HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-09-20 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• ~:;...:--• • w • • ,. ,._ "-. --. -:-=r = ... :;;:s::;:_-=--
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NY ·s _wea-ter Girl
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ERIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 20, '.1968
VOL. t1, NO. 127, 4 Sli:C'TIO.S, SI l"AGl!S
Dangerous Curves
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Father!)s· Rea·etion
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To ' Q_na.dr~plets:
-2~ooey on P 'ill!)
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'llvliitYBoDV WAITS "5 TRAFFIC 'i TOPS FOR FRANCINE
!ll'Ol!i<!yn ~w-G,lt~ HM ;Rffl Fo~11 I~ flHncl~l .lilltd~
·T:r~ffi~ St~pper
Frdn:Cirre ( 43~25-37) Dt aws Cr.owds
Stand on Cleaver
NEW YORK (mil) -A stockbroker
iQ a proper blue SUit shinnied up a but-
fcfnwood.'1ree to see wbat the fuss was
all abou~
The steps of the New York Stock
Exchange were jammed. Spectators
ran to roof.tops and clung to light
Poles. The windows of the staid old
Morgan. Guaranty Trust co. were mob-
bed.
At 1:34 p.m. Thursday police
estimated the crowd on Wall Street
near the 6tock exchange where the na-
tion's finraoci& bushless is centered at
5,000.
, At precisely that moment Francine
Gottfried, a 11·year-old computer
operator from Brooklyn, stepped from
the BMT subway station and walked
doWl'I. Broad Street.
She wcire a tiglX yellow sweater aJJd
a red skirt and almost caused a riot.
F o r days the w o r d bad spread
through stock ex.changes, banks and
brokerage bouses about Francine's•
walk. Daily the Cl9Wda grew,
Tllursday Wall Street erupted.
eterk1 in beige jacket! mobbed the
Sidewalks an hour early to get good
positions. The roofs of twc. cars were
atamped in. Women screamed,
J!hotographm shoved.
: TwO pla.inclothes policemen -the
Yord bad spread to dty hall, too -
• 'l!anaged to pull Franciile from the
mob to safety in a hotel lobby.
· The cause of the near-riot was the
yellow sweater ahd Franckle's figure,
1"hlch measures ·"3-2S-3'7.
"It's the blf(ell tlllng to hit Wall
Street since the crash," said one stock·
exchange clerk. WJlockefeller eouldn't
lraw the c?'OWds she (ell. Look a1
tbem." ' • ·
Uke the 'man '"Up the buttonwood"
tree, Fra:ocme didn't know. or
~·t let ~' what all Ult! tu1s was
d1 tt1Il don'\ believe tt myself," the E'°'t-4 brunette 11ld. "I think they're . <:rarr: W!ilt are il>ey doing this t' ~: .. Some peoJ)le aSk 'me for my
IUtograph,'' ahe aaid. 0 Why should
they! I'm jlllt an ordi...-y girl."
Fr-may be Jllll "" ~ary lltl, but one Wall S-t veteran aald · Ille c:rowd obi drew '.lbinday et 1 .. st
matclled that turned out OD May 17.
1987. for the 17Sth IDni..narr -.monlea of tbe ·New York Stock E1<-
cilmlc•. . Vice Prealdent -Hubert H. Hum-l'fil'o1, Gov. l(elson Rockefeller and
Ml:yor Jctm V. Lindsay were the 1l-
trllillloD1 tllal 67. . ~ j
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CURVES FOR COMMUTERS .
Computer 0por1111r Gottfrloi
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Reagan Plans
To Attend UC
Session Today
LOS ANGELES (AP)•-University
or c.a?ifomta regents resume today
considering what to do about Black
Panther leader Eldrldge Cleaver's
selection as a guest lecturer at UC
Berkeley.
Gov. Reagan, who has predicted the
regents will pre...eM Cleaver trom ap-
pearing in an experimental course on
the background of racial disorders.
planned to attend the meeting at
UCLA,
After two hours ot public hearings
and an hour of private debate Thurs·
day, a regents eommittee failed to
(See CLEAVER, Pace Z)
If you haven't. got Olympic Fev~r
you're missing out on one of the rnost
exciting "diseases" to .hit the Orange
Cout in 'decades.
Thia area n e z t
month will send 11
athlet.es a n d . o n e
coach to Oly'lnplc Vll·
Iage in Me-City
u part of 'the United
States delegation to
the 19th Olympiad.
Exclu&tve CO\:'.et:11ee
of tllllt•hlstory-maldng opo<U .,,.1
rea11$ gell W>de1" way Saturday In !be
DAILY PILOT when the !lrat lJ1 a
Hrles of penooallty sketches on the
OrlJ!jl•· Coast Olympians atarll. And
lb"" -.,-w1th·billngual sports editor
Glem Wl:dte, only newepapennan
from Orange County covering the
Olylµplc Gama, •bon he lrave!J •to
Mulco tu get !be 1tory In !be Ian·
guage of ,the OJ¥mplcs and tranllate
It lJ!to acttlng Uvorage excl111lvely
for DAILY PILOT readua. Gel the
fe>\r, You'D ""Jor It.
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Quads Wreck Canadian
Father's Faith in Pill
FBI Rescues
Kidn~~ B.oy, '
<llICAGO (UP!) -FB)• agenll to-
day rescued ·the ' toill!le-h~ ~-yeill"
old .grapds,on -<ii a we.itJiy maljufac:
tlll'f.I' and seized two mep. ~ a.
we>man accUled of ld'dnaping1 the.."1>Qy
and holding him lllr two days under ~t ot death. . · ;' r • ·•
. O'ITAWA (AP} -Mrs. Victor
·Millar, 30, glive blrth Frid.lay to
, quadruplets -three boys and a girl.
"That kills my faith In the pill," oaid
her 33-year-old husband when h~ got
the news.
"l tmnk. I'll picket the company," he
added.
Mrs. Millar was delivered of the
babies in seven minutes, starting at
6:38 a.m. All babies and mother are
"just fi ne," the hospital reported. The
children will be kept in the hospital,
most Of the· time in·lncubators, fer at
least a month because tl!.ey are two
montils premature.
The Millers have known 1lnce last
mOnth lllat Mrs. MUlir would give
birUl to three 21Jd JIOISibly four babies.
-·Dr. Sydney Kronlck, the mother's
obstetrician, diagnosed the multiple
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pregnancy With X·rays Aug. 19, noti-
fying the hospital of th1, probability or
quadruplets.
The Millars have two other children,
a girl 6, and a bc>y, 12.
"They took it very well," said the
father while waiUng a summons to bis
wife's bedside.
He said the boys weighed three
pound! 10 ounces, three pounds 14 and
three pounds nine and the girl two
pounds 10. They were given excellent
chances or survival. •
Mn. Millar is one of ·12 children and
her-mother, Mrs. Roger Dubue· of Ot~
tawa, .gajd oall 12 came along "one at a
Ume.".
"I'm in a state of shock," she said
when ask«t how the felt about her
daullbter's giving birth to quduplet.a,
The agents and ~n5".:_ Closed Ui on'
an' apaitme.nt pn ~.~'s soulh~es(
side and found ·Htllatd WlHls · Mitt-k1;
who was abducted while-walking hbme
from sdiool ln tlie llirihion~ suburb
of Oak Brook Wecb:lday held for
$12.5,IXXJ. ransom'.. · .
lfillard, his wide smile reyealint the
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lfeetller '
. CoUJlfy Warned,to Brace ·
The we~the~m.D &us for de-
creasing .. cloud~ ~ ·'t'eek~nd,
which means. the ..sun might
come out iat 9; Lm,. Instead of
noon. Othenrt.se it's the same
tempenturellolse' -~ aloog the . "" For Jet Traffic Explosion ·
Uke •It · ..-not, orange County 11
1 going to have to brace for an air traf-
fic explosloo.
Md tltat m•..,. Jet traffic.
Jam<• Sil>lt, proJ..t· -for Willlilln E. Pereira I< A11oclalet ,
. made this plalD to the Orange COunty
Coast Association 'l'huncla1 nlglW.
"Wtihln tf\t Delt 10 years," be told
, his Balboa Bay Club audience o! !'10,
"alrcrl(t al all' 11* will • be jot
· poiie ed. '1bll 11191-the pat.pull at
CA-ant• Coun!J Allport. "Sl>!dleo mdi"*"' tltat It's golnc io be more economtoal to have lll1all Jet
engines lhaD It , JI to bavt • tile
redprooallnc · ...i.e1 .,,. now know _ ..
Sink, wllo beoded up deveiopmedl ol ,
Phase I of Peretra's ma1ter. plan Jcr
Orange County air tranapot<atlon, told
why there will be no alo'tfing the 1
growth.-ot ~ ·passenger ; 1
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Oljfht1 out of11>e CO<lll(y. I
"In not too lIUllll-'!Ytorl, you '#IU be able to flJI rOU11C!trij! l>otw.,n So<ttlvsm
Calllornla and Hawaii for wider l!Q,
Wben thal ~DI, t*I...,.,. will be
coming cNt ol llt -..orl<.. You will
bo .. ~ i-Q)ectlono ol * trllffic demand• \o OOlljood: with.'' • r
Tiie cbe-rata. 1\0 llld, would i.
the ~le r$ull ,of, Ibo .... ·of
larpt, luter alr«all, ouch u Ibo 30I).
p-er Air BUI.
. SO the C9Ual;J 'llad better gel"""'·
will! I res1-J alJport UPlbie ol
(See PEREIRA, P.,. i) .. '
beach &¥ '13 lnland: , ,
lNS(J}B !'ODA)' .
It ain't the Met, bvt some
opera buff• aoy it'1 bettn-yet.
li'1 grand o.;.ia ~tr tht stars
fn Lagrma B,ach and uou can
find ' OUI oil oboul It tolloy in
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Marines Kill
110 Reds
Along DMZ
SAIGON <UPfl -'U.S. mllllilry
.,.._ llld todo7 e li.t force cC
1,000 U.S. -bod -dra!>!>ed
-boUa>pler Imo the -<Dd af
... ·-1mMI at the wry tmdof GI Nor1h V-o.nd bad llll·
i4 110 OommaDJtt "--J.!" ......,,,... oald !ft blllllliml
· the 4tb and 9tb Marlnt
J.olimeoU ~ the -.e drtve a.. 1'1oodll)' tlo cut -vietmme ..
-...... tmd blodt -\£1eb1811 ""•..it. rgwh-t the 11rin&
cC Morine ml Anny 1-sH loaC tho
DMZ. -
The Ma6De1 were drqJped. on the
-GI tile Beu Hal Rlver. the acCuol
-GI Nmb end Soulh Vieb&n. The DMZ exteok bee miles north
and oOulh Or the Ben Hal Rtver which
rllN In tile --i-'""' • -.. tile -<Jllna see. Altlo• the big drive 1-n Gil
Tueocbt;y OllDOWICOlllonl .... deloy<d
untjl today for oecurtty .-om. The
bellcopt.or-~k -the ~ al1led ..... al tbe-In·
to tl>e Demlllllri>od Zone, whtdl ·the
Comnnmlsla .,.,. Ultd u • major
~-· A !lp(lke1111W111 &ald ooJy "s..,....Uc
coot.ct" W8ll reported but the Marines
kill<d 110 Not<fi V-troops
and captured nearly 500 rifles cached
by ltbe Commun I 1 t1 in the area.
Marine cuoolties ...,.. dacribed as
"11(111" altboueb --1 -• foiled by tile !ID degree bOl!-
'lbe --the Morine drlV" -talllng ploc< ii heavily JUDCled mcamtaiolldet, poabty tbe worlt in
Viom ...
Only -Frl<!ay ao elMed force ln-
cludtnl -· staged • land, ... end air l.o,Wifli.<11 ct. tbe eastern sector
GI tl>e DMZ and killed 158 North Viet·
namese in an all-day battle. The thru1t
this week was the filth of tile sumnu~r
into the so-called neutral :oooe. -
A..,..__ Eld the latest -was aimed at· cuttlnr ·~m .
rouf<I uoed by the 37111 Nuttl Vlot-
nameee dlvtslol\. The Morl,De< ·fowld
""""" tnl1a with -floa<• ..... ting 11roug11 tile mountaD llld "blllh
opeed" -.. -by """'""' '""' lliCyd!N. 'lbe haavily lodell blc,cles
.... puobod by ... trcq>S, •
r.t.j. Geo. Raymond n..;u. ...,,.
Dtlll1de!-af the ~ M>rlne Dl.tJ!oD,
--ly the --cC the 3lOB NV A clvlllon In tile ......... llld
.,, the -pooed ·-.. tho.allied coq>lex -Abo ill c.,. Lo, Qunp <lom>ll ml tbe llodpllo. 'l1lt 'J'lledly
aaault -aeven miJjf'iOit' cC tlJe
Con 1bJeo Oldpoll.
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YMCA Files Big
Suit Against
County Airport
Oraoge c-t YMCA affldals . uld
today Ibey bad fUed • property
damage claim <i $225,000 against
!)range Oounty ~
"We are getting droppege and dirt
on our equipment from tbe fuel oil
residue <i tile planea," YMCA -
Roll<nllrolmrdllld.
"We hlwe to 1nteniJpt our classes eon"adt:r .. ....it far the !righ1""ing
Dllle4o ." 'lbe ~ Ill loUllng -1y 850 In·
cl\lidml ctatmant1 who have filed
........ tbe airport, accon11ni to Dan F.mcrJ, cbolrman al Ibo Airport N'"8e
/!""""""'! Oommltteo.
'lbe -f.., clelma has been rovllod ID~ 111119, he saJd. They
lllrMdy -y $2'7 mllllon.
Emory -the Grig!mi cutolf waa sept. i. 1998, but "the response wu sO
ON wtM!lmlnc we utended C:le Ume to
-evlr)'VllO .. file .•
DAILY PILOT
............. c....w.. :::r:,..... ~:::
CAUPOINIA
OltMOI COAST PUILISHIHO COMPANY
M:•Mrt N. Wetd
..... Wint .... Plllllltller
J1r.• l. C:.rl..,
Vkil ,,....,. ... ......, MtNMr
n ..... K •• ,u ·-n.11111 A. M1ttJhiM
MeMll ... I: .....
la.t Nin" _,., """ ...
Stranded Freiglater Resciaed
Mesa Beatlttfl • 1
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I Hessian Seeks
Sanity Hearing I
By A~ II. VINSEL a pool cue ov<or a ta~ game I
Of"" D•ll• , .... ,,.,. . eight-ball -: ideoti!ied. Wild .MOUN :J
A Newport Beach attorney for t.he gun-wielder.
Hessian motorcycle club member wrutman told Judge Ouneao Thu.1 ..
Frank W. "Wild Mouae" Rundle dat that hJ.J client baa spent time in a
1urprtsed courtropm ob s erve r s mental bospi\al anp .a Vete?iao11 Adt-
.Thlll'lday by M1dng a aanlty bearing ministratl<ill Boapltal In New York Ol1d
for his clleo~ a former mental lo subject I<> blaclooµll Ind perbapa
·ho&pttal patient. > even seizurea. .
Harbor l>iltrlct Judicial Court Judge Two psychiatrist. will be appolnUfJ
Dl?nald W. Dungan granted the mo-to examine Rundle next Friday _.
tJon , ordertnc the defend.arit to Orange the outcome of hll Cllle will rest OJI'
Oounl)' sUperior Coort, Dopartment their findings . •
One, at 9::.> a.m. nut Friday. He could then either be aieot 1o
·Attorney Robert R. Wh1,Jman, who Atascadero state Hoepillal for e. II«!
took qver the case trom f co~ap.. ditional 90 days of obserwtaoa. or eJ-.
Jllltl4 poblle def>llder, alld Rundle ~ tlo otaol tnal on the ftlollX
· teems unable to compreheqd the pro-counts against blm. "-!
ceeding1 or the cha:r;ges agalJist him. FACES 14 YEARS ·:
eoa.t Guard cutter Dallas stands by the Dutch
freighter Jollamles Frans 650 miles east of Eliza-
bd.b City, N.C. The freighter bas loot all power and
lts engine rOO!Ds have flooded. The Coast Guard He ial!o said Rundle, ~1 of 1SS 1 i
A,lbort Place.-Oosta M:esl, Is »0t He facea " pooalbll -lo '°""'"'! dropped pumps fr'!'I' the air. · <'!"'bio GI 11811111111 In hllt defense )'Mfl In etMe P'"' .., cm-,,,.
OD olulrpa..<f -ult wj lJl!eot to OSIMlit wi1111Dleat fo """""1t 2lllllM
Floating Airport Called
'$2 Billion Nightmare'
By JEllOl\tE F. COLLINS
Cit ... °'"' P'Utt ll•lf
Avlafi.io moo,ter planner J..,,.. Sin!
:'!u!rldot plgbt tank a.. c1r .... o! ' o~ alspcrl for Orlllljle County,
lb OOlt, he lndlcated, would he r
nlgbt:mlte-ltt. possibly a '2 billiou
nl(btmare.
Sink,. -of projecll fw W111 lil. m E. Perelra & AHoclates,
developers ot the county's a I r
tnwporiattoo masl<r plan, sal4 the
cmcept had been stµdied by his llrm
once before.
· ·It WH. considered, l)t-Nld, · duriog
EX-NEWPORT MAYOR DIES
Orlle B. Road
Former Newp9rt
Mayor 0. B. Reed
Dies at Age 85
Former Newport Beach mayor Qr.
lie B. Reed died Wednesday after a
lengthy illness at a convalescent home.
He was 85.
Graveside services will be held at
4 p.m. Saturday at Pacific Vlew Me·
mortal Park.
Mr. Reed served as mayor from 1946
to 1948 and as councilman for eight
years.
He was mayor at the Ume the city
decided to build its present City Hall.
Born in llllnois, be came to RJver.
side in 1908. He was commander of the
Knights Templar and a charter mem-
ber of the Rotary Club, bolh in River-
side.
Swvivors include his wife, Frances,
of the home, 444 Begonta Ave., Corona
del Mar; two sons, Donald W\ of New-
. port Beach and Robert L. of Upland; a
daughter, Mrs. Margaret Hackett of
Arcadia; a slater Marie A. ReM of
Alhambra; tour grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Dr. Philip G. Murray of the Congre-
gational Church, Corona del Mar will
offt.ciate at the services.
Tbe famlly snggesta that those who
wish ..., make rnmiorlal contribu-
tlOlll ID the Orango 0ow,cy Clilldrens
Boop!W.
Front Pqe J
KIDNAP •..
abtenct of two !root teeth,,.. Into his
motber'1 ll'IDI at FBl beadqlmtus
ad 1be flrl't thing he IMd WU, "Oki ·
wt bavt 1be J*tY?" He WU tllltlng
-the party tl>r his eeveolh birth·
d11, wbldl would have boea held
'l'!lllndoy.
"No," Mrs. Mary Lou Ma-ta &aid••
Ille huged her ion. "But Wl'll hive it
IOOll."
recent Pereira studio ol Los Angele1
l.otematlonal A*port tralfic pnlbl<ma.
"We fomd that the coot al just 1""-
viding aca:ss to a seadrome would be
iJlsunnountable," he 1atd. "When we
got to the figin <i '2 billion, we just
qull"
Sink was aslmd about tbe aubject In
an interview after be reviewed county
aviation needs at a meeting ot the
Orange County Coast Association . of
the Balboa Bay Club.
Earlier this week, Newport Beach
real estate developer George Freeman
hod proposed the fioating airport I<>
tti.e County Alrpmt Comm 111 lo u .
Freeman nid tbe ocean could thus
Provide the COQllty with ia regional
airport site that no one else naw
seems to want to.
But Perelra f-'iltcUtive Sink just
shook his ·bead et'1he idea.
"Not Cl'lly the cost of aecas ii in-
volved here," be aaid, "but there's
also the matter _ of an airport's sup-
porting faclllttes. An airport is DOI ju&t
a runway, it also requires a tennlnal,
m&Wenance -facilltlet and e v-e u
hotels."
'l'hele,Jie pld, would bavetq 11' built
on Jand-0 qllite a bit ol land"-even U
tbe ~· were out at sea. ' 11You've :1ot to, remember that most
sucCeHful afrPorta are dtiea in
themselves.?'
He empbai:ized that he had DD idea
what a ,&eadrome would cost Orange
County. "All I know is Iha\ we sl<>pped
at. S2 billion when we studied one tor
~ Angeles."
From Pase J
PEREIRA ...
handling notional fiigltt!, and with
mmoporta for shorter tllM, he said.
In less than 25 years, Sink predicted,
Orange County will become lhe 10th
largest me.tro{>Olitan area in the na-
tion. The pre.Sent 1.3 millJon pop\j_ation
will approach f million in 1993.
That could well mean. be said, a
total of 49 mllUon fl1g1:Jt pa&sengers
originating in Ult county anmally by
llleo. CurreDlly, 2.8 millloo origlna1< ill
the county, with about a fourtti ol.
these using Orange County Airport.
The cowty facility, he emphasized,
will never be able to come clO&e to
meeting tile demand, Access road1 to
the •lrpoit ere too limited, the number
Cl( available gates too few and tbe
acreage (52!>) too little, be explained.
For tt:iat reason, new runway grouod
must be broken, be said.
From Page J
CLEAVER. • •
agree on a plan to end tbe con-
troversy.
"'Ibere was no consensm," Regent
William K. COblont. of San Francllco
said aller tt<e tneetin!: of Ille nine·
member education policyc cmmittee.
"I made several proposals," UC
Pre!lident Charles J. Hitch said.
"Other regents made several pro.
member ed.uca.tica policy oommJ~.
One plan bocked · by lhe UC
Academic Council would require clo11e
scruUny 0( the acade.rni c backgrounds ot mtormally as well as formally ap-
polntod UC leOO!rm. But lhe plan
wou)d not necesnrlty her ON.ver
from opeaklng In at teaat 10 a<heduled
c1 ... perlom.
The Academlc Oouncil Is composed
of )eafen of the Acw:lemlc Senate en
UC'1 nine campu1et.
1be bask: issues railed 1burwdly:
will Cleaver bt ~ teacher or tbe sub-
ject matller of tile courM, Mid should
he bo .Uowod to opeak at the unlvonl·
t)' In eltber caae.
Clelver, mua.ter of tnlonn.Uoa for
tbe Bliek Pantl>ors, Ill 1 -. pr1t00
paro1H ladng cbartlo• o! attempted
murder and .... ult with • deedl,y
weapon • the re.ult of a lhootout
WWI <lakland pollco Jut Aprtl.
The COIUomla Leilalaeure censured
the regonts and uc·. oclmhU1r1\lon In
a r ... 1uuon Tluoday i.., appolllUne a..-. .
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Hitch Requests
$63 Million
Boost for UC
LOS ANGELES (UPO -University
of Callfornla l'resldent Cbar1"' J.
Hit<:h Nld today !Ila\ $3S4 mllllon will
he n~ed I<> malntsln Ibo "Yilallty,
qua!Jty Md Impetus" of the nlne-<am-
pus lnltltutloos during the 1969-70 fis-
cal year.
The budJl"t Hitch Jroposed I<> the
board of regents for 1969-70 is $63
million more than the UC budget for
the current fl.Seal year.
The presJdent ea1d enrollment will
increase by more than a percent to l~,000 students next year. In 19?'3, he
added, the studeot bodies at the Dine
campuses will be more than 32 per~
cent larger tban at present.
"The university must play a pro-
minent role if the 1'8te of Oalifornla is
goJag to meet the needs of an ex-
paocling population and a growing
econooi.y ,'' Hitch said.
"It is oow generally recognized. tha\
high talent human resources are
critlo:al to economic growth and
development. The population ex~
pansion, and expaot1ioo. of business
and industry, end the technological
society in which we live require ever
11ncreaem1, Dll!Dbor• o1 highly skilled
men en:l Women With graduate and
profe.s1Jional education."
Hit.ch noted *hat the university's ef-
fort to tum out more doctors and den-
tishs to meet the needs of a growing
population "will continue to place a
heavy burden on available resources."
He Mid that 522 full time faculty
members and 144 additional full time
teaching assistants wUl be needed on
the n.iIJe campuses next school year.
"In making budgetary propooals I
am mindful that 1967-68 state support
was $38 mllllon below our requested
needs, and In 1968-69 was some $35
million ·lower than our estimated
needs," Hitch said.
~ m1""", waiilt-a deadly alme. . W.-and·burllary. , ~ Dlstrlnt, AllCmey• Jo J Tllo .,.peet bu been he! al Orengo Moseley, coordlnatlng'lbe _,uori,
Cpomti Jail ID lieu of '37,llio ball, hut aid Whlbn..,'1 mollon cane .. • Jol!t
will ""= i. moved;!? Orfllge but both he -1 tile jUdJe were do' Collllll Cellt.r for ..... llklay tlrely .-1e. . ;h
to lhne -Pl10blatrlc evaluation. Moteiey -lfblt ..0 blocked_.,
b•TP•-•••ft-beaing end Jl"OOM'li'IP obOuld COll'(
----llnuo ... • l»th•"""" ooold OYertunli Rundle wa1 accuaed by witnesses Of the case on appeal. "'1
being lelldOT al a ratpack of IS "' 20 Judge DUDtl"I '8id he har<J't bed,
cyelil:tl who Maged a ~ vengeance much chance to obserw: Rundle in•
raid on the Co9tta Mesa home U a court, but was duty-bwnd. to C«tify
former New Yori: Golden Gloves box-him up to Superior Court, U hia
ing mempim last month. defense attorney questioned th f:.
ROOert L. Gtazier, 30, of 2224 suspect's mental stlate. .
Pkacentia Ave., was whipped with cy. An 18-year"°ld bloode VriJo ba1 bedf,
cle chains, beaten and 1hot in the band lWD:lle's girlfl'liend since be anivea'
as he covered his face during the from the east early this summer told a
melee. newsman Thursday that Rundle iJ u,..:
GIWer - -had Mid be fougllt telligent 6Dd 00. ab~ In elec''
with Ruodle, alter being attacked with tronics. "1
• d 'i
Another Plane Hijacked ::;
To Havana; 53 Aboard "'
"'
MIAMI (AP) -An Eutern Air
Ldnes JeWner wilh S3 perllObl &board
was hijacked to Hcavaoe. today while
en route from Son Juan I<> Miami.
The plane, a Bneillf 720, wu 40
milea southwest of Nassau, the
llabamal, when It ltaddeoly veered to
the left and beaded for ca, said
P.au! Boatman, area admlnistratcr for
the Federal Aviation Administration in
Miami.
lie aid the Cl'dt IWllllg <if course
at 9:12 a.m. EDT, and touched ttown
at Ha'Vana'a Jose Mi8l"ti Ajrport at 9:45
a.m.
"lbere wu no radio contact from
tile pilot," said Boatman. '4Com·
munication suddenly halted when the
plane veered to tlhe left and took 8'
southwest course for Cuba."
Boatman am 39 persons were
aboanl. but BUI Wooten, en Eastern
Executive in Miami, said thoM! aboard
were 32 pe.11sengen, seven crewmen
and 14 Eaotem employea.
Wooten said a passenger, list was not
immediately available. The crew
member"• were all MNimJ residents, he
added.
D
Woot"1 ldeotilied lhe pilot ot <Jai>t'.
W. T. Babbitt and the first officer litlJ·
W. J . Ridwdson. ~~.
Neither Boatman nor Wooten had
any information about the ti.:)adtt OO·
hijackers. ..:
''We won't know anything about hoW •
it happened untll they get back," -Boatman,
Wooten said Eastern had appeale4
to the Slate D~ent to get the'
passengers back immediately.
The night, EAL 950, depori.d Soi!-
Juan at 7:30 a.m., officials saJd, aril
took the "Yankee Route" to Miami,
swinging east oC Cuba. r.
It was the 12th coonmercial flight l:t(-
jacked t.his year and the ninth to be
flown to Cuba. ,
All commercial planes hijacked this
year to Cuba were.promptly returned,"
but an EAL liner forced to Havana in
1961 was not returned for 23 days. .
The 1961 plane wias hijacked by a
former Cuban secret poli~an end ·
finally was swapped for a Cuban-·
patrol boat wi>ich had been alled to .
key West earlier ttrat year by three'
defectors. •·
7 a
)
~-
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Henredon's new line of promotional ch.airs
ore truly worthy of the nomo Henredon .
A collection of seven chairs to choose from
evei1eble in a wide assortment of handsome
fabrics. These hand crefted chairs ere os-
sembled with the finest in materials and
wori:manship. Any of these chairs ere avei1.
oblo ot $199.00.
NEWPORT llACH
1727 W•tcllff Drift
642-2050
P-lonel 1-LAGUNA BEACH DetltMn 3-45 North Cont Hwy.
Anlleb!.-AID-NSID OflN RIDAY 11L '
.... T• ,_ .... el 0....,. C..., '*lW
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4~51
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Bea eh Your Bometo
VOL. 6f, NO. 227, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES
EVERYBODY WAITS AS TRAFFIC STOPS FOR FRANCINE
Brooklyn Sweeter Girl Has Real Following in Financial Dlstrld
1Traffi~ Stopper
Francine ( 43-25-37) Draws Crowds.
NEW YORK (UPI) - A stocltbroker
in a proper blue suit shinnied up a but•
tonwood tree to see what the fuss was
all aboul
The steps of ttie New York Stock
Exchange were jammed. Spectators
ran to rooftops and clung to light
poles, The window& of the staid old
Morgan Guaranty Trust co. were mob-
bed.
. At 1:34 p.m. Thursday police
estimated the crowd on Wall Street
near the 6f.ock exchange where the na-
tion's fin.accial business is centered at
5,000.
At precisely that moment Francine
Gottfried, a 21-year-old computer
operaitor from Brooklyn, stepped from
the BMT subway station and walked
down Broad St?eet
She wore a tight yeUGw sweater and a. red skirt and almost caused a riot
F o r day1 the w..,o r d bad apr~
throu·gti ·atoct. excbangte;--banks ad broiUJ'•••··•llW ... Uoul l"raodll4'a walk. Daily !be cr<rwdl grew.
Thursday Wall Street erupted,
Clerks in beige jackets mobbed the
sidewalkl an bour early to get good
positions. The roof.s of twc. cars were
stamped in. Women 1creamed,
photographers shoved.
Two plai:Jc:1othes policemen -the
word bad spread to city hall, too -
managed to pull Francine Crom the
mob ro safety in a hotel lobby.
The cause of t.hi! near.riot was the
yellow sweater and Francine'1 figure,
which measures 4J...25-37.
"It's the biggest thing to hit Wall
Street since 1he crash." said one stock
exchange clerk. "Rockefeller couldn't
draw the crowds she gets. Look at
them."
Like the man up the buttonwood
tree, Francine didn't know, or
wouldn't let on , what all the fUss was
about.
"I still don't believe it myself," the
$.foot-4 brunette said. "I think they 're
all crazy. What are they doing this
for?
"Some people ask me for m y
autograph," she said. "Why should
U1ey ? I'm just an ordinary girl.''
Francine may be jui;t an ordinar:·
girl. but one Wall Street veteran said
the crowC: she drew Thursday at least
matched that turned out on May 17,
1967, for the 175th anniversary
ceremonie1 of the New York Stock Ex-
change.
Vice President Hubert lt. Hum-
phrey, Gov. Nelson Rockefetler and
Mayor Jotm V. Lindsay were the at,.
tractions that day.
rmill
lf you haven't got Olympic Fever
you're missing out on one of the most
exciting "dlseues" to hlt the Orange
Coast in decadea.
This area n e J: t
month will send 11
athletes a n d o n e
coach to Olympic Vil-
lage in Melico City
as part of the United
States dele&ation to
the 19th Olympiad.
Exclusive coverage
of t.hiJ hl!tory-making sports event
really gets under way Saturday in' the
DAILY PlLOT when the first in a
aeries of peraonallt7 Sketches on the
Orange Coast Olympians starts. And
then ttay wtth bilingual spol'ta editor
Glenn WhJUI, only newspaperman .
from Orange Count; covertng the
Olympic Games, when he travels to
Mexico to get the 1tory in the Ian ..
iuage of the OI¥mpics and translate
tt into exciting covera1e excluaiyely
for DAILY PILOT reader1. Get the
fever, You'll enjoy it.
J J
U,I T•lw,,._
CURVES FOR COMMUTERS
Comput•r Oper•tor Gottfried
County Official,
Lagunan Facing
Perversion Count
An administrative officer in the
Orange County District Attorney's of-
fice was arrested Thursday in a Santa
Ana bus depot restroom aloog with a
Lagwih Beach man on sex perversion
charges.
A Santa Ana patrolmAn a.llegedly
observed Raymond 11. Sctidder, ZT, of
Tultin, In the act wl1h Dav;d E. Wood·
fin. U, of 2445 L<>mlta Way, Laguna
Beec!L
Scudder was released on hi.,, own
1'!COglllzallce pending preliminary
hearing on the charge. but Woodfin
failed 1o post bail-~ In jail.
Th• District Attorne.r'• a1de resign·
ed the pooltion be bad held for ono
Yt8I' fOJloWin& hi< ....... t on tllo W:.
charge.
Ollel DeQuty District AUon><y
James Em1gbt said ~ cane to
Orange County from Ktr11'tlo<uity and
that he ·ha1 been a competent
empl:oye.
1'le arrests 'ft:l'e made after the
&lleged violation in the meu'1 room of
the G1'1'yb....i bw dtpal.
EDITION DaHy Paper
.•
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER! 2Q. '1968 TEN CENTS
Jei Traffic to Boom
Pereira Aide Spel"ls. It Out tor Coast Association
llie It or not, Onlnge County Is
going to have to brace for an air tral•
fie upioslm.
And that means jet !raffle.
James Slot, project director for
Willlam E. Pereira & Associate!,
made this plain to the Orange County
Cooot Association Thursday ni~ "Wlthin the next 10 year1," he told
hll Balboa Bay Club audience of 1701 "ainraft. of all sizes will be jet
powered. This includes the put-puts at
* * * Air Expert
Sinks Floating
Airport Plan
By JEROME F. COLLINS or t1111 O.llY l'!Mt s11rr
Aviation master planner Jamet1 Sink
Thursday night sank the dream of a
floating airport for Orange County. I
Its oost, he indicated, would be a
nightmare -•like possibly a. $2 billion
nightmare. 1
· Sink, director of project.< for
W 111 i a m E. Pereira & .Msoclate1,
developers of the county's a i r
transportation master plan, 1aid the
concept had been studied by bis firm
once before.
It was coosldered, be &aid, during
recent Pereira studies of Los Angeles
ID!ematiooaJ Airport trallic problems.
"We found that ll)e -ol jllll -
viding access tO a seadrome would be
insurmmmtable," he said. "When we
got to the figin ol '2 billion, ft Jl\SI
quit." . '
Sink was .. be! abOut lli1i 'aibleot lB
e hlta t!ew -be nvlend county
avlatlan needJ al a meetl!tf ol Ill~ OraDlo Couni,. Coast AllOCiatlob ol
tho Balboa Bay Club. I
onnc• County Airport.
, "Studies indicate th~ it's going to
be more economical to have small Jet
engblea than lt is to have the
reciprocating engines we now know
abotd."
Slot, who headed up development of
Phase I pf Pereira's master pian for
Orange County air transportation, told
why there will be no slowing tile
growth of coounerclal passenger
fllgbts out ol the county.
1 "In not too many years, you will be
Not Mueh Vet • • •
ablt to fly roundtrlp betw .. n Southern
Califoro.la and Hawaii for under $&).
When that bappena, passengers will be
comiog out of the woodwork. You will
have astronomical iroJ~ons of air
traffic demand.I to contend wlth."
The cheaper rates, he said, would be
the inevitable result of the use o!
larger, faate_r aircraft, such as the 300-
passenger Air Bus1 So the county had better get ready,
With a regional airport capable of h"'1dllni national fligbts, and with
metroPOIU for shorter runs, he said.
In less than 25 years, Sink predicted,
Oraiige <:ounty will become the loth
largest metropolitan area in the na·
tioo. The present 1.3 million populaUOa
will awro,acb 4 million l.n 1993.
That could well mean, he said, a
total of 49 million night passengera
originating in the county annually by
then. Currently, 2.a million originate in
the county, with about a fourth of
those using Orange County Airport.
Earllor this week, i:;'ewport Boacli
real estate·developer George Freeman
had proposed the floating airport to
tile County Airport C o m m i 1 Ii 1 o n ~
Freeman laid the ocean could thus
provide the county with a regional
airport site that DO ooe else now
11eems to want to.
I Tractors and carpenters and foundations plus plenty
of dirt remain the. main ingredients of the Fount-
tain Valley civic center additions now under con-.
structi0n behind city hall at 10200 Slater Ave •. Wor~. On the new police facility, library and community' ...
k"1ler Is expected to be completed by early 1969. ,-
But Pereira executive Sink ju1t
shoolt bis head at the idea.
''Not ooly ble cost of access Is in-
volved here," he said, "but there's
also the matter of an airport's sup-
porting facilities. An airport ii not jua:t
a runway, it also requires a terminal,
maintenance facilities and e v e n
hotels."
Regents Fail to Rea~h
'
These, he said, would have to be built
on land-"qu.ite a bit of Jand"-even if
the runways were out at sea.
I
Stand on Cleaver Issue
"You've got. to re~ember t~~t mo~t LOS ANGELES (AP) -unfversity successful airports are cities in . . themselves." .. of Calilorma regcnt.s resume today
He emphasized that he had no idea ·considering what to do about Black
what a !e&drome would cost Orange Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver's
County. "All I know ls that we stopped selection as a gl.iest. lecturer· at UC
at '2 billion when we studied one for Berkelev Lo6 Angeles " · ·
· Gov. Reagan, who has predicted the '1:r 1:r tf regents will prevent Cleaver from ap-
pearing in an experimental course on Kids 'Tak;ng the hllckground of racial disorders.
&; planned to attend the meeting at
UCLA.
Over' County?
A lot of statistics were rattled oft
by planning expert James Sink in a
talk before the Orange County Coast
Association Thursday night. One in
particular drew a big gasp from his
audience.
"Right today," he said, "42 percent
of all the people in Orange County are
are under 3).''
"Migawd," came a voice from t be
rear. "I hope Uiey do.n't find Ollt."
After two hours ol public bearings
and an hour or private debate Thurs-
day, a regents committee failed to
agree on a plan to end the con-
tro~y.
"1bere was no consen6ue:," Regent
William K. Coblentz of San Francisco
said after the Jn{!eting of the nine·
member education pollcyc ommittee.
"I made several proposals," UC
President Oharles J. Hitch said.
"Otber regents made several pro.
member education policy committee.
One plan backed by 11le UC
'A.et on Parents' Qui%
Scl,ools Taught
By SANDI MAJOR
or ""' D"l't P"-Iliff
A 1\U'Vey of parent& wiftl children in
the Founlain Valley School District,
which ohowod Ille diJtrlct could do lit-
ue to improve at Qpt glanoe, Is bring·
In& -cooolderablo dlanp In tbe classrooms.
Closer 9CI'Uti.D7 of the re&pCl'llStl of
5,46$ puentt to'• quefltionnaire aent
ool llKt sprlni bu promp(ed offlclal1
to rev1ew their .cluoation program and
11> encourage teadlen end pdnclpolA
to work cloler witll _..
Deputy Supt. Dole R. Coogan al•o
noted the district neeclt to step up Its
"parent education" pro gr a m ,
especially on the value ol new sub-
jects, like new math whtcb one p&reo1
commented "is for the bird1 I"
Nearly «> percent of the survey1
sent bome last IP?in& were returued
validly m•kod. Some parents added
written commente on a few of the
quelt.lona.
Dr. Coogan prHentod the inltlal fin·
dings of the lllr""1 to IMlstees In July,
ootlng ~ pomits' re_. -f'8'VOrallle 'but we 9til1 need to make a
check" on aom, of the repUes.
Thursday nig!lt, he gave trustees ~
'
Academic Council would require close
scrutiny of the ~ademlc backgrounds
of lnfonnally + well 'II formally ap·
pointed UC leictllters. But 111• plan
I . ~-WOUid not necessarily bar '"'n::aver
from spealdne In at Jeasi 10 scheduled
class periods,'
The Acadeinic Council is composed
of leaders o~ the Academic Senate on
UC's nine campuses.
The basic1 issues raised Thursday:
will Cleaver be a teacher or the sub-
ject matt~ of the course, and should'
he be allowled to speak at 1he 'Universi-
ty in elUieT case.
Cleaver,' minister of lnlormatlon for
tile Black. Panthers, Is a stat. prtson
parolee facing charges of attempted
murder and assault wtttl a deadly
weapon las the result of a ·shootout
with Oakland police last April.
The CAll!omia Legislature censured
the regebta end UC'•.admlnistntim In
a resolUUon Thurlda7 kw' ~g
Cleaver'.
~tesson'·
summary of the written commenU:.
Vr'hl.cb showed a "ne'9 for follow -up"
in Hveral areas.
Op tbe liral part ol the 1uney, 87 pen:ent 0( tbe parents ~ with Ille
wtf 1lldr dllldren were 1!dng lallCh~
and mor<i than 12lree-!OID1lll lliouS!\I
tll<lr dllldron ,,.... ro tttnr In·
dlvlduall2ed atlentlon.
At I-80 per.en! marbcl-e
or above f<r tbe quality of lnlJtructlon
given In nearly all 111b)ocls d!end In
Ille llcboolJ.
Spanish took tile brunt of crltlclsll>
m tbe llrtt P"!'l..i. wltll 22 pen:ent of tbe
, Iliff Sui<VEY, Pa .. t) ·
'
"
W estmioster Fire
Loss at $2,300
. ' . ' Fire erupted in an unoccupttd
Westminster apartlnent today caustnc
an 'estimated $'2,300 damage. ,
Eighteen t.iremen from three engine
conip&nies took 14: minutes to control
the blaze · In apartment 13 of · t!lo
bufidlng ·at.8441 l~ St. tlwdire w)s
· first ""l'O':ted at 2,s:i:am. by ilnothor ' . . . . · tenan:t Who smelled the ·smoke" .
Firemen 'said ' the ' bUr.ned
apartinent's oocuPaot; Veln)a lfarm1,
wa.S not at bome. She may be on vaca-
tion. and still had nol bee.n notified Ot
the blaze which completely destroy4!11
her wardrobe. Couoo of the fire II
under lnwstigaUon, olflctall said.
or:•11 c~
Weet•er
The weatherman calls for de-
creasing cloUds th.is weekend,
. which means the sun might
come-out at 9 a.m. instead o( noon. Otherwise Jt's the same
• tepi.peraturewise -68 along the
' be"adh and 1$ lnland.
INSIDE '.l'ODAY
It· atn•t t~ Met. bkt some
opera buff• IOI/ it'r bcttcr-11et.
It's grand opera.under the stars
In La.gt.ma Stach and you can
find out au about it todat1 in
WEEKENDER. -. ..._ . .,__ .... ._ " =-=-'l -. •~ ..... n ....... ..u --. ......... '' :: .... ":"'" : :::;:::""--;
...... -.Mt ,,
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J AILY .PILOT • Frldaiy, September ZO, 1'68
Marines Kill
llOReds
' t\longDMZ
·~GON (Ul>l) -U.S. mlliW"1
.,,.._ uld today a 1ask force ol
2'JOO U.S. Mlorinea bad hem dJ'Ollllt4
11f ~ ln1o the ""*rn eod al
lllo -Zone at the wry
bordtr ol Noo1h VIMnom and bad kill·
.a.110 -troopl.
.)1"4lbe $0kelmen said two battalions
.,(fom Ibo •th and 9111 M a r I n e
~gllneiU ..,aoad the maasive drive
"" 'l\llldq to cut Nor1b VlotmmeH
'~ routes and blook N-
~ u..Wt.s apinlt the string
al Marine ml Anny blloa Joas the
DMZ.
Tho M-a wwe dropped m the
-al the Ben Ila! River, the aduol
_.a1Ncr11land-VleU...
'Iba DMZ ~ l!Jrea m!lea llOlih
11111 -al the Ben Ila! River wblch
rllto Ill tile --.... :i-.... now."' the -Ob1na Sea. Al......,. the bli drive bepn 001
Tuffdl;y announcement wu delayed
until today for security rtUOM. Ttie
~ -w .. lb• _. alllod tiva al the-•
to ... Dtmtll-Zollt, wllldl Iha
Communist. bow uHd u a major
Not Too Badly • ' :
' l Ol!ly _Two Valle)i
' Schools Crowded
Alter coe week ol claaset only two
scboolJ In the Fomtaln Valley Sdlool
Ill.net art --· trurteea "'""' told 1'Jundly. , Bui In oolJI 001a al \!>Oii acbl!Olt dOll
tha number ol atudel!la per tllcher
averoae out lj> Q1ora than Ille recom·
mondod !O In l ratio.
The OVOJOhlWd.Mi ocboola lll'O. Foun•
ta.In Valley and-~· Founlain 'f.."/l'J. earoll'4 928 · alildo!ila 111 111 I d~ for oi\ly '118& .. llwper
toot In ·1911 ~. 19 men !ban Ila plamM<l~11·-. At F . V= U..· al\ldeot· teadlor r . o ~ ·°"' dlotrtct'• aim. In -.U-111 ~are 37.&
alud•Dll per toa\lber. (<lrllfol l to 8
FNtlt ~ .. e J
SURVEY~ ••
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pareDta lhl!>ldnl if ranked below
averop and oDly l P9<0ent "'~ lt abo'Ve ... cveraae. '
Tburodey nllh~ -Dr. Coogan rmowed the written oplnloDa of
pore!lta, be Poll!led out several other
area a "that concern u1."
DOING GOOD JOB
I •
average to ~·· studenta per ~r).
One otller school, Bushard, ~ werJ
over the Ideal In klnde<aan..., w1f>
112.3 1tudenta per t.acher.
At Harper, the rallo la !O to I In
kindergarten and 28.8 to I In sradee 1
to 8. •
Fw tbe root of the ditlrict, em:oll·
ment by acbools, tile dealpd Np&cj·
ty ol It &nd the ratio for sroc1e1· 1 to 8
are:
-Arevaloe, '121('183),2'7.1 In l.
-Bulbard, 746 1'183), {18.2 to I.
-FuitoD, 870 17•7), 29.• to L
-Lamb, 788 (813), 28.0 to J.
-McDowell, 7'11 (882), 2'1.2 In I.
-Newland, SM ('183), 22.t to L
-Nleblaa, SM {879), 28.S In l.
-Tamura, 7~ (818), 2'1.8 to I.
-Wardlow, 7~ ('780), !0.0 to l.
,
Huntington High
Seeking Student
Work Stations
•tlllac-.
A ipobcmon Nld o111J "llJOl'llllk
.... _ .. -report.i llUI 1lle ldarlntl
kllled 110 Nor1i vt-•ao tiooi>•
and mpturod nearly IOO rlllea cached
111 the Comm unhta Ill tilt area.
Ocean View School Dlatrict'a prevloua adminiatra-
tion o!licea, which offlclala aay were built before
1920, art aone u are the good old daya when acboola
Wll'!il't overcrowded and requlrementa weren't 10
atU!. State Field Act (earthquake) requirements put
thi1 building at corner of Beach Boulevard and
Warner Avenue out .of use.
In reading, he noted that four out of
five parent• tbouaht tbe di1trlat waa
doing 111 avar.-ge or better job, but
"the 16 percent ~ feel ollhen\rt5e
concern us. We need to detennine
whether or not oral reading time ta
being overlooked,'' he u.td.
Key to successful operation of the
work experience program of the Hun,
ting!Dn Beach Union ~ Sebo&!
Dlotrict i. ~on by buatness Mil
industry In provid!ng placet for the
students to either work or just observe
the operabion or the workaday world~ -· .
-euualtlet ..... de...-.. n H.:..1d 2 D "lllM" altboueb -i -. f•lle4 : . ..,oy ~ ays
by 1l>a IIO dell'M bNt. , • . . ·
Th• -wbere the -driva · '1·-Ki"dnap' Drama
Wll t.':ft ploco 11 htavlly jiqled .1:,11 · mocm 11, poaolbJ.y the worl! Ill . v~i0.t Frlill1 .. alllod -1n-·Rescued by FBI
Another Plane Hijacked
To Havana; 53 Aboard
Hoa·nd'Writing instruction was criticiz-
ed 'Also by some parents, who com-
mented. "neatness and accuracy not
stressed" a "bu not improved ldnce
September (one year)" and "tieacber
-not emiNolze -·" "lt ~ well be 11ba! ""111 ao meoy
new ereas of the curriculum needing
tbe lel<her'a tlmo, hllldwrltlng hall been alliiited," Dr. COop;n aald, a<!·
dln1 tl>&t -· would be osked to spend more time on ~.
Robert C. Martdtl, -coonllnalor of the
program, is looking now for wol'k.
stations for juniors and 1entOT"1 at the
district's four main campu1es.
Two types o{ programs are being Of;
fered agaJn tltls semester, exploratory
work experience education a n d
eenerel work experience education.
The f:l:rst program involves 1tude~
who are not paid, spendiog about 30
houra each at a variety of training ml·
tlons observing the operation of
business, Industry or the profession.a:.
cllllllnJ Mlrlllll lllqed • land, -:' ... ntz":::i:: ~'Vi: ~Ill an all-day beltla. Tba lllfl\tl
tlllt -.... the -of tbo llimmer Into tho OCM>allod neutral-· A~ oald lho -I octloe·
waoalmodat~routaa uaod b)' tbo NrilrV!ot·
n-n dhialon. 'Iba llUrfM• l!>dnd n..,,,.. tralla wl1ll ~ llOGra cut-
llDC 1ltroulb the mounlallll a ''bllh
IPOOCI" lliod11 UHd 1>J "llariew aad blc,.uoti. 'Ibo 1-Uy lldea bley<l11
art Jl"'bod b)' _l>e lrOCJl>I.
Mod. Gao. IWymoojjl~ J)av.i. eorn· moncler of Iha i!rd ~ vlJlon, 11114 -•11 tho r. of the 311111 NV A dlvWon lll'lllt Ille!
al tbo .... poood • tllral1D tbo allled -lu -llbo 111 c.m Lo, Comp Olmll and the Rocllplle. 'Iba Tu-y
Ul&Ult WU MVen mil•• WMt of the
Oon 'Iblen oolpo9l
Dinner Meeting
Set for Seniors
Tbera will be no meeung ol tho Hun-
tington B-Senior au.... Club
Monday morning because Of the
s~ "Dbmtr iii Served" p-ogram
be~ II ll:!O a.m, a<eordlni to
Harry C. Jlo1er, club publicity chalr·
mm.
He Hid 1bat all UI ..--VatiODI to
the dlnner proiram bavt -sold. Llat mffllnS ol tile club .... -d•d 1>J 130 plrlOIU, Boyer ..td.
Oo Tutoday Ille Seulcn travtl to Ill•
Loa Ani1I01 ~ Fair, laavillc for
Pomona bJ bua at 1:30 e.m. from the
Sberawn·Be!Mtl Im!. Fero la '3.211 and
lnc!udee odm!IWico to Ille fairgrounds.
Tbe smon return to tu V111U on
Oct. 18 OP! will stay at the Mint Hot.I.
Fee ii $27, but meall are not in·
eluded. A 15 re!und for recreation will be made on arrival et Lu Vegu.
DAllY PllOl
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M11llHl1 A.Nrm:: P.O. lu 7'1 92"41 --......... ,on .................. c-. #lblt Ult Woll .., "'9lt "'--,_.: m,.,.. ~
DArt.Y PILOT,"'"' ...,ldt It........, .. ..... ...,. .... IMltl!Wllld Mllr ~ ...... y ... _... .......... """'"'-'-~ ............. call Mele. i..... "9cll.. ,,...,... ......,. Miii ....,......,, ........
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• .
ODCAGO (UPI) -FBI aaenta to-daf roacued tho .toilal .. bairod 7.71.,. MlAMI (AP) -An Eutern Air
okl ~n al 1 wealthy manufac-!Anea JeWner with 13 perl<lll lll>oard
'llU'lri ..,.i 11iled . two men and a wu h!Jecltld In H•vana today while
,....., ,-o1 lddnaplna ttie boy en routa !tom San JIMD r. Miami. ~ i/o!d1ni him tor two day a under The plane, 'a Boehll 720, wae 4-0
lhn!ll'.ot death. mllea oouthweat of Na,aau, tile
Tho ·....,ia and poUCe oloaed In on llabamu, -ii lllddeoly vearod ro
u ~1111 on Clllna'"'' aouth-Ille left and hooded for c.a, aeid
aldt 11111 found " lllllaJd WUlia Marki, Pao! Boelmon, eroa ldmlniatrator for
wbo'wli\abductod whilo walldoa borne the Federal Aviation Admlnlatratlon in
lr<ial .. ~ In 1111 loablmable IUburb lllllmt ct,oat Broot.Wac1D•ocia11!111 held for • Ho 1"14 Illa, a,11 .....,,, ~ oour .. '12S;OllQ)lwom. . ' • It t:u .:.,;, Sft, 11111 touabod a.wn ~W. wlde .;n.·revNllJi1 Ille . ..al lllwua'' Joao M.u Air1>orl al 9:45
oJ>l!iaOo lit.\wil fr!ml-. ~ lnln bit ··~· , • '1.•il m....r•1 ll'ml •I nil heldquortora 'l11tro wu no ~-c:ootRt from
and tbo ~ illllla ha 11kl waa, "Did the pilot," Mid Boatman. "Com·
WI bava ~ P11"'11" He wao talldni munlcatlon auddenly baited when the
about th~ party tor his seventh birth-plane veered to tlbe left and took
day, which ' would have been held n .... at · 8
Thursday. ' 50U1,:1swl Cour&e fOT' Cuba."
"No," Mra. Nary IAlu Marki aaid 18 ~Qatman said 39. persons were
abe h1Jiled hU aon. "But we'll have It aboml but Bill Wooten, an Eutern IOOD... ' Eucutive 1n Miami, Aid thOM •board
Hllllrd'1 f1!1ier Jr.Xlcattd a chance were 32 pu1enpn, HWD crewmen
.acquain11aoceahiJ>'-•t a guotlne 1tatian
may have lee! 'I' tbe lddlla'plng -a
kidnaping whlch\Wa& kept a tecret by
the FBI, pollc1 -4 news reporte11 for
two days for f1ar the abductors would
carry out their threat to miJtilate and
kill the boy if word of the crime got
out.
The f,.tber, WJ.Uialn I. M•ks, a 34-
year-old fUniltlre manufaclllnr, oald
he had known one at the arrested men.
Daniel C. Pieter, 30, an tmsuccessful
g&1oline &taUoo owner.
DeBakey Makes
New Transplant
HOUSTON (UPI) -A 17-year-oli'
Jacklc:mvllle, Fla., man rtceJved t.b P.
heart of a Baytown, Tu., man in tbe
aeoond heart tNnoplanl in t.wo day1 by
tile Molhodi<t Hotpltal •urilcal tea111
of Dr. Mldiael DeBeby, boapltal of·
!fclall announced ear Jy 4Dday.
Bernwd E. PlohJ reotlnd the heart
of RobeI1 Gordon Muir, 46, Tbunday
oiibt obout 30 mlnute1 alter Muir
died, MW sulfored lrreparallle brai"
damage by a aelf~tonfcted CUDsb&'.
wound, booplt&l oflldola llid.
Antenna Nudges
Power Line;
Couple Shocked
Mr and Mrs. Robert Law of Hun-
tiJli\00 Beach w"" oeverely aboc:ked
Wedne1day1 wtlen the television .an·
lenDa they wwe erecllng at
home 1Upped qaloat Edison Company
pow.-linel.
Low. 29, and Ilia wile De.....,, 26,
were knocked uncOl'ISctous by a partial
cbar1e from the 12,000-volt power
line" The couple bad been erectJng a
35-foot antenna in tllel< yard at 17242
Aoll St., -. the ocddent oc<l.lrTed.
Netgl)bora called police ond firemen
who admlnl-first ald until the
ambulance took them to HunUngton
lnlorcommunlty Hospital when Law
wu treated for hand burns end releu·
ed.
Mrs. Law was trB1Mferred to the
burn unit at Orange County Medical
C.eoter fOr treatment ol burns on her
ti.ands and amu:. Her condition is
serlows1 l&ld bolpital autborltie&.
Qunds Wreck Canadian
Father's Faith in Pill
fYM:AWA {AP) -Mn. Vicl<>r
Miller. !O, pva birth Friday to
quadruplet! -three boys and a girl.
"That tillJ my feith in the pUl," Mid
her 33-year-old husband whea ho cot
tht newa. •
"l lhlnlt l'll picket the compony," he
addod .
Mra. Millar wu delivered of the
babloa Ill eevon mlllutoa, ator11na at
1:11 a.m. All bable1 and mother are
"luat fine," the hoopltal reponad. The childnn will be kept In the bolllital.
moot ct tho Uma Ill lllcubaton, fer ot
leut a moatb beol.UH they art two
monlha premature .
'Mie Mlllara have known 1lnct tut
maalh that Mn. Millar would 1Jve
birth to lbrea ...S poalb!y four bablea.
Dr. S)'dnq ltroulct, tho mother'•
ohotetriclaD. dlqnogod the mulUpio
1·
l
Jl<OID&DC)' with X0ray1 Aur. 19, nou.
fYilll tho boapilal of Ibo probability of
quadrupleta.
The MJU111 b&ve two other children,
I girl 8, and a bo)', 11
"They toot it very well," uld the
father while wattla1 a summon.a to his
wtft'I btdlide.
Ho aald lh• boya wa!Jhed three
pounde 10 OUDCH, l>rff poWlda H and
-pouodt nln• and tho girl two
pound.I 10. They were a:lvtn exctlltnt
chances of IUl'V:lval
Mro. Millar la ono ct 12 children and
her mother, Mn. Ro11r Dubl.lt of Ot·
tawa, ll1d &ll 12 cam1 alont "001 at a
Um1."
11 rm in a 1tat1 of &bock," lb• 1aad
wh"1 oaited bow Ibo folt about her
dalJCbler'a !llvllll birth to quo<hplot. • ..
------------------ -
and 14: Eastern employe1.
Wooten Aid a passenger list waa not
immediately av.Ullble. The crew
members were All Miami residents, he added.
Wooten idenWied the pilot Ill Capt.
W. T. ll8bl>ltt and the !Int officer aa
W. J. Rlobardson.
Neither Boatman nor Wooten had
any infonnation about the hdjacker or
hijackers.
"We won't know anything about how
It happened until lhey aet back," Hid Boatman.
Wooten 1&i.d Eastern had. appealed
to tile State Deportment tO get the
passenger• back immediately.
The filJht, EAL 900, departed San
Juan at 7:30 a.rn., 0U1clal1 aald, and
took the "Yankee Route" to Miami,
IWlnilnJ Mat of Cuba.
It was the utb commercial flight hi·
Jacked till• yoar and the ninth to be now. I<> CUba.
AU commo«!ol planes hijackecl tills
year to Cuba were promptly returned.
but an EAL liner forced to Havana in
196t waa not returned for 23 deya.
The 1961 plMe wu hijacked by a
former Cuban secret policeman and
flDally was swapped for a Cuban
J)atJN)l boat wtUch had been ulled to
key Wta:t earlier that year by three
defectors.
A slx·w..k coone to dewlap •tudy
habit.I I• to be one other change in tbe
clllrlculum at Fc:iumatn Valley as a
result ol tbe ourvey. Thirty-one per-
cent ol. the pareota expressed concern
that their children we,. not developing lP<lod atud)' bablta.
PLEASED LOOK
Truttees took a plea·&ed look at one
ovwwhelming}y favorable tet olf com·
ment1 on tlbe ~. More than 2,600
Pol*lve comment.a -row-t1mea as
many iat permed to other quert:ioos -
were made on the value of. the adlools'
learning centers. The centers also
received tbe amallest percentage of
negative comments.
Officlala dl<ided to take the survey
lut year beceu6e "too often, it w.as
felt, 1School dlrtriot& are influenced in
decision-maldng by a vocal minority
and mlalnt"l'<OI their feelings to be
representatlve of the tot.el com·
mwlity," Dr. COogan explained.
TrusU!e Pr<sldent Dele Stuard
probed tho ldmllllstratora for their
wort with the surveys t.nd gave them
authority to go ahead with necessary
reviliOlll in the program.
Shaking bit head with obvloos roll•!
that It wu now over, he sighed "we
left ounelvet really open for criti-
clam."
Henredon's new line of promoti'onel chairs
•re truly worthy of the no me Henredon.
A collection of seven chairs to choose from
oveileb!e in e wide assortment of handsome
fabrics. These hand crafted chairs ere as-
sembled with the finest in materials end
workmenihip. Any of these choirs ere eveil·
•ble el$199.00.
INIDIOIS
The second program in v o 1v11
students performing i--oductive work
and being paid at the rate ol at leut
$1.35 per hour as well u recti.vtng
achool credit. •·
"There are 5,000 er more juniQCf
and oeniora In tile blib &Choo! dl&lrtct,
Theae young people need tralnlnc *'
tloru; end ~..ti.me employmeot e~·
periencN 1f ttiey are to make in·
relllgent occupatlonol choice< and
become ~ve citizens.
"Help ua help you and our studenti
by providing tramlng and -k ~
tions within your organlultion, •
MU!lin asked of loCa.l buAne11mM!. . ,
The program Is In lta second yeer.
RHults of surveys taken following the
end of the firat year revealed satWac-
llon on the part of botil o(udenu and
employers with the program.
'
Woman Shot Dead
LONG BEACH (UPI) -i
saleawoman was found sh« to deaili.
'l'hllnday night behind the """"tor 01
the liquor !tore where she wu
employed.
Police !laid Mrs. Dolores Dyer, '5, of
Long Beach, apparently wti.a killed iii
a holdup of Silver's !Jqucr Store.
'
1'1of111toMI Interior LAGUNA llACH Deal..,.,. MS Nortll Coot! Hwy. 494-6551
Anllol>t.-AID-NSID DION pa11AY "Ill. t ..... , ............... c.-, ..... w
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·Laguna Bea~h . Today's C:Joshig
• N.Y. Stocks
VOL 6f, 'NO. 227, 4 SOCTIONS, 50 PAGES CAGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA FRIDA'(, SEPTEMBER 20,)968 TEN CENTS
• 0 ave Ill
Funds Return Seen
Smith Hints Restitutwn to Play~use
The poo;ibility ol re&tituUon ol $9,475
missing Laguna-~foulton Playhouse
funds existed today.
A schedulod prelimfilary hearing of
forgery charges against Frazier Smith,
former building fund chairman for the
Playhouse, was continued in Laguna
Beach Municipal Court today for two
weeks at tile request o{ Smith's at·
tarney, deputy pubti.c de f e n d er ,
Bernard November.
U.S. Flood
Study Asked
For Canyon
Congressman Jaq,es Utt (R-Tustinl
will be asked to work for Federal fun-
ding of an Army Corps of Engineers
study of the Laguna Canyon water-
11hed.
Laguna Beach COUlloilmm ha~e
authorlzed the mayor to seek Utt's
,.• · assi&tance with tile study which would
·detail methods of ~venting future
flooding as the area developes.
Such controls might ,.iDclwh! .a
massive drainage system u Ji d e r
Broadway to the ocean, or a system of
canyon retention basins linked to a
smaller drainage system.
In other matton Wednesday night.
the cotmeil:
-Granted an extension of time for
completion of Hillcrest Drive adjacent
Ridclle Field because the city engineer
said a telephone conduit trench not
properly compacted is delaying work.
-Approved landscaping and erOl.ion
COr1!rol on the fill carrying the road.
The work is expected to cost about
$6,CXXl.
-Did not opJ>OSt: an on-sa1e beer
license application for The Boardwalk
(fonnerly the Barefoot Bar), Ill Ocean
Ave. The liquor Ucense at the
premises is being shifted to Hun-
tington Beach.
-Approved a charity solicitation
~mit for the American League Aux-
iliary to cmduct a rummage sale Oct.
3 and 4 at LegQi Hall.
-Approved a tentative tract map
fer homes on 18 Jots along an ex-
tension of Skyline Drive to Thurston
School.
-Approved sale of tickets by high
school cheerleaders and song leaders
for football dinnen to raise funds for
the 1969 senior graduation party.
-Decided nothing Could be done
about a resident's complaint about
noise from planes using El Toco
Marine Corl>' Air Station.
-Authorized. appoWltment of Vice
?iofayor Joseph O'Sullivan as voting
representative of the city during the
League of Cities confereflce in Los
Angeles Oot. 13 to 16. Councilman
Richard Goldberg was delegated ao
alternate.
If you haven't got Olympic Fever
you're missing out on one of the most
exciting "diseases" to hit the Orange
Coast in decades.
This area n e x t
month will send 11
athletes a n d o n e
coach to Olympic Vil-
lage in Mexico City
as part of the United
States delegation to
the 19th· Olympiad.
Exclusive coverage Of. this history-making BporU event
rully gets under way Saturday tn the
DAILY PILOT when tbe first. in a
aeries of personality sketches on the
Orange Coast Olympian• atarta. Aod
then stay with hllingual sport. editor
Glenn White, only newspaperman
from Orange County covertn1 the
Olympic Games, when be travels to
Mu:lco to get the story ln the Ian·
iuaae of the Olympics and translate
1t into excitin1 coverage exclusively
for DAILY PILOT readers. Get the
liver . You'll enjoy lL
..,
Asked if the continuance related to
the possibility of restitution ,
November said to a reporter:
"Yes, I bad a convenation with the
Playhouse attorney, He would 1.ilf:e to
get together witti me and the attorney
from the bank before anything gets
done."
The Playhouse has filed suit against
the Bank of. America in an attempt to
recover the funds. The building ftmd
money was on deposit in the bank's
Laguna branch when several checks
were cashed over a period of time.
Smith, a distinguished looking New
Englander, has not yet entered a plea
to three forgery coun~ that are lodged
ag~nst hlm.
fie was 181Tested in New York for a
traffic violation and returned to
Orange County to face trial. His
preliminary hearing i5 now set for
Nov. 4. '
IRS Gives Laguna Boost
In Acquiring Main Beacli
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 flit D•llr Pli.t Sl•ff
Municipal acquisition of the Main
Beach -a gleam in the eye of
Lagunans for more than 40 years -
was a notch closer to ~a1ity today.
Cii:y Manager James D. Wheaton
said the Internal Revenue Service has
approved .as tax free a bond i.ssue to
pw-cllase the land from individual
owners.
He estimatrd that the 1,000 feet or
bead! will coot aboot $3.25 Ojillion. 'Ille. prot:Mem now, said the city
~li'1itft••• for liM: re-
mitndei of the property and to sell the
bonds befOre the Nov. 5 election.
U the Watson Amendment on the
ballot 6holI1d pass it would make it il-
lepl for "the city to sell the bonds.
Whealoo journeyed U> Washington,
D.C. in August to explain the situation
Market Loses
$131 to Burglar
A petty cash box with $131 was
missing from Acotd's Market, 283
Broadway, Thursday.
It was one of three burglaries under
investigation by Laguna Beach police.
Lt. Frank Schopen !µI.id a rear door to
the market 1WlS found open Thursday
morning.
In a residential burglary, Fanny R.
Sparks. 328 Loma Terrace, told police
that $370 worth of oriental rugs, c\oth,
yarn . and a ca.mer a had been stolen
while she was in the hospital. Means
of entry was not known.
Gwen N. Mathew, 537 Browncroft
Road, said a belt Crom Brazil and $3
worth of stamps were taken from her
home after the burglar crawled
through a kitchen window where the
screen was unlocked.
to the IRS and hasten approval ol the
bonds as tax free.
There are 2'l parcels of property in-
volved including nine owned by
Consolidated Mortgage Co. The city
has already made a deal on three
parcels and Wheaton said price
agreements have been reached on two
othecs.
Although it had seemed earlier that
the ~)' W()\lJd go to court to acqll¢e
the Consntid.ated Mortgage praperty
(which the oompany vclued at $1. 75
million) ... \Vheaton said negotiation js tYldll(o~y flier.-aiilO.
Atter acqµisition ot all the beach
Crortage, Wheaton said, .. then. we face
probably a five year period to exhaust
existing leases. likely not much would
be done toward actua'I park im-
provemerrt until the leases run out."
The city would act as landlord to
help defray the load on the tax rate.
Questioned about poselbility of com-
mercial development on some portion
of the property after it is city owned,
Whe3'1.on said it is not a decision the
council bas to make yet.
High Holy Days
Start Sunday
NE\V YORK (UPJ) -Ram's-horn
trumpets will sound in synagogues
around the world next v.·eek, signaling
the observance of Rosh Hashanalt and
the start oI the year 5729 of the
Hebrew calendar.
The observance begins the High Ho-
ly Days, which culminate 10 days later
with Yorn K.ippur, the holiest day in
the Jewish year.
Rosh Hashanah begins at nighUall
Sunday ·and continues through Monday
for Reformed Jews and through 1\ies-
day for Orthodox and Conservative
Jews.
Bringing Bmne the Baeon1
An elusive porker evades his youthful pursuers during a i:reased pig
contesl at weekend Mission Viejo Da,yf. The two-day celebration drew
. na rama·
CYCLISTS WANTED-G0ry ITwlD, l.5, 'i'~,-.pd~Jsle~ dlr~lor
of the Laguna Bicycle· Club, are seeking 106' DlenlberJ fUr the new-
ly formed YMCA program. • ·
Anyone for Bieycling?
'. 1 , I '
Laguna Y Sends Out Call
I low about working up an appetite
ior Sunda')' breakf~?
A good first step is to j<in the
Laguna Bicycle Club. a YM0A func-
tion.
Like Diogenes seeking an mnest
man, Bob Isles. prqgram director, is
looking foe 100 honest-to-goodness
cyclists. Jn fact his search is suf-
ficiently intensive that he's offered to
buy bre-akfast for those who sign up.
Isles feels that many people are in·
terested in bringing "a little exercl&e
into their existence" but are a trifle
lax about the arrangements.
Club functions include rallies, pic-
nics, toun and Sunday morning jaunts
. ,.
to places sum as Newport • 11 .. ch or
Leisure World for, breakfiast Ages of
clut> members ba.W rianied ~ 1( to
60.
Many garages, said Isln, Dave at
least ooe old b1cycle. "We don't care
what the appearance (Jt's not a Melng
club) as long as it's road safe.," he
said. · · ~
lsies said the club can get 3'J percent
of£ on any parts needed to repair or
renovate bikes.
The cost of joining the dub, he .aid,
is '5 payable to the YMCA. 'nrls
covers the oOft of mailing notices and
insurance against accidents while
cycling with th.e club. ....,.
:
' an es!\mate« s,ooo resident! of lb~ new cormnun!!y on Sept. it 111d U and die ·lone pig, of course. -. ), .
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Trio Held;
No Ransom
Paid Out
' CHICAGO (UPI) -FBI agents lo·
day rescued the tousle·baired 7-year·
old grandsoq o( a wealthy manufac-
ture;r and 1eized two men and •
woman· accused of kldnaping the boy
and holding him ror two days under
· threat of death.
Tbe agents and poll~e closed 1n on
an apartment on Chicago's southweit
side arii found Hillard \Vlllis Marks,
wbo was abducted while walking home
from school in the fashionable suburb
of Oak Brook Wedae1day and held for
$125,000 r8l'ISOD1.
Hilla.rd, his wide smile revealing tbt
absence of two front teeth, ran into hia
mother's arms at FBI headquarters
and the first thing he said was, "Did
we have the party?" He was talking
&bout the party for his seventh birth·
day, which would have been held
Thursday.
"No," Mrs. Mary Lou Marks said as
sbe bugge<ther son. "But we'll have it
IOOn."
Hillard's father lnd.icated a chance
~uaintaocesblp at a gasoline station tn,ay ,have 1~ to the lddnaping -a
ltidnaping which was kept a secret bj'
the FBI, police and news reporters fo~
two days for fear the abductor' would
carry out tbeir threat to ~til&te and 1!ill the boy If word of lhf crime Sol
outri.t r."Br. w~ E, Macks. • 34-
ar-old furniture mJ.Dufacturer, a.aid
had Jmofrn one ol the Arrested men.
el C. Pifler, 30, an unauccessful
casoline station owner.
Roads Approved
For Dana Point
A new roadway whidl will connect
two areas of Dana Point bas been ap-
proved for bidding by the Boord of
Supervisors.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna
Beach sald plans call for constructlon
of Selv.a Road between the street of
the Copper Lantern and stoneldIJ
Drive and on Stonehlll Drive between
Selva and Ocean Hill Drive.
Estimated cost of construction ta
$81,554: and sufficient funds are
.available in the 1968-69 Orange County
Road Fund, Allen saJd.
Wori.: to be done consi!ts of grading,
coostruction of drainage taeilities and
aophalt concrel< paving d two !Nvol
lane!.
Bids will be opened on Oct. 14.
Stock M•rkets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stD<:k
:market. turned mixed in moderately
active trading lhil afternoon. (See
quotations, Pages 10.U).
Advance& trailed earlier trading
Where a ·contlnllll:lon ol • higher trend
seemed evident.
o ....... Coast
The weatherman calls for de·
creasing clouds this weekend,
which mean1 th~ sun might
come out at 9 a.m. instead of
noon. Otherwise it'i th~ same
temperaturewt.ae -fl8 along the
beach and 7$ tnland.
INSJ8B 'J'ODAY
·,,JC ofn"t the Mel, but some
e,tha bu.//1 ao~ It's better-yet.
tt'i grand OJH'TD 11nder the stars m Lagtma B1ach and 11ou can
/ind out au about le &oda11 in
WEEKENDER.
• • .... n
Cle =• 11 --. -.
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' OAJI. Y PILOT • ' . •
County Air Expl~si.on Predic.ted
•
17 .taon·P. OOWNll .
Lib 1l "' nal; ~ Counl1 la
going to llaft to Inc. for an air Ira!·
fl• uplollm.
Jill ldlool •• , Club .-. of uo,
"llnrlfl "' all ... will bo l ... f::4° ~? tlll pu11'"111t
PlllM I of ,_...,., "'"$ for hive Mlronomlcll proJOcuou of air orup Couol.1 lllr 1r1111p111ta , told 1ralll4 dlmand• to ....-with." Wb1 dMn -.Ill bo Do 1llo • 'l'bl dleaper rates, he aald, wou!d be
~ ol •..-.i ~1 tlll ~~ reiu!t of the u,. d ~!'_ovt"Cll tbe eau:aty. larJtl', faster•aJrcraft, such u the 300-
· la ltN -U 191r1, llU pradlclad, °'88''' °'l"'tY will bocom1 lllt ~ lar geet me!roP9Utan area 1" tho DI·
Uon. The prMdt 1.3 mWion pop\il&Uon
will approach• million· in 1993. ~ that ...... jet lrafllc. ,.r.,.., Sblll. project dlrectnr for
~' E. p.,.1ra & Assoclai.,,
niAdt wa plain to the Oranae County
CO.. .Uaocla#on Thundoy nigbl.
.. _ tbat Jt'a lalDJ to
be more eccmomlcal to hove amalf jet
enginet. tb.u U. fa to have &be ~I eoJIM• w1 now llnow
about."
ln nbt too mw:l)' year1, you will be passenger Air Bus.
able to ilY-f'.Ound.tripbetwee.a Souihem So the county had better get ready,
That could well mean, M 111d, a
total of 49 million flight paaaencen
orJginaUng in the count' annuallJ b)',
lheo. Curr•a!IY, 2.8 millioo.ortglDate In
the county. wlth abOut a fourth ol
Calllornla Ind Bawall for under '50, wt;i, 1 regional airport c1poble of
Whan 111&t ~. puaenger1 will be lwldJlllg Dlltlonal lllghu, and ~th
, wWlbln tbe DUt 10 years," he told ' Sink, wllo -up development of oomlllg oUt of the WOO<lwort. You will m.VoporU for aborter fUDI, he aald.
Marines Iilll
110 Red s
. '
Along DMZ
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. mi1J1ar1
spolceamll! Hid today I laak ! ..... ol
2,000 U.S. Monnes bad been dropped
by bellc<>Pter llllo the ~ end ol
the Demtlllilriled ZOM· at tllo "WrJ
border o1 North VletZlom Olld bad kill·
ed 110 C<immunlat trol>ps. i
The lt)Okelmen said two batlalioos
from !be 4th and 9th M a r In •
lle&lm<Dla '_,eel tho JllllWVI drive
on Tuelday to cut North Vletname1a
lnflllratloll -· IJld bloct -Vietnam'"' atlOUlta ~th• 1trtng
of Marine aol lt(mY *" long the
DMZ.
The Marines were dropped Oil the
bank.Ii ol tbe Bell Hai Rlver, the actual
border of Norll .and ~ Vietnam.. .;. · 11."' ~ • "' " 0A1L v ,,I.OT 11ttt ,,...
The DMZ e.al<ods -miles north ..;~~T"-'f •Mt:RALD IAY -CW'loUJ onlooker checks out
8Jld oouth of the lien Bal River whlch . e .ol. crub. on Coal! Wpawy at Emerald Bay curve. One
rues In the mountalnl iiear Laos aod . -~~~tn' lhjund. ·-
flaws to the South-China Sea. · · • /! · ·
Altbou&b the l:ig drive began on , -"""~ _
Tuesday annooncement was delayed IJ;1 l,.J · l w · I 1 d ::.::~ 7t~?k re:::-·:~':_· tl}':W.f!r. y oman . n1ure
westernmolt allied drive O{ Ute War.IM .·~ .• ~ • , • ~ . •
to the Demilltamed Zone, wblch •IM ·J" ·E · · ld B A id t =~::have used ••• major .·, • .,,, . mer.a . ,ay cc en
' . A spokesman said only "spota41a. , •
contact" wos reported but the M~ln.. A 'lt-y~.Old Sant.I Mcml"' W<>11W1 and rett. · , .> ...
1<llled 110 North VietnameM trooi>• wu )loapt!alz¥ ~1 ane. ber • Polloe aald bor • ~nd car
and caplured nearly 500 rlflea,ucbe~ ·;...,..:iu rib' · -"'·. to ' llnlck the Ctrol l!'~'W. Anderoon, by the Com m un ts t 1 In ·the .,._, car ,~..,,.,~-:• ~· ·.--1 on '7 ol 1401 Emerald a.i-8J be drove ~~ ~=~ .. .;,~~,4;,=~e11:.: =tr~,~~~·"' upper =:s~ ~ hlJlnr'1:: II'• ~ not
bythe11odeereehea1. · • Of!ICllk..a·---0v ·A ~rr~~ The torraln when! lh~~drlve H~~1"· · · -U«lllt..:• '. · · , 'Jlrllt'ilMf'.'•· wa.s Wcing plllce ii ~ed ,,....... ~, .!!'!>'...'....~ Tl!iUI,....,~, and. "
mountaimfdes, poHfbly J:-;;n;tf In ~ ., ... ~ ~-~-• ~ · ~ .. :~r~:ar~~~£1Jd.e.~"; . e~eii s·. · a·,.il~t""o,,,._ .. ,,.~e· 1~a:~1.c~
and air invasion d the• euterlf 11ector It.
ol the DMZ and killed !SB N-Viel·
namese in an all-day battle. The thrust
i:~~·~=:~·:.::t!"ie'.""""er Stand on Cleaver Issue
. .
Services Slated
For Mrs. Jackson
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Saturday for Mary F. ''Toni"
Jackson, 48, of 459 Pearl St., Laguna
Beach.
Mrs. Jackaon, a resident Of Laguna
for three years, dled Wedne1day at
South Coast Community Hospital after
a brief Wne55.
Services will be conducted in the
Lquna Beach Funeral Home Chapel
by Rev. Gilbert Prince of the St.
James Episcopal Church in South
Pasadena. Mrs. JackS<ln was a
member of the church. She was alao a
member of the church. She was also a
Club.
Survivors include her widower,
Tom; and five children. Unda, Joy,
Michelle, Mark and Jennifu, all of the
family home.
DhllY PILOT
........ a..drr. Callfen ..
OltAHGE COAST PUlllSHING COMll.AMY
k•b•rt N. Wet4 , .................. w.r
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TM11111t Ktffff .....
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lldi1rd P. Nill Pewl Nl1te1t ....,_ MK!t A.,_rtlll ..
CITr e111w otnctor
"--0-
222 F-d A"•·
M•llll•t Mdret1: P.O. 1 .. ''' tz•sz -..-c .... ,.,,_: Sit W"1 .. , $11 ....
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -Unlvt'nlty
of Californfa regents: restinte· todt1.y
t:onsidering what to do about Black
Pa.Mher leader Eldridge Cleaver's
selection as a g'ueet lecturer at UC
Berkeley,
Gov. Reagan, who has predicted the
regents wiU prevent Cleaver tr<>m ap-
pearing in an ex11rimeotal course oa
the background o[ racial disorders,
planned to attend U;le meeting at
UCLA.
After two hours of public bearings
and an hour of private debate Thurs-
day, a regents commtttee failed to
agree on a plan to end tbe con-
troveny.
"There was no coruiensus," Regent
William K. Coblentz of San ·Francflco
aaic1 aft.er the meetmc of the nine·
member education pollcyc ommittee.
"1 made several propoa.al.1,'' UC
President Charles J. ili\cb said.
••Gtner regents made 1everal pro-
m~mber education pollq committee. one plAn backed l>Y the UC
Academic Council wonld require close
!Crutiny o( the academic bacltgi:ounds
of informally as well as formally ap-
pointed UC ledureri. But the plan
would not nece1111rll)' bar Cleaver
I rom rpe aldng In at least 10 t<heduled
claaa periodl.
-The AcademtC coDncll jg compo1ed
of leader• of the Acadiamtc Senate on
UC'1 nine campw:es.
'lbe baalc 1s1ue1 raiJed Thurtday:
will Cleaver be a teacher or the sub.
ject matter of the course, and should
he be allowed to speak at 1be univer•i·
ty 1D either case.
Cleaver, mlnltter of information for
the Bladt Panlher1, ta a llalo prllon
porolee f""1DS chorf" of attempted mu:<lar and 1Haul With a deadly
weapon u the rtrult of a shootout
with OakWKI police !lat Aprll.
The Calllonn Le(l.otature censured
the regtntl and UC'• admlnlstraUOn ln
11 ruolutton Thurld1y for appointin1
Cleaver. .
"I wouldn't care lf thll man i1 tbe
~ atll!lorlty In the world," aald
Rein Jmn CIDOday of Burbank.
"With 41U1 record ho haa, I -·t
want our ltudeota Upoaed to him."
But l!ac• WUU-M. -of. WubJnt\oil, D.C., Aid, .. tmi. Mt.
Cloover lo ~ u • ··-· -there II "°5;: ll>out bU rilbt to appear oa m1 talk.''
Who tint ,,...-~ m... fe< •,
Cleaver, tdd' regeutl: "We are very
proud of the course we suggested. It
will five itlldent.8 a chance to in·
terrogate b'tm ~ learn the problems ot racism."
Roth refused to attend the closed
portion of the meeting on Cleaver,
saying it was .inappropriate.
.i\sked about Cleaver, Hitch said,
"My concern is about such. a major
role being plajed by:a person who has
not gone through UM academic review
procedure.''
About XXl student.a and ottier spec·
baton watched the,j)ublic portion of
Thursday's comailttee meeting.
Hessian Surprises
Court, Requests
Sanity Hearing
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of "" OlllT lllMI lllrt
A Newport Beach attorney for
He111lan motorcycle club member
Frank ,V. ..Wild Mouse" .Rundle
surpriJed courtroom o b 1 e r v e r 11
Thundoy by asking a 1anlty h .. rtng
for his cUent, a former mental
hospital paUtnt.
Harbor Dl.ltrlct Judlctat Court Judge
Donald W. Dungan granted the m0<o
tlon, orderinc the defendant to Orange
County Superior Court. Department
One, at 9:00 a.m. next Friday.
Attorney Robert R. Whitman, who
took over the case from a court.ap-
pointed pubUc defender, said Rundle
1eem1 unable to comprehend the pro-
~Hdlng1 or the charge• agalnst him.
Ke al.lo said RundJe, 24, of 135
Albert Plact. Costa Mesa, 11 not
capable of 1salatin1 ln bfa ewn defense
on charge& of a1s1ult with lntent to
commJt murder, usault wltb a deadJy
weapon ind burgl1r1.
Tbt 1U1peCt haa been held at Oran10
County Jell In Ueu of $37,500 boll, but
wlU P"•wnobly be movad to Ortnte
CounlJ Medical Center !Gr tile IQ.day
to -week p.oychtotric 1valuatlon.
Nixon Gets ·Big .
Philly Greeting
' PHIUDELPHIA (UPI) -Re-
p a b 11 c a n ireuaential candidate
Richard M. Nixon motorcaded at noon
through a blluard of ticker tape ln
this vote-rich city t.Oday.
-A police official estimated the crowd
lining the motorcade route at 200,000.
Nixon was recel\lfld with more
entbualum than Vice P r t s I d e n t
Hubert H. HumpJuey when the
Democratic candidate traveled a
aimllar path on Sepl 9.
Police Copunla:sloner Frank Riuo
told reporters he esUmated the Nixon
crowd at 200,000. Rluo bad eatimated
the Humphrey turnout at a quarter
million, but reviled it later to about
100,000.
Althoua:h most of those along the
Nixon z:oute cheered-the GOP. can-
dJdate, many held up 1lgn11 denouncing
him or boosting Humphrey. Some
booed.
Driving through the f i.n an c i 1 1
district on Chestnut Street, Nixon, his
wife, Pat. and prominent
Pennsylvarua Republicans were delug·
ed with ticker tape end confetti
showering down from the buildings.
Nixon stood atop the back of a black
convertible. A teCN:t serviceman held
hl1 ankle as he held hl.s hands alort
and made a "V" for victory 11ign.
Rockwell Names
Land Developer
H. W. "Woody" Linton of Newport
Beach, a 26-year veteran of the North
American Rockwell Company, ha'S
been named executiw vice pM&ldent
and general manager of the NAR·l&nd
held arteage now under study In
sbutheastem Orange County.
Linton, who bas been responsible for
the massive relocation of.· tOe
Autonetics Divlllon from Downey to
Ancfueirn, has been director of
facilities and ioduatrial engineering
for the Autonetica Divillion since 1960.
Prior tx:> that, he had been with the
Los Angeles division a11 plant engineer
aOO facilities admillilt:Nltor.
A graduate of Ohio State University
he is CUITent president oC the Orange
County Chamber of Commereo.
Linton, 519 Vista Flora, will be
responsible for the development and.
)easing of the 1,014 acr0ll oC land under
a wholly owned subsidiary of the
North American Rockwell Company.
The laod is located on Irvine and
Moulton property adjacent to the 320
acree: held by the Autooetics Division.
On several occasions, he jumped
from the car, dUted toward 'the crowd
.and •hook out.stretcbed bands of eager
adm1rer1.
Aside from the numbers, most
observers felt that Nixon got a more
joyful response than did Humphrey,
who generalJY. ellcl~d'"Ciislnterest.
Laguna Eyes
Compulsory
Trash Law
Lagua Beach ta ptcklng ltl way
tOWArd a compulsory trash collt¢on
ordinance.
City Manager James D. Wheaton
has been in6tructed to look into the
poasibillty of an arrangement whereby
Laguna Beach County \Yater Di&trlct
would blll !or city trash collection
along 1Rlth the water bi.lls.
It was Councilman Rich a r d
Goldberg's recommendation after, he
said, reading a newspaper edltor:ial.
Goldberg mentioned nelghbor1 dum-
ping trallh into his ontai~s and said
there are are& littered by persons
who do not subscribe to the optional
trash collection (costing fl.75 mon-
thly).
\Vheaton said trash collecUon is not
now mandatory. There are about
4,000 customers, he sald, and wa11n't
sure how many non-.cu!tomer11 are
making their own arr~gementl.
Record comparlsona and 11 o m e
footwork would apparently tum up the
non--cwtomer8.
Vtce Mayor Joseph O'SuJHVan 11k~
how an apartment building with flYe
or six unit.a and one w"ter met.er
would be billed. Wheaton saJtl the pro.
perty owner would be billed fOr each
unit.
\Vllliam Moorhead, water-district
manager, wu non-0:>mrnJttal about ttie
dJstr1ct taking on the extrar billing
chore if such .an ordinance is paaaed.
Moorhead said at UUs point the
dlstrlct doesn't know what would be
expected of it. He 68.id when he had a
concrete propo&al be could bake Jt. to
his board of dtrectors. H1 aaii the.re
might be a lot of ltgal aspects Mi con·
sider.
Councilmen dealt briefiy also with a
letter from Jean C.White , 170 Chiquita
St. She had protested the new garbage
pickup schedule, once weekly co·
mingled with trash instead of twice,
3
Henredon's new line of promotional chairs
oro truly worthy of tho nome Henredon .
I\ ~ollection of seven chairs to choose from
ovcilcble in l.I wide assortment ~f hendsome
fobric~ Tho,. hond croftad choirs ore.,.
sembled with the finest in rMleriols end
workmanship. Any of these c.heirs nre ove il-
oble ot $199.00.
<
~ "!':.i,°'~~=ood~J
wlll oever be able 16 come doee
meeting Iba demand. Access road• u.. airport ate too limited. the num
of available gates too few and
. -gl (5:ll!) too little,~· uptalnld
, For Uiat reason. new rtlllWAY gr
muM be brokenr he 111c:. lg addlti<>n to melr«ports (simll
he aeid, to the present County Alrpo
8J!d a regional airport, tho CoWl
roust alto support a plan tor ano
iaternatiODal .aUport somewhere Sou~n Califom].a.
"'An lntornaUonal airport site 111
vicinity of ()amp Pendkton. oiler& .
IllOlt interesting Po81ibilltiea," ~
said. "It would be only 80 minu.:e!P.!
maximum driving tbne from .LOs
Angeles and San Diego." &.it he qwck·
ly added· "We'v~ looked at a site there only in
tenns of itl geography, not in terms of
its availability." .
He described a n international
a1rport .u one serving a1rcraft w1th
"unlimited" passenger load and fll&bt
range capecities. It would encompass
about 4,600 ilcres. A regional airport,
in C'Ontrast. would cover between 2,oOO
and 2,600 acres.
"A deci11ioo on the location of a
regl.onal a1rpor1," he 11aid , "will have a.,,
11trong impact on the location of all"
other airports." ·~
He urged the selection by county
government of one of the five regiooal.:r
airport sites recommended in the ·
Pereira master plan report. All five ·
have met with stroog protests fnnr·~
citizens, the milltary• and local egeB1'1·
cle11. . •J'• Sink briefly dlscu11sed ttie sites, one
by one. None of tlhem, he made clear,
ii perfect: ·:·:
-EL TORO MARINE CORPS AIR•
STATION: "Th.is his been consideredr>
the easiest answer for a long time. But '
\vith its runway alignment, It is now
not a good airport. A new runwar.
sytem would have to be buHt, paralltlo
to the Santa Ana Freeway. At thift ·
time a regional airport there wouJo..:.
have llttJe effect on existing urban
development, but it would have con .. ~
sidera-ble Impact oo potential develop·
ment." :·•·
-LOS ALAMITOS NAVAL AIJI·<
STATION: "The buic problem here~
toot it l~ ahnast completely sll'·
rounded by u-rban development. 'VL
could twist the runway to get flighbl .
over the ammunition dump, that vrouki·.
help.
Another problem is that depa.rturei!l tt
would cross arrlvall!I to Long Beach
Airport." I• I
LIGHTER THAN AIR BASE: "Thi~·
is just north of Orange County Air'por!t.;11
so a site there would be pummg
Newport's (noise) problem just a little ·
farttler north. It would also have *1
deficiency in that there "'"ould be
fYgh1.I over UCI." . ..r.
&AN JOAQUIN HILLS: "We coul<!c
put in a duaJ runway system here the•;:
would encompass enonnously si.ze!f.1
airplanes. One of the deficiencies Is
the roadway system. It has none now;·
and would be very expensive to J>N1-!""
vide." .i~.
BOLSA CHICA STATE BEACH:
1'We could utilize the off11hore coasaft·~
sbeU 'kl extend dual runways out td ..
sea. The runways would be a mlfe'!
apart and give us a aha.nee to ~velop
a combination marine and a i 't"
transportation servke. But it also Ju(si:
its surrounding urban developmedt
problems." .,;.
Sink's talk, whlch was accornpani.~1·
by slides, wa.s warmly applauded mi"
Coast Association members. -f.'1
a
' ' '
Pn>f. J. L. eley, chtlrman of tho
focu!Q< -which -4 th• course. said: "Ml'. Cleaver's role is
roughly that or a Uving book."
llundlo wu ac<U.led by wltne1H1 ol belni leadar o! a ro1pocl: ol 15 to 20
cycllltl who ttaaed a aang vengeence
?'lid on the Cog Mesa home ol e
former New Yort Golden Gloves box-
ing cbarnploo last month. NEWPORT lllACH
1727 W•lclllf Drl ..
642·2050
Prela"1..,1l lnterlo. LAGUNA BEACH
-
KelJey said Cleaver will be Ule sub·
jeet matter Of the CO\µ"le, not the
teadler.
!Mr)' Magid, a Berkelty rent
•
R~ L. Glazier, 30, o! 2224
Placentia Ave .. was \W'lipped with cy-
cle chains, beaten and ahot 1n the htlid
•• he cov1red his face during the
melee.
'
Deolgnon 3-45 No"h Cout Hwy. ·-551 Avoll•bl......AID-NSID OPIN PllDAY 'Tll t
..... , ........... •f ~ ee.tr 540.126)
t
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EVERYBODY WAITS AS TRAFFIC STOPS FOllt l'RANCINIE
Brooklyn Swe•t•r Glrl H•s RHI Following In Fln•ncl•I District ,,
Traffi~ Stopper
)'rancine ( 43-25-37) Draws Crowds
J:IEW YORK (UPI) -A stockbroker
in....a proper blue suit shinnied up a but·
t<*twood tree to see wbat the fuss wa1
all about.
The steps of the New York Stock
E¥cbange were jammed. Spectators
r~ to rooftops and clung to light
petes. The windows of the staid old
Morgan Guaranty Trust co. were mob.
bed.
·At 1 :34 p.m. 'lbursday police
estimated the crowd on Wall Street
n~ar the Mock exchange where the na-
tion's financial busbies! i! ceatered at
5.000.
,At precisely that moment Franclne
Gottfried, a 21-year-old computer
oj>trator !rom Brooklyn, stepped from
tlte BMT subway station and walked
dBwtl Broad Street.
·she wore a tight yellow sweater and
a red .skirt and almost caused e riot.
·For days the word had spread
through stock exchange.G, banks and
bfokerage houses about Francine's
walk. Dally the crowds grew.
·Thursday Wall Street erupted.
C!erk.s in beige jackets mobbed the
sidewalks an bour early to get good
positions. The roof& of twc. cars were
stamped in. Women sere ame d,
photographers shoved.
Two plainclothes policemen -tile
word had spread to oi.ty hall, too -
managed to pull Franci.De from the
mob to safety in a bot.el lobby.
,The cause of U. near-riot was the
yellow sweater and Francine'• figure,
which measures 43-25-37.
,"Jt's t.be biggest thing to hit Wall
Street since the cr.h," said one ltoclt
exchange clerk. "Rockefeller couldn't
draw the crowds she gets. ~k at
Utem."
Like the man up the buttonwood
tree, Francine didn't know, or
Wouldn't let on, what all the fuss was
about.
."I still don't believe it myself," the
~oot..f brunette said. "I think they're ali crazy. Wbat are they doing thi!
tq,r?
: "Some people ask me for my
ay.tograph," she said. ''Why dlould
tbey? I'm just an ordinary girl."
fra.ncine may be just an ordinary
girl, but one Wall Street veteran said
t~ crow~ she drew Thursday at least
matched that turned out on May 17,
1967, for the 175th anniven;ary
ceremonies of the New York Stock Ex-
cMnge.
UPI T.iHMt.
CURVES FOR COMMUTERS
Computer Oper•tor Gottfried
lf umphre; Raps Nixon's
~harge of Wallace Deal ·
• ' JIWRINGFIELD, JU. IUPI) -Vice
F}"esident Hubert H. Humphrey ac-
cQsed Richard M. N"1xon today ol mak-
i® a "patently rid.iculous"charge
tliit he was in collusion witti third-par-
~oandidate George Wallace. He
allenged botb men to a national
t•.
Democratic presidential can-
f te aaso served not.ice that he would
as good u be got from the an·
ar hecklers wbo have cklgged his
i1 AW President
f euther Backs
Vemos' Ticket
:CLEVELAND (UPI) -Unit<d Auto
*rkers (UAW) prMidem Walter
uther endorsed the H~y·
sk.ie ticket Thursday end 9Bid GOP
[
sidenti&l nominee Ricbwd Niron
I "' be::n "on the wrooa sicW' f1 every
i :.ie wtiich has conoerned the mm-
" n working man."
uther, standing before two brge
traits oi Vice Preddent Hubert
lmllln:y, tlOld 500 UAW del.._ to
ogtooal caalottn<e here tl>al. be had
Gl a "new Ni.nil . .,
'I have oo --Nbon -y lo 1*rr"e cmJUous imd more c1ewr," be
tltd. ''But I am ooncerned that be is rtilrer no more conJpMlkmate nor
cincet1'ed with tile pUgbt ol ordinary
J6il>le."
.ReuUier, who tr'ged his audience to ~ Hwnpbrey "'1d hlo vico
l!f'Sidentiial running mete, S e n .
•und Muskie ol Maine, cltided thi1'l
porty "'-G«qe wan-tw ''pl~I on people's leu."
campaign, booing. jeering and hissing
him. He caUed the billl:er outburst
against him and Sen. Sdwaad M. Ken-
nedy (0-Mass.) Thursday in Boston
the work of "intentionally mean
anarchists -period."
"It's time to bl.ow the whistle,"
Humphrey tdd a Soux Falls S.D., au-
dience Thursday night.
Humphrey told new-smen that the
protuters havt met a "tough guy,"
and said the hecklers were "coward'S''
who wlil "never run us off the plat·
form ."
ln remarks ~ for delivery
from the rteps of Abraham Lincoln'•
home here today, Humphrey sakl Nix-
on's statement that the Humphrey
camp wat in oahoots with the Wallace
supporters was false. ''That charge is
patently ridlculous, and Mr. Nixon
knows it," Humph'ey" said.
Trying to draw Ni.Jon into a debate,
Humphrey Nid, "let Richanl Nil:on,
George Wallace and me debate the
ilsues on nation.al televiJion. 'IlWlt way
we'll IOOll find out who is in collusion
with wbom. And it won't be Humphrey
and Wallace."
Hwnphrey choee a historical setting
for isruing the oballenge -the area ol
the famous Uncoln-Douglas debates.
In his Sp'lngfi<dd 1peech, HumJWey
eootinU<d lo dllde Nllioo in whet ""'
becoming • IUndord campaign pKdl,
eccustng him oC not l!pNlldn'g <U. can-
dldly on mi,Jor t11uet Judi • gun con-
trol, the nucl-nooprollferation trea·
ty. civtl rigllts and the oominatii>n ol
supreme court f\l8tice Abe F'Ort.1 to
OUef Justice.
He oald the -· woold let the AmeriCMI people "dedde Oii the bHll
of facts -not empty promises,
&loga"" and tbat opedal brand of
fence·stnddlin« wtrlcll Mr. Nim>
~ted Joa& .... "
r
Hitch Calls
For Boost
In UC Funds
LOS ANGELES (UPO -Unlvoralty
ol California "-kl•nt Charleo J.
Hi!A:b said today that $354 mllllon will
be needed lo maintain the "vitality,
quality and Impetus" of the nine-carn-
JXll instituUoos during the 1969-70 fU.
cal year.
'!'be budget Hi!A:h propooed lo tile
board of regents for l&ei-70 b '63
million more than ttie UC budget for
the curre~ Weal year.
'nle president Gd enrollmeN: will
increase by m«e than I percent to
105,<XX> students next year. In 1973, he
added, the studed bod.lea at the nine
campuses will be more thin 32 per-
cent larger than .at preeent.
"The university must play a pro.
in-role If tile slate of Oallfomla Ill
going to meet the needs of 'Ill u-
panding population ilDd a arowinl
econuny ," Hitch said.
"It is now generally recognhed that
higtl talent human resources are
critical to economic growth .and
development. The population ex·
panslon, and expansion of business
and industry, and the tedlllolollcal
society in which we live require ever
iocreMing numbers Of highly skilled
mm ab!. women wt.th graduate and
professional education,"
Hdltcb ooted that the university's ef..
tort to tum out more doctors and den·
tiBtll to meet the need.I of a growing
population "will cOdtlnue to plec:e a
heavy burden on available re~ources.'"
He said that 522 full time facu1tt
members and 144 .additiooaJ full time
teacht:og assistants will be needed on
the niDe campuses next school yec.
"In maldng budgetary pr<>pooals I
am mindful that IJ967-68 state support
was $38 million below our requested
needs, and in 1968-69 was some '35
millioo lower than <lllt Htimated
needs,•: Hitch said.
* * * Irvine Asking
Regents for TV,
Residence Halls
Instructional television stations, a fa.
culty club, a student recreation cent-
er, new residence halls, and a 1ummer
quarter for the UC Irvine oam.pUJ are
matters to be comidered today by UC
regents.
The University of California govern·
ing body is meeting at UCLA.
Agenda matters affecting UCI in·
elude:
-Reservation of $1 .8 million to be
accumulated In special funds the next
two fiscal years for a recreation cent·
er, residence halls, 11.ddlttonal parking,
instructional TV stations and a faculty
club.
The rpeclal hmd money ls not pub-
lic tu: money. It eomes from unlverai·
ty overhead on federal contracts,
many involving nuclear research.
To be set aside is Sl.175.® forth e
recreation center, $298,000 for resi-
dence halls, $238,00> for parking, 1141,·
ro:> for instructiorJ&l TV, and $20,000
fur the faculty dub.
-Establi5hment of a summer quar-
ter at UCI in summer of 1970 with
115 ol stOOent body em-oiled to bo
built up to 2/5 by summer of 1974.
-Authorization to sell $5.S mlllion
in bonds to build new residence halls
and apartmentl for the Irvine cam·
put.
-Approval of temporary pay r1te1
for UCI-CallfornJa College of Medicine
faculty until a permanent pay acl1e ii
worked out.
-Application for permit to build
sidewalk alon11: Campus Drive connect-
ing Student Health Center to main
camous area.
-Report showing that during months or July and August UCI receiVf:d S2B7,·
490 in government grants, S37 ,994 In
private donations and $19,379 in fotm·
dation and corporate grants.
County Official,
Lagunan Facing
Perversion Count
An administrative officer in tht
Orange County District Attorney's of·
lice was arr~ Thursday bt a Slnta
Ana bus depot restroom aloog with a
Laguna BNth mf!O on .ex perveraton
charges,
A Sant.a Ana patrolman allegedly
observed Raymond H. Scudder, 'II, of
Tustin, in the act with David E. Wood·
fin. 41 , of. U4S Lomita Way, Laguna
Beach.
Scudder was released on his own
recognizance pendinc preliminary
heufng on the cbarce, but Woodfin
lailed to post bell end remained bi Jail.
The Dlatrict AUorney's aide redin·
ed tile poeltion be had held !or one
yur followlna: his .-rest on the vice
clllu'ge.
Chief Deputy District Attorney
James Enright said Scudder came to
Orange County from Kern County and
that he has been a competent
emptoye. ,
The wrerta: were made after tM
alleged violation in the men'1 room Of
!be GroJl>ound bus depot.
Phooey oni-Pill
That's Father's Reaction. tO Quads
Catalina Island
Night Club Fire •
Injures Firemen O'M'.~WA CAP) -Mrs. Victor
Millar, 30, save . birth Frkiey to
quadruplets -three boys and a girl.
"That lli11I my faith In the pill," sekl
her 33-year-old hu.sba.nd when ht! aot
tht MWI.
"I think I'll picket the company," be
added.
Mr1. Millar was delivered of the
babies in seven minutes, starting at
6:38 a.m. All babies and mother are
"JU!t fine," the holpitaJ reported. The
children will be kept in the hospital,
m01t Of the time in l.ncubators, for at
leut a month because they are two
moottis prem1ture.
The Millar• have · known since last
month that Mn .. Milla would give
birth to three and poJsibly four babies.
Dr. Sydney Kronick, the mother's
obstetridan, dlaenosed th.e multiple
pregnancy with X-rays Aue. 19, noti·
fy\llg the hotpltal of tile probabJll!Y of
quadnpiets.
The Mlllar1 Mve two other ch.lldren,
• girl 8, alld • boy, 12.
"They took lt very well," said the
father w~ ~j.in& • 1ummona to bis
wife's bedajde. _
He 1ak1 · the boys weiehed three
pounds 10 ounces, lu'ff pounds 14 and
three po~ nine and the glrl two
pounds 10. Thef W8l'e elven excellent
chances of sur\'ival.
~-·Millar .ii ope ol 12 children and
ber mothe:r,·*"8. Roger Oul>ue ol' Qt.
tawa, Pict all 12 came alone "one at a
time."
"I'm in a1state of ihoek," the said
when asked_ how she felt about her
dauJht.er'• givln& birth to quadruplets.
Speelal te lk DAILY PIWI'
AV ALON -Invatlflllln 1lf!lna
cbalred rubble ol a ONlloa 1-
l<lples• -tavvn dottroyed la a
•100,000 flro Wednoll<llly brio opdattcl
tllelr orilfnal .._u.
No ..,. .... ropocUd hlJured wbllo
botlliDg the blau at tl>o Cbi Chi, W
suminer Ave., Avalon, but two meo
have since joined the casualty~~
Fireman Geor1'e MorriJ -l
to the ground when ... ol tbo
Volunteer Fire Department's *Ider•
collapsed -haa developed a ,.,.,.
erm, l>ut It should mend qulcldy. • .
Fireman Milton "Blackie" ~
wao hit in the -by a &oJf bAU wt>Ut he and fellow flreftgtrte.r1 were C'lel&-
lng their sooty equipment near a pi1d!·
and-putt Coif ran&• am! ~ hurt. ,,
• • ' r An Penney .stores o,.n Every Night Monclay Th""'lli Satunlay , i
COSTA MESA . '
)
luy t~ clothes that Mii you •••
OUR OWN FAMOUS
TOWNCRAFT BRAND
•
----y ,
Men's .year-round
weight suits, slacks,
and spor1 coats •••
Top Penney quality.
r-a11• sulll ll'om P...,.Y• _...you al
"''"' and porioct fit ••• '°"' "'°"' and '°" silk ........ you of utmost cornfott.O-youni
from a toloction of 2 bvttoft modol1 in IOlfdi
and -Colon, oln., bluo, told. .._
andgroy.!Mn'11;,.,, $80
Youn1 Gontry" fi'11 quality hopsock -
bla • .,.. of, sliapo rotalnlno 55% dacnio pol)o-
"'"'and~% wool. Rid. colon Ill Fnndi bl...,.
gold, O< -,. i;..•, ·-· $35
Penn Prett9 ""'"'"'" continentof tlacb, the
por!.ct bloior companion. Thoy .,._ noocl
ironing -tumblo clrltd and come Ill grd
·eo1on-o1;,., bluo, and gold. Of durable
--polyooter/-/spandox. $11
•
IUJlfJlllro. RACH · 11£WPORT BUCH • . .
CH ........ ~)
"
"
' . '·
''
" '
'
..
·(~·
•.l.
·' .-
• ' .
"
• !
I.
1
,_, -:Kl, 1"'8
ly IARL WILSON .. ,,.~ ..........
,
,, ''lt'• nice to have a famoUs ~ ion like yw roglJter In Welhers-
•. 6eld,.. said town clerk w. Dvdley -~a1r..,lntlhem when 21-yeeN>ld ·P•
lricfa NIJ{Oll, of CormO<Ucut, came
In lo s!g1111p fDI' her flnt elecl!on.
Miss Nit0ti1 a nurse at Hartford
! Hoopital and i RepUJjllcJl!~ thank·
" ed him .liut_.uplaioed 'thal sbe is
not the daugbler of Rl~anl Nixon,
although the. older daughter of Nix-
on bas the 881Jle name. "But I did
BemfJ• on Broadwag
•
Gas Drives 1,000
From Castro Play·
NEW YORK (UPI) -Gas bombs
set oU Thursday night ln a Broadway
lbeaier drovo oearlt 1,000 coughing,
-ping p!ay&oo"s into the ltreet.
1bey bed beell watching a prenew of
"'lbe CUban 'Ibinl." a plly 1ym-
pa1hetlc to Cuban Premier Fidel
~ Plainololllesmen lllat!oned In the
theater tn. antkipation of trouble ar--
rested fo1.r OJban refugees oo charges
Of setting ott the bombs. A fifth man
-not a Cdban -wu detained for
queotiooillg.
act compoli.tloa waa uncertain, but !~
IWIC!iooed lllJ.t a comblaation ol
stench gas and tow gu.
The performance was canceled.
Memben of the audieDef! were Glfered
their dlolce betweell a refund Of
ticl<oll for.,,_ performance.
n. fOW' 11.11pecta .,,... boolPed on
marges Of daoget'OUI lmplemeotl, hr
citing, to riot, feioDow: a111ault on
policemen md. rec t 1111 Ill•
clangerln<nt
The play, by Jack Gelbor, formally
apeDI Tu.W, olghl.
. , just finish taking care of a P."tient
• named G,orve C. W11U,ce, • Miss
' Nixon'aald.
'Ibere wu no pmic, and no cme was
seriously injured. An elderly woman
and her daughter were treated at a
bospital f<W' gas inhalation and releas-
ed. A policeman bit in the lace by ooe
of lbe gas bombs also was treated .
There was a capacity audience of
945 penons in the Heery Miller
TheaW, jwlt oil Time& Square, when
the flrlt curtain rose for the 'ltnnday
nl&IJI performance.
California's
Grapes Turned
Rather 'Sour'
-' .
' ' ' l :t
';: '
•
Among them were some 3 O
pia..._men, u•lgned to th.e
ttieat.r because ol a tip that anti·
Oas4ro Cubans plantled to dUnlpt the
pe1.tttmance.
The New Y<rt md:sdoas c:l a mm.bu
of natioo& which do businesa wltb the
C.-,,,g!me have bem bombed • ·=· _.,tJy by Cuban
A: few minutes after the curtain
rose, fine bomllo went ol1 with muf-
fled pops. Two were set all. near tbe
Iron! ol Iha -wn and the tbinl sevenl ~ fUrther back.
The -quietly filled with what Po1!ct ..,ilod J ''lloskius cu." It. U·
.,. I .... . ' ~.~ .. ' '
WASHINGTON (UPI) -'.!be coo·
greanan kom New York told the
congressman frOm California: "I like
your grapes but not the sentiment
behind them."
The exchange of words and grapes
between Reps. James Scheuer, (D
N.Y.) and Robert Malhi.,, (R-Calll.),
produced a near riot 'Thursday that
crushed both people and grapes in the
corridor outside Mathias' Off.ice.
The freshman lawmaker f r o m Calif-.•, SAD Joaquin Valley, a two-
time Olympic decathlon gold-medalist,
Abbie Hottman, Yfppit' Lea<Ur f"rom l JJ·• sent bags of muscat and white im-
N•w YMk, -OIT<lt<d ot O'Hore ' a'se'b-11 Star's periai grape• to all of hlJ colleagues.
· Chi bond f jri-' illl Some were ,accompanied by a bumper Airport m cago on a or ' i sticker that read: ''Eat California
turi charge ariling from dUOT'licn So. En Pl dvring the Democrotic Natiunal Con. . ll terS e8 Gr"'°' • The Focb!dden Fntit."
vention. Politi later charged him· Scheuer• Rep. William F. Ryan, m "'~ anpther Nl!"fJ .York Democrat, ~th u~wful use O! a weaJ>09 ~ G · 'Ch pel'SO~ returned their grapes. Six ,.,,.~~,.Uh•. kll•/o II< ~ "l.ll un arges . -.. _.Democrat. -their• ,. aa4·Dl·hil J>OIMUI07"'°".t11e PfDM· -: :::~ '-. • •, -..; ' b&Ck: when they ll'lterpreted the move :..... e ' . STAMFQRD~ C0mll.' (UPI) -The . as . a Blap at the labor boycott on
obert Doell, of Denisoftt1 lOfla, ICi:t of';hse~ Hall of F~ 1 t 1 ~ ~ CaU!ortda grapes in support of
emocratic candidate jor ·Secle-Jaclde;Jlobimon hat'Jlleaded lnn.,..J!I Weslml pickers who ,.,k union
'·of ~· bu ol!IPM ll'J'"·WP! ""'-flt chirps In swn-~. . go tn mill-<:ampalga'. JCe:came , · fotd CltCUll 'Contt all4 .lilt cue b a • "We ,. .. out po1ai-last year and ~:'.ii.own with the mumps. ._:... been bound over to the~ sestton of none were returned'' aald., a puzzl.ed
:s~ · • .i . t . S~ =• Wile acctpted the ~~ ... ~ .... :,.~°" with
Rare Happening
Mrs. Marie Ooton of Mountain View, Calif., who received a kidney
transplant two years ago and was cautioned at that time against
having any more ~hil n, has reason to smile after recent post.natal
esamiDatioo at S Medical Center. BOtb Mrs. Ooton and son,
Shaoooo, born July , were reported dolllg well. The incidence of
successful pregnancy In women with transplanted kidneys iJ es·
tremely rare.
Political Candidate Gets
',New ·Heart in Transplant
. '
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) - A
candidate in the .November elections
became Michigan's first heat t
transplaz;t pa:tleni tOday. He suffered a
cardiac arrest.~ .minutes after leav-
ing the ope:atlng room but bis new
heart was reported running smool!hly
at Dooo. ··
The heart ol a stroke victim began
beating "spontaneously" in the body 0£
PhDJp T: 8arnuin, <9, of Kalamazoo,
Mich., at 3:02 a.m E .DT. Dr. Roger
Nelson, usociate. director of the
University of Michigan Hospital, said,
"There was a little fluttering but it
corrected it.self."
Nelson said Barnum, a candidate for
the Kalamazoo CoLmty Board of
Supervisors, was in "fair'" condition
with his heart aided by a
"pacemaker," an electronic device
designed to maintain a regular
heartbeat. He was reported conscious
and alert.
"The ne1Jf. few hours and days are
going to be critical," Nebon &aid. "We
are not yet out of the wood.a."
18 Inches
.Save ·Life
'Of Mirwr
PAONIA. Clolo.' 111Pll -Jalm
·-"'"'· • ..,,_,114 -of llye. -Goel 'n111ucloy foe 1! m-
dleJ of-· lt.siva4 '* ~··
---llld 1f<xr C<lllllJelllons .... -mllo4 deep lnlldo 1llo u. s. ~ Ccrp'1 ~I coal mlno
-lho TO<l eollapocL Ooq he -.1\oed.
.,,._ al.al 'w1:1 vtt:y, very, very
dote llbelJ lt 1111." be aald. "'God eave
mo -l! IDd>eo ol .-n and It uv-ed roy life. n ·
~d 1J<> death by the tons ol rock
_. m1"" superintendent Archie
McNail M'orrisul, 42; general foreman
Veloy K. Picdooi, 37; foceman Joe F.
Burum1_54, and Eugene Lee Bailey, 46,
amine--,
ft took rucue WOTktts mere tb an.
six' hours to reach Che llodiel In the
mine, io miles oor1heut m PamD in
·w.stce<Mll'()ol~
•11 jolt 1aw lour ol :iny buddies
smashed to death," Southerland 1aid
ahortly after the accident
Later, however, as rescue worbra
lrted to reach Iris companions,
Southerland said he did not want to
speculate on the condition of the
others. ''They're my b u d d l e 1 , ' '
Soutberland said, "and I want I<> hope.
You know what I mean?"
Southtrland, a miner for ~
years, s~d he fell into an 18-ildl
space between two pieces of 1-YJ'.
gauge machinery and was protected.
"There was an imlgularity in the
roof and it slipped and came down,''
he said. Southerland •ald he received
knee and back injuries and "bni.ses
all over."
Many of the .mine's 150 workers Uled
their bands and heavy machinery to
dig their way to the victim.I in bopel
they might stlll be alive. The mine bl
drllled at an angle Into tile side ol a
mowrtain more than 6,oo:> feet above
sea level
Spokesmen for u. s. Steel said an m.
vestigatioo would start as soon al
mine expert, from Utah, Colorado and
Pennsylvania could arrive at the
scene.
Nation's Crime
Rate Increased
By 21 Per Cent ,~! A check written by w.E. ,......,, Innocent plea trom-Jackie Roblnaon , "Thll time tllt grapes cane wi1b a
; .• J>f Ames, Iowa, whicb,,.u COVfled Jr Thursday and ordered Ibo case to .ticker tllat •-.lbe le'"e" ~lJ>y rubble from a tornaio wblcb IOI s.Pertor Court.lor trial but did not set · •SdieUll' 1114l;; ·~ ' ·. ~'leharles City Wt •Pdht, W:~ 'lib-a trial data. "I'm oirpriiod that Ibo-boycott got ~vered thl3 week ~ ~:senl ROb-fl. RI ~In the in-la 1"IOt I tllouglit wu a $1 Million Paid'
Barnwn was the world's 5lst heart
transplant J>3tl'ent.
He~ receiVed the heert of an
anonymous 37-year-old donor who bad
been decla'Ted officially dead of a
stroke at 12 :45 a.m
tion's crime .fa'te rose' 21 per cent in
the flint half of. this year over the
iame period in 1967, acccrding to the
FBI. The biggest increase camt1 in
larger ciitlies and in the northeast.
~4'o its d...uDatton. ·lmlen bad prvcoedlnj.,bf Atty" argo'llll. thOOgi>fftill gMllre," ~ Maljilas, :.:::wailed the check latl'May to lie Young Robln1<1n, who re • tree ICIWJdlng,,......... ~,;'fowa State Cyclooe Club. nn '8,000 bond, was ""'"'"' wllb an Poli« lotiebl to clear illO corridor of -~ e alleged pro1tlluto in a downtown the fa~ er~ ol con·
!:.:: They didn't sboW 0 0f the Same Stamford hotel Aug. 23 when be al-gressiaoal aides, n~men ~ a ~ender" at the Roxy Theater in legedly wawd a loaded .SJ caliber nnal !p'OUP Of Mexican-Amencans
;:•l.liami Beach, Fla .. after the state revolvor at poll«. who •aid 1lley &poke lot the grape ~~ttomey'& .office complained jhe Wben arrested, Robinson wa1 ac-picten. The Democratic study <J:roup, ~:~ovie qbscene. ult was a little companied by Janet Wallace, 19, of an organh:.ation Of about 150 liberal
·•· gh'~plac .. conceded !healer New York City, who elso wu urned, House meml>en, conducted a ~J'OU m · es, . I police said. He wu charged with ac-telepbooe ~ign to get a big ;-::.:~wner L•.roy Grlfflth1. The ~tle o gravated ;1"8ult,. carryh)g f danger-turnout cf--IN(>e ret\nees.
·•Tue su~sUlute .film for \oday s ,\"'tr < 0., weopon; redltinf amt! and .,. One girl, who could !IOI be Identified, -:Jons: My Third Wife George. Ing a le male far immoral purpo1a1. -Ibo If-!rUo ber plastic bag ,... e Earlier this year Robinson was put one by one and CI'Ulbed ttiem in her
-on probatlon~afttt belng term.Id a fingers, ~ the ooze drop in~ a
Mif/lin~s Sportswear store in "drug dependent°" person under a new box hurriedly i;.-ovl~ by Methii4 to
Du Quoin, Ill., changed it.a natM Connecticut law. receive ille '1forbldden fruit."
to "His and Hers Clothier" 4ft.er
11 burQl.aT'tl two weeks ago. BMrg-
larized again, th.e management
said it was holding "Litensi to
steal Jale" over the ~ikind.
