HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-09-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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'CRYING IN GHETTO'
Robber's Boast
Proves Downfall
A robber who boasted loudly about
holding up a Garden Grove store and
pla:;ed. "big shot" buying drinks for
the house was arrested by Garden
Grove police Thursday night while he
held forth in a Stanton bar.
James \V. Stuart, 22, of Anaheim,
was arrested in the Candle Inn at Dale
Street and Chapman A venue after
someone tipped the Stanton police
department that he was bragging
abou. his holdup.
Stuart was jailed on suspicion of
armed robbery of the Stop 'N Go
n1arket at Gilbert Street and Katella
Avenue in Garden Grove.
Orange Caul
Weather
I~ow clouds, fog and drizzle -
th al' s the gloomy weekend wea·
ther picture for the Orange
Coast as the temperature drops
down to 70. Bring back the heat
wave.
I NSIDE TODAY
There's music in tl1e air at
Lag una Beach's Irvine Bowl
1vl1e1·e tlte Lyric Opera As$ocia·
tion opens i ts sea.Yf1n tonighi
1vith "La Boheme." Read about
it in today's WEEKENDER mag.
a.zilic.
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Roasted Four-letter'
~ords Spice
R,acist T~
'LAUGHING IN SUBURBS'
DAIL T .. fL.OT ........ 1W '""' O'DOftfNlll 'POLITICIANS UP TIGHT'
... ~;;B~m:$•=·~~c
''Tl!Oni .n the ~...i ore
tlie nl•i. '!be ~-. are tlie 1i(>~· .itruc·
ture"•"'Blacl( l>BJ\lbet· Eldridge . Clriv·
er t6id 2,CKK> UC Jrvi.he students Thurs.
<)a~~~
paro<l tn de1troy those he calls pigs.
Ho \lied a vulaar four·l~r exple-
tive to refer to Gcw. Konold' ·~rut,
whom he inamed all one of tbe. pigs.
He said. "If Amertca' bas to be de-s~. we (Negroes} demand our
rights to participate in the destruc-
tion."
Thus Eldridge Cleavet" did not dis-
appoint the students or newsmen who
turned out en masse to bear him
speak.
OVERSHA DOWED
Avalon Senior Citizens
There were three other speakers in
the conclave program on "America
as a Racist Culture," but Cleaver as
the notorious personality overshadaw-
ed the others. It was his first appear-
ance .since the UC regents slapped him
down as a 10-sesston lecturer at Berke-
ley.
He said he did not speak at UC Riv-
erside Wednesday night because his
parole officer told him he was gOing
to be shot there and he was going to
be shat at Irvine, and given the choice
he would rather be shot in Orange
County.
Rally to Protect Palms
Special to The DAILY PILOT
AV ALON -It was role-reversal day
in this sleepy Santa Catalina Island
community, jblted a.wake by a
demonstration.
Long-haired youths were the au·
dlence nru.rsday. The marchers were
the establishment -neatly suited
businessmen a n d parasol<"3rrying
senior citizens who defied the sheriff
and other authorities.
At staike wa' the survival ol seven
100..foot pabn ·trees whioh line Cres·
Copter Crash
Probe · Results
May Take Year
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of t11<1 O•llT Pll•I Sl•ff
Findings in the worst civilian
helicot>ter CN.sh in U.S. history -
fro mlluman control to systems only
an engineer can comprehend -are
due within a year following close Of a
two-day federal hearing Thundey in
El Segundo.
A missing nut and Jn.t which helped
hold a pttch dlange rod oo one of live
main rotor bladet is considered e
crucial factor by the National
Transportation Safety Board.
The last of • series of 19 witnesses
called to testily about cauie of the Los
Angeles Airways helkopte'r crash
wb.100. killed 23 persons May 22 were
heard Thursday.
Most <X. their rem'arks were so
tedmic.al that only airline perSOllnel
and other quaUfied indlvtdualJ could
understand just what ttie. three·m611
bOard ol inquiry was hearing.
Mechanical problems of some sort
appear to be the factor, however, in
lhc. phmge ol the S-sky ~IL
(See COPTER, P1&e :)
\
He added that "t.he truth is I was
' cerrt. Avenue, the city's main str~ust toot~." . The City Council has authorized a • Dressed 10 a bla.ck, guru-styled stlk
structien ftrm to pull the trees f shirt and black pants Cleaver sat in-
their planter boxes and transplant dolently, eyes nearly closed, srtroklng
them nearby as parit of a $400,000 his short beard through the. other
street improvement project. talks. A. hush fell when .he stood up
The stage was set, the players in to the m1c:ot>hone as the final speaker.
their places, and the show begran. The Presumin.g t?. s~ak f<;>r the Negro
members of the A 100 Bea tif 1 race, he s~d, We re going to be free . . . va u u or nobody 1s free. We say let's make
Assoc1at1on, ~eUmes as ~Y as this pain democratic. I don't want to
400.peroons, nng~ the trees, defi.an.tly hear no more crying in the ghetto and
being the sheriffs aIJd con&truct100 laughing in the white suburb. workers.
The insurgents seem to have won
the ·battle -if not the War. The City
Oooncil will hold an emergency
session today tQ consider petitions
stgned by baH of Av,aloo's voters.
By nlghtt.all the event was more a
festival 1ben a protest. Deputies and
workmen shared the p I c k e t s '
sand'wiiches and cider. "We haven't
had thi1 much fun in Avalon in 35
years," ooe participant grinned.
The arch-villains of the play, the
bull.dozer& and earthmovers, were
oowflere to be seen by sundown.
"1bis is costing me $260 1 day,''
comvlai.ned a campany o t f i c i a I •
"We ve got. another job on the
mainland and can't keep the eqWp-
ment here."
Olty Manager Jack Osteen 68id
Avalon 's unique transplant operation
was ordered beacuse "engineers told
us that those trees and planters con-
stitute a traffic hazard."
Kurt Becker. a barber and hood of
the"t:itizeos' group thought differently.
"One d. the city couns:llmen who
authorized the move just wanted to
get rid of three of the _palm• which
stand in !TOOt d.. bff pt.ace of
business," he said.
"There I& no tnlllc hazard and
the counCil't own traffic committee
said to," Becker eonUnued.
PUNKS uP TIGHT
"\Vrinkle faced punks like Ronald
Reagan and Max Rafferty get up tight
about that," he sald.
Cleaver said Black Panthers are
(See CLE(\ VER, Pare %)
How "Swede" It is when Lester Cut.
ler digs into the water with a kayak
paddle.
The Orange
Coast kayak.er, '
one Of a dozen
area personalJ ..
ties to wi n
berths in t h e
American dele·
gation being ·
sent to the t i:'
Olympic
Games 1n Me.xi· co City. is a stu·
dent of Swediah 1
techniques
which have won
seven out of 13
gold medall in
the kayak event
in paat Games.
His story 11 featured today-on Page
16 to the latest of the pre-Olympic 1er·
ies spoUigblina Ult Orange Coast'•
Olympians.
"The area to which they!d be mov·
ed. adjacent to where the planters now
stand. has highly taline soil and the
8f0Und la lull ol pipei. That would bo
Ju."t too great a ahock lo die 40-ye.ar·
old trees." ----------.. ~---~ " • ' I ,
•
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FRIDAY AFTE'RNOON, SEPTEMBER 27, 1968
YOL..•t• NO. W. t $ICTIONI. U P'AOU
,,
•
Copter Crash·
Findings D~-~
Within Yea~
Surprise Off spring
Maureen McRorie's pet donkey, Flower Power, gave the 18-yeiar.old
Santa Ana Heights resident quite a ·start th·e other day -wHen she
produced an oHspring. "We didn't even know she was expecting,!.,
said Miss McRorie, who has named new arrival '•Sir Pri5e."
Newton Faces Up to 15
Years for Police Slaying
OAKLAND (UPI) 7 Bk-:!k PanUter
rounder Huey P. Newton was M:n·
tenced to 2 to 15 years in state prison
today tar voluntary manslaughter in
the slaying or an Oakland policeman.
Superior Court Judge Monroe Fried·
man denied motions for a new trial, to
allow Newton free on bail during ap-
peal t.'lld to grant the 2G-Y,ear-old
Negro militant leader probation.
In a 20-minute court apipearance,
dltt'ing which attorneys' arguments
were f'Xtremelr brief, the judgo ·
ordered Newton to ti'le sta1e medical
facility at Vticavllle "under the term
proscribed by law."
Def~se counsel cttWs Garry. In alldn' 1of probation, Pf"Veri\ed peU·
tiClll wltlcb he aa1d bad 29,301
•lgnatures cilllng Ne'Wtan an "honest
dedicated, aelfl ... blllnan b¢ng" who
wou}(;l be a "powerful ISSet to the .
com.r.nunity. ''
Newton maintained. his l'httrlul de-
meanor, $nWlng and waving at the
two dozen spectatora 1n the courtroom
a~ he left accomPanlCd by t>cillff&
Th,r __ cheered and • h o u t e d en· ·
c~ement to Newton, compelJ.ir:ti
t
Friedman to gavel for order.
Garry immediately tiled notice ot
appeal and again asked for bail, poin·
(See NEWTON, Page %)
Clay w Fight
On R eservation
CHICAGO (AP\ -Cassius Clay,
rormer heaYyweight cbampiOn, said
Friday "ovetytbir>g' is on" fQr an o<~
26 fight with Zora.Fqlley on 1lle Pima
Jiidlan Reeervation 3S mlk• tnm Phoena, Ariz.
Clay, """ I01oW11 u l\klllammod AU.
smd hi ,, .. ""8ltq .... u -his
ailvilerl about th• eontraet. "l'U pt .. babl:Y ,. down there ro s1an it Sollu-day," Mid Clay. .
Folley, ol Chandler, Arlt. ~
has .11'fled Ille cootrac~ accordln& I\ 'll •1»~esroan lor the corporaUon ~ m.otln'g the to-round mateh, which 1f.1;.
b6 at-wn ol Sacatoo ~
Pboanix. & :'..:
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'reen Beret
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iahAttack
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1*9 .......... "Soliatl.Ulloc Ill
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·~ ti.. ·-UoQI 21 milol arlfrt were tbe latut in • t«ies
ailjllit bor<ler oulpON on · &l*Tlll•
~ ~ard Saigon, where anti-In·
llllftlioll palrOll ... "' lhllr loQlll•ll
alert alnce May. ~orth Vietnamese forces slammed
1,000 mortar and rocket rounds into
the U.S. Special Forces camp at Thien
Ngoo u a pnlude to charging with tear gaa into tile ~'s barbed
Wire.
l}PI correspondent Kate Webb said
tb.t\'-Amerlcan and South Vietnamese
dete'nders leveled their howitzers and
fired "beehive rounda" -filled with
tiny darta 11milar to hua:e carpet tackJ = Into tbt_Commllllilt ranlu.
At clay!JreU:, tile defeoder1 found 33
bodies on the barbed wire f.Od 103
out&ide.
'.!Jt was a real mess," said one of the
G~n Bereta. "Btt:s of people were
hanclnl all over the wire."
Small Surf Seen
~ Big Tlu:eat
'l'o Championship
' ' 87 CJIAiG LOCKWOOD 1 ... DtltY ,...., ....,... .....
Saturday'• annual U. s . SUrfboard
C~p al Huntlnl!OO Bea<h
mq be a repeat of 1967's IUJ'fle1s turf
CO!!tell.
The problem IJ -oobody knows
for lllre.
/IA -1urfer will toll you nothlnl Is at·lc*le aa tl:le IW'f,
":Ibo llllf'• jlllt Ilk• Ille IWck ~ 11'1 up -y, aod Mwll ~·~~:: dat1>reak In tbo e°ree, .two.foot
surf near Huntington'• famed pier.
Corelully dopolltlnC bit II-foot, II-Inch
~ In Ille sand, Ille )'Ollllg
SUJfer save a l>oi al&b u be looked al
Sll!llll1 W'&VU. ~ '!You oon'I ride a mini· In furl
lite ... " he noted. I'm" are to<ll!J'• ""1 ... of tile -1!1'• moe1 q1*tlr flolving ploce " ,.,art. eql!lp-mll!ll: tile 1WftJclwd.
LMt ,_. averaae 1urfboerd lenfth wu about 10 ttet. Tbll )'Nr most boird1 are under eight feet, and 10me
ace under e feet. The longboard J1 as
dead u the dinosaur, and 10 11 no1e rktine. on wtuh mo&t conteats were
iudeod ody 12 ll>m month• ego.
The lhort board bu produced a
~ ln IUl'llni. aod lld'flnl
tecbmque tbot bat lo be -to be
believed. SWfen are now dolot thlng1
on waves that would have been bellev·
ed lmpolltble two year• aeo.
But Uke the ttcx:k market, the 1ur1
has trends and b'eod-watcheri.
Toda)''• doom merchants are predJc.
t.ma a repeat of 1be 1987 contest which
wu bekl" in amaU surf, and wa1 won
by °"" Point'• Corty Clrroll. While prodlcllaol for Ille weel!end'• "'*" .U. \WY. contelt bopefUll were pl'1IClldnl In U1Jputlan We IWllla.
and ~ lo (et tho !DOit out of
,--llloy llod-lo Wlrl< with.
"W•-.! there -.._.s to be a lftll ln Baja." one thiverlni 11\lrler
added, ''but tt IUl'ely hun't sent us
any aurf yel" sun. every(IOe knows It could come
up bi( to Ille 24 boun tllat 1eoo.rate to-
day from Saturday. Lots ' of blue.
knuckled fingers are being crossed by
the beach aeoeration.
DAILY PILOT
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H1111tl"tt•• h.c• LotH• lffcll w..,., • ..., "•••te111 v.11.,
CAIJPOIHIA
ORAHGE COA$T Plll!ILISHl"'O COMP'AN't'
lob•rt N. w,,J """''°""'' .... httW...-
Jock II. Cvrlty
Ykt Prn1*nf 1ftd c-.i M-ttr
Tho11111t K11vll
Ediklr
Thell'I•' A. M1rphlM
MlqjWlllt' lffllllr
P111I Nii1111 ""'""'II'"' D~ier
.,_ Oflk"
c.fe ..,.., -...,.,, ..,. $1•..t
frl-1 .... 1 :ltl1 w .. 1 .. -~ ~N ~ -..wti: tn F-' A-~ .. lldl: ., Jlfl HrWt
-·
Naticy Launehe• 'Beaver'
'
:.lit Phase Co•tapleted
Dana Breakwater·
Gets Capstone
\Vorkers ha'Ye placed U1e capstooe
·on th• Dana Point Small Boat
Harbor'• breakwattt, marking cmn-
pleUon ol that phase ot' the multi-
million dollar marine project, Orange
County Harbor Director Kenneth
Sam peon announced today.
1iM capetone, he 1aid, repre1ents a
mUflltol'le. Major federal involvement
in the project ii now over.
With completion of the $7.6 million
breakwater, Sampson said, "\Ye are
now looking forward to U1e beginning
of the second phase, the interior
harbor work."
Tb!• wW be paid for by the county.
Plana for the 2,150 boat allps· are
now before the Board of Supervisors.
A call for construction bids may be
issued Tuesday.
If all goes weU. said Sampson,
launchina: ramp facilities will be opec
by next summer. All facilities could be
Ci>fllJlleted by 1971.
Estimated cost of the interior work
is about $4 million, to be. pai<t h·om
available H&rbor District funds .
The improbable ex.cavaUOn, he seld,
will be made 'possible' by building a
temporary dam acros1 tbe bart:io: en•
trence an:l thin pumpinJ out the baaln
that .is formed.
He added that coope.raUon between
Doheny Stt¢t Beach oftlclals and the
harbar district ha! resulted in joint
parklne: and common UH of aeeess
roads, repruaUna an addlUonal sav-
ings of thouaands ot dollars.
Ball Resigns
U.N. Position;
Editor Named
WASHINGTON (UPI) -George IV.
Ball, the Vietnam dove in the Johnson
administration, quit his five-month-old
job as U. S. ambassador to the United
Nations Thursday to help Hubert J-f.
Humphrey try to defeat Richard M.
Nixon for presldent
Mra. Ronald Reagan, in Long Beach to chrlaten
North American Rockwell1s newest deep submersi-
ble, ts introduced to this mockup of the vessel and
served a cup of coffee by one of the manipUlated
arms. She later smashed it with a bottle of cham-
pagne,
The breakwater was funded 50-50 by
federal and local agencies. Although
most federal participation is now end·
ed, some dredtlng work and in·
stallation of navtgatiooal U.ds will re·
quire additional federal financing.
Sampson noted that $500,000 will be
saved in the construction Of the inller
harbor by abandoning · tradition-al
\Vater dredging tecbnique1. Land ex.0
cavation equipment will be used in·
stead.
Ball said Nixon, the Republican
nominee, "is not a man in whom the
American people can repose con·
fiden~."
President Johnson named J. Ru1sell
Wi ggins, editor and executive vice
president of the Waabington Post since
1960, to succeed Ball. JobnaotJ said the
world had gained "an advOCQte of
peace" in the 64-year-old Wiggins. Nixon Chides Humphrey
For Wallace Maneuvers
a!ATTANOOGA, TeM. (AP) -
Richard M. Nlxon accused Vlce Preli·
dent Hubert Humphrey today of trying
to use former Gov. George C. Wallace
of Alabama to' defeat Nb:on in the
South.
Nlxlm, tile GOP prealdentla l
nominee, told a planeside new1 con· ,....,,.. In Loulaville, Ky., before
flylnl here, tllat he will not join In any
nationally tolevtlod debate whlcb ln-
cllldes WalJ.ace.
C.Ongresa ii con1iderlng a meuure
wbl.ch ·y;ould relax th equal time laws
!or poll1jcal candldat<l-.to PIOJ'mll a
thrOt·WIY debele. Hwnpbrey baa laid
he would parliclpato.
1111011. ,S!'ld be ~t . ~Q, along
bec&Ule ne believes that csettate m whtcll a third-party c a n d I d a t e
participated "wotfd not be to 1be best
lotereats of the country.''
The GOP nominee said Humphrey is
tr)'ini to build up Wallace lo offset the
vice pre1ldent'1 lack of crtren&th In the
South, in an effort to prevent Nixon
from winning Soulbeni electorll votos.
"Mr. Hum?>r•Y neodt tlle -:dll>ale
e.tp01Un1 for Wallace," NIICOI aald.
"Humplrey can't win In wbal he calls
the New Soath. He 11 trying to uae
Wallace lo beat NIIon In !he Soutll."
In LoulavlUe, ~· Tburtday night.
Nixon broke hla'-~ sell-Imposed rule
again1t even mentioning Wallace's
..ame and was expected to step up his
drive agalmt the ttweat that the
pl'ealdenUal dlolce will be tllroWn Into
the Hou.n. U the •oter1 want a
change, Nixon •aid In a .-.ni.
then be ls a cancldate wbo w1JJ glve ii
to lhom.
He said that from the N~t of
belng elected, tile f~ar, bamR
governor'• cmdl.da~y fl 0 Dot Hrl0t1s
at •.11." • ;,
"He baa no chance at all," Nb:on
sald. "The question 11 whether or not
he will get enough vol.ea in the elec-
toral coUege to deny a majority to me
flroin P11ge J
COPTER ...
helicopter lnto a J>aramount dairy cor-
ral.
Mechanics who serviced tbc craft
nown by Capt. Jaclc E. tlupies. 4S. of
6442 ~vin Ct.rcle, Huntingbl Beach.
"'ere adamant during que'Stioning
'aOOut how tlley did the job.
Investigation \Yed.nesdC1y centered
around the mlatng bolt and the pro·
cedures used In tracking rot!Or blades
of the 28-passenger helicopter during
predawn hours on the day it crashed.
Tracking ·mearu setting the blades
so they lf1.ll all turn at the same l"el.
wtthll\ a fraction of en inch. thus
eUminatmg vibratlmis caused by an
out-of-track -·
f'reill P .. e J
NEWTON ••.
t.lnr; out to the jurlsl that appeal! of
lhl.a type take between 18 month! and
2i,t yeara. The Jatlp. a1atn de:nlfd the
motion. DurinC the brio! arJUID8llU, Garry
sak1 the "eommunk1 oetds'' Newton
and he 11 "no lancer a penon in·
terMied lD h1J own •ao and his own
seU -he ii an •xctllent subject for
probation."
'The prose<:utor. As.gist. Dial. AU.y.
LoweU Jensen, retorted that Nn'ton
was not eligible for parole under the
penal codt and It did not m.att.tr
whMhtt there were 29.<n> or 250,tnl
lipaturta on tb• petWoO. ,
'
or to Mr. Humphrey."
Nixon &aid he thinks tbe voters
should choose between him and Vice
Presider.t ltubert H. Humphrey, the
Democratic nominee.
He added, ''I just don't think t.hla nl·
lion at this time in lta bi.story. when
we need so many changes in our
foreign poUcy and our domestic policy
should run the riak of a coostitutional
crisis of a Houae of Representatives
11electing the preaident of the United
State1."
Nixon aald that Humphrey "seems
to be leaving the South alone" wl\en
the Democratic contender should be
campaiiniril in the-·area.
It is vitally important, Nixon 1a1d,
"that we have a two-party 1y1tem 1n
thit South and it'• Vitally importet
that the WhOle South not go <J(f on a
third party k:i.ck and not affect the
future in the decision made this year.
"l personally think," he continued,
"that when you look at the South from
tbe voters standpoint ln this part of
the country ... a vote !or Wallace Is
actually a vote for Hwnpbrey1 because
one thlng"ts for sure, Humphrey can·
·1t win these fit.ates. I can."
* * * Humphrey Blasts .
Nfion's Refusal
Of TV Debate
SAN FRANCISCO (UPll -Vice
Preeidonl Huberl H. Humphroy said
today Richard M. Nixoo was showing
"d.ildain" for tM public In refusing to
CTt'f&ge In a tele'(il'lon debate.
Rum~ey far &evetal week! baa ln·
eluded u a ataridard part of h11 cam-
paign oratory a challenge ta Nixon to
debate. Thi.I week Hwnphrey sug-
ae•d even a tmee-way deba.te to in·
elude American Independent party
candidate George Watiace.
Nixon rejected the thtte:way debate
ldea and tt 1etmed to Humphrey that
the RtpubJJcan Indicated a prererence
for • two-at.Jn joint_ digcus1lon.
Humphrey !trod 0£( '! 1•1ogtam to NI•·
on Thnrsday ni1ht ·1~!n,c he waa h~p.
py to learn1.hat· Niloo wa,; pow willing
to de~e hfm llnd be uke4 that Ulelr
re.presentatl\lts ~eel immediately to
m~Xe arrangtmenta,
From Louisville, Ky., today.
however, Nixon came back with
another statement, term.Ing as "kid
stu.C" the Idea .of a DOD-televiaed de·
bat. with Humphrey.
At the time of the Ntxon statement,
Humphrey was on Uve tetevlllon
himseU, acceptlllg qlleftk>ns from
v1Nera in San Francisco.
"Yoo may call lhiJ kid stuff, Mr.
Ni.lion . but t call it ~ stuff ol
1tate1men.'' Humphrey aald.
"I'm rolnl to lnal1t that we act like
meft and not like managed roOOts. l
think: Mr. Nb.on. )"CMll' re)ecUoo of
thla tndicata a k1r>d or disdain for
publlc opinion.
"Mr. Nixon, U you are unwilling to
debate with me. how are you going to
strand up 1n d1Jcua1ion1 "'itb other
world leaders?"
In r•IPOOM to another queauon.
HU11>9hrty aald while be was ''on an
upnrd march," bl.I campaign ellaru w.... "dupenltl for f l n a D c I a I
anittaDct. ''
Ht wn on to uy he la.eked the
fWJda available to Nixon to buy ex·
tensive Mtlonwide telavl..tlm tt.me and
he did not beUeve "• m.n lhould be
denied the prealdency beeauae he doe11
r\Ot tJave tllft casti •.• for conlrlVt:d
perforrnancet . . . before carefully
manipulated audiences.''
From Page J
_CI,EAYER ..... _ ,_
tttoring up guns to fight back against
IJ'acist pig cops recruited in Alabama
and Georgia. He said tbo P anthers'
ambition in arm.a.mentl goes all the
J•ay to the hydrogen bomb.
Like Cassius Clay in his brasher
days, Cleaver knows how to grab at·
tentlon. Usually he rellet on the shock
power of h1J remarka.
He seemed to be egged on by tbe
polltene11 of the audJeoct, u if be
wanted to bear hecklen.
"I want to get run out et town. No
one'• throwing bottie1 yet, ao I bave
to go farther," he 1ald.
OBSCENE DISCOURSE
He then gave an oblcene discourse
on th ·~'~n tllt.t.~1a "ID.DV0
men.
The governor '"' hta l'!:inclpal !Jr·
get w he &C<nied. him otuilni "me
and the college u a whJpplna boy to
Mir up right wing .enUment so he ean
gain a firmer grip at the ballot box
in November."
Cleaver 11ald the Kerner Report of
the President's Commission on Civil
DlJorder was the offlclal confetalon or
white racist America, He saJd It was
no blJ news to him or hi.I fellow Ne·
groes. "We bow,'' be said, "the ques-
tion II Whal lo do about It?"
Later, he gave h1a answer. "Black
power for black people. Faculty pow-
er for the faculty. Student power for
the students. And barbecue for the
pigs."
Jack Di~m~nd,
Tennis Official,
Succumbs at Sea
Jack Dlamond, resident of Newport
B-ach for 25 yeara and acUve in tennis
circles both u player and umpire,
died ol an apparent heart attack
aboard the plea.sure ship Lurline,
while en route to Hawall cm a vac1t1on
trip, It w11 learned today.
The fatal attack occurred Saturday.
Mr. Diamond, whose home was at
1207 W. Bay Ave., Balboa, wa1 a
member of tht U.S. Lawn Tennis
Umpire Assoct.at.lon.
In the textile bualnm for U yeare in
Loi Angele I, -ht g, · iUhivell b"y, -his
wife, Ellzabel!l, of Ille family borne:
two dau&l>ten,.Joyct iuc.1 .ot South
Puadeoa a1d Qloria Guild ol San
Marino; ml two grandcblldre!l.
Cler.k Shot Dead
LONG BEACH (UPI) -Charlea 0 .
Dixon, 35, a clerk f'1f the Jnternatlooal
Loophoremen'• and Warehousemen's um.on. .,,.. rbot to death "lburlday
nl&l>t during an alle!<atlon In whlcb be
leaped from Ille IOCOnd alory window
of hJs apartment.
Hs atepaoo, Robert Mooney, 25, sur-
rendere<l to Loog Beach police a ~hart
time later and was booked on suspi-
cion of murder.
Ball, lonner l!Ddef.ocrotary ol
state, said h> will Join HumphreY't
Democratic campaign as the viC.
president's foreign policy adviser.
Ball's predecessor 'at the U. N., An'bUt·
J. Goldbe<g, also joined tl1e Humphrt7
campatgn Thursday.
"I have taken thiz step so that I m&J
devote all my time and energy
between now and Nov. 5 to help assure
the election of HuWt Humphrey and
the defeat of Richard Nixon," Ball
&aid.
Ball explained his action at a state
department news conference: "To
avold any mltu11.derstan.ding of my
motives and pw-po1e1, I wish to state
flatly that after the November election
I thall return to private life. I have
asked the vice pre11tdent not to con-
sider me for any post In bis ad·
ministration."
Ball haa long been tllought to harbor
ambltJooa to be teeret.ary of state and
both President Kennedy and Johnson
reportedly conaldered him for the
post. ·r.:~·11f~~·~t Ba11, appob!ted'\o 1111 U. N. post last
Aprll 25, turned in what diplamats
considered distinguished
performances in the Security Council
debates on Czechoslovakia and in a
confrontaUon last week with Secretary
General U Thant over Vietnam.
Bail Inaugurated his presence in
Humphrey'• rankl with a scathing at·
tack on NI.son.
Humphrey, be said, ha1 t.he qualities
to meet "unparalleled dangers and op.
portunlt:les 1n ttle larger world arena"
in the years ahead. Nixon, he said,
"lamentably Jacks" the ability ''need·
cd to guide our country toward a
stable and lasting peace."
COMPATICA
Compatica is for t~e youn9 who w1nt to in•e1t i111 Contemporary Furnlture thet
collMtlon for li•iflt room, cUning ro.m and bedroom.
DIAURS l'OI: HINdDON -DlllXIL -HIRITAGE
will •ndura. A compleft
to DAYS NO INTIWT-TllMI AYAILAILI ON Al'PIOYID CUDIT
IN11RIORS
NIWp01T BEACH
1727 Wetlcllff Dr• 642-2050
OPIN PC.II.AT 'Tl\ t
rro'-lon1I Interior
DotlpM ..
LAG\INA llACH
:M.I Nor111 Coelf Hwy.
Anllobl.--AID-NSID OPIM PRIDAY 'TU. t
...... , .. ,... .... ti 0....,. c...ty 14 .. llQ
..
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t
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D11ntington Bea eh Your Hometown
• EDITION Dally Paper -
VOL 6f, NO. 233, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALll'ORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1968 TENC~
City Support Urged for Downtown Renewal
Rv WILLIAM REED of '" DlllJ .... ll•ff
Key to rebuilding the downtown sec-
t.on of Huntington Beach as a modern
commercial area is a demonstrated
willingness on the part of the city
leaders to go ahead, a vice president
of a New YorJt-real estate develop·
ment firm told the Mid-B each
Development Committee Thursday.
Donald R. Riehl, vice president in
charge of real estate for Donaldson,
Lulkin and Jenrette. told the com·
mtt.tee that his firm "is sure there is a
wonderful future for this area of tile
city."
He warned, however, that the key to
getting progress toward that future is
commitment by city le ad er s to
assemble the land n e e d e d for any
development.
'Ibe New York firm has indicated in-
terest in a large project of com-
mercial development on the pier and
eaver
It.In Dal!klul1t l'h1!1
SURFER CUTS TOWARD PIER IN 1966 COMPETITION
But Where Are Those Six·Foot Wav•s This Year?
Smaller Surf, Boards Due
At Beach Championships
By CRAIG LOCKWOOD
Dlllr 1"1111 ""'11119 l •ltw
Saturday's anaual U. S. Surfboard
Championship at Huntington Beach
1nay be a repeat of 1967'ii sur!less surf
cantest.
The problem Is that nobody knows
for sure.
As any surfer will tell .Y<J'.I nothing is
2s rickle as t:lle surf.
Robber's Boast
Proves Downfall
A robber who boasted loudly about
holding up a Garden Grove store and
pla~ ~i "big shot" buying drinks for
the house was arrested by Garden
Grove pol.ice Thursday night while he
held forth in a Stanton bar.
James W. Stuart, 22, of Anaheim.
was arrested in the Candle lnn at Dale
Street and Chapman A venue after
p;omeone tipped the Stanton police
dt>partment that he was bragging
abou. his holdup.
Stuart wa!I jailed on 1uspicion of
armed robbery of the Stop 'N Go
market at Gilbert Street and Katella
Avenue in Gardea Grove.
A suspect had walked into the store,
si mutated pos1es1lon ol a gun and took
l50 frGm tht cash register. He got the
m()ney from clerk John Collins pf
Oranie.
..
''The surf'.s just like the stock
marlret. It's up today, and down
tom.arrow," reported one'Hunti11gton
surfer who had been practicing since
daybreak in the fi6-degree, two-foot
surf near Huntington's famed pier.
Carefully depo&iling his 6-foot, &-inch
surfboard in the sand, the young
surfer gave a )Ong sigh as he looked at
smell waves.
"You can't rtde a mini-gun in surf
like this," he noted. Mini-gwis are
today's version of the world's most
quickly evolving piece of siports equip·
ment: the surt'board.
Last year average surfboard length
WM about 10 feet. This year most
boards are under ei~t feet, and some
are under 6 feet. The loogboard is as
dead as the dinosaur. and so is nose
rkling, on which most contests were
judged mly 12 Short months ago.
The short board hu produced a ·
revcXWon in surfing, and surfing
technique tbat has to be seen ~be
believed. Surfers are now doing
on waves that would have been bellev
eel impossible two years ago. \
But like the stock market. the surf
has tl'erlds a n d trend-watchers.
Today's doom merch8nts are predic·
ting a repeet of the 1967 contest which
was bekl in small surf, and was won
by Dana Point's Col"ky Carroll.
While predictions for the weekend's
wave du vary. contest hopefuls were
practicing in Lillputlan size swells,
and attempting to get Ult' most out of
,·•hat they bad to work with.
immediate downtown area.
Riehl said an area along Coast
llighway abouti. one or two blocks in-
land from First Street to about 6tP
Street could be developed.if tbe land
can be assembled.
"This is the stumbling block,'' be
said. •
Before his firm or any other could
become int.erested in developr.;.m., he
told the committeemen there must be
an economic .study showing that the
project contemplated is economice.lly
feasible. ,
Before his orga.nlz.atim w o u l d
become active in solving any of the
downtmm problems it would need
assurance 1tiat it would get v.batever
project evolved from studies, he told
the commit!«.
Riehl emphasized that i.t was im·
port.ant for the city to make decisions
quickly if it wants to move ahead.
"First dectsion is whether you want
sa
Four-letter
Words Spice
Racist Talk
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of .._ Dl!tr Plltl Sletl
"There a.re the people and there are
the pigs. 'The pigs are the power struc-
ture,'' Black Panther Eldridge Cleav·
er told 2,00J UC lrvine studerfts Thurs-
day.
lie said black militants are pre-
pared to ~stroy those he calls pigs.
He used a vulgar four-letter exple-
. ive to refer to Gov. Ronald Reagan,
\v hom he named as one or the pigs.
He said, "U America has to be de-
::;troyed, we (Negroes) demand our
right,, to participate in the destruc·
ti on/'
Thu:s Eldridge Cleaver did not dls·
appoint the students or newsmen who
turned out en masse to hear him
speak.
OVERSHADOWED
'.CRYING IN GHETI'O'
' ' " .
to go ahead or not. If you do, get the
economic study going. If not, we 're
wasting our time."
He said that il the project looks
economically feasible, his ftrm would
want to acquire control of the p!'operty
-all of li -by leasing or purchase
from ttie city.
"We are not about to get involved in
urbul renewal, or long term land
assembly projects. You assemble the
land and W!'ll solve your money pro-
blems."
He pointed out that it is Lmport.ant te
obtain proper freeway interchanges
into the downtown area from the Cout
Freeway. 'nle committee appointed a
sub~mmittee to meet with the state
engineers to insure proper freeway in·
terchanges.
Riehl said thtit bis development firm
is looking for action. We are not
(See DOWNTOWN, Paf e Z)
DAILY P.JCOT ..... .., N ....... 'l'OLITfCi~S UP Tljffl'I'
~ · I »"_,,,~•1·a1 '"'1 ".• . y · ,, .... 1n··· ear :·
l ~ ;•
There were three other spe:,tkers in
the conclave program on "America
as a Racist Culture," but Cleaver as
the notorious personality overshadaw·
ed the othe.r"i. It was his first appear·
ance since the UC regents slapped him
down as a 10-sessioo lecturer at Berke·
Jey.
19 Witnesses Testify at Helicopter Hearing
He said he did not speak at UC Riv-
erside Wednesday night because his
parole officer told him he was going
to be shot there and he was going to
be shot at Irvine, and given the choice
he would rather be shot in Orange
County.
He added that "the truth is I was
just too ti.red."
Dressed in a black. guru-styled silk
shirt and black pants Cleaver sat in·
doleotly, eyes nearly closed. stroking
hls short beard through the other
talks. A hush fell when he stood up
to the microphone as the final speaker.
Presuming to speak fO'I" the Negro
race, he said, "We're going to be free
or nobody is free. We say let's make
Utis pain democratic. I don't want to
hear no more crying in the ghetto and
laughing in the white suburb.
P UNKS UP TIGHT
"Wrinkle faced punks like Ronald
Reagan and Max Rafferty g€t up tight
about that," he said.
Cleaver said Black Panthers are
storing up guns to fight back against
racist pig cops recruited in Alabama
and Georgia. He said the Panthers'
ambition in armaments goes all the
way to the hydrogen bomb.
How "Swede'' it is when Lester Cut·
\er digs into the water with a kayak
pMdle.
The Orange
Coast kayaker,
one of a dozen
area personali-
ties to win
berths in th e
American dele-
gation being
sent to the
Olympic
Games in Mexi-
co City, is a stu-
dent of Swedish
technlq_ue1
wh have won
seven u of 13.
gold m a1s in
the kay k event
in past ames.
His story Is featured today on Page
16 in the latest of the pre-Olympic ser-
ies spoUlgbting the Orange Coast's
Olympians.
Dy ARTHUR R. 91NSEL
01 1111 Ol llY l"llOI Stiff
Findings in the worst civilian
helicopter crash in U.S. history -
fro mtiuman control to systems only
an engineer can comprehend -are
due within a year following close of a
two-day federal hearing Thursday in
El Segundo,
A missing nut and bolt which helped
hold .a pit.ch change rod on one of five
main rotor blades is considered a
crucial factor by the National
Transportation Safety Board.
The last or .a series of 19 witnesses
caUed to testify about cause of the Los
Angeles Airways helicopter crash
which killed 23 persons May 22 were
heard Thursday.
MoM of their remarks were so
technical that only airline personnel
and other qualified indiYiduals could
Wlderstand just what the three-man
be>ard of inquiry was hearing.
Mechanical problems of some sort
appear to be the f.actor, however, in
the plunge of the Sikorsky S61L
helicopter into a Paramount dairy cor·
rat.
Mechanics who serviced the craft
flown by Capt. Jack E. Dupies, 45, of
6442 Govin Circle, Cluntington Beach,
Y.'ere adamant during questioning
about how tlley did the job.
Investigation Wednesday centered
aroond the missing bolt and mie pro-
cedures useji in tracking rotor blades
of the 28-passenger helicopter during
Mother Enters Plea
Abandoned Girl Goes
To Father in Minnesota
Little Corrine Ann Rieter who was
abandoned Tuesday in the Orange
County Airport by her mother, today
is in ~found. Minn. with her father.
Orange County Probation officers
put the 7-year-old girl on a plane, to
Mlnneapotis Thursday where she was
met by her father Michael Rieter Jr.
Juvenile investigation officer Henry
C. Duffie said inveitigation revealed
that the little girl was le1Ially in joint
custody of her father and mother and
that ''under the present circumstances,
she was better off with her father."