There are ft.O plam to change
thi 1tore'1 name again, the man-
agement rejecting perhaps the
m o s t appropriate suggested
name: "RU, Hers and Theira. •
• At least Mrs. · Shlrlay Halllol. of
t. Louis, • .Mo., was nea.r .. a phone
• . hen Ille crime occuzed. Mrs; He!-~ ~llel reported to police that she had ~'!:Placed her purse on the ledge .of ~~an outd()()r booth while making it
. •telephone c.all ... and a passerby
(;~reached in, grabbed the purse and
~~fl ed.
;. ~ .
" : Patrolman Robort Rudowlck, QI
• San An$0Dio, Tex.\ armed wiµi
~'.Chemical+ M ace• ~ted. 1 a
"..,kunk ainled with a spray Oevlce.
;; ~Rudewick, answedng a · call to P,t t· .the skunk out of a' rarage, fired
~:'the Mace. The alrunt did his thing
! ..and fired back; <f'up'rlng in more ~ i'ways than one, Ruaewick drew bis
: frevolver and put the skunk out of
c l>usiness. . .,. . . • • • "~ don't t!dllk Jasttc. was-.dealt • re toe!~• Mgola M. · M.rlenl
.:oir .. ~, ol New .Britain, Conn., told
•l'fjle juage after behlg fined $50 and :~lven a 1uspended 30-day jail le&
• ce for le~ up a tcaffic ticket
nd throwiJ\: .it Irr the offt,C)!l''S
ce. "Every dafeddent receives
lice hf llrls cburt," replied ~udp
red T-no. And with a ·bang the.·~ be rewl<ed the sus-.. ~ and ordered the
letpaid 30 days bebind bon. • ...,_ Bynum ._ned that a
1ec1 bathtub ten oB hi• trucJt •• w11 drivlnJ .., -lnterstata 40
••r GreenabOn>, N.C. Bynum
"11t11a lllupped to Tetrtevr1h~ ~
-' ."' ~ UatJlt meMl!ck· fl 1IP .... 'Jlk!lill .. llll lbelr lrudr bdore be cnuld I~ lo iL
I
Country Singer Red: Foley
FoundDeadinMotel'Room
FORT WAYNE, l.i. (llP!) -Red
Foley, the Grand Ole ()pry l!'lrltual
singer who helped pioneer ,co~
muslc, wa1 found dead .in bi1 motel
.._ by a deanlolCf~ Thunclay
night. . The 58-y...,-old aln(er bad bee
deid 8 to 10 hours, '·a:ppareqt];y fro1
natural causes, aCcoidma: tO Alic
Co.mtf Coroner Gonion Fran)te.
Fo1E!'y, ltle "father·lD-law Ol slnge
Pat Boone, bad --In IT" per!~• of 111'1 Grand Ole ~
in Fort Wayoe Wednasday 'lltld •P·
parently planned to return to 1'1• bomr
in NadlVille, Tenn., TbUl"lday af·
tenoon. An alrpla>e ticltet with r
reservation for Thursday wu found i:
Foley's pocket. poUce said.
Bom Clyde Julian Foley oa 1 24-acri
farm in Blue Lick, Ky., Foley was con·
stdered a "singers' singer" among hi r
country music cootem}>C*'Mias.
Mimie Pearl, wbo had starred on
~e .Grand OJe {)JU 1P'1Ul Foley, burst
i!lto 'l<tfl -fnfOllll!d·of bl1 dtotb
at Nmhville.
"He was one of the deM""est friends t
ever bad," she said. "I never wanted
to foUow him on Siiage because ht was
so great. No one could sing like him."
"I've lost a very dear friend," &aid
Roy AA:uU.
Tex Ritter called Foley "a ere at
friend end great artist"
Foley wu one of the fir1t country
and western lingen to record mlllic
1D NMhville. HiJ bigest hJtl we.re
"Peace in the Valley ... "Jult a Qoe:er .
Walk With Thee," "Ole Sbep," ,..O.t-
tanoop Shoe Shine Boy," ,.,_,,..
S-.lay Nigh~" and "Cil>drmaU
DlllClnl Pig."
From • $2-a·show singer at Cov-
ington, Ky,, Foley joined Gene Autry
on the Natlooal Barn Danct Ind in
ltlll .... nt With Ula Gl'lllClOla ()pry, Ht
lell tha ()pry In tha eoiV 19!0o lo
found· 111'1 o.irk Jubllet In Springfleld,
Mo.
--FOUND DEAD IN MOTEL
Country Singer Reel Foley
FoS.7 •• married tbrtt times and
bad folU' dallhter• and a dozen
srandchlldrell. JIJ1 lint .wile, Pauline
Cox, died la cbOdblrtb, ud bts second ~
wt{e, Eva Ovtnlab, died In 1951, A dollO by tllll _...,., Sblriey' t1
m.m.dto-. Foley and hit tbinl wife. one-time
entertainer Sally Swee~ Hved In an
apartment in Nash.ville.
The couple wu burned a n d
hos plt.aUzed In 1964 when fire swept
through tbe apartment ..
Foley wa1 fiivolved kl a tu suit with
lb• lntern111'lln .... Sj>rvl<o In the
early 1980I when ttl9 govtmment
clal01ed he .-iia.ooo Ill back WU.
Ibo sult -Jai.r -·
,_
.JO•• •HI
For RFK's Story
On Cuhan Crisis
NEW YORK (UPI) - A 25,000.
ward manuscript about the Cuban mil·
.U. ertslJ by the late Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy has been purchased for a rec-
. ord price of •l least 'l million -about
-MO a wcrd. Thep urcbese was announced joint-
ly Thursday by Henry E. Bowes, pres-
ident of McCall's Corp., which bought
worldwide rights to the manuscript,
and Theodore C. Sorensen, represent-
ing the Kenoedy estate.
Bowes told a news conference the
.tl · million wa1 an advance. He sald
the ultimate payment for the manu-
.acript would depend on disposition of
the 1ubsidiary rights.
'lbe McCall executive said the man-
·uacript wUl be published In the No-
vember issue of McCall'11 magazine,
which goes on sale Oct. 22, siJ: years
alter the erWs began.
Bowel said the manuscript, written
by Kennedy about a year ago, J1 in
rough form except for some minor
edittng b1 Sorensen.
'
Nelson said when Barnum's new
heart stopped. be was promptly
resuscitated and r e g a i n e d con·
sciOtJ9negs, He said other such stop·
pages might occur.
People Poisoning
Parading Pigeons
In Pershing Park
LOS ANGEIES (UPI) -Some 50
pigeons dropped dead Thursday in
Pershing Square and the senior gar-
dener pointed the finger at dove-lovers.
Leslie Sedberry said he thought
somebody fed the blrda polsooed bread
or grain because "some ol the people
are partial to the dowo here. They
want to get rid of the pigeons."
Sprinklers in the @wntown park
were turned on to wash away any re-
maining p<>Uoned lood.
The bird! walked erratically oo the
sidewalks before keeling over or ~
ped from perches on light poles. Seven
sparrows aJso died.
Director J. Edgar Hoover, releasing
the FBl's latest crime repcrt. !aid
ThU:rsday that the crime rate is up 24
per cent in cities with more than
250,(XX) populatioo and 17 per cent in
those with !'ewer than 1(),000. ·
Suburban area!!: reported a 21 per
cent increase while crime· in rural
areas rose by 14 per cent, the report
said.
Hoover said the upward trend wu
consistent throughout the nation -up
'J:1 per cent In the norilleast, 20 per
cent in the west, 18 per cent in the
south and 17 per cent in tbe ncxtb cen-
tral states.
A national breakdown showed a 29
percent increase in robbery, a 17 per
cent increase in murder, a 15 per cent
increase in forcible rape, and a 14 per
cent increase ill aggravated assault
"Property crimes" increased by20
per cent as a whole, led by a 2f per
cent increase in automobile tm:ft, a 23
per cent increase in larceny involving
$50 or more, and a 17 per cent in·
crease in burglary.
Hoover ako saJd there was a 34 per
cent increase in armed robbery and a
28 per cent iocrease in assault! with
firearms.
Appalachians Dampened
Meteorowgical Disturbances in Portage & Klamath Falls
taHt......_
v.s. su ..... .,,
Cool, -' ,...,.,.r contl-• 111 l'l'llJdl
d !tit ......... ;,...1 LM.et .,,,. W,. P•
C'll'le ~·· ti~ • ""'"" ~"' ---ltltf'-411 .. ,..
"" fll --"'-...... -""' _... ,,, .. °""' Ubl.
~ """ .._,, fell "' ..,,.
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flllt frorOI tto. _ _,., Ctflll,,,.. ..
Ntw IE ...... .,,,. fnm Ctllfertllll ..
lfle M ........... llwr Vt11W ...,.,
t1Mr P:W-IL
TfMr "'""""' '""" ._,. -11 tllHCMid llbow llw 6,000.'90! "vtl
"' ..... ,_ MOll!tllfl ,,,., "'°""~"' ~1 ......... ~ 1.11111 ftl'I !fl ,,,.
~ ......... "'-"•"' Ptllor t i ,..,.,,., ....... ,._,..,
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r1 '"'wt ... IM ,..b .... "*""' _, ....
At111'111
••~e~fi91d ......... ....
·-~ "-C:lr'ClflNifl c ....... ...,_ ......,_ ,,. ... ......
·~ ...... ·~~ Nt'-"• ---H-fOl'I
KtntM City .... ,,,_,
L• AroMIH
Mlt!N flM<JI .. _
Mlnne...ollt
New Ort•flt _, .. ....... -, __ __
f'tlt1••i.11i. -· .... _ ...,, ... ·-"" .... ..,.,, ·-SK,._..,..
ll Leult
s.111111
ltll ltl<• Clf\f .. ,_ ... ·~-............. ,. ..... -........ ·-
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., 56 ·'' n "
11 .. ·'' ...
.. M
n " "' .. .. . .. .. " . -
fl ,. .u
If 7S n s. .01
~ " .. " " n .'1 ., .. .... .... .. .. .. .. " . . ~ " -• • .... .. .
D a • • • " . It. JI ,II • • 11 • ~
" D . ..
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. -... v -· . .. v • -.. . ' ' • ~-.... ... ~ ~ ' r 'I • '• ~ ' , '
, . . . . ·--....
.
frtciay, StptrmDl'I' lO, l"'8 DAILY PILOT 9
Couniy's Moving Day Neighbors OhJecdng
Courzs, Jail Take Over New Quarters Anaheim's Metroport Under Fire
. . '
SANTA ANA -'Ibo bi{
move for county , olllco1
bei!DI Ibis .... ttlid ..
employOI -lo occupy the how fll mijllQll jail alld
eherlll'1 beadqU-. ~
the -$19 m II\! o\i courtbouae. . ;
A lormei Jail ..,.,.. hi•
been ael tw Oct. 30 and the
oour1houoe ceremoaiff w!ll
be In Jamw:y. In Ille mttn-
time the moYe la on.
Tile 1berill'1 ad·
milli<trallve stall leada \be
way thia weekend.
In most cases the move
amount.. lo a tbr .. to lour·
block migration but lo th•
Building Services Depart·
ment whic:h is responsible
for m81!llfnl tile wllole
trek. lt m!Jhl u well be
mile<.
n-ank Young of BlllldiDC
Serv1co oiler«! Ws tel»
taUve eclleduJt alter 11le
ibertlf& weekend move. All
others are set for weekenda
loo ••
Oct. a -SberW's crime
lab and dark room.
Nov. 2 -Orange Counly
la!! pri>onen.
Nov. 16 -District JI·
torney'1 offJ.ce, fatnlly sup-
port lacil!Ue1, p u b Ii e
d<lender and the Grand
Jury. Nov. 23 -Veterans
service center, marshal, six
municipal court& and court
' c)etkJ.
NOv. a> -County clerk, 19
sup'1'lor c..'O\lrtl, court ad·
mhUtr atCl' and c o u r t
reporten.
bee. 7 -Extra equipment
fOr alorage, equipment In·
volves some 25,CKIO bookl
and 1,000 emplo~s.
Fedli'tlef. vacated a r e
being grabbed by other
overcrowde4 departments
whld>. have no new buildln'g1
to move to. Bvildiog
Services and plaonlng
departments will share the
former sheriff& offices.
The old jail does not fit in·
to tile future picture. It will
either be torn down or
remodeled.
Kidnaper
Given
Sentence
By JACK BROBACK
Of lllt Dtllr ,Utt 11"'
ANAHEIM -Anaheim's
propoeed fl.$ m 11 !l o n
metroport near A n g e l
Stadium was attacked from
all eogtes Thursday at a
Federal Aviation Ad·
mlnl•tralloo hearlna l n
Orange.
Orange May..-Don Smith
charged that Anaheim had
not Informed ill nel&tibon
as lo Us airport plan. Ht
lurther objected on grouodl
of noise, safety and
economics.
expecled in :IO days .. ti (Vtrtlcal Take Off and Lan· The c.w.ly'a '1rport ltdll1
Anaheim cootinuts wittl the ding) Ind a combination of allows liu'ger eraf1: to UH a
aiq>ort pU\n the S t a t e
1
_t .. b•e•two-..,.fy-pe.:;.;.;•;;.,· ____ ...;m;;;e;;lro;;.:;;flOl~t. _____ •
Division o f Aeroo.autic1 ~"'\i,!PP:f~• ~~~~~~ · High Holy Day Se~ices · " ' ..
UtU1Ue1 Commhlslon mull
approve ab-line 1..-vlce. TEMPLE SHARON ....... ... ... ,. Mrt. Lois Barke o r ~ '
Orange repreaenttnc an te·
tive cit1zeos group opposed
"' 11le alrj>ort pointed lo the
,,.i.ty ha%ard lo homea,
IChooll and lnsUtutlons and
the noue i.ctor.
Anaheim baa e.Umaled
Clat within tiw years there
would be 5,000 operation• a
morrdl out Of the facility.
Th• Cons•rv•tlvt Syne9ogue for the
Entire Harbor Arte
617 WEST HAMILTON, COSTA MESA
. . 646°5552 •
.All J'ewlth famlltes are invited to participate ln ~
m<anlnaflll Ill.lb Holy 1"" Servlc<1 at .CS oe17 .........
ror ~he ROlh Raahan&-Kol Nldre-Yvin KIPJ!ui'-Ylakol' Services ·
""' l11fw!Mtle111 &46-1112 ., 14M4tl
R1bbl P•vl Dubl"
C111tor M•rvi11 KD}in
tncl fltt T11111plt s+itron Cktlr
R••OrYO your 11th toclty-111!111t 11 limittd
•Cfi!ldl"lll llllCltr 11 FJtEI
For The Record GARDEN GROVE -The
CEntral figure In 1 kidnap
and attempled rape w!>lch
lnV<llved a wild police cbue
tmoU'gb Garden Grove
streets last June 9 wa1
sentenced to state prison for
1·25 years ThuwJay by
Superior Judge Howard C.
Cameron.
A1'o att tc king was
Marine Lt. Col. Guy Badger
speaking for El Toro Marin~
C-Orps Air Sta~on, Santa
Ana Marine Cor}l6 Air
Facllity and Los Alamitos
Naval Station . He coot.ended
that tile melr<>port would
overload an already
overcrowded air t r a f f t c
area.
The city ha1 takesi a
limited approach to the
future uaes ot tne airport
stating that lt would be
capable of supporting only
STOL (Sborl Take Off and
Landing) and VTOL
11~v~nln9 orovlcllcl· fOt *"'1h'lll 19Nlcot. .... ., .. ,., ,,..., ........... -
Schol ... llhWtfff.
SATVRD.ll'
DIVOlCIS f'ILIO
Htllt'l'I 1..0UIM Or.-;o \II Cl\erln J-11 ··~ I""' O~ Ctlll'll1'19 \II Adlllll 8. CIMlflll .1n1 111 WhMler "' RObWI Oonlild WhMI ... lfl•~· Llttl1!orl vs Llovd G. Lltti.ton "'~ r O. Critchlow v1 8..,.0.1 J, Ptl~i&'°T.' MtDot,1 .. 1 \I\ RtYmond R, Sh~ y ~~ W1Mlfl9 y, Ol\lld UROY W ln1 C.V~• R~ Nlllolelt \II Clla"r J NII LIJll"t G. 11ndqul1t VI W•lttr H. Ruf'ldqul1t, Jr. Lind• M, .,,DIJO(i, n Mld!Mt H1ddodc, 9t ,,, Oo<"t V!d VS G41C!r .. Weldon Vici< Lorri !,.. M. Putman "' Jt mn C. PIJt.
DEATH NOTICES
GUERTIN
Dlt"' V/Ylan Gverlhl. Alt l1, of 7211
Polnsettle, C«-ck! Mer. O.t1t 111
11e1th, Sltpf, IS. survlYtd by hustwind,
Frank O. Gwert!n1 t1t11er. W11l1w
Shelden, Sr., S.n Dleto; broCl'l1rs.
W1ll1« Sheldon, Jr., Conc«G; Don-
ald Sheldoll, 1..onuvi.w. w1.i.1ne1on1
RUJMll SMldDn, RtOdlnt, tnd Robert
W1U1~, I.et.non, Oreeon1 ""'' 1l1len,
811rti.n1 Ginn, El Sobt1nl1, Ctllf., tnd
Jo.Me M<N111. C.rmlt""I, c.111.
Services, Stlurd1y, 11 AM. Ptdllc
\'~ Clltl:>fl. lnte!'T'\t'nt, P11,:11c ._,._
Memarl1I P1r1<. Directed 17Y 81!11
MorTY•r'Y• 3S20 E. C011I Hlghw1y, '°""'' del Mtr. SIMMONS H~rt 0. SlmmOl'll, A• "• riA '"'3
S1nt1 An. AYe., COl!t MtM. OI'-of
dt\llth, Sel>I. U. $urv"'-d by wli., Mn.
H"'""rt D. $lmrnonl1 ltirM d111111llt.n.
Mn. Vln1lnla CG!ton. Mn. fMN Nwr·
!In. S.nt1 81rbln1, and Mr.. Mar1arl'I
Mllllf', so.. Caltlllllll. Gn1vnlOe MrvfUI,
Mond1r. 11 AM. H1rbar Jtnt Metnor11I
P•r11. 01~ br Ben BroedwtlY Mortuery. 1111 llrotdwff, COllt Mffll. REED
Orll1 a. Jtffll. j"6 8-111, COl"Cll\I
lie-I M.r. Dtl• Ill deelh, S6Pf. lt. Sur·
vlwd l7Y wile, Fr1ncon M. Rnd, ti
1119 "-' aont. Doneld W., Nawpart
B•cl'I, end Jtoblrl L. Jtewd, 01llllldr
dtll9htf1', Mn.. Ml'91rtl R. Htctr.e-tt,
Arcadlt; 1l•ttr, M~rle A. Jtlltd, Al-
h•mbr11 four or1ndclllldrtn 1"11 two
''"'·•r.,ld<:hlld,..,., W11 tom!Tll~r
ol l(nllhfl T'""'ltr, R\Vffllll!I cht,..
"" rMmll« of Jtlvtf"llOe Jtohlrv Club1 N~I !l"dt City C01Jncltm1n IOI' I
Yt'lll'I, tnd l lt'\led 11 MIY'OI" 111 N-
ll'Ort !l"d! from 1f" 10 1t.-. Gr1-
1ld1 ,....,.1ce1 wl!I be 1-111 S.turd1y.
' PM. Ptcl!\c View ~or1t1 Perk,
wllll Or. Phllkl G. Murrey ell\cl1lll'IO.
F1ml1Y ~t>Sll fl\ose wlaltlnt lo
mtke mHnor!al can!rlbl,ltlons, lllMH
mntrlbult to ttll Ortl'le CounlY CM,.
dl"tftl H01pll1I. Otrtc:ted by P1clllc
vi.w Mortu1ry. BROTHERTON
Ma~ Broth~ of Co1t1 MIM. $11r·
Ylved by i.ori. f'n1nd11 d1Ultlter,
8l1ncl\9 Amoldr 11llffi, A1111t1 lrottl·
ertoll tnd P111llN ClllPldol. Rourv.
FrldtY, t PM. R,equltm Ma11, Sttur·
d1y, t AM, bofh 11 st. JNC:hlrn'1
c.il'IOllc Churdl, COllll H.He. Olrtc:I·
ed br PMk f11nllv (olanltl f:unel"ll
·~· ALLAN
KellY Marl• Alltn. tln Wildwood or .. Hunllntton lffd'I, Jnl1nt d111;hter el
Mr, tnd Mra. TllOml\ AU1n., 0 • .. of
cl•e!h, Set>t. lf. Graveside tll"V1tft,
Frld1y, lod1Y, ) PM, GclOlll lhftthitn:I
Ctmetery. Dll"t(ll!d by S!!'lthl MOr·
tu•r'Y.
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR UC50
Coala Meoa Ml I-UZI
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Coftl Me11
LI 1-U33
DILDAY BROTHERS
Huetlnelo• Valley
Mortuary
1'1111 Beacb Blvd.
Hantt•Clo• Beacb
IU-7Tll
PACIFIC VIEW
l\IEMOIUAL PA.lilt
Cemttol')' • MortaarJ
Chapel
-Padlle View Drive
Newpoli Beacb, CaUforal1 -PEE!t FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
SOME
Tiil Boha A ... w .. 11111m1er INllll
'SMITll'S MORTUAl\Y
m Main st.
llmtlllloll Boadl
LEMm
WESTCLIP'P MORTIJAl\Y
Cl E. ITlb St.. Coda Mela
·~ .....
-·--.
8t~rt """ R"I VI Jtobert Cl'ltrtet .". J1CC1111ll"" Ann ""-nn VI Dat\tld T.
""" Howerd T. Melum w Auror• R. Melum
C1tlll1 J, Srww, 1 minor, ttc. vt
Ge.iffteY P. 11\0W
Kty 0 11,.. Eldrldvt .,.. Otnnl• 0111111
Eklrld"
JMn A. JtullP YI W•l"'r R11"
Jahn 0.0fff Blk ... Vt Rollt ....... ••kt•
Ml~tl"tl Ann Ntwlon VI Mlc:Ntl
Wiiii. Newton
Elllllbtlt'I Jlnt Lofltf YI Wlll!•m H. .._
GllYltn I.. .. P'l'ISie"f VI DtllnY Gtllt ,_..,
JoAN-. 0 , Htlltrt'f YI G«111d R. ._..,
IMry LOl.llM W11ktr ¥1 Roblrl W....,,.
Wtlktr
P.lol'et Joen OuMan VI J1dc. f'1y "'-" Jtutll J1nt Ltwh VI J1d!; Ofllnll
1..1w!1
Merlorlt L. Cf'H)mpfl VI Jt-ld
"'~· P1111lne Ev1n1ell"" Mtr!t Tolll YI
l..1110 Toth
Connl1 M. Yorbe v• Rl,h1t'l:I Fern1n-., y.,,.
Jody WllMln YI Me!Yln R. Wl!son
Vlrefnlt Lee ~muron v1 Dwl9hl
Ht'lllY Htmlltoll
RoY ThDmll Otlton VI Kllltll''fN ldl
01tton
!l;obf'l'I N, H1nkln1 YI Marie E. ~"° "N ·Ell11bei11 JOA1111 JollY YI L1wreM:t o. Jollr
Sl'lllron K, CltPPlf VI Tommy o .
Clt1>11er
Rober! Let Clrftlnl YI Lindi ltt
Ctrnev
l11be1 Herntn<lu VI Phlllp He1n111de1
Trevor W. P!atJ v1 Pt"'llt J. Pletz
MIN '-" 81tkt VI J1me1 Blakt M, JNnet~ M\111 VI lv1n Otlt Miiis
Cleo M, L1udldc VI H~N G. Lt\IClldl
K••nMh E. DtYenp(lrl YI Mt'11e11
01Vt<'IJlort
G!end1 Beeuton Ctmobell "' 1Ct11Mtl1
Edwin C1mllbtll INr._ Je1n Dombr0!.111 \II Jt1y
Jernn DombrvW!.e
W'~~llt'"1 Marie Hlener n Doutl"
C111 Hltllltf, Jr.
L• ·1aro E1r1 TharnfQn \II Yc.l'lkt
Thornton
M•rv L~ Pvl'Vn•nt" VI Ju1111!0 P11-
'"" P"f\1901""'' Sr. Oonnt M. Ntlto11 Vl Ernttton W.
.ie11or1 Mt.,•ret G. fl~ v.a Roy o .• arown' i
Nlllt\I LYM iv..1.... VI A!len L"
M1looe
Ch•r1ene V. AVft VS. l'°"9rtl J. AW.I
Sool'lkt Pen,.... Kellev VI ·e 1111e llay
Kell!y, •I ti
ClellCle Wlnl•m LfndSllY VI Judllll
Mtrle,.,. l lndltY
Stndtt Lff W!llls VI l..twrtnc:f ll;ol). ert WHlls
Mlr1t 0 . OCl'IOI V5 Sllvtdor Q. Odlot
l e•ll• J, S1m•nlcll. e«;, 'l'I VICI«
Fire Calls
Hunllntf"' ... ~
1 :112 P.m, l1'1U"4ty, motdlttl t ld, 161122
l1rtlett, Apt. 1
S•t! •11c11
11:55 1.m. Tl\uradlv, 11ubll c 1ul11,
<:orner of llY •rod fl1Ytr1y fMnar . ...
W111trn1111i.r
6:H' 11.m. Thllrt.d1v, trash flrt, Fi'n-litv 1chaol
2:1' 1.m. Frld1v, tlr11tlul'I tir., $UI
Utl'I SI., Apl. 1J
N_.n a1o1cll
2:2' 1.m. Th~rld1v. lrt11'1 11,,,, t llev
bthl'ffn Tustin 1nd A:tvtnlclt 1lrM!1
CM" """" 10:21 1.rn. Tllundty, ur fln1, Gl\I••
tnd Wtlhlnelon
•:• p.m .. ftl .. 111rm. 11111 Slf'ftl 11111 Plt«nHI AYtnll9
Jesus Ramirez, 23, of San·
ta Ana, wu convicted by a
jury in Cameroo's court last
monllt ol kidoaping and at·
tompting lo l<rclbly rape~ 1
25-year-Old Midway CI t y
housewife who had drivec to
a Slantm factory lo pick up
her brother.
Rami'rez' corripanion in
11le kidnap episode, Frank
M. Laurent, 31, of Sr11ta
Ana, was killred in the crash
of the ear following the 100..
mlle--hour chase "1l!cb
ended in Buena Park.
Laurent was a paroled
murderer who was involved
in tne 1956 ''di pstick
murder'• case in which he
and another were convicted
or the stabbing death of an
elderly El Modena service
station operator.
New County
Plant Opens
ANAHEIM Warner·
Lambert Pharmaceutical
Company formally opened a
majGr new manufacturing•
distribution complex here
Monday.
The meeting drew such a
large crowd that Jt was
mo~d from the Orange City
Hall council chambers to the
El Modena High School
auditorium. Ao estimated
350 attended.
The FAA bas authority to
grant air opace 1..-lli&ht
patteroa and a. decision is
Explorers
To Learn
Of Sheriffs
ORANGE -Boys from
the Orange County Sheriff'•
department. Orange and
Tustin police departments
law enforcement Explorer
P.?Sts will get a taste of what
it's like to be a deputy sber-
W this weekend.
The traiDing sessl.oo at the
Sberilf'o Tralnlng Academy
in Orange will be spoosored
by the law enforcement post
of the Sheriff's dep&rtment.
Explorer post& make up the
senior dlvialon in the Boy
Scouts of America.
The young ~pr----Uve
''lawmen" will report in full
•l!l!lorm to tile training
academy Friday t!Verdnt
and start their lnlenollied
course WiUl radio and code ,
operation. "
,uter reveille Saturday
morn.Ing, the boye will be
put through their paces by
SPECIAL!
STUDIO DISCOUNT
PORTRAIT
YOUR CHOICE OF
8" X lG" OR 11" X 14"
BLACK AND WHITE
Regularly $8;95 Value
For
Only
NO SERVICE CHARGE
FRI., SAT., SUN. . .
c
Sept, 20, 21-11 a.m, to 5 p.m.
Sun., Sept. 22-12 noon to 5 p.m.
~ • • t
ONLY 'A 'r' MA11Kll' 1,._KE1'
•
By PERSONALITY PIN UPS
GLENDALE, CALIFORNIA
A•iltlo .. t plctlm ._. ~ .,..._
" ,., • qede1 price If ,.. ...
...... l'IMl1 ....
FAMILY GROUPS ... '9c
EXTRA EACH PERSO-
L!Ml·TED ONE SPECIAL
PER FAMILY
7742 Edinger, Huntington Be1ch
five regular volunteer ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! Sherill's deputies who will ':
start them off with phy&ical
Illness tralnlng followed by G. S1m1nlcll. etc.
Fern H. Alhb'f P1'11er vs. Ch•rle1 A.
Ptrker Pilot Visitors
The plant, open since
spring, is producing
Listerine Antiseptic! WI.thin
a rew months, a production
line to make Certs, candy·
breath mints, and Rol-aids,
antacid mints, will be in
operation.
driJ.~ng and inspection, an
obstacle course, a mm and
discussioii period about law
enforeement careers, patrol
procedures, defense tactics
and crime in general.
...... ~~ l!'.ITaobelll Ann Winter vs Htrold H11bert
Winter Ne...:Y G•Ylt Skelly \11 Pt!r!df J-
#11 SlctllY
J11"" Marl• MtGet VS Merv!n Vlf'lll
""'" G<ill c11r11tl111 ai.ck vs. MJd!•el ll1v
Bite~
Ptttr A, lennnute v1 Su.in M. ''"" _,,
EYelr ll<Jtll Gtl"itl VI Eerne-s! Gerlc1
T11Qme1 Pi!rvlll Smlll'I VI Emmi /Vlllfo
lor!e Smi!h
Dona June M1tt!r1 V• ll1ymond Ari-
thony M1cer1
l11t1h1 V. Coy V1I Elwood L. (DY
Lindt ll. Fr1mttton VI Jtlml II:.
Frernplon
P1111 fl. Connff'I VI L• Ju1n1 C?nf\01"$
Sylvie M. GO!l'!l v1 Carlo• P. Gomer
Helen M1rl1 Wll1an v1 Ktnntlll P1ul
w111an .
J1nl1 H1len Wlc~er v• Kt'l'lne1h RIY.
mond Wlc~er
Ctr1d1d G1rtl1 VI f llot G1rcl1
Arlvn L.H Vin Glider VI C1thtrlnt
SUI Vt n Gilder
P1lrlcl1 Ann V1n ltlerJum n Jtl7)'
R~ Vtn lllel'lum, 1t 11
Emlly Cltrk Vt Wlllltm J, Cl1'11
Pior.ne. II!. 01nltb YI ltrn' I ,
01nlels
Ktthl"1 n Anr'lel~ Moe VI ll:Ull•!I owen
M~ l oret!t J1ne Oft'se 'n Dl\lkl JllH'Oh -· lh1r1eY Ann LtWll VI Wlllltrn HeDry
Lewlt, Jr.
Loul1 V. $l'l(lflm1k1r v1 H1rrl1011 F.
Sl'loe"'1ktr, Jr.
Flonnct 1. Whinier. "'· VI Jtty I ,
Wf'lnler, etc. Verw .... Holltnd VI Ectwtrd l . Hot-
""' EJ11nor Otv Pele11on Vl Altrtlll
Jdln ,.....,,.
JlmtlOIJ hnn VI Etmer J. Stnn
Mtl"llrlta I!. P-1'1 VII FN11Kil 0 . ·-~ 0 . Albt Vl ill~rll Alb•
Mmrlt A. Mtnnl vt V11tntlno Minni
Divorces
WAUHOUSI OU1\IT
... ""'" -c.,.t Soenlah Oolt • Wroulht ll'On 1>lnln1 Set 48'' table t chain
$1'5.00 Stt Re9 . ,245.00 """' """ .............. ,... , ...... , ....... .....
J. J. kHICkUIOCkU
4001 11acH IT 'f .....
C........ , ........ & MICAl'fllVr}
HM40f
•
IOl!l'J 11'1 COllOUdto to\of!fll\"I 1n• Fr'llllY~for ld\ool f1'"" ot llflll "ii, ..,., •nd ebc.,.. or 01~1r oo~ ll I I el II lttJI ttlll 1g1 il¥o
t11....:"'-'td areuP11 rn•v till MI. Jt..,.. •I W.. DAil Y PILOT.
lHN~~O ~BllfOlNIB
Uldllllll§.Am\d
~§ ~ekend September 21&-22
Artlsts'Weekend ~' ~
Gutting Horse
l1hlbltlon
llWJ01111 --Quarter Horse Show! ---
Nat laakud September 11111
Scalptun law • t-1 C1iDla Iara law
laUJlllJ
lpab1a1 & lqnitatloD now
Rancho California's Plaza Jias
something for everyone! There' re
horses and ponies to rent, miles
of bridle trails, picnic grounds,
and unique gift shops. The kid!
can fish in the fishln' hole and
play in the hay house. You and
the family will enjoy touring the
modern dairy farms, ranches
and ranchitos on our 87,600 acres
of land!
lRNC]O CBUf DllNffi
I • I
..... ~
""""' ·-· Chick lvt rtOll. Inc.
Z I 11 N.wp1rt loul1Y•t"
111•1 •1J.otoo .
{
-Ju. Cep11111111
•l!J "CJ••• ,,.,.
.1. J21SJ V•ll1 ~ ...
4tt·tl61
"'"""''" -· H•r\.o .. , v.10 •• ,.11.
\171! h•cll t.IM-4
11141 141MH
-~
Ei .. , I 19 -
'
I
I'
lO DAILY PILOT
Here's How to Tell W11ere OVER THE COUNTER
You Really Stand on Pay
By SYLVU. PO!l'l'i;:R
U you're a lyplcal _ ..
eaner in the U. S., your g.... w~ earnings are
now up to an all·ttmt hlJh
,109.16 • lull ,13.18 ..... t
more than your pay tn
September" 1965, when tbe
escalation of the Vietnam
war fot under way.
Bu do you know how
much or th1a pa,y gain is
"re•l" ascurniog you
h.ave three depeodentl! To
tran,late. do you know how
much of this 113.18 ls lett in
actual purchasing powt.l'
after you have deducted
· Social Security and federal
tncome taxes and made ad·
justrnen(S !or blg!rer livln1!
costs!
A MERE Zic a w.ek.
1f you're a typical factory
• worker ia manufacturlna:, . ~·our gross weekly pay 111 up
to a reeord $1.22.10, a full
$14 .27 a week above Sep-
tember 1965.
: But assuming again tbaf
Sou.rs Is a famJly of fo\D', do
you know how you 1tand in
terms of "nal" pay, mean-
ing after deduct.Ions for
federal Jncome and Social
ScC\.lflty taxes and ad· justrnenla for ruing pric .. !
YOUR REAL pay la ac-
lually OOW!I 63c a week.
. At the end Of this colmn.n,
··:-,ou11 find a cunpilation
.~ for me by the . , Jluieao al Lab« .$tatlatloa
lrhicb ll!Dws what "'°""' a,re ahead in ''real" pay,
-l•belllndandbyhow
mud!.
The compilation t e 'I. r s
apart the Overall dollar
figure6 on pay increases
-..... In' ptriod al .... celeratins lnD•Uoa ma&k
mllt'b more than t h e y
reveal.
IT DISCLOSES tl\e Ct<ot
to wblc$ 1lle lll6M'l-68 ln-
flat!oo bas been and Is
eroc:linJ the as?Pa:rent rise in .... d-..
And oltboogh It doesn't
state it directly, it
dramatb:ea bow pttlfuor tnr
behind lo 1be family li"11g
on a rlaldJ>' set or com.
paraUvefy aet income, the
indtvldual livq on Social
Security or 4 private
peoalon Qr savinp invest.eel
in fixed-income aecurtUe&.
n.s IOrt of. compllatioo is
dynamite at ony time. II
could be of. expl01ive im·
portance in t.his b t t t e r
presideotlal eledlon year.
WHO'S AHEAD the most!
The WOflker in construction .
The rise in his wages hS:s
been at a pace which dwarfs
the increase in bis taxes and
living costs. Hts gross week-
ly oheck is up '21.87 ln three
years from $138. 75 t o
$167 .62. His real net ."Pen·
dable earnings, assuming
three dependents. art up
from $111.73 to $116.95. He is
ahead by SS.22 a week, an
indisputable gain on the liv·
log standard ladd!r,
The explanation fOf' tru.1
erosion is m the front pages
every day ; the Vietnam
war. When piled on top of an
already booming economy.
it v..as simply t.oo much.
The superb balance
between wage and price ill·
creases disappeared, prices
started to zoom, wages
started to SU11ge up, the
leapfrog was on and it's still
Olds' New Look
For 1969 Oldsmobile has simplified its medium price
class lineup. All 88's this year will be known as
Delta 88's and will include this newly created top.
of-the-line Delta 88 RoyaJe. The new hardtop coupe
Crossword Pmzle
ACROSS
l Rich fruit
takr
i Pudding
ingredient
9 One of
mylhologi cat
twosome
I E~ypt.
pr1mev.1I
deity
.; Allegation
or fact
lb Abra sive
material 17 Un1rst1ained
rrvelry
'.ta Curl1n11 team
lJi Ki.1d o!
• l'l"illth
'0 ~l ~tricd
ll'lill\ :z f1 ne-gra1ne J
1911rous rock
!) 1t e tream -
::4 Kind of
fabric
5 Making no
uueranc e
3 K1nd•ol
slltllng
vapor:
2 words
.?. Inordinate setf-eslrl"l!I 3 tiletaphysical
entity
_.4 Aetompli t f' J> litu1gy
J& Presiding
orflc•r's 1mptr11ent
37 Kind ol
""''f;' tom sill0tt
)a ~tt Down
)9 Protec.led
with a levee
40 Befuddled
41 Up---:
Z words
43 French
resort
44 Corislantly
45 Place in
studied
attitude
46 Canadi1n
Island
49 Deprives of
st reng th SJ Not in a
wh isper
54 Ore of
Labr ador
55 Exclam ation
of pain
Sb Na rrowly
reshicled 57 Wild pigeon
58 Inner:
Prtfix
59 Rtgarded wllh
hostility
bO Frigtitenrd
bl Ftllne
sound
~'Y
l Biting
1ema'k 2 Fr. girl
friend
) Benefit
4 Go brlorr
5 Sptelally
of Hayes
11nd JerOlllt
•-blut
7 Fellow
I Trer
' Dlsfigurtd
10 Pltasanlly
diverttd 11 Isolated
hill
12 U.S.S.R. city
13 Word heard
lrrquently
·In U.N.
21 Compl1t!d 2Z Wanting
novelty 14 Put somt-
th ln g In the
Inside of 25 Smal l
httrln!f z• -coriftttl: A roet
27 EaSlly nextd
2S AcW1lor 29 Forest11g1
30 lridlan com 31 COl'lvers•
lionat
stratagems
)} Dtclarrr
In br1dgt
36 Prtsentrd
a\ I Qifl
~120/68
37 lrl usical
composition:
Z words J' Kind of highway
40 WW II 1ircrafl
carrier
4Z Oe11y
-43lr11d1up
-45 Verify conectness 44 "Ari of Fugue"
compoSfl'
47 ·-br1ve:
lrluslcal ..... ,.
48 ltngUI
unit
4• Bird
50 Th ing In
shape of
hall moon
51 Outside:
Comb. 101111
52 Ostentation
54 ll oun laln
of Asia
lfinor
"
•
"
... l '
? .• ~ ... _-,.
has ils own distinctive features and markings and
comes with vinyl top as standard equipment. OJdg..
mobile line goes on sale Sept. 28.
SP Complains
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
No Admlstlon Ch•rp
.. 1"'"411tfM ,. ...... ,. ........... ef hmtttt-c .. c ....
,.,.,. lltM.flt. ...................................... hrwl"'
& "-........... ,.,......, ...... ~ .... wlHI,. .....
'*"••••• ....i ttec• •d a " .,.._.. ...
WM . L O'BRYON. Instructor
l1t1h11tl111f .. ,......, 21ttr
1...-1 ...._wn...,.,.. J:lt .. ftlO , .... _...._.
JIOI W..t.m Ott.. --........ ""LHtlw
•
INVESTMENT COURSE
Cond•ct1d by IDWAlD McN.UY
A!Jied Member N-York Stock 'txcban~
FIVI WDl(l Y sn510N5
I Cander11•" from Mr. McN•ry'1 cunent
12 ..., .... co'1f•• et U.C.L.A.I
Monday IY"'l"t• -7:00-t'" p.m.
Sopt.,,,1-ll, 30 i Octob« 7, 14, 21
Island House, Fashion Island
Newport 8t•ch
tCom11limtntary Admttalon'
l!DW.AaD MeNAlY. Gen•r•I P•rtner
0. H. Bl•ir & Comp•"Y
itembmi New York Stodl; E~hanp
Nt'W Yortl: •nd Lori An~tn
•
1
... ~.,.....-------.. -. -.. ...
f'rld«r. So-21!, 1961
Friday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
=·-... -1::
1 . I
•
" ' ' 1'
•
J! DAILY PILOT Fl4day, -20, 1%8
•
• ' ..,,REMIERE -Gene Barry, above, co-stars on
"Name of the Game," debuting tonight in color at
8:30 on Channel 4. Toy Franciosa and Robert Stack
co-star in the series of high life, adventure and ~workings of a top crime magazine.
;JELEVISION VIEWS
'The Outsider'
Lacks Action
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Something was notice-
ably missing from this week's premiere of NBC-
l'V's private eye series, "The Outsider": violence.
THERE SEEMS little doubt that the antivio-
lence campaign took its toll of the new, one-hour,
Wednesday night show that stars Darren McGavin.
For time and again the experi.ence<I viewer could
aJmost feel the m<>ments where violence would have
been used under tile old system -and where it
will be used again when the beat is off.
AND WATCHING the show under these circum·
stances was enlightening. It was vivid proof of how
a program often relies on a punch in the mouth or
a gun duel as its climax -and how the same show
can s2g when denied tile chance to use these easy
ways out.
Actually, ''The out.sider" was p1easant enough
in the traditional private eye mold. But I don't think
anybody would deny that it barely got off the
ground in terms of being gripping.
WHAT WE SAW was a basically likeable hero
and format that got caught up In small talk. The
characters were pretty rountine. The plot -about
card 00.eating in a men's club -was interesting
b:Ut not overwhelming. And the wit was ordinary.
These aspects of a show may be forgotten, or
glossed over, or just serve as transitional material
to reach the final fight But robbed of the no-llllnk,
kick-in-the-teeth climax, suddenly the characters,
plot and dialogue are centrally important -more
than usual in weekly video series -and one sees
them exactly as they are.
NO ONE of any intelligence regards the basic
quality level of most television sertes as very higb.
But it is silly to blame the problem on writers, act-
ors, producers, directors or network executives. Tbe
problem is simply there is too much television. No
one can grind out superior stories for &how after
show. week aft.er week.
Thus was t he debut of 11The Outsider" victimiz-
ed by the antiviolence crusade. And other shows
'vill be similarly affected, and many of them will
not be as basically likeable as "The Outsider",
and will suffer accordingly, especially those without
as amiable a leading man as McGavin.
DON'T EXPECT hearts and flowers in every
2'Ction series. however. There will be "motivated"
virnence in a number of shows -and of course
truly dr amatic showdowns in violent terms are just·
ified if properly motivated. It is unnecessary to go
again into the classics of literature that are full of
violence.
The television showdown, however, will come
when the shows that are downplaying violence are
perhaps bit hard by tile early-season ratings -the
ones that make the difference in whether they stay
on or go off the air.
WE KNOW that unmotivated violence is going
to gradually be brought back on the air in larg~
scale tenns when things cool down. But the ratings
- and the millions of dollars at stake for a ll net-
\vork.~ -may ca use turnabouts quicker than ex-
pectf'd. and a reshuffling of programs and scenes.
F'or to wait to long in the shark.ea t-shark wor· · or tPlevision ratings may well mean the few stat: .
ti"al points that keep a program on the air. Altru-
i ~m and brill iant scripts are nice to think about, but
t""'v are hard to come by, and we are talking about
f'.'Old·blood ed world of numbers, dollars, jobs and
corporate stock prices.
Dennis the Menace
• I
1
PEANUTS
DR. KILDARE
GORDO
RAP-
LAY-
HOOTA!
SHAMUS!
IS 'THAT VO() f UN LOCI<
THE DOOR!
JUDGE PARKER
1~ YOll'U GOIN6 TO
FlirST TALK WITH Q!r
FATHE!r, ll'Otol'T
W™flt CAL.UNG!'
MOON MUWNS
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
I iELLYoU
I GO'T' A
MOUSE IN
s£~ACHI
MISS PEACH
Il<A is
SUG<iED
ll'Y M/ll!lCIA I
lloR.GfllMMIS .J
. . ~ . . -.
'
ly Charin M. Schub
I
LET'S ~ 'l(J.JVE
CO/r\Pl.ITTL«/ LOST ~OUR MIND!!
!<MD !li'f TfOOPER HERE 'S 51T OOWM,
PRETTY CER.TAIH 'IOUR WAROffl. 10U,
FOi.K'S PRACTICAllY TOO, TRcOPeR.
Kl~PPEO A WA.RO
Of. THE STAT?:.
By Ken Bald
cot.I!: TlfCRNE J$ HERf. AT THIS
VER'f MOMEHT HE 15 SflNG
OPERATED OH '6Y ONE Of'
TI1f CDUNTR'/'S LEADIKIS
8RAIN 5UllGEONS,
HIC·KEV! HIC-KEY! HIC·KEN! l<IOCI<! WIS-KEY! Fl(/S-KEY!
II'/ ./AAINEE,JOl/NNV
PAVL ! I'VE FOµND US A
!t WONOROLlS JUICE!
'' e!Z).s A CJJP,QUICJ<f IX)O/l UN/..OCI<.!
I '\
By Harold Le Doux
By Ferd Johnson
By Tom K. Ryan
GOOD! NON, MJ>SSl>Gf.
FINGERS GENTLY, FOR A
HEALTHY, TINGUNc; SCALP!
By Al Smith
I -..... 1....w... I \ I ·--... --I
IT ~OUNDS VMUE, IRA .
~S SHE OD .. NYTHl,.G
IN P~ICl.ll.J'lt TO S~AK DF?
I
ly Men
NOT EXACTLY.
EVEl<YTlilNG SHE
DOE> 15
LJN>PEAl<ASLE'.
1' 11 I • !I •• fl
.. ~
• FRIDAY ~ATUROAY
lm£MIQI 20
· r vr N1~r
. • I IO'TElllllU 21
'.'Of!','•' . I
~ .. • 'l1lo "' .... (Cl (IO) ""' ~::I=..\':."".%'=.:>. Dllnphr. • a..: CC> A 1t1t11C1 ..,. ;...
ltM Allen: (C) (IQ) Ml " •llMt ~ "'* cocrtrlb• I H1ltlltf'ltl•W., ..,.,. (C) (]O) wild tll .,..t minds •nd 11...t
Sil O'a.dt llfflt: """ SlwU..-tiQps " Iha tltl4, wtttl • -( r111N1) 'i>-.lole FtfTW, June AllJ. 1ud/w.1: rl 1011111 atlldMtl. .... R •1n11u• (t) m 111_..: (t) (30) "HI-Did~ CNtp• 'a "Portnlt II T••
lllddl1." 1111 Riddltr wr11b IMVK !'" ln ttl1 livtl of 81trnlR .,,, ltobk\. 7:JO Sii• ... lwlinS: (Q [6uc.
fE wurs MtW! nti •rllt productd In -moci. Ill._. iubll9t tlM with MlcMpA St.ta Ullfm1llJ,
l:JO I lllC - -IC) (Ol) Iii -,....., (Cl flit '"""' SloW (C) (30) " Morie: ..,.. n.. .. LM" I L.Mi1 LllCJ' (30) (comldy) '4J -C11udlttt t.olblr\ 9 (j) McH1ll's 111.., (30) Fred MKM11111y.
SKrl9tl .. riN: fJ EHtdM LMlr. tel With ,,.
Jfetidtf'I M (C} lntOi' Chlrl• L Rulcin. ll'llltllldoc'.
7:00 8 9 (I) C11 [\ltnllll llltwr. (C) m lllr. "'*'-(t)
(30) -W1ller ~nkitt. 7:45 ID SHftld HMit (C) •
I, ,,.., (C) {30) l :llD I 1~ ..... .., . .,.: (C}
P'"""'lll (C) (JO) Slrplr I (CJ
l lHll•fl't '"'" (30) • ,., (C) lll•ldlic .. lllMI ti 111"""1: S1t11lll1J t•11tr~ ''1'1q1I
"Yciar Doctor and YOll." Drums" •nd '111• Endl•nttd Y•lltf'."
7:JO R IB (f) Tiit Wiid, Wlllll Wiit tD LIS &hll• J hW
(C) (il)~•tttm 1dvtirm.111 spy ·_. 1:908!HI(I)11111 lwllJ'/lllllll ...
riu ll:1rrln1 ROO.rt Colll'ld 1nl • .-...:[€!
Ro• MtrtlL (R) !' T., Cit (Q II M(W !WOI H!Oi ~ n. .V.Mlwti ., ...
(C) (60) "Tiit sta!llGI\." Aft lndiln
ciutbruk lhreatms to 1n1pt wh1n f) ..-. fC) -n. \.Ill CMfllll9
Bllly Bhlt Clnnon Ind In APKM (ldv1ntur1) '54 -T~ Rumll,
bay fllht O'+'ll' I prlzld llont. II) Enfil laltla'
Olost lw Spiel: (C) (60) "Spic. t:OOMl ~Tlll flltbtlnll (C) Cireus." Will rie1rty run1 1w1r with · JpWlr 11111 (C)
1n lnt1rplactic ci1cus. .a l..11111: (C) Fitllffl 11111
O @ (])Oft T• SM t11t WIDrd: mrci11 proar•m. (C) {MIJ "T1n1n, tht Ape M111." fl) Clitln'• fJ MM\111 $ Mowir. "'YM C... , Alff(' (COO!ldy) '45-Roblrt Cum· 1:15 A M1•i1. .... ~ W...
minp. Llr Scott r....r 11141 hr" (cotllldy) ~ 8J Tr• flf -llllCC (C) (30) JtLr.11111, l»IN l)'llll. Ctl1net Ru1·
hrrJ Mun (60) t:JO =QI (J) WMQ I-= fC) C.r-
fD AFRICA ••. In Color toGn a.ms w1t11 11"' •ra ... * Stunnlnc ABC Oocumen· weird drivm. .
· :r.;c~~~~:~,,~ndU· I~~~:
ti.on. and "Dirt Jout~."
g)Fllipl s..-@!)~IMO: fC)
... m ..... IC) (30) .... ,illlm"" ..... -I<) @I) Mllliu r Estrtll11 Ill-': Q1) Hcl!'MJ t. .. c....
1:30 f) 9 (J) 0.-Pyll: (C) (30) • the rtfl (C) B MB: "Shoet4111 II Mtdkn 0 Look What PLYMOUTH iiot' <""'•'> '57-,_,. * 11 Up To Now Scott. Jtfnll Cnlc. "-Cit DkDt-
Watch The a1.~
NAME Of THE GAMEi ,.,.1m 9 ()),,_/_ A
D ti) Cil P'IElllltlE "" 111... Y.11_1_ ..... (t)
9' tllt fi•: (C) (90) "Th• ftlr 02) W Fllllblllk f.-CC)
of Hlah PIKU.". Jeff Dillon 11ll:Gllfi19 Cl) .... Lllpt ""'* lfwn 1 DOmprMlsin1 pldurt fl • (Cj ltlnu to bl 1nnounc«I.
top pt«nment offlel1I, but blfor1 g MtW: -n. '1111'1 I•" ( ....
ht can dllCOVtf If th• plch.ir1 tdJ) '42-:-(lon:lthy Ltmw WUlllll
muM bl1ckrna!I or 1 ••n1nus Holdtn. Betty Hutton '
p«nment andll, !\ii wlb!MI .. O ~ ._.. fl .. ... =~ ~ w.-..: <C> (30) m .. """" ..... • -.
''01k Ctttk C.nyon." F•tur1d in Wortd.
tttil tour °' Ariron•'• O.k CrM 11:H § ~W ~ ""1..... fCl Clrryon, Mttln1 lor 11111Mr01.11 mo-~•erlt11 l1MIUHI
tiClfl pictuna. ii 1 look It Mont. -• .,,.e1m,.. ~ -
lll/M I U..stll. -Mwlr. .. 0 ~Cf) ........ lllltm: (C) (~II') '55--lliOntllll lohe-
(00) 'Why The' IUlltd JilCllan." s,, tfnt, MHllmo Qmttl,
1d¥tnturt 11ri• starrlrc llld'llrd Im,.... ......
Bndford. (II)
I .. lrifll fC) tlO)
Ktnll Ciiis (C) (30)
Speclllltlo1: "Th• Slrtfln -A
Hew Lita St)'le7" l%:OO 119 (I)._! (Ct
@II A1errla AdMlll 12::301 QI (I) Je11"' 0-fCJ
t:00 IJ 9 m Fri41'1 Ml&it !bit: (C) FMtn: "Arctic M1nhunt •
"Knill >I>." This two·hour futur1 1111 lllMlet n.n: "T111
film 11 th• pilot hit CBS'1 new show !1111ls."
tti&l ·W~I preml1re MXt Wffk. l:GO U ~'II Mortli "-klll Socw ....._! (C) (JO) l•PI ampionltlip 11... \VJ I Tiit °"'''*' (60) . '0.1 • -
D Mowtr. "1'M HIRrdl II ~ D M111161 &ti t..Cll ~ (dru111) '40 -C.,, lnnt,
t:JO 0 ~~Im ti Wll Sollllltt: M1rtli1 Sevtt.
i {lO) Rlcll tl'lt Loni TrtU.'" 0 Morit: (C) ~ .....
Nen: (C) (30) l.llT)' Bumn. (muticll) ~S--Oori• l>IJ, H•~ n. 1111111 (60) Kell, Philip ClrtY.
NET ,..,., •• "YidDft. lll&t· m Oplftltn: W....,_ (C')
n1: Aulul'l'ln." €!1 LI Mollfl • cnotta (C')
l0:000Q>fl)lllEW IEASDM ltlf 1:150!Hl(IJNW Fo1t•1ll: (C)
Tr.ti: (C) (60') "Spock's 8r1ln.'' A San 10s1 al Stanford.
beautiful women's stiostlr im111 l:JO m Movie: (C) "Tiit lll1ktd Mtll"
startles tti1 otlicers 1111'.1 Cltw on fdr1m1) '59--Avi Gardner. Anlhonr
!ht bridlt or th1 U.S.S. Enterprise, Fr11iciGM.
but i1s dluppt1r1nu brinp the 1:00 O Clrap1l111 ind Calldldlllt fC)
di!ICIWll')' that Mr. Spock'a br1in (!) Cort111I Tllltatrt; '1wo·Gu1
hu been mnOYld with tuffir;ll ,.,. Lady."
ftdion.
§ CW~htMJS lflM (C) (llO) 2:10 CJ TIMI kopl: (C) "Altlllt• fror I Bitter Amtrkl.'' ~ JlllN tw .. DtflMr. 0 ...._ (C) "'Whill F•thW'9
i 1'ill ' o KIM I Jrrl1d1111t1." , ... ..,) 'SS -Robert W1-, rim:m:i .. Art tM ..... , ...... ~llVllwt with D1v1f Ben· John Lind', Dlbl'I P111t
tii•rion tlllf v ... Dlytn, .qhtil, wole.f£::" llkk (C) af MOlhl DIJlll. 'fllhnl11 COllllMll-llM: (C)
tlllof bl lllllld..11111 *"' till corn· ,._ ,.....
--(I) "'°lilt())"" ........ IC) ID w ldrltll ._ fC'> (60) Mo* (C) "flit If• Y1lr-fm LI .... di Clt*bl (C) ( ma) '51-Jue Wym1n, Ch•rl• lO:JDI •--(30) Bill Jollns. l1uf,:1Dn, .IGln Blcind1U.
lnllftltilnt: "H1nnonlc u''"·· "'~.,. ,., ~-~ O.tdooi-.n: (C) "'~
Don•tl rct1 T fO!lhy fllllin1." me.•• ll:OD 0 Ellftlt D'Clock R1Plft; (C) (JO) 6) Color T1111trt: (C) '1he Lltl ti
Jerry Dunphy, t/11 MohiC1n1," With Jost M1tt0.
0 ltHBC Ntw1 Strtlte: (Cl (30) •:on 0 lnthkr /Oubldtl' (C)
Tom Brokaw. O Tiit Profenion1li: (C) "~
§ Nfrld Hlklad (30) dto.''
Ill ... : (C) (30) 9ul1r W1rcl. Cl Chtrfll CluR
MR: "T1M MooR 11 Din" (dr1m1) '4l-Si1 Cldrit H1tdwlck1, •:10 I Ylnfolllt: (t) Jers Wltte1 hostL
Lee J. Cobll. This WMll 111 tl!t NFL: (C) m DouN O'toll111t: (C) (90) hltm: (CJ '1o Cltdl •
Gllffl:s hlf this Mnina: '" atrna RhinG." Oocvmentlf)'.
Kt71 BIH1rcl, DOmlc stuM!y K171. S:DO 8 S..... Wot!dtr1vl Klpta: (C)
recordinl 1rtlsl JllMS D1mn, dull· PrlWlfw af the ntw fill llUCln Oii
lll:·IClor, R1ymond St Jacquts, 1rtd CBS. (A)
actor C111 Bell:. II SpMkln1 Fl'llllJ: (C) Eitwl• 18 Tllllt Sllttf: (C) (30) .lolll Rif. iffwm1n hod:s.
111 II hostass. Godf11y C.mb ridlt IJ AF\. CUM II tl!t Wttl: (C)
discuu11 dlttin1 with tlptrt Jt1n Q @Cl) AIC's 'KICll Wll'N II
Nldelch. S;11rts: -(t) U.S. Men's 01,mpk
€1) NoJclert 34 (Cl Track ind Fit!d Tr!1l1 llcim Sou lh
11:15 ii) Dr. nn. HI Jinct (C) ~ T1hoe, C..lilw11i1. Jim McltaJ
i1:10 m ecr1e1 I •NdJ """'"" (t) ·-11 :301J Mcwlt: (t) °'Mar;trit lrflrlllftt. I I k p ti "T> ltlr" (dtll!MI) '57-tf1talle Woe>a, IC lflllC re: O Gt111 Ktl_!r. Scfloola." A IMl'lll al btlld: Ind
'
9 (})"" ........ -IC) .... 1"""""' i-• ""' iiiiwll: (C} .... ,.... (dnml) ldlCltOf Oft tuch .. !Mqultlle irl
-.le•n Simmona, Mar1oll hl'ldo. tht ltfl6. (I}
f)llHl l])..., ..... -(Cl lllf--m iif'"tril: <C> "Stlllldt·HMI klld· s:JO ! 111.1p11 .., (C) <R>
4•·HIJI" (m11s1ctl) '41-.klftt H1¥11'. mu"" Ctlttwtty lllllnl: (C)
LOii Mt.Alllll1r. ..,. Allin Chllltftlll MlnMIOl:1
12:JD m Nalltd Cltr ~bTwlltM hM •
12::40 0 Mowll: (C) ........ If ....,. fD loll lt1t: HOit 110bll1 Crcimll
($Plci.1c11l1r) '61 -.IN11111 Cnln. lnt1Ni"' Noel Glno11, l\lftlof II
Jolin Dml llff1'110fL "Jlftltlllfl 5'1U1rl."
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
'l"·''iihiiidi
642-4321
1111 Wnt B1lboo Blvd.
" '
Newport llN<h
' .
1
l
1
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• . .
'Old Polle · !*! 1 y .. . . :• . ,
'
Business Pi-,;~~$
PIRATING
MOre 11111!1 .., ~~ •
_,ioy<n In a """"1 by
the 8'1reai o1 Natiooal AI·
tars, a publisher o f
bl111ne11 IJ1format ton
rep>rted they llave pro·
blema with competitors over
j>lrai!ni " -·"'· . A few fl. ~e companies,
theburoaufowld,~
reelgDotloo to tile
wtcb stBtem.ents tueb. •a,
•'1bat'1 tbe. n~ Qf the
lllDe," end, 1'Thi1.il a ;w:ay
of. Ufe." But dM! CQDl·
pll1i.t """' li>diguact.
'"lber<I lo -!peal com-
--·· the ..,....y lbowed, la through salary
iDcrealel, and sometimes
through ~ta in
-1dDg coodJ1loM and op-=·· Aoodler i s eacli~~
Bui the direct -k method bu advooates, as il-
lu9trated by the clin.i.oal·like
,,.port from the industrial
relationl manager of a
rela~-1]-y:
"Piracy -practiced by \WI> O<lllll>etloll ~-w. of.
lemjllecl but lallOcl to -an amen.Ne agreement, aft·
... -... pirated their emplOJCll. Wt then reached an acreement we'd not em-
ploy each olhe<'• active
Business Briefs
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) -
Men')' Co. announcod It will
apeod. 1everal m J ·11 l-o n
dolW• to expllllll a n d
modernize Ill lirlc!t and t.lle
planlil, Inclu<ling !notall.Uon
ol a completely automated
brick plant wtth annual
capacity of 40 m i 11.i o n
bricks.
•••
•
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'
J
i
I
j
I
I
• • r ...... ., . .. -...--......... . .... -' • •
J-1 Ll"Wlt .. lllll ' •
' •
/\
The MUG SHOP
Personallied ~lug.s
Since 1941
3024 E. Coast Hwy,
Coran• d•I Mir
THE FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANT
675.1374
Manahan & Eggers,
Inc.
lr111urance Brokers
2700 E. c .. .i Hwy., CdM
67l-0562
JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN-MERCURY
900 W. Coest Hwy,
N•wport Beach
Loh of Luck!
Gen• Johnson
e Uf• l11s11r1"c• e M11tu1t Fu11d1
540-'1469 830-1042
Karen Morgret• Imports
I D•"i'h Coff" G1rd111
26'40 E. Coest Hwy,
Coron• cl.I Mar
OpoR ov1ry d1y
ISlAND WASH
Self-Service Laundry
N,.1 I• f•rry
Balbo• lil•ncl
HARRY KELSO. l~C.
-Cuatom Honu.s -
Newport Beoch
673.0690
BARTHOLOMEW
INSURANCE, Int.
l ob l1rtholom•w &
l ryso11 Hlckmen
23ll E. Cout Hwy., CdM
675-5444 545-3165
KIRKPATRICK'S TV
Sales &: Service
0011 JCirkp1trick
2760 E. Coast Hwy.
Coro111 d1I Mir
673-2650
ALBERT E. STOCKTON,
V.M.D.
3838 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
673-1050
PAT MARLEY'S
BLARNEY SHOPPE
MEN 'S SHOP
3565 E. Coest Hwy,
675 -IB50
HAL AEBISCH ER
HEARING AIDS
3409 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona d.l .M•r
675·3833
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL BAN K
N•wp•rt C•"''' OfHc•
Lester R. Schwaiger
Vic• Pr•sid•11I
Newport Beech
CROWELL, WEEDON
& co.
Dick Smith
3326 E. Coast Hwy ,
Coron• del Mer
671-7005 or 549-0331
Lesler, Ryons & Co.
Dean W. Campbell
3425 E. Coast Hwy ,
Coron• del Mar
673-8380"
NEWPORT
FLOOR COVERING, 1,c.
Don Bolton
3500 E. Coest Hwy ,
Corona del Mer
675-1636
WILLIAM WINTON
REAL ESTATE
Montana Rumbold
229 Marine, Belboa hland
675-ll3 I
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO
CORONA DEL MAR YOUTH CENTER e SEA SCOUT BASE
e CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIP e
UCI SCHOLARSHIPS e ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
SCHOLARSHIPS e CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOOL
KEY CLUB e HARBOR AREA BOYS CLUB
YMCA e JOPLIN BOYS RANCH e AMERICAN FIELD
SERVICE e INTER-FAITH FOUNOA TION UCI e FOREIGN
l STUDENT SP~SORS e SPEECH SEMINAR SAN DIEGO
e KIWANIS BOWL-HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT QUIZ
HARBOR
INVESTMENT CO.
284 I E. Coa1t Hwy., CdM
673-4400
• BARNETT MORTGAGE
COMPANY
lloyd l1r111tt
2lll E. Coast Hwy.
Up1t1ir1
Coron• del Mar 673.5420
AMELIA'S
l 11 Marine Ave,
l1lbo1 ltt1rwl
673 -6580 5,30.9,30 p.m.
HERSHEY'S MARKET
& GROG !HOP
Personelized Servic e
Balboo lslend
STEPHENSON
REALTY
Salu l!clllall !Z<l1411l1"
306 Morine,
l1 lbo1 bl1nd
OBERHANSLl'S
of London
Patio Diriing-Delicatessen
2400 W , Coast Hwy,
Newport Beech
642-3414
Korker Liquor
222q E. Coest Hwy.
Corona del Mar
673-0916
Lester, Ryons & Co.
Robert E. !tftrctr,
Manager
1425 E. Coest Hwy.
Coron1 d11 Mir
673 -B380
BARTHOLOMEW
INSURANCE, Inc.
Bob Bartholomew &
Bryson Hick.man
2333 E. Coa't Hwy.
Corona de! Mar
675-5444 545-3165
3838 E. Coast Hwy.
V.M.D.
3830 E. Coos! Hwy ,
Corona del Mar
673-1050
JOHNNIE'S LIQUORS
Dee Cook-Owner
3537 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona dt'I Mar
673-7530
NEWPORT CENTER
PHARMACY
1402 Newport Center
Drive East
Newport Beach
6+1-2131
The MUTUAL Life
lnsur•nce Company of
NEW YORK
Robert S. Cun11lsO'll
)810 E. Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mer
673-9271 or 624-3564
Lesler, Ryons & Co.
Do11ald E. ll umpl~rtJIS, Jr.
3425 E. Coos! Hwy,
Corona del Mar
673-8380
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK .
Robert G. Lttch, Manogt:'
3141 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mor
Coren• ... I Mi' Off. 6JJ.tl40
WALSTON & CO.
Harold T. Butt1, Jr.
2700 E. Co•st Hwy,
Coron• d.I M•r
675.()501
MUTUAL FUND
ADVISORS, Inc.
1601 W•sfcliff Driv e,
Newport Be•eh
6<12-6422
AMLIN G'S
NEWPORT NURSERY
1600 E. Coast Hwy ,
Corona del Mer
(714) 673.()690
The SNACK SHOPS
-Fe r W•st Servic•• -~
We cannot compete with
"KIWANIS
PANCAKES"
-IUT -
W1 promi11
" TO TRY HARDER"
Speci•li1.in9 in
•SHOPPING
CENTERS
• INDUSTRIAL
BLDGS.
e INCOME
PROPERTIES
RICHARD D.
BECHTEL
Rtal Estatt Invtstments
833 Dover Drive
S11ite ''
Newport Beech
-642-0177 -
NEWPORT BE.A.CH
COSTA MESA
BOARD Of
REALTORS
Wh1n you
BUY OR SELL
,.511 yo1,1r
LOCAL REALTOR
BRUSH YOUR TEETH
TWICE
A
DAY
AND
SEE YOUR
DENTIST
TWICE
A
YEAR
YOUR
LOCAL DENTIST
See Your Friends At This Big
Good Luck
ON YOUR
KIWANIS
PANCAKE
BREAKFAST
You r Local
Lumber Yerd
WARD &
HARRINGTON
•
CABLE\llSION
Your VieJD to
Btteer Ttt1virion
NEWPORT BEACH
CABLEVISION, INC. .
1501 Wester.ff Dr.,
N•wport Beach
17141 M2·l260
Villa
Sweden
S1"tof11lbord lunch l Dinn•tt
6ilt Shop l lek•ry
3536 E. Coos! Hwy,
Coron1 d•I Mir
522 Main St.,
Huntln9fo11 l11ch
Your Hosts -
Oscar & Hertha Backlund 3300 W. Coest Hwy, i--------41 Newport Beach
548-3411
2:0 Yee" Servi119 Tll• H1rbot Ar•• i11 ~•sid1nti1I I Cemmer•
ci1I Prop1rti11 I Acr•191
To Those WM Know ... ,,.,
BAY & BEACH
REALTY, INC.
KIWANIS CLUB EVENT!
Coron• d•I Mir Offie•t
2407 E. Coast Hwy.
675-3000
N•wporl le1ch • l1lbo1 Offlc•1
2025 W. B1lbo1 Bl.
673-9200.
EVERYONE WELCOME ••• ANNUAL
OLD FASHIONED
PANCAKE BREAKFAST
DON V.
FRANKLIN
REALTOR
3250 E. Coos! Hwy,
Coron• del Mer
673-2222
• Anne Brummett
• J. Herold Celclwall
e John Franklin
• Charles H•ncock
• Florene• Lichter
• Lucile Moore
• M•rilyn P•rkhill
e Richard Schumacher
Sponsored By
Kiwanis Club
of
Corona del Mar
SATURDAY, SEPT. 21st --7 A.M. to 12 NOON
.. LUSK'S
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
HOMES
Corona del Mar
John D. Lusk
I SON
Qua lity Ifomes
A /i'amilJI Tradition
OBSERVE
LAW AND
ORDER
BANK OF
AMERICA
N1tionel Trull
I S.1.,in91 A1101i1ti•11
Coron• del ~•r
675-2550
SERVED AT THE
PARKING LOT OF
SCHROEDER'S
CHEF'S INN
3201 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
18 OFFICES
TO SERVE YOU
• Safety of Savings
• Premium Home Loons e Insurtd Escrows
GLENDALE FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Rui••!I M. li+,h Anlst111t Vic• Prniotr>t & MINflr
2333 E. Coest Hwy,
Newport Bsach
673-1 550 540-5311
TODAY'S
REAL ESTATE
IS
A GOOD
INVESTMENT
Coldwell,
Banker & Co.
2200 E. Coast Hwy ,
Newport Beach
549-ll51 675-2000
A/vita Brand
Products
• Commercial
• Industrial
• Residential
CONSTRUCTION
J. RAY
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY,
INC.
James D. Rau.
Prtsident
I BS E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa
642-4210
* * *
Pancakes
Served
The
Way
You
like
'E r m.
~ * -ti
' Newpo~ •• ~.~~!. Savings ... a Good place to save
M•ker Of The
Original
ALFALFA
TEA
SUPPORT YOUR
UNITED CAMPAIGN Jlolo ~: S3ee Via Udo, Newport Beach. Cali!. 92663 e Phone 673-.3130 I 21M Eall Co11t llwy., Coron• de! Mu, Cali!. 92625 e Phone 675-SMO
Jtcsou.rCrt In Exo!tl: of Onr-l-fundrro ~1illion Dollan i P. ~ Palmer, Chairman of tm Board e AJnet Blornqulat, Prt-sldcnt
•. t
I )
l
,...J
·1
I I
l -
I
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t
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TAKE THAT! -Ray Dalke (right) delivers a kick
·to Greer Golden in a karate demonstration at the
Los Angeles Press Club. Both Southern Californians
D1l,IL'I' PILOT ~ IW' ltlctoanl KMllllr
are black belt practitioners of the sell defense art.
The first-ever world karate championships will• be
held at the Sports Arena Oct. 19.
Olympi~s
' Alternates
Named
Paul Smart, chairman of
the U.S. Olympic Yachtinc
Committee, has announced
the three alternate skippers
who will co to Acapulco for
the Olympic yachting eame1
beg!nniJul Ocl 12.
The .alternate skippers wi11
be John Marshall·, Stamford,
Conn .; Robert Doyle, Massa·
chu1etta, and Tom Allen of
Buffalo, N.Y.
Marshall was runner-up to
Gardner Cox ta the 5.5 me-
ter Olympie trials held in
Newport last month. He ha'
experience in several classes
and will be expected to pinch
hit in either the 5.5s, Dragon
and Star Class.
Oi>yle was runner-up to
Carl Van Duyne in the Finn
Class trials, and Allen was a
close second to Robert Jam-
es in the Flying Dutchman
Class t;tials.
Both Doyle and Allen will
back up the skippers in their
respective classes.
"I feel that the five skip..
pers and three alternates
will give us an er eeptionally
strong team at Acapulco "
said Smart. '
Tournament in _Los Angeles ..
In !be 1964 yachting Olym-
pics at Enoshima. Japan,
the U.S. team won medals in
every class, but no gold me·
dais. Smart said he is confi-
dent that one or more go l d
medals will come to the U.S.
with the strong team being I~arate Getting on Its Feet;
World Championship .Set
fielded. .
Two NHYC
Skippers
Get Honors By EARL GUSTKEY
Of 1111 Olllf PIJ.tl Sl1ff
Judo. Joog C<lnsidered the
king of the seU defense arts,
'fs being strongly challenged
by karate, according ta
;'.Southern California karate
".; official! wtlo are planning
·the sport's premier e·vent
next month.
Los Angeles will be the-
host city for the 1968 World
Invitational Karate Tournia.-
ment on Satunlay. Oct. 19,
at the Sports Arena.
It's the first time the
world karate movement has
been organized sufficiently
to conduct a world tourna·
ment. Contestants from tfle
United States. Japan and
four Europe011 countries will
compete.
Karate hasn't yet ap-
proached the world recogni-
tion that Judo has, but it's
growing, particularly i n
Southern California. Judo
became an Ol~pie sport in
1964.
"There are ka.ate clubs
springing up all o v er
Southern CaliforrUa," says
Dr. Lester Ingber, a physics
instructor at UCLA and a
b}ack belt karate prac·
Tri tons,. Eagles
Outrun Opponents
In opening cross country
match<S Thursday. tho San
Clemente and Esbancira hllh
schools won easily but
Laguna Beacfl and Fountain
Valley were on losing end1-
by convincing margins.
Senior Charlie Hoyt and
his sq:ihmmre brotber QJrt
led Estancia to a perfect
score of 15-50 (in cross
country, low score wins).
· All seven Esttaocia run-
nehi crossed the finish line
Artists Drop
12-11 Game
To Warriors
A last·minttte goal by
Troy High School enabled
the Warriors to edge La-
1una Beach 12-11 in the two
school.a' 1968 w 1 t e r polo
opener.
The Artt.u Jumped to a
9-7 hall time advantace. but
Were overcome and finally
be9ilen on a 11!t-minute pen·
alty shot by DiYt Meyers.
Artist center-forward Bob
Gar~nt.r h'"1 an outstanding
gs"T?, 1::ortne eight eolll5
:·-r' ,.,. a fantastic all·
.. J , ..
. :ir for the War·
i" }(:i'I Wilb
·. t'nr·i ·-r I
• "$, ,, ·fl·
.. 1~·1. a.n:l t.1e
berore a ninner from host
school Tustin could finish.
Bob Uneba.ck and Craig
Sterling led San Clemente to
.a 15-49 wtn over visiting
Nell High School.
The Barons of Fountain
Valley were defeated easily
by &lnctto Alamitos, 16-45,
while at KateUa Laguna was
beaten by the host Knights.
19-36.
Coetl ,,... '111\ifltn:
ll!tl111Cl1 lJ, T111llll Jf
(U Cl>lrllol HO¥! t:", Ul Cvrt l4ovt
10:01, (l) lerry H1u11 lO:OI,. (4} Lii 81rl011 10:111, (5) Wi ller lreu 10:11,
Cf) Mll'll 111...,,, 10:25, en Cl'llltk $hllf. 1,,. lf::JO.
iM OeoM!lt. lJ, -· (ll ao11 L~dc U:ll. !ll Cr1i11
SterH1-12:11. Ul lllf E111ll 1t:J7, 1• 8111 liY., ll:•, I I Jl kl'I 51t111 12:'1, 6)
... , .... 1em111 12, ... (II Mlle• w .. tflll 11:01. ltl llCllll ,.....,. 1 .. ,,_fllfl V111111f U 0) k1vln WIHllm• t:Sl, U) 01w
.\illller If 13, (fl c.!1 "'°""' to:l,, !Ill Tlm """* tt:J6. 112J ,..,,. c11r11111no 10:51,
Y anki Min Two
titioner.
"There are a lot of karate
clubs on univers.jty and col·
Jege campuses tnat. will soon
become accredited physical
educatioo classes -as soon
as we can get enough
qualified m.tructors."
T h e difference between
judo and karate is the
degree of punishment one
can inflict upon an attacker.
Basically, the object in
judo is to throw yo ur foe to
the ground. ln karate. the
practitioner uses striking
motions with the hands,
elbows and feet.
As Harry Umemoto, a
Huntin!llOO Beacll black belt
devotee, puta it: ' 'Th e
physical philosophy in judo
i6 to use your foe 's force
against himself. In karate,
you maximize your own
strength ... applying basic
laws ol physics to your own
body."
The highest ranking
karate expert in America is
Hidetaka NWtiyama, a sixth
degree black belt and chief
instructor for the A 11
America Karate Federation.
"Some of the techniques
in karate seem very s01aU
and yet they are completely
disa"bling," he says.
"It requirefl great mental
and physical fitness.
Obviously, since karate
can lillJ. or severely wound
an opponent, it can't be ap·
plied in its raw form in com·
petitlve matches . The coon·
petitors are scored b y
judges as they fall just short
of striking ttteir opponents.
"It's not like pulling your
punches like e boxer does."
Dr. Ingber says, "you're us-
ing full force but coming
just !hart of making COD•
tact."
Karate is one of four ma·
jor sell-defense arts. The
others are judo, kendo and
atkido. Kendo requirt:s the
skilled use of long poles or
sticks and Aikldo is an at-
tack upon an attacker's
joints.
Umemoto is attempting to
form an active karate
organization in 0 r a n g e
County,
"We have 10 people signed
up and ready to go,·• he
says.
"Our only problem is fin·
ding a facility where we can
work out. We'rt: trying to
get permission to use one Of
the wrestling rooms at the
Huntington Beach H i g h
School."
Umemoto is a bl.aek belt
member of the A l I
American K'a:rate Federa-
tion , ~ only nationally
organized karate organiza·
tion.
"We ·are directly affiliated
with the J-apan Karate
A.ssociation (JKA), which i.!
the largest in Japan and the
only one recoenized by
Japan's Mini&.try of Educa-
tion," he says.
~Newport H.arbor
yachts won top honors In
Lo8 Angeles Yacht Club's
Whitney Series ~ WM
concluded last week.
Overall winner w a ti
George Sti.irges' Oolumbla-
50 Release from Newport
Harbor Yacht C1ub, and
runner-up was Bill Allen's
Oal-40 Madrugador, .also
from NHYC.
Class breakdown of tile
series was as follows :
CLASS A-(1 ) Jubilation,
Harry steward, LAYC; (2)
Suma<IN, Al Martio, LAYC;
(3) Capricious If, B • n
Williams, LA YC.
CLASS B (1)
Madrugador, Bdll A 11 e n ,
NHYC; (2) Release, George
Sturges. N H Y C ; (3)
Dorothy E Ill, Boris Levin,
CYC,
CLASS C -(1) Papoooe,
Cliff Tucker. LBYC; (2)
Conquest, Bill Polly, LBYC;
(3) Star Dl'!JICer. Doug
Starkweather, SI BYC .
Resull.!I Of the Little
Whitney Series for Midget
Ocean Racina: Fleet Yacht.I
was not computed becauee
one of the races was can·
celled and will be sailed dur·
int LA YC'1 Harbor Series .'
Pomeroy
Series Set
Polo Tourney Final s
Slated This Eve ning
Sou~ Shor! Sailing Club's
PDmeroy Trophy Series for
Midget Ocean Racing Fleet
yactru will be held S.Wrdoy
and Sunday with start. off
IN: Bal boa Pier.
In oonjuncUon with the
Second and final day or
action in the Newport-Mesa
Class B and C water polo
tournament started at 2:30
this afternoon at Estancia
RJgh School with !he final
rnitches stated to get under
way al 5 o'clock.
Jft Class B 1ctJon Thurs·
day, Estanda hlghlighte<I
action with a pair 0£ victor·
ies.
i n the opening game of.
the Bee bracket, Newport
was beaten by Estancia,
9-5.
Greg Goodyear s c n r e d
fl vt Coals tor the Eagles.
Costa Mesa, 6-4. series will be the Cel-?.O fleet
The first game ol the dlampionflhipe.
tournament w~s in the Cee The late Warren Pomeroy
bracket with Newport }jar-was a great advocete al
bor defeating Estancia, 10-3. 1mall ocean racing boa.ta
Harbor's Dou.a Snyder. was long before the Midge\
high 1corer with five goals, Ocean Racing Fleet wa1
while teammate Kevin Allhf'.! ever irpnlzed. M 0 ft F
had three scQr'es. boat.I are 30 feet and under
Costa Mesa dumped Coro-in over.it lengtti.
na del Mar &-3. The Mus-Pomeroy WM an empk)ye
tao.a;1 jumped out.to an early of ~e W. D. SCbock do.
5-1 half-time lead and never wbidt produced tbe Schock ..
relinquilbed it to the Sea 22, qne ol the earliest oi the
Kini•· . MORF lypet tn 1his aru.
Costa Mesa played Est11n-;::===========.I cia in the third game and
remained undefeated in the SHARP
tournament by downin& .the If y•u"• 1 ,harp +r14•r, •••
E I 7-4 J hn r.-t ~. DAILY 'ILOT'S f1111e111 -.g es, · 0 ..,... .,..,.n er Dl""•·A-Line 1!11tlflH ''' S.+-
Volante II Named
· 66 Series Winner
Mike Hirsh's Cal 2-:K>
Volante II has been named
the overall winn!r of Balboa
Yacht Club's 66 Serles, com-
posed of six races of ap-
proximately six hours dura-
tion.
. Second in the overall stan~
dings was Jack· Baillie's 12-
met.er Newsboy, and third
was George Sturces's
Columbia-50 Release.
Following are the ~inner•
in each class:
CLASS A -(J) Newsboy;
(2) Release; (3) Sparkle,
Alex Irving, BYC; ( 4)
Pt:elude, Jim Linderman,
BYC; 15) Tatis.man, Bob
Williams, BYC.
CLASS B -(I) Melee,
Don Ayres, NHYC; (2)
Enehanttea;, Wynn Bedall,
BCYC; (3) Vela, Jack Bibb,
BYC; 14) Holiday, Page
Noll, NHYC; (5) Maurice J,
W, W. Su tli van. LAYC.
CLASS C II)
Impe t uous, C harles
GI as go w, BYC ; (2)
Marvida, John Payne, BYC;
(3) Falcon, Bob Smith,
BYC; (4) Destiny, John
Hooten, BCYC; (5) Jeja,
Jim Borger, BYC.
CLASS D -(1) Volante
II; Mike Hirsh, BYC ; _(2)
BalandNI, Jeny McC!.aire,
LIYC; (3) Bravo II, Bill
Hukell, LIYC ; (4) Una
Mas. Dick Lin'dsey, CBYC ;
McCULLOCH
~·l.--1.fl
PUTS YQU 1M THE WORl
SAVIN&, TIME SAVINI
WINNER'S CIRCLE WITH
2.QREAT REW Cl!AIN SAWS
(~) Anita, Buster . Ham·
mond, BYC.
MORF -(1) Dolphin,
Milt Alliont, LIYC; (2)
Vivacious, Bill von
KleinSmld, NHYC; ( 3 l
Aloha. Glenn Reed, SSSC;
(4) Baby, Steve Seal . LfYC ;
15) Twinkle, Frank &,Dave
White, BY C.
Oubs Set
Match Race
San Diego and St Francis
yacht clubs tangled today in
the San Francisco Challenge
Cup race.. a match race that
was first held in 1895.
n,e event is a single 1 match r a c e under the
ratings of the Cruising Club-
or America measurement
rule.
San Diego will make its
bid for the cup with Gerry
Driscoll and a crew or
SDVC sallors In the 42-foot
Chrls C r a f t Comanche,
Wind star. On the San Diego
crew are Lowell North,
Gene Trepte, Rodney Eales.
John Dri1coll, Russ
Lamoreaux and R o g e r
Barnes, all experienced one-
desifn and Offsbore racers.
st. Francis Y adit Club
declined to name itJ boat
lv.,Y·WHk M M(:O Nt11fle• ~
N'•11 ID,OQO tr1111M1"1l1&1on prqQirM,
Yoii 11t ft•• towlnf. • frw ~
e1t1e1r, r111t, -"!cfMI .,_le~
llm11 I" J111t -t11j,. AM .. Wl&i
MMCO, your t11n1ml11lon c111 M
11rot1ctltd lty ~., 500 MMCX!.~
II .. COl lt 10 Cllllt. , ,
Ev1ry ml1111t• end I hmlf, ....,.
0 ... 11....-1.,,
YM .. ,. ft•el yMlr
VHMllH'-.. AA.WOtl
COSTA MESA .· .
1741 Newpeft II. 646-TIU
Garden Grove ' > '"1 G1rdt11 GIT+'tl SlfC. ·••· .,.._
Santa Ana .. ~ ..
"1 •· , .... , Sf ............. ~
0\/~Q ""'0 f..j/,''": , ... ".
·"" ~o,. ~~ .. • -
and defending crew until I:========:::::==., five minute! before race
time.
St. Fr.an<iis YC won last
year. breaking San Diego's
Strini O{ five sttai&ht vie·
tories.
PENETRATION .,,
N111ly •Y•rye11• re•ds ·: ~h•
DAILY .PILOT, hern.+own n•-
p1111r fot th• F18ulou1 Orutf
Co1.t. . •. , " '
Siturday & Sunday Only .: .
SiffttilU IP ME NT
$ 00
, PER
ITEM ON
NEW &
USED
> Ski,, Poles, Bindings, . ,
Sweaters, Boots,
C.r !Woks, Ski Boots, · '
Acc1ssori1s
Hurrvt
Quantims LimiUd
.ALSO:
HA.IT
.,
'
' HOLIDAYS $99.50'
let· Slit .JO
I Nl lU I L
. newport llffch
HOI W. '9aal Hwy. 642-1»5
11..;1 •.·
Tht USA hu tnltred
teams in 17 ot the l(r1ports
on the calendv for · Ult
Olympic Game1 .In MeJd L'O.
Tte USA was e'imloeted in
lhe first rou!"KI Of the soccer
eLmit•1ion rournaDte.nt and
the llei 1 hoe.key team failed
ti"! qttr"fy with 1 third plae1
flrish In thf Pan-American
Game1 at Wirttttrifl rn 1t197, .•.
Co•t• Mesa.-completely
cruahed Corona de! Mar tn
a team effort. 11·1. E1tancta
then came back to defeat
and Grt.C Beal had three u'41i yi. M .... 1 ll•ttw 41.,1 ..•
IOlll apiece for the Mµt-w•effiff. .,.u·,. W,Mt .,, ,.Ubt.
tan1•. L,.-....: __ .:._:.... _ _:._~----------"--------.,.---------_. ~ l ' '
~--· ............. _,........----~----'-.. ----------------
I
• -
OAD,Y PU,OT EDITOlllAL PAGI!':
•
. ·-Let's I-Iear It on SJC! . ..... ~ .............. ~. ·-~~·;;o·· .. "J!-or,..,....~. -f
I
I
I
•
r
1'1e faculty o( Saddleback Junior College was wel•
corned last week at a luncheon in l.aguna Beach.
Cbambefl of Commerce from Tustin, San Clemente
and Laguna sponsored the function. There were intro-
ductions and words of welcome. Tbe luncheon was a
1ooc1 Idea and well received.
'nlla: was perhap5 One of those rare ~casions where
a bit more might have been said. In hindsight, porhaps
the bosU: Were a little too restrained about real1y beat·
ing the drums -about communicating fuUy with ~ur
new teecben our pride in our new college and our pnde
In their new community.
Some of the new faculty might bave been interested
in a quick. thumbnail sketch or the area's history. -its
land barons, the Spanish era., the harbor where ~1cbard
Henry Dana landed, the mission of San Jua~ Capistrano
and ttl.e peaks from wbjch the college drew tls name.
Since the luncheon was in Laguna, the teachers
migbl have enjoyed learning a bit about the Arl Colony,
its early seWers, its art, its cultural activities and the
interesting people wt)o live here.
And what of the rather dazzling predictions of resi·
dentiaJ and industrial growth in the southern half of
Orange County in the next ·few years?
Growth that will probably make the college district
one of the more popu.low in California shou1d be of in-
terest to the new faculty. They're in on the ground floor
as a new educational institution opens its doors.
The expansion will likely hasten the appreciation of
value of the homes they're buying.
Most important, maybe they wou1d enjoy sharing
the community excitement abont the exacting task of
launching a new college.
Residents of the communities in the new district
had been for years sending lbetr youth out of the area
What If the
'They'
' By GEORGE R. ROFF, Pb. D. •
Cops and robber11. Cowboys and In·
dians. Fox and hounds. Chase -run
-hlt -hit again -let them know
how it feels -get the bastarW -they
can't do tbat to us! (Perhaps violence
Is fun to those from a satiated IOcie-
ty.)
What'• happening? ln Chicago? In
Berkeley? Where will it all end? In
Hell? Violence iSll't aesthetic or even
pretty. It burtl; it smells bad; con·
torted faces of t.error; sweat from ex-
e'rtion and anxiety; it makes sickening
sounds. (Amerloa is masculine. We'll
teach those savages dem0cracy, if we
have to jam it down their throats.)
The Great American Hope, ". . .
freedom and justice foc all," has been
disintegrating into a nightmare of
broken dreams, heads, windows, pro-
mises, and spirits. ("Oh well," we
say. as we lead our lives of quiet
desperation.)
MAYBE rr•s THE final symptom of
a decaytnc .and regressing civilization.
f'"aybe It's what we deserve for Com·
p\acently believing that neither our
L ·olhers -nor we -need keeping.
(\/e'll all stand tall a_nd proud, all the
\\ ·y back to the cave.)
~obody wins, but everyone play.s.
'l .1':! police speak softly and carry a btg
n;ghlstick. The demonstrators, speak
lcudly and hide their impotency. The
observers -politicians, social scien·
ti'its. reporters, etc -say nothing un-
til the damage 1s done; then. their
''helping hands" strike again. The
whole 1Ci!ne is God-awful. (Isn't it
reassuring to know that most of us
have someone else to do our dirty
"'ork for us?)
\\'H.<\T'S NEEDED? Needs. needs.
nc;eds, needs. Oh, how it hurts when
the) 're .always felt but seldom fulfill-
ed. Even police. Even demonstrators.
E"en though they can't admit it open-
Is Us?
" I' . ~· Everyday
>
• P1:oblems -<
• < ,>\:
ly, the observers. The ones who need
the m01St are the ones who are hurt the
most. They certainly don't need
taunts, obscenities, bricks in their
faces, clubs on their heads, tear gas in
their eyes, or platitudes and advice in
the morning paper. Or do they? (May·
be our personal and collective guilt,
because of what we haven't done, is so
pervai.s.ve that only punishment will
expiate it.)
Hard, tough, sharp talk, instead of
hardware, may jolt us back to where
we'·re all. at -together. Harder,
tougher, and sharper Ustenlng may
shake us loose from the cradle of our
intanUle stereotypes. (Everyone wants
to be mature without going through
the pain o{ growing up.)
IT'S RISKIER AND more threaten·
ing not to have riots . Are police in the
business of protection or suppression?
Do radicals want a better social order
or their own brand of anarchy? Politi·
cians. What do they really want? Ask
their colleagues from the rival party.
(Come on, gang, let's go to the riot
tonight. Don't forget your Polaroids.}
Everyone gets quite bored. really,
negotiate with people wtio don't think
or feel the "right" way. Where's the
drama? Where's the excitement?
Where's the gut-level satisfaction ?
(There's more happening on the
streets, and besides, we don't have to
reveal who we really are when we're
fighting back.)
Fighting back is fine whet1 we know
who's out to get us . But what if we
have the wrong "they" in mind? What
if the ;,they" is us?
I-Iumphrey's Fast Talking
It is doubtless temperamental on
l ·th our parts. but a man who talks
,.,. much and as fast as Hubert Hum·
p'1rey always arouses my suspicion
th.'lt he is trying to overwhelm my
t!'>inking process rather than stimu·
\s'.e it. • • •
In a v.•ell·ordered society, most men
r1.<:e to the top through their own in·
oustry and ingenuity : in a poorly-
:>rdered one. through the foolishness
and gullibility of others. • • •
Sophistication Is necessary. but
dangerous: for as soon as we realize
that there is some good in all evil and
Dear George:
My boy friend i.s so jeaJous he
rues lnto a rage U I even talk to
my hw:band on the teleptlone.
~ he DHd professional beJp?
FIYI
Dear Flit
Jvat u:plaln t.o your boy friend
thet there 11 nothlB& between you
ud -hmm. Weit a second, that
queff:ioa mixed me pp a little.
ta tact. I thJok l'U foriet the
whole thln1. (No other advice
columnblt .uJ make thlt nate-
ment.J
• • "Sydney. li,m-ts ,.
•
evil in all good , we begin hunting ard·
ently for the good in that. eviJ we wish
to commit. • • •
The hardest thing about a victory is
not .attaining it, but knowing what to
do with it after you have it-thus. the
most glori006 victories in war have
generally been followed by the kind of
"peace" that bred the germs of
another war worse than the last.
• • •
If you think that if poor peopl<'
shaped up a little Uley could find bet·
t~r jobs. read ''Ta.Hy's Corne.r." by
Elliot Llebow, .a bril\Jant, sensitive,
and fair·minded analysis of the
chronically poor in lhe U.S.
• • • •
Those vA1o look down upon ''mere
theory" miss the point that. for ex-
ample. the theoretJcal 1tudJe1 in
mathematics and astronomy, by run·
ini navigation lnto a prfCise scien<'e ,
did mare to i;ave lives 11t st'a than all
the ''practical" Inventors of life·
jackets and raftg ,
• • •
1 Sydney J Harris· newest book of
collected columns, '1J.e11vlna the Sur-
face." ii currently available at book·
&bop• I ,.
. -. • . . .... ... = ·=--· • 'i-
and supporting other lnsUIUtion• financially.
Now they've voted into existence their own school
and agreed to finance Its campus and support its pro-
grams.
It ls an exciting time for the communJties involved
to see their college come allye, a time for a bit of un·
abashed drum beating. pride and pep.
'Airport, YES; Here, NO'
"I gal.her the JM!t'J'Ple of Laguna are interested in
something other thanil lot of noise."
It was a fair statement by Mayor Glenn Vedder of
Laguna Beach as he spoke against a proposed San Joa-
quin Hills airport that would host major cross.country
flights.
Unfortunately, the same unequivocal opposition
backed up with good reasons has been put forth
against any of the five future airport sites sugge~ted to
serve Orange County -a knotty problem for ttie Air-
port Commission.
Vedder said the airport wouJd stultify development
of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach (and the prime
Irvine land between), would pose a hazard to UCI and
possibly force relocation of El Morro School.
The tngger problem is that no one -from the mili·
tary to the homeowners -wants the airport. They con-
cede it is needed, but -elsewhere, elsewhere, always
elsewhere. About the only proposal not yet in disfavor
is the suggestion that the big planes land on a floating
off-shore facility.
•
~dfpT,e,,,,,__., 'a "" .. r;;;;;;-
:5'oc,£Ty ~~..-;:J
fr. ~
" ·:o:· ... ~ ..• ~.Y...:_ •. .:<-,, ... -1 .J-,;-~:'I • .., .. "..,,.,,.:. ... -. . .. • .
But the problem is unresolved. And until it Is,
Lagunans should keep a vigilant eye on the situation. "5o WHAT IF YoUR Rl>.NCH FAILED?
THE fASTES"T 6UN IN THE WEST.•
Pentagon
Has Bungled
M-16 Program
WASHINGTON -While Pentagon
"experts" have been bungling the M-
16 rifle program into a procurement
scandal. Communist forces in Viet-
nam, down to small Vlet Cong guerrilla
units. have been equipped with a com-
narable fast-firing weapon. the AK-47.
That is the real tragedy of the M-16
mess -a story mostly untold by the
House and Senate investigators who
have correctly criticized development
and procurement of the M-18. The AK.
47 is, in fact. a largely untold story in
itself, although lt has been an im-
port.a nt Communist weapon iil Vie t·
nam since 1965.
Heavier than the M-18 ind ltot so
rust In rate or fire. the AK-47 is,
r.evertheless. a rugged serviceable
weapon. The Senate Preparedness
..... ;,r, .?j . ..,,...
-A11~ict.la~1uti!j • .
• ~ it
Subcom1nittee recently described it as
"an automatic weapon of good quali·
ty."
COl\IBAT REPORTS from Vietnam
indicate that North Vietnamese units.
main force Viet Cong units. and some
smaller guerrilla units, are now equip·
ped with the AK-47. The current crazy
mixed-up M-16 procurement is. of
course. designed to speed that rifle to
South Vietnamese forces -and
especially to local defense units.
It has been widely .assumed, here in
the United States. that U. S. and South
Vietnamese forceii; have an edge in
firepower and mobility in the guerrilla
fighting in South Vietnam. It is an
-unpleasant fact. however. that the
Communists. thanks to the AK-47.
have had the firepower advantage in
many engagements involving smaU
units. rt is also an unpleasant fact that
while the vaunted U. S. industrial base
has stuttered and stumbled under the
Pentagon's M-16 proitram the pro·
duction base of Communist China has
largely met its admittediy smaller
logistics problems. The AK-47 is 8
Soviet~e11iened weapon. but 5ources
here report that most of the AK-47s
captured in Vietnam are of Chln'ese
manufacture.
URGENCY LACKING -Army pro·
l'.'urement officials have been justi-
fying their recent award of M-16 con-
tracts. to high-priced bidders on the
basis of urgency. The rifles. they say,
are urgently needed and there was no
assurance that the low-cost producers
could meet an accelerated production
schedule.
Review of the M-16 procuremPnl.
however. does not Indicate that
anybody fell a real sense of urgency.
here in Washin1Uon, for many mnnth!I
after Gen. William C. Westmoreland
began makine-urgent requests for
more of the rifle!i.
Experts say the Communists began
Introducing the AK·47 to Vietnam
combat In February 1965. and the
weapons were quickly in evidence as
far south as the Delta. Even before U.
S. forces were committed to t.he Viet-
nam fighting the M·18 had seen some
ei:pe:rlmental service there. ln Oertm·
~r 1965 Westmoreland asked that the
M·l6 be ndopted klr Vietnam~se units.
WEST!'tfORELAND'S request. as
noted by the Preparednes5 Sub-
commitlef!, stated that use by the
Communists ol high volume automatic
lima.U arm5 fire gave them a pro-
nounced superiority in the sudden
engagements which arose
r rd
By Robert S. Allen
ind Joha A. Goltlamllb
I
:s c .---
In Era of Fear of lnvolvetnent • • •
To the Editor:
On Sunday, Sept. l , my husband was
stricken wjthout warning with a fatal
heart attack at the Coyote Canyon
dump. Two county employes, not
realizing he was already beyond help,
rushel.i him to the hospital at the risk
of censure or possible suit. The
nearest telephone is several miles
away and their only thought was to
avoid delay and help an apparently
suffering human being.
IN THIS ERA of complacency and
fear of involvement. this kind of
personai disregard for involvement
but on the other. hand concern for
ohe11 feUow man is uncommon and
rarely appreciated. AK a grateful wile
and mother I want to publicly thank
these men for their unselfish act
"above .and beyond the call of duty"
ar.d commend them to their employer
for appropriate recognition.
MRS. ALFRED E. VAN HOOSE N
One-sided TV News
To the Editor:
This is a protest -a protest of the
horribly one-sided unprofessional news
reporting by the major television
networks in regards to the recent hap-
penings in Chicago. As a result of that
"un-reporting," I no longer utilize the
television for my news gathering.
I do not doubt that some of the
things thrown at the Chicago police did
l•lle" '""" l'PMno ••• -· Monnalty wrll'ln i.hc:n:ld c:onvh' ttwlr men"• kl :IOD words or le"·
The ri9l'tl to condenM ~rs IO Ill soac.e or e!lmln119
libel Is re1ervMI. AU lert.n "'"'' lrKlude 1l11n1tu"
uid m11t1n1 9ddre1i.. but n1mes wlll be wl!~hehl
on reo1utl!.
stink. but I wonder; could it have
smelled any worse than what was
thrown at the American public by the
television news media?
MARVIN E. FOLEY
No Cleauers af VCI
To the Editor:
ls there anything we can do as in-
divijuals -and collectively -on the
local level in terms of hJg any in·
fluence on local schools, particularly
in showing great disapproval of any
plan to have Eldridge Cleaver and
other advocates of violence appear a.t
UCI?
I should like to express my approval
of your thoughUul, reasonable 'and
continued expression Of d.Jsap'lroval of
the adoption of TV surveillance in
Newport Beach. It seemed a Very 'ob-
vious effort to sell a new prodt.ct by a
manufacturing org2nization w hi 'c )t
wanted to get its product in cltcula-
ti.on, regardless Of its basic moral,
public and civic justifica·tion in
Newport Beach.
I shall continue to be interested in
your editorials.
M. THAYER
Laguna Bus Serllke
To the Editor:
Is not Laguna large enough to have
a good bus service going oorth and
south?
The present one is not reliable. hav.
ing buses which always seem to be
breaking down. Today the bus broke
down after leaving the South Laguna
p:1int and coming back to the Ocean
Avenue station at about 2:30 p.m. It
m"':"s no conne:-tion with other buses
going to Santa Ana or Leisure World.
1 .!ey run ab ~ut once an hour (round
trip) and cease after about 7 p.m.
THERE WERE about SO passengers
gathered at the Ocean Avenue station
but both the owners were in the office
·and failed to notify any of them
(waiting for a long time). This is
rather shabby treatment as they could
hav~ arranged other means of
v.ansportation if they were told by the
owners of the breakdown.
This is sure a hick town and even
the hjppies don 't use the bus. they beg
a ride.
R.A.W.
Look Back and Remember
Memory is a fadeless wealth.
It is the ever·golden currency of the
mind, a coinage that is more likely to
gain in value than depreciate with the
passage of time.
Unlike other form s of currency
which. once spent, are gone forever,
your memories can be shared with
those of others, over and over again,
.and yet they remain intact within the
treasure house of your spirit. Even
after you leave life's pathway, it is
possible for them to endure beyond
death u part of the folklore of yotµ'
family or race.
No one can put a price lag on his
memories -except perhaps people
who write spicy memoirs-but you've
probably got a pretty valuable hoard if
you can look back and remember
when -
THE ONLY FELLOWS who beat
bnngo drums lived in jungles.
One of the first things a bride bought
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
TIM Laguna S..ch Chamber ol
Commerct hat a 1lgn out front.
saying . Welcome V!sltora. But
It ls cl~ Saturday and Sun-
day. wtien else doea: tbt town
have visitors?
-L.L.
Tilll ..... '9llldt ....... ...... .. ~Mrttp ... ".. • ... ......... _._._ ......
{
when she came back from her
honeymoon was a washboard.
Most farmers still preferred mules
to tractors because you never had to
oil a mule and it didn't rust ii left out
in the rain.
During the Great Depre5sioa it
seemed like there were more men on
street corners selling apples than were
eating them.
A young fellow would be ordered out
of a community pool if he dared show
up for a swim clad in bltbJng trunks
that left his chest bare.
If a born orator was too dumb to
make his way as• politician, he could
always earn a IJving as the spieler for
a traveling Indian medicine show .
A COLLEGE GIRL thought-there
was nottiing more romantic than to go
lor .a canoe ride at twitight with a
young blade who played the mandolin.
You could wln a reputation for
repartee by asking. "Why did the
thicken cross the road?" and then
quJckly adding -"wby, to get to the
other side."
In hundreds of ~mall town11 acrogs
America your JOCial 1tatl16 actually
depeoded Ol'1 WW!• )'OU. lived 00 tbt
rlflht or Ille ..,..,. 9de of tile nllroo4
track&.
About 11\ree oyt ol 11\<e -hid potcho1 .. tho Inner lulloo ol tl!eir
Ur• and •bout eltllt out of ten maQ
boys -llW!y had polchet cm Mr trousere.
THE HIPPIES ol Ille 1920s """
cau.d "cake •ten,'' Mid thtir revolt &fllnll ... <Oll1Jl>GllPlac .,. ...
pn•ed d!lefl;y by •owhc lionf
Metku1• and weaahc C111atl1ndim.ly
• I
~.. ...
wide p.a.nts and pork pie hats.
A girl could start unsavory gossip
about her morals merely by being
seen riding with a boy in the rumble
seat of a sports car.
You could tell a woman who dyed
her hair as far as you could see the
color of henna.
fo,at people were thought to l<>ok
h~althier than thin people. If you were
slender you were urged to eat more
and "get some meat on those bones."
DOC"rORS HAD no telephone
answering services. The ooly way they
could be sure of not being called out in
the middle of the night to make a
house call W85 to go on a vacation.
It was an unwritten privilege Df
childhood for a small boy to wipe his
runny nose in winter on the sleeve of
his sweater -but never on Sund~)
when he wore his only suit.
lf you had told the average wife that
some day men's shirts would be in·
vented that wouldn't require ironing,
she'd have burst into hysterical
laughU!r.
'Tho6e were the days! Remember?
-----
Friday, Sep~mber 20, 1968
Tht editorial page of tM Dai.111
Pilot •tekl to inform and atttn.
u1orc rcockrr 1>11 ,,... .... 11ng tAu
..._... opinions ond co... ,...rc.y .,. loJ)ict of mt<rut
""" ~ 1>11 protridlng •
'"""" fc;r Ut4 ui>r<ulon of our reodttl' opitdon.s, and bu
pr8'..uing "" dlv<nt -poinb of fnfonnf:d obaervera
and ~"" l4!>fa of th< dof.
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
I
I
'
\
-•
•
-·~-"-· --
Newport Harbor ' rottay's Closln:t
' VOL. 61', NO. 227, !i SE.cTIONS, SO PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTCMBER 20, '1968 TEN CENTS
It'll Be All-Jet Traffic
Pereira Aide Says Brace for Passenger Explosion
87 JEROME F. COLLINS
OI ftlt O.Uy P1191 Jl•ft
Like it or not, Orange Ulunty ls
::iing to have to brace for an air traf·
. 1c explosioo..
And that means jet traffic.
James Sink, project director for
\Villiam E. Pereira & Associates,
made this plal,n. to the Orange County
Coast Association Thursday night.
"Within the ne:iut. 10 yt:ars," he told
his Balboa Bay Club audience of 170,
Three Arr~ted
Ualrmlft. of all siz.ea will be jet
powered. 'J'.hb Includes the putt-putts
at Orange County Airport.
"Studies indicate that it's going to
be more economical to haw small jet
engines than it .U to · have the
reciprocating engines we now know
about."
swn who headed up development of
Phase I Of Pereira's master plan for
Orange County air transportation, told
why there will be no aiowine the
FBI Agents Save
Kidnaped Boy, 7
ClUCAGO (UPI) -FBI agents to-
day rescued the tousle-haired 7-year·
old grandson of a wealthy manufac·
turtt and seized two men and a
woman accused or k.ldnaping the boy
and holding him for two days under
throat of death.
The agents and police closed in on
an apartment on Chicago's southwest
Side and found Hillard Willis Marks,
who waa abducted while walking home
rrom school in the rashionable suburb
of Oak Brook Wednesday and held for
$125,00J ransom.
Hillard, his wide smile revealing the
absence of two front teeth, ran into bis
motber;s arm.a at FBI headquarters
and the fint,t.hing be 'aid was, "Did
we have ttie ·party!'1-'Re1waa talldnC:
about the party tor his seventh birth-
day, which would have been held
Thursday. • ·
"No," Mrt. Mary Lou Marts said as
she bugged. her son. "But we'll have it
15,000 Pay $10
To Heat Wallace
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) -Fil·
teen thousand ~le paid $10 each
Thursday nigh~ to jam a sweltering
coliseum oaruf cheer G~e Wialiace.
"I know you are sweating tonight,
but the Republicans and Democrats
ere sweating a IDt more than you
are," the dUnl party presidential c.an-
didate said. The faithful cheered.
The ral.)y was the final event in a
"George Wallace day" fund J"Bising
extravaganza that included a $50().a-
}»ate private luncheoo and a $25-a·
plat.e dinner.
soon."
Hillard's father indicated a chance
acquainllaocethip at a gasolille station
may have led to the kidnaping -a
kidnaping which was kept a secret by
the FBI, police .and news reporters for
two days fOr fear the abductors would
carry out their threat to mutilate and
kill the boy if word of the crime got
out.
The fdther, William E. Marks, a 34.
year-old furniture manufacturer, said
he had known ooe o( the arrested men,
Daniel C. Pieter, 30, an unsucces1ful
gasoline .station owner.
Capt. Minugli .
.Quits Police
Xltif ' 1t 'Years
Veteran Newport ~ Police Oapt.
Hal Minugh has resigned bis post to
join his father tn a. realty business in
Morro Bay, on California's booming
central coasL
Olie( B. J"""" Glavas >aid the 34·
year-old captain was a. -fine officer that
the force is. sorry to be losing.
''We regret bis malting t b l s
decision," said Glaws, "he bas a vast
.amount of experience the force could
use. but l know he's been thinking
about the move for a lorrg time."
Minugh asked for his resignation to
become effective Sept. 22, but it v.oa~
done Thursday so he could complete
personal arrangement. for the move ·-· M'mugti, who rose through the ranks
In 11 years from patrolman to captain,
is currentty in San Fnmcisco.
.,-owtb of commercial passenger
flights out of the county.
"In not too many year~. you will be
able to Oy roundtrip between Southern
California and Hawaii for under $50 .
\Vhen that happens, passengers will be
coming out of the woodwork. You will
have astronomical projectious of air
traffic demands ·to contend with."
The cheaper rates, be said, would·be
the inevttab)e result of the use of
larger, faster alrcraf~ such as the 30().
DAILY f"ILOT lleff ......
Party Girl
Little Cath Ware of Newport
~r.J! find~ .a ,~Ill~ ~P.~ · sollitlon -to ber fi'Os'bfy ,..-
hair getting in the way of her
ice cream cone as she cele-
brates her thin! b!rthd.ay party.
Regents Consider
Cleaver Ruling;
Reagan Sits In
LOS ANGELES (AP) -University
or Galiforn13 regents resume today
considering what to do about Black
Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver's
selection as a guest lecturer at UC
Berkeley.
Gov. Reagan. who. has predicted the
regents will prevent Cleaver from ap·
pearing in an experimental course on
the background of racial disorders,
planned to attend the meeting at
UCLA.
After two hOurs of public hearing!!
and an hour or private debate Thurs·
day. a regents committee failed to
agree on a plan to · end the con-
troversy.
"There was no. consensus," Regent
William K. Cobleiitz of San Francisco
said after the meeting of thP nine-
member education policyc ommittee.
"I made several proposals," UC
President Charles J. Hitch said.
"Other regents made several ;;ro-
member education pollcf committee.
One plan baeked by the UC
Academic Couocil would require close
scrutin~ of the academic backgrounds
of inionnally as we-11 .as formally ap-
pointed UC lecturers. But the plan
would not necessarily bar Cleaver
from speaking in at lea" 10 scheduled
class periods.
The Academic Council is composed
of leaders of the Academic Senate on
UC'.s nine campuses.
The basic issues raised Thursday:
will Cleaver be a teacher or the sub·
ject matter of the course, and should
he be allowed to speak at the universi·
ty ln either case.
passenger Air Bus.
So the cOunty had better get ready.
with a regional airport capable of
handling national fllghU , apd with
metroports for shorter l'Wl6, he said.
In less than 25 years, Sink predicted,
Orange County will become the loth
largest metropolitan area in the na·
tioo. The present l .S mllllon population
will approach 4 million in 1993.
That could well mean, he said, a
(See JET, Page Z)
* * * Air Expert
Sinks Floating
Airport Plan
Aviation master planner James Sink
Thursday~ night sank the dream of a
floating airport for Orange County.
Its cost, he indicated, would be a
nightmare -like possibly a fl billion
nigbbnare.
Sink, director of project3 for
W i I Ii am E. Pereira & Associates,
developers of the county's a Ir
transportation master plan, said the
concept had been studied by his firm
once before.
It was considered. he said, during
recent Pereira studies of Los Angeles
International Airport traffic problems.
"We found that the cost of just pro-
viding access to a seadrom.e would be
insurmountable," he said. "When we
got to the figure of $2 billion, we just
quit."
Sink was asked about the subject in
an interview after he reviewed county
.aviation needs at a meeting of the
Ora!!g> Cgmty Co8lt ..U.oclaUon of
!be Balboa Bay Club.
·EarUer this week, Newport Beaetl
real estate developer George Freeman
had proposed the Ooating airport to
tile County Airport C o m m i s s i o n •
Freeman said the ocean could thus
provide the county with a regional
airport site that no one else now
seems to want to.
But Pereira executive Sink just
shook his head at the idea.
"Not only the cost of access Is in·
volved here," be sai~, "but there's
also the matter of an airport's sup-
porting facilities . An airport is not just
a runway. it al.so requires a terminal,
maintenance facilities and e v e n
hotels."
These, he said, would have to be built
on land-"quite a bit of Jand"~ven if
tile rWJways were out at sea.
"You've got to remember that most
successful airports are cities in
themselves."
He emphasized that he had no idea
what a seadrome would cost Orange
County. ''AU I know is that we stopped
at $2 billion when we studied one for
Los Angeles."
* * * Kids 'Taking
Over' County?
A lot of statistics were rattled oft
by planning expert James Sink In a
talk before the Orange CoWJty Coast
Association Thursday night. One in
particular drew a big gagp from his
audience.
"Right today," he said, "42 percent
of all the people in Orange County are
are under 20."
"Mlgawd," came a VQice from t be
rear. "I hope they don't find out."
Stork Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market turned mixed in model'8tely
active trading this afternoon. (See
quotations. Pages 10.11).
Advances tral1ed earlier trading
where a continuation of a higher trend
seemed evideot.
Sea Yields Death
f'lapjac'fu for Vickie -
Vickie Black, 17-year-old hi~h schoql senior, Is smiling guest fur trial
run oC Corona de! Mar Kiwanis Club's pa(lCllke breakfast, which
takes place Saturday 7 a .m . to noon at Schroeder's Chef's l'nn. Serv-
ing up Oap jacks and bacon arejlrit) .K~y Club member Steve Hart-
ley and Kiwanis vice president ohn Case. Vickie 1s Kiwanis queen.
Breakfast will be oniy $1. wiUi all proceed< going to-14 local youth
groups.
' !
----·--·---
87 ALMON LOCKABEY Da"' .. OM ... ti .. IMttr
1be MA Ls giving up the remains of
the 5()..foot power cruiier Grundl which
~r;:n~~ :;fnkG=·~~
W-ash.
Three Newport re11denU drowned
and one was reacued Jlfter a itent
wave broke over the Grund.I 86 she
-WIM"~ng tN" harbor en(~e.
The sea has yet lo K(vc up 11\e bod,y
of Glenn G<llowa,y, one o( tllooe who
perished In !be a<oldent Tho C...t
Guan! l>U llloP<nded Its soarcb fw
the mllsing man.
The bodtee ol Geoow:ay'1 wUe,
Melila, and Diane Guertin, wbo were
beUeved !Npped In the cabin when the
GruOOI capftzed, have been WMbf!d
asho:'e.
John H. Porter Jr., owner of tbe
vessel, said today tlbe Grund.I 11 ' ap-
parently brealclng up aud coming
asllore In pie<:e1. llo said a -o(
W'tT ....
QUICK AS A WINK -Pat Nixon seems to be wiokjng at a friend as
she and her husband, Republican presidential nominee Richard.
Nixon, leave New York's Americana Hotel to attend a $1,000-a-plati:
GOP dinner.. · 1
·200,000 Crowd Nixon
•r·~ •. · >' ""'"'n,,,......,,,,J t_ '-· i;." .. Phifuiklp'j'il~ Mo .torcqtk
P!jJ~DELPHIA (UPI) -Re·
p u Jr I J o a n presidential candidate
Richard M. Nixon motorcaded at noon
through .i. buizard of ticker· tape in
this vote-rJch city today.
A police oUiclal estimated. the crowd
lining the motorcade route at 100,00J.
Nixon was received with more
enthusiasm Utan Vlce Pr e side n t
I-Jubert H. Humphrey when the
Democratic candidate traveled a
If you haven't got Olympic Feve:r
you're missing out on one of the most
exciting "diseases" to hit the Orange
Coast in decades.
This area n e x t
month will send 11
athletes a n d o n e
coach to Olympic Vil·
lage in Mexico City
as part of the United
States delegation to
the 19th Olympiad.
Exclusive coverage
. -
similar path on Sepl 9. ,
Police Commissioner f'Nnk . Riuo
told reporter• he estlm1ted the,Naoa
crowd at axl,000. Rizzo had utSqlltld
. the Hwnphrey turnout at 1 ~ua?t.
miilion, but revised it later ~ about
100,000.
AltMugtl most of those al@ng the
Nixon route cheered the GOP can-
didate, many held up slgns d~ouncing
him 'or boosting Humphrey. Some
booed.
Driving through the f i n' a n c I a)
district on Chestnut Street, Nixon, hll
wife, J;>at, and ·pr 01 ~ t n en t
Pennsylvaa'ia RepubliCans were deJug.
ed wfth , ticker tape and · confetti
. '!li?w,erlng down lrom the bWidlnp.
Drlbton stlX>d atop the bac-Or a black
!C()ftvertible. A· secret serviceman beld
his an,kle as he held ·his : bands aIOlt
and.made a "V" for vittoi-y sign; ;.
On several occasions,: he jwn~
'fNnn the car, darted toward the cro~d
·.and shobk ouUtretched hands of eapr
admire'rs. · ·
A11id~ irgm Ute nl.lrnbefs, mo8t
, observers felt that NiJ:on got a more
joyful response than !fid Humphrey,
who generally elicited disinterest of this histocy-makl.ng sportl eve1t
really gets under way Sattn"day in the
DAILY PILOT when tbe first iJI. ·a
series of personality s1'etche1 on the
Orange Coast OlytIJ.plans stam. And
then stay wtth bilingual •porti edl"!r
Glenn White, only newspaperman
Crom Orange County covei;ing the
Olympic Games, when he traveb to
Mexico to get the story tn the lan-
guage of the Olympics and translate 1
it Into exciting coverage excluaively
for DAILY PILOT readers. Get the
Orange 'Coast
""""""' Wea~
•
The, weatherman calls for de-·
creasing clouda thi5 weekend,
whlcb means ·the aim might •
come out · at 9 a.m. instead of • noon. Olbe(Wlse it's ~e same"
te01peraturewlse -68 alol)g the .
, beac~ and _'IS inland. · fever. You'll enjoy it.
Cruiser
!be ~hood and tbe ftlllbm have '
' b«n foutld ii\ ti?< 11¢: '.
-le. Franlt Guertin. Oll<l'llor
ol Clle Grund! -llhe -llWlnJl>ed by h "maverick" weve, said .-1er
reports that be tried to brinK t11e
vessel about v.tJen be aa-w the wave
oomlng are false. He 1atd be atp
temjllbed lo keep !he Gnindl dead
belore 11te onl'O!lllnr ... but ,... b--the ,.. brob over tile stern.
-•
INSIDE '.l'ODAl'
l& cd:n't thr Met, but som1;
opera buffs 1a11 it's be£&er-11et
lt't grand opera Unc:ft'f' the Sla1'1 •
in Lag1tna Beach and 11ou can
find out all oboa" it todaM in
WEEKEND£R. ,
1
or-.. o...it't' • ' s.MI """"" ,, • ..... , *"" t•u , """' *' ~ .... ~ lt-11 1 T.......... ttJ -. ..,. ..... ~· --"" .,_ IJ
-J °"""' 1)14 ... U-11 t ,.. ..... t t -.. ----·· --*' .. , • ........ •11
•
•
j DAil. Y PILOT , Frlda7, Sf:plembtf 20, 1968
WWW
2 ChanWt:rs Eye . Newport-Mesa Bond Issue ;·
lllllllr _. u .-i, de-"'•
--I dU ti the C-. ...... NQfllt..._.t>sr'k•..., ...
~!'II!~ ... " •• ' TM ..._, A. ~ 01M1:t .••. a-=«! ardiltecll or dt1lgn fng
monumeota to th.tr •10. build:lac
beyond educati-1 ntecla. and oped-
fytng eaa"'1l bulldlJlg moterlols lbat
aren't COIJljl8W:lve lDc&ll¥-
He CIBed for -ICbool pi... He lald ·111e <11111 vlriltlon
l'r•• .... J
JET TRAFFIC EXPWSION ••• ••
-
EX-NEWPORT MAYOR l;llES
Orllo B. Rud
Former Newport
Mayor 0. B!f&,d
Dies at A#. 85
Former Newport ~each mayor Or-
lie 8. Reed died Wedne&day alter a
lengtby Wnea at a convalescent home.
He W81 85.
Graveside services will be held. at
4 p.m. Saturday at Paclflc View Me-
morial Park.
Mr. Reed served as mayor from 1946
to lM8 and as councilman for eight
years.
He was mayor at the time lhe city
decided to build Its present City Hall.
Born in Illinois, he came to River-
gide in 1900. He was commander of the
Knights Templar aod a charter mem·
ber of the Rotary Club, both in Rlver-
11lde.
Survivors include his wife, Frances,
af the home, 444 Begonia Ave., Corona
del Mar; two son.a, Donald W. of New-
port Beach and Robert L. of Upland; a
daughter, Mrs. Margatt:t Hackett of
Arcadia; a .Uter Marie A. Reed -0f
Alhambra; four grandchildren and two
sreat-graodcbildren.
Dr. Philip G. Murray of the Congre-
gational Church. Corona del Mar will
officiate at the services.
The family suggests that tho11e who
wish ma,y make memorial contribu-
tions to the Orangt: c.ounfy Oill.drens
HOl!ipital. .
DAILY PllOT
--Colffenolo ORANGE COAST P'VBlls.llhlG COMPANY
Robtrt N. Wt•d
Pmldtnt Ind PIM!lhef
bt oold, lo 1he -t (lounty Airport) ud • nooaai airport, tbe cow>ty
Jllllll a11o aupport a pie fer ano1her
inlerllillMonal alrpmt IDDlewbere in
~~ olrport lite In the
.i.:tmty of <Amp Pendleton otfen the
--· poalbllltltl," Sink &lid. "It wwJd be only llO minutes
mghnum drtvtnc: time from Los
An&elel """ Siii Diego ... But be qulck-
i, -.i: "We've looted at a lite there ooiy in
terma of Ill -11Pb1. not In lerml of
Ill aVllllbllll.Y-" Ila dQcrlbed • • !nt.emati4nal
airpori u one serving alrcralt with
"dmlted" .......... -""" fl1l'>t AllCI capcltiec. It would ODCOID!*I
-4,llOll acrea. A rqlaaai airport, In-. would covor llet•een 2,000
and 1,IOO ......
"A deddon m. the locatkm of a
re~ airport," be aid, "will bav• a _, bOpOct Oii lbe ~ of all
other lhportl.''
Ila urged the -... by county
goverument of ooe of the 11 .. reglooal
ab,,ort -recommended In the P-. muter pion report. All five
haw mat rill J1rm« ~ from
cMJr.w; :it a:tl.dlllr'J and local &gen·
clea."" .... ·
Sl*1irloOJ -lbe -· ... l>f'.P.-or .. m. be made.-. II pOrfeot·
-EL TOiiet l4AJllNE CORPS AIR
S'l'A'ftON: '"lbll 1111 been --Ibo .... ..,.,,., far a long time. But
'il!lh' 1111 rumNy aJliDmen~ lt la DOW
J. not a a:ood .aUport. A new nmway
• i"""1...Wd have lo be ball!, porallel · "'w 1M Santa Au l'rrM••Y· At this
· time a regt6nal airport there would
haw Jl\lle ellec:t OD exJsting urban
deve!Olllll<D~ but It woWd have con-
oldenl>le JmP!ld on j>otenUal develop·
meat." ·
-LOS ALAMlTOS NAVAL AIR
STATION: "The basic problem here is
thol It 11 -C<Jl!lple!ely '"" rounded by urtJan developmelll We
could twlit Ille · nmwq 1o i« fllllrta
over the am1111mltion dump, 1hlt would
help. .
AaOther Ill'®!'"" la ~t ~· w<>IM • ...,.. arAfaIJ to lonz B.a.i.
~.,,;.,II ~ ~~: , . : ''Thi•~ ls~·Ol'~...-' Alrt_>oi11,
se> a &fte there would .. pushin~
Newport's (noise) problem Just a little
fartter· nOrth. It would also have a
deficiency ln 111at there woU!d be
Bight.a over UCL"
SAN JOAQUIN HlLLS: "We could
put in a dual J'UllW.J 1yatem here tbet
would ~ompua ~oualy med ~· One of 1he deficiencies ls
the roadway 17stem. It bu DODt DOW,
and would De vay upelllive to pr~
vide." .
BOLSA CHICA STATE BEAC!f:
''We could utilize tbe offshore coastal
shell to ei:tend dual runway1 out to
sea. The runway1 would be a mile
apart and give ug a ma.nee to develop
a combination marine and a i r
""'-'1aUon ..me:.. But ll allo bas
ill stnoundlnl -dewlopment problems."
* * * YMCA Files Big
Suit Against
County Airport
Orange Coa.t YMCA officials 1ald
today thoy had filed • property
dam•&• claim of '225,000 agalnat
Orange County Airport.
"We are geWng droppage and dirt
on our equipment from ttie fuel oil
residUe ol tbe planes," YMCA director
Rollen Brousard said.
"We have to i~ our cla1111es
conslantly to wait for the frlgbtenlng
nol!e to pass."
The YMCA ii Joining n...,.ly 850 In·
dividual claimants who have filed
. against the '"1>ort. ll<CO!'dlng to Dan
Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise
Abatement Conuniltee.
The deadline for clatrns has been
revised t.o May 15, 1969, he saJd. They
already tot.1 nearly m million.
Emory noted the ori(lne,I. cutoff was
Sept l, 1968, but "tihe re!iporue waa so
overwhelmJng we eUended the Ume to
a How everyone to fUe."
Newport Chief
Back on Duty
Ntwt-port Beach Polioe Chief B.
James Glava11, recovertna: from knee
•urg<ry, waa back .,, tile job today,
alllloog!t 00 c:ruldle1.
Glavu mdM"went an optnttoo at
Hoog Mmnorial Hoopttal two ftelta
ago for coc1ection ol. cartilace damq:e
to hi• right knee.
.._}!,'· ;:~ McCam Hid the dtlel ~au haw to remaln on
crutches fer another two week&.
By that td.me, Glavas will be tn
H"1!'all '"1 • COIUbtnetioa buolaetl·
vacaUon trip. C.pt_ Dooald Oy-will
resume fllllctloolnl as ac1in& dllef.
...
bit•--~ be bocaul• "" Ille "1bo ..... .,, ~ ••a 11111 I 2111.''
1'a ctrrbv -•••• hi tM _.,,,,_....~bml--
DorlUI, a Corona de! Mar -t
who Is a member oC the ltudy" cim·
mlttee, took exception to Gaflerdam's
.rem.ark&. .
He said th.at curriculum need5 are
c:banglng all the. lime and •OOool
deolJD -. to be lept cumml He
----=-...... hit .,.,,.. •. 11 1 aral••t ~ .. ~. teosal manager Cl(
-I\IJ Conatruct!oo Co., Costa M.a, answered he knew of instances
wbMo -..ai plans were lavish
but admitted be had no experience in
tho Newport-Meoa District .
Scboo1 board member Selim "Bud"
ll'rm*lbl askod bow tile diJ1rlet -Ud
bow ii ardJlteclural plana are
UP'IT ........
ONl .... _. Ottd t·· •f •Mnd llil_lo ___ .,
CS>arge.
It waa tllell decided to IOdD a
speclal committee or per.... ....
..._'led wl1li ~ Coaotructlon ln<lllllr)'.
Including ard>llacti, =--ll'acl«I tO nvlew 1cbool wblle'
they are sl!D In llle pre ' •ta&•·
Dorius aald lat>er he dQem't thin~
ard*edl WOllJ.d wait ructt a com~
mlltee )ook!OC over U>etr llhouldtr.
Jtfesa · B~qting
'
Hessian Seeks , !
Sanity liearing
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ol ... OMlr .........
A Newport Beach attorney for
Hes11lan motorcycle club member
Frank W. "Wild Mouse" Rundle
1urpriNd courtrootn o b 1 e r v e r s
Thunday by Mking a sanity hearing
for his cj.ient, a fonner mental
hospital patient.
Harbor District Judicial Court Judge
Donald W. Dungan gr11nted the mo·
tion, ordering the defendant to Orange
County Superior CoUit. Department
One, at 9:30 a.m. nexf Friday.
Attorney Robert R . Whitman, who toot over the case from a court..ao-
pofnted public defender, said Rundle
seems unable to comprehend the pro·
ceedlng11 or the charges against him.
He 4llso said Rundle, 24, of 135
Albert Place, Costa Mesa, ia not
capable of assisting in his own defense
on cbargeJ of assault with intent to
commit murder, assault with a deadly
weapon and burglary.
Moseley, coordinating the insecutlon,
said Whitman's motion CMDe aa 2 jol\,
but bottJ. he end the judge were eft'.
ti.rely agreeable.
''
Planners Deny
Liquor License
At Teen Ouh '• .,.
Newport Beach p 1 an n in g com-
missioners Thursday denied Finn 0¥;.._
Ol:sen, owner of the New Look Discote·
que, permission -to reli alcotwltC·'
beverages at the teen4ge night spot>'
because of parking problems. '• ·
'I'be commission decided t h a t
Olsen's expansion plans {or the night·
spOt, which included making It a 214 '
years-of-age or older operation, w~1'
not compatible with parking conditions ·
at 810 Balboa Blvd.
·White Father Indian-giver?
The suspect has been beld at Orange
County Jail in lieu of $37,500 ball, but
will presumably be moved to Orange
County Medical Center for the 10-day
to three-met psychiatric evaluation.
In other action Thursday night, tbe M
commission continued until Oct. 3 a
request by Kenneth McCullociJ. to bufi(!•;
a 170-bed retirement )1ome at 4000·
Hilaria Way. ;:.···
Representatives of the Taos Pueblo Tribe appear before the Senate
subcommittee on Indian Affairs to seek the return of 48,000 acres 1
in northern New Mexico. The lands we~e seized in 1905 and made
part of the National Forest Preserve.
Rundle was accused by witnesses of.
being leader of a ratpack of 15 to XI
cyclists who staged a geog verigeance
rald on the Costa Mesa home d. e.
former New York Golden Glove!i box·
ing champion last montb.
Newport Citizens Group
l!wns ior Questionnaire
Robert L. Gkizier, 30, of 2224
Placentia Ave., was whipped with cy-
cle chains, beaten and shot in the belld
as he covered bis tace during ttie
melee.
Glailer -who had said he fought
with Rundle, after being attacked with
a pool cue over a tavern game of
eight-ball -identified Wild Moose as
t.ie gun-wielder. • '
Newpori Tomorrow, • cilla8~ty
project to Sb"l'O lbe oily along piamled
bes, ha• cho6eD. iU vice-<:hairman
and decided to sample citizen opi.mons
through an ' int.erview-questionualre
program.
Da!1 GlllUand haa beM aeled<d
second..SO~. laid Newport
'fylnorrow geloeral chairman John
Macnab, a Newport Beach realtor.
MlCnab noted. that Gilliland Is also
the cbairman of Newport Tomom>w's
Tran!J>Ori.aUon Committee, and is a
form« president bi the Balboa
Peninsula-Point Association.
Ma<:nab said the goals and ob·
ject.ives phase of the program would
gather opinioris of Newport re&idents
through mailed questionnalr~ and in·
home interviews.
City appointments to the seven
Newport Tomorrow c o m m t t t e e s
cbaired by private citizens were aho
announced by Macnab.
Representing the City Council on tbe
general group is Councilman Robert
Shelton. Planning C o m m i s s i o n
Chairman David Curtis will represent
the city plantWlg commission on lhe
oteering conunl1iee.
Building director Oliver Grant and
Senior Planner Willi.s Warner will
$Si.Ill chairman Milan Dostal with the
Reside.ntitll Goals Committee.
Ass'iatanl City Manager James
DeChaine and Finance D i r e c t o r
George Pappa& will work with
Chairman Dorothy Hardcastle on the
Commercial Goals Committee.
AdministraUve Assi!tant Phllip F.
'
Boat Tr.agedy
Victim's Rite8
Set Saturday
Funeral services for Diane Guertin. :n, will~ held Saturday at 11 a.m. at
Paclftc View Chapel, with Interment
to loUow at Pacific View Memorial
Park in Corona del Mar.
Bett.encourt and City Engineer Ben
Nolan will help William D. Clark with
the Industrial Goals Committee.
Harbor Coordinator George Dawes
and Marine Safety Director Robert
Reed will asslrt Donald C. Simpson
with Ille Harbor Goals Committee .
The Tl>wnac:.,,. Goolo Committe.
will be chaired by Peter Vogel with
assistance from Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Director Galvin Stewart
and Assistant Planner Pierre Mooney.
Public Works Director Joseph T.
DevUn and Acting General Services
Director Wade Beyeler will work with
David S. Tingler on the Public
FaciUties Goals Committee.
a
\Vhitman told Judge Dung.an Thus·
day Ula! hls client has spent time in a
1nenlal hospital and a Vetenao's Ad·
ministration Hospital in New York and
is subject to blackouts and perhaps
even &eizures.
Two psychiatrists will be appointed
to examine Rundle next Friday and
the outcome of his CMe will re&t on
their finding11.
He could then eitber be sent to
Atuoadero state Hospital for an a<l·
ditional 90 days of observation, or el&e
made to rtaod b'ial on the felony
counts apinst bim.
He faces a posisible one to fourteen
years ln state pr111on on conviction for
assa1.1lt with intent to comm.Jt murder
alone.
Deputy District Attorney J a y
a I
Henredon's new line of promotional chairs
are truly worthy of tne name Henredon .
A -collection of seven cha irs to choose fror.
available in a wide c!lssortment of handsome
fabrics. These hand crafted chairs ere es-
sembled with the finest in materials end
workmen~ip. Any of these c.~oirs ore eveil-
'ble ot $199.0tJ.
They also delayed until Oct. 3 a re-
quest by Explorer Motorbome Inc. fdi-1
manufacturing h o m e s outside ~'
building at 4CKKI Campus Drive. '.''!! :: ..
'·'·
Delay Granted "" ' 0
In Sentencing ••••
f' A man convicted of robbing a eor:"
ona del Mar woma_p won a delay iJh
sentencing until Sept 26 when be SP,·
peared Thursday befo.~e Superl<4':
Judge William C. Speirs. -,1 John Allen Baker. 22, or Lakewooa:
was convicted of armed robbery, kit11 naping, burglary and conspiracy. ~'.
was arrested last October and accU.&-,...
ed of committing the crimes agalruit
Mrs. Belle Chase Lee. ,,. ..
Arrested with Baker, and rt.ill facing.
prosecution were Louil Fiaoo, 46, aq4;
his wife Ramona Raye, 30, also of
Lakewood. Iii.
The Fianos are accused ol conspb!t:
lng to kidnap and rob the Corona del
Mar woman. A fourth suspect in t h.e..,
robbery-<:onspiracy Joe Gurlo escaJ)''
ed prosecution by turning state's wit.,.
ness against the other three. -"''
-·· 7 ·~
I
Mrs. Guertin drowned last Sunday
when a power yacht on which she was
a passenger was cap11lzed off the en·
trance to, Gray'& Harbor. Wash. Her
. hlllbaod, Frank, was pilot o( the ves·
liel.
Two other persons allo dled In the
accldenL They were Glenn and Mella
Geno-ny of Newport Beach.
EXCLUSIVE OEALERS FOii: HINRIOON-DRIXEL-HERITAGE
Besides her husband, Mrs. Guertin
11 1urvlved by her father, Wallace
Sheldon Sr., San Dle10 : four brothers,
Wallact Sheldon Jr .. Concord, Calli.;
Donald Sheldon, l.4ngvfew. W11h.:
to DAYS NO INTEREST-TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT
7eJ11M ~
INTUIORS
"
Ruuell Sheldon, Redding, Calif. and
RoblJ1 Wallace Sheldon, Lebanon,
Ore.; two sl1ter1, Barbara Ginn, El
SobNJtte, CalU .• and Joanne Moves,
Cannlchael, Calif.
N!WPORT BEACH
1727 WMlcllff Drive
642-2050
Prot.ulonal lnt...lor lAGUNA BIACH
Baltz Mortuary la In char&e of u-
rangemenU •
'
Dot,.,,.,. 345 Nonh Co.,t Hwy. 494-4551
Aw•ll•w..-..AID-NSID O"N fllDAT itL t ...... , ............ ~ c...,, 14 .. 120
.~ r
.. --.
lly JOHN CllNNUT
NEW YOllK (APf'-' '111e
plnley ol trolntd -Ioy••·
t1uo JuriD1 d. 11>.m 1o ottier ...iatt.a~·
panles, 1* Joac bee!l a
-In A-an ccir-
porate lire · de.,,ito public
denilll.
Wlle.ebutlrom,....can· ~ -)'GU pick"" •kill· ed _..,. .. ..i ., odp• In
sales M the ..ue Ume? And
bow betltt -you evoid 1IJe hi8b oool ID time and
money o11r.-ic -ken;?
In this day <O hi--.,. relln·
eel abilities and a r;potty •hort.llf• '" -. ... tllo !!"'" blem 11 pooloriDfl the 1""
duolrJ .. it ·-bu
-·· 'lbe IJl'Cll>lllO ,niltl llOt ~ly In regard to hliOi
IOV<I .-utlves but to fl$-•·
week clerks •s ~11.
In financial di!tricts all
over Aroerioo, lcr eJIBml'I•,
a gr...t deal ol plr.,Y-iAI
p.-icecl. Clerfcal -!refs
sometimes con.sider' a s
mM!y offers • ~ge baseball slllra.
"We have trained workers
!« '""' weeka," oald O>e lop ...,_.In.-· brokefat:e bouee, "and then
bad M!lbeody ~ lure
them """1 u experienced
help.'~ ,
PIRATING
Mort iban hat! I h e
ell'l'Ioy"" in • survey by 1be BureaJ o! Natloool AI·
fain, ~ a publliiler o f
business inform.at Ion
reported they have pro-
bl,ems wlth rompetltors over
plrailDg of wbrkers.
A few ol. tile compaNes,
tile buroau fOOnd, exprelE<\1
reeigDotlM to Ille -witb atatemenU eud\ as,
'"Ibat's -1he name of b
game," eod, ''Thia h: a way
of We." But acme (Om·
panles ...... kldlgnallt.
"'lbere ls ooe local com·
pany defeole, Ute survey
i!l»wed, II 1broug!I salary
iDcreaSel, and sometilnes
tlrough tmprovern<nts In
....ntng conditions end op-~·· Another i s ~"''""""Ila~ 1-.•• eadi "°"""'' emplo)les alooe. But the direct oita<k
m.etbod. has a11vobates, as· n-
)ltelrated by the clinJcal-like
report fl'OOl the industrial
relation& manager ar a
relrat:M!ty 1mall company:
"P!rocy -pra<ticed by 1w1J O<JlllllOllllg fhml. We ot-
-pted bUt failed lo ,_..
111 .,... .... agreement, alt·
er 1'llldl <n pirated tlletr
empl.,,.... We then l'«IChed
an agreement we'd not em-
ploy each other's active
Business Briefs
AUGUSTA, Ca. (UPI) -
Min')' Co. announced tt will
spend several m 1111 o n
doll.a.rs to expand • n d
modernize ltl brick and tile
planll, Including lnotallatlnn
of a completely automated
brick plant with amual
capacity 0( 40 million
bricks.
NEW YORK (UP!t -
New Plan Realty Corp. an·
nounced it has p!,llchase4
the 24-acre plant complex. of
Libby, McNeill & llibby at
Blue Isla®. ID., and will
ae~elop it as a tnulti-t.mant
industrial center.
daily.
LO& ANGELES (UPI) -
Unlro}>el, Inc., llll001lllced It
will increilse output at ill
1'>• Angelel tin plant to
20,000 pUMDg« tires dally
next year.
• I I • -
, • •
I
I
11
j
l ' I
••• . .
' J 4 Ol !LY rtLOT
The MUG SHOP
P1r10ft0liud MMDI
SI-1947
3D24 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• d•I M•r
THE FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANT
675-1374
Manahan & Eggers,
Inc.
lnlurance Brokl!!ra
2700 E. Co•tt Hwy., Cdt.i
673-4562
JOHN~ &SON
LINCOLN-MERCURY
900 W. C<><1•t Hwy,
Newport Be•ch
Lots of Luck!
Gene Johnson
•. ur. l1u11r•nc• e M11t1i11•I f11 nil1
540-4469 aio.1062
Karen Margret• Imports
&. D•ni1h Coff" G•rd•n
2640 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• ~·I Mar
Open •very 4•y
ISLAND WASH
Stlf·S•rvic• L..undry
Wm. l•'1t•f• • 0w-
N1at It f.rry
a.Ibo• l&l1nd
HARRY KELSO. INC.
-Cuatom Homes -
Newport Beach
673~9D
BARTHOLOMEW
INSURANCE, loc.
.... ltrtlloltlfl•w a
l ry1011 Hicl11ri111
2333 E. Co•st Hwy., CdM
675-54« 545-3165
KIRKPATRICK'S TV
Sale& & Service
Doll Kirkp•trlck
2760 E. Co•st Hwy.
Coron• d•I Mir
673-2650
ALBERT E. STOCKTON,
V.M.D.
3838 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• del Mer
673-ID5D
PAT MARLEY'S
BLARNEY SHOPPE
MEN 'S SHOP
3505 E. Coa.t Hwy,
675-1850
..
HAL AEBISCHER
HEARIN& AIDS
3..o9 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• del Mer
675-3833
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL IANK
N•wpori C111l•t Offlc•
Lester R. Schwaiger
Vitt r r•1ld1nt
N•wport B11ch
CROWELL. WEEDON
& co.
Dick Smith
3326 E. Coast Hwy ,
Corona del Mtr
673-7005 or 549-0lll
Lester, Ryons & Co.
Dean W. Campbell
H25 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• d•I M•r
673..S38D
NEWPORT
FLOOR COVERIN&, loc.
Don Bolton
3500 E. Co .. t Hwy,
Coron• clef M•r
675-1636
WILLIAM WINTON
REAL ESTATE
Montana Rumbold
229 Marin•, Balboa Island
675-3311
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO
CORONA DEL MAR YOUTH CENTER e SEA SCOUT BASE
e CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIP e
UCI SCHOLARSHIPS e ORANGE COAST COLL~GE
SCHOLARSHIPS e CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOO~
kEY CLUB e HARBOR AREA BOYS CLUB (
YMCA e JOPLIN BOYS RANCH e AME.RICAN FIELD
SERVICE e INTER-FAITH FOUNDATION UCI e FOREIGN
/ STUDENT SPONSORS e SPEECH SEMINAR SAN DIE&O
\, e KIWANIS BOWL-HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT QUIZ
HARBOR
INVESTMENT CO.
2841 E. Coast Hwy .. CdM
673 -4400
BARNETT MORTGAGE
COMPANY
Lloyd l•rnett
2313 E. Coast Hwy.
Up1t1ir1
Corona dal Mar 671-5'420
AMELIA'S
31 I Marina Ava.
l1ll>e1 ltleri4
673-6580 5,30.9 ,30 p.m.
HERSHEY 'S MARKET
& GROG SHOP
Balboo Island
STEPHENSON
REALTY
Solu ll<ntall l:uhang••
306 M<irine,
a.Jboo l1lood
An ..,pwtM ~ CDM ltwa11h C11 ..
OBERHANSLl'S
of London
Patio Dining-Dtticattssen
2400 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
"'42-3414
Korker Liquor
2229 E. Coast Hwy.
Corona dal Mar
673-0916
Lesler, Ryons & Co.
Robert E. Afercer,
Afanagtr
3425 E. Coe1t l-iwy.
Coron• 41el Mar
673 -8380
BARTHOLOMEW
INSU RANCE, Inc.
Bob Bartholomtw &
Bryson liickman
llll E. Coe1t Hwy .
Coron• d•I Mer
675-5444 5'45-3165
3838 E. Coast Hwy.
V.M.D.
383D E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
673-IOSD
JOHNNIE'S LIQUORS
Dee Cook.--Owntt
3537 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona clel Mer
673-753D
NEWPORT CENTER
PHARMACY
1402 Newport Canter
Drive Ea1t
Newport Beach
644-2131
Th• MUTUAL Life
lnturanc• Ccmpeny of
NEW YORK
Robert S. Cunni.fun
3810 E. Coe1t Hwy.
Corona del Mer
673-9271 or 62'4-356'4
Lester. Ryons & Co.
Donald E. Humphreys, Jr.
3425 E. Coast Hwy,
673-8380
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK ·
Robert G. Leech, Manaar.
3141 E. Co .. t Hwy,
Corona del Mer
Coren• 41•1 Mtt Off. 67J-f 2'40
-----.. -
WAl5Tl)N & CO.
Harold T. BirtU, Jr.
2700 E. Co•st Hwy,
Coron• del M•r
675.05DI
MUTUAL FUND
ADVISORS , Inc.
1601 We•tcllff Drive,
Newport Beech
642-"'422
AMLING'S
NEWPORT NURSERY
1500 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• d•I M•r
(714) 673~9D
The SNACK SHOPS
••
-Far W"t Services -
We cannot comp•t• with
"KIWANIS
PANCAKES"
-IVT -
" TO TRY HARDER"
CTry 111 l1t1rll
Sp•ci1ll1iftt 111
•SHOPPING
CENTERS
• INDUSTRIAL
SLOGS.
•INCOME
PROPERTIES
RICHARD D.
BECHTEL
Real Estate lnve.stmenta
833 Dover Drive
Sui!• 16
Newport BHch
-.642-0177 -
NEWPORT BEACH
COSTA MESA
BOARD Of
REALTORS
Wh111 ., • .,
BUY OR SELL
s •• }10 11•
LOCAL REALTOR
BRUSH YOUR TEETH
TWICE
A
DAY
AND
SEE YOUR
DENTIST.
TWICE
A
YEAR
YOUR
LOCAL DENTIST
See Your Friends At This Big
Good Luck
ON YOUR
KIWANIS
PANCAKE
BREAKFAST
Your Local
Lumber Yard
WARD &
HARRINGTON
3300 W. Coast Hwy,
Newport Beach
548-3411
• Your View to •
BttttT T1koiiion~
' NEWPORT BEACH l
CABLEVISION, INC. ,
1501 Westcnff Dr~
N•wport leac,h
{7141 "'42-1260
Villa
Swee/en
S1111.-.11Lor.I Li11cll I Di"""
S ift Shop Ii l.akery
3536 E. Coost Hwy,
622 Main St.,
Hun tin9to11 lt1cli
Your Hosts -
Oscar &. Hertha Backlund
•
1----.....rt
20 Y11rt s.,.,i119 Tllt Htrbot '
Ar11 ln R11id111tl1I I "c;.,,.,.._..
dtl Propetti11 l Acrttft
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--. . . . . .
TAKE THAT! -Ray Dalke (right) delivers a kick
to Greer Golden in a karate demonstration at the
Lo6 Angeles Press Club. Both Southern Californians
are black belt practitioners of the self defense art.
The first-ever world karate championships will be
held at the Sports Arena Oct. 19.
Olympics
Alternates
Named
Paul Smart, chairman of
the U.S. Olympie Yachting
Committee, has announced
the three alternate skippers
who wilt go to Acapulco for
the Olym·p.ic yachting games
beginning Oct. 12.
The alternii;te skippers will
be John Marshall, Stamford,
Conn.; Robert Doyle, Massa-
cbusetUl1 and Tom Allen of
Buffalo, N.Y. •
Marshall was runner.up to
Gardner C.Ox in the 5.S me-
ter Olympic trials held in
Newport last month. He has
experience in several classes
and will be expected to pinch
hit In either fhe 5.5s, Dragon
an~ Star Class.
Doyle was runner-up to
Carl Van Duyne in the Finn
Class trials, and Allen was a
close second to Robert Jam·
es in the Flying Dutchman
Claiis trials.
Both Doyle and Allen will
back up the skippers in their
respective classes.
"I feel that the five skip.
pers and three alternates
will give us an exceptionallv
stron,e: team at Acapulco,"
1ald Smart.
-
Volante II Named
66 Series Winner
.In the 1964 yachtlngOJym.-· Mlk'e Hirsh'• Cal 2-~ (~) Anita, Buster Ham·
ptcs at ·Enoshima, Japan, Volante JI haa been named mood, BYC.
.. ' -
DAILY "LOT
Tournament in Los Angeles the lf.S. team won medals in the overall ...Onne.r of Balboa MORF -(1) Dolphin,
every class. but no gold me-Milt Allio•-LIYC (2)
dal Yacht Club'1 66 Serie•. com· '"'• ; s. Smart aaid he la confi· V l v a c i o u 1 , Bill von
I~a1~ate Getting on Its Feet;
World Championship Set
dent that one or more go J d posed of six race• of ap-KleinSmid, NHYC ; ( 3 )
medals will come to the U.S. proximately aix hours dilra· Aloha, Glenn Reed, SSSC;
with the strong team being tion. (4l Baby, Steve Seat. LIYC:
fielded. 151 Tw1'nkle . Frank •-Dave Second in the overaJ1 stan· uc;
Two NHYC
Skippers
Get Honors
dings was Jpck Bailli~'s ~-White, BYC.
meter Newsboy, and third
was George Stu r I e 1 ' 1
Columb:ia-50 ReJe11e.
Following are. Ule •winner'a
in each clasa:
CLASS A -(I) Newsboy;
(2) Release; (~) Sparkle,
Alex Irving, BYC; (4)
Prelude, Jim Linderman,
BYC: (5) Talis-man; Bob
Williams, BYC.
Clubs Set .. ' .. . Match Race
Evwy -* AAMC:O utl.;r.. MCn
t1Mo11 10,000 tnoamlul• ~
Yow a.t"frH towlltfo_ • frM ...
olttrct, tnt, 8ffk/9rlf Wtv/a• ;.Ollt
tlmH In. }u1t -d,.Y. Affll 'MUI
AAMCO, your t111n•mt11 ron -""' ,rotedtd b)' over .500 MMCO CM-
t1,.. COii! to tPlt, By EARL GUSTKEY
Of flll O•llY ~lltt St•ff
Judo, long considered the
king <>f the self defense arts.
is beln·g strongly challenged
by karate, according 00
Southern Califomfa karate
officials who ere planDng
the tpOrt's premier event
next mOllttt.
Loo Anll"I.. will be th•
host city for the 1968 World
Invitational Karate Tourna-
.ment on Saturday. Oct. 19,
.at the Sports Arena.
It's the first time the
world karate movement has
been organized aufiicierrtly
to conduct a world tourna-
ment. Conteistant.11 from the
United States, Japan and
four European countries will
compete.
Karate hasn't yet ap-
proached the world recogn.J-
tion that Judo has, but it's·
growing, particularly i n
Southern C&lifomia. Judo
became ac Olympic sport in
196"!.
"There are karate clubs
springing up all o v e r
Southern California," says
Dr. Lester Ingber. a physics
instructor at UCLA and a
black belt karate prac-
·Tri tons, Eagles
.. Outrun Opponents
In opening cross country
matcll<s Thur &day. !:be San
O.ementll and Estancia hilh
&Obool.s won eMily but
Laguna Bead> and Foo!IW<l
V,alliey wen! on Jos:ing ends bJ convincing marginl.
Senior Charlie Hoyt and
his sophomore brother Curt
led Estancia to a perfect
score of 15-50 {l.n cross
country, low 9C'Ore wins).
All seven Estancia ruf'l·
neni croesed the finillh line
Artists Drop
12-11 Game
To Warriors
A last-minute goal by
Troy Hilb School enabled
tile Warriors to edge La·
1una Beach 12-11 In the two
schools' 1988 water polo
opener.
Ttle Artt&ls Jumped to a
,_7 ball time advantage, but
were overcome and finally
beaten on a lut·minute ptn·
alty 1bot by Dave Meyera.
Artist center-forward Bob
Gardner bad an outllanding
came, scoring i!l&t\t coais
and doinc a fantutlc aJJ.
M"OWld job.
High tcortt for the War·
rlon was Meyer• w J t h
three goals.
La&"una Beach dominated
th• lower clan aamea. Win·
ing the Bee.11 1 19-1, and the
Cee1, llf
I
befiore a n.lnner from host
school Tustio could finish .
Bob Lineback and Craig
Sle<ling Jed San Clement< t.
a 15-49 win over visiting
Neff High School.
The Barons of Fountain
Valley were defeated easily
by Rancho Alamitos, 16-40,
while at Katella Laguna wu
be<lum by the host Knights ,
19-36.
(Oft! .,... flnlsher1:
E1l•11elll lJ, TlllltO. s.t
fll Cl>arlie Heoyl t:,fJ, 121 C1111 ttWi
10;01, lll ,..,,.... Haun 10:•. (•l ~
8•rto" 10:10, CSJ W•IMr &roll 10:11,
Ill l'Nrt ltffdr 11:'5, f1l Clltldl Shlll-
1"8 lO:JG.
Yanks Mi88 Two
The USA hM enltnd
teams m 17 ,_, the 19 rpar1:a!
en the caiender for th•
Olympic Game• in Mexico.
The USA WM ellmineted in
the first round ol. ttie IOCCer
elimination rournam@nt and
the field hookey teom failed
to qualify wlln.a Illini placo
finilh in tM Pan-Am.ican
Galjjoo at Wlmipef In lM'I.
titioner.
"There are a lot o{ karate
clubs on unlversity and col-
lege campuses that wiU soon
become accredited physical
education classes -as soon
as we can get enough
qualified instructors."
T b e difference between
judo and karate is the
degree of punishment one
can inflict upon an attacker.
Basically, the object in
judo is to throw your foe to
the ground. In karate. the
practitioner uses striking
motions with the hands,
elbows .and feet .
As Harry . Umerooto. a
Hu-jtoo Beach black belt
devotee, puts it: ' ' Th e
physical philosophy in }Udo
is to use your foe's force
against himself. In karate,
you maximiZe your O\Vll
strength •.. applytng basic
laws ol physics to your own
body."
The highest ranking
karate expert in America is
Hidetak& N:imiyama. a six:Ui
degree black belt and chief
instructor for the A J I
America Karate Federation.
"Some Of the technique.s
in karate seem very small
and yet they are completely
di.sabling," he says.
"ft requires great meotal
and physical fitness.
Obvjously, since karate
can kill or severely wound
an opponent, it can't be ap-
plied in iU raw form ln com-
petitive matches. The com-
petitors are scored h y
judges as they fall just short
of striking ttieir opponents.
"It's not like pulling your
punches like a boxer does."
Dr. Ingber says, "you're us-
ing full force but coming
just abort of making con-
tact."
Karate is one of four ma·
jor self-defense arts. The
otters are judo. kendo an.i
aikido. Kl!Odo requirt:s the
skilled use of long poles or
sticks and Aikido is an at-
tack upon an attacker's
joints.
Umemoto is attem~ing to
form an active k a r a t e
organization in 0 r a n g e
County.
"We have 10 people signed
up and ready to go," he
says.
"Our only problem is fin-
ding a filcilify whMe we can
work out. We'rt::-trying to
get permission to use one of
the wrestling rooms at the
Huntington Beach H i g h
School."
Umemoto is a black belt
member or the A I 1
American Karate Fed.era·
tion, tile only nationally
organized karate organiza-
tion.
"We ere directly affiliated
with the Japan Karate
Association (JKA), wtuch Is
tile largest in Japan and the
only one recognized by
Japan's Ministry of Educa-
tion," he says.
Two Newport H a r b o r
yaOOts won top honors in
Los Angeles Yacht Club's
Whitney Serles wtUch was
coocluded last week.
Overall winner w a 1
Gea-~ Stw--gea:' OJlumbta-
50 Release from Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, and
runner-up was BUI Allen's
Oal-40 Madruractor, also
from NHYC .
Class breakdown o{ ttie
series was as follO'\lo's :
CLASS A -(1) Jubilation,
Harry Steward. LAYC: (2)
Sumatra, Al M•artill, LA YC;
(3) Caprlcioos Ji, B en
Williams, LAYC.
CLASS B ·(I)
Modrufador. 8'!! A l I e n •
NHYC; (2) Releasoe. George
sturges, NH Y C ; (3)
Dorothy E III, Boris Levin,
CYC .
CLASS C -()) P"flOOBe.
Cliff Tucker, LBYC; (2)
Oooquest. Biii Pony . LBYC;
13) Star Darw:er, Doug
St!arkweattier, St BYC.
Results of the Litt 1 e
Whitney Series for Midget
Ocean Racing Fleet Yacht&
was not computed becauge
one of the races was can-
celled and will be sailed dur-
ing LAYC'1 Harbor Seniu ..
Pon1eroy
Series Set
Polo Tourney Finals
Slated This Evening
Souitl Shore S8!iling Club's
_Pomeroy Trophy Serles for
Midget Ocean Racing Fleet
yaotita will be held Saturdllly
.and Sunday with start& off
the Belboe Pier.
ln conjunction with the
Second and final day of
action in I.ht Newport-Mesa
Clan B and C water polo
tournament started at 2:M
th11 1fternoon at Estancia
Hilb School with the final
matches alated to get under
way 1t 5 o'clock.
In Cl.us B action Thurs-
day. 1':1tancta highllghtod
action with a pair of victor·
ie1.
In the opening game of
the Bee bracket., Newport
waa bealen by Estancia,
9-5.
Greg Goodyear s c o r e d
five goaJa for the Eaglea.
Costa Mesa, S-4. series will be the Oal·20 fleet
The first game ol the dlrampionshipe:.
tournament waa in the Cee 1be late Warren Pomel"Of
bracket with Newport Har· was a 1Teat adYOC&M ol
bor Clefeating Estancia, 10-3. 1mall ocean racing boatl
Harbqr's Doug Snyder was long before the Midget
hiah icorer wlth five 1oals, Ocean Radnt: Fleet wu
while teammate Kevin Ashe ever «ranized. M 0 RF
bad three scores. boata are 30 fee.t and ~
Costa Mesa dumped Coro-tn overall length.
n.a del Mar 1-3. The Mus-Pomeroy wU an employt
tangs jumped out to an early ol the W. D. Schock Co.
f>.l haU·time lead and never wll!ch produced tl>e SCbock·
rellnquilbed it to the Sea 22, one oi th• earliest oi tbe Kini•-MORF typeo in tbU area.
COata Mesa played Estan-r==========,i cia In the 11\ird game and
rf!mained undefeat.ed in the SHARP
tournament by downing .thf! If y•u''• • 1lt-it1t tr•tltr, u1•
Eagles, 7-4 , John Carpenter th• DAltT ''Lors '•"'•11•
and Greg Be11I h11d three Dl'"•·A-LI"• 1l111tff•tl ··'· Sri-
CLASS B -(I) Melee.
Don Ayres, NHYC; (2)
.Enchantces1, Wynn Bedell,
BCYC; (3) Vela. Jack Bibb,
BYC; (4) Holiday. Pa11
Noll, NHYC; (5) Maurie. J,
W.W. SuHivan. LAYC.
CLASS C (I)
l m p e f u o u s , Ch arlea
G I a s g ow , BYC; (2)
Marvida, John Payne, BYC ;
(3) Falcon. Bob Smllh.
BYC; (t ) Destiny, John
Hooten. BCYC; (5) Jeja,
J~m Borger, BYC . . .
CLASS D -(I) Volante
II; Mike Hirob. BYC; (2)
Baia,,dr•. JMTy Mcctaire,
LIYC: (3') Bravo II, Bill
Huke!l. LIYC; (4) Una
Mas, Diclr Lindsey, CBYC;
McCULLOCH
~IL~LEi
PUTS YOU IN T1f[ WHK
SAYING; TIME SAYING
WINNU'S ClllCU WITN
2·111EAT NEW l:Hllll sAWS
.··'~'Q. I~~-~-, I
\,.~·
McCU LL<I CH
POWER MAC 6
CENTER IAlANClD IASTEI
GRIP for OM-Hind Cttil;.11
San Diego and St Francis
yacht club11 tangled today in
the San Fr.ancilico Chal'lenge
Cup race. a match race that
was first held in 1895.
The event is a single
match r 1 c e under the
ratings of ttie Cruising Club
of America measurement
rule.
San Diea:o will make its
bid for the cup with Gerry
Driscoll and a crew of
SOYC 1ailors in the 42-foot
Chrla C r a f t Comanche,
Wlndstar. On ttte San Diego
crew are Lowell North,
Gene Trepte, Rodney Eales,
John Dri1coll, Russ
Lamoreaux and R o g .e r
Barnes, all experienced one-
dealgn and offahore race.rs,
St. Francia Y ad>! Club
declined to name it. •boat
[w•ry ml1111t1 .•nd • MW, .....
-JN"OY" •••
Y .... ,.'ftnf ,_,
*'--1H'-.. AMIOel
COSTA MESA
1741 Nftpeft •• '46-116'
Garden Grove ·•·
twl •• ,.. .,._ •iv.. .........
S'•nt• Ana
ftt •· ,Int It. ............ IOoMn
.:J,~Q tO AA-'<_ ""'.
,..,. CA ~'"--<'~ -
and di,Pending crew unt.il l;=========~ five minutes before race
time. PENETRATION
St. Fr.ancls YC won last
year, breaking San Diego's
string o! five stf:raight vic-
N11rly 1v1,Yo"• r1ei1 #11
DAILY P'ILOT, h_t .. w" "•••·
p•p•r for tll• f11Mtlou1 Ort.ilt•
Coal!, tories.
00
PER.
ITEM
ON
NEW r.
USED
Skis, Poles, Bindings,
Sweaters, Boots,
C.r R.acls, S~i Boots,'
Accessories
Hurrt11
Quantitita Limittd
ALSO:
HAIT
HOl.IDAYS $99.50 .... ,,, ....
INllS'sll
BUCKSTAIS $99.SO
! ...... t\.a. .... ''"·" ... ,~.: ~' P1<k ... of Skl1, t34.so ~ Polfl, Blndlnt1
SKi MART A;:~~;;
Al.MM'll ..... .,._IUALfrt • -....
7777 Edln1er Hunlinflllll Bea.ch,
IMWpolt bNCli
2IOS W. Coast H.i.,.
Cotta MMI completely
cru1Md Corona 'deJ M'ar ln
a team effort. 1 l·l. Estancf1
then came back 1 defea&
11'41yt. Mt•• • b1tt.r rirle1I ,, , • &Oils apiece for the Mw-whitlt•r ,.11·,. r..,.,1~1 •r ,,111,,. tao&•. L:~:.;.._:..:.:.:..:....:...._~11~~~~~:t-~ll.o~~~~~~..,..~~--"'T"~ ......
•\
·'
. . ... -. -. . . . ·-. . . .. .. -. ----. ........ _ .... .;~ ..... . ' . ' ..
• '
DiULY PILoT EDITORIAL PAGE
• • The -Problem Remains
• • • •
. I v I\'• eu er to Iooe by a mlle. To Io .. by an eyelash ·-r
• ··-
-12 vot .. -as Orange Coast Junior C-Ollege DUtrlct
did on !ta bond Issue, is herd 1'> teke. It leaves a lot of
pertonl who worked !or passage of Ille bonds wooderlng
what they could have done to get out a few more favol'°"
able vote1.
• Certail1ly junior college dlstrlct officials are highly
disappointed.. Their problem of how to accommodate
the crowing number of studenll remains unresolved.
• -Bui nolhlng la accomplished tbinklllg about what
mlglrt have been .
Satisfaction can be taken in the near miss since
most akeptics thought the bonds dldn 't have a chance
to win. Nearly capturing twt>thirds of ~e votes is a
real improvement over not being able to 'muster 50 per~
ceit for a tax overrl:de the last two times oUt.
And an override measure accompanying the bond
issue thla time did pass.
And, on the basis of the vote, the juniOr college
dlatrlcl certalnly bas the light to !eel it has the confi·
dmce of the major communities it seeks to serve.
''
The bond election passed in Costa Mesa and New·
port Beach, and that a1so offers hope for Newport-Mesa
Unified School District when 'it tries its next bond elec·
tion, probably early nert year.
The bonds received well over 60 percent approval
in the West County although not enough support to pass.
Huntington Beach Union High School District !'ill have
lo improve on that margin to succeed with its $12 mil·
lion bond election Nov. 5.
But what is clear Is that the problem of what to do
wit.b the students remains. It takes several years to
build a junior college building and precious time has
been Jost in the race to keep up with enrollment.
An opportunity to obtain matching state and fed·
eral funds for building has been missed. Maybe a simi·
lar opportunity will present itself again, but that's
little comfort to the J;aigb school graduates who will find
there is no more room for them in the meantime at OCC
What If the
'Th~y'
lly GEORGE R. HOFF, Pll. D. "'
Cops and r<>bben. Cowboys and In·
eians. Fox and hound1. Chase -run
-hJt -bit again -let them know
how it feels -get the bastards -they
can't do that t.o us! (Perhape violence
is fun to th<>3e from .a satiated soc.it·
ty.)
What's happening? In Chicago? In
Derkeley? Whtre will it all end? In
Hell? Violence i111't -aesthetic or even
pretty. It hurts: it smells bad; con-
lorted facet of. terror; sweat from ez:.
ertion and anxiety; it makes &ickeMag
sounds. (Amerio.a t. masculine. We'll
teach those savages democracy, if we
have to jam it down their throats.)
The Great American Hope, " ...
freedom and justice for all," has been
disintegrating into a nightmare of
broken dreams, heads, windows, pro-
mises, and spirits. ("Oh well," we
say, as we lead our lives of quiet
desperation.)
' MAYBE IT'S THE final symptom of
a decaying and regressiog civilization.
Maybe it's What we deserve for Com·
placently believing that neither our
brothers -nor we -need keeping.
(We'll all stand tall and proud , all the
way back to the cave.)
Nobody wins, but everyone plays.
The po'iice speak sofUy and carry a big
nightstick. The demonstrators speak
loudly and hide their impotency. The
observers -politicians, social scien-
tists, reporters. etc -say nothing un·
til the damage is done; then, their
"helping hands" strike again. The
whole scene is God-awful (Isn't it
reassuring to know ttiat most of us
have someone tlse to do our dirty
work fur us?)
WHAT'S NEEDED? Needs, needs,
needs. needs. Oh, how it hurts when
they 're always felt but seldom fullill-
ed. Even eoUce . Even demonstrators.
Even though they can't admit it open-
Is Us?
~~yday,~ ,..
Problem
ly, the observers. The ones who need
the m06t are the ones who are hurt ttie
most. They certalnly don't need
t.aunbi, obscenitie&, bricks in their
faces, clubs oo their heads, tear gas in
ti:leir eyes, or platitudes and advJ(:e in
the morning paper. Or do they? (May·
be OUr personal and collective guilt,
because of what we haven't done, is so
pervais.ve that onJy puni6hment will
expiate it.)
Bard, tough, sharp talk, instead of
hardware, may jolt us back to where
we're all at -together. Harder,
tougher, and sharper listening may
shake us loose from the cradle of our
infantile stereotypes. (Everyont:. wants
to be mature without going through
the pain Of growing up.)
IT'S RISKIER AND more threaten·
ing not t.o have riots. Are police in the
business of protection or suppression?
Do radicals want a better soeia! order
or their own brand of anarchy? Politi·
cians. What do they really want? Ask
their colleagues from the rival party.
(Come on, gang, let's go to the riot
tonight. Don't forget your Polaroids.)
Everyone gets quite bored. really,
negotiate with people who don't think
or feel the "right" way. Where's the
drama? Where's the excitement?
Where's the gut-level satisfaction?
(There'=' more happening on the
streeU, aod besides, we don't have to
reveal who we really are when we're
fighting back.)
Fighting back is fine when we know
who's out to get us. But what if we
have the wrong "they" in mind? What
ii the "they" is us?
Humphrey's Fast Talking
rt is doubtless temperamental on
both our parts, but a man who talks
as much and as fast as Hubert Hum.
phrey always arouses my suspicion
that he is trying to overwhelm my
thinking process rather than stimu·
late it. • • •
In a well-ordered society. most men
rise to the top through their own in·
dui;try and ingenuity: in a poorly.
ordered one, through the foolishness
and guUibility of others. • • •
Sophistication i1 necessary. but
dangerous: for as soon as we realize
th.al thert is some good in all evil and
B11 Geot'ge ---,
DHr GeorfO:
My boy friend J1 1<1 jealous he
flies inCo a rate ii I even talk to
DJ1 bulbaod on Ille telephone.
Does' be need professional help?
' FIFI
Dear Fill:
JUlt eipltin to your boy friend
lllot lllore IJ n-. -een yoo
and -lanm. Wiit • aecond, that
quutlon mbed me up a lltlle.
In fact. I lhiAk I'll forrot the
whole tJ\ing. (No Olbtt odvloe
columnllt will mate that It.It.
ment.)
/
'
evil in all good, we begin hunting ard·
enUy for the good in that evil we wish
to commit.
• • •
The hardest thing about a victory is
not attaining ii., but knowing 'Nhat to
do with it after you have it-thus, the
lllO$t gloriow victories in war have
generally been followed by ~ kind of
"peace" that bred the germs of
another war v.~rse than tile last.
• • •
lf you think that if poor people
shaped up a little U'ley could find bet·
ter job6, read "Tally's Corner." by
Elliot Uebow. a brilliant, sensitive.
and fair-minded analysia of the
chronically poor in the U.S.
• • •
1'h05e who look down upon "mere
theory" miss the point that. for ex·
ample, the the<retical 1tudie1 ia
~athematics and astronomy, by run-
1n.g navigation into a precise science
did n11Jfe to save llveis at sea than ali
the '"practical" inventors of life-
jac.kets and rafts.
• • •
I Sydney J, Hii.rr1s· newe•t book or
collected columns, "1..#avlng the Sur·
f~. '' i1 currently available at book-
ahops.)
or Golden Wart colleges .
To thoee wao wlsbed they'd Voted and d\cln't: ,.,.
member how !rub' precious your ballot can be, ~acb of
U.O.e 12 mtasinc "yes" votes tasi Tuesday· wu worth fln),000.
Great Boon to Newp<;trt
F'ublon Island Is celebNting its flrol birthday.
Everyone in town should join in -certainly every
lallpeyer, atlea$l
Here's wb~:
'lllf $80 million shopping center during the current
financial year is expected to pum(> some $560,000 into
the city treasury. That's in property and sales taxes and
in buS1ness license fees. (Taxable retail sales in New~
port Beach were up a whopping 52 percent in the first
quarter o! 1968, compared with the same period In 1967.)
And in exchange for this. Fashion Island will re-
ceive something in the neighborhood of $200,000 in city
services. These include law enforcement, sewers, park·
way maintenance, street lighting, trash pickup, traffic
signalization and tire safety.
Wha't it al1 adds up to is a "profit" to the city of
roughly $300,000.
That sum is equivalent to what 15 cents on the city
tax rate would generate. The tax rate is now $1.~.
Without Fashion Island, it might well be pushing $1.40.
In addition, that great bie beautiful shopping com·
plex contributes just about an eq.ual amount to the New·
port-Mesa Unified School Distrlct. II will pay '300,000
in property taxes to local schools, and wW require noth·
ing in the way of services.
'•
'ef/{EA~z, ... :lllP,
• Iii . .r;;;;;).-
"Soc1£Ty ,,.. · ~
rr. All of this is money that is much needed by our city
and our schools. If it didn't come from Fashion Island,
more of it wou1d be coming from you. And us.
So, Happy Birthday, Fashion Island -and many,
many more of them. N
"5o WHAT IF YoUR RANCH fAILE1>2
THr fASTE)T 6UN IN THE WEST.".
~-o;;~
YOU'RE STILL
Pentagon
Has Bungled
M-16Program
WASHINGTON -While Pentagon
uexpert.s" have been bungling the M-
16 rifle program into a procurement
scandal, Communist forces in Viet-
nam. down to small Viet Cong guerrilla
units, have been equipped with a com-
parable fast-firing weapon, the AK-47.
That is the real tragedy of the M-16
mess -a story mostly untold by the
House and Senate investigators who
have correctly criticized development
and procurement of the M-16. The AK-
47 is . in fact. a largely untold story in
itseU. although it has been an lm·
portant Communist weapon in Viet·
nam since 1965 ..
Heavier than the M-16 and not so
fast in rate of fire . the AK-47 h;,
nevertheless. a rugged serviceable
weapon. The Senate Preparedness
·~ ., I Jirt\"t~ ~' ' iit_I-~
~il~n.GoidWith · ~
,, •. 1 t:._ li' t
Subcommittee recenlly described it al!
"an automatic -~apon of good quali-
ty."
COMBAT REPORTS from Vietnam
indicate that North Vietnamese units.
main furce Viet Cong units. and some
smaller guerrilla units, are now equip·
ped with the AK-47 . The current crazy
mixed-up M-16 procurement is. of
course, designed to speed that rifle to
South Vietnamese forces -and
especially to local defense units.
ft has been widely assumed, here in
the United States. that U. S. and South
Vietnamese forces have an edge in
firepower and mobility in the guerrilla
fighting in South Vietnam. It is an
unpleasant fact, however, that the
Communists, thanks to the AK-47,
have had the firepower advantage in
many engagements involving small
units.
It is also an unpleasant fact that
while the vaunted U. S. industrial base
has stuttered and stumbled under the
Pentagon~s M-16 program the pro-
duction base of Olmmunist China has
largely met its admittedly smaller
logistics problems. The AK-47 is a
Soviet-designed weapon, but sources
here report that most of the AK-47s
captured in Vietnam are of Chinese
manufacture.
URGENCY LACKING -Army pro·
curement official& bave been ju.!lti·
fying their recent award o{ M-16 con-
tracts to hi!ilh-priced bidders on the
basis of urgency.·The rifies. they say.
are urgenllv needed and there was no
assurance that the low-<:()Sf producers
.could meet an accelerated production
schedule.
Review of the M-16 procurement.
however. does not indicate. that
anybody felt a real sense of urgency.
here in Washington. for many months
after Gen. William C. Westmoreland
began making urgent requests ror
more of the rlfies.
E][pertJi say the Communists be«An
Introducing the AK-47 te Vietnam
combat ln February 1965. and the
weapons were quickly In evidence as
far south as the Delta. Even before U.
$. forces were committed to the Viel·
nam fighting the M·lf hid seen some
Q1)e.rime.nta-1 service f.here. In Okem·
ber 1985 Westmorehi.nd .a1ked that the
M-15 be adopted for Vietnamese units.
WESTMORELAND'S . request, as
noted by the Preparedness Sub.
committee. stated that use by the
Communists of h.Jgh volume automatic
small trm1 fire gavf! them a pro-
00\m<!ed •uperiorlty in tb11 1udde.11
engagMnentl which arose.
By llollert 5. AilH
Ind Joh A. Gtid1111llll ;,
........
In Era of Fear of Involvement • • •
They Gave Unselfish Help
To the Editor:
On Sunday, Sept. l, my husband was
stricken without warning with a fatal
heart attack at the Coyote Canyon
dump. Two county employes, not
realizing he was already beyond help,
rusheO him to the hospital at the risk
or censure or possible suit. The
nearest telephone is several miles
away and their only thought was to
avoid delay and help an apparenUy
suffering human being.
IN TH.IS ERA of complacency and
fear of involvement. this kind of
personal disregard for involvement
but on the other hand concern for
one's fellow man is uncommon and
rarely appreciated. As a grateful wife
and mother I want to publicly thank
these men for their unseUish act
"above and beyond the caU Of'duty"
and commend them to their employer
· for appropriate recognition.
MRS. ALFRED E. VAN HOOSEN
011e0 1ided TV Net"'
To the Editor:
This is a protest -a protest of the
horribly one-sided unprofessional news
reporting by the major television
r.etworks in regards to the reeent hap.
penings in Chicago . .As a result of ttiat
"un-reporting," I no longer utiliT.e the
television for my news gathering.
I do not doubt that some of the
things thrown at the Chi~ago police did
stink. but I wonder; could it have
smelled any worse than what was
thrown at the American public by the
televis.ion news media?
MARVIN E. FOLEY
No Clea"""' at llCI
To the Editor:
ls there anything we can do as in·
dividuals -and collectively -on the
local level in terms of having any in·
nuence on local schools. particularly
in showing great disapproval of any
plan to have Eldridge Cleaver and
other advocates of violence appear at
UC!?
I should like to express my approval
of your thoughtful, reasonable and
continued expression Of disapproval of
the adoption of TV surveillance in
Newport Beach. ft seemed a very ob-
vious effort to sell a new proch.ct by a
manufacturing crganJzatioo w h l c h
wanted to get its product in circula·
tion, regardless o< ii.! basic moral.
public and civic justification in
Newport Beach.
I shall continue to be interested in
your editorials.
M. THAYER
\lil.e Stench
To the Editor:
I hope Chancellor Oanlel Aldrich
Dear
Gloomy
G'us:
Wouldn't be t t er Ughtlna of
stJ-eet.11 throughout the Newport
Beach, Corona del Mar and Bal·
boa Island are11 be a hlg step
in tfle right dlrection u a crime
dflternnt?
-Mr• A.HT.
,.. '-"'" NllK1I -..... .. _.., .... tot.. . ....
,_. ... -• .._, ... ...,. NI&.
Lttt.r1 from 1'911dtrl ,,. welcome. Nonne11Y writ•,..
should aH'IYtt' their a!IUllll In XICI -nil ot 11-ss.
Tiie rlettt ta conden:1t lettlr1 ta 111 SPKe or ellmlnaN
llbtl lo .._....Id. All iett.,.. n'llld Inell.di 11tn.iu,.
•nd maUlnt ..;.i,_, but n1meo win bl wll!'llMld on r"uat.
does not allow Eldridge Cleaver to ap-
pear on the UCI campus.
We, in this wonderful community.
feel t:hat a man of Dr. Aldrich's
caliber will not allow himself Ul be
respoosible for any polluti~ of this
area by the vi:le stench that emanates ....
fTom that. sewer of higher intellectual
learning at Berkeley, and that he will
see to it that our beautiful sweet·
smelling campus at UCI will be a
tribute to him and his constituents.
Jet Jeopat'd!J
To the Editor:
E.A.W.
Just last week we were shocked to
hear of the tragic C1'3sh of an ex-
ecutive jet at the Burbank Airport.
For someone to say that it can't hap·
pen at Orage County Airport, that per-
s<>n just isn't facing the tacl.!I of Ufe.
Consider for a moment that Uie
commercial jets carry the equivalent
of Crom one to three railway tank cars
lille;d with kerosene. Should ooe qf
these noisy brutes fall on the tllke-off,
it would mean a wide swath of fiery
destruction right dovro through th~
center of NeW'pOlt Beach. Local
residents who Eve in the Oigbt pattern
at Or:inge County Airport are thus the
innocent targets of such a potential
b"agedy.
No on Prop. 9
The State Board of EduoatiOJt iJ
vigorously opposing Proposition 9, the
scr<.•aBed "W-atson Initiative." on the
Nov. 5 ballot.
The board voted its oppo&itioo at its
recent (Sept. 12·13) meeting in l..Qs
An~les after hearing th.at if passed
ProposiUon 9 would wipe out local con·
trol of schools. cause class sizes to in·
crease and put many pupils on double
sessiops .
Harry Fosdick, assistant e.xecuti.Ye
secretary of the California Teachers
Association (CTA), pointed out
Prop>sitlon 9 woukt strip Jocel scbools
of 60 percent of their fin.tncial support
over a flvt:·Yeet" period wlth no
guarantee that the money would be
replaced.
REPLACF.MEN'l' Of" the funds
would have to come from tht state.
which wollld have~ Increase the H.le1
tu to 12 percent, or the income t:u: by
300 percent to raise the money, he
said. 1'b.i.s. he added, would put the
lltAte ln full coolrol ol !be ldlools. with
JOOll pattnU hevtng ao poslible way
of oupportin& quality educ:stlon 1bovo
.a mediocre state mJnlmum.
Fosdick also polnlA!d ou1 ttlal "'1ly :.i
percent ot the property ln the state i.s
owned by homeowners. Thus tM big
land ownua, who have 7U percent .
would beneOt ttie mott from ProposJ.
tion 9.
state Superintendent of SChools Mu
Raff~ ai..o urted deleal ol Proposl·
tion I , whicb ht called "a very da_..... pr:i:n.;;; -Service
THE A l R LI N E OPERATORS
appear to be trying desperately to
prove that they couldn't cai:'e less a·
bout tlle problem they create as long
as a buck is to be made. It is obvious
that the residents ol Newport Beach
residing in the airport flight patrem
are expected to sit quietly by like
"'good little taxpayers" while betng
deluged with an ever increasing
volume of noise and dirt and con-
template the distinct possibility cl.
being cremated in their homes.
Sc.n1e means must be found to blow
the whistle on those individuals who
would ignore our plight. I seriously
propose as step Nwnber 1 that the
mechanics be set up NOW tb indict
each: and every member of the Orange
County Board of Supervisocs fOf"
manslaughter on as many counts as
there are fatalities who are not
pas&engers en the downed aircraft.
Such an indictment would become
autcmatic should a crash occur.
WOllLD SUCH action accompLish
anyU1i.ng? Let's consider a moment
the reaction by school b -0 a r d
throughout the state of California not
too long ago 1,1o·hen it was made known
that the board members would be held
persooally respon.stble for the safety
and welfare Of each student wtiile al·
tending school. The frenzied activity in
con-ducting engineering studies, and in
scme instances condemning substan·
dard school buildin gs was truly awe-
inspiring. Why shouldn't men with
~thority be held personally ac·
countable for their d e c i s i o n s
particularly v.·here the lives of in·
nocent bystanders, in this instance
residents in tile flight pattern. are in·
Yolved?
It i& my opinion that the "ho-hum"
attituUe taken to date on the Orange
County Airport expansion w o u I d
change overnight.
To the wise~acker who says if you
don't like it here. get oul, let me say
that I would love to move tomorrow if
someone can show me how I can sell
our home and avert a seriou& financial
loss on our investment in a real estate
market already devastatingly depress·
ed by the Orange County Airport ex· pantron.
ROBERT L. WERKHEISER
'A•lc r..m..., Compan11'
To the Editor:
I'm a little girl who is 91h years old.
l have a pony who I love dearly. His
name is Sugar. I ride him when I get a
ehe.nce. He lives at Rancho CerritOf!i
which Is being closed down by tht
lrviM Company, .
.Please ask the Irvine Company to
11ve our stable a new place. 'Cause ii
they dcn't, I wm't see ~gar any
mon.
JENIFER HUTa!INsoN
---W-
Frirlay, September 20, 1968
Tl!. tdilorlal -• o/ Ult Doilr Pilot 1eeb to lnfOM71 and mm.
ulatc rtodfn b~ prc1mting WI
...,.._,, opiftlonl cmd CO!l>-
tN"nt.a'l'; on topics of tnitrut
and ,;(lfif/f<:•••=<. bv provfd1no a
forum for the f%J>'l"t:uion of
our rtl>Mr$' opinion.$. and b~
prest.lleing tM diverse vitU>
points of informtd obltrVtr1
and 1pokt.rmn on topics of the
dau.
Robert N, Weed, PubUabor
--~__..... ..... ..-~, , .. . --· +<· ---~~-~~---·---------------------,,........... . . ·-· ----------
I
I
1
Costa Mesa Today's Closing
VOL l.f, NO. 227, :.t SECTIONS, 50 PAGES
Setting llp for Luau
··The female cmmterpart of tile Coota Mesa Jaycees (left to right) Mrs.
~Don Bull Mrs. Bob Shipley, Mrs. Jim Tice, Mrs. Dan Nusser (seat-
ed) and 'Mrs. tbris Freed set up for the Jaycees ~ual luau, set
·for Satwllay beginning at 7 p.m. at the Kona Hawaii Restaurant.
Tickets wlllch may be purchased at the door, are $5 per person and
will go 'toward the Jaycees' civic programs for next year.
Regents Fail to Reacli
Stand on Clea:rer I ssue
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Un1versity
of Cali!omia regents resume today
consideri!lg what tG do about Black
Pantlier leader Eldrklie . Oleaver's
selection. as • guest ~ at UC
Berkeley.
Gov. Reagan, who has predicted the
regent.I will prevent Cleaver frOm ap-
pearing in an experimental course on
the background of racial disDTders.
planned to attend the meeting at
UCL~.
· After two hours ot public hearings
and an bour of private debate Thurs-
day, a regents committee-failed to
agree on a plan to end the con-
troversy.
"There was no consensus," Regent
William K. Coblenti of San Fran~co
said after the meeting of toe rune-
member education policyc ommlttee.
"I made several pl'opo.sals," UC
President Charles J . Hitch said.
"Other regents made ieveral pro·
membec'education policy committee.
Mesa Recreation
'
Signup Satm·day.
.•· Final registration sessions f o r
~veral or 24 Costa Mesa fall recrea-tion courses still not filled up Is
echeduled Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1
JS.m . at the Costa Mesa Civic Center.
·All physical education cl.asses tor
men, "W'Omen and children are •.till
dpen. according to the Recreation
Department. but a telephone call can
~at ify just what is left.
""'
' " Orw ,,tan t!ac\Od by Ille UC
Academic Council would require dost
liCTUtiny of the acllClemic background&
of informally a( ...,U ... formally ap-
pointed UC lecturers. But 1he plan
would not necesnrily bar Cleaver
frOm speaking in '81 le"31 to seheduled
class perlodi.
Tue Academic Couocil Is composed
of leaders of the Academic Senate Oil
UC 's nine campwe:!I.
The basic issues rU!ed Thursday:
will Cleaver be a teacher or the sub-
ject matter of the course, and should
he be allowed to speak at the universi-
ty in either case.
Cleaver, minister of information for
the Black Panthers, is a staie prison
parol~ facing charges of attempted
murder and assault with a deadly
weapon as the result of a shootout
wilih Oak.1and police last April.
The California Legislature censured
the regents and UC's administration in
a resolution Thursday for appointing
Cleaver.
"I wouldn't care if this man ;s the
greatest authority in the world." said
Regent John Canaday of Burbank.
"'With the record he has, I wouldn't
want our .students exposed to him."
B11t Regent William M. Roth of
Washingtoti, D.C., said, "Unles8 Mr.
Cleaver la there as a teacher, then
there is no question about his right to
appear on campus and talk."
Prof. J. L, Kelley. chairman o( the
faculty board which approved the
course, said: "Mr. Cleaver's role is
roughly that of a living book."
Kelley said Cleaver will be the sub-
ject matter of the course, not the
teadl.er.
. EDITION N.Y. St o cks
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1968 ~N COOS
It'll Be All Jet Traffic
Pereira Aid e Says Brace 'for Passenger Explosion:
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of "'-D1l1'1 Pli.t lllrf
' Like it or not, Orange Ci>unty ls
,oing to have to brace for an air tra.!· nc explosion.
And that meane jet traffic.
James Sink, project director for
Willlam E. Pereira & Associates,
made this plain to the Orange CoWlty
Coast Association Thursday night.
"Wi'thin the nexlt 10 years," he told
his Balboa Bay Club audience of 170,
* * * '.Air Expert
Sinks Floating
Airport Plan
' Aviation master planner James Sink
Thursday night sank the dream or a
floating airport for Orange County.
Its cost, he indicated, would be a
nightmare -like possibly a $2 billion
nightmare.
Sink, director of projtru for'
W i I Ii am E. Pereira & Associates,
developers of the county's a I r
txansportation master plan, said the
concept had been studied by his firm
once before.
It was considered, he said, during
recent Pereira studies of Los Angeles
International Airport traffic problems.
"We found that the cost of just pro-
viding access to a seadrame would be
insurmountable," he said. "When we
got to the figure m $2 billion, we just
quit."
Sink was asked about the subject in
.an interview after he reviewed county
aviation needs at a meeting of. the
Orange County Coast Associati_,.i •
Ille Balboa Bay Club.
Earlier thls week, NeWJ!Ori Beioch real e1tate developer George Freeman
had proposed the floating airport to
the County Airpcrt Comm i 11 ion.
Freeman said the ocean could tlnls
provide the county with a regional
airport site that no one else now
seems to want to.
But Pereira executive Sink just
shook his head at the idea.
"Not Ofl.ly the cost of access is in-
volved here," he saicl, "but there's
also the matter or an airport's sup-
porting facilities. An ai.rpOrt is not just
.a runway, it also requires a terminal,
maintenance facilities and e v t n
hotels."
These, he said, would have to be built
on land-"quJte a ·btt of land"-even if
the runways were out at sea.
"'You've got to remember that most
successful airports are cities in
themselves.''
* * * K ids 'Taking
Over' County?
A lot of statistics were rattled oa
by planning expert James Sink in a
tallt before the Orange County Coast
Association Thursday night. One in
particular drew a big gasp from his
audience.
"Right today,'' he !aid, "42 percent
of all the people in Orange County are
are under 20."
"Migawd," came a voice from t be
rear. "l hope they don't find out."
.. aircraft or all sizes will be jet
powered. This includes the putt-putt.s
at Orange County Alrport.
"Studies indicate that it's going to
be more economical to have small jet
engines than it is to have the
reciilfocating engines we now know
.about."
Sink, who headed up development of
Phase I Of Pereira's master plan for
Orange County air tran!porl.ation, told
why there will be no slowing the
troMh of commercial passenger
llights out of the cOunty.
"In not too many years, you will be
able to fly roundtrip between Southern
California and Hawaii for under $50.
When that happens, passengers wlll be
coming out of the woodwork. You will
have astronomical projections of air
traffic demands to contend with."
The cheaper rates, he said, would be
the inevitable result Of the use of
larger, faster aircraft, such as the :IX)..
UPI Tl ......
HELD IN KIDNAPING OF CHICAGO BOY
Stevert' Martin, 24, Wife Ethel, 26, and Daniel C. Pit ier, 30
W ealthyChicagoan'sSon
Saved From Kidnap Trio
ClflCAGO (UPI) -FBI agents to·
day rfscued the tousle-haired 7-year·
old grandson of a wealthy manufac-
turer and seiz.~ two men ~ ( a
woma ace1ised o{ Jddnaping die lloy
and. W fing him. for two days under
threat of death.
Tb• aienta and police closed in on
an apartment on Chicago's aouthwnt
side ao;;l fouDd Hlllard Wlllls Marki,
~ho wu ·abducted whil! walking home
from school In the fashionable suburb
of Oak Brook Wednesday and held for
$125,000 ransom.
Hillard, bis wide smile revealing the
absence of two front teeth, ran into his
mother's anns at FBI headquarters
and the flrrt thing he said was, "Did
we have tbe party?" He was talking
about the party fOr his seventh birth·
day, which would have been held
Thursday.
"No," Mrs. Mary Lou Marks said a1
she hugged her son. "But we'll have it
soon."
Hillard's father indicated a chance
acquaintanceship at a ga'!lotine station
may have led to the kidnaping - a
kidnaping which was kept a secret by
the FBI. police and news reporters for
two days fOr fear the abductors would
carry out their threat to mutilate and
kill the boy if word of the crime got
out.
The !dther, William E . Marks, a 34-
year-0ld furniture manufacturer, said
he had known one of the arrested men.
Daniel C. Pieler, 30, an unsuccessful
gasoline station owner.
"He was a fellow businesmnian,"
Marks said. ''He awned the gas statioo
on the block my business wias on. I've
been friendly with him for about four
years and bought gas at his station."
Hillard was found in the apartment
or two alleged .accompllce'S, Robert
Steven Marin, 24, a machinist. and biJ
wife, Ettie! I\otarie, 26. All three were
booked at Cen.ral Police head·
quarters.
UPI T ........
FREED UNHARMED
Hill•rd Markt, 7
Mesa's Firemen
Seeking Little
Miss F ire Saf e
_ The Costa Mesa Fire Department is
again seeking their special queen, but
no hot numbers need .apply.
pmenger Air Bus.
So the c0unty had better get ready,
with a regional airport capable of
handling national nights, and with
metroparta for shorter runs, be said.
In less Ulan 25 years, Sink predicted.,
Orange County will become the lOtb.
large«t metropolitan area ln the na·
ti.on. The present 1.3 rolllion populaUon
will approach 4 million in 1993.
That could well mean, he said, I
(See JET, Pace %)
Hearing Set
On 'Sanity'
'Of Hessian
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Dt ~ DallY Plitt Sti ff
A Newport Beach attorney for
Hessian motorcycle club member
Frank W. "Wild Mouse" Rund.It
surprised. courtroom o b s e r v e r 1
Thursday by asking a sanity hearing
for his client, a former mental
hospital patient.
Harbor District Judicial Court Judge
Donald W. Dungan granted the mo.
tion, orcleripg the defendant to Orang~
County Superior Court, bepartment
One, at 9:30 a.m. ne:r.:t Friday.
Attorney Robert R. Whitman, who
took over the case from a court·ap.
pointed public defender, said Rundle
seems unable to comprehend the pro-
ceedings or the charges against him.
He also said Rundle. 24, of 135
Albert Place. Cos,. Me•J. Is DOI
capable of assisting in his O:fl! defenst
on charges of assault with intent to
commit mur~;:;utt with a deadly wealfn •lll .
Tbj •WJ>OC! h.,. been held al O...nre
County Jall lh lieu of 137.SOO ball, but
will preaumably be move'd to oi-angl
County Medical Center for the lo.day
to thrtt-""ek psyc:hlatric enlua!lon.
Rundle waa accwJed by witllesses Of
.being leader of a r4rtpact Of 15 to 20
cyclists who staged a gang vEf].geence
raid on the CottQ Mesa home ~ a
former New York Golden Gl'O'ves box-
ing champloo. last month.
&her! L. Glazier, 30, of 2224
Placentia Ave., was "Whipped with cy.
c:le chains, ~ten and shot in the be(ld
as he covered his face during the
melee.
Glazler -who bad raid ho loudil
with Rundle, after being attacked with
.a pool cue owe a tavern game of
eight-ball -identified Wild Mouse as
the gun-wielder.
Wbi.tman told Judge Dun~&11. 'Ibus-
day that his client bas spent time in a
.mental hospital and a Vetel'arl's Ad-
ministration Hospital.io New York and
is subject ·to blackouts and pecbaps
even seizures.
Two psychiatrists will be appointed
to examine Rundle next Friday and
lhe outcome of his case will rest on
their findings.
He could then either be sent to
Atascadero State Hospital for en ad-
ditional 90 days of obserw.tkm, or else
made to stand trial OD tile felony
counts against hlm.
.He faces a possible ooe to fourteen
years in state prison on conviction fOT"
assault with intent to comm..lt murder
alone .
Deputy District Attornel J a y
(See l!ESSIAN, P.afe )
Or•nge
fml
'.-Jr you haven't got Olympic ,Fever
you're missing out on one of the most
exciting "diseases'' to hit the Orange
Are sqioo·ls Too Frilly?
Bec<1use Little Miss Fire Safe will
be h«ipng the men on their rounds
dUling Fire Prevention Week, ex-
plafnlng the program to achoo!
children and other groups.
Capt. Dave Teter, of the
department's Fi~ Prevention Bureau,
says Sept. 30 is the deadline for cifls 7
through 9 to submit applications for
the honorary position.
The weatf¥.rman calls for de-
creasing clouds this weekend,
which means the sun might
come out at 9 a.m. instead of
noon. Otherwlse it's the same
temperaturewise -&8 along the
beach and 75 inland.
Coast in decades.
• ·This area n e I t
ihonth will send 11
i"thletes a n d o n e
coach to Olympic Vil·
:Lage In l\1exlco City
as part of the United
States delegation to
(be 19th Olympiad.
Jo i1it Chamber Group t o Study B uUd ing Cost
... Exclusive coverace
qf this l'Jstory-making spOrta event
~ally gets under way Saturday in the
JlAJL y PJLOT when the first in a
Urles of personality sketches on the
Orange Coast Olympians starts. And
.. n nay with bilingual sporU editor
Glenn White, only newspaperman inm Orange County 'cC1'1eriftg tile
Q\ymplc Gaoie.s, lthen he tra~ls to
Mexico to get th• 1tort ·in the lan-
guaae of the Olflnplcs and translate
it into e1cltin.g eaverage exclusively
{or DAILY PILOT rudera. Get tho
f~er. You'll enjoy Jt.
• f.
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Dt "" D..tty ''"' S11tt A joint chambers of commerce
study commit.1.ee is zeroing in on an
issue on which the next Newport-Mesa
school bond election may turn -tbe
cost of building tcbooll.
01.amber committee members want
to know, to put ~ bluntly. wh<tller
schools are built with too many frills
(If 0( too expensive material.
Two exper11 wttll dllferlni opiJlions.
builder and .. architect, clasltod ••
recent session of the COit.a MHa-.
l'/ewport Har!Jor CJtamben Study and
llena<ch Subcommlltee.
lbe builder, A. L. GaUerdam, ac-
cused ard'iitectl of d e 1 1 g n i n c
monumenta to their eio1 buUdlnc
beyood educaUOClal needs,· and specl-
lylng eutern bulldip& materlala tlial
aren't competitive locally.
He called for standardized ICbool
pl&ns. He sa6d the only variation
• • 2't s fe -:,'c .... <'f'aJ.!.•.J4~+·.L.s F 1'n -,
between schools should be because of
the contour of the land, and declaied
··a classroom ii a classroom.''
The chamber men applauded the
idea of standard.ired plaM, but Kermit
Dorlus, a Corona del Mar architect
who ii a member of the .tudy com-
mittee, took e:r.:ceptlon to Gatterdam'1
remark!.
He said that curriculum needs are
chang'illg all the time and school
dtllip needs to bre keii,t current. lie
uted on what basis the bu.ilder made
hit blanket accusation a g a inst
architecU:.
Gatterdam, 1eneral manager of
Jamea ltay Cooatrudlon Co., Cot,.
Mt11, answered he knew of inltancet
where ~ldteetu:ral plan• were lavish
but admiLted be had no upu!ence In
tile Newport.MeM Dlmtct.
School board member Selim "Bud"'
Fnnltlln uked how tile dimtct would
t:now ll .archftectural plans are
overdone, and Gatterdam volunteered
his firm to review them free o(
charge.
ft was then decided to form a
tpecial committee of persons con-
nected with the construction industry,
including architects, builders and con·
tractors to review school plans while
they are still in the preliminary 1Lage.
Oorius 1a1d ·1ater be doesn't think
architects WQUld want such a com-
mittee looking over their shoulder.
The-revlbvm's would be commentin&
out ol imuf.Octent lcnowled&e and aome
preJudlc:e\ be auggested.
He aaid ar<blt.ectf would rath~
wort w'lth a k:Dowleda:eable c]ent and
tt>at he hoped tha ad!ool dIICi!c:t could
1upply ft.I own expertise, perbapt by
hiring a consultant.
nle •tudy committee will bear from
CJtarles Bedt. Coota Meia *'thltect
who la on tile dty Pt.llilni Com·
ml&slon , llt It.I llleellnl next montl\.
l
Good scholastic sbandlng Is ~must.
Just mail a postcard Mtb nahie, age
addres8' end phonti number to the
Costa Mesa Fire Department, '1 Atten-
tion, Sparky tile Dog, P .O. Box i:ro;
Coita Mesa, 92628," Gapt. Teter tays.
Sparky Is a gpecfal COD1"lalll lo thi1
Third Annual contest.
Flre flnallsts will be dlosen and uk·
ed to wrlte ln 25 words or less why she
would Uke to be Lltlle Min F!r< Saft
durlng e Prevention Week, Oct. I
me cl the five will bt
N!lW YORK (AP) -Tbt otock
market turned mixed 111 mod.,.Wy
active tradlnf lhl& alW'nooa. (Sot
quolation1, P-.•• 10.11).
• Adva"'*' trolled Mn!er tradlnc
wl>enl a &ntlnllillloD o( a itlitier b'Olld
seemed evident.
j
I NSIDE l'ODA1'
It ai7''C the Met, but some
opera bu/fr ·~ U'r bettn-~et
It's grand OJ)f10 undn the star•
in Laguna Baoc.\ and you can
find oat oU cbowt it today ;,.
WIEKENDER.
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i OAll.Y PllOT
Marines Kill
llOReds
~ong.DMZ
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. military
~eomwi &aid today a wk force of
2,0oo U.S. MoriDe1 bad -<lropped
lrf bellcopler Into tl>e -end of
tllO ~ Zone al 1l>e very
l>qJder .of Norfll V-end bad klll·
e4 110 C«nmunllt troopl •
.!!be spokesmen aatd two battalion•
from llie 4th aod 9th M a r J n e
~stmenl& opened the massive drive
on T\lelda;y to eUt North Vletmmesa
Willntioll routes and block N-
Vletnameee assaults .aeainst the atrlng
of M&rlDe and Army bases !Olli the
DMZ.
The M#ioes were dJ"opped on. the
.,... «the Beo Hal River, th• actual
bonier of N-and 5outlt vi.-.i.
'Ibe DMZ extends three miles north
and south ol the Beo Hal River. which
riles in the mountains near Laos md
flaw• to the 5outlt China Sea.
Although the ~g drive began on
Tuetday announcemeDt was cletaytd
until t.oday for teCUrity reasoru. The
heUcopter-bome attack Was t h e
westernmost allied drive of the war in-
to the Demllltarlred Zone, '\\Ulch the
Communists have used as a major
staging ania.
,Effective Parent
Course Slated
At Mesa School
An eight-week course in Parent EC-
fe<Uveoe" Training begin& Tueedey
at Co5ta MeN'I Mardan School for
EducaUonal Therapy, under direction
of a local psycl'loiog.ist.
The initial sessl<Jn may be attended.
free so parents can learn mere about
the c~. according to Jack C. Plltt-
man Pb. D., who is associated with
the school.
The Marda• School is located at 695
W. 19th Sl, ID the old Coota Mesa Olty
Hall.
Hours for the P.E.T. sessiops will bt
7:30 to 10:30 p.m., and ioclud<s ex-
ploration of methods toward better
parent-cbild communJcation, ways to
help chOdren learn problem-!JOlving,
conflict resolution end ways to reduce
~ frequency of quarrels.
PUttman ia a therapist at U\8
Orange County Crisis ._ Intervention
Center, a st.a.ff member,« Fair.view
State Hospital and hat~ 'witl the
sQlte Deporlmeot of M..W Hygiene
for 17 y<an.
YMCA Files Big
Suit Against
Couuty Airport
. . .
Orange Coast YMCA officials said
today tb<y had filed a property
damage claim of $225,IXXI against
Oraoge County Airport
''We are getting droppage and dirt
on our equipment from the 'fuel oil
residue or the planes." YMCA director
Rollen Brousard said.
"We have to interrupt our classes
constantly to wait for the CrighteMng
noise to pass."
The YMCA is joining nearly ~ in-
dividual claimants who have filed
a.&alnat the airport, according to Dan
Emory, chairman of the Airport Nol.:ie
Abatement Committee.
The deadUne for claims has been
revise<! to May 15, 1969, he said. They
.already total nearly s:n million.
Emory noted the crigt.oa_I cutoff was
Sept 1, 1968, but "the response was so
overwhelming we extended tbe t..ime to
allow everyone to file ."
DAILY PILOT
OIAN!S'f COAST .. uelllHIHG COMPANY
• Roi.tr! N. w,,,J
f'rnldlilt tl'ld P!Jbl!sht!I'
J1c• k. Curlty
Viet Prfil*"I ...it Geroert! M~n.w11tr
Tho,,..,,1 KtOl'it .. ~
Tho11•i.• A. M111'J'hi"t ,,...llUI ... f:dlklr
,tul Ni1t011
.ld-!IMM Dlrw<:!OI"
Co ... Mtw Offlpo
llO Wo1t l1y Str1tt
Mo1li11t Addr1u: P.O. a.. IS•O f2'2'
-°""" Ht:WflOl'I klcf:I : 7111 W•I .. llol '°"'"•rd ~ ri..oi: 212 ,_, .. -..
t111111ir.1on le«h; .., $111 ''""'
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Nixon Gets Big
I f hilly Greeting
EX-NEWPORT MAYOi! OIES
Orllo I . Rood
Former Newport
Mayor 0. B. Reed
Dies at Age 85
Former Newport Beach mayor Or-
lie B. Reed died Wednesd•y after a
lengthy illness at a convalescent home.
He was 85.
Graveside services wm be ·held at
4 p.m. Saturday at Paclflc View Me-
morial Park.
Mr. Reed served as mayor from lMf
to 1948 and as councilman for eight
years.
He was mayor at the time the city
decided to build ill' present City HaJL
Born in ]Wnoil:, be came to River.
side iD 180S. He wu commander of the
Knight. Tt!mptar and a charter mtm·
her of tho RDtary Club, both ID River·
side.
Survi~ors inclllde hi!: wire, Francts,
of the home, 444 Begonia Ave., Corona
del Mar; two sons, Donald W. of New-
port Beach and Robert L. of Upland; a
daughter, Mrs. Margaret Hackett of
Arcadia; a sister Marie A. Reed of
AlhamJtta; four grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Dr. Philip G. Murray of the Congre.
gational Church, Corona del Mar will
officiate at the services.
The JarnJly suggeata that those who
wish may make memorial contrlbu·
tions to the Orange County Chlldrens
Hospital.
• PHILAD!l.PIUA CUP!) ~ Jlt.
p u. b 1 J c a n Jn:ddential candidate
Richard M. Nlxon motorc•ded •t noon
fllrouth • bllzutd of ticker tape ID
lhil vote-~lch city today.
Legal F oulup
Helps Clear
Pool Players
A Oort.a Mesa man 8Dd a ta.wrn pool
game opponent arrested 9fter-detec-
tives said they uw $2 change hands
have been treed of gambttng ctiarges
on legal tecbnicdtlea.
A third man aJTftlted M. the Sassy
Lassy, 2901 Harbor Blvd., on Aug. 11,
pleaded not gufity in Harbor District
Jlldicl"1 Court Wednesday and relurDS
Oct. 11 •t II a.m. for jury trial.
Phillip O. Simpton, 211, ol 1212 S.
Cypress St., Santa Ana, had bttn
chartred 'Mth 1ambllng and resfl.Ung arrest. but tbe case was dismitJed on
ground.a the clty11 desired proaecution
w11 not clear.
Mlcl!eel G. Singer, 24, ol 2337 Rich·
mood Way, Costa Mesa, WU freed
wnen dupMcote c:omplalnta c:trarpng
him with gambling tUlllled up before
the judge at hU preliminary heorln(.
Police •aid today that _...,,tly
different people typed up complaint&
on Singer and two different penons-
in the clty attorney'• office signed
Ulem, due to a communlcatton1 gap.
A defenclanl cao be proncuted on
only one complaint and a duplicate
copy nullif!.es the oase, u n I e 1 1
withdrawn before t.he court hearing,
when 1ucti errors are dilcoveTed.
Gary G. Schmid, JO, of 17922
Bascom St., Irvine, ie cWTently free
oo $65 bail whi.le awaiting trial on his Dot guilty plea to ~ gambling cbas'ge.
Plainclothe1 officers said t h e y
watched the trio play a gmne of pool,
after which Schmid and Singer each
gave '1 to Simpson when he won the
g~e.
lnveaUgators said Simpson had to be
taken a10ng forcibly after betng placed
under arrest, le-ading to his now-
cliim.i5sed reailting arreat cberge.
From P.,,e 1
JET TRAFFIC EXPLOSION
< ' '
• • •
total o( 48 m!llion lllghti;)u .. ogen
or!g!Mllng ID Ille county. llUlually by
·lllen. CUrrently, 2.8 million oriJ1Da1e ID
the county, with about a fourth ol
these using Oraoge County Airport.
The county facility, be empbalhed,
will never be able to come clOM to
meeting tbe demand. Access roeds to
the airport are too limited, the number
of available gates too few and the
acreage (525) too little, be explal.ned.
For that reuoo, new runway ground
must be broten, he SllC.
In addition to metroporta (&imllar.
he said, to the present County Airport)
and a regional airport. the county
must also support a plan for another
interoational JJrport somewhere in
Southern California.
"An international airport site in the
vicinity of Camp Pendleton offers the
most interesting possibilities," Sink
said. "It would be only 80 minutes
maximum driving time from Los
Angeles and San Diego." Btlt he quick·
Jy added:
"We've looked at a site there only in
terms of its geography, not in tenm of
its availability."
He dtscribed a n international
airport as one serving aircraft with
"unlimited" pessenger load and lJlgtJt
range capacities. It would encompass
about 4,600 acres. A regtonal aJrport,
in contrast, would cover between 2,000
and 2,500 acres.
Society Extends
Banquet Deadline
De-adline for reservations for the
Cos-ta Mesa Hlltai.cal SOciety'1 Se·
cond Annual Banquet and Installation
next Tuesday ha6 been extended
through tonight.
The public I• Invited to tho 8 p.m.
soctal hour and 7 p.m. dinner at the
Cost.a Mesa Goll and Country Club,
whether one maintains memberahip in
the group or not
Tickets for the bclqoet an $4.75 per
person and annual dues for thole who
wish to join ... J;, acwrdlng to Mn.
Carolee Stevens. Call 549-0922 to pl.ace
rtservaUons.
Speebr for the event will be Mrs.
Ruth I. Mahood, curator Of history et
tbe Los Angeles County Museum.
Pinkley Slates
Worker's Week
In a world which hia:hly prlua
youth, the ove--rorty crt1wd ha1 won
reco&nlUon in Cotta Meta at leut,
durinl the curnnt week.
Joinln& with the California State
Employment Servtce, 1.1•yor Alvin L.
Pln.klly h11 proclaimed Sept 15
through 20 11 "Hire the 40-PlUI
Worker Week."
•
"A decision on the Jooatlon o, a
l"f:fioDal airport,'' be iaid, "wtll ha.ve a
strong lmJ*t on tbe location of all
CJtber alrpcrts."
He urged the· eeiecUon by county
government of one of the five regional
.airport 1lte1 recommended in the
Perelra mairter plan nport. All five
Have met with strong protests from
citizens, the military and local agen·
cl es.
Sink brtefly d!.tcusaed the sites, one
by one. Nooe of them, he made clear,
is perfect:
-EL TORO MARINE CORPS AIR
STATION: 1'Thil bas been considered
the euiest answer for a long time. But
with Its runway alignment, it is now
not a good airport. A new runway
sytem would have to be built, parallel
to the Santa Ana Freeway. At this
time a regional airport there would
have little efiect on existing urban
development, but it would have con-
aideraoble impact on potential develop-
ment."
-LOS ALAMITOS NAVAL AIR
STATION: "The basic problem here is
that it is almoet completely sur·
rounded by urban development. We
could twist the runway to 1et flights
over ttie ammunition dump, that would
help.
Another problem is that departures
would cross arrivals to Long Beach
~~R THAN AIR BASE: "This
is jurt north of Orange County Airport,
so a site there would be pushing
Newport's (noi&e) problem just a litUe
farther north. It would al.so have a
deficiency in that there would be
flight. over UCI,"
SAN JOAQUIN HILLS : "We could
put in a dual runway system here that
would encompass enormously &ized
airplanes. One of tbe deflclenclet is
the roadway system. It has none now,
and would be very expensive to pro-
vide."
BOLSA CHICA STATE BEACH:
"We could utilize the oCfsbore coastal
shelf to extend dual runways out to
sea. 'The runways would be a mile
apart and give us a cNnce to devtlop
a combine.Uon marine .and a i r
tramportlUon service. But it allO ha1
its svn-oundin& urban development
pr<>l>lema."
,.,..,. r.,e 1
HESSIAN •..
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A poUee official estimated the crowd
lininC the motorcade route at 200,000.
Nixon was received with more
enthuaia:sm than Vice Pre & l den t
}Jubert lL llwnphrey when the
Democratic candidate traveltd a
1imUar path on Sept I.
Police Commissioner Frank Riu.o
told reporters he estimated the Nixon
crowd at 2tl0,000. Rizzo had estimated
the Humphrey turnout at a quarter
million, but revised it later to •bout
l00,000.
Although most of those along the
Nlxon route . cheered the GOP can.
dldate, many held up signs denouncing
him or boortlng Humphrey. Some
booed.
Driving through the fin an c I a 1
district on Chestnut Street, Ni.J:on, his
wtf!, Pat, and prominent
PennsylvWa Republicans were delug-
ed with ticker tape and confJtU
showerlllg clown from the building.\.
Nlxon stood atop the back of a black
convertible. A secret serviceman held
his ankle as he held his hands a1ort
and made a "V" for victory sign.
White Father Indian-giver: "' ..
On several occasions, he jumped
from the car, darted toward the crowd
and shook out.stretched bands of eager
admireri.
Representatives of the Taos Pueblo Tribe appear before the Senate'
subcommittee on Indian Affairs to seek the return of 48 000 acres ···'
in northern New Mexico. The 1ands were seized in 1905 8nd made·.:.
part of the National Forest Preserve. . ......
-·~·
Aside from the numbers, most
observers felt tfi•t Nixon got a more
joyful response than did Humphrey,
who generally elicited dlslnte.rest.
Another Plane Hijacked,::
'"
Week Proclaimed
For 'Y-lndians'
To Havana; 53 Aboard , ..
., ...
Costa Mesa is a litUe too urbanized
to be called a frontier, as such, but
don't be. surprl!ed if you spot Indians
roaming the streets on Stingray
bicycles.
M•yor Alvin L. Pinkley has pro-
claimed the current week Y-Indlan
Guide Week, in honor of the YMCA
program for fathers and their young
sons.
A special proclamation was given to
representatives of the Or..ange Coast
Nation during Monday's City Council
meeting.
MIAMI ( . .\P) -An Eastern Air
J_,ines jetliner with 53 per.90Th'i aboard
was hijacked to Havana today while
en route from San Juan to Miami.
The plane, a Boeing 720, was 40
miles southwest of N'assau. the
Bahamas, when it suddenly veered to
the left and headed for Cuba, said
Paul Boatman, area administrator for
the Federal Aviation Administration in
Miami.
He said the er.aft swung o:ff course
at 9: 12 a.m. EDT. and touched down
at llavana's Jose Marti Airport at 9:45
a .m.
"Ti1ere \vas no radio contact from
tile pilot," said Boatman. "Com-
munication suddenly halted when the
plane veered to !tie left and took a
·sea Yields Death
By ALMON LOCKABEY
0•1" ,.li.t ... ""' •tUtw
The sea is giving up the remains of
the SO.foot power cruiser GrundJ which
"'·as swamped '8nd sank last Sunday in
a tragic accident off Gray's Harbor,
Wash.
Three Newport n!sldent.a drowned
and one was re1oued after a giant
wave broke over t.he Grundl as she
was approectnng the harbor entrance.
The sea has yet to give up ttie body
of Glenn ~noway, one cA those who
periished in the accident. The Coast
Guard has suspended its seartb for
the missing man .
The bodies or Genow:iy's wife.
Mella, and Diane Guertin, ""iho were
believed ttiapped in the cabin when the
Grul'lil C'Sp9ized, have been washed
ashore.
John H. Porter Jr., owner of the
vessel, said today the Grund! is ap-
parently breaking up and coming
ashore in pieces. He said a section of
9 2
Henredon's new line of promotional chairs
ore truly worthy of the name Henredon.
I\ collection of seven chairs to choose from
evailable in & wide assortment of handsome
fabrics. These hond crafted choirs are as-
sembled with the finest in materials and
wor1:menship. Any of these cha irs ere aveil-
•ble et $1 ".00.
southwest course for Cuba.''
Boatman said 39 persons wei-e
aboard but Bill Wooten, an Euteni'
Executive in Miami, said th06e aboaTd
were 32 passengers, seven crewmtD:
and 14 Eastern employes. ..,.,
Wooten said a passenger list was m'.lt
immediately available. The crew
members were all Miami residents, he
added. . ·
\Vooten Identified the pilot as Oap(..L'
\V. T. Babbitt and the first officer al
W. J. Richardson. ::·
Neither Boatman nor 'Vooten had
any information alx>ut tile ttijacker Or
hijackers.
"We won't know anything about h0-W
jt happened until they get back," saw.
Boatman. ....
Cruiser··: ' ' ,
the overhead .and the transom ha.vi
been found in the surf.
Meanwhile, Frank Guertin, operator
of the Grund! \\-1Jen she was s-wampt(t-
by the "maverick" wave, said earlier
reports th.at he tried to bring the
vessel about when he saw the wav~.
coming are false. He said he at-
tempted to keep the Grund! deaQ.
before the oncoming sea but WK
broached when the sea broke over UiJt.
stern. .
a
IXCLUSIVI OIALIRS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL -HERITAGE
90 DAYS NO INTER!ST-TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT
'letl.. ~ ' ltnRIOltS
,_J..,.l ln!Orler LAGUNA IEACH
Dooltnorw :M5 Norfh c. .. 1 Hwy, 494455 I
At'ellabM AID-NSID O"N PllDAJ TIL t
"""-Tel ..... ...., •f 0,.... C....., Ml-IJ6J
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Olympics
Alternates
Named
Paul Smart, chairman of
thl!I U.S. Olympic Yachting
Committee, his announced
tbe three altermte skippers
'Wha will ga to Acapulco for
the Olympic yachting gamf11
beglnntnr Oct. 12.
The alternate skipper1 will
be Johll Marshall, Stamford,
Conn.: Robert Doyle, Ma11a-
chusetts,. and Tom Allen of
Buffalo, N1Y •
,.
~shal,I was runner-up to
Girdner CoX in the 5.5 me-
ter Olympic trials held in
Newport lait month. He has
experience in several classes
and will be expected to pinch
hit in either the 5.Ss , Dragon
and Star Class.
.TAKE THATI -Ray Dalke (right) delivers a kick
to Greer Golden in a karate demonstration at the
Los Angeles Press Club. Both Southern Califomians
DAILY PILOT ........ .-, Rlclulnl kMlller
are blflck belt practitioners of the seli defense art.
The :first.e·ver world karate championships will be
held at the Sports Arena Oct. 19.
Doyle was runner-up to
Carl Van Duyne in the Finn
Class trials, and Allen was a
close secoiid to Robert Jam-
es in the Flying Dutchman
Class trials. , .......
Both Doyle and AU~1will ~
back u~ the skippers · their/\ Tl Zan*.,. JJ Na»'> nd respective classes. ./ ,f _., (le::; 11116
"I feel that the fivfl skip· •
pers and three alternates 66 s o w ,
'Will give UI an exceptionally eries inner
strong team at Acapulco ''
iaid Smart. '
Mike Hirsh'• Cal 240 (5) Anita, Buster . Ham·
Volante II his been named mond, B~C. ,
Tournament in Los Angeles
. In the 1jMW. yachtJng Olym-
pics at Enoshlma, Japan,
the U.S. team won ntedals In
every class, but na gold me-
dals. Smart said he is confi-
dent that one or .more g o I d
medals will came to the U.S.
with the stron1 t~am being
fielded.
the averall win~ olBalboa MORF --(1) Dolphin,
Yacht Club's 66 Serles ~ Mitt Alli.one, LIYC ; (2) ' Vivactou1 , BUI v.,.,
I~arate Getting on Its Feet;
posed of six r1ce1 of •Po-lCl.einSmid NHYC · '( 3'l
proxima.tely six hours dura· Alaha, GI~ Reed : sSsc;',
tian. (4) Baby, Steve Seal. LIYC;
Second in the ovl!lrall stan· (5) Twinkle, Frank & Dave
Whit., BYC. ' dings was Jack Baillie'• 12·
meter New1boy, and third
World Championship Set . Two NHYC
Skippers
Get Honors
WU Georae Sturae•'• a L -s t
Columbia·OO Release. . UU!'! e
P'ollowinc are th• winne11
in"'eacb cla11:
CLASS A -(1) Newsboy; Match Race
lvwy ..-MMCO NU.ilA. -
"\Mn 10,000 tr11n1m1t;11w! ~
· You all' frH '-IP!ft • f,,.. "*" . °"'°"· '-•t . ..,."E ...... lo..-mellt lfmff hi' "1st di)'. -"" wlttt MMCO, .,...,,-11111r1!111cwt CM ...
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of 1M Dlll't' l"ltlt SI_.,
Judo, lmg considered the
king ol. the aell defense aru,
is being strongj,y challenged
by karate, according to
Southern Californta karate
officials who e.re plarQng
the sport's premie!' event
oext month.
Los Aoge.les .will be the
host city f<r the 1968 World
Invitaitional Karate Tourna-
ment oo. Saturday, Oct. 19,
at the Sports Arena.
-It's the fint time tile
• -.world karate movement bas
· been organized sufficiently
to conduct a world tourna-
ment. Contest.anti b'om the
United States, Japan \ind
four European countries will
compete.
K.tllate hasn't yet ap-
proached the world recogni-
tion that Judo tup, but it's
growing, particularly i n
Sol&hern California. Judo
became .., Olympk: sport Jn
11164.
"There are kante clubs
springing up an a v e r
Souttiern Cal:ifamia," says
Dr . Lester lntber. a physics
instructor at UCLA and a
black belt kari.ate prac·
.-Tritons, Eagles
Outrun Oppoµents
In openina: cross country
matdles ~sd<ay. the San
O.emente and E1tarx=.ta high
.sdhools won eaSily but
Laguna Bead! and l"ouni..in
Voallley Were oo loMng ends
by ~n\lincing ui,argine:.
Senior Charllt Hoyt and
his SC1phomore brotfler Cwt
. Jed Estanoaa to a perfect
IK'Ofe of 15-50 (in CNS!
country, low SICOf'e winl).
All ltVf!ll'l EstJancia run·
neni crossed the finish line
Artists Drop
.12-11 Game
To Warriors
A !ut-mlnuto goo! by
Troy lliab 5cboo1. UIBbled
the )Varr!Ol'I to edit La-
·IWll' Buch u.u lii the lw<>
acbOela' ttee w • t e r polo
opener.
'Ji. Artist. jumped to •
t.7 half time advantage, but Were overcome and &ally
. ~~ten on a la.t-minute peYI•
alty 1bot by Da.e Meyer_s.
Artist center-forward Bob
Gardner had an outaiandinl
game, ocorlng eiabl loo!JI
and doing a fanllsUt all·
ll'OUlld job. lll"1 ......,. far the W•·
den was Meyers w i t h _,_.
Laguna Beath dominated
tb6 lower clau gam.1. win·
"Ing tbo Bees, 19-1, and Ille
Cee1, 144.
before a runner from host
school TusUn could flni!lll .
Bob Unoback and Craig
Sarliog led San Clemeote to
a 15-49 win over vi1lting
Neff Hll!il School.
The Barons of Fountain
VaUey w.ere defeated easily
by Hantho A-Jtos. 16-45,
~ at K1tlllla Laguna was
beaten by tt"Je host Knights,
19-36.
CMll ..... llnl ....... 1:
•tt1ftd.i: Tl, T-'111 N
fll Ctll'1'1i. l'lll'tt t :", 121 turf MM
16:01, Cl) Tetl"I' HMM 1':11, 14'1~ L .. iwrtt.n 10:10, f.11 W•her ereti 16:11,
(') .tNrtl ll:Netr lf !U, 11) CfMk lfllll-
1111 10:•. s. CltoMllN lS. -· 0) •ab LIMl>ecl< 11:1kl, 121 Cr1;,
1i.r11ne 11:11, 13j II:•' •1111 u ·J7. l'I
11111 "'"''' 111•. 1 1 ll:lth 11o1i n:n. • f'•I 1""1"'""' 1!:-. Ill Miiie W!Htf•ll ll:Gr.
ltlldlil "'-'* "· """""' """"' ,, 111 l(f!vln WIU11'"' t:st (I! Dew MlllW lt:tt. ffl Den ll:Mrtt Ill", (101 Tim FUl'lk. tf::llt. 1111 Slew'I CIWlll!llle
ll:JJ. "9Wll ....._ r.!\.
(.\l l(urt Je..,.., 11 :'2, (1} Daw
HuJrwtdt lf:lL (I) Olrl1 Ltmbert
11:1'. (f ) Mlrtt J..,_ \1:4'. 110)
Mlrtl ._,. 11:1+,HI llefort Cott•m U:Q. Ill! .J"" t. 11:15,
Ml.W ''· '""" ll' 1. Oii"-Lid!.,,.,. II.N I l. k9 "-ti-
""' 11: .. r I. MIU W•~ 11;0f; 4.
C!'w11 Yo.W ll·tt.-i t .... IW~ l::U.. J•--.: Mff ... JS. M--"' G.
Yanks Mi11s Two
tJtioner.
·-''There are a Tot ol karate
clubs on university and col·
lege campuses that will soon
become accredited physical
education classes -as soon
as we can get enough
qualified in!tructors."
T h e difference between
judo and karate is the
degree of punishment Olle
can inflict l.JOTI an attacker.
.Buie.ally, the object Jn
judo is to throw your foe to
the graund. In karate, the
practitianer uses striking
motions with· the hands,
elbows and feet.
As ·HatTy Umemoto, a
Huntington Bee1ch black belt
devotee, put.I it: ' ' Th e
physical pbilO!iophy in judo
is to use your foe's force
against himself. ln karate,
yoo · maximize your own
strength .• " app!yliig l>Mlc
laws ol pbysiai to yotr own
body."
The higittest r 1 n k I n g
karate expert. in America is
~lidetaka N8Iiyama, a sixttl
degree black belt 'and chief
instructor for .the A 11
America KArate Federation.
"Some. of. the techniques
in karate seem very small
and yet they are comiitetety
di!tlb-Ung," be says. ·
''It requ.b'M gr&at mental
and phy1!Cal fitneu.
Obvlau,ly,. since karate
can kill or severely wound
an opponeftt. ft cen 't be ap-
plied in It.! raw form in com-
petitive matches. The com·
petitors are scored b y
judges as they fall just short
of striking their opponeT1ts.
"It's not like pulling your
punches like ll bdxer does."
Dr. Ingber says, "you're us·
ing full force but coming
just short of making con-
tact."
Karate l! ooe ot four ma·
jor self-defense arts. The
o4herl are judo, kenda anJ
aikldo. Kendo requirtls the
skilled use of Jong polet; or
sticks and Aikida is an at-
tack upon an attacker's
joints.
Umemot.o is attempting to
farm an .active k a r a t e
organization in 0 r a n g e
County.
"We have 10 people signed
up and teady to ga," he
says.
"Our on!y prab1e:m is fin·
ding a fadlity wtlfn we can
work oot. We'rtt tryint ta
get penni11ian to use one of
the wrestling rooms at the
HuntttJgf.on Beach H i g h
School."
Umemoto is a bla-ck be.It
mf!illlber of the A 1 I
American Kiarat.e Fed.era·
tton , the only nationally
ora:ani.zed karate orgard.u·
tion .
"We are directly affiliated
wttb the Japan K&ate
A1'i-0Ciatlon (JitA), wblcll is
the largest in Japan and the
only one recognized ,by
Japan's Minisb'y of F.duca·
tion,'' he says.
(2) Relea11e; (3) Sparkle, San Diego and St . Francis
Alex Irvia-g, BYC; ·(4) yaOOt clubll tangled today in
Two Newport H" r bar Prelude, Jim Linderman, tne San FNncisco c.h.aHenee
yactits wan top honors in BYC; (5) Talisman, Bob Cup race, a match race ttiat
Let An1eles Yacht Club's Williams, BYC. was first held ill 1895.
Whitney Series v.tlich waa CL..\SS B _ (t) Melee, The event is a single 1 concluded last week. match race under the
0vf!l'all wi.lliner w 11 Don Ayres, NHYC; (2) ratings ef l'le Cruiling Club
Enchantl"ut, Wynn Bed.all, ot America meuurem.ent
George Sturges' O:>hanbfa. BCYC; (3) Vela, Jack Ribb~ nile.
50 Release bun Newport BYC; (4). Holiday, Page · San Diego Will make its
Harbor Yacht Club, arid Noll, NHYC ; (t) Maurice J, bid for the cup with G«ry
Minner-up WM Bill Allen's W W S Iii LA.Ye Drjscoll and a crew of
Oal40 Madru,.oor, .also · · u van, · · SOYC sailcws i.11 ttie 41--foot
fram NHYC. CLASS C (1) Chris Craft Comanche,
Clese breakdown ol the I m p e t u a u s , C h arle1 Wlndstar. On tht San Diego
series was as follows : G l 1 s g aw, BYC; (2) crw are Lowell North,
CLASS A -(1) Jubilation, Marvida. John Payne. BYC ; Gene Trl!lpte, Rodney Ealea,
Hiarry stewud, LAYC; (2) (3) Falcon, Bob SrNtb, John Dr i 1co11 , Run
Sumatn., Al Martin, LAYC ; BYC; (4) Destiny, John Lamoreaux and Rog.er
(3) Caprlciou1 Ii, B en Hooten, BCYC; (5) JeJa, Barnes, all experienced OM·
Williams. LAYC. Jim Borger, BYC. deslgn and offltlore racers.
CLASS B -o 11) CLASS D _ (!) Volanle l!<. Francll Yad>t Club
Ol'fllMt.o" by ,....,. !00 AAMCO C..
i.... ca11t to e1111.
[V•ry ""'""t. «Ml • w ...... _..,__,, y ___ .,_,,....
.. •• ,.,..,_ .. • • •llJ
COSTA MESA
1741 ' Newpert II. '4~1,4'
G1rdan Grove
t!M"I •• ,.,.. .,.,,,. ......... ..._
S1nta Ana
.,, -.. "'"' st ...........•. MJ-tiot
(),1ER tO 4. \'.'( _ '.!--_
I~ (Al~:::..,.·~ 1 Madrupdor, Bill A I I 1 n • 11; Mik• Hinh, BYC; (!) declined to name Ill boot
NHYC; (2) ReJeai;ie, Geor1e ~' Jerry MtOlal.re, and deflending crew unti.11-;:;========;;;;;., Sturps, N ff y C ; (l) LIYC: (3) Br1vo II, Bill five minuttll before race 1'"
Dorotlly E III, Borio Levin, lluull, LIYC; (4) Un.a dme. CY~ C _ (l) Pllpooee, M11, Dick Li.ndiey, CB"(C; St, Francis YC won tut
G!IH Tucker, LBYC; 12) 1-;:::========:; y.or, brealclng San Diogo'•
Oooqueot, Bill Polly, LBYC ; McCU'LLOCH otring ol ftve walght vie·
(3) Star Daocer, Dou1 tories.
Starkweattler, Sl BYC. .
11•f 1C' 1.-----.----= Result1 ol the Litt I e a.A "'!.Allll..,1
Whitney Seri11 for Mld1ot . .,.... ..,,.,.,-
<lcffri l\adng Fleet Yachts
was not computed beoeule
one of thl!I raoe1 was ean-
celled and will be ~led dur·
ing LA YC'1 Harbor Series.
Pomeroy
Series Set
PUTS YOU Ill Tiit WORK
SAVINI, .Tll!fE SAVINI
,WINNER'S CllCU WITM
!·HEAT 11EW CllAltl IA
00
PENETRATION ,
N••rtv "''"011• re•tl• tw.
DAILY l'ILOT, li•ll'l•to-11•wt·
p•p•r for the F•"•leu1 Oroii,.
Co11t.
Skis, Polis, Binding,s,
Sweeta;J, Boots,
'
Polo Tourney Finals
Slated This Evening'·
SOU~ Shore SMUn.g Club'1
Pomeroy Trophy S«le1 for
Midget Ocean It.acing Fleet
yadrtl will be beld Slhlrday
•nd S<il1day with mm o1r
Ille Belboo Pi<r.
Jn ooajunctiort with the ,
PER
ITEM
ON
NEW &
USIO
Car R.cks, Ski Boots,
Acce11erie1
HUfTlll
Quanti!Ur Limited
ALSO:
MA.IT
Second and final day of
action in the Newport-Mesa
Class B and C lt'ater polo
tournamen~ 1W1~ at 2: 30
thi1 aftemooo at Estancia
High School with the final
matche1 slitted to gel: under
way .t $ o'.cfock .
In ci.1·8 action Thur•·
day, E11tncla hlghllahted
actloa -with a pair ol victor·
iet:.
ln t.ht oped.ng game of
tllo Jiff lrickel, Newport
WU betWI by Ellanefa,
1-6.
Greg Goodyear 1 c o r fl d
fiv••Oiall for the Eagles.
Coot. w-completely
crlllbed C<rooa <lei Mar Ill
a team effort. l l·L E1ttnci1
then CM'fte back to defeat
r-~ M # J serte1 'MU be the C.1 ·20 fleet """nna e11a, tr"'I.
The first game ol. the m.m~.
t.aurnamenl was Jn lite Cee The late Warren Pomeroy
bracket with Newport Har· ~·u a great advoctite d
bor defeat.Ing E1t.ancl.a, 10-3. small ocean racln1 boats
Harber'• Douc Sn.Ydtt was long before the Midlet
high s~orer with five 1oals. Ocean Racine Fleet wa1'
while teammate Kevin ·Ashe ewr <rfan,iztd. M 0 R JI'
had three scores. boaU are 30 fftt and under
COit.i Mesa dumped Coro-ln overall length. ·
n.a del Mat W . The MUii· P<tneroy WU an employfl
tangs jumped out to an early ot ttie W. D. Schock Oo.
1-1 ball-limo lud and never whldl prodooed t!1e Bcbock·
tt,llnquilhed lt to the Sea 22, ooe ol the ..,.llHt ol tbo
Klnl•· MORF l)'pes in 11!11 areri.
Colla M•ll pla)'<d E11Bn· -;==========J eta Jn the tl!lrjl lllD• and
nmained undefeated ID the SHARP
tournament by downint: Atie If .,.11·,. • tli•rp t.-•••r, ...
E I 7..f J~"--r_.._ .. t tfr.e DAILY lllLOTS fe"'"' ag ea, · Ulm ._, ~· er Di-...A-l l11• dM11n..i ••• ..S•t.
HOUOAYS
.... 111•.H
IHllUll.
119oqort bee~h "
2ll05 w. c-1 liwf.
$99.50
·1
'42-1335 and Greg ~el.1 -tt•d-thtM! .,,.,.,,, M•~• • O•thr "••I .•.
1oaJs apiece for the MUI--wli•ttl•r ye11'r• ~yl119 er ,,111,,. tanp. L.~~~~:...._~.:..J1i~~~~~~~~r"-~~~~~~~~~~~----~_.
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DAD.Y l'ILOT EDITOIUAL PAGE '
.(fh e Problem Re mains
• • '
Ullle comfort to-the btaJt lchOOI araduotee who 11'111 ftnd
there Is no more nlOlll for !hem In the meantime al occ
t\'i eut.r to 1 ... by ~ n:Ulo. To 1 ... by an eyelasll
-12 votes -u Oracae Coast Jwi!or Cofiege lllll>lot
dld on Ila boocl luue. II bani to lake. It leavei • lot of per_,. who warted for pa11age of the llond$ wondering
wllat they could have done to get out a few more favor-
able Yoles.
• or Golden West collegea.
CertaiDly Junior college diJtrlot officials are highly
dluppoillted. Tl)eir problem of bow to accommodate
the a1'IWIJJg number of students remains unresolved.
ii.it notb!Jlg 11 accomplished tbintlng about what
Dgbt ba\le been. '
Satilf.acti.on can be taken i.n the near m1s1 .since .....,. lhpties thought the bond1 didn"t have 1 chance to wla._ Neerly capturing two-thirds. of Ure votes is a
J'eial Improvement over not being able to muslA!r 50 per-
cent~ •·tax override the last two times out.
And an override measure accompanying Uie bond
issue .tbf' time did pa11. _
· ..
~ on the basis of the vote, the junior college
dilllrict cerlalnly has the right to feel It has the conli·
deoce of the major communities it seeks to serve.
The bond election passed in Costa Mesa and New-
port ~ and that also offers hope for Newport-Mesa
Unified Scllool .District when it tries its next bond elec-
Uon, probably eerly nell year.
The bol\dl recett/ed wen over 60 percent approvaJ
in the West Counfy although not enough SUPj>Orl"lo pass.
Huntington Beach Union High School Distrtct will have
. to improve on tJs•t margin to succeed with its $12 mil4
lion bond election Nov. 5. ·
. ,.
But what is clear 11 that the problem of what to do
with th~ students remains. It takes several years to
build a junior college building and precious time has
been lost in the race to keep up with enrollment.
An opportunity to obtain matching state and fed·
eral funds for building has been missed. Maybe a siini·
lar opportuni~ will present itself again, but that's
What If the
~They'
By GEORGE R. DOFF, Pb. D. •
Cops and robbers. CoWboys and In·
1.'!ans. Fox ud hounda. Chase -run
-hit -bit aaatn -let them know
how it feels -get the buterda -they
can't do tb.at to UI! (Per:bapg violence
is fun to those from .a utiated socie·
!YJ -o
What'• happeniH'!' In Chicago? In
Berkeley'!' Where wlll it all end'!' In
Hell? Violence h1o't aesthetic or even
pretty. It hurta; it amelh: bad; con-
torted faces of terror; sweat from ex·
ertion anJ anxiety; it make1 s.i..:kening
sounds. (Amfli'ica is masculine. We'll
teach those s•aies democracy, ll we
have to jam it down their throat&.)
The Great American Hope, " ...
freedom and juatice for all," has been
clisintegrating into a nightmare of
broken dreams, beads, windows, pro-
mises, and spirits. ("Oh well," we
say, as we lead our lives of quiet
desperation.)
MAYBE IT'S THE ftnal-symptom of
a decaying and regressing civilization.
Maybe it's what we deserve for tom·
placently believing that neither our
brothers -nor we -need keeping.
(We'll all stand tall and proud, all the
way back to the cave.)
Nobody wins, but everyone plays.
The poiice speak softly and carry a big
nightstick. The demonstratars speak
Wudly and hide their impotency. The
observers -politicians, social scien·
lists, reporters, etc -say nothing un·
til the damage ii dooe; then, their
"helping hands" strike again. The
whole scene ii God-awful. (Isn't it
reaS5uring to know that most of us
hiilve someone else to do our dirty
work for us?)
WHAT'S NEEDED? Needs. needs,
needs, needs. Oh.. how it hurts when
they're always (J!lt but seldom fulfill ·
ed. Even police. Even demonstrators.
Even though they can't admit it open·
Is Us?
ly, the observers. The ones who need
the mOEit are tbe ones who are hurt the
most. They certaln1y don't need
taunts, obscenities, bricks In their
faces, clubs Ofl their heads, tear ~as in
their eyes. or platitudes and advice in
the morning paper. Or do they? (May·
be our personal and collective guilt,
because of what we haven't done, is so
perv&S.ve that onJy punishment will
expiate it.) ·
Hard, tough, sharp talk, instead of
hardware, may jolt us back to where
we're all at -together. Harder,
tougher, and 1barper U1tenlng may
shake us loose from the cradle of our
infantile stereotypes. (Everyont; wants
to be mature without going through
the pain of growing up.)
IT'S RISKIER AND more threaten·
ing not ta have riots. Are police in the
business of protection or suppression?
Do radicals want a better social order
or their own brand of anarchy? Politi-
cians. What do they really want? Ask
their colleagues from the rival ~ty.
(Come on, gang, let's go to the riot
tcQght. Don't forget your Polaroids.}
Everyone gets quite bored, really.
negotiate with people who don't th.ink
or feel the "right" way. Where's the
drama? Where's the excitement?