Meanwhile her mother. jdentified as
Patt Fischer and Patt Es.au was ar-
raigned in Central ONnge Couoty
l\funicipal Court this morning. She
pleaded not guilty to felony child
abandonment and a Jury trial was set
for Oct. 23. She was released on her
own recognizance.
The mother, 3:1, had 1urrendered to
sheriff's deputies Wednesday. She told
them she was married last Sept. 10 to
Jerry Flscher, 24, and had been living
at 14102 Ash St., Westminster with
Fischer and the chlld.
Witnesses said Corrine had a tearful
reunion with her lather in Minneapolis
as she walked oft the plant'! aloae.
Rictcr Is a surveyor with the liennepln
Cnunty JUghway Department.
.,
Rieter said his ll fe left Minneapolis
with Corrine last December.
The little girl was abandoned at the
airport Tuesday morning with a note
asking that she be sent to her grand-
mother in M1chigan.
Car Crash Hurls
Woman to Death
An unidentilied WQJTl411n was hirled
100 feet to her dea.tt\ today 'Ntlen her
small foreign car was smashed
broadside by another vehicle at a
Westminster lntetttcitoc.
Offidals at Wesbnincter Ccxnmunity
1968 Cou•y Trt:ffl c 1117
15:1 Dealb Toll 1S5
llospit.al rftused to release the vie·
tim's name or any other information
about the cese.
PoUce said they ~ have a tl'affi'c
accident liatallly however, and a CU'·
me.r's deputy was at the hospital.
Th• """'"" -drl>ing through Ill< ~aection ol Bolla A venue and
Bushard Street when the accideot oc·
curred, Ct1U1triog in the drlvflt's a.idc ol
the sedan.
.~
predawn hours on the day rt crashed. ·
Tracking means setting the blades
so they will all turn at the. same levet.
within a fraclilon of an inch. tlni1
eliminating vibrations caused by an
out-of-track blade.
Pitch means the forward tilt which
carries the helicopter along, 1AU1e yaW
-also discus~ed ·in the tracking pr1)oo
cedure que:ruons -is the amomt they
.are· laterally slianted' to gi've the
aircraft lift.
Discussions Thursday primar\~ i~·
volved exetUtives . cf the S!konk1
Aircraft Qi~ision of U.nlt~~ Alt!f Corp .. afld only an expert (:Ould ·
just wba.t ~y were s·aylng. · '
The NTSB panel,· preridin~ ' er
repres~ntatives of four ottrer agencies,
including the airline, talked' of tile
possibility or a ·small, bu t !n·
capacitating failure in tbe automatic
flight control system too.
Another Los Angeles A l r w a y s
helicol>ter piloted by Capt. ·Allen D.
Ritter, of Los Angeles, was almost
forced into an emergency !anding on a
goU course June 23 during an AFCS
crisis.
Subsequent investigaUon revea1ed
(Sff, COPTER. Page 2)
Orange
...
Low clouds, fog and drizzle -
that's the gloomy weekend wea·
ther picture (or the Orange
Coast as the t.emperature drops
dowa to 70. Brlng back the heat
wave.
INSIDE '.l'ODAJr'
There'a music in !11e air at
Laguna Bea.ch'a Jroltie Bowl
where the Llf"'ie Opem A1aocio·
tion open.t i t a lea.son tonighC
with "La Boheme.., Read obol'C
it tn today'a WEEKENDER mag-
azine.
)
--· ---
J DAILY PILOT F rldlJ', Stptembtt 27, l 968
tfrea~her Crie~ Fuol at s~hool Na111e Ga111e
~ . .. .. . . . • -~·na 1 a mu or not . -· ...... bee.it the quertioD for trustee• of
I tinl1'lll Beach Ullioo lll&h Scb6ol
•
t or •l least that's wbat appeared to , 'be at .take in truJtee deliberaUons on Jl name for tbe new 1ebool which unUl
~Jut Jane was to have been named
l i "lbomu A. Edison High SChool.11
i J: Today the question seems to be one
; Cf whether the trustee. have confi.
, donce In the ability. ol otudaoll to de-: !'41o Oil lbe ume for lbe school o-
.Baby Sitter
Kidnapers
Arrested
Two kiclnapera were arrested Thurs·
iy morning after they allegedly drag-
!d a Huntington Beach ba&ylitter in-
) a field, blindfolded her with her bra
ud robbed heI" Of ff. .
Jailed on 1uspidon Of kidoaplng and
'rongann ~ were Eugene T.
,havez, 19, Gorden Grove, and Gary
:ottreU, 18, of 11400 Court Lane,
fesbninster.
Police said the duo first pulled up in
' car beside Mrs. Gertrude Green·
man, 83, d. 80 Huntington St., as she
wu walking near Atlanta Avenue and
Beacll Boulevard on her way to work.
According to police accounts, they
uked Mn. Greenman for directions
and when she ignored ttiem, they
jumped from tne car and forced ber
Into .., adjacent Beld.
pcjice Detective Gilbert Veine said
sn unldectifled oil worker found the
woman and brought her to police
beadquarUrs. A description ol the
allepd aasailanta wu broadcast and
the polr was picked up shortly
th~.
Police aatd Mrs. Greenman was
1baken and bruised, but otherwise
umajlftd.
l't'om P .. e 1
COPfER •••
an electtlcal component had been In·
ataUed 1~ degrees wrong and shorted
two or hee ti.mes, causing the
aircraft to lurch back and fO<th.
Spec1ftcally. the system was given
an UDWanted eleotrical power input,
causing the illstablllty, which deared
·up by itself, allowing Capt. Ritter to
·ny on to Los Angeles InternationaJ
Airport.
The young pilot said in.flight pro-
blems bad been in his mind since the
crash of Capt. Dupies' craft on May
22 three months before a second LAA
he1Ucopter crashed in Compton, killing
21 persons.
METAL FATIGUE
Metal ftiigue was probably U1e fac·
tor causing that helicopter, nown by
Capt. Kenneth Waggoner, 33, or 3131
Pierce Aw., Costa Mesa, to crash in a
city park playground and explode Into
flames.
Evldence of metal fatigue was found
in Ule main rotor spindle and LAA has
replaced that component in its four re·
malnillg helicopters.
The NTSB is expected to hold
another public hearing into Aug. 14
crash wl1hin the next few months.
Both belicopt'ers crashed within the
same 21n: mile radius, leadnJg to
epeculation of all kinds, includlng the
poulbWty of sabotage or a sniper on
lllo ground.
No evidence of in-filght explosion
was found, however, nor indications of
pos&ible ground fire.
Witnesses to the May 22 crash in
Paramount said during the NTSB
hearing that they heard a change in
tihe sound of the turbojet powered S61L
cbaoge, caU1ing tbem to look up.
OAllV PllOI
OllANG! CO.t.lT "1.llllSH!HG COM,.AHY
R•h•ri N. W••d Pf"ft"'9nl 1M Pvblltller
J1elr R. Curlty
Vk.e "'r•l4llnl Md Genlr11 M•Nf'r
n."''' JC •• .,n Ecmcw
T111"''' A. Mw,~in• AYIMll .... .6Glfw
Allt•rt W. l•I•• WUll 1111 lt11d
AMOd•,. 11lilflllll'1'oll a.a.
EOIJOI' Clly fdllW
"""1t9fMIHcllOMc. JOt Ith Str••t
Maill119 AJ4r••n r.o. 101e 7to t2u1
.,..... ""'"' H ........ "'9dlr 121"1 Wlllf ... lblofl loll,,,...atd c.ita /Mia: Uri Wtlf ltr lt!WI
UWN a.at: m P9'ftf A-
,
:=.:r~ WU placid In th• 1tu~•I
p.at't ttia ..i.w of Mn. Marte, Q>nll
~. lllt educalot Ill 11 ... tlnl!IO•
Beach llial> &cbool.
"I ha .. no lni.ntlol:I of d\tputlnr
what should be the proper name of
the school, bu\ rather>-the breaking of
the board's' word to 1he teen-ager.''
'nte truttees decided once to allow
students to cboose aqiong the names
Edlaon, Robe<t F. Kennedy. Dwight D.
Elaenbower and ·Walter Dls~y. Tues·
day tbey reversed tb'.tmaelves and
d•ldM to allow the atudents to come
up with o .. po.llibla names baled on
locatio!l of Iha DIW lacillty in IOUth•
•ut Huntlnct.b llMcll.
Of the five namu choten u pot·
slbtes by the student., three would be
submitted to student ballotin.g and
presumably if the ballot decision
pleases the trustees the name &elected
would be applied to the school on Mag·
nolla Street north of Hamilton Avenue.
"We must ask our1elves if the board
of education ls our violce or our mas·
ters. 1 a.ck all th.Ole who believe aa
I do lo illlOJ'm the board that the,.
teen-aim dtlll'Ve our conrtdenct.
"11it majority ba\le earned it to.
ge'thtr with our respect. Many o(' my
1QOC1ates agree. Only fools can deny
thal today's youth must face more
ch•llengea than we did at their age.
"How often we as educaton have
heard stu4ei!U say, 'If only our par·
em would giV! us more responaibillty
and the opportunity to show we have
adult thougbtl and feelings.'
"Other studentl reply, 'Ob, but you
must earn tbl rffpect or your parents
Nancy Launches 'Beaver' "'' T1..,,_,.
Mrs. Ronald Reagan, in Long Beach to christen
North American Rockwell's newest deep submersi·
ble, is Introduced to· this mockup of the vessel and
served a cup of coffee by one of the manipulated
anns. She later smashed it with a bottle of cham·
pagne.
Humphrey Blasts
Nixon's Refusal
Of TV Debate
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Vice
President llubert H. Humphrey said
today Richard M. Nixon was showing
"disdain" for the public in refusing to
engage in a television debate.
Humphrey for several weeks has in·
eluded as a standard part ol his cam·
pai.gn oratory a challenge to Nixon to
debate. This week Humphrey sug-
gested even a three-way debate to in·
elude American Independent party
candidate °'°rge Wallace.
Nixon Chides Humphrey
-For W allnce Maneuvers
CHATI'ANOOGA, Tenn . (AP) -
Richard M. Nixon accused Vice Presi-
dent I-Jubert Humphrey today of trying
to use former Gov. George C. \Vallace
of Alabama to defeat Nixon in the
South.
Nixon, the GOP p re s id e n ti a I
nominee, told a planeside news con·
ference in Louisville, Ky., before
flying here. that he will not join in any
J\atl.onally televised debate which in-
cludes Wallace.
change, Nixon said in a statement,
then he is a candidate who will give lt
to them.
He said that from the standpoint of
being elected, the former Alabama
governor's candidacy is "not serious
at all."
1'He has no chance at all," Nixon
said. "The question is whether or not
he will get enough votes in the elec-
toral coµege to deny a majority to me
or to Mr. llumphrey.''
and 1how them )'OU are capable ot actmc tn a mature fashion.'
"Theo we read ln the DAILY Pll.OT
of the retraoUon by the board con·
cun.lng studenU actually naming the
school. I ask certain members of the
board to act in a mature fashion and
then!by earn the respect of all con-
cerned.
"The individual (Trustee Richard
Wilson) who stated that he would not
accept any niame submitted by stu·
dents (unless it met his agreement)
shows great lack of confidence 1n these
tecn-aie.rs or lack of under1.talldin& or
both." '
Mrs. Ecke11, who says she has been
teaching lD the Cli1trict four years,
says the schools may be overcrowded
and lack the con!ldence of those who
vote for funds for building or opera·
Uon, but that through it all the young-•
st.era are capable and de.serving of
respect.
"There )1 no doubt in my mind that
these )"Oqpg people will flllfill our faith
1n them and in their future."
Opens Fund Drive
Preacher Rails
At Bureaucracy
By JAMES McNABB, JR.
Of ~ Dlll1 ,.HIM 11111
Gospel pceacher Claude Bunzel rail·
ed against the evils of "big brother
big money and big government':
Thursday .at a joint luncheon of the
Fotmtaln Valley Kiwanis and Ex·
change clubs.
The original meeting purpose was to
kick off ttie 1968 West Orange County
United Fund drive.
The fiery orator, whose preeeot job
is curator of the Colonial Research
Libf'ary at Knott's Berry Farm,
departed from his announced topic
"General Welfare end the Con·
sti.tution" to attack what he termed
the "expensive, top-heavy Washington
bureaucracy.''
Speaking before an audience ol
Fountain Valley city, educational and
business leaders, Bumel claimed a
300-yeu-bistory of seU-gove:rnment in
America was being eroded by a ma•
jcrl.ty of present day Washington
politicians .
He said there were a few exceptions
from Or~ge County to the "general
rule of bad politicians."
Af.l<r 20 minutes of background
materlal, the guest speaker turned to
the welfare topic.
Denouncing current federal in·
terpreta.Uons of the Coru:tltutlon's
"general welfare" clause , the minister
cited a 15().year-old veto by President
James Madison that was based OD a
states-rlghU interpretauon.
According to Bunzel, federal publlc
welfare is "illegal."
The 4&.member audience warmly
applauded hil remarks that concluded
witti a call for Christian compassion
linked with an intensified drive for ·
more locaJ government power.
Beach GOP Plans
'Tequila Thing'
White e 1 e p h ants , pinatas,
refreshments and music will be a part
of the fun ata "Tequila Thing"
sponsored by tile Huntington Beach
Republican Assembly.
The event begins at 8 p.m. at 9075
Blackbird Ave., Fountain Valley.
Tickets are $1.50. Information on tick·
ets and the event may be obtained by
calling Cissy Zaionz at 962-9960.
C~ITICIZES 'BIG BROTHER'
Speaker Bunzel
From Page 1
DOWNTOWN • •
prepared to spend money in Hun·
tin:gton Beach if nothing is going to
happen. If the preliminary study
shows t:here is promise and you want
the development we can do it. You
have time to gain by our eking the
developrqent job.
"You are at a major crossroads in
economic development. Whether you
chose to capitalize on it or not is
something else."
While the committee did not order
the developer to go ahead, it seemed
sympathetic with the comments or
Committeeman Jack Koebig.
"For tbe fitst time in years someone
is interested in developing this
downtown. We should show some en•
cow-agement or it will be another 50
years before anyone else is interest-
ed." Nixon rejected the three-way debate
idea and it seemed to Humphrey that
the Republican indicated a preference
!or a two-man joint discussion.
Humphrey fired off a telegram to Nix·
on Thursday night saying he was hap-
py to learn that Nixoo was now willing
to debate hint and be asked that their
representatives meet immediately to
m&ke arrangements.
Congress is considering a measure
which "·ould relax the equal time laws
for politicaJ candidates to pennlt a
three·way debate. Humphrey has sald
he would participate.
Nlxon said he won't go aJong
because he believes that debate in
which a third-party ca n d Id ate
participated ''would not be to the best
ioteresta of the country."
COMPATICA
From Louisville, Ky., today,
however, Nixon c&me back with
another statement, terming as "kid
stuf" the idea of a non-televised de-
bate with Humphrey.
At the time of the Nixon statement,
llumphrcy was on live television
himself, accepting questions Crom
viewers in San Francisco.
"You may call this kid stuff. Mr.
Nixon, but I call it the stuff of
statesmen," Humphrey sajd,
"I'm going to insist lhDt we act like
men arn::I not like managed robots. I
think, Mr. Nixon. yoor rejection of
this indicates a kind of disdain for
public opinion.
The GOP nominee said Hwnphrey is
trying to build up Wallace to ofhlet the
vice president's lack 0£ strength in the
SooUt.,.. in an effort to prevent Nixon
from winning Southern electoral votes.
"'Mr. Humphrey needs the debate
expooure for Wallace," Nixon said.
"Humphrey can't win in what he calls
the New Sou.th. He is trying to use
\Vallace to beat Nixon in the South ."
In LoulsvWe, Ky., Thursday night,
Nixon broke his sell-Imposed rule
against even mentioning \VaUacc's
. .ime and was expected to step up his
drive against the threat that the
presldenUal cholce will be thrown inlo
the House. U the \loters want a
Newton Faces Up to 15
Years for Police Slaying
OAKLAND (UPI) -Bltck Panther
founder Huey P. Newton wa.s St'n·
tenced t<i 2 lo 15 years In slate prison
today for voluntary. manslaughter in
the slaying of an Oakland policeman.
Superior Court Judge Monroe Fried·
man den.led motJons for a new trial, to
allow Newton free on ball during ap·
peal uid to ifant the 26-year-old
Negro mltlt.ant leader probation.
In a 20-mlnute court appearance,
durlng which attorneys' argwnents
were extremely brief, the judge
ordef"ed Newton to the rtMe medical
fa dllty at Vac•vtlle "under the term
prosorlbed by law."
Defense counsel Olarles Garry, ln
tlllting krr probation. preventtd pttl·
tiona wtilch he 1ald h•d 29,~t
1lgn1turM c1Jling Newton 111 ''ho11t1l
dedicated, se!Oew human being" who
would be a "powerful asset to the
community.''
Newton maintained his chHrlul de· ,,
meanor, smlllng and waving at the
two dozen spectators In the courtroom
as he left aceompanie~ by b•illffs.
They chttred and s h o u t e d en·
couragement to Newton, compelling
Friedman to gavtl for order.
Garry immediately filed notice of
appeal and again asked ror bail, poln-
tJng out to tlle Jurllt U1at appeals of
this type take between 18 moatha and
2~ years. The judge again donled the
motion.
During the brief arguments, Garry
said the "community needs" Newton
and he Is "no longer a person In·
te.-~ in his own ego and hi• own
1elf -ht ls an excellent 1ubje(t for
probation."
The prosecutor. AWt. Dist. Atty.
Lowell JenaM. retorted that Newton
w11 not eligible for parole under the
penal code and It d.Jd not matter
whethM' there were 29,000 or 250,000
slgnatw'e1 on ttie petition.
Compttlca il for the young who w•nt to inv•it In Contempor•ry Ftu·ttltul'9 th•t will endure. A complet.
coll•ctlon for living room, dining room •ncf bedroom.
DIAlllS POl: HINUDO N -DlDIL -HllnA•E
to DAYS NO INTIWT -TUMS AYAJLULI ON APl'lOYID CUDn
NIW-T llACH
1717 Weotcllll Dr• 642-2050
OfWM PlllAY '11l t
I
LAGUNA llACH w North c-Hwy, 4f4.4111
Of'IN NIDAY "l1l t
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. . ,..· DAILY PILOT Lagu11a Bea~h
• J ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA VOL. 61, NO. 233, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1968
Today's Closing
• N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Laguna Bowlers Vow to Blackball R_ace Bias
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of t"9 C»llY l'llM ll•lt
Lagufla Beach Council.man Roy
I lolm hovered delicately over the
situation for a moment and tben
swooped right to bls point.
He told members of the Laguna
Beach Lawn Bowling Club he wanted
to be S'Ul'e that the city will not provide
facilities only for white Anglo-Saxons
wiU1 the club weeding out others.
He referred to procedural methods
of decidklg who 6hail use the bowling
greens when the club builds a
clubbouse in city-owned Heisler Part.
Club d.Wectors at the council :study
session Wednesday assured Holm
there is not and will not be racial
discrimination, that it is guarded
against in their bylaws.
Holm asked about the procedure to
join and WQ! told it includes paYlJlent
of a $40 initiation fee, payment of $10
eaver
yearly membership dues and 15 cents
a game tor bowilng.
The club board m'"°ben asked only
that new would be bowlers be restrain·
ed from using the geens until w:ltti
tutoring they attained sufficient skill not to damage tbe greens with inept
bowling.
Councilman Richard Goldberg sug-
ges!ed that an arrangement simllac to
the Festival of Arts policy C9f'nmittee
be set up tO arbitrate questions o!
><Hgw&; '"""¥ ..... f Four-letter
Beat Brea Ti111e ·
Words Spice
I
DAILY PILOT Stiff l"tlel9
SET FOR BIG GAME -Laguna High song leaders will be cheering
their team on tonight when Artists renew grid rivalry with Brea-
Olinda Wildcats. From leflt are Merilee Magnuson, Tenie Leslie,
Debbie Brekke, Marsha Hinwood, Merrilee Benton, Debbie Aubrey.
Brea Tonight!
A rtists, Wildca ts ili 35th Grid Clas h
Tonight'.\ 8 o'clock kickoff marks the
!15th annual renewal of football bo8ti-
litie5 between the Laguna Beach High
School Artists .and the Bre.a Olinda
\Vildcats. one or Orange County's
oldest and most hotly contested
gridiron rivalries-.
It will be tile first home contest of
the 1968 season on newly designated
Red Guyer Field -named in honor of
the long-time LBIIS coach and .athletic
director.
Tille series st.ams at l( to 18 in
Brea's favor but the Laguna squad is
favored tonight. Laguna comes into
the game after a 13 to 5 conquest o!
Katell.a \\'hile Brea took a 41 to 0
thumping from 1'"ullerton. See details
in Sports Section, Page !8.
Ro bb er's Boast
Proves Downfall .
A robber who boasted loudly about
holding up a Garden Grove store and
pla, :i "big shot" buying drinta for
the house was an-ested by Garden
Grove police Thursday night wblle be
held forth in a Stanton bar.
.James \V. Stuart. 22, of Anaheim.
was .arrested in the Candle Inn at Dale
Street and Chapmlln Avenue after
someone tipped the Stanton police
department th"'t he was brae:ging
.abou . his holdup.
Stu11rt was jailed on suspicion of
nrmed robbery Of the Slop 'N Go
mM"ket at Gilbert Street and Katella
Avrnue In Garden Grove.
In the 34 previoos meetings. there
have only been two tics. It "·as 0 to O
in 1937 and 19 to 19 in 1938.
A complete report ol the game will
appear in Saturday's DAILY PILOT.
l-lere is the complete 33-year varsity
foot.ball record of competition between
the Laguna Beach lligh School Artists
and the Brea Olinda Wildcats:
1935 -Laguna 0, Brea 26
1936 -Laguna 18, Brea 13
1937 -Laguna 0, Brea 0
1938 -Laguna 19, Brea 19
1939 -Laguna 14, Brea 6
1940 -Laguna 0, Brea 25 ~
1941 -Laguna 19, Brea 0
19'2 -Laguna 0, Brea 6
1943 -Laguna 6, Brea 0
1944 -Laguna 18, Brea 0
1945 -Laguna 26, Brea 6
1946 -Laguna 3'2, Brea 7
1947 -Laguna 34, Brea 0
1948 -Laguna 6, Brea 13
1949 -Laguna 45, Brea 6
1950 -Laguna 47, Brea 0
1951 -Laguna 12, Brea 19
1952 -Laguna 7, Brea 2
1953 -Laguna 12, Brea 25·
1964 -Laguna 25, Brea 13
1955 -Laguna 13, Brea 26
J956 -Laguna 71 'Brea 2.6
1957 -Laguna 7, Brea 25
1958 -Laguna 0, Brea 19
1959 -Laguna 7, Brea 26
1900 -Laguna 7, Brea 59
1961 -Leguna fi, Brea 25
1962 -Laguna 0, Brea 13
•1952 -Laguna 7, Brea 3:2
1963 -Laguna &. Brea 20
1964 -Laguna 19, Brea O
196.5 -Laguna 8, Brea 10
1966 -Laguna 14, Brea 9
.1967 -Lagun11 7, Brea ~
•-CW playoff gamt.
Racist Tall\:
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of !!It D1U1 PllOt Sl1ft
"There are the people and there arc
the pigs. 'fhe pigs are the power struc-
ture," Black Panther Eldridge Cleav-
er told 2l!XKI UC Irvine students Thurs-
day.
He said black militants are pre-
pared to destroy those he calls pigs.
He used a vulgar four-letter exple·
tive to refer to Gov. Ronald Reagan,
whom he named as one of the pigs.
He said,. "If America bas to ~ te·
stroyed, we (Negroes} demand our
rj&IJU to participate in the destruc· uon... .~
Thus El&idge Cleaver d.Jd not dis·
appoint the studerltl or ~wsmen who
turned out en mUH te · .bear him
•peak.
OVERSHADOWED
There were three other speakers jn
the cooclave program on "America
as a Racist Culture," but Cleaver as
the notorious personality overshadaw·
ed the others. It w§'s his first appear-
ance since the UC regents slapped him
down as a ill-session lecturer at Berke·
ley.
He said he did not speak at UC Riv-
erside \Vednesday night because hls
parole officer told him he was going
to be shot there and he was going to
be shot at Irvine, and given the choice
he would rather be shot in Orange
County.
He added that "the truth is I was
just too tired."
Dressed in a black, guru-styled silk
i;hirt and black pants Cleaver sat in·
dolently, eyes nearly closed, stroking
his short beard through the other
talks. A hush fell when he stood up
to the microphone as the final speaker.
Presuming to speak for the Negro
race, he said, "We're going to be free
or nobody is free. We say let's make
I.his pain democratic. I don't want to
hear no more crying in the ghetto and
laughing in the white suburb.
PUNKS UP TIGHT
"Wrinkle faced punks like Ronald
Reagan and Max Rafferty get up light
about that," he said.
Cleaver said Black Panthers arc
storing up guns to light back against
racist pig cops recruited in Alabama
and Georgia. He said the Panthers'
ambition in armaments goes all the
(See CLEA VER, Pare 21
How "Swede" it Is wbcn Lester Cul·
!er digs into the water with a kayak
paddle.
The Orange
Coast kayak.er,
n n e or a dozen
area personali·
ties to win
berths in t h e
.. American dele·
gation being
sent to the "'
Olympic
Games In Mexi-
co City, ts a stu-
dent of Swedish
technJques
which have won
seven out of 13
gold medals in
the kayak event
in past Games.
His story is featured today on Page
16 in tile latest of the pre-Olym.plc ser-
ies 1patligbting the Orange Coast's
Olympians •
clubhouse use and other matten.
Club membenl, including James
Cavitt, Dun Clanton, Art Brl~s aDd
Richard Davies, bad no objectign to
civic groups using the clubhouse when
it is oot in use. But, they called for
some type of controls to protect the
property.
UOO.er terms o! the propolSed lease,
the city would provide the land ad·
jacent the greens and U:ie club would
l~ conNuction of the clubhouse
with locker, toilet, office and storage
area.
The lawn ti>wterg aJso asked. t<r a
20-year lease: rather than .a 10-year
lease. Council dlscusston indicated
that the city wouk1 approve a 10-year
lease with two-way 10-year optlans
similar to leases with the Festival and
Laguna Players.
The bowlers asked that ttiey be
given until Jan. 1, 1970 to begin C<Jn-
&truction so they would have time to
'
Meeting Set Mondor
Opinions Vary Widely
On Hotel-Motel Zone
There arc those who feel it ls
altogether too restrictive and those
who feel it is too liberal.
The opinion spectrum about a pro-
posed commercial-hotel (CH) zone
for Ltguna Beach will likely surface in
ef'ltirety Monday night.
The Laguna Coordinating Council
has scheduled a public meeting at 8
p.m. in city council chambers to
thrash out specifics of the ordinance
draft. Al 'Autr.Y. city planner. will be
tthere lo field questions be they from a
hotel-n1otel owners at one pole or
estlletic·mindcd citizen groups at the
other.
The ordinance would attempt to. on
one hand, correct a long-sanding situa-
tion of mixed zoning that has forced
hotel development by variance.
Such is the case where a property
owner, hoping to build a hotel. owns
adjacent parcels in which one bears
co1nmcrcial zoning and the others
bear one or two types of residehtial
zoning , each with a different set of
restrictions.
The ordinance, on the other hr.nd.
would attempt to protect est:hetics and
view of the ocean and would, of
Group Plans
Fall-winter
Lecture Se1ics
SpiJ.ituaJ Research Associates of
Laguna Beach has announced a lall-
"'·inter lecture series to be held at the
Women's Club.
Dr. Patricia Rockland, graduate
psycbologist and mystic, wilJ initiate
the Mies oo Oct. 18. Dr. Rockland
will deliver two more lectures in
Novembe!' and January covering rein-
carnatJon, the human a u r a and
meditat1on.
English medJum Brenda O'enshaw
wW demoootrate her med.lumship on
Nov. 8.
In January Gina Cemiinera, author
of the best sellers, "Many Mansions"
and "r-.1any Uves. Many Loves," Will
lecture on Edgar Ca)'ce, his diagnostic
abitlties and prophecies.
Information on the lectures may hC!
obtained by writi.og to P. O. Box 42$,
SOOth Laguna.
•
course, set parking standards.
J.farry Lawrence, chamber presi·
dent, has said probably nottiing is
more important to future Laguna than
contents Of the ordinance. H<:!Ty
WWats, motel owner with expansion
plans, sajd recently after reading a
draft of the ordinance that he went ill·
to shock al proposed restrictions.
The ordinance contains no height
limitations but would make height a
function of both front and sideyard
setback to mainta.in a special separa·
tion of buildings.
In the words of City Planner Autry,
"capabilities under the ordinance in·
crease In relationship to the amount of
frontage and depth of properties an in-
dividual pulls together."
The ordinance is being designed
chiefly for areas oceanward of Coast
tlighway. Autry said it r.Uows nex·
ibility for v a r y i n g topographical
features encountered along Laguna's
coast.
He said he considers it a viable.
functional ordinance but conceded
there are probably several aret-s of
disagreement among those in the opi·
nion spectrum.
These would range from setback re·
quirements to parking requirements.
Bir cher Off er
For Speaker
Interes ts VC I
A UCT group apparenUy has taken
at face value the offer or a South
Laguna man to secure a right wing
speaker as a counterbale.nce to the
speaking engagement of B 1 a c k
Panther Eldridge Cleaver.
Dr. Robert E. O'Brl&n aald today
tbat he had been asked by UCI to
secure a member or th• John Birch
Society to speak and hu 11Tanged ror
such a t.alk.
A Uct public information officer
could not confirm such 1 speaking
date but said It ls not unlikely. "I've
heard talk thnt maybe they should
take him up on his offer," said Wayne
Clark of the UCI public affairs office.
l-le said a number of groups C<Juld
Ji-ave made such a requHt. of O'Brian,
adding "this campus b 811 open cam·
pus."
• I
raise fund1 for the project. CouD·
cilmen agreed.
City Mgr. James D. Wheaton ...
the bowlers, like the players, will have
to place in escrow all funds needed to
complete the project, a budget atatt-
ment of all C061' and an agreempit
with a contractor before construcfldn
can begin.
Councilmen are expected to look at
the revised lease again on Oct. 16.
•
Lagunan Held ·
In Burglaries
Of Two Of fice8
A Laguna Beach men has been ar-
rseted on suspicion of the do\lble-ec-
lion burglaries of neighboring office
suites.
Detective Vic Sagan said burglary
complaints will be soug1lt t~
against John David Maybouer, 24,.of
1289 S. Caast Highway.
He was arrested by detective Alex
Jimenez on suspicion of t w i c e
burglarizing both the office of Micro
Tecb. Inc. 1999 S. Coast Higtiway, and
the <Bdjat:ent office suite of Laguna
Heights, Inc.
Sagan said Jimenez has ·recovered
one adding machine taken in the
burglaries Sept. 15 and 16 and is at-
tempting to recover other items 50ld
to ·a Pasadena firm.
Taken in aie weekend thefts were of.
!ice equipment estimated to be worth
$1,62.5 including an electric calculator,
an electric typewriter and two adding
machines.
Stoc k Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market cllmbed back to the upside in
a strong rally late this afternoon. (See
quot.at.ions, Pages 10-1 J ).
Oran:L~'
Weather
Low clouds, fog and drizzle -
that's the gloomy weekend wea·
Uier picture for the Orange
Co.ast as the temperature drops
down to 70. Bring back the heat
wave.
I NSIDE T ODAY
There's musie in lhe air at
Laguna Beach's Irvine Bowl
where Ille Lyric Opera A&&ocia-
hon open& i t 1 1ea1un tonight
with "La Bohnie." Read abou.i
it in toda1/'1 WEEKENDER mag.
arint,
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l.fHW!llt ,,.. • •-.rt*"-' . w.,._
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f DAll.Y PIL!lf FridQ, Stpt.tmbtr 27, 1968
Other More:·· ··Light~. ~ess~ Be-at
.~.!'!: ... ·-..
Green Beret .
fleehives' ' ' .
Hfilt Attack
·,
-.SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Gr,.n Berets
aild South Vietnamese paratroopl
leveled c!Ort-!illed ortllle<Y ODd blaoted
apart Commun.ht attacks today oo two
outpost.I guardlna the Cambodian
border northwest of Saigon, killing 282
guerrillas against li&ht kisses of their
own.
The two attacU about 25 miles
apart were tte lateat in a aeries
agalnst oorder outPostl on 111errtlla
routes toward Sataon, when anti·in·
flltraUpn patrols ar. on thelr toughest
alert 1lnce May.
North Vietnamese fortes slammed
1,000 mortar and rocket rouodl into
the U.S. Special Foret:a camp at Tbien
Ngon a• a prelude to c:b&rging with
tear gu into the outpost'& barbed
Wire. .
"UPI COITfllpODdent Kate Webb said
t2Je American and South Vietnamese
defenders leveled their howitzers end
fired "beehive rounds" -filled with
UDY darts slmllar to huge carpet tacks
""lnto the Communist ranks.
··'"At daybreak, the defenders found 33
11odle1 on the barlled wire alld 103
outside.
"It wu a real muc," said one of the
cfreen Berets. "Bits ot people were
h&Dlini all over the wire."
1be "Beehives" cut apart the 400·
man North Vietnamese unit which ap-
parently based its hope on crippling !lie bate with the !,!JOO.round shelling.
No Americana: were killed.
" Jobless Capo
Fireman Admits
Theft of Car
An unemployed Capistrono Beach
fireman turned bimseU in to Laguna
Beach police this morning and, they
said, adrrutted stealing a car which he
hoped to trade for marijuana in Mex·
ico.
Police Lt. Robert r..1cr..1urray said
?'IUchael Raymond Schneider, 20, of
34528 Camino Capistrano was booked
on suspicion of grand theft auto.
· McMurray said Schneider told police
he took a 1969 car from the lot of Tom-
my Ayers Chevrolet ·on Sept. 18.
The officer said Schneider told
pollee that be and a friend intended to
tnde the car in Tijuana lor marijuana
but missed their e<:otact.
Instead, McMurray said, they were
atopped by Tijuana police wtio drew
guns when the car went through a red
light. The car v.·as impounded by the
Mexican poijce pending proof of
ownersWp, he said.
McMurray said Schneider turDed
himseJt in at 3 a.m. tOOay. The officer
said a COOlplaint for auto theft would
be 111ought today !rom the district at·
tOI11ey.
onllY PILOT
Oll:ANOE COAST PUlll.ISHING Ccw.fANY
R.eb•rt N. W••d
Pmldenl •nit 1'utlllllwr
J 1cli: It. Cu1ley
Vb !"re.I,.. 11\f a-.. MflWftr
lhe111•t 1(...,11 .....
Tiie11111 A. M•1plrti11e
...... Nllnt f:dllor
•1ch•nf '· H•11 P•vl Hi11111 l•-tekl\ .A"""ltl .. CltJ Ell!IO" Olrte.IOI'
a..,.. ....-Oftlce
222 f•r•1t A••·
M1iU119 Add•1n: P.O. 11• 6l6 •2l52
0-°""" cat. ,,._: "° ""'"' ,.., ,.,...,
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'VIOLENCE WON'T HELP'
Riot Comml11lon11 Corm1n
. . ' ~ef lt-~rdoctr=.U. In aw ,...._ . wlio..1 ell It .al>e :.-==. handl.b while racllm,
-Bo~ --rtaallod 11J -I C:--12 lllt XOrW .... that "0Ur ""' 11 moving toward two 15oc\etie11, one
Vt1te and Qne black, se~ .Cd
unequal.'' · · 'Ile 'con..! for a. hrotl><tfiood of C9n·
ctl1!io bllld. Ille country togetlt.,., 'nd
"rtjoctlon or &n1 hlomnollt tllat would
(Utk c\[vlde IL -
llolllpirtl ..iuor SCheer callld Concr:ft..,. CCrrnar1 .. a I o o d
Germ8a~' along "with Vice ?resident
Hubetl Humphrey •
'AMERICA ON DECLINE'
R1m.,.rt1' Editor SchHr
Albert Eccles to Lead
Laguna Chest Campaign
Banker Albert Eccles will terVe as
c a m p a l g n chairman or tbe 1968
Laguna Beed! Comlllllnlty Cbet!t flllld
drive wblch gets under way Oct. 1
wtth <a record goal of $51,CXX>.
"We are a1lting everyone to consider
making a greater contributlon to the
Lai:Urta Beach Communit)' Chest this
year for t.he needs ol the 14 agencies
"rhich serve the he~lth, weff!re and
youth agencies are so much greater
now," said Thomas J. Doherty, board
presldent.
Doherty said Bruce Bare, Jr. will
apin head the bu61ness adVQDCe gi1ts
division.
The community chest board also in·
eludes Richar<:I Mudge, vice president;
Harold Coward, secretary-treasurer;
and directors, Dr. Leon Al:elrod.1 Ned
P. Blackmarr, Dooald HOU6eman,
James Keyes. Roy Marcom, Jr.,
\Villiam McCready, Jr. and Dr.
Edward Nell.
Campaign headquarters for the 1968
drive are at 228 Forest Ave.
Doherty said the agencjes assisted
~ local contributions serve the area
from Crystal Cove oo the north
Cleaver Lectures
Set at Stanford
STANFORD IUPI) -Eldridge
Cleaver, Black Panther leader at the
center of etintroversy at University of
California campuses, will give a series
of three lectures at Stanfc:m1 Universi-
ty.
It was announced today that Cleaver
would give lectures on alternate
weeks, beginning ne1t Tuesday, in
Dinkelspiel AuclltarW.m, H is ap·
pea.ranee will be ·sponsored Py the
Committee for a New Democratic
Politics.
San Francisco supervisor Terry
Francois, a Negro attorney, also wUI
give three lectures. The talks are not
part of any cOursc and a 75 cents ad·
mission will be charged.
At the Uuiversity of California.
Berkeley, a seriff of lectures by
Cleaver as part of an experimental
course was· ~t back recently by the
board of regents to one .
Fred · Blackadar
Rites Plam1ed
Pi.1asonic services v.·cre to be held at
1 :JO p.m. todpy in th~ Lagufia Beach
Funeral Hom1 fot Fi"ed K. Blackadar,
31, ol 4SS N. COilt llighway.