Where's the gut-level satisfaction?
(There's more happening on the
streets, and besides. we don't have to
reveal who we really are when we're
fighting back.)
Fighting back is fine when we know
who's out to get us. But what if we
have the wrong "ttiey" itJ mind? What
if the "they" Is us?
Humphrey's Fast Talking
It is doubtless temperamental on
both our parU, but a man who talks
as much and as fast as Hubert Hum-
phrey ah.i.·ays arouses my suspicion
that he is trying to overwhelm my
thinking process rather than stimu·
l11te it. • • •
In a well-ordered society, most men
rise to the top through their own in-
dustry and ingenuJty; in a poorly·
ordered one. through the foolishness
and gullibility of others, • • •
Sophistication iii necessary. but
dangerous; for as SOOJ'I a11 we realize
that thert: is some good in all evil and
B 11 Georwe --~
Dear Ge<rge:
M,y boy frJeDd is so jeaJous hr
rues into a rage if J e-ven talk to
my husbaod on the telephone.
l>oel be need profe111ional help?
FIFI
Dur Fifi:
Just uplalo lo your boy lrlend
that there II nOcliine betweet1 you
and -11111111. Walt a llCOad. d>at q-mlled !DO up. llttlo.
la """-I lhlak J'U forpt the
whole tblni-(No other odvico
colwnnlJl wUI mate ll>at atato-
mrn~)
• •• ' _, .,._...,,;,;._ .......
tvil in all good. we begin hunting ard·
ently for the good in that evil we wish
to commit.
• • •
Ttle hardest thing about a victory is
not a~taining it, but lcnowing what to
do with it aNer you have it-thus, the
most glorious victories in war have
generally been followed by the kind of
''peace" that bred the germs of
another war worse than tile last. • • •
If you think that if poor people
shaped up a Uttle they could find bet·
ter jobs, t't:ad "Tally's Corner." by
Elliot Liebow , a brilliant. sensitive,
and fair ·mindtd analysi& ol the
chronically poor In the U.S.
• • •
Those wtto look down upon "mere
theory" mis5 the point that. !or ex-
ample, lhe theoretic.al studies in
~athe~atics an<! astronomy-.by run·
ing navigation Into a precise science
did m<i"e to save lives at sea than ali
the "practJcal" Inventors of Uie-
jackets and raft~.
• • •
ISyclney J Harri.I' nl'.'wesl book of
collected columns, "LtavinJ t.ht Sur-
ftte," Is currently avail.able al book· 1bop1.)
• To thoce wbo wilhed they'd votod and didn't: re-
member bow truly precioUI YOll? ballot CID be. Each of
those 12 missing "yes" Yotes last TUelday \fU worth
f60!),000.
Area _for Cooperation
Nlneteenlll Sire<(! zips ID east·weat line right ,
throuth the heart of Costa Mesa, one of the city's bo!t·
tnown and most-traveled thoroughfares.
Not everyone knows that fol.lowing the street to Its
west.em end puta one at the 40-acre •site for Newport
Beach's municipal dump - a site that Newport has sud~nly discovered might be worth a small .fortune. ~
Development of the 40-acre property is of extreme
importance to Costa Mesa because it is surrounded by
Costa Mesa city limits, with the exception of one Uny
shoestring of land that ties It to Newport Beach. ;Whal·
ever Newport does with the 40 acres will have a deep
effect on that Costa Mesa land.
A consultant told Newport city . government last
week: that 1he 40 acres is worth $800,000 rieht now and
will be worth $\-2 million by 1980.
The same consulting firm told Newport that U-e
land possibly could be made into a trailer park, a goli
course or an oil field or sorfte combination of those uset.
Certainly Costa Mesa would' most like the ~olf
course, certainly could live with the miler park, b\lt
undoubtedly would have understandable reservltions
about an oU field .
I-t is another area where a maximum amount of co-
operative spirit between the two cities should bf! exer~
clsed.
c
"'flEA~-~~ -• 3'oe1ETy
~
"5o WHAT IF youR AANC H f AILE I>?
I TH E FA.5TES"T 6UN IN THE WE.ST.,,
Peritagon In Era of Fear of Involv ement •
•
~i::..~
YOU'RE STIU.
'
• •
Has Bungled
M-16Program
They Gave _Unselfish Help
To the Editor:
I WASHINGTON -While Pentagon
"experts" have been bungling the M·
16 rifle program Into a procurement
scandal, Communist forces in Viet-
nam, dOWll to small Viet Cong guenillil
units, have been equipped with a com-
parable fast-firing weapon , the AK-47.
That is the real tragedy of the M-16
mess -a story mostly untold-by the
House and Senate investigators who
have correctly criticized development
and procurement of the M-16. The AK-
47 is. in fact. a largely untold story in
itself. although it has been an im-
portant Communist weapon in Viet·
nam since 1965.
On Sunday, Sept. l, my husband was
stricken without warning with a fatal
heart attack at the Coyote Canyon
dump .. Two county employes, not
realizing he was already beyond help,
rushe<.i him to the hospital at the risk
of censure or possible suit The
nearest telephone is several miles
away and their only thought was to
avoid -delay .and tlelp an apparently
suffering human being.
Lttt.n tram ........ arw -IQlrf\'lt. MomlaliY wr1Nn .....,let OSIWY thllr -lo.IN Ill •• wonb or Ins.
TM ri911t to fMldlMa lett9n ,. flt -ca or ellml11ei. libel h rest,..., All letters must lnck.llH ll~naturw
end m•IU111 «k!rtU. bu! 11ames wm 119 wtllll!elcl .. 1'911uut.
THE A IR L l NE OPERATORS
appear to be trying desperately to
prove that they couldn't care less a~
bout the problem they create as long
as a buck is to be made. It is obvious
that the resident.s of Newport Beach
residing in the airport fight pattern
are expected to sit quietly by like
"good little taxpayers" :while being
deluged :. with an ever increasing
volume Of noise and dirt and con·
template the distinct possibility of
being cremated in their homes.
11
I
Heavier than the M·16 and not so
fast in rate of lire, the AK-47 is,
nevertheless, a rugged serviceable
weapon. The Senate Preparedness
Subcommittee recently described ii as
"an automatic weapon of good quali-
ty."
CdMBAT REPORTS from Vietnam
indicate that North Vietnamese units.
main force Viet Cong u.nitl . and some
smaller guerrilla units. are now equip-
ped with the AK-47. The current crazy
mixed-up M-16 procurement is, of
course. designed to speed that rifle to
South Vietnamese forces -and
especially to local defense units.
ft has been widely assumed. here in
the United States. that U. S. and South
Vietnamese forces have an edge in
firepower and mobility in the guerrilla
fighting in South Vietnam. It is an
unpleasant fact, however, that the
Communists. thanks to the AK-47,
have had the firepower advantage in
many engagements: involving small
units.
It is also an unpleasant fact that
while the vaunted U. S. industrial base
has stuttered and stumbled under the
Pentagon's M-18 program the pro-
duction base of Communist China has
largely met tts admittedly smaller
logistics problems. The AK-47 is a
Soviet-designed weapon, but sources
here report that most of the AK-47l'
captured in Vietnam are of Chinese
manufacture.
URGENCY LACKING -Army pro-
curement officials have been justi-
fying their recent award of M-16 con-
tracts lo high-priced bidders on the
basis of urgency. The riOes. they say.
are utgenlly needed and thert was no
assurance that the low-cost producers
could meet an accelerated production
schedule.
Revlew of the M-16 procurement.
however, does not indicate that
anybody felt a real sense of urgency.
here in Washington, for many months
after Gen. William C. We11tmoreland
began ma~ing urgent requests for
more of the riflet.
Experts say the Communists began
introducing the AK-47 to Vietnam
combat In February 1966, and the
weapons were quickly in evidence 11
far south as the Delta. Even before U.
S. forces were committed to the Viet-
nam fighting !he M-16 hid setn Kime
experlme-ntal service there. In t>ecem.
her 1965 Westmoreland 1sted that the
M·l& be adopted for Vietnamese units.
1fESTMORELAND'S request. as
noted by the Preparedness Su~
committee. stated that use by the
Communists of hliti volume automaUc
1maU arms fin! gave them 1 pro-
nounced superiority in the tudden
tngaaemeni. whlOh arost.
By RGbert S. AUew
ud Jolui A. Go1d1m.Jt~
IN THIS ERA of complacency and
fear of involvement, this kind of
persona1 disregard for involvement
but on the other hand concern for
one's fellow man is uncommon and
rarely appreciated. As a grateful wife
and mother I want to publicly thank
these men for their unselfis.h. act
"above and beyond the can Of duty"
and commend them to their employer
for appropriate recogniUon.
MRS. ALFRED E. VAN HOOS EN
One-sided T V News
To the Editor:
This is a protest -a protest of the
horribly one-sided unprofessional news
reporting by the major television
networks in regards to the recent hap-
penings in Chicago. As a result of that
"un-reporting," I no longer utiUze the
television for my news gathering.
I do not doubt that some of the
things thrown at the Chi.::ago police did
stink, but I wondi!r ; could it have
smelled any worse than what was
thrown at the American public by the
television news media?
MARVIN E. FOLEY
No Clea tlers a l IJCI
To the Editor:
ls there anything we can do as in·
d.lviduals -and collectively -on the
local level in terms of having any in·
fluence on looal schools, particularly
in showing great disapproval of any
plan to have Eldridge Cleaver and
other advocates of violence appe.:u-at
UCI?
I should like to express my approval
of your thoughtful, reasonable and
conUnued expression of disapproval of
the adoption of TV surveillance in
Newport Beach. It seemed a very ob-
vious effort to sell a new product by a
manufacturing organiiatioo w h I ch
wanted to get its product in circula-
tion, regardless of its basir moral,
public and clvlc justification in
Newport Beach.
1 shall continue to be interested in
your editorials.
M. THAYER
Vile Sten<!h
To the Editor:
I hope Chancellor Daniel Aldrich
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Wby don't Costa Mes• traffic:;
sl(nal controlle.r1 1ynchroniu
the lights 1t Newport Boule-
vard and Mesa Drive? It's an·
noylng to wait for a ireen Ught
crwsin1 Newport and thtn have
lo wilt &1llll tmmedl1tely be-
e1u1e OM light turne red as the
other tw-n1 (nen. It Isn't that
way at Oil Mar.
-R.T.R.
T1lla 1,..,.,.. """'"• ...... -... __ .,, ...... -' .... "'"'"-· """ ...... ,...... ......... , ... Deft ......
does not.allow Ekli'idge Cle.aver to ap·
pear on the UCI campus.
We, in this wonderful community,
feel that a man of Dr. Aldrich's
caliber will not allow himseU ta· be
responsible for any pollution of this
area by the vile stench that emanates
from that sewer" of higher intellectual '
learning at Berkeley, and that be will
see ill it .that our beautiful sweet-
smelling campus at UCI will be a
tribute to him and ha constituents.
J el J eopar dy
To the Editor:
E.A.W.
Just last week we were shocked to
hear of the tragic crash of an ex-
ecutive jet at the Burbank Airport.
FO!' someone to say that it can't hap-
pen at Orage County Airport, that per-
son just isn't facing the facts of lile.
Consider for a moment that the
commercial jets carry the equivalent
of from one to three railway tank cars
filled with kerosene. Should one Of
these noisy brutes fail on the takEi-off,
it would mean a v.ride swath of fiery
destruction right down through the
center d Newport Beach. Local
residents who live in the flight pattern
at Orange Qiunty Airport are thus the
innocent targets of such a potential
b·agedy.
No on P rop. 9
The State Board of Eduoet.ion ii
vigorously opposing Prop01IUon 9, the
so-c.alled "Watson Initiative," on the
Nov. 5 balloL
The board voted its opposition at Its
recent (Sept. 12-13) meeting ill Los
Angeles after hearing that if passed
Proposition 9 would wipe out k>cal con·
trol of schools, cause class sizes to in·
crP.ase and put many pupils on double
se$slons .
Harry Fosdick. assistant executive
secretary of the California Te1dler1
Association (CTA). pointed out
Proposition 9 would strip local schools
of 60 percent of their financial aupport
over a Ove-year period with no
guarantee that tbe money · would be
replaced.
REPUCEMENT OF the funds
would have to come from the state,
which would have to~ 1be 1ale1
tlx to 12 percent, or lbd!9C0mt tu. by
300 percent to raJae Ole money, he
taJd. This, he added, would put the
ttate In fuU control of the schools. with
\ooaJ parenu having no pogsible way
of supporting quality educ1U011 1bove
a medtoa'O state minimum.
Foedle:t aJso Poinr.d oot that only 3()
percent ol the propnty tn the state ii
owned by homeowners. ni.u1 the )ig
land ownen. wbo haw ?O percent,
would benefit ttJe moat mi.n Proposl·
Uon t.
State--Sprintt:ndent ol Schools Max
RafleriJ ilso ura:ed defeat ot Proposi·
tkm 9, w1ltm he eallfJd "• wry
~ 'tlon.''
T.t1ttoa Newt Senilee
I
Some means must be found to blow
the whistle on those individuals who
would ignore our plight. I seriously
propose a1 step Nwnber I that the
mechanics be set up NOW t:o indict
each and every member of the Orange
County Board of Supervisors for
manslaughter on as many counts as
there are fatalities who are not
passengers on the downed aircraft.
Such an indictment would become
automatic should a crash occur.
WOULD SUCH action accomplish
anything? Let's consider a moment
the reaction by school b oar d
throughout the state of California not
too Ieng ago when it was made known
that the board menfbers would be held
personally responsible for the safety
and welfare of each student v.ilile at·
tending school. The frenzied activity in
conducting engineering studies, and in
some instances condemning substan·
dard school buildings was truly awe·
inspiring. Why shouldn't men with
authority be held personally ac-
ci>untable for their d e c i s i o n s
particularly where the lives of in·
nocent bystanders, 1n this instance
re'sidents in the flight pattern. are in-
volved?
It is my opinion that. the "ho-hum''
attitude taken to date on the Orange
County Airport expansion w o u I d
change overnight.
To tlhe wlse~racker who says if you
don 't like it here. get out, let me sav
that I would love lo move tomorrow ir
someone can show me how I can se ll
our home and avert a 11erious financial
loss oo our investment in a real estate
market already devastatingly depress·
ed by the Orange County Airport ex-
pansion.
ROBERT L. WERKHEISER
'Ade Jr.,ine Compan11'
To the Editor : \
I'm a little girl who is 9ih years old. \
t have a pony who I love dearly. His \
name is Sugar, I ride him when I get a
C'hance . He lives at R.andlo Cerritos
which la be.Ing closed down by the
Irvine Qimpany.
Please ask lhe Irvine Company to
give our 1tablt a new place. 'Cause if
they dori't, I won 't see Sugar any -·-JENIFER HUTCHINSON
---iiiii-
l'riday, Seplember 20, 1968
Th1: editorial pcgt of th• Daaw
Pil.ot uclu to inform and 1tfm.
tdnte rtodn'J bt1 prt1entino this
flNtpCper'I Opfnion.s and CQ71'1.
nuntarr Oft topia of interut
and ~ifi<mtc<, b• prooidtng 0
forum for tJtt upttlrion of
our rtaders' opiniom, and bt1
preunt.iftg the c:ftwrie f1ino..
potntr o/ m/Of"lll<d obs.,.,,...
and spokumcn ao toptc:. o/ u..
da •.
Robert N. wei.s, Publish.,:
•
I
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BY
WU.Ll,t.M
REED
••eel• ...
In the Wind
. Santa Claus is coming to town
and if you don't believe it, just take
ti.· look at any of the major stores in
the Rrea. It's almost Christmas, at
least in toy departments.
The point, of course, is that
lbey' re starting late this year with
ttie season of good cheer or
\Nhatever says the latest com·
.~ercial for the Christmas buying
season.
·~It's September and the
cprislmas rush is just beginning.
La!;t year it began about July 5,
just after the big parade. We are so
fortunate these days. When I was
just a tad we only had a couple of
weeks or a month at most of
Christmas.
* Kids todav have months and
ioonths of being able to stare at all
the wonderful creations in the toy
departments. I stopped for a while
yesterday to look over some of ~he
items and if those who are in·
terested in gun control want a pro-
jQct, they should march right down
t() the local department store.
On one shelf is a gun which is
f~signed to "disintegrate th e
enemy at a distance of 600 yards
day or night, with or without aim·
ing at the pull of the trigger."
·what I want to know is why our
OOvs in Vietnam are not armed
with the weapon. Another "toy"
promises to send "a lethal jolt"
coursing through the body of any
enemy unfortunate enough to stroll
into its path as it zaps out to its
range of two miles.
* And the aircraft for sale to our
babies, wow. All of the tools of war
can be purchased right here in
West Orange County. It'll do the
politicians no goo·d ·at all to pass
gun laws as long as the ultimate
\veapons are to be found in any
department store.
·At any rate there is something
sort of interesting about Christmas
toy departments stocking so many
items designed for make believe
rriayhem.
. It all sort of warms your brother·
l~ love.
'fumbling Teams
To Begin Fall
Program Monday
'Iiie fall program of the Fountain
ViJley Park& Def>arlment-sponsored
tqmbting and acrobatic class is keyed
td"begin at 6 p.m Monday in the Foun-
tain Valley High School gymnasium. It
will run for eight weeks.
-A second sessioo of tumbling t.eams
will work out oo Wednesdays at the
same time.
Course registration fee 16 '5 £or one
night a week and $10 for two nights.
For more infoomation contact the
parks office in city hall, llY.B> Slater
AVe., at 962-24.24. .
GOP Hq Opening
' (;rand opening ceremonies att
sdledulecl from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Mon·
d~ for the Westminster Republican
Headquarters, 8251 Westminster Ave.
Mrs. Peter Noling, city head·
q'4irlers chairman, said 11 local
R'f)ub\ican candidates ar~ ected lo
at(end. Office telephone numbers will
""' 893-8581 alKI 893-8582. ' •• ' ' Elected Attorney
I
Getting First Band Tips
Robert Schwerdtfeger, mayor of Fountain Valley (left} and Robert
Read, of the Fountain Valley School District, get first hand informa-
tion about the United Fund drive from Jesse Greenleaf of the Boys'
Club and Beatrice Bonnici of the Orange County Children's Hospital
United Fund week will be celebrated the week of Sept. 26 by reach-
ing for a $24,500 goal.
Double Sessions Looming
If School Bonds Defeated
By SANDI MAJOR
Of th• Diii'( .. llttl Stiff
School officials say students in the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District may be squeezed into dooble
sessions unless a $12 million bond
Issue for new conslruction wins ap-
proval in November.
District Supt. Max Forney, in
releasing projected en r o 11 m e n t
figures, predicted ttie school system
will have 18,800 students in five years,
or about 4,040 more students than
seats in district classrooms.
That's more than enough to fill one
of the present full-size high schools,
Dr . Forney explained
The district's bond prop o s a 1 ,
Proposition A on the Nov. 5 general
election ballot, includes money for the
construction of one high school and
purchase of another high sohOol site .
It also carries funds for classroom
and library additions to the exisCng
We.!\tminster High School, expansion of
district offices and $1.5 million to
bring Huntington Beach 1-ligh School
up to Field Act requirements.
Unless this construction is provided,
Toastmasters
Slate Meeiing
The Pacific Sands Toastmasters
Club holds its first meeting Monday at
the Fishennan Restaurant at Coast
Highway and Main Street at the head
Of the Municipal Pier.
Speaker for the 8 p.m. event will be
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R·
Huntingtotl Beach).
The toastmasters plan to meet every
'second and fourth Monday at the
Fisherman Reshaurant at 8 p.m. ·
Persons interested in tOQstmasters
are invited to attend the dinner
meeting Monday.
student.s will be forced into half-day
sessions or some form of limited
academic progr.am, 1 eh o o I -ed.
ministrators warn.
Th.is year's freshman classes in the
five di.strict school8 total 3,515
students . More tlum 4,100 are expected
by 1972. Tota1 district enrollment this
year is 13,157 and is expected to be
18,800 in 1972 and 21,150 in 1975.
Dedication Set
For Seal Beach
New Fire Station
Seal Beach's third fire station will
be dedicated on Saturday.
The $67 ,884 station will be turned
over to the city at 1 p.m. iu an offictal
presentation_ of station ke}'! to Mayor
Lloyd E. Oum.mere by Eco09my
Builders, Inc., of Wilmington.
Seal Beach firemen will present a
fire-fighting demonstration at the
dedic.ation and open house, and will
then conduct tolln!I of the new 4,800-
squaie-foot facility built to serve the
north part of Seal Bead!.
SCla.tion Number 'Mlrefl, at 3131
Beverly Manor Road, will nave a com·
plemenl of 17 men, a snorkel and a
pumper. -....
Under construction for six rnontN,
the new station will be the clty't third,
with others in Leisure World end
downtown.
'Silent World' Set
The Huntington Beach Pub 11 c
Library Film Forum will shaw Jac-
ques Cousteau's Academy Award win·
ning film, "The Silent World" at 7:30
p.m. Oct. 4 in the library ad·
ministrative annex, just south of the
m-ain library at 52.5 Main St. The show
i.s open to the public without charee.
Huntington Minority • Ill
' ~( the 2.5 cities tn Orange County,
J;;u; ;-.g.on Beach is the only one with
an!elected city attorney.
f,\ 1s also only one of 10 incorporated
ci Jes in all of CalifomJa that select
le '1 1 counsel by popular vote.
Kuntington Beaeb's current city at·
toriiey. appointed -but jllft tern·
po1arily -to fill the unexpired term
of •the city's elected bm'rister who
resiigned this y88r, came up wilt! these
fads In preparing ballot argumeots lo
change the situation.
RcgiMered voters in the city will
decide NoV. 5 whether to change the
31-year-old Marter provmon beck to
the way it was when the dty in·
cocporated 59 years ago.
Don P. Bonla, tho city's -81>
pointed attomey since 193"7, argues
"the general electorate is not really in
1 position to evaluate qualificatioos
for city attorney."
''it's not ttietr cup of tea."
Because aa anaroey 1a ..a
''specialist," Bonfa insists the man
should be appointed by ttJe City Coun·
cil as ari.. ottier city specialists. such
as the city managf!«' and police and
fire chiefs.
When Huntington B e a c h in·
corporated in 1909 as a general Jaw
city, it had an appointed city attorney,
937 pe<iple?" he asks.
May 19, 1937, the city charter was
accepted by the state. making ii. a
charter city. and three months later. a
special election in which 93"7 voteti
were cast -513 Of wlticti were yes -
made the job e.Jectlve.
"Why should t city of 100,000 be sad·
died with a system adopted in 1937 by
'¥1 people?" he oasks.
Bonfa Mid he favors the city at·
ttmey being eppoiot.ed b e c a u 11 e'
"otherwDe, be must m.Mnta.in a
private office because he may not be
re~lected/' thereby splitting hit time
between two jobs. I
Oppolitioa I<> livin& cit7 OOWJCU !lie
right to appoint a city attorney may
have come frc>m fears the man would
not be "responsive" to Ule people, he
suggests.
However, as a city attomey it 11 hiB
job to represent the city, not in·
dividuals, Bonla went on. When a
citizen comes to the council ti> eppeal
a planning comrniulon ruling, "I can't
repr~t him as an aggrieved citizen.
I have lo represent the city depart.
merrt." he countered.
The people would still retain' the
right, under the amended ordinance,
to ~ the city attorney, evu though
he is oot elected by them, Bom:a ex·
plained.
Ho became city alt«ll.,. In July.
after Dale Bush re11gned to devcr"...e full
time to his prtvate~practt.ce. Bohfa 11
to serve un.W 1!170", when he mu.A
9tand for election to the· oUice
That is, unless re~enta ma.nee the
system ln the general efectlon.
. .,, ..
Friday, Stpltmblr 20, 1968
Bond Recount Due?
.
Trustees Weigh Move After Narrow Loss
Orange Coast JWllor Colleee Dlltrlct
trustees may request -1 recount of
Tuesday's close bond election loss but
the decWan. won't be made until next
Wednesday.
Board President Worth Keene said a
recount Is probably a good idea to
show good faith to the people who
voted for tbe bond issue.
The ft .25 million bond election lost
14,6'5 votes for to 7,353 against, just
1hy of the two-thirds approval needed.
A final check of tally sheets show 12
add.!tional "yes" votes would have
carried tbe election.
Keene said he Will bring up the ma~
ter or a., recount at the board meeting
ne:rt wednesday night. '"By then," he
uld, "the. tmo.Uonal 1hoct of an. this
will have kind of worn off and we can
sit down and figure the nm things we
are going to have to do."
Dr. Norman Watson, d I 1 tr i c,t
1uperlntendenti said a recount by the
Orange County Schools office would
cost PX> to. $300. lt would cons.\lt of
recounting every ballot. ·
A recqunt carl't be ordered until
after the official canvas1 next Tues·
day,, Watson said., A canvas& is a
re~Jaling ol the precinct tallies by
county school otaclals. Individual
ballots are not counted in this pro-
cedure.
The posslbiUty of a recount brought
back memories of the tie vote of April,
1962. In what one newspaper called "a
billk1n I<> Olll obot"' a. v~ on 1 10\i·
cent override l81ue ended s,m for -
3,271 •1at.n1l
There followed monthJ of eoo-
sternatlon during wblcb ab: ablentM
ballots postmarked before but relcel.Y..
ed after the absentee deadline were
finally opened by court order and
counted.
The count wu four vote1 for the
override and two votes agaiDJt and tbe
meuure carried.
Voters Tue1day approved converilnl
that same override fn:lm reltrlcted
use for bullding only to general
purpose use. The vote wu 13,902 in
favor to 8,186 against. A simple ma·
jority was all that wu needed.
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Thrtn1gh Satonlay i
TDDAYI
,
COSTA MESA
,...,._ M1p,.la1 C..I
I
Buy the clothes that Mii you •••
----,. .,
Men's yeaN"OUnd
weight suits, slacks,
and sport coats •••
Top Penney quality.
Town~ suits from Penney'i oUui-9 >'°" of
value and perfect fit ••. 90% wool and 10%
sllk assures you of utmost comfort. Choose yours
frDm a selection of 2 button models in sof'id1
ond foncies. Colon, oliYO, blue. gold, brown,.
ond'groy. Men's sins. $ 80
You119 Gentry" flnt quolity hopsock -
blozor of shopo refainlng 55% dacron pol)I"
.,,.,. ond ~5% wool. Rich colon in French blue,
gold, or ""'Y· Men's siz1t. $35 ••
HUNTlllGTOll BEACH llfWPOllT IUOI
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4 DAILV PllOT
BomfHl on Broadway
Gas Drives 1,000
From Castro Play
)'IEW YORK (UPI) -Gu bombl
aet off Tbunday lligbt la a Broadwai = drove nearlJ l,000 coulllllnr, 9y E,ARL WILSON g pla.ygoer1 Into the street.
ot n.. IDlllr ""' 11.n They bad beea watchlne a preview of
.. ' '"'lbe CUban 'tblng," a play sym-:! patbetlc to l\Jbao Premier Fidel ~ '1lt's nice to have a famous per· cast:ro.
•• son like you reg!IU!r Ill Weiher,. Plainclolltesmen slallooed In Ute
., .1!eld " said town clett W. Dudley lbeM-•· nl''"'""''on ct troubl< ar f: 'l~ingHam wbeft 21-y'8r4d Pa-restd ~ ~~fugees on charge;
:: 4ricl• Nlxont of Cpnnec..'Ucut, came ot_ letting off the bomba. A flfth man
:· in to sigD up for her first election. _ not a CUban -was detained for
.,,..Miss Nil:Qll, a nurse at !lartfo?'d queotioOOg.
-llosiiftaJ and a Republican, thank· There wu no panic, and no ooe was
• ed him but explained that &be 1' 8'1ri0011ly injured. Aft elderly woman ! not the dau~er of Richard Nixon, and her daugbter were treated at a :i: although the older daughter of Nix-~ f« gaa inhalation and releas-
:·: on bas the same nam~ "But I did ed. A policeman hit in the face by one
just finish taking care of a p,ati~t of. the gas bombs also was treated. ·.:: . ' • ,, . .. 1•: : .
• . : . •• •• .-... ••
" "' ·~ • .. ,. •• :· • • •• ., .. •• •• •• • • •
named Georp C. Wallace, Miss Tbei'e was a capacity audience of
Nixon ~cl. · • · ·1145 ·..,...... in the Heney Mlller
" • 'nle-, just off Times Square, when
the firM. curtain rose for the Ttnnday
olgl!t perf...,.ance,
Among them were eome 3 O p-.m••. uttoied to the ~ ttieatAr because of a !lip that anti·
Oa-CUbanl plaooed to discupt the
• perfocm.anee,
The 'Ne'J' York mi:ssions of a number
· of•nattcms which do bw:ines1 with the
Castro regime ba.. bem bmlbed
recently, apparently by Cu b a n
refugees.
A few miaJtel after the curtain
rose, three bomlJI went off with muf-
fled pops. Two were set "1. near tbe
lrool of lite auditorium and tile third
aeverel l'OWI furtha-back.
• 1be -qulcl<Iy !lllod willi what
poke called a ''Do:doua gaa." lts ex-
act compoliticn waa omcertain, blJt It
lunctloued 1lM a comblnatloa <II
lteochguandlbm'pa.
The performance wu cancel~.
Members al the audience were offered
their dlOice betv{een a refund or
tickell !« a later porfcrmance.
The four rupects were booloed on
maries ct dal>geroos lmplemenU, m.
cltin,g to riot, fel(Uioul aa1autt on
polkemen and r e c k I e ' 1 er/-
daogerment.
The play, 111 Jock Gelber, lonualfy
opem Tuelday night.
California's
Grapes Turned
Rather 'Sour'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The coo-
gressman from New York told the
congressman from California: "I like
your grapes but not the sentiment
behind them."
The exchange of words and grapes
between Reps. James Scheuer, (D
N.Y.) and Robert MaUtlas, (R-Callf.),
produced a near riot Thursday that
crushed bottl people and grapes in the
corridor outside Mathias' office .
The freshman lawmaker f r o m
California's San Joaquin Valley, a t'wo--
time Olympic decathlon gold-medalist,
-~Abbie Hoffman, Yippit leader from sent bags of muscat and white im-
ew York, .... arr<Jted at O'Har• Baseball Star's petial g!'apes to ell of his colleagu ...
irport in Chfca{lo on a bond farfd-. .. Some were· 1;ccompanied by a bumper
Rare Bappeaal
Mn. Marie Ooton of Mountain View, Calll., who received a kidney
transplant two years ago and was cautioned at that time against
having any more children, has reason to smile after recent post-natal
examination at Stanford Medical Center. Both Mrs. Ooton and son,
Shannon, born July 7th, were reported doing well. The incidence ol
1uccesaful p~gnancy in women with transplanted kidneys is u·
tremely rare.
Political Candidate Gets
New Heart in Transplant
18 Inches
Sil'Ve Life
Qt M_iner
• • j>AONIA; Colo. (UPI) -Jolin
. SOutborl!!!id. a 35-~ lather of ..,, tbailbd Gocl-'J'I"!'~ ~ JJ Ji>. ~11( wee: It AVed' IO life, -line! 8"d folr compenloos
.'were tllrM'mlles do'!'_ tile u. s.
1 Slee! Cc)rp:1 Som!n<net c"'1 min6
' -· the root i:ollapsed. Ouly be I survived,
I '."!'bat •lo& -vtrf, vory, very · tlOle "wtHm lt felt. .. he aaid. ''God gave
~ al!out 18 lndlel ct room and it sav·
f ed my lift ...
· <ruobed to detth by the tom ct rock
wet. mine 1uperintende.nt Archie
· McNall Morriacn, 42 ; general foreman
Veloy' K. Ploolonl, 37; foreman Joe F.
Burum, 54, end EugeDe Lee Baley, 4fi, ·---· n toot re9C'Ue workers more than
llx boun to reach the bodies in the
mine, 10 miles northeut ot Paonia in
west coma.I Colorado •
· "I j~ taW four fd my buddies
· !Jll•sbed in d1&tll," Southerland said
· shortly a!ter the aoddent.
Later, however, as rescue worten
lrled to reach · bll companions,
Southerland said be did oot want to
apeculate oo the coodition ct lite
others. '"lbey're my b u d d I e 1 , ' '
Southerland said, ''and I want to hope •
You know what I mean?"
Sool!ler\and, a miner for eight
years, said he fell into an 18-kdl
space between lw<> p!ecea ct heavy
gauge machinery and was pnllllcted.
"Th<re was 'an in'egulority in the
roof and it sllpped and came down,"
be said. -land said be recelwcl
lolee and back injuries and "bnlises
all over."
turt charge ari!'ing from dilonkn · ... -· 1tscker. that read: "Eat Cal!Jornia
during the Democratic Natiunal c.... '?-_ n. Enters Plea Grapes -The Forbidden Fruit." . ANN ARBOR; Mich. (UPI) -A
:»ention. Police tater charged him t3tl Scheuer end Rep. William F'. Ryan, candidate in the November electioos
University of i1ichigan H06pital. 818.id,
"There was a little fluttering but it
Maoy of. the rnine'a 150 workers used
their hands and heavy machinery to
dig their way to the victims in hopu
they might still be alive. The mine ii
drilled at an angle into the llide ct a
mountain more than 6,00> feet above
sea level.
Spokesmen for U. S. Steel said an in·
vestigation would start as soon u
mine experts from Utah, Colorado and
Pennsylvania could arrive at the '
•·• h la ful f a. weanMI. in ~& • another. N~ York D. em o c r a ~' became Mlcb.Jgiln's fin;t heart .-w•t un w Wt 0 r~·~ ,,.n G -£"L personall'7 returned their grapes Six I . . corrected itself."
'Connection with a kn1fe he allegtdl11 .. ·vD UD. \...dl&:rges other HOUie Democrats Mmt theiri trensplarit patient today. He suffered a 1ioo in his possession an the plane. J.,... ·t", back wbea:tbey kiterpreted ttie move cardiac amst 3Q. minutes after Jeav-
Nelson said Barnum; a candidate for
the Kalamazoo County· Board of
Supervisors, wu in "fa1r" condition
with his heart aided by a
"pacemaker," an eleclfonic device
designed to maintain a regular
heartbeat. He was reported conscious
&nd alert.
scene.
• .~ll'l:AMF<>Rl! Coon. (IJ!'I) -The as a slap 0at'·llie , la,bor boy,cott on : inC , the. opmiling ...,m but biJ new
Robert Dodd, of Denison, Iowa, , ~ ol baltbah ltall.1>! Fame • t • r California ')lrapes in support of · . l"l8" ,,.. repor\ed nmning 11moolhly Nation's Crime
Rate Increased
emocratic candidate fur -'Secre. · Jacklo 'llol>luon ha pie~ !Jmoc1!nl , wea<ern pl~ -•eek union at ·-
ry\ilr state, 1W -Clllii;)ed liiJ te JUD lllli-'111orlll' cblrl!M In 5-· ' recogrJJtldo, The heart ol .. stroke victim began
age in mid-campaigd.. ·He came ford Circuit Court and hfJ case h' s "We gave out potatoes last year and beatin " tmeou 1 ,, . .o&.. bod 1 ·th th been boµnd over to the next seuion~ none were returned" lrlid a puzzled g IJ>OO. 5 Y m W1'l Y 0
n WI e mumps. Superior Court. Mathia. in a confroata.tioo with PhWp T. Barnum, 49, of K-aiamazoo,
A ""-kwn·.r •byY#.E. F•"'on, JudgO Georee WIH accepted the Sdieuer. "How come?" Mich.., at 3'02'.•.,Dl E.DT. Dr. Roger
..... _ ttell ,_ limocent plea from Jackie Robinson ''Ibis ttme the grapes came with a Nelrlon, a110CLate director oC tbe ~.:.:j;l: Ames, Iowa. \vbith was covered Jr. 'IbUl'lday and ordered the case to sticker that de1lneated the ilsue,"
"The neD few hours ,.00 days are
going to be critical," Nelson said. "We
are not yet out of the wopds."
I
By 21 Per Cent
~:J)'y rubble from a tornado which bit Superior Court for trial but did not set SCbeuer said.
·:+:Charles City last spring. was un-a trial date. , "I'm. surprlled th.at the boycott got :;~-vered this week · qi! finally sent Robinson, 21, ,..s ~sented In the lnwlwid in wl>at J 111""'1>! was a ~ Its deslination. ·~den bad procoec11n~1 by Atty. Moo~ \lfa,golls. Uiougl!Uul gesture," said MaU\ias, ~ ailed tbe check lasl~May to lbe Young Roblnlon, who r~I free oounding ~ ' ~owa State Cyclone CIUb. on $8,000 bond, wa1 arre1~ with an Police sought to clear the ronidor of
@.. e atlel!"d prostitute In a dowutJawn Uie fast.Crowin( cr<Jl'ld of con· ~l;.. They didn't show "OC the Same Stamford hotel Aug. 2S when be al· grt!sllooal aide,&, newsmen and a
~1~ender"· ·at the Roxy Theater-in legedly waved a loadecf -32 caliber mna1J. group of. Mexican-Americans
.... """"". · Beach Fl after th stale revolver at police. who said they spoke for the grape
·, A..~·~1anu ' a ., . e When arrested, Robinson was ac-...1,.1.ers. 'Ibe Democratic Study Group, :.}.~jpttorney's office ..complained the Y-~ovie .was obscene. '1t ~as a little companied by Janet Wallace, 19, of an orgasizatiott Of about 150 liberal ~3:~ugh 10 places," conc¢-ed theater New York City, who also wa1 armed, Howe members, con<iucted a
•'.;."-j)wner Leroy Griffiths~ The title of police said. He was charged with ag-teiephoae campeign to get a big .;~the substJtute film for today's pat-gravated assault, carrying a danger~ turnout of grape returnees. ~. ous weapon, resisting an-eat and us· One girl, who could not be identified, !~~ons : ''My Third.Wife George." ing a female for Immoral purposes. t.ook ttie grape1'from her plastic bag
i,/""' Earlier this year Robinson was put one by one and c:ru.rhed them i:n her :~ on probation after being termed a fingers, Idtinii tbe ooze drop into a
Mifflin's Sportnoear store in "drug dependmt0 penoa oder a n1w box hurriedly trovided by Met2i1u to
Du· Quoin, IJI., changed iti Mme Connecticut law. nceive the .. fwbiddllll fruit."
td "His and Hers Clothier" after
a burgla'11 two weeks ago. Burg-
larized again, the manage?Mnt
said tt wa.s holding "License to
steal sale" over the weekend.
There are no plans to change
the store's name again, the man-
agement rejecting perhaps the
most approJ11'iate suggested
name: 14His~ lfers ~ Theirs,"
• • ,. At 1'"1st Mrs. Shlrloy Holbt~ of
t. Louis, Mo., was near a phone
hen the crime occured. Mrs .. Hei·
I reported to police that she had
•• laced ber purse on the ledge of
~ outdoor booth wJrt]e making a
... -:-telephone call .•. and a passerby
.:.;;~ached in, grabbed the purse and
~itled .~... .
~;. Patrolman Rob.rt Rudewick, of
;';,San Antonio, Tex., armed wj.;Jl
·}'Chemical M a c e, con.fronted a ·t·~!kunk armed with a spray device.
; ~:~Rudewick, answering a call to. get
!".::the skunk out of a garage. fired ~<'.the Mace. The skunk did his thing <~'and fired back. Fuming in mote
:~·ways than one, Rudewick, dRw hia:
•.:yevolver and put the sku.nk out ·of ~.~business. · · · :...: . .
~~; "I don't think justice was dealt
·:·:.:here today," Angelo M. Mariani :·~;Jr., 18, ot New Britain, Conn .. told
:t&e judge after beiag fined $50 and •
ven a spspeqded :JO.day jaU sen-
""9 for tearinJ up a tra!lix: Uckel
nd throwing it in the officer's
ce. "EVeey delendent receives
stice in thiJ Court," replied Judge
red T0te•no. And with a bang
the gavel, he revoked the aus-
ded sentence and ordered the
outh to spend 30 days behind bars. •· H.,._ Bynum repolied that a
led batlllub fell oU hiJ truck as
e wal -driYlng on lntersta~ 40
r Green1boro, N.C. Bynum
hr atupped to l'OCl1 ... the 70-
und tab ••• butµ.. .. men pick·
It up all4, p!JICed. It OD !heir
before he ,:;jd,,Jet to it. 'Mid hfl .,. ....
•••
I
Country Singer Red Foley
FoundDeadinMotelRoom
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPO -Red
Foley, ·the Grand Ole ()pry aplritua\
singer who helped pioneer country
music, was found dead in his motel
room by a cleaning woman Thunday
night.
The 58-year-old singer hAd bee
dead 8 to 10 hours, apparently fro1•
natural caqses, according to Allt-
Co~ Coniner GordoG Il'ranke.
Foley, the father-In-law of singe
Pat Boone, bad appeared In lw
periormances of the Grand Ole Opr~
in Fort W1')'1le Wednesday and ap
P>fentlj ,plaooed to l9blnl to blJ bom•
in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday &!
ternoon. An atrplaie tlckd w1th t
reservatioo fO'r Thunday was found h
Foley's pocket, police Jaid.
8«'11 Clyde Julian Foley on a 24-acrr
farm in Blue Lick, Ky., Foley was con·
sidered a "singen;' singer•: among his
country music contempOrlriff.
Minnie Pearl. who had starred on
the Grand Ole Opry with Fdley, burst
into tears when informed of his death
at Nashville.
"He lVM one of the decftst friends r
ever hid," she said. "I never wanted
to to~ li.m on ltlage bealuse he was
so great. No one could sirlg like him."
. "l'n lost a vecy dear frieod." Wd
Roy AcufL
Tex Ritter called Foley "a great
fri.end end great arti1l"
Foley was one or the first country
and westera singers to reCilf'd music
in Nashville. His hlggest hits were
"Peace in t:ht Valley," "Just a Clo&er
Walk With Thee," "Ole Shep,'' ••Chat·
tanooga Shoe-Shine Boy," "Tennessee
Saturday Nlgbt," and "Cincinnati
Dancing Pig."
From a $2·a·l'how sblger at Cov-
ington, Ky., Foley joined G<oe Autry
on tile NatJooal Barn Dance and in
lt46 went with the Grand Ole ()pry. He
lf'Jt tbe Opry in the oarly 19508 to
foum tile 0-k Jubilee In Spril\Bfleld.
Mo.
UPIT .........
FOUND DEAD IN MOTEL
c...,try Sl119or Rod Feloy
Foley was married ~ tunes and
had fol.If daughters ud a dozen
graudclilldno. Illa first wife, P>uline
Cox, died in childbirth, and his secood
·W'f.19, Eva Overrtake, died in 1951. A
child by this marriage, ShiTley, is
married to Boone.
Foley and hl1 third wife. one-time
entertainer Sally Sweet. lived in an
apartment in Nashville.
The couple was burned a n d
bosplt.alµed ln 1964 when fLre swept
tbrougb' the -Foley was involved l.n a tu suit w1th
lite IJ\Wnal -·Service lo the
early 1980s wtlen 'the government
clalmod Ile ow<d '28.000 lp boclt tu ...
!'be suit -later -
$1 Million Paid
For RFK's Story
On Cuban Crisis
NEW YORK (UPI) - A 25,1\(\(\.
word manuscript about the Cuban mis-
sile crisis by the late Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy bu been purchased °for a rec-
ord price of et least Sl million -about '40 a word.
Thep urche.se was announ~ joint·
ly Thursday by Henry E . Bowes, pres-
!<lent of McCall's Corp., whicn bought
Worldwide rlgbta to the manuscript.
and Theodore C. Sorensen, represent-
ing the Kennedy estate.
Bowes told a 11ews conference the
$1 million wu an advance. He said
the . ultimate paym.ent for the manu-
script would depend on disposition of
the subsidiary rights.
· The McCall exeCutive !laid the man-
uscript will be published in the No-
vember issue of McCall's magazine,
,..hlch goes on sale Ocl 22, six years
8tter the crisis began.
Bowes said the manuscript, written
by Kennedy about a year ago, is in
rough form except for some mlnor
editing by Soremen.
Barnum was the world's Slit heart
transplant patient. ·
He received the heart of an
anonymous 37-year~ld donor wto had
been declared officla.UY dead of a
atroke at 12:45 ia.m t -i.
Nelson said wh!n lBlmum'1 nbr
heart sitopped, be was prompt1y
resuscitated and r e g a i n e d con-
sciousness. He said other such stop-
pages might occur.
People Poisoning
Parading Pi'geons
In Pershing Park
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -Some 50
pigeons dropped dead Thursday in
Pershing Square and the senior gar.
dener pointed the flngeT' at dove-lovers.
Leslie Sedberry said be thought
somebody fed the birds poisoned bread
er grain because "some ol the people
are p.&rtial to the doves here. 'Ibey
want to get rid of the pigeons."
Sprinklers in the downtown park
were turned on to wash away any re-
maining poisoned foqd.
The birds walked erraUcally on the
sidewalks before ke;llng over or top-
ped from percties on light poles. Seven
sparrows also died.
tioo's <rime rate rose 21 per cent in
the tirst half of this year over the
same period in 1967, accocdlng to the
FBI. The , blggeost increue came in larger cities and in the northeasl
Director J. Edgar Hoover, releasing
the FBl's latest Cl'ime report, said
Thursday that the erime rate is up 24
per cent in cities with more than
250,000 population and 17 per etmt in
those "Mtb fewer Ulan 10,000.
Suburban areas reported a 11 per
cent increase while crime in rural
areas rose by t• per ceot, the report
said.
Hoover said the upward trend was
consistent througbota the nation -up
1:1 per cent in the tJOrtbea,.,t, 20 per
cent i.n the west, 18 per cent in the
south and 17 per cent in the north cen·
tral states.
A national breakdown showed a 29
percent increase In robbery. a 17 per
cent incr-eue lD mtrder, a 15 per cent
increase in klrclble rape, and a 14 per
cent increase \n aggravated assault.
'1Property crimes" increased by1ll
per cent as a whole, led by a 24 per
cent increue in automobile tMft, a 23
per cent increase iE: lan::eny invoMng
$.50 or more, and a 17 per cent in-
crease in burglary.
Hoover a1so said there was a 34 Pet"
cent increase in armed robbery and a
28 per cent increase in assaults wWt
llrearms.
Appalachians Dampened
Meteorowgical Disturbances in Portage & Kwmath Falls
C•Hforaf•
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• DAILY PJLUT 5
Czechs Ref use Russ P~ge
End of Flight
J\1.edical attention is given to victim.s of., a balloon
accident in Penndel, Pe., Thursday. Both Herbert
Trauger, 29, and Mrs. Joanne Flannery; 23, were
pronounced dead after tumbling from the balloon's
!WIT..,...
basket to the pavement below, afte~ the balloon
struck a high power line. The SS.foot hot-air bal-
loon was being used to publiciie the opening of a
restaurant
Russia May Put Troops in Bulgaria . .
to the Soviet invasion. warning to Moscow that Yu·
We1tclllf Barber Shol
1M1 W_,dlff Df, --ml
N..,.-t ... ,., C.llf.
the
origlnal
·Ii~t
Seo tell now59'
fifth
USHERS LONDON (UPI) -Mar·
..ihal Ivan Yakubovsky, COO'l·
mander-in<hief of the War-
saw Pact, flew to Sofia
today amid t,>efSist.ent re-
ports Russia may put troops
into Bulgaria to reinforce
control over its East Euro-
pean empire.
Russia now has 20 divi·
sions equipped with lat.est
weapons in Ea.st Germany,
2 divisicms in Poland and 4
divisioni in HUJ1gary which
were moved there after the
1956 Hungarian uprising.
His latest move signif· godavia would fi1bt if Rus·
icantly also coincided with siao tried to intervene. a call today from Pravda,,...:.:::...:::::....:::....::.:=.:.:::::.~~!::::::::::O'::::::=:=:::::=:=:~~~...,...~...,..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,...._ the Soviet party newspaper,
for a new military buildup
in East Europe.
Yakubovsky's trip follow-
ed secret discussions in Mos-
caw earlier this week be·
t w e e n .the Kremlin top
leadership and Bulgaria's
strongman. Todor Zhivkov.
Botti moves coincided
with diplomatic reports that
Russia apparently is anx·
ious to place some troops in
Bulgaria. the only nm:i.ain·
ing Warsaw Pact member
which has so far been
spared the presence of So-
viet forces, apart fr om
maverick Romania.
There are upwards o{
500,CKX> Soviet troops, with
several thousand tanks and
several hundred planes, in
Czechoslovakia.
This leaves Bulgaria as
the only Watsaw Pact part-
ner so far not r_tinforced by
the Red Army. IJomania has
frequently attacked the
Warsaw Pact in l.hepastand
suggested that it be dis·
solved, along with NATO. It
is at best a dortnant mem-
ber of the Warsaw Pact.
Y akubovsky h&s played a
key tole in Russian activi·
ties in CzechoslO'(akia, prior
Pravda spoke of the spe-
cial importance to be at-
tached to the "task of .rais·
ing the defense capacity of
each socialist state and the
whole socialist community.''
The presence of Soviet
troops in Bulgaria. could
have important implications
in regard to neighboring
Yugoslavia, . diplomatic
sources said.
Moscow has warned Pres-
ident Tito to halt his attack
on Russia and against back·
ing CzechoSlovakia's pre·
invasion Uberallzation pol.
icy. Tito reacted , with a
Mexico Police Battle Rioters
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -
Antigovernment demonstn.-
tors, angered by tile army
occupation ol ibe Nailooal
Olympic: Garnes Site, clash4
eel anew with riot Police
OOwnb>wn Thursday night
and IOOay.
Att.ml\tillg to pi:eserve
Mexico's intemaliooa1 im·
age aJ ho.st to the 1968
games beginning Oct. 11,
police SUITounded a n d
ttu-eaten e d phot~
and destrofed Clleii fiim 'of
the latest outbreaks.
Policemen 1wing1 n g
nightsticks and firing tear
gas broke up the an·
tigovernm.ent tnobs t b a t
hW"led rock&, bottles and
heavy coins thro u gh
=~ ~~: ~tx~~ I
charged army lines three
times at the university but
was thrown back.
Mexican army armored
C'BI'S and i>oops occupied the
school Thur-sday night in a
li.gbtning move to rout
students who had oceupied
• Philippines
PlanNoWar
In Malaysia
MANILA IUPll -Pr.a-
dent Ferdinand E. Marco1 of
the Philippines said today
there would be no war
between his country and
Ma1.aysi.a over the Borneo
st.ale ol Sabah.
Marcos spoke as a wave
o( anti-Philippine sentiment
swept Malaysia. A Chanting
mob Of 10,000 burned
Marcos in effigy in Sabah.
Malaysia tonnally notified
the Philippines today it was
swipeoding diploma.Uc rela·
tioos with Manila because Of
the Filipino c:Wm t o
sovereignty over Sabah.
''Ther-e ii going to be no
wit, no callup of re1erve1,"
-said Jo. 11&1<1ntnt ttleaoed by blo Gftlol In
Manila. "Then ll oo lllaa to
invade or illfiltrate Wah."
some of ttie ~s since
July. Then they threw a cOr·
don around Ule campus, site
ol mocst of the athletic
facilitie6 for the 1968 CJ!ym.
pks.
The students' demaods
are that the government
repeal antisubvensive laws
and release Communists
from jail!I. The ~ government
has refused, leading to a
series ol serious pitched
bal1!es t11r<zii&li00t 'th< sum·
mer. R
A·mong the athletes
already here Were those
from S o v i e t • occupied
Czechoslovakia. For Ulem,
the campus full ot armored
oars and armed ~s was
a familiar sigtl.t.
'lbe athletes gawk at the
armor aod soldiers from the
snow·white "'-asses ta k In g
them into the campus for
workouts. Bicycle racers,
out for a sunny day's prac·
tice, are rerout.ed b y
military roadblocks.
After six yean o l
Pf'll:para\ion and mounti."1:
anticipation. Mexico City 's
officials and J'e6identl alike
worried over the effect of
continuing student disorders
on the turnout far the-.
games, now only 22 days
away.
•
"Don't worry about not
having pas!eS to get into the
stadium," a Berried Olym·
pie official told newsm~n.
"The army won't let you in
anyway. That's another pro..
blem we have to consider."
'The government 1 e n t
·troops aOO armor into the
campus after a warning it
would take "all I e gal
measures" against any
threat by the stud-enU to
sabotage the games .
UAW Backs
Tea mster s
LOS ANGELES CUP!) -
The Unit"ed Auto Workers
ha! thrown its support tx> the
Teamsters Ul a ·runoff elec·
tion to determine represen-
tation of 22,000 aerospace
workers at the McDonnell·
Douglas Corp. plant in St. Lo . ~a representation e1ec-
ti.on ii.st week at the St.
Louis plant, tbe UAW, the
Teamsten and the AFI,
CIO International Assocla·
tion of Machinists competed
(or recognition as the bar·
gaining agent
·GRAND OPENING
I Nl(K'S ITALIAN DELI & REST,
SPECIALS FOR OPENING!
FREEi
With ••ch large
pixie -
0... ...... of
Spathottl
FREEi
with Sp19hetti &
meet balls -
I.art• tflu of
Piao
TAKE OUT OR EAT HERE
PHONE ORDERS CALL 549·15'1
COMPLETE MENU 0, ITAL IAN DISHES
e Pine • Subm1rine1
• Spe9hettl • Meet 8111 S1nd. e l e119n• • ~1u11g • Sandwich e Ravioli • Home Mede Seu1t9•
Ctmr To Home ParU.1
In a. related deW«Jpmt!ot,
a group ol -iO Filipino
university -!Uged I
brief 11wown c1m10D11t81ion Nick's Italian Dell & Restaur111I outside tile U.S. Embusy in
Manila. proteotlng "h 11 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER
lltoy detail>oc! M "illoaal 2300 H1rb4r Blvil.
harferenoe" by the United Cost• Me.1 Stites in tile clopuCe over 549-1511
i)lbah. '11\ ____ ~,~ .... :::·;.t~-:: .... ::·~-=~ .. ~=~~l----"' J Thero wu no violence. 'I
4~ Pack of'4
Plastic Baby·
Pants .
~~.--39c
t.onr wear~
Inf, ~Wtie
W&flt for anur f l t.
8 1sea lt·X..
fr XL. B,U·J'
DOW IJMt•V• •• Thnft
.·2"· ea. Infants
Cotton Training
Pants 5;..$1 • liy'I_.
S4ive 45c
·I' ., TllPlf~
.\ ··r· With a I •r"tu'ntt' •IMUc.w,Jati bUI~ ~t •at
l .... ·1 ·.11.
s1 11 Baby Ruth
or Butterfinger
CandJ Bars
lox of 1l gr
I •
78' Bon Ami
·Dust 'n Wax
Fumi.ture Polish 49c
Larp , .....
....N ....... ..Uy flmOld
quiJU;y at a
'l'lu1lt,y dll-
....,,. price I
IH llt STOCKS LAST
Sunbeam Electric
Tooth Brush ,..
Recommend•
e4 for belt
d-nlal hy-
l i •Dt. ' b ru s h ea. 'fPT!
$1 ·.0t ValueJ
Jergen's lotion
77c
L&T(• t%
ounce bottle "'th ~ er. Sloe up at tht1 'Pt-
cl•l di.count prtct .
Reg. 15'
Book Matches · .... so, ....
'01-.CH & IDINGI• I LVD,. MUNTPteTQfl 11,t.CH •
FREE! Baby Pants
111111 '"''"'ti si.1111u111
PLAYTEX Drjjier Pads
$157
s3" Full Length
Door
Min'Or
$319
A:ttnollw brus·
tone fiam to 10 lf'1l.b u.y deoor.
I>Lltortion f r • • f. .... p,u.11 ... toe ~n.
89' Vallie Sclilck
·Krofta Chrome
D ... le U.. llocln
67e ..
'l'bl Bt.-olu· ~·-W' llaldt tr om.
lleNel;. I o r
the peite.lt
.U.'rt of
)'Ol.lr life.
• m 1. 11• 11.....c.11 Miii •~ c.tw • , .... _, el nM M11Wr ,.,... 11t Wln-II. -
, ...,..... llleHllll C..ftr, CMll Mii#
• Mu-w .. t.ni.w "' OM1M •-'• Wts!Milli1,.,.
• I• W, I•""" .... l "'*i.! II. -IMlfi• c ............ Allll
• 17* ............. ,...,.
"OUlllllN VellrJ
c..,..,.....,..21.
ii::JM>Betty Woods
Facial Tissues
lox of 200
3•=s55e:
-Ladies'
Knit
Card1gans
~--100.~ ,...
CI D -,i:uc tD ~98
""'' lmll Han4 loomed. t ull ·--...... ~ fl"" ~t '•I ,
SS" Value!
18" Club Bag ,,., " •
I
' j
----------~= --. =4'W,,.,~===---==-=---
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-. .._._ ----· . ----. . ------,~·\.·•• .................... . " •
----..
.J DAILY ~II.OT
I
•
Walker Gets Sirh.an Trial. QubLauds
Redwood
Park Bill
llgu11 INcll Sdool of Art ind Dalla
LOS ANGEIJJll (UP!l -
Siii>o.rlcr Ccilirt Ju 4 C•
l!trtiod V. Wllar, -
LS !be ... ol .. c!'llllllllll
o:urt -. will ..... IC\
t:-e trial o1 Slrbm B. Slzlaan,
chariicl with tl)e ••usiM-
Ceo ol S.... -Y. ltlli-
lle:ly. w allJu' "'pointed t 0 1uperlot ....at In !..,,
haDlllo4 ... -I C.0-f\dellClal M'P-trial ol a
dt=*':ti afo. He sentenced
CanL·ai111man lo doatll
•n<I <ooc!ueted the trio! ..
Ronald Denni! Wolff, 15, ax sloY«' Of blJ 1 o < I 1 II le· !!I-. -°" ol Wallrer to preside •t the triAl set to
SF College
Head Backs
}>anther
SAN FIWICllOO (AP) -
Su 1'r1111cllco .. CoJ,.
legt't .. -1111bl1111
no lnlelliloJo ol C&llCtll!nc &
pi.rt·tima lmtructor'I COD•
tract awarded to Black
Pan-le-Gtcqe Mur·
ny. .
Th•,.. ........ Dr. -
Smltl!, -~ '1'11 .... day r&lardlllc a t>oct a<nrd•
ed by hl$ adiool'i En«!W>
departmert.
MtDTly, 2Z, v1sttxtd CUba
dwin& the 1wnmer dnpite
a travel bell by Ille St.!te
Dtpll'tl!iOl!i. He la on pro-
bation in conn9'.'tion witb.
battery charges involvinc
the editor and ltaff of tbt
College newspaper ln lt87.
Smith's comment came
after he was inform.M that
the state collere chin·
cellor's office was reviewine
!ol111Ta7'1 --·nt. Chuclllor Gl111D S .
lliltil1ll Hid in Loi An&ll ..
that tba choice Of Murray,
minllttr of education of the
Black Pantl>era, -the rupon1lblllfy al tbe pnll·
dent.
Dumke Indicated t h a t
rehlrlnC Min&)', who taulllt Enfliall lut year, ccu!d In·
wave a more Jel'ioUI altua,.
tion than Cleaver'• Hl'V1bt
u a guest lecturer.
Dumke aaid no person
abould be broutht on Cl!!I·
PUI u a iftpqMldlJt and
added:
''Teadlioe a courae and
being a m«nher ol tile
faculty is an entirely dif-
ferent matt.tr ,than il!Yttlftg a
petSOD. to Ieclwe."
Senators
Stalemated
Over BART
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The Senate reached a
ltllemata early t.oday In a
b6Wt ovtr financina: the
'1" mllllon dlflclt ol tbe
Bay AIM Jl.oc>ld Trwmt
(BARTi system with both
Gov. RooaJd lll&(an and
·Sen. Georce Miller Jr. <D-
Martiilez), n!Ualn& to jive
an inch.
At 3,31) Lm., UIS lloura
a&r a roll call b91an cn a
blD raiain& tollJ on the San
F r 1 n dlco-OU1and Bay
brl41• that Rl&(an 1114 be
will veto, 1M1tors reached
• "gentlemen'• acrnment"
to return at S p.m. today to
comple~ the vote.
They decided to Walt for
~ return or Democratic
Sens. Ralph DWs, Gardeua,
and Tom c-reu, s .a a
FvnaDdo, who were in
l\lanchester, N.H .. atlAmdlnf
a legislative leaden cut·
ference.
Both were called back to
Sacramentowller•blcbn
ol the toll increue had
m&Dlfld ..i:, 1111&-11-.
three lllort ol the 21 needed for _,._
DIAN 0, llNCH
J~ .. HerMrt Wilker
'
UN l"llANCISCO (AP) -
'l'tio llltn'& Clull --4 "*"'" _ ...... .,... ..
hoH ortll• rnCdtonll clllll v*9d eecwaulc war-
rr today attar~ DMllll • 11111 .....,, •
ll,Clll04in -.. -Park.
A IPOWIDOll lot tb1 _.
lll'YIUollial club that bad c-for I IO,Ollkcrt park
Hid: "Tllo bill la ~ I
---1lul ... thJnlt JI' I lbt boot 11111 II f!Allbll at lbla time and ft re Vfrl
pltUtd.''
Mayor Ward Falor ol
FAL1. ~PROGRAM • ..,r. IO • DIC. 7
.., ...... -
' AINOll ICHIAJI ·--· .ION l!ODllAIY
IAllC AND ADVANCID couua
' DIAWtNI
COUii A .. JIN
OIL r.\lllllHI
ICULnllU
WAn&C-1
,,_ !ct••••" 611•• ...... ,...,_
... --U. 7t<Mt4-1UI
$261 Million Tax Break
Approved by Legisl.ators
A:Oow romark~ that hl1._ll'!!!!'lll..,"!"..,..,"""!!illil .... 11'!!!'9 .. '!'lm .. ~ believed dial !~ the I, t' bm 1a .. re11e1 to everybody T e ' Great Orange Coas s
1lul It la DOI to tbl bell ed·
vaat&(•" "' bll Hwnboldt No. 1 Pa per I COWlt1 .....
hlor ••artad there la'-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "bouDll lb be • b • d ,.
economic lllK't until people
in the area learn to convert
to tourism ," pointing out
that a good 50 percent of the
area's industry ia based on
lumber.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Gov. Reagan received toda1
tbe legi1letlve prize that
eluded him all year long -t.
property taa revlllon thal
promises help ror Reagan't
"forgotten man" who car·
ries the burden of govern•
meot on his sMulders.
taa.
-,.\ $1a m(DI°" cut Jn th<
bullnOu lllnotory tu.
llEBATll:
ture of a:Overnment on his
tired baek and ,be worb two
and a balf hours of each day
jult lb pay lta CCll"
He -eel durln( the
s even-month-Jong rtl\llmr
Iea:tslative session a pro·
perty tu cut, an 1cro1s-the*
board $1S.$ millioo. reducUoll
throu1h tile county
government!. ..
''We hope,'' he~.
"that the federal and it.ate
governme nts will work to
get the par.Ir: tn operation as
fast as pos&ible ao that the
f<:OllOll\y will ti • b JI Ir •
lbself."
eA-lqltn•'°lll!Pll·
.... , f'rlaldolrt-l>elt ....
Woe new I« $115.00
Murder; ·:1
Rape Trial '
Under Way
The Aaaembly lale Thun-
.,_,,~ action on •
-• •mJlion tax revWora ~ llllding It to 1111 chief executive'•
dea~· on a '11·2 vote.
Slnce thl.1 ywar '1 tax rates
&lrltd1 ... Mt by the <OWi·
ti.,, citi<&, sdiool dl1tricts
and myriaa other local tax·
lttl ag1netie1, tb.e
-'Wiil llltlbe11nt
........ -· Ill ..... ·"111'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . ~~,J!ij; ll>ri!lf.1\ti ~I~
p....win, Ibo . prOpoul, to'.
-•• .aie bollol .. Pn>p. l-.1, Wini In Novemi>ar'
over PiW. -9, ·the in'4sure
~ brP.bllip w-,
Lal An,.i. Coullly --
• Ukt to bt a aad.tu.te
GtlldrnOdMr f o r llODle
children Sa Mmr Werde?
M~ a Mary PoR*l&?
The lower house
lawmUere tllln -their attan!it• to llltovtr minor 1•111 ..... bopilll lo clur l! SAN JOB (UPI) -A up _,-ID4 11111 tile two-
Wuhin&ton lt&ta youth ac· •Mlt<>ld lpocill 111alon. -· cuatd of murder' thin.aping 1be t a I pro Po a a l repr11ent11 eorn;ro• cm and rope .,., eald by his de· tll< part of th• thNI key
f1n&1 altorn61 Thursday to 11,..... · tnwlYed: lleQan;
be ''not !ully ~n1lble for !ltJhocratlo A I I e m b I y
hl$ ectJ" 1'llJla bis -~ Jtllf M. Vlll'U!I ol
dendantwu dlaCrlbed&lbl-lilll-1114 sen. a-,.
Dtirlns the ,., ~ talk
111,,,...od 0Ul11111!Jilllll a •aadldo• loi' Pre-. be _.cf&' 1 !orJ~t'tan ~-~"~tbl ---c-
Mlllor Jr., ID-M..une.l .. in1 "dominated" by. Ill 1 .a,tort 11 --Into lfloel,
compuion. it hilB to win llOPfOVl1 of tht
Th• remark.I came 1il op-vote .at tbt NOv. I 1tnerll
enlng statements by defenM eieetlon over a comoetlnl attorueya lot LIOD&rd I:. plan -Pr<p. 9, .. lDlillltl.O
Malnl and T b o m a 1 E. proposal lo put & tlCllt lid Oii
Bftun, both 19, ol Rltavllle, the ruun, UH of Pl-'IJ I Waab. Tbe two are accused lull ar IO'Vlf'Pll1eDt sup-~
of tho fatal thootlna ol Tim· porl.
oillY Luce, 17, and th• ltld· CATALYST
nap and aaaauil of Illa llrl -t •-1 ~ lrt!llld, Susan Bartoloniel, • .... •-Y --m.IJ« c:a111111 mch -DGW 18. t b • Democntlc.contr.n.d Br•'"!:• attorney, Merl• leaJelaWro and llllCllll lnlo
Orchard; told the cour~ ''we a •plrlt or compromile un·
111 not denyinJ tbue !ml· Crm..,~. l!lltad Jn RllC&n'I ble crimes ... wa an n o t
denyln( the particlpaUon ol The l•llalalure'• peckap
Thomu Eua:ene Braun.'' pledges :
However, he 1114 Braun -A $760 uemptlon to a.
"ls emotionally, develop. homeowner oa. the .,...Md
mentally and iDtJllec:tually V1lue ol hll boull, lll\lritll
clonr to the 111ol15," and out to an .....,. .. -11
he claimed BralDl .. was not t&J; wt o1. f10 a year, tt· tu
fully llipOnslble for his rai.t renllhl con.it.ant. And
acts." amc. Ntll vwr t.rom eoun· John Poulos, repr11ent1n1 . ty to county, IO W«lld the Ma.lne, •aid b1I cllent "wu cut
not a party to shooting any. -A tolal flO m 1111 o n
one." rtduction for tht uat.er",
"Mr. Maine WU blmaell who lndlrectlJ P111 tuae
thrtatanld with a .22 callber through blfhOr rent. Thia la
automatic pist<Jl and was in done throU&b doUhUng tht
extr1me fear for b.111 l f e," sWKlard deduction 'ft'Mn
said Poulos. fi.au,riq tba It.ate income
how thrlRY
are you
when you borrow
money .
• So uthern California Thrift & Loon
specializes in personal, businu1 and
Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today
and ... hoW.we can solve your Imme.
diate money problems from depend.
able fund• 1vailabl1 riCht now. The
Thrtfl)' WI'/ CIO -~ money.
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
THRIFT & LOAN
11'0t.I11111 •· e.to -••... 141""41 USt Wlllfll" IPvd., Loa A111tlt1 .,. 65l-tn0
·WHO IS BAHA' U' LLAH? '.
The Public Is lnvltlcf To H11r
DR. JOHN STROESSLIR,
KllWTllT AM nTCHOLC>el11'
AT Tl-IE BAHA'I CENTER SEPT. 21, I P.M.
985 VICTORIA ST. COSTA MESA
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,,... & -Tral<r, mottti 13, au mraa at an
extrolowpr!Ce. . • -lllul ..... tn llrnlturt
torS,Q; ..... llmpl. ma-
ple tAblet, .CC.
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Vtq hln<IY &\lldt. • •
IARNIS • NO,ILI
CoLLEGE OurLl.N,E SE,ttE.§_
~. atudent'..,rlvllte Tutoe,, ~ :t .
The 1Bookstall · 1
333 I. 17th St. c..to Miu -11 '
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Rioting Pak Over
. ~ \ .
'Long Hot Summer' Bet · r Tlwn Expecied
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The United State& ma1 have
possed 1ile peak ol lta deod-
ly epidemic ol raclll rioUng.
That hopeful ~Ut;y 1.1
S1Uggested by J u 1 t I c 11
Department Stati«tiea OD
urban di1ordera during the
"long, hot swnmer" juat
ended. ·
Many bad feared that the
summer of 1968 would be
the worst yel But it tw"ned
out to be c<niderably less
violent than 1967.
Last year, 83 persons
v.-ere killed in outbreaks of
ghetto violence during the
peak· hot weather months of
July and August. The Na-
tional Guard bad to be C6ll-
ed out 18 times.
This year, civil disor./ers
in big cities claimed 20 lives
$ring the same period. The
National Guard was needed
7 times.
CLEVELAND WORST
lollowod tile _.. • tloo ol
the Rev. Dr. Martin Utei
King Jr. Major Ii OC•
currediDWasbin ion,
Chcaao, Kansas and
Bahimore, with 1 e 1 e r
dJ.sturbances in mare than
100 other citfe:s.
SAW DECLINE
'lbe tra&ic week in
may help to account
.swnmer's sharp dee
rioting. Cities ripe for
ble got it out of their m
in advance of the usual um-
mer riot season. But. ven
v.'hea the April are
added to those whicb took
place in July and A gust,
the 1968 toll was m edly
lower than that of 1
fI'be downtrend may ve
to be temporary. Bu there
are grounds for c tious
hope that it reflects ba6ic
cbanges in the ability of U.S.
law enforcement agencies to
rope with riots and, even
more important, in ~ at-
titude of urban N'groes
tQWard this way of giving
expre ss ion to their
grievances.
Nell"• """"· But only l~
percent tbou1ht ttiat any
good could come ol further
'1olence. '!be overwhelminf
majority favored political
a<:tion and noo-'1olent pro-
testa as the be1t ft] _ for
Negroes t.o gain their rights.
Except in the most radieal
frill&• ol -mll!lallcy, wbere a relatively rmall
mloority is frankly bent Oil
fiery destructJon of
America's wbite<ootrolled
society, there is a growing
awareness among Negroes
that violence b e g e t s
vfolence, and ttiat the end
retult ol prolonged urban
rioUng is likely to be a
harshly repreS6!ve pol1ce
state.
"Over the past few years,
through protest demoostra·
tions and riots, Negroes
have been clamoring for the
attention of their country,"
says Sterling Tucker, direc-
tor ol the Waohington Urton
League. "They IlO'YI have the
attention they 21ooght, and
need no longer use up their
energy on angry destruc-
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DAILY PILOT
Tbe largest of trus sum-
rn er ' :s diSturbanci!s OC·
curred in Cleveland, where
10 pensonis died in five days
of racial v!oleDC€ touched
off by a black netionili'st
looting, burning and sftiping
that took pLace in early
August while the Republican
National Convention was in
progress at Miami Beach.
\Vilh some coos cuoos
exceptions, btg city lice!----------'==========~~~ tiveness.
departments have lea ed a
lot about riot control
No one was killed in the
Chicago disorders ac-
companying the Democratic
National. Convention. The
allcago troubles did not fall
into the category of racfal
rioting, in any case, since
they hwolved a c l a s h
between mostly white anti-
war demonstrators a n d
police. Chicago's b 1 a ck
n e i ghborhoods remained
qufet throughout.
ques during ttie year.
They have learned ~e im-
portance of a balanced
response -getting 1 there
quickly with enough fOrce to
quell a pote~tial
disturbance, while avoiding
over-reaction that mii!ht fan
a minor incident into a ma-
jor riot. I
WANING SUPPORT
By far the worst raeial
violellCe of 1968 took place
in the spring, dW"ing the
week of April 4-11, when 42
persons were killed in a na-
tionwide wave of rioting.that
Waning Negro supptrt for
riots iS reflected in a survey
conducted in the black com-
munities of 15 cities Qy the
University of Michigan's
In s titute for S0cia1
Research. Nearly hall of the
respondents felt that past nots bad been helpful to the
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642-9742
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LOSED SUNDAY
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SEE YOUR DEALER NOW! ..
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. ..... 11 lllptrt ..
rlr~ 1111 p1l1t
• · Designs on black'or
on light b•ckground
SAVE Sl'
5''
111111' 1li111•11·
lrH prllt •lo1111I.
• ... , roll·up slHvos
• 75% oombod cotton
and 25~ polyostir
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•
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II
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Y1l11rl1 •1r111t11
dork 1111 prlre•I
• lacy wrought iron
and spun br111 cornho
• In fanciful design
SAVE 4 96
1999
II&. 24.tS
(_ ··-.
M11'~.r11•io11d
foot a1w sorksl
• Absi rbon! cotton
• HHlto loo terry
SAVE 60c
3ra.l 19
• Zip comp.,tmenl1 ., ,, Qt. 7.ff
• Elegant •«NIOl'J '" . ._ ___ __, • W•rr'ft. tUft"Y colors • Poworod by battery
• Neat stay·up tof,s IE&. J/1.7'
•Whir•· block rov,.13._ ___ __,
SATURl'A Y OIUY ~
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• ,#
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• Coller and cuffs
Lycra• reinforced
• I oo•/• cotton knit is
w11h1bla1 111y-c1r•
• Seven great colors
•· Si11s for all men
SAH 111
118
IH. 2.ff
SATURDAY ONLY!
\ c .. p1d Sl111t111
,1111•11 IJp1wrlt11
• Weighs o•ly I O·lbs.
• AD "pro" fe1tur11
' &Net for 1tud1nh
• Pic1 or Ellt1 type
SAVE 10 10
H&. 54.H
SATURDAY ONlY!
•
SATURDAY ONLY!
dura:fresh'
Our comfortable ·full or
twin size sleeping sets'
.•
SA TUR DAY ONLY!
' .
Sltl 2.99 II ., .... fr••
11/Jxl y," 4,,
stael
fr1me on
Cl!lf•rs. .11•~ 7.H
SAVE b0 .07
• Choice of 612-coil innerspring or 7" polyurothtn• fotm
mattress with m1tchin9 ltox spring_ ••• one low 111• prJ11
219.95 ROYAL QUEEN MATTRESS a·SPIUN& .... 14t,JI
269.951\0YAL KING MATTRESS, 2 SPRINGS ••• ; ltt.11
9ft!fo1 7',.u..sm srr
••• Ut.tS
.. SATURDAY ONLY!
. 22 11llhr lt11
rlfl1 111trl4111I
• Hi .. sp11d: lubric1t1d
• Coated wi~ copper
• 50 in box; limit 10
boxes per customer II&. lk IOX
SATURDAY ONLY!
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D111•l1111• ... • • pl1tl11• , ... .,,
•
• Light, flet ta store
• L1rg1 work platform
• Room to stand, turn
• Safe, won't tip over
a•~
.... 10.ff
SATURDAY ONLY!
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SATURDAY ONLY!
W•rds ca11plete 10-gallon
aqilarl111 outfit 01 special!
• t,utomatic heater~
lh1rmo1tat: filter
SAVE 10.10
•1Pump end food 1488 °J· Add fish end woler
'EG. 59c TROPICAL
fl SH NOW ...... 25c ea. IE&. 24.11
SATURDAY ONLY!
S•arl woo4 Ira••
•1dld11 11•11111
• Decorator frame is
of simulated wood
• Big I 4x24" mirror
• Recessed styling
SAVE l .11
II&. II.ff
SA TUR DAY ONLY!
,SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL 9-SUNDAY-11 A,,M. 0 5 P.M.
HUIJllGTON BEACH s:: ::::: ~~:!· PHOIE 1·4. 92-6611
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• DAILY "lOT 0
Couniy"s Moving Day Neighbors Objecting
Courts, Jail Take lJt.ier New Quarters
SANTA ANA -'lbe big ~ ....,.M \lb. whole
,.... for C....11 o(IJce1 trek, it JD!&l>t ., well be
Ana.heim's Met .roport Under Fife
bellJu am weolttDd 11 mlleo. I
empioyel _.. lo occupy Prank Yowic di: Bulldlnc
the -fll mlllloe Jail aDd Service oil~ \119s ten.
ollerUl'1 bt1dquonor1 aDd taUve oc:!1'dUle illter the
tb.t new '11 mlllJoa lherllfa~move.AU
courlhA 1~; J olbera are "" tor weuendk· ~-Ill_.,. hos too.
been oet lot Oct. 30 and the Oct. 19 -• !lllerllt'1 ~· ~ cetomod'" w1ll lab llld dark room ~
be In Jillllllr)'. la the JUND-Nov. 2 -er.ng, County
Umt tilt move ii on. Jail. prlaonm. · l,
The 1heri11' 1 ad· Nov. 16 -Diatrkl .it-
-.. 11111 leads the lorney'a olllct, !IJllly oup-
way tbla weekend. port fadltita, p u b 11 c
Io molt caees the mOTe defender and the Grand
amowrta lo a lbree lo lour· Jury. '
block migration but to the Nov. 23 -Ve J e r a a a Bulldinc Servl<ee Deptrt-service center, m~ 1lx ment wbidl ls retpO!IOible munlctpol courta llld court
clert1.
Nov. 30-Q>unty clerk, 19
superJor courts, court ad·
nWliltrator and court "-· Dec. 7 -Exira equipment
lot llt«ar•. equipment Ill·
volvt• some .25)000 boob
and 1,000 employea.
Ftdl£tiu V9Ct.ted a r e
being lf•bbed by olll<r
over<rowded deparbneott
which bave oo new bulldln&•
to n:iove to. Building
Setvlcea and planning
departments will abaH the
former lheriff'a offices.
The old jail doee not nt In-
lo tho future picture. It will
either be torn down or
,...,,odeled.
For The Record
Kidnaper
Given
Sentence
GARDEN GROVE -The
central figure in a lddmp
and attempted rape which
involVed a wild police ch&Be
through Garden G r o v e
streets last June 9 was
... m ~· M., Mf~·"· .. ~_!I!._. & CnlJI te-~ •1,111u1 """ llHa "' ll:fllllltrt CMr• ....... U(/ '· -~c1ttdt. aen •n..~ to state prison for
JI.-""'-. J1-.11nt A1111 ,,.,.nn vi. Dorllld T. Ll~ s.,. Trtvir1111n n •-L" 1-25 years Thursday by
Men" Tr111t~" S H-n1 T. ,,.,.,"""' "Auror1 JI.. Milllm r:,a:.olT~:~~i~si:;r.:m-~cn. uperior Judge Howard C.
c111111 J. Snow. • minor, 11c. v• vi. HerJ'R~, Dtor11w, Hfd't, Cameron.
GHffn, '" s-• a'OMI ~n. ic: • ., 011"" Eldti... ..., DtMlt Dl>I"" P~••n Akfli'n n L111r11n1 ,,,,..,,. Jesus Ramirez, 23, of San· J!~r~·--'It W1ltu .. _ t':!:i.z.\:r:~;nld c~~~. ta Ana, wa.<! convicted by 8
J<N GiwM ..._, ...., Rolll MM 81k1r " Juanll9 Mn MACLMrflo i.ti','ui, j ,,.,.,,...,,.. """ ttewten n MldlH• c,.... com1111. ury in Cameron's court last Whltrt +ftotwflll ~ Glor:.C,t,:n KMnl'lorl 'I• •-Id ll. th
Ell111bltll J1~ lortlZ n Wlllllm H. ~?J'~ Lu'I ~:,11~")..~.!-:_1111 DlOD of Jcid..Dliping and At·
o!:'.:' L.. PIWllT VI CltMY GeM Ad111 -;.;;;"t.'\t:W:C~ Vt fWifl. \1:11nc.1. tempting to forcibly rape • 2.1:.'l: ~-. 'T:tU~ ":. 'l~: ~-~tiU.~ is-J:::_..., 0, H.,..,,., " o.tald •· 11.~"~ "'"""' "' JOf!IWlll w. year~ld Midway city
Kan...,., 01v ~-Jrilnt vi. ~u,. IJ:"'.J: housewife who bad driven to Mirr l.Ot.llM W111Uir v1 lloblrt W..,._ IE n W1lllce Cl tJ Wt"-" c ~ · ' "' •ne a Stanton factory to pick up ~nJ°"" Dl.IM1n "' J~ ... ., °Woe;;;r: L. Wood!IM "' Mlr1'tr c. her brother.
L1try1H1'.:,er1....,.,. "' c-..111 M. ·~"'..,',.,... Lewis "' J1dl DIMll •r11 Ramf'rez' com--'an in ._ e .... trl"!' 1:r,: Jiit!-n. R1111111d i--""-~~ L. 01om11tr , "' 11:-ld T=..,., ,_ the kidnap -·~-. -· "'""'""' Min:e, IY """"""" 'It Ntncv L'(fltl _,.lll'l)U"l:O ~ ,_,.,
P1u1lne ll!:v1nt111,. Mfirl9 'Toth 'It 81rtNrt SW ~rlltt "' 01911 AU1n M. Laurent, 31, of Santa
L•1lo Toti\ wffi,!'rlllU CON\le M. Ywbl vt Rlch.lrd Fet"l'll~ .Jm;: Dlvld M!lltr YI Pe11VV Ruth Ana, W8.S killed io the CJ'ruh
By JACK 'BROBACK °' -.. ., ,. l"'9
ANAHEIM -Anebelm'1
pi<>poeed 17,5 m 11t1 on
metroport Ilffr A a g e I
Stadium wu attacked fr""I
all all(les Thumlay at a
Fedora! Aviation Ad·
mlnlstr.UOn btarlllg I n
Or&llf•· . or .. ,. Mayor Don Smith
cbaried that Anabetm btd
not In/armed 111 nelthbon
u to Ill lirpoti plan. He
lurt.bw objected oo crounda
of ooile, ~ and
ecanom1c1.
Allo attacking was
Marlne Lt. Col 011)' Ba<!Ctr,
tPelklni !<Jr El Toro Merllle
Co,,,. Air Slatton, Slllta
Ana Marine Corps !Jr
Facility ond Los Alamitos
Naval Station. He contended
that tbe metroport would
overload an already
overcrowded air tr a ff I c
area.
The meeting drew such a
lar1e crowd that it wa1
moved from tbe Oranie City
1-Iall council chambers to the
El Modena llllh School
auditorium. An eaitlmat.ed
3lO attended.
The FAA bas authority to
irant air opace foe fll&lll
plllterna and a dedlioo is
Explorers
To Learn
Of Sheriffs
dQ Yortwi SN"-" A. McL1110f\ll" 'It M1rUv" J Of ~-O&f foll-'-• "• 1~ Jodv Wilton V1 ~v!11 "· Wiison McL111wlllln ' "1JC u"""6 UJ IN" OR 111.rGE Bny1 from Ylr1rn11 Lft H•mlllo11 ... Dwlvht R111!1 M. 1'[1• ... Wllll\m R01>41rt PYlt IU'I -H1nrv H1m1tton Et'.!\ti fi',~111n1 l•he ... M•rv m.Ue--per-hout chase which the Orange County Sheriff'• -~~-· ~lkln YI ~•thryne tell M1;:J: r .. ~tn1 ... Gftll-11 L1r1er ended in Bue.na Park. department, Orange and
R*rf N. M•nklna "' Mlfle E. "'"" H•'-" J-,.ta'Pf',l:lcl:'Wt w. Acton l.Alurent was a paroled Tustin police departments
11.1"' '""~ ._.. law enforcement Explorer E1~7~:v JoAM Jo11., ¥1 1.ew111nc1 0~1~11 M1r.tteu YI Geo,.1 ;., murderer who waa involved post.a wtll get' a tute of wbat
Sr\1"'1 I(. Cl••Jler VI 'Tommy 0. Wiiii• Mel Plthn VI Wllllem l'l'IYI~ in the 1956 l 1 di pS t j Ck_ {t'I Ui:e to be 8 deputy abe:r-
CllPl>tf ttr Pi11111 .. .ad IJ ,. which b 1U ~·· k d DEA'J'B NOT ICES 11:~r1 L .. c • ..,..., v. L•~ L" 1rr1 J. Gr1m1111w _, Rotiert 'T•~lor m'""'er case U1 e u...ai wee ID •
t•rMv onm1111w and another were convicted The trainlng aessloo at the
l11bll He'rn.ndlz ... Plllll•· HtrN1nd11 co-.. J1mn Cr.It~•" 'II P1tr1c11 s·~-Tr·'-"'• A ...... v GUERTI!"I . T,.....or w. Pltll' ... P•-J, Plett """ C....,hln or the stabbing death o! an IU:IU!.. _._.. c-~
DllM Vlvl'..n 01/t'111n ...... ». ol no ,,,.,.., L• l!Utkl VI J1nM1S lllk• Je-.. n_~I, H•IQ!lllcti ......... A, lftldli. 1n Orange wiB be sponsored
Po1 .... 1t11, car-11t1 Mtr, Ott. o1 M. J"'"''" Miiis vs 1v1n Diii Mlll1 .... elderly El Modena 6e?'Vice b th 1.. ~ .-• .-dHtll, s..t. 11. lutvlYlll by lw•bend, CllO M. L111dldl VI H..iry G. L1udlck IMrv Kelllerllll 'Ti.r ...... VI !!:at.rt E6-f e &&W 9ua~ r-
Frtnll o. Guerttn1 ••""'• w1111W 11:·~-E. o.vt-• v• Menr.111 w1n1 'Tltmev station operator. of the Sheriff'•~• nt
Shttdon. Sr., 51" Dle9o1 brotlltrl, c.vt~ JO¥C• J. P'Plnt.r vs Llltlwr G. P'll..,N!r ETnl--po... th W1t11c1 Sheldon. Jr., Conccinl1 DDft. Glenclll lffulon C.rnpbtn 'It Kll'IM!tl PClnllt!y L" l-11 'It A. W1yne L-lt -r """'" e up e
•Id ~ L_...llw, W1Ml ... 1on1 Edwt ... C.#!NeW senior divisiOll in the Boy
R!IUll* Shttdlln,. Rtcld1 .... ''" .... ,,,....... J"" Drmbr(1$11;• "' ••Y -="i·re "'alls New County Scouts of Am-'~a. Welllc., L9blRllll.. Ortoc1111 ,.,... 1bllfS, J1n'W't Oom~• ... " ~~ 11r111r1 GIM, 1:1 1at1r1rtt.-. ee11t .• 1r.c1 w•~ .. 11r~ Marie Hlflltr v. DOutlu 'lbe younc • prospective
Joew M-. C•rmkl'INI, c111t. C1s1 Mll111r, Jr. KIN!tl..,w a.ari Pl 0 11lawmen" • ...111 -..-,_ lull ~ .... !wMY, 11 AM., P'Klflc L" ·ufl:I Elrt ThOmlM 1M Ywflll 1:4 l.m. 'Tlwrtd1y, '"9Cllcel 11d, 1"2:11 ant pens wm ••r-• m
Vltw C"-1. lnN!mient, P'1tlfk View 'Theomtorl • ••rtl•tt, "''· I untform to the training
Mtmorlll P•r1r.. Dlreclld by ••Ill Miry L• P'u"'"9M" VI Ju1fll!O ,..... ..... •..ell academy Friday •--'-
Mar1\ltl1'V, lS1Q E. coeit H~Y. -·• "''NI''""'' sr. 11 :ss 1.m. 'T1111rue,, pUbllc 1u111, .. ,.'AliEIM Warner· and ~-• -e1r ,~..:,-111ed• C~ ftl Mar. Dorinm M. lff":P"' n E,...._ W. aimer ol 81y •fllll .. nrly ,,.,.,_ l'W.'I .,._. ~ ""' ......u:t.1
SIMMONS ,,.,."";!';:, G. 1...1.,, .,. 11:.,.., 1'_ .,_,, •• w.1n11 .. .., Lambert Pharmaceutlcal colD"se wtth. r~o and code
Mmi.rt D. SlmmSll, .... "· f/I 1:5'2 N•rw:r L)'ll" Mlllnl WI At11 L" 6:1t p.m, Thlllldly, lrtah fir., fltn-Comnany !mnally ,_ned a ,,,_.atioo. Slnllo Al\I Av1., C.11 .VO... Dllt II Mllonl "" sd!OOI r~ -~ "1"-
,,_lh, mt. is . .,,,,...,._ "'wtrt. Mrt. c11e,.,.,... v. """' "' Leon••d J. Avn 2::1-1 1.m. Fr1c111v, 11!\l(f\ir1 f!f"I, "41 major 11ew manufaoturtog-After reveille Saturday
expected In :ID day1. II (V.uo.I TU. 00 end Lan· 'l'bo counly'il' 111n>Ott ltlldJ
Anaheim C<llllinut1 wlllt lbt ding) and a comblnalloll ol allows !arCtr erafl In UM a
al.rl>ort plan the S t a t e1 ~th:=,• ,!lw:_o l'.J~'·:__..., ___ m~~~;.,..,..,;_ __ _,
Division o l Aeronautlcslr ,
must approve constn&Ction H · h H I 0 Se . on tho alto and Pub~c 19 O y ay rv1ces
Ulllit!e• COmmlsllon must
apptDvt airline lfrvlct. TEMPLE SHARON
Mrs. Lola BU'ke o f
.. .... .. . ..
Orqe representtnc an .c·
Uve cit!.-lll'OUP oppose.I
to the alrport polnlod tn the
~Y huard lo homu,
schools llld Wlltutlons aod
lbt nota. f.ct<r.
The Con,•rvefiv• Synagogue for fht
Entire Harbor Art•
617 WEST HAMILTON, COSTA MESA
646-5552
Anaheim hal elllniated
Chat Within fiw yeara there
would be 5,000 operaUom a
montb out Of the loclllty.
All Jtwllh famllles are lnvtted to partklpate in truly ~Olb~~ Serv1,cet at $15 per penon• Sttvices 1 Ntdn-Yam Klpp.4'--Y't&kor
The city bu taktn a
limlted --tn th• future uses of the airport
llatiDg that It WOUid be
capable of luppor1jng on\y
STOL (Short Take Off and
Landing) and VTOL
SPECIAL!
STUDIO DISCOUNT
PORTRAIT
YOUR CHOICE OF
8" X 10" OR 11" X 14"
BLACK AND WHITE
Regula rly $8.95 Value
,., ... ,., .. ,,.,ii ...... u .............
R.bor '••I Dubl11
C.11tw M1r ... h1 K•h11
1"4 the T11t1pl1 S!r.er111 Choir
R1t1rv1 Yfut 11•h tff1y-111tl11t It "'"ltff
•Cfll~ ~ I)· P'•ll
.. 1rr11n11111 ,,.... ...... .., """-..me..
..... M ,_ Ptw., ~ ..._ _,
~............ .
•
c
By PERSONALITY PIN UPS
GLENDALE, CALIFORNIA
A4cUtto.lll plctllNS ~ Me• 9'91tf"
Hfw•.,..Mlprlc9 HynwWi ..,... ~ ..... For
Only
NO SERVICE CHAROI
FRI., SAT., SUN.
Sept. 20, 21-11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
S8'·• Sept. 22-12 noon to 5 p.m.
•
ONLY AT MAltKIT BASKET
FAMILY GROUPS ••• 99c
EXTRA EACH rlRSO-
LlMITED ONE SPECIAL
PER FAMILY
Hlf'btrt D. lf.mrntMI "'"' dtuthlln. Solt!ll ... ,.,..,. KllllV VI 81Ull ll:IY Ulh St., "-'· IS morning, 1llo boys will be
MT•. v1,,,1ni. °""'"' Ml'"I.. Merv Me,.. KtUey, tt 11 NtwPlf'f l•dl distribution complex here 7742 E"I H ti I Bt h 11n. s.nr. .,,...,., •1111 Ml'"I. Mlrt~ Clltlldt wrnl•m Llnclttr ..,1 Judllll 2:2' 1.m. 'Thvrldi v, tri•ti 11111, .11e, Monda put through their paces by "'nger, un ng on IC
Mllllr, So. C.nill1111. Grtvellde ""'left, M<irltne Llndl11 · "'-" Tu•lln •1111 lllnr1ldt •lr"t• Y· five regula;r v o 1 u D tee ril~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~~~~ Mondly, II AM. H•rbor ll•I MlfMrltl Slndrt Lee Wlllll 'It LIWl'"lnte Rab-Cllt• ar...., The plant, open •Ince ,.,,.._ Dll'IC!ld .,,. e1n anlldW1\I' ert w1t11r. 10:21 1.m. 'Thuf"ldey, ur 11.-.. Ghl•r SherU!'1 deputies who will Mor1U1rv, 110 1raHw1y, C•lt Mui. Mllril D. OdlOI vi. ia1v~ o. 0ci-1nc1 w.11111111hln spring, is p r o d u c i n I atart them off with phyeical REED L11ll1 J. lli1m1n!Clll etc. vt Vklci.r S:4 •·'"·• 1•1• •l1rn1, 11111 Sl1'ill 11111 Lis•-~-W th! fltne 0r11e •· 11.-. ...,. a111011t•, c~ o. s1r.11n1cti, tic. P'IKtntll AVlllUI ....awe Antiseptic. t n 11 training lolloJP9(1 by
d.i Mir. D•i. -ftltth, '""· 11.. .. ,.. Ftrn H. Astltlv Ptriltr ~ Chltlll A. Pilot v1·s1t-• a few months, a production drl.lllng and inspectl.QD, an
vivid .,,. wlft, frsnc" M. "'"· ti P'ir1<11' .,. ~'--ta le film -~ 1111 11crne1 ._, Ooneld w .. N-..t• l!Unbtlll Ann winter .v• H1rold Mubert line to make Certs, candy· ~ C coun11e, a · a.n1
eMd'I, •M 1tllblrt L. ••· u,1111111' winttr di!CUSsion period about law
4w1111 ..... Mn. MM'W•'"" k. Htetttt. Hiney o.v11 S1<•11Y v1 P'11riu Jo.-'":ic..-,,. ~~"=" •flh: breath mints, and Ro)a.lds, nf
Ar'<-11111 11"9!'. IM•le .... """· Ai-..n S11:111Y 1r1C1e f.:1 .,,., or 0t., .., .......... :.-1 _,_._ will e orcement careers, patrol "•'"°"' four orin6chllrd1W1 Md ,_ JUN Mlrl9 ~ "' ,,...,...in v1,..n :r.nll1tloftl o1 .t !Ml .... if, ""~""' uw1~, be in procedures, defense tactics •'""'"'nctchlldl'tft. wn Clll'l'lll'llndtr Mc:Gte l!J"11';.f'*L.....,~ m•y uu · "'""'ration. and -~--In ren••-' o1 ICnl.tlb T-llr, Rl'nnW.1 cba~ 0.11 Cllrilllrwi lllKlt VI Mld!lll 1t1y _____ ...;:._;;;;;:IL~Y_;•~l~L:.::_· __ ~..:._·_;_;:::_ _______ _:=:..:u:=m::.~=...!:=-~u:::., --
111' ............, o1 lll...,.lde R..r.rv Club1 llldr.
"-' l)ftdl Cltf Collflcllll'lln for • I ,.,,.r .... ''""""'-VI lus•" M. ,.,..
,_l'"I, •nd ............ ~ ol ~ 'llftUlo
_, lloldl fnm 1Mi f1I 1Nl. Gr•-£....,. ltllltl G«la "' E•l'fllll Gfflc•
11de llf"'fkn wm i.. PMMI Slturde,, Tl>omti Ervlft Smith "' Emme Ml,..
!. PM. PKlf"lc V11W Mtrnc!'\11 P't r'll, lorll Smltll
wtltl Dr. 1'!11111 o, Murrtr atfklltlnt. Do!\11 June M.lart VI J11:1yrnond Atl-
F1mt1Y n<lll'mtl ThoH wllhl.,. 1'D t11ony M1ctr1
ll'IP.• -Ill mntrlW!I ... , PllllH Loi.Ille V, Cpy 'It £""""°" \-CoY
canll'IWN '° 1'111 Ol"ll!IJI Cau11ty Chi\. Lind• I . """""'°" YI Jt;m.,1·-.:·
dmw H•Pllll. Olnctld b"!' P•dllc Frln'll'iorl Vllw Morlll•rv. Ptul e. COii ...... VI L• Ju•:uM~
BROTHERTON S11Yll M..Jj.o/'rftl vs C1rlof • <>-1
Hllln Merle Wlllol'I 'It 1(911 P1ul Mlrlt I~ ol Clll• Mffl. Sur· Wiiton
vl'lld ., Mlft, l"rtnet.I Muehllf, J•nli""'Ktt•n Wlcktr VI K..iMlll ll:IY. ai.~ Arnoldi 11111'1. Aflfll •~ rnona Wldt1r
trton •nd P.ullne Cl'MIPI ..... •-rv. C.rld•d Glr-4:11 VI l!:lto. G1rcll
Frld1y, ' PM. ·-llm Ml••· S.l\fr• "'"""' L .. V•" Glld•r VI CltlletlM d1v, I AM, btllll et St. Jmc:~lll'l'I Su• Vin G!Jfl~r
C1thollc Cl\urcti., C•tl Miii. D!rtct-Pitr'kll ""n Yin 1111num "' """
Id by ,.ttlt l"1ml1Y Colon1tl 1"uMr11 lll•Y!llllfld V•n llttrsum, el 11
H~. A' • 'N Eml!y Cieri< "' W!lll1m J. (11'1{ ~ F1ortnc1 11:. 01"1111 vs L•rtT a.
1t.i1., M1rl1 Alli n. 11'2 Wlldwellll Cf".,
Hunllnt}Cln IHCh. lnf•nt dl\lllhNr ol
Mr. 11if Mn. 'Thllmlt Alll"' DtN ol
dt•tll, *'· If, Gr1 ..... ldt ~. Frlclllv, tllllel'. l PM, Golld SIMllltnl
(-'try, Dl,_11111 by SmHM Meir>
"'""''"
BALTZ MORTUAlllES
Corona de! Mar OR Ul5I
COiia M•n Ml f.Wf
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Bre1dway, Celtl Meu
LI J.IGS
DILDAY BROTHERS
Rullnflo• Val1•7
Mortl.111
l'ltll Btadl BIYll.
Rutlestu Beadl
IU-7771
PACIFIC VIEl'I
MEMOJUAl. PAR!t
Cemttery • _,,
°""' -Padlle Vl<1r Drift
Nwport -· Cdlonla -PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL nnmw.
HOME
"'1 Bolal A•t.
WetlmluCtt mma
llMITll'S MORTVART
a7Mall Ill.
&-.-Btadl
ui:..-
WE8TQ.lfT MORTVAllY
UllE. l~ &a., Ctlta Mesa
' -
••t••
01111111
k1lfllftn """''" MCI VI llus .. tJ OW.n MM
lMllTI JIM 0ttw vs D1vld JOfflllh
°"M Sii~ Ann lewis 'It WUll1m Hlfll'Y
Lewi•• Jr.
L1111ll V. S~ll:•r 'It HlrrllOll '· Sftoln'llklf, Jr. I
l"lortr.n •• Wllltllr, 1tc. "' ll•Y I . -· "'-'"'"' I/. HOlllnd vt Eotwenl L. ~ .... E..._,. Dir ... ~ '11 Al11'"11f
Jehn l"tlwMfl
Jl'"'loY """ ~ l!:lll'll!r J, S.1111
MlrHr1tl 1 . ,._,. "' l',.nci. 0. ,_,
Htlln D. Al'H VI ltlchlnl Alboo
MIN A. Mll'lftl 'It V•llntl,.. MIMI
Div orces
WA UHOUSE 0''"''"
........... c.r,tt
Spanlah OU.• W ..... t ""1<
Dlnlnr S.I 48" tablt ' dWnl
$191.DO Stt R19: '241.00
__ ... '4. ........
'-~-• • J. J. I NICllfttOCIOI
.... , •1lCH IT .. N-L <--.. ........... ..,,....,
MM40t
RHNCHO CBUf DllNIB
Wt I<l.Y ALMANAC .
mttnt••m•••'l•o:••••ITTVTTn'n'l~tn-•~~ ...
~~ 'Keekend September 2111-22
.lrtists'Weelrend .t '
Gutting Bone
Bzhlbltlon
•llllJ -.,_ Quarter Bone · Show!
lalt laakad Septambar 11119
ICIJJbri Unr • t-1 Clllic Iara In .....
lpba11Ilqlltiia1n
Rancho California's Plaza has
something for everyone I There're
horsell and ponies to rent, miles
of bridle trails, picnic grounds,
and unique gift shop!!. The kids
can fish in the fishin' hole and
play in the hay house. You and
tte family will enjoy touring the
1odern dairy farms, ranches
and ranchitos on our 87,500 acres
of land!
·anNC~O C~UfORNIH
Ntwpoit _.
ch1\r, '"•"•n, tne..
JI 16 Newpott l~l1v1rJ
17141 671·0t00
'"!' J-c.,r-
11n Y1t1a 1111.
JJllZ V•ll• lte•lll ""·2t••
"""llttl• ....... H..-Mw V•fbwt ...
1171 I l 11&fl a.,1 • .,,,..
17141 Ml-4411
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"7,:;;::::;::'.::·· ... ~~~~~~~· ........ ~ .... ~'"''"',..., ......................... .,,,,..., .............. """"'ii'~"1 .. ,.!"""'"'! ...... 1!11!1!11!11111ll!ll! .... llllllllllllll!!llllllllllll ...... 1111-.111111 11 -• '"' • -o .... ,. ·'~ -,~ ... ,__..,. •,.__.: ....... ~ .. 'e '"', •.,"' 0 , ~ "'
\j
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'•
l0 GAILY P!lOT
:Here's How to· Tell Where
• By SYLVIA 1'0llTER
u ,...,. • \)'lliu1 -
earner ln Ile U. S., your
CfOH weetl:f umlnp -now 111' lo an· a!Hlme blgb
tlllll.10 a fUU $13.lS a week
...... ll1an )<>Ir POI' In
September 1965, wb•n the
lscatatloo of the Vietnam
war rot under way.
But do >'Ill know bow
• much of thb pay gain II
"real" -assuming you
have three depeDdellll? To
traMlate, do you know how
much of th.is $13.18 ts leU in
actual purcb.asing power
after you have deducted
Social Security and federal
income taxes and made ad·
justmenta lor-big!ler llvq
costs?
A MERE 23c a week.
U you're a typical factOf'Y
worker in manufacturing,
your gross weekly pay is up
to a record $12'l.10, a full
$14.27 a week above Sep-
tember 1965.
But assuming again that
yours Is a lamily of. four, do
you know bow you stand in
terms of "real" pay, mean-
in" after deductions for
tederal income and Social
Security taxes and ad-
justments for rising prices?
YOUR REAL pay is ac·
1ually down 63e a week.
At the end of this column,
you'll tind a cunpilation
prepared for me by the
Bureau of Laber Statistics
which !bowl what groups
are ahead iD .. real" pay,
-i. behind end by bow mtldb.
The compilat:ioo t e e r 11
apart the overall dollar
figures on pay increases
wtdctJ, CM, hi a period of ae-
colenllDC lnll.aUoa m:ul<
much mere tblm l b e y
rev.al
IT DISCLOSES ft>e •mot
to -... 19116-417-611 ...
o.tlon bu beeo -Is eroding the apparent rise in
~· Githough It doesn't
stMe It directly, it
doarnlltizes bow pitllully tar
behind It ... family living
on • rlJrldJy set or corn-pe.rat.lv-efy set income, the
imlividual llvlag on Social
Security or a private
penslon or savings invested
in ft.xed·lnc<me securities. nas sort oe oompD.aUoc is
dynamite et any l!m<. It
coul<I be of exploclve Im·
port.ranee in this bi t t e r
presidential elect.i<ll year.
WBO)S AHEAD the most?
The worker in constn.:tion,
The rise ln bi.! wages has
been et a pace vmi.dl dwarfs
Ute increase in bis taxes and
living costs. His groos week·
ly Meck is up $21.87 in three
years fl"om $138.75 to
Sl67.62. His, real net open·
dla!ble eamin~, asmming
three de;>ende.nts, are up
from $111.73 to $116.95. l;le is
abeai J>y $5.22 ia week, an
indlaputable gain on the liv·
ing standard ladder.
The explanation tor this
erosion is on the front pages
every day:· the ·Vietnam
war. When piled on top of an
already bocming economy,
it W83 simply too much.
The superb bal,ance
betwet:n wage and price in·
creases disappeared, priee9
started to zomn, wages
started to N11ge up, 1be
leapfrog w.as on .00 it's still
Olds' New Look
For 1969 Oldsmobile has simplified its medium price
class lineup. All 88's this year will be known as
Delta 88's and will include this newly created top-
of-tbe-line Delta 88 Royale. The new hardtop coupe
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
l Rl th frull cakr 5 Pudding
ing1rditnl
• Onr of
mythologic1I
twosome
14 EQYPl. p11mtv1I
drily
15 Atrrgalion
of fac t
l!i Al>rasivt
ma\rrial
17 Unrrstrainrd
ltVtlry
18 Cur!lno team
19 Kind of
miltch
20 Narr1td m" .!2 Fi ne·gra111td
1911~ous rock
23 lcr crtam -
24 Kind of
labrlc 25 ll;iking no
Ulttfilnte
28 Kind ol
Stifling vapor:
2 words :z lnordinatt stll-estttr.'I 13 Llrtaphyslcal tn\1\y
:>4 Accomplice
35 Liturgy
;i. Presidln9
officer's impltmrnt
)1 Kind cl
musical composition
JS Set I Down
1
"
"
" ...
' '
• • ,,
J
39 Protecltd
with a lrvtt
40 Btfuddlrd
41 Up---:
2 words
43 Frrnch rrsort 44 Constintly
45 Plitt in
studied attitud e
4!i Canad1i.n
island
49 Otprlvrs or
slrrngth
53Notina whisper
54 Ort of
L1br1dor
55 Exclamation
or Pilln 5£i Narrowly
rts!litled 57 Wi!d plgt'on
58 lnntr:
Prefix
59 Rtgardrd wiU1
hostility
60 Frighttntd
61 Ftlint
sound
DOWN
l Biting
1tmart
2 Fr. girl
fritnd
3 Btiu~flt
4 Co before
5 syeclalty c Hayes
illld Jtromt
•-bhlt
7 Fellow
I Tttt
CJ Dlsflgurtd
• '
10 Pleasantly
diverted
11 lsolattd
hill
12 U.S.S.1'.
city
13 \'lord ht:ird
lrtqu,ntly
in U.N . 21 Compltttd
22 Wanting
novelty 24 Put SOM~
thin'1 tn tht
Inside of
2' 5rn1U herring
26 ·-confetti:
A rock
27 Easlly nued
zg Atluator
29 Fornt>
JO lnd11n ·com
Jl Convtrs1·
lion al
str1taotm s 33 Dttlartr
in bridge
36 Pr&stnttd
IS I glfl
9/20/hB
37 Uuslcal
composllion:
2 words
31 Kind of hi9hway
40 WW II
ai1craft
carrier
42 Deny
43 t.11dt up
45 Vtrlly
cottttlness
46 "Art of
Fugue"
eompostt
47 ·-brtve:
Musical , ......
41 Ltnglh un it
41 Bird 'o Thing In
'"'f"' hat moon
51 Outsldt:
Comb. font
52 Ostentation
54 llounlaln
ol Asia
llinor
I "' " n "
• . ..
has its own distinctive features and markings and
comes with vinyl top as standard equipment. Olds-
mobile line goes on sale Sept. 26.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPJ)
- A Southern Pacific
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
No Admission CMrge
A.11 l11tfHlfCttff1 .. Ille .... IC ,. ... _llfeh ef lll'"'ltitt hi c.,..
,.,..... stM .... a-.. M•tti1•l''11'"' .. c.....,._, IMft, l•llilll11t
• '-• AIMc'-t ..... 11'9~ ...... ~ ........... ..
........,, .. •4 .......... ,_,. .,..1 ...
WM. L O'BRYON , ln•lruclor
htl•Mtlie,......_JM ,., I -i..-w ....... ,, l !ll ,. t 1Jf ,...
..... -.It ....
JlOO ......... °"'9 ....... -
. -
' ' • I • • I s
,.
Thursday's Closing Pric~ -Complete New
,
-:.-~ -----
York Stock Exchange List
•
OAILY PILOT
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PREMIER -Gene Barry, above,-vro-stars on
"Name of the Grune," debuting tonight in color at
8: 30 on Channel 4. Toy Franciosa and Robert Stack
co-star in tlle series of high life, adventure and
workings of a top crime magazine.
TELEVISION VIEWS
'The Outsider'
Lacks Action
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Somethi~ was notice-
ably missing from this week's premiere of NBC-
TV's private eye series, ''The Outsider": violence.
THERE SEEMS little doubt that the antivio-
lence campaign took its toll of the new, one-hour,
Wednesday night show that stars Darren McGevin.
For time and again the experienced viewer could
almost feel the moments where violence would have
,been used under the old system -and where it
will be used again when the heat is off.
ANO WATCHING the Show under these drcum-
stances was enlightening. It was vivid proof of how
a program often relies on a punch in the mouth or
a gun duel as its climax -and how the same show
.can sag when denied the chance to use these easy
~ways out.
Actually, 1'The Outsider" was pleasant enough
in the traditional private eye mold. But I don't think
anybody would deny that it barely got off the
ground in terms of being gripping.
WHAT WE SAW was a basically likeable hero
and format tllat got caught up in small talk. The
characters were pretty rountine. The plot -about
card cheating in a men's club -was interesting
J:>ut not overwhelming. And the wit was ordinary.
These aspects of. a show may be forgotten, or
glossed over, or just serve as transitional material
to reach the final fight. But robbed of the no-think,
k'ick-in-the-teeth climax, suddenly the characters,
plot and dialogue are centrally important -more
than usual in weekly ~video aeries -and one sees
them exactly as Uley are.
. NO ONE of any intelligence regards the basic
quality level of most television series as very high.
.But it is silly to blame the problem on writers, act-
ors, producers, directors or network executives. The
problem i5 simply there is too much television. No
one can grind out superior stories for show after
show, week after week.
Thus was the debut of "The Outsider" victimiz-
.ed by the anti.violence crusade. And other shows
will be similarly affected, and many of them will
not be as basically likeable as "The Outsider",
and will suffer acconlingly, especially thooe without
as amiable a leading man as McGavin.
DON'T EXPECT hearts and !lowers in every
action series, however. There will be "motivated''
violence in a number of shows -and of course
truly dramatic showdowns in violent terms.are just-
ified if properly motivated. It is unnecessary to go
again into the classics of literature that are full of
violence.
The television showdown, however, will come
when the shows that are downplaying violence are
perhaps hit hard by tbe early-season ratings -the
ones ttiat make the difference in whether they st.ay
on or go off the air.
WE KNOW that unmotivated violence is going
to gradually be brought back on the air in large-
scale terms when things cool down. But the ratings
-and the millions of doUars at stake for all net-
\\•o rk s -may cause turnabouts quicker than ex-
pected, and a reshuffling of programs and scenes.
For to wait to long in the shark-eat-shark wor·'
of television ratings may weU mean the few st ati ·
tical points that keep a program on the air. Altru-
ism and brilliant scripts are nice to think about, but
th ev are hard to come by. and we are talking about
cold-blooded world of numbers, dollars, jobs and
corporate stock prices.
Dennis the Menace
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PEANUTS
DR. KILDARE
GORDO
RAP-
LAY·
HOOTA!
SHAMUS! 1s mAr vou? llNLOClr: 7HIEDOOR!
JUDGE PARKER
IF VOU'n 60IN6 TO
Flll'ST TALK. wml VOl«i
FATHER', PON'T
!OTHER c.A.UJN6!'
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
·.
Mun AND JEf'F
I TELLYoU
I GOTA
MOUSE JN
STo~ACHf
MISS PEACH
·-·---
lRA is
BUGGED a'/ MAQC!A,
MllG~IMMJS.!
HE SAYS ..-~i; x 60TMER!:
.MIM-
..
By Charlff M. Schull
'
LET's ~ 'KJJYE
COMPl.fTELl{ LOST
I/OUR MIND!!
HIC-KtN! HIC-Kl!Y! HIC·Kl!V! HOCIC! WIS-K/!V! Fll/S-Kl!Yf POOR UNLOC/t.!
By Ken Bald
CClE THOl?Nf IS HER!. AT nttS
VERY' 1'!Clfo\EHT ttf'S BEING
l' t
l ,,
'· ,
OPfRA'TED OH S'( ONE Of-1
THE COUNTRY'S LEADING
BRAIN SURG!ONS, !
l
I
I
I
By Harold Le DoUJ[
SATURDAY
I I ll.PTEMBCfl' 20
I ~ .. B ..... !>It ..,,_ (C)
f:OO 8 TM .. ~ (C) (60) Jlrl'J 7:00 l'IDllEIJ JlllUI ...... Mio
DIQPhJ. 11r a..; (Cl A tdt11tt .... • II~-... -CCI (30) '°'" " ..... •'"" '" ~•I ... lha: (C) (to) 111111 " xi.. tM. 1Nlr COlll:rl!>•
Sb: O"Cltct; ... """ ..... Ilona -ttit field, wfth • ·-N) 'U-.lott f«l'lf • .lunt AllJ· tlHlltACI ti )IOUfll t(IJdtnt&. '" B 11n... (C) m ••ut: tQ <30l ''tfl·Ol6dll-c...,. ... : "f'ortrtie " r ..
lliddlt:'" T~ Riddllf 1'1'Nltl 1'lvoc ~·" hi thf h Of 81tmu1 and RobiA. 7:l0 s. ... Unlq: ICJ Ed~ ft!""'' """ I ltfltt productd In W0¢1t-&l U. ,_..._ titft wttll Michlpn Stale UnMmt)'.
t~ •· ·f ITf N r N C ..
~ .. , .... --ct) (llO) ............. (C) ·~ • TM "'"' ao. (C) (30) """* "'Nt Tl1111 tit ...... I tGw UcJ (30) (eomld)') '4J -Cltudtt\1 Colbtrl.. 8 (I) Mdttlt's ""' (30) Fr9d M1cMufrty. Slcntnt11at flit: 0 Ufedln U.htc, (C) Wltll Pr•
~ M (t) feSltlf C.1rles L Rulon. lnllructot.
7:mellimcos ...... -(C) m•·· -(Cl
(JO) '"\¥1Hir Cf0Ml1-. 7:.451!J ~ HMrt IC)
11 '"" (C) (3-0} l:<lO~ll!i ~ ,,.,, '"'"'' (C)
·-(C) (30) @ -• (C) cmi,.11•1 1111114 {30) • '*' l1ICJ (C) Mt~ 11111 MOit ti llltbtrf'1: S1ttr•11 Tlrl11trr. "Y1qul
"YOllf bodor tlld Yov." (' tnd "the fnchanltd V1Hlf,•
7:.JO 119 (I) 1\e WIW, Wiid Wlllt CE LM fJtnll .. J Udld
IC) ii>)Wut1111 1dv1t11:11,. apy,. l:lOD9CIJl11111111.,/ .... In-na lbirrln1 Robert Conrad and .., R°i-.rflil
ROIS Mlftill. (II) !~ Ttp c.t (C) 0 NEW SlAIOtll ~ cu,.ml: TM Mita .. II C• ~ (llO) """ "'"""·" " , .. , .. outbr• thr11ttns lo trupl whH ClJ Morrlt: (C) '1'tlt Liit Qui"'
Billy lh.11 C.nnon and •n Aofclll (1dWnturt) · '6' -Tonr RuwlL
fl&lit O'ttf I prlted ~Ofll. @m !stldJt b!llP
Ml I•. -(CJ (60} ........ t:OOl!(i)TM -(Cl " Will ntlrly runs "'1 with CI) Spider M•11 (C)
In ln~ltctlc dl"cuL LI U111r. (C) ~ '"'
D Ult (JJ Off Tt S.. .tile tnunl: mrcl11 JlfQlnm.
(t") ~ "1112111., tht Al)9 Min." II Wtlrra
OMitMM $ Mllrit: "'l'M Cl• W Aron(' (comtdy) '4S-Rob«t Cum· t.15 0 N11l1: "'h' ~ lf'I minis. Liz Seott. 1111111 •ltd.,.,.. (comtdy) 44-G•I
Ill Trd " Conllque..a: (C) (30) Ruutll, Di1111 l.JM, Di1iltl Ru.-r-111 ... (60} Iles.
... I t:•IJQtl())WlcQ I..: (C) r.r. fl!l AFRICA ••. In Color toon •1U with u• •r• _,,, * Stunning ABC Documen· weird dri'ttf'S.
tary -Final 2 holn R~[lli::.,:.";:,!~ ICI
fEllHCJ4!Atrica: (C) Condu· ·~ n.trr. (C) "Ak11~ lion. and "Dart Jotll'lllf." Ill'""' ..... Ill -'""' (Cl
'1a Mllllu r &lrtH• M.-rt ~ JollfM7 tt .. c.atar ""'m Hwl (C) (30} ..... ,am"' ...... -(Cl
~------~ 1 1:30 o a l1J...., ~ (C) c30l 0 ~ .... :'~~ .. • lll-'td•
I ffe]5;.'o1:':S:° 0 look What PLYMOUTH iMd" (westtrn) '57-R1n6olJ>ll y 9-.2o * 11 Up To Now -~"" C..1£ -Di<llft.
Watch Tht cm ctti•n
By Ferd Johnson
OH,QUl'T PUTTIN' lt>EAS
IN MY H SAb. PLINK11'P·· J1M
ONLY T.Al<IN' OUR 5fUF"F
10!)41 L.,AUNDRY .
To SAVE SOME LASO!>.
PAINS.
By Tom K. Ryan
GOOD! NON, ~E
FlNGERS GENTLY FORA
HEALTHY, TINGLING SCALP!
By Al Smith
YOU GOT THE
WRONG MOUSEi
IT'S A GRAY ONE
I GOT!
/ \
1- --...-::::--.... ·-! ' ........... _ .,. ... ,.., ··-
IT,OUNDS VAGUE1 l:~ .
l'OES SHE PO ANVTMING
IN l'A~IO.JL-Alt TO Sf£AK OF?
'·
ly Men
l'IOT l<X/ICTLY.
EVe""~TIHNG SMr!
DOE> 15
UNS"PEAKAl>LE",
I
NAME OF THE GAMEi l~JO.lll(J),_I_ !Cl
OID(i)PIEllllEIE n..... ' 'lOaq_S..• (C)
If tM It•: (C) (90) "Tht F11r !HJ []) FMbltlc Fa (C)
ot Hilfl Pltces." . Jeff Diiion Is 11*11!119 Ci) Majar 1.111111 tM11:
alYtn • compromilin1 picture d • <a r.1111 '° bl 1n11D11ntld.
top iMJn~ otfid1~ ~ ~Oft e ..... ~ n..t'I II" 6conl-
llt ctn d11CO'ttl' W lht pidurt Illy) '4Z--Dorotlly LHMlur, Wllli.111
m.ns bl1dl1Mll or • hnterous HoWtn. 8lttJ Hutbl
llM"VMtrt arm!. Ilia wittlllt .. I ~ m c.r., .. .. ....
:an:,.:.:., W11tdm (t) (lO) ~ n-tre: "'lllrld II h
''01k CrMk Cln)'Oll." futurtd In orld.
this mur of Arlz<H1 .. 1 O.k Crlll 1l:Hl9Jm!!" ........ fC>
C.ll)'Dl'I. Mttln1 far n111nwt1111 mo-~ttl~•=• l1Htbltdt
lion ~llftt, ii 1 I* It Mont. • lilwle: "'1111 SIM If ...... zuma'1 u.stlt. , 0@(})111111 ill I $6llt: (t) (~l.r) 55-lucMrih Joht.
(lO) "Wl!J TIMJ llffltd Hola11." SPJ riu, M .. mo 'nttl.
1d¥entl.lr1 llriu st•lllnt Ridltrd Ill ,_II ..._.
BradfMd. (R)
I M"' lrll'l'lll (C) {90)
KtnA Ciiis (C} (30)
lplc:11lllio11: "Th• Slnsl•-A
NN Life stJltf' l?:DO 119 ()) ..... I ~
Ill -.._ IMOl ll!J CIJ""' -(Cl t:GORll!Jm•-""°' -ct> ,_ "'""' "'"'"''" ~ J:f." T11f1 two·hour ftatu II• .... ~ "Tiii
flllll ii tht pilot for CBS'1 MW lhaw Anil!lllL"
t11a1 wm prn!m next weft. t:GI II QfJ m ...,_ '-kH ..,_ I ~-=~(J~> IMpl "?k:apb:dt:lp 11111: (C)
Iii Md: ..... lk:A'dl "' Ylr&ln-EI M.W EJtl l.Mlt ~ (dra1111) '40 -C.ry Gr.nt.
l:lO D ~(I) l111n1 .t WiD SottJMtt M1rt:h1 Scott i (30) "ltidl till LDlll Trall.n fJ MDN: (t) "CthllltJ Jell"
NIWI: (C) (30) UrrJ Burri!!. (f!lusic.a~ '53--Doris 0.,, HOlfltnl
Tiit ltotlllS (60) KM!, Philip CarlJ. NET Pl.,-...: ''Vldc:ril Riil· m Opl11lon: W..W.IM (C)
mi: Autllmn." Im la l•lltl • Cordebl (C)
lO:OOOi»@NEW IElllOll b l:l50{HJ(l}llCM foott.111: (C)
Tr* (Cl (60) "Spxll't Brain." A Sin 10~ II Stanford.
buutlful wom1n'1 11H11tty !map l :JO m MD'ril: (C} "TM ll1kld M1l.-
sttrtl1s tltl oftlceri 111d ~w Oii (df1m1) '59--Av1 Gardner. AnlhonJ
1)11 brid1e of ttl• U.S.S. Entarprise, Fr1nc.iosl.
but ih diS1ppe1r1nct brlnp !ht 2:00 CJ Cl:UJllp tlid Cln6idlbil (Q
dbi::oY61J lllat: Mr .. S9otk'1 bniln 6) C1r111t Tll•trt: "'Two-G111
has .1>91n ..... with llllfrbl ,.... lldJ.''
'n"'f.;.~ ---(Cl (60) ""a,_ -IC) ......... "'. B1tltr llmtria.~
@ , .h:dd fl!' tile ~ Q Mt*: (C) "Whitt FHtlllr°' {&I) 1o Kiit • M1dm1n. (wHlim) •55 _ Robert W1in• I SBC!A I WM Ari 1111 W..1 ' (C) (60) lntiMtwS with Dlvid Ben-John lulHI. Otbra P11et.
Gurion 111d Ylll DIJlll, d111atrttr S:OO.~(l)Mtl:r ~ (C)
el Mosbe 0111n. Vettt111 comTMn· Ajbltare USll: (C)
ta1or RDd Mld.tilh dots thl CIOlll· .-.... Mliltl
_ .. .., (RJ "''laCIJ"' ._ -<ci m w La11:111 ..... tc> <60') .....: <CJ '""' ''• v.r el LI 11111111 • C.MI (t) ( rtJM) '51-.llM Wy1111n, Chtrlll
1~30 ...... (C) (30) Biii .lollns. L1111hton, Join BlD!ldtll. · 1 ncwltlol:s: "H•rmonlc Orl¥t... • T'9 Ollldoonm~n: (C) "Arctic ~111p Clrc11 Trophy r11111n1 ...
m """' 11:00 t) DM11 O'Clod Report (C) (30) 6) Ctlor Tl:Ntr1: (C) "The Last rl
Jtrry Dunphy. tllt Mohlcins." With .lost M1rco.
Cl ~IC """ a.me.: (C) (30) 4:00 II lnW... /Olbldlr (C) Tom Brllbw. 0 T\t Prtltuiolltls: (C) "Ro-i AllJM Hitdlcod (30) dl!D "
Nnrs: (t) (30) B1xter W1rd. CJ .Cktrlil C!Mn
Movlt: "TM MDCIII " 0own• •· I . (d •l '43-Slr Cedric H1rctwitk1 .JO Vltwpolnt: (Cl Jeu W1"er hms.
r1rn ·1 TILis Wiik ill Ille Nfl: (C) iD lio~b. O'Connor. (C) (90) f'!ll:u: (Ci '1o Cltdl 1
Guuts for this Mnint 111 lcirus lno. Doeumer:Urr. ~JI Ballard, comic Stvbby Klyt,, 5:00 0 ~ Wtndtrful Nlfbb: (C)
re<:0rdin1 trllsl James Dlmn, duel· Prn1N of tM lilW flU MllDfl 111
lst·ldot Rtymond St. JICClllff. ind CBS. (R)
tttor Cir! em. O S,..U•t fl'MIJ: IC) EdWln m n11 Shtw: (C) (30) loan Rh· ""'1ntn hosts.
1rt Is host°" GodtrtJ Ctmbrlda• 8 Af1. Gantt 11 tt1t WMll: (Q
discll$.tlS dl1nn1 wtlh •Plrt Jun @ (}) AIC'a Widl World .t
Nidetch. s,.r1': (C) U.S. M1n'1 Olrrnpic
@El Nttldtrt J4 (t) fr1Ck tnd Field Trials horn So uth _ _ .., " (Cl Like T111ot, Cltlfomlt. Jlrn MeKIJ 11:15 i::w Dr. ,,._ ,.11<9 hostl.
ll:taalB!lltl SRWtMJ .... ., (C)
ll:JOQMO¥it: {C) "M1tjtlit .Mtnl111· 115:= ,,,.,,,u •• : Mlh•
star" (clf1m1) '57-N1\1h1 Wood, Schooll... A p1111l of bltek 1nd
Gent K•!!I_. wflll1 joum1ltsb question • lwl A~ ltl n. T111lctrt ...., ~ ltd11t1tor on t11C11lnc lntqulU• In g M•: . (C) "Dftlrtl"' (dr1m1) t11t lhttto. (R)
•)¢.--Ju11 Simmons. M1r10n Br1nOo. fl) F.tW-Stcar
Ill@ Ill..., ..... -(Cl m Morit: (C) "kldd•MMI 5u:d-5:30 8 Ralpll 5'117 (C) (R,)
11-K.yl" fft'llllic.tl) '4&-Nr!e Hner. IElltRll CeltDfttr 1111\ltft:: (C)
Lon Mo\111'1.tr. SIM 111111 chllllnaes Mlnnuoll ..... lt:JO m ""1ld ChJ 0 T•rtit ~
11:40 e MtiWtl: ~ .,,..... " ...,.. m '°" 1u1: Host Robtrt Cfom1t (spect1cul1r) '&I -.ltlnnt Crtln. lnt1rvllwl Noel Q1r10n,, 1ulhor d Jol1fl Drw lltryrnort. .. ,.ff.,.. Squirt."
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
1iii·111JWl1
642-4321
2211 :W••f Balboa Blvd. hr:ewport 6a.lch
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PIRATINQ
More --t\b '• eu.,loy<n In a ,..,.,, by
tile Bureau of N.-i .AI-
fain I • pj:ll:itlber 0 f
businets lnformat ion r""'""1 !hey baYe pro-
blems with oixnpetttor1 over
pirating of 'l\'llri<en1.
A few ol the companies,
the bur6111 lowxl, expre-1
~lo -the
with stat.ementa IUCh.. as,
'"lhlt.'1 the name of· the
pine," and. 1'TbJJ it a~
of life." But some cam·
panlea _.. ir>di&Dmt-
"'Ibere ii <JOe local COID•
paoy deffllJle, the l!llll'WY
~. la lbroogll salvy
iDc:reeles, and 9Cl1Detimes
through impn>Y<melli. In
working <.'Ollditions and ~
~·--la 1m>ugll-entl lo loo••
each other'& employee alone.
But the direct -metbOi.:l hu advooates, u 11-
lwllrated by Ill• cUnleol-llke
report from the industrial
relatioDI manager of a
relattY91;' ....n company:
"Piracy -practiced by nm omnpellog flJ11llS. We at-
tempted but failed ., reoch
an amenable agreemert, aft·
..: wbldl we plrat.d their
employee. We then reached an agreement we'd not em·
Pl'I' eacb othe<'s acll•e
•
Business Briefs
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) -
Merry Co. announced ii will
spend 1everal m 1111 o n
dollars· lo expand o n d
modernize Ila brlct and tile
pl-, !ncludlnl lDsW!ation
of a C<lllllflelely aut<Jolfai.d
brick plant with anoua.1
caJ)aclty of 40 m I 111 o n
bricks.
NEW YORK (UPI) -
New Plan Realty Corp. an-
nounced It has pm'<haled
the 24-acre plant complei or
Libby, McNeill & Libby at
Blue bland. Ill., and will
develop it a1 a multl-tenant
industrlal cemr.
.. ..,. . ·-.,. ..
•
••
110• •
t ~.
•
••
• .,
'14 DAILV PILOT Frid11, Stpltmbtf 20. 1%8
. • •
•
Tbe MUG SHOP
PenonoU:ed Mugs st ... J947
3024 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron• .dtl Mer
JHE FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANT
Corona del Mar
675-1374
Manahan & Eggers,
Inc.
Insurance Brokers
2700 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
673 °0562
JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN-MERCURY
' 900 W. Coast Hwy,
Newport Beach
Lots of Luck!
Gene John1on
• Lil• ln111r<1 nc• e M11!111J Fu~d1
540-4469 830° I 062
Karen Margrefa Imports
I D•ni1h Coff•• G•rd•n
2640 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
Op•11 ,.,,,., d1y
ISLAND WASH
Salf-S eriice L•undry
Wm. ltPl•11t• • Ow11er
N••t lo Ftrry
BalbC!• lsl1nd
HARRY KELSO, INC.
-Cti1tom Homes -
Newport Beach
673-0690
BARTHOLOMEW
INSURANCE, loo.
lob lertholomew J
l ry1on Hlclmte11
2331 E. Coa1t Hwy., CdM
675.5444 545-3165
KIRKPATRICK'S TV
Sales & Sertnce
0011 Kirkp•triclc:
27b0 E. Coast Hwy.
Coro"'• d1I Mir
673-2650
ALBERT E. STOCKTON,
V.M.D.
3838 E. Coast Hwy,
Coron • del Mar
673-1050
PAT MARLEY'S
BLARNEY SHOPPE
MEN'S SHOP
3 565 E. Coast Hwy,
675-1850
HAL AEBISCHER
HEARING AIDS
3409 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
675-3833
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL BANK
Ntwport C•nt.r Office
LesteT R. Schwaiaer
\liet l'rt,icle11t
Newport Bea ch
CROWELL, WEEDON
& co.
Dk.le Smit/&
3326 E. Coast Hwy ,
Corona del Mar
673 -7005 or 549-0331
Lester, Ryons & {o.
Dean W. CampbtU
3425 E. Coa1t Hwy,
Coron• d•I Mar
673-8380
NEWPORT
FLOOR COVERING, l•c.
Don B<Uton
3500 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona dal Mar
675-1636
WILLIAM WINTON
REAL ESTATE
Montana Rumbold
229 Marin•, Balboa Island
675-3lll
ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO
CORONA DEL 'MAR YOUTH CENTER e SEA SCOUT BASE
e CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIP e
UCI SCHOLARSHIPS e ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
SCHOLARSHIPS e CORONA DEL MAR HIGH SCHOO~
KEY CLUB e HARBOR AREA BOYS CLUB
YMCA e JOPLIN BOYS RANCH e AMER ICAN FIELD
SERVICE e INTER-FAITH FOUNDAOON UCI e FOREIGN
, STUDENT SPONSORS e SPEECH SEMINAR SAN DIEGO
( e KIWANIS BOWL-HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT QUIZ
HARBOR
INVESTMENT CO.
2841 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
673-4400
BARNETT MORTGAGE
COMPANY
Lloyd l1rn1tt
233 3 E. Coast Hwy.
Up1t1in
Corona dal Mar 671 -5420
AMELIA'S
3 I I Marine Ave.
l1lbo1 hl1nd
HERSHEY'S MARKET
& GROG SHOP
Personalized Service
Balboa IJand
STEPHENSON
REALTY
Salt• R~taU: Ezchanges
306 Marine.
lol1'o.i l•!.nd
All .. .....,.... b7 CDM llWG11l1 Ch11t
OBERHANSLl'S
of London
Patio Dining-Delicatessen
2400 W. Coast Hwy.
N•wport Beech
642-34 14
korker Liquor
2229 E. Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
673-0916
Lester, Ryons & Co.
Robert E. Merct1',
Manager
3425 E. Coast Hwy.
Coron• d•I Mir
673-8380
BARTHOLOMEW
INSURANCE, l•c.
Bob Bartholomew &
Bryson Hickman
lll l E. Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
675-5444 545-3165
3838 E. Coast tiwy.
V.M.D.
3830 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona dal Mer
673-1050
JOHNNIE'S LIQUORS
Dee Cook-Owner
3537 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona dal Mir
673-7530
NEWPORT CENTER
PHARMACY
1402 Newport Center
Drive East
Newport Beech
6+4-2131
The MUTUAL Uf•
Insura nce Company of
NEW YORK
Robert S. Cunnisun
3810 E. Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
673 -9271 or 624-3564
Lesler, Ryons & Co.
Donakf E. Humphreus, J r.
3425 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona dal Mar
673-8380
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
Robert G. Leech, Manage~
l'l 41 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
Coron1 d1I Mir Off. 671·92•0
WALSTON & CO.
Harold T. ButU, Jr.
2700 E. Coad Hwy,
Corona del Mar
675-0501
MUTUAL FUND
ADVISORS, Inc.
1 •0l Wtt.tcllff Drive,
Newpbrt Beach
642-6422
AMLING'S
NEWPORT NURSERY
1500 E. Co11t Hwy,
Corona del Mar
(714) 673-0690
The SNACK SHOPS ..
-Far Wast Services -
We cannot compete with
"KIWANIS
PANCAKES"
-IUT -
" TO TRY HARDER"
fTry ,, l1t•rll
Speclalisin9 in
•SHOPPING
CENTERS
• INDUSTRtAL
BLDGS.
• INCOME
PROPERTIES
RICHARD D.
BECHTEL
Ri!al E1tate Inoeatment&
833 Dover Drive
Swlt• 16
Newport Beach
-642--0177 -
NEWPORJ BEACH
COSTA MESA
BOARD. Of
REALTORS
Wh111 y111
BUY OR SELL
S•e your
LOCAL REALTOR
BRUSH YOUR TEETH
TWICE
A
DAY
AND
SEE .YOUR
DENTIST
TWICE
A
YEAR
YOUR
LOCAL DENTIST
-See Your Friends At This Big
Good Luck
ON YOUR
KIWANIS
PANCAKE
BREAKFAST
Your Local
Lumber Yard
WARD &
HARRINGTON
CABLEVISION
Your Vl<w I<>
Belter TtlevQion I
NEWPORT BEACH
CABLEVISION, INC.
1501 Westcliff Dr.,
Ntwport laac;h
1714) 642-3260
Villa
Sweden
S111er9t10or4 lu11cli l Dl11nor1
Gift Shoi-I l1k1ry
3536 E .. C9all ~wy,
Coro11t .lol Mtr
522 Mein St.,
H1111ti119t.-i ltach
Your Ho1U -
Oscar 4r Hertha Backlund 3300 W. Coast Hwy, 1--------1 Newport Beach
548-3411
20 Y••rt S.f"tf119 f1Ht. H•tbor
Ar•• I• R•1id•nli•I I Comm•r· ,
c;i•I Prop•rti•1 A Acr••<J•
To Th-Ost Who Ktiow
~ . :_,It's
BAY & BEACH
REALTY, INC.
KIWANIS CLUB . EVENT!
Coron• tl1I M•r Offi"r
2•01 E. Coast Hwy.
675-3000
N•wport l·•~h • l1lbN Oflic•1
2025 W. B•lbo• Bl.
Ul·9~00
EVERYONE WELCOME, ••• ANNUAL .
OLD FASH.ION·ED .
PANCAKE BREAK·FA.ST
•
DON V.
FRANKLIN
REALTOR
3250 E. Co1>t Hwy,
Coron• del Mar
673-2222
e Ann• Brummitt
• John Franklin
e Lucila Moor•
• Richard Schumacher
e ~aury Steuff 1r
Sponsored By
Kiwanis Club
of
Corona del Mar
SATURDAY, SEPT. 21st·· 7 A.M. to 12 NOON
LUSK'S
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
HOMES ,,
Corona d1I Mir
John D. Lusk
I SON
Quality Hermes
A Family Tradition
OBSERVE
LAW AND
ORDER
BANK OF
AMERICA
N•tie,,11 Tr•1t
I S•¥ing1 A11oci1tie11
Coron• d•I Mar
675-2550
S1ERVED AT THE
PARKING LOT OF
SCHROEDER'S
CHEF'S INN
3201 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
18 OFFICES
TO SERVE YOU
e Safety of Savinas e Premium Home Loans e Insured Escrows
GLENDALE FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Riut•ll M. litch
AnlJt1nt 'lie• P•~I I. MaNlwr
2333 E. Coast Hwy,
Newport 811ch
673 -1550 540-5311
TODAY 'S
REAL ESTATE
IS
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2200 E. Coast Hwy,
Newport Beech
549-ll5 I 675-2000
A/vita Brand
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• Commercial
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CONSTRUCTION
J. RAY
CONST!lUCTION
COMPANY,
INC.
Jomes D. Ra11,
Pre1idnt
188 E. 17th St ..
Costa Mesa
642-4210
'* * *
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AND LOAN AllOCIATIOH
M1\er Of The
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ALFALFA
TEA
SUPPORT YOUR
ltalo Offic<: 388tl VIA Udo, Newport Belch, Calif. 92663 • Phone 87:1-3130 I 2111& Eut Coaot JIW)'., Corona dtl Mar, Calli. 92&25 • Phone 675-5&0
RetOW'Cft In ~ ol OM Hundred 1'1lllion Dollars I P.A. Palmer, 01Airman of the Board e Arnn Blomquist. ~ldtnt
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UNITED CAMPAIGN
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JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321
,~, ..,._,_, .. IHI NI , ... ll
City
Society's Role
It's going_ to be Children's Home Society Week in Fountain Valley.
The organization, through its auxiliary, Las Bri?.as del Mar. has
been acclaimed by Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, and the group's dedica-
tion to assuring each child's right to a home and parents will be explained
throughout the community.
Beginning Mond11,y, information re,arding the society's role in
adoptions will be displayed in the Fountain Valley library and aui!liary
members will be present between 7 and 9 p.m. to serve coffee and answer
questions. · ·
Members also will serve coffee and donuts to mothers who bring
their children to the story hour between 10 and 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 26.
The first Christmas Happiness Sale in the area will' take plaee be-
tween 11 a.m. and 4 ·p.m. Thursday and Friday, Sept. 26 and 'Jf/.
Mrs. Al Kn\l<Bllbert will open her home for the sales and greet guests
with ~hristmas p~b a~ COC?ki~. On disr,la~ will be a wide asso~ent
o1 holiday decoration• lind gilt• items loc uding candles, toys, boutique,
wall tapes!Iies and plaques. ·
The seleciloo <ii merchandise has heeq prepared by members of the
Orange County council of the society's auxiliaries.
Showlhrs In members' bomes will continue through Sunday, Oct. 5, lind fllter..ted reoldenll. may ob!a!J).more 1nformatioo· by calling Mrs. Wil-
liam Poon, cjlairplan, at 962-@35. .
Also offered during the sales will ,be personalized Christmas cards
· · at discount prices, and additional infonneUon may be obtained by calling
Mrs. John McClane, 952-4373.
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Sl!i!·V(CES .ACCLAIMED -The · efforts of Children's Home
Society and its auxiliary, Las Brizas del Mar, will be recognized
Utr:ougltout Fountain V·alley next week. Proclaiming Sept. 23 to
29 as Children's Home Society Week is Mayor Robert Schwerdt-
feger, who ·presents the official notice'to (left to right) Mrs. R. L.
Gadberry, secretary,, and Mrs .. James Ackley, president of Las·
Brizas. Since It was founded in 1891 tile society has found homes
for more than· 31,000 child.rein:
The putilic is invited tQ attend a shopper's lune?beon at noon Wed.neg..
day, Ile!. 2, In Peek's Family Colonie! :rerrace Room. 'ncket., at $1 each,
will inctu·de the opportunity to browse among the gift selections, and reser ..
vatlons may be made by calling Mrs. McClane.
• 'Las Briias del Mar Auxiliary member.s·aslist·the Children's Home
!itlciety by raising funds, staffing the well-baby clinic, providing transporta-
tion for-babies and foster mothers, and ser;Wng as· a source of. information
for those in need of.tlie society's services.
INFORMATION, PLEASE -The activities of Chil-
dren's Home Society will be explained to interested ·
residents who visit the Fountain V·alley library ,by
·1xiliary members. Serving information with coffee
·e (left to right) Mrs. Anthocy Gajewski, Mrs. C.
Kent Scholten and Mrs. May Wella. Members or Las
Brizas also will distribute literature regarding adop-
tion to all professional offices in the city, and pre-
sent a book on the subject to the library.
HAPPINESS IS -An opportunity for some
eartY shopping will be offered at Christmas
Happiness Sales which will begin during
Children's Home Society week. Displaying a
variety of selections available for purchase
are (left to right) Mrs. Johll McClane, Mrs ..
Herbert Kurt.le and Mrs. Morris Weiss whose
daughter, Beth, 3, is a potential member· of
Las Brizas de! Mar Auxiliary.
In Race to the Altar, Bride-to-be May Lose by a Nose
DEAR ANN LANDEM: Our
dau&'htel' Doria: i1 22, a college
etaduate, talented, and she has a
world ~ frieD!!a. Sile began to date a
,,., nice younf mm> lbe-roet during
her aentcr year at Sbmford. He oow i5
rtudyjqg for the Calllomi• ~ Bar
exam.m.tion. \ ·rwo monllll ago Dorla and Sid
decided to get.married In January. We
,1 have met h1I people and they are eX·
-~fine. Do<il YU -I OD 8r ODd eff!'1lhlnl -med perle<t. Lat
DlglltoSid oalled my hlltl>aod and uked
if they oollldd>llU lullob todoy. The
firlt thing Sid said to my busbane: was.
"Kow bad was it?'.' My husband Uk·
e':l._.''How bad was what?" $,id.replied, ··..,r11· noSe ~ftte she ha~ done .''
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ANN LANDERS
My husband was t'loored. H e • answered, "Well , I thought her noae
WN all right the way It wat . tn fact , it
WU like her mothel'S." Sid gasped,
''1bat11 what I wu arraJd ol. Do you
have pictures of Doris b::forc'!"
Sid then Ulld my husbMd he hrd to
consider their urbora c i. n en :t
allowed 83 how Doris sh:~·j r ,.vt tr''I
b.im 1hft had had her fl ~e 1 •. ..,~ J
before they became engA;,c:S lt~o.1·
siderc her silence VetJ disho11eit. By
thl1 tfihe· my husbana wa1 pretty mad
and told him o!l. Dorb is upa:talr1 crying, her father
LI begging bn: to break off the eng1ge·
ment. Sid now 1a11 he i.s sorry he
brou~ht it up and WaTlts to marry
Corl.!1 no mai.ter what her nose looked
I,~:~ hef.)rt. Ani I am writing to Ann
l.L ~nje;s. Cltn you help? -NO CITY
PLEASE ~
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• DEAR NO: Let Sid and Doris Settle
tbi1. E\reryone el1e r:1ould keep their
noseil out of It. 'Better the kld1 should
.l.llherll Dorta' noH lban-Sl4'1 'brains.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My
husband'1 parents feel they should
h: ve free access t.n our home at all
tln1es. Since they live near us, they
i:re in and out a'S of.en as four Uroes a
day. 'Sonletiuies J don't even lnow
an /one ls in the hoo.!e until I run into
one of mt in-law1 hf the bathroom
or the kitchen. 11"'1 a ti'ightenlng el·
perlonce and happen1 quite regularly . ~eccn:tv l 1ug11:est!j that they
sbould lrnock or use t~ bell. I was
clobbered unmercilully by my h111-
band. He lnforn..ed me that hiJ parents
are not guests and that I had inlulted
them.
Am I wrong! If not, what lJ the solu·
tloo? -NO PRIVACY
DEAR NO: Anyone who leaves
doors opelft thete 4111 11 tacky If he
gels no\l'ltng wor'le thin unwelcome
tv·law1. EVea 1mall &owners who
b:o::.-.sted not m!l.ny yean 110. ''Nobody
ev~r locks tbefr doors here," lla•e
begun to use ke11 and taret1 chains.
So lctek up, Womu. Tell yoar butbaDCI
t.lmet ha\le changed.
CONFIDENTIAL TO SHOULD I OR
SHOULDN'T 11 : You 1houldn'l Toll·
lng everything OM knows ii oot a
1lgn ol hone II)'. It II a sign ol rtupld·
lty. You do DOI owe tile genllemu
the infQrlll-be hu ..... lr)1na to
wheedle out of you, U you are wise
you'll tell him to stop pumpm, •
What awatb yoa •a tM Miter lkle,
oJ the mama1e wtl? Jiow eae ,.. be,
11.1re rour marrfage wlll wert? ReW
Ano aaden' bookie• "Marrtase -
Wbat to E•pe<t." S,.ad yoar .... -to Aon Laaden lo "'° ti .....
ntwap•r.r enclotl•I It ... ta ta ....
Ud I ODl1 ti.amped, ~
eavelope.
Aon Landen will be .... -., \elf.
yo• wltll your problema. 5ead: daem te
btr lo care of tbe \)AIL)' PIWl',
tndotllll • tell-ad-. llampeil •).te!ope. ~
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_!8 DAILY PILOT
Thomas A. Butterworth
Claims Pasadena Bride
Cambrlda•, Mau. will be
the new home of 1'hom11
Austin Butterworth 41'4 hb
bride, the former Vlrg!W.
Charyl W~ward. who
were married in All Saint.a
Epl1copa1 Church,
Pasadena. The ceremony
was performed by the Rev.
Canon Edwin Moss .
The bride ill the daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. Charles
Maynard Woodward of
Pasadena. Her husband,
formerly of Three Arch
Bay, is the son ot Mrs.
Darwin Long Holbrook of
Tbne Arch Bay and George
Weldon Butterworth Jr. of
La Canada.
lengtb turquoise sbantune
bimmed in Pf.le yellow rib-
bons and wore yellow an·
niversary rosebud garlands
Ju thelr hair.
Flower girll, Suzanne and
Jennlfer Baldwin, t h e
bride's couahu from Walnut
Creek, wore long empire
gowlJS of turquolse ahantun&
with yellow ribbon suhe1.
Dale P. Boller of
Pasadena was best man,
while George Belheumer of
R<>me, Italy. along with
John Patton of San Leandro,
Agler and Thomas Curry of
Montrose were uabe.rs.
Following the ceremony,
300 guests gathered In the
Univerllity Club of Pasadena
for a reception.
' 'Swan Song'
Debs Close . Season
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Prior w 1eav1n1 for their rupeetlre col· !~es. Children'• Home Society debUtantes
climued the 1wnmer socl1l sea.son with a
ttieater party.
Traveling I<> Loo Angeles via an Englbh
double decker bu1 and dining on !>o• suppers,
the preaentee1 attended a performance ot ._
Se;po Mende! and tile ·Brazil 86 and Jnae
Feliciano at tile Greek Theater.
HO<tinJ .tile party In h0t10r of their debu-
tante daugbten were the Measrs. and Mmes'.
Joeepb Henderson ClarkllOn, William Laird
Stabler, John Arthur Sl<lrch and Roger Ebert
Turner.
Honored guests were the Mis1e1 Cathy
Jo Clarbon, Linda Christine Stabler, Anne
Cuey storcb and Alicia Stanley Turner.
They will make tll.U formal bow to soc-
iety with 16 other debutanleso at the 15tt1 'an-
nual Debutante Ball, sponaored by the New·
port Harbor AtOO!iary of Children's Home
Society on Dec. 28, in tile Balboa Bay Club.
Couple Exch.ange Vows-:
I n Long Beach Rites
Docalta L. Dilday of Hun·
llnil<la Beach clalmed Lln·
da Lee Ray u bJa bride
durlnt a double ring cere-
mony cooducted in' st Cor-
nelius CathoUc Ch u r ch,
Long Beach.
'!be bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mr•. Robert L. Ray of
Long Beach, wu given in
marriage by her lather.
Her empire 1own of peau
de sole leatured an embro1d·
ered and jeweled chantilly
lace bodlce and sleeve1. and
appllques out Ii n e d the
fronl
The embroidered I a c ~
was repeated in the nine-
loot train and her illusion
veil wu held by pet.ab fad!.·
iooed of pearla and jewels.
For her wedding the new
Mrs. Butterworth chose a
full len&th silk organza
gown fashioned with a man.
daria collar, short sleeve1
and appllquea of lac;e daisies
scattered over the tucked
bodice, skirt and train.
The new Mrs. Butterworth
ls a graduate of Westridge
School for Girls, Pasadena
and earned a degree in civil
engineering at the Universi-
ty of the Pacific, Sfbckton
where she served as prelll·
dent of Delta Delta Delta
sorority. Other honors in-
clude being elected to
"Who?1 Who Arno n &
American University and
College Students 1968." '--------------------'
Her bouquet was a cas·
cade of orchids and stepb-
anotia with lace leaves and
aatin and net streamers.
Honor attendants Mrs. R.
The bride asked h e r
sister, Mrs. John Shirley
Wood Jr. of Washington, D.
C. to be matron of 11.00or.
Brldumaids were M i s 1
Robin G\albally of
Puadena; Miss J•net
Llster. San Diego: Mrs.
William Agler, Stocldon;
Mrs. Jame.a McMani1,
Cupertino, and Mra. lllichW
Morey, IJdo Isle.
They were a:owned in floor
MRS. BUTTERWORTH
H•w•ii Horteyn)OOl'I
Golden Anniversary Celebrated
The bridegroom is an
alumnus of Webb School DI
California, Claremont and
University of California,
Berkeley where he majored
in chemical engineering. He
affiliated with Kappa Sigma
fraternity which he served
u viee president.
Alter floneymooning in
Hawaii, the bridegroom will
do research and graduate
work at the Masaachuaetb
In1titute of Technology.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Smith of Costa Mesa were honored at a party hosted
by their son and daughler·lu-law, Mr. and Mr•. Robert F. Smith of Costa Me!a
on the Occasion of their 50th anniversary •• Robert Smith was born in North
Platte, Neb. in 1898, moving with his family to Vancouver, Wash. in 1905. His
wife, Neoma, was born in Springfield. ID. ln 1899, moving to Oregon with her
family in 1904. The Smiths w~re manied Aug. 17, 1918, in Stevenson, Wash.
Smilh worked at the Balboa Bay Club for many years and his wife has Work-
ed at Fairview State Hospital for the past 10 years. They have one grand-·
child, Amelia Smith.
Horoscope
Cancer: Take
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 21
By SYDNEY OMARR
"The lWse man controls
his destiny. . .Astrology
points the way."
ARIES !March 21-April
19): Work conditions un·
dergo change. P e o p I e
around you appear restless.
Your ~iple& are put to
lelll Iroportant to adllere to
ideldll ~without being ar·
rogant. Be confident, not
cocky.
TAURUS (April 26-May
20): Your relations with
member of opposite sex are
accented. Don't impose your
views. Explain w it ho u l
being dictatorial. Ir n!Cep·
tive, you gain. Otherwise
you are surprised, caught
orr gum-d.
G~ (May 21 -June
20): CondltaOllfl at home
ba,,. ""' .. bo "'"etting. Key is to be flexible . Sense
of hwnor becomes great
aU1. Famly member may
ect in eccenuic manner.
)ffte a..llow'9!lCel for emo-_ _.,...._
Open House
CANCER (J.... 21.July
22): Take care witti minor
details. Simple oversight!
coold multiply. Avoid un-
necessary journeys. Day
can be CClllStructive ii you
are observant. Heed advice
of one with experience.
LEO (July 23 • Aug. 22):
Guard possession&.
Carelessness today could
result in loss. St u d y
CANCER met1aage, Some
who meari well may lack
fads. Avoid eel-rich-quick
schemes. Yoo gain i! a
shrewd obse!'ver.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
You are gclng t.o be in the
limelight. People w i I I
observe, question and judge.
Know th.is -be at your
best. Diplomatic approach
gains favorable r es u It s .
Don't rock boat.
LIBRA IS.pt. 23-0d. 22)
What appeared settled cOuid
be subject to change, upsr-t.
Don't Pu1 all eggs in one
b a s k e t . I n v e s ti gate
alternatives. Don't fall into
trap o/ wisblu1 lltinlring.
Care
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·
Jan. 19): Stress .added in-
d. p. ndence, originality.
We!eome new contacts.
Bring forth creative
abilidet1. Take care with
what you put on pq>er. You
could be called to account
for views.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb.
18): Necessary to meet IC·
counls, bud-get. Find out
bow to streamline methods.
procedures. Then ta k e
positive stepe . Accent con-
tinues on financial aspects
affecting mate, putner.
PISCES (Feb. 19--March
20): Acee nit on outside
pressures. Circumstances
dictate that you take con·
servative course. Heed ad·
vice or on e familiar with
legal procedures. Steer
clear of any public dispute.
All --will bo .,,... tcac:rrow 10 that
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 · Nov.
21 ): Emotions nm high;
nothing halfway. S o m e
friends m.ay speak out or
turn. Be mature. Re&fue
somr we.akness is but tern·
parary. Avoid e.ttravaglll>CQ
Go slowly and easy on pro·
mises .
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTIIDAY you h a v e
sparkling sense or humor.
You we willing to fight for
undert1og. You are com-
pleting a cycle a n d. very
mort..ly, will embark upon
new project. Intellectual
curlo1ity is highly
developed. Your intere1ts
are varied and you possess
am.ti< talent.
GENERAL TEN· tic-lllaJa SllmM may ,., %.'"":: ...S meet
---of Ibo Ontntl• Aiiis p1 Qulptor. -••~d•rek, wtll----for .. .tblr, ldMduled SID4p.m.
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Oec. 21); People in audiorl·
ty move in swift manner.
Impulsive action by tholle at
tbe top could affect you . Be • eooo. sympathetic
li:ltener. Be ready . but don't
I ce way. R&main ct.lm.
DENCIES: Headline• t<U Of
thream, bluffa, lntl.midatiog
actions o n intemetional
front.
Engagement Revealed
At Family Gathering
Burr Dilday, Mra. Gary
Huff and Miss Ctri.lltine Schlma wore identical
gowns of bright pink with
matctting h a t s fashioned
from fabric petals and net,
and carried cascades of min·
iature pink roses.
Serving as bridesmaids
were tbe Misses Jean Jon.
lick, Suzanne Landry, Cindy
Dilday, and Debby Towns-
end. Keely Huff wall jun.i<r
bridesmaid and Gllla Oil·
day was flower girl.
n_, a party In the
Garden Grove home of Mr.
and Mn. Eugene s. Lyall
they announced the
betrolbal of their da.,.iiter,
Khn Diane Lyall to Riehm!
Alan Hoe, om ~ Mr. and
Mrs. Wilfred Hoe o f
Newport Beach.
A weddlng_!1 being plan-
ned for Nov. 9 Jn the First
~sbyterian CblD'Ch o f
We1tminster.
Among ~the 40 close
relatives and friends at-
tending the party were Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Richard
Cilana of Arcadia, slater
'Ud ·brother·in-law of the
bridegroom-to-be.
A .PiJik and blue colGr
scheme was carried out in
party decorations.
Miu Lyall is a lf&duate
of Wesfmiluter High School
and attended Calilornia
State College at L o n g
Beach. She is active in the
choir and teaches at the
church.
Her fiance attended Chap-
man and Orange Coast col· legu.
Gathering
Scheduled
Line Officers Advance
Night it.. members of the
Harbor Star Chapter 568 will
take place Sept. 2f, at 8 p.m.
ln Seafaring L«lge, Newport Beach. \
ilurb!I. the pthering Mro.
Paul F11SOD, associate
matron, and Gilbert Seal
associate patroo, will be ac:
ting wor1hy matron and
patron for U>e evening.
Oot. 8 is the date for the
chapter's election of of.
ficers. On Nov. 12 will be
Fareweil and New Member•
Night and on Nov. 26 the in·
stlallation of new olficera
wtll bo conducted.
Ideas Offered
For Listening
George Kirk will speak oo
U...niDg "' Ille R i g h I
Vcices before Mission Viejo
Republican Women
Federated~ Mannings
restoonnt., Leisure World at
11 :30 •.m. next Tuesday.
A resident of Leisure
World , Kirk wa~ a former
pUbtic reiltione; employe for
a steel corporation and
~sista.nt ro the personnel
director of the New York
Stock Exchange.
Coming ev~ announced
by Mrs. James Wand, presi·
dent. include a lingerie par·
ty which will take place in
the Laguna Hills home of
Mrti. Daniel Carr at 7:XI
p.m. next Thursday. A buf·
fet dinner will be serv~d
following the party.
Court Stella
Members ol Court Stella
Marlll 1448, Cat h o I i c
Daugtittt1 of America meet
eacil second and fourth
Monday at 8 p.m. in St.
Joachim's parish hall. Costa
Mesa .
OC Single Bees
The •econd and -Friday of the monlll Orengo
County Single Beel aather
in Doig Scnool. Garden
Grove . Activities beCiD at 8
p.m. ~?
KIM ·LYALL
E.,..t
Tbe bridegroom, son of
Mrs. June Herklotz of Roll-
lng HilJg and the late Mr.
Robert Francia Dilday, ask-
ed hil brother, R. Burr
Dilday, to serve· Ill best
man.
Ushers were Larry Ray,
,Gary Huff, Jim Jooes, Earl
Dunstan, Jim Richardson,
Richard Rebel, LaJTy Jowdy
and Clluck and Rick Throop.
Danny Bueb.n was junior
usher and Tad Dilday was
ringbearer.
Special attendants at the
guest book and at the door
were the Misses Cbriltine
Goyette, Maryh?a Barnett,
Unda Sprague and Jennifer
Richardson, and Bridgett
and Susie Barnett distrib·
uted rice.
Following the ceremony a
champagne reception for 600
guests took place in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Barnett, with flov.oers float~
ing in the swimming pool
and ribboos and bells dee·
orating the patio and gar-
MU. DECATUR L. DILDAY
Huntington . loch Home
dens complimenting the de-
cor. AS6lstlng tllf! Barnetts
were Mr. and 'Mrs. Jack
Buehn.
The bride was graduated
from St. Anthony High
Sdtool and Lon& Beach City
College School of Nursing.
She won first place in the
Miss Welcome to Lon g
Beach beauty contest and
placed second in that city's
Amvets contest and Miss
Red Rose of Memorial H06·
pita I.
The bridegroom is a grad-
uate of Long Beach City
College and California State
College, Long Beach, and
Los Angele5 Mortuary CoJ ..
lege.
.
He Ls a member m lhf
Huntington Beach Elka a.nd
Exchange Clubs, the South~
ern Caillornia Tuna Clu~
Long Beach Yad'lt and PO:-
lice M6"r Patrol, and lh4
Palos Verdes Masoni;
Lodge. .
Special gue5ta at the wed~
ding included the Donalcf
Schultz family from Sao.
Jose; Mr. and Mrs. RaYi-
mond Ray from Mammotl
Lakes; Lt. ~ and Mrsi.
Pat Bass, Castle Air Force
Base; Sam Brooks, Enid:,
Okla., and Mr. and Mrs:.
Walter Ray from San Diegot
The newlyweds will make
their home in Huntingtozi
Beach.
softly belted Italian knits by Umbertd Severi
Fcmn.onl It's a universal lanquaqe. Today the best in fashion can come from anywhere .... qo anywh.Je.
The5e two end three piece suits were desiqned exclul!lively for May C.O. in, tie ltudk> of
Umberto Severi in the foothills of Florence, Italy. Pure wooi.
MGtr' Co. ICRutee Italian knttmanship as we honor the One World O! Fash.km M · l '>I•.
a. ~iece striped suit. Gray /white, camel/white. 45.0I
b. three-piece suit. Camel and qray. SLICI
. .,..,, a.-d travel. '"""' 49
may c:o south coast ptcao, son di• frooway at bristol, c:osta mesa: 546·9321
st.op monday ~rough saturday, 10:00 a.m. ~ 9:30 p.111.
. . •
'
i
I·
I
PEACOCK ALLEY -Mrs. Lyman W. Porter of
Eastblu!f and Mrs. Edward Ethell of the Bluffs
aw·ait the beginning of Peacock Alley, U.S.A., a
faShion show sponsored by Madrecttas Auxiliary,
Holy Family Adoption Service, with their table
hostess Mrs. John P. Condoo of Newport Beach
and her other guests Mrs . Stanley Smilhsoo of
Corona del Mar and Mrs. William G. Thrash of.
U.S. Marine Air Co/n, El Toro (left to right).
•P ...... -~
Frid~, Stpltmbtr 20, 1968 DAILY '!LOT 'J 7
Milady's. 'Chained' to Styles
By JEAN COX the U model& In tile lbqw. dr•u trimmed In white bodlee1 o! empire lJOWDI
or -...., .... ""' They were evidenced ln mink and a "winter white" which featured both a lace
T<day'1 lady Of fuhlon ocnunptuouo lm>cadel In· A11t1 dre11. styled ss • sklrt and a black and red-~ aom•thinl Ukt a dlme cludlng a. ipectacular laven--1imple lhlrt waist, except c~ked ah.irt and tt won
1tbn. tltptamaulec. der, .Pink and gold brocade how m•ny lhirt waists are
• She'• eof ~e• on her with ._ hemline of ranch . fuhloned wltb mink trim on enthusiaatic •wlauae as a
wrl.ltl, '°'"" N011Dd ber mint, a Nehru jacket and a the cuffa? pluah gown fuhJoned with
neck, cbaln.I encltcllng her tie belt. Black velvet was used pearls and rbine111one1 en-
w•t, a. red jaclc:tt, INY · Othet atrlking numbers repeatedly in evening wear crusting the \trlltl and
, 1weec1 ~and wbo lmoW1 1_1n_clud __ ed..,;..•_brown...-....;...m_a,..IAl ... la<s~• ... •_de_s;..:Ign='';....;I;;.t_...foc.rm=•d;:_t;.;h;;.•;;_.;:h<mlln==•;.;· ------
what color vest?
••1t1 called the
haberdashery 10 0 k ,' 1 U·
plal••d Mlrs Kathy
HoJHmer, 80Uthern divilion
fl•hioa ~tor f 0 r
Joaepb Magnia d u r l n g
Peacock Alley, U.S.A., a
fashion abow staged by
Madrecltas Auz_lllary to
raise funda for the Holy
Family Adoption Service.
Since acce11110rie1 are all
importan~ erpeclally chain
belts, 1carve1 and
medalliOPI, and. since mi:J:
and match is the fuhion
byword for daytime wear, a
n1.ther busy or put together
look la bound to result
These looks included an
attractive tweed ault, worn
with a vest, of a dJHerent
tweed.
Harbor Council Movie Guide
IJOnger jackets went well
with soft CGk>red panta, all
of which &eemed to flare out
at the bottom of the leg, and
the blgb-collared N e b r u
jacket ii still being touted.
) !Edllor'• Natat: Tiiis movi. 911i<le 11
;: 1>rwp1~ bV tM fllm1 camml"M of
_:. H1rbof' Coul'Kll PTA. M,... Robert Sor·
1 '""'"' II 11!'9idtnl Ind Mrt. thr1
s-II cammlltft c11a1~11. 11
1$ lnrended u 1 reference In delttmlf>.
Ing 1uJ11bllt !llms tor a r11rn 1111
erouPS 111d will .i•-r ...... Iv. Your
vle.n •~ i.olklhld. fMU ft!tm 111 ffl<'
-le G111de, c.iore "' Ille DAILY :_ PILOT.I
! c TEENS AND ADULTS
f 1'HE FAMILY WAY-Lack
of privacy at home and
community·s interest in
their affairs t b r e a t e n
marriage of y o u n g
Englistl couple.
FIVE CARD STUD -
Professi0001 g a m b I e r
solves murder mystery in
this untraditional western.
GUESS WHO'S COMING TO
DINNER? -Moving
story of parents' reactions
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with bla ck and white gl06sy pbour
graphs U> the DAILY PILOT Society Depart-
ment prior to or within one week after the
wedding.
For engagement announcements it is
suggested that the story, also accompanied
by a black _(l:nd· white glossy p i c tu r e, be
submitted ffily. U the betrothal announce-
ment and wedding date are six weeks or less
apart, only the wedding photo will be ac·
cepted.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail-
able in 'all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466 .
. • i e • : ! • : •
Vocalists
Wanted
f Harborlites Chaple< of i .Sweet Aclelines is chorusing 5 Q:he annual pit.di for new
:Snemben. j: Kicking off the drive Moo·
: i.ay, Sept. 23, the group is ! jnviting all women 18 years
: ;and older who enjoy singing
! f• enjoy the evening of : armonious fun. ! Meetings are conducted i very Monday at 8 p.m. in
i: B:ite College Park School, ! £cost.a MeE;a, and further in-
: iformation is av.ailable by ~ :Calling Mrs. John Hamigan l !'at 962-4987. : t The opening sessi'on will ! 5 feature a sing-along with the
: t chorus plus entertainment
:.: by VariOUl'l quartets in· ~{cituding the newly registered r. !ow-some, the lArilif!l'S .
: : The Chapter hopes to sign fl up enough new members to J place it in the large dlorus n c1tegocy at regiooai com·
i.: petitioo. :t .. " ii Burgers i ; Ii To Sizzle
" : •1 The: Costa Mesa home of
tile Harry Hilliard< will be
l tbe tcebe of e hamburger
~fry nut Sund&I' from 1 to 5
f p.m.
' Member< on! friends ol i tile G-. Harbor White
I ( Sbrlne of J...-.m and !he > Wl>lic .... lllvlt.d. Tickol&. i i ai.._ sqs •. adults and 75
• :'Centi foe Chitdren under 12,
i l will be oold at tile door. i r On 1'uu>wday. Sepl 26,
• ~juniOI' port -. Mr. and
I' . Mrs. Gilbert Seal. will be
h10110red during Ille meeting i£fn the Newport Beach ! t Masom• Tempi<. SIAIU... i i w111 be fliled by visiting '! E j-put officon fiom !he ~Soutflland. Qieirman iii Mrs. i t Hilliard. ,.,
I
Initiation
Scheduled
New member'S will be in·
itiated at the first mem-
ber-ship meeting of the
Orange County chapter ol
National Association o f
Women i n Construction
Sept. 24.
The meeting will begfu
with 6:30 cocktails and 7
p.m. dinner at the Caspian
restaurant in Costa Mesa.
Reports will be given by
Mrs. Donald Ames and
N"!T6. Kathryn Clay,
delegates to the natiOOai
convention which t·a k e s
place today, and tomorrow
in Washington, D. C.
Reservations can be made
with Mrs. Carroll Bole& at
548-5671 and Mns. Catharine
Patterson at 64.2-1511.
Living Art
Revealed
Learning to Make an Art
of Living will be members
of the Gamma Alpha Nu
chapter, Bell Sigma Phi, at
their next meeting oo Mon·
day, Sept. 23, in the Hun-
tiDgton Beacb home of Mr:1.
William Okey.
bm. David Person& will
pn11e11t tile program and
Mrs. Eddie Secklr will .-i1t
tile holteoo.
1be 8 p.m. meeting wW
.cooclude witll a pizza party
at the Pizza Palace booor·
ing prospective member1.
During a combined
meeting and beginaing da)'
last week in the Huntington
Beach home of Mr1. John
Bowen, a program on Giv-
ing and Receiving
FnendShip waa pre1ented
by Mn. Gary Emery. Mn.
Morey Watman le!"Yed •
C<H>ootl!os.
to racially mized mar·
riage.
HANG 'EM HIGH
Marshal hunt& vigilantes
who tried to lynch him.
MADIGAN -New Yock
police manhunt reveats
problems of police com-
misidoner.
ODD COUPLE
UproariOU& comedy t n
which two ill matched, ex-
marriedls decide to room
together.
THE PARTY -Slapstick
comedy octurs w h e n
disaster-prone East Indian
actor iS invited t.o chic
Hollywood party.
TORTURE GARDEN -
British horror film.
VILLA RIDES -Harsh and
brutal story of Pancho
Villa.
WHERE WERE Y 0 U
WHEN THE LlGHTS
WENT OUT? -Famour
blackout in 1965, serves ae
background for f r o t h y
comedy.
ADULTS
THE FOX -Reletionsh.ip
between two women living
on isolated farm.
THE GRADUATE -Comic
satire of young man wbo
breaks out of materialiltic
world of bis elders.
HAMMERHEAD
Undercover agent is
assigned by British to
thwart a sadistic villain's
attempt to steal vital
missile informatloo.
. JULIET OF THE SPIRITS
-Italian film .about
anguished holl<ewlfe.
RED DESERT -Italian
film 1 about a woman's
struggle to~ find her iden-
tity.
ROSEMARY'S BABY -
Blending of horror-fantasy
and everyday,...ilty.
SPREE· -Tasteless, vulgar
film.
SWEET NOVEMBER
. Dying --to unusual length& to be
remembered.
THE SWIMMER -En-
counter1 reveal emptinese
and hyprocrlay of
suburbanite'• life as be
swim6 home via b t 1
neighbors' 1 w i m m-t n g
pools.
THE THOMAS €1\0WN AF·
F Am -Insurance sleuth
suspects thn11 1 e e k i n g
millionaire of m&l!itermin·
ding ·• bodt r-ry.
J
Pleated akirts, much to
the glee of the dry cleaning
industry, are back. Be they
box or accordion pleats,
they all are acceptable as
part of the new "heavy
look" which iJ great if you
are 5 foot, 9 inches and
we~gbt about 9.'I poundJ .
Heavy stockings, such as
white textured hose, are
needed to complete this:
heavy look, Mil!is Holiemer
1tres1ed.
The furs in the fashion
show w e r e magnificent
pieces, including a window·
pane mink coat, a natural
lynx coat and • Mongollan.
lamb combined with foL
Fo1-trimmed an elegant
tout colored cape at the
· hem and neck which wu
worn with a fox bonnet, tied
demurely under the chin.
Also striking was a navy
gabardine costume trimmed •
in Persian lamb; a leather
coat trimmed in fox at the
hem, sleeves and neck and
again worn with a matching
foE bonnet. and a ne._tural
Spalllsh lamb eo11t trimmed
in leather.
The Eut In'dlan influence
was seen in the glamorous
evening fuhiom paraded by
li
lC
~'VEAtrxRY Glfr
on
SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTIONS
fan merchandise lrom our regular
stock. September l9, 20, 21 only.
SWEATERS
PANTS 30% SKIRTS to
DRESSES
JR. PETITE DRESSES
BLOUSES
KNITS
COCKTAIL DRESSES
Fo1hion l1lond
Newport Center
Newport Beach
50% off
~ OFF
-----------------~ ------
15.00
Just switch a~~
to give this knit a new look
Never mind !he small I" ice! Yoo'll get CllllPfimellts 1J/llfi 111f,.
actessorize !his great little bas\c dress. lea! lie !Ji&!.,.
hlled scarf. Your lavuite pin. Or, a pendanl. 1c1111-...1u11 • seYeral colors: awcarlo, plum DI walrlC. Ollari llll!lkllal.
bonded lo acalalli lliall; }(). )8.
lludatt Dresses..
u urns'
.
--., __ • -• --.... -1111 ... ____ _.
• •
I I
..,,~~~t'.7 ... ::u. --..~ -' --.......
J I -IWLY PllOT
........ -.-•
Fridly, Stpltmbft 20, 1%1
. . . .. .. -.. -
Emerson Te.st s~_·J\-_shs~ Laver Faces Graehnet
l
t
Hills Lead
RichPGA
Team Test
OKLAHOJllA CITY, Okla. CAP) -
lt took yowic Mike Hill twice to satlt-
factorily d:lmplete the official PGA
Tournament -· but -D<t,. HW believes hi leU'llfld hill le1lon1
well.
"Mike aaved. three fantaaatic pars,"
Dave said TblO"aday after the brother
team carded • nine under par G to
take the fir1t round le•d of the $D), ..
000 PGA team championship.
Mike, who i. 29 and a ll!'rinC ll'Od·
uate of the PGA ••-ofter ffDing
to -pus la1t fill, had equal praise for
Dave.
"Dave's a great player." he said.
"It's quite an advanta11 for me to
play with him."
'Ibo broither --Jadmon, Mich., held a two-stroke lead over vet-
eran.s Arnold Palmer ud Jack Nick·
Jaus going Into the oeeond n mnd of
the tournament today.
Palm.er and Nicklaus, defending
team champions, tired a AC Tbunday
with each Carrytnf JU llllaro of the
load.
"Jack could have stayed In Iha club-
hoUJe on the front nlnt and t eould
have stayed In m Iha back nine and
we still would have had the ume
score," Palmer aald.
The Hill -. and, the Palmer·
Nicldaua combination played at Twin
Hilla Country Club 'ntUl'lday. the 1,,
700-yard par n ....... that produced
the best scoring.
Four teams were ln a tie for tYrd
place at 65. They were Bobby Nicoll
and George Archer, Larry Hinson and
Bunl<y lmlry, Bert Greene and Randy
Glover and Jack McGowan and D J c t
Crowford.
A 25-mlle-per.ho ur wind (!luaed blfh
tcoring on the Quall Creek course, but
the Twin Hilla Uiyout ii partially pro-
tected by tree1.
"The wind makea II dlflcull 'bacauaa
the greens .. vflly llDllll," n.w H1U
said.
Investigation
Of TV Eyed
By Colleges
ATLANTA (AP) The eom-
missioner of the Southeasbem Confer.
enoe said Thursday he will investigate
charges that t.elevi.sittt technicians
worked on the playing field during tfle
• Geori:ta·Termessee football game.
Pictures of last Saturday's rame
showed that during the match a
camerama!l, an assistant and a sound
man worked a few yards out on the
playine 6Urlace and mriigled with
coaches and players.
"The field is .supposed k ht kept
clear for tJ}e players." Commissioner
A. M. "Tonto" Coleman aid. "l am go-
ing to look into it. We don't have any
rule letting them on the field."
Norma.I college rules .re q u l re
phocogriaphers to Jtay one yard back
or the sidelines aid out of the area
between the 35-ya-d lines where the
co.aches and 1ubttttut:. playen sit.
University Of Georgia Ooa.ch Vince ~Y 'aid, "Onee or twice they got
ut the way. It got to be a little
bothersome, .although It was no real
problem."
The ABC.TV network had the game
move:t up a week and starting lime set
back two hours t.o avoid conflicts with
other telecasts.
The netwOl'k pays more than
'300,00> to t.eem.1 participating in na· ti= televised tames. The money is 1 witllotNtrSoutheaatern
Ccderenoe teama.
,
,,.,. '11 the
Ofr .. lc &w•
"
"hotf 111 Pit O'DO!llWll INDESTRUCTIBLE OUO -Rod Laver (fore-
ground.) and Roy Emerson make a tough tennis
combo to beat when they team up for doubles play.
Thursday night the Corona del Mar duo dumped
Charles Pesarell and Clark Graebner in Pacific
Southwest Open play at the Sporn Arena. Tonight
at the. same site Emerson. challenges U.S. Open
champlon Arthur Ashe while number one singles
seed Laver duels Graebner.
Trojans Picked by 6;
Bruins by 19 Over Pitt
By United Pre11 International
South&rn California. relyiJJg greatly
on 0 . J. Simpsoa to shore up the holes
ripped into it by graduation. opens
d~fense of the national football title
Saturday a six-point favorite over Min·
nesota.
"0. J. is looking better than ever."
eoadl John McKay of the Trojans
recently declared of his senior
halfback who roared to the natibn's
grtM.md gaining title last season.
McKay also rated quarterback Mike
Hoimgren as a bright light on a team
which overall is rcga.rdt!d as young
and inexperienced.
WhHe tile Trojans are invading Min·
nesota. other Saturday action finds
Califorfta at Michigan , Oregon Stale
at Iowa, Oregon at Colorado. ruce at
Washington. Pitt Rt UCLA. San Jose
State at Stanford and Idaho at
Washington State.
The Pitt-UCLA clash is a night af.
fair.
ll's Colorado by eight over Oregon.
the oddsmakers say. with coach Jerry
Frei o{ tne Ducks worried a.bout stop-
ping quarterback Bob Anderson of the
Buffs.
Frei is pleased with his own signal
caller. Alan Pitcaithley, who can
throw as well as run.
UCLA is a 19•point favorite to beat
Pitt, causing Panther mentor Dave
Hart to observe that he is tired of
coaching underdogs.
Was·rnngton, with .Jerry Kaloper
possibly starting at quarterback. is
rated a sewn-point selection to beat
Rice oo the Huskies' utroturf while
S~nlord reigns a thr&! TD choice
over San Jose State for their backyard
squabble.
"The kids are looking shaii>er
every day," Jim Sweeney has said a.'i
he prepares to launch his debut as a
Washington State coach against Idaho.
The clash between the two schools is a
traditional. --
Angels Facing
Worst Record
CLEVELAND I AP ) -The Calli or·
n.ia Angels are still fightin g to avoid
having the worst record in their eight
American League seasons.
The eigtith-place Angels. with a
record of 66-88. have eight games re-
maining this year and must win at
lent ball of them to reach their low·
victory marks or 70 in 1961 and 1963.
A miracle co uld boost the Angels 1n·
Angel Slat e ,,l'l!!r'· ti A1111el1 11 C..._,tl•nd 11 :10 1,m, KMPC
I. 22 A~Vt>llnd 11 •IO &,m. KMPC !110 s..,t, 1l "'""~ '" MIMtlOla 1:55 o.m. KMPC 11101 SePt """"'' YI M1nnei.o!t l ;SJ p,m. !CMPC 1\0) ~tPt 15 Allll~ ~I Mlnnnolf 1:SS P,m. ICMPC 11Dl SN!. H AnOtll YI Chklto 7·U "·"' KMl>C 1!Dl
to seventh place at the end Of the year
-but to accomplish the feat they
would ha'Ve lo win all their remaining
games and the Minnesota Twins would
have to drop their last nine.
But a poor showing by California
could drop the team into ninth. The
Chicago White Sox. who now occupy
that spot. trail the Angels by 2'12
games.
~Angels. Idle Thursday, also have
today off.
Top Names in T ennis ••
' Vie at Sports Arena
LOS ANGELES -Rod Laver aod
Roy Emerson, a couple ot ne&r·lnde-
atruetible Auatrallan tennla 1tar1 who
now make Corona del Mar thelr heme.
battle a pair of leading United States
amateurs tonight at the Sports Arena
aa the Pacific Southwest Open 't'ennfJ
Tournament edges closer to Sunday
night's finals.
Lawr, Wimbledon champion and
traveling pro for Newport Beach Ten-
nis Club. iJ acheduled to take the
court et 6:45 aiatnst Clark Graebner.
Emerson. just turned pro this year,
follows 75 minutes later against United
States Open champion, Lt. Arthur
Ashe .
Saturday. Kathy Hart.er or Seal
Beach goes against Brazil's Maria
Bueno.
Ashe and Gniebner are two of the
principal .reasons why the United
States is given an excellent chatlce of
ending Australia's grip an the coveted
Davis Cup.
Laver and Emerson teamed Thurs·
day nJghl to outdo Charles Pasarell
and Graebner, 12-10 .and 6-1.
· lt was marathon night Thursday as
Fred St.olle, an Australian pro, scored
a mild surprise when he beat Spain's
Andres Gimeno 6-3, 16-18, 6-1 in a
men's quarterfinal match that lasted
two hours and 32 minutes.
Seventh-seeded Pancho Gonzales.
one of the game's all-time stars. was
ousted by Australia's Ken Ro sewall,
the No. 4 seed. 11·9. 6-2. In another
quarterfinal.
The second set or the Stolle-Gimeno
match was the lonc:est of the t.10.000
tnurnament in sin g!Ps comr etition. Jt
took one hour and 48 minutes.
The previous longest set occurred
Wednesdav when Ashe lost to Yul!'o·
1\avia's Nicola Pi!ic. 12-14 . in the
opener. Ashe won the match by taking
the next two sets.
Stolle appeared to he in better con-
dition than Gimeno. He came back in
the third and deciding -set to blast the
Spanish player 6-1 in just 17 minutes.
Gonzales trailed 0.3 In the first i;et
against Rosewall but rallied to tie the
gcore at 3-3. The pair traded games
Sports in Brief
until the Australian led, 10.9.
Rosewall broke Gonzalea' service;llt
tbe 3'.tth a:ame when be forced the ~·
Angeles-born Mexican-American lr'ito
an errox; with the deciding point.
The 1eeond set was all Rosewall.
The tiring Gonzales, now 40, mlued
&hots in the second set that he would
have handled easUy a few years ai.R.
Miss Bueno, the No. 3 seed in the
women'a singles, beat Francoise Durr
of France, seeded fifth, 6-2, .a.a to ad·
vaoce into the semifina.la.
In men's doubles Ashe and Ron
Homburg routed Tom Okker and Mu-
ty Riessen 6-3, 6-2.
Rosewall and Stolle each are "lil:·
sured of at lea.st $1,400 of the prtr.s
money by their victories Thursday
night.
Tonight's Slate
4 1>.m. -Jl:A"" J--.. J1:1ittt5-N c ... 11 (womtn'• 11nt!n Hnllllnal),
S:U •.rn.,.....,Clltf Drvtd1lf'J1:1it09er T11lor YI. TOfl'I l!dlnf9!'1-xMIJ Ancltrton lmM'J deubl• 1utrflr· f ln1I).
''lO p.m-•ltod Liv.,. VI. C:J.trlt Gr•lb!w (rntn'I 1ln11ln qv1rttor.flnel).
1 :~ .,,.,,.-"'"'u• Alli• v. •ll:ov t:lnfl'11111 ("11!1'1 alnvlei qutrl•r·llrwl).
' •.rn.-•Ktn •o-•!l·lll'rtd Stiolle VI Jl!TI M<Menus-Jlrn Osbaml tm111•1 llriel• Wll'llr.ffnttl. ~-l'rof~nl0"1l,
49E RS T O FAC E
A RIZONA COLLEGE
Cal S~ate (Lung Beach) opens lta
1968 football schedule Saturday night
in Flagstaff, Ariz., where the 49ers
will play Northern Arizona.
The home team is working on a win·
ning streak against the Long Beach
eleven. Northern Ariwna has beaten
Cal Sb.ate the past two seasons.
N(lrthern Arizona has a game under
its belt already. but it's giving coach
Andy MacDonald indigestion. The
l\rizonans dropped a 30-14 decision to
Drake.
Cal State coach Don Reed scouted
the game.
PGA Reject s Propo sal .
By Touring Pro Rebel s LI
PALM BEACH GARDENS. F'la. -
A new propcsa1 by touring pros, for a
14-man executive committee was re·
jected Thursday by the Professional
Golfers' Association.
TI1e plan calls for seven tour
players, three PGA officials and four
businessmen to make up the executive
tou r oommittee. Sponsors would be
al101.ved two representatives but no
voting priv':ileges.
Sam Gates. attorney for the pros.
announced the counter proposal in
Oklahoma City where the players are
participating in the PGA team cham·
picmships.
"The new proposal. under anv
circurl).stances. is not acceptable tO
the PGA ." said Robert T. Creasey. ex-
ecutive director C>f the PGA.
"That's the situation," Creasey said.
1'We don't know what the next move
will be " ... ... ...
SOUTII LAKE TAHOE A
· member of the U. S. Olympic Track
and Field Committee said Thur1day It
11 unllkely that Vlllanov1 '1 Dave
Patrick will be named to the U. S.
Olympic team In the 1,500 meters.
However, any announcement would
come after tbe committee hears from
Jim Elliott, Patrick'• coach, the
spokesman said.
Elliott said We dne1d1y the com-
mittee broke 111 wo rd. contending: that
athletes we re promi1ed that first-place
fhl11her1 In the Olympic trills In June
at Los Angeles would be r uar1uteed
Olympic team berths. ... ... ....
The Los Angeles Rams have ac-
quired center Frank Marchlewski
from the A Uanla Falcons to replace
i!Tjured reserve center G e or f e
Burman.
Marchlewski. 24.. a starter with the
Falcons. will be used as a backup
center to Ken Iman.
The Rams made the acquisition
Thursday Jor a high draft choice ne~t
season. Burman, 25. has b e en
bot<herecl by a knee injury. ... ...
WASHINGTON -Congresa h.aa
1tepped lnto 'the baseba11 battle over
the fl ring of t\vo American Leaiue ll41·
pl res. ~
Hcarin(s before the Roust labor
subcommittee were scheduled for Oci.
14-15 after umpires Al Salerno and Bill
Valentine took their appeal to Capitol
Hill Thursday.
Rep. F'rank Thompson. D·N. 'J.
chairman of the subcommittee, c~
It a clear vlolaUoo of labor laws lr
Salerno and Valentloe were fired
because of their efforts to organize an
umpires' union In the American
League.
Thompson announced the hearlaga
for the week after the World Serie1
and said American League President
Joe Cronin wo11Jd be invited to testlry. ... ... ...
PALM SPRINGS -Clyde Johnson·e
first golfing holes-in-one came 26
years ago. while he played Morris
Carl. In the intervening years John;on
carded two more aces -botfl agai'tist
Carl.
l-lis fourth came Thursdav while
playing Carl's son, Ray, on the p.ar,_,,
15.1-yard 18th hole at Palm Springs
Municipal golf course
Minnesota hu 27 returning \el·
tffmen for its game with use.
veteran• o( a Gopher team which
finished in ~ tie last se.ason for the Big
10 title. But ttie squad is said to lack
apoed. McLain (31-5) Gives Idol No. 535
The Golden Bears of California will
be counting greatly on that very com-
modity for ~eir game al Mich!gan
wbert Wolvervine coach Bum p Elllott,
whose brQttier once coached Cal. hu
been working to cut down oo the
Be.an' streaking olfense.
Oregon Stale i1 tabbed an 11-point
favorite to beat Iowa whidl may have
to 1lart with Darmy Green switched
&-om a tailback t.o fullback spot
becauae ol injuries.
The Hawkeyes gn in heavily for
paasJng and coach Dee Androe of the'
Beaiten baa streued Aerial defeDM
tllla week.
,_
DETROIT (APl -Denny Mc:Oaln
was &even years old when Mickey
Mantle broke iJ!to the Amorlcan
League in 1951 "4ah New York.
And as Mantle rounded tie bases
Thursday with bis 5S5th ~ home
run, the 24-year-old McL&ln lf.Oodlt on
the mound saluting his boyhood Jdol.
There were hinta: the n1er1 Jrik"tler
had juM. served a gopher batl to Man·
tie on a silver platter.
But it. didn't a.tfect the outcome of.
the pOle -Detroit WOO &-2 for its
nlnl.b llraight vicltlry.
•
The hortfer made Mantle the t h I r d
leading home run hitter in baseball
historY, be-hind Babe Ruth and Willie
Mays and ahead or Jimmy Foxx.
"II he (Mantle) ltiU your idol ?"
_Mef,1io was .asked afUr the game.
·~e 1till ls," McLain said. "I got a
·tffliog he wanted me to hit I~" Man·
tle said later ln the Yankee dreuinM
room .
Detroit WIS lea<tillg 6-1 in the ei&'bth
l-nnin&. when·, with an 0..2 COUDt. Man·
tie motioned w.itb hi11 hand for McLain
to give him a 1o1ter·1>igli pit.cl!.
Mickey tllen blasted the next. pltcti \n
the upper deck in right field as the
crowd roared.
"I think it was just a strai~ fast
ball." Mantle sa:id. "It's got. to be one
of hi best tbril1s I've had in
baseball. I •
McLain smilingly dooied t o
newsmen that he deliberately threw 1
pltcb that Maotle could aurely blut in·
to the .wm.
"You doo'l think I'd delibera~.ely
throw him a home run ball, do you'!"
McLain Jrinned .
"There: would be a scandal and an
immediate investlgaUon o( baseball.••
McLain, w:ho holth the Tiger recora
for most home run pitches (42 WI 1966)
and has given up 31 this year, said the
last one wasn't anything special "but
this one J'll remember a liWe bit
morf'."
Meanwhile, McLlin became only the
eighth Amer-icl(l league pitcher t:bis
century to win 31 games as he went
the dista!lce fur Ille 28th time this
yaar.
).. ' '
HELLON HANGS ON -Mater Dei end Don Bellon (84) leapo blgh lo
haul In Ted l!arrrillm's prus on Morum:hs' first piar from 1crilnmage
against Santa Ana. Panesi Afualo (24) caught up with Hellon after 1.8-
•
MU.YPUY ...... WO. ......
Ypnl rah! end Bmla Am went cm lo pOlt 1111 lmprenlve 31·13 victory
'I"." Iii-Del.
•
f Md11, s.,mnw20. 1961
9,794 See Saint ·~-
F ootball Exp res~· . •.
Cru-sh ·Mn ,· 31-18
By GLENN WRITE Of"" °"" ,.., "'f'·
Santa Ana Hllbl~ pidlioo •ipr111
l'Olllbled lttou&h Matat DI! lllgb's
once.proud defenae. ~~a 1tr~er
muhlng a c~ ,"1'plo. ,'11iureday
nlll>I .. the polemt s,Joll trouncl'I tho
Monarm., Jl-13, bolon p,.7M !aoa It
-AneBowl.
Coach~ Tom Bl1d.win'1. defending
Sunaot WIUe ct.1io-llved up to
tbMr pre•euon billing u 1be 1tate'1
leCODd best team by 1corini: in every
qua1er ud cenerally st'Hl.Uinl down
the llloter Doi attack.
Mainiflcent Isaac CUrtis paced the
Winners, cbllking up 156 y.ards in 19
carries and scoring two. toudldowna.
He also kicked off once during the
three quarters he taw KU.on.
Curtl.!, an All·Amerlcan candidate,
wu on the ridebet tbe la11t period
with e 1lilbt limp ed Baldwin chose
not to riU: 11erio111 iajury to his pot-
tege kl view of the Salntl' 24-13 lead.
It wu Curtis wbo broke the scoring
tee, cuWn& k>oae 9n • 71 -yud scamper
rilht aftor hil IDllla bod throttled I
Monarch ltd on the Saint 29. Curtis'
1allop ood Den ~·· place kick
mad• It 7<1 with 7;31 -·In th•
ftmt quarter.
Gardea 1Mer broke over from tbe one.
'Iba< narrowed tbe J•P IO 17-/3 Y.1111
1;4$ to ao In the third per1o4!. "·
Seventy-seven seconds later Santa
Ana did it api:n on a abort pua frtlm
Gary Woodsmall to Panes! Afualo that
turned into a 113-yard -inf jaUD\--
A 17-yard d.ub by Marttoe• In the
~ last quarter wrapped up acortn~1lor
the night. · ·
Santa Ana. was a complete oUeDJive
unit with Wooc!imaU faklng ex·
ceptionally well, Curti.1 looking like a
HeUmao Trophy winner, full~~k
Chris Meers performin& · ~ely . ' and Afualo sparkling'. '
Th• Saint.I ' Oct. 18 dote at An11hetm
looks like the county game of .the cen:
tury. ,
T•AM ITATllTICI .. •• Finl *-n>lhllll .. ·-• Jl:ll'lt ....... NUlnt ,: I
Flr1t ~ ,,..,.lttli • Tohl ffr1t 6owftl " • ••
Y1re. .. 111111 rutllllll . "' ...
Y1rllfa •lnloll NNI,,. • ..
Y1r!ll. 1!191 " ..
Hit Ylfdl •"*I "' ·~ l'IUU~ • l ·--• .,,_ Md lllr.t._t1d • • N\llNllr llf ~ • I ... ..,.,_ ...,.,. ••• .... .... ,, .. •• I
Yll"dt pe11ttlrd .. " ·-•• I
FIJ!Nlflt i.t • I
·-.., o..,....
Tars Shoot f or A nother Shraout
Mater Del Wat never ever to
overtake itl!I lfid conqueror althoueh
coach Bob Woods' outmarmed chap1
did mranaa:e to keep the heat on tll the
last 29 seconds of the third quarter.
, 7' 1• t"-JI
I 1 I I -U
*NDIVIOUAl STATlnlCI
ltUSHING •
Newport, CdM Clash • Ill Big Opener They Ohallred up l!IAolr first tally with
2t) 1econdl left ID the haU, thanks to a
Ted Hamittoo pass to Don Helloa for
the fina:l three ye.rd.1. Th• 1core was
set up with the same eornbo clicking
on a 44.-yard gainer seconds earllfll'.
Ron Muniz converted.
•• ~ ....
~ """' t.t AM19
ID WDOclameM . ....
"RU Alll
TCI vti YL AY9.
" "' • .. • ~· ... ..
I " " u • • • '·'
By ROGER CARLSON
Of TIMI D•llY ,Otl tl•ff
A ship's bell, the only tangible piece
6f property, is at stake tonight, but it's
a safe bet that not too many varsity
gridders from Newport Hari>or or
Corona de! Mar High Scltools are giv-
ing the bell too much thouillJt.
The opening gam1 for both teams of
the '68 f~ campaign is billed for 8
p .m. at Davidson Field on the Newport
camplU.
Li ons, Lakewood Mix
In Important Opener
Westminster and Lakewood, two of
California's finest prep football teams,
launch their 1968 football seasons
tonight at Lakewood.
A ,pre-season fOotball magazine has
rated the Lions 'bhe state's -18th best
ouUit and Lakewood 12th.
For Westminster, i~ fate appears to
reot with its pass.defense specialists.
Coach Bill Boswell is rightfully con-
Dodgers End
Home Season
Against Cards
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The St.
Lou is Cardinals, beaded for a defense
of their world clbamplonship against
Detroit, take a ._sidetrip to Dodq:er
Stadium tonight for the start of a
three-game series agttjnst a Los
Angeles club resbing easily in eighth
place.
The Cardina.IJ throw Steve Carlton,
Dodger Slate
S.pt . .20 = ¥1 Sf, Loui. 7:15 p.m,. l(P1 (Mil S@cll 21 ' \II $1, Loul1 U:» p.m, l(F1 1 .. 1
Sl9I n ... YI SI. Loul1 12:SS '·"'· KFI MO
SHlf, 2~ C>odQef'I ,r Ch~9D ll :U "·"'· KFI 1 .. 1 s.,i 1J Oodil.,I .rf Chluoo ll:tl 1.m. KFI MO Seclol: 21 Oodoln 11 AllatllA $:• p.rn. KFL IMO!
s.e..1. 11 ~n .i ,\ll1n11 11:10 1.m. Kfl l"'I
Seto!. 2t Doc1Mf1 11 "°"'"'' 11:00 1.m. KFI MO
13-9. against Bill Singer, 12-15; Larry
,Jaster against Claude Osteen Satur-
day; and wiOO up Sunday With Bob
Gibson against Don Sutton.
Th en the Dodcers fiee town to finish
tl1e sca;;on wiUl a five-game roadtrip.
The aeason for the Dodgen la ac-
t u.ally ending on an upbeat. They've
v1on 12 of their last 16 games. They
beat CinciMaU Reda Thucsday, 3-1,
gi:lling good pitching from 21-year old
.l\lan Foster and some timely bitting
by Bart Shirley, Len Ge.briel8oo and
Foster.
Cll'l(lfll'IATI Loti A.NeaLa• ... , .. ,..
1:D111. rt • 1 1 c~. • P'-cf • llW.01 ...... d A.J~ N 4 1 I IM11M",t;
l tntl'I. e • 2 t ~ rt
..... IL • 4 f I 1""'91, rl
L M1v, 111 2 C I Sudltl.a, a
1:11!1. lll I I 1 P1r'll1r, 11 MJ_, ... 1 I I P-ldl. M C1rrwU, p I I I Sl'ltrlly, JI
C4111eNs, • J I I l" .. N!", • c .. 1 ...... , • 1 1 o GrMt, • M~IM, • I J I
Wl'lllf'"', ""' I ' I W-1'9. a I I I
.. , .. ,...
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4 I I 0
• 1 •• •••• I I I I I I I I
J I I I
J I I 1 I I I I
TC111l1 11 I 1 flot11t :0 J 7 J
c1nc;-1r 111 eoe aaa -1
La ~ t'GI CDO 11• -I E -S-11, ~I. OP -L .. A""'4ll
, LOI -Clnc!Nwtl .. Loot Mtelll t, 21 -Shir·
ltV, t)lbl"ll4Mft. SI -lhril.
11 "' It ·-•• so C~-tL.ll·lt) •lfJ J 2 J I 4 E .,, ..... 1
I 1 1 1 I o cw.1•1 t • 1 o 1 ,
9f'9ftt J I I I I I
Hll' ;-.~':" Cl'ri1r), WI' -Oflflf, n. -J;!I, A -I.Ml.
---•
cerned about Lakewood's passing at.
tack and his club'iS ability to stop it.
The culprit ts L a k e w o o d
quarterback Mike Rae, a· husky 193··
pounder who completed a stlartllng 64
per~ent of hls passes last year as a
junior.
''I've told our defensive backs lhal
we've got to intercept two of his
pas.!eS ," Boswell confides.
"If we can d o that, we will dampen
their desire lo pass on us and l know
we can S'top their running game.••
That's bold talk, because Lakewood
al.so has a talented array of back!.
But, then, Westminster has one al. the
CIF's best defensive lines, too.
Thi& LloM' Mehor man up front 11
all-CIF candidate Chuck Suter, a 218-
pound strongboy who migh t be the
best prep lineman in Orange County.
Suter will be thrOVt'ing hlmself at the
like11 of Al Limmerman (195), Dick
Herman t 190) and Don Richardson
(ro:i).
It's the tirst~ver meeting between
th;? two CIF powers.
"They're strength (pa9sinf) is our
weakness," Boswell uys. "If we can
&top their passing game we can win
because I !:hint we have a good foot-
ball team."
Says Lat.ewood coach John Ford :
"We've got 12 lettermen back from
our 7·1·1 team last year, so I t.hink
we've got a good group.
"But . I'm very CC!DCe.med about
Westminster -I saw them in a scrim-
mag• and they looked very good to
me."
FULLERTON RIPS
CYPRESS,· 4&-0
l~ '" .. 'I' l • :g \,,
Defending naticoal c h a m p i o n
Fullerton JC made it 41 ttra.l&trt vie·
torie1 by rolling OVl!'t Cypre.11, 46--0
'nlunday nl,itt at w.-. 111&1>
Scbool.
The HometJ rolled up a 27<1 bulge 1t
hdtime llld leered at ~at once in
eV<fl"'/ period to poot Ille lm-1lvo
victory.
'Ibo top-renked Hornell flattened
Cy[l181 With • brulsinl around -that Dtltod more 4llao 300 yanll and
-up the evooq wllll mora lllaa 460 y~ Jn lotll oft .....
1 ...
Uppennort ID moll Ooroaa del Mar -ds II tile lad that NOwpoli Hari>Or
hu knocked lllem off llvee atralght
times in the five-year-old· series, the
· last two by sbutoutl. '
For Newport, the thought of havin&
ill C1lU!loa come up to Davidson Field
with the idea of lmocldng off the
Sunse1, Leaguers, ls to "I' the least -
repulaive.
Coad!. Wade Watts contiden his
Newport squad better than the team
tlhat went 4+1 la.st year. Included in
the column of Jones were dete.ati by
lfl-7 and u .. . .
The Bluejacket& ripped Westmin&t-er
17-6 aod opened the season with a~ 1
win over Corona la.tt yeat.
Corona de! Mor ls !'13 paunds
....0 wbllt Nowport la 171. Th•·
Newport backfield oulwetgi)s UM! CdM
outfit m 11> rn.
Corona del Mar'& hopes f« an upset
ov.-Newport took a lathering when lt
wu learned that Ray Berg, the Sea
King•' &-3, 210 lb. tackle, i> out of the
fracas wltlt • bad lmejo.
Slated to take Berg's spot are Dan
Saluar-on offense and Brian Stern on
defensive. Berg is considered one of
Holland'• stalwart& both way1.
'!be top individual attract!oo Of tile
night II In the Confrontition between
Nowport Harb<r's Siu Aldrich, a 6-2,
22() pound, tight eod and hi.! COUD•
ttrpart from Corona dei Mar, Stern,
M , 215 pound.!I.
It w• a '17·y.ard blitz following San·
ta Ana11 second touchdown and left
the losers behind at balftlmt, 14-7.
Santa Ana e.xteDded. It. edle to 17-7
with 4:1.8 to eo In the thitd stanza a11
Mrinl• made IOOd on a 1111-yard
ft•ld &oal.
Hoiw.ver, Woods' croup made one
moro nm at tho •W&Y Sa!Dll 1b0rtl)'
""'1 the field &oal
A 54-yard &allop by Jloo Gardoa put
the Monarcbl in scoring raa1e and
~ Mlr11MZ
23 Du1611 • 01YIJ;
T.t11t
•• "'"" " ··-~-ll H11'tll!IM . ....
JI TOii-..
l) HluP1r1
11 !NIIMI-.....
Mt. PllJW
11 Woeofllnlll
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MIW Dtf ,}a l'.I. l'C 1'10 ,.. ~d.
' • • a ·;.m
Corma'1 Sea Kings weren't quite as
fortunate, winnitoc only once ill nine
p-utings along with two .Uea -one a 6-6
shocker With powerful Magnolla.
But, it's another year, and tonight's
ballt1e ia ttle start ol. Jt. Coaeh Dave
Holland ol li!e Sea Klnp clalma one ol
his worries llbou.t Newport is its.me,
but the fact remaim that neithet
team is considered biC 1rl any 1en&e.
~~~I ~r 1DL . 1:ci-..n u ~ ~· Jut! ~ !5t-:~ ~_y... ~it-·-= h = *"11:1 ~1 l ·~~glf.f
Eads, San Oemente
.........CWIN .:i~~1lry iw=~li,C~IJ~Ml~tt I ~:: ~='11.~ t'11Z;,
1 -H......il=.:I~~.
Open Season at Home: ..
Laguna:, Katella Jump
Coach Tom Eadl and hi• lonne< El
Rancho Hip football aides will unveil
their San Clemente football squad
toni~ at 8 \\lb.en the Triton• meet
Nel.f High of La Mirada on the Tritons'
campus.
Into La Palma Struggle It marks the first pme for Eada &!I
a bead coach after aerving 13 years at
El Rancho tn P1co Rive!'a.
Eadi will be tltrowin& I bolan<ed
team at Neff v.i.~ the emphalis m tile
quarterback sprl.ntout play with the
optloo ol throwing or passing.
Every football coach wants to win
his opening game, but Hat Atkins of
Laguna Beach High School and John
Let of F.:atella, would be 18:tilfied U
their teams coine out of tonight'•
season opener w~out an injury
Kickoff for the game at La Palma
S!odlum In Anaheim ls 8 o'clock.
Neither team really can afford
anythin·g In the w•y of injuries.
Laguna has a squad that numbers oaly
24, ao anything more terious ·than a
couple of Dnll.set could leave Atkins in
a ~ind far football playen.
Katella .already has been h.it by a
rash ol lnjuri~ and ~ 11 players
hobblilg •ound. witb lee miserie11
most of th':m of ~e knee variety.
Even with ~Ua comtna Off wlUI
an impr61sive i-1-1 season in 191'7,
La&una it a 1llght f•vorrl't'*i m°'*1y on
the 1lrength of a finely.· baltnced
backfield.
Qu.arterback Steve Wiezbow1ki 11 a
c&pable patJer and he has three ·backs
who can ably handle the running
chorea in Jim Kuhn, Paul McManus
and Brian Bagley,
Laguna's deftnae 1s built around
2U-pound S\eve Klostennan.
Katella'• Injury Ult lncludts ·three
starten who an quectfon marks for
tontght'1 &ame -fullback Ray Con-
rad, center John Rowell and tackle
Nowell Sweeny.
Det1nltelj-1lde·lined i1 Katella's
·m~1t dangerous back, 1Z7·pound-flyer
Chris Hiiby.
The Tritons' field eener•l, Mark
Heumann, ia considered the beat run-
ner on h squad wi.th halfback Homer
Waisner In the wtnp with a lrokeo
band.
If sheer weight meam anytnmg, San
Clemente ls in troul>le. Neff ootwot&!le
the Trltona on ~e offensive starting
team by 16 lhl . per man, 176-160.
San Clemente has h'J one in tile 200-
lb. claH jn Iii ltrlll wit.
Neff comes tn to tte opener with.13
lettermen from Its second place team
ol '87 In the Suburban League.
Leading the T r o j a n 1 are
quarterback Jtm Macl>ooal_d and two
La9111• •udl
11:1 -ll'lltt-
ltT -kMrlr
ICIM ..
UICI -McMUllfl
1Ml.T-Cr1M
lHLO -S1'111e
212( -ltow.!l
1'51(11 -Smlfll
1tJ•T-S-
IMill! --ftotitr•1
UolCll -'"'-'11•
1~1-c-~
,. * * * 11:1 -J .... _
C ' -1ei.1trm.n
LQ-._,.II
LT -O.• Lt -A*1
QI -Wl9111rM'tkl
LH -IClltWI
ll:H -McM111111 ,. -... i.v 117"41 -llW'n u,.,. -CrwM
'"
§ Pi~-111:~': i~ tt~ !.i:. \~ bi ~§.... uo ~~ -.,., .. ,. ~ -~~ >~ LH-A•-> A -//:~-
sbtlty hallbaclp, Danny McFadden
aod Rick Coml>e.
Three of the lour bacl::llekt ..,.. lar
Nell'> Trojans u. Hn1or1 Whlll_dx of
the seven linemen are juniors. ·
Last year the two rivals battled 16 1
li-19 deadlock: in the season'• opmlll'.
IT'S COUNTDOWN
FOR JC ·KICKOFFS
it.'1 24 houri until kickoff ttmeptor
Orange Coast aru junior collea:e foot4
ball-. Golden West, Orange Coast and
brand new Saddl•~k all launch 1beir
seasona Saturday night.
1be Ruet1er1 ol. Goldeli Weist play
Eut Loi Angeles •at OCC'1 ·r..eBard
Stadium, Orange Cout traYflll to Oer ..
ritos and Sldd.leback opena ·wit?! f.be
Cal Lutheran freshmen .tt M111lon
Viejo High. ·,
Golden Weal, in ttl third seuOn,
hasn't yet dropped an opening gaine
but this one looms u lta: toughest
openUlg test yet.
Orange Coast bas lort three atralibt
openers lD Cerritos end hul)'t woD .an
opener alnce 1983.
Saddleback will engqe in it. first-
e\ltr athletic contest against Cal
l.Altberan. 'Ple Gauchot '68 1.chedut• it
comprilied of collea:• ftOlh ¥Hf l?rlall
JC. teams.
UCI Poloists Look for Best'. Season
uc lrvt;;.. o1111 1ou? r-• o1c1 b.t
alre.ty a natJonal water polo power,
should be ~ooa:er tbln ever thiJ
aeMOn .
1be ArMaten Wtt"e 13-4 i.t ynr
but coach Ed N..,.land thlnkt bla team
will have nlore depth thls year in ad·
dltion to eight lettermen who retutft.
UC! "Mer polo leaml htVe"obllked
up • 46-14 racord and Newland hoptt
to make it 47·14 Wednesday when Ce.r·
d.t.oJ viJiU UCI for a 7 :~ p.m. opener.
The Anteaim · visit Orange coalt
Saturday at a a.m. for • pre-1euon
""1mm11e. .
lrviM'a ~will ntna aff a
car and a color·talovillllll tel prior I<>
ttie m1tch.
The el&ht r-.ia letlw w!nnen
or• Bill Brtl7, Rich Euoo, stove
Farln«, Dalo Hlllln, Ferdy Muarnino,
Mike Martin, Doug MCCiellan, Muon
Philpot and Paul Poznal>ter.
'nlat ll"OllP ~!pod Irvine wln two
toumam«M lut yo« -111· own and
the Gold Cout ovaal at. UC Slota
Bart.a ..
Oerryln1 ..,pporttng i:oles tllil 71or
wlll be ~era Steve Balback of
Santiago Hip, Bob Dake ol Orang•
Coat~ Tim H-o I Marina, Dallx>
Maurin Of Fullerton and N'ewport's
Jim McDooalli. .> ·
UC!'• -• oclledlllod far
Septombei-28 with Oii -(Lani Bead!), USC and UC Santa Barbara
Included In th• ot&ht-team lle/d .
'nl• all-Uotvor•lf;J of Calllorola tournammt will ba bald lo Berko!oy
Ocl. 17·11. Newland will !Ua bis
polotllla north earl)' to .-111 San
Joao Stoto and Stanford prior to the
tourney.
Othm-llCbodule hlghl!Jhla lncllllla ...--
C.1 SC.ta (LOii& Beach) maid> QOt. U
and USC at UC! OD Ocl 29. Tb•
Anteaters U.vel to UCLA Nov. t.
"It 1oob like we're aolnl to 'be -.,,or .lb111 1111 of our previoua teems," Newland aaya.
"W1 have a lot ol. Al 1-t who
.
played lalll tear and who a1su """4
AAU ball 1l>il ..,._._ Md. -
younger kids, UM llahn a ii d
McDonald, plai'ed in the nattooals al
tho CollffUDI llllt IUDllll<f ·,.
M9mntno ood McOo!lan Dioke4.!IP
f!nt clu1 oxperlenco trllaloi with ia
Olympic team at DeAnua J'!"flr
Oollege reoontlj.
N~ tay• Iha -ol U.. tcor-ln& load w!ll lall •POii tbe 1hould1rs ol
MCCiellan, Maaamlno and Martin.
McC!oU.. -tile lean\'• bl8h ocorer lort :y-. Ha'a I C:0.-dal Mar Jllp F~· •ls Martin. M•·mmo 11 a ~~ ... r..;.·, ~
. ..
'
[
l
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:f8 OAJL Y PZLOT
Start Your
Engines
-~ -by Deke Hou/gate ~ ~.:.ffunt on down to the fairgrounds, Silu, they•1a racln'
t:. Indy can on the horse track1again.
Ctwnplomblp dirt treck racing, which is what everything
·s-ln tbe beginning of. tbe sport, has never been better than
1s:th1s )'NI', and the way things are going, it may never get
,m-;better. ~ USAC held a couple of dirt races at OuQuoin, m., the ~ of JU&head plow-pony racing, and both of them out-
·Jlrew-the Bambletonlan. The "hame11 clllsic this year drew tl!.,.!19 spectators, but on back-to-back days during the Labor
.~_w6ekend USAC stocks ·drew 21,500 and champ cars dnw 1J!.GllO fans. ..-.! :Tb.la ls to announce that the United states bu finillr
~ught up wtth the IndusbiaJ Revolution in sports. A. J . Foyt
~d-Marlo Andrettl are now as well known as Nevele Pride.
~horse.
:.; ,, 1be dirt cars come west this month for their 18th ap-
.:;:earance at the now-abandoned California Statle Fairground.!
'"Sacramento. The rece Sept. 29 may be the last ever seen in
~· West oo a dirt track. ·~ -The 1am-e conditions of progress that have led to recognl-
-,tli>n of auto racing aa a sport have also swept away all the
Q!, beloved dirt tracks.
.;: Beflnal.at nes:t Tbur1day, Dete Hoalgate can be heard ~tly over Kn (l40 K.C.) at '1:10 p.m. PDT wtdl his new
ijdJn procram, "ln1kle Sport.. Auto Racl.nf."}
~·1 I'm surprised the Sacramento fairgrounds race is still on ii\is year. bee a use the state Fair that used to feature bome-
Olined preserves. prize porkers and horse racing is now ex-~. thanks to a beautiful new multi-million dollar tourist at ~on called Cal Expo. '!:' ==It'.1 only a matter of time before the state rips down the
fences and plows up the one-mile oval that has been
_ lbed by some drivers • about as easy to race on as the ~achhead at Anzio.
: ; • l1irt racing is tough, dangerous and dirty. A1 Sacramen-
··~~multiply toughness. danger and dirt by three and you get ·~~ idea of what a c~ore it is for the best driven in the world tS llP.fil'.&tiate 100 miles on the horse track.
· -Driving the dirt is likened to boat racing in a choppy sea.
The ."line" of ha~d packed earth that provides the only
relatively safe portion of the track ill ever llhifting. Every few
lt'os the "line" develops a pothole. and llometimes that moves
too.
·~ ~t the end or 100 miles drivers, cars and racetrack are
Cori\l;lletely soent. Up in the aplintery gN;ndstands, so are the
"'CJ:choked f11n1. Sacramento gives them more racing In 100
·P.f.!,_1ha n Le Mans could possibly manage in 24 houri.
·\.::.Aild the heroes of Sacramento read like a who's who of ~i::racin g. Starting in 1949 the winners have been Freddie
Agabashian. Duke Dinsmore. Jimmy Bryan, Jud Larson,
Rodger Ward, Jimmy Thompson. Jim Hurtubise, A. J . Foyt
=?on B~anson and Dick Atkins. Foyt will be going after.hi;
f1t'th victory.
Eagles
Eye Win
Tonight
A frulllrat!ng tr.nd el
cloee los9111 p'3.gued Eltan-
da High School lalj year
and roach Jdul !l.owrT• _.., on betm "'1eo ...
Eatl .. ~lhflir -ope~ to ' 20-19.
'l'bat was f:int ol two
one-point defeD for tbe
l!:lldet. who alao '°91. one
g.ame by -.-one! played ODe acorele11 tie in a
3-5-1 season.
Lowry '-' his 111118 out·
fit can rewne that b'end
ton&ht in their &e&.orl
opener oeaimt Elle ...,.
team whidl started
ewrything bad in 1967,
Tuotln.
Kicbllf f<r lhe DOll·l-
opeoer et Tuotln H I I h
Sctid>l is 8 o'cloclc:.
Both ckbs .are loaded with
es:perlence. Tustin ball nine
veterans back oo itli srtmti.Dg
offemi.ve squad which put
together a 7-2 record last
yefll. But Estiancia iii one up
with 10 letterman. Hawevw-, the od.y non·let·
term an for Estancia on ,af·
tense, i• Curt 'lbornes at the
vitlai quartertJract slot.
Both clubs figure te slug it
out 00 the ground in mi old-
fuhiooed. running battle.
Tultjn bas a pair of bani
nn>en in haiftllld:S Bd>
Sd>osl>lg one! Toby Wbiltle.
Sch::l6tlag ate up TTIDfe ~
600 yards ks.st season while
Whittle averaged 4.5 yards a
carry.
Est.ianci.a will counter with
its own pair d. bard runners
in fullback DIS Durante
and llallbacl< DaNo J...,....
i
•
•
Meet Area Prep Gridders
ltOCKY DIXON --81CK ... TltOS
Ct-411 Mar lldf
-....... _ .. .._ ,_.y ltllLLY ----
TOHY veNTIMIGLIA
Mltflll ltclc
Oilers
To Battle
Jordan
In. rect!lW years, Hun· tinlWft Beach has earned a
--l<r OeldinS big, burly !oo41lall .,.m, "1>ioh
devoured t h e l r opponents
witll crulld1lng boll contTol.
But 1l>at ldnd ol PoW>dage
i&n't there · anym<Jn and
Oiler coach Ken Moats mu&t ·turn to the "lq bomb" of·
tensive theory.
'lbe Oilers' new )ook will
be unveiled t:oniglJt in their
season opener at Long
Bead> Jordan.
"In Che past we've been
ltroog enough to control
tm ball but this year we're
going to have to try and get
people outside and throw the
ball more" Moa ts ex•
plained. '
Aga5nst Jordan, Moats
will open with veteran ToniY
Bonwell a t quartert>ac k;
Bonwt11 was last year'~
starter but wet hampered
for part of the 5eason by a
hip polnStt.
The Jardan affair could
turn into a pas sing
marathon. Boswell figure.f
to begin firi!C &WllY at the
outset end Jordan '&
quarteri>ad<, Jmo Edwards,
is aiso well schooled in the
art.
He was a starter aM last
season u a junior and has
one of the ClF's better
receivers to throw to. He's
speedster Dennis Brimhall,
an all-Moore League choice
la« year.
In the backfield, the Oilers
must be wary of 200-pound
tail.back Steve Helm and
breakawray threat .DeMis
Kinley.
Both teal1lfi were 2-7 last
year and bot.ti expect to
register improvement this
year. Jordan will have 'Ute
revenge motive in its ammo
bag -tl>e Oilers stomped
'em last year, 35·7.
/\'eanderthab of Radng
Mien it comes down t.o a
running game. Tustin will
enjoy a big edge In we.,
akmg the line. With four
lineroeo lli{lping lhe scoJe.. at
more than 200 pounds, the
Tillers ·will have a 23-pound
per411:811 adWllltlage acroS&
the front wall and that's a
big km! for the EaglN to ~m~ound. ... .................................................................................... ...1
Says Jordan co a c h
Len Stewart-"From w h at
we've heard, we think Hun·
tingtoo i:s pretty tough. I
know Moats has improved
his speed with Ugbter backs
and we're real concerned
with their passing attack
becaulie that's the fastest
way to get beat."
Just as dirt cats are the Neanderthal1 of raclnc, 10 are
Uie SCCA formul1 cart ttie hot new setup of the future.
Fennala raclni baa been kept In SCCA '1 close& for 10 lone
tt'1 a wonder that It 11 flnaUy emerfln1 into the mainstre~
with a little ela11.
The 1ceond year of so-called profe11looal formula road
racing 11 near It. end , and the champ of the 1erfe1 11 a denU1t
from Fullerton, CaHf., Dr. Lou Sell. That'• not too en·
~urag!nf a 1tart, bat Trans-Am road raclnf 1ll:rted ta a
tloset too.
Doctor Sell has probably achieved a1 much notonetY
f£-0m belnc the racing a11oclate of comedian Dick Smother1
., he has from winning everything be ha1 entered 10 far this
•eaaon.
Unfortunately, the fact that business and profe11I011al
men usually start at the top when the 1porta car voup
ftt-~lop1 a pro circuit ob1cure1 the fact that wealthy
'"ducated fUY• can be Juli a1 1ood 1t drfvinC 11 unemployed
.13•mechantcs are.
•:::. Deorge Follmer, who started 11 an insurance broker and ,.'~tier en.(lnttr Mark Donohue proved that. Now we 'have
. J~u..SeU. At hit present rate rA climb to the top tn auto rat· ·lag;:sen may become tJle moat famous part-time dent11t since . t:al'J"_ Mlddlecoff.
Formula Radng E"'J>lalned
!:. So what is fonnula racing, anyway? 1 have to confess J
don't fuUy understand the classes. but here is a loose ex·
planation :
lndy cars are formula cars in the sense that they are
specially built to a formula and not to some manufacturer's
sp.~ifications. Engine sizes. wheel base lengths and
minimum weights are proscribed. and a complicated um-bre~ of technical rules is applied equally to all the cars in a
fJlthcular formula.
...... ~'/ts in world championship grand prix racing, formula
Ws are open wheeled iand carry only the driver.
The class Sell dominates is Formula A, which is nothing m~re or less th~n SCCA's version of an Indy car. Engines are
5 h~er 1305 cu. 1n.) American V-8s . Last year's formula , now
des1.gnated Cla_ss B. features cars powered by 1600 c.c.
enll.1nes producing 160 h.p., and t~re is a Formula C with
1t00
1
c.c. engines in the pro series.
n amateur racing there are two other classes Formula
V .. ee -a bargain basement class in which only V~lkswagen
compone.nts are. us~ -and Formula Ford, which uses 95
h.p. Cortina ~n~tnes 1n ~tock condition. Open wheeled formula
cars are springing up like mosquitos from a swamp.
At the Santa Barbara Labor Day raet!s there were so
Many yees. they had to run in lwo separate races -
, something like 40 entries.
: Ccsts range from $1,500 ta nearly SIO,OO'J. so no formula
, car is cheap, but they are a lot less expensive than the 4-cam-
: mer1 and Offenhausers that run with Foyt AndrettJ and the
, Unsers at the controls. '
, SCCA Is working it.self up to a big announcement for 1969
; t~at f_ormula road racing ~ill replace the U.S. Road Racin~
; CU'Cwt. that the annuaJ. driver championship will be awarded
. to the formula series winner in lieu of the USRRC.
BlghtllUIJ• More Dangerou•
~ M1.nv • pro driver proclalms he would rather bf' In 1 race :-=r lllll!mf Wlfll nta pee,.. th an on the public hltllw•y1 He
: Myt "ff lee:h 11ftr. 'nle flnt 1cle1tifk reaearcb cov~rtng 'that ·
point U1 been unoaDCed ln En1land by Dr. Michael Hen-
• deQu, wbe lulstl 11'1 •ot 10. r;,• 1117 a Brftll~ driver had three ttme1 more cba~e of
19JUY II' dull • a race COW'H than on 1 blgilway Dr , =,_ aUd. lnjur)' ntet were higher In open can, ~ e1::
~1. U perceat of •II raclni lnJ1try acc.ld~nta
Win ca-.. ., *"er ,nor, Z5 percent by 1nother com-
,,._.. '1lllltab,14 pe.rcpi by mec:battical failure and t per· :eat '1 •leedlaMOW oChtr eauet.
.
)
• ' ' -
tap at COsta Mesa High
(t:~ &.m.) Saturday with
... CorMir1 IWIY 11 San
Oemtnte and tht Coronas ·-· .~
•tt1Mle
Cf -M*.t N .... IMWI ~ -J.ti Seiver G -Rod f 11!1 -ti••latld Kcdi G -01Yt Nturnen
n -~1ym0f>d RE -.,,,,..,, •t -,,., homtl F -lck 0ur8"11 H -1¥1 Jot.nlOll W -Gtt nl Vin 01W11krr T111tl1 ~Lf = c;r;;8ld.11 -ilP' ii" ..... i-II Hill = -=. 1~1:nf.;,t'lfi.~t1cl
Q -D1v1 Al'd1Jo111 Ha -'l'otly Wl'lll!lt
Hll -llotl SdmllH FL -aaO SHvt
'" •• "' "' ·~ 1l: l~ '~ "' '" ~· ru OU l8l ·~ '" "' in
Diablos,
Saddleback
In Debut
Mission Viejo High will be
up against a totally ex·
pericnced Saddleback team
when ttte two schools open
their football s e a s o n s
tonight at Santa A n a
Stadium.
Mission Viejo can't help
but improve this year. The
Diab\06 Wf!re 0-9 last season.
Saddleback was 4-3-2 and
fini shed se<:ond in the
Orange League with an all·
junior team.
"We've got 28 lettermen
back this year," says Sad·
dleback coach John Moore.
"We have an excellent
passer fn Steve Ross and an
out.standing running back in
Rudy Silvas."
Missioo Viejo will start
Ed Gray at quarterback but
Jerry Gloster. las~ year's
starter, Is also slated to see
actioo .
Halfbacks Don Wiloon and
Rfck Boehmer have bot'h
been impressive in Mission
Viejo worltouU. The Diablos
wiU operate out of the split
T formation and t h e
Oklahoma defense.
On defense, the Viejo
standouts have been Bob
Radz.avage and M a nu e I
MWHn. 'The be5t of the
linebacke?\S is Ray Johnson.
Saddleback'1 Mike
Stewart hag beefl t h e
surprise so faf" at left end.
Stewart WM out all last
feaE with a broken leg but
has been an outstanding
recelw.r In workouts. --· lf -lllltoe S....,1tt 119
LT -(till L .... • Ill
LO -Ltrl"I' !low.., 190
C -Ml-• Rl"f...iot Ill 110 -T-Gtl"(ll IM
ltT -Diel ll'""IMKIVnkrl "J
1tt: -""' v_.i 1u O• -5~ lto.1 Ut
Tl -Wllho W•"'" 1$0
... -OOll4r l>om•11 ''° w• -ltud'I< SllYlll l:tl -· ... ltf -ltll' """'-115 ltT -lttw Gton 177
ltG -Mll!t llCktf' 17' C -1111 iltld.tll\llH lH
LG -ltldl; W1rd ln
LT -Dell l" ...... tr1tl lll
LI!' -$!..,. l"t'll.• 1'5
o• -t(d Gr1v 1tf
LH -0.,.. Wlltoll IU
l'I -J-Cll•'""' 110
llM lllck letll•tte:t 1tf ,
QB Duel
Highlights
Baron Tilt
Vikes Will Battle •
South Torrance
Marina High School 's pro·
An interesting ma.tchup in mising offense will be ade-
qua.rlt!ri>ack skills figures to quately tested in. its season opener tonight w,hen the
highlight tonight's 8 o'clock Vikings journey to South
season opener be t ween Ton-aoce High .
Fountain Valley .and Rancho Sou.th Torrance is a
Alamitos Higti School at defensive-minded outfit with
Huntington Beach Higti's five defensive lettermen
stadium. returning to man positions
In Dennis Regan. Rancho they held down last year.
Alamitos has a quarterback Marina, on Ule other hand,
who looks and acts like a has a new quarterback and
quarterback should. Foun-a halfback who hope5 to find
tain Valley, on the other some big holes in the Soutti
hand, will go with Tom Torrance defense.
Malone. who hasn't exactly Greg Henry pl,ayed second
dQU}ed anyone wittl his fiddle to quarterback Mike
form in practice. Tamiyasu fur two years at
Baron head coach Bruce Mari:na but this year ttie job
Pickford. s.ays Malone is the is his from st.art to finish.
at fullback, where starter
Shawn DeLoyola is out
cusision. Tu.king his place
will be Keilth Donaldson,
starter at safety last season.
Marina was 3-6 last year
and South Torrance was
44-1. #
''We're going to be strong
defenisive~y. where we have
most of ouc lettermen.
We're m o s t l y concecned
about moving the football,''
says South coach Herb
Richey.
He has a brother act
going. with Steve Rober1son
at left el)d and brother Sam
at quarterback.
worst looking quarterback "Greg is nnt. the runner
he has in camp when il com-lvfike was but he's a better LE_ vi"'e Mo1~•r1"' uo
es to doing thin'g'S according passer,'' says Vilce coach LT -M lk• R~ '"" •• •• book B ! h J• C LG -Dtve Tttl 173 ..., 1..t1e . u some QW, tm oon . c _curt s11111tf 110
with so~ u o or th o d o x The back is Mike Witt.ick. RG -Jim Gtu11111n 1n
:.... n.~ · M J H • I •-• od """ · RT -Andv Vorono 20:5 sruearm 111.lJ oWJng, a one e s OOa..:u go enou6·u lD llE _ D•ve L•cv 1r.o
has won the starting job pre-season workouts f o r Q11 -G'"" Henrv 1As · I •·-h -~ C to · ert " LH -Ml~e w111kk 1n s1mp y ~ause e resrnn•S oon rns some game-RH _ ranv venum111n1 1"5
to pressure. breaker" type plays in fl -Ke1111 0on11d1an 1110
Malone's mam· targ t M00,·na's offense. 10· Ttrr•llC• e s .... LE -5"'"" Rllbe<"lson 1l5 figure to be flankers Keith "Mike was our leading 1.T -o. ... p.,..,,,s 1t0
Arledge and Don Harris, a scorer last year and he's a LG -Mike wim1m• 11s C -Mlkt R111l1ncl US 140-pound speemter. good receiver. We're hoping RG -R09tt s""•" 1u R-an. has half a dozen he can break aw.ay a lot for RT -01<:• vi1n 11111 "b RE -Slew Vlco 1'5 better than .a v e r a g e us this year." Qa _ s.om ••"-' uo
re<:eivers to handle his Coon has made e. change r11 -•fl!<t Jo11-1u Fl -T-°'"~ 115 thl"Ows, headed by starting several weeks with a eon-11H -o'" wri1tton1 1.s enda Richard Mcinturff and _c::_::..::._::..::.::_::__c:_: __ :::_..:.
El Segundo
Nixes CdM
Tournament
n>e sixth annual Corona
del Mar water polo in-
vitational geUi wider way at
UC Irvine and Corona del
Mar Saturday with one ma-
jor deletion.
El Segundo, counted on to
participate in ttie classic,
was forced to cancel out due
lo schedule clifticulties and
has been replaced b y
Corooo. de! Mar's Bee team .
It marks ttle second year
in a row t h a t El Segundo
has seen fit to pull out of
the classic at the last mo-
ment.
UC Irvine will be the site
of most of the action with
only two first round match-
es taking place at Corona
del Mar.
The host Sea Kings, seed·
ed number one, will tackle
Futl.Jerton at 10 a.m. folJow-
ing the 9 a .m. match
between Newport and Sierra
at CdlY1.
Meanwhile, at UC Irvine,
CdM's Bee team will tangle
with Whittler's varsity and
Cal High will fOilow at 10
with OUGrd.
Winners ot the four first
round matches mix it up at
UC Irvine at 2 and 3 p.m.
with the championship ~
at s.
John Cunningham. Baseball Standings
Hv11Un.ton &Hell
LE -Marl( W!'llllltld 18
LT -Hooe su111v•n 19J
LG -r1111 Navlor 16S
C -Gf:Of!lt Ollv1t 175 RG -Tom Arnold 19S
RT -Bob SMldon 195 RE -Ml~t Prlcldy 160
QB -Tony Bonwtll 175 LH -D111r Smllh 160
FB -Fr•n-Ntt! 165 WB -Carl PtdtrSO!I 21.I
l.onl •11cll J1nl111
lE -Dtnnls llrlmllt H 1711
LT -Gerry Dunn 190
LG -Clauda G1ul!!ltf' 188
( -Oollg 0111 llS
RG -Robblt P1<1m1n ln RT -Htl Howell 210
RE -Chrll Hyt1 1t10
QB -Johll Edwtnh 17.S
TB -Sieve Helm 2(),1
MB -Oe<1nl1 Klrk.e-v HJ
Fii -Oou8 Mlru: 11JO
Cee Grid
Results
Coslt Mes.I 1' IJ 0 11-21
Dr1n1te 1 O O II-7
Touclldowns-(CMl .t.rutller 2, Yount.
Ran11el. P.t.T-Tom!!n 2, Mt nlK.
0 0 0 ~
000&-6
lto11111 Be.ell 1' 1' 1 0-.li
Kttrllt 0 0 0 II-O Tood>downs-Jllll O!tmer 2, s-
nv 1. M11rp111ne. P.t.T-Ottmer, Sweomv,
CrO'Wfl, N!llt, Rt<kll,,-.
E•ltr.clt 20 20 u '"-'O
T11111n o a o G-a
looclldowns-IE1!) Oulltw I, DllJ..
O<ldc. Roberlsan, Ttrrln.
Founttln Vt llw
Rtndle Al'1nll,.
0 •• 0--4
0000--4
oaa11-a ,0,.._11
D ' O ~' 0 12 ' 11-11
Last season both club6
posted 2·7 records, s o
tonight's winners will have a
good start on at least equall·
ing its 1967 win total.
Both clubs feature rather
light lines and Fountain
Valley's left tackle Bill
Cha.mpioo will ~ the only
200-pounder OJl the field.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
xSt. Louis 94 fi() .610
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
xDetn::Mt 99 54 .. 647
Merits & Benefits
Of Full
The Vaqueros boast a
riifht edg'e in experience
and weight a.k>ng ~ line
and that could prove to be
the deeidine factor. lf..d. Alt"'IM 'I -RldYf'll Mcinturf!
L -Miit l""""" " -l'."'" •• , C -of\n IWIJ
RG --l1rt. ll:f -OIY!ll~
ltE -JOl'tll evnn1,..111m
~· -0.""'9 It"'" HI = !~~i=-
"' -Fr1'* Hlnlllfl ........... YI'!,.., tf::~·s..: tG -~ wunflbKht• Rv=r=H«S §f :O ~i§: H -'t,!! r(Oll "' -M •ltttM
Trout Plants
San Francil!CO 63 71 .539 JI
Cincinnati 79 73 .520 14
Ch icago 79 75 .513 15
Atlam.s 78 76 .500 16
Pittsburgh 75 Tl ,493 18
Philadelphis 72 81 .471 21 \~
Lot Angeles 11 83 .461 2.1
New York 68 85 .4« 251,\
Houston 68 86 .442 2t)
1:--clinched pennant.
TINY'I 01mt1
Cll~to (Jlfllr.IM 1 .. u, II Pllhbv<11~ 1•11u 1'-
S), nNlll
Cl~lrwwitl CHoloM t ·ll 11 l'to<lllOn 401trt:f'r U·
U!, 11ltfll
SI. Ltull !C1•110n 1).11) 1! LM .t.,_lft CS!,....
It!" l"l-1S), llltf\I
At1111ll II-7·>! ti S.11 Ft1<>el11CO !Mt•!.
d'lll JMJ. 111t11t
New YQtt: !kl\llt!" U·ll t l'CI Ct~ll 7·13) 1t
,_lll~i.1111 !G JIC:ll-I~ -L. JKI:-1). 1'1. I, ~<119M
Baltimore: 87 67 .565 121,1
Boston 81 72 .529 18
Cleveland 81 73 .526 181/i
New York 80 73 .523 19
Oakland Tl 16 .500 Z2
Minnesota 73 RO .477 36
California fl6 R8 .4%9 U'h
Chicago 63 90 .412 36
W a~ington 59 93 .388 391,1
1:--clinched pennant
T"'1nUY'I lt"'°ttl
Ot•l'OIT L Ntw ,...,.., 2
W•1nln910fl ti (IWtltftd, c.""lftl, r.in °"'' "'""" ld'ltdulf'f T-w•1 a.itlft
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Dttreil !Lelle!! UI) ti W11llln9'!on IC~
ll·lt or Ht""'n l!Wl. nl9M
8o1T<lfl '""°'""""Id I.I ,. L"'llllrg S--ll •• tow
Yort: IP•..,._ 11·'1· n~t ltlti,,_.. IH1..i1" 1 .. 111 II Cl>k:•"' (NyfNll ,,_H nlllllt
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Orangt Co.'1 Oldut & Most ltttpectcd Li'ncotn-MtTCUfl Dealer
Johnson & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH
642-0981 S45-1271
\
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lncrt 11in9 nu.,.bttf of Al'l'ltric•n luti.
n111 ind Prof111iontf min tnd wom1n
t r• ttkin9 1dv1nt19e of tht u11111u1l1y
1Hr1cliv1 "p!u1" b1n1fih of 1 Fu 11
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wic• rt quittftltftt up fe 40,000 mil•i.
fh1 pro9 •t fl'I, t vt i11blt i11 Or1n9t
County lhtv Johnton I Son, 11 t un-
iqv• olf1rin9 tf !ht Lincolt1 Mtrcvry
D•1ltr1 l111ing A1tocittion, t n1liot1·
wid1 or9111ii1tion of evt• 400 f.t11•
chlttd mtmbt<1 witli •t JHt11nt1ti .. t 1
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1969 CONTINENTAL
'160 .......
C•ll Tod1y for
---------------------------·-
I
.I
I
.I
-·-·~·-·----·-~·-··~-tr-T..._1"""1••"!'.a r _, ___ ~ .. ,-~_~..,,..,.,.~ ... ..r _,,._.,,....,,,_ ·-"-·-..
(
TAKE THATI -Ray Dalke (right) delivers a kick
to Greer Golden in a karate demonstration at the
Los Ani:eles Press Club. Both Southern Californians
DAILY l"ILQT l"!Motn Ill' tlcllm,_ KM!llw
are black belt practitioners of the sell defense art.
The first-ever world karate chainpionships will be
held at the Sports Anna Oct. 19.
Olympics
Alternates
Named
Paul Smart, chairman of
the U.S. Olympic Yachting
Committee, bu .aMOunced
the three alternate ·skippers
who will go to Acapulco for
th! Olympic yacht.in& games
beginnlng Oct. 12.
The alternite skippers will
be John Mar1hall, Stamford,
Conn.: Robert Doyle, Massa-
chYHtta, and Tom Allen of
Buffalo, N.Y.
MarabaU was runner-up to
Gardner Cox in the 5.5 me-
ter Olyms)it trials held in
Newport last month. He has
experience in several classes
and will be expected to pinch
hit ln e~ther the 5.5s, Dragon
and Star ..Class. _
Doyle was runner-up to
Carl Van Duyne in the Finn
Class trials, and AJ!en was a
close second to Robert Jam-
es in the Flying Dutchman
Class trials.
Both Doyle and Allen will
back up the .skippers in their
respective classes.
"I feel that the five skip-
pers and three altt!mates
wlll give us an exceptionally
strong team at Acapulco,"
taid ·Smart. .
Tournament in Los Angeles
. In the 19&4 yachting Olym·
Jncs at En01hima, Japan.
the U.S. team ~on medals in
every class·, but no gold me-
dal11. Smart said he Is confi-
dent Utat one or more g o I d
medals will come to the U.S.
with the stl'Gng team being
fielded. I~arate Getting on Its Feet;
World Championship Set Two NHYC
Skippers
Get Honors By EARL GUSTKEY
Of !ht D•llY P'llDI Sl•ff
Judo, long considered the
king of the sell defeme arts,
is being strongiy challenged
by karate, according to
Southern Califomta karate
officials who are plaru»ng
the sport's premier event
next month.
Los Angel.es will be the
host city for the 1968 World
Invitational Karate Tourna-
ment on Saturday, Oct. 19.
at the Sports Arena.
It's the · first time the
world karate movement has
been organized sufficiently
to conduct a world tourna-
ment. Cont.estants from ttie
United States, Japan and
four European countries will
compete.
Karate hasn't yet ap-
proached the workl recogni·
tion that Judo has, but it's
growing, particularly i n
Southern California. Judo
became ml Olympic sport in
1964.
"'There are kvate clubs
springing up all o "-e r
Southern California," says
Or. Lester Ingber, a phy11ics
instructor at UCLA and a
blaek belt karate prac·
Tritons, Eagles
Outrun Opponents
In opening Cros6 country
matc.ilts Thursday, the San
Clemente and Estencia high
sobools won easily but
Laguna Beach and Fountain
Val\ey were on loeing ends
by convincing margins.
Seruor Charlie Hoyt and
his sopbom«e brottler QJrt
led Estancia tn a pe<fect
score of 16-SO (in cross
country, tow JCOre wins).
AU seven Estamci.a nlf1·
ne1"6 orwsed the ti.ni!lh line
Artists Drop
12-11 Game
To Warriors
A last-minute eoaJ by
Troy' llltb SCl>ool enable<t
Ille WarrJor1 to edge La·
guna Beach 12-11 in the two
schools' 1968 w a t er polo
opener.
~ Artists jumped to a
~7 half time advantage, but
were oven:ome and finally
beaten on a list-minute pen·
alty shol by Dave Meyers.
Artist cenler·forward Bob
Gar·'1•r h ~1 an outJtanding
g : · ·. s.:orlna ei1ht goals
r~ t. _,, a fantastic all·
u : j ... J, r· 1 s · . er !or the War·
·; 1~!iers ,with
·, r'nrli-.. f"'J
•.• ~.!.\I 10·
. l"·I. nn..: t.lt
beiore a runner from host
school Tustin could fini9ll.