Mr. Blackadar1 a realdent of Laguna
fer seven year1, died Wednesday. In-
tennent was lidwiduled for Valhalla
Me mortal Part, North Hollywood. Mr.
Blac:kadar was a member o f
Tillamook MasonJc Lodge 5 7 ,
Tillamook, Ort. lie Is survived by bis
"1dow, Mary Ella.
Bloodmobile Due
The American Red Cross . blood-
mobile wiU be in Laguna Beach at the
PnsbyteriM Churcll. 415 Forest Ave.,
Oct 14 from 2:30 to 7:30 p,m.
• t
through Laguna Niguel on the south
and Inland to Laguna HUU.
Agenclet a.sslsted include B o y
Scout!, Glrl SCouta, YMCA, USO,
Boys' Club, Chlldrens Hospital ol Los
A n g e l e a, Chlldrens Hospital of
Orange, Orthopaedic Hospital, Catholic
Welfare, The Villa, Visiting Nurses.
Travelers Aid, salvation Armi and
Family Service. '..,,·,
Want to Slim?
Gym, Vollyhall
Classes Off e1·ed
' .
'
Ladiu, do you yearn to be svelte
and lltbeT Men do you want to Tei.urn
to athletic .trim?
Laguna Beach recreation director
Norin Bor'uck.l may have the ansv.·er.
A ladies "slim gym" class will be of-
fered from Oct. l through May each
Tuesday at the high school gym from
'7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
It will include exercises, general
conditioo.ing and volleyball.
Mdl:'s·volleyball classes will bt held
,on..MOnday nights from 7 p.m. to 10.
'lbere wtn· be &. seven team men's
volleyt;Wl league. ol six-man teams.
Three ea.mes will'be played each Wed-
nesday begtnniftg at 6:30 p.m. League
ptay begins WeOOes<lay. Oct. 2.
Co·educatiooal volleyball for adult
men and women will be held every
Thursday evening from 6:30 to 9:30 .
Gymne.stic instruction fQr junior and
.senior high school boys and glrls will
be offered at the pm Thursday nights
from 7 to 9 with Ne« Gibby in·
structing. They begin Thursday, Oct.
3.
Sons' Funeral
Fatal to Mothe1:
PltlLADELPHlA (AP) -A mother
collapsed and died at the funeral of
her two sorus Thursday. All died of
heart attacks.
The sequence of deaths began last
Saturday when Peter Tritz, 38 suf·
fered a heart attack at his llome and
died on the way to a hospital. llis
brother, George, 45, went to the
hospitnl to console Peter's widow.
1'hcre he collapsed and died.
Thursday, after attending a double
Mass for her soos, Mrs. Anna Trill,
69, a widnw . was driven to the
cemetery. She collapsed end died as
the caskel! were being taken from a
hearse.
Dorothy Malone
Euds Film Career
LOS ANGELES (!JP!) -D<rotlty
Malone, 'vho came to Hollywood from o.n.u. l'tx., 24 year• 8'0· has an-
nounced plans to retire and return to
her childhood home.
The former star of televW00'1
"Peyton Place" and Academy Award
wtmer cited poor heaittl, flna.nclal
problems and mnot u reasons kr the
n1ove.
\
.,._,,,.t l~I ... fl!'oujl!e,;: liO ~ ,--.
cracldog up..!w ~-l>lit II ~'I .'.Jto6i,td. It liq to be otlackod," he
• said. "'Plie)"1<• tllo,. of • "!1"i<>llari' about to be dlltroytd." ....
kno'I! It. 1'Y Iii '*"'ID thf add)ir, -..ia;. :; _ .. * .. .. ""' -Jllll SUn· Ht uld Ille t1ltlled 1!111<1 befan.ttJ
period or defllne !rt ... lli60'1 and.II" ~i•ll! ta I U\~ 111wr1. "llotll
tbin,'' be s31d, "we believed we could
take care of the world and o the r s
would like it because 1 we would be
benign in our a.dm.lnbtratinn."
T Y dsr, f.s l . ~,.,. against a rMt;tloo to ~Ill tip and dee« nclsm. "'1'11.,e 11re no marginal peo.
Felber ~. -.. pen.a "*" ple, no UllOJDl!loymtut ID Cube." he
Guofemala ii.· -::.~olutlooary, ullf Yid'. "They d .. ~ llQ' to the dark·sklll·
U.S. rulers cl8lm to kn:O\I what..& tifst !led" man, 'We don:t -iou.' They
1?£ tbe bltok 1lm.ot-~ alMl;l!i!ll· c · uy; .'vte need ....,. hand.• · ·
}le said now Negroes lo the clUes
and persons abroad are standing up
and saying, "You can have it. We
don't went it, Your culture ls sick ...
dian In Lallll'Apl~. '. ~Jll;! tee long: run the i>eluants will
"Tlie r~. · ~·'.out or ~ • cwirtome the wtdlll men; he oeld, ...i
soil"-Jusl ~ ,~out¢:·~~ •rwe will see the beaut.for more and
-tbey . •ho\ :J>,1 PeR. ~ ~lh!M J>iofe mlxed blood -the lnternatiooal worJ:4 .cOW\~"_11c;:~d.-_ •. ~ ..... -nc~"
He said the slckney II the arrogant,
racist view tba.t ~ white man l1
superior, that he ts lbe guardiall angel.
Tbe American power structure is
~-~lllllotd lbs ;u.sr-~·lo•. · · no conc1an· J>Ontoh>onll were ID·
du..,.... cOmltlz;ls A. -(ei ibat "'* by the 1tu$ot'.Orlfftl>ltlon Wffk
neodl wann bod!ts Ind -II it '~ ond poldC. bonnrorlum of makes warm~. "U bat to be '400 eaoh.
Newsman ·Nmned
Ball -Quits Envoy
Post With U.N.
LATll'f AMERICAN VIEW
Father Blase Bonpane ·
From Page l
CLEAVER ...
WASHINGTON (UPI) -George W.
Ball, the Vietnam dove in the Johnson
administration. quit his five-montlM>Jd
job a1 U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations Thursday to help Hubert H.
llurnphrey try to defeat Richard M.
Nixon for president.
Ball said Nixon, the Republican
nominee. "is not .a man in whom the
American people can repose con-
fidence."
President John.son named J. RWin:ll
Wiggins, editor and executive vl«i
president of the Washington Post stnce
19601 to succeed Ball. Johnson said the
world had a:ained "an advocate of
peace'' ln the &t·year-old Wiggins.
Ball, fonner undersecretary of
state, said be will join Humphrey'•
"DemocraUc campaign as the vice
president's foreign policy adviser.
Ball's predecessor at the U. N., An 'hur
J. Goldberg, also joined the Humphrey
campaign Thursday.
way to the hydrogen bomb. "l have ti.ken this step 10 that I may
J.ike Cassius Clay in his brasher devote all my time and energy
days, Cleaver knows how to grab at-between·now and Nov. 5 to help assure
tention. Usually he relies on the shock the election of Hubert Humphrey and
power of his remarks. the defeat ol Richard Nixon," Ball
l-Ie seemed to be egged on by the said.
politeness of the audience, as i( he Ball explained his action at a state
wanted to hear hecklers. department news conference: "To avoid any misunderstanding of my "I want to get run out af town. No motives aod purposes, I wish to state
one's throwing bottles yet, so I have flatly that after the November election
to go farther," he said. I shall return to private life. I have
He then gave an obscene discourse asked the vice president not ta con·
on the power 'vomen have to inove sider me ·lor ,any post in h.is ad-ministration.''
meu. Ball bag 1911g been ~ought to harbor
The governor was hjs principal tar· an1bltions tO be--secreWy of st.ate and
get and he accused him of using "me both President Kennedy and Johnson
and the college as a whipping boy to reportedly considered him for the
stir up right wing sentimeot1so he can post. <;j
gain a firmer grip at the ballot boi: Ball, appoint.ed. to his U. N. post last
in November." April 25, turned in what diplomats
Cleaver said the Kerner Report ot con1ldered dl1tingui1hed
the President's Commission on Civil performances in the Security Council
Disorder was the official confession of debat.ea on Czechoslovakia and 1n a
white racist America. He said it was confrontation lut week wi th Secretary
no big news to him or his fellow Ne· Gf:neral U Thant over Vietnam.
groes. "We know," he said, "the ques· Ball inaugurated his presence In
tion is what to do about it?" Humphrey's ranks with a scathing at·
Later. he gave his answer. "Black tack on Nixon.
power for black people. Faculty pow. Humphrey, he said, bas the qualities
er for the faculty. Student power for to meet "unparalleled dangers and op·
the students. And barbecue fe>r the portunities in the larger world arena"
pigs." in the years ahead. Nixon, he sa.id, '--"-~~~~~~~~~~~~
''lament.a.bly lack&" the ability "need·
ed to guide . our country toward ,
si.ble aD<l Jaslinf peace."
6th Graders
Nice Problem
For Schools
There are 10 to 12 sixt.h graders who
are creating a problem, a rather
~pleasant problem for Laguna Beach
Unllled Schoo! District.
"They already have c o v e r e d
everything in seventh through eighth
grade math, a:nd now we have tG
dedde what to do with them," Owen-
Tait, assistant district superintendent,
told school trustees.
Tait said the students, mosUy 8t
Alis:o School, could be sent to the high.
school or to Thurston Junior High
School to take algebra, normally a
high school freslunao's subject.
Another atternative, he saJd would
be !o bring a teadler to the students
or devise a new course for them. "It's
kind of a breakthrough," said TaJt, "in
providing a continuous progress pro--
,gram for students so Uley can really,
move .at their own rate.•: '
It's not a new problem really, just
enluged. Tait said there are currently
three eighth graders at Thurston who
la.rt year finished high a c b o o 1
freshman algeb<a.
They are being taken to the high
school to study geometry, a
sophomore subject. Preswnably as
freshmen at high school next year, be
sal.d, they would take Algebra II and·
as sopbomtres move into senior
analysis and trigonometry.
ln their junior years in high school.
the administration would either have
to devise special courses or ship them
to Saddleback Junior College for more
advanced work.
COMPATICA
' '
f
t.. 'i ..
~ ' ' ~
i• for fhe younq who went to inv est in Contemporery Mirniture 'lhet
collection for livinq room, dining room and bedroom.
will endure. A complef• I
DEAl.fRS FOR : HINREDON-DREllL-HERITAGE
9i1 DAYS NO INTIWT-TUMS AYAILAU ON APPROVID CRIDIT
NIWPORT BEACH
1727 W•l<Ulf Dr. '42·2050
OfllN NIMT 'T1L t
l
INT!RIOlS
P~on•I Interior
0..lgMrt
Anlleblo-AID-HSTD
LAGUNA IEACH
MS No'1h Co111 Hwy. 4f4.6SSI °"" ,.,, ... , ,,l '
l I
"
I
,I
,I
I I I
ll
II
•• DlllMld .......
SURFER CUTS TOWARD PIER IN 1966 COMPETITION
But Whtr• Are Those Six·foot W•vt1 This Yt•r?
Smaller Surf, Boards Due
At Beach Championships
By CRAIG LOCKWOOD
0.11"1' 'lief S11rflllt' llllfw
Saturday's annual U. S. Surfboard
Championship at Huntirigton Beach
m ay be a repeat of 1967's 8UI'fiess surf
contest_
The problem is that oobody knows
for sure.
As any surfer will tell you nothing is
as fickle as the surf.
"The surf's just like the stock
market. It's up t.oday , and down
tomOITow," reported one Huntington
surfer who had been practicing since
daybreak in the 66-degree, two-foot
surf near Huntington's tamed pier.
Carefully depositing his 6-foot, 6-inch
9UI'A>oani in th& sand, the young
surfer gave a long sigh as he looked at
8Jllall waves.
"You can't ride a rniili-gun in surf
like tih:is," he noted. Mini-guns are
today's version of the world's m?St
qui ckly ev()lving piece of 9p0rts eqwp-
mellt: the surfboard.
Last ~ average surfboard length
was about 10 feet. This year most
boards are under eight feet, and some
are under 6 feet. The longboard Js as
dead as the dinosaur, and so ls nose
rid:mg, on which moot contests were
judged mly 12 short months ago.
The short board has produced a
revolution in surfing, and surfing
technique tbat hes to be seen to be
believed. Surfers are now doing things
on waves that would have been believ-
ed impossible two years ago.
But like the stock market, tile surf
has t:ref\ds and trend-watchers.
Today's doom merchants are predic-
tillg a repeat of the 19fl1 contest which
was hekl in small surf, and was won
by Dana Point's Corky Oarroll.
While predict.ions f« the weekend's
wa.w size vary, contest hopefuls were
practicing in Liliputian size swells,
and attempting to get the most out of
,.,hat they had to work with.
"We heard there was supposed to be
a swell in Baja," one shivering surfer
added, "but it surely hasn't sent us
any surf yet."
Still, everyone knows lt cou1d come
up big iD the 24 hours that separate to-
day from Saturday. Lots of hlue-
knLJCkled fingers are being crossed by
the beach geberation.
First Phase Finished
Workers Plaee Capstone
Of Dana Harbor Project
Workers ha'Ve placed ij1e capstone
00 the Dana Point Small Boat
Harbor's breakwater. marking com·
pletion of that phase of the multi-
million dollar marine: i:roject, Orange
County Harbor Director Kenneth
Sampson announced today.
The capstone, he said, represents a
milestone. Major federal involvement
in the project is now over. . .
With completion of the f1.6 million
breakwater, Sampson said, "We i;u-e
now looking forward to the begiMi;ng
of the second phaae, the interior
harbor work."
Thi• will be paid for by th• county.
Plans for the 2,150 boat 1llpe: are
.Doheny State Beaeh officials and the
harbor district has resulted in joint
parking and common use of access
roads, representing an additional sav·
-ings of thou.sands of dollars.
Car Crash Hurls
Woman to Death
An unidentified woman was hurled
100 feet to her deat!l today when her
.tmall foreign car was smashed
broadside by another vehicle at a
WeotmlnsterlrfUrse~.
O!fidallat Westm!OOer <nnmunity
now before the Board of Supervil<rl. 1MI Cont)' Tralftc 1N'1
A call for construct1011 btds may be 1SS Death Toll U5
issued Tuesdaoy. .,_, --..1 _-..a I th vie 1r all goes well, aald Sampson, ~Offl-. 1~U11CU to re ease e -
launching ramp !aciUUee will be open t.m I name or any other information
by next summer. All facilities could be -~:e~~ethe did have 1 tnff'ic
com?leted by 1971. . y ncl
Estimated cost of the interior work ~t fatality however, a • cor-
1 bo t $4 million to be paid from oner s deputy w.as at ~~ hospital. s ~ u .. : . funds The woman was dr1vmg throu&h the
available H~ District · Intersection of Bolsa Avenue and
The breakwater wu funded 50-5(1 by~ Street when the acddmt oc-
federal and local. agencies. Although cumd <rU&bing in the drl...-'1-of most federal portidpaijoo ii now end· Ibo ,.dan.
ed, 10ine dredging work and ln-
trlalJaj;on of naviptloo&I aids will re·
quire addltiooal fedora! financing.
SamJl"on noU!d Cllat '500,000 will be
saved in the conatructi.on of the inner
harbor by abondonlng tndltiontl
water dredging technJques. Land ex·
cavation equipment will be used ill·
&t.ead.
The improbable excavation, he said,
will be made possible by buildJng a
, temporary dam across the harbor etl·
trance ind then purnplng out the Dalia
that ia formed.
Ho oddocl lb&t ~atinG --
Clerk Shot Dead
LONG BEACH (UPI) -Olarle1 0 .
Dixon, SS, a clert !or the tntern1Uonal
L<>ngshoremen'• and Warebou1emen'1
Union. was shot to death 'Illurad.1.y
'light during an altercation in which he
leaped from the second 1tory window
ot hia apartment.
Hs sttpson, Robert Mooney, 25, 1ur-
rtndered to Lona: Beach pcliice a abort
time later and Wai booked oa 1uipt.
dGll of murder.
Humphrey .
Raps Nixon
Over Debate
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Vice
Pl"fllldeot Hubert H. Humphrey 11ld
today Richard M. Nix.an was showing
''disdain" for the public In refusina: lo
ensage in • television debate.
Humphrey for several weeks has in·
eluded as a standard part ol his cam·
paign oratory a challenge to Nixon to
debate. This week Humphrey su&·
gested even a three-way debate t., in·
clll(je American Independent party
candidate George Wallace..
Nb:on rejected the three·WIJ debate
Idea and it seemed to Humphrey that
the Republican .Indicated a preference
for a two-man joint discu3sion.
Humphrey fired of! a telegram to Nb:·
on Thursday night saying he was ha~
py to learn. that Nixon. was now .willing
to debate him and he asked that their
representatives meet immediately to
ll\Llke arrangements.
From Louisville, Ky., today,
however, Nixon came back with
another statement, terming as "kid
stul" the idea ol a non-televl5'1 de-
bate with HlUDpbrey.
At the time of the Nii:on ltaterMnt,
Humphrey was on live televi&ion
himself, accepting question! from
viewers in San Francisco.
"You may call this kid rtuff, Mr.
Nixon, but I call it the stuff of
statesmen~" Humphrey said.
.. I'm going to insist that we act like
men and not like managed robots. I
think, Mr. Nl.xon, your rejection of
this indicate! a kind of disdain for
public opinion.
"Mr. Nixon, if you are unwilling to
debate with me, how are you going to
stand up in discussions with other
world leaders?" '
In response to another question,
Humphrey said while he was "on an
upward march," his campaign efforts
were "desperate for fin an c i a 1
assistance."
He weot on to say he lacked the
funds available to Nixon to buy ex·
tensive nationwide television time and
he did not believe "a man should be
denied the presidency because he does
not have the cash •.. for contrived
performances . . . before carefully
manipulated audiences."
Avalon Elderly
Protest Removal
Of lswnd Palms
Special to Tbe DAILY PILOT
AV ALON -It was role-reversal day
in this sleepy Santa Catalina Island
community, jolted awake by .a
demooatra&n.
Long-haired youths were the au·
dleuce lbursday. 'Ibe mardler' were
the establishment -neaUy 1ulted
buslnestmen a n d parasol-carrying
senior c!tizens who def.ied the sheriff
and other authorities.
At stake ""8s the survival of. seven
100-foot palm trees which line Cre1-
cent Avenue, the city's main street.
The City Council has authorized a con-
struction firm to pull the trees from
their planter boxes and transplant
tlhem nearby as part of a $400,000
stnet improvement project.
The stage was set, the players in
their places, and the show began. The
members of the Avalon Beautiful
Association, sometimes as many a1
400 persons, ringed the trees, defiantly
facing the 1beriffs and construction
workers.
The insurgents seem to have won
the batUe -il not the war. The City
Council will hold an emergenc1
seHion today to consider petitions
signed by balf ot Avaloo's voters.
By nightfall the event was m-0re •
festival ilwm a protest. Deputies and
wockmen shared the p l c k e t 1 '
sandwiches .and elder. "We haven't
had thia much fun in Avalon in 35
,.., .... -parilclpont ll!lm>ed· Tho arcb·vlllalnt of the play, the
bulldozers and earthmovera, were
nowhere to be teen by sundown .
"This Is eostinC me $260 • day."
com~lalned a company o ff I c i a I.
"We ve got another job on the
mainland and can't keep the equip-
ment here."
Olty Manager Jack Osteen sa1d
Avalon's unique transplant operation
was ordered beacuse "engineers told
lll that thOH trees and pUIDter• con·
1titute a traffic huard."
Kurt Becker, a bOJi>er and 1-1 of
the ctU...' -tllougbt dll!.....iy,
"One of Ille city <ouncllmen "1lo
autboriNd. the move just wanted to ret rid of tine at the polm1 which
1'8nd in front d hl1 placi of
buainess," he said.
"There 11 no traffic haiard and
the council'• own tra1fic committee
said so," Becker continued.
"The area to which they'd be mov·
ed., adjacent to where the planters now
at&nd, b11 hlJh!y Nllne IOil and the
crounc1 11 111u .i ~·· ,,,. ....wd be Juot too 11'•11 a shock to h ~year·
old &llK&. ''
''kl.ty, Stpttmbtr 27, 1968
~ U,ITe..,....,!
BOWING TO .TEENAGERS -GOP presid"1!tial ·
candidate Richan! Nuon bows to young high School
students on stage during taping of tel:evisibn show
Thursday in st. Louis. Nixon made short speech,
then answered questions from students. Overfl~-.
crowd of 3,700 mostly teenagers, watched show in.
Kiel Opera House.
Nixon Hits HHH Tactics
Charges Veep 'Using' W alwce t-0 Defeat Him
CHA'ITANOOGA, Tenn . (AP) -
Richard M. Nixon accused Vice Presi·
dent Hubert Humphrey today of trying
to use former Gov. George C. Wallace
of Alabama to defeat Nixon in the
South .
Nixon, the GOP J'.o r e s l de. n ti a 1
nominee, told a planeside news con·
ference in Louisville, Ky., before
!Jylng here, that he wlll not join in any
nationally televised debate which in-
cludes Wallace.
Congress is considering a measure
which v.·ould relax the equal time laws
for political candidates to permit a
three-way debate. Humphrey has said
he would participate.
Nixon said be won't go aloog
because he believes that debate in
which a third-party c a n d i d a t e
participated "would not be to the best
interests of the country."
The GOP nominee said Humphrey is
trying to build up Wall ace to offset the
vice president's lack of strength in the
Sooth, In an effort to prevent Nixon
f:om winning Southern electoral votes.
"Mr. Humphrey needs the debate
exposure for Wallace," Nixon said.
"Humphrey can't win in what he calls
the New South. He is trying to use
Wallace to beat Nixon in the South ."
In Louisville, Ky., Thursday night,
Nixon broke his self-imposed rule
against even mentioning Wallace's
mie and was expected to step up his
drive against the threat that the
presidential choice will be thrown into
the House. If the voters want a
Nixon said he thlnkB the voters
should choose ,between hlm and Vjce
Preside~~ Hubert H. Humphrey, the
DemocraUc nom1nee.
He added, "I just don't tliirlk this na-
tion at this time in its history, when
we need so many changes in our
foreign policy and our domestic poUcj
should run the risk of a constitutional
crisis of a House of Representatives
selecting the president of the United
States."
Nixon said that Humphrey ''seems
to be leaving the South alone" when
the Democratic contender should be
campaigning in the area.
lt is vitally important, Nixon said,
''that we have a two-party system 1n
the South and it's vitally important
that the whole South not go off 011 a
ttllrd party kick and not affect the
future ir. the decision made this year.
"1 personally think," he continued,
''that whet. you look at the South from • tbe voters standpoint In tWJ part ,of.
the country .•. a vote for Wallace ii
actually a vote far Humphrey, becauo:e
one thing fa fOJ' sure, Humphrey cah·
not win these states. I can."
23.00
1 •
"
., Great fall walking suit
for misses and half~i7.es
You always feel so fashi~i!lllt
in this chic coat costume, And,
our town 'n travel ensemble holds • its shape beautifully. Coloray
rayon bonded to acetate. Our
newest way to flatter you! Bllle,
green.12·20, 1412-22!2. ·~
Budge.l~~
Bufjinn'l'
llewpoit Center tl Fashim Island • 644-2311 • lb., l'hl11., Frl. !0:00 Gii 9:30 Oller m,s ttoo till 5:31
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4 DAILY '1LOT
FOtlr States Bit
•
Student Racial •
Violence Erupts
ly IARL WILSON o.n. ............
14wonl A. Mo1tronolo was lined
$1,220 In Utlco, N. Y., for chorges ttom a toto1 of 122 parking ticke!L
<llY Court Jude• Horold HS' or·
diired Mutranelo to pay lm-
!lledlatel,y and ~ each month until
tli• bllaDce Is llquldoted. For every llC;ltet fhat Is not J)O!c!, Hynes ad·
deil, Mutrant1o will be required to
spend .... dQ' In J.U. . •
Actor Peter Lawford, f<>n'f&er b1'other-
ii.~w of the late President John. F.
K'ennedt1 mw:I Seti. Robert Kennedy,
like mmttl HoUy\Ooodite.s ts ritting out t"'1 elfction. "Mt£ch aa it pain& me to
think about it, I think Nixon will win
the election easilt1," said LawfOTd,
"So I'm going to vote for Snoopt1 or
Pat Paul.sen ... in that order." • Police said Loa1ie Thompson of
st. Louis told them he got $300 in
the mall this week . . l mc:iney he
identified as c om in g from the
$1,000 burglary of 1h) is borne last
week. •
117 V-l'lell 11-.llooll
a.clal vlolenot ...S I tu d I n I
"boodt11mtsm" tlll'ed today at acbooll
In •I-four llalol. lltbll ,outhl In·
Vlldod -.itown nore1 In two dtt11,
•teallac morcbandlH one! 1nwhln1
windows.
Scbot6I wer.-cl0&ed at Kalamuoo,
Mlcll., and Sellltlt, Wall!. Police brae·
ed !or ponlblo In>_ at Lindon, N.J.
Hl&b Sdlool, and nclll attacu wvo
reoor1ed ot 'n'eolo•>, N.J . llllh School.
More iMn 200 Nesro bl"1 1cbool
studonb In lie RGx!Jury oectton cl
BOl!m hurled rocU Olld bott1u ol
belmelod police Tb u r 1 d • 7· (Sii 6i.r7 oad Pldlft Pop 5)
--domcdod lie white fooet.I1 cOllCh at Jfal1m•l40'I Central
Hi8b SCbocil be nolaced by • Nesro. '!be mllltento botiled white aWdonto
llhorily after O toocher Wll struct
during a acllool meettnr. Flst>ta
out.side lbe Mlcbig1n achoo! !weed
cancellation of cla.ne1 for the day
Alles" tbt noon rece11. The school wu
cloeed l<lday,
Dr. Forbes Bottomly, 1choo1
superintendEim, said the district "can
Dirksen Backs
Off' on F ortas
Endorsement
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate Re·
publican leader Everett M. Dirksen,
until now a oolid supporter of Abe
Fortas' appolntment as ch~ jU1tJce,
sald today he will not back a move to
choke of! a filibU!lter •ialnllt the nom-
ination.
Further, the Senate minority leader
left open the question whether he
would vote for approval Of Fortatr: if
the oootroverslal nomination ever
comes to· a vot.e. ,
Asked whether Dirksen's latest
statement would hurt efforts to break
the filibuster and bring the question
to a vote, Senate Democratic leader
Mike Manslield replied: "It 1ure as
hell will."
Dirksen'& disclosure came as Mans·
The thief who took Dr. Charles l . field. moved for a •~ vote,
Dolo'a HWe brown bag in Chicago ,. l>rol\91>17..:l'Ue•'!"Y,.,~ ~-the three-wlll !Ind when he opens it speCf., da:y filibilitar bwawg the nomlnaUon.
mens of lung cancer emphysema "Afany thJng.t have since entered
throat cancer, stoma~h ulcer, hard: the;tr>lcture," the1~ill ~bllcan
ened. arteries and be art disease ·· told'.ncn~~en. JI~ cited as one of them •. . ttie tact that Fortaa bad accwted
Dr. Dale is a pathologist who lee-'15,000 for nine lecturH at American
tures on the dangers of .smoking. University last summer. •
Two of three escapees from
San Miguel Count11 Jait in Las
VeQas thumbed their way back •
behind bats. The two men, one
an acc1L.!ed murderer, hitched a
ride toith Sheriff Pat Gallego,
who dro~ them straight to jail.
• "Boy that's really something
••. I 've been drafted," wrote
Lance Cpl. Donald M. Morcom
from Vietnam. That's where the
l~year~ld Jermyn, Pa., Marine
was when he received. his induc·
lion notice recently from his local
draft board, forwarded by bis par·
ents. Mrs . Marcom said she called
the draft board in Carbondale and
told the woman wh o answered,
"My so n would be happy to report
for inductioo i! the board would
pay his fare back home from Viet-
nam."
21 Million Kick
Cigarette Habit
Claims Crusader
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -About 21
million Americans have kicked the
cigarette habit -three million of
them during the past two years -ac·
cording to a pioneer in the an·
tismoking crusade.
Dr. Daniel Hom, director of the
Public Health Service" Dlltional cletr•
inghouse for smok:inl and bealtb, said
Thursday a smaller percentage of
youngsters are tt.artlng ' to 1moke to.
day than 10 years ago.
"The country oan't afford to have
people continue amoklnr when you
realize that one·foorth of the total ii·
lness in the United States can be at·
tributed to cigarette 1moking,'1 Horn
a sserted.
.do no more'' to matnt&ln order. He
urpd on -ta "' lllldenta In the
cloted -In meet' wllb lim loalpt
to belp -crd•.
HWe doll't want~ ol thl ouW4e qltaton -1ile B Pllllhera and
group1 like them -mJ.lHng around /'
Boll<mly Mid, ''Tho ICboolJ cannot
tolerate hoodlumtam."
Gd'&• OllOll, prillclpll cl the Seal·
Ue ocbool, wai atniclt by• IT·yoor .. ld
DODlllldent uruor 1111a .,;.u. .
'N1sro y-. l'llllt>Qed throup
clotl>lnc 11ora, la ·X&lamuoo and
S-1111. Polieo uld newi, '3,000
-111 cl cW!d~ WU llollll from Seollle &l<nl. _. of two
11'1n1-.bulen .
Tht Kalomuoo llllb School bu bod
racial --Jut yea Whan blact mllltanta IOl'Ced lntelll'alllll of
lbe p:evloual1 oll-wlllte cbeerloadera'
1quad. 'Ibey demanded that Paul
Baldwin, tlll wlllte football coach, be
replaced by a Nesro. 'Ille school ls
about evenly divided between white
q11 Nelll'O ltudenll.
About 300 students boycotted classes
at the Trenton 1cbool Wedne.!day. It
bu been cklaed three Um.ea tn tbe past
year because oi racial trouble. Wbi.te
youth& ha.,. c:ompWnod thot Negro
rtudenta have attacked them inside
and oulllde ti!< ocl>ool.
Teen Pair Shot
In Desert; Girl
Fights for Life
MOJAVE (UPI) -A teen-age
Campbell, Calli., girl who wu 1bot
and left for dead in the Mojave Desert
with her mala companion remained in
serious condition at a Bakersfield
Hospital today.
Diana Bradford, 18, underwent
emergency 1uri?ery Thursday after
1he was found along 1 desert highway
about 11 miles east of here early
Thursday.
Before going into sureery. Mias
Bradford told Kern County Sherlfrs
deputies she and Randy Jenkins, 17, of
Salt Lake City, were hitchhlking to
Solt Late Cily.
''Sbt Nid: ..a couple driving an. older
~el fallow Falcon picked them up near ~atersfleld a.ad ~ve them into "the desert. W~eri both -wer .. _...
the head with • .25 callbor plllol.
Miss Bradford crawled to the edte
or Highway 58 where a pa1sing truek
driver spotted her and brought help .
But lt was too late for Jenkins, who
was pronounced dead at the scene.
Deputies issued an all-points bulletin
for the couple, who were believed
beading for San Antonio, Tex. They
said Miss Bradford told them the man
wu about 30-35, live.foot.two, and the
woman about 20 to 25, five-foot.four.
Authorltiu said the motive ap-
parently was robbery.
Nude Performers
Wind Up in Jail
NEW HAVEN, Coon. (UPI) -
Police ~ ten persons on the
Ylle umvemty campus early today
on charges of indecent exposure and
breach of. the peace, following a
performanct ol an avant garde play at
the university ttieater.
Police said a number Of th05e ar·
rested, six men and four women, were
in h r.ude and aome were "scantily
clad."
Sunshine State Drenched
Fair Autumn Weather Distributed Over Rest of Nation
CaHfoi-t0i•
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turdwood 1aflds (I.6J.4J0l), CK ;.. ...,..ine PK1n Yenttr1 and
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L'OO. 'l1lo I~ -(C) (IQ) 1'r>Y ~. ,:.;.., .• ....., ~· (Q (10J -••<Cl -1u..i1 )olnlq Stl'lt laflt 111
M11'tt11 Raye Ind htt llllUtflltt,
alnpr Mtkldy Colldoe. Pit Htrtifll•
t011, ind "Hot1n'1 Heroea" #t11
Bob Ct1n1. D Six O'CIOQ; ·Mowlt: ,.. ,,
IWI Jl1111 (1dv1nt11te) '41 -John
W17ne, John Ap1, Ad1l1 M1r1,
F11rttsl T11ck1r, W111y Ca&Mn.
\:~TlJ1\rl\Y
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fttlpt Sllehs ~a ~·
PEANUTS
'Tlil! A5PIRATIOH
OF THE FLU10
WA5. COMPLETELY
SUCCE5,FUL .
I. lHtNK YOU'!:
MR. THORNE W!lL
'IE ALL RIGHT,
'OOCTO!t:S.
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
¥OI SAIO' OYER MOW n.AT 1\\ Hett, t"P
TME "'°Ne ntAr lATl4ER NOT TAU: A&oll'T
VOii WiUITfO TO RA.NP\'! M' IOl:i5 M&! I
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11111 his cir to Gorn1r. , ... -11 ,,... e look What PLYMOUTH l~IO 1=r.· ... * is up to now F•ntlelk f .. (C) Watch the 11:00 Mltoi' Ln,. laiilblll:
NAME OF THE GAMEi ••ms to b• 1nnounted.
119 C1J 1111 1111111 If .. llmt: MM: "Mr. Stnitll C... • ~ ~) "Wttne.." Robert Stock ~n" (drama) '!9 -Jtln
bOMI is tdltor Din f1rrtll Alto 111 Althur James StNlrt.. 1 '-WL"-
tfll cast are re1ul1r sta11 GtM Barry tO) (I) t.rRt of tht Jiqlt
'"' "'"' "'"' ,..,. 1o1n """"· --•• : '""ta ·MO. ON MU LU NS Jtcll: Clrttt, VldDr jofy, Rutll " • ... 11
bl ... 11c1 .laleph Clmptntlll 11:JOI'-. ~Tiii Mlrclllllds (C) l:'f.. "-"" W1llidlttl't: (C') (30) ........ l1bdltlRC (Cf ~'"Door of M•iocl" Sllm 1nd • ow 1: CC) "H1rc11e1 Un·
Henrllltl drtn dawn tii. --of lnld"' (~•11 '60-StM Ill• C.ltfOl'lll• to one of tht rnott R......., !ytv1 llolclna.
Mtlltiful h•lth/Yltl'llonl rnortl
111 Horth Anlt:rie1. I ."l'f1'';()()\ I tHl C1J NlW IWON fol"' ilid: lt> (30)
-'""'' <•i llOl u.-oo,am-1(C) Htnll Calla (C) (30} U1 Clntt .. MtxlC9
S111c1\1tle11: "Eplcurioslb'." hllttlla hlclna
t:OO .'tw .. 1uso11 rr111.,lZ:JO ~~<:.Wild."
('C) ... 1114 .. -..... Thlltrt; '1 td, ..... 11rt"' (com.:ly) '64 -Tony rk and ........... •
Collt. No1'1~ -· H""1 ·-· 1!00 89 (I) .... Aosja• -Lallrlft laclll, Mel renw, Fraa W· L1tp1 troctt Ql•p':mt'r (C)
fritL ""' -. • f.....-.: (C) '\lrvwtr1fllld "" ~1111 ...... (6<1) 111~-" Oocllmenbf)'. Qf) (]) rtllMIERE. Doll 1lklM Mo'rit: "Air fCIRI"' (1dvtntllrt)
: te) (30) Rldtln demon-• 11 Youn&. John Qarfltld.
$lnlu hit tel lib bumor on ltre 10pl111tn: Wellhlnl'NI (C)
1Ullll Mlectad from t!'lt 1udl111t1 La M11lalt de Cord* (C)
Ind • clllbrlty wfll 1i'l't his wit Ill 1:15 (1%1 m NCAA foolblll: (C) Col-
U.lfciSt In reptrtlt. 0111111 Thomu Ofldo st~! BtfktllJ.
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ll11ndl " l'Jltl Ltct Ralpb RltlllrdlOO.
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111: Wll'lter." 2.:SOllT• Sa:-. (C') "I Ustd To 10:001111 @ lllf TM (C)f,l (60) 'Naik fl'fe Miles to School I" the Cl~ Plltn• NM (60) Snow" lHJ (]J N£W IWOH lldd fDr C!J Mcm.· (C) "'Thi ~11bltllln"
iillrlM: (C) (60) "111 • Plltt (ldventur~) '55 -Burt l1nc1J11r,
al Smob." Questln& \11 ttll1 pr• Dl1n1 Lynn.
ml1r1 epl90dl of tlll MW ... .,n 1:00 18 m Mtbf Didi (C)
ts Kath1rint Koulhlon 11 tht wUe A&r1c:Wll11 USA (C)
of I ,.,..,,. ITllll wtlO lmmalt\11 Amil lllllllM
hl!Mllf to pntm tfll dnft. 1:10 9(1) n. ..... lllllS (C)
I--(!O) ·--· l'w (C) "* ~ ... _CC) <~ n. 01••••: CC) Joe ,_
U ... de ""' .... 10:)0 .._ fC) (317) BUI JdlM. c.te.' 1'lllht fC) '1h11ndtr-
ltltTltlt111 ~ ... h•d." -· '"°. -(C) """" .. -• --~ --.-.tn. (.annlur1). ;sz -Paul Htnreld. 'l:OO 0.. v-, .. , ,.,.., John sutton. ""' °""""· ! "'" tnd WI• (C) D QIK. ,._ ltrYlct: (C) (3tl) n.. Prlft.ionll..: It) "Auto tom Btobw. Kin&."
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pMrl w1t1I Monit .. Y11 Vam:11 OIMfl'I ~n11llt Trlllt, from
TUMBLEWEEDS
SAY! !>ti> 'IOU HEAR THAT
·PtTIF\Jl.,SCREa:HING WAIL Of A
RABii> COYOTE PRIFTING ClOWN.
FROM THE HILLS~
Mun AND JEFf
THATWf>S
NO CO'l'OTE ...
THAT WAS
HILDEGAAI>
HAMH()CKER
SINGING! .
ANYONE FOR.
TENNIS?
•
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1!1111 ...us tlll ,.,..,. N\. 1--(Cl
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Complete Printing Servic:e
Top QuaRty -'Fast S11rvic:e
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MISS PEACH
.............. _
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frldty1 Slpltmbtr 27, 1'68
By Cliarlts M. Scli11ls
ly Gus Mlola
WkJ,J.,
I JJlJNlolO[ ~i.-i:·· lU
71t.V!