Bob Uneback and Craig
Sterling led Se.n Clemente kl
a 15-49 win over visiting
Neff Hi!lb Scbool.
The Barons of Fountain
Valley were defeated easily
by Rancho AlamJtos. 16-45,
while at KateUa Laguna waa
beaten by the host Knights.
19-36.
Co.11 •re• l!n!11>er1:
ll1ta11ei. 11, T111U~ Jf
111 Ch•rlle HCl'fl f :'9, 12) C~rl Hoyt
11:11, IJ) T«!'Y ~n II: .. C•) L'" 8•rlon 10:10. fJ) W1lltl< ll<OIJ 10:11,
1•1 M.rt; • ..., 11:s. 1n cr.uea lfllll·
lne ll:Jf.
lltlldle ,.._,._ lL ....... v •• ...," C 11 K1v!n Wiiii.ms t :U, !I! O.w
Miiier ll:U, t•l D1o1 lloett 11·1t. flfl
Tim ~"'* ll:JI, 021 •twt CJtrl'l"•l'lll ll:JI.
Yanks Miss Two
The USA has <ntertd
...... in 17 o( th• )Q lporU
on the calen:Jar for t11.1
dlympic Gthnes in Meak.'O.
,,.e USA was eliminated In
the fi rst round ol th~ aoccer
etm,l r1 !lon tourn1J11ent .arid
th! fie! 1 ho~ke)' team failed
10 qo r1•fy with a thlrd place
f1fjAh in !he Pan·Amerlcan
Ga"meg at Wln-1""1.': 1 .. 'ft!l!'7.
titioner.
"There are a lot ol karate
clubs on university and col-
lege ~es ttlat will soon
become accredited physical
educatioo classes -as soon
as we can get enough
qualified instructors."
T h e difference between
juOO and karate is the
degree or punishment one
can inflict upon an attacker,
Besioa.Uy. the object in
judo is to throw your roe to
the ground. In karate. the
practitioner uses stnking
motions with the hands,
elbows and feet.
As Harry Umemoto, a
Hunting;too Beach black belt
devotee, JJ(lta it:· •'•The
physical philosophy in judo
is to use your foe's force
against himself. In karate,
yoo maximize your own
strength .•. applying basic
laws ol. phy1ics to your own
body."
The highest ranking
karate expert In America Is
Hidetaka NWU.yama, a sixth
degree black belt and chief
instructor for tbe A 11
America Karate Federation.
"Some Of the techniques
in karate seem very 1mall
and yet they are completely
disabling," be 1ay1.
"It require& great meotal
and physical fitness.
Obvioualy, , since karate
can kitt or severely w<>und
an opponent. it can't be ap-
plied in its raw fonn in com·
petitive m..tchee. The com-
petitors are ecored b y
judge1 as they fall just short
ol. striking their opponents.·
"It's not like pulling your
punches like a boxer does,"
Dr. Ingber s&fl, "you're us··
ing full force but coming
just short of mating con-
tact."
Karate is one of four ma·
jor self-defense arts. The
o~ .are Judo , kendo anJ
a.ikido. Kendo requirts the
skill~ use of long poles or
sticks and Ailtido is an at·
tack upon an attacker's
joints.
Unlemoto is attempting to
!onit an active karate
oreanizatiom in 0 r a n g e
County.
"We have 10 people signed
up and ready to go," he
'"Y'·
''OW' only problem ii fin·
<ting a facility where we can
work out. We'rt trying to
get penni111ion to use one of
the wrestling rooms al the
Hw.ntington Beach H i g h
Scbo9l."
Umemoto is a black belt
member of ttle A 11
American K1Wate Federa·
tlon, tM only nationally
organized. karate oreaniza·
tion.
"We .ace directly affiliated
with the Japan Karate
Association (JKA), which is
the largest in Japan and the
only one recogntud by
Japan's Ministry of Educa·
tion," he 1ay1.
Two Newport H • r b o r
y.actlU won top honors in
Loi Angeles Yacht Club'1
Whitney Series wtl)ch WM
concluded last week.
Overall winner w a s
Ge<rg1? Sturges' Columbia·
50 Release from Newport
Hart>or Yacht Club, and
runner-up WliS BiU Allen's
Oal~ Madrupdor, also
from NHYC.
Class breakdown of the
series was as follOVr'S :
CLASS A -('!) Jublhrtion,
Horry stewaro, LAYC; 121
Sumow, Al Martin, LAYC;
(3) Capricious 11, B e n
Williams, LAYC.
CLASS B (l)
Madrugador, Bill A 11 e n ,
NHYC; (2) Release, George
Sturgts, NH Y c ; (3)
Dorothy E lrll, Doris Levin,
CYC.
CLASS C -O l Piipoos..
Cliff Tucker, LBYC ; (2)
Conquest, Bill i'<>lly, LBYC;
(3) Star Dancer, Doug
Starkweather, Sl BYC .
Results of the L I t t t e
Whitney Series for Midget
Ocean Racing Fleet Yachts
W\as not computed becavse
one of the races wa1 can-
celled and Will be sailed dur-
ing LA YC's Harbor Serties.
Pomeroy
Series Set
Polo Tourney Finals
Slated This Evening
Soulll Short Soilin& Club's
Pomeroy Trop~y Series foc
Ml!lcet Ocean Racinl Flee!
ya'l!liU will be bekl SMurday
and Sunday with IW"tl off
the e.Iboa Pitr.
In coojuncUoo with the
Second and final day of
action in the Newport-Me8a
Class B and C water polo
tournament started at 2:30
thi! afternoon at Estancia
High 'Scbool with the final
matches slated to gel under
way at 5 o'clock.
. Jn Cius B act.Ion Thurs·
day. Estancia highllghled
acUon with a pair of victor·
les .
lD the opening game of
the BM bracke~ Newporl
t;tu beaten by Estancia,
9-5.
Greg Goodyear s c o r e d
fiv~ 1oal1 ror the Ea&les.
Costa Mesa completely
cru.sbed Corona del Mar ln
a team effort, 1 l·/· Eat.ancla then came back to M~at
Costa Mesa, 6-4. ierl@s will be the Cal-1.0 Oeet
The first game of the championships.
tournament was 1n the : Oee • 'Ille late Warren PO'meroy
bracket with Newport. Har· was a great advocate ot
bor defeating Eatancla. 10-3. small ocean racing boats
Harbor's Doue Snyder was lone before the Midget
hilh scorer wltti ffve goals, Ocean Racing Fleet waa
while teammate Kevin Ashe 4!:Wll' organii.ed. M 0 R F
had three scores. boats are 3G feet and under
Costa Me•• dumped Coro-in overall length .
ru. del Mar U . The M1.11· P«ntroy wu an em.ptoye
tanp jumpod out to an tar!y ol tllt W. D. Schock CO.
11-1 half·tlmt lead and ntvtr Miid! produced tile Schock·
retlnquiahod 11 tn UHt Sea 22, one ol the -nut ol tbo Kinas. /o!ORF I (JOO in tbU ana.
C.1ta Me1a pla)'«l Ellan· ;:::========;J
cla In Ille third ·-and remained 1mdefeated in the
tnurnament by downing Ille
E11Iu, 1,., Jahn· eorpenttr
and Gree Beal had thr ..
goals aplece fo.-the Mus.-
tang11.
SHARP
If ,..,., ...... ,., ff•tl•t, •••
+tie DAflY Pltors ft111e111
Dl1t11·A-Lh1• cl .. llflM .... s .... •"• M••• • Mtt.r '••I ... w er Y••'t• iHlyU.1 ., 1eUl!'11.
-----------------------------·-·
• ., . • ?> --
S!i ES WINNER -Volante II, skippered by Mike Hinh ol Balboa Yaclll!'
Club was overall winner of BYC's summer 66 Series of offshore yacht races;.·
Volante II Named
66 Series Winner
Mike Hirsh's Cal 2-30
Volante II has been named
the overall winner of Balboa
Yacht Club'• 66 Serjes, com·
posed of six races of ap·
proximately six hours dura·
tion.
Second in th.e overall slan·
dinp wa11 Jack Baillie's 12·
me'ter Newsboy, and third
Wu George Sturges's
Columbia·50 Release.
Following are Uie winners
in each class:
CLASS A - (I) Newsboy;
{2) Release; (3) Sparkle,
Alex Irving, BYC; (4)
Prelude, J im, Linderman,
BYC; (5) Talisman, Bob
Williams , BYC.
CLASS B -(1) Melee,
Don Ayrts, NHYC; (2)
Enchantres'I. Wynn Bedall,
BCYC; (3) Vela, Jack Bibb,
BYC; (4) Holiday, Page
Noll, NHYC; (5) Maurice J,
W.W. Sullivan. LA~
CLASS C (IJ
Impe t uous , Charle11
Glasgow , BYC ; 12)
Marvida, John Payne, BYC ;
(3) Falcon, Bob Smith,
BYC: (4) Destiny, Jon,n
Hooten, BCYC ; !l ) Jeja,
Jim Boraer, BYC.
CLASS D -(!) Volante
TI; Mike Hirsh, BYC; (2)
Balandra, Jerry McClaire,
LIYC ; (3) Bravo II, Bill
Haskell, LIYC ; (4) Una
Mas, Dick Lindsey. CBYC;
McCULLOCH
~ll.~1181.fi
PUTS Y8U IN THE WORK
SAVING, TIME SAVING
WINNA'S CIRCLE WITH
2.QREAT NEW CNAlll SAWS
(S) Anita, Buster Ham·
mond, BYC.
MORF -(l) Dolphin,
Milt Allion>. LIYC; (2)
Vivacious, Bill von
KleinSmid, NHYC ; ( l)
Aloha, Glem Reed, SSSC;
(4) Baby. Steve Seat. LIV'C;
15) Twi.nkle, Frank & Dave
White, BYC. .
Clubs Set
Match Race
San Die.go and St Francis
yacht clubJ tangled today in
the San Francisco Challenge
Cup race, a match race· that
was first held in 1895.
The event. is a single 1 match r a c e under the
ratings ol !!le Cruising Club
of America measurement
rule.
. . ., .
IYaa ... MMCO .. tie lfl•11 /14000 tra"1mJtslqn ·
You fel 'f"'' tewl~ 'il•fne • 1111.ck, tut, eMc/WYI _...lc..........t
tfme1 111 )ou1t -Cay. Alllll wltfl MMCO. yo11r tninaml11!oi\ c., ••
,OtOl•Cled by DVtT 500 MMCO •. C..
111-. Cfftt bl COttl. •
£'11.•17 mlriutt' Md 1 ....,, ...... °"' Pl'CIV" •• • •
Y• Ult U••I ,..,,. "' :.~ .... ,..,.., .. ,... ..... ......
••· ... !'> ...
San Diego will make its 1 '°"llillilillil
bid ror the cup witii Gerrytl
Driscoll and a crew of
SDYC sallors in the 42-foot
C1'1rls C r a rt Comanche.
Wlndstar. On the San Diego
crew are Lowell North,
Gene Trepte, Rod'fley Eales.
John Driscoll , Run
Lamoreaux and Ro g er
Barnes, all experienced one-
design and offshore racers;
St. Francia Yadlt Club
declined to name its boat
. ... ,
COSTA Mll• ;,:; ·
1741 NewpM't M. U6-'j~~~.'
Garden Grove
ff41 Olr*fl .Grft• ........... ~
S•nta Ana .. '. '·
('lv r ll "''.J Al',/\i',_ -,,
1t 1 -_., ~~···· -
~
and defendina crew until'-========;;;;;;;., five ntlzwtee before race It -• " 1. ume. PENETRATION .. ·
St. Francis YC woa la.st N••rly .... ,ryot1• ratd1 ffli>
year, breaking San Diego'• DAILY l'ILOT, ~om.to-nt\llS•t
string of five straioht vie· p•p•r for tha F1buleu1 Or•!'lt';
-Ce11t. tories.
Saturday & Sunday Only r .......
SXk\iDU IP ME NT~
"
$ 00 Skis, Poles, Bindings, .;i
Sweaters, Boots, ~· PER Car R.cks, Ski Boots, ;:1
ITEM ~1
ON Accessories
NEW & Hurru! USED
Quantitie.! Limited ,.
ALSO: •• ,.
HUT , • -in
HOLIDAYS I $99.~.,
.... S11t.IO •(I
INlllSIL
S-Ki MART ·J
' newpo.t bMch
HOJ W. 1-Hwy. 642.UU
!
• • .. ,_,_~-
·r
I ' •
DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
• The Problem Remai ns ~
•
It's eesler to 106e by a mile. To lose by an eyelash
-12 votes ·-as Orange Coast Junior College Olstrict
did on its bond issue, ls hard to take. lt leaves a lot of
penoos who worked for passage ·of the bonds wondering
what they could have done to get out a few more favor·
able votes. _
CertainJy junior college district officials are highly
disappointed. Their problem of how . to accommodate
the growing number of students remaios unresolved.
But nothing is accomplished thinking about what
mlgbl have been.
Satisfaction can be taken in the near miss since
most skeptics thought the bonds didn't have a chance
to win. Nearly capturing two-thirds of the votes is a
reel impr6vement over not being a ble to muster 50 per-
cent for a tax override the last two times out.
And an override measure accompanying the bond
issue th.ii time did pass.
And oo the basis of the vote, the junior col1ege
district 'certainly bas the right to feel it has the confi-
dence of the m·ajor communities it seeks to serve.
The boad. election passed in Costa Mesa and New-
pc>rt Beach and that also offers hope for Newport-Mesa
Unified School District when it tries its next bond elec-
tion, probably early next year.
The bonds received well over 60 percent approval
in the West County although not enough support to pass.
Huntington Beach Union High School Dis.tri~ will ha~e
to improve on that margin to succeed with its $12 mil-
lion bond election Nov. 5.
But what is clear is that the problem of what to do
with the siudents remains. It takes several years to
build a junior coUege building and precious time has
been lost in the race to keep up with enrollment.
An opportunity to obtain matching state and fed-
What If the
'Th_ey'
By GEORGE R. DOFF, Pb. D.
Cops and robbers. Cowboys and ln·
· :ins. Fox and hounds. Chase -run
-· hit -hit again -let them know
how it feels -get the bastards -they
can't do that to us! (Perhaps violence
is fun to those from a satiated socie-
ty.)
What's happening? ln Ctticagc? In
Berkeley? Where will it all end? In
Hell? Violence isn't aesthetic or-even
pretty. It hurt6 ; it smells bad; con·
torted faces of terror ; sweat from ex-
ertion and anxiety; it makes sickening
sounds. (America is masculine. We'll
teach those savages democracy, if we
bave to jam it down their throats.)
The Great American Hope, •· ..
freedom and justice for all," has been
disintegrating into a nightmare of
broken dreams, heads, windows, pro-
mises. and spirits. ("Oh well," we
say. a'S we .lead our lives of quiet
desperatioo.)
MAYBE IT'S THE final symptom of
a decaying and regressing civilization.
i~aybe it's What we deserve for com-
pl3cenUy believing that neither our
b:·others -nor we -need keeping.
I We'll all stand tall and proud. all the
"-' v back to tile cave.)
Nobody wins, but everyone play.s.
T11e poiice speak softly and carry a big
nightstick. The demOMtrators speak
lo;1dly and hide their impotency. The
observers -politicians, social &cien·
lists. reporters, etc -say nothing un·
til the damage is done; then, ttieir
"helping hands" strike again. The
whole scene is God.awful. (Isn't it
reas5uring to know that most of us
ha ve someone else to do our dirty
work for us ?)
WHAT'S NEEDED? Needs. needs.
needs, needs. Oh. how it hurts when
they're always felt bul seldom fulfill·
ed. Even police. Even demonstrators.
Even though they can't admit it open·
Is Us?
·E~eryday
Problems
ly, the observers. The ones who need
the most are ttte ones who are hurt the
most. They certainly don't need
llaunts, obscenities. bricks in thelr
faces. clubs on their heads, tear gas in
their eyes, or pla·!itudes and advice ln
the morning paper. Or do they? (May.
be our personal and collective guilt.
because of what we haven't done, is so
pervas.ve that only punishment will
expiate it.)
Hard, tough, sharp talk, instead of
hardware, may jolt us back to where
we 're all at -together. Harder,
tougher, and tbarper U1teniog may
shake us loose from the cradle or our
inf.an1ile stereotypes. (Everyone wants
to be mature without going through
the pain crf growin g up.)
IT'S RISKIER AND more threaten.
ing not to have riots. Are police in the
business of protection or suppression?
Do radicals want a better social order
or their own brand of anarchy? Politi-
cians. What do they really want? Ask
their colleagues from the rival party.
fCome on, gang. let's go to the riot
tooight. Don't forget your Polaroids.)
Everyone gets quite bored. really,
negotiate with people who don 't think
or feel the '"right" way. Where's the
drama? Where·s the excitement"!
Where's the gul·level satisfaction?
(There's more happening on the
streets. and beside..., we don't have to
reveal Ylho we really are when we're
fighting back.)
Fighting back is fine wtien we know
who's out to get us. But what if we
have the wrOflg '"they" in mind? Whal
if the "they" is us.,
I-l umph1·ey's Fas t Talking
It is doubtless temperamental on
both our parts. but a man who talks
a, much and as fast as Hubert Hum·
ph:·ey always arouses my suspicion
that he is trying to overwhelm my
thinking process rather than stimu·
late il. • • •
In a well-ordered society, most men
rise to the top through their own in·
dustry and ingenuity: in a poorly·
ordered one , through the foolishness
and gullibility of othet"s. • • •
Sophistication is necess"ary. but
dangerous: for as soon as we realize
tbat lbere ir some Jood in all evil aod
Dear 0-ge:
My boy friend l.s so jealous ht
flea tMo a rage ll I even telk to
my hLl!band on IM telephone.
Doti be need proles1ion.al help!
FWI
Otar Fin: _
Juot explain to your bOy lrl•nd
thal ~~ notllillC bellr ... YOIJ ..,a= ----;-\\!iii-a oili:OOd, JUI
quutioe mixed .,. up a HWe.
In fact, I thfnt I'll farpt the
whole t.bln1. (No -advice cohlmnilt will mall• u..t stata.
ment.I
•
f
-. -
, '.
Syd ney Harris
' •
evil in all good, we begin hunting ard·
entJy for the good in that evil we wish
to commit
• • •
l'he hardest thing about a victory is
not attaining it, but knowing wtiat to
do with it after you have it-thus, the
most glorious victories in war have
generally been followed by the kind of
"peace" that bred the germs of
another war vroNe than the last.
• • •
Ir you think that if poor people:
shaped up a little they could find bet·
ter jobs, read "Tal\y'1 Corner." by
EILiot Liebow. a brillianl, sensitive,
and rair·minded analysis o( the
chronlca\ly poor in the U.Si •
• • •
Those who look dmm upon •·mer,.
theory" miss the point Uial. for ex-
ample. the theore.tioal studies In
mathematics and a~tronomy, by run.
Ing navigation into a precise scitfK'e ,
did more to save lives at seA th111 all
the "practical'' inventors of life.
jacketa and raft&. • • •
<Sydney J Harris· newest book or
coll~ column11. "Leaving the Ntr-
face," la: CWTently availabli at book·
1bops )
... --......
\
oral IUlljfs lor bllilW., bu bffn mi•sed. Maybe a aim!·
Jar opportunity will present itself again, but tbal's
little comfort to tbe hlgb school 1raduatea who will find
tbere ls no room for them in the meanllwe \t OCC
or·Golden Wut e ff. \
To tbo.e who abed they'd •oted and dldn'I: re-
member bow tru)y p OUI your baHot can be. Each of
those 12 rNsling "yts votes last Tuesday was worth '600,000. • .
Fountain Valley Voted Yes
Fountain Valley voteJ>s again have solidly backed
Illar school district by approvtng an $8 million bond
issue with three-fourths of the voters iJI favor of the
spending plan. f
Administrators of the school district are justr'y
proud of the confidence they enjoy from residents of.
the community, ·
In Fountain Valley, elementar.Y school education
is a partnership of school officials and the citizens, not
just during the few days or an override or bond cam·
paign, but every day of the year.
Education costs money and the administration bas
never tried to hide this fact. The school tax rate is high
-$3.56 per $100 assessed valuation -but the taxpayers
have voted themselves to pay it.
This partllership of taxpayer and educator bas al--
ways existed in public schools, but unfortunately too
often it is recognized only to the extent that one party
pays and the other party educates without full apprecia·
tion of mutual interests, needs and benefits.
It's not that way In Fountain Valley and the re-
sponse to the bond election shows it.
H
. '
""'' ~ ... ...,..,.....,,..
YOU 'RE STILL
Pentagon In Era ~ Fea,-of Inv olvement • ~ •
Has Bung led
M-16Prog ram
WASHJNGTON -While Pentagon
"experts" have been bungling the M-
16 rifle program into a procurement
scandal. Communist forces in Viet-
nam, do.wn to small Viet Cong guerrilla
units. have been equipped with a com-
parable fast-firing weapon. the AK--47.
That is the real tragedy of the M-16
mess -a story mostly untold by the
House and Senate investigators who
have correctly criticized development
and procurement of the M-16. The AK·
47 is. in fact. ·a largely untold story in
itself, although it bas been an im·
portant C.Ommunis"t weapon in Viet·
nam since 1965. . .
Heavier than the M-16 aild not so
fast in rate of fire. the AK-47 is.
nevertheless, a rugged serviceable
weapon. The Senate Preparedness
Subcommittee recently described it a~
"an automatic weapon of good quali-
ty."
CO!\tBAT REPORTS from Vietnam
indicate that North Vietnamese units.
main force Viet Cong units. and some
smaller guerrilla units, are now equip-
ped with the AK-47. The currenl crazy
mixed-up M-16 procurement is. of
course, designed to speed that rifle to
South Vietnamese forcts -and
especially to local defense units.
It has been widely assumed. here In
the United States. that U. S. and South
Vietnamese forces have an edge in
firepower and mobility in the .l!'.Uerrilla
fighting in South Vietnam. Tt is an
unpleasant fact. however. that Uie
Communists, thanks to the AK-47.
have had the firepower advantage in
many en~agements involving small
units.
It is also an unpleasant fa ct that
while the vaunted U. S. industrial base
has stuttered and stumbled under lhe
Pentagon's M·16 ' prollram the pro.
duction base of Communist China has
largely met its admiltedlv smaller
logistics problems. The AK-47 is a
Soviet-desie:ned weapon, but sources
here report thAt most of the AK-47s
captured in V1etnam are nf Chinese
manufacture,
URGENCY LACKING -Army pro·
curemenl officials have been justi·
fyin g their recent awart1 of M-16 con-
tracl.'l to high.priced bidders on the
basis of ur~ency. The rifles, they sey.
are urgentlv needed and there was no
assurance that the low-cost producers
could meet an accelerated production
schedule.
Review nf the M-16 procureml"'nl.
however. does not Indicate that
anybody felt a real sense of ur$t:ency.
here in Washinirton, for many months
"9fler Gen. William C. Westmor_,Jand
began makine: urgent requests for
more or the rifles.
Experls sa:v 1he Communlsts began
Introducing the AK-47 to Vietnam
combat in F ebruary 1965, and the
weapons were quickly In evidence as
far south as the Delta. Even before U.
S. forces were committed to the Viet-
nam fl,Rhtin.e the M-16 had sef'n some
PXperlrnel'lfAI service there. In OecPm·
ber 1965 Westmorel8nd asked that tht
M·lfi be adopted tor Vletnamese. unit~.
WF.ST~10RELANO'S request, 1s
noted by the Pr!pllredne~!J Sub.
comm\lttt. stated th1t use by the
Communists of high volume 1utomat.ic
i.malJ arms fire gave them a pro-
nounced superiority in lhi sudden
enaagarnenu which arose
. •
By Robert S. Altt.w
and Joh.a A. Gold~lllll
They Ga -\rt< Unselfish Help
To the Editor :
On Sunday, Sept. 1, my husband waa
stricken without warning with a fatal
heart attack at the Coyote Canyon
dump. Two county employes, not
realizing he was already beyond help,
rushed him to the hospital at the risk
of censure or possible suit. The
aearest telephone is several miles
away and their only thought was to
avoid delay and help an apparently
suffering human being.
IN THIS ERA of complacency arld
fear of involvemeot, this kind of
persona! disregard for involvement
btJl on tbe other hand concern for
one's fellow man is uncommon arid
rarely appreciated. Al a grateful wife
and mother 1 want to publicly thank
these men for their unselfish act
"above and beyond the call of duty"
and commend them to their employer
for appropriate recognition.
MRS. ALFRED E. VAN HOOSEN
One -side d T V l\'eu,.
To the Editor:
This ls a protest -a p;otest of the
horribly one-sided unprofessional news
reporting by the major television
networks in regards to the recent hap-
penings in Chicago. As a result of that
"un-reporting." I no longer utilize the
televisioo for my news gathering.
I do not doubt . J.hat some of the
things thrown at the Chicago police did
Letters from readers art welcome.
Normally writers 3hould convey their
messages in 300 word.s or less. The
right tG condense letters to fit space
or eliminate Libel is reserved. AU let-
ters must inclw::U signature and mail·
ing address, but names will be with-
held on request.
stink, but I woOO.e r; could it have
s melled any worse than what was
thrown at the American public by the
television news media!
ldARVfN E. FOLEY
l\'o Cle a ver • a t IJC I
To the Edit.Or :
Is there anything we can do as in·
divi:luals -and collectively -on the
local level in terms or having any in·
nuence on local schools, particularly
in showing great disapprevat of any
.Plan to have Eldridge Lleaver and
o{her advocates ol violence appear at
UCI?
I should like to express my approval
of your thoughtlul, reasonable and
continued expression of disapproval of
the adoption of TV surventance in
Newport Beach. It seemed a very ob-
vious effort to sell a-new product by a
manufactu(ing orgeoization w h i c h
wanted to get its product in circula·
lion, regardless Of its basic moral,
public and civic justification in
Newport Beach.
I shall continue to be knterested in
your editorials.
M. THAYER
'Shook llp '
To the Editor:
You may just as well get into the
fight to get the property taxes off the
back of the few and onto the backs of
those who receive the most benefit
from them.
The Watson Amendment will no
doubt go through. so we have a lot of
peo-::e worried. Looks like the big
gooSe that has been laying those
golden eggs is about to die.
We have a Jot of sell-styled experts
telling you and me how the big com-
panies are going to gain.
1 AM NOT RICH, but the way 1 pay
taxes you would th.ink I had a pipeline
from the U.S. Mint In fact, if I keep
my property another 10 years I will
have paid for it twice with no income
from il I'm going to sell and put tlh!
money into putting Prop. 9 acr05s.
[ notice the boys at Sacramento are
getting all shook up . About time.
I. E. ALEXANDER
Look Back and Remember
Memory is a fadeless wealth.
rt is the ever-golden currency of the
mind, a coinage that is more likely to
gain in value than depreciate with the
passage of time.
Unii.ke other forms of currency
which, once spent. a.re gone forever,
your memoriff can be stared with
tnose of others, over and over again,
and yet they remain intact within the
treasure house of your .llpirit. Even
after you leave life's pathway, it is
possible for tnem to endure beyond
death as part of Ult! folklore e>f your
family or race.
No one can put a price tag on his
memories -except perhat>S people
who write spicy memoirs-but you've
probably got a pretty valuable hoard if
you can look back and remember
when -
THE ON1, Y FELLOWS who bt'at
bongo drums lived in jungles.
One of the first things a bride bought
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
The automatic door openers to
tbe Fountain Valley School Dis-
trict Curriculum Materl.ala Cen·
ter are prett)' fat1cy for a ttnan·
clolly hard·preued school db·
lrlct. Mikol a pov~·strlcbn
Laxpeyer wonder juit bow much
he can afford for local acbools.
-M.l".B.
when she came back from her
honeymoon was a washboard.
Most farmers still prelerred mules
to tractors because you never had to
oil a mule and it didn't rust if left out
in the rain.
During ltle Great Depression it
seemed like there were more men on
street corners setting apple11 than were
eating them.
A young fellow would be ordered out
of a commu.city pool if he dared shQw
up for a swim cled in bathing trunks
that left his ctiest bare.
If a born orator w86 too dumb to
make his way as a politician, he could
always earn a living as the spieler tor
a traveling Indian medicine show.
A COLLEGE GIRL thought there
was nott\ing more romantic then to go
for a c.noe ride at twilight wtth a
young biade wbo (Mayed the mandolin.
You could wtn a reputation for
repartee by asking. "Why did the
dUcken crocs the road?" and then
quickly adding -"why, to get to the
other side."
In hundreds of small towns acroge
Amerie. your sociaJ status actually
depeaded on whether you lived on the
rlgtlt or the ..,_ oldo of the rollroad
tracks.
About three out of ft.ve au~tt
had potdt<I 00 the -Nbeo ol llleiT
tlres IDd -~ out ol ton 1mall
bo7s holillulll:r bod po-... -
trouoeR.
THE HIPPIES al ate Jll'l(lo w....
called '-'CID eaten," md their rt'Volt
qalnot the ~ w ..... pr•-dltlllJ by ~ loof _________ \ ddobuna and WHrlnf oullonclliliJy
wide µt111ts and pork pie hat5.
A girl. could ·start uosavory gossip
about her moreds merely by being
seen riding with a boy in tile rumble
seat of a sports car.
You could tell a woman who dyed
her hair 85 far as you could see the
color of heruia.
Fat poople were thought to look
healthier than thin people. If you were
slender you were urged to eoa.t more
and "get some meat on th05e bones.''
DOCTORS HAD no telephone
antiwering servicec. The only way they
couk1 be sure of not being called oot in
the middle of ttie night Lo make a
house call was to go on a vacation.
It wa.~ an unwritten privilege of
childhood for a small boy to wipe hill
runny nose in winter·on ll1' sleeve of
hls swea.'er -but never oo Sunday
when he wore his only suit.
If you hiad told the avera'ge wife that
some day men's shirl.'l would be in·
vented that wouldn't require ironing,
she'd have burst into hysterical
laughter.
Those Wtte the days! Remembl!r1
Friday, 5eptember 20, 1968
Tht cdftoriat pogc o/ Utt DaUw
Pilo« 1c1kl to inform and mm.
ulatc rtcldcn bu prc1tntingi thW ...,IPCIPf"• oplnlom and ~
mentarv on topfct of fnkre•t
and ligftlflc<m<r. by providing •
,.,,..,. fur 1/14 t:r:pruJlon of
our rendm• opinions, otwl bv
pru"'tinfl tM dtvcr1c Nao-
polftll ol mform<d ob1m><n
ond IJJOlu"""' "" lopia of UU d4r.
R<>berl N. Weed, Publisher
I
t
. '
• •••• /
IMPERIAL LE BARON Ray Vines:
AT RAY VINES, YOU WILL FIND THIS
~WEEPING NEW DESIGN, WHERE
BODY AND FRAME ARE ONE.
-OVER 300 1968 PL YMOUTHS
& CHRYSLERS IN STOCK
ONE OF THE BEST SELECTIONS
IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
SAVE ~~ s1200
THE GREAT NEW CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER FOR 1969
NOW AT
RAY VINES
8 FREE CHAMPAGNE
e FREE COFFEE
• FREE DO'NVTS
e FREE CANDY FOR THE KIDSt
FURYS e BEL VEDERES e BARRACUDAS e VALIANTS
J
4201 WILLOW
• AT THE LAKEWOOD TURNOFF
· OF TIIE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY A' . vi A_.--:._._ ___,,_,.,.... __ . ..,,.,., ... 't"",,,.._ "":;"" ..... :. ? ,,... . . . j ;..;-; ,. I i. T 't -..\ -. ··-.. '" > . '.... '"t' .. ,att •·· .,..,,>,· •'. • ..,_ ' 1, •• ' -~
. ! I
ALL NEW FOR 1969
Now there ere 6"4 great new Plymouths to
win you over. Completely festyled Furys.
Longer, wider, roomier. The beautiful new
edition of the success car of the sixties. The
we~on versions come with e two-way tail
911te and a ~oof-mounted wind deflector that
•ir-washes the reer window.
And the beet goes on with Belvedere.
Our answer for the young•+ heart. The fa1f·
est-growing line in the mid-site market.
Twenty-six new models.
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
IMPERIAL
Barracuda -pure sport from bumper fo
bumper. For 1969, "¥e've edded two new
high-perform1nce peckages -'Cuda 340
and 'Cude 383.
Eight new V1li1nts, bec1u1e • 9ood hone1t
comp1ct m1ke1 • lot of 1en1e to • lot of
p•ople.
In th• l11t two ye•r• thr••-qu1rter1 of a
million owners of comp•titive cars have
b•en won ov•r to Plymouth. But that w11.
just th• b•ginnin9 S•• for yours•lf why.
Friday, Saturday,
Sunday
Sept. 20th, 21st, 22nd
• LONG BEACH
FROM ORANGE COUNTY
426-7301 543-6663 527-2341
~~~ ... -., .. -~
~ '
I •
. . . . ...
I
I
I
I
'
"' ........ llllll,. ..................... 111111 ....................................................................................... "'" ......... ~~~~------..-~~----· -.
DAll.V Pll.OT
Every..,. MM
Something That
Someone Elsa Wan+-
HOUUS/OR SALE HOUSES. FOR 5ALE HOUSU 'POii IALI
8-al 1000Gonoral 1000 General
• ... ,. .,
-'lillJ a--and save $1 ,500. TbiJ 4 bed·
i-l llili-. lw a dream kitchen with
l T .. ..S dlolnnaher, shag carpeting and
·• •..-A·l COlldWon and ready to
--lL w.a: to Ill acboola, so acre park,
TRJPlfX ltga~ P.rdonifi1J
Plcturoelfjo Coll~
You C..n StU It,
'!ind It, Trade It
With a Want Ad
HOUSEi FOR SALi
1000 Gener ii 1000
· DOVER SHORES
QNdoua ' Bdrm, 4 ti.th
•e with magnillcertt
V1ew ol lwri" Newport
Boy. Do-utl'8lly ......,.
eel tn pricle IDr quick Ale . m.soo
Salea thro~9h the Multiple Li.ting B/B
China Cove Service of the Newport Harbor 2709 COVI
Coate Mesa Board of Realtors g:N,.s:! !. 5~~
St. 3 -. • 3 &tho -' totaled $35,268,700 for the first .....,,._._ Shon m.. •
Mode L SPEx:TA.clJLA.R
• : ... jolt t ....._ to South Coast Plaza and '
All two bedroOO\, l'ioii BATH
UNITS with Built-in Kitch-
~ Carpets. Drapet and
aeparate endoeed --i-tioe.
ConwnlenUy lo c aled to
evrr)'tbinc. ~
RDrrS -loW Ve.cuey Fac-
tllt. Slbnlt on Down • 5«> ....... -.--Coll"-Ill
Wtth .. fllltvl l'tultlal~
l!llfl\llllfal)' decor-. llcepUonally
lufa root111. I be@ooma. J balha, for. mar dln1ltl room, ounken ll.in1 room.
H1111dlomo family rm fl'otlootinl ln-
vlliml lanaL
1000 Whtwlnd W1y OPEN DAILY 8 months of 1968. List your prop· OCEAN• BAYVIEW.,..,..
l!ti,IDl. Et'n. 54-8*53 ., .... ~
P'frtt '!'Ima Offtratl -Dovel' 8boru $115,000 \ Mr.. Marl.., 644-2531
* .• * * Bf A LANDLORD
arty with ii Realtor today. Matchmaker!
roocn an R4 Lot Below Mar-
BAYFRONT
' Aa •" n t ""1 at *211.&00 with 90% con-
' M' s' flnMw:fna aYailahle and monthly
,'M 1711 tf $118 prlndJ>al and lnlerut. You --•IPPNdato. Own .... ft<? -·· t~.,~·::;r~o..: .. =-·r~:::-~J4j~6:·~,~·~·I Euttide C.0.1.a Mf!M. Two
Exclutlvo Wllll:
COLDWILL, IANKER & CO.
2200 I. COAIT HIGHWAY NllWPG•T IEACH
An excepdooa'I¥ beautiful
home whidt u bees!. lav·
ishl.y deoorated. 3 Bed-
room Ir: lamlb' nn. alid-
ln& gl.u1 wan. open onto
a maenificent ~
New Pier & Fb.t A
home d"i&ned 1o M:rYe
all tunctionl ol enftt"tain.. ....
Please Help ! I
:====I Tllll JUST lJSI'lD 2 Bcd-
kri Prl~. The Perta c t
Match for RetirMll ·er N9w-
IywedB. Exoellent Appreci.a·
,tim Potential. Pnlptrt;y in
"Move-• rugbt ~In" Ccftli.
Chlnnino-
Comlortable
Close to
Schools & Park
•• .. and three bedroom a.put. o.n.. ...... ..n ........ ...,
doe to tr.nster, 3 SR'1
2% bltbl, l&tge tam rm,
~ Eltrelita Modd
Only l.ew" lltPI to your
pool 00 ont °' the ftntst
crwnbelta In the Btu&.
menta with l'iS bttbl. built·
-111(111 SllE CUSTOM DUPLEX "' ...... ..,., .... ..,., '"'°' • ed. air hM.t Loc:a.ttd n.-r '75-2000 lion. Shown --$28,500 Harbor Highlands
A rood family location. Qutet
sa-t. Minimttn Foe •
Where Mothtr N9.U-. lifts
the ftd& • Utt1e Krtitr.
Spadoua 3 Ekdrooo1 md
Convttt:ible Den b:mt. PWS
Huse fmnlb" l'OOQl. Trnnend-
aus htSo I: BBQ 5beiter.
Propea l;y in ''Mow-In'' COD-
,;..., t -+ ..... -1Ar1o I 1111 uolta with pri-Eut 17th SO..t '°"l'!linf, , ."-w W1 1 Ml ... ¥Ut tiltlol. w etqipl11C. Jaw . vac:ancy a.cw. tiabo s>lll~•-O*tJlu. Lmlla_l ,,,,ttbe-. "'""IW ,.,_"' -I&
$91,500
Call kc' ApPOintmmt
• ._ • .. 1-... t M tt. l .at 'tlllclnt • ~ fer a ~m•t. Pr*'9 ti .U. Oill ~-0--.. 11. ---'ll'll n!A ....... --
DOVER SHORES
&IPUb 4 Bedroom home
Wlth "'-OOJ aq ft. Drama~
"""""' fDuntaln & locu>-zf. • a.hi, """"" "" .•
dm, + •. t.Mthtakinc
view ol the Btcr. Sacrifice
All bl.t·hu, carpets,
drapes, trpc +
&.;, .... --Mti:IJllL Mldftl '28,500. -. "SILL NOWI" ·---.. -. ... __ ,,._ . all---· ..,,. .... .,..,,.. l .......... --tp ; lit A• who U llvinl tn
I----.
.p E qfir JN
3 SJORE
COMMEICIAL
2 patios .t. a irundeck.
WW ..U J>.low market 1t '42,7SO """"'""' ...
Carefully maJnta!Md and
l'Ndy for a new farnil.y. New
carptll, new pU\t, :I Bdnna,
1 2~ baths, oYersized raraee.
... ·Mllloii 111.-. -..,, """"""" ii--* 642·1771 &""'fl!IO * • Bedroo'"' • WnllY rm
, , . .:. . . . Hold on to your mail'! Full
price $21,500. A barber owns
this s year old buildin& "
will keae baok tor 2 more
)'efln. Other 2 l'ft\lala va-
CM.t. (nev 17th&. Newport).
OaU to lee "' ai:mit your
price at $79,500 EASTBLUFF
REALTY
SEE-1919 Ch~1co,
Irvin• Terr. E•1t
Low ...... bold <tition. --0 $49,500, Tenna.
-·,~ 00 qldlt lb'tet
TllY OflF!R Ev""""' Call >48-377> tn w-...,. Shown by Appointmtnt and g'OOd tenru E-. '13-ai64
Bay & Beach
RHlty, Inc.
675-3000
' , • \\ 111 t I
I II. Beedl house nr. Bay S I an extra aharp !klme
·-· ,... UV... rm, -peclacu ar with .,,.,,, ...... Priced l:o mOYe
:Q-1,\\11\·
:3414 Vlata Del Oro
644-1{;'il':.,BeAJl.1541
OPD'i SAT-8\JN AFT/NOON
CURI DOSH, Realtor john mac~b
ira ..... Clrl, 5tS-M40 plaoe, Lee lot. '39.riOO. from point ol · at $45 cm
81lbo1 Real E1t1te Co. and we:~ mean VIEW"~ !Mml.t y~ tmns '""""·
REALTY CXlr.iPANY
Ill DtlY1lll Oii. 1110 ". Clout Hllltwq '407 E. Cout Hwy., lllM
College Park
$2500
DAIL)r' Pllm WANr ADS 100 E. Balboa. Blvd., Balboa well u the m.a.ny unique Qill: Jtm O:iJb
BNNG R&WLTSI ORlole 3..(140 feature-of thl.I 1 year old E'vel. ~1164 Newport .,
Victorl•
Hl!IWPCllT IMCll ' C714l· 642-ltH
llNlll EVU.mM
I iPldQ IRll
Open Houses
THIS WEEKf ND
1-. .... "-"' • .....,., .,.. '" ................ ,_ .. M.-i..athlf. All tlle ~ lhtM .. ,_
.. 4McrtbN .. .-.., -.n 19y ...,...,., .....
.W. Im tMay'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. r.treM ........ ,.. ..._ fer ... ., ......... .,...
,. .. adi I...,_._ II tw. hf•-.... MM·
HOUSES FOR SALE
(3 Bedroom)
8402 Doren Cin:le, Huntington Beach
962-7815 (Daily)
857 Beach St. (Westside), CM
893 Towne SL (Nr. 19th & Placentia) CM
245-7575
1226 Polaris Dr., Dover Shores
1142-8235 (Sat & Sun)
{3 Br. & Family Don)
980 Preeldio Dr. (Meoa del Mai") CM
545-5487 (Sat & Sun 11-8)
1919 Chehuco, lrvtne Terr. East
642-8472 Eves: 673-3488 (Sat & Sun PM)
*1620 Warwicl< (Harbor Highlands) NB
642-5200 (Sun 12-5)
*2421 Tustin Ave., Coota lfesa
548-5508 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
915 W. Bay (Peninsula) Balboa
642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
22022 Capistrano Lane, Hllntinp Beach
540-9945 ~ly)
393 Vista Baya (Back Boy) NB .
642-5200 (Sun 1-5)
481 Flower, Costa Mesa
646-0555 EV"'5: 545-2833
466 E. 16th st., Costa Mesa
540-1720 (Sun 1-5)
2519 Vai;sar PL (College Park) CM
642-1771 (Sat & Sun 1-6)
386 Visla Baya, Newport Beach
64&-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(4 Bedroom)
351 62nd Sl (Newport Sboces) NB
675-0144 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
*1336 Galaxy Dr., Dover Shores
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
1000 Westwind Way, Dover Shores
642-8235 (Sal & Sun)
*1539 Santiago, (Baycresl) NB
642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
(4 Bedroom & Fam~y or Don)
423 \Vindward, (off Tustin Ave.) NB
675-4392 (Sat & Sun 11-5)
1706 Tradewinds (Ba)'<l'est) NB
642-5200 (Sal & Sun 12-5)
1514 Warwick Lane (W'"tclitJ) NB
646-2668 (Sal & Sun)
1842 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores} NB
646-1550 (Daily 10-5)
1751 Pitcairn (Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa
540-1720 (Sun 1-5)
17391 Avalon Lane. Huntington Beach
842-8691 (Sun 1-5)
150 I Eton Place, Newport Beam
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
*1924 Leeward, Newport Beaclt
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
(5 Br. and Family or Don)
**1350 E. Ocean Front, Balboa Penn.
673-9200, Eves: 548--0715 (Daily)
Duplexes. For Sale
(3 Bdrm & I Bdrm)
816 VI• Nord, Newport Beach
675-5200 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
{3 Bdrm & 2 Bdrm Apt.)
1811 Cllfl Dr. (Newport Heights) HB
543-8415 (Sat & Sun 12-6)
Income Property For Sale
(2 8drm. + I Bdrm. Apt.)
**414 -38th SL, Newport 1'1and
673-9200 Ev .. : 548-4810 (Sa t 1-1)
Jvu w~ Atrium model.
4 BR 3% t..ths, family
J'tUJ\ PUJ8 ~ IQ ft rum.
i-. room for that pool ta-
"'" The inner 11.tritn bas tiled
floor Ir: ekclrically ccrttroll-
ed ~root.~
"""""1 ......... land-
acaped -read&' f« that dia-
R&ALTORS
673°4400
-----·--
O<min& ___ .... Duplex $21,000
the best. Aaklng SllD,OOJ. 2 Dandy tm.lta ln N~
Well ftnlll10!d. Heirhls diatrk:L Partly hr·
MU811
~---
Elegance & Privacy
Built around a cotrt yard
to accomodate • pool or
aeduded garden entry. This
lune la: planned kX' Wt>n"Y-
tree entertaining & family
comfort.
6°/o Loan
LOl'S or PRIVACY -Chrlot
location 3 bedroom well u-
nngtd, ' bath founll> ......
Large tamll.y room uu,
fireplace -1mAL NY·
MENT U!li
-Tarr~w--
ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST Rey J. W•rd_ Co. nlAhed. Could be conv.!rted
{Ile.ya-est OWceJ to 4 Bedroom, 2 btth home
1842 Santiqo Dr. &16-lSM and add another unit.
V•c1nt -0peno.:rY
3 Bdnng, F.P. Hdwd fir&.
Dbl gar, Price !"~----·
New paint inside &. out. Will
carpet color to suit. Otter
1ood thru Fri. Sept. 20, 68 •t
$24,:l()J, Auume Lo a n
pym'll •PP· SlilO. includes
prin., taxes, lnl. Nr CM Hi.
With 4 BRa 3 bat.hi, the
master suite, bee.med -cell·
1ng living room, formal din·
Ing room, kitchen ...tth breaktastnook 8 re com-400 Eut 17th, Collt& Mna 1003 ~r. C.M.
p!.etely dosed oH from the 64&-32SS, i:ve 56-713'1' 541$32
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
646-7171 546-2313
Uncle Sam says 'OK' T l tr" fZJ Ll\J
SENIOR crnz.ENS family room & children'1 ~----
Vacant 2 bdrm1. F.P. dbl win1. The whole lovel:y plc-
pr, Nr Stater Bros. & bus. tu~ 15 tied together with a By Owner ONE OF A KtllD
Investor's
Paradis•
You carpet &: aave. Painted 40' bef!.utiJ'Ully tiled glllety. Up,,.r Bay Area
Vallle'I there, own!!' lulde il out. ~5-2209 Rltr. The pe.instaking craftsman-r"'-
..,., "Sell!". MESA 119,670 "''•of rv/\N wi;w;· .. -·· Bdnn, 2\1 bath,
I I ' I I I
5 BR 3 beUui Coll~ Park
aree home. 2 story with
huge y•rd .t. enormowi cov-
ered patio. VETERANS NO
DOWN .
Two home1 on a hill acr..
One 13 a charmer wtth 2 BR,
beam ceilings and l.o&dl of
panellinl'. The other 11 a 3
BR and onb' 4 yurr old.
Both h•ve pnges In addi-
tion to an extra 3 car pr-
aae. S125 • month tor $38.0l>.
VER.OE kit. Im-newly 00001'11.ttd """'""' :...... ' -OPIN DAILY llllf7'1 Tllll LIVINO <Xll>f· = ~ I'":""'":: """" .. home. "'"""""'
Bjg SR.s, 2 bethl, tire-•II Pewtll '''" J'Ol\T .. tN1 l llelttaem, I lhdinS , v~~~ See mgthil tami1Y kitchen with sepuate
place, OO'Yft'ed pstio. NO ...,,., Olll lllWM FHA loin M• irnm&cNlllt ti Im f , Jlf&W """' today eat:ill1 arM. Ovenized
Drive by 2367 Fordham
and l1 you l:ikt what )'OU see
Dow N TO VEJ'S. 51111 lllL M .. ,. __ Ht Your-'""alt .. lllN ll II o W _; C famlly rm w/flr<pla .. ,
SMALL DOWN TO ooilttl to ,;;:I II\ t 111, fl 1t•lril Mr 1'1111· ftl/IUIT ':'Z.!.!10Gt..1°' ond ....... ofaos "°"" coll "'· l!\s;;n;G ANYOO'E. Full ·price llv ,., aa.,&Mt, ... IU•i 1tCI ~t)r. ....U{iO leadinl to p.tlo and loVely
llum """""'' uo ,o;o. •hue -CWr I llomt1 ti pool ""° ,.ro. at
Newport «""•REALTY ~-"••Vii'"'" 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
COATS '""' ..--. ,_, COUNllY "'"""'~:' .. ..ii ~ wAtLACE * i.AcHINMe;:: ORAN~~~~~TNTY'S ATMOSPHERE Qoll ... >;68 ~~.~~ ~ REALTORS Don't tiifu This m E. 17th st. 646-4494 ~::,·.;..';;;, ,,::::,:; ..........--..-$23,950-FllA or VA
546-4141-Jmmo<Ul•t•E..i.ttleloca""' NEW HOME pine panelled famlly mom, Colle«je Park i """"'~~~"!"""'""I
!Open Evonlno<J 3 BR•'"' r.m mt, •formal Low Oown Paymont ""' nv1ng mom w;th ru.-4 Bedroom $15,750 3 BDRM• 2 BA TH
~=======! dining aret. 51.4"° FHA • 3 BR. 1~ Ba, fenced, lancJ.. pl•ce, and ~ peti~. $25 750 Cute 3 bedroom, one bath on Carpels, drape1, ftttplace,
ii 10% down. «9.ped • many other e:it· Half acre lot With fruit • quiet trtt lined strttt. Fix-FA heal, built·ina. PLUS
Unusu•I Duplex * 172,950 "* tru. West «l VM:torili, left trees. Zoni!d for S mare Trim and neat ln the choicest 'er toll and rent, move in large endoeed patio. o.ner-
CUstom -built .ProYi:ndal 3 MIZELL REAL TY en V.nt:y Road. U07 Valley ooita. $31,!l'IO. arM. ol. thla tine section, 2 youne1.1 or~ another unit lot with room for boat, camp.
BR • 2 bath home nestled 54&-2'lO!I Olde. 6C6106 bll.tha:, large kitchen, lot. of tar Income. Lot bu alley ac-er, trailer or etc. Euhide
amonc Ivy, b"eel & ftowen.J1•iiiiiiiiiiii..Oiiiiiiii ... .;.;iiiiii ............. iiiiilj;'. bftS & achrubbery. Owner ces1• An ex«ll"1t opport. near Newport Heilht•.
Huge muter bedroom MJ.ite ill leaving MM and will aeU i.mHy for the wile lhoppcr. W1llt-McC1rdle, Rltn.
with BAY v 1 E W! HiV! ( Id II B k low down n14 or VA no l l10 N be9med ~uinp, detuxe dee-0 we I an er _,, .. ~-~ ·-o·"-down. ...,,.1111 rwport !1~ct.·,,;~~~ orator''"'"""'•-,,..,,... ...,. ~ ·~·-• ~·· MUlll ""'7171 -~·~---~--~ ~-~-room overlookine ct.rming OFFERS G.1. 2 iSOUiLi! d1ilillRI
polio PLUS -2 BR : Notd -T '11U lo lt O>o-Tl!! f4,J ! I
I 1 1\T f·:r·
I04I QllU;IJ7 DIUYll
... Till °"° --last llde ::beA"~t/ul rrntal wtth Ul!ll!d bride fire. tractor ftDll' .,. ..U No
""""'·........., "'""'" • ... OCEAN & BAY VIEW Dawn GJ. 3 -111
Ho. A one O"llmt!'r, p&mpi!ftd bl.th, flreplaoe a00. llrlt CONDOMINIUM
property on f&tll.O' ch::irelea Home fiituated over China Cove w /tre. comer lot. Bullt·tn dlabwaab-
lot. XLNT. INCOME TAX mendom Views. 3 Bedroom!, 3 baths + er and Nu-tnne b'l:M'cun TRAllER & BOAT $21·,950 2 BR. 2 bat.hi, cbob U'llL
Pool, Cub Houe, M/blt-Jn
kit-. --I.owl> priV8.le patlo, elec dcm till BENEFITS! OnO' 16'1 ,500. family rm &: den . Price reduced for quick ~ ln all room• indud· o.m.r.--.. "'3<;U6 .. le ..... , ...... , .. , . , . . . . . . . . $98,500 Ing AM-FM ndio, IZI-'"' College P•rk Be1uty
FHA·or YA
Ooee to Westdiff shopping
and tehool1. 3 bedrooms, 2
car gvage, nice yard, alley
entrance, with room for boat FIRST TIME
t!Vft' era the marnt 9nd Its
offered by DelA.ncy Re9.1
Estate exdu.s:lvely. Ranch
lltyie borne with heevy shake
root, ctt..mond lha.ped win-
dows, 3 bedrooms, 2 t..tbs.
Mahogany panelled family
room. Like n ew condition
(lll]y -' years old. Bt!t loca·
lion • . . . . • • . '... •• • S69.5<XJ
0.L•ncy Reil E1t1te
2828 E. Coest Hwy., CHM
6~770
1 3 E'side Duplexes
Best Beach Buys
1 BR plu1 large bunlly rm
houle R·2 kit. Room IQ build ,
""""' * * * • Sharp 2 BR House
Plus deu\ 1 BR ~ I! car
~.MO.cm.
llalboe Bay
Properties 673-7420 EvH: 673-9117
lJOO STRADA CORNER
Wann, c~. 1padoo1 3
8R 2 t>itth. dlnina room.
Hup J>llt1o. Mov&-tn COO•
tlltlon. Own·AaL 673-S168
Mrs. Harvey and Slfti. P &: I.
Colesworlby & Co.
3 BR &: family room, l %
IJ<th.o. -"'""" tot, fine Corona Model. F\a1l price
$24,9"".
garage, $28,9!'!0. Rldo•rdoon R11lty
~ E. Cbut Hwy, amt: 675-4031 PRICE REDUCTION
Oameo Shores-Quality home with 3 BR, 3
batha, plus beautiful master suite. Secluded
pool, & private Cameo beach .... $74,500
Charlotte Long
OCEAN FRONT R·l + UNIT
Best location with space to add 2 Units. 3
garages & 2 BR home -very rentable for
excellent income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '57 ,500
Waller Huse
SHORE CUFFS
New listing! First time on market. 3 BR's +
convert den. You own the land. Lovely 2·
story home in best residential ar .. $69,500
Mrs. II.au lslon
BA YSHORE EXCLUSIVES
Two comp le~ remo<loled 3 BR, ba, w /bit·
in kit, FA beat, master BR suites. New
carpels and dishwaaher, eztra low leues
..................... $48,500 & $46,000
Joe Clarbon
OFFICE OPEN
SATURDAYS
COLDWEU, BANKER & CO.
2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BIACH
Kl 9-3351
f 1
642-nn
1904 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
Open Eves.
COllE6f PARK
HUIT)'~ Hurry! Hurry
143 Broodw•y 645-0181
Ew•ning1 646-4579
Pool • $26,500
Move • Right • In
MUsr SELL WIDOW SAYS •
c.ALL NOW to 1tt th1I fine
3 ~. R bl.th o:m~
lmUy located 3 )'e&I' 0 l d
borne. VA NO DOWN OR
FHA.
or cemJ)P'I'. 646-7171 546-2313 J ~~'!"'"!'!'~!"'!!'~I Giant Sliod Fomlly ltm. $22,500 THE~EAL
E S TATERS You won't believe It 'tU you
1tt it! Eirtmdl the mtire
~ ol the hon>e'. R1cb pan..
iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I e~ walls, entictn& fire.
SLASHED $$$$ p1,,,,, Lara• bedroom. 2
Back Bal' custom. 3 BR I bath.s. Homemakft''I pride
bath w1th oveniz.ed den _ built-in kltdlen, SUdina: doon
With all f'OOl'lll focuaed on !Nd to lovely )'I.rd. ~1720
-pool l -BBQ. TARBELL ""'8-JUl Tustin Ave.
Bayshores
EXCELU:l'-rl' l.OCA.'nON -
C&pa Cod < 8drmo, 2\1
baths, FA Mil, .S cw pr-
333 E. 17th .st., C.M. age. PRICED AT 0 NL Y
N H • hts ......... S<7.500.
•wport e1g 1:::::======1 "C" THOMAS RHltor
OPEN DAILY Whewl Co01 0111 N:,! 'r::' ~
615 Powoll Pl•co ORANGE COUNTY'S Spi.uh oround 1n tru. oparld-I ~~"""!""'""'"""""",..'' ~ ':.'. ~;.. "',!": 293 E. ~:~~~.5l.6-4494 :. ":',. ":° :: •=.;:, BA~OA ISLAND
-.... , .. 3 BR ' ... tr ""'" • ....,,, • BR "1th FIXER UPPER
ltY nn, .......... -..,.., Ouollty 11 Price 11 tunlly mom l •bout 1600 DU""'X
.t.ke root Pool liJied lot A llfv:Mwla~ 4 bedroom, sq n. Good Gav't JO&n~ take l""l.lii
room tor boAI or trailer. 3 bll.th Ivan W~ h::me. over-too , with pt.ymi!!lt Im Bf!'9t buy on Balboa 1lland.
Anllioua. Only 6 home8 on Formal l>tnirw room, than rent lmmed.. Pou. N81' B:a,y. 2 BR tn !rant +
this col*•c. VflCllllL game room I Anthopy $29.500. 1 BR rMr. Vesy auklul
R.ltr, 646-39'1.8 Ev~ 642-0185 pool. 91' frontage. COl..LEXiE REALTY~ Rltr. 646-3008 EYK. IM2-0'l8$
*LACHENMYER """'"-""' finoncing. L£C_ ___ *LACHENMYER Appolnlmcnt only. Olli
POOL nME -• • Pete Barrett Riiy. HARBOR VIEW F.Ar!_ ~-Ready? Contemporary home rMdy to-IL ...., .-u..... pl.rt)' 1-:
II year IU'OUDd at um 3 BR um WNtdlft Dr. ~ l'DOYe tnlo. 1'inl kin&" me A Gniclol.a' Br. Homit
l den home. Tho -°' ''"'"""""'!!!!!""'"""""'""" BR, 2 ba, ........ "'" A --_,. tlllth ol f,!.'°:';,,""" .,.:'l:, = Widow Must Sell! m."" -1"' '"' "°""· an ""' tn ""'"""' .-. tlon O..utllu! ! BR E'-home CORBIN-MARTIN ::" .... W::""-';0'!!\:· NEWPORT BEACH All ..,,,.,,., 2 Ill• ho, le REAL TORS ~-,... '
REALTY ll• nn. din""-potlo, "1>1•. 3036 E. Coo•t • CdM Open Sat & Sun 1-5 675-1642 tr dbl ....... Pri« $23,9""-675-1662 An mo If() H-blond Dr., NA I !l!!!!!ll!!!!)!~~!!!'I!!!!!!!!!! I Loon Vlbort, Rull.. !!l'!!l!i!!!!iiiilJii!!!J!i!ii!!l!l J "-6'>m7
SOCK Tr TO 'EMI 543.mlll anytime White tJe~mr ~ SOCX rr TO 'EMJ . c
I
f
I
I
I
DAllY "~or 1$
Da ily Pilot Clauified
HOUSIS FOR SALi HOUSIS FOii SALi HOUSES FOii SALi ' I HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSiS '°" SALi
0....,.al 1000 • M.,. 11111 l1yc,..t 1:123 Huntl......., looch 1400 L1gun1 Inch 1705
RiNfALS
H•·•• PUl"ftl .....
Newport-OWNER LA BOUND Ol'liH HOOSE u~ Now &oycrw Llttlilt Cl80 Pr...sdlo Or., Me. del Sp&nmnc adUtt o<"CUpl-Yoq att lnvtltd to an
H R I , " ,_, 3230 OREGON AVE. M&I'. 125."'1. 3 a.-, lam nn. od 4 BR 3 balb ., .. ..., OPEN HOUSE Sun. 12-6
CLASSIFIED INDEX OPBt SAT /SUll
our......,: 8CJU at10nl-Yl8Qtlna1 Mfu. Verde 3 BR + tamily.1,-':ii;""==-,.---~ on 8 quiet lbw\ with a 2W92 Adrian Clrc:.
l.RROR ... 1 Afflrt...,.. l!Muld tlfltOk th.,, .... 11, •nd ,.p•rt lmlMlll•ttl,. .,,..,.. ~DAvt'1""""'or-IR<R$24,1950. '2s'i:!:..~ ltouaea on 2 R. Pllfti:·tlkt ll'ttin(: For-IDrl!ut G&ldm Hornet
or ml.ciautt•t~n• THI! DAILY PILOT .-umoe ll•blllty for.,.,..,. only to Nn el fy Call owner, ~~at =I =r·= ~ lBR~~iA·~l~~ll
the oJrt•nt of tMJllllehll'lt the •dvertlMtM•t oorNOtly 0111 time. ~ room .ft. bath. 1'~-am. Brina: family .l IWim •Uitl. Ritt. 2100 Harbor 58, CM;/~=~-----~ " Dl.ADLINE. P'OR COPY AND KILLI: 1:10 P.M. tflo day Wore pub!at1on, 1JC1Mpt r.r 546-S460 Ev.. m,.JIX)ll GOOD Invtstm't, home With Pe. Oun: ddusiwty at fYM aoddle. tenied ln
w .. k•n.d f.dltltlft •nd Mond•y ICCliont' wtt'" el•lnt tlm. 1e l :IO .-,.M. P'Plday. SEE THIS I I unU $25,500. Both mited S60.500. FAMILY ROOM
YOU MUIT HA\'ll KILL NUM•Eftl Wheft ktlllnt •• •d ......... of ._ulck ~Ill, .. BEDRM-$23,000 I Immat. lO~ dn 615-4859 Owr Pele Barrett Riiy. Takt over p.l'e9!nl loan, with
be •ure to make 1 record •f the till number 11~11 you by your •d taltor .. Completely redecof'ated . &Arp l BR 2 ba tmbi rm cul-=i! ~ ~m:&hl In.
vorlfloatlo11 of >"""'' 0811. ... Beem~ ttUil'lgs. Well to .._c xlnt uu. Ntl'W Paa t.80fi WestclUf Dr. 642-5200 I ..:=::c.:.;;;:::.::;.;:;:;...--
r.vory offort 11 mad• u kill or oorreGt • new •d thlt h•• bo111 erdorod, kt wa ean· w&.11 ca.rpet(n& thruout Oltte ept, drpa. $21.lkXt. ~1ti62 j'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!~~~~'!!!~ I GI or FHA -a..........i-... • • formal dfn1~ 3 BR 3 bath '"'" tbup not gu•r•ntM to do llO untll tho 1d h•• appeared In th• piper. ;;;:=."''2 :.th&. WtJk ~ M••• Del M•r 110.S Harbor Hlghl1nd1 1235 Me•dow ho1ne. $650 movl!-tn. Ol~E·A·LINE Ado are strlctl1 cash In odvanoo •1 mall er at ony 0110 .tour •ffloee. achools tr lhoPPin&. ~ c;::;;;:_;;::;_::;_~--.::.:: Uparaded e&rporla Ir dl:apes
NO ph1M •rd•,.. W1u help Un&nct. ~l'TSl By Owner P•nnywlM Pric•I throughOut. ., •• everythin1.
The DA, ILY PILOT reNrY .. t~ rtght t• ol••lfy, odlt. ""..,. ... NfUlo •• ,. adv•,.. TARBELJ.. 2955 Hatt•or Sa 6 d ~peril value In thil all :i:~·\I: :.!.c :.~t=
t 1em1nto •nd to ohang• r\I ratee ond NQUlatJ0111 wtthoout prior ....... CUSTOM HOME-Ye O/o an net IUKUJ')' future borne.
AdvortlNrw may pl•oe their ad• by t.10,.,on.. BACK BAY '2 Pool, lanai, crea,t ftoor \olist.
DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 "-~~~~c~~~~6,9Anso_. Mbaeaait dbeuyl Main :;,; 14~;~" 3
.,._ V.1llage Real Estate
SMOS-lnM_,...
15, $21» ~ 0.'*"'1
"""· > er. > a.. 1111o ldtdMn. llreplaco. Pat\!>,
dubhooa. Adult.. No ....
No. 144 8ayPde Vl11op; :1111
~~ ~ Pacltic: Cout H'A'J• (2Q) --~ '414·1177
VICTORIA fllOHlANOS Nowport Hfll. 2210 ,
Ocean vlew, quality home. 5 vt.Ew home; c;;a;:;;;&i; la.ra~ bedrm1, formal dlnlna: furnished, •wb' demnt.ed
nn, 3 baths, deluxe kltcb· lhrou&bout. 2011 K Sa 1 •
tn, I yeill' old, ieYel Sarden Ro.cl, MS..2394 8'ttr C J.ll'I•
• IOll,:1111. 3 BR., !1m •m., l!i "'"
W/W Carpet. Nita CQl'1Mt.
IRVINE COVE · Bea.utlfWb $22a Month &tUT.15
desipied, l'P&eioua no m , I="""=='===== I
with charm, OC'dll. view• rrom an maJor room•. tiled
Cotono d1I Mor
,...,,..,.,.,. r-""' •IUll.le. ..,. r Open Sunday 12·5
WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 -. o1 '"'""·· rorma1' -· 2 bath with -1no wi.-w1c1< dlninJ: room. 2 fireoplacH. carpehna, custom drapes,
galleria, walnut paneUed S BR. nr. Albtrtn:l'• Mkt.
family rm w/wet bar, din-Frpl., C"aft>. Ii: dnpH. $230
in& nn, outstandlflC tQ~hen, Mo. to JUM 15th; avail.
80":!-l lil Evu. Y..n.JW 3 ample bednnt. 3 batbs, 1 _~"°"::..;~· ~c.J=t---=213::;__' ~"""'~:..:."""'~::.-__ jijj_jjjiijjj _____ "_ oovered patio · $82.5(KI 2 SR. 1 t>.th, lara:e Jot, le.,.
Huntlnvton Buch 540.1220 a.......... ,,,... """"'m• oou1-1n.. • • w .... t ... Pele Blrren Riiy.
Lov~ ltnd..:•ped aroundl. ready to move in condition. E .... nt 4 D -' I TURNER ASSOCIATES $16'. G. H. -Jthr: .,a DeUroom 6112 No. Cbut. Blvd. 6'7>:2Hl
5'0-1720 Must tee to appreciate thls
TARBELL ~ Harbor f1ne home and excellent J '"~~'!!!~'!!!'!!!~'!!!~
lfiOO Westcliff Dr. Phones Are Opan 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m. 21J2 be.th, carpeted It draped. Lq\ula Beam ITI4) 494-1117
electric built-trur. lndudtna diihwa&her. Walkini; di .. EVERYnlmG READY FOR
tanot to the beach & priced LIVING in this 3 BR 2 BA
Lido 1111 2161
9 lo Noon Sa!urday-Clos1d Sunday Jiiii!Jliiiil!iiiiii!;liii;iiml buy, Conventional loan avail·' Garden Vanety •bl• with peym'"" or 11668 ·;;.';;;ck;;;-;;,~;;:Y;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l2;40;
CLAlllFll!D COUNTERS art; 1oe11ted .. fol1ows1 Lovely 3 BR. 2 bath home Ptln. l inler"Ht, or CM •1• •
llome . ....._n-te ..__ °""" .$600 LSE. thl'u M&rcb 26th; at $22,500. Try 10% down. ...._...... ......-•t-~·t 4 BR. I a..· ~1 to d...ii~htfu] sun-room. n.~i. w 0·11V1"1 , _.
p1 2 Br .._.,._ *'1\id be6 r sume· our mortfaR:e. Country Charm Com.1 P1cltk' Shores Rl!'alty ~ ..-... N B•u •~ Ind ~· -•~ 536-8894 Et.>e-a. SJ6..732'7 lty carpetin1. House Ir: yard · '&,,# wo;,, • .................
2211 Wett .. n... ... ......., H_,... .._ •. JJI W• ..,. StrW Con ..._ Jot us ·~·· U l· 2751 Poo:tol• Ori ..... • • ful flowen In Udo ~a. ••
PIM Stn.t, "'"''•·· 1Hc•. m ............... t..tna ..... l :lO·l:JI bcept. s.t. as. •. $43,500. C1lh 546-1337
Mall Addr .. : 80J11 1171.•Newport •each. Calif. George William11m, Rltr. I "'=~=~~;;;;== 673-t\JO Eves 673-1564 Me11 V•rde 1110 . -
HOUSES FOR SALE ::::O~ :~~=n !: ::~.~H>M1 .,. Th fa t • DRIVE BY •SNIUL 1• •Ll-l,!ALI IYICI "',..n • C IS • • • 3261 Wa.sh.in,..ort SI. 51.a-4 COSTA MIU 1'111 llllW,.011 IWllU "2tt '"' ..., •• ,_,.,
MISA OIL MAI 11• w•STCLl,JI .,,. IOUIPMIMT llllT.&LI wt OW' Salesmen are ma.kini ' family, fireplace, built·
M•s" vaaol' 1111 ~:~•:!VT ,..... :; :=• :: money -we have desks for ins. lovely heeled pool. Own-
~~::.s,. ...... ~" :: IAST ILU,,. tin JIUIHACI ••PAIU. l k ... ,. 2 mere. Inquiries contlden-er transfered. VBCant &
MSWl'O•T "•>•KTS llll COltONA Dl"l MAii "2M 0MlllM1NO Ulf t' I t ~· ... sale A k
l'REE TO YOU!
Plus secluded atrnoa.
phere with th.is ~ne 3
bedroom home on large
lot lor only $39,500.
Owner movina.
Open Sund1y 1-S
393 Viste Bay•
Pele Barren Riiy.
" tAUIOA .. OINllAL SlltYICll "" 1a . wan ~ . s In a:
LlLM>A cov1s 111• 1.1.v isu.11101 ..,. ou.a11t .. 011tu1• MM BURR WHITE, R••ltor $29,500. c ALL GLEN NSWl"OIT IHO••• lftl LIDO tlU lllf1 •un 1~ WestCl'!ff Dr. 642-5XD
a.t.Yc•••T 1m •AUOA isu..wo uas ••••M TMUM• ~ 2!IOl Newport Blvd .. N.B. QUEEN 540-1151 <open ewtJ I !!!~!!'!!!~~~'!!!~!!!~ a.t.YsHo•u nu ··-675 63 2 H ·1a
Air Conditioned
Sol Vista
4 BR, 2 baths, cptl/drps,
pa.tio, landscaped, hdwd nn.
Owner tranderud -take
. over this rood FHA loan.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
847-8531 Eves. SU-MU
4 UNITS OOYI• •HO••• ID1 HUNT.,_.TOJI ••AC" .... OUN SKOi" '"' ~ 0 eves: 673-512 en ae Re&l EAlate
W•STCLI'" ltM "0UNTAIN YA.Un .WH HIALTH CLU•I •ntl--~="'"~,_;""__:_= '"'""'"°====:;;== _E_._•l_b_l~!! _____ !,:242 llAL atACM +c11 MAULIN• me POOL 11x36' I' N Dee KA•ao• ~ll•MU.MDs lut LGMe 8UCM UM KOUt•cL•AtoMo ~ 3 BR 2,, ba••-W>'th ..........,. College Par!:: 1115 Ml' an ._downtown UNIYl•SrTT 'A•k IUt OU.NOi coU.,,.., .... ttfT11•toa Dl!CO•ATHle •••• .,. u~ ...,......, 8LUFF'1 f Br. 81)1t lvl. open CORNER ~ .. ~1:•u, .·:: ..... DIN ••oY• 4'1t tNCOMI TA>C "" den. Vf!l'Y cll!M h 0 me. 3 BR. 2 be. bit-Ins e........ beam. Tile root. U/mrkt at HUNTINGTON BEAOI IAIT•LUI'.. l:Mt WnTMINSTI• 4'11 l•ON, DrMm--. 9tt. "H .,.....,:_i.. f / ' ' ,.....,, II.VIN• Tl•l.ACI ltd MIDW.IY CITY 4'" ••ONIN• "" ~u ... lera R, I~ COY. pa. drt;il:, fplc:. dbl pr. $23.~. $31,950. Owner '44-0740 $31,500
co•DNA Ol.L MA• iut IANTA AHA ~ JM111u.T1N• •1• tio, epts/drp& tbroout. Cose Owner 646-1492 Ted Way "lty 536-2579 aALaOA .. aNINIUU '1• SANTA AHA NllOWT'S t&M INSUUNCI '"' to ..._ __ , "' ••AcoN •"" '* TU1T1M ..,.. 1Nv11T10AT1wo, ~ '"' SUJUUI~. Coron• del Mar 1250 RENT U
1.ay isu.Nos ll5t coAsT~ m. JA1111To•1AL 47M tiAITDAL REALTY Newport Buch 1200 I iiiiiiiii~iiiiji~~jjjii;ii;;i I AL B YS LIDO ISLI \Uf U.OUMA SIACH 4111 JaWILl!Y •••Al .. lk ... 8470 Warn-840 ·~' -=-'---"-C:.::::.-.:::=: V•·ont 3. ' BR horn••.~--IALIOA !SU.NO IBS U..OUHA NIOUl!L f7'1 U..NOICA .. IN• Mii "' VTWWI VIEW· HOME .... .... "' .. HUNTINGTON ll!ACH Ult SAM CLEMl!MT• ~'" LOCl(SMITM ""1............................ There's room to Add... pets, drapes, bullt·tna. EZ HUNTINGTON w.1.11•0111 uu DANA 'on•T •1• MASON•v. na ... 5 B d to this subatantial Ba A 3 Bdrm. 2 bath + family· '-......... •-rm• whll• p-•~ l'OUfrlTAIN YALLl!V U1f Tl!t,L•X. etc. 4"t MOYINO a ITO•Ael .... 9 rooms y ve. ditLing ma • Has EVERY· ,.,,,,uu "" '"'-~ ,..
11"1. at!ACH 14H CONOOMINlUM ........ ·.·.·,·.· ... •· ···-~•h" ..,., .. 3 bath! +family -+ •• -,. home eilhu a Bedroom-or THIN ing VA or FHA We. sUNSBT a1ACH t.w RENTALS "" a complete Unit-or both. G! Beautiful • SEE LISTER REALTY aA•DIN 011ova un •.t.T101 "'' Ing rm, Back Bay Bee.uty! Old ""t THIS! $42,500 LON• a1ACH 1no Apt1. Unfurni1hed l'HOT09•Al'HY mt Onl • ..., ~ er, uu !IOUfld. 3 BR, 2 ba, 16612 Beach Bl .. HB 842~ UK•WOOD IJJt GENE•AL ,.. .. usT••11te. .. ~ •• ,.., .... y ...,.,,,...., la.rie llvtnr rm, firel»act o•AHOI coulfT't "" coSTA Ml:». 111t ~:~~":•ooMIM• !",..'
2
Rich1rdson Realty R·2, parking. Priced S47,'fl:X)'. BALBOA ISLAND FOR Sale By Owner. Deluxe OUT 0, COUNTY u• ... u. Vll•D• •n• 443 E Coast H CdM B 3 Bdrm , bath 0 I 1 Tovmbouae " Br. 1% Ba. OUT o~ STATS "" Nn11•curr ••.1ttM '* •DOL s1•v1c1 fflf . wy, URR WHITE, Realtor ' up a, STAM'fOlll "11 NIWl'OltT H•IOfl'TI 1111 ~:·.:::~~1Na ::: 675~031 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. block to Village. only 5 yn StOYe, retrl1. No down.
WllTMIHI1'1• Ult Nl:""'°"T SKO!tfl mt 675--463 old, excellent rental record. Auume 51' % FHA loan.
MIDWAY cm 1•1• w11TC:L1''" n• :::r~,..••lrt. •re. ::: Onan Sat/Sun l I· 5 0 eves: 673-5122 Yours fo, s~.ooo. ,_,_ Total payments S13l ,,_,. SANTA ANA 111f UNIVlllSITY .. Altll l1J1 ltlMODILl1'1e a •• ,All ... .--LOVELY Woll•-t ho · '" ""'"' .,..... SANTA ANA Hitt. u11 aACK SAY it• ••MOO•Lrtte. xm:M•MI ..., 6&7 BEACH ST ., CM .... "p me m CLIF PRIEST, R••ltor mo. 96z.l266 o•AMG• Ull IAn OLU.. Htt ldu«s --"" • VA -FHA -$19 800 Hamor Htrhlands. 19Zl ==~-~~~=--TUSTIN 1'4t ~ONA D•L MA• IUI . • Since 1957 TAKE over 5%% rnA loen :::~:.;us''" :::: ::~·:~MDI :: :::::: MACNIMI ••l'A1a1 = • 3 BR 1% bath. lmmac ~==~ !;8'1e. 4 ~:..:'ti ~ 3034 E. Cout Hwy., CdM on newer 3 ilR home. cor-llLYl•ADO CMYOM "" LIDO ISLI USf s•PTte TMQ. .._'"" "" • $155 PAYS ALL _,,,,_ • rapes . .__..e y..... <nc) 6'1S-351ll net kit, room to build.
U.OUNA HILLS Utl MUflllTIHGTOM atA('I' Met ~:~\:r:•cONT•O&. ~ Rltr. 642.9760 Eves. S4S-Or.I) .. Newly painted exterior. fteaan Realty .,._,,.. , .. _
U.OUflllA llACM '"' ,OUNTAIH YALLIY "" • 5%. loan can be ed ·-· ~:uc"L~,:~~~~L :: :~~O:,l~':"o =: i:t:: =:::. a Mni. #:: KENNEDY 548-7398. Owner =~pp·i. Beautiful ~.,._=~=~~-~--~-
,..,. JU.AM c.a,.1n•AH 0 1n1 LOH• ai.acH »11 Ta•• llllYICI .,. LOVELY 3 BR, hardwood
cA,•sTuHo ..... c:.. 1n1 otU.No• couNTY ~ '•',~!".~,·,· •'""" ., .. -'"' BUILDE"'S CLOSEOUT BAYCREST-4 BR Canyon· View •--oA•.a. l"OIMT lnt .... OIM GllDVll KU ,_ ••• ... Amon• !50000 born UVUIS, new crptin1. blt·lna, tA•1.••AD 11 .. "'""'""'' •• ,, •It.DIN• '"'New 4 BR ......... IChool • eg Qu'-1 &. ROltful nice welled ·--'. 1 Bick •-oc1ANs101 tnt MIDWAY cm i:11 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~~ _...,,.,-··,~-:-'.,· s fur only $35,CXX> • tenna .. ,,._.., "' .. " .,... •m ~ ,,_, -OPEN 2 Bdrm•, 11L be.•'--IChools. ~r. $23 ,000. IMTA ANA Nn 10& WANTID. ,.._ l'IM OPEN SAT SUN 1 o: DAH.Y l · !. ~ ua lil1Vl!.SIDI! COUllTY 1• SANTA AMA ., .. ,...,. Siii JOii WAflllTID. ·-~ rue • }..., 17 Nt'N' !JO% loa.ll •vailabl~ 962-7115 NOUSll TO •• MOVID ,,.. TUSTIN ..... JOI WMT•D. t'J3 Windward, oH Tustin 36 Highland Dr., NB S42 500 .o.::.,,:.=-------COHDOM1HIUM ltst COASTAL trll MIM a WOMIM ml HAL PINCHIN le ASSCX: Owner/Bia. 646-0663 ' HEATED .l fUU!red pool ~R·E:~~T~~·,,.~0:.: ... ..:L. w~ i:~:~E!~L ~ :::::f.~ :.LI' ~= 3900 Cout Hwy. ~ OCEANFRONT DUPLE:X Wm. Winton, Rltr. ~:36~!.Brnar1,.ea~n::
N ALS SAN JUAl\I CA,.1mu.1110 m! ::~c~:~T=!i.., "'-:: 2;?~· apt.I., 1 new, tum 229 Marine, Balboa Is By Owner. $2!5,950 34741<»
Hou•• Furni1hed DA"A NIHT .,. .. H•U' WAHTIO. ·-HM IMMACULATE Coile&e Park UUUQ. beech. s 6'. 9 0 0 . ~33.11 Open 'tU 9 pm •,•,~,'."u'L ,. ••••• 1111 REAL ESTATE, JOal--IMll o w-1111 beauty 3 BR l"'-t..th Smalt 548--0897 or 6 7 !-& 7g 9 j !!!!!!~!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• j3 BR 2 BA, tirepl, new cpl.I, .. t1111 1io•MC1u. M.-i • ._ ntt . ' C Sh ~ dbl ~ ~ COSTA M•IA lllt General SCHOOLS & INITll1icTION JMI eqtllty, &a8Utlle large lo8.n. eves/wkends. GnHt0 Ores "'I"'• l&r, i--.")'U, peuv.
In top cond::itks1. Beat dose-cl\tl privU . 6'J3..6356 O.,,.; 6'7J.«lll eve. In Jocation, nea.r school. Be-
low replacement cost, 5 BDRM eucuUv~ hornf:.
$45.500. available roe winter le~.
GOOD REAL Em'ATE Realtcr 6'7l4830
353 N. <:out Hw)o. 2 STORY; r.on.er, fii room
~1518 House. ======== Call WE f.m20 or 8R o...«K7
Dan• Point 1730
Whitt: water ._ mountain
view. Prol. landscaped, 3
BR, 2 BA, fam, rm., frplea,
vaulted ceillnp, crpts,
drpe:. S3'1' .mo 496-5875
Condominium 19SO
Jmmac.\ll•te 2 BR· HW floors
Oc:ee.n Yiew • Auwne $10,800
loM 6.6% -S76.00 mo.
$16,500.00
S.lbo1 lsl1nd 2355
S. BAYJ1WNT 4 Br. f Ba.
Avail Ill Feb. SJl) mo plul
utll. f'l5-t214
Dupln• fum. 2975
2 BR 8-)' View, ~
w/aar. $1~. '17 Hardine.
B&l. Key at 4.19. 54.().9545
$125. 2 BR. Stucco duples:,
reoc'd yll'd. Peu • kXI OK.
Broker. SM.6680
C'ustom Built l BR ! bl .. ..,..:;.NTAL$
Very , very nl~. beautifully HouMI Unfvm .....
landtcaped • Ocet.n view •
mow lo new May 0>.·$32,500
North COYnty R11lty
JO'J • 3rd St., Oee~
(ll 72'U696
'"'the~ Piffl
RENTALS
HOUMS furnished
Ronl•lo to Shi,. 2005
H1pr,ln•11 is •••
H•v ng A Roommat•
Let Roommate Rdttence
auiat )'OU •••
Roomm•t• R•f•,.nce
Service
Newport Beach Ph. 675-l213
TWO )'Otml FMllile teechen
wish Roommate. .] b:W'm.
larye Octt.11 Front Home. .,,__
COLLECE or worlrltw mu
to aha.re 2 BR Ip(. Pool,
pt, S'TS. 645--0373
4 BR twnble, a t r conci:,
ti>t. I drpe. Pool. S2Cl I mo.
13&-7608 83&-1103 ·•
ms. 2 BR .....;,., i..c:d ;.,
w/wall, rood uea. Broks. "'--$180. 4 BR, 2 BA, w/Wl.I.
fenc'd yd. Small pets • W.
OK. Broker 53+6980 '
$Z15. 3 BR, tam rm., 2% B&,
w/wall, ~rps. blt-ina. Tub
OK. Broke!'. 5.34.a>
Cost• MM•
VERY ClWI
MESA VERDI·
MISA DIL MA• 2111 TW.lil'Ll!X. ttc. fftf Joa ,,.,A•ATIOff ,.. $25,900. Phone Realtor Ml BEST BAY VIEW BUY Lovely custom OcetJ\ View 3 U?,500 Low dn, •asm loan. ~:~t.::"~:.. ~;:: ~:~':~"~~:TD = M'~'C~ANDISE FOR'"' 2-ZJ22 Custom 3 Br. 20XI'. 2 sty BR. 3 baths, 3,lm sq. ft. 84W Reilly, Pac. sand•. WANTED air! to •ha.re 2 Br.
1111w,o•T ·••ACM nte •ooMS l'OI! •IMT ttts SALE AND TRADE c.'Orldo fee land $37 Pool, lmmacUate. Immedi-YEARLY 1111!. $250. Like new Apt. Eaat C.M. $70. can
.] BR 2 bath. T-Plln . .Dae( •
lent. Convenient UM. $Zllf
mo. Act· 54i-4lil !
ONE BR twu.e. Plent7 e\!p-
boenl1 tr wardrobea. !'tnp-
ed yard. ' GtraJe. P1tle.
Adults, no peta. $95. ~
Very Net: 46 BR, atone 1irt-
pl., -.... t a ""I·
erpts, drpe, $210 mo. IS6Gi
Bakf!'r I: Fa!Mew.
:::~:~ ~:~... :: ~=J. ~",,~~•a cou•Ts :;; ,u•NITU•• -Costa Mesa 1100 eonsid: trade. ~lW ·
500
• •te poeaegm, $74,!m, ex· clean 2 BR, 2 S.. Pool, ~ att S pm. IAYIHOltlrl 1t'lt aUllT MOMll '"' 01',IC• .. U.MITV•I "" llent finenc' beo.('h. Bay1kle Village l213) 1-.-l.A~M;DY,.-.::'l'o,-=-~..,..'=-"~---,,. oov1• sHo••• ttn 1111111c. ••NTALS .,,. o'"IC• 1ov1,MSMT •n TAKE OVER 5%% LOAN -MOVE in! Nr. new c Br., tpl ce mg available. 2?2-4300 Adul
1
houee with rr:~J~~~~:y 'A•K = ~"u~~:ss":::::~'t :: ~:~~ ... ~~':_u~~~~ ::: ~~ti oncy $1&5 month new cpts., drapes; ,.. btich'. THE FOX CCMPANY · ti, no peta. aame, 1 child OK. Coal.I
1•Y1N1 m1 T•.IJLI!• ,,, •• , MSS IA• IOUIP'MaNT ltlJ m<"luding taxes • no loan $28,000. Open wkends. 351 673-9495 or 642-6969 GLEN Mar 3 BR, C'UltomiJ.· Mna. 642-7697 aft 4. PM. ·.~~.· •'L'u'•• n• au11H1ss •INTAL ~ KOUS•HOLO MOD• ..,. fee. Immaculate home with 62nd St. Owner 67f>.-014~ Invest nr. the Ocean ed, many xlra1. Excell. fin. ... tNI 0''1CI •t!HTAL ... ,. • ....... SAL• lfl2 3 B Must •tt to •A>· 962-1837 11tv11111 n••ACI' nu IHDuST•IAL l'1tOl'••n ... ,u•NrTU•• AUCTtoH .a 3 lqe bedroom&. bu&e WATERFRONT 3 bdrm #62 R, 3'~ ba, den. 2 Fplcs, 3 ~:~: Oil MA• :: :::.;:f...'t'-•• HTAL = ::~~~cu ~;: ~ly room.,. .d 0 u b I e Balboa Covet. $60,CKX>. Would iaraaea. '"Motmlain" type By ownft'. 4 BR 2 ba, blt·lns,
•AT llLAMOI DN L.oTS . •1• ...... MACN•Mll 1111 tirl1Jlact, all built·l1-.. fan-prefer •cretae in trade "Be.ch" home. Of' ttle as fncd yard. Walk to ICbooU. ~~~o':L~sLMo : ~~".~"s~1tOV11s ::: ~:i'~~~L1 ':.:~~:'1"1 ri: !!,stic yard. Aakin& only u.a. 7771 ' Duplex. Or build lttOfXt $21,500 Sfr.+M& HUNTIMOTOM ••ACM Ull AC•'l'AOI: mt llAOIO ftff .-.,950 • exi!tin1 I 0 an home on beautiful 40' lot. 514 ?D Gr Newport Wnt, 3 bl'
FOUNTAIN VALL•Y Mlt LAK• ILSIND•• •m TILIVtSIOfl nt1 $21600 CALL 540-llSl (o,_, DELUXE Condo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. STAN SMITH 2 ....., llAL llACH UM l:llOltT l'•Dl'l•n 4!fS MM'I & STlltlO ftll • . .. ~. Pool. {4e. petio $3500 Dn ba, .-.,95CI. $215/mo. rent. LON• •aACN net oaAMo• co. ••Dl't•n '"' TAl'I aaco•o••• mt rvtsJ Herltaa:e Reill E:Jtate _ uu. 6..., .,....._· ·· Realtor 6~Z10 Dm Capistrano Ln. 540-~
Cost• Mela 2100 f BR. 3 Ba., blbll, ~ •
dnpoo, J .., P'· N•. *'Ji!
2 BR. Oee Ir ~art.able. coi.rse. For 11 a • e. $i»
S90 f« couple. 340 Avocado. Month. 5U-9'm. • 613-6~
&7J-8961 3 BR. l" Bl.. I.rs tmom
1 BR, Utilities paid, S85 mo. yard.. Partiall,y crptd., t11tM.
Couple no pets. J03 Moote S185 mo. {Mela Vo r • e).
Vista. 548-3963 5'8-8U4 . o•ANO• COUNTY Hll OUT 01' ITATI PltOll'. '* CAM.mllAS a IOUl,M•NT Ult .....,,.......... o.r....,.,.-,, Rltr. ~~,~~1!,~111 ::: ~u0:~~~0: ~:~1:T :: ::::.:1,r."'~~1 = Golf CourM View BLUFFS 1.ret1; 3 BR. 2 ~::. 2"br.17:::.: r=~~ ~~~:"A~!TY,..11•HTs ~:, :~.~L 1'.x~T:J.:o~••YKI m: ~.':c~~:·~ioll'•1 :: H~'s • tebuloos Ing Jot wi.tb :-ttm; cond.o~·· next lo pool. •Pt. 2 br. 1-%. b•, pm. disp.; COASTAL 1111 •· a.. WAWT•D n• MIK. WAJITIO u11 158 fronlagf' aloni the f1ur· Y owner. ril,950. 644--06.)."i dbJ. iarage. Extr•, Extr1 Fine
G,•:;•::d::•c::n:_G::.;__r•:.•::•:__..:1..:4::_7:,5 1 BEDROOM booat tum:mh-3 BR HouM $UKI. mo x..eu,.
-="'="="'=M="""'=="'-'=="='= I Nowly """· "' --fir occ. Sept. 25th. 1911
::::~:! :~:S:L ~= BUSINESS •nd ~~~=~i:i••"· •te. ::: way, Can't you JU!t picture N H-_... .. ·-N(!ftl' Fashion !Aland NPV La Quinta Hljh. l 8/R
SAN c:L•M•NTI 2111 FINANCIAL nouo• am your home overlooking thl!'le •wport gts. 1210 e 702 Avocado. CdM • ~.9fJO. Take over the low
Ull 'UAN u .. 1n1tAHO 1ru IUSIN'l'U ... l'O.TUNn11s '* SVllOIN• MATWJUALI r• beautiful lakt5 & fairw1ys rat.-FHA loan. Owner wlll CA .. llT•AHO ••ACM ,,. IUSllllU WANTl:O .. IWA .. 1 • rm . Ch m & v I CTJST. 2 BR. 2 Ba. plus den. h 1 I h he <t:>wn DANA .. OIMT '141 INYlnMl!HT ~ All PETS ancl LIVESTOCK GOLFERS or WOULD . BE ar . a U• Large moma. 50' View lot. e p you w I I Pl)'· :l~~~:!~•.C::,.UTT'L~ 1-: =:~M~HTU:,,.AltftO :'S: ••TS. ••Nt•AL ... GO~ CALL NOW for Tree shaded. quiet •treet 3 $52,ro::i. Owner 6734869 men!.
CONOOMINIUM l'HI P••SC»tA~ LOANS AU CATI ..,. •pp::untment to aee! BR. Frplc. dble pr, extni j ==~=====~:;;:,,= Rex L. Hodres Rffll;y
•R•E•Ni.•;•A•L•SUltN. .,, ~:r~L:."'.~~"i.~'ANI = ::::,. =COLLEGE REALTY 546-58111 perking off • I I .. y. Ntce Balboa Peninsula 1300 l===,.,::M'I;;-=;;;~==-=
••AL ISTAT• LOANS mt LIYll'TOCtC ... Heights area, $24.500.
HouHS Unfurn1stt.d M0111Tool41s,,......,.... ...,"• CALIFORNIA LIVING BY Owner-Imm Posa. 3 BR 2 Graham Realty lagun• 1 .. __ ch ___ 17-'0"S
........ L .. MOMIY WANTID •u•s••t•• "'' BA H 0 b by Stiop..Camper Be1ch Lovers ~°t:...A :.•Lu. MA• ~= ANNOUNCEMENTS :=n•• ll'OOU :: boat storqe. New carpets: N~r N,B. POl!I Ofc. &t6·2414 Bay View and Patio Too~ L19una IHch Income
MllA VllllD• lilt and NOTICES AWIUN• '"' drapel. Lawn spklrs. Auto !"!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~""!!!!!""'' I .] bt'droom, 7% bath, 6 unit apt. bldg., PRIME L().
',.",-!,.:0°:',, • •• ·.~,,. .,.:'.:.,' ~.:::Mt) ES TRANs'PORTATl,..N '"' E1'.~~1at_r~ DayN lit:~ilL-*, BRC2ustom Built * d+''"""w~~ tire0nplace, ~~ ~ ~~~N~
HIWf'OllT SKOlli:t AHlfOUNCIMIWft Mtf ao.An .. YACHTS ,.. ........... u ""· e!W >-'' ' bethl, Fplc, crplll, ·~....... tht IAYIM09:P = llilt'TMI •II IAIUOAn "" CdM HhSc:bl. 332 Moote dr•pett. all eltc. ~insuJ1. =E~ICE~~1·~· 'n.e :a.;:::L~.::-.. am :~ro·=~Al.'f ::~: =··:J:~1:::~ = Vista. CM. 54Ul.2'7 $38,COJ. Exe tinancin1. Open S•t/Sun 1.5 TE.RMS A.;AJ~ town.
uM•v•••rTT l'A•• :; lllUH••AL Dt•llC'To•i "1• SOAT TIIAIL••s .., JOB tnuater. Mllllt -.11 325 Fullerton AW!. 915 W. Bay MISS!~ REALTY ~"..."'~:· .... " = m::~ TJIAMQ =~ ==~ ~J::~::c· = everythin&;. Appl.'• & ha'n . G. H. Rotim.Jn, Rltr, Pele BsrreH Rllr. """"' '94-073! IUT ILU"" na •• MIMOltlAM Mii MMINI aou1... ... etc. 3 BR 2 BA, bit-ins, 543-1413 • tav1MI Tla•ACI n• CIMl:T••Y LOTI 6411 SOAT SLIP, MOO•IJ. MM .,_... • . , COl:OHA OIL MA• mt CIMflT••T c•YPn Mlf 90.JT ltltVICU ..., '" • patios, )(. upatllirs • PLEASANT OUf Haven 3 18(fi Wt>Stdlff Dr. 642-5200 Genaral
•AL.MA 1111 CltlMATOAl•S ...,. •, .. .,,, •,~~ .. TA1U0 --nimpua rm. $1500 equ.ily. Br, 2 blll + 2 Br Ocean Vu j!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I
3000
N•wport le•ch 2200 Pooiona, C.M.
OCEANFROOT 3 BR., 1% fBr.2811.bome.Nevewt:f-
Bll. 2 Car 18"· Avail. now. thin.I· Sllli pet' mo. ~
Wntr. lsl! or yearly 67!)..1536 2115 PUD1• s.M-75&1
An lnvlt•tlon EASTSIDE; 3 BR. ~ W:
Spend the winter at the ins. $170 mo., J.eure. •
be•ch. RedUced Rates make l-=,;';22;,W;;;lln;;•t;:,, ,;o.t&;;,;;;;.._;;;;s.J
It -a Rental B&rpin! We
have all sb:es tr pria•. Mell Verde 3110
BURR WHITE, R.1lto• 3 BR. lamlly ...,, s ~
675-4630 IVll: 642-2253 2 ft ..... 1ce1. $1l1> .... W&IJ< ..
3 BR. Ftplc, dshwr. 04*! to tchl. ~
OC:Nn. 114. 39th St. 1'115 IS YOUR AD JM a:uJI'.
winter. SllO yrly. ~ nEDT SQIDeCDI mil ...
or 8" wknda. lookil:8' b ft. Dial IG4l1I
Neod 1 Gc-Y .,. quick. <ill-.....,.
rind ii with a WUI ad! m.l &U-5671 far RESUIJn,
3000Gonorol
aAY !M.ANOI ... MaMO•tAL .. Allttt'I '92' .... _ _._ ,...__ ...a LIOO llll Wt AUCTk*I ... "llHIH ID.An fM ~ « ! ~peNtf', 5u incmv: Apt. $49,500. 5f3.724.9
oAL.ao.t. isUMD ,.. AYIATtOM •••vie• .ui •OAT MOV1•• ""' ena. ~ L1do Isle 1351
Htwl"O•T w•n nn TIIAVWL. ... •OAT STORA•• ... I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I . ''''•N•T'oN ••AC:tt _.., ,A!!..~','••'°"-_.,... :f:i:.~NTWD ::: BEST BUY aycrest 1223 • HUHTOleTOH MA•OOll• "''"" ,_..,. /-;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
S@~~1J.-l££tfs•
~T•IM VALLIY JUI Ll•AL tlOTQI ._ il'LYINe L.09DllS -'"' ShUl' S 8R, 2 bath hOJ'n#, Tool•
••AL ••ArN ,.. •••MA• a TUT011•• ..,. ~· ,:C:.":i~' mt mlJ'I)' t'Xtraa to list. Fit.A or Just What You W•nted?
GAltDIM e1tov1 MN SERVICE DIRECTORY MCYCLll .,. VA ·-· "", ~ N"" • Size-: 4 Bedroom• LONO llA(M lllf ACC:OUNTIMe ... IL•C"tltlC CA•t nJa ""' .,_, \.JW..L< ...,.,. ~ • Kind ~-Uy •---~ 011.IMel COUflT'I' ... AM--•U•• t1aYtce ~ MIMI atjell "11 50N 54().U51 {open eYes) ; J"lllll ·P•au"o:u! 1:,"ri~i:"or'oi Jil;ll APl'\~llr"I •l,.,Aflll. ,,.,. 1)11 MOTOltC'l'CLn .... _ H~•••• .,_, ..,. ...... ,_ • F'ittipl.ce; 3 (Bouquet lflt A,,.ltMl•e •It MOTOAKOOTl1t• .,.-,._ neu ,.,_......,, ""-·-} MIDWAY CITY -" "'"-'LT. Oh dl'I AUTO 11.VJCll a ... ,.n •• ........,.., stont iAM'TA AMA NllGflT1 llJI AVT'D 1•PAlltS -AUTO 'fOOU a l•U111' Hll ()n the Bluff • 8ath3: l (Splridingl CO.l.STAl IM AUTO. ,_. .... T-lk. 6MI RAH.I .. TIAVIL M1' f Br 2 Ba (*l'U)' furn if • • ---• Gt UOUMA ••ACM 1111 IAIYSm•M• ... RAILl•L lnl"" ·-• .. ....... : ... walls! LAGUNA HI.Ult .., toaT MAlllTWUlfC:S -0.Wlts ... w.nted. Let lot. rm. for • Dining room· LaJ'lt' IAN CL1Mllf"1 .,..., ••.CK. MAICOHff, .._ AMI TitKIU ,,.. travel UT. Encl. ptt&.. "'·--'-'nP.' .. • ...... -~:., CA,llTW.AfCO 1\111•1 .. •a'liCh .... Ill" ",. ,..__ h -"~i.-. ~11 ,. 'lwl&W"ll&. C:Arltf•.llltO lllA'-,. ltJt ou....... _,. OVMe ·~II ,_ ......,.,, ptS, w..., ,_..,,.. • Arn: Sett tBl)ocrestl
OAMA l'OIWT -CATl•IM ..,. IMl"O•TIO HITOI ......... $22,S(l). T«t'll.L 66-1111 • ~-~---M,_., ., .... _, COHDOMIN•UM -CAllt•ITMMC... -tl'Ql:T (Ab .,, J llR-3u ba<6.• ....._. r '""""'"• --1 -. ..... . OUl"LIXIS UNAlltL .,. CM'•lfTllNM ... AlfT10UQ,, AAUKto N11 • -,. "-_.. pr., • f"rioe : $51 ,SQ), • Blriatn R.ENTALS CIMIMT, ~ .. I.A.Cl CAltt...... ... bl!lautl~ 18.ndacp .. fruit 11~ T•··--·-·-
BAYFRONT
l BR, 2 bll. Home en Nt>rd
with 1 BR Apt Excellent
financln&. no&,000.
W•lker Re1lty
XJ36 Viii Vlt Lkio 6~
Unu1u•lly Strlklnt
Smart bUcon.y muter Bd
2 oth« bdrma. ''°' bathl
f'fteetf~ •troe<l6 piant.
lnp. SUnd«k cm rcot.
R. C. GREDI, R..ity
3418 V1a Lido 67J.9D) ..... , 1 L--CHIUI CAltL ......... "11 "'"°' IYtM'TS -Will GI ~ ·-1193 -~·-"'t"'-um tn-COWTUCTOM a A'"°' waWT'I• ,,.. trtc-s. · · ~· .w.t. ft---S•t/Sund-12..J 01Mla.t.t. CAAll'IT a.I.All'-" ... •n CAii ,_ Towne SL • l9tb l-F\lcreft. _,..., -' LOVELY lrf. 8a,yC'nt «1 fJ1 ~o:_::::.i:. CA•'"r..,u.nt9 • ••,AJ•.:;.-"'~~~ ,. ... tta. bkr. Pele Blnett Riiy. kit. Ael-&:ltip.0neo1Udo··
HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR
I
THE HIDDEN DOLLARS
IN YOUR HOME LATELY?
~ '
--------------------
r1 x ER.up p •r t s:zs.mo nne.t. S166.COJ "1 owner.
Value. ' Blt-2 BA. Con-tam We1lcliff Dr. MUD! 675-a't
..rl.d ..,..,, -d '1 ltANY WUIJ)ERl'UL OP. Hunti~°" looch 1400 Mar. Netdt palaUt I: POlt'l\1MJTlD b&YI! ._ ....
-· 121.'50. 5'Mfll7! dlwww••"'" O•.UW Adi. Yount 4 IR Homo AB1ME 51'. ntA. on becrt 2 Tmll Mell: tit .,._._ 0,.. Oatprett Ir dnPN thnlout.
BR. dtl'I w/Wtt blr, COl'l'IP' cortunidM" MOM • Bullt·tm.. f!rdeol. l a_r 1 e
""4d A drpo. 'ti , tO o . lXJ<'T JUSr WISH .,. -.......S polio. """"'""°' -_., ___ ,.-..... c.. .... _
GI SJUGO, No -. S Br. • • • • llnd ..,.. '°'1W IO "'1 F IM -°"Ir SM,1GO.
..... """ ""' 6""" .... ...... a...iliod ..... -<htdt lfiio ----·-·-_,..._.,,,.if l'oul"-R111ty -I...,. ........ • Go-Cot JM'l-t• Z-11!&-'ml
Solve• Simple SCT=bled Won! hu!c fiw a C1nu:klc-
0 Rootrang. Sett.,. J the four 1eromblod wctdt ti..
)ow to form fO!Jr li111Plo words.
IAIRTOD 11rr1 I
IDlR-AT I r I I
• -
•
........... "!'I ............................ "" ...... "" ....................................................................... -........... --·--------. • ··--.... _,.. .. ~ -·-p
H 11"'1.V I'll.OT
""'°'AU ·--···....!!: ,_.,ALS • -RENTALS UHTAl.S U NTAU -· REAL ESTATE, ANNOUNCEMENTS
'Mouou U........... i-:"'Aflt:....._'-:"'hmlohed-'--'-'=-::~il:-'Apta.=;;:...Fu:..,:,rnl~u;.;WI;::,.= Apt'&. Funtlshocl Apts. U--A""',Unlu-_6!':c•;:.r•:::l _____ 1 ond NOTIC!I
Melo V... 1110 Gon ... t 400 C--dot • -•25 0 Caota Mooe 5100 c ..... ,., Mat $250 Ronlall Want.I 5990 Commordol 60l5 Found lfroo Adil 6'00
1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;,;;B;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 RENT w/op to bey. I BR 2 BR -~ lndudln& I BIL ... 1wau1ooo ... 11 .. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-3 BR. J Sa. l..ty, -at * USEll CAI\ LOT -i, ~ .W..1o&oeo
~ .bOOlt. s;..Q127 aft ....,_ lUQ. C. d.. M. will. ..... Wtinl. refrla., ., -.. ~ WlU ~ Proven MON'E'Y MAKER foood Ut ~ty o I
Neer Two 5/Da)'I. J2t.-G15 't'tltrl.ncit. OR ).960fl or -.T910 ~ .lndky • .Leue:. One ~ undet-#IQ. &G--3048 w/&fen, lights, b~ ~ YorldowA :A bnda Blwl ,._~ C"'bl ""'"-...._ No ,.... :naa ~ •PU w --.----,.-~------' '""· R"" ., '-· Pb. '' -""'_,~..,_, ... , •• ~ ~--•100 NtW, """· bodl., So. ol . ~·~ ·-Sll-"36 ==~~~.....,..~
1• • Bdzm, 1am"" -·· ~ ~ 11wy, "'"1o. • -"· Moplo. :.o&-.lllll. _. ... s old da.uio rou!lDi !\ ,.........,,.. .ic.
ho ID.. Spou-condldoa, 185. fin,.t004 615-0046 2 BR, 11,1 BA. bltm, dwhr, ON TEN ACRES automolli!N. 20: a-i588 a..Jbaii 'Btftt -r'~ ff'w)'
o..n.>le "" "°" $IZS mo. .SUS CA5"AS roRNISHrn 1 BR apt, ''u" 1,,., pYt -$1<0. Mill• I l 2 BR. P'urn l u.-lnduslriol Rontal 6090 """''" ,.,;. lnl"*· aoi
Jlditllf'f prdeaer a ..... tu. TUrutabed l Br. • &chelor ~ pts cno. lease. No peta lMl Po m 0 n a Trplca I Prl I Padol I Room• for Rent 5995 INPUSJ'1UAL BU>G. 1650 A identify, ~ll6
61J.311£3 E'wL 5CM!ll96 Aptl. 6'fl...m23 54~T ~ =~~=~ Bii: 0 C F..ANJ'R()ttl', Bachelw 9«1. ft. dl.rided W/Kf!f9 ~ Hound touod SllO lay Ir leac• M~ew;rtHo~t SHARE apt: private rm_, lBR.newcpta..&lJl:blt·IM. 900 SN 1..1.M. OSM 8"4IS1l Apt. Prt •ntrance. btwn. NG.. C.M. M&-6896. Fub.ion I&laod mall. Call
l9:1fty, In~ balh, .uy A I' et r I & • $125. AU,() rum. blchtlor fMacArtbu.r nr. QIUt HW)l'l RnponaWe adult t.taant. !>ve ~1417 _642-1483:.=..:=::..... ___ ~~-
*5 W. Ba1bMi BlW., NB $25 Wk. Up Ml)...217'1 Bd. 10 AM. 1 PM. utll'a pd. $1351 Nr CXX:. No cmldrlc'. $85. 644-0ZM M-1 COSTA MESA, MALTESE kitten abt 5 mo
• ·-~·-l .... Adulta. 54rr5019 LRG. f Br. Near IChla A:.,,c"'...r,"-'--1-6'1~-~--= New bid&. 2100 t.o 3000 aq. fl.; old, vie. 38tb &: Seasbore-
rN.wpo.rt Buch noO • i':cl utUa" ,.:--""· lalboa 4300 l BR Sltna, 4.lshwuber'. J:&l". lb,p'1 center. O'»ts. *»9.·n Bo M rO't' rent $1~ hee.ti!'lg. 3 Phase pcM'tr; }£e,m.,\IOO ".c..,=~--.,--=---1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;; 1 • 14&14 ....,.. • 'f'V ovd.1 --0~C-!i_A_N_FR_O_NT--I !'.;! ~~ i::,. ~"° blbW. 673-:MOI 111 5. c.otlenuo4 ..., . ._Good'""' parl<ing. '™""' MALTESE kilt"" ab! 5 mo '4 le'..-. • Nw Ce.la 6 8llf """"' HlBtt. ·Beech. Oall aft U. WAR'EilOUSE For ftnf:; ZllO old, vie. 38th & Seashore. LHM/~o 2316 Newport Blvd. 5fa..9'l35 Yearly Rentll I &: 2 BR. Apts. l11 Mea Dr. Huntl,.._ BNch 5400 9151-mB sq tt. 1t 9c ft . or Jeut at 67~100 • ...,.. .. " Newly ~rated. Bachelor " 3SJ Vtetorte. St., C.M. ATrRACT'lVE room witb n~ mo. C.M. ar-. 5t&-00tlw c::VEL:..::::Y:__hand __ B_lble __ .,,
l .. tril\.lewl. N tatha, CHATEAU La POINTE Apts. No pets or cblldren AduHI:. $!(). ~2401 Cape HuntilM)ton prt.ate bath. Idea.I tor stu-tele booth at Shalley's C.M. wtthi.S..: ~:: ::,· LoYtl,y rum. l .BR aptL oa. SlOO i: $125 mo. 1 BR apt, tum util"&. No lCondam1niWDI dent or wortiq &irl Cd.'d. Lots 6100 MS-1037
lllCUltty ~ a I re e t ~ mrpat'll. 925 E. Baltm. Blvd. childn-n, no JIN. 532 Celttt LEASE With ~ti on IJ7-'lm --------ADO;;:,;,;RAB;:;~LE-=--.,....--,-,ki"'t""'--
t Htd. pool Adults, DO pets CLEAN Bach I A ls St, C.M. ~2551 PORTAFINA LAG~A De\.ancy lilul Estate l9U POMONA AVE. CM e er P · 2 Bdrm Urdtl. $15 UP wk. w/kitchen $25 Panoramic View 1.Qts !HO Paularino, CM.
2111 E:. n.at H~ .. CdM • • · All util incl flS up l BR &Pl. 1tOYe A: ttlrt&'· Prtva.le patio. Ddlle p.rqe. ~ Studio Aptz. 2 3 T 6 Wbite and COMt• I=========
673..3770 SPACIOUS mmro 2 Br. :ns E. Balboa Wvd. Oct. bt. '60. Retired RecreatUonal tadlitiiell. He9t· N~wport Div., c .M. 548-9'155" line vitwa Lott 6401
w/w C11>t1. drpa. ElK BALBOA 671-9945 l.dy Oftb.. M&"66Q1 ed Ptlol. DD..UXI: room in private 426 NYH Pl.ce
bltns. F\rn or unfum. Nr. 2 BR. avail. Sept . June. I BR. Newly deooratcd! $125 (nf1 8C-727f home. Man only. Must hi.Ye 1..agwl& Beach COLlJE, aable & whitf'
Hefvhtt 3210 ICbll I: -.·c NO PETS. Private beat:k & pier. Ml E. mo. 995 VaJenda So. mi. M---.11.. at Adunl5 oar. $15 wK. 546-ais9 1714) -· -male, AMWe"S to &lrl<fy_ 54S-Oll2 SM-60'19 _.......-. ._...,,.._, Lost nr. Warne I' &
3 8R J BA. Iii. yd. SdS mo.
'Rel: ph. m.t&.1.1, m.1441 ex
lD!l -1<
eves a wkndl Edgewater, 67S-0178 NEW .. 3 BU>CKS TO Newpart Beach. l'OOPl with Bea utiful View Lot Edwards. 8 4 6 .. 18 6 l or
LARGE 2 BR apt. <loR ., 2 BR dlx, elect ldtch, r1ear ArrR. 3 BR. apt.. 2 ha., BEA.QI Sundecks • l • S pctr. bath: near btsch. No. 264 on Antigua & Hamp-546-1144 Reward.
&bopping A: btm tine. Pref. l..-. Sl50 mo. Adulta . w/w CBJll., drps.,.attr. yd. Bdrma, BalaDce Powe r • MZ-3518 e LOST·. g,·0..,...,,. _A,_ cat ~ 548-34111 Sl).0154 ~ · ~·; shire, Dover Shores. For sale ........... ,........, ~e. t No Pt'(!. Inq. 119¥.i m~ or ~!lilt ; ; ~oth St., 4l1 l 4th SL w SIP'G rm b: man. Pl'i hm by owner. $18,000. wired col\ar, vie. Corona
lrYlne 3238 ._..,fl er, rMr. OCEANP"RON'I' apt. Winter & enfr. By roo only. $35. (714) D-4651 ask for Ariete del Mar/ Newport area. $25
1----------IMMAC 2 BR. beautito!Jy or YM!)r. 2 BR ' Den. n Newport lluch 5200 Z BDRM duplex. Pool Pvcy, 1543 Orange Ave., C.M. Reward. call Oiled.: n4:
C BR, 2 BA, 1&.mU,y room, rum. New carpet, bltins, E. Oceanlront. Cpta. 0,,., 1 St;y, Gv. Like 2 ~ TC:r!1'!a::deNB 673--0783
atrium. New bcmt in Turtle bt'amed ceilln&s, Adulta, no•!-====::::::::::::= MODERN 3 BR new. Avail Oct l $Ui. Misc. Rentals 5999 Fee Simple. 646-8565 LOST • Ladies diamond &
Rack, cbest to UO. Swlro-pei.. $,1SO 1974. Wallace Bal._ __ bland 4355 2 bath, 23x26 Wv /nn, bl:t·ln Ml-8337 -~. tennis, etc. $2Th mo Yu. kl .. _ Ll' ... 1. ...._ .,,__. ~~------~1~ OP double avaae tor • ACRES land tn Oregon. white gold wed• band, ;;''ie.ae. 515-7163 QUIET, ch. 2 BR., new ---------tcut:n oot UWCl\ .... ~ pa1 2 BR, U'pct:afn. ~ reJrla;. stora1e, COOCftte I l o o r, Ree.sonab+e. Call Sf2·15151 tor vicinity 11¥i!ty Mar I •
u au-pt'c .. hkns, patio. ~~=its.par:,~~~ ~ch,:;>-$125. Adults onl)', 116 Palm. Sll/mo. 1543 Oran&:• Ave., lnformation. Hacbor & Adams, Costa NE»' Vlllap 11, 4. BR. 2">a Adulta. No ~ta. $150. ...,,l""J'""' a er se ~ C.M. Mesa. Reward. 54&..&9>
be. "8m rm. ltv rm, din tm, ;,;lt7~<:,.W::oll~ace,:;?-..::Qoot;::•~M:"'~l:Y="""'==l80.===ll=6=A=Ar::•="=i ......... wr. Goll course view sscm LOST .. Bladt l.ehraO.r. blt-m kit, yr IE $340. Avail ;,.., '-1 Br Garden Grove 5610 REAL ESTATE equity. WW aen er trade. male, puppy. Chrooa del
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·' •
Read
DAILY
PILOT
Oct. 1. 548-7«11 after' 5 p.m. 41;;~ ~~ ::· Huntington Beach 4400 · General 646-1286 Mar area. Answers to name Wuber/~. Ge.r. Adult.I. FURN 'l BDRM 2 balh studio Co1c.we1I, Banker & C.. BIX&Y GREEN I P 6000 TRIPLEX lot l8fh & Wall&ce Kilo. Reward. 675-J.9.iO afterN
mt ._ c... -. 2 .t 3 BR. TOWN' HOMES nc:ome rop9r'ty key lol, $l0,-... "''--·b. 6 Pt.1 l!"JO-B Wsllaoe, C.M. be11t location 1 bUt to S Pta. ..__, a-. c.rt11n11 """ ''OU .... -• T n.. .. -1u .,m, ~ FamiJ,y mom. pm., patkll e COSI"A MESA e C>Mter Box !Ml. ~ Am.. •!ALE Siam"""'-cblds .... .
Irvine T•raee 3245 c
L
2 lclrm Luxury H-Fum or unturn, lge 2 BR .._ lnu own and ........,,try Up ,.CN\ ~ u........., .._.. ..... ..
"
~ •-/Z=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:l=:i=:i:/ to J.JW square"'?'. Tb.,. f -~.,.. ..__.__,__ brn "·-on sto-.. ch lnn hlxe apt. bit.ms. pool, 1 Or'!'ll, 1neatet", resta.uran.., ..,.,.. __.,............. Luo ..... 2 bathB, dinilW rm, tinplace,
a:ivl!!l"ed patio, $.195 mo. yr!:)' ...... dilld. No pets, Di? caeyoo &nd bri. AWllil. Oct. 1 $150. B/B .. Central air conditioairia: at;yled: tildl unit baa 2 BR., /;R;'";e;hes;;;;;;;;;;;;;6;1;50; / gurgery -call &t6-am Dr S45-ll04 Tn>l ElliJ Apt D M call I9% return m CliSl in'f'est FOUND: Stingray Wee, vie .
DDEELUXEiJ: i00<_11-BR,RR'"";; • .,.;;;;--;:""";:;:-·l·"""~~;'C,::--~D~RM.~~F~U~R~N~.-1 3,!.~=~ ~~ -.~ ~ ~ =will 1ake pr@Paid in-HORSEMAN'S ~i~tit~~·8· ca1J & ~Reial Estate
~~ ::;:r· 1:'°· ~~ ALSO 2 BIL UN FURN. Adults mly. • =~~er -HOME LOST 9110 Siam~ att
Corene •I Mw S250 mar. A. Utilltiea included lay & leach . Walk to all IChoola ?l Unit• w/pool. This 7 yr. 4 BDRMS. on 11A a.cr@ll in point ?.1ale cal No a:illar.
615-Z'm &e.3815 ewa.
1----------1 •==,..-:---~-llEATED pO()L RNlty, Inc. old ~· is In xlnt cood.. &: the country, cloR-tn to free. Vic Park Udo. NB.
$350 Yeuty Jeaa•. untum 2 1r:':i.~ci ~:811: !Kl2 Knoxville, Apl o, i-m :ll25 w. Balboa mwt., NB Lara:e poa1, ~ttlnc ll'fi!rl, suecesstiJlly opn-ated by way. Corrala b' hones. a Rc>ward! 642-79$
Br. home. Li's yard, 2 car CM ~25f4. 548-8333 I ==-·~~~-'7'-·-= 613-3663 Eves. 5t8-a966 volleyball, badminton, etc. reside.Gt·"*'ll&et". T e r m s swimming PI) o l. rumpus I"'======== pr.~ redea:in.ted! -.,;;,.,.;;'7:-=~-I FURN Mobile borne. SUS From $270 can be IU'I'arlge(i. room, m11tr. bdrm. w/frp)c. Personals 6405
CX'peta, drapes. Adults pref. 1 BR.., $ll5 Mo.; lfil3 mo. 2 Br. f,dults. Stt rrqr LEASING Oct. 15. S1&5. Util 6868 L1mpson Dorado Developmenl ~2-54.!fi and den. Full price $2i,OCO.
No peta. Water .. prdener Santa Ana Ave., C.M. No. '9. 21002 Ocet11 Ave. pd, 2 BR, crpta, drpl. Lge (nr. knott) 8% RETURN, triple net For further infonnatioo fREE!
pd. 91J.'llf6 er f13..30l8 toc "';;:;;:"-,,•=M.><!5==-"~·'---H.B. frt>lt". 1 Bick bcb. Adults. ,.~ nnEN ,._.,,rnn:o lease • :rl )'NI'S. with AM please call Glenn 'IbomplOO ~ .. '""=~------~r I:::=::~===~==·~== .... -h Batie Boating Claues _,_ NEW DELUXE l bedroom '~NEW Sound ~i-••ato I ~ tenant. Agent o;ro;.,.."" ?.it •·-~--!=:::=:::=:::::::::= E kh ff & A I Offe!'ed to Public by 3 BR. :Z Ba.. fr1*:. patio, cpV $1.lS. DepogH required. Back BR bill: to ocean, indlvid. 4 BR. 2 Ba., partJy furn. :Z w~mlnstor 5612 c o SIOc., nc. Balboa P-er Squodron
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A: dbhwuber. Ge.rip. lVd. cm pert scum d •. k & -00· . 61J.1~•. Houses ctf beach. Redec. ""-"'---"''=..;,;...;,;. __ _;;.=lluslneu Rental 6060 1818 W. Cllapman Ave. ...--".. ...... "" .,.. Orang S1arting 7 PM Mon. Sept 16
LMaeSZSO. 6156t06 VERY Quiet in l'ftr. u-g t 536-1319. See at 14 A. Walnut skle &: out S295 mo Yf'b'. AVAIL. OCT. lit OOMM. ))Mg for lelJll!. New. Ml·26'n., Eve:~~·5J&.€127 at Newport Harbor Yacht
l BR. 2 ha. lire lat. leut: .:;: f;· Olide p'ff ISM QUIET & BEAUTIFUL Drive by 112 4ot.b, NB tbe:ft :1 BR. W/prap $1((;. Nr. So. a.st Plaz.a. 12,lml::=======;:'. Club 720 W. Bay Ave., New-~~ H, Rd>ettam. JCtr, ;;-;--;;.,--.,,..----Adulls oncy, l Br. Poot call 675.ITOO or 6334863 Feocr: ~;., pakl sq. ft. Ail or liS. Ideal tJr I: port Beach. NO ADVANCE
$115. 1 BR, .Ea.at aidt C.M. 176760uneron. 847·'1125 CLEAN A Spacious 2 BR can 8etWffn 2-S' markets, furniture AcrNg. 6200 REGISTRATION NE(CES-
•·lboo ••-Ytt£d. i.-Ir.· pnp. Mab. LRG. be.cbeiOI" utll pt idea.I apt. Acn:a from. beac:h, e 6lMt20 e hardware. Ex~I. paricing.1;.;.:c.:;=:._---.::::: SARY, ENROU.. AT a.ASS
ue .-vu ~1-1 for !ing'.le, retired or pension-$175. unfum/ PD. Furn. I====::===== Reu. mil. Courtesy to 10 ACl"Pll In Bonsall 646-842'2 or m185.5 Jar more
:! BR. 2 BL Hup pc, UJlf& 1 BR. SlZ; bad!. $UO; er. SOO. 8G-Zl19 Yrly. ~?OIS L99una BMch 5705 brokers. &Ci Bilker St., C.M. ~:entto totti~~:;'t ~ info.
drpa.. $360 ~ i.. 61'5-Sl52 Very tgr. l'OOml, nicely LARGE. Unfurn 2 BR, 2 BA _"6-_2481_______ Down &: Countty aim. ~k-Also
"""" 10•30 s.m. "' "' s .... 64:1--"""116 loguno Booch •705 •pt. N•w """· «P'" 100 CLIFF DRIVE BUSINESS BLDG ;,,. ;i.soo ..,. ,.,, Sulmt Huntington Beach
p.m. ~!!.Br~~·), I BR .. NEW Tnmish@d 2 BR 2 BA'"~=--;.:;,.·"'"""""'"""""'· ::.,,.$1_ .. _ ... __ m_o. =Ri:.~= Downtown Main SI. )"OUI" terms. Registration at Huntington
Huntf ..... lucft 3400 _.., dfllll. bltm. a I I e I e c bu 111 -1 n a. r j BR built-ii», beamed ei!il-Yearly Lea-.. 1 bedroom • Morse McDonald, Reelhr Beacti. High School Monday '';;;;;-;;;'';;;;';;;;:;-';;;:;:;;;;~ 1 :.""'~~"~"~·~•;·~·~Dr~. ;-~~ Panoram.ic vin; overlookicw fTI4) iJ.8-84(Jl Sept. 16. Classes coatinue 1 IEREE RENTAL BOOK Nassau hims l & 7 BR. A1i11o Bead!. Mature adults in.gs, ~ce. 2 be.th&. I ates-to ShlJN a Sbopt 1800 1q ft. Huntington B<:h. no So· Main, F'&llbrook:, Cal. throughout the ran.
Drop In •nd Browse Pml. $130 f!D S150 only, no dildm SU6. 499-37!6 blodl: to beech. Annual ren-Oceanview born f!'!lf!.r,/ Apt. $350 PER MONTH b~-2 n.--Co ITI E 22n '" ,..,. $200/mo. !tom IJ50 mo UP. 1aM Tod Woy Riiy 536-2579 R"°'' P-porty 6205 THE ORIGINAL
3,.;:;i:" ... ~u'Gm,. ey · d St 6f2..2Ui (tN TALS Goodwin Co. (TI4) m..9150 .f!K.2449 IN BERKS~ , ..
ce. ....... ~ ge, $145 CLEAN J Br. EnclogOO Apta. Unfurnl•hed CLCSE TO OCEAN .. BAY. !XT.ANFRONT apl L r• R~~AURANT MOUNTAIN cebin k>cated irl Singles Dance ~ ~i:ia.~ Lease, yn:I, Infant ok. No petz. 2244•----------~· Running Springs. Member· and .!!till ''THE MOS!'" $181.SO per month. State 64J...•m • Gener•I 5000 2 BR. Cf1)1d; dqJtd, b!t·lna, garden are1. Priv. beech A: Store building, formerly n...... Wed Th Fri
·• yrly. 67l-6730 aea pool l br. ' den. Part. "The Look" 673-94(6 5hip 1o club avail. Cabin "'"""" " Qrs., ·· Sat. "'·-'"""! 4~ '""' !::::::======= will accomodate 16 ._.....J,. Happy H.r. 7-S:;Jl Dinner to 9 N Bo h - -DELUXE Bayfrmt, boat •••:1 ='~="·=-==mo=. =~===-I ~,, DANCERS CORN
avail. Poot 2 BR. 7 Be.. $275 5990 Office Rental 6070 finrt. After 5 pm. 548-l4G4 1<l3812 N. Main a! Edingl'f'
16112 EDINGER
ewport IC 4200 VENDOME Large famll.v rm. WI C'ftnj' ER
MOBILE 1*ne: :1 BR. 2 BA. to SJ75.. Rltr. fi?.>.28f5 ,R;;;•,;;nt.:.;•::lo:...:W.::1::"::1M:.:._= S•nt• Ana 542-9306
l8XlM lfvinr. Yard, dlx rum, Make reMTVationsNOW GOLD Medallion 2 &: 3 Br. 2 FR LAGUNA BEACH M nt & Desert 6210 -"' '40Sl40 oil bit-ins, "'""· """''· Newly Redocoretod ba ~-~ bl-$ll5 EE SERVICE TO Air Conditioned ou · --'-":..c..._;:.:c:.; * Sin9le Adults *
f,... Rental Service UtfJ'a ind. 2 Poou & lltps. Cl t S5.--· p k . ~x.fro -..firfr~-OWNER-MANAGER ON FORES'.i.' AVENUE IO OR 20 Acns, So. C'alil. You can meet from 2 to
•-bom and S175. Bayside V,'-~e No OH o • ....,..p•"t1,,; ar -""~•-· ~-~· ~~~-BROKER Desk spaces available ln reasonable. )[Int &reL IO new ,_.,pl, ••'-U.
.., e owners tenant&. Zl&. Call Mr. ~ aft 7 ADULTS ONL T NEW SoundPC'Qli 7 Br. :Z Ba. You 9elect your own tennant newll$f oftlee building at Agent 542-'1555 and ev;;-moo&"" frormon the
PM. 61J..97e e Spadoos 3 Br's, 2 Ba Acrou fin. Oxo'&. l6Qj ACTIVE RENTALS prtme locatiol! in downtown ===~===== xt 5 ,,,._.. ';;;;;;;;;;o;-;==-:-,~--e I BR. furn. Avail !-""" $ll5 ,_ -. .,~ .. ........,, , --~& n.a.... ..,& ___., ne years . • . Ject:. ~ 3 Bedniom, e Swim Pool, Pul/IP'ffll '...... .., _.., ~ ~=="-53:.'4-6.:...:9:.1::2::..... __ 1 ;,:;-c~7ect ~beau~ 1 _E_x_<h_•_n_,g:.;°':.•:.,;,;R.;...;:E::;._6::2:.:3:.:0 ed to please you:. For inter.
upper-bilt-INI, e I ec tr I c • Frpl. Indiv/lndry fac'ls 3. B.R, 1' bo, trplc,l I bGlt·ina. $225 MATURE Couple wish to ls. panel~ ~ing. Two RANCHO SANTIAGO esting recorded messaze-.
_ u.~ 111.... kitrben, tile batb. $160 Per 1845 Anoholm Ave I n c u t • • e o r I e hm •-/ dial 836-6200. ''-•..i,,,..· ..u. 11Kllllh, utiJI"--'-~~-• 2 , Willialn.!ICl'I Rltr. 673-4350 _.... mo., wW care fur entrancel: Frontage on 4 Plex, Income $700 mo. ~=="'""''-----SfS.9491 Open till t PM ...,.. ~ • COSTA MESA 642..2824 samt as thoo&h it \ff.I'!! our Fores;' AYe., rel\!' leada to Equity $Z2,000 for Bead! ALCOHOLICS Anonymous
rnonlhs n!:nt plu. cleanin1:I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ own. Writs M-193 Daily MUDClpal patldq Iota. SSO home, Newport to Seal Bch. Phone 542-ntT or wrilt' to SlNGl..E house on nke yrd. cbarie required. No pets or m . 1 BR. Newport Hgtl. 5210 Pilot pm-mmtlli tor .pace. Desk Ow 543-W9 P.O. Box L.?Zl Costa M6a.
2" bck'rm., !rs Dr.<. rm., children &16-9154 Beach T"efri& and chairs available for SS. ner. or 7JS.-OJ30
newly derorated. Nr ahoJ> 't()CWPORT apt., stoYe. ·• 2 Bdrm!!., carpets, drapes WANTED lb NOY l5t or ™h., Busme. boun aa.swer.ing 1 ~•c.v:."-·~~-----
ping. 1 mile from H. B. "'··h ..... APTS* util'i pa.id. ~ Pittio; garage. Adults 1903 1 BR W'lllnl Apt, C.M., New-aervice avail&hle for SlO. BUSINESS end
Pier. No -· (7131 DCU.: • ...,..., CXllllP furn. Haven Pl. Yrly. 54s.530ti port, Corona del Mar or La-·~ ~u Hid. -Priv. ........ Cost1 Meu 5100 All ulillties pa.id exc~t FINANCIAL ~-~ ~ NICE , BR. ft-I • runa. To $UO ma. Gar or ..... --&
D .. ---·-...___ ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .-......... , p&ti{)!!;, 1e1e.,._,.., Bus. Opportunltloo 6300 3 BR. booae' SL10 ftse
f BR. 2 be. n.fi leue
Nr. ai:hoola A: Beach Blvd.
llS56 Van Buren 842-182.1
$200. 3 Bedroom, 11,ii Bath
na:. ............ -......-uuw 1• carport neeeN1r,Y. 6G«ll6 om y PILOT ~ $115 Mo. 642 A,,.... gar. bltns, cptl, drps, ad!tll. • ~ Excellenl, park • like IJUJ'· No pe13. S140 rno. 641-3XJ1 a!tet 5 p.m, 222 FOREST A VENUE
2 BR. furn .. neat 1: dean. :1 roundinp fM adult.I requir-LEASE c.-optiDD. f BR. LAGUNA BEACH Going into busineu? H~ elf beach. $175. in&: peace l quicl houae, Mea. Verde area.. 494-9406 Golden opportunity ui be&ch
Drive by 1U 4-0lh, NB. lhen Discriminative Tenants Newport ShorM 5'220 $200 Mo. area. Phillil>S fi6 Servke
Walk to bell.ch. call 615-1700 or 633-4863 1, 2 l 3 BDRM. API'S. 3 BR. Duplex: blt·in!I, pr, e 546-8064e SECRETARIAL Stations for lease. um POOL. NO OilLOREN ::o==-~'"""'--~ SERVICE Bayside & Marine Dr .. Phone 7U: 861 -J UM CUTE l BR nbly Furn Udo
Peninlula n?S yrly lease.
Ballo& Bay P!'opertlet l!M
McFadden PS. ~1420
MARTIN yard, club. Must aee. p:io WINTER rental wanted by Modem ofticet1, carpets, e.tr Newport Beach; 371 Main &: 19UE Yrly ~ 64).Q.16 retired 1entl~man. Clean conditioning, parking. From Orange, Huntington Be•cb.
Laguna S..ch 3705 GARDEN Am. and retpOnSible. Otn man· sm pu month. Orange Coon-Cont11.ct· Cl'luck Crowder
East Bluff 5242 a.ge 9djacent units. 540-6&42 ty Bank Bldr. m E. t?th St., 714: m .n10 714: TI4-1CH.1 OCEANFRONT 5pectacu1u HONEY 18th • Santa Ana, C.M.
VWa. Parl.ly hmlished. Huie MOON apt. vi~ ot Call Mn. Rendenon 64fi.5542
mu. perlf.like 'roan d a, be.J and ocean. ~ mom tm Santa Ana Apt ll3 CM with nrep1ace. lritcbm. mo. · · · · i;rlqte beach. 1e• pool S600 548-f mo. AlJo, Vk:ioria Buch 2394 a ter 6 (l.m. S85 1 LARGE Bdrm .
Ooeanlront houM $JI s , 2 BR. 2 Ba. $1'5 O'IO. Winter \lo'/carport, oppoaite new
494-4fiS3 AD utM pd. "9 b1k to bch.. ho&pitJll. P.Utte Realt<JI'.
MONARCH BAY AR EA In W. 8aJbot; BI vd . scs..«in
LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. l 04-SlS9 1'?~8R~71\,~-bo-.-... -,.-./-apb.-
BR It den, 2 SA, epU., 1>111' 1 BR.., furn. l 1&lfum. Pool: Blb:ia. pri PJ'/patM>. Adults
trpl, pool.. $300 mo. A1ao 110 children er peta. 24Cli}9 $141). 5-f9.-0;U1 ~ rv,.
PRESTIGE Town Homes roRMER h: OWl'len; Cl>l Cost. Mesa. &C-l48.l IBE REN A IS SANCE
For lease, 2 br A den l 3 br wanl \ft 2 Br., crpta, ...,._ MED &. Attornl!:y's office; (clothing & antiques), weU
with 2 or 2~ ha.tbs. Gold Pt.tlo or baJ pref, Apro" 1.cm -ISOO sq. rt., U--cond. slocked, $3000. 212 N. Cou:t
Medallion all eledric. POOL S150. 548-GlT Good loc. Low ~nt. 548-6761 Hwy, Laeuna Be a ch .
2-car rar. Rent atarta at URGENT need, 2 BR Me, 2 ROOM Office near Od City ~-::,:,.:c5888::,:,.~-~--
$250 mo. unf\lm, older ~e. ApP. Hall. Carpet& .t clrapts, etc. BEAUTY PARll>R. Owm-
831-871 Amlp Way, N.B. $100. Con&. LIUop 4!H-4l04 $80 util. incl. 642-6560 trig, uruqu~ abop. Busy loc:a.
JOIN the ••SC•a II UM 2 LI.die&. 1 or 3 BR unfurn. BEAtmFUL otftce If*« in tial. rood cllm:ltek. New
DAJLY PD.OT WANT ADS! bou1e pt. ~ Nov h1 Glendale Federal Bide., equip S4.990. 5f5..949l, 60-724l
642-5671 w~. ~ . CdM $45 Mo. up. STS-3793 LIQ. LIC'S. :::lr10tOOo
3 COMMEROAL. l indust. Act Now, LimJl~ty~
Announcements 6410
Lifette Health Studio
Hospi tality is Our Motto
FREE STEAM WITH
SWEDISH MASSAGE
Open wkd;ys IO am -11 pm
Sundays 10 am. 8 pm
519 E. Broadway
Long Beach (213) 437·7™
•
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
The
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
avail. 2 BR. 2 be. $250 rno. ,'co'"'=St.=.°"'N~.B-·~-~~-'-
adulta 4~1243 betw lo..!i pm WINTER Rental 4 br .. 2 ba ..
1 BR, f~. Jc patio, nan.p MW kitchtn. Avail. 9/!.S.
rm., pr. flftl:. IMM'. m5 mo. 615-0m'
494-m'.1113kr. OCEAHFRONT apta; l BR
l wttll living qtn. ' Orange City. off llllle Cito~)
Call owner: fit6.2130 Winston Collect (213) :m-4249
UQ. Loe. 11~ ftxturea. IM
Industrial Prop. 6080 b dn.wing. Bristol I Ran-
dolph C.M. ..,,._
JN0USTR1AL bid&, 11 e w I=========
10.000 .. ft, kr ,.... "' Money to ..... 6320
aal@. 8~ Ol'.flt» sq ft.. 2 bib ::.:::::.:!...:::...:::::::.......;=
NOW'S THE Marketplace
URN!r' A lower ala> bacbeb-Duplexes Unfum. 3975 Util pd, SM-7122 or 544-SZt.2
2 BR 2 BA, clx vHw, new
bely front. le: patio, yrl7. m 19!h St. ax Mm.6
RC:N TALS
Apts. Fuml.,,..
BAVFRONT DUPLEX
Ntw 2 Br. 2 Ba.. lower; $1Zi
MG.. wmtr. rn 19th mens
OCEAN1'ROn' 2 BR.. dtx.
tum. bldna. Adults. Wurter
rental. 64S-Ol88
4000 2 BR. Pu1Jy turn Apt 1M ,_________ .1"1 $ll5 mo. 2 blks "'"'="·
RENT Ooldrn ok. 315-341h SI. Nil
3 llGoms Furniture $ZS Montlt eor.... dol Mor 4250
rulL OPTION TO BUY e COROLIDO APTS. e
No dtpmlt o.a.e. l·BR. haii., w/lrplc., lee.
H.l'.lt.C. -$16• ,..ny ......
Fumltvrw a.ntalt Avallable Oct. lit
511 w. uu.. c.11. 5'3-31!1 m E. Cout llw)<. QJ.3'11
l58f W. ~ Mlm T14-.m:J PIUV Room .. batb. um.
"' WESTCLIPF nllttr. aw. '"" ,_ ltlVIERA Jslalld, IQ).1\Jes. W<d . J'r1
2 BR J11irn, l'"do, ....,.... ._ 6TMfll4 .l wlc-<adL
~ oduiJL llntod l'loal NEW, ..... -t!o. ol
-Wesldlll Dr. NB B"1. -• llolplor. ~ • F m-mr;
.... ' ,,..,., """'-to $12,000
hroktn. 2959 Cmtmy. C.M. Avall. for good 1st er 2nd TD
st&-24111 loan. J.J yr term. Call
M·l Nlit. 8c:h. omce.Jatqle.. Mr. Adami. lier. 49f.t650
1500 aq. fl. Lot 225 .; ...
Inc. fTl5 mo. 161,(01. $1.D.
aUt. Oimer, 7U: !Ml-1368
K-L llXJXDI, left!
Sll,{Q) . Tenn.a
Welta:lde a.ta Mesi. M8-6'Mt
Common:lol 6085
•
HOME LOAN ~
Let l1J; kelp you ~ a home.
tttlna.nce Pxbting loan or ob-
Wn • 2"nd m loM.
FREE APPRAISAL I
PROMPT SERVIQ:
.S.tU~ M~ Cb .. tnc.
3lS E. 17th St., Costa Mua
642-:nn 56a;l.1.
Eva 61S-'1111i M2.J151
n-s WCM>ERrUL tl>I ma,,,
bQyg m appllancca )'OU ftnd
tn the Ot•'W Ada. 0...-.t <mn-i
TIME FOR for
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A Automobiles
DAILY PILOT...---
WANT AD
642-5678
llBST
110\TSI
~
1•--------'"'!"-11111!-•1SEltVICI DIRICTOltY SUtVICE Dl ltECTOltY •••*** Contractor .. • • 6620 P•parh•"lli"I
Palntlna . 6150 l e ROOMS ADDmONS •
L. T. Conll:J'Uctbl
hmllJ rooms. kitchen m-
lW!itl, Slnate 1t!Jl'1 or 2:
plUil custom dtoliiMd, fllr
Ml~ & layout, pbal'le
* PAINTINC l
DFX..'ORATlNG it
"Interior, ulf:rlor
Uc'd. lns'd. GWU'Mtced.
Wluldd\'• w .. tt Wlwicidy• Gett
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOlt
NA TUltAL IORN SWAPPERS
Special It ...
J N--5--51M1dcs
au1..M -M MU ... INQ.UOI ........... -..... • ... .......,. r-.... Ill ...... a-vo1.1111 .-.. """1• ..,..__ ~ ""' ., ....,..,,.. """"'°THING ll'O• $/tLl -ruoe:s OMl'fl
PHONE 642-5671
Te ''•~ Yeur Tr•r'• ParedlH Ad
UPRIGHT piano with stool.
TRADE FOR STERID
COMPONENTS SYSTEM
o<TV.
e MT-15U e
Ca,.,.t Cle1nint 6625
Custom work onb'·
HARRI! PA1NTINC 642-45.58
THE Jgl.and P•inler Will
paint anything comm' l or
residential. Exp, licensed,
i.Mur. More the.a $2,()(0
CARPET " rvm. cle11.ntna:; worth o( ea1tipmcnt. Call far
Jar 1 day aervi~ It qualitJ free taL 83:9-626.t
wori<, catl Sterlfna: for briptnea! 60-«'0) PAINTING. El:t Int. Ext.
I~====· ;-===~I HM Trailer. 17 yn exp.
Carpet l ayint &
Repair 6626
Revolution1ry Hoit
Dry Cleaning Method
R1tgs, Drapes, Upholstery
Can be used lmmedi•tel.y
after work is completed
Sa.Jee, Servk>f:
and ln1tallation
• M&Bter Cbarce
J"tte eat. Acoust. eeil.
543-""5
PAlNTlNG A.od Papering. II
you <:all me we both benetlt.
Exe!Ulli't"t but not expensive
1'X'Y me and see. 541-'ll57
SCHWARTZ wallcoverlrtg5 &
paint lales & installation
Mobil st.ore, home app't 847-1659
5 BR 3 ha, 2 story home
in Back &y. Trade clet.r
for vacant land, older or
smaller h o m e ~ trust
deeds. Owner-bldr 646-1675 ----"-UM-·-~-• Bankamerlca:rd 3 BR. 2 ba Monticello Con-Modern Rug & Carpet
Pa intinK Exteriilr/ Interior.
Free Ealmates!
Colonial 2 Br. 2 Ba. View
hm. in So Laguna. A 2 llirY
hm w/2 frylcs. Approx 1
yr old: Want sm inc. wtila.
Own-Brkr. Aft 5 pm. 499-1990
do. 2 pools, $20,950. WW 4335 Cttnshaw, Los Angeles
take 3 or " BR home $20,000 n3 -296-5100 Collect Ptumbing 6890
to $30,000 bradcet in tra&. ---''-----~5580 owner/agt. Gardenint 66IO Plumbing 24 hr. ael'Y. Work
llome Busi:n~; defierl-Ori· ___ A_N_T~H_O_N_Y_'_S __ auar. Lie .. insur.; remodel,
·• XJn ta ··-ff -air, rooter serv. 531-1566 entt:<1. t x wnu: 0 s. Garden SerVice · -..
• 64.2-4669 • 548-8112
•
Friday, Stpttmbtr 20, 1961 OAll.Y PILOT ~·
JOIS I EMPLOYMENT JOI$ &_EMl'\.OYMEHT!JOIS & I MPLOYMcNl '"'"> 6 CM~LO YMINl JUB) I l/ll~~OYMIN•
Help W•nted, Mon !200 Ht~W•nted, ~ noo Het, Waoted, Men 7200 Holp W•nled, Mon 7100 Ho~=ted
e ·uean up
Men
• Carpenten
W1th mobile home
experience. Exc.ellent
ben•llh. Apply In
person.
EXPLORER
MOTORHOME CORP.
4000 C1mplls Or.
Newport Beach
Enqln•ering
GAS CO.
StHdy Employment
Interestlna outdoor Jobi now
Ope!'t lrJ mftt. No e)(pt'r~
M'(:HUry but ftlf'Ch&nlc:al
ilikill hclp!ul. YQU eel tine
traln.lrij; and pxl ~
salaey. A~torn11tic Pll1 rat"
e11, •11 well u advanc«nent
opportunities, Bf:nelltl In·
cloolnl, s da.v ...x. •'""
V!LCatlons. holidays, CM\•
pa.ny paid lile lnlutaace. dif.
ablli()' I: pPnOOl'I pla.n.
APPLY AT
1919 So. State Collete Blvd.
Anaheim. Calif,
Mon lhru f'M 8:30 t(I •
Southern Counties
Gas Company
T.c:hnlclan "' ,..w opportunity fflll)loyer To work closely with engi. 1-,,,-:7.c-cc~-~~-
,,..,. 00 •ev•lopmon• °' Hi·fi Components digital eltctronics d a t A
equipment and dig1tal mag-SALESMAN
netfc recording transports.
Understanding of electronic
DISHW}SHER
Nigh!>
BUSBOY
Night. .
Apply in penon
3-5 P.M, Oa.il_y
Snack Shop #1
2305 E. Coo1t Hwy.
Coron• c:Lel Mar
LONG ltANGI
TOOLING
PROGRAM NEEDS:
, • CARPENTERS
• WOODWORKERS e TOOLING &
LAYOUT MEN
Previous boat bulkflnt
e xperience preferred,
but not necessary.
Columbl• Y 1cht
275 McCormick Ave.
Costa Mesa ---
BOX BOYS
run I Part Umc
ltlch•nf• Liff Cenltr
3'33 Vll Udo
N.wpcrtlltocll m<IJ60
7400
PROOF OPEltATOlt
-------1 UNITED CA LIFORNIA llANK
lusboys &
Dllhwlllhen
Full time, over 11
Apply in Penon
lob's Big loy
1S4 .E. lTth St.. C.M.
Sales, over 18
Sa)n: promotion Jobs avail.
Large int'I. ('Qll'P. $10,000 1st
year. Managemenl opportu·
Di~. Olli. morns. only.
539-1183.
• Bo•t AsMmbler1 .. xp
• Carpenhlr•
• Painter•
Apply ln penon
Jensen Marine Co rp.
:ti) 1''1scher, Costa Mei;a
Want; 1!>32' Twn Scr.v, SI S
auto P., dp fndr, All equip.
Have: 1'D's Ol' Choice Des-
ert home.
'Take over go}d panning kit
mtg. Trade for sports ~P 646-1948
($3001 Val« !, 54.8-8642 LANDSCAPING
tundamenllls required and Eicperieoct> not neoessary but
experience with tltbrlcation must be familiar with sttftO
a.nd test of electronic cir-equipment. Excellent oppcr.
Remode l., Repair, 6940 cu/try desirable. tunity for 1 Hl·Fi hobbyist
OPENING
IMMEDIATElY
OX 3-(1.!31 er fJ99.(9)3
Ocean Vft • Nr. NPt pier
4 units furn. Best Tental
tree.. $58,500-take sm hse in
trade. Owner ·~:Oi1A Court
Ave. 673-6527
Sll,IXX> equity Anaheim
llouse. 3 Br. on Brookhurst
mncd Res-Prof. Wan! house
iri Harbor !lfea. Owner.
6'5.36&1
BOOMING
WELL LOCATED TENNIS
SHOP u down paymt oo
y,our reel estate.
~ or 494-4925
Fr. Haviland & Old Col slvr
sv. 12: bottle&, books , rare
W'gwd. StaHordshire pea.:
for mobil hln., oyo apts, hse
boat or ? 37-4 E. Montana,
Pu.
Snow skis, 74" Lund "TOP,
flight" & ski poles. Want
golf clubs llOl'l&') & bag in
good cmdition.
'""""' 20 A£. horse ranch N. Cali.
3 houses lOM ft fencing, 9M
fl barn, 14 stalls, FM S. CaJi
ranch • inc, home -or ??
$60M equity • S95M crwner
645-1900
Have: Palm Desert l Br.
2 Ba. f'urn. Best area.
$34,500, eq. $7,200. Want;
What have?
R. Ro.v; M~n: Jr. 673-61!l6
LlOO ISLE CORNER
3 BR, 2 bath!, beam ceil-
ing, Frplc, 156,500. Trade
$19.0CO equity for boat, Jot,
nr ??? Owner. 673-&290 eve.
FOR TRADE l960 I..ures n.y MONTHLY M:AOOENANCE
bridge, sport ti8her & Ava· Exp bortiC!UlturUL
Ion mooring . WANT 11' l/O Comp!.ete Oeanup. Reas.
with trailet" for Mexican Japanese Gardener
walen. 546-2268 O>rnplete Yard Service .
TRADE •511 CHEV ~ TON EKp. Free est. Landscaping.
Pla<UP truck, very gd Clean-up. 540-l3l2 • 546-0'l'U
oond, FOR SHARP '59 OLDS 0Jt & Edge Lawn
98 (lt' gd car of eqool value. Maintenance. Licensed
842'2 Saru, Hwit. Bch. 548-4808, •ft 4 PM
TRAD& C-3A property next European Landscaper
, new Seat'f: Covina $61,COO: Th~ Finest at Reasol'lable
f'qUity price $69,<XXI tor in· Price 496-3383 Evening
come, deer land, beach RES. & Comc'l GardMing
home, or ?'! owner MS-1900 Llc. Xlnt work, Reu-
T r a d e Hemet acreage 646-6222 or 646-143-t
SOO.<XXI dear, excd toe. Will MOWING, Edging vacalawn.
take up to 40 units or Comm Gen'! cleanup. Hauling.
• Industrial income or sut; Odd Jobi. • 54g.....fj$5
mil. Agent. 540-1151
SALT LAKE CITY, have
$20,000 equity in large,
view home. Want So. Oillf.
Japanese Gardening
Professional Maint. Land-
scaping. Cleanup, MG-6553
CLEAN·UP. tree serv, rototil,
prop., home, units. grading, aprlnklers, lawns,
Agent 642-5495 haul'g, spray, 640-5848
Will Trade Equity in '67 EXPERT Japanese garden-
Oiev Impala still undf.r in&:. H.B .. F.V., C.M. area.
Wa.muity for older car or 1 * 847-01.32 *
1786 A Westminster Ave.,
Costa Mesa. AMERICAN GARDNER
Exper. commer. & resid.
Wanted 40 or -42 ft Trkabin Free Estimates 968-1911
1964 or newer with low
hours on ~. For real General Sarvlce1 6612
property or !!'!! Cal I
61!)..6135, e'V'etl. Sf5..1564
Trade 2'.2' Dey Sailboat
on tN.iler.
Trade !or
utility trailer.
~---~~---PR.OFF.SS. Window. wall& &
fir. cleaning; b u a in e 1 a,
resid., l construction
Cry.-Window Qe-aning
Free Eatimates 548-8737
540-6'200 PROFESS. WlnOow, walls &
"H,.av-,-,7N,...,,.,...--H~.,.,,7-~i.,-3~..,~ nr. cleeDne; bu 1ine 1 1 1
J~ Sa. Comer Jot. $34,500. resid., I coort:ruction
Eq. Sl2.:150. Want : What Cry1tal Window Oeaning
ha.ve you? Free EMtl.mate1 548+8731
R. ROM Myen Jr. 673"6756 CHEAP fill dirt from Lag
* * * * * IA~~N~N!O~U!NC!E!M'-E!N!T!S!!!!!!!!!!SE!R!!!!!VICE DIRECTORY
•nd NOTICES
* Bc:h Sleepy Hollow stcrm
drain. Deliver « pick up.
5'.S-1797 day -530-4859 eve
e 1 DAY 1ervice. Home &
apt cleaning. O'pt!I, walll,
Funer1l1 6412
WESTMINSTER
MEMORIAL PARK
Mortu1ry & Cemetery
Complete fu n1rals
from $245
Cemetery Iott
from $130
lncludes Endowment Care
Everything in oDe beautiful
place means lesa; cost.
No traffic problems.
14801 Beach, Westminster
531-1725 893--2411
Memorial Parks 6421
Four burial spaces In
Harbor Rest Memorial
Park S700. Owner 839-1894
SERVICE DIRECTORY
windows, painting. 642-8020.
Brick, Masonry, etc. Sterling for brightness!
6560 I 7H~a~"l~m~g~. °"cl,.e8'HJP-.,,-, -,,,.,=ag,-,.-:-
Etc .. , •. Free F&imatee,.
Anytime ... Jim ~5325 BRIO<, Con~te. C&J1H'ntTy
Cu8tom Cabinet!. S m a 11
jobg OK Free Est 962-6945
BRICKS, Blk., con c r ~ t r.,
carpentry, new or repair.
Any type const. 536-8885
Carpentering 6590
CARPENTRY
MINOR REPAIRS. No Job
Health Clubs 6720
CtllROPRACT'OR
HEALTH CLINIC
Massage, sauna, steam ad·
ju;ltment, x-ricy. 548-99U
Female Technlcian
132 E. 18th St, C.M.
Too Small. Cabinet in gar-Hauling
11.ges & other cabinet&. ---"'------
6730
545-8175 Eves. 641).2372 Days UTE Hauling-Trimminl
ff. O. Anderson. Trash, Garage Oeanup1
e HOME REPAIR,. N~e JgffN Re~=~
Cabinets· remodeling ,
Prompt. re11oaablt>
&16-4224
MASTER.CARPENTER
New & repain1. $4 hr.
CLEAN t.ou. garage!!,
etc. Tree removal, dump,
skip, backhoe, till,
grade. 962-8745
h 0 :,---6-520 I 53&-.1900 aft. 5 PM
I ·A_•P_•_ll_, __ 1 -'----REPArRS * ALTERATIONS
*LITE HAULING•
aean up. Free e'i"t.
•546-7849•
QUAIJTY asphalt seal COfll
& repairs driveways & pari<·
ing Jots. 894-3129
CABINET'S, Any Gu job. ========"I
25 yrs. exper. 548-6713
DRIVEWAYS & Parking lot~
repair~ &: seal coat'ed. Frtt
eet. ReM. 5.11>-1413
DON'1 (iv1 1t away, cet
qUlcit eaab for It wittl •
Dllily Pilot "1lt Ad!
642-5678
Babysitting 6550 Cement, Concrete 6600 ----LET me love them when yoo
rnust leave them; child
<:Qtt, my home: middle-
aged rellablt mother. Vic.
Brookhun:t & Adams, H.B.
Daya or tves.; Ca I I:
THORYK CONCRETE
NO JOB TOO SMAIL
li'ree Eat. * 646-1234
BDIT In COllCrt!te.
pool decks, llocn,
642-&51-4
Walk&,
pMkll.
lnter;or Decorating 6737
e Residence -Comm'I • e Painting, int. & ext. e WB.ll Coverings
• Color Coordinatio11
FREE FXTIMATI::
~nsed &: ln1JUrf"'
MODERN
DECOltA TORS
536-95U
CLEAN Lots, 1arage1,
ttc. Tree removal. dump,
akip '-ckhoe, fill, "'""""· Child Ca,.. 6610 I ====-==· =Ol'l-87=='~' =~ Babysit my horn e, F'n!nch
f».mily, daDrtlmc, 5 da)'I UC. Day C&rt, 1 child. l% 1 ,t_ren_l_"ll~-----6-7_55
weekly, A~ 2-5. CoM1 )'Tl. up: pri•. home. Wri IRONING In my barn• $1..25
--------'
Mesa. 646-4856 or dfly, Mon thro l"li. ht. 54).6239. 1510 Orchid Or ..
BABYSIT'I'fNG: Age 2 -5 546--«Q) • Senti Aita.
fenced yard. hot lunches "u=c.-<1oy~-..,.----AM~-,.~,~.~.._,.1 ·-.,,-,,.,,f"nr""'c1aneLC---..,-chom--.-
C.M. Atea ~1 txt 218 Jtot ltJncbM, x11Jt ea r • . $2 I: up,
MCYI'HER Wlshes to kbysit, Rubor • Baker 5tfl..1539 UJ Albert St, C.M.
weekty: fenced )Id.: So. J WllL care tor your child tn I==========
Cout--rtaz.a IU"e:!· 546-2617 lnl' home • tnMll, Jae 1enc. P.,.m.nelnt
AGE 3 to 5. iovi11C eatt. Vit. eel play attL 49'1"·1501 Palntfnt
o.tfield!Yorkiowil eut d MOT'HER -.viii e11R h .-TJ22 .-~ EXTERIOR • t n ft r I or , Beach. 961-llCh llC" mild, my home wk Spedal -prku tor apts. Neat
BABYSITI'JNG for wortdna ck\f$. Ori 11•. CM ~ work. Rm. &11-1358 moth~. my own home, =========·I-::.::.::..,::;:::.:;:.,;::;.,. __
ADDmONS Call BOB THORNE to enter the audio businets
Carpentry & painting TALLY with a rrowing company.
For Cooks with
Hotel-Club txp.
Call Dick 642-1197 Computer Products Div, Must be over n.
======"'I 714-542-1196 646-8895 Ca ll Chef, Oscar Dnk
s.w~1n~''---~-~-6_960_1 ............................. 1· .... ~:::::::::-~::""'I
DRESSMAKING • &!tor•· Ex parieneod IMPORTED CAR NEWPORTER INN
tiong by expert Full Time
~~~"':!.Tail•• R • a ' , LOT MAH MEOfAftlC
· SEWING & Alterations
Experienced. Reasonablt
• 546-2617 •
EXCELLENT WORKING EXPERIDlCED
OONDITIONS! Full time, 5 day ~.
TOP SALARY! Excellent working condltiona~
Test T.c:hnlcian 2 SERV Sta Attendants/Sa16-
mt'fl. Par1. time. EXPf"I'. Ray
RN's
Clrvey Oievron. 004 S. Coast Mt>d • surg. All shirts. OB
Hwy., Laguna. 3-1 l, ICU 7-3, 3-11, ll·T, Contact Bob Thompson Top SaJary! Contact ...
s-lng Mae-~pr~ .. ~962 MARQUIS MOTORS BOO Thom""'
· -"2 •145 ooo So. Coast H.iwy MARQUIS.MOTORS
To perf<nn final tests on
complex electronic eQUlp...
merit. Must be familiar with
operation of all types of
~lectronic test equipment
and be able to devise suit-
able test amutJ"ements and
write test proce-edure.
-WER. Mecbani.c: also OR 7-3 and on call. Cc&
Aurom:ottve Mach1nls1 tact Director Of Nunes. Aher•tton~ ..., 9110 So. Coe.st Highway
Neat, accurate, :io yrs. exp.1 ..,,......,.,.,..,..,."""..,ch..,,.494-""15ro""~l'!!!!La;;:;:""";;';,;:Be;•;ch;;,;<;94-;;15ro;,., Costa Mesa Auto Works Costa Mesa Memorial Hosp. •
Tile, Linoleum
& Morble 6975
H1rfy's Floor CoYerlnv
Llnoleum. Tile, Conlon
Indoor -Outdoor Carpet
"FREE vinyl as(>hal! tile, for
any lize bath with kitchen
floor sale. ..No job .too big
or too small." State Li·
oensed, Free estimate, All
work guaranteed. P ho n e
842-3856
Upholstery 6990
Czykoski's Custom
Upholstery
• New Location *
Opening Special -plain &Ota
& cha.ir $75 labor. Ellf"<>
pean O"llftsma.nship. aJI
wo:rk guar. 24 hr aervi<:r..
642-1454 1831 Net.,:mt Blvd.,
C.M.
JOBS & EMPLOYMEN l
Job Wanted, Lady 7020
PRACTICAL nurse, for bed
1P9tient. or semi-invalid your
home days Rei., drive .. Ute
hskipJ:W, 536-98'26 before 3
p.m. or 96z..6829
PART-TIME or r elief,
mature lady companion, Or
sitter. Car. Ref. 494-5703
Job Wanted
Men & Women 7030
COLLEGE
STUDENTS
AVAILABU
for all type11 of work
PART TIME
Afternoons Of" evC'11.
!OUTHERN CAL.
COLUGf
STUDENT
EMPLOYMENT
SERVKE
Kl 5-1178
MA'n.JRE O>uple WBntl poli·
tion as apartment nllr"· !or
apt &: 7! 646-3401 --·
BOAT CAREER
OPPORTUNITY! • Carpenter•
Joi,11 todays tutest growing • As .. mblers
profes!IOD-Mutual Fund aales e Bonde,..
No experience necessary-• Painters
We train -Ml or part time Experience required
Mutu1I Fund Advisors, Islander yachts
Inc. Npt B. 1603 Weatc!W 64z.6422 1682 Placentia Ave.
S.A. 1212 N. Bl'!Mdwa)' Costa Mesa
.. ,-8331
lailor-Fitter
Must be experienced on
qualltY tailoring. Perm•·
nenl position, excellent
benefits.
Apply HM p.m.
Robinson's
Newport
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
An tqt1al opportwlity
ernploY"r
Experienced l.anclscape pr-
dener. Minimum of 2 to 3
yrs. t'Xperiencie in cornrner·
cill] landscape gardening.
Excellent Company berie-
fHs. Plea~ contact:
DIRECT SALESMEN
I need 3 men immediately to
fill new 11l]tt potriUon1 in
the Fullerton area selling
stereos & sewing machines.
3 Leed& t>e!' day, 100% fin-
ancing, medical inRUrance
etc. Call 9 to 12 AM, 526-6616
PRODUCTION
WORKERS
For Ceramic Industry
Day shift.
Apply
lndustrial Clay Products
187&5 1''iberglass Rd.
Huntington Beach, Clallf.
COOKS
DRIVERS
HELP!
f'L1U.-PART TIME
EVES. Late Nlte
642.9498
NOW~
PIZZA MAN
Call 646-9611
RIGGER
Must know:
e SPLICING
• SWADGING
Columbl• Yachts
275 McCormick Ave.
Costa Mts•
Dlshw111her & Bus Boys
Apply in person
No phone calls
SURF & SIRLOIN
5930 Paci.tic Cotlst Hwy
NeWpOrt Beach
2066 Placentia, C:OSta Mess 642-2734
BOYS Betwoen 10 Md 15 SALESLADY
years of age for ~v':"ing Exp in Fine Ready to wear I:
work. Good ccunm1ss1oru. 5port1 wear. F\alJ time.
Call Bob" OM375 GENE'S
e FIBERGLASS e 2:lOO """'" Blvd. CM Assemblers & carpenters -~==~=~.;:.:-1 wan1td 2117 s. Lyon, Santa CAREER GIRLS
Ana. experienced ~· Md/
SERVICE station a t t e n d ?r Man'.1icr1. 2 )'f'Ql's exper-
ience 1n womena wear. "'.'/mechanical exp .. Full APROPOS, Town 1 O>untry,
time. Mio PT man n1tes • Oran 543-:Mm
wkends. 1697 Placentia, CMj,-;;=;-''-·=---.--~--1 WANT Women to leant DRIVJNG imtructor wanted pow& sewing & cutting toe l~ Sta~e licens::'d. school, upholstery shop w 0 r k .
Will tram. 547~101 i42-l4S4 l"lr lrn Newport
Agtncles, Women 7300 .,.s,tv"d" .. "'c,.M_~~=~-I
----· .. ----WOMAN want~. WaH en NEW & used car detail man
&: lat man, Liberal pay &:
allowances. Full time, 5 ---------1 counter. anewer p ho n t, da/wk lh'>. Contact Bob See Betty Bruce at mark in.
Olsen, David J. Phillips m f1 Exclusive Drapery Cleaning
Buick . Pontiac -Opel, i~~ L xec: 1102 Newport mvd .. C.M.
Laguna Beach, 4!M-1047 642-0270
e FRY COOK e Aa-ency for career Girl• SEAMSTRESSES
Gra~yard Only, 2 )'l'I exp 410 W. Coast Hwy., N. B. Expel'. lor fast rrowinl worn.
nee. Start $100 wk. By appoinr. 646-3939 en's sportswear mfg, Groovy
Cottage Co/fee Shop ~~~""'::"":"""""""~I place to wori< plus aood ~. 562 w. 19th St., C.M. WOMEN Prr ,. I car . 1g10 Monrovia, CM.
Production Train•• Fullerette HB. s2 hr guar. • SALES-DH.If.AM JOB e
Apply In person Lyn~e Brown 5 • 0-193 2, Keep your important Job u
TROY ENGRAVING Co. M2-m wife J: motbl't' Is earn a
2322 S. Pullman St. Help Wanted wkly pay check. ~.
Santa Ana. Ca.lll. Women 7400 · 544-J854, 63&-M9T
TOOL & DIE MAKER --------RESPONSIBLE p....,. to nt e Part time D•ys CLERK TYPIST with 6 mo old, Thun -Mon
Mr. Ballenger, 642-0325
NURSERYMAN
• Good Wages to train as loan "scrow pr<> 4:30 -7:30 p.m. My hcirne.
PART Time crew ·manager, 1604 Monrovia Ave.. oessot. Must be able lo type Temp. Hi school Pt ck!
easy work, 3 or 4 houta Newport Beach 156 wpm a.ccuratety & be able 675-4761
Exp. Nurseryman to work in f!Veninp working with boys. EXPERIENCED salesman to to do ~imple figuring, B~A~B=v=s=1=r=rE=R~.-Th~m'I-.-. -Fri~ ..
a young progrffisve retail Musi have car. Com. aell the world' a finest sailing Apply m penon: 2 to 5:30 and Sat. I to 5:30· Nu~ry in ~l' County missions. For informatiOn yachts. Mattin-personality WORLD SAVlNG I LOAN my mne, W•st CM·_
near the beach. Pleasant call 89l-5375 and ask for nece!sary. Jndoc:trinat!on 29'1 S. COii.st 1-lighway, 642-1987
sl.ll'l'OUndings. Room for ad· Bob ~ed. Write Box M 204 1 -~-La~""'-"~aeu __ h_.·-~-w~o=M=A=N~w= .. -...,-.,~babyod--t -•'
vancement. ln.t.crvlews In 1-=p,-,-,~T=im_e_&~FUll-=Tf-m-,-Dally Pilot. Executive Stcretf1ry light houaework, Mandiay
. pe~son only. Call for liliP-Parking Attendants & Bus -,y"...,=r=--m-:,-n-.2'=-c10-=3So-oc-Managerial pQSjtion.,, ln thru Friday. % «full d13.
pcnntment. 642-22~ week boys over 18, Villa Nova night student needed retail !hop. Interesting fa&h· Call after 5 PM 9Q2.-5242
day1 onl,y Restaurant 3131 w. Pacific 1 C ff ion career. Call APROPOS, or o ee Shop, CdM . LYN, Relief shift. Aw1J Hi Fi Technician Coast Hwy, N.B. 642-7880 51,., Days. Good salary. Call 543-Jajl Town & Country, Laguna Beach N u r.al ar
•For store In Q:i!!ta Mesa. ~ SE'RVI<:-"E Station Attendant. 673-t166 for appointment. Orange Home
portunity to advance to 8€f'· Full time. EXp nee. Hrly Service itation attendant, Local law firm requirs * -494-SJ75 *
vict' manager. Mu~t be fa· wag &_ comm. 2801 E. Cst minor tune.up, day work. put timt> secretary for
mlliar with solid state eQ'UiP-_H-cwy=. 00Cd~M=====-Matthew'1 Unlon Service. 1utornatlc typewriter. Eve-Sec:ret•ry
Engineering Sales omc.. At:-
cursite, attractive. Sal4ry
open. (213) 421-8$1 Lone Bc:h
SALESLADY -30-55. H01iery
ment. Xlnt fringe benefits. BROILER/FRY COOK 3928 E. Coast Hiway, CdM ningg prelerrN. Houri to
bt' arranged. 642-9900 646-8895 Beach House Inn 0 RIVER, Mll!lagement
619 Sleepy Hollow l..anf' trainee. 2 Yn. college.
TOP MACH INISTS-
wanted
Will pa.y top wagcR.
Apply:
G.rtler lndu1tri•s
914 W. 17th. C.M.
WONDERFUL Opportunity
with growing Co, Ambitious
young men 25-35. Salary, no
seles. P I e 1 • a n t sur·
roundings 11.nct working con·
dl!lons. Wrile Daily PilO'I
Box M 200
Laguna Beach * 497-1188 Equal opportunity Employer.
CH ILO Or invalid care It lite 548-3.f&l 54()..6842
duties by matur~ woman. SERV ICE Stabon salesman
549-1096 or 642-7643 Older man fine. Top wares
SupPrintendent experienced,
11.partments & industrlaJ,
Box M 199 Daily Pilot
Liquor Clerk-Exp.
Gm Liq 2'JOO Harbor, C.M.
Top Machinists Wllnted
Will pay top wai;es.
642-3265 for ApPL
Ii rommlssion. Qlt"Vn)n Sta-
tion Ad•tn11 &-MsgnoHe, HB.
LANDSCAPE foreman &
laborers. Must have mm
tramp. Mf;..2535
COUNTER MAN. £)cper.
City Auto Parti
2(172 Placentia. Costa Mesa
WAmtESS
Experienced, DVer 21 &: handbee1. POhibility cl.
Kone Lan" management. ~ Mt.
Restaur1nt Phelps for appt.
2699 Harbor Costs Mesa WOMEN Prr w/ rw.
SHARP BAR ~OS & GO Fullerette HS. S2 tr SUU"·
GO DANCERS. Top wages. Lynne 8roYr'n S 4 0 -l 9 3 2 ,
$2.50-$3.50 to start. Call for 842-7692
Interview. 545-9983 SASSY 1'P~A=R=T""-o~·m-.-B~ ... -O.-~;v-.,.-. ,~,-30
LASSY 2901 1-11.rbor. C.M. to 9AM I: 2:36-4PM. Qan 3
COUNTER. girl, ove-25; driver'a llctn1e ft'fj. 12.25
steady job, 5 day wk., no br. 6.fl.-3357 ~xper. necess. ~ i:n s=1=1=1ER=.-A'°'1-.. -rn-...,,-,-.~M~on--I
Domenic H•lp 7035 AUTO MECHANIC -~---· I R.eatorina old cars. PIC!lS81\t
He I rt W11 nt•d. ~ll!n 7?.00 H•t., W1nt9d, Mtn 7200
peJ'!IOn. d41y t.hrourh Friday. 19th St.
Anthooy'1 Shoe Sttvtce. l Meyer. Oall after 15:30.
3401 E. O:wut Hwy., CdM ~ DOM'ESTIC dean Jftdsion work. 20. 40 :1. h' week. You Mm• It. Re·
titt!d man OK. Aluminum
HELP body exper euential. AS for
MrJ. White, 646-4456 days.
Box Boys
WANRD Livi\ tn nr Uve nut
HouNkMSMrl
Exeelaior Agency
.tJO ~. Bn>adway, LA 900'l3
1213) 683-08-41 (213) 620-l'm
LIVE INS
Emplafer pays tee1
Gecqe 8}'1and AienCJ
106 8 E. 16th S.A. MT-0395
«I hMn or l'l'IOrP
Mon thnl rrt, 9 to I c.11 675-1210
BOOK $TORE
A~e Y9'nlC man to
lffm book ~ Appb
9;30 AM, ~. Pick·
wick Book ~. South
<but Plaza.
SERVICE Stetion a~.
~ ...... Good -u. 7200 tond. 0-)'ll UnJon OH. 393 Help W•nted ""'9n E. J74h CM
C!dntM ll•e--lna. Qeerlul
Pto:rmanent. ~td. rar F.ut Alf.DC7 U2-810.1
Help Wanted-Male
Ho w would you like lo work for
• daily n1w1peper and sh•r• in th•
u ciling growth of th• f•bulous
Orang• Co .. t? If ybu •r• aggres-
sive, ambitious encl unafr1id of
work, we may. have the situation
you hev e bun wanting. We have
an opening in our circul.ation d ..
portment which •ffonl• the op-
P"'iOnity for r•pid edv•ncemeot,
Wanbl!d BabYlttta' vilthln A"TrRA==c=11=v=E,...,..w,,,--,p"1..,...r.r
walJdrW diatance of Killy~ part time work, aga 21-35.
bndte School, call after permanent. No CIOltUmt.
5: 30. * 54().6361 646-5544 lor -wt.
NEED Reliable exp bskpr WOMAN to work in dmut
U:30 ·• 3:30 daily. Moii-Fri. shop. No phone calls please.
Hartior Hills. awn trarll. 29f,7 Harbor Blvd .• C.M. -ll=o;:--,,,,,--.,,7.""----.IMOTHER'S helper 7:30 a.m. MAID work, tun or part • 11:30 a.m. Your dlilhft
time; Sunny Aae1 Motel welcome. $f6-0050 alt 6
Apt, 2376 ~ C. M. 8ABYSlt1£R. my home 129
-• 381" St .. "---S.Curlty l'Klflc Nal'I. 1'!>1454 •
Tenen I: pn>OC operators, Ap-.:,-.;.___;___td_~.,.~ .. -,.---~-1
~ In P9l'IDftt 17'tb I: ()r. Trofter' I Baket)'
AJ'llt:, CM. 2M Fornt. Aw, Lq 9ch
WArl'R!SS 9f!r"IOJ.,_ ove-DENrAL usiitant • k'. Ex..
21. 1"11M-servfce: f'tllaurant. psienotd 1S.f5 Hant .am
lnterriewt !J..4. 232\ E. I p 0 n-i-H.8 . er..t Hwy., OdM nq. . • DOM _.._. '
.BABtSTrl'ER ....ttd Im· e $ALES CLEltK • Wkf1. KiddJ yd. &Q.lJ12 Contractors "20 PAINT 3 BEDROOM D..'TERIOR SIZ. PULL Tlmt C'.OOk, -~ oliLY PILOT DIK&A· • R. J. wn:MAN • ~CES $..17..W operi. on ~ cm:npta.
l -~a.EAN~~~UP~llOY~~
Pl .... _ 3 bnlnllM
• u t h • fringes including the
perJOftt l uH o'f • company euto-
moblle. Experience not ..... ,.ry
--·11 tr•in you. PIH"' call Milon
lHvitt, 642-4321 for •n •P-
pointm•nl.
a>Od!&kl1 "' llve la. Room Coll ..a.1111
UN£S. YC*:: ~ ~: Room Arid . Kit. &th cabs. I -:1N=1='Utl=c.=-~.--=EX=wu=~c.=-~ -:.= pma 6
_,. OR 3--4459 e U. M180 Pain.tins. JJ o.:;, ~ roLl. ~ "*"'""" Sain.
!l'e -- -sir---* n.mode1llla Lie, • ""-°""" 645.QIOll ---Clonu<t PllJl pit idei:tbt f!Y9l'1 Sell ttllf Fred H. C«wk*, Uc. INTER Or Ext. PAINnNG, * 642·1133 *
llAILY PILOT Oullllod 613<IOO * !16>1'ro DIMEO. SERVICE. Loe<! "" llal1Y Piiot W"11 -
-NOll'I -1>" ll8.lftGE m ft4. PRPJE Ml,._...., DW 9IUm
-· ..,.._
• -+., .. $100~ .....
month. ....... J.>.4:30 p.m. ~ .....
e W41TREU ha.,""" --
W -wANTED Wllilllll to-..
HOUSEKD!PER. M°""f'rl, Atpy't CatfM 8bclP. alZl 8.
Pltrm. H.a. -Blvd .. C.11,
538-1"' DW IOlll1I llr Jmllll~
~~~-~~~--~~~~---.. l -
..
... -~ -------------.... -------
.................. -..................................................................................... ---... ---... -..,..--.---.... -----------. -------. ---~
l
•
SOltfETBIN6 NEW-SOME'l'llJN6 DIFFERENT l l NOW l l l-_P_l..=L;;;;;;O=T==P =E N=--=N=Y~P =1 N=C=H=E=R=--.1 ( wJ:f .I
3 I • 2 t• $ 200 DIAL 642·5678
. •
Ines Imes No11• Coult Toi,.... 540-1220
,,_ S.,: "CHAIGE In"
JOis & !Ml'l.OYMENl Joas & EMl'LOYMlNT JOIS & IMPLOYMENT
H.lp W.nlM w-7400
18111
S.Yl1191 & Loon ...
perMnc. prohrrod.
APPLY IN PERSON
MARINEIS
SAVlll6S
1515 WodcllH Dr.
Newport Boach
Wanted
Immediately'
• !>tp Doublo Noodlo
Power MachlM
Opor•lor
• Aho Dr•pery work·
en, mite work In
Drapery Mf., Co.
• NeH t trafnM.
Good wq:e&. Xlnt w~
oond:ltlom Pua Fringe Ben-
olit..
2005 ~St.
COAST DRAPERY
Call -. .... ,,.,,
SADDLWA<X QJll~e aeek-
mc -,..uc... "" clerlt-t»ist position: ex~
tended dQ office_ Hours
2:30 p.~ to 10:30 pm. _.....,. ...... ,....
$417 JM!!' mo. School ex·
perience lft{erred, but not
lll&lldatory. can Mr. Har-
rineton (TI4) &-4531 er enc) IJ3T..e'i'DO m n
WOMEN
Aftracttv.e wcmen 18 I OYU
to display new i:roducta,
Trim ,,...._ .. major Dopt.
stm"el In local aree.. Mmt be
lboYe &VS'tl&'e penonality,
poiR.. • dmm. No ll!'XP5'
MARSHALL
COMMUNICATIONS
Ono of Orange County'1 l•1ted grow-
ing computer orient.d cotnpanies has
immedi•t• openings for people with
the foftowin9 qu•lification1:
• Engineering Admlnlstrllive
M1n1ger
• Real-nme Programmers
• System Engineers
• Senior Secretaries
• Recepfionlst /PBX Operator
e Cleit Typists
e Assembly Operators
C.11 or send ,.,um• lo:
2230 S. Anne St.
Santa Ana, California
An equal opporlunlty employer
---~-----
neoMD.JT. 4 hrs lkily. Ex-Help W11tted
C!llent -.Jary. Call for appc. women 7400 Jobs Mon, Wom. 7500
Wanted (213) ~. --------
WAITRESSES
Nithh
Apply in penion
~ p.m. Daily
Snack Sllop # I
2305 E. c-1 Hwy.
C.-. dol Mor -.. 0-.n View ScM.I Dist
NIGHT
NURSES
Regl1teNCf Nu,.. for
night shift.. Exc.9llent
.. 1.ry llnd bonofilL
ST. JOSEPH
HOSPITAl
633-9111
&lbatitull! driwn needed.
SZ.'M br.~ tuU time In
luhn:. Will Ira.in. 8tb grade
.... tign. 1 yr expeor opera.
tirxt al mater vehicle. Apply
"'"'""' °'"'"';woo ou. STENO SECRET ARY "'°· ... I'll. >m w.,..., He NEWPORT IEACH
IOOICKEEPER PHILCO FORD CORP.
A/P aod pa)TGIJ.. Expo:.~ SPACE I: RED"ITRY
Immediately
Neat, lndwtriOUI, bondllble.
Good driving record. Over 21,
b1gh IChool educe.don. For
aale1 work in Oranp Olunty
for Dnpery Hardware, Work
room aupPlies; Trimmin1,
DN.-orative drapery poles
and woven wood blinds. Sal-
11)', cornmiasion pJua tra11•
portatioa.. Open field lor
Rigt\ earninp tn pn:ittoetive
territory.
SOUTHERN COUNTIES
DISTRIBUTORS
Di5 Olarle C.M.
Roi.In b-tnttnlew II -4; :II
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Spodll ---In Spocl•I C'-lflcolloRo 11e1t•-sso
MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOlt MERCHANDISI FOR MERCHANDISE fOlt MERCHANDISE FOR MERC HANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE SALi AND TRADE I SAL! AND TRAD~ SAL! ANO TllADli SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADI
Furnltu,. tOOOFurnltur11 8000 Furnftu,. IOOOFurnltuN 8000 Ml•cellaneous '600Mlsallaneous l600-::.
Decorator '~fl Spant·L \' ~ HARBOR BLVD. . R-1-concollotlon of mGOO.llO ~. .., ...,
Sponish Ind Modllo rr••Hn Furniture • a MeditetTa-• µ DRIVE-IN THEATRE Al New t., fwlltJ' ..._. N.-.
Item a: ::u~;; .. a':;geo~;a 'it o.c:; quilted Boutht M.~~,~~r;s ~=~ sampi.. SW AP MEET
sofa with .separate loose pillows with heavy oak 8' Wood carved um divan. lg. man'1 chair;
trim decor and matching chair, 3 matching oak beaul fabrics. 5 Pc hexaron dark oak din.
occasional table., (2) 58" tall decorator lamps, set. w/black or avocado framed chain; 5 Pc
hanging chain swag lamps in wrought Iron, an BR seL &<Ir Mr. & Mn. dresser, Jg mirror,
8·piece king size rv.aster bedroom suite in pecan 2 commodes, deoor-ative head board in Span·
paneled Mediterra'nean 1lyle with top quality ish oak or avocado deslen.
15 yr. warranty king size mattress & box spring&. Itema Sold Individually
Spanish decor dining se~ etc. Shop Around-before you buy see US!
-.,_ --stl2UO VALUE $195-FULL PRICE $429.95 ~:'o~~-·~:i. ... $698.00 No Do=~=~ ;:.::·~;;:kPlan ,.,, ,.._ c.. • rw.• 11 , .. ,.._., N F ~ t BUT Q allty Val •-~d Ter111t Avell•bl-Newco111•ri .. Ctl!f.ernla 0 ancy l'tvD -U Uel lU6I e
"'"" App< .. H lmm•4l•t•ly APPROVED FURNITURE
BUY! SELL! TRADE I
FREE BUYER'S PASS
TO SWAP Mm AT
HAUOI ILYO. DllYl·IN THIATll
.... 600• 10 AM lo 'PM .... MOO
IAT. 01 SUN. FRH ADMISSION ..... 01 IUll.
PUSIHT THIS PlD PASS AT THU.TU IOI Off6CI
PASS .uwm CAI AND AU OCCUPAMTS PUii
YOID AJITll DIC. J:I, lt6'. , I 11] 2U9 HARBOR, COSTA MESA
i 12 Years same location-same owners Pianos & Organs 1130 Mlscell•neout
Sundoy 1~. Conn Mlnuot Orv•• Furn ture ~ o.nr 9.9 ~
1144 Ntwport Boulevard, Costa Melli (only) S48-9660 Walnut • ueed far tMchin& SWIMMING
.. ........ lh4. only ln our mtdio. Ledie .. 1J n rool, rnter, sartaal
Every night 'tit 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'tll 6!!!!~l:::;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;,,,;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;I Conn speaker aywtem, per. Sldmmer, MahltmanDe Kit.
L
cussion, austain, chimes, etc. FREE Gniuad Pltd.
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Fum~-IOOO ApplilncM 8100 pt1,_ & o..,.... 1130 N.,. orgao .,..,.. .... N-$149.11
A I "--• ___ "_"~-----!-----=---:--:--,..,. lllill5 ••• until 5oll S!CARD POOL -' .IJOw~! ~ • Green Tag Sale s.-.., 111115. -·-· 7550 MOVING -MUS'l' SEL L f'RIGIDAIRE 14 aa ft. ~ S23 I. lf.Ua. ~ -'"'-'="------Solid mahog. baffet $60. pert.one Sl.25. Maytag 1u Sept brinp this ram.Olli sale Gould Music Com.,.ny m.1192
NEEDED: Duncan Phyfe china cL,aet ck'Y'!(' $15. Kl!mnOn wuher ot. fine pia.no. A orpm, (Our 58tb Year) I '!!~~~!!'!!!"!~~~ TYPISTS 1100. Mahog. "'"' tbl • flS. All •XC. oond .....,.., Ev•cy plom A orgao markod ""5 Main, S.A. S<?-0681 * AUCTION *=.
mlmr $30. Round ma.hog. 12 cu. rr F r t 1 t d a t re ln creea curie.. di8counts SALE u JOU wm .en .-baJ -
tbl $J.Q. Nlk-nak 1 he If refrigeni.tor, ~· EzcelL to 30~ best ~ are Pianos Org•nt lfv• WJndJ • tl7
w/mlrror $7.50, 5 pc mahog eond. sro. 96J...2994 a.Iw-.ys •t Rebuilt IJ'Dda from $699, A.Ddiooa Frida17::.tp . ..;-
UR.GEM'
NIGHT
AUDITOR
bdnn ~ $Zia. lf'M812 ot sz . WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO Wul!Uer MW ecma:ales, trom Windy 's Auction .. ,.,
Ml-""" N-e 9 ,;., ft --lMI. NewptJrt., C.M. 6f2-M84 $634, Wurlitzer organs, ftoor at.&.. ...... ~. .__ ·~.., Open ~ay attemoorui model&, from $734. 8eb1nd TOllJ"t --.. -•
BUNK bed eet w/mattttss 540-3n3 BUNGALOW l.%Jricht piano, SAVE $$$ 2075% Newpt;>rt. CMS..-
Sober, reliable, Xlnt benefits. $1Z. Drea.M!r A milTot $25, 14 CUB. ft-rdrigerallr, lg, make Winter New Yori<. R~ster for children'• piano Put )'OIS'ltlf lft aur Pllce
matob.lna: dresser, minw, 2 rre.ezi----$1). .......... ...... m. ... h Harbor Blvd D-1 ~ Fee Negut.iab1e
• line, .... •
Placement Agency
542 W. 19th St., C.M.
-
~--L 2 -l "-'5 ._...,...._, ~-u°' ..._,., CllBe, a mot COUJ"IJeL ~ '"' or best otter 5.361185 prool hammtra. Xlnt cood. WALLICHS MUSIC CITY 3700 McFadden, S.A.
•lands S7S.. ~700 11 cu ft ~ Coldspot 1115-548-M69 3400 So. Bristol SWAP MEET.
BEAtrr lounge cba1r I: ot-Rd-ii. copper Xlnt cmd. ~~~~~~~~"l :°"""~~M~':"':...~*:..~540-~Zl~ffi: I Pnan. decorator ca.bric. noo &t6-348S FREE TO YOU Sl.25 (cost PIQ). Ladies an-;;"·======= Hammond Spinet organ
Hque pink Sl'CretBTJ deU: .__... ll lO --------w/percussion. reverb I: Schools-lnatructlon 7600 noo (coat $250). Miac items. ..,.,uqu• f FREE kittens. Bom Alli:-repeat Save $225.
---4!5-4926 1---------9th. Males 4 temaln Furey Uaed spinet piano, S395.
DENTAL & MEDICAL MODERN old ch &l t ANTIQUE, UNIQUE OAK trained. Call aft 4 PM. SOIMIDT-PHIWPS co.
ASSISTANT & coo 'w nu KALL 'TREE· COMPI..JETE-548-1023, 7'20 Victoria St. 1007 N. Main o 20th
Women to train for ......ition trhn, exc cood S125; Mex-LY RE5'I'OR.i:n .$$ 644-0063 CM 9123 ....,.., k:a.n tile oorftt table $«); · 1 · · Santa Ana
.. Assistants and Secretarifll '~~~ ... ~~~ ..... ~' --• H redwood patio Furn ~ • 4 PUPPIES, % Bauett,1 ~ ln Docton vwcelJ ...... 08-lllfle b e d, & frame $30; MusrClf Inst. 8125 llOTlle .Poodle. 6 1'1'ttlm. Wurlitur <llord Organ,
pit&la. Short Cbune -OJrn-,..... ...., 6~ -w-~ ·-• -• A S200 or make otter plete Tn.irdJV. Receptionist, .... ,eat .....,; ,,, .... ,.°"'. VOX Continental Orpn. Vax .., ........ ........, ~ ve. . 54&-C729 oc 646-7585
Public Relation&, Labon· SEALY Golden Sleeper fjrm, Westminllll!I' Amp. Must C.M. 9123 1 ===========I tory, Speech and O\ann. excdlent conditio.n. UU'd sacrifict! 837-952~ l EXCEmINGLY mniablel·
Age 18-55. MaJTied or single. onl~ 7 mootna.. Double box GU ITARS: HARMONY 12 OxJw-/ Semoyde / Wolle-Televlslon
Will not lnterfert with pree-sprwp. ma t l r e•• .t: ming, $85; Ep'cihone 12 mlx A1m:i S ~ ldt11en1.1---------
ent job. Ble.ir College of HoU,ywood frame S JO. atring, Sl?S ~ 54S-l.l89 weeke n da or ftbl'I
Medical I: °'5Jtal A!Mstantz. 962-7689 e•ea. 9/23 Klnl ~~~~"7"--c,..--.-c::;ISOiAIT upright piano~. ===..._,~,..----'C N C I TV WrtJ:e giving add!'e!lll and CENUlNE mabog. 4 pedestal "-.the violin $35. ORGANIC fertilhB', aged eW 0 Or
telephone number to Bax drop le&f table, 3 leaves l * -49Ml90 * bone manure com b i n e d $9 PER MO,
M751, Dally Pilot. asbestoa pad to flt. $50. 4 _ _ ---· wttb wvod llhavtnp. Good
646-8831 .... 962·5932
1205
upholstered cbairs ret.IOll-Pianos & Orpns 1130 mulch. 833-6.m between R & RDITAL CAN APPLY TO
Ahle. 67l-02Efi __ 5 or 546-4931 after 5 1130 PUROIASE
ONE Wccir ONLY Balboa ORDER BY PHONE '.;:'i!A. !:, ~ m!:': "" v~..,:""..,. .::;:' 548-851 I
Starts Aua. 11 ..::
531-1272 alt 7
STATUES, ETC.
Finiabed ••• -to
.it )'l1Ut decor.
See our displayg at ••• ,
3419 VI• Oporto, N.t.
TREASURES . OF
AU BABA
BEAtmFUL mink abj!Jr.
Ladies 14 KT W. ~"
engagement aolitatre rinc
set. Rowad brilliant &et ....
mond. 40 ct&. R• ... lW
642-1814 afW 5:30.
KNITTED FABRICS
newport
school of
_business
133 O.V.r Dr., N.B.
646-0153
Duncan Pby!e • t y I • • HUGE SAVINGS ... .._ mmod. 61.1.1468 9 AM to 9 PM 1 o.,.
rn-<986 9!20 21" 1V, 135 • 21" TV, $25. "'F01t SALE
KING Size bed, complete, ON All PIANOS 5 UVll.Y kittens, 3 white Gd. cond.. 54S--4395. lJOl s. ~ aamplea A Mm
chest Ii. ai&bt &taod ; exec. Th• fim• t• b11y i• NOW dur· wttll 111"1' cap&. 2 Bile I: wh. Briatol, S.A. ends Sat. 0nq 8 LfD. ta 2
...,. *7· A p ply W. D. SYSTEMS DIVISION Adroit _ ~ad_ WhH.t _ ~·· OJstOll'l
Sdoct Co.. l5QZ So.. Gl'ftll-~uirl!s H.S. diploma and 2 Append _ WIDE OPEN Upbollitery
.l..--1. .... _ ... I. -.. ...i. weaned and Miid boll" tram-I=="'-~'-..-.~,..---"""' ... L ,,__.._ .. ---... uounu a u_.,...: step-in9 •Ut hu 91 pr•·•••1on pi•n• ed. 545--50BT 9120 COLOR TV 19' Sitvertone p.m . .,,,.,, Dal\t!r, ......w. ,..ea,
lble.s; col!ee tble. 642-3681 1•1 1. N • .,.,. b•f111• h •~• ..,, Brand new. $290. MOVING. Se 111 n I sH
vilk St .• Santa Ana. YMts experi@nee In aero Hevd at 8 wedding: "She's Now you can Jeam custom
DmtaJ •-m•nt wanted 1 Pl c e Industry. Securil)r IWw" into this m8.n'lage with uphols!ery in yoor spare Hun~ Beech. Part ~ belpful. Fe:' inter-her hands WIDE OP!l'l." time. Morninp. afternoons
time, ladi:QC to full vt.eT· ~ for •JIPOlll~l . .. evenin& cla&&es. 00-161
timr: in few JDONbL Mn. Gana. &33-1441 E:xt. OOUPLE Uve-m, man handy er via.it our shop at l&ll
e!6l-JllM 19'8 with b o • t *· 8190 houR Newport Blvd., C M
man. \Vile good rook, clean --=~~==~=-RECEPTl~1ST · It ~ .1: b-on. Two c h I I d r e n , e 1st LESSON FREE e
dnt wol1linc cond in laR An Equal OppommjlJ Private room I: ~e. GUITAR lessons ill rock, folk
growing Co. CEC!Benmar --,~Em-="'p:O-l,°"'.=--=-5% days per "'eek . 1:-cl&uiatl iUit&t; special ~! W-.me7 A•e. S.A. PART TIME PermanmL Good saJary for counes in tht ~ 11Yles of
SECIETARY pod workers. 548-TIJ6 J-lendrix, Claptal'I. Deck, etc.
HElP Nttd a substitute Call: 673-7783
WALNUT Buffet &: Hu tch o,ff•r•d ~•ch • f•h~lotn t•l•c· MALE kitten. black w/4 675-32:54 houaehokl fumlshlnp !nd.. -~ I . .;i;...;_.. ,.1 "'·" vf f1n1 9r•nd1 If 1uch 1-whlte feet. Fully trained.I--,==~=~~=-II ~··-tuou piece .._...., 1959 RCA 21" Color 1V sma. awu-"-"Y:11· l 9 311 St6-2?Q'.I pric es: '"' 2273 Columbia Dr. nr Wilson
PINE --• d I -• -bl e STllNWAY e llTIT 642.Sl.35 C.M. 9/21 In Working O:md!tion :~St., ap. 118;.
v•.. rop e... '"' e • MASON & NAWUN 3 OUT -DOOR type kittens, $50. ~3567
w /extemkln. Cost sz,o new. e CMICIDIN6 1 CRESS High P'lre Kiln; · Se~ for $75. 646-&lJl l!'Jes. e Wlll l t'!r,.m:-te. ::e·a!t:.~ Hl·Fi & Stereo 1210 ?-.1ode1 A-22-8, DJ V, 2'J ·
SAQUnCE orb' American : :::::cH• llMIALL PL, C.M. 9123:1----------Amp. with 11"""1S .!!tt~"~ '
8' qltd aola. Maple tbb: &: Stt!['f:IO • dlx ronaole 1968 temp. &are. · ...,. ........; • AND MANY OTHIU 3 Very unlqut kittMS, half r .. ~. rt-> -lmp1: al.I lor $155. 6of4..(ljJ2 IOI.id state with 4 _.__ .......... .,,.,........,.,, Siamese, half Maruc • bowie ~ All GRANDS, m-oken. 5oJ6.874S 9/'l3 changer. Lett on 1a,y.a-TORO t.wn Manr, o:~
SPINETS, way. P8.Y ba.I. oI $18. or eel.lent condition. $J•$. Office Furniture 8010
~--·--Outdoor ~-r FULL 'TI m e Bookkeeper. 1---------gra,...,ut1U111:r for bab.)'l"it-.a..&... _1 r• Wonderful opportunity with MISS Wriabt'a, r1te, to type USED otnce t u I' n. Desk,
tire. )'OUng ICftool. aa:e chi.Id. -·ertl .. ng pt. crowing Co. Pleuimt sur-write right before 1ehool. table, chairs, file cllbinet
~CONSOLES rnEE Tabby Klttena to good aniall pymnts.. Credit Dept ~ .
SLASHED FOR hooie. It wb, hBbrkn. e S?l-7280 • KIRBY Vacuum cleaner i: : !16Ul88. 9/211 l--;=7,c,.:::c:.:::::-:....-
Our bomr. MIM Vmit N"EWPORT BF.AO! ....... ........_ lnatant learning. Qillcoat etc. 646-f4.l.4 646-6968 A ~ 546-1606 . ..__ .. ~ • .I: working ~ ========= rtt. 7J ditians.. Wri~ 0.11.y Pikit 10-1.ason Typing School.
IMMEDIATE .Beautilul console ateno. att.ach111.eota:. Pymnta or U .00
SALE I FREE Gennan Shepherd SlOO. per mo or $49.70 cub. Credit
S'!UDDIT-Mother'a belpe-. CASV1ER 8::1:1 Mn 17J Del Mar, CM 548-2859 Store Equipment __ 80 !~
6x8' MEAT walkifli. U'
c.aes • t vegmble. Saw.
Stott cloHd make oiler .,,._
.......... fl .., COtll. "" .,.........,, .. """""' tfll NeftMMr -4 tnft. , .........
pups. 5 wlu. old. 719 W. S40-&tZ1 Dept. 535-7289 Wu.on. Apt. H-2. C.M. 9f201lc:===--=====o ~I HAMll..TON" Pafntlnt, beat Live-in, Baytront home. Pri • 'l e 0~NU=RS=rn~-._-. --._.-TUTORING
rm & ba. l in family. COUNl .... ~ GIRL preferred. 1-3:~ 6 11 10 All levela: imth, ltd achl F'R.EE le family w/children Sporting Goods 8500 e•rly period nso ........... -.. · only. 2 yr. okl (F) cock-a--------.. ,,..._,..,.
poo. 673--0276. 9/20 SURFBOARD 9'8" iexcellenl $45 New alereo tape dtd: SS0
3 FEMALE kitten.. Jona co~ition SJS. 536-0071 823J 642-SlllS.
m..5139 5 day ~-No Week~ 7:30 e ruu. A Part Time Ki., HS physka. 962.-40C6
\\'ANTED; Back office or Holiday wort. HOUSEKEEPER.. Park *ART CLASSES
f!W"'9'. P/ time Thurs A m.a;m ext 2036 LI& Chnvaleacenl Center. by Robert Thompton
Fri. C..U durini olfc bn. MATIJR.EHouaekeep er 41i6 F1agah.ip Road, Newport liarborArU 642-s:J!IO CO. -::::.:r•=.;S.:.:::le:_ __ I02:::;:;;2I
FRANCHISED
DEALER FOR
YAMAHA,
STORY & CLARK.
haired, h o u 1 e b '" o k e a . Indianapolis, HB SEPT. Wallpaper Sale! 113 '
M&-7585 9/20 off. Walker Paint Ill W.
646-1694 w11.oted, for 2 adulta A. 10 Beach. 642-lDW Call 9 to 5. YA.RN ART C\.ASSE8 -l;w'"'v'"IN'°Go-.,,-m-an--,to-·-~·,---.,· I mo. be.by, Pvt rm, blth, COOK GARAGE SALE; Stereo tape
dedt, meat llkPr. clotl'le.,
books, cocktail tbla, bkycle
parts, horse lhoea. I021
dulJI;, '60 c.dillac. Mucb
Mon:! &57-C Plummet CM.
SAT I: ~-6CM3U
KOHLER &
CAMPBELL
4 Kl'ITENS. <lite, cuddly A. Ml1cella~·.:.:::••:__=;l600:::: 16th St. C.M. &C-Sm
crafty. Weened Ii: box tr•in· Double a.cl. Dobennans AKC <llampk& -·-~· p Job I by Olarles. 't'lipestry, waR ol 8.ctive 2% yr old ..._., our • • · enri. o n y , ed. ,.._ 9/20 Xlnt condl $25. "''• "°""""""'· Shoto VUIT r;..., .... _ Nm-amokft-------. hanzi,ngs, rup. 613-9138 borne pn!.h!n-ed, Mm lhru ~'"""' .,."".,.........,., JI S50 * 548-1172 GERMAN s H E p H E R D .. S.r StoolL $20
Sal. t94-G5l3 Jobi Men. worn. 1500 ~c:m. ~Z ~~ti:a1c:~1 ~~~
TYPIST • Muat be a.xur.te, 546-1223 ltudentlJ. Reu. ~2227
Dolly 1041 M. 'tU t
s..Mr 11 "ti' Female, S months old, has * 548 6539 * 24 .. CAZWAVE 10 SPtfd
lhOCa. M4--015t 9121 UPHmsn:RJ:NC _ $19.SO, 2 ractna: bin. Good cendttion.
NEfD bom• for 6 months pc. <European aiUtamen) Ne<eda ttrea. sz. 90-1681 :: ~ '~~o:: WANTED: COOKS==,.., "P,~ntry..:.=::,:..Ql_,......, .. ,..,._,..I MERCHANDISE FOR
m""'1 Top lea! Estate wubtt. AppJ.v m ,,...,..., Air. SALE AND TRADE old lf!Dlale Mau kitten. f'lft nt, dd, pickup, 715 BH.utiful ~ Bu COAST MUSfC
BIG rummage sale; an-1139 Newport Blvd. Professionals •• Smeldt. 1.ogu.,. °""'""' -·--Club. 31lai S. C.0..st Hwy, Furniture 1000
Spayed 6'l3-C3C9 9121 Main, HB ,.Be.my" 5J6..6tOO F'Umiahf!d Mapl•. Must SeJll
96&-""' tlques, )&e. oftice de:ak .k 271 chair. -· -. oldl--~'~4~6-·~0~=~-BOXER -male lawn '°'°' 68 SOLID ot•te '""° oon· Opminp for experWnced Hc-
f!ftM!d P~ lo auoclale
with a Df!"Nly orpniud "Pro-
f~ Rttl Ert:ate M&l'-
kotinr ..,...UU.tJon."
Glau AAembt)' Tmtt
Int~ behrfti. l ::.l
AM a 4;30 Plf, Gq
HAIRDR~ERS • FOilow·
Ing pref. New !hop, ad Joca.
tion. Ask for 8 e c le y, -
-ARGUS EMPLOYMENT
Exec s.cy-..•••••. St 11'.1 $57!.
~ ·••••••• toS«JO Manej:w trnt • • . • . • • . . . S4!I)
Data~ •••••..• $400
!)Mk dntr .......... ~ $pj()
O:xm <mUe .I: f~)
Tw-~ Div. GldaD 1D.. ................... toU.00
BAd!SiltEA, )!Oar' ~ dUltr1ts, lac. l2Z Plodlectkla :;!:;,f';:'t :.:::-CV. A-. ""•At 8 o •ch , ARGUS EMP\.OYM!NT
v1-&a.al'" All --1 ...... OONSIJLTAl'n NJD«:Y -· ... ==""" ~-~----~...:!-. ~ .,....,."~ .___ ......_...,.~ 20t3 WINtdJIJ, N 8. ~77!:i
dn:ww. Uttle tis 0, 190 BLUE Beet . 6'C..JSC4 D!nnfr 1F.:24 E. 17th St., S.A. 547"336
....... "' CM. -°""'" f-12 om $30. ... alll1I DAILY Pam W'lln" ADS ""'" .--·-..1mo A qp Wollraa-. ' lllllNG RDOL~
XLNT cond -mue diiwnport
135. G.-ey -""""· SIS. ~la46.
handcwved tnu*, s:il"er-NEW & USED AKC ~ Good "' children, mle. Diamond •tylus,. 4
wa" • """"· ""'"""""'"" PIANOS & ORGANS -. 1" yrd • ..., .. 9m ope.d. $19. $2 WMkJ.v, Fr"
Pl. oor. o1 Db., CM. &42-Ul8 t..arcest 9'.0ck ID Otange CG. l YR.. Seal Point SiamHe home trial. &42·1403
4 Bar Stools.· $20. •
*~*
UIO FR.I. I: SAT -everytbb:ia: ~9t't from tbe ti:Mtt bn.ftd female • 893-al.09 ' 9121 11'' ROTARY Mower with
Caah for Furn., 1ppH. mwl 19! Transferred . namn tn AIZMrica -Otklter· 4 ClM'E kittens. fi weeka old, catcbf!I'. Sell or tn.de forW --ANTE0--------.. -,-
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I: tools. ~'m.15/aof'l-6974 OocUet o( Miacellaneous. q , Knabe, Sohm.er, Wurltt-box b-alned. 6U-01'3 t/21 rrel Il>O'N'ef', 96&.nlll a.tt I UJ
p rn Eltablllhtd Co. Q ua 11 t:r MAPLE table. tormk:a 1op I: 2.lUlb SL Seal Beam. Apt. aer, -and tbe9e pia:IOll oan BAmE1T Hound male alto ~· =·===~-~~ name-bn.nd LadW,, Gb'tt 6 chain $50. Hang. 'l'Uf. 'l. m : 598-1858 not be lold from n!W I: Aft hotR mam&n 5f6-8762 9/20 DRAFTING rn a c bine
tnl:lp lamp $18. 548-1132 fRJ 1: SAT, •"n'lof! Blulb." full¥ iruaranlttd. Nf'W spin-~==-__,-,--,,..---BRUNING, A 4 acaJa. $SS. ~~m~ tun,..; i ..u ..= u 1: cmDn from UBS 3 MALE pet rt.ta Ill c:&1•· ~ ,,_.,,,__, ~.. ..., ,,.. ..... MATOmlG Spu.iatl aotu, 2 Sprr1 aoods. p&Uo A furn e · fi'T3...m1 9/2011=,;,,,c=------te<cted by fNW'MC't. Cd
1: l cuab.ioaa, b I a c: k itnna. Lou a( b9rgaioa, no NEW LobAer Tt-apa $10 I: $f4..9311 Tlla.-Sat I JD .,....
hol _,,_ 546-7103 Junk. 212-4 Vla:ta Dorado. RENTAL PIANOS 'l adorable kitt.m: s12. Lobster Boat $900. 417 :
up stf'r)', ~-6f4-UJ5 all 191taJs •PPIY to purcbue ea-.5383 9/20 29th SL. N. o. ~ ='.,:•~"'-·~~~~~~
NE.Am. v MW daub~ hox ff'OlJ' no Jiil!I'. mo. FREE ldltena, 1111. bZadt. W A N J £ •priag,mattr.:lframe lruGESM.E -BARGAJNSl 4 YearBadc:Tft. lto-8998 9123 WANTED: Gf'P.111 Boo ka
SJO, S48-663J A p p 11 • n c e • .hoUKWAn!s No Down J>-.vment WMtem World tl!l also. eft-
BIG rxK"Utiv~ desk walmt. lffts, boolui. Pl c' u r e•, Gould Music Comptny RATS • variom ares I: en. eydopecUa IJel. KI 4-"'669 WE need qua1it)' <• _. • ._. ................. ~-" Jewe!ry. 234 Vtctoria Sat. r..._ .. &J. Year en. '*'DIR 9 l'DtSIAN KitUm. white and pleue} • l'Und~ cokll'
.::: ... .::.: ~t IL 1 _ on17. 3K;, P.1a...,,,,..ln.;;: 5f7-46tt 3 TftEE Kllleria! ott.-eolon. P~. O'.I. TV's.. ftT'80I, ""'*9 E
i.... --...... -~ tl2S CqUtrano BHCh. fS6..55JI toob. ome. ........ -°"' ..ii k ...,,, • OAll.Y Annll•nces 1100 HAMllOND °"""' Orpn. TOPCASH n<3ll
DAILY PILOT C•u111ed ·..u; No. &4. W/-A FREE l"£ftTllJZm'IJ:z3 IL!lCT. -tllo1. o.t-U -...;:5!1::.·.:;Ull~~·=-;;::::;..:;;
o4. DEUIXE ll«tric ..,,... ISO. """"· Ul<e _, 6'Urn 54HIS3 _., -1'75. llcot """· * WANTED '#r -
DAILY pu.ar DIME· A· Kenmorto wubeT, 0 e e d I or m-ntOJ GERM.AN ~. pan lnd 2 6G-mo Good UMd • ~ ~-
1..JNES,.. You cu UM UIRn t'!'p&ir Sl.0. ~ SMAU. upriabt pi1DO yn. old. Q-.213$ 91'231,JllD;_;,,.--'IH;_tMr __ eh_m_.-.. -.... ----, HtwiQ U'!141'aT11Wt., ,.
far Just PtMlel a dq. Dia.I nuGmAIR.E lmptrial, f'rosl Excf.1 conct. $2X) hr Dally PQot Want Adi. ft n e I• m 11 Ii, Sp ode , We1nm1Mta', Ween t rt r
ICM67a he. 1111• MW" it'll. 548-4417 6~ilsi D\aldSG elftl 11.)• aw~ m.•. 484-a!M e ...,.. e ., ti. •
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··"" F1lllAY. StpllltlW ao, ll6f ~·v 'llOT ,, I f1RCHANDl51 FOR · TRAHSPORTATIDN • • TRANSPORTATION ', TR4NSP,ORT~TION .-TR4NSPDRTATIDN TR4NSPORTATION ;-TR4NSPORTATION TllXNlllOlTATION TiOOllllORtATION
I . i1 SALi AND TRADI IMh & Y1chfl 9000 ... ,, & Y11hh IOCIO Mllll 111111 '27Jl-------I l!!'r-----=·1::;;;:;.;.;..;..;.;.;;=.--'-;l "'-'-'--'"-'----1'-r C:ruletre 9020 1,1111-Sld lo11t 9030 ... tSlloMoorl"f fOlf Mo~ll•H-9'00 . ~Melo,.._ fS50 It!,_ .. W•n.~ · fflO "'"Ill . u:r 111JliCk11P ,_boot or • -·-"' M.... -~-~.. , ____ .....__ (USJOM BUILT ll.WIOA lllP 10< 40" bolt. 111' • Cl IL OWl>l• Wldo BIO. 1IW!. GO-OAllT 'G Vlll'A. ._ wtll: -::e . Wmto e '"'' ... ""' c1-_....,, ~ ..... -, ·~, 1167 w (:llJllS eor1nlhl•• I/lilt& .. C/l!lltll. AOll>le -aot "" .. '41111 • b• ""· 2 ""' ....._ ..... lcJclc •tart ' upt ., .... "
II -.~ ~ ~~mo •·· , .....,. and '""" !or .,. i.oHHI IJko ..... !Aw In. ··-·· _,, --J: •··•· k .... ~ __ ,_ :': _ -~-I ,...,._ ~ r~ ., ...... Wo ~ •• boo,. for WUI --•-..._...... .---"r•-' •~ to -' -•w~, '"' •·~ ' .,., -..... I• 11111oe """'' "'""',.." -··-· ~..... l1111ndtrbl~ eoXT iiiP $30 P<r .... u;: dud• rt1r1pt1to1· 11r ;a MINI DJC. Mfut C<lQI!. ~ • • • ~umltu..-.A,,ll•••M -· ' Pll --II cull ............... , ... !S· owiiiiCli QWISl!!ll ""-mi··'a 233" --· .... M._.,. ... ., • 0. dl"-'-•. dlaltw.-M ... --· ~--· Trtl.lor, Tr1vtl MU I Ctlor TV~llnot y...... tory autborlled .Evlnl\ldt Xlnt eotnd Loaded! Sac! ,... w ,._ ~ --.-· ™ ..._.... '"' ..._ -""• 'I at NtwpOl'l KuW -t d"ttt A -"°' tent... ,._ .,.,1111 ~-_.,L '"'1• 23, t11 ..i .. -"---V l!Wl Ave. N.JS. ntk_. Of!b. landlcllfbllo oarport. Pltlo taeritlc.! 6t6-35TJ
t ITC. Qll'o 'Ill! W, Ill' Av.., 11-M>SA ao.t.T CENTm -···~ .. ~ •· , .. •-~:r.-" ~--·-411' Slip Anll ·-• • •kllllDJ, a ow IOiWlZ4 J.iijjj:81Jie t IOllo\lo Ulh~ J'llll I I ! C.sh In 'Ii Hour poi<......_ NO .Al>VANCJ: ,,. Newport Rkod ""' UNlJ'LITE 21· "°" --.. ~u mo ·-w~ · earpot lined 4-lft!al s-. 'l'rlllor, -Ui I
S.41-45'1 llEGISl'ltATlOH NQf. -'...:.No ,,_.. will/I -• Nolnf dellp. 1''"""" .,... Nico --No. iM711. NI pl'lct -· -old, ....... ---W/"""1 ...,,;;;;;;;;;i°i-;;;;;~~1 SARY JI:lll\Ol.I. AT a.Ml! or tandem traller m-oil8 1'"-aJ>d proytn, LU'· -""· C1U Dt111 W14t Illa <ti -..., $140. -a-·-...... 16111 o rJ woman'I g 6f6.842aOJttn.•tarmcn 1t'rtKIUMt.)5hpe'ftn._...;x; > ;,· wwwX#ii, lSTSKIBOATl)ESIGN, 01a.pmu. Mobllt Iao, MM • 61).«G6'. !
SchwlM. into. C..., HOit, el" '""'· -Sp•~ Ski llofh f030, B!llK!L!Y J!T ... t-Y1~hl !1!1.-.i. Motoloyt!OI r--ti' xttilJINIJl\l TJllVij;
• 615-'"43 • Aho ""· °""• ~ '315. -Powen<t ~ • l50 H.P. A.,. Ch1rttro ~9 LATE !iii a..,.1 Lill• 1"IWLAI. 000!! <oc>d. 1321,
M:.ii'in•ry, -mo Huntlntton l"ch 11-11,_' _10 11 !~T~!':l»\-f!., ~"':..~.~! b.;.i '.=; '°.:'.'-::"Wd ~:._ 8;"~,-~ ';: ~ vi':i"': ~ijt 1=",.7-3444..., .... ====•I
PllllJ. .....,, Miu bench RogWrallon •• Huntlllrt"' .. lh "' moolet. "' seod pqndilloo. trtpo to "" -• ,...... ..n1ne. 41' Stoop ..... ,801 .,,,.. a11 thnt. ~· lOnt ....i. suoo. 5 I Trucb 9JCIO 1 !Jlt"Odti on ,.,.t 1tand. 11' e.ach lliill School Mondar * Dlli\0 SALi * Comllhte wll<u1\hll Usht" '"· thle '*'•ti' will mak• ~-~~...'.'.""' ..!:,".!. ~:'.",pb, ~ N!'.'!!'. "!..'!', ·•• ft-... ...,.., ••. -~ed. 61$-2763 Sept. 16. Oaues candnu• tthodte: 19 •••• $1100 bf& .,htel trailer• c~ !~heideal, lhl1h-speedbo sport Alrcrtft 9100 ... _......, _ ........ --.. _,.... .. ..... ~ .rw -4l''r.N'f"''""""'"""' ,.. JI I : throl.llhout tht Fall. 1 mqp doWJl eoVtr. Priced tor .... r <w' P Maute •t. I: avm~ IXlT Jal"Oh chrome SliO. '1 '"*b'PI Van CO lTIQ hd. td9, '
: 3111) t.bA, 'i!~~-U•••n •~•TS J~~~~·:: .. ~ll) quleJr Mil ll!O. _,, "2-... cl~'~-·~/;~.~"!'.~. 195: C!:SSNA l~D. lOC·l!JO cq>td. Utll ;.Id, ... lo ..;. 3'l' Y..,lho -llld ~~ ~':'!!" 5 opoed,-eJC. I l • · ' NEWpOJ\T '""""""'R -Dctno •••• $2590 49IO .lfttr T:OO 11.m. ....., ·-· ~· B, P'Ull pe.nel. Hl·1'me q. ~I Mcwirtl:I Vwy.,...... atrokld ext. ~ N '--"· .... •ll' etc', new
.... 1 * Eves 897-2433 Two 2T' Ktnp QoulMr Fun Zooe Bott Co. •IJfbol. SJa""'"Or ·J"llh, 11' Mere Ulll tr •t.treo ~tt.nl and' w~ U'/'00. or make oteer. TlC: able! Nr. Dooglu JlllDL Custom fUCO ta v tat ed. 1VH. J~ JPl. pvt pt;y. "
:
.•, ; moops ~ one most lmtuc-• cutona trailtt equ1PPtd with 54lhST01 M..oe91 aft t .m. A: b. Untit!Wwl $500; S It.all ~ -..209f 812~ uleloboU ... CoPt!"'-t 131 AUIATllo.IS Sloop. :i.,::.-;c· boot "'"J,; tl>o""ltbnltt.The....io. UNJ·-~•p ~ 'l'l'eU<r. porll<!, wired, 'M um;itl<ATION.U.Ci&I
mt.VER AKC . Toy Pood1, 6 OUtr! DtauQ>! Die • a 11,. Just to TN.Urtu~ tw Ptl ed cabin sleUf 2 and ii com· Moblle Hom•t '200 y c-.. • ,. • r r a Uoensed:. Ntw mll tu. Gl'tltl 1DeWUo Hu to lit
r.:::: ~ "' 31•. 28' SLOOPS. c..l M b&ultd le patnttd. Jdlll allp, IO-.,. • · plete with btad. She's ready C\Ueir, lO ~ 15. ~ 1100. Want to ti.q !Me full the sharpest Kl~ Prictd .-abl•. otl I .,_.. Ool,..bla 2<, ldanollr M. AsklllC 11300. ITWil3 ot' to.:'1131, IOU ,.,i., AY<. , • • All Ibo ·-lo a "1dp. '16 VOONG !loLuxe. i BR, 2 ~~ ~ ~~t pl~•."::; -H.D. 74, Cail !ltip Let lo "11 t1>ll ""-eod. lice •t
.Id 142""3 rn....., '1Yer " lllMI JI ,.._ m.t'IS HB ' Pl'· Jiu -to 6tllt llo1llde _., •~· n~-,._ -i0-!180 ,,.,. dlr. lllO _Bl..,, 0.14-'~ ';'"''!' ":.;· ~-lllodl•tor 14. ~ _: CALI r6 ftN I A CAT.A. CllS'rOM ild ;;;~ IOOll 642-4321 bl. 240, D1ys Vlllas•· 253 Ma,11-Dr. ~ N•. ~. N.B. • ... ,. HODAKA I 00.
· ' mos. 1• c ' inander :I) Trtton 28. MARAN 13' w/tniler $'1'95 Mere, tnr, llkll, ttc. Oean 644-1742 !vet. N.B. '63 FORD Piclc-up, ~ toDI ~" :;4}-l547 . 41' DI-i K""h 1111.000 ~ llll E. Clout ttwy; auto "' , ... _ ,_ wt SKI BOAT, lt' i'GNr& 120 (X)LQMDO "'-tniltr, s MOTOlt HOMIS t21S ~ ..u;o. Many oxtraa! SACllD'ICE, l8lli. iholt ..... ur,. Peke-A·f'!lo IJ\l'Pl.e9 40' Alden Motor Saller l'f. s. tifmt. WlU tinanc:e. WW Merc .. E;x(ioUtDt condition. x 21 All metJ!. XlDt ccut. bed;, ~11u OCll)d, .,....., 1t!n wkl. $35 -"II)) -.. IOO Pr!. • '61 Bultat"O L:iblto. $250. '"-" r..uc V ~ ' , e646-'J052e . , •" •." "•. •• • SJO,vw . 8&-m C'\&11 1()' Sailboat .. , ~ """ , 675-4455 S.. to •Jlllftd&t•· $650.. CIU 545-7216 -.;¥'"'" an new ...... .., • ' DAVID L. F~Al.lll s.m Trovonor 1" 11.., 1'1· !I!l-1'.!I = ~-ell. mKh. ....i. tJwtliit, l'IJLi, Ake.'""'· 9..., I» CALL: 01'ldt AYOrf c...;.111111. -tr1..i i'JllVATE Party muat "" kit L1unchln9 9034 wli'lii:b .. ...., I 1111 lll6'1 -IO -~. ""'·,_.it I Pit :Idell -C!bildrm. e1S--210I 3G4 Via Oporto, ti.I, ,;rrw-_ · -11' ft1 boat. Mere 1000. All --1..n h ,_' ·~ In low mlleaie. $150. •53 JEEP Pick-Up 4 Wbfiil 6 . m.-i * *'3916 EVIL ~·; vMo4 ~ nttda lit-t q • t pm e at. MUJt ... r.ux;oi. Inboard Mt.rine .......... 0 m •· .._ 5'8-5351 H.,... 8830 tlt work. ?-rut, boornl, •atlt lacrttloe ma D a y I . 4mrlnt ' CYCl• ' eyHnder. Costa ~ t&M?!i4 'fi6 Pantiao Stlticft Wq., ~MOO or ~ bi PU.
Ii§_,,,_, ... .:,.,· 18' RUN About w/tft11M, but •~a:. Ind. 115. 5tl-tf34 ~ 'Nilbtl .. NO-MD N'ewr u1td $300. 5*-0518 STAR; 3 mo ,old, ~. ! Cl.Goodean!-~ .• t!~te. ,16 fV\l'Vlv. Vu, -·~
Cl.Joo-wntm> -•· out ol huU. Stamd ti ;li' YAWi. 1'' 5l'fliD' a 31ii Boel. '°"" Bii. 2 BA, 2 awn!nP, aklrt, ~w -~· ~-~ ---'r:' .u.r .. Call .....,, roflolC. Trailer tncllldtd, IT.!195or .lntlelor """' Mft outboard, Morini Equip. 9035 In beaut. pie. ~11111 JSA Qil CC.,.,.._°"""' ::·~" $11:JO,
-1ell u ta 1J5. 54B-4lJlS _.. bot• IMWlll -a oil -llVIN!tUPI!l O<lt-4ird. ...pie, M.uu..i:rr 1'r<ilor 10 x 116. /. bot.1, -.nte ..,._ Mr m • ~I'-T P/U =
·TUNS.OltTATlDN .0:1Jl>UNUM tl', 10 liP ·<i\llilNTIJliX 11 • l7Mll! 35 HP mao\Ml, ...,..., .,,.. v•ry cloon, all arpoted. 2 than now, '"'· ... IMM'lto .. roru " •
:..J; • , , · , Evin-: blf wbl, tilr. lave ISOO. Pvt. l!J· " 11' GilSSl'Ai!. G-3 trol, SU tonk, oxt:. 111"1' BR, 1% Ba. 54()."'61 1"' HON!)A "" -1115, * 847JliU
I lln!'!rlttl A-HOO!!."-u" ~ _,, 75 Ill', oil elool· LooU•riwlik•now.1191, fQrCollyPilotW10tMI. MTS. Ema C'brom•, '60CHEVYlitooPicl<Up.1
,•• • ' ' -• ._ w or ~ IC' diiUIJ!iiGEll iii1iliil.1 .,.=~n;::l~·,;;636-<::;::;S091;;;.==.!._;13M11:1::;::;~=====k=,ODial=o:61a.'i611=::===:~"""=§<==<<=<=~~-ii=='';'=,.,. __ ..,.~.,~ii:laoo.:=•==3';::587==:=:I CiOl&'Lliih: jil;t Aepili', sllp. stul'dy boat w/eue ot1;
-.. Lid. ~ -ri-· · 644-1618. &4<--0352 -(ors -; 9800 New C1t'll 9800 N1w C111 9IOO N1w Ciro 9IOO New Care HOO Now Coro 9IOO
JAG XKE Roadltttt,
·~ top. -"'*"· 171911 •
¥.<:. MlllUal, ta'I • :roa. It, KITll 14 it
II.& -·-dolly Good cmd!tjal. STAN lll!ll..--'il&li • MOO. 548-W ~uminum trailer, likt "" SABOTS. NEW' 8 FT
$330. 642-0555 SAIL PRAM. $249.
PAINTING, Varni&hinr mast COMPLETE. 67J..<fil2
reflni&'hing, let Sob do !t! I ~=7"""77"-.,.---=o: (2'18) ~ LfOO 14, trlr, cover. Extra
J8,ils. Rigged for racing. ~1 21' Oirlo CNlt. )Ont cend. $1(M. Sl&-4965
lll!O. Slip No. !. -. Cli 21> No. IM. -· N.B. 118-llOI !!2% c;...oa, tloct. od
JS' G. J. S'f'6Nt 1\1'1 boat. ind. etc. na.-. ......:;
Ntldl ....... ml CMb. ~TE ~ ~M-'''" e988-1&11e ""' • -v• ~-~ ""'' uud J timu. <n'l ..,..... D:! ::"" t!>en~ cm:: . 18' DAYSAiLlli
Uattn tr.: tllt phone r!ql GOOD COND. .,,..,.
9'00 lmJOmd Autft
COMPARE
• Oulllty • Price • GU1rantee
w. ti•• th•in th,. Y•llow1,.11 . I 6·peint S1kty •114 Ptr·
l•rflltn•• lr1111••tltn, T111t'1 why w1 ttll 111•r•~+.t
1001 .... rtptir tr ,.,ltttlfl•nt of tll mtltr mtcllcn•
lit! 111rt1•, l11t ntt IYel"f' 1111tcl VW fth +hit flltpt•fion,
Only VW1 1tl4 hy tvfllerh14 cl11ltrf. U~t ""' . ..,. .... '"""""•• ......... ""'"' •'--lllMlel .... .,.... • ·~ .,... ..
IUOS • IUOI • auGS
'66 vw ,.. ___ _
""lot. a PM -
'65 vw
t,... hl••111
'67 vw
t ,..., hlmt ..
'61 vw Co---, .. -"".
'64 Porsche
'67 Porsche
tll,4 ...... , .. ,...
'66 Porsche
tlLI ....
.... llrom
$499 .. $1899
'73-1190
1970 Haittor llYd., COltO M ..
CltOlolhll1'0 •
'68 MUSTANGS
11111 .... 1.,,,...
DISCOUNTID
Al M!llllAI '600
01 .. nttc hliiClleo
'68 FALCONS
'64 CNtn~ -~"-=.: =:.t. ....
'1295
2240 Jo. Mein at W1r11r • Sat1 Au • Ph. li48-18l0 •
•• .
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... ·--___ .... ,-~ .. -"'---~-~--------------------------------'---------------------~
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3'1 OAILY PILOT •
BILL MAXEY
ORAllGf COUNTY'S HEWm
T 0 Y 0 T·A
AUTHORIZED DEALER
INVITES YOU
To See the largest Stock of
1969 TOYOTAS
FOR IMMEDIATE DWVERY
eCOROLLAS
eCORONAS.
eCROWNS .•
• •
• •
• •
$1770*
$2046*
$2819*
8 ~~?.,~~'~!!EA~~!~*
10 AIR CONDIT10NID CORONAS IN STOCK
DRIVE THE NEWEST
1969 COROLLA
$177()00
""' • M.I. , ... us. • ,... .............
e HIA~ a fllLL WHm COYIRS
e nNTID MASI e 4 UllD Tu.NS.
e YINLY INTlllOI e NYLON CAINTS
e WH111 WAI.I.I e UCUNIN• SIATS
e IUllPll euAlll a DNllllCOAT '
6'-arnlftt 4Mp.,.... 1966 VW SUN ROOP s1499 1~. '""'"· ...... , . 1·•• ••. ,. ...
1967VW2DRSIDAH s1599 Art+ •11• h 4nw. tt.ts
'" bl•• b .... , .....
ft. •·& "°"' .,....,,,
tr!• ""'"
, , 1966 TOYOTA CORONA $1699
1
Polar whl .. Qntrutlnt
· ~I u • ff•h. oqut,,..t t '"'.lift air cond,. •It,
. 1967 TOYOTA CORONA $1699 I l•autlful 4 11 p b1ltie
blv•. It 1 d I 1, h•1+1r, ·
w/w. Showa lied of
ee .... Low milea. ·
1968 TOYOTA CORONA s1799 j Shl"'1111rl119 •ola, red/
1 blaelr ln .. r. Only 9981j
, 1"1. Seldom 1a11 w1 of*
J fer a U••d aar •howf119 •~ts fin1 ~ar1 a11d low
1T1llaa91. be1ll1nt bvy at only
Easy lo Reich al Gar!feld end Beach
~ llU ll(AXl'r
TO TOTA
•AIPllLD = z " ;t.DAllS ::I •
. II:
e
p.t,CIPIC COAST HWf,
BILL MAXEY
.
0 Y OTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
ffllllf6TOtl IUCH -847-8555
3 Ml. NO. OF HWY. ON BEACH BLVD.
AL
NO MONEY
DOWN!
ON ANY
NEW CAR
OH mWJYEO CllfDfl
•
JAGUAR
'6i X1'E Ro&dster', red,
blk. illtf'r. Extra deen!
Best offer over $18Th. •
636-2515
KARMANN GHI~
'fi6 KA1tMAN GHIA. Red 'fl/ bm~k lnteriof'. AM/FM Blau·
punkt · radio. f.ua: rack &
more--extru! L<i mlleqe.
$1850 °' bm: otter. 646-'T~
MERCEDES BENZ '
ROBERTS
home of the
"FAST" PL YMOUTHS
1969 ..
PiYMOUTH
ROAD RUNNER
BOY! YOU SHOULD SEE
WHAT CHRYSLER· PLYMOUTH
IS DOING THIS YEAR!
My Daddy invites you to see the "Quiet Ones"
The new '69 Chrysler line at Al Robert's NEW CAR SHOWING
SEE THEM ALL
THIS WEEKEND
OPEN
9 A.M. TILL?
ALL '68's
MUST GO!
LOOK FOR THE
SEARCHLIGHTS .,.,, ,,,,,
COM.! IN
AND
SAvtl
'65 MUSTANG
'66 IL CAMINO
'1799
AL
ROBERTS
5% FINANCING
'66 IUICX RIVIERA
'2999
'67 CONTINENTAL
'3999
On new cor pu~no..
OV(Ji!abl1 on ~
bonk. cl'9dll.
....
"'"
....
NICI
'67 IONNMW
'2699 .
'66 IMPERIAL
'2999
Ply111qt1ln
LOOK FOR
THE
SEARCHLIGHTS
,
• 10080 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
GARDEN GROVE JE 7-7800
------------~'#-~· ---
-...... -.. •
" ...
( Mike McCarthy
. BUICK . ·
Why take 1 ..... on the
finest c1r1 of all
•••• thin
"Mike's
Magnificen~
Savings!"
Nobody but nobody •.. c1n meet
or match Mike McC1rthy's '68
. Clean-Up Valuea.
••w '68 Buick Special
2 DOOR SEDAN
'2841 3~,..
& Uc.
A re1I luxury Cir with big v.a,
1uto. tr1ns., power steering,
R&H, w/w & fi.ill wheel covers.
5fo<k No. 8263.
Wide ·Selection of Fobulou•
B~!D '68 BUICKS
To .choose from •t Mike's ••• at
brllli1ftt '68 CIMn·Up Prices.
'6.8 RIVIERA
$4495
Factory air co11ditionl11g and full powet
111clwdi119 wi"tlow• and 1ttl1. R•dio end
h•alat. E.ery conc1lvabl1 luxury option.
Ex1cvtlv1 cir, Vary low mil••· 81 1trlyl
Stock No. 1133.
With tho "high· ~·
standard" Buick touch!
'64 Country Squire $1 5 99 W1ijl0n, AIR CONDITION•
ING. AUIOmllk lr11111T1t. 1lon. Pc.wei-slaorlnt arid
brlkn_ !ltdlo •"" hMtef'. I'_. rtll' window. (!Ml>fft ~ou•w.rv« ~Modem d1y "Wooc:tle". L~ No. VH8 on
!5 ~~ •• ~~~-·-$1049 t...nsmlaslon. P-r ltlO!r·
Int, Radio anCI i.1ttr.' '
Bta.Jfiflll rna rOO<>. 11:,,.FIW ''""· \.le. N:o .. PVJ 61.
'63 BUICK Wiide&! $899
2 door ~n:Flop. Au1om11lc trtn1ml$1lon. P-r llHr-
1"9. Po..,.r brake1. Power .
wlnellnn. "-r 1e111. CDNOlt. Bt.oekel !ells.
Wl!ltrw1lll. L..-<Hd. Btllll'y, LIC. No, NZT 1:13.
'63 MERCURY
MONTEREY. Aulamatlc tr1nsm!111loll. Power 1t1er-
lrig. Powtr br1kei;. Rtdlo. Heiler. "Br.ere throuth" PtlWl!r riar wlr><1ow. ~nv ttr..r flJlff"ll, C.r It. lust 1bollt perl~. 0... _,,.,. Lie. No. IEE U.S.
'6S MUSTANG $1099 I do« 111n1io.,. Redle,
Heeter. 11 fitly for "''' beautr .
LIQUIDATION
SALE!
1967 ;. 1968
Uncolns, Mercurys, Cougars
'68 MERCURY $3975 MONTCLAIR. 2 Oocr Mnl-to.-. FACT. AIR (ONO,
A11!0. IT1ni. PDWO!r steer
11'11. PoWl!r brU:tl. R1dle. ~"'r. M1n1 otl'ler IV>M'Y •• ,,.. •• Tiii• c-r r>eYer niglsl'erld. Sllldt Ho, M·76.
'67 'MERC 4-Door $3695 ll:MI lu•urv wUll Jl /H AU'lo. TrlM. P/5 PIS 1rici Factory Air. Cumbltrl1nd llelllf. Siii:. No. M ...
'68 MERCURY $3395 '""'' ""-· ''" " . llllllll'Y Piiis. P/$, P /9,
R/H, t. St.el Sh'l1 Wlllli.. In S-Wlllt1, Stk. No. T ·2.U.
'67 MERC Comet $292 4 4 Or. LNdecl! PIS. P/B,
""10. TY-. 111/H end Fac-
tory air. G'""'I"" told -(11)111'1. ft. No. C·li.
· "The Most For Your Money"
We lease All
Makes & Models
IN TODA
' .
-' . . .
•
.
---... -
. . -
.. ·-.. -·•· ·-.. r
-·~ ·-·-..
---
. • ·-_,
• --
.. •
·-.. ·--• --·---------~ -· • .• • ::l ~
·-~ -.. -·
.
• 1;
' ,. -. • -•
. • -. -• • . • " •
-• •
l • • . .
t
t •
• . . •
l -• • -.
. • • .
-.
I
( F•ldot, Stptc-20, I~ DAILY '1LOf ~$J
TRANSPOllTATION 'fRANSl'OATATIOH TltANll'OttTATIOH TltANIJIORTATIOH TMl1Sl'OATATION TIIANIPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TIWUPOITlTION TIWBl"OIT.Uldfi
.• Ill'
.
at .. ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac
>':!'CLEARANCE SALE of 1968~~~stv Cadiilacs
-·•
' -
, .. ; 19a WllUAC CUE DEYIUE . :
1968 Cadillac
COUP1 DI VILLI
Litht -lllu• with whit• vinyl top, blue int•rior. F•ctery
air co1MUtienirtg, MIW CAI WAllANTT.
$5995
1968 Cadillac
COUPI DI VILLI ·
/'&old with black ~:r. te_p!_ 9_0lcl interior. Full pow•r,
_ fac+.ry air conCi itg. JllW CAI WAIU.NTY.
,f5995 ·.
. -I. • ,
1%7 Cadillac
llUIOllADO
Tu,uoise wfth )l.c~ vinyl top, ht.ck hrte_rior. ·Full p~
.,, actory alt cen~iti~nint. NIW ~ ·~AUANTY.
$5695
1965 Oldsmobile
( I "II• .
$5995
.. A Beaut111
FiNmist 9rean with bleck vinyl
top, bleck interior, Full power,
---I factory air conditiOftfncJ.
1968 Cadillac
ILDOU.DO
Gold witl. blaclc vinyl top~ beit•_ !nterior. Full power,
factory air concfition1ng. NIW CAI WARRANTY.
$6995
1967 Cadillac
COUl'I
White with black vinyl top, rad le1thar interior. Fu 11
power, factory air co11ditioning. NEW CAil WAI•
U.NTY.
$4795
1966 Cadillac
Sl)IAN DI YIW . .
Blua with bh.la ·fntarior. One ewnar. Fun power, factory
air conditioning.
$3795
1965 Jeep Wagon
Elegant!
Medium blue, bJue vinyl, top,
blue Houndstooth int. Stereo
radio, door loc.k1, crui1t con·
.trol, full pwr., fact. •ir, 9,000
ml. ,6 Yr. S0,000 new car w1r-
ranty.
$6795
1968 Cadillac
EL DOU.DO
Blue with blue vinyl top, blue interior. Fu~ _power, f1c-
tory air conditioning. NIW CAI WAlllANTY.
$6995
1967 Cadillac
SEDAN DE VILLI
Turquoise, white vinyl top, turquoise interior Factory
air conditioning. NEW CAI WARRANTY.
$4495
1%2 Cadillac
SEDAN DE YIW!
Whit• w'th black interior, Ful• power, factory eir con·
ditionint. 10,000 Milas. ONI OWNlll •
$1295
1963 Lincom
4 DOOR
like new. Gold with black leether i~tec-ior. Full power, factory
1961 W>lllAC B.DORADO
1968 Cadillac
COUl'I DI YIW
Turroi•• with bleclc vinyl top, blaclc leather intarlar. ~11rr7•r. foctory $5995· NIW CAR WAR·
1967 Cadillac
ILDOU.DO
Golcf w5th brown vinyl top, brown 1 .. ttt., interior. Fvlt
'4jj;r, loctory •:• i579s -. CAR WAR•
1966 Chevrolet
COlYETll
Fa1tback. Yellow with black luthar. Full power, fac•
tor air conditionin9. l0,000 Mila&. ONI OWND.
$3595 '·.
1966 Oldsmobile
STATION WActON
·, · 4 !loo<, ltor4top, 1-ry olr cood;tienlnw. C.lor told.
: : OMl.O\VN& $1895 ;,
4 Wheal Drive, white with ,Mue · interior,
20,000 Milas. fectory air concfitionint.
$2395
air conditionin9. . .
$1795
Vitt• Cruiser, white w;tft Wue interior. F11ctory air con·
cllttonin9. _
I $2795
. . ..
.. ..
..
Oldsmobile -Cadillac
1150 -SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY
Laguna Beach
494-1084
547-3103
lmpo""" Autn · • "°41 Imported . Autoa 9600 lrilporte<I -'-·Hoo Import.Ct Au too .... '690 lmportod Autoo 9600 Imported Autoo 960I Import.I· Autoo 9600 Imported A-
OPEL / TOYOTA VOUCsWAGiN VOUCSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOUCSWAGEN VOLVO
'67 OPEL .WQ'. l',mlly -·d. M,.. "°"' m.Jio cf. fer. iant. cooc1. HI iNu TOYOTA '"' VW Doi,,... P .. thl1..,. '65 VW CAMPER '66 VW . 1961 VW. ...,__ Ml. '58 vw Bua: new clutcb: VOLVO '63. 1W11o1 -.
Uld)OQlolo.NodownOAC. S'IATION WAGON TbepopuluBug,competilloo 'X!nt. new .ba~. :13,!IXI &OOd ........_Ion. Mlntcood.-l'llnfo u•·~u.um:RS ~ ool7 "6.50 per The popular -m llnd ... """"'·immaculate -ml. $1925. -"15. -~: llllMm
• ....__. mo. 842-4615 deL Ready to IO for oft the out -only .one ot its kind. J ===="'='""'"'==;_:-=='=======J..;::=::::::::;===::f
PORSC.. ELMORE ·~ ...!;' ,.! ~i':'. road """'P~"f. Only Can llnon<• ~.,.or put P.,. Imported Autos 9600 Import.I Aulot 9600 lmoorted Autoo
;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;,;;;;=;;115300 Be&dl· 81-A!., Wltmnllr '65 VW Bus. &d CODd. UH, Can finance all or part P..,. ments u . low u $3),00 per
l'0
9
R
1
S
1
C
5
HE , "'-89<J322 .,.. llltl. 84u;.!7 '""'" .. low u 122. ,.... mo O.A.c.
mo O.A.C. . ELMORE
TRIUMPH '':.,~. vw~o~ ELMORE ' to dlOOte: liarn
$1£m. * 100 ml1es.