By Harold Le Don:
THE TRllTM IS T\tt' TH,\T~ THE~ FUTTEl'IWG
NEVER &ffM INTBBT'IO TMIM6 I'W Ml!ARO ,\LL W.V ! lllT
Wil R"MPV! I'M INTR-'IOI SCAll li\&,!oHllLA! 'l'OG 1'0lP
E!of ll) tM '/Oil l'HI PMtlr::Ef'I: eoMt ~IN• FUITT~N6 tH1N6i ....otT Ml!
By Ferd Johnson
... "Ti.I& HORl:ZONTA~
.JUST Nnt>l!D Al:>J~TIN«i,
ly Al Smltli
1y Men
•
, .
• • •
DE~UT .:r Don Rickles, above, hosts ''The Don : . ; Rlcce~ ~now," wltlct premieres tooiattt ID color at :: ;
9 on Ch an n e I 7. 'nte hal!-hour C<111venaliltll --• •
ies will have Danny 'lbO!llas as Its lint CUeR loo :
ll!gltt, Pal McCormlcl< is Ricki .. ' -·
TELEVISION VIEWS
'Journey' Star
Rated 'Great'
ly RICk DU llltOW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -NetW(/l'k te!evlslllll'•
only an(lboloay series, a ··us~ 111117· enUtled ••Journey to the Unknown,1
• arrived OD A.BC Thun-
day night wl1it a 1ale of a .fOWlll man w11o fal1a for
a w•x manneq,Uin.
THE HOUR·LONC» series is film«! 1111'.A)adoc,
end !ta bo<s 11 J09!1 Harrtaon, who former!Y pro-
duced Alfred HltchcoCk's teleVlslon show. Emy
press releases indicate the series is after marquee
value ae well as 1uap,ense. It la a llood. Id~ lillce
Ille coDlJ19111ion for 'Journey to Ille Ullbowll" 11
very rough: CBS-TV'• 'l!tunday nlahl movlel 111111
NBC-TV's "Dragnet" and Dean Martin.
Virtually all the London-filmed Video series lllat
are seen in America boaJ't 1upertor .. cttnC, and th• ·
premiare of "Jo\lrney to the Unknawn'' wu no ex• .. ~
ception. The mannequin -and headliner ,__ w a I '. -~
Carol Lynley,. who had ~atlvlly few lines. But
Dennis Waterman aa the confused y0W1g man who -..
Is frustrated W\111 the real world -and falls. In love
with her -was the real star, and Wll excellent. ' AND HIRMIONI Badderly added. few dtolct
acenes as the over~the-htll landlady who bas eyes
for Waterman. In the ltory, tiUed hEve," the _young man. who
works In a department !lore, asks to btcOme a
Window c1reaa·er atter he imagines that a .manne-
quin in "" tveitlni fOWD in the wind"" hu anllecl
•1,et him. ·~ "' ,
HIS TllANSPllt lo lflll!od, and tlten M lWlll all Ille wax manneqtllll.a, lncludlni Eve, are to bt
:repl1<:ecl by new ont1 made al-tlbetelal•, aJtd d•
atroyed. Dttermlittd to save ' her, he bides bl 'II•
ltora after clotlu, I• discovered by a auperloi and
accidentally kll1a 1mn. ' 'He flees wllll the mannequin to U artllt flhltd, : ..
and from there runs aglln tllllll, In •·dwlce _.,.." ,
tor with a couple ol tou11to ID a tltld. he lo lmiftd ~
to cl"8lll deteadlng Eve, whom lilt hoodlumo.-fr<m · ·
a distance -tlililk Is reel and wul to wau!L
EXCEPT FOR the most memorable suspense
tales, which are intellectual as well as theatrtcal -
experiences, nothing much matters in this genre _
of entertainment but the effect of the presentation. ·
And if there was no P.artlcularly ringing and ... ..,. ·
tial meanln1 to "Eve," there ra no doubt U was el.· ·
fective, and an enjoyable · beginning to ''Journey ;:
to the Unknown."
Another London-filmed aeries, a half-hour situ""
ation cOt?ledy called "Tile Usliest Girt Ill Tllwn,"
had !'Is debut on ABC-TV TltUrsday ltigbt. And Its
very amiable ;r.oung star, Peter Kastner, managed
to carry off !"Ith 1race, clUlrm and ~ blllllOr a
very difficult teltvlalon chore: htlni ailltro who bas
to dress up much of the time Ulte a CIJ1. Ezplana·
tion: .
IT SEEMS THAT Kasbter, a novice Hollywood :.
talent agent with little money, falls for a visiting
Engllsh starlet, and she for him. She retW'Dll to
London. He can't afford to follow. A. photographer
frtend coincidentally asks K11bler to pose aa a fe-
male for a layout for .• ~on m&ga$\e IJecausa
bU oril!illal pictures were ruined. 'nta publlcallmt
tbln\s K:astner -that ts, th• "&111" liiodel -lo great, and br!nge bim (her) over to Lootloa:. Kast-
ner agrees to go only to be near bis air!· 'nlus b&-
g!ru his masquerl\de. '
Dennis the Menace
•
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'I
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JO DAILY PILDT Frld:n, Stplt!mbtf 27, 1968
Your Jtfonql'• Worth
Why Umbrella Insurance? i
By SYLVIA PORTER
A P1>711cWt Wal called ln
not loo( qo, lo d!apo .. lbe
condWoa of a woman 1uf·
,ferinJI ll<>m ~oc7.
AAu be Jelt, the woman
'jumped out Of lhe w-w.
Her turVfvor1 sued the doc-
1 tor a.ad won a settlement of • • $200,000.
A man wu sitting In h11
• car In front of a boute when
a tree fell on th•
automobile: tile resulting in·
Juries I.rt him pual,yud
from the neck down. A Jury
awarded ilim $1.5 mill.Ion In
bU suit aga!M the Pl-11
own<r.
A PHYSICIAN and a dnlg
-nanufecturf!!' were sued
recently for $8 million for
the wrongful use of a drug.
The case has not yet been
concluded, but the &beer
size of the Mmand l.! a
dramatic lliuttration of the
huge 1um1 Involved in
• liability suita -and awards
• -today. The '111 rmllion suit
also Uh!Mrates bow finac.
dally vulnerebl• hundnm
of thousand& of wealthy
\mericans have become.
As a protection against
!I"ipptina: law1uits, mounting
1umber1 of business ex-
e<:utives, docton and other
,rofessiooals -moderately
well-to-do as well as wealthy
-are turmng to ''um-
brella" liability inlna'ance
policies. Today tb«e are an
estimated 250,000 umbrella
policies in effect, w i t h
coverage ranging from $1
million to SS m.1Illon. The
vast majorlt;y of these
;x>licies have been written
just within the past five
years.
An umbrella insurance
policy builds on top o! your
existing auto and
home owners' insurance
coverage and, p e r b a p s
landlords' or professional
m a Ip r actice in6urance.
Umbrella coverage al s o
covers you for &ther types
of legal action such as libel
suits and false arrest -in·
volving a deductible which
may range anywhere from
'250 lo 15.000.
IN ADDmON, umbrella
cov.erage extends to areas
not UBUally covered by stan-
dard liability pol:icies: for
inlUUlce, rented items rang· me from boats to
automobiles. And umbrella
tMurance may extend yolll'
A·merica'& 171-0st
di&ting1ti&hed
171-0tor car
SEBITNOWl
Learn How To
Grow Your Own
MONEY TREE
If you'ro plonnin9 to plont o few dolfors in Colilornio reol eslote, th is
free series of lectures will show you how to make them grow. Keyed
to the everege reel estete investor, especielly the speculetor with
residential property to menege1 the series will cover all aspe"Ct s of
the current merket in lectures by top·roted experts in various fields .
Pion now to attend the clesses to be held on fo ur consecutive Tuesday
nights et 7 :30 each evening in Newport Harbor High School Audi-
torium , 15th end Irvine, Ne,vport Beach.
•
Real Estate Investment Series
Oct. 1--loltert N. Wotd. Welcome; Horry lalibltt, '"°""'1• County -A ._
Woy of Ufe fw lh1htau and Plect111ra"; Arthur A. T"'11tr, ''Why
lnm ht l..t lmate?" and .. Tallorlnt Your ll:eal lstote lnvntm .. t."
Oct. 1-M-A. D""llias. "Soll°' Prof"'loool Manogom .. f'; Cap
llack.,_., ''Wladom of land ln•ntmant."
Oct. 1 I-GI•" Marth,, "htv"fmut In e Slnqle Fondly R*lidMtce": Roy J.
Wf/l'd, ''Th• •eo1 lstota bchottqe" and "111• 'Tax Fr••' &change."
Oct. ll--Wr, Wobttor. '"Fl ... cl•9 Todoy"; Chvcll Droy.,., "Ylold L"'"""J• 11lrwtfi Whe -cl ... ..
Ticket Information
IW ,.,..,.., Mt lldl"" .. req•lrocl, Tltoy cao be plchtl up lo ""-<•
• tlMo o.-t• C-Colfot• ....,,_ °' at tll• l'lal!y l'llot office lo
C.. M-Newport INdl, HHlf"'toft INcll and 1.a9 ... •-i..
~by
DA!Y PllOJ ORAllG£ COAST COLUGE
llWPORJ HARBOR· COSTA MESA BOARD OF REALTORS .
j
)
I
)
OVER THE COUNTER
Shouldn't You
r
Examine Your
Investment
Pro9ram •••
..•• to 9iv• your dollars a ch.tnc• to 9row1
Htr• i1 a vtluabla opportunity for you to lttrn
wh•t invtsfment mtfhod ii best for you. Tht1e
FREE Goodbody & Co. Baiic lnvt1fmtnt Lac-
tufe1 •rt designed for tht invtstor who would
likt to know more about sound investment prin-
ciples.
A CHOICE Of THREE PROGRAMS IS OFFERED
FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 6•0-8121
" MAIL COUPON
11 I SERIES Of THREE INVESTMENT LECTURES
Tuesday7:45 p.m.October I, 8115
Placa: Goodbody l Co., Oran9a Co Airpor+
Office, 4501 Birch St., Newport Beach
121 SINGLE EVENING INVESTMENT LECTURE
Monday 7:45 p.m. Sept lO
Place: Keystone S1vin91 & loan Auditorium,
555 N. ~uclid, Anaheim
1 l I KEOGH FORUM, FOR SELF EMPLOYED
Sin9la Evenin9 Thur1. 7:)5 p.m. Oct. 10
Place: Goodbocly Offic e -Same 11 I I I
ltlSTRUCTOR: CLAUDE TAGGART, Rog;,,., Rop.
GOODBODY l CO.
Member o! New York Stock Eicchana:•
GOODBODY & CO.
4501 Birch St., Newport •each
D Will Attend. No. of People __
111 S•tias of l -······· ll 1•Sin91a Eve ......... K•o9h·--···
D Unable lo Attend But Oe1ire Info. On
NAM E _, ......... -....... -....... ____ ,,,,,, ................ ,, _______ _
AOORESS -···--··-···-·-·--·-··--···--·---·--
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• DAILY •ILOf JJ
Friday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List
I
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bAll Y PILOT F"rlda1, Stpltmbtr 27, 19b8
Last of Three A.rt lcles --------
Elvis Returns to Public,
Schisgal
Duo Opens
At Laguna
Clemente
To Stage
'Heiress' Plans Concerts and Tours
By VERNON SC01T HOLLYWOOD (Ulll) -
Wbile the Beatles and other
groups have filled sta.1ia
and audltoriums w 1 t b
screaming teen-agers, Elvis
Presley climbed Olympus,
aloof from the howling,
record-buying youngsters.
UnW now.
He is returning to the
grass roots of bis popularity
in a rignillcant about-face
for the secretive, invisible
Elvis.
"Before too long I'm going
to make some personal ap-
pearance tours," he said.
''I'll probably start out here
in this coumry and after
that play so1ne concerts
abroad, starting in Europe.
"I want to see some
places I've never seen
before. I miss the personal
contact with audiences."
While Presley's
bandwagon hm;n 't rolled to
a standstiU, it might well be
sidetracked.
It has been movies and
recordings and that's all.
Rut youngsters want to see
their heroes in the flesh. It
adds new impetus to a lag-
ging career, creates fresh
excitemeot.
The adult Presley un-
derstands this.
KNEES SHAKING
He grinned broadly: "I've
already taped that
Chris tmas show for
December. And let me tell
you my knees were shaking.
Not that they were keeping
time with the music.
"It had been just too long
since I'd appeared before a
live audience. After awhile I
began to relax and enjoy
myself. Now I'm looking
forward to a tour or two and
seeing the people from a
stage again."
personal interes'. in a
number of chariUe~, ml).lll ol
whlch,he keeps secret,
Ooe friend said he has
given away more than a
million dollars in the past
decade.
He Qnce &'\Ve a $50,000
check to the Motion Picture
Relief Fund.
"Elvis is a very generous
boy," says Colonel Parker
in his best Micawberish
voice.
Moreover, Presley !las
refused to invest his money
in tax shelter dodges. He
earns a fortune and pays
straight income tax on it.
We stoQd talking on the
set of his latest movie.
"Olarro," when a makeup
man called him to one side
to blot the perspiration from
his face for the next scene.
Director Charles Marquis
Warren stopped by. He was
asked what he thought of
Elvis as a straight actor,
without being called upon to
sing a note or play ttie
swaggering hero surrounded
by dancing girls.
WITH 11IE BEST
"Elvis stacks up with the
best of them," Warren said,
"and I've directed Gary
Cooper, Bill Holden,
Gregory Peck -all of
them. I love Elvis because.
he takes direction well and
tries hard to bring a little
something extra to bis
characterization.
How does he compare
married life and fatherhood
with the free-swinging
bachelor days?
"They sure are dif.
ferent," Elvis said.
Elvis' father. Ve r non
Presley, was on the stage
watching bis son work.
Presley Sr. is a tall man
with gray hair, soft spoken
and obviously proud of bis
son.
Before the millionaire
singer-actor hits tbe road he
will star in bis 30th film,
"Chautauqua."
He has another rnovie1i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,j
commitment next March at
Universal. So far there is no
title for Presley's lirst pic-
ture at the studio. but such
details don't laze Elvis.
It is enough for him that
he continues to be In dt-
n1and hy motion . picture
compan.i~ and that his
records sell like magic.
The details, the money
and contracts are left to
Colonel Torn Parker. Elvis
does, however, take a
WAREHOUSE OUTLET
Furftlture Clftd Carpet
Spanish Oak I: Wrought Iron
Dinin& Set;i8" ~bJe 4 chain
$1'5.00 s.. Rog. J2.46.00,
....,Y ll;l.. ....,, ..... i... ..... ............. )( ........ ·.
J. J. KNICKEllOCIEI
41C11 llRCH. ST., N.I.
cw .... ,..~ & MacA.r1tM'J
545-1409
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS Jl"" _.4 --d1nct Ytsttrd1y's Pun:le Sol't'ed:
IC • 'I A ~S Hold mastery "'"""~ ·"!liltiil r.,;;r,;;;,, oo~ n over H certain way 47 Unusual
lo W.ent with 51 Numbtr dispatch SZ ., __ ·--and
10 Place of Stripes": temporary 2 words
I' lshelttr.11., 54 Knocked
n a uni down: state: Colloq.
15 i:i;:~hlte 58 Coating oo
I. ,.0 h metal -ve,r, I 1 5' Penelrat1 hill, In slowly
the army lrl lluslcal
17 -· -a gun!; composition '127/lrl
2 words lrZ R.obtrt. -: ' overc1me ~ Thants 11 Al a 2 WOids 10 With 12 ---!:
'Specific ltMe: lr3 M1ri: result· Down, Cuban 2. words
2 words Ing fro11 landm1tk 37 Further 1' Vaccines damaf' 11Grow11\tir 39 Sea in the 20 Glvts vent w Ntga iv"• : 'Atlanlit
to Irritation -gastous Ion 2 words ~ Ocean ' 22 Apparitions lr5 Anll-prohl· 12 See 10 Dowil 40 Mass of
2.-. -of lh1 b1tlonlsts lJ Somtlhlng ovult·btarfng
lillst 66 llan's name m~lded: scales: 26 Domain or 67" --110!": Suffix 2 words a cDUnUss 2 words 21 ~est In 42 Give an
27 l~rd ~ed certain oblique
wtth rail DOWN . position edge to
., and side 2J Card game 43 Asbestos,
.::ol H•berdash· I Fish 25 Ornamen-for ont
t'IY Item 2 Like ---tatlon 44 Deserts
32 Q~etn's -: ol bricks: 27 German 40 -west
Historic .. 2 words admiral •7 Spread abClllt
horse race c 3 Hawaiian 28 Olagra111 48 Greenland
33 Kind of wlndstor11 drawn on settle111tnt
cl11a.r1He .-Graw offense a plane 49 Malit adjust· 35 Eq111nt parent S Reduct In 29 At the end ment In U\1
38 Lenient lmpcrtanc1 30 Exercised ' conttols
!.'I Un1nlmoa1 6 Special control SO Upright
•o -·Alto publlc over 53 Exchan~ •I Adk«.tl•• assistance: 34 Almost membe~hlp
,2 ",,.,1,x Abbr. ertlnct ~lmal 55 Link firmly 1 Kind of of USA 56 Esau sollcltude written and Canada S7 Cooked 43 Wol'd used pet111lssl01t 35 "To Cuba sufflclenlly
with tey 8 Run ilWIY and Sack" 60 NFL Of
"
111d suit with a lover author NHL player . '
• •
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,,
I
12 13
,.
"
"Elvis works hard," he
said. "He enjoys ""hat he
does and when the day is
over, he likes to let down
and relax.''
So far as i.s known Elvis
Presley never visits night
clubs or restaurants. He has
a gN!at need of privacy.
Even strangers visiting the
set have an unnerving effect
on hUi concentratton.
What of ttie futlU'e?
"Well," Elvis said. "I'd
like to make movies. some
of them straight dramatic
stories; some of t h e m
musicals or comedies. I'd
like to continue recording,
and I'm looking forward to
making these personal ap·
pearB11ce tours."
Does he think his brand of
music will continue to be
popular?
"It's still going strong,"
he said. "Lots of people are
singing it now. I don't plan
to change that."
Elvis Presley reshaped
the world o! popular music.
It's his bag, and he's going
to stay with it.
Tryouts Set
For Mesa's
NewC01nedy
Tbe ftnal season of the
Laguna Playtiouse in its
present quarters will open
Oct. 2 with Murray
SC'hisgal's companion OM·
act pla)'!I , "The Typists''
and "The Tiger."
Dfrected by O a v i d
Marlow, whose production
of ''The Odd Couple" set
new summer attendance
recordij;, the t a n d e m
comedy-dramas will b e L"I'"'"'" presented wltb s e p a T a t e
casts.
Appearing 1n " T h e
Typists," which chronicles a
long day in the life al two of-
fice worken, will be Julie
llaas and Milt Hanson. Bob
D'lsidoro will be seen as
"The Tiger," a mail carrier 'Here's To l' ou'
DAIL V PILOT' Sit.ff PllfM
ca.ting tor the S .a n
ClemfJllte Community
Theater's first production ot
the new season, • ' T he
Heiress," has been an·
nounced by the T h e 1 m a
Ruckman, resident director
or 1l>e group.
Patty Broderick, w h o
recently moved to San
Clemente from Houston, will
play the title role o t
Catherine, a young woman
pursued by an opportunistic
suitor. The latter role of
Morris Townsend will be
played by Steve Reed.
Tryouts for "The lr-
regnlar Verb to Love," the
second production of the
season for the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, will be held
Sunday and Monday even-
ings.
Director Pati TambeUjni
announced that the comedy
by Hugh and Margaret
Williams· requires a cast or
rour men and five women.
who kidnaps a housewife, This 1Cocktails for two' scene lacks an element o!
played by Betsy Hewett. romance as Linda Baum seethes .over Tom Titus'
All rour performers have comments in the comedy noream dirl," opening
appeared many times on the tonight for two weekends at the Costa Mesa Civic
Completing the cast of the
19th Century drama are C.
Gordon Smlth as Austin
Sloper, Catherine 's cautious
father and Ruth Tay1.or as
the meddling aunt, Lavinia.
The Ruth and Augustus
Goetz ' play, taken from
Henry James' no v e I
"Washington Square," will
be presented for n i n e
p etformances, Thursdays
through Saturdays, from
Oct. 1 o -2 6 . Reservations
may be secured by· calllDg
the Cabrillo Playhouse at
49'l·IH65.
Laguna stage. Miss Hewett h c has earned two Vi'ctor _P_I_a:..y..cb·c..ou_s_e_o_n_t_e_O_ra_n..:g::.• __ o_un_,ty:_F.,.a_i..:rg,,.ro...:...u_n_d_s. __
Reading> will be held both
evenings at 7:30 in the Qm.
munity Center auditorium at
the West gate of the Orange
County Fairgrow1ds. Pro-
duction dates are Nov. 22-23
and ~·30.
awards for "Under the Yum
Yum Tree" and "BarefOot
in the Park"; Miss }1aas
played the lead in "Romeo
and Juliet"; Hanson last
was seen in "You Can't
Take It With You," and
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D'Isidoro was feature!! in
"The Odd Couple."
The one-acts, written by
the author of the popular
"Luv," will run for three
w~ks, \Vedne6day.s throogh
Saturdays until Oct. 19 at
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Ave. Reservations are DOW
a vailable at 494-8061.
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HUNTINGTON BEACH Also SPRINGDALE & EDINGER 892-4463
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'r'IMY• '-'• IJ1 1Ht I.I , .. , 11
JEAN COX, 4'4-M66
Extravaganza
Takes Ticket
•
... .... ..
"' ~
" .. "·Ticket" is a word which seems to be on everyone's lips these-:;~ :.
days. There are tickets to buy for concerts, operas, plays and baUs.;.;z:;
and tickets to vote fur when-Nov. 5 rolls around. ..~ i=
However, for the Orange Coast fun-lover, there is one ticket·:.::.:
which is a must -a ticket to the celebrated Fractured Follies of 1968~:~ • ·.~
presented for the entertainment of all and benefit of South C o a s t ·~ ' ..
Community Hospital.
The follies, staged by the hospital's auxiliary Oct 24-26 under
the .auspices of its Silver and Gold Chapter, gleans talent from San
CIQIIleote to NeWp<>rt Beach. .
·,t After foundations az:e laid fo rt.he 8:30 p.m. show, Jerotne H: '
Gai'gill·•PrOductions of New York mo.ves in with scripts, costumes and .
· i lii:et~ .. to 4frect tlie· extravagan:z.a in. Laguna Beach High School's audi·
; tonum. -.
1• Wliile ,ea~lrshow is completely new;t.his is the third follies pre-:. ··~
· sented as 'ap· atilµiary benefit and proceeds will go towards the bard'.-·-·-.::
wor]<;ng grqUp's current $100,000. pled~e. • • _
Maiking .the opening of ticket !ales for the spectacle, Mrs. Sam';' • ~ .: •
Garst hosted a coffee in her Irvine Cove home for member! and . ~
guests last w,eek. • '
', Assis.ting Mrs. Garst in greeting guests were Miss F":em Ran-
dolph,_ chapter president, along with the Mmes. William Imhoff, Os-
car Hoffmsn and Jack M. Lyons. •
Ticket.SJ for the show are $3.50 per person and are reserved.
They may: be obtained at Adventure World Tr8.vel Bureau, 332 For ..
·est Ave., Laguna Beach or by calling Mrs. Don Seal, ticket chal,. ·man, 494-5720. ·
GETTING'l:INWOtlND --' Mrs. jun ·€1Uo w ·f. greedy. She just
wants to make sure she has enough tickets ·to the 1968 Fractured
Follies for her family and friends. Helping her out is Mrs. John
Weld, (right) ·chairman of the entertainment extravagenza, to take
.. . ' , .' . . . -.. place in Laguna B..,ch High ·SchOOl'.~torium Oct %4-~,. ,!'w-
ceeds. will go to the Solllb "<loast €o1Jl11mnity Hospital'·•· euaent
$100,000 ·pledge. ·
Mrs. Seal Is asllisted by her co-chairman, Mrs. H. Donald Out·. ·
mens, and ~ttee members the Mmes. Tandy Goleman, John·
Valentine, 0scar.ffoHinan and Eugene Shidler.
· Those il\jerested in auditioning for the 1how may obtain fur-
·Caracas,
:Enrich La.guna
What do East Maitland, New South Wales, Australia and caracas,
Venezuela h·ave in commoo?
Fo'r most students attending Laguna Beach High School, this is a
simple question. Both countries have sent on~ of their youngsters to the
school under tlle American Field Service program.
N1ctiolas Ennght, a gregarious young man from East Maitland, is
Jiving with Councilman Roy Holm and h1s farruly on Zell Street, while
Diana Baralt, a nattractive brunette from Caracas, lives with the Jerome
Linenkugel family in their El Bosque Street residence.
For both students, attending a public, co-educational school is a
unique experience.
Nicholas a'f:t:ended a Catholic Jesuit boarding school, but said the
Laguna school is quite similar to state school& in Australia. ,
"I ·was interested in traveling and meeting other people. I wanted to
se~ what Americans think like." he said, explaining his decision to
become an exchange stlident. He is one of 118 students from Australia
studying in the U.S. under the program.
Diana. who previously attended a private Catholic School for girls.
learned of the AFS program from a girlfriend's brother who studied under
the program.
"He spoke highly of it," she said. "I was interested in knowing more
about the U.S. I wanted to see for myself what it was like.''
At first her famiJy was reluat:ant .to let her trave1 so far, but AFS
officials contacted het mother, and soon the family agreed.
A particular problem for Diana is mastering the English l<a.nguage.
Howev,er, she 98.id she is beginning to "tune her ears to English" and the
school is providing her with a strident tutor to help out.
Future plans for the coed 'include further studies into chemistry at a
unjversity and eventually a career in the sciences.
Nicholas said he would like to go to the University of Sydney where he
would major in English. Eventually he wants to be an actor.
For Diana, living in a small town ts quite differerrt from life in busy
Caracas. "Everybody here know! eacb1other. It's much nicer," she com-
mented;
N·ichola5, in sorting out his original impressions of his nev; surround-
ings, said he was surprised at the political awareness of young people
here.
·,
ttler Information· by calling Mrs. Victor Andrews, 494-1737.
t.
'P.EOPLE HERE ARE FRIENDLY' -Both Nicholas Enright
and Diana BaraJt, American Field Service students at Laguna
Beach High School, agree that people here bave been quite friend-
ly. The st1;1dents, looking over their hew l>Ooks,.receive help.from
Gary Nortoo, &rector of student aclivitieo at the high &C!!<Ji/I. Dk
· ana is from C~racas. Venezuela: East Maitland, New South Wel.,~
Austrilia "is Nicholas' home. · • ~
• ~i: .. -s:
•
Attitudes .Could Spoil' Rom.ancei~!:
< ... ~
. I Fiance s Family's Sa>ur
DEAR ANN LA'.Nl>EllS: • I 1111
engaged to marry a young man I have
gone with tot two years. Vem'1
mother disliked me hUnsely from tbfJ
moment we met. His fat.her acts as if I
don't exist. l'Ve trie<tve:y>hard to ,wift
them over but I have failed miler ably.
To please V.ern'a fa mil)' I joined their
chW'ch. I used tt> wear my hair l~g
until his mothei' suggestel I cut it. She
insists on helping me select clot.hes
becauAe she says I have no taste. I
stopped wearing peHrlited nail palish
becaUse She &aid It looked cheap.
It is agony to have dinner with
Vern 's parents because of the long
periods of silence. Last night l at·
tem!'!:t.;to makt·flome ~mall tali ·Mid
Vern 's mother aa ict. "Why don 't~you
ANN LANDERS
stop babbling.?" I was so hurt I almost .
crle.j.
Veto's older brotl.er married a girl
they cdnsld'er "inler1o:-t' socieUy end
intellectually. Her Ufe has been hell . I
love Vern very much b· r m b~.z ·
niflg 'to wonder 'if ~ have t"e i;.rcng 1
to marry i.nto this fa mi , .. Wh?I do yll 1
thillk? -PLAIN JAYNE
DEAR JAYNE: You f-.n't '"'' ._,.,
i1bout Ver1'1 atdturle. 'Yl1at ri<'~!I It,.
••Y when -M.-par?.nb ptlt ) "11 ti · W1'1~
Doe1 be ju1t 111 theft Ii.kt a wart on ~
pickle! II 101 y-0u 're. going to wind Ufl
alongsld" your futurt silter·ln·faw.
Tiie td~ to7~llr fu,ure ·w'.ttb~Vern. lies
111 bf1 'lblllty to give you Ote emoliort11I
j;por1 you 11-:t>d to wi~hstand hfs
,.r.,,·:;• h'I':.: I'' y. If yon r.an t'n t:"t on
1, ~r.y "yr.11' -0Tu,.r Wh1r , forgttt It.
DG AR ANN LANDERS: A close
relriLive t1:,err1s a grea-~ ~eal of ·.ume in
nrrr1ro-me. He Is twice my age and i
hesitate to be disrespectful. However,
•
our children·1tre DO'f 5, 7 aod 9 and sickness. What about cheat l n g
they pick up wards e~~ :..• ~ . , . lathers? Is 'that a sickn~ss, ~oo?
This relative '_:A !~in r~a1 My fath~ ta 44,. good·l!C!~I· IP-
groups by names Wbicb I &'bhor -pears to be ·younger-than bis age and I
Wop, Klke, ~. Spic, Spade, Hunkie ' alway1 thought be W my mother
and sc on. I have gil/en bim dirty. loots were ver h La t • but he ignores me. My hul})and 1ays it Y •PPY · • year my
isn't worth tbe trouble I mlgbl run into mother CC!nlided in me tt:'8t my father
if I hit hlln bea~on. ~at1do you AfiY ? .. ,, Qas be~ rlUlJling around with .notller
-MIDWESTElRNE8 ·.. \ woman. Si.bet I learned 'Of b111 un·
DEAlt Mll1> I 111 -.lobbCf die 1;.: falthfulaesa l have boon unable to be
r.o:;ii:ntt1. S~A ta~ 1tiould ... Di't bt . cj,vjl tQ hJm-'"Our home tile 11 horrible.
w:erated. CbUdren learn,f r reat deal ~ Don'l tell tne to talk it. over with
more trom el'.)1 nute thfjll frmn fn· 1aJzyoae. I'm tGo ashamed. Plt=est tell
ttnlctl oq. If you want them to .be &ood . m-e wnat to: do. I feel so fielptess . --
Amrrfc.ansf t.each t~tm to re•peel all ABC · ~
people. . ' DEAR At'Thtre ll ootblnr yoa e111
, _ J(o •• l'.ltl~ILWbJ 11'• 11fortu111e yovr »EA!! AW LANDERS : You have motllu d you. Sht ahoutd bayt
Written a lot about alcoholism u a "cooli lD" 1omeoae el.le If 1hll rett
...
Ille need to unburdea ~.\
elercyma1 nr a cou.uelor ....... 1
beeo rqore ju<Mcltlll daoleel..:; :.~,
-( .. !~
Give in or lose hilll .•• W!Mjlf~
gives you this llile,'loot oull ~~
oo how to bandJe tho -.:~
aaloamao, cbecl: Ann Landen. ~
her bootlel. "Nectl.nf and Ntlbit!;.
What Are the Llmlb l" Sepd! jotJI! ~
quelt to AM 1'ander1 ln ~~ newspaper, eocloaing SO cen\i.:~
ari<l a loog, stamped, ,.lf.Gli 'h4 tvelo~. -~ .. ,.._
Ann llandera "Ul tie allMI to ...
with your problemt. 8eti<1_ therii ~ lm-
ln care of-Ille DMLY l'ILO'l(:~
ing ~ sell·tddreeatd, '!f'mpM· -.. lope. .., . -
'
----------------------..
DAlLY PILOT
Stork Delivers Drudgery
Bundle's .No J_ay Until Later
Hospital Volu,,teeu
' •
Auxiliary to Form · ~
-·-MRS. GEORGE T. SEELEY
Morrlocl It S..
Vicki Beardsell Now
Mrs. George Seeley
While et IM!ll aboard the
yadlt, Wild · Goole, Vicki
Elle'.n' Beard sell d. Newport
BeaCb "became the trlde of
Geor..ge Tucker Seeley of
Seal Beach.
The Rev. Loren P'licJdnger
pen'onne-J the ctcd:tle ring
rites for the daughter of
Mrs. Phylli!. Mu rt a g h
BeardSell <>f NeW'pOl't Beach
and Yiet« Beard1ell of
West Los Angeles and the
srm d · MJ'I.. Evelyn Seeley of
Seal Beach.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore an Enclilb net tkimmfr over
white silk peau de soie .
VeDise lace flowers were
embi'ddered v~Uy ;on
the 1kimmer, but foll~'
t:1e D811ural line d the
rounded yoke .• Matching
Lact and net were repeated
io her Frencit pr1ayer bat.
p.,t.I yellow frock! wit!>
lac-e trJm wen selected for
the bridesmaids, the Mi.Sieg
Mart!. and Cindi Belrdlell,
tbe bride'• &lat.era, Jan
Ne!Joo and Manha Bloom
of Los Angelea.
Ushers were Bob
Prigmore, Boyd P e t e r 11 ,
Tom Om<ilundro and Brlam
Sweet.
Alter docking at the Lido
Yacht Anchorage, the brldal
couple received 100 guests
aboard for the reception.
Presicling over the gue«t
book waa M.111 D i e n n
Richlrd1on, tile b r j de ' 1
couain. Special guertl were
Mn. Maqaret Murtagh <i
Newport Beach\ the bride's
grandmotheT, and Mrs . Lila
Bluff of Seattle and Mrs.
Freida SOeley <i BlyU>t, 1be
bridegroom's grand.mother1 .
Followil\g a H a w ra i i a n
honeymoon, the newlyweds
will reeide Jn Seal S..cl!.
'Thf""brfde •attended PJe.rce
Junior and Orange Co111t
cOUeges and CU:rrenUy is an
&ir(jM hostess. Her husband
was graduated from Bolsa
Grande lllg!l School 1'1d
p!'eaenUy la enrolled at
Oalifornla State Collea:e at
Lcm1Beach.
By JOAN l!ANAUER
NEW YORK (UPI) -
Whoever named newborn
·babtet bundle. of joy never
cbqed a dirty diaper ·at 2
&i'Ql. or tried to coax an af.
ftlC!Monate response from a
crou-eyed, beld.fltaded in·
(ant.
AA a guess, it seems tii:ely
the tenn came from a
doting· at · a· distance
grandparent. Even adoring
fatbera know better.
Wltat every W'Oln&rl should
know about babies,
pa.rltcularly the e·xpectant
moUler walkinC around in a
glow ol anticipatory love, is
that infants are more tike
lumps than bundles, and the
joy involved resta more in
what the little lump wUI
become tilan -..ti.at he is.
By the time the baby is a
few monU111 old;of cour6e, it
all d\anges and infant en·
ter• a deUgbtful stage of
coos and smiles.
Speakina from expehence,
when I rtm brought my tiny
daughter home from the
bospital f WU horrified to
find my mother-love t.ested
by a rain ot. wet and soi.led
d.iapKW, btrping problems
Ind opiUlng up.
What waa bo4bering me
wu not tbe much discussed
postnatal depreuion -it
wu deprneina reality. The
pioture waa fhit :
I wu trapped in my own
homt, unable to do anything
on the IPW' of the moment
because baby cou1dn 't be
lett alone . I practically had
to h.ire a babysitter !Ml I
could go to the
supermarket, a trip that
became my idea of
JailbrO.k.
On top of t!he housework,
which I attacked com-
pulaiv.ly out of Uie guilty
feeline that 11 a temporarily
.
Workshops
Conducted
_..hops for d>alnnen
will be OOl!ducted by l<>s
Cemtoa Qll&ict, Cali!OrDia
FederatJon . of W o m e n ' a
CM>1, Junior Membership,
•1'7 p.m. M.on<!Oy, Sept .. 30.'
in Bateman Hill, Lynwood.
Attending will be district "
otficen, chairmfl:!I • n d
coordinators, 1 n c I u d i n g
reipreaenUtlWI! faun the
South CoaltJtmior Women's
OIUb, FOU!Mln Volley.
'Harbor Council's Movie Guide
tEdlllll"'I Motl : T!\11 "'°"19 l'lllct. 11 11,.....,,_ b'I' ff'le flfml commlt!M d
H1(bor (Go.Inell l"TA. Mn. llabert S.
-Ill Jl"9lldftlt 11M1 Mn. Hert
s~ II Wlft"11W.. cf\11,,....n. n
11 lll1wndld •• 1 ,...,,_ .. *"r·
mini,. 1ult1bll llim. tor otrMln -
,,_ 1!1111 Wiii -r W91kly. Your ....._ .... .ollclttd. Miii ltltl'll '°
Mal;le ~ Olr. d tllt DAILY ,,.
'°'· MATURE TEENS
AND ADULTS
ANZIO - W • r cor· ~""""coolly ... .-.
DAllX O'I' TllE SUN -
Tribol ctftl w1r ill Congo
~ violent
..mature.
DEVIl.'S BRIGADE
n.llli lllerilla combat
forct II created from a
COIDPIDYof Am er i c • n
mbliU and crack Caoa-
dWll.
GAMES -A •-aeful
--•couple
an1 their guesta
amuse themselves
sinister games.
ADULTS
wtio
with
BOOM -Film creates a
mood of opulent
d6cldmce w h e n at·
tracUo.D and con I II.ct
develop between a
wealthy, dying widow and
• poet.
CLOSELY WATCHED
TRAINS - A youth's at·
tempt to achieve ma.Mood
is portrayed with earthy
frankness and humc.-With
Engli&b subtit1es.
THE FOX -The nb-
tiOO&bip between t • o
women living on a n '
ioo!otlld fmn la 1hattored
with the arrival of an at·
txactive man.
THE GRADUATE -Comte
satire of a young man who
tnaks out of the
mftrlalletie world Of ·his
elders.
ri&ge up to ridicule.
HER WE GO 'ROUND THE
MULBERRY BUSH -
Shocking mu$cal about
high school aet.
POOR COW -Srory ol
Engli!h alum•dweUer.
THE SWIMMER -En-
counters rewal emptiness
and hypocrisy of
suburi>arutes Hft aa he
8Wi.ms home via h i s
neigtlbm's' poole .