892-f:iMl or ~ ~ TRnJMPH TR .f., O» =ts cmb' $31 per mo. MOTORS
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph.""'3320 •. !!'!!"!'l!~~'!!!'!"!lll"!'f vertibl.. IVH N•• tires. TOYOTA \ 196"1 pORSCHE 912 Tarp. $ Ex. running oond. Alking '65 VW Deluxe. DoD 't miu Pb. 894-m:l 15300. Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr
•i'::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ J •pd , A M · P' M r a d lo·• Jl.450 or make of fer . tM9 one. No dotm1 OAC 15300 Zea.ch Blvd., Wlrtmn!tr '66 VW Deluxe Spedal. Extra
atef'eOl:ape, Dlac w h •el• • 540-4726 Ol' ~1533 ~ onJ,y $31 per mo. 'G VW Deluxe. l owner. dean. No down 0 AC , MG
MG
Polo rtd Inuuctilate. Beat TR 4. '63 xlnt cond. bw mi. 1003 C&lifoml.a St., ll B. Pa.Tmentl cm.1y $H per mo.
offer OYfl' $4,«IO •. &Q.,11(1. Mkbelln tires. Must sell 'Qi BUS VW l'M, air born& 5.16-8139 ~"~'-='~--~~ Jxl Q. AM tor Mr. NtlJtn. pm 64~ fiberltw t n • u I ate dun-'64 VW Mu.tt see. ·Beautiful
'63 PORSCHE R1Ptt 90, ~! DAILY ~ ~ O"~A. · dtnetl $1.f.10. 548-3819 '68 VW Olstom Clamper ireeta $50. dawn O A C
·-• ~---~ m. rM.Al".a unr.-80IXl mi'1. lnlmaculate. ...... •-,., ~,, ~ "'""'"""'"'" · · · LINES. You can Ille tMm e '88 VW BUG. w/mrtfOd.., .....,,,men ... on.., ..,.. per mo.
:::jl:iom<>Jate 8"" MG iDvelltOr1 radio $2950 on& owner for jolt pennies a da7· DiaJ OriJ SZOOJ mt. SKAR.Pl 646-472'U tM2-t6l5
the new Aud:a America ~1e M2a?I' * ~ * &-477S '65 vw Sedan, R &_ H. '"'68,.....vw=-. -....,=--•"'1x-,AM=,,.,.= Here Howl PORSOIE '61. :roadltu, new ~~ rr _ ·-·i · · Diwrce. 27,800 Orig. m1. ht radio, Car cover coco mata.
tires chrome wblt, xlnt eng. ~ , .av -AlWQW • Go-Go! $1250 takes. 6'7S-16T7 $18!6. Excel coad. 54&-21163
&ta macbloe, ll-1 $1995.
'42-411> Imported Autos 9600lmporhd A--Imported Autos 9600 lmportod Autos 9600
'61 Poncbe Nmnel, 'ininor
-"""' $350. + pld< "" p)'mta. 615-mo .n: 5:30'PM
RENAULT
WWWJ ........ M ...... no DAD.'f rrurr a .,.. ....._ •••• -..-.--""" .w.rtf
J.
. '
'U Jet-2+2 ONLY
•me,. ..... $4399 ... ...., .. ,ou. ---'" c:..-ONLY ..... -.-· $3399 ,.,_,,_ ....... ----'.
'" A.H.Hi .. IJ ONLY
.... -···-s26n .... ....,,...... ' ...............
·t12 I .. ....., .......
''7 ~ 1'11-4 IRS OllLT = ::.... .. ~ .. $2499 ••• , ...... 711.. ................ I I,,.,....
'61I11• 1•1 11tW ONLY,
loan hW-$1999 .._, ..... •••••• •
~ .........
-.
ONLY
$1999
·o-•GIN ONLY
::":!'";.::. :!.'.' $1399 ............
"60 M.G.I. ONLY
::.::! =-$1699 '"'· ' .'60 M.G.A.
IA.Cl TO SCHOOL
IPICIAL. _ ........
'19 Tri~ 1'11J m 111. Md.
....a.w .. "' .... __ ...... .... _
''4 Dabu1 ·-r, ONLY t:.o':=· $ 399 •( . , .
'U~ ONLY ~~~$1699
NOW!
·Weare THE
Dealer for
the World's
Most Advanced 4
Wketl Drivl
DATSUN
PAJIOI.
Wi'LL PROYI IT
TODAY AT:,
IMMEDIATE
DEUVIRYI
..
DATSUN
Especially. the ... ,_ DMo.../71 '*9"1 Two-Door
driving 11 ~ IPOrtina boot. Five ..-naer iooml
96 horHPoWlt ....i..tionl 25 ollieo per geiiOft
economyl'Sofety front dilC bnlbol·""8rv fine ear
feature prown on D1111ur\'1 flmOU4 Soden I Check el
the neW Dmuno. Get II 1>a11un·1 -ongi.
nearing. Clullity -i.nenahip. l'nlcllo lltt8nlion '"
luxury. comfort. uf91yl Sedan to 4-Whtol driw
Paaol. "1ere'11 Det1un forVo<W d_riving -·~'l'llW
r>t>dcld>oot. Seo 0-'1Big7for'89 e!YO\Jf d .. ~
.or'•todayi
'r I
l
DA11Ufil TlADl4NI
0.•f 60 Sport C..r•
a '"''.,... .. s.lecf ,, ••
l ·
"
I
t
--------------- ---~-----------------------'---------------
I
I
•
32 OAll.Y I'll.OT ~, Stplttnhtr 20, l 'Ml
flllilSl'OllTATION .. ~ •• .-l'OliTATION . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION tilNSl'OlfATION
t u...i Cori -Uood c ·-uHcl Ctn
TllANSPOllT ATION
f900 UHcl Ciirs
TllANSPOllTATION
9'0011...iC... . 9900Uoed Cll!I __ 9'°°~ c,,. -
CO"NEtt CHEVROLET'S USED . CAR CENTER SPECl~LS
'66 CHEVROLET '66 RAMBLER
Hardtop. Gold ,,,flh aold lntttlor. Auto-
mallc transmWlon, radio and heater.
(SUB392L
Oauic 770 wa&;on. 11,000 miles, tur-
quol&r with turquoise intt>rior, radio,
heater, au10., luggage rack. (TSB122).
51499 . 51899
'64 BUICK '64 VOLKSWAGEN
SJ>PCial &-luxe w11.gon. V8, autom•Tir,
powtt 11ieering, rad.lo, ne..ter. Sierra
rold w/beige vinyl trim. C'NYP121)
Bu11:. 4 11P"f'(I transmi5Sion, good runnPr,
new \nlerior. !FMC407J.
51495 51099
'64 PONTIAC '62 IMPALA
Grand Prix. V8. automatic, powPT' 1tN'r•
ing, elf'C. "i.ndow1, RAH. Danube blue
w/whlte vinyl roof. CNQX710l
Station wagon. VS, ovC'rdrlv,. tran'i .
radio, healer, tuxroo black v.1rro in·
tf'rlor. fCHY779J.
51295 5895
'68 IM ALA
C~lom Coupe. Su1)f'r Sport ~uipmf'nt,
fact.ory air cond., powpr ~tr(., automatic
ITAnl., nidio .r. heater-grotto blue with
black vinyl interior. Uc. No. VRC413
'66 OLDSMOBILE
f.85 4 door led&n. V-8. automatic. radio,
ht>ater, powf'r steerin~ and finished in
Turquoi!le. Sharp. (SBTIJ5)
53295
N..-Car ,act..-Warrant..
$1795
'66 PONTIAC '67 CHEVROLET
Lf'M11.rnii. Silver with bh1:ck inlprior,
black vinyl top, radio, hr.ater, automa-
tic, pow0< ateering, air conditioning.
~ SVE692).
52099
CApril.•. Like nev.•, aulom.11.tic transmi~-
~ion, powPr stl"Pring, radi-0, heetPr,
(UOE689t.
52499
VERY GOOO SELECTION OF
VACATION CARS
At Gr"t Savings!
'66 CORVEnE
Hardtop. 4 speed transmissioo, AM/FM
radio, red w/red inter. Stk #Pl560A
53299
'64 EL CAMINO
WitH' bucket seals, stick shift w/over·
drive, 283 VS, power steering, radio,
heater. (Stk. # 1727)
51595
'66 CORVAIR
Coupe, AT. R&H , g<>ld with h<ig• In·
terior. 13 .000 actual miles. OK Usr ..
Car Warrant.v. Lie. No. SUB392
51495
'67 EL CAMINO
CUSTOM. VS, automatic, power steering,
R&H, ermine white w/black vinyl inter·
ior. (V42925)
52595
'64 CHEVROLET
Imp.ala hardtop. Turquoise wth tur-
quoise interior, automatic. power steer-
;'lg, radio, heater. (EIU933)
51399
'63 RAMBLER
Ambassador. V8, auto., air cond., power
1tttr., R~. recllnlnc 8fftl. (0KM63.1J
' $695
'68 CHEVROLET
% Ton Pickup with cab-over camper,
6 ply tires. low mileage. I.Jc. No. Q91115
52695
N.w Car '•cftty W•"•nty
'66 vw
SQuareback 5 t a t I o n wa1on. AM/fM'
radio. SLV799
51595
'67 CAMARO
327 V8, a utomatic, radio, healer, power
1t.eerins. (ULSlfO)
52495
'68 NOVA
2 ·door. V8, automatic transn1ission,
power stetting, air conditioning, radio
1and heater. new car warranty. VTP434
52495
'65 CHEVROLET
Impala 1port coupe. Yellow with black In·
tmor. automatic transmission, rad Io,
heater, VS. ~r steering. Stk. No. 874.A.
'65 GMC
SuburbM c.&rryall. fi cylinder engine, extra
Conv.!rUble. VS, auto. ,air oond., P.S~ radio.
'66 PLYMOUTH
Fury ID 9 passenger st.11.1,ioo w.11.gon.
Automatic, power atttring, radio, heat·
er. !SVY3701.
$AVE
'63 IMPALA S.S.
Coupt. Automatic, power slt"('ring. faf'tory
air, radio, heater, satin 1ilver w/rM vinyl
interior. lFYE139)
'65 CHEVROLET
'Ai Ton Pickup. VS engine. cust. cah, heavy
duty rubber, split-rims. step bumper, tool
boxes, exlra racks, ideal for plumber, etc.
H.D. c,
1
.,.,
99
equip. Ll
5
.c. ~o·oi!~
Wam111'7
CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
USED
CARS 546•1203 CN:~ 546•1200
Sport Co" 9610 Autos Wonted 9700 Autos W1nted 9700 Used Cir. 990Q Used Can 9900 Used Cars 9900 I Used Cats =c.;....o..c.:.._ __ _
'64 JAGUAR XKE, bladr
.roadllter, wiN w b e e I 1 ,
Pittlli<. Xlnl ...... """· ...... ,..,
Antiqua. Cl•uies 9615
'36 OLDS Conv. co u J>'
w/rumble seat!. 0 r i l .
eond, runa fa.ir Must ll!Af.
$500. 962-6674 H.B.
Autos Wanted 9700
WE PAY ... CASH
b' used can • truck:s just
call ui tor ll'ff eltimatt.
GROTH CHEVROIIT
Aak for SR.Jes Manaier
lJ21.l Beach Bl ..
Hun tt"tgt.on &1ch Kl..,,,
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR
USED CARS
CONNlll CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Colla Mesa 546-1203
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
Will Bur
Your Vollmral'ftl er Ponche
" ~ top dollars. Paid for
or DOt. Call Ralpb
673-1190
BUICK
CADILLAC
'64 CADILLAC Sedan dt
Vitlt>. Air. tilt steerini;:.
AM • FM. Hl?flf'Y beige.
L" at her inrerior. Must
sacritice at $2350 lor im-
l ITW'diale sale. Call 548-ml
d!r.
---------'64 CADILLAC Fleetwood. '56 BUICK !ll>fi' .• runs good
MAKE OFFER.
• 546-2617 •
CADILLAC ------'64 Cadillac :ntttwood
full power, factory air.
all dcluxe extras. Brand
new tin>!! & brakes. Want
tut sale. $1995 lull
price. Priv. ply 54&-3619
'57 CAD. Coupe De Ville
a.ir-eonchlioning. Clean.
962-7635 Alt. 6 -1Vkends
Executive·~ car in excellent
condi!ion. J.'actory air ron-
ditionin&:. AM-f'M radio,
fuli power, cruise control.
black with vinyl top. $2475
Pnv1te party. G46-4348
'59 Cachllll('. Good running-&
g-ood lire~. $600 or best offf'f.
Can be seet'l al Sp ffi, 829
Baysiclr Dr., N B.
'68 SfilDAN DeVille. Orig
owner, 10.500 mi. full pwr,
air, rxtra:\. 494-8794
Wh.ire ElepfuUltS'?'
CADILLAC * Mill ionair•'s Choice!
1962
CADlL t.AC CPE DEVILLE
Beoutitul leal blur -show-
room mnd:itioo thru • out.
Command this air-condili0&
ed citadel. of luxury, power
and str('flft'th ynu~('lf f~:
ONLY $13951
1st car lot on ll;uiJOr Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln-Mef'C\ltY
Chsla Mesa Br111ch
19"11 Harhor Blvd. 6-12-7050
'61 CADILLAC Sedan de Ville
ALL POWER including air
conditioning, power steering,
power brakes, power win-
dows, 6-way !ll'&I. auto. trU11k
opener. Radio, ht"ll.ter, of
ru~! CleM. $750.00 , •.
879-6088 i f'ullf'Ttoo l
New Can 9100 N•w Cars 9800 N•w Cars 9800 New Cars 9800
IMPORTANT • NOTICE TO
BARGAIN
HUNTERS
MASI SPICIAL pUR(
sran• N•W (a ...
ALL MODILS •
ut1TS
variously lqulpp•
IAR IND DISCO Y aonu Plus Fadort I
(Of.I . FACTORY %Otll an• 1xecutiv•
MORI FO
Yqur (ar
a
Mow -
Our •pecial purchase of ell aveilable rem•ining brend
new I 9b8 Americen Motor• Ambassadors, Rebels, J•v·
elins AMX 's •nd R.•mbler Americ•nl will ba cloled out
by 1909 model show date Oct. lit.
Two & four door Sedans, Hardtop1. 7ort Coupes and
Station Wegons. Som• fully equippe with •ir , c~ndi·
tioning , pow•r st1ering, shift command trensm.'111on1,
tap• players etc., others with bar• Factory Equipment.
Maximum dealer discounts plu1 liberal fec.tory bonus
brings prices lower th•n we can •ven eifpect to sell n•w
c1rs for.
A limited number of sl ightly used fully equipped AMX
& Javelin Sport Cars ind Ambe ss•dors ef ev,,, lower
prices while they lest.
Trade your c ar before new models make it • yeer older.
We h•va a great demand end d isplay 'Pace for -40
more goocl used cers. Any make or mod• .
OLIDA Y RAMBLER ---.
A M E R I C A N M 0 T 0 R S A U T H 0 R I Z ED D E A L E R
1969 Heritor Blvd., Costa Mesa °"" s••••n Telephone 642-6023
NO HOKUM -No GIMMICKS -NO DOUBLE TALK. WE HAVE THE CARS WE ADVERTISE •• , DRIVE IN
-PLENTY OF PARKINS
• ,,
•
CADILLAC EVROLET -tf ·Wagons Ho! 1 --------r ~~-
.66 Cl-fEVEL LE V-8 '67 CADILLAC convertible. 4 SPEED
"Malibu" STA. WAG. All Black. Loadt:-d! Slcrro
"AIR COND." P/G, Pv.'rl radio &. 1apP. Pri party. SPECIALISTS St,. f' r. R/H. Lu~gaJ:e
rack. Plc. Sµarklin~ au-ioo"'=7:i=. ="='=-"="=====I HIGH PERFORMANCE tumn g:o!d. Shov•room CUSTOM CARS
cnnd. thru-out! CAMARO LARGES!' SELECTION IN
$ l 995 --ORANGE COUNTY
'65 CHEVROLET v.s Bel-'67 cAMARO 5pt Cpe Selected Auto Air ·•9" passenger ST A. Gr·~ian gold with contras\lng WAG. 0'AIR-COND." Full .._ ' p\Vr. Pqpt. Beaut. all Al· black intC'dor. Nicest in Or-Center
aska while w/snappy fi-ange Oxln!y. Only 13032 4-larbor Blvd. 537-4646
esta red inter. "A wagon . $2267 .... .65 CHEVY Im•·. Su""r <.:.v.rt full of vatu('!" C f a c all or part r.y ' ,_ ~ $1895 an m n e -Cpe ....tit wfwh! IC'a'ther 1n-menls as low as $29 per n10. ' 11 · R/H '6,') BUlCh'. V-8 "Sp!'cial" O A(' !('nor. ll powN'. atr,
STA. WAG. A/T, pwr/ · ELMORE lrrunac. $1350. 644-<M77
slC'rr. ''AIR COND." R/H. 1964 CHEVROLET Impala
Beaut. Sf'B mist green w/immac. gr e p n vinyl 2 · dr. H11rdl0f.l with power
.fl.10TOHS stf"ering, auto. trans., air. inter. l in 10,000! TOYOTA . $1695 $1j75. Today. 642-0981 di::_
'6.'l MERCURY V ·8 "Col-Ph. 894-3.J:lO "63 NOVA Convert. Auto
nny Park., STA. WAG. 15300 Beach Blvd .• Wstmnstr trans, R&H , p<Nr str' & brk!.
A/T. Pwr/steerfbrks. RI N!!W tires. !rans & brakes.
H. chrome roof top lug· COMET
gage rack. etc. Attractive ·="~'~-"'"==""'-o~--=. ivor-y 11nd wood grain. 1---'60 JMMPALA Conv Xlnt E:io:crllenl c-0nd. thru-oul. '63 C'OMET Wag , stick, 1 , . $1095 JUH d ti &. d 1 f'ond New top, Gd tires.
Ow.,·. e~:.n 0,'~f-6"""7, 0 ;,,1 PIS S49!:i afl 5 p.m. 675-3480 'fi.'l Cl-IEV. V-8 "lkl·Air" " ,..-N "'~· .,..........,, STA. WAG. Affi COND. 1966 Cl~EV. 1\1001.a. f'our
P/G, pwr f s teer. RI H. CHEVROLET speed. $15~. Call Bob
Chrome roof top luggage Mangan at 642--0981 dlr.
rack, etc. NOTE: !This -· -----\\·a~on has 11. compll'l<'lY 1962 Chev V2 ton pickup l!liO IMPALA Convert. nl"W
RE BUILT MOTOR!l Hard to find model with lh<' !rans. brakes. top. Gocid
Sparkling all Al ask a 8' bed, F1eelside. Beautiful in cond .. $325 or offer. 646-4200
\~1hite w/fawn inter. silvl'f" metallic ~ Im-,63 CHEV lmpal;-cOOpi. $1195 '62 l\.1ERCURY V..tl "Col-macul.11.te. A/C. 11.000 milea, Pri party
any Park" STA. WAG. Sll35 S.lliOO. 84~~?7_7 __ _
"AJR COND." A/T. Pwr. Can hnanrt< all or pu1 Pay---°"'fi6 STINGRAY
i;1f'E'r. Lui;::gagl' rack. RE-ments ;ui; low as S22 per ~t7--t25 HP. S.~200.
BUILT MOTOR~ mo. 0.A.C. ~1411-1489
'62 C HR$~Ol~ER V-8 ELMORE '61'1 CHEV. Biscaynr 2 dr.
Sports STA. WAG. AIT, One ownf'r. Pf'rfrM con-
pwr. PQ. R/H. l.ui;:gage ~!OTOP.S dihon~ 540-2842 art 6 PM
rack. A r<'al pov.·erhouse TOYOTA
CORVETIE
1956 OJRVE'ITE F'astback -
4Z7 with four speed. AM-f'M
radio. Electric m e t ft 11 i c
bJ.ue. Fine l.'Olldition. Priced .
at $3525 for a proud and ap-
precialive buyer. Pho n e
548-T15I dlr.
1965 CORVETTE. A
duplicate of the one above
with a 396. 4 speed. $2900.
This has to be the value of
thp year. Call 548"-7751 dlr.
'67 CORVETTE ra.stback:
427-3!Kl HP: p/s, p/w,
posi.; xlnr t'Ofld. 642-9.134
COUGAR
'67 Cougar Hardtop
V.S, air t'Ond., dlr. full pwr.,
lmmaMJJatf' condition. Black
landau lop, rurquoise bottom
Will take $18j cash or good
used ct1r. Will fine. baJ. Af.
1 ... r 10. 494-9773 ·or 54:>-0034
1967 OJUGAR I G T) Local
nwncr t~ul\y t<f!Uip?l'd & .air
conditioning, Disc brakes.
Call today for sacriiice sale.
642-0981 dlr.
1967 COUGAR • S2ffi0. Phme
:;.jg. 7~ l dlr.
DODGE
1961 PHOENIX HT. Clegn,
gd met.•han1cal. Gd tires.
S300 !'l40-J023
'64 OODC E Dari CT Pn pr-
ty. Xlnl cood. $ l 095.
642-2115 Rft 6 p .m.
'63 DODGE Dart. 2 dr-. auto,
!r1ns.. R/11, good cond.
$650 !NS-24!17 for long distanf'e cruis·
inii:. Aret.ic white/Kodiac
""·
Ph. 894.3J20 'j9 CHEVY ~ood transport•·
15300 Beach Blvd .. Wstmnl!tr lion. 283 eniJne. make offer. '66 SPORT VAN
642-!M30 496-lO'l!i $9'5
'61 FALCON Hi·Thrift
SIX STA. \VAG. Std. 3
speed column shift. R/H.
Sp.11.rkllng -0ri.c;. Alaska
w ht If' w 'imrnar. rC'd
vinrl inter. "A running
F1JEL injttted '64 Chevelle :.cc.;,5c;6,.CH""E"VY;v-$o.2-.00..--========i'=
M•1ibu ss, • '""·· .,.;., FALCON Ivy. duty sus p ension: • 962-4511 • m rt• 11 i (' brakes. spec I~======== COLLEGE OR SCHOO
Whtt1'' polygl4' "'" oew CONTINENTAL L
r ... 00 .
blk. paint; elee. windows. -~ ·--SPECIAL ~7131 : 8(2-nt.2 eve '67 CONVERTIBLE 'li2 raJron l)(olwu! Sed1n.
Powder blue with contrasting $5tS '6.<j TMPAL/. 320, 4 dr HT. Continrnlal, bhN' w/blue top, ~-I · d' I lntPnor Radio, heltCT. A 1st c.11.r J(ll on Harbor Blvd. feel air. fl pwr. new tirrs, while ~""'r ntpnor. ra 1a
JOHNSON & SON new pa.int. A·l cond. Oria. tires, 11lr<Onl'l. rull P'A'T S.'J200 real milea~r l;Pttet. Only
Owner. $1495. ~~2588 ()wn(>f 644-1361 $695
Uncoln-f\1rrrury 1964 Cl-IEV Impala with air '66 CONTINENTAL 29 000 Can finance ft.11 or pan pay-Coslll Mt"M Branch • ' ments as low 111 $1 1.00 per
1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-7000 rood. WU! sell right away ml. Ligb.t yellow. avocadoU mo O.A.C.
NEED A CAR? for $1400. Phone 548-7751 vinyl top, leathel', .tu ELMORE
CAN 'T BE FINANl"EDf dlr. power. atr, t&pe. l'le'W litt..
•BAnkropt! e RepollSf'saion! SACRinCE! '64 Qlevelle 2 Call 67>-0.'!22 •Bad Credit? • Dtvoreed! Dr. Xlnt 11h11pe. $!50. ··0 .. ~w~H=ITE~-.~/bl=.-. ~1.-.~th-.,
e Mllltary •New In Area! 646-JS.13 lop .l Inter : T'H'w ('Q(ld
Mab Payd.11.y Paymeota ·59 ().{EV Nomad wagon: A· Urunut. St .~. 673--7~
McCARTHY ltlOTOllS 1 "°""· o;., lo ...,...,.
lQ> So. MaJn • Edina« 2'!f>4 1'-1on11'N"y. C.M. 54a-,rr.13 CORVAIR (2 blocir:1 N. of Seva) _
Santa Ana Pb 5G.J50'1 1900 OK'Y)' ti NOVI . 2 Or. I-IT CORVAIR Monr..a '63, 4 ~pr ---------1 FVll. Pa. V.S. Auto. U599 k R & II I
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894-3320
lfi.100 Aefich Blvcl., W!tmnstr
'64 f'alcon xlnt cood.
S.iCIO. -ts YOUR AD IN Q.ASSI· * 968-134) sl , , flWner. IOfl
m:or -.... wm ., no1ch. "'° '"--0828 FIREBIRD,
lookq a It. otaJ "2-¥111 '64 BLUE metallic, 4 spd. ======== -------'--~ ---,._,...., ....... ""' .. ..... CORVETIE '67 FIREBIRD, R/H, ....
DON'T si'V'I I aWQ, pC 1980 Harix>r B!'t'd. C.M, new lit't'!!o UXXI ~7695
G\dct cun .,.. • ~ 9 '62 -C Dr. t,.ia.. pwr llel't'· 1958 XLNT Coot'!. CIMI! lnt. NU maner What t&T ,.otJ
Dau:, Pilot wut Adi In;. r/h, oriit owner. Xlni No brM. dutch. mutfltT. 2 can 1ell ii with a DAILY
IC-!1811 rood SlllOO. ~ top11 St'f' f~ llpt'll'"f'll' ~'t'\t\ PTl.1YT'WANT AO•• ~1 .. ·-:·'1
~. .. f' I
---
•
t
,
••
I
I
I
1
.-
'
• •
·=::.;::;:.;:;=:.;.::;.:.;.._T;.:RAN;:..;.;:.:.$PO;...:.:RT.;.;.;_A;.:T...;IO..:.N __ T..;.RA..;...;.N..;.SPO'--RT"'-'-A..:.Tl;.:0..;.N;..__r..:.RA;..;..N.;;.SPOlt;..;.;.-T.;..A..:.T-'ION.__T"'"RA'-'-N-SPOlt..,.·..:...:.T_A_Tl'-'O-'-N'-...;T..;.RANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
l'f104r, atp\efl'IOW 2IO, ltMI
t KAN~~· r A fl ON
HOO_ CA,.
·DAll.Y 'llOT ~ '
fRANS POlflfiON
I
TREMENDOUS YEAR END SAVINGS
-
.....
ARRIVING DAILY -SPECIALLY PURCHASED 1968 CADILLACS ATIRACTIVELY
PRICED -GOOD SELECTION OF MODELS, COLORS AND EQUIPMENT
·----OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM---
'66 CADILLAC
Coupe de Ville. Soifd p-een finlah with &retll
Jee.tber and nykm interior. 1ul1 cadlllac powe!' equipment plus factory a.ir conditioning, tilt-•l:eierina: whffl, power door locks. 6 way seat
and many. other of th! utru o!ftted by
CadlllK.
SALi $3888 PRICE
'64 CONTINENTAL
S{unning tuzedo black leather' interior with
strlklng sliver exterior. Has aJ1 the power
assist& including brakes. steeri~ windows,
l'lc. hctory air conditioning of course. This
car won't be here long, w hurry. ·
SALi $1999 PRICE
'68 BUICK
Sport Wagon. Thia 1tation ...,on la aJ:.o..
lute!J loaded with automatic, radl°' beater,
power steering, power brak-. power win·
dowa, power tall pt.e window, and of coune
facto~ alr condltioniri.s-Beautiful blue with
sim, wood grain panell1nl: and matchln& blue
tfiterior. Don't m1aa thla one at only
SALE $4222 PRICI
'67 CADILLAC
OntER SPECIAl VAIW
'62 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e
'67 CHEVROl.ET CAMAl!O • '64 AVANT! • '64 PONTIAC STA. WGN. e
'65 CADILLAC
SALi $2666 PRICI
'63 CHEVROLET
Impala -....... .._ w111 ........... wltb
nd bucket -t tntmor. VI en.ctne. lllltomauo
tranam1mon with ca.tel' eonaol., radio sad
beater, power' at.eertng, wtlite aide wall Uni.
Don't mill tbll sreat buy,
SALi $888 PRICI
'65 BUICK
'65 PONTIAC . Coupe do Villo. Boautllul Mon....,. 0...... fin-'66 BUICK LE SABI>[ • The luxurlous -tra 22" CUdem • door ish with Black vinyl roof and tun leather ln-I\ hardtop with all the flOW6 acceuodel lndu4-Grand Prtx. Automatic transmJuton. power ln1 power ..+--.1--........,er b-1.-i-'
t•rl<><. Full C.dillao powoc lnclu-powor '64 THUNDERBlnD • ,...,.,., ..,_-.,.di, ond beat.,, bu<-windows, ,,.;:;";;.;:~ ~ ~ndl-vent windows and of COW'H, factory a1r con-It kat seats, center console, fkbometer, white lng. Alpine white with bJack landau nic:e
ditlooln;~ $4111 PRICI '67 CHEV MALIBU couPE • .Id. :.-$1444 PRICI and :~s'"lia8 l'llCI
-------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN-------
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SU NOA Y
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA
• NABERS
2600 Harbor Bfvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100 -
Uted Cars 990C 11.u:.*=.;:c,o...,__:_ ___ 9900_ UHd Can 9900 UMd Can
FORD FORD FORD __ M_ER_C_U_R_Y--i--0-L-D-SM-O-Bl_LE_ PLYMOUTH PONTIAC IAMBLEI T-lllD
'64 FORD Fairlane Sta. Wag,
Gd. cmd. 1 owner, muy
xtrs. $1001 or subm.lt offer.
Call Day 673-8650 .,,,.
61S-OO\!l
1967 !'ORD Squire wagon,
pwr ate«ing, braku, air.
Xlnt cmd. 644--0354
'ffi GALAXIE 5(K'.l XL. grttn,
tan i.rt. Pwr str, elect win-
dows, AM-FM, 390 eng.
Xlnt oond: Sl'r.S. 644-242'2
'36 FORD Pick Up. Xlnt
cond. CBn be seen at 1800
Wallace Ave., C.M. 646-8752
DAD..Y PILOI' WAN1 ADS!
'rr"'-"thd 'A1•t o• 9600 Imported Autos 9600
VAN 1967 MDC O.. Pk. Station '6i OLDS. Delta 88; Jdnt PLY. '&7 BelvedM:t 2 dr. 1966 PONTIAC G.T.O. '59 RAMBLER. nm ldnt.,
Wq\'.ln. 9 pa:sseneer. Fu.lb cond., 7600 Miles. Prlv. hdq>. V-8, P/S, auto. trans. Hardtop, +mpred oa the floor, low mJ~.; cleu; '31)) or
powered, fac:fl)cy air, tilt hot air; vinyl top. P/S, On1y 28,ro:J ml. Must sell met&lllc sreen wtth bl•ck trade. 646-1.m
1963 Eocnollnt wn. Exe& steering, IUfCpge carrier, P/8. nid., htr., W!W, liril due to death tn family. $370 landau top. Pol!itJvely the =======
T·BIRD ''6; port; -HT
Wht. tulJ pwr • ma UJJbola. a:
paint, reblt ena. f Jiil tru.
Prl -· 11600. 1111-411111 lt!nt coodUion throughout. cameo green.. Truly fine glass. Best ofter. 83U352 Below Blue Book. nicest in Orange County. T BIRD
Must aell, oNy $39per mooth co n d It ion and m06t 1968 OLDS 98 4 dr HT, 6 mo-548-758<1 OR 646-1794 ONLY $'2'2ffi • • li6i T HU ND ERB I ft D
0 .A.C., lie. no. G\VC 735 reasonably pri~. C •I I lo mi, full pwr, alr-cood. '57 PLY w..--n, mtr. needs Can nnance all or pert PIY· equipped w I t b ~:e:_
OPfN ROAD 548-Tr.il dlr. Pvt own. $MOO. (Sac. $1.JOO Yr'Ol'k; body&' auto. in good merits aa low 81 $27.00 per IM T-Bmn. Full power. Fae-conditioning. Malt-.._.,,.,,
'62 MERC Station Wagon. otf list.) 644-2~ cond. lat $35 takes. 833-0436 mo 0 .A.C. tory Air. Rec, seal H.R. Pbooe 548-'MSl dtr.
. Pwr str' air cond. Good . ELMORE 4&8 tr ltereo aeu. Ex. 1956 T-BIRD. 'Ibt dulit ol 130 5 . HARBOR BLVD. . ex~ cleu inside IE 62 STARFIRE cmv. Oni Eves Cond. 2Cfi3 Newport Blvd. all time. Loe•! owner tr 10
SANTA ANA 531-4655 tll'H, -• .,-4190 owner. Xlnt mech cond. '64 SPORT Fury, top cond. M&-2887 yura. Mu.t be 1HD trt ap-
."7""==-"""'=o.,-=c I out. Exe cund • ., ........ O'lr $625 613-5581 * 642-3«4 * MOTORS • '64 FORD Eooooline V1111. 84'7-fl90 · '67 T-BIRD, Landau. Fn11 predate. 642.alll dlr.
RJH. Good tires. Reliablt. 1964 COLONY Pk. Station '68 OlDS 442 Coov, air, w.d-* 642-3651 * ~~~ power. F•ct air cmd. Xlnt '58 T-BIRD. Full JIOWU'· Kutt
m•i 496-2815 w...., willt ""· 11"'" tor "'· """' "'6011334>. 6300 PO .... •c 15!0l Beach Bl"' .. wmmatt """'· """ mi. ". '°". ....-. ..,, -· -. .. immediate Ale. No dea1en ma. Call aft 11 a.m. 642-8847 n I IA 64&-3546 party. after 1 p.m. call
"''"'·..,.._db-. 4 SPEED 57 T·BIRD. Blu. Au t o •. ~""'~'°'-=~-~~-I
'68 COUGAR 1ype 91 PS I PLYMOUTH YOUNG Sal"man will> rom-SPECIALISTS Po<tbol• too-Slocl<. ""11 '16 T-BIRD tmlvorlll>le, .,w JEEP
I
1 a~a~a~
ELMORE MOTORS
Choo1• your TOYOTA from tha large1t dee ler
with the la rgest 1election , • •
1969 "COROLLA"
•37•7 MO.
OR
1·1110
AMERICAN CAIS WANTID IN TRADE
CORONA SPORT SEDAN
"IOOM"
FOl
ALL
PIMANCINe Af AILAIL I
ON Amont CIDIT
Wo .. w-. -T.,.t"
,. tfrl. ..,. •• af """' ..... ..., oh T.y.to 0..1., i. fftt Ottft. .. s .. ....,
1\w'9 .......... , ...... . _. ...,.. ,.. ..,_ Y6' ...,
.... ... ... ..... i..,..., -
1"f+..,..tot .... Jfl-4 ...
........ __,.,.. -.Ju f.clff.
tl11, off.I .. .,... tl.1 ~Mtt 1f •
.., s.i..~ • .,.. ...... w .
"WI (All At Elmore
""'°""
11Hll llACH II.VD.
WlMIUIEI
894-3322
'64 J•p Station W.,on 1--------1 JNlDY car provided has '67 tram. Priv Pty tire ulne le&tber in-4-wh~ drive, beautiful con-PB, R&H, Call 54().lfOO aft-4 SPEED GTO 389 -4 barrel, Hurst HIGH PERFORMANCE q ., ' · s, itll
d'ti 25 OOJ mil Driw to er 6 p.m. trans., His a: Hera AM/FM CUSTOM CARS-M2-34l1 befOl"f! lil A.M. teri!r, atereo t1pe, aD the t~ 00~ket or ,;· tbe n>11d =~===== SPECIALISTS r1dio, 8 track stereo tape. LARGEfil SELECTION IN '&f T-BlRD Landau, full. 'PO"'· extru. $2400. U) -..m
hm. MUSTANG HIGH PERFORMANCE Xlnt -.. mod!um mil.,, ORANGE COUNTY Pr.he 54•':· ~';","' -· l l!i95. '6l NllRD, ....,.,. .. _
ONLY $1.lll -------·I LARGEST SELECI'JON IN blue botUn, white vinyl 5 lected Auto . lr"'IOJ eves. up''; $0} CASH
C•n finance all or per! Pay. 4 SPEED ORANGE COUNTY tap, white int. Take aver e '63 T-Btrd, full power. e968-1508e
"""'" .. tow •• m.oo .., SPECIALISTS CUSTOM CARS ..,.,,, ...... li48-0'"1 Center -"' --· o.m.r.
mo o.A.c. "'-'e~--' Auto ROY CARVER 13032 ""''°' Bl•d. 537-• m-rna • ELMORE HIGH PERFORMANCE ..., ......,
CUSTOM CARS Cen~r PONTIAC ... PONTIAC v"'"""· load-OON'T JUST WISH .,....... ..., TORaW>O rw ed, t.ake over m.\' pymnta mo ttdbl ID f'almilb ·Yflf# lmla
TORONADO
MCYI'ORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 894-3320
LARGESI' SELECI'lON IN 13)32 Harbor Blvd. 537-'IMG 2125 HartQ Bl., Costa ,,_ refinance. Gettlng married, .•• ftnd sreat bu)'i ta to. a.Ir and 'PO'JN!I'
OR.ANGE COUNTY .55 PLYMOlmt Station Kl6-4444 must give lt up to save,1 .::i•l1':=•:C:•"':;:fted~-=;;=:~-===M=l=!=llc:•===I Se•--t--' Auto ,_....._ money1 54G-4847 aft 5. 1 · ,_...., w..,., -oond. IUS. a.an .. °"""'1'• --·• '~ ro-•c T•mpoot Now tar.. ·-910tiN•W Caro . 15300 Beach Blvd., Wlt.mnstr Center 545--0129 0e111!!' ror 1toU1 • Rortw and "-'7W .. t Of'
13032 Harbor Blvd. 537.t6t6 nlE SUN N'EVER SETS on =Ben=tly-'-=. ==,..--,,--,~ C'llatorn waaon. Silver. X1nt
, . Claullled'1 acdon power. 1960 PONTIAC l door eood. 4 nu tire. nsoo.'
65 MUSTANG HI'. 289 VS, For an ad to •ll around berdtop, ~ tins, excel. Own.el' alt 6 p.m. 968-3138 LINCOLN
'62 CONTINENTAL A I r,
FIP, LIKE NEW. Muat 8ell.
Prv. prty. 675-55112
auto. trans. CUst. bit RIH. tl1e clock, dh1J &n.667&. cond. Sacriflce. 5.tl-6449 OfARGE m
Xlnt meeh. cond. $1295. -=='°"'=============-"=======
548-26911 New C•l'I 9IOO ~ew C•rt 9IOONew Cara
MERCURY
For Sale '68 Muatanr;
Sacrtnee! .... .,..
':8 MDtC'. St& W•r. t Paa '65 Mt.ETANG 5 cyl, auto
Gd an:I.. $98. Iran•. R Ir: H, lIT, Io w
M7-75f4 milff.p'. Gd cond. 546-5586
New C•rs 9800Now Cars -•
SHOPPING
For That Year Encl l•r9•in?
w .. 1,"'t It he foell1h •• -r1 .. 1t th d11l•r·
1hlp tt.ri ho• re"'1iMCI et th1 ••-IOMtio11 k r
fift••• y••n -tltet h•1 ,..fin ed •"' M 11<-4 ltt ....,..., ,. 1 ,_tllt t4!1t l .. lult., ,.,!Mh
CLIAUWCI DISCOUNTS rffht ,,._ .. ih
11•WM11.
The New
DODGE Awaits
YOU •••
' ••• There 1 •
warm ind .
frlondly w1lco1T1•
w11+in9 t.i vroot you et
BROOKHUR.w j '.t
DODGE ........ ut '.;:.-:!0.::) ·::o;c.<-.: . ..... ........ -
111 •AIDlll ••on IOUUVARD Uf-
AT •oot1NUUT $TlllT IH •AlDIM •aow
SNEAK PREVIEW
'69's
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25
1968 Oldsmobiles
At Final Year End
DISCOUNTS!
1.c11·9est Stock In
Orange Coamty
ty Fac+.ry eo ... t
Over 29 Executive
andD..-Canat
Even Great.,.
SAVIN.SS •••
'
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2500 HAUOR II.VD.
CO$U__,. 546-5550
9'00
.
I:
" • ~ • l , . •·
' .
t
'
'
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I ,
• I
1
I
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'
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I
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THE.RE'S NO .EXCITEMENT LIKE
• .
A REAL CLOSEOUT SALE!
... AND A REAL CLOSEOUT
SALE IS WHAT WE'RE HAVING!
STILL A GOOD SELECTION FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE: NEW
PONTIACS, TEMPEST~ GTOs, FIREBIRDS AS WELL AS
THE FINEST DEMOs AND EXECUTIVE CARS! •
FULL PRICE
'~!o~~~!.!~~~!. VS. •"to-$ 3 2 7 7
matie, pow•r 1teer1n9, radio, heater,
wh ite waf/1, factory air c:onditionin9.
FULL PRICE
'~.~~o~•!+~l~~~~owe•g l;d•. $14 7 7
power steering, radio, heater, white \
side well tires.
FULL PRICE
'~.~~~~.R!L~ST '"lom•I;,_$ 24 7 7
power 1teerin9, radio, heater, white
side waits.
FULL PRICE
'~.6 M~~~o!o~ ~~dtop. VS, hyd"-$ 2 2 7 7
metic:, power 1teer1n9, radio, heater,
white side welt tires, fa ctory a ir con·
ditioning,
FULL PRICE
'~~.!,0s!! ~d~~~~ ..... " $1977
VS , Crui1omatic, power 1teerin9, r~
dio, heat er, white walls, factory a ir
conditioning.
FULL PRICE
0
FULL PRICE
'~ .. ~~~.~~"~~·vs, '"'0 •
513 7 7
metic:, radio end h•at•r, white
sid• wall tir••·
1 PULL PltlCE
'66 PONTIAC $2577 GTO 2 Door hardtop. VB ,
automatic, pow•r st••ring,
radio, heat•r, red lin• tir•s,
factory air, 29,6'42 mile&.
'UU PRICE
'~~.~~! ~•~0~NR~; •. h .. + ••. $ 2 2 7 7
.tutomatic trans mission, full power,
fa ctory air cond it ioning.
FULL PRICE
1~6 •• ~~.! Aw~glo~~•d;o, he•+••.$ 2 8 7 7
automatic transmiss ion, power steer-
ing, factory air, tow mileage.
EYE 'EM · TRY 'EM · BUY 'EM!
The '68 Pontiacs have attracted the finHt
\ Trades! And, each
..------1'+.L.JIJ and every "Carver·
Care Car" carries
a 100°/o warranty
on engine, rear-end
and transmission
parts!
AND HERE'S A
TIP FOR THE
>
URLY BIRDS!
•
Right now toC!ay • , •
you can order your
1969 Pontiac for -fast delivery. Or
you can make _
leaH arrangement.
for your fabulou•
1969 model!
•
· mission, power sfe•rinq ,
,ULL PRICE
J~~,d~; !.:?.:. R•d;o, hH+••· 4 $ 3 5 7 7
speed trensm1ss1on, pow•r st••r-
in9, dark blu.. ·
,ULL PRICE
'65 CHEVROLET $1977
Caprice • door hardtop. V8, ower-
glide, powe r steering , rad io, ~eater,
white walls, factory air, padded
roof.
FULL PRICE.
'66 CHEVROLET $197 7
Impala Super S or+. V8, power staer-
inq , radio and ~eater, white side wall
fires .
FULL PRICE
'68 LE MANS $3 -477 Hardtop coupe. Radio, he.tter, .t ufo -
matic, power steering , fa ctory .t ir con-
ditioninq.
0
-~------~-~-----·-· --·~-~---~ --_____ ______... ---------~ --------·--------------------------------------------
v
'66 FORD 4 DOOR
Pully _..._. lnclucllnt -1r-lnt .... maon~ 1lllnl, Lie. Ht. UCIA 11('
$877 TOTAL 29 '°'" PllCI $ DOWM + TAX .. lie. PYMT. $29 "''" MTHLY.
"1'MT.
IWJI IOOK nlCI $1JtS
'65 DODOI DART
... _""" r.-,...... Lie. N1. Hile"'
s777:~': 526~· •26 1f.~'v +TAX & LIC. "YMT l'YMT.
ILUI IOOK PllCI $12SS
'64 PLYMOUTH VALIANT
IWI IOOI'. NICI $1010
'68 DODOI DART G.T.
TOTAL .........
1"'1'MT.
,..,... c..... llecll1, l'!Mfw, l'llte!Mtlc. i-,., 11r LIL He. YU-.
S1977'°'"' S67'0
"' .:'~~ I LIC. =·
MUI IOOlt l'llCI fll70
'65 PLYMOUTH IPORT PURY
t ~ Ht,.,._ ...._ ,_..., .-w .,.,,,., ....., ...,._ LIL Mt-. oYl" •
s977:~· s33= +TAX .. LIC.. f'TMT. s33::.;. O'YMT.
IWI IOOC NICI $1710
'67 MUOANG HT CPI.
51877TOT"' 563 '0
'" .::'~~a. LIC. :=. $ 6 3 !.f.-:.'Y. O'YMT.
1LU1 1001C NICI $17ft
'64 PONTIAC GRAND PflX
I Doer HlnU.._ l"w-rY ..,, .................. ....,_., _...,ftk lk.,.., IOS 111.
s677:.o;: s23::.'.:-s211~'.:.'. +TAX & LIC. l'YMT "YMT.
OPEi
l DIJS
liUI tOOK NICI Sl7JS
OILY -
lllUIU AWAY
from where you live
-ay to reach from
any area In Orange
County.
u1co11mo1a
100 DAYS
OR
4000 MILES
USID W
8UAWTEE
..':> ./
,.
DAILY '11.0T 35
COME TO OUR
ARE HERE
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
'
$1.95 On.
$59 Mo.
ORDIR YOUU HOWi
1969 BELVEDERE
s2177
l'!w Tp & LIL
$195 On.
$55 Mo.
'69 VALIANT
r~.--=-~~~r-...~ ~-ft-~ ..... lllO( '"'' ...
ORDH YOUIS NOWI
SIB& D1. S&O lo.
\
l'llllY ...,.,. _,.,..., H•IW. ...... ""9rSt
lltiMoW ........ o(y ., ........ ,,.,.,_ '"' .,.,.,,
~ --.............. frte. 2llOI.
s1997
l'IW TU I. Lk.
.
J
'66 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
I Dow Htnn.. l'KfwY ltlr, ... le, Mltv, ~le. -""'1r11. wll\dlfWI. Lie. Ne. NHKN1.
5 1777:',~' s6o~~ S60 1~'v. +TAX • LIC. PYMT. l'YMT.
IWI IOOK l'llCI $276J
'64 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR
l'~IY Mllllll'llll. Lie, Ilk HYW •
$377 TOTAL s13 TOT"-PllCI OOWM
+TAX & LIC. l'YMT. s13
IWI IOOk l'llCI $115
'68 DODOI DART G.T.
t Door Hwctt.. It ...... llHtw, .......... le. Uc. N9. VIZ &JI.
......
MTHLY.
l"YMT.
s1977:~~ i6J~' 563 1~':,. +TAJ( & LIC.. l'YMT. l'YMT •
IWI IOOK l'llCI $2705
'65 DODOI POLARA WAGON
u.clt' wnll ICIU!_,. Uc Ho. TJH 11•.
s1277 :~~&LIC.s43~;~ s43~~·
ILUI 10011: l'llCI $11'0
'64 Pll.YMOUTH 4 DOOR
11: .. o. .......... llll'llfTllltk. ~ ""1N. Lk. Ne. JIN JW.
5477'°'"' S16 ,., ... :'~~~ & Lit. ~.
IWI IOOIC l'llCI t111S
'65 CNIV. IMPALA HDTP.
.. .....
MTHlY,
l"t'MT.
·~·.'-7' •1· !:~c~.,, _.$2"•"9~:~ ;2v ... u..9. ";i;~
+ TAJC & LIC. l'YMT. ,.,MT,
IWI 100« l'l:ICI t171S
'68 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill
! Do9I' ~. ,lldwY air, ....... ....,..,,., raona. ._,.,., wlolMtlc.. Uc. H1. Vll:C na,
2677 '°'" -590 "'"' s90=•• s :'~~ & LIC. =· ~~:·
IWI IOOI( l'llCI $332J
'67 CHIVROLD 4 DOOR
l'Kterv air, r.dlo. ht-. ~k, """'11Mr1"11. Dl:Wt'f ml• 11111 -· Lie. Ne. TVK 111 •
.. 5 1477:',~ s49= s49=~-• TAJ( & L1C. ,.,MT. l'YMT.
IWI IOOIC ma ftJ20 ,
'64 PORD 4 DOOR
lt..,11. llll!fw, an.Mtlc. Uc. NI HIM '71. s577:': 519 = s19 ~.:.~. + TA.X & LIC, l'YMT. l"YMT,'
IWI IOOIC Pita StlJ
'64 DODOI 4 DOOR
ltMtt, """'' fllfomltk. Lie. Ho. Ne.I.... ! s477:': S16 = S16' :.~;,. +TAX a LK. ,,.,MT. P"t'MT.
1W1 IOOIC ,_q t1111 ,/
\ •
t
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I
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,>
-~ -~ ---~ --~. -,._ ·~ ........... --....__ --, ___ ----------- ----_______________________________________ _. ....
_ • .,..,,....,._...,._......,~--"'7 ~··~~·~ .. ,. .• r••::.::::r""""""''""""~""'_,._..,,.r,...,..•"'l"'l .. ••l'"'F-••,.o .. wr»PO;,.a .. u""u.,o .. o•a"'o"'o-•o ••••'""*'"'''""' ,.. •• _.,,.....,...,.,........., -= ----= .,..,.""'!':""":,~! ""'"'"'"'"'•-' ••"":v,...,,......., ........ ..,...~ ......... ~-"":i-1
H DAILV PILOT
"
Frldly, Stpttmbf!' 20, 1968 •
I ·$
'
I
I
'
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•
YOU CAN STIU CHOOSE FROM
20 TRUCK LOADS OF
BRAND ~EW 1968's
DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY
AND
THE FACTORY SAYS
SELL THEM!
IF YOU MISSED OUT • • • HURRY ON DOWN
SAVE NOW LIKE NEVER BEFORE! . THIS VIRT UALLY EVER,Y MO DEL AVAILABLE IN
A VARIETY O F COLORS & EQ UIPME NT IS A
BOOMER!
USED CAR SUPERMARKET
'
WE'RE SWAMPED WITH OUTSTANDING TRADE·INSI
PRICES SLASHED TO CLIAR THIS WEEKEND!
'60 FORD Pickup ........ $49S· '67 FORD Custom 4 Door $149S
f.100 'h. To11 Fl••hid• Ml1166. 20% down or <f cir. V-1, .1uto. fr.1111. No. PJ717, 2 07:. down .,
tr•d•. S2l per mo., 24 mon#11. tr•de. $45 p•r mo., J6 mo11th1.
• Transportation Specials • '63 FORD Custom ...... $39S
Now •¥1r.19in9 II Cl '1 p•r week •nd now c•n be 4 door. VI, •utom•tic, r1dio, httl•r. IOTUI04) Tix
,.t1lltd •I wliol•11le to th1 public, lttt tht d1tl·
t r1 011 th•t• old1r c1r1.
l lic1n1• do-or trtd1 $21 p•r mo., 24 mo.
SAVE!! '67 MUSTANG VS "". $1995 . -
. . $99S I Auto., R&H, PS, f1ct, w1rr1nty . IVCL0781 '" '65 MUSTANG Hordtop down or fr1d1 $54 p•r mo., l6 mo.
Coup•. Fully 1quipp1d, 111tom1tie, r1dio. li1 1!1r,
pow1r 1t11ri•t· ATA 15]. 20'1. down or tr1d1 $35 '67 Lincoln ............ $399S p1r mo., 10 month1.
4 Or. Full powlr, 1ir cond. IUJC270l 20"4 down or
'64 FORD Custom 4 Door $495 1 tr1d1 $106 p1r mo., l• 1110.
V-1, 111to. fr1n1. NOV-704. 20 1. down or tr1d1. $25
'67 MUSTANG VS ...... $1995 p1 r mo .• 24 mo11tli1.
'64 THUNDERBIRD H.T. .$1395 H.T. Cp1 .. Auto., PS, R&H. !VCL071l. F1ctory
Fully 1quipp1d. l l1ck top. (WOEI Ill 20'1. down or
w1rr1nty. 20.,, down or tr1cl1 $54 p1r mo. l ' mo.
tr1d1 $51 c•r mo ., 24 mo. '64 Ford Squire Waqon .$1395 '64 RAMBLER Wa9on .... $S95 Country Squir1 9 pau. Air cond., VI, auto., PS.
460 11ri11. Equipped. !UJI 974 1. 201. down " !10Y247l 20 % down or tr1d1 $51 p1r mo. 24 mo.
trede, $)9 C:' m1., 24 monlli1,
..... $795 '62 CHEVY II ..........• $595 '63 VOLKSWAGEN
2 Or. 01lux1. fGM'f4ll). 201. down or trade. $JI 4 Or. A11to., RIH. IJO'l'SlO l 20% down or lr1d1 p1r mo. 24 montli1. $25 per mo., 24 mo.
'65 FORD Pickup ........ $99S '67 T -BIRD Landau ... " $3S95
4 door. Air eond., fact. werr1nty, full power. (TS'f F·100 'h. Ton lont bid Fle1hide. (Pl516!). 20i'. Ill ) 20?:. down or tr1de, $96 per mo., 36 mo. down or trade $35 per mo ., 10 month1,
'65 PLYMOUTH Wa9on . $1295 '62 T-Bird . . . . . . . . . ...• $695
Va1ient v.200. Auto., RIH, 1ir eond. tRRil7ll Convertibl1. lo1d1d. No. 610A. 201. down or h 1d1
20 % down or t..1d1 $4' per mo. 10 mo. $19 per mo .• 24 mo.
'63 T-BIRD H.T. . "" ... $S95 '64 WILLYS Jeep ..... :$129S
R1d/r1d inl1rior. lo1d1d. !IG0]58) 20'4 down or W19on11r. 4 wh1el driv1. No. 154A. 20~ down or
tr1d1 $17 ptr mo., 24 mo. tred1 $54 p1r mo., 24 mo.
WAGONS
MUSTANGS ,,
•,
!:pit.
CORTINAS C'.t.r CUSTOMS
WE HAVE ROW UPON ROW OF NE W '68's
HERE NOW • • • JUST AS THEY CAME
OFF Of, THE TRUCKS ••• TO BE SOLD '
REGARDLESS OF PROFIT! TAKE YOUR
PICK • • • WE'LL HA VE IT READY FOR
DELIVERY IN LESS THAN TWO HOURS!
If you've l1iou9ht you couldn't afford a new car this year, check the
EASY FINANCING WE'RE OFFERING DURING THIS
FINAL SELL-OFF of '68 M ODLES
LISTED BELOW ARE SOME OF FINANCE SOURCES AVAILABLE:
UNITfD CALIFORNIA BANK • BANK Of AMERICA • SECURITY FIRST NATIOHAl
NEWPGRT NATNlKAl • COMMERCIAL NATIONAL .
SALES DEPARTMENT HOURS PARTS & SERVICE HOURS PARTS ONLY \ e A.M. to 9 p M MONDAY . FRIDAY e SATURDAY 6 A.M. to 6 PM. 7 AM TO 9 PM MONDAY e 7 AM TO 6 PM TUE SDAY FRIDAY B A~ TO & PM SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAVS
• -' J \
~ -~ -------------------·------.............. -.. -·--------. --------------.................... --.----~----
-" ----
-"
·-· ---
-•
-. -. -
. =-----
DICK NABERS, A SPORTS
M IN D ED AUToMoBILE
DEALElt, IS TH! SUBJECT
OP D 0 R 0 T H Y P I E R'S
MEET THE PEOPLI FEA-
TURE C>N PAGE 3.
LIVELY THEATER, MUSIC
AND SPECIAL E V E N T S,
SE? FOR THE LOS ANGE·
LES AND OUT OP TOWN
ARIAS ARE COVERED IN
KRISTIN GOFF'S UPTOWN
THEATER ROUNDUP COl·
UMN ON PAGE 13. LOCAL
LIVE THEATER IS LISTED
ON PAGES 2 AND 14.
MAHY OF THE R&STAU·
RANTS IN THE ORANGE
COAST AREA SPECIALIZE
IN F AM I L Y D I N I HG
WHERE A MAN MA
TAKE HIS WIFE AND
CHILDREN OUT FOR
TREAT AND STILL HAVI
SOME FOLDING MONE
LEFT OVER. OUT 'N
ABOUTER TELLS ABOU
A FEW OF THEM IN T
DA Y'S COLUMN, ALON
WITH OTHER NEWS OF
THE DINE 0 U T S C EN E
. PAGES I THROUGH 11
-
'
WEEKENDE ·R
t
•
Special Evenl8
CONCERT -Singer Rod McKuen will perform at
Melodyland, 10 Fre«lman Way, Anaheim to-
night, Sept. 2.o at 8:30 p.m. and Sat., Sept 21
at 7 and 10 p.m. Tickets range from $UO to
$5.50, available at the Melodyland box office or
Walllch.s Music City st.en. Phone 7'16-74«> for
further information.
IQ: FOLUES -An lee ataUng revue, the Ice Fol-
lies, will be staged at tbe Forum, Manchester
at Prairie, Inglewood, through Oct. &. Perfor.
mances: Tues through Fri. 8 p.m.; Sat. 1, S
and 9 p.m., and Sun. 1:30 and 5;30 p.m.
Tickets, priced from $2.50 to $5, are available
by mail from the Forum box office and ticket
agencies. Phone (213-1) 673-1300.
OPEN-AIR CONCERT -A pops concert will be
conducted Friday nights at 9:15 p.m. through
Sept. 'r1 ln the Fashion Island Center Mall.
Pacific Coast Highway at MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Beach. The Pops Concert <m:hestra
1s under the direction of Henry Brandon. There
la no admission charge. See picture, Page 3.
TEEN DANCE - A dance for high school aged
Westminster teenagers will be held each Fri.,
from 8 p.m. to midnight ln the Community
Services Building of the Civic Center, 8140
Westminster Ave., Westminster. A live band
will provide music. Admission $1.50.
DATE NIGHT J\ND BIRmDA y PARTY -A date
night at Disneyland, 1313 S. Harbor Blvd .. Ana·
heim is scheduled for Sat., Sept. 21. Five big
dance bands plus a show staring comedian
Pat Paulsen will be the special attractions dur·
ing the 9 p.m. to 1 a.rn. gala evening. Regular
admission prices will be in effect. Mickey
Mouse's 40th birthday will be celebrated with
a 4 p.m. parade Sunday, Sept. 22. Presents
for youngsters under 12, and a birthday cake
will also add to the occasion. Phone 533-4456.
See feature on Page 4
MAGIC SHOW -The "Great Kirkham" wilJ per·
form magic feats in a show at the 0 r a n g a
Coast College Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa on Sat., Sept. 21 at 8 p.m. Tickets
are on sale at the door , $1.75 fur adults, $1 for
children.
IWRSE SROW, ART FESTIVAL -A quarter
horse show will be held at Rancho California,
Highway 395 midway between Riverside and
San Diego, one mile north of Temecula on
Sept. 21 and 22. An art festival of paintings
done by Southern California artists wi11 also
be on display this weekend. The.re is Do ad.mis-
sion charge.
CATAIJNA FESTIVAL -The annual Catalina Art
Festival ls scheduled for Sept. 21 through 23
along Crescent Avenue beside the bay at Ava·
Jon on Catalina Island. Over 500 artists, many
from the Orange Coast, are expected to exhibit
their work.
"~ ,.,
GUIDE TO FUN
Special Events
LA. COUNTY FAIR -The Los Angeles County
Fair, one of the largest in the country, will be
held llt tbe fairgrounds in Pomona through
Sept. 29. Rides, handicraft uhlbttl, Hvestock
shows and exhlbits plus entertainment and
harness races wlll be featured. ·
' AN'nQUE SHOW -An antique abow and 1ale will
be held in the Long Beach Municipal Auditor·
ium, 270 E. Seaside Drive, Long Beach, Sept.
26 through Sept 29. Hours: Thurs. through Sat.
noon to 11 p.m., Sun., noon to e p.m.
Coming Up
DANCE -Big Brother and the Holding Company
plus the Morning Glory will provide music for
a dance in Campus Hall at UCI, 7601 Irvine St .•
Irvine,, beginning at 8 p.m. Admission $3.50,
students $2.50.
LYRIC OPERA -The Laguna Beach Lyric Opera
Association presents "La Boheme" by Puccini
Sept. 'r1 and 28; Mozart's "Marriage of Figaro"
on Oct. 11 and 12 in the Irvine Bowl, &SO Laguna
Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Tickets priced
-from fl.50-$7.00, available at the Irvine box
office or phone 494-0709.
BENEFIT BALLET -Gene Marinaccio and his
American Concert Ballet Company will dance
"Adagio for Strings" and "The Fifth Day."
The Rosalia Holland Dancers wDl present
"Aurora's Wedding", "Gaite Pati&ienne" and
"Excursions into Jazz" in a be~fit ballet con·
cert for the Rehabilitation Center in Orange on
Sal, Sept. 28 in the Garden Grove High School
auditoriutn. 11271 Stanford, Garden Grove. Cur·
tain time 7:30 p.m. Tickets, $3 for adults, $1.50
for children, available at the Garden Grove
High School auditorium box offtce. Phone 538-"
0320 for further information.
DCXIELAND AT DISNEYLAND -Louis Arm·
strong and his band plus, Turk Murphy's Jazz
Band, Santo Pecora's New Orleans All Star,
Teddy Buckner and his band and Pete Loft-
house's Second Story Men with Barbara Kelly
will star in the annual one-night jazz festival at
Disneyland, 1313 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim.
Sat., Sept. 28 from 8:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. on--
limited use of park attractions will be avail-
able for a single admission price. Advance
tickets. $6, on sale at all branches of the Ban1t
of America and Walllcbs Music City store. At
the gate, Sept. 28, tickets are $'1.50. Hours: open
witil 6 p.m. tonight, Sept. 20; Sat., 9 a.m. to
midnight ; Sun. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Closed Mon.
and Tues., open Wed. through Fri., JO a.m. to
6 p rn . Phone ~.
SURFBOARD CHAMPIONSHIPS -The 11th an-
nual United States Surfboard Championships
will be held near Huntington Beach Pier, ofi
Pacific Coast Highway, OD Sept. 28 and 29.
Events begin at e a.m. both daya and eod at
2 p.m. There Is no admission charge.
HYPNonsr -Pat Collina, the hip hypnotist, will
entertain on the Melodyla.od Theatre stage, 10
Freedman Way, Anaheim on Sept. 30 begin·
Ding at 8:30 p.m. Tickets, from $2.50 to $4.50,
aYailable at the Melodyland box oUlce or Wal·
Ucha MU!ic City store. ~ 716-7460.
(
Things to Do
JIAR,JWR CRUISE -Boat toor1 of Newport H~
bor'a bistorfcll 1itet1 famous houses, blandt
and polW of 1ntere9t leave daily at 2 p.m.
from the Fu.11 Zone Dock, between Palm ancl
Main Sta., Balboa Island. Tickets fQr a 90-mJn.
ute cruiJe, adults, $2; children 5-12, ti, young-
lters ~r S, free. Phone 873-0'24.0 for further
information. ·
AtrroMO'l1VB MUSEUM -Brlgi1 Cunningham
Automotive Museum located at 250 Baker Street,
et the corner of Red Hill, Oosta Mesa. Houri:
10 a.m. to $ . p.m. daily. Musewn features a
collection of vintage, cla88ic, racing and 1portl
cars pl~ engine disPJay11. Adnllssion, adults
$1.85, students and military 85c, children under
10 free. Phone 546-7660.
Sports
ANGELS BASEBALL -Calllornla Angels vs the
Minnesota Twins, Sept. 23, 24., 2.5 at 8 p.m.;
Chicago White Sox, Sept. 'IT, 28 at 8 p.m., Sept.
29 at l p.m. In the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 state
College Blvd., Anaheim. Ticket. available in
Orarige County at United Calil. Banks and Wal-
llchs Music City stores. Phone 633-2000.
DODGERS -The Los Angeles Dodgers vs the •
St. Louis Car4inals Sept. 20 at 8 p.m. Sepl 21,
22 at 1 p.m. in Dodgers' Stadium, 1750 Stadium
Way, Loil Angeles. Tickets available locally at
Wallkhs Music City stm-e.
COVER: Bruce Yarnell and Karan Arm·
strong will sing the lead roles in the "Marriage
of Figaro" when it is produced by the Lyric
Opera Association in Irvine Bowl, Laguna &ecb,
on October 11 and 12. The season ope(}(!r "La
Boheme," will be on stage September 27 and 28.
See feature on Pages 6 and 7.
GoJde to Fun
Meet the People
Pops Concert
Garden Note1
Dtsneyland Date Night
Dtsigner'1 Notebook
Lyric Opera Season
Oat 'N' About
New Zealand's Maori Art
Uptown Theater Roundup
Current Art Exhibits
Movies
ORANGE COAST
September !O, lMS
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page a, '1
Pages 8-11
Page 12
Page 13
Page 13
Page. 13-15
MAGAZINE
Ofwt .. CNst Wl!lll&M>l!lt IMMmo. 11 ,.II_. 'l'Wan h .. -'*' ei Ille DAILY f'ILOT .-, tlle OAltte CMal f'Rlla.lliflt Ce~
..._..,, S.tdl, .._. ...... IMdl, Celle Mell, ~ IMdl. ..... llllM1w 1"4 ,_.... ¥1llly, Ca'"'"'la.. ...,_, ..... ~ .. ,
t171, ,._, ~ c.lt"-11 '2.U..
Pbo11e 14.2-43:!1
Lucy Be.ll Editor
He's A . Ter:'ni~-Playin' Cycle-Ridin' Auto Man
Corona del Mar resident, Dick Nabers, started in his chosen field as
a salesman and worked bis way up until now he is prince of all he surveys
at his own posh automobile agency in Costa Mesa.
. Born in Chicago, he was reared in North Hollywood and was "1'adu·
ated from North Hollywood High School in 1943. After three years m the
merchant marine he enrolled in tlhe college of commerae at USC, but by the
end of hls junior year he was too anxious to get out into the business com·
munity to stay in school any longer.
His first job was as a salesman in a Chevrolet agency. A ~r later
he s~rted selling Oldsmobiles and Cadillacs in Glendale where, during the
Pops Concert
Conductor Henry Brandon delighted youngster• with the first ol three con-
certs last Friday in the Fashion Island Center Mall. He'll do the 11me tonight,
September '-0, and September 'r1 with fret under-the-1tar1 family concerti
beginning at 9:15 p.m.
JMet*t ...._O .. J'-Y PILOT
Prl~,JW .... ~JN,
next 18 yem he worked up from salesman through nles and management
positions into the general management of the agency.
AD that time Dick had visions of operating his own dealership and
in 1964 applied for a franchise. It was not until three years1ater, howeYer,
that he received a hint that his dream might not be far off. ~n through
nuances the Cadillac organization informed him he was the number one
capdidate to receive their kanchise, the first totally new one to be given
in Southern California since World Warn.
From then on it was Dick's responsibility to look for land and set
about planning the building of the facilities. September 18, just a year ago,
the Nabers' agency actually received its franchise and qpened its doors in
time to sell tlie new 1968 models. An instant success, they sold 100 new
cars in the first three months.
Dick is particularly pleased with the location and the facilities &f the
agency. "Harbor Boulevard is actually an auto bazaar where buyers are
able to go from one '1ealer to another. We have four acres of land which
enables us to grow quickly and easily. We can keep pace with the market
at a minimum of e>q>ense for expansion," said the youthful apearing, red·
haired dealer.
Already looking toward the future, the cliwic·styled, cement building
features a subteNanean show room where 25 cars can be displayed at once
out of the dust and rain. -.
As much as Dick likes Cadillac, there is another vehicle in his Uf&-
the motorcycle. He likes to get up before sunrise on weekends and cruise
up the backroads such as the Ortega highway to Elsinore on his big Harley
David~on.
''I go 50 or 100 miles, stop and have breakfast, then come home be-
fore any traMic is out. It is a real release from tension. In the evening when
I come home from work, I take off into the Irvine Ranch for an hour before
dinner," he explained. ,.,,
Also a tennis fan who plays three or four times a week, Dick is a
member of the ws Angeles Tennis Club, the Newport, Costa Mesa and Huntin~n Beach Chambers of Commerce and the lfoard of Governors ot
the Balooa Bay Club.
He and his wile, Peggy Lee, whom he met while attending USC, have
two childr~n1~ Rick 17 and Kathy 15, who both are enrolled at Corona del
Mar High ~ool.
Io his elegant domain, Dick Nabers is a jolly monarch with a strong
business sense and an interesting affection for those be serves.
t
-Dorothy Pier
Do You Want To Be A CheP.
Htr• •• lust SOM• of tlle probl81U you would llOYe (lMft we'I Mlv• tll• for r•.>
I, Yo• prepare for 200 encl SO come. 2. You preptrt fo r IO 111cl 200 co111e (yl)u c111't wl11t ,
I. Your 11l1cl 9ree11s ere olcl encl wlltecl. 4. Your French frit1 wo11't brow11. 5. Your bekl11t
pot1tot1 cllcln't beke throu9h. 6. You ce11't strve fr11h n9eteblt1 boceu11 they're too high,
A11cl, we uulcl 10 011 encl on.
Here h tlle Wf1J IMlyl .. from Newport PrMuce would solve yow probl1M1.
1. It cloe111't metter how meny you prepere fM, we ce11 r111h ''"" to yeu " we dellnr 111
dey, enrycley, Hcept Tut1d1yl Se let t+i1111 111 ahow op, y111'r1 prtperecl •• , lly
telll111 u1I J. Your ulecl 9r .. 111 are frt1her lleceu11 you dtn't hen to l>uy tlirte or four
cl1y1 ehHd. We clellver everycleyl J. 011r potetot1 are No. I ltu"th • , • they l>row11I
4. Our bekers are No. I ldehon ••• t+iey baktl I. Wt h•n It nrletlH of frtth ve9e•
tal>le1 encl tt.ey'rt chHptr tha11 frtHll encl whet e dlfferenct In tut.I
CotlpCMI speclah ...... w ... r -.=Im -• -a;,, -• J~,-;L;;l:-1
I Artichokes I Peppers I Oranye:. I
I I OC .. I I 0 ,., 25' I t!. i:sJ.. I
Llmlt-4 I LIMIT-11 I LIMIT-1 CARTON
'
wlttt tttll cwpon WITH THll COUPON WITH THll COUPON I --------------~ c..,.. IJplr• Sept ..... 2ltll
Thtst fine restaurant. demand the flnHt for tftelr customer• -1'e Pow W....
H•--INQ, Pirates D....C.OM d.e M•, H...._Ntwpeirt .._., TM '°'U:-Newpert ..a. lel•y -and over 200 othert. How about you c•ll•
ln9 1?
PHONlt
673-1715
CLOSID TUUDAYS NOWI
NEWPORT
PRODUCE
Or.mftCtQ8f(I..._
............... 01; t,,.
2616 N..,...
IW. ....
P11lnr .. 1
Ofwllftet..e. ...... ,, .
GARDIN NOTES
Why .. N.ot Plant Some
Now is the time to put in spring flowering bulbs. Almost everyone
ts famillar with the usual bulbs tQ be planU?<t now such as daffodil~ Dutch
iris hyacinths anemones and ranunculus. Why not try an unusual kind of
bulb or two thls fall?
There are a number of lesser known bulbs that are not overly expen-
sive and are either pretty or interesting or both.
One of my easy to grow favorites is the alstroemeria or Pemvian lily.
Plant the tubers in part shade with a lot of bumus mixed into the soil. The
plants grow from two to three feet tall and bear clusters of Jong-lasting
flowers that come in shades of pink, orange, yellow, red and occasionaDy
white.
Alstroemeri11 resent transplanting and will not bloom too well the
first year -but they will bloom some. In future years they ttoWard with
ever-increasing dumps and great masses of colorful flowers in late spring.
One of tM most unusual bulbs ls the climbing brodiaea. This plant
has a flower that is similar to the native Calif omia 'brodiaea commonly called
Blue Dick;s or Califorpia Hyacinth. The flower however is on a flower stalk
that climbs. Mind you it is not the plant that climbs but the flower stem.
It will twine around a pole or string to a height of three to five feet reaching
for sun. Plant it in part shade in well drained soil and it will live for years
never ceasing to intrigue with its unusual growtlb habil
The Mariposa lily or Calochortus is a California native. The flowers
have been hybridized so they come in a wide variety of colors from pure
whlte to dark red and range from three to five inches in diameter. Since it
is a California native one would think it would be easy to grow ,here-unless
one is familiar with California natives in the garden.
California natives resent summer watering so should be planted where
they get good drainage and no summer irrigation. The calochortus will
bloom the first spring after they are planted in the fall. Future bloom de.
pends on the summer care and location in the garden. However one year's
bloom is worth the cost and troubie.
The Pineapple lily is s~alled because the flower stalk is surrounded
by numerous small greenish whlte flowers and topped with a tuft cl leaves.
The whole effect is very much fike that of a pineapple. The bulbs are easy
to grow in the garden or as potted plants. The flower stalks will grow from
18 inches to three feet depending on the variety.
-Don Horton
I P•t Pau1Mn "c1mpalgn1n on the Dlaneyltnd Tomorrowl1ncl St1ge Saturday •
..... Cillf 'l•flf•
Unusual BulbS This . .fall?
Mariposa Liiy Is A Native
PAT PAULSEN ON STAGE FOR
DISNEYLAND SUMMER ~INALE
The final sha-bang of Disneyland's star studded summer ta1cea
place this Saturday aoothe perk then swings into its fall season, with
the heaviest fall entertainment schedule in its history.
Comedian Pat Paulsen, still running strong in his "presidential
campaign" will appear on the Tomorrowland Stage as part of the
Dmneyland Date Nite entertainment Saturday, September 21. Paulse!3
who announced bis candidacy for president during the early primary
elections, bu since then soared to popularity with satirical political
.Speeches, press conferences and witty non-solutions to national prob-
lems.
Sam Riddle will serve as master of ceremonies at the show•
scheduled for 9 and 11 p.m. Other entertainment will include singers,
the Mustangs and the Disneyland dancers.
From 9 p.m. to the 1 a.m. closing, five big band$ will provide
music for dancing throughout the park.
Sunday, September 22 brings a big birthday party for a great
little guy. Mlckey Mouse will celebrate his 40th birthday with a par-
ade at .f p.m. Bands, dancers, a birthday cake and present. for each
youngster under 12 wm add sparkle to this delightful anniversary.
Di.Deland at Disneyland will return to the Megtc Kingdom
September 28 featuring Louts Armstrong and ten of the world's great..
est lr.mdS.
Beginning September 23, the park will be closed Mondays and
Tuesdays; open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Wednesdays through Fridays and
9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays.
~~fl IW&.)' PtUrt
Fi+aii, .... '" .. '"'
E
-•
DE-51.GN.ER'S
Upholstered Furniture
BY ~· RUSSELL TUMELSON, ORANGE ~OUNTY DESIGNER-DECORATOR
In these days of mechanical pro.
duction, increased automation and
widespread confusion among bomemak·
ers about conflicting claims in furniture
pieces, it is worth relattng briefly a
series of true quality earmarks in up-
holstered items.
1. Look for 1m•ll we~lng. The pip-
ing or )Velting &lmost universally used
in good upholstery 11 set in a seam.
The smaller the welts, the straighter the
seam ls likely to be. Coarse welting
more easily obscures careless sewing.
Double welting, commonly pointed out
as a mark of true custom craft, fre-
quentiy obscures a stapled or an outline
edging of brads in lieu of hand sewing.
2. Look •II erouhd a piece of upbol·
stered furniture. Look for evenness of
boxings, those panels of upholstery
fabric around the edges of cusbiOllJ and
sometimes across the tops of backs,
arms. or facing of the platform (lower
section), of sofas and chairs. These box-
ings will commonly occur between
parallel weltings and if they are intend.
ed to be parallei they should be truly
so. The outside ends and back areas
should generally be padded under the
covering.
3. Look with c•r• at the seat cush-
ions, if any, or feel the loose back pil-
lows and require th~ sales person to
tell you their inner contents. In most
states there ls a legal reRU!ation for
inner stuffing of bedding ancl upho16tery
with the true contents set forth on an
attached label.
NEXT WEEK: CHAIR BACKS
.
Please address Inquiries encl questions by letter to: Designtn Noteboo~,
WMkender Magazine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beech, C.tfornia.
~tllll 'letftl" OIA 'f Nlo'I c......., .. ,.,.,
HOBBY CINTIR FOR MOM AND DAD
The hobby room, above leta Mom and Dad pursue their leisure time activ-
iti.Es separa~Jy or togeiher. A partition separates the two principal hobby
a:reas. The desk section provide$_ a convenient spot for work with sfamp, coin
or art conecUons, while the adjoining workshop is ideal for Dad's wood work·
ing hobby. The area, partially shown In tile foreground, provides a table for
board games cards or other leJsur~ Ume reluatfons. Rough textured panels
complement lbe beams providing an informal settin&.
FAMILY FUN ON TWO LEVELi
The family, below, enjoys togethernesa with a difference. The bi·fevel room
puts ~ billiards on an elevaUon, lellviag another level lor reading, muato
and conversation. The carpeted floor In the bllllard area belpt reduce nolae
and add! a pleasant touch to the room ~ch also features reeeued lighting,
a beamed ceilins1 and contrasting wall pantling. For a booklet ChoWing
room's construction, send a postcard to Muonlte, Box B, Chicago, llllnoll
60690. Request form 6820. Masonite Corporation manufactures the wall pan·
eling shown in both pictures.
-... , • I
TWO
t ' r
-... ., ~ 1111"'" ---._r -... c..r,.
OPERAS
•
SCHEDULED
·LA BOHEME SET
FIGARO, AND 21:
FOR SE ·PT.
OCT. 11,
27
12
The Lyric Opera Association of Orange County will present two
operas this season in Irvine Bowl, Laguna Beach. Puccini's "La Boheme"
\Vil.I be performed on September 27 and 28 and Mozart's "Marriage of Fig·
aro" on October 11and12.
David Lloyd, tenor, will sing the role of Rudolfo in the first produc-
tion opposite Karen Armstrong's Mimi. She will do the part of Susanna op-
posite baritone Bruce Yarnell in the second opera with Andree Jordan
&inging Cherubino.
Lloyd has sung with most of the major orchestras in the country in-
cluding the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He also has been featured in music
festivals in Edinburgh, Prades, Athens, the Glyndebourne Opera and his
concert tours have taken him all over the world. In addition he bas ap-
peared in numerous television productions.
Bruce Yarnell is no stranger to Orange County having appeared at
Melodyland. He has sung leading z:oles in "Carmen," "Tosca," "Lulu" and
''Falstaff." He has appeared in "Anne Get Your Gun," "Unsinkable Mollv
Brown," "Carousel," "Show Boat," "Bye Bye Birdie," "Oklahoma/'
"South Pacific" and "Kiss Me Kate."
Karan Armstrong, a member of the Metropolitan Opera Company
receMly completed her debut with the Santa Fe ·Opera where she sang the
role of Adina in "Elisir d' Amore". She bas performed in the Lake George
Opera Festival and sung with the Memphis and Milwaukee Florentine
Opera Companies.
1 Andree Jordan appeared in Laguna Beach last year in "Romeo and
Juliet." She is a winner in the regional finals of the Metropolitan Opera and
a finalist in the San Francisco Opera auditions.
Miss Jordan, a mezzo sop,rano, includes in her repertoire the operas
"Barber of Seville," "Carmen, ' "Cosi Fan Tutti," "Rigoletto," "Salome,"
"La Traviata" and "Die Fledermaus," plus several oratories.
Others appearing in the operas are Alan Gilbert, Carol Kirkpatrick,
John Beauchhamp, Bruce Tuthill, William Felber and Dick Kuykendall in
''La Boheme." · ·
In "Figaro" Marvin Klebe, Nancy Bramlage1 John Beauchamp, Mar-
vene Cariaga, Matilyn lnle1'1andi, Robert Behan and Bru.ce Tuthill will be
heard.
Eugene Ober ls musical director and conductor; Howard Graham is
the stage director and Barry McGee is the set designer and handles the
lighti.ng.
Jack Coleman ls the chorus master; Donald Bess costume director
and, Bliss Herbert guest stage director.
Karan Armstrong, above,
a member of the Metro-
politan Opere Company,
recently made h•r debut
with the Sant• Fe Oper•
Company In the role of
Adil)• In "Ellslr d'Amore.''
For ticket information see Guide to Fun, Page 2.
,_ She will sing the part of
Mimi In "L• Boh•me" •t
Legun•.
Alan Gilbert, no strang•r
to Orenge County •udl·
ence1, will do the role of
Marcello In la Boheme,
September 22 and 28.
Davlcl Lloyd, who Is cast In
th• role of Rudolfo In "La
Boheme," hat 1un9 with
most of the maJor orches-
tr,. .Jn the country f nclud·
Ing the Lot Ant•IH Phil-
harmonic.
~-~~-~~--~~--~.--~~~--~----------.._,--~-------------------~------------------------~
LYRIC OPERA SEASON IN LAGUNA
Keren Armstrong H Su1AM4a In "Merri .. • of Flgero."
MHadlt htllli •tLY ~T
FrlOY,~~,lf, 1'61
Bnlce Y ernell sings the role of Flgere fn "Merrie,• of Figaro."
AndrM JOnlM pl.ya Cherubino In "Figaro." --c..1 Wiii If '1
f I
Of cou.ne a kind woRI'• in order and It
ls ottered here for none other Utan that olcl
favorite, the Sizzler.
• I '
: .. · ..•.. :
, I • • • .. -' .
I • ! • l t . . . , .
Two Sizzlera in the Ora:qe Cout area
more than fill the blll. One'• on 17th Street
near Santa Ana Avenue ln Cotta Mesa, the
either on Beach BOulevard at Main Street in
Huntington Beach. Both are tp0rtlng newly
redecorated dining rooms and both are adroit
at handing out the sturdy-buwtmple Sizzler
bill of fare.
Basically, Sizzlers dlih out lteak and
ground round. You're served caf«eria style,
10 if tipping is one of your han.g-upe, you're
off the hook here. The ate.ab are modest
·'
'•
. ·. i
. .
--.. ilii
FAMILY STEAK HOUSES
Huntington Beach • Costa Mesa
Make Monday Night ----
Your Family Night!
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
lnclwclea ••••d er Fre11ch Frle4'
lletetoei, Roll A h tter.
Clllld""' Pertlon YI l'rlcl
Mid-Week Special----
Wednesday Nights Onlyl
NIWYORK '
STEAK 24 ....
$1.lt
HUNTIN•TON llACH I COSTA MESA
TOWN • COUHTitV I HILLGHM -.UAlta ,_ ........... ...... IHINO TaXACO ITAnoM ----.... .. ""' . ..... ... ..,..
• •Jo. • • . . . .
. . ..
I
' .. ") .. )
·· ................... _ ...... _____ _
Uc!, but ~wf. .:m....e. ~ e:.JCMl ~·fib:· .. :,~~~
range, ~ lldoia wtcla .,a e&l'fe. J · French ldee -..A ........ .t i • ..... I ..... ._., .... _, ~ la • . ..,.. .. . l OD ,~ .. 1 'llll-• • ~ ..,.I•• ' . t • " • •' • ~ lleUI an HJ!Ved ·OD ....... Jaiot J • metal~S,lffl."*is-falt·Jnd-l'L • ; '. ·~
.. ' Satisified CUBtomers · · · · ' · ·
One Out 'n' About nader advises:
"Wf're a · family iof tour, my bml>Ud
and I and our &1?1,-U, and aon, I. We try. to
eat out once a w~ so I often wait for Mon-
day -that'• Sizzler's special night and the
best steak 11 only ,1.09. Our check, for salad,
drinks and all ls just about an even '5.
"I'll bet there aren't many familla our me that can eat cd for a five dollar blll
these days.11 •
*· True ~. ond, °' w Mid, kind tDOt'cb ' are in order. · '
TWe &..c4ltlw • • •
COSTA MESA e..... ef .... ,,. & Mnl
540. 3641
OtW i..c.tk1 -....... leecll
CLOSED MONDAY
Howdy and Art Present
THE NEW LOOK
JOSEF'S
• Quiet . • • Private Dining Area
• New Cocktail and Dance Area
• Private Banquet and Party Room
Drop 111 50011 ••• We thi11• yo11'll li•• tho "Hew Look"
* Luncheon • Dinner • Late Supper
2121.1. COAST HIGHWAY
At The J1m1cl1 Inn
COlONA DR MAI 67J-11IO
INJOY DINING AT
SCHIOEDER·'S
STEAK HOUSE
Formerly the Chet's Inn
FIATUllN&: STEAK e CHICKEN e LOBSTER
AND IAR-B·Q'D RIIS
HOUSI SPICIALTYt 11 OZ. T-IONI S11AI
• NOW PLAYIN•
MAIK DAVIDSON TRIO
WDNaaAY ntn IUMIAY -
o,....,....,.Tl11hp .,.. ...... ,4 ....
Jlt1 IAIT COAl't HIMWAY -COIOMA llL MAI
..... & ..... ,.,.,., • 6n.t47t
, ' I
..
Gift Of ~ Ca5tu•, · l
I ~ ·'
Amoept .,.. who ......... lip la ...
f'l'alll8 Cqut area theN 11 a dilerrnAMe ~ ... ~s· ~······ trtendi fi'C; the . .00 ·OW · · Keei .Ht oC ·. the ~ plM.il, 'tecj · .' ' ·.tr·. '.: ... ' ... . ' .,. '
It'• hardlr the ~ · ot clrlnt ~ 0ne RPI or cuzile. ttrai&bt. but.:..Jnbecl wWi a
compuiolaable ~. it'•, a ie1JCb*M chanf~ Mr item.. . -
~ often, 'eUr 1>art8lcler fritindt afttH, it'• beln& ordered t.n the fonn ol a m.,.,..
rita (not margueritE, u tt'• often mistmn-
~) -a delightful combination of tequila
lime juice and camtreau (an orange-~
liqueur), aerved tn a 1alwtmmed glu1 lfter
being blended wtth lee In a hl&b-""4
blender.
~ .,,., A~ h~ 'otters a .,n on
bartemkn . who' bl~ bi emulstften that
make IJWladtal foamy encl malted-milk· '·"' . ~. .
NOW
APPEARING
HERB & JOE TIUO
hM111 LlltH ... 1 ..... 1:41 ~ ... .....,
e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING
FOR RESERVATIONS: 536-1421
21112 OeNn Avenue Huntington Beach, Cant.
am Martilli Presents
"THI COOK BOOK''
F .. tvrh11 Cl.A Y CHllSTOPHD . ......, ... ~ ....... ...,
l HA~;; 1 ~~UR In townl , ........ ,.. .. ...,
ILLIAAD ltC)OM...oL.ADIU WILCOMm--.i
BIU. MARTINI
COCKTAIL LOUN•I
UI L 1 M COSTA MIU
,......, .... MllLTP1LC .. .................... .
I
I
-.
• •
,, . .
F~ IOUth PD ,the ~ •. • ~orful canUna Mfted right. out of old M~,. th!t
venerable .Maico li(ido ln Sall Juan C•Pt·
stnno, 1toc"ks a full line of 1outh-ot-the.tx>J'd. ·
el Saini :Jrop~Z
RESTAURANT FRANCAIS
f1'111cla SHclalty
· CW Ilene• ,,.,,,..,,, wtth Ro111a11eff'1I
3012 Newport Blvd. Newport INch
OPEN DAILY 1:30 P.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.
Closed Monday 673-7183
1~. FLING-
•N'lllTAINMINT • 7 Nl6HTS A WllX
DANCING
WED THRU SUN. * HAP HALL DUO
.... HM ........... MllA Rear-Mestt Theater SQUARI Calta• M9la
L 1ftta It, Just 9ff Ntw,.t IML
,_...., tWI ...... 11llyWL --• L& .. I.... -
Real
Cantonese Food
Mt here or
t1b home.
STAG
CHIUWllO
OMAR'S RESTAURANT
SAN CLEMENT&'S FAVORITE SPOT.
PRESENTS
JULEN TERRY
ON THE KEYIOARD
Frf.-S.t •• Sun.-Tuts. 1:10.1 :30
JUI S, El c.-. lttl
...... c... ""'"·. Mft c....... .. .. ~ t;' .::::;-.: :::.2 c.-. Rt•.,.,1tlou 4'1.1172
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Back on. IJW'luitas, the Reuben E. Le• Hems "-> aiwlfl come up with a good one,
u does Kona Kai on Ed.wards Street in north Huntington Beach. ·
Another New One
KeeP your eye ' OD 'Coast Highway in
Newport again. Still another restaurant I.-
In the inaking. It is Newport .. s Grotto, offer-
ing a bily 'Vit* right next to the Arches.
CONTINENT AL CUISINE
COCKTAILS • LUNCHEON
Dancing & Entert1~nmenf Nltely
:;;:::.Barbara Kelly Revue
11512 BMdl Blvd. 1t Ellis
VILLA ROMA
Speclalbl.. hi ITALIAN DINNllS
13 Varietiee Sea Food
Lobster Tails Scampi
NY Steat.~zailoa
lf'ICIAL.-TAICI OUT OtlLYt 14 V arietiea Pizza
S~ Varieties Pasta
Prawns Scampi Ciopplno
12 Varieties Veal
SPA$HITTI DINNERS
Wl1ll IW **ioua lftllt -.We I -.t llelle, •rflc tMet MCI '-
It 9ff with -"""""" """'*' ~ ... .,._ too ll'Mll " •• , ... ~ Ill dl#GMbtt C9nt9lnlr, ne ................
$1.45
Seal op pine
8 Varieties Chicken
445 No. Newport Blvd., Newport IHch
Op• 4 p.m. 12 p.m. Ml 6-'4929 CLOSED TUESDAY
DON JOSE
presents
,.. .....
MARIO SAID
TRIO
...... ,AIM
by popular demand
ENCHILADA A TACO ....•••• $1.30
CHIU RIWNO:IN~~='DA •• $1.45 ....................... ... ..( >
··~·~ ..
~··
N• from a racier: "I had dfnner ·ai tJae
Pbhtfmaa tft Hcilltlnltbn iteacb, More than
satiafactory. Service a bit 1low liat who 1' in
a hurry with auch a lovely view , ... 1unaet on
the Paclflcf Maybe tbe7 could Ult a few ex-
tra waitre11ea, &ut we were-treated well and
the food wu fine. Solt Vemonlque at-
tractively _ •ervecl with rice and hot french
bread. Salad crllp .and served with cblllt4
fork (I like thole extra touches f). Ciani
chowder tlopl. marrarlta1 excellent."
So take a bow, Hant Wlacbnewaki, you're pleasiJJg your patroni. --
.. .
~
INN
MARINE RESTAURANT I
Servfnr Luncheon and D1Dller :fron\
11 ;SO .ill .... enchanti.ot atmoaphere u.4
'riew •••
~.LIDO LOUNGE
Tht FAST FEAST L'1ncheon. lJut?et-.
l!onday through Friday•• .11 :SO All·
2:80 PM
.And, :from o :00 PH to eloalo6-1olt
lirhts, l'Oomy club chairs,·~ eon·
tinuoua music {or dat>.cint r
Bill McCluN Duo • • • Paul Mannera Trio
~BISTRO ·.
A touch of Paris-open from. '1 ~00 AJl.-
Breaktaat, Luncheon, Dinner, S:oaw,
American Bar.,.
EVERY SUNDAY!
JWNr l~AS'l' • , •••• .. t130 AM·i&OO rM
· JIV.BVOS UNQl!l\OS •••••• 1130 AM·S.IO JM .... .
r NEW I 11 ti• N1w111t11 ~
81lNDAY IN THI LIDO LO UN GB I•
1 THE -TABLE ••• 1100 rM·l&ot Ill I
J. MIU1l't1lrl£ IUNDA'I ftUD ... • Mm.JO ••• DJllClNQ -~ UWPOITll INR 8"-1'100
urr J1nw1• an. NIWNlt 111m
·~ ..
-c..t I ••••
...
-
...
• 1 .
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4
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·-
';l)oJt <=Ro1'erto~ F1mlly Rest1ur1nt
•where the Food la Mexico-
TryO. ..... ......
.s .... .......
Moll. l1lnl Tllvrt. u Nooa • It r .M. e M. • let. 11 ••. M111111111t
1985 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. 548-9927
ENTERTAINMENT COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT fRl -SAl. f.R4, l S,\T.
HAPPY HO URS FROM 4 TO 6
-... SPECIAL COMBO DINNE.R
Scampi & Filet Mignon $3so
With lread-S111od-lolie4
Potato or M11staccJoll
11821 BEACH BOULEVARD
(I BLOCK NORTH 011 CHAPMAN I
CAlt:O FOR RE.SERVA TIO NS 892.2655 or 893-991 8
OP!N 4 t-.M. CLOSED MONDAY
Vina Harmer Trio
Monday thru S1turd1y
Dick Powell Trio
37 f'ASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
~ •llff11n11 & •ro1dw1 A111p1t Pll'kl"I "-ti· •144-2030.
FOR ADVERTISING ,.
IN THE
WEEKENDER MAGAZINE
Phone 642-432 1.
I OUT 'N' ABOUT 1
Continued from Page 9
Something Differ ent
Seekers of things different might well
pay heed to the growing number of fans wbo
have found a bill ~ fare from half way
around the world -Restaurant Indonesia -..
Which offers a wide-ranging list of recipes
from the hands of a Chi~se chef who mast·
ered Indonesian cooking.
Restaurant Indonesia got lts start in a
wedge-shaped corner of Newport Beach ad·
joining the Newport Pier. Success there en-
abled the owners fo move to larger quarters
at Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard
in Corona del Mat.
Hue and Cry
Would you eat lavender mash potatoes?
Or a pale green hamburger steak? Or a
shocking pink salad?
Color bas indeed a lot to do with food and ·
restaurateur George Olseq oot.ed to Out 'n'
Abouter the other day that few people have
ever stopped to think of the reftexes built
into one's palate when it comes to the hue of
ttie food.
LUNCH SPECIAL
2273 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA carmam 642-1312 OPU
at HRS.
CLOSED FOR
REMODELING
WATCH FOR ANNOUNCEMENT
OF OUR REOPENING "' ' ..
•BREAKFAST SERVED 24 HRS. A DA Yim
-~~---·· ------
George not., for Instance, tbat the b-est lettuce tn the world bas a brown tmge to
edge1 and d1ners 1~ect it summarily. So, he and others use m cheaper iceberg lettuce
to satisfy ttie tricky tastet of the custom~.
"I believe that entrees, for IOUle reason,
• mua\ be the color ~ the earth, the color of
the soil, or some shade thereof," George
says. He notes that all meats when cooked
are an earthy gray, brown or shade thereof.
George n<>tes also that two colors are not
found on the drinking or eating menu any
place in the world -blue and black. A
couple of exceptions are truffles and caviar,
and one rare blue liquer, bµt all in all the
"theory bolds up.
Some forward souls are dying bread
green, pink and other colors in canapes, but
George doubts the trend will get very far.
We're sure he's right, but it would be jolly
good, gay fun to have :i restaurant that of·
fered food in one's favorite color as well as
one's favorite degree of doneness . A royal
blue sirloin served with bright red rice and
white string beans would be just the thing
~r the 4th of July.
No stJbstttuUons. plea.sf.
' I
------------------------------------------------
'A.T
OMARS
On tho co.If tn San Cl•
monte on El Camino Reel
PIRINO llNl6Nl'I ~ ...... , ......
-., ......... ...,. .......
U.PRUt&EJI LOUIE
SHIP RESTAURANT
VISITORS WELCOMB ·
lrlllf y.., c .......
No Adm. Ch1.•frH Poi\lne
11-i::=.~
Cttlitd •
.:.=~:!. ,.,.......,. .. eoo
USBVATIOMS '
'31.JUI 17S.t.M1
M2U,M.i.a..-t
ht t( Ln. ~T.trl!!!!!l hlM there's • n lmpreaalve I=========
restaurant called Om1r1 1--------..-.--.11
whore dinner 11 Hrved l~:;i~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~-from 5 to 10 p.m. The 1:
menu r•nee• from prime
rib, stoakt and ••food to
1hl1h kebab and curry
dish ... In the lounge there
is top notch entertainment
every night except Mon·
day. It 11 split betwMn two
talents who appear solo
on various nights of the
wMk. John Cook, 1t left,'
with his guitar and fine
voice 11 In the lounge on
Wednesday and Thursday
evenings from 8:30 -and
during his engagement
one can order 1 1tMk
YOU'LL ENJOY OUR
SUNDAY
BRUNCH
11 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
3801 £AsT C.0AST HlcHWAY
C.0.0NA OF.L MAR, CALIFORNIA
PHONf.: (714) 675-137-4
'Uffa r/ova
~rJewporl
IU1 COAST Hl•HWAY
NIWPOIT llACH
DWW~111 1M1.111.
RESERVATIONS SU6GESTID .. ndwich until midnight.
From Friday th r o u g h
Tuesday (off Mon d 1 y ), L----r---=-..---,.-----r----'
Holen Terry 11 the fH·
turod attraction 1 t t h •
"42-7110
1:00 P.M. • 2;00 A.M. Defty
pl1 no bar playing cont I nu· l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
11 music and singing for
tho lounge patrons. If you
want to call for 1 reserv•·
tion try 496-9855. From
some 1rea1 you'll have to
d11I the numeral one first.
/1/. Jfc 1is~rman ')r. ·:,
' ~-" At the Pi~r HUNTINGTON BEACH. CALIF / . 1
RESERVATIONS: 536-2555 ··f\• °'?.
TH' DORYMEN
FISH 'N CHIPS RESTAURANT
"NEWPORT STYLE" BUCKETS TO TAKE HOME ROAST~BEEF } DI N 'N ER . SPAR~RIBS . all for
FISH 'N CHIPS
Complete M.111
FOR I ,OR 4
$2.50 $3.25
llOR I
$4.00
plus lots. of salad and homemade bread , Imel. hultt.
Cltl .... $1 .00 CHICKEN 'N CHIPS 3.25 4.25 1.25
6.00 "NORDIC" 5 M 0 R G A 5 B 0 R D SHRIMP 'N CHIPS 4.00 5.00
Call In your order-Pick It up on arrival
1500 Adams • Costa Mesa • At Harbor & Adams 1 ""' tf ltrrilk Clim Clltllrdw l'Rll wl"' •ell llMldlet 1111rcll1•td t11111uell Oct•lltr.
Open 7 Days
llunche01a
weekdq1
[l];nnu
1ervtd in th1
Grand Manntt
•
$71 S. MAIN, OllANGB
Jlewvadou: 54Z.3S9S
( aOMd Sunday)
......... hct~LY l'ILOT
Pl'Nly, .. ..._ lt. ,,..
TelephCMle: 540 • 1937 e IEPAIATI ROOMS
LUNCHEON -11 :30 a.m. to 3 p.m. • MHTINGs
2100 W. OcHn Front Phone 673-2200
Newport Beach 11 A.M.·9 PM. (12 AM. Fri & Sat.)
ftMEftA
ltf..STAUftANT
Contln1nt1I Cuisine
Codd1i11
Senring
Luncheon and Dfn~r
Monday through Saturday.
CZ01ed Sunday1 ·
Open for
Pnoote Partita Only
We art located on the
Bristol StrHt side bt•
twHn Mulftn and Bluett
and the May Co.
HHl.Mnl c.... .. _ ..... , ...
IUll llLllll
• iAN9uns
PROUDLY PRESENTS
THE RICK llLllt
GRAND OPENING
OF. THE SENSATIONAL
SILER BROTHE·RS
Jnt cCMICWl91 tHlt West Coad tow
NIGHTLY ••• TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY. IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGt:
Discotheque Llghtfnt-Red V•lvet Room-Dancl,,g, H1rdrock, Soft ('rl. & lat) (ClotM Monday
No C..w •No........_
I 045 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach • Phone 671-0200
~·
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·CHRISTMAS in MEXICO
16 DAYS .
$278 Per P.rson Sh1rin9
ASK MR· FOSTER
TRAVEL SERVICE
ICIR'S Newport Center · 6"-2800
lburthe
South Pacific
on the Flight Fantastic
Let an Air New Zealand DC-8 be your ltland In the •k:y
whlle )'OU jet to the fabled l1land1 of the South Pacific-
Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia, FIJI, Samotl Ewrythlng
on your tour It arranged, Including hotela, and 1lghtN•
Ing; and moet toun Include all rneaJ1.
For only $995, you can leave lot Angeles on a 22-day
budg« tour of the best of the South Paclnc. Or choott a
32-day deluxe t1corted tour with all meals for $2,035. Or
take Tahlll and •11 of French Polyneala for 18 daya for
only $795.
Call your travel agent or clip the coupon for full detall1
on Air New Z.aland toura.
AIR IEW lEAIMD ~
THI AlllUHI THAT KNOWS THI IOllTH PAClflC IUT
WITH BOAC ANO OANTAI W! OFFER 17 fllOHT8 A WHI<
DIRECT f110M THI UNITED 8TATE8 TO THI 80l1TH PACIFIC.
;-----------------------------------------' Dept. TMl-lSA
: AIR NEW ZEALAND
I &10 Wttl Sixth s1r .. 1, lot AngtlH 90014
Pita" •end me all I nffd to know about toure 101
D Beat of the South PM!flc-New Zeal111d, Auatrali ..
French PolynHi" Samo" FIJI. 0 f,.noh Polynula-Tahiti, Moor.a, Bora Bora, Ralatea.
I prefer -H corttd -lnd•S*'dtnt tou,..
N•m•-------------------------... ~ddrtH~----------------------Olty ____________________ _
~--~~:~~----------------------------J .
_______ ..
1New Zealand's · Maori ·Art
It 11 hundreds of years since the tn~ld MaoJt
navigators sailed their frail canoes thouaandl of
miles down the Pa~ific from their legendary bome
of Hawaiki to New Zealand, but thelr wood carv•
lng, said to be the highest form of Polynesian ~
has been carefully preserved in its major forms,
But, there has been a lack of continuity iQ
training, and it is this that the carving school of
the Maori Arts and Crafts lnatitute at Rotorua on
New Zealand's North Island has started to
remedy.
Under the master carver, Hone Te KaW't
Taiapa (John Taiapa), seven Maori youths from
various parts of New Zealand 8f8 serving three-
year apprenticeships to learn and develop the ex•
pertise or their forefathers.
The •pprenticff, all between 15 and 18, work
on carvings for meeting bouses throughout New
Zealand and are taught the carving styles of all
tribes so they can carry out any wort required.
At the end of three years, they will receive diplo-
mas after which they may continue to work at
the Institute or enter business on their own.
Many of the present carvers are descendanta of
families which ha~ produced out at a11 d l n I
craftsmen for centuries. Wood carving ts an
honored profession. In the old days, carving was
almost a sacred occupation with appropriate ritual
and prohibitions. Women were not allowed to be
present while a carver was at work. All c.arvtng
chips had to be collected carefully and burnt 1n a
special fire to prevent contam,ination through con-
tact with cooking.
The c•rv•r't basic tools are chisel, adze and
mallet, and the apprentice must learn to handle at
least 60 variations of these. When really ex-
perienced he needs only six. High relief carVing is
done with the adze; lower relief work and
finishing is done with smaller short-handled adzes
and surface decoration with cltisels and mallet
Timber used is almost always the soft native
totara.
The Institute'• authority extends to the main-
tenance, preservation and improvement of the
Whakarewarewa Thermal Reserve, w b e r e
geysers, mud pools and hot springs can be seen
close at hand. The reserve includes a model Maori
pa (fortified village) which was built as a visitor
attraction by the government during the first
decade of the centurv. Fortified by palisades. the
pa figures are renroductions of the various villa~e
buildings with their .elaborate carvings and ~e
fortifications built by the Maoris to def end thel.l'
settlement against attack.
The director of the Maori Arts and Crafts
Institute. Kuru Waaka, was born in
Whakarewarewa village, and his father was one of
the first Maoris to be ordained a minister of the
Anglican church. He is determined to promote a
high standard for the Institute's work, and hopes
to see a flowering of interest in the practice and
appreciation of traditional Maori skills and
cultural activities. ,
The exotic arts and crafts of foreign lands are
probably the most fascinating aspect of overseas
touring, and Rotorua, one of New Zealand's main
visitor attractions, is the focal point of Maori
culture. The area also offers some of the weirdest
and most colorful thermal activity in the world.
Within the institute building are many of the
components of the traditional Meori meeting house
(wharenul). The meeting house ts always named
for a prominent ancestor1 for although ancestor
worship is not the Maori s customs, be still ac·
cords them reverence and respect. The ancestor's
stylized likeness, a carved wooden figure
(tetoteko) stands on top of the roof-tree. and the
PANEL CARVED IN 1116
bouse itself represents the body of the ancestor.
The ridge-pole is his backbone (poutahu), the
rafters his ribs (heke), the barge-board his arms
(maihi) and the center-pole his heart {pou toko
manawa). The meting house! th.ere for ed
represents the ancestor spreading his arms an
boCly over his descendants, saying: "Haere-mai kl
roto ki te poho o to tipuna" • "Welcome into the
bosom of your ancestor".
There .,.. five examples of poupou 1n the
Institute-carved boards placed between the reed
lattice work-and the carving depicts the feats and
characteristics of the ancestor. These five ex-
ample one of which is shown in photo, were carv-
ed at ihe time of the nearby Tarawera eruption in
1886 which almost completely wiped out a Maori
village. Neighboring tribes. as a gesture of
Boodwill built the survivors a new meeting house
in place 'of that lost in the eruption.
Five prlcele11 Maori cloaks hang on one wall.
These are almost a century old, and two are made
entirely rl. kiwi feathers on flax backing. Another
is made from kiwi and kaka (parrot) feathers, and
the remaining two are tasselled with Kereru
(pigeon), kiwi and kaka feathers.
In glHs 1howcasH can be seen stone axe-heads,
carved canoe paddles (hoe), feather boxes
(whakahula), several rolled flax skirts {piupiu).
and stone and wood hand weaoons (mere and
patu)-the batu was used in battle, the mere for
ceremonial occasions.
Other •rilfacts include flax baskets-some for
carrying, some for cooking foods in hot pools, 60-
year-old fibre mats and taiaha, a spear-like
weapon used in band-to-hand combat.
The Institute 11 a showpiece of the traditional
culture of New Zealand's indigenous Maori people.
Not only is its function to preserve and encourage
the traditional arts and crafts, but in the carving
$cbool, ls a proving ground for young craftsmen to le am and develop the highest form of Polynesian m
Ma .. 11 ... ~'""' I'll''
. ~ ' ~llfll-tt. I
...
Upt_own Theater
Thing1 are looking bright and cheerful ~
the Los Angeles entertainment scene thi
September. A number of comedies are on
stage, a light opera, s~veral concerts, a
variety of dramas and an ice show off er a
wide choice for leisure hours in the Uptown
area.
At the Dorothy Chandler Pafilion of the
Music Center in Los Angeles, stars of the
opera, theater ' arid screen coordinate to
present the final event of the Los Angeles
Civic Light Opera's 31st season with
"Rosalinda," a gay revival of StTauss1 "Die
Fledermaus,'' star:ring Cyril Ritchard, Jean
Fenn, Hans Conried, the Wiere Brothers and
Barbara Meister.
In the ~ark Taper Forum of the Musi c
Center, Tennessee William's "Camino Real"
is on stage through Septembel' 22. This pro-
duction has been described as a sort of Jazz
symphony, providing a managerie of
characters. Casanova, Gutman, Lord Byron,
Sanch<>-Panza, Don Quixote, K i 1 r o y ,
Esmerelda, Gypsy, and Marguerite Gautier
all make their appearance on stage.
GrHr Garson is the lucky lady, in fact the
only lady 1n the Center Theatre Group's new
production, "Captain Brassbound's Con·
version," a comedy opening at the Ahma~on
Theatre in the Music Center September 24.
Also starring Darren McGavin, Paul Ford,
John Williams, George Rose and Tony Tan-
ner.
In another part of town, the Inner City
Repertory Cornpany is opening "A Raisin in
the Sun.,, toQ.lgbt, September 29. It will be on
stage througQ November 9. Also at the ICR,
a Japanese cultural program is slated for
Sunday, September 22.
CURRENT
ART
EXHIBITS
LAGUNA ART ASSOCIATION -'gt CUtf Drive,
Laguna Beach. Three separate shows are on
displey through Sept. 29. The Annual Member-
ship Show may be seen in the Main Gallery;
Art from the Black Community 1n the Entresol
Gallery, and the Flrlt Memorial Show for Keo
Kutcher in the Lower Gallery. Hours: Mon.
through Sat., noon to 5 p.m.; Sun., 1 to 5 p.m.
General admission 50c. Members and one guest
are admitted free.
MUTUAL SA VJNGS AND LOAN -2.867 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. On display dW'lng
regular business hours, knife and brush paint·
ings by Silvia Moonier, through September.
COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. On exhibit Mon.
through Sat. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., through Septem·
ber 23 watercolors and etclllngs of ArtbW' Mill·
ler spoD90red by ttte Newport Harbor Service
League.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside
Drive, Newport Beech. Etching•, paintings and
drawings of Newport Beach artist, Jeanne Rar•
mood on exhibit durlng regular bu.sine,. hours.
NEWPORT BEACH CITY BALL -3300 Newport
Blvd., Newpcd Beach. On exhibit during regu·
tar businesa boun, a colltcdon of pbotoeraphs
of Russian people and acenery by Herbert
'l'yrnaurer.
MARINEBB LIBRARY -m Dover Drive, New-
port BMch. On dbplQ dUrtDI recuiar llbr117
houri tb?Ooah S.pt., oO and acrylic pelntJ.nt•
by LaguM BMch arUJt, VinceDt Ferrell plus
a<:ulpture and mlxed media by Robfrt Jablon.ski.
MatlattM s.d-....OAILY PILM
Fi.a,, ........... ..
Now on atage at the Ivar Theater, "You're
a Good Man Charlie Brown'• based on
Charles Schulz's comic strip "Peanuts" (car-ried each day in the DAILY PILOT comic
section.) This tunny play is now in its seventh
month of laugh provoking hilarity.
At the Huntington Hartford Theatre, the
comical "Your Own Thing" has been ex·
tended to a September 28 closing date. Com-
in~ next to tile HH, Nell Simon's 11Plaza
Sw«!," to open in early October.
At the Forum in Inglewood, the Ice Follies
is the current attraction. A huge cast of in-
ternational skating stars in dazzling cos-
tumes perform through October 6. Olympic
gold medal winner, Peggy Fleming makes
her professional debut in the show.
An Engllah repertory .company, Tb e
Theatre Royal Windsor, bas a bu.sy pro-
gram in p~ress at the Greek Theatre in
Hollywood." Tonight, September 20, George
Farquhar's ."The Beaux' Strategem," is on
stage, September 21 Noel Coward's "Hay
Fever" takes over, followed by Oscar
Wilde's "An Ideal Husband," closing the
engagement on September 22.
At the Hollywood Bowl one of England's
top singers, Donovan, will perform in his
uniquely f~rock atyle on Saturday, Sep-
tember 28.
In Claremont, the Mexican Players are
presenting "Concierto Mexicano," a two act
concert of music, costumes and dances from
Mexico. One of the pleasures of Padua Hills
is having dinner in the dining room where
the Players entertain nightly prior to the
performance. .,.
-Kristin Goff
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Cent.er St., Costa
Mesa. A one·man show of oil paintings of Jack
Schirmer and seascapes by Jan ·Cook are on
display during regular business hours.
MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde
Drive, Costa Mesa. Oil paintings, stitchery
and landscapes of Doris Berry are on exhibit
dW'ing regular library holll"s through Septem•
ber.
SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK -196 E.
17th St., Costa Mesa. Oil paintings of Costa
Me,,a Art League members, Louise Williamson,
Marcella Stanley and Theresa Raciti are on
display during regular library hours.
CROCKER CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK -Har·
bor Shopping Cent.er, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. On exhibit to Oct. 1 during regular busl·
ness hours, pastel sketches and oil paintings
by Lois Dietman, Phyllis Biel and Artie Poll'Om.
CAMERA WORK GALLERY -1834 D. Newport
Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Currently on dJsplay photo·
graphic prints by book illustrator Phil Palmer.
Hours: 7 to 10 p.m. weeknights, closed Wed.
and Sun.; Sat. open 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -li66 Center St .. Costa
Mesa. CurreDtly on display during I'i?gular bus-
iness hours, oil paintings of A. E . Stelly and an
autograph and manuscript collectJon loaned by
James Currie.
SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach
Blvd., Huntington Beoob. On exhibit during
regular business houri, oil painting. by Larri
Cusolito.
STANTON PARKS AND RECREATION -Center
7800 Katella, Stant.on. Art work 1n various me-
dia by artists Rena Spencer, Charles BosweD,
Phyllla McCarty, Ferne Williamt, Lucy San-
ford, Emma Parter, Marcella Stanley, Mar·
1ayn Beemer, Marian FtcUJ, Mwian Ries and
Betty Kelley.
CRA8LES BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main st., Santa Ana. Roura: Tuel. through Sat. 10 1.m. to 4:30 p.m.: ~un. 1 to 5 p.m.; Thurt. eve-
nlng 7 to 9 p.m: No admluton cbarce. CUrrently
on elhlbit, hand.IC!raftl done by Cuna women
on Sin Blu Ialandl, Panama and palnUDga and
dnnring1 ot Raymond Lark.
t MITZI ta•VNDA
• 8HECKV GREm•
• BARBRA llTMleANQ
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WHtRf THE BRIGHTlST 3Wf8 SHINI
()l)POalle 011111vi.nc1. Anth•fm
Tonight 8:30 PM-Tomorrow 7 &. 10 PM
Selltl Av1ll1ble 1t ThNtre Box Office
In Concert
Sept. 27 & 28 • Fri. at. 8:30, Sit. at 7 l 10 PM
$3.50, M.50, $5.50
The BEACH BOYS
tptC:/t / fUHt ltl,.
GRASS ROOTS •W••TWATlla
MAIL OROERS OHL Y
Monday, Sept. 30 at 8:30 PM
$2.50 ,3.50, $4.50
An entrancing 1v.nlng ffUA
MISS PIT COLLINI
The Hlp-R11pnollll
Bring the Kidsl
VICTOR 8016E
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KATS NOW at Box Office, by Mall & et 111 Ticket Aatncln
llthoft• (714) 77 .. 7220
FOR
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Phone
642·432 r
MAMMOTH
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2616 laythoN Dr.
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Sunday 10 1.m. • 4 p.m.
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TECHNICOLOlr
HOLLYWOOD . REP.ORT
By LINDA DEUTSCH
Ull'I ~ c.nza:4cllf
When a painter becomes a director and
a housewife turns film producer, what can
the end result. possibly be?
In the case ol "C. Soutine,0 it's an art
film about an artist, and it has walked off
with this year's Venice Film Festival's
prized golden lion for best documentary.
"C. Soutln•" cl1ronicles with stunning
impact the life, work and thought of Chaim
Soutine, a Russian-born painter who lnflu-
enced the Paris school of impressionists and
post-impressionists.
The movie was the brainchild of Rita
Morrison, a Los Angeles doctor's wife who
sturued film at UCLA.
"I had always wanted to make a film,"
she recalls. "Finally I just said, "Today is
the day."
For her aublect she chose Soutine, a
painter whose reputation lagged behind his
contemporaries. He was the "painter's
painter."
But now, 25 years after Soutine' s death,
there was to be an exhibition of his work
at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Curator Maurice Tuchman set out for Paris
to ferret out Soutine works hidden in attics
and cellars of the artist's friends. With him
went Rita Morrison.
In Paris they found one of Soutine's mis-
tresses. Mrs. Morrison quickly hired a cam·
era crew and filmed an interview with the
petite MHe. Garde who spoke no English but
said softly for the cameras: ''j'adore Sou-
tine."
They visited Mme. Madeline Castaing,
an early supporter of the artist. "She is sup-
posed to have hordes of Soutines stored away
that she won't show anybody," says Mrs.
Morison. She showed us one of Soutine's
portraits. She complaihed that lt was dirty,
and she called a maid and had her scrub
the fa ce with soap and water. I was horri-
fied."
Back In Los Angeles with her film, Mrs.
Morri son recruited Jack H. Lieberman, 88,
a one-time painter and lecturer in the hum·
anities. As a film director he had several
documentaries to his credit. Also, he had
studied at the Barnes Foundation which
holds the largest American collection of
Soutines.
Lieberman brought in Ken Plotin, young
innovative cinematographer, and Fred
Haines , screenwriter who had worked on the
film "Ulysses ."
Edward G. Robinson, a Soutine admirer
\and art collector, agreed to narrate .
\ "In rt1H rching Soutine's life," says
'i,Jeberman, "I found that he was haunted by
a ~Id.hood experience. As a boy, be witness-
ed t~ Jewish ritual slaughter of a chicken.''
Exarrilnation of Soutine canvasses further
revealed tortured visions of dying animals-
bleeding chickens, hulks of butchered
cattle.
"He was a visceral painter," says Lieb-
erman, ''And the film had to be visceral ...
Soutln•'• years ln Paris among friends
like P,ainter Modigliana, sculptor Jaques
Upchitz and painter Willem de Koonlng are
filmed ln brilliant color. Soutine's canvasses
flash across the screen as his friends speak
of him. LipchJtz calls him a "spontaneous
genius." De Kooning says: "He influenced
me as much as he could. His color was light·
ed from the inside."
There 11 • brief black-and-white se-
quence when Tuchman brings Soutine'1
paintings to the ivuseum for the art show •
Then, again In color, the film returns
to Pads, 1943. Chaim Soutine's death, of a
perforated ulcer, is depicted with a closeup
vlew of open-stomach suraery.
A1 Lieberman aald r "it ts a visceral
film."
LIVE THEATER
~
OPENING TONIGHT
"1be Bomeeomlng"
A Harold Pinter drama. "The Homecoming," lS
on stage Thurs. through Sun., sept. 20 to Oct. 11
at the South Coast Repertory, Third Step Theatre,
1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Curtain time 8:30
p.m. Phone 646--0363.
OPENING SOON
"Dream Girl"
A comedy of a young girl lost in her daydreams.
"Dream Girl" will be staged Sept. 'D through Oct.
5, and Sat. nights at 8:$1 p.m. by the Co6ta Mesa
Civic Playhouse, west gate Orange County Fair·
grounds, Costa Mesa. Phone 834-5391 for further
information.
' I ...........
~IPWll·~-o····~·e ·•ao
Cottl11on Sat. ffo• 2100
WHKDAYI
... Office o,. &141
IATURDAY·SUNDAY
c.i.ttM .. 12:41
Steve McQUffn & Faye Dunaway In
"DI THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR"
Color
-PLUS 2nd ACTION HIT-
Willlam Holden in
'1HE DEVIL'S BRIGADE"
Color \
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ALIO
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· -M&ADdU. ........ --Da•ME·WIG.-•Jtuw•-...,,,....-i.
'"· Sliow Storts 7 p.~ Colltlnew....., h• .J ,..,
NIWPOIT HACH -el ti.. ••lnl-te lei..leM U4e 1111 -01. J-USI
En. Sltow Starts 6:4'
C•""-"t Sliow
hitday from 1 p.-.
FIRST RUN
IN THE
HARBOR AREA
A DRAMA OF PASSIONS AND PEOPLE!
Burt The
Lancaster in Swimmer
"A&&llillMEllT
STEPHEN BOYD • l:AMIUA SPARY
MICIWl RmGRAYE ~ ~ ~=~~
199. Shw Stwtl 6:41; C .......... ...._,,,._IP·•
~tlllt lecft1 DAILY PILOT
F,,...,, --~a IHf
'Dick Van ~':.~•rs with Jack Elam In -N .. wr 1 Dull t," now at the Surf ThMtre,
Huntington Beach.
Cliff Robertson, William Holden and Vince
Edwards star In "The Dev11'1 Brlgac:M," cur-
rently at the Edward1 Cinema West Thfftr.-,
Westmlnst.r.
SOUTH SW
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THEATRE
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HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546-3102 .
J ACADEMY AWARD WINNER -
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'nils II BerUuil.
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MATINm
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William Holden
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