TWO FOR THE ROAD -
S o phl.Ucated romantic
comedy traces the
backgromd of quarrels
and brief tnfidel.ttits in a
floundtrine marriage.
WATERHOLE THREE -1
rowdy 8p00f of traditional
' west.em wttlh bawdy satire
a.bout greedy reseal! and
stolen gold.
nonworldnc mother I h1d oo
exCuae for 1 me11y home,
there were the b & b y ' 1
chore1. They weren't dif·
ficult, but .tbat formula·
m a k I n g , 1 t erllization,
!Mding, baU!ing, chqing,
all had to be done on
ecbedul.e, not when I felt ll.ie. K.
Alld r wu Juat pWn tlred
and rundown .
All tbl.1 woukl have been
okay if my Utile daughter
even knew who I was or
I.bowed tome sign of notic·
inl me. lnateod Ille stared
at me -or the rug or the
slipcovers -wltb crossed
eyea and a vacant face.
Adding to my mouMng
hy.ttria would be t b e
women who would teU me,
"~la iJ the wonderful 1*me
-elljoy it wtille you can .
You'll mill It when tho bahy about tho period by aaylna,
ltarU to irow." "Utb"
. One night I oobhinJly coa-11ien my dauct>tor 1oo1< fe••~ to my hulband die 1 over by 1lvtna me a broad
ftar 1ttat r was an unnatural IQn lhtlt obviously wa1 in·
molher. Ho uld he t.holOibt ttollooal, not in~lllnal. She
most women felt .e t did, • ~· nol111 •t me r~
but ( w11a"t sure he knew trom U.. trlditional coo
-bo waa talldna about to -~ 11111 oouaded lince he wun't a mother Uke "ilonk.' wtlicb wu Aid
himself. So r began to ques· ln • loud ~~ce and obviously
tion friends wbo were. meant, hurry up a ~ d
Communlly·mincled WO!lltll b!Weated In wllllll"'1nJ oarvic• at a hoapltal are In-
vited" lo Iba orcan!zaUonal ~c of lb•
COiia M .. a. Memorial Hocpi!lil l\Vomeo'•
Auxillary. , •
Tb1 meet1n1 will be coiled lo order at 10
a.111, Wtdulday, Oct. 2, in Illa 'doctcrs'
IOll.Q&t of Ibo hocpltal.
Cond.QCttnc the lint ••••ion .,uJ. be Mrs.
A. L. Pinkley, who urc•• women to attend
"I dldn't ~·-• kJA~ change me, mommy, I m
wUUll. my wi bungry .. '--------------------_J we.re fun until Ibey were old Almtfst overnifbt t h e
enouatf to take .to ttle zoo," lump bad turned. into a real
one frieD<lt whose t w o person who loved carrou
children lrf: tffnqen, told and hated her vitamin
me. :tropa:. J melted W.o a pud·
''I felt u if I were in die of sendmental lhllh on
prison," another s a i d , that firet mWe end never
alttlougb it dkb'l~t stop her .hardened again.
from having & second baby But I wl1b someone had
recently, told me what every mother
A thS'd friend remi.nlaced ougbt. t.o know.
..
Colleen Rene Powers
To Marry • Summer 1n
Washington Wedcling
The beCro1llal « Colleen
Rene Powers and Scott
La!IAie Morr• wu dUcl ...
ed by her porenta, Mr. and
Mr1. Demel ~ in their
Huntinit.on BMCb h o m e
during a cbampqne p1rty. Couple Tour Mexico During the unounctment .
party more than 7'5 relativta:
and cl<lse friends from Loi
Angel.es, Sentil. Mooica and
San Fernando Valley con·
.tratuliated Ole couple.
Whit. llowera in wb!Ui
Greci¥ urn& filled Uie
UDltod Prtoi>yt«lan Church
ill Olym!111, Wub., for the ftdd1nc ol L)UI Marl!UOrite
Slbold and CUlf James
Coker.
The &v. Maurice Haehlin
conducted the ceremony untll>c tile ilaulht.r o1 Mr.
and Mrl. 0-W. Slbold of
Olympia and t!>e 1011 <i Mr.
and Mrs. Cherlei M'. Coker
ol HuntinCtoo Buell.
For her weddJnC t!>e bride
selected a coat drese of
candlelight HrMO cloth.
The A·Une gown WM design-
ed wit.h a mandarin oollar.
A Door length mantilla of
candlelight rose point lace from Europe wu held by a
floral headpiece Of fresh
white rosebuds, st.ephanotis
and green velvet leaves.
She carried 811 arm bou·
quet of white butterfly
r o s e b u d s , stephaootis,
baby'6 breath and rem. and
WU'! a gold bracelet with a
pearl and gold wedding beU
charm, a gift from the
bridegroom.
Precoding the bride and
her father down the ai'sle
were ttwi IJlatron of honor,
Mrs. Joel Jt. Leidecker. the
bride'.s sorority sister b'om
Seattle. and brldesmaids
Mrs. F. Roger Brown,
another sorority alster from
Seattle, and the Mia,.. P011·
fY and MIU'<ha Coker,
slater• of lhe bride(l'oom.
Their identical g o w n s
were tleeveMe blue, green
and off-wil!to striped raw
silk designed with yoked
bodices and A·Une skirts.
Fresh daisies in their hair
held blue and green ribbon
curls cascading down one
side and they carried
nosepys of daisies and
rosebuds.
Robert Schoepper o f
Portland served a1 best
m•n and ushera were 1Arry
Fl<ming and Frllllk Sm1lb of
Seettle, and Jeff and Gregg
Sibold, brot.hen ol the bri«ie .
Following the ceremony
Vie couple greeted 300
guests at a reception ill t.he
Republican
Picnic Set
~
MR. AND MRS. CLIFF COKER
S.IKt Se1ttl• Home
t The dote lar t!>e wedding
in st. Bonaventure'•
Catholic Church, Huntingtoo
Beoch, la being planned ""
• July, 19119.
'Mlt bride~led is a fflli.or
Ill llllrin• Hilb Scllool.
Her fi.anct, IJOfl. of Mr. ud
Mrs. !Uchord L. Morgan of
Gvden Grove, 11 an alum·
nu1 of 1'*11 Hi&h School.
Anaheim, and attended
Fullerton JUll!or Oll!Ofe
wtiere he moJor<d In ---------h1.111Dess -tiOD.
Acrylic
Exhibit
To Open
Yule Items
Exchanged
For Cash
Ayudante1 Auxiliary,
Opening to the public next Children's Home Society,
Monday for a six.week run will stage its Christmas is en acrylic art show by
J.ames , cl u t t • r , in· Hawines-s Sale during a
ternationally known artist salad luncheon in th A
and teacher \Vtlose paintings MiMloo Viejo Recreation
hang in some of the finest Center at 11 :30 a .m. next
private collections in the Monday.
wock!. Area residents are invited
The Coffee G 8 r d e n to attend the luncheon and
Gallery, 2625 E. <»ast iMpeet tne unu.!ual gifts
Highway. Chrona del Mar created by members of ftte
will be the setting for the 14 Oilldren's Home Society
exhibit and is sponJcnd by auxiliaries in Orange Coun·
r:.;:.~ ~s.Mce tyTicket.. !or the lllllcheon
Outter ..1 i'Reived b i 1 are $1.25, and gifts range
trai~/at the Otis Art from i1 to $10. Women are
Tyee Motor lnn where a at the university and a Instit~te , Chouinard A rt welcome to oome after the
maasive arrangement of member of Beta Theta Pi In.stlt e, Los Angeles City luncheon to view th e
lighted tapers banked with fraternlty, was a member of tC<tJJeg and the University merchandise from 1 to 2:30
pale green gladioli and blue the Husky varsity football 'Q.f_~~co. His classes at the p.m .
s tadium chrysantryemums team which awarded him Clutter School or Fine Arts Further information may
filled the barbecue ptt. the Flaherty Inspirational include a workshop fur pro· be obtained by calling Mrs.
HoStes.s for lhe re<:eption Award. He will be com· fessionaJ as well as amateur Edward Mitche!J. auxiliary
wa& Mrs. Richard Hicks, missioned in the u. s. -:ar::;ti,.·s_ts_.-=--::---7"-_:Pl'::_eol=d::"'::::t•..:837:::.-Mll2=:· __ _
and presiding at the bride's M·arine Corps following his The I I
table were Mrs. J. R. Cum . graduatioo. Doi y Pi ot Covers Boating
minp Sr. and Mn!. V. G. After a wedding trip to
Sibold, grandm ot!>en of the Mexico the 00\lple wm make Best In The West
bride: Mrs. J. R . Cummings the!r home In Seattle.
and Mrs. Dent Sibold, aunts,..============================== ol the bride, and Mrs. Jacki!
Hubbard, ttie bridegroom's
aunt.
A graduate of Olympia
High School, the new Mrs .
Coker ls a senior at tht
University of Washington
where she is a member of
Pi Beta Phi sorority.
Her husband, also a senior
FASHION BREAKTHROUGH
Area Republicans are In-DAR Group vited to '°8ow the music to
New Way To Be
Suddenly Slim
a carnpalgn kickoff picnic
"'°"'°'ed by t!>e Huntington Heo rs Mayor
Harbour Republican
Women's Club on Sunday, Glenn Vedder. mayor of Bonsai Art .
Displayed
GUIDE FOR THE MAR·
RrED MAN -Bruay
comedy whidl bolds tnar·
WILD IN THE STREETS -
Bloodcurdling satire of
rock sinJtr and biJI "way
out" friemh who take
o~r the country and
wich!n ttle gesieration gap to inlillity.
Sept. 29. Laguna Beach will be the
Los Angeles :-Are you a
\Yoman whose figure is on
the good side but might
look perfect? You'll be
thrilled by the new easy
\Vay science hi.5 discov·
cred for yot1 to become
Suddenly Slim and yet
co111pletely comfortable.
If you're more than 15
pounds overweight, or
~·our \vaistline is larger
than 32 inches, then thi.5
idea is not for you . If your
weight problem falls
within this range, then
you can realize a new,
smoother figure today,
without diet or exercise.
science prooess and can·
not give or sag. It's sur·
rounded by a slimming
1ction border. A feather-
stitched panel down each
side of this girdle will
contour your hipo if tbey
are a problem.
Mini-Mermaids Formed
Tbe affair has been plan-fUeSl speaker when Pa-
ned as an old·fashioned tience Wright c h apt e r ,
Americ.anbm pay and aU Daughters of the American
1
1
Repubt,iom candidates and Revolution honor the U. S
inc\D'Dbenta bave been in-Constitution in the Hotel I
vtted. Laguna at 12:15 p.m. Tues-At Party FamiliM ,nu r. the r day, Oct. 1. I
Laguna Coeds Rall .led between4and!Op.m.attl1e Dudng tne fir.rt meetioA
corDer of Edgewater and of the fall season. c<>m· 1
Boo&al end Sul--teld e.n. C&urtney Lanes· in Hun· mittee chairmen will g1vr ~ _.. UMtiN. to at-tingt"OO Harbour. reports. tend lae O.b eamat ut:Wbit Laguna 8 e I c h H I g h the city and new ideas de· li";;;;;i ___ ;;;;;; _____ ~;ii;iii;;; _____ =
~ wtD take pl9Ce two = ~~s :re n:ng cl~~ rived by the membec1hJp. ~ beginning tomorrow in which will be part or the Further informetioo may
the Onage County Buddhilrt Mermald11, Women's Divi-be ·obtained by calling Carf'll Ouch, Anaheim. ,,. £ ~ .La Lindsey. 494·'1989 fir Mrs. '"len~ra-~ -·• c•-,,., on o 111e guna Beach B
., ~ ui: '" .. Chamb@r of Cou'imerce. urton at 4M-3'119 or 494. ~ bf John Neb, St u dents Interested tn __ 4,.71.,i._. --=-=--ooml<lered ..,. ol th e Joining the Minl-MermaidJ"
--IUf'l'Ol1ers are invlled to attend the la .... ,.,umi.,. will dlliihl!f flTOUP'• initial mHting in ~eliundredpllnta. lhoh ot"-Rud AMllOUllCEMOOI
:'rli;N ·i.• no -orne =•· y Bur-ton, 697 Catalina St .. Lagu-HHtt-VaRey ~ ........... public It In· .,. Beach 1t 3 p.m. next ,.,._ tnlloDd *-...., In Tuesday. M h,.r ...... bly
If p.111. --... or The (roup will meet every "WHERE JESUS IS REAL"
aooa eo I p.m.. Smc1117. ottw Tueld1y in thf! Bm-1 . lelCJnd will t. mtlJJY ton home which ii one block / '"" ,. _,.. YH ht ,,,.... :SW..ui. dlapley~ ol roclct from Ille b1fll school. "' wbl~ pcuen • tl'ttstlc or Anticipl:ted projects ln · An _...., Cflirll,._ Mhlbfriet trnrireelWt .... •'n d elude doll drive:s, ht!lp with
•. c.dlariio Juelporl ""°"Ill>! -Ille Mennaid pro J • c t 1, ,,,. l. o...., "''"-"'· ._..,._..,..,,,as. <2rbtmu decaretiotu I« • ._ ________ _
1 ~I
The Fant11stic "m o /!,,, r. (/U{i
Newly ArrivH From New
Yor~ City. Specieli1in9 in
Personal ti•ir Styling. No
C • r b on Copi•sl Ev•ry
H•irdo • Cr•ation Ju1t
F-or Youl 1
OPEN 7 DAYS Pl"' EVENINGS
flwilc/i <fi1n'h
COIFFURE ';"/"
1091 BAKER ST .. COSTA MESA 540-0341
• >... ' .
Suddenly Slim is an all-
new kind of 4-<Jrz. girdle
constructed of science
fibers. One startling inno-
v1tion is the sheer nylon
front panel. This is per-
manently stiJJe11.a by a
The girdle itself is of a
"wonder" Lycra spandex
blend. It's a new power
net consisting of nylo n,
acetate and spandex. It is
so comlomble, but bu
such slimming strength.
it gives your ngure every-
thing that'• possible with
a foundation .
·suddenly slim; In
both girdle and panty
versions, is the pealc
achievement of the Cali-
fornia designer-genius,
Olga. They are available
1t Buftum'1 Found1tJon
Dep1rtmen~ N 1., po r L
844-2200.
-
• (
~Id~, Stpt&mbfr l7, 1%8 DAILY '!LOT J t
•
, In Football W·ar.
Diahlos Face VC Two Pirate Teams
"""' In ,Blic Tourney Mee-Pr.e~ .Gridders
' • ' '' .t
bn ., ... . -....... .,,.
'-.. !:: ,• , ..
~~ .. ·r~~
•ILL C:HAMlllON ._. .. \111..-, U..-1
. '
Orange CoHt college
w•ter polo. coach Jack
Fullert..n bu enough good
player• to field twQ teams
so that'• esactly what he's
going to do S.tordl' when
Area Prep
X-Country
Summaries
the Buc1 launch thelr 1968
ttason by playina· host to
the annual Pfr-.ff:e lnvita·
ti on at.
The sit-game touroimeat,
feO!uring tbt -two Qraoit
Coast teams along with' S•D"'
ta Monica City College and
COUege of the Sequoias, will
get underway at 9 a.m.
Fullerton didn't re a 11 y
want 1:0 divide his squad, but
he was forced to when L~
Harbor College dropped'
out oJ. the toorrnamenl and
he couldn't find a l&st·
minute replacement.
",,.."111,... -."'~ .. ,,..r 11 Top matchee In the ·ln·
i . J•r ,.,,~..., IHI), 1a::s:i.1 1. v. vitabooal fi&,ure to the 9
Martklel' (Ha), 11:u· a. llld l'lwu • 1-Ak betw ~ fm-4), \1:01 4, Rldl MCCiure (Hll, 0 Cl\11.: opener eett u1e
i1:11 s. M. DoMw•11 IH&J, 11:1] '· OCC Reds and Sequoia! and Si.wt Alw1rd (HI), II :Jl 7. 0.YY • . J1«-(NHI, 11:» &. "· MtO... the 4 p.m. finale, aiain
tHal. 11:2' •. Kevin 11111tr OtHJ, 11 :u featuring the Reds and San-11. Cllrl6 hn...-, jNH), ll <il ll, II. --l ei:p1t11 (HIJ, 11:l1 n . $t•" o,.,..._. ba M1,111:.ca.
IHI), ll:l.I IJ. Jdl" Pie~ INHh The occ Reds will be the ll;iO I'-S""-Oeleflll'tl (MHl, ll:SJ J•'f'-stronger or the two Pirate
H111111...-1t. "'--' H1""" u / teams and will be led by let-
T°" Fhll•r•: 1. ••'-11 11411 terman Dan ~-,·sty w•-11 ~U.1 :l. De"M' Cll,.. tNHJ, II ;ll.G' \.AU 1 1 • llV
....... s..11 was Orange Coasts leading
,... .... ., ... -a-11 1t, "...,.._, Hll"W scorer last season . .. TOP Fl11IM1e11: '· lonldl: (HI ),
ll :IJ.11. Jim Acllt tNtO. 11:'1.I "New He-1 Hlrbol" 1ruMw111
recorcl.
E-r week MMCO utl1filt mort ti.. 10,000 h1Mmls1ion llf'Obl1m ...
Y-pt frn Wwinc. •·fr" told-
dleek, f11t. 1fflcl1tnt 1trvlc-m111t
tflnu If! j<111t ont di)". ArMf ••th
,V.MCO, )'Our lraMmi11ian c1" bi
prOIKlld by OYtr 500 Mli!CO C•n·
11•1 eo11t to COl!I.
Ev.try mlnutt i nd I i.1t, toml-
-Pt'DYM ,,.
Y .. Nit trnf ,...,.
,,_ 11•11u/-.. AA.cell
Tourney schedule :
t 1.1r1. OCC Rids 1<1. Col..._ 111 Sa-
Cee Grid
, Summaries
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. ·~ , ....... In theee dl'J:s· and tl:mes,
lb• "VC'' ian't IOIJ\tthlnl inost people consider friend-'Jf .· I
Especially peop)e from
Mi.1Sion Viejo High ~hool
befauoe the D!ablos will en·
COU\er a dom!\'Uc fOrm of
''VC" tn Valley Christian
High Sdloot1 varsity
football~-
Coach Ray Dod&e 11 coun-
tin& on two players In
i J)articular to come ttrmugh
Jor1ilm when b~teedl'Uke1
Tu.ii.. 0 1 I 1-t ,,.,,1; fit" t . e' \ •~e-' H11n!ln11on IHdl » 1 "21 -n 1111! ru a AI"~ Ill&
TOl/Cll-n1 IH!l l>tl.... Wl'lln jl !, lt:hool at 8 tonight. i:..~ ~1=::. 'b.!•·ii:~~y !tt • Tb e y ·are quarterba~lc S-", PAT1 (HI) Ir.ti Wllllt lll ), .•
20
&.00x13 --llllt""!'.!1..! I':·~ -·~-=
30 ·
&.50x13 --·· l'.':.li."' -... :: Swim Club Awards Set Monday OVER ~!, fl.fl.I,,. -.:,~5 ., ':\ ~-:.• {., '. .• ~ ~ ,, , " ..
'Ibe Newport Beac}J. ,SW;im • Alamitos. High School and Al
Club will hold it>< lilaiigiihl Irwin. _Athletic Director of ~ d ......... et Mon-UC Irvine. , . R4X1r~ awar """"iu Reservaions can be made
day .at the Newport Beach by calling Newport Beach
Temig Club at 6 p.m. Tenn.is Club aquatic director
Guest speakers &re Flip lAlrry Dellota at 644-0050
Darr. coach or Rancho be.fore 6 p.m . today.
Have the NIGHTIME
of Your Life!
NIGHT RACING starts
tueaday at beautiful
LOS ALAMITOS . . .
~IRST M NINE RAC!S
MON.·SAT. AT 7:41
Turf T.nct Dfnlnt. , •
T.W. ......-V•Uont Calt:
.(213) 431 ... 22 (7141 527~71
Stlll11'1 K IHSTll(fYCtl , CIMN .OllNl.llOlmDWlllUEYIQO S!IGRbl lllJTlAl.wrrl $J.994/50T.
Smart girl,
Smart guy,
Smart buy,
SUNNY
BROOK
$399 ~@~ . __ p
SUNNY
Toke ~.,e sfo of its BROOK
marvelous mildness ~~===;;;!!,;i
and you'll agree; f' ... ~
there"s no smoother ~ ·
whiskey than ~:
Sunny Brook ~·
at any price.
I
'
• I·~
•Extra touab Tnf1yn.
rubber add1 1xtr1
1tr1n1th to the body
and extra mJle1 to
the lre1d
•~lore thin 11.000
gripping edgP1 11lve
lractlon 1o •Lari
1ur~r -~top f1ster -
tAln or 1hine
1• Modem wr1p•11ound
trud provi des bener
lt1erln11 control in
th1 t4m1
our Newest POLYGLAS• tire
POWER· CUSHION·
~)"Ill• t!N tMt Ml_.......,. •• ,
\ ,,1 ... -tt $3296
• A tire th11 fl1h 11 1q11lta • , ~
11v11 th1 tre1d for loii11r life
111d J111prov11!1 TOed pip, 7.00 I U ....._
•Two Polyetttt C.rd Pl!... r~n:_•_:JJt
• Two P'lb1"q:l1t1 Cord lilt Pj.1 .. , 'tf4 ~ • • •
., ...
Fed. E.x. Tix
i nd old tirt
$2.35 $1.36
$2.56
$2.54
$2.11
45
7.75x14 ::==. '
r.:. &:'!:: I"" old t "
WldtewaD1 only $ .,_
BUY NOW
on our
Easy Pay Plant
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . ..
SERVING ALL SOUTHERN. CALIFORNIA
'
YOUNG & LANE nRE co.~ Uff NIWl'O•T
,h. 541-9'13 COSTA MIS4
.YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO • ... 2 OCIAN AVINUI
Ph.4'4,U6 LAGUNA
~T•tftaeo...,.ea.nt.weY~
•
TH£0DORE ROBINS FORD 2Ci6o HA•-ILVD. ' ,h, "IUOIO COSTAMISA l
•
( ' '
:
:
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;
' !
.. r
I·
I
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_....._;__ -:_....;-"'-' C..0'-!•~-_...:~>-'·~··~·..;_~0'1"-';>,.~·~•L•~z~-< --.-. --. .___ ---------------------------------------------------------
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DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE •'.
Saddleback 'Comes Alive
It Uvee. It brOalhes. 11 iacb•.
Saddlebtcl< Junl!?r CoU•J• thl• week became a ttal
live educational institution as it threw open lte doon for
tha tint time.
AltlloUfb heads were ~l being eounted as rogi ..
tNtioa COlll!nued tbroUfh the week, ii appears that
llho\it 750 studenta will be full.time during the first sem-
ester and about that many more will be in the extend-
ed day (evening) classes.
And with tile Oedgling class Ullder way, Saddlebacl:
already IJ looking to the future. In Ught of registration
for the first freshman class, it is interesting to com-pare proj,cted growth of the district -which covers
4' ~of Orange C~ty . • With a 15-acre temporaey campw in ~atiao and
a 200-acre permanent campus picked near , tnistees
are alrea~y calculating the need for a second 8mpus.
One • ,.;te under study would be land 'bet~ the
Junction of Laguna Canyon Road at the S.ani. a, San
biego Freeways.
It is estimated that the junior college enrollment by
.1978 will have reached 8,500 and at saturation 'will be
30,000. By that saturation time the district is'expected
to have about 1.3 million residents, about what Orange
County contains now. \ The college district was voted into existe.oce\feb.
14, 1967. The electorate reaffirmed support for its own
college April 9, 1968 by handily passing a '9.5 million
bond proposal for land, campus construct.ion and equip-
ment.
The 13 relocatable buildings that are the first cam·
pus ~e air conditioned. and have a permanent I o o k
which in itself is .something of a marvel
'
They weren't there June 20. The site was just grad-~
ed I.and Ob a brown hilllide when the first packa~es of " ..
bul.lillnp .arrl\led. Now there Is a fun<'iootng complex
of clu1rooms and admirUstra'Uve buildings, even a
bustling book store.
Souµi .Coa1t reside.at.I are already taking pride in
th.air fiedgllng .college.As its sinews grow to keep pace
with a population surge lhat pride in a fine facility will
grow.
In the Top One Percent
How about that!
~!' 1:-aguna Beach High School seniors are among
aenu-~sts on the National Merit Scholarship Test.
Scholastically, this places Ben Schiff and Brlan
W-a.j.nwrtght, both 16, among the top one percent of high
1cbb01 -seniors throughout the country.
Narrowing the perspective, they are among only
2~ in Orange County chosen from the county's 18.000
high school seniors .
Further testing may enable the two to earn scholar-
lhips to college Worth up to $2,000 a year. The word' of
Joh~ Stalnaker, president of the National M e r i t
Scholarship Corporation, seem appropriate:
. "These students deserve credit and honor. They
bnng honor to their families, who deserve much cre-
dit, u do their teachers and communrties. Their future
su~~ess7 however, will depend increasingly upon their
ability to become productive at the high intellectual
levels of which they are c.apable."
\
... ,,
' ·~I ,. . .. .. . I ·• • < I .• "
l
Characteristics Bonn Leaders
Alarmed Over
R~ss Threat
They Stopped to Jlelp Hi1n
Of Fine Athletes
By NORMAN NIXON, M.D. ms is the season when Americam
or all a.ges, from all walks Of llfe, go
cl.ally over competitive liporta.,Every
Saturday, football stadia from coast to
coast overflow with wildly cheering
fans while countless millions watch on
te!evision as a handful of robust.
athletically skilled and superbly train·
ed young men fight for the,ir alma
mater -and individual recognttlon.
~eek marka the beginning of the
W · Seriee, the time when pational
m ' hysteria reigns supreme!fAJi~trt
. 12, provided the slrlking
stQ•ts and tile Jdexlcan govuni;nent
reiolve their grlerances, our eyeNnd
earl ~ill be tuned In to the Olympic
Games in Me:rico City.
MANY EDUCATORS decry the
emphasis on spectator sports in our
colleges and high schools. They con·
tend that the athletic tail ls wagging
the academJc dog and suggest taking
away the dollar aign by eliminatlnf,
paid admissions, peld coachee, travel
ex!M!nses, athletic scholarshiP& and the
dependence of "other'' iporta on foot·.
b· rt and basketball.
Sp far. these objectors reprefent on·
lv a small mlnorlty. For most
I "nericans believe that our way of
f ering competitive sports in boys
a d girls in our elementary, junior and
s:rtior high schools pays dividends in
frrthering responsible citizenship. And
that high-level competition during
adolescence and young adulthood con·
tributes positively to character fonna·
ti on.
IN THE RECENT !968 Olympics
is:ues of the Journal of tlhe A.M .A.
Dr. Bruce Ogilvie of San Jose State
College Counseling C e n t e r sum·
maf'lzed his years or experience with
high sci1ool , college, Olympic and pro·
fe ssi onal athletes from every com·
petitive sport who had been referred
be ('aus'! of psychological problem.s.
Although Dr. Ogilvie has some
doubts regarding the value of athletic
competition, because of tne variety ot
bodily complainta and the sevuity of
emotional react.ions to the stress of
Ja.i&h-level compttition, he lists many
posifive character tralta in the
~ties of most teen·a&er1 and ~g\adul!J who partlclpato active!)' ltJ!~petitiw sports. · ' ·
... •OGILVIE REPOllTED that JD.year·
b\d: boys, When accepted by the na·
tionally renowned Santa Clara Swim
Chlb, tend to be cool, reserved and in·
troverted; tlo8e who remained in thi1
extremely competitive training pro-
gram urrtil their 14,th birthday showed
greater emotional stabillty and higher
con.science development, along with
increased ltlt..as1ertioa all d in·
dependence. The aune bOlds true fOf'
many youngsters who participate in
fop Warner football and Llttle League
baseball. ·
Successful atltlete1 are achievement.
oriented and gain great satisfaction
from their striving t,o succeed. Like O.
J . Simpson in last Saturday's U.S.C.·
Minnesota thriller, a great alhlete is
at hi.s very best when the odds are
slightly against him.
DR. OGILVIE IS cmvinced that
athletes who retain their motivati<li.
fOr' competition dhow these personality
tra,its: »nbltion, organ i z at i o D
deference, dominance, endural'ct and
aggression. Most of them are self·COJ\-
b'Olled. self·coofident, tough-minded,
trustworthy, intelligent, and ex·
troverted.
Whether good or bad, Competitive
sports are here to stay. Cert.lin\y, ow-
Uves would be less colorful without
them and without the athletes who
make them po9Sible -especially
those outstanding ones wtlo become
our national heroes.
'Grow Up and Go Home'
"Al-'1.JYS we hear the plaintive crv of
.tie teen-ager: What can we ·do?
Where can we go? The answer is :
Go Home!
"Hang tbe stonn windows, paint thto.
woodwork, rake the leaves. mow the
lawn, shovel the walk. wash the car,
Jearn to cook. scrub the floors. rep11.ir
the siok. build 1 boat, get a job. Help
the minister « pries! or rabbi, the
Red Cross. the Salvation Army. Visit
B11 George ---.
Of!ar George:
Help me. please! I'm going
with this girl and I Uke her 1 )ot
but i;he has ' pet dog and every
time l ki1111 tier 1ht insist!: I alao
k.isr; the dog. What CID I do? l'U
be your friend for life. w.s.
Dear W.S.:
We.JI , one thine you can do ia
let me know the next time you
three go to a drive-ln movie -I
want t.o watch. trve heard oft.he.
e:,rnal tnangle but this ls
~ ridiculous.)
CONFIDENTIAL TO MAYOR
DALEY OF-CHICAGO: It goeg:
"StJclt1 ind 1tona may break
my bone11 but words w:IU JH!Vtt
hurt me."
~-·~·-------It.----
; I
.. -' 'I '. . . ' ~-'
Editorial ·
.,
the sick, Assist the poor. Study your
lessoni. And When you are throtlgh -
and not too tired -read .a book.
"Your parents do not owe yoi.t en·
tertainment. Your city or vilh~ge does
not owe you recreational facilities.
The world does not owe you 1 UvinJ.
You owe the world something. You
owe it }our time and energy'1ind your
Ulents so that no <1n4! will be at war ln
poverty or sick or looely again.
"lN P.LAIN SIMPLE words · Grow
up! Quit belnl a Cf1b1by. Gtt oot of
your dream world and develop a
backbone, not 1 wishbonl"-, &nd atart
•ctint like 1 man or lady,
"You're 1upposed to bre m1turt
enough to accept tome of tbt
re1po.1sibiUtie1 your patents have Clf·
rted for ye.art. They hive ura:ed, bel·
ged. ext'\lsed, tolerated and denied
themselvu needed comforts ao lhal
you could have etery benefit. You
have. no d&hl to expect ttlem t.iJ bow to
evtt:Y whim and fancy.
"In He11veu's name, GROW UP
AND GO HOME ••
By Judfe PbWp B. GIUl1m
J1venlle Coart t>ef r, eo1orach
~
WASHINGTON -West German
Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger has
quietly employed a bit of personal
diplomacy to crystalli:re U,S, support
for bi1 menaced government in the
wake of R11Ssia's march in to
CUchoslovakia.
Kiesinger sent a close foreign policy
advisor, Kuct Birrenbach, on .a. quick
trip here as ma personal represen-
ta~e. Bitrtnbach made tde rounds or
inDuenUaJ congressional lfc.ffiCf:s to
underscttNI the West (; er m a n
.government's grave concetp.
Blrrenba.ch is a member or thP.
Bundestag who has Jong been a sup·
" poner~ Of .NA.TQ. and art advocate oJ
European cooperation. He is also 'h
financial trustee anl counselor for the
powerful Thyssen industrial interests.
In talks with congressional leaders
Birrenbach expressed the fears of the
West German government caused by
the invasion of Ciechoslovakia by
Russia and it! Warsaw Pact allies. He
stressed the positioning of troops on
the ~ech-West ~rman border.
HIS QUICK VISIT h e r e coincided
with a round of proplganda and bOm·
bast leveled by Moscow at the BOnn
&overllJJllnt. At the same time the
Kremlin \\fa! assurihg other Middle
European nations, Jl(lt.ably Rumania
and Yugoslavia, that it plannP.d NO in·
vasion of their territory.
As a consequence. U.S. officials
were led to believe. formally and by
Biffenbach's informal mission. that
West Germany was the nation most
endangered by the move i n to
rz.echoglovalcia. That led to warnings.
from the United St.ates. Britain and
France, that any move into West
Getman territory: would bring "Im-
mediate Allied response."
Now that Cuch leaders are saying
that a Soviet pull·back is in prospect.
U.S. officials are keenly Interested in
tJle extent of the withdrawal of oc·
cupation forces and tM location of
unlb: which remain in Czechoslovakia.
BIRRENBACB'S TALKS here were
well ti.med. His vistt came when the
Senate and H01:1se . were preparing to
complete actJon on the ad·
mlnirt:ration'• m·bimon defense at><•
propriation bill. Some infiuential
senators h a d been questioning CIA
director Richard Helms. Defense
Secretary Clark Clifford and Gen.
Earle G. Wheeler, chairman r:>r the
Joint CtUefs of SWf, on international
developmNJts.
The lawmakers were: told , in closed·
door teatimony. that eight divi.11ions of
war,aw ~et. troops -more than
80,(m l'ig11ting men plus support units
-W'8J"t posltiOhed in Citchoslovakt1
la the Pil.sen-0\eb atfll where they
posed a threat to W"l Cennany's nttem border. T h t tenators were
thus ,.-epared to give a sympathetic
heartn&: to a personal spokesman air·
in&: K1eatn1er•, apprchen&ions.
Dtsplle: their symJ)AtheUc attitude.
however. congressional leaders. like
other U.S. oftfclals. were finally In-
clined to take 1 somewh•t less alarm·
ed view of lft 1dmltte\ly a1ar1T1 i,g
situation. They reachf'd 1 tentative
C'OQC!uaton tha.t Ru51ia w•s not
.ae:riowly Considi"!:rfn1 a move into
Wu.t Germany.
By ll•bet1 5. Allen
and Jolin A. ~d1mlth
I-le Salutes the 'Nice l(ids'
To th e Editor:
To thcink Lhe young people who go on
be in g the "nice kids" t hey have
always been but who don't get the
publicity reserved far the diisenters,
the rabble rousers, the dirty lazy lot
rt!vel in . The .. nice kids" don't need it
(isn't e\eryone nice, sort of things?).
Last Monday afternoon at Beach
and Ma.in in Huntington Beach. the
.. loaner" car 1 was driving went dead.
Hundreds of people passed, a little in·
dignant that my borrowed car had a
dead batl8JY and they had to make a
slight detour around me. No telephone
in slght. and. traffic on all sldes of me
made crossing difficult.
•,i ' 'I
flf \\IASN 'T THE m o I o·r c y c J e
police1nan, who col'ldn't help twt see
li1e stopped up trafric, who came to
my assistance. It wa sn't t h e
policeman in a police car. who
bothered to find out what the trouble
was, but a "nice kid" who DID stop
and who DID do something about it.
W,hile he was jockeying 'into the posi·
tlon or alerting the nearest gas station,
another car stopped with three "nice
kitls'' on their way to tile beach on a
100 degree after nooon, who bothered
to take time to guide my car into the
gas station.
These are just four "nice kids" -
CLEAN "iiice kids" with clothes to
match . ..-.<ith masc1•line h:::ircuts le~v.
ing no doubt in my mind who they are
and h<.re they came frorn .
I salute them -whoever. or
wherever, they are! (I like nice It.ids l.
A. K. "ETSCH
One Sad Co11clu•iott
To the Editor:
Suspicion and bias often a r e
generated by rear and -or lack of
unden;tanding and often result in
stereotypip g of individuals and issues.
Two items appearing in the SepL 18
issue oi the DAILY PILOT, wh il e
seemingly unrelated. could "con1e
under the stereotyping mentioned
above.
One item wa& the letter fro1n a
mot.her whose 16-year-old son , while
taking a polltical pOlt, was subjected
to suspicion and indignity. seemingly
without cause. The inference here is
that because he is a youth. some peo·
pie feel he is not deserVing or the
same initial trust and right to basic
human dignities that we adults expect.
THE OTHER ITE~f was' the
headline. "J C Bonds Lose by 12
Votes''. Surely it was not the. sUght tax
increase thal defeated the needed
bond issue -an increase in taxes of S3
per year on a $20.000 house is
mtnima\. Also one would have to wear
blinders not to realize the educational
and cultural benefits you th and adults
a\ik p;ain from our junior col\eges. It
Dear
(;toomy
Gus:
La11.1na Beach, just Uke every
other city in Orana:e Pount1.
doesn't want a jet airport~.near·
by. But the Civil AttoaauUcs
Board i1 so powerful that we're
golng to have more big planes
operating In the coont, in th t
f1.1iurt -and th1t could mean an
•lrport lletlfby. lib It or not. _ -.D. D. I.
l~!t~'l trom '"""'°""" , .. w11come. Nor"11llY wrllef'S
-uld tonvt°I' tMlr mes..,.;11 Ill JOO wom or ltSf.
TM r.gM "' ton!len .. \!ttU'I to Ill ""'' or 1llmln1t•
llMI I' .. ..,,.,,..,_ it.II ""''" mu11 lncluch 1kln1l~rt
">Cl m1lll1111 -·-· bl.II n11M1 wltl t.. wllhl>lllill ~~-
· ... uld be interesting to learn why
some voted against this bond issue.
and why such a large number did not
bolher to vote at all -when the right
to vote i:; one of ou:r nation's cherished
privileges. ..t~
ONE S1\D ·conclt.isicm th.iit Could be
drawn from b~lh of these items IS t.hat
our erligh;ined society contains too
r .y who do not attenipt to reason a
situation or issue through, but who fall
back on suspicion or indifference.
SHIRLEY ISERMAN
Lng11na Green Belt
To the Editor:
I r.ave wanted lo convey our thanks
f:n-that very fine lead article and the
editor ial on I he gr?en belt. When l
read tile article I felt tnat the battle of
the City Col1ncil h:id rea!ly .. ~en won
in tlie "columns of the DAILY PILOT
f ie dJy after. Ri ch ard Nail's superb
rep~rliing \~riped out any sense of
disccr'uragement we might have felt
from the lack Of warmth in the coon-
cil's reception . I am hoping now that
he can stay long enough with us to win
the green bett with us for I truly fear
that some big eastern paper or joornal
will grab his talents from us.
Every member of our association
has been excited about the help he has
given us and I have no hesitancy in
signinR fer them when I say ttie se
things to you
.JAMES W. DILLEY
President
Citizens' Town Planning Association
Ifill Developn1enl
To the Editor·
Assessment District 1963·1 (the
Park Avenue Extension) resul{.ed in
the development or Top of the World
property in Laguna Beach. Assess·
ment District 1966-1 (recently ap-
ptoved) vttll result in the development
of considerably more hill acreage -
400 lots, I believe.
In fiscal 19S3.fi4. tile Laguna scho<M.
district lax rate was S'l.06 per $100
assessed valuation. For fi scal 1968·69
th e rate is S2.98. despite an increase in
.pssessed valuation from $54,321 ,934 to
$79,306.020 during the s ame time
perkld. Not all of the tax increase is
d11e to d<'velopment which resulted
from Assessment District 1963-1 , but
n1m::t of it is, An:t both fire and police
protection. including a new fire s taOon
a! tht Top of the World. h11vt adrled hi
the cost of !he r!evel~ment.
OTllJ-:R AHEAS of eommunity
SP.rvices (parks, recreation , hcr.IP'.~l
s e r v i c e , Boys' C I u b , Yale&.,..
Playhouse. library, etc I are ia
various ttages DI capital and O{)ent-
tional budge! deficiency. and 1n many
cases ar-e not provkling the *"' level
of wvtce per -• in tile (lllt.
Quotes
Levtte,Sbdalr, San Diep, cia "PoOr
Peofh'1C.mpaJp11-''ln my IJ'l')Winf
J'Hl'I my fomlty -very _. lbull
we didn't ' e e m to demand our 'ri&hh' tbat tho """" llrtuent "'°"Id
--to -Joi."
Many c.lmmunity facilities and pr&-
grams are inaciequate and overcrowd·
ed.
Twenty and 30 years ago, young peo--
ple loitered at a Youth Center, a boWl·
ing alley, and a fairly large drive-in.
There was once a dance hall in
Laguna. Today. none of these facilities
exists, and about the only place to
loiter is on the public sidewalk, which
creates problems.
In many areas the Laguna Beaoh
community has not caught up with the
results of Asses£ment District 1963-l. t
hope we can get even, and then get
re'idy rcrr the results of Assessment
Distri~ ~1. -. W!Lt,JAM M. WILCOXEN
Wilco:tn'}r.a,,.,..tee. a11d last year
was president, of Laguna Beach Uni·
fi€.d School' Di.!trict. Assessment Dis·
trlct 1966·1, to which he refera. U; i11
A,.ch Beach Heights and was some·
what controversial because of the 25
by 100 foot lots in o grid pattern 011
a steep hillside. Engineering for the.
district recently won City Council ap-
proval bu a 4--1 vote.
Grand .J ""'
To the Editor.:
-EdiW1
Not being the kind of human wht
lets his ears and eyes de cide what's
right or wrong with any su bject, I do
not watch TV nor listen to radio.
which only gives one the phony stufl
that they are paid to show or teU us.
I must read at least f o u r
newspapers an evening in order to
"get" the · thoughts and views of
editors and 16 newspaper columnists
who are all in the four newspapers.
IN THE LAST six or seven years,
editors and publishers of La~una
Bepch paperli have come and gone last.
1 am surprised that the DAILY PILOT
would print on Comment Page,
'·Grand Jam at the White House
Door." It was wonderful reading and
the truth.
I wonder why our Laguna papers
ha.ven'l printed the little Japanese
lady's prophecy of "Johnson won't
serve his term out" -and Humphrey
will become "It" and we will be plung.
ed into the worst war that has ever
happened.
Btrl' WITH NIXON . Humphrey and
John5on fail three) 8JiSassinated
before elt.cUon. who else can ruin the
day for grand jam at the White House
door? '
If Richard Nixon does win in
November. millions of people will be
eagerly waiting to hear his plan to end
the wiar. One or Olem w!Jl be Richard
Nixon. Remember, Nixon is the same
Nixon. who served in the Eisenhower
Administration when the nation suf·
fered three recet1sions.
CHARLES A PEDDICORD
----
.._Friday., September 27, llHl8
TM ..Utonol """' Of ... Dally
Pilot "'"' to fftform and stfm.. tilaU rl!ldm btl prumUng UW
,...,._,.., opiolo1ll cmd """"
.......,, .. topicl af hll<T•it
cmd "°'"~ btl prouidJng • ,...... for ... aprenlon af °"' nodm' opln/<>!u, and l>r F~U"lltil'tf ~ dtwru Nw-
poilllr af 11<J01f>l<d obi.,...,
cmd .,,.,rc....... "" ta¢a oJ tlM
day.
Robert N. W~. Publl&her .,
h
fJ
a
d
t•
E
h
D
c
J
f
t
' t
I l
------------------~--~ .... ·--:-----"'.'~~:-:--:::-:-:~~:::-;--~--:-:::--~-----:. .... ..... . --. -·· .......... . ,,,. ••• ,,1 .. .. . . .
Newport Harbor
VOL 6f, NO. 233, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ...,.FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, "1968 Tt:N CENTS
•
DAILY ,llOT '"°''--Irr''' O'Dt-U
'CRYING IN GHETTO' 'LAUGHING IN SUBURBS' 'PO LIT ICIANS UP TIGHT'
Crash Verdict Due in Year
19· Witnesses Testif y at Helic opter Hearing
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1llt 0.lfY Plltl Shff
Findings in the worst civilian
heliropter crash in U.S. history -
fro mbuman control to systems only
.an engineer can comprehend -are
due within a year following close of a
tv."O-day federal hearing Thursday in
El Segundo.
.~ missing nut and bolt which helped
hold a pit.ch diange rod on one of five
main rotor blades is considered a
uucial factor by the National
Transportati<>n Safety Board.
The last o{ a. series of 19 witnesses
called to testily about cause of the Los
Angeles Airways helieopter crash
whidl killed 2.3 persons May 22 were
heard Thursday.
Most m their remarks were so
teohnioal that only .airline personnel
and other qualified individuals could
understand just what the three-man
board of inquiry was hearing.
Mechanical problems or some sort
appear to be the factor, however, in
New ton Faces Up to 15
.n "•1t.~"~'"9 ,~ ~ t-""'~ ~-~·
Y ears for Police Slay ing
OAKLAND (UPO -Blad: Panther
founder Huey P. Newton was aen·
tenced to 2 to 15 years in state prison
today for voluntary manslaugbter in
the slaying of an Oakland policeman.
Superior Court Judge Mooroe Fried·
man denied motions for a new trial. to
allow Newton free on bail during ap-
peal aid to crant the 26-year.-old
Negro militant leader probation.
Tn a 20-minute court appearance,
during which attorneys' arguments
\\'ere extremely brief. the judge
ordered Newton to the state medical
facility at Vacaville "under the term
proscribed by Ja'v."
Defense counsel Charles Garry, in
:ttsking for probation, prevente4S peti·
tions which he said had 29,301
fiignatures calling Newton an "honest
dedicated, selfless human being" who
would be a "powerful asset to the
community."
Newton maintained his cheerful de-
meanor. smiHng and waving at the
f\VO dozen spectators in the courtroom a~ he left accompanied by bs.iliffs.
'l)Jey cheered and s h outed en-
c.:ouragement to Newton, compelling
}'riedman to gavel for order.
Garry immediately filed notice of
appeal and again asked for bail, poin-
ting out to the jurist that appeals of
this type te>ke between 18 months and
2'h years. The judge again denied the
motion.
During the brief arguments, Garry
said the "community needs" Newton
Orange
Wea tller
Low clouds, fog and drizzle -
that's the gloomy week.end wea-
tJ1er picture for th,e Orange
Coast as the temperature drops
do"'" to 70. Bring back the heat
"'a\•e.
TODAl'
Tl1crc's tnn .. ~ic i11 tht' atr ot
Lar1101a Bl'ach's I rvine 801vt
1vhere the Lyric Opera Associa·
tion open., i t s 1t01an tonight
with "La Bohtmt." Read abow.i
it in today'1 WEEKENDER mag.
azint,
C•11Mn!t. c .. ..in.t1
Comk>
Offlll "''~ 01"""' • ..,i.ou~, ...
ERl"1M-I
• ..... • ' ' " .... _
... 11
' .. ..
' " " ..
' "
s.dtl ....... l•U S.wh 1'-lt
ltw-Mlftleft, 1•11 T•lrfllllll f -·-·-. • ._ Wiii.. " W"'1ol~ 4"1 ·--•rt --....... ....
""" GH&t ......... --· -· "" .. .,..,..,
• • .. ··~ • ' •• ...
and he is "no longer a ~rson in-
terested Jn his own ego and his own
self -he is an exctllent subject for
probation."
The prosecutor, Assist. Dist. AUy.
Lowell Jensen,. retorted that Newton
was not eligible far parole under the
penal code and it did nol matter
whether there were 29,000 or 250 000
signatures on Ule petition. '
$5 00,000 in Tax
Reven ue Gained
In County Au dits
Auditing or 734 Orange County rum,
which did not file equipment and in-
vent.ory statements will bring in an
estimated $500,000 in additional tax
revenue, County Assessor Andrew J.
llinshaw said Thursday.
Hinsh:aw said the 734 r i r m 5
represent SS,794.620 in escaped assess-
ed valuations dating back to 1965.
w~f ~s:;~be~~e ~e~m~ai%~
willlully evaded filing statements as
required by law and they were fined 10
percent of their assessed valuation
QDlOUDting to $348,930.
The balance of the firms were not'
penalized because it was net indicated
that they had willfully violated tbe
law. Hinshaw said.
The assessor said Orange County
has about 50,000 businesa firms with
.an assessed valuation of fA>out $400
million in equipm~t and inventories ......
Kidnaper Draws
Life Sentence
Ch.arle!i R. Willis , coavicted (1£ rob-
bery and k.idnaping in the holdup of
the F'ox South C.:oast Theater in Costa
Mesa, wa" tiCntenced Wednesday to
life imprisonment.
Willis, 38, of 133 E. 16tl1 St. Costa
Mesa. an ex-convict, was sentenced on
two count.I of t:ldn9plog and one count
Of second degree robbery for the June
B holdup of the South Coast Plaza
theater.
Witnesies said Willi! entered tlle of·
flee of theater manager Harry D.
Francis and forced bim .at gunpoint to
open ~·o sa!ea. While the holdup "·as
in progress, assist.ant manager Loren
Annas entered the ol'fice and. oHtttd
to help not knowi111 what was going
on.<->
Willis walked both men oot of tbe
theater and down the rtreet about 100
yards leadJn& to the kidnap charEes.
--------------
the. plunge of the Sikorsky S61L
helicopte£ into a Paramount dairy cor-
ral.
l\1echanics who serviced the craft
nov;n by Capt. Jack E. Dupies, 45, of
6442 Govin Circle, Huntington Beach,
\Vere adamant during questioning
about how they did the job.
Investigation \Vednesday centered
around the missing bolt and ttie pro·
cedures used in tracking rot.or blades
of the 28-passenger helicopter dwing
predawn hours on the day it crashed.
Tracking means setting the blades
s<Tthey will all turn at the same level,
\Vithin a fraction of an inch, thus
eliminating vibrations caused by an
out-of-track blade.
P-llcll-~'Armll!l..lilt'lfilk• carrlef.thi'1reUC0pYei 110rif,'·~"'W;
-also discus&ed in the tracking pro-
<:edw-e quest.tow: -is the amount they
are laterally slanted to give t.be
aircraft lift_
Discussions Thursday primarily in·
volved executives of the · Sikorsky
Aircra!t Djvision of United Aircraft
Corp., and only .an expert could know
just what they were saying.
The NTSB panel, presiding over
representatives of four other agencies,
including the airline, talked of the po~ibility of a small, but :n ..
capacitating failure in the automatic
flight control system too.
Another Los An geles A i r w a y s
helicopter piloted by Capt. Allen fl_
Ritter, of Los Angeles. was almost
forced into an emergency landing on a
golf course June 2:1 during an AFCS
crisis.
Subsec1uerrt inveS'ligation revealed
an electrical component had been in-
stalled 180 degrees wrong and shorted
two or three times. causing the
aircraft to lurch back and forth.
Specifically, the system was given
an unwanted electrical power lnput.
causi.Qg thf' instability, which cleared
up by jtself. alk>wing Capt. Rittt,· to
fly on to Los Angeles International
Airport.
The young pilot said in-flight pro·
blems had been in his mind since the
era$. of Capt. Dupies' craft on May
2'l. three months before a second LAA
helicopter crashed in Compton, killing
21 persons.
Metal fttigue was probably the fac·
tor causing that helicopter, flown by
Capt. Kenneth Waggoner, 33, or 3131
~ierce Ave., Costa Mesa. to crash in a
etty park playground and explode li::'.u
flames.
Evidence cf metal fatigue was found
(See COPTER, Page !)
~co
How "Swede" it is when Lester Cut-
ler digs into the water with a kayak
paddle.
Th e Orange
Coast kayaker.
o n e of a dozen
area personali-
l i es to win
berth~ in t h e
American dele-
gation being
se nt to th e
Olympic
Game• in Meli·
co City. ls a stu-
dent cf Swedish
techniques
wh1ch have won
seven out of 13
gold medals 1n
the kayat event .
in past Game8. ·
Hh1 story is featured today on Page
16 in the latest of the pre-Olym pic ser-
ies s'J)9t.UghUng the Orange Coast ·1
Olympians.
Four-letter Words Spice Panthe r Talk
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Ot Ille DlllY ,llM Sftff
"There are the people and tbeie are
the pigs. The pigs are the power atruc·
ture," Black Panther Eldridge Cleav·
~ told 2,000 UC Irvine 1tudenbl Thurs-
day.
He said black milltants are pre-.
pared. to destroy those be calla pigs.
He used a vulgar four·letter expJe ..
tive to refer to Gov. Ronald Reagan,
whom be named u one of the pigs.
!le said, "If America has to be de-
stroyed, we (Negroes) demand our
righta lo participate ill the destruc.
ti on."
Thus El<ridge CleJ.ver did not dis·
appoint the students or newsmen who
turned out en masse to bear him
speak.
OVERSHADOWED
There were three other speakers in
the conclave program on "America
as a Racist Culture/' but Cleaver as
the notorious personality oversbadaw ..
ed the others. It was his first appear•
anre since the UC regents slapped him
down as a 10..Session lecturer at Berke-
ley.
He said he did not speak at UC Riv-
erside Wednesday night because his
parole officer told him he was going
to be shot there and he was going to
be shot at Irvine, and given the choice
he would rather be shot in Orange
County.
He added that "the truth is I was
just too tired."
~ressed in a black, guru-styled silk
slurt and black pants Cleaver sat in·
dolently, eyes nearly closed, sttoking
his short beard through the other
talks. A hush fell when he stood up
to the microphone as the final speaker.
Presuming to speak for the Negro
race. he said, "We're going to be free
or aobody is free_ We _aa.y , let's make
this paln ·~~llo. ~*'?!Fa~ hear no more crying in the ghe o and
laughing in the white suburb. ,
PUNKS UP TIGHT
"Wrinkle faced punk$ like Ronald
Reagan and Max Rafferty get up tight
about that," he said.
Cleaver said Black Panthers are
storing up guns to fJght back against
racist pig cops recruited Jo Alabama
and Georgia. He said tbe Panthers'
Newport Mail
Ca rrier's PUg lit
Draws R esponse
Response to the plight or a Newport
Beach mailman -living on borrowed
time with critical kidney failW"e';"-has
been so heartening that his neighbors
need help in directinr well wishers to
hl~ home.
.Jim Wiernicz. 34. and hill family live
ln Apartment D, at 318 Ogle Sl, in
Costa Mesa. It is the fourth unit
toward the rear of the property, ac-
cording to his landlady.
Persons who read of the \Viernicz'
troubles in the DAILY PILOT recently
~ave gone to other units for directipns,
1n stopping by with kind words for'the
ill oostal carriel'.
lie ill su!lerin~ from kidney failure
ana' must enter Mt. Sinai Hospital in
Los Angeles each week to have his
blood chemically cleaned or acids and
toxins.
Still. this treatment cannot save him
too much longer, without access to an
artificial kidney which does a more ef·
fective job.
He is rrcxt on the Ust for treabnent
on one of the $2.5,000 machines, but
hopes perhaps -whether It is in time to help him or not -that a Jim
Vli P.rnlcz Fund could be assembled.
The money would be used to buy Mt.
Sinai another artificial kidney: capable
of helping a dozen or more other pa·
tienl'! each week.
SymnatheUc HarhoT Area residents
have donated small amounts through
the Rev. Roy Thompson. pastor nf
Mariner's Church. in care of Ille: o!Oce
at 1812 Dover T>rive , Nev.'}Xlrt, but far
mnre i!I needed.
The Wiernicz family has gone on
welrare since Jim was no longer able
to work. but they cannot themselves
accept money as a result, and even
the amount of rrocerle1 they can take
as a helper is limited.
But they haven't lost (a!th.
•"rhtngs are tnovin( pretty wtill,"
the Rev. Thompson 1aJd recenUy, "jt'1
just a metttr of time."
Jim Wlernlcz knowl that only too
well .
Only too wen doe• he know his
aJternative!I. ~ausP p h y 1 I c I a n 11
predicted ln May that he couldn't
survive the summer without treatment
on a kJdney maclllnt .
He has no blood rtlaUvts who could
fl'ooote a kldnty.
1mbltion in armament& goes an the
way to the hydrogen bomb.
J~lke Cassius Clay In his brasher
days, Cleaver knows how to grab at·
tention. Usually he relies on the shock
power of his remarks.
He seemed to be egged on by the
politeness of the audience, as if he
wanted to hear hecklers.
''[ ~nt to get run out of town. No
one's throwing bottles yet, so I have
to go farther," he said.
* * * Shed More Light
He then gave an obseent discourse
on the power women have to move
men.
The govenior was his principal tar·
get and he accwed him of using .. me
~ ttie ~olleg~ as a whipping boy 'o
stir up right wing sentiment so he can
gain a firmer grip at the ballot bo.1
in November."
Cleaver. said the Kerner Report o(
the President's Commission on Civil
(See CLEAVER, Pafe %)
Other Speakers ··.
Give Less Abuse
Three ottier speakers In tlle k
Irvine conclave program Thursday on
rscism were less abusive and gave
more thought-provoking talks than did
Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver.
LATlif~.U.E1hc.1,N .VIEW
Fathii r ll~aa lo11P" .. ..
'AMERICA ON DECLINE'
Ramparts' Ed itor Schffr
.Y10L ENOE wON'T HE LIJ<
RIOf Comrr'111JOn'1 Corm•n
Their messages were discusse.1
longer than Cleaver's in student
discussion group sessions with. faculty
members that followed tbe c0nclave.
Congressman James Corman, wb•
1erved an the President's Commission
for Civil Disorder, said the prevailing
U.S. mentality of white ra9i.sm must
be changed to prevent further riots iq
the cities. He said he is ei:icouraged.
that racial attiludes are softening but
he is worried that it is not happening
fast enough.
Robert Scheer, editor Of Ramparts
magazine, 11iid Arherican1 have ilad
an imperialistic attitude from the Old
Welt frontitr to Vietnam and that it is
racist tn nature.
Father Blase Bonpel'le, defrocked
Catholic prie!l who calla h.imselJ it.
revolutionary, equated capitalism witlJ
raci.m end 1ald the· future belongs to
the peasants of the world.
Corman (D-Van Nuys) Jashed out at
Cle.aver and the Black Panthers for
preaching vlolence. He said there is no
difierence between Ule white lynch.
mob in Mississippi ·and the so-called
guerrilla warrior ln the ghetto. ·
He said a national survey showed 19
out of 2(1 Negroes reje(t separatism in
any form. Those who preach it are
playing into the h<1nds of white racism,
he charged. •
He repeated the conclusion reached
by the President's Commission, the
Kerner Report that "Our nation is
moving toward two societies, one
White and one black, separate ind
unequal." .
He call~ for a brotherhood or con-
cern to bind the country together a"d
rejection of ariy movement that ~ould
further divide it.
Ramparts editor Scheer called
Congressman Corman "a good
German" along with Vice President
Hubert Humphrey.
'.'H~phrey's tears are genuine,'' be
said. They are those o! a missionary
about to be destroyed."
He said the United States began its
period of decline in the 1950's and it is
accelerating in the 1960's. "Until
then," he said, "we believed we could
take care or the world and others
would like it because we would be
benign in our administcation."
He said now Negroes in the cities
and per~ons abroad are standing up
and say1ng. "You can have it. \Ve
don't want it. Your culture is sick."
He said the sickness is the arrogant,
(See RACISM, Pqe Z )
Oeaver Lectures -
Se t at Stanfor d
STANFORD (UPI) -Eldridgt
Cleaver, Black Panther leader at the
center of controversy at University of
Calilornie campuses. will give a series
o~ three lectures at Stanford Universl·
ly.
It was announced today that Cleaver
would give lecture• on alternate
weeks, begtnning out Tuesday, In
Dinkelspiel Auditoriwn. H i 1 ap..
pearanct will be opons<nd bJ the
Cornm.J.ttet for a New Democratic
PoUUcs.
San Francisco IUpfll"Visor Tefr1
Francois, • Necro 1ttorney, also will
give th.rte lecture.a. The talks are not
part of any courae ind a 75 cent.a 1d·
m.Jsslon will be cblrged.
At Id• Unlvuolty of CJllloinlo,
Berklley, 1 series of lecturn b7
Cleaver 11 part of an e1pertmenl1l
course was cut back rec.11'4' by the
board or reitn11 lo one. -
•
-
_. ·-..-.... ,£1 .4 0 0 a a a c o sesc .. s. s ; z .a # ,.a..._ a s ca I o 9 ¥ e c •• 4 6 4 9 •
l;: DAILY PILOT frld.ly, Stpltmbtr 27, 1%.'l
South .. C
1
• •
~I\}' II ,. ... Iba ii. ·h'bote .......... -tho degr .. ol
~.Jn-= Orange Coun-t1i we're -int today," aaid F• Did<_,, "°'""1 plonnlng
~ . -'
MOD spoft ln LaauM. Beach at
a a.amber breokffll, 'n. audlenct
o1-.1 100 lncluilod l>oslnesa and ~ -from 1unwndlng
1'bo plallne!" l&ld II percent of tho
land.. bl 0.&1111 County ii In )l<IVI ..
boldlrlp. Tho built of thil II in
sout!JerD Oran&O> CotmlJ' and ii yet
~ahy Sitter .
:(\idnapers . '
Arrested
••
Two kldnapers were 8.IT!sted Thurs..
day manilne after Ibey allegedly drag·-
ged .a Huntington Beach babysitter in-
to a field, blindfolded her with her bra
and robbed her ol $4:.
Jailed on suspicion of. kidnaping and
strongarm robbery were Eugene T. ,
Chavu, 19, Garden Grove, and Gary
CottreU, 18, of 11400 Court Lane,
Westminster.
Police said the duo firat pulled up in
a car beside Mrs. Gertrude Green-
mm, s:t, ti. 80 Huntington St., aa 1be
wu walking near AUanta Avenue and
Beach Boulevard oo her way to work.
According to police accounts, they
a&ked Mn. Greenman for directions
apd wheo she Jgnored them, they
juinped from the car and forced her
mto an adjacent tield.
'Police Oetectlve Gilbert Veine said
an un1delltified oil worker found the
'f91DaD and brought her to police
beadquarten. A description of tho
a'tlefed, assailants was broadcast and
dit pair was picked up shortly
thereafter. •
.Police said Mrs. Greenman was
1b'.U:en and bruised, but otberwlie
um.Jured.
Stereo Bandito
Hiu OCC Again
Orange Coast College's car-crack·
tng stereo bandito is on the loose
again, Costa Mesa police learned
ThundaY night. niree more 1tudent victims turned
In theft repoN--all slat.tog that the
wiDd wtngs of their cars were pried
cpea and their auto stereos and tapes
taken.
Norman N. Noggle Jr., 22, of 728
W. Wilson St. lost a 11tereo and 11
tapes, valued al •103; W~am D.
Middleton, 18, of 2155 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach, said a stereo and
l!ieven tapei were missing, a $142 loss,
while Jlugh A. Spencer, 17, of 2315
Laurel Place. Newport Beach, re-
ported the theft of a stereo and 10
tapes, toWing 1141.75.
.From Page I
CLEAVER .•.
Disorder was the official conl"slon of
white racist America. He said It was
no bl& news to him or his fellow Ne-
groes. ''We know," he sald, "the ques-
tion 111 \\'hat to do about It?"
Lat.er, he gave his an!iWer. "Black
power for black people. Faculty pow -
er for t~ faculty. Student power for
tbe students. And barbecue for the
pigs."
1 DAILY PllOI
011..-.NGE COAST l"VIL!SHIN() cOMrA.N'f
R•b•rf N. W•ed
I'm!'-"! tlld l'ubl\lhtf
J,,. R. Curley
Viet ..,.._,.. tl'lf o-.1 MtNDtf'
lhom•1 l(,,,jl .. .,
Tli1m11 A. M11rp~in1
Mli .... lnl Edlfror-
Jfflllll F. Con;,,, P•11I Nl111ro
,.,_. hkh Ad.,..rtlllnl
Cll'I' E41tw Director
.......,.,, leKl Offk•
2111 W•tt lelite.11 1,111/..,,1"4
M•ilirot Ad•r•u: P.O. 101 1175 91661
•
OtWC>ffl.-
C..19 M91: »f Wtd II~ Sltwt
L-...-: m it..t •-H...,......,. llMdl: M M l'"9t
t
f
.
undovolljed .. u _ _, aeeplC nlu1t," 1j11 "ld, aclcl-
IJ .J>IU,'.' "' Iba .............. to,., ,;rtlollor ..
.... -.... ----u.. ..... pc;;;Ajitiii~;.· "''-* ol c,...\J i .,.ic W&bW11 ......... ~ .... -. 1iO ~ -foi,--Ora.op Couaty~ lt will hav~ an i& · flels. in zonlne and for bUlboard con·
teaslllcatton·ot Ute and a redevelop· trol11, citing the abandarice of signs in
• lnent, "he pncllcted. Dana Poffil.
But, ot soulberu Or.nge County, he Dickaaon said there is a shid.y finder
sald there 11'! .nevet. been such a de-way on undergroond.ing uUllU~ fron1
gree of. pl.ariidng llCtivit;J by large land Three Arch !lJ' to Dana Point. "Hope·
owoen u 1& .ncnr under way. Dicka-Ll.Lll)'r it w be a prototype that
son oai4 Ulal b)' 1193 U.. cOWJty (pres--14 spreed up 8"" down lhe co11t"
eat boPUlat1on U m.llllon) will have be sald1 · t.ur:mmi..--i.. • . Tbe oludJ;, being peld IOI', ball by
The next five )'eOl'I wll1 be critical the county and l>alf by property own-
ones in tbe ffeld ol. t1tbetics, be indi· ers and homeowner assocfations, be
NEW ADDITION FOR "EGOMANIAC WALL"
Chamber's B•rnttt and ''Guts" Award
Rewarded
Chamber Manager Presented Tropliy
Piloting ttie Newport H • r b o r
Chamber of Qnnmerce wouldll't at
tint glan .. a_,-to be the type of
duty fraught with pel'IL
Further 11oundlngs, · howe~er. ii!•
dicate 11boals behind the free lunches
and dinners to snag the unwary
navigator.
For the unflinching navigation or
such pe.rill, Jack Barnett, executive
director of the Chamber of Commerce.
has been awarded a trophy for "guts,"
by Blackie Gadarlan, owner ot
Blackie's Boat Yird.
The proclamation with the trophy
tells the whole story:
''In recognition o! 10 y e a r & '
merito.rlous service attending in·
numerable banquets, luncheons, co!·
fee1 and breakfasts featuring bad
!ood, long speeches and smoke-ffiled
rooms on behaU o! the Newport
~!arbor Chamber ot Commerce ...
This takes GUTS," it said.
Given to Barnett at a recent
meeting of the Chamber's marine
division, the trophy is of marine
varnf!:hed mahogany with a gold
painted cleat and knotted gold rOJ>e.
'lbe rope and cleat stand for strength,
Gadarian said.
The trophy and proclamation would
be put OD his ."egomaniac wall" along
with the rfft of his awards, Barnett
said.
P ollu-iion Experts Claim
Smog Leaving Southland
Smog -along wtth ~trus iroves
and bean fields -Is leavinl the
Southland.
Air now thickened by pollutants will
be noticeably cleaner ffl &DOther five
yeara. a panel of ·e~rts predicted
Thursday at the University of
California, Riverside.
"By 1974 or 1975, we will still be
having some unpleasant days in the
Los Angeles B•sin'.'.;~d Dr. A. J.
Haagen-Smith, cb1Urnl8n of t h e
Callfornla Air Resourct'll Board.
A UC Irvine medical reselll'(!her.
hoftver, gave added evidence thlt
smog b: deadly 1n prolonged doses,
noting thet dtrt.ng severe sieges the
death rate has rl!le.n .
Dr. Stanley Rokaw said smog is
particularly daflgerous to infants. peo-
ple over 65, and anyone who has a
respiratocy" or cardiovaK"u.l.ar system
Air Cal Jets
Into the Black
Air ~wn!a bar moved Into tht
black !o rtht first time ln t.be airlloe's
18-mooth ulstence.
Presidt.Dt Carl Benscoter t o 1 d
Thurlday'aannual 1 tock ho Ider s
meetlng ~ a1rllne carried more than
70,000 pMm!IVI in Auguffl and
-od a proftl of Jll,500.
1be ~...bad prevlou1ly
.._uci ""' 1o~ ol '868,11:1> for the
f1JCll year t1adtd J:ua » on revenue
of 18.1 jji!Ul4i!1,.., Benac:ater predioled
the ...ier ...... tr-...... 11w1 one m11Uoo puaanaen: lw the current
11-1 ywr.
Sbodt In tho airline closed al t7\lo
Thursday •lcbl, and edeed up 1" IW.
thl1mO!'llln(. ·
Stockbo)dws approved a proposal to
tncreese authorized theres from one
mlll!oo lo Im. mllllao. A <oonpa11y
spokesman sakl the move will allow
grnter o..Jblllt1 In lllmn ezpanslon
plooa.
"\
disease.
1'Th8re lJ a -system of documented
mortality statistics dating back to the
1800s showing · there have been ex-
ceislve deaths doring times ol smoggy
episodes." Rokaw told air pollution ex-
petl!.
2000 DEATHS
Rokaw noted that more U1an 2,000
deaths above' ~ statisUcal 11veraace
occurred in London di.ring a five-day
smog siege 16-years ·ago.
Studies also now ·show changes in
the ·". respiratory system functions
amoog persons li viqg in smo&gy ace as
such as Los Angeles and, Increasingly,
Or.!.tlge County,
These ch~nges increase the suscep-
tibility to disease and premature
death, he said.
Scientists ,c.,mot .yet single out In-
dividual poUutaots as disease-causing
factor•. sji4 llbkaw's 'colleague. Dr.
Jtaagen-Sin.lth, but they undeniably
con.trlbult to illness.
The picture. bowev!I', is getting bet·
!er.
Automobile eXhaust emmlsslon cOn·
trot systems hOW being us® as stan-
dard equipment in new o&a'S should cut
hydrocarbon wistes by 90 percent,
nitrogen oxide.cl by 70 percent ancl
carbon monoxide by 71 percent in five
re.ars. he saJd.
''Those are "the goels of the Air
Resources Borel and l don't c\!wbt they
will be obtained,1o he said.
Additional controls m.ay Include use
of UquJd nat\n.1 gu for car fueL shut.
down of factories Jn crittcal areas and
OlmltaUon of tilt ai.e and l!mepo-
of automobile eag:tmis.
Rep_ John Tunney (D·Riverslde)
Also called for more money to be .pent
on cons1ructJOft o{ a modern rail
transi t system Instead of increasinl
freeways to carry pollution.producing
car~.
''Billboard! along the hilbway1 are
a nuisance and polluted water la bad,''
Ttmney Hid. "but we don't go swim-
ming all tbe time."
"But," be added, "We breathe all
the time -and look what we're
breathln(.'1
~
' I
said. • -
Dlel<UDll • ... -AltGG ~ ii&_
d.l.ltric& 1upervllor, for rillnc from a
alclc bed and securing funding alllr
1J1o -y WIS hyp"5Sed ID the 1Ju4iet
One of the greatest growth 1timu·
)ants to the area was the North Ameri·
can Rockwell decliion to build its Au-
tonetics plant in the Laguna Niguel
area, be said.
A m.Wlon 1quare feet of plant la to
be operalinC nul July wllb 7,500
employe1, be said. He clted Laguna
NJguel'1 acqu.ia:ltJon ol the Cap'Oo pro..
perty (for ltO.~ mWIM), Moultoa
Ruch ptanntng MW WICIEr way and
acllvitlea In tho cominunltlea of El
Plan, Zoning
Fees Soaring
For NeWp@rt
On Oct. 10, planning and zooing ep-
plloatklD feee: will increase from 100 to
700 percent, eccording to N ewp>r!
-Cify MtDmey Tully Seymour.
He ezp»idned that on that date,
ordinances ample<! by the City Council
establill:q tbe new fee1 will become
effective.
The ordinances OAl.l tor a boost in
use permit fees from "10 to $150;
variance fees, from $.50 txi $150-; re·
zoning fees, from SlOO to $200; sign ex·
oeption fees, from $40 to •too; Bild
planned community zoning fees, from
1100 to 1750.
PWuling Ihrcctor Ernest Mayer Jr.
emphasized that any minor matter,
suoh as a feoee height, U5e pennit ex·
tensk>n, aild minor structural change,
Will Jllvolve only a '30 appllcetion fee
and will be taken up by tt.e city's new-
ly formed Modifications Committee.
The Modifioetioas Committee com·
prises three city department heads or
their representatives. Its function is to
undertake items of lesger consequence
that in t!he pa.st have been the business
of the Planning Commission.
Prom Page J
RACISM ••.
racist view that tile white mq is
iruperior, that be ls the guardian anaeL
The American power structure Ui
cracking up, he said, but it doesn't
know It. "You have been in the -saddte
so long you think what you lire doing is
rational. Your right wing extremism is
a reaction to break up ancl decay."
r,ather Bonpane, expelled from
Guatemala as a revoloUonary, said
U.S. rulers claim to know what is best
for U!.e bl&ck slave at home and the In·
dlan in Latin America.
.. The indigenous people out of the
soil -Just like worma out of the soil
-they know what 11 belt for third.
world countries," he sa.ld.
He cbimed the U.S. military-in·
dustrlal complex Is a monster that
needs warm bodies and from it it
makes warm hamburger. "It has to be
stopped. It has to be attacked," be
said.
,, ,.,,.. .
Mother .En~rs Plea
AbandOOOd Girl .Goes
To Father in Minnesota
Litt.le Corrine Ann Rleter who was
abandoned Tuesday in the Orange
County Alrporl by her mother, today
Jack Diamond,
'
Tennis Official,
Succumbs at Sea
Jack Diamond, resident or Newport
B ach for 25 years and active in tennis
circles botlt as player and umpire.
died of an apparent heart attack
aboard the pleasure ship Lurline,
whlle en route to Hawaii on a vacation
trip, it was learned today. .
The fatal attack occurred Saturday.
Mr. Diamond, whose home was at
1207 W. Bay Ave .. Balboa, was a
member of the U.S. Lawn Tennis
Umpire Association.
In t;he textile busil)ess for 45 years in
Les Angeles, he Is survived by his
wife, Elizabeth, of the family home;
two daughtert, Joyce Zikas of South
Pasadena and Gloria Guild of San
~tarino; and two grandchildren.
Fimd Raisers
Get Off Ground
Ls in Mound. Mino-with her father.
Orange .(b;mty ProbatlDn offlcer1
plll the 7-year-otd girl on a plane to
MlnneapollJ 1b.ur1da7 where she wu
met by her father Mlcbael Rlei.r Jr.
Juvenile tilvestigatlon officer Henry
C. Duffie .said investigation revealed
that the little girl was legally in joint
custody of her father and mother and
that "under the pr-esent circumstances,
.r;he was better off with her father.''
Meanwhile her mother, identified a!
Patt Fischet and Patt Esau was ar.
raigned in Central Orange County
Municipal Court thJs morning. She
pleaded not guilty to felony child
abandonment and a jury trial was set
for Oct. 23. She was released on her
own recognizance.
The mother, 20, had sl.lTM!ndered to
sheriff's deputies Weclnesclay. She totd
them she was married last Sept 10 to
Jerry Fischer, 24, and had been living
at 14102 Ash St., Westminster with
Fischer and the cblld.
\Vitnesses said Corrine bad a tearful
reunion with her father in Minneapolis
as she walked off the plane alone.
Rieter is a surveyor with the Hennepin
County IDghway Department.
Riel'er said his life left Minneapolis
with Corrine last December.
The Uttle girl was abandoned at the
airport Tuesday morning with a note
asking that she be sent to her grand·
In.other in Michigan.
A flying fund-raising party fpr tbe .-.. Prom Page 1 Nation al Cystic Fibrosi.i Foundation
'vill get oil die ground Sa.tllfday in
Newport Beach and three otfier
California cities.
Party goers in the $100-a-seet affair
will attood cocktail parties either in
Newport or San Dlego before boarding
four jets and flying to Slan Francisco.
After a two-hour jazz festival in San
Fnmc.lsro'1 Palace of F1ne Arts, two
more jet.I will be added to the
sql16dron and the whole party will be
nown to Palm Springs for a late sup-
per encl dancing at a new country culb
hc\cl.
ProceeJs will go lo the Foundation
for Research into the cause of Cystic
Fibrosis,
COPTER.~.
in the main rotor spindle and L . .\A. has
replaced that companeDt. ln its four re·
maining helicopters.
The NTSB is expected to hold
another public hearing into Aug. 14
crash within the next few months.
Both helicopters crashed within the
same 211.i: mile radius, leadnig to
speculation of all kinds, including the
possibility of sabotage or a sniper on
the ground.
No evidence of in-flight explosion
was found, however. nor indications of
possible ground fire.
COMPATICA
Compatic• i1 for the young who want fo invMt in Contemporary Furniture that will endure. A complef•
coU1ction for llvlng roem, dining room and bedroom.
DIALHS fOR: HINUDON-DlllXIL-HEllTAliE
'O DATS NO INRWT-RUIS AVAILAIU ON Al'PROVID CHDIT
N-TllACH
17!7 W-1111 Dr• 642-2050
OfU llllAT TIL t
,·
INllRIOU
P'nlftulen11 lnterftr
0.1..,.,..
AYOllabr....t.(D-NSID
' LAGUNA llACll
141 North CMlf Hwy, ~I
0PtJrt 'IJDAr 'TIL t
:.
I '
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I
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•
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tl~
.. .. . .-,, . . . . . . -.
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. ,,....,, .... IJ, lMI tfMM IP-. 11
lllA ANDllltsqH, ldlter
E-xtravaganza
Takes Ticket
"Ticket" is a word which seems to be on-everyone'• H.~ these
• • • . . :-
days. There are tickets to buy for concerts, operas, playa and balls ' _ _ .
and tickets to vote for when Nov. 5 rolls around.
However, for the Orange Coa9t tun-lover, there is one ticket
which is a must - a ticket to the celebrated Fractured. Follies of 1968
presented for the entertainment of all and benefit of South C o a 1 t
Community Hospital.
The folliet, sla~ed by the hospital's auxiliary Oct. 24-26 under
the auspiC<s of ill Silver and G<>ld Cbapter, gleana talent from San
Clemente tO Newport Beach.
, A:tter ·fp~ndations are laid fo rthe 8:30 p.m. show, Jerome H.
Car&ill P1'U4~ctions of New York moves in with scripts, costumes and
aeta to dired the extravaganu in Laguna Beach High School's audl·
·tOnum.
While each show is completely new , this is the third follies pre--
seated as ~ 1~uxiliary benefit and proceeds will go towards the hard ..
worlring group'! current $100,000 pledge.
Marki~·the opening of ticket sales for the spectacle, Mrs. Sam
Garst hostedJ a coffee in her Irvine Cove home for members a n d
guests last wftk.' .
Assi.stin}: Mrs. Garst in greeting guests were Miss Fem Ran-
dolph, chaptctt" president, along with the Mmes. William Imhoff, Os.
car Hoffman·~· Jack M. Lyons.
Ticketsl'."for the show are $3.50 per person and are reserved. T'!er may be'obtained at Adventure World Travel Bureau, 332 For•
~ Ave., Lagtma Beach or by celling Mrs. Don Seal, ticket chair·
·man, 494-5720.
-. . . \
GEnlNG UNWOUND -Mrs. Jurt Chin<) isn't· greedy. She just
wants to make sure she has enough tickets to the 1968 Fractured
F_ollies for her family and friends. Helping her out is Mrs. John
Weld, (right) chairman of Ille entertainment extravaganza, to take
place in Lagu;.. lleat'li Hlgi, sd.x.1:s a'udi!.ori~ Oct:'24-'.!6 .. Pr0:
ceeds will go 'to Ille Sollfh Coa>t Community Hospital's .current
$100,000 pledge.
Mrs. Seal Is assisted by her co-cheirman, Mrs. ff. Donald Out.
mans, and co.inmittee members the Mmes. Tandy Coleman, J a h n
Valentine, Oscar Hoffman and Eugene Shidler. . ,
Those Uiterested in auditioning for the show may obtain fut.
tlier informatti>o' by calling Mra. Victor Andrews, 4M-1737.
" .. .
Exhibif · ·'Pictures'
America in the 30s
Remember the America of 1~1941, with its ice cream stands
and gas statiom, its roadside landscape, its citi"6 and towns, county
fei:rs and burlesque theaters?
' A nostalgic_ look at pre-war America is tt:ie subject of the first
exhibition of the season at the Newport Harbor Art Museum, opening
Oct. 2. Jusl Before the War is the title of the exhibit, prepared by the
museum's director, Thomas H. Garver, who used photographs made
by photographers of the Farm Security Administration during the
New Deal.
Working under the directioo ol' Roy Stryker, the photographers
captured nat only rural subjects, but built up a vast file of pictures
which documented the ~erican way of life. The collection of .more
than 250 prints examines urban, middle-class America without em·
phasizing the hard limes of the depression thirties. Surveying the more
casual areas of life, it shows broad similarities and sharp differences
between that era and the present.
Among the well·known photographers working with Stryker were
Ben Shahn. also a painter, Walker Evl\DS, recipient of the first one
man photography exhibition in · the Museum of Modern Art in New
York, and the late Dorothea Lange, a Californian honored with a
Memorial Exhibition which was shown around the country. •
More than 50 illustrations will be included in the catalogue of the
exhibition plus statements by two of the photographers who worked
for the FSA and a memoir by Roy Stryker who describes those days
"just before the war."
.... ,~ . '
i • " Ebells '·Rally'
For a Benefit
• .
"
. •, •
The aighll and sounds of vigcroua campai(Dinl 11111
end with the November electlon. ·
But the campaigm wa&ed yeor aft.er year by dedJ.
caled clubwomen will continue ·as they raise funcla for
health, welfare and scholanhip programs.
The Newport Ebell Club's Cotton Rally scheduled
foir Ocl 17 is auch an event, taking place at the Amert·
can Legion HaD in Newport Betlch. Wa)'S and Means
ch&man, Mra. Herbert Puterbaugh, has concooted a
auccesaful formula cambining a noon Iuntheon, cfld
party with •·90litical theme which will include a vole
far·Ebell ·Club'1 favo~ "fictltioua" ~dential candi·
date.
D""""tlom will include a •otln& booth, ballot box
and pQr!ers ol' true u well as fictJUous candidates for
the pr11ldency.
' Junioc Ebell . membera with Mrs. Edward White-
house, junior president will be all decked out in loot·
alike drwes, hats and campaign buttans and will be ·on
hand to serve u the weicoming committee while hand·
ing out '1polltical" brochures.
A!llilting Mrs. Puterbaugh with arnngemenll ,.1~
be Mrs. Thomaa Baume, Mrs. Shelby GbU, Mn. Oiadea
Kelley, Mrs. Richard Hodge, Mrw. William Dana, Mn.
Frank Merkel and Mrs. Ridlord Schneider.
"
The Newport Harbor Art Museum is located in the historic Balboa
Pavilion, and is open from Wednesday through Sunday from 1 to 5
p.m. and Monday evenings from 6 to 9 p.m. Admission is free. The
exhibit will aontinue until Nov. 10.
VOTING FOR CHARITY -In this year of campaigning, members of the Ebell
Club ol Ne"1>0rt Beach are casting their votes for charity during the be·nefit
card party and luncheon scheduled for Oct. 17. Eager to stuff the ballot ,box are
(leJlt to right) Mrs. Frank Merk~!. Mrs. Shelby Gott and Mrs. Richard B.
Hodge who will be present at the event.
Mn. Cllyton Thompoon, who ia serving u preoldfllll
of tho Ebell Club thia year, wiD conclude the afternoon.,
1estivWe1 when she awards a Hawaiian lei maoe-ot
dollar bilb and flowers to some lucky person prese:n,t.
Reservations for the luncheon and card party t:J;e
bein& handled by Mrs. Edward A. RoJ•n and cin'.be
made by callinf her at 673-8505 for tic-. prioed.U
Fiance' s
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am
engaged to marry a young man J have
gone with for two year-1. Vern'•
mother disliked me wtensely from the
J1lOIDflnt we met. Hll father acts 11 tf I
don't emt. rve tried very b~ to win
tl)IOJ. aver but I hllve failed miler ably.
To pleaae Vern'~Jalnill' I joined their
church. I used to we.ar my hair long
unW Illa molher auueotet I cut It. She
inaistl on httplng me select clothes
because sM say1 I have no taste. I
stopped wearing pearlized nail polish
beoause she said it took~ cheap. '
lt 11 agony to nave dinner with
Vem's parent.I becau1e of tfle long
periods or silence. Lawt night I at.
tmtpt.ed to make some small ~k and
Vern'• mother 1aJd, "Whf don't you
per pe1'llOll. . •
•'
Family's Sour Attitudes C·ould Spoil Romance :
nur children are now S. 7 and 9 and 1lckness. What about c ~ e a l I n g
they pick up words. ~asUy. fathen ? Is that I' licknen, too ?
ANN I.ANDERS This relative ca& certain racial My father ii 44,, fOOd·IOOtinJ, ap.
groups by names which I abhor -pears to be-younger tbu b1I 111 and I
Wop , K.ike, Chlnki Spic, ~pad~, liuokie atway1 ~gbt be .and my mother
and 10 on. J bave given him dirty lookl wft very. ham Lll"t year my
Clleoeedto11•1rdea-.l
deramu •r • eoauelor wouY ...,.
bRD more Jadldon clttlee1. : : . .
atop babbling!" 1 ..... so llllrt I almost
cried. -, Vern's older broth• married a girl
they consider "inferior" 1oclally and
intellectuall)'1 • life ha1 been hell . I
love Vern very mucti but l 'm beg.in·
ning. to ,wonder. JI 1 have UJe strength
ta min')' into lhl1 family. Wh.at do you
think? -PLAIN JAYNE
DEAR JAYNE' Y" doe'I HY bOo
about Vera's attitude. Mat does he
••Y •he• bit p1re.ntl put yo u dowqf
Does he Just tit there like a w1rt on a
plcllie? U it, you're &ola& tt·wbtcl up'
aloqllldli your ramre lhier·ln·law.
The kily to JOtlt future wlU-Vern llll
ta bJs abllffy to Pve you the emodonal
support you need to wtthstaud hi•
parentt1 bo1tlUty. If you caa tount on
hlm, ay "ytt'' -otberwtae, forstt It.
but he ignores me. My husband 1ay1 it ·
isn't worth the1n>uble I might ruaJnto -,~other confided In me that 11>1 lath«
il I hit him head on. What do you J ay!· \>.,ill been npminf aroWld rill another
-MI!)lj'ES11l~ , I woman'. -I lumtd cl h!J ..,.
DEAR MID: I aa1 clobbe~•tbe tr · lfiltl>Mne,.,1 'b&Ye beal unabla lo bo
noramu1. S'ICh talt 11iould aol be clvtl to him. Our home Ule la hcrrlble.
tolerate4. Cblldr,n learn-, ptlt deal · Don't tell me to talk it ""' with
fll9re Iron) example tbM ·(n,111-l1J---. .nyon..-Vlft t&O alhamed. AtMt t.elJ
1truct1on. If i•u waot tbe.p IO bo .&oPI me -t to do.' I feel IO bolpleu. -Amertcant , teach them to rttpect all ABC
DEAi\ ANN LANDERS' A clOllt people. ' 1 1 , D&U\ Ai 'I7bert II ....... ,.. cu
re.lallve spendi; a grm.·deal 0( time h1 1 · ·• · tlo, wM_cli ft wlly t&•1 uftrta•t JWr
our home. He II twice my age end 1 . ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: Yoo have mo~~ &old you. s•e .....W laave
hesitate to be disrespectful. However, written i lot about .alcoboliJm u a "coaflllM ii" IOIHHI tlie It llte fell
Gtve in or !Ole blm ••• whm a C'f
llvu you tltia line, -oull Fer ~
oa Mw to b8Jldlo tha "'I*' ~
oaleaman, chect Ami ~ Jl4lid
lier booltlel, "Necllinf 11114 PotUn& '*
Wbat Anl tha IJmlll!" Sand -~ quest to Am Lander1 in can flt J1>i1r
newapaper, endoalftfl !O Ctllll ID ~
and a Jont, Ramped, •lf·ldclnelW
evelope. . ;.
Ann Laodc.r1 will bo Clad to bolt> i.Ol
with your prob!ema. Stlld them lo lier;
ill •N" of Illa DAILY l.'llm, ~
inf i 1tlf·•ddre1aed, ~ ..... lope. ~-,~~ ••• :· •
•
Fridu, s.t<mbet 27, 19611
Stork Delivers Drudgery •
By JOAN HANAUER
NEW YORK (UPI) -
Whoever nam'ed newborn
hlbiet bundles of joy never
obaaeed • dirty diaper at 2
a..m. or tried to coax an af-
fectkmate response from a
cross-eyed, bald-beaded in·
fan!.
Al., a guess, it seems likely
the term came from a
do ting· at · a · distance
grandparent. Even adoring
fathers know better.
What every WOlnall should
know about babies ,
parUculorly 1ho expectant
mother walking _arpund in a
glow ot anticipatoey love, is
fNt. infanb: are more like
lumps than bundles, and the
107 involved uats tnore iii
What the Httle lump will
become ttian what he is.
By the lime the baby is a
few montba old, of coun;e, it
all changes and infant en-
ters a deliCbf!ul stage of
coos and •miles.
MRS. GEORGE T. SEELEY
Mlrr'9cf It S.1
Speaking from experience,
when I fl.ret brought my tiny
daughter home from the
hospital I WU horrified to
find my mother·love teated
by a rain Of wet and soiled
diapers, bllrl'log problems
and spitting up.
Vicki Beardsell Now
Mrs. George Seeley
What was bothering me
was not tile much di1cussed
postnatal depression -it
was depresting reality, The
picture wa1 this:
I waa trapped in my own
home, unable to do anything
on the IP\lf of the moment
becauH baby coo.ldn't be
left alone. J practically had
to .hire a babysitter 90 I
coul d go to the
supermarket, a trip ttiat
became my· idea of
Jailbreak.
While et sea alloard the
yacht, Wild Goose, Vicki
Ellen Beord .. n_it Ne.wport
Beach. 'bec3me tlhe bride o(,
George . Tucker Seeley of
Seal B~.
The Rev. Lorerr Flick!inger
perlonn.d lhe double ring
rites flar the dau~er of
Mrs. Phyru., Murt•gh
Beardsell of Newport Bead!
and Victor Beardsell of
West Loa Angeles and the
son d Mr5. Evelyn Seeley of
Seal Beach.
Given in marriage by her
fatber, tlbe bride wore an
English net skimmer over
white' silk · peau de 90k!.
Venise kite ~s were
embraidered vertical]y :on
Ill< 1kijnmer, but fol{..,ec(
the nature.I line oi the
r o u ri d e d yoke. Matching
~e and net were repeated
in her Frencb proyer bat
Pastel yellow frocks with
lace trim were selected for
the btidesmaids, the Misses
Marti and Cindi Beardsell,
tbe bride's sisters, JM
Nelaoo and Marsha Bloom
of Los Angeles.
Ushers were Bob
Prigmore, -Boyd Peter s ,
Tom Omdlundro and Brian
Sweet.
Alter docking at the Lido
Yacht Anchorage, the bridal
couple received 100 guest.t
aboard for the reception.
Presldin« over the guest
book was Mis1 D j -a n n
R.iebanlson, the b r i d e ' 1
cousin. Special gue&ts were
Mrs. M"'l!aret M\lrtaih of
Newport B&ach, the bride's
grandmother, and Mrs. Lila
Bluff of Seattle and Mrs.
Freida Seeley d. Blythe, the
bridegroom's grandmothers.
Followiog a Ha we ii an
honeymooo, the ll#lyweds
will rNide ill "Seal Beed!.
The bride atteoded..,pjerce
Junior and Orange Coast
colleges and currently is an
airline hostess. Her husband
was graduated from Bolsa
Grande High School and
presently is enrolled at
Oaliforni.a State College at
Loog Beach.
Oo top of ttie housework,
which I attacked com·
pulsively out of the guilty
feeling that as a temporarily
Workshops
Conducted
W<rbhop1 fw obairmen
will be ocmuct.d. "" L<l•
Cetritos D.latrict, ~rnia
Feder:adon ol W o m e n ' 1 CM>., Junior Mem,berablp,
at 7 p,m . Monctay, Sept. 30,
In 8aleman HeB, Lynwood,
Attending will be district
otflcers, chairmen a n d
coordinators, i n c I u d i n g
r&pre1en~VfAI from the
South Coast JurUor Woman's
OlUb, Founwn V.Uey.
Harbor Council's Movie Guide
n:ro,... .. ,.. ...... ~r·"'"'"~~~,..~--.,~.,~~~...,, ..................... .,
(Edi~'• Hcrtt· "TM1 mOY[• Wide Is
...--red b¥ IYlt n1,,,, eommlt1" 111
H11"bor Council PTA. Mr1. Rober! Jo.
""''~ It p<nlden! ind Mrs, Hirt
5-Y b uimmlntt c1 .. 1 • .,..n. I!
Is lnltnlied II I t'e't<!rencl '" cki.r-
ml"f .. 1111111111 lllrn1 lor cerl•ln •-
groulll 1r!d win •-• -"I'!'· Vour v~ .,.. _.lclte0. MIU them I<>
Movi. Guidi, ar1 fll II><! DAILV pl.
LOT.
MATURE TEENS
AND ADULTS
ANZIO - W • r cor·
reapot~na views costly
imlaaion.
DARK OF THE SUN..._
Tribal civil war in Congo
backgrounds v i o I e n t
adventure.
DEVU.'S BRIGADE
Toulh guerilla combat
force is created from a
company of American
misfits and crack Cana·
dian1.
~AMES - A suspenseful
shocker about a couple
Bonsai Art
Displaye~
....
and their guests who rilfe up to ridicule.
.19muse them."lelves with HER WE GO 'ROUND THE
11\nister games. MULBERRY BUSH -
ADUL rs Shocking musical about
BOOM -Film create1 a high school Ht.
mood of opUlent POOR COW -. 'Sf«y of
decadence w1h en ~t· EngU.h alum dweller.
traction and c o n f 11 C t THE SWIMMJtR -En·
develop b e t w e e n a counters reveal emptineee
wealtty, dying widow and and b y p o c r J 1 y of
a poet. f" IUburbultel life • be
CLOSELY •WATCHED · -.., home vie hl1
TRAINS -A youth'& et· neigbbora' poolo.
tempt to achieve manhood TWO FOR THE ROAD -
is portrayed with earthy So phlJUcated romantic
frankness and tnnnor with comedy tr a c e 1 the
En·glish subtities. \ background of qua-rels
THE FOX -The reia· aod brief infideUt.lea in a
tioosh.ip ~tween t w o floundering marriage.
women living on a n WA TE RH OLE THREE - a
isolated farm ls shattered rowdy tp00f of traditional
with the arrival of an at· west.em witih bawdy satire
tractive man. lbollt greeQy reacall and
THE GRADUA'l'E -Comic stolen g<Jld.
satin of a young man wtlo WlLD IN THE STREETS -
breaks . o~ of t h. e Bloodcurdling .aatlre of
materialistic WNid of lus rock ai.neer and h1a "way
elders. out" frfend:i"' who take
GUIDE FOR THE MAR· over tile country and
RIED MAN -Brassy widen the aeneration eap
comedy which hDkk mar· to infinity't-
Mini-Mermaids Formed
nonworkint mother I bad no
excu&e for 1 mesty home,
tnete were Ute b 1 b y • 1
choret~. They weren't dif·
ficult, bui that formula-
m a k I n g , 1 t erilizatiop,
feeding, bathing. changing,
all had to be done on
achedule, not when I felt Ulte
It.
And I WU just plain tired
and ruodown ..
Atl this would have been
okay if my little daughter
even knew wbo I was or
abowed eome sigo of notlc-
lng ""'· Instead oh• rt.red at me -or Ile rug er tbe
rtipcoven -wiU! crossed
eyes and a vacant face.
Ad4Jng I<> my mounting
hysta1a would be t h e
women who would tell me,
'"lbill is the wonderful time
-enjoy lt wtlile you can.
Vou'U mlas lt when tile baby
atartl to a:row."
Ont nirht I 10bbingly COO•
l!IJ«! to my husbond the
fear that I wa1· 1.11 unnatural
molber. He ••Id he tl>oupt moot womeo felt .. I did,
but l wun't 1urt he kn~w
what hf. "u talking about
since Ile waan't a motbt-r
hlmseJ(. So I began to ques·
lion trlendJ w!io were.
"l dJdn't tbink my kids
we~ fun wtti1 lMJ Were old
enoutb to tab to the zoa, ''
one trieod, whose t w o
cbildn!n an ~enager1, told
me.
.. r felt aa ·if I were in
triton,'' another a a 1 d ,
although it didn't stop her
fTOQ1 having a second baby
recently,
A fbird friend reminisced
Washington Wee/cling
Hospital Volunteers
~ .'!-'" pOriod by uyin,, Commlll1lty·mlnded women intttaled ill
'nlen my daut~tor took volun~ atrvicu 1t a botptlal ire in-
over by livint "'-• broad vlt.4 to Iha oralllizallonll m~ of the crto that obvtoullr ,ll'U in· COlll MHa Memor!ll H0tpttal l'iomen'•
tOntlonal, not "1Wllol1. She Alll1U11'7.
made nols81 11 me raocln1 Tiie ~will be called to order 1t ID
&om Ile tradltlonll "coo" a .m. l'iednua.f, Oct. 2, in the doctors'
to 1omet111n~ that 10uoded lounge of th• botpllal.
Uke "&look,' "1llch w,aa u14 I--Conduclinr the first 1e.,Ion will be Mrs.
In 1 lnud voice and obvlOl!sly A. L. 1'!nkloy, who urge• wM!leo to atteud
meant. "hurry up 1 n d -......
change me, mommy, I'm
hungry." L...------------------_,J AJ,most overnight t b e
Unp had turned into a real
person who k>~ carrota
and bated her vitamin
drops. I melted 1llto a pud·
dle of Mmtimental slush on
that first mille and never
.banlened acain.
But I wish someone had
toid me what every mother
oual>t to lo!ow,
Colleen Rene Powers
To Marry • Summer In
The bet!~ of Colleen ,,..,..._
Rene Powtr1 and Scott
LI.Rue Mori-an WIS diJclOS· ""
C·ouple Tour ·Mexico
ed by her par1!11(g, Mr. and
Mrs. llolffl Powa-1 ln their
Huntington Beac:il h o m e
during e cbampagne party.
DurlnJ the annoWJeement
=~:~~r1!:S 75~::ti;: _,
Angeie1, Santa P(lonlca and
San Fernando Valley con·
gratulated the couple.
Whit. llowen In whit.
Grecian un» filled the
Unlt.d Preebyt.rian Church
in Olympia, Wull., far the
"""dine of Lim Morprit.
Sibold and . Cliff James
Coker.
fbe Rev. Maurlee Haehlin
conducted the ceremony
tllliliog the illUgbttt of Mr,
and Mrs. Gene W. Slbold ol
Olympia and tbe son of Mr.
and Mr1. Qmrles M'. Coker
of Hunllneton ileacb.
For her wedding the bride
selected a coat dre5ll of
candlelight ler8llO clolh.
The A·llDe &own W:M de.Igo·
ed With a mandarin collar.
A lloor l!!lgth mantilla of
candlelight rose Point lace
b"om Europe was held by a
floral headpiece Of fresh
white roeebuda, stephanotis
and green velvet leaves.
She carried an arm bou·
quet of white butterfly
r o s e b u d a , stephanotis,
baby'1 breattl and fern, and
The daU !or the wedding
in st. Bonaventure••
Catholic Churcll. Huntington
Beach, la being planned !or
July, 1969.
1bt bride~leot is a senior
at -High Sd>ool. Her tJan«, ..., ol Mr. and
Mrs. Richonl L. Moqao of
Garden Grove, is an alum-
nus of Loan. High School.
Anaheim, and atten d ed
Fullerton Junior OJllege
I COLLEEN POWEllS
Engeged
where he ma)ottd in ----------
businest!i adminiatntion.
Acrylic
Exhibit
1 Yule Items
Exchanged
For Cash
wore a gold bracelet with a Ayudan t e 8 Auxiliary,
pearl and gold wedding bell Opening to the pubtic next Childr • H •-~-
To Open
~--. 8 "'" from the M ens ome ~ty. '""·""" '·" 6'-'' onday for a 1h:-week run ·u bride-. .... • WJ. st.age its Chtisbnas ---is en acrylic art show by ~eceding the bride and James c 1 u t t e r , in· Hawmess Sale during a
her fatl)er down. the af1le ternationally known artist salad lwrheon in t h e
were t21e matron of honor, -and teacher whose paintings Mis.sioo Viejo Recreation
Mrs. Joel K. Leidecker, t.he bang in some of the fineat Center at 11 :30 a .m. next
bride's 1orority sister from private collections in the Monday.
Seattle, and bridesmaids world. Area residents are invited
Mrs. F. Roger Brown, The Coffee Garden to attend the luncheon and
another sorority sister from Gallery, 262.S E . Coast inspect the unusual gifts
SeatUe, and the Mis&M Peg-Highway, Qirona del M.-created by members of ttie
C'I and Marlha Coker, will be the sett!ng for the 14 Clilldren'e Home Society
list.era of the bridegroom. f exhibit and is spons~ by auxiliaries in Orange O>un·
Their t-ttcol go w o I MR. AND MRS. CLIFF COKER !he Newport -Service ty.
were tleevelll blue, ereen. Select Seattle Home League. Tickets for the ll.81Cheon mid off.white striped raw Clutter received his are Sl.25, 8Dd. gifta range
odlk dellpied will> y.>ked training al the Otis Art from •1 to '10. Women Ire
bodioe11 and A-line sld.rtl. Ty@e Motor Inn where e at ttie uNversity , and a Institute, Chouinard A rt welcome to come after the
Fresh daisiet: in t.hefr hair mustve arrangement of member of Beta Theta Pi Institute, Los Angele! City luncheon to view the
held blue and green ribbon Ught.ed tapers banked with fraternity, was a member of · College and 1he University merchandise from 1 to 2:30
curls cascading down one pale green gladioli and blue the Husky var&jty football of Mexico . His classes at the p.m .
side and. they c a r r i e d 11 tadium chrysanthemums team which awarded him Clutter School of Fine Al"t.!i Further information may
oosegays of daisi" and fllled the barbecue pit. the Flaherty Inspirational include a work.shop for pro· be obtained by calling Mr&.
rosebuds. Hostess for the reception Award. He will be com· fessional as well as amateur Edward Mitchell, auxiliary
Robert Schoepper o f ·was Mrs. Richard Hicks, missioned in the u . s . artists. presidmt, 837~.
PorUand served as: best and prt!siding at the bride's M·arine Corps following his -T:-:h-e---,,---......,1---'--'-'--'-:..C....:.=:::... __
man and uahen were Larry table were,MrJ. J. R. Cum· graduation. Dai y Pi ot Covers Booting
triemlnc Ille! Frallii: Smltl> of mlngg Sr. and Mrs, V. G. After a -dlni trip to
Seattle, and Jeft i.nd Groll Sihold, grandmoth.,.. of t11e Meldoo tt>e couple Will make Best In The West
Sibold, hrotlMn ol the briCle. brido; Mrs . J. R. Cummings lhelr home In Seattle.
Fonowtnc the cemnony and Mr•. Dom Sibold, aunJs;,.============================::; 1he ccuple greeted 300 oi the bride, and Mrs. Jaekll
guetta: at a reception in the Hubbard, the bridegroom '6
Republican
Picnic Set
aunt.
A graduate of Olympia
High School, the new Mni. Coker, is a senior at the
Univer-llity of Washington
where she Is a member of
Pi Beta Phi sorority.
Her husband, also a senior
Area Republicans are ln· DAR G vited to r.ilow ..,. music to rou p
a campaip kickoff picnic
llJ>OlllOred by t1a.-Huntlngton Hears Mayor
Harbc;qo ,ft'flpublican
Women'• Club on Sonday, Glenn Vedder. mayor of
Sept. 29. Lagun;: Beach w11l be t:tle
The affair has been plan-guest 8Peaker when Pa·
ned al' an old-fashioned tience Wright ch a pt e r . j
Americanism Day and all Daughters of the American
Republican candidates and Revolution h<>nor the U. S.
incumbents bave been in· Constitution in the Hotel
vited. Laguna at 12:15 p.m . Tues.
FASHION BREAKTHROUGH
New Way To Be
Suddenly Slim
science process and can.
not give or sag. It's sur·
rounded by a slimming
action border. A feather-
stitched panel down each
side of this girdle will
contour your hip1 if they
are a problem. At Party
Sood! a nd Sui·seki en·
th..WU ... In~ to at·
lend llMI lillb -llhibit ~ will take place two
day1 beginning tomorrow in
the O.W.e C«mfy Buddhiot
Chrcb. Anaheim.
' Lagu~a Coeds RaJlied
Families will g a I her day. Ool. 1.
between 4 and 10 p.m. at t.he During the .. tirst meeting
corner of Edgewater and of the fall season. com-I
Courtney Lanet!i in Hun· rnittee ehainnea will give
Ungloo Horbour. report& I Laguna Be 1 ch H 1 g h tht city and new ldeu c1ecl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;ii~~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
Los Angeles : -Are you a
woman whose figure is on
the good side but might
look perfect? You'll be
thrilled by the new easy
way science has discov-
ered for you to become
Suddenly Slim and yet
completel y comfortable.
If you're more than 15
pounds overweight, or
~1our 'vaistllne is larger
than 32 inches, then this
id ea is not for you . If your
weight problem falls
within this range, then
you can realize a new,
smoother figure today,
without dcet or exercise.
The girdle itself is of a
"wonder" Lycra spandex
blend. It's a new power
net consisting of nylon,
acetate and spandex. It is
so comfortable, but has
such slimming strength.
it gives your figure every.
thing that's possible with
a foundation.
_..,.,. of Hv• dMH•
. -by John Neka, ~one of the
--'·,,..,. llJllll'llW•
Ja ~ _,,, will """~ "f!Jl:t• ~ pJon4. ,,,.. ta DD. ...ti a A ae
dm8 -... pAllc 11111·
.ititflo ...... --.. 11 ;.a llOrt _..., er -••PJll·-1· :r:.i will .. -SJd ....,,. " ...... ~ paa111 • ..u.atk « ~ ....... ••.d ,..,,... ...
tram ..
School coeds •e being ~-1 d b 111 •--11 cruited ror a new club r ve y e memuusblp.
which will be part of the Further information may
Mermaids, Wom'en's Divi· be obtained by calling Carol
fion of the Lagunn Beach l...indsey, 494-7969 or Mrs.
Chamber of Commerce, Burton at 494-3789 or 494-
S t u d e n t , lnw•lled 1n ll'-4~721~·------Joinlng the Mlnl-MennaidJ
are Invited to oltend tlle AJlllN•(fMICllTt rroup'• lnltial m,.tlng In """" YUi the home ol Mn. Rudy Bur·
ton, fNI Catalina St., t.agu. Hootl ..... .,....,
na Beach at 3 p.m. oezt F.11 ..__. ... ,,_ ... Tuesday. .__,.... .. ,
The group will meet every "WHERE JESUS IS REAL"
other" Tuelday in the Bur·
ton bome whlcb t1 OM block • 1""' .. ...,.. '" • .....,., -
from the high 1ctloo1. -4
AnUcipated projecll Jn. dude doll "drivet, fM!lp with An ...., ~ •111~
tbe Mermaid project 1, ''" 1 o...,. Hnff.,... ..._ ,~tmu dlconUou '"'·~--+-----
•
The Fantastic "m -o IJ.,, r. cl"uli
Newly Arrived From N1w
York City. Specielitin9 in
Persontl Heir Styh"9· N&
C • r b on Copies I Every
Heircto • Creation Just
For Youl
OP[N 7 DAYS Plu1 EVENINGS
f/~u~:
1091 BAKER ST .. COSTA MESA 540-0341
•
•
Suddenly Slim is an all.
new lcind of 4-oz. girdle
constructed of science
fiben . One startling illno-
v1tion is the sheer nylon
front panel. This is per-
manently sU!ened by a
"Suddenly Slim," in
both girdle ind p1nty
versions, is the peak
aohlevement ol the Cali.
fomla designer-genius.
.OlgL They are avail1ble
at Buffum'• Found11ion
Depl.rtmen4 N • w p o r L
644-2200. I
, ...
•
.. -. . .
llOOIR ICINNIY
Ml--1 HI,._ LIMl'M•
-----~------. . . . . -
HNMIS STI IN
WldMIMtlr ••Cll
•
Orange Coaet c o 11 e g e
water p0)1) coach ..1ack
Fullel'f4o ~ ,,.. &ood
players 'to f'l'eJci tw'o teams
so that;• uactly what he's
going to do Saturday when
Area Prep
X-Country
Summaries -""' .......... "--' ........ Ill ' 1. J.l't ~ IH91, ll;:I0.1 t. Y.
'Mrtll*. (Ha'.-11:5' 2.. ·~ f'IBct (J1HI, )1:12 .._ llkk McCluN IH9), ll:l_a S. M. ~ IH91, 11:1' ...
Ste¥to Atwerd !tel), 11 :21 7. D.IY't
Jaffe lH.Hl, ll!U I, I". Meo..
Oil), 11•1~ '· kt\'lfl Sutler INHl, ll :1J 10. Olrll &enlley tNH ), 11'~ ll. It.
ewl11. IHI ), 1':Sl 11. Sl•n l),_...,ort
tHIJ, 11:~ II. JeM l'!tllt:hel' tNHj, 11:• u. stwto ·O.i.n.r IHHJ, ll:Sl ,_
M11nH ....... If, .._...... ......... :M
1'0P Fir>!~: 1. l•ll!IMll CHI\,
11 ,21.1 2. o.,nnv cune tNHl, 11 :n.o·
lf...tfl.SNll
HuMlllllM aMcll It, Mew-i H1rffr .. TOI> Fln!Wn:: L lon:tc~ lHll.
ll:Jl,I 2. J1m Adil INH ), 11 :51.t "New Ne-1 Herbor lrfthm1n
record.
C,,.,. .__ AAWCO u ti•flee -..
thM !0,000 ~mls.iort probl1m1. v ....... ,, .. lerlrin&. • fl'M l"ll•d·
eMek, ffft. ~-_,,ic-•t U--i. )9st -clq. Arid with
MMCO, )letlr trl""'"l11len een M
pratected by 0¥11' SOO MMCO C•n·
... cont .., ••st. '
Ev•ry mirt\ihl llftd 1 1191f, IC»n•· _,,.,.,..., ..
Y• u• tnnt ., .. ,
--...JsslM .. AAlfCOI
1745 Newport II. '46-1666
Swim Oub Awards Set Monday "·"' st. 10-hll
c ~•rr 'C .'Ir,,.,·:::-,µ~r.s
:" ':'. F ::~·--·:.
' ,, . '
'l1le Newport -·Swim
Club will hold lta Inaugural
sporlll aMWd banquet Mon-
day at the Newport Beach
Tllllit& Club at 6 p.m.
Guest .,,eekerc are Flip
Dw, coach of Rancho
Aiamit.os High School and Al
Irwin, Athlet,ic' Director of
UC Irvine.
Reservafuns can be made
by calling Newport s..cll
T«tnis Club aquatic director
Lerry Dellota at 644:-0050
before 6 p.m."today.
Have the NIGHTIME
of Your Life!
NIGHT.RACING starts
tuesday at beautiful
LOS ALAMITOS
FIRST 01' NINE PllACES
MON.·BAT. AT 7:45
Turf Temca Dlntnc •••
Tllbl• ltnlrnt:IOM C11t.
.Illa> fll-0022 !71•) 527-4471
I
•
SbNll'ft DISTll!EfY'CO .. Clll .. GlllO.IUlllEDllUSnYIO" "51UAIN llE~RALSPltlll'3:9g4/~0T
Smart girl,
Smart guy,
Smart buy.
SUNNY
BROOK
$399
I
~~ ._.9
SUNNY T a~e ~"e si p of its BROOK
marvelous mildness "'1p;,i:::;:;;cl,.,
and you'll agree:
the re 's no smoother
whiskey than
Sunny Brook
at any price.
the Bucs launch their 1968
season by playing host to
the annual PiT•l.t lnvita-
tiooal. -· The six-game tOl\l'na.ment.
featuring tbe two Orltl&t
~st teamc •lone with San-
ta Monica Cily Oollege a.net-,
College of the Sequoias, will
get underway at 9 a.m .
FuY,erton dtdn 't r, e ~. l 1 y
want to..divkle his squad, ·btit
he was forced to when Los
Harbor College dropped
out oI the tourrnament and
he couldn't find a last·
minute replacement.
Top matches in the in·
vttatl.onal fia:ute .tc the 9 o'clocl< op..,... )>Olween the
OCC Reds and Sequoias and
tne 4 p.m. finale, again
featuring the Red.I and Sen·
ba Monica.
Th« OOC Reds wi.11 be the
stronger of the two Pirate
teams and will be led by let-
terman Dan Christy. who
was Orange Coast's leading
scorer last season.
Tourney~ schedule:
G
Cee Grid
Summaries
FrldaJ, Septtmblf 71, 1968 OAJL V ,ILOT J!
Diablos Face VC
By ROG~ll CAJU.SON or ._ _,., """' ,. • .,
In tbHe daiys and time1,
'"the ·''VC" 11111.'t tomethlng
most pe()ple consider friend-
ly. ,
E'f""'ially peopl< from
'Mission Viejo ffigh School
because the Dta~los will en-
ccuter' 'a domestic form of
"VC" ln Valley ehrtatian
High Sd'loo1'1 var 1 l t y
foo~~~ ~~·Dodge is coun-
tin~ on two players in
particular to cmie bough tor him when his teem takes
title field at the Artesia
ocbool .. I ...Ught. ··
T h e y are qUfCterback
*
20
6.00x13
Tultl=I bl1e11 ~ ~II& ti. M. b. TU eM ol4ll tli.
30
6.50x13 T---~
•
~ ,,. -.
~-...
·~· • • : :;,
->
'·j "'"
51'' ~ .. '
• llxtr• tough. Tiif1ya
rialtber edd1 extia'
atrenxth to th1 liody
and •xtra 111!111 to
the tr .. ed
, •More th•'! 11000
zrlpplna •di'"-•·t1IVI
lr1ction to 1tsrt
11r'r,o,r -•top f1111er -
r11fn or thine
•Modern Wr1p:1round
tN!1d pr'ovlde1 better
steering control in
lhe turn1
ll1ckw111
·Sl .. 75
$~ .90
$29.95
Ptlyt l•• li,. tll•t ......... , .. ,~ ....
Prlcoutort ti $329&
•A tire tb1t fl1ht1 iqulrm ,, •
1eve1 tht tread for lon11r lHe
•Yid lmpl"l)Vl!I ro1d trip. 'i'°-. 11 t.MI ...
•Two Poly11t11r Qud. PllH. •:J.~',t".C·~
•Two Flb11"1l•11 Cord hit.PU-. eN tn
'"' f'ld . Ex, TIX
1nd old tir•
1235 12.J6
"l:
l>ll
45 ·
7.75x14
:l:'i:!=':, =~-•Ml 0 ttni
Wldlowollt only S -
'
BUY NOW
on our
Easy Pay Plan!
....................•.••..•..•.............•.....•••••• , ...
. '
SERVING ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
YOUNG & LANE llRE CO. UN NEWPORT
Ph. 541-9313
YOUNG . & LANE TIRE co:-=.~ '/;.',~~. AVENUi
·""~·~-·-··-
ROBINS, FORD
'
•
2CMO HAltlOlt ILVD.
Ph. 64UOIO ,-
COSTA MISA
LAGUNA
COST.A.MBA
'
• • t:
r·-
=~j .......
:~A _,
l
I .
'
•
t
•
I
• -· ..
•
DAD.Y PllOT EDITOBUL PA~
Decent Thing to Do
ln llit allmnalb of Jut October's Newpart,Mesa
school bond defeat, the city of Newport Beacll came in /
for heavy criticism 11'>01 unhappy supporters ol the
plOpOBal.
They charged ljlat the oulcome m!thl have been diliweot bad the city openly and stiongly bolclted the
scbooldblrl!'t.
Even II It were not true that at least two councll-
mm wurlted qweily against the bonda -as wH
clwged -no ofliclal upreuion ot """""'"llem•nt
came trom the council.
n was a bttter episode, but out ol. it emerged some-
lblng J>O<ttlve;
Tfio ~ resolye<I to support the local. school
sy&'tem, to comider its·ueeds and to cooperate wit.I) 1t m
every practical ffi8lll\~ • \.. . Councilmen, iodllili!Jr lhoii Jlewb' elec~, "have
lince lived isp to Iha! re,plVe. " ' • -
For several monU.., ·• cou1\dll liaison coq1mittee
has been e•cbangll)g , liilormatioo, willi .. ~terpart
commilteo 'represeutlrig the school 00.rd. j!:acb keeps
the other abreai.t of plans and politics that may affect
both.
But the best example of the city's determination to
keep &c.hool problems m mind involves the recent cl vie center site decision.
Municipal lawmakers, by formal vote, went on re-
cord opposing any election on civic center financing un-
til after the upcoming Newport-Mesa new school bond
election.
Mayor Doreen Marshall explain~ the decision this
week in a letter to District Supt. Willlam L. Cunningo
ham. She said the corincil has no intention of competing
witti the school district for property tu dollars.
"We recognize," said the mayor, "that the com-.
munity'1 need to e~ate it.I sefi·ous ~assroom sho.rt.-
age is even more critical 1han our groWl.Dg deficiencies
at «lty Hall."
Supt. Cunningham's response: "The thoughtfulness
and concern ot. the City Cound.I are appreciated more
than we can say."
AU citizens -certainly all parents and knowledge-
lll>lt young people -will applaud the city's action as
a veey!l"<=Mlt and constructive tlllng to do.
Charity Begins at Home
As always, the new United Fund goal in Newport
Beach is more ambitious than ever before -$184,928.
And again, as always, it will surely be reached.
... Tbatls because the leadership is there, Ille workers I ~·thefe and -most important -the need is there .
• _ ·~·The 13th year of the Newport United Fund," ~ay1
1 ~g .. ~oag II, 1968-69 president, "sees population in·
c're.-es .and rising costs oecessitating more money to
•upP<>rt 25 cbarities."
Many of these agencies aren't exactly "charities''-
our own youngsters or those of our friends berlefit from
them. For example, the Orange Coast YMCA (4,000
members) and the C:Ommunity Youth Center (2,250
members).
When we help such organizations, we are obviously
helping ow-selves.
There are, of. course, a number of other youth
groups that share United Fund contributions.
,Among them are the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Girls' Clu~. Camp Fire Girls and Boys' Club.
Bec'ause our children are directly involved in these
groups, the United Fund campaign has to be a very
personal thing for most of us.
It ls, in short, truly a charily·begins--at·home en.
deavor.
N ''MAN, WHAT ARE You l>OING WITH At.L THAT BLOOt>?"'
Characteristics Bonn Leaders
Alarmed Over . ' I ' .
Of Fine Athletes Russ Threat
111-NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
11tU1'k the se•son when Americana
of all-:.agt'!s, from .all walb of lift, go
dally ever com~Utive~rta. Every
SaturdJllb football ii.ctia m cOagt to
coast overflow with y cheering
faru whlle countless m.UlionJi watch on
television a .a hudlul rJ. robust,
athletically akilled and superbly train·
ed. young men fight for their alma
mater -and iodividual recogaition.
Next _. marks the beginnlng'ol tlle Wor~~ the time when national
;i:,:r~~=
studelilt lDd" the Mulcan government
resolve-their grievances. our eyes and
ears will be tuned lD to the Olympic
Games in Mexico City.
MANY EDUCATORS decry lhe
emphasis on spectator sports in our
college1 and bigb scboob~ 'f.hey con·
tend llrat tile atbletlc laJl II "llgging
the academic dog and suggest taking
away the dollar sign by elimViating
pajd admis&lons, pUi eoaches, travel ·
expenses, athletic ecbolarships and the
dependence of "other" lporil: on foot·
ball and baskelha!L
So far, these objectors repreEent on.
ly a smut minority. For most
Americans belie'Ve that our way of
fostering competitive sports in boys
a id girls in our elementary, junio:r and
s~nior high school.I pay.11 dividends in
furthering responsible citizenship. And
that high-level competition during
adolescence and young adulthood con·
tributes positively-to character forma·
ti on.
IN mE RECENT 1968 Olympics
issue, of the Journal oC the A.M.A.
Dr. Bruce Ogilvie of San Jose State
College O>unseling Center sum-
marized his years of experience with
high school, college, Olympic and pro-
fessional athletes from every com-
peUtive sport who had been referred
because or psychological problems.
Although Dr. Ogilvie has some
<'oubts ~anting the •:alue of athletic
impetition, because o! the variety of
bodily com~ and the severity of
emotional reactions to t h e stress of
bigb:-kvel competitlon, be lists many
poeitlvt. character traits in the pe-of moot teen-agen and
~adultl who,particlpate ocJlvoly
in d'mpetftift ·~· . ~. 1
OGll.VIE REPORTED that JD.year.
old boy11 .when accepted by the na~
tionally renowned Saota Clara Swim
Chlb, tend to be cool, reserved and in·
troverted; 1hoae who remained in this
extremely competitive train.Ing pro.
gram until their 14th b1!ti¥!t.!sbowed
greater emoti9'laJ. ,Slablll~: higher
conscience developmtpt, ong with
increased seu .. seraon • n d in·
dependence. ~....,.. llokll -... many youn,.Wa who participate in
Pop Warner football and Little Learue
baseball.
Successful athletes are achievement.
oriented and gaih great sa1Ufaction
from ~eir striving to 1ucceed. Like 0. J. Simpson in last s8turday's U.S.C.·
Minnesote thriller, a great athlete is
at his very best when the ~ds are
slightly .agaiDl.t him.
WASHINGTON -West German
Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger has
quJHI¥ employed a bit of personal
diplomacy to crystallize U.S. support
for bis menaced government in the
wake of Russia's mar~h i n t o
Czechoslovakia.
Kie&inger sent a close foreign policy
advisor, Kurt BkTenbach, on • quick
trip here u blJ persooal 11epresen·
tatin. Blrrenbach made th&rounds of
lnflueotiaJ congressJonaJ offices to
undenco:re the West G er m a n
government's grave concern.
Binenbach is a member of the
Bundestag who has loog been a sup-
porter Of NATO and an advocate ol
European cooperation. He ia also a
ftnmdal truatee anl counselor for the
powerful 'lbyssen industrial interests.
ln talks With congressional leaders
Btrrenbacb expressed the fears of the
West German government caused by
the lnvaslon of Czechoslovakia by
Russia and its Warsaw Pact allies. He
streslied the. positioning of troops on
the Czech-West German border.
DR. OGILVIE IS convinced that 818 QUICK VISIT he re coincided
athletes who rftld:ii their motlv•Uon · · .wi1h :a rOlJtld Of ~ga:nd.a &nd bom·
!or competiUon !lh01f' these personality bait leveled by Moscow at the Bonn
traits: ambition. organ is• t Ion, government. At the same time the
deference, dominance, endurance and Kremlin was .11ssuring other Middle
aggression. Mon ot them are ult-con· European nations, notably Rumania
trolled, self-coofide~t, tough-minded, and YugosI8via, that it planned NO itl·
trustworthy, intelligent, and ex· vasJon of tlheir territory.
troverted. . . A1 a consequence, U.S. officials
Whether good or bad, competitive were led to believe, formally and by
s_ports are here to stay. Certamly, OUT Birrenbach's informal mission, tJiat
fives would ~ less colorful without West Germany was the nation most
them and without. the athletes who endangered by the move i n t 0 make them J;K>Mlble -especlaUy · rzecbosJpvakia. That led to Wll!'nings . tbose outstanding ones who become ··M.• ~ , ~ • . ·our national he.roes. trom uie United .:itates , B:itain and
France, that any move into West
'Grow Up and Go Home'
German territory would brin& "im·
m·ediate Allied response."
Now· that cUch leaders are saying
that a Soviet pull·batk is in prospect,
U.S. dftclals are keenty interested in
the extent of the withdrawal of OC·
cupation forces and the location of
11nits which remain in Ctechoslovakla.
"Alw.Jys we hear the plaintive cry of
the teen-ager; What can we do?
Where can we. go? The answer is :
Go Home !
"Hang the stonn windows, paint the
woodwork. rake the leaves. mow the
lawn. shovel the walk. wash the car,
learn to cook , scrub the floors, repair
the sink, build a boat. get a job. Help
tht. minister or priest or rabbi. tho
Red Cross, the Sa:Jvatioo Army. Visit
B11 George--"'--.
Dear Georg"
Help me. please! I'm going
with this girl and I like her 1 lot
hue. she ha1 a pet dog and t-ve.ry
time 1 tis• her she Insist~ I also
kiss the dog. What can I do ? l'U
br your frlend for life. w.s.
Otar W.S.:
ffell. one tbillg you can do is
let me kDow tbe nut time )'OU
three 10 to a drive.Jn movie -I
waot to watdl. (l'v. heard 0( th&
otemal trtan.cle but lhll i1
rlcllculou•.I
COlfFIDEllJ'lAL TO MAYOR
DALEY OF' CllICAGO: It '°"" "StlcU 1nd •tones ml,)' break
m1 bmea, bvt words will never
tuu1 me.·•
• '
'
I
the sick. Assist the poor. Study your
lessons. And when you are through -
and not too tired -read a book.
"Your parents do not owe you en-
tertainment. Your city or Village does
Mt owe you recreational facilities.
The world does not owe you a UVinJ.
You owe the world somethJng. You
owe ft )'our Ume and energy and your
talen'tl 10 tbat no one wilJ be 1t war tn
poverty or sict or lonely again.
''IN PLAIN SIMPLE words: Grow
up! Quit being a crybaby. Get out of
your drta.m world and develop a
backbone, not a wishbone, and start
acting like a ma.n or lady.
"You're suflPOMld to ht m•ture
trJOUgb to accept som11 ol the
re1po.11lbilities yov:r parents have car-.
ried for years. They have urged, bea·
Ced. excused, tolerated and cfenJed
ttlemselves needed comforta so that
you could hive every benefit. You
have no T'lghf to «r-pect them kl bow to
every whim anct fancy. •
''In Heavtfl's name. GROW UP
AND GO HOME.".
By Judie 11hlllp B. GUllam
Jaw.ane. C.art
0t:DY-eft C.\trlff
BIRRENBACB'S TALKS here were
well timed. His: viait came when the
Sen8te and House were preparing to
complete action on t h e ad·
ministration's $72 billion f!efen se ap.
propriation ·bill. Some influential
senators h ad been questioning CIA
director "~ard Helms, Defense
Secntary Clark CDffocd and Gen .
Earle G. Wheeler, chalrman of the
Joint Chiefs or Staff, on irltcrnatlonal
developments.
The 1awtnaktr5 were told, In closed·
door testimony, that eight divisions of
Warsaw pact troops -more than
60,doo fighting meo plu!I ,11uppoi"t unitii
-were positioned Li Ciechoslovak!a
In the rusen-Cheb area where lhcy
)>Ol!:ed 1 threat to West GermRny's
eastern border. T h e ten1tors were
thus prepared to g1ve 1 sympathetlc:
hrearinJ to a penooal spokesman air·
ing Kie&lnaer·~ a~e:he;nlJons.
Dtapite their 1ymp&thetie -atlituct.,
however, conire1sional leaden, like
other U.S. olficllall. were finally fn.
cUned to Uh a somewhat' less alarm·
ed view of an admJtten:r alarming
dtuaUon. They reached a tentative
conclus.lon that Russia was not
sulously eonsJdering a move lnto
Wist Gtrmu,. .
lly Rob<rt s. " .... aid Jou A. GolMtnltll
They Stopped to ~elp Him t
;
I-le Salutes the 'Nice Kids'
To the Editor ;
To thank the young people who go on
be l n g the "nloe kids" t he y have
always been but who don 't get the
publicity reserved !or the dissenters,
the rabble rousers. the dirty lazy lot
revel in. The "nice kids" don't need it
(isn't everyone nice, sort of things?).
Last Monday afternoon at Beach
and Main in Huntington Beach, the
"loaner" car I was driving went dead.
Hundreds of people passed, a little in·
dJgnant that my borrowed car had a
dead battery and they had to make a
~&ht detour .around me. No telephone
ih siiht, and traffiC on all sides of me
made crossing difficult.
IT WASN'T THE motprcycle
policeman, who couldna nelp f>Ut see
the stopped up traffic, who came to
my assistance. It wasn't the
policeman in a police car, who
bothered to find out what the trouble
was, but .a "nice kid" who DID stop
and who DID do &omething about it.
While he was jockeying into tbe posi·
lion of alerting the nearest gag st.atioa,
another car stopped with three "nice
kid1" on Ulei.r way to the beach on a
100 degree aftemooon, who bothered
to take time to guide my car into the
gas station.
These are just four "'nice kids" -
CLEAN "nice kids" with clothes to
match. with masculine haircuts leav-
ing no doubt in my mind who they are
and ... ht.re they came from .
I salute them -whoever. oc
wherever. they are! (I like nice kids l.
A. K. nETSCH
9...., Sad Co...,lusion
To the Editor!
Suspicion arid bias often a r e
generated by fear and -or lack of
understanding and often result in
stere-0tyµing of individuals and issues.
Two items appearing in the Sept. t8
issue of the DAILY PILOT, while
seemingly unrelated. could comf'
under the stereotyping mentioned
above.
One item was the letter lrom a
mother whose 16-year-old son. while
ta.king a political poll, was subjected
to suspicion and indignity. seemingly
without cause. The inference here is
th.at because he is a youth, some peo-
ple feel he is not deserving of the
same initia1 trust and right to basic
human ctignities I.hat v.·e adults expect
THE OTHER ITEft1 was the
headline. "J C Bonds Lose by 12
Votes". Surely it was not the slight tax
Increase that defeated lhe needed
bond issue -an increase in taxes of $.'l
per year on a '20.000 hnuse is
mlnim•I. Also one would have to wear
blinders not to reallie the educational
,tlnd cultural benefits youth and adults
atfk gain from our junior colleges_ It
uld be lnte-resUng to learn why
some voted against this bond issur.
and why !luch a large oomber did not
bother lo vote at all -when th e right
to voW! is one o< our nation'!\ cherished
privile&e!I.
ONE SAD eoncluslon that could be
drawn from both of theae !teens is tha.t
ollr e-nlightened society contains too
rr-1y W'ho do not attempt to reason a
situation or issue through, but who fah
back on suspicion or indiUereoce.
SHIRLEY ISERMAN
To the Edllor.
Eldridge Cleaver Is an eloquent
young :spe11ker and write!\ the author
d .a recently pubUlhed book~ "SouJ on
Jct." a very moving account of !\if
odytHy In America 8$ a Black man.
LttNr1 from rt-rl ••• --· Mc.rm.I~ Wl"ll•no .i'lollld con .... Y their mn-In XIII WOtlls .,.. .. u,
TM r;glij lo condenH letl•ni IO flt IPAC9 •• el!mln&N
Ubet ls , .... ,......,. All lett9n mllSf Incl.,. 1lvrw1'u ..
-m.111.,. add•RU. but 111me wllt bl wl!Mleld ""'""' ... '·
and although not yet 35, the presiden·
tial candidate or the Peace and
Freedom Party, which won a place on
the California ballot.
Although SQIDe people would like to
silence thb remarkabJe 1.PWt&'JDO., I
for one ani glad that 'We 'tiVe In i.
democr"Gl' Whic:!l oheriobu fl'~
of speedf.' t urge that YOU' editoriaJly
defend his right to state his case.
MRS. RUTH SHAPIN
Blow for f'reedotn
To the Editor.
The Newport Beach City Council
struck .a small but powerful blow for
freedom of the individual in rejecting
the anU-hltchhlking ordinance.
The council ts particularly to be
commended because there was no con·
certed opposition to the ordinance due
to the type Of person against whom the
rrdinance was directed: in the main.
young people and certainly the less af-
fluent types.
I am a g a i n st hitchhiking,
persona.Hy. But I am also dead s e I
against the steady increase in the
number Of laws a person has to con-
tend with to merely get through the
day in living in these United States.
I am proud today to be a
businessman in ttie community the
Newport Beach City Council governs.
GEORGE L. PERLIN
Bike Clini<' f'OC'ts
To the Editor :
tn \Vadnesday's Mailbox column
relating to bike clinics on the same
day . the head "A Cas@ of M~in
formation" was correct but the editor
should have s.dded that it applied to
his comments. and not those of Sam
Chiodo submitting t:he letter. A phone
call to WestcH.ff Plaza conducting the
event in qcestion woukl have provided
the facts.
Neither the Newport Beach Poli~
Department nor tile Costa Mesa Police
Department scheduJed the bike safety
clinic conducted at Westcliff Plaza
Saturday, September 7. This W'S done
by out merchants' association in an
effort to assist in promoting bike safe·
ty and liccl161ng. By coincidence, a
Costa Mesa stioppioog center also
scheduled a bike safety clinic tht.
same day. This certainly is no pro-
blem -ttie more bike safety pro·
ntoted, ttle beUer.
\YESTCl,JFF PLAZA, located on
Irvine Avenue tn Newport Beach, Is
just acrOSI\ ttie street frMTI Costa
Mesa. Personal vlsit.s were made to
both department.Ii. Newport Be1c:h
POiice Departmel\f assigned Officef
t.aaghtin in charp ol B1ke Safe~ to
cooducl the safety clinJc and a meter
maid. to issue license• at tht c:ll_ptc.
Cott.1 Mesa Poike Dei>irimen(
... led lh•l;three o!flceh had alrucly
been assigned ta tile Cooll 11W1
Quotes
,
Llulsir.: Siacl1lr, Sin Oleft, on ''Poor
People11 Campelfn"-"ln my growing
yMtl my family was very poor (but I
wt dldn't st e m to demand our
·~ts' that tbt1: mort affluent lhouJd
C011tribute to our lot .··
•
clinic and that nooe were available
kir Westcliff Plaza. In further diSCWi·
sion, however, the impression was
gained that, since the. Westcllff Plaza
merchants were paying the
children's bike lice n s e fees, it
would be satisfactory 'if W! simply
took the names aod addresses of the
Costa Mesa children applying at our
Westcliff clinic and forwarded the
names and our license fee payments to
the Costa Mesa Police Department.
Such a list was in fact delivered to the
Costa Mesa police station tbe .af.
ternoon ol th~ tjinic.
A'I"~~ ...... aey re.. col-lect.,~ ¥ ··~Jiff Plaza by any
NeWlJQrt: ~rofficer or anyone else.
The entire i>rogtam costing over $700
was funded by the Merchants Associa-
tion , with the largest expenditure
bei·ng the full page ad in tl1e Daily
Pilot. plus two free bikes and licenses
for all unlicensed bikes , .. absolutely
free. Seventy licenses at $1.50 each
were provided Newport B e .a c h
children -35 at 50 cents eacb were ~ted for Costa Mesa children.
Mien the Costa Mesa children were
unsuccessful in obtaining a lice11se on
their appearance at the C.M.P.D., a
letter of apology for t h e in·
convenience, plus thf: 50 cents ror a
license fee, was mailed by the
We.rtcliff Plaza merchants. to each
Costa J\1esa child involved. lf it had
been thought lhat p rope r ar·
rangements had not been made, it
would have been a simple lTllilittcr lo
give the children the money for the
license at ttie clinic. But we w~ted
the children to llS1e the money for bike
licenses 'With our complimentl -not,
perhaps, candy or ice cream.
WE HAVE NO quarrel with 37lyone,
only a desire to help promote bike
safety a·mong the youngsters in hopes
that it might prevent injuries or more
serious consequences.
Officer Laughlin and Meter Maid
Sandy Turner did an admiNble job of
indoctrinating 114 children. as l am
.!Ure ttie Costa Mes~ officers did with
those tfley processed at the Costa
Mesa shopping center.
We plan to conduot another program
.in January, 1989, and again in addition
to offering sa!etr. rules and regula-
tions, licenses will be sponsored by
the Westcliff Plaza Merchants. Both
department. will again be contacted
for t.heir cooperation in what file
merchants of West.cliff Plaza believe
to be a most worthy cause.
DICK VERNON
Preside··
Westcliff Plaza Merchants Assn
The editor's· note appendt'd to the
'letter in question apparently wa.,-
ba.sed on t1'1'oneou.~ in/ornwti011. Tht
DAILY PfLOT rtptet.s the r,rror.
-£ditor
----
,Frid a y, September Z7, 1!168
The <diWrlaJ 1""'< Of th. Dolly
Pilos 1ttkl to tnfonn and .stfm.
uJak reoder.t bJI prt:tnhng this
"""'J>OP<"• op/Iii°"' and ...._
mntcrv °" topia of inttrelt
and lign.ifiamct, b~ providing a
forum for the tzpres:ion of
O-Ur T~adtm'' qg#nJQtU.,.:..and by
prtS«11ting the dfvtr:ie vie~
point.t of lnfornted observe.r$
and 'POkttmt11 on topu:s of tht day.
I Robert N. Weed, Publisher
--------------------------
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Costa Mesa ---DAI LY Pl LOT Today's Closing
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
\
VOL 6f, NO. 233, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1968 TEN CENTS
'CRYING IN GHETTO' 'LAU.GHING IN SUBURBS'
OAILV PILOT......_..,, .. O'Ollllflt
'POLITICIANS UP TIGHT'
Crash Ver.diet Due in Year
19 Witnesses Testify at Helicopter Hearing
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1M D•lll' Pl ... $ftft
Findings in the worst civilian
heli<-wter cra.llh in U.S. history -
fro mhuman cootro1 to systems only
an engineer can comprehend -are
due within a year following close of a
two-day federal hearing Thursday in
El Segundo.
A missing nut and boH. which helped
hold a pitch dlange rod on one CJf five
main rotor blades is cocsidered a
crucial factor by the National
Tran&p0rtation Safety Board.
The last of a series of 19 witnesses
called to testily about cause of the Los
Angeles Airways helicopter crash
whioh ldlled 23 persons May 22 were
heard Thursday.
Moot oi theit remarks were so
technical that only airline personnel
and other qualified individuals could
understand just what the three-man
board of inquiry was bearing.
Mechanical problems of some sort
appear to be the factor, however, in
Newton Faces · Vp to 15
• • ' ' 0' • p .,.~-~·-...
Years for Police Slaying
OAKLAND (UPI) -Black Panlher
founder Huey P. Newton was sert-
tenced to 2 to 15 years in state .prison
todaY' for voluntary manslaughter in
the slaying of an Oakland policeman.
Superior Court Judge Monroe Fried-
man denied motions for a new trial, to
aUow Newton free on bail during ap-
peal s.nd to grant the 26-year-Qld
Negro militant leader probation.
In a 20-minute court appearance,
during whi'h attorneys' arguments
were extremely brief. the judge
ordered Newton to the state medical
facility at Vacaville "under the term
proscribed by law."
Defense counsel Olarles Garry, in
nsJ<lng for probation, prevented peti·
tions which he said had 29,301
Elgnatures calling Newton an "honest
dedicated. selfless human being" who
would be a "powerful asset to the
community."
Newton maintained his cheerful de-
meanor. smiling and waving at the
two dozen spectators in the courtroom
as he left accompanied by b&iliffs.
They cheered and s h outed en-
couragement to Newton , compelling
Friedman to gavel foe order.
Garry immedi&tely filed notice of
appeal and again asked for bail, poia-
ting out to the jurist that appeals of
U1is type take between 18 months and
21h years. The judge again denied the
mot.ion.
During the brief arguments, Garry
g.aid the "community needs" Newton
Weather
Low clouds, fog and drizzle -
tilat's the gloomy weekend we•-
ther picture for the Orange
Coast as the temperature drops
down to 70. Brine back the beat
wave.
INSIDE TODAY
There's nuuic fn lhe air at
Laguna Beach's Irvine Bowt
where the Lyric Opera Associa-
tion opem i t 1 sea.son tonight
with "La Boheme." Read about
it in lo<fo;"1 WEEKENDER mag.
mint. .__
• --1i.11 c-... ...,, , .. 1. ..... • ·--.... -~-, , .. _ • -' ,_..., .... _
a.itw1a1 , ... " w ...... • ••t..,.llllllMnt OleM Wiii,.. ..
w ... -W"1illlil ..... .. ,,_ 1 .. 11 w--· , .... C:.b ' '" -• -"
.. _ • ..... L•-.O " ,,_, " --' ·-,~,. --" '"-' -·-.. -.. • "' ........ """ •• --· , .
0t1._ C-'f ' ..... •• .. ,.,.,"' ...,., " """"'"" ...
•
f
and he Is "no tonger a person in-
terest.eel in bis own ego and his own
self -he is an excellent subject for
probation." ·
The prosecutor, Assist. Dist. Atty.
Lowell Jensen, retorted that Newton
was not eligible for pirole under the
penal code and it did . not matter
whether there were 2!},000 or 250,000
signatures on the petition.
$500,000 in Tax
Revenue Gained
In County Audits
Auditing of 734 Orange County firms
which did not file equipment and in-
ventory statements will bring in an
estimated $500,000 in additional tax:
revenue, County Assessor Andrew J.
llinshaw said Thursday.
Hinshaw said the 734 f i r m s
represent $5,794,620 in escaped assess-
ed valuations dating back to 1965.
Of this number the assessor said, it
was char~d th.al 382 · firms had
willfully evaded filing statements as
required by law and they were fined 10
percent of their assessed valuation
amounting to $348,930.
The balaoce of the firms were not
penalized because it was not indicated
that they had willfully violated the
law, Hinshaw said.
The assessor said Orange County
has about 50,000 business firm11 with
an assessed valuation of about $400
million in equipment and inventories
alone.
Stereo Bandito
Hits OCC Again
Orange Coasl CoUege·s car-crack-
ing stereo bandlta is on the loose
again, Costa Mesa police learned
Thunday night.
Three more 1tudent victims turned
In theft repoN-all stating that the
wind wings of th~lr cars were pied
open and their auto 1tereo1 and tapei
taken.
Norman N. Noggle Jr., 22, of 728
W. Wilson St. lost a stereo and 11
tapes, valued al Slo.1; William D.
Middleton, 18, of 2156 Irvine Ave.,
Newport Beach, said a stereo and
seven tapes were missing, a $142 Jou,
while Hugh A. Spencer, 17, of 2315
Laurel Place: Newport Beach. rt·
ported the theft of a ate:reo and 10
tapes, totaltnc fl41.'75.
r
the plunge ot the Sikorsky SfilL
helicopter into a ParamOunt dairy cor·
ral.
Mechanics who serviced the craft
flmvn by Capt. Jack E. Duples, 45, of
6442 Govin Cin:le, Huntington Beach,
were adamant during questioning
about how they did the job.
Investigation Wednesday centered
around the mi!Sing bolt and tne -pro-
cedures used in trocking rotar blades
of the 28-passenger helleopter during
predaw.n hours on the day it crashed.
Tracking means setting. the .blades
so they will all turn at the same level;
within a fraction of an inch, thus
eliminating vibraticms caused by an
out-of-track blade.
Pltcb'...-~d tl!Hllliel>
carries •e hellcopter along, wh1fe Yaw
-also discussed in the tracling pro-
cedUre quetUonl -l& the amouqt 1b•r
are laterally slanted to give the
aircraft lift.
Discussions Thursday primarily in-
volved executives of the Sikorsky
Aircraft Division of United Aircraft
Corp., and only an expert could know '
just what they were saying.
The NTSB · panel, pre&iding over
representatives of four other agencies,
including the airline, talked of the
possibility of a small, but m-
capacitatin-g failure in the automatic
flight control system too.
Another Los Angeles Ai r w o. y s
helicopter piloted by Capt. AUen D.
rutter. et! Los Angeles. was almost
forced into an emergency landing on a
golf course June 2!J during an AFCS
crisis.
Subsequent investigation revealed
an electrical component had been in-
stalled 100 degrees wrong and shorted
two or three times, causing the
aircraft to lurch back and forth.
SpecificaUy, the system was given
an unwanted electrical power input.
causing the instability, which cleared
up by itself. allowing Capt. Ritter to
Oy on to Los Angeles International
AirporL
The young pilot said in·flight pro·
blems had been in his mind since the
crash of Capt. Dupies' craft on May
22 , three months before a second LAA
helicopter crashed in Compton, killing
21 persons.
Metal f&ligue was probably tbe fac-
tor causing that heUCQpter. flown by
Capt. Kenneth Waggoner, 33, of 3131
Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, to crash in a
city park playground and explode into
names.
Evidence of metal fatigue was found
(SOe COPTER, Page ZI ---------~
How "Swede" it is when Lester Cut·
ler digs into the water with a kayak
paddle.
The Orange
Coast kayaker,
one of a dozen
area personali-
ties to win
berths in t h e ., ... j
American dele-
gation being
sent to the
Olympic
Gamel tn Mexi-
co City, ts • stu-
dent of Swedlsh
tecb11tque1
which have won
seven out of 13
gold medals ln
tbe kayak event
in past Games .
His story 11 featured today on Page
16 in the latest of the pre-Olympic ser·
ie11 s?OtJlghUng the Orange Coast's
Otympiau.
Cleaver Hits 'Pigs'
Four-letter Words Spice Panther Talk
By TilOMAS FORTUNE
ot ""' Dllh' ,,It, 1i.tt
"There ani the people and there are
the plgs. 'The pigs are the power struc-
ture," Bl~ck Panther Eldrid~ Cleav·
er told 2,000 UC Irvine students Thurs-
day.
lie said black militants are pre-
pared ta destroy those he calls pigs.
He used a vulgar four.Jetter exple-
tive to refer to Gov. Ronald Reagan,
whom he named as one of tbe pigs.
He said, "If America has to be de-
stroyed, we (Negroes) demand our
rights ta participate in the destruc,-
tion."
Thus Eldrid~ Cleaver dld not dis-
appoint the students or newsmen who
tw·ned out en masse to hear . him
speak.
OVERSHADOWED
There were three other speakers in
the CQnclave program on "America
as a Racist Cu1ture," but Cleaver as
the notorious personality overshadaw~
ed tbe othero;. It was his first appear.
ance since the UC regents &lapped him
down as a 10-session lecturer at Berke-
ley.
fte said he did not speak at UC ruv-
erside Wednesday night because his
parole officer told him he was going
to be shot there and he was going to
be shot at Irvine, and given the choice
he would rather be shot in Orange
County,
He added that "tile truth is I was
just too tired."
Dressed in a black, guru.styled silk
shirt and black pants Cleaver sat in·
dolenUy, eyes nearly closed, stroklni;
his short beard throulh the othet
talks. A hush fell when he stood up
to the trUcropbone as the final speaker.
Presuming to speak far tbe Negro
race. be said, "We're goine to be free
or nobody is !ree. We sat let's make
this pain ~qd~tle. ~dOll't>-io
hear no more crying in the ghetto and
laughiJ!g in thi white ·1ub1D'b.
Pu#dl1P TIGHT
"\\'rinkJe faced punks like Ronald
Reagan and Max Raflerty aet up Ught
about that," be said.
Cleaver said Black Panthers an
storing up guns to fight back againsj.
racist pig cops recruited in Alabama
and Georgia. He 1aid tht Panthers'
Mesa Burgliµies
'
Net Purse, Ring
And T eevee Set
A purse, a television set Md a dia-
mond ring feU victim to txrglan in
Costa Mesa 'Thursday, police reported
today.
The ring. valued at more than tl,000,
was stolen from the bedroom ol Winn
W. Scott, 51, of 3117 Cinnamon St
Scott told police the thief entered by
taking a screen of! ttie bedroom
window.
Leo Detrocehi, 46, o/ 180 E. 19th St.
reported that his home wa.!J entered
in a 1irp.1lar manner and a Sony TV
set taken from his bedroom. He ef!lti-
mated his loss at $150.
An . 18-year-otd Costa Mesa girl,
J-Tarr1ett M. Schablein o( 241& Niagara
Way, told poUce her purse waa stolen
from her car while tt waa parked
out.side a restaurant at 191 E. l'lth St.
The purse contained $115 in cash, a
•10 check and six credit card's.
Two Youths Held
In Kidnaping
Two lddnapers were arrested Thurs-
day morning &«er they allegedly drag.
ged a Huntington Beach babysitter in-
to a neld, blindfolded her with her bra
and robbed her o( $4.
Jailed on susP,cion of kidnaping and
strongann robbery were Eugene T.
Chavez, 19, Garden Grove, and Gary
Cottrell, 18, DI 114-00 Court Lane,
Westminster.
Police said the duo first pulled up in
a car beside Mrs. Gertrude Green-
man, 63, of 80 Huntington St., as she
was walking near Atlanta Avenue and
Beach Boulevard on her way to work.
According to police accounts, they
asked Mn. Greenman for dirediOOJ
and when 1be ignored them, they
jumped from the car and forced ber
into an adjacent field.·
Potice Detective Gilbert Velne 1a!d
an unJdenUlied oil worker fotmd. tbtl
woman and brought her to police
headquarten:. A description of the
alleged assailants was broadcast and
the pair was picked up sbortly
thereafter.
Police said Mr~. Greenman wa~
whaken and bruised, but otherwise
unirijured.
J •
ambition in armaments goes all the
W3:!J to the hydrogen bomb.
l.ike Cassius Clay in his brasher
days. Cleaver knows how to grab at-
lention. Usually he relies on the shock
power of his remarks.
lie seemed to be egged on by tbe
politeness of the audience, as ii be
wanted to hear hecklers.
''I want to get run out of town. No
one's throwing bottles yet, so I have
ta go farther," he said.
* * * Sited More L!glat
He then gave an obscene discourse
on the power women have to move
men.
The governor was his principal tar·
get and he accused him of using "me
and the college as a whipping boy to
stir up right wing sentiment so be can
gain a firmer grip at the ballot box
in November."
Cleaver said the Kerner Report of
the President'• Commission on Civil
(S.. CLEA VER, Pa&e Z)
Other Speakers
Give Less Abuse ..
u:r1if' ~E,iti~~'. \11i.,Y ·
Father BloM . n.. · . ' .
'AMERICA ON DECLINE'
Ramparts' Editor Scheer
'VIOLl!NC&· WON'T Hl!LP'
Riot -conwn111ion'1 Co"'"•"
_____ l._ __ _
Three other speakers 1n bie t1C
Irvine conclave program Thursday on
racism were less abusive and gave
more thought-provoking talks than did
Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver. ;
Their messages were dilC\ls.k.J
longer tha.111 Cleaver's in 1tudent
discussion group sessiO(ls with faculty
members that followed the conclave.
Congreasman James Corman, whG
served on ~ President's Commisslon
for Civil Dllorder, said the l"evalling
U.S. mental!IY\ Qf wblte r8Clllll must
be changed to ptev~t further ri<lU in
:"a1 ~=~:i:.;,1=:t~ he,i~ eel !bat It a not happenlni
fast enough.
Robert Sc~. editor of Jtamplrts ~ ..;•gaz!ne, s~ e:v• had ••all<: · tlle'Ol4 .• '~ er to v . iu;·that it 11
racist !Ji nature.
Father Bllle Bonpane. defrocked
Catholic priest who callJ himself a
revolutionary, equated capitalism with
raci&m aitd said the future belongs to
the peasants of.the W'Ol'ld.
·Corman (D-Van Nuys) lashed out •t
Cleaver and the Black Panther• for
preaching violence. He l3id there ls no
dUference between the white lynch
mob in Mississippi and the ao-called
guerrilla warrior ln the ghetto.
He said a national survey showed 19
out of 20 Negroes reject separatllDl in
any form. Those who vreach it ar e
playing into the bandJ or white racism,
be charged.
He' repeated the conclusion reached
by tbe Presi:dent's Commission, the
Kerner Report that "Our nation ii
moving toward two societies. one
White and one black, separate ind
unequal.''
He called for a brotherhood ol con·
cern to bind the country together, and
rejection of any movement that would
further divide it.
Ramparts editor Scheer called
Coogressm1ln Corman "a go o_d
German" along with Vice President
Hubert Humphrey.
"Humphrey's tears are genuine." he
said. ''They are those of a missionary
about to be destroyed."
lte said the United State& began its
period of decline ln the 1950's .t.od it i1
accelerating in the 1960's. "Until
then," he said, ''we believed we could
take care of the world and o th e r 1
would like it because we would be
benign in our administ:ation."
He said now Negroes in the cities
and persons abroad are standing up
and saying. "You can have it. W•
don't woot it. Your culture is sick."
He said the sickness is the arrogant,
(See RACISM, Page % )
Cleaver Lectures
Set at Stanford
STANFORD (UPI) -Eldridge
Cleaver. Black Panther leader at the
center of controversy at University of
California campuses. will give a series
o~ three lectures at Stanford Unlversl·
ty.
It was announced today Ulat Cleaver
would give lectures 00 altem•te
weeks, beginning next Tuesday, iii
Dinkel!piel Auditorium. H i • ap.
pe.arance wlll be sponsored by tb1
Committee ror a New DtmocrltlO
Politics.
San Fran8soo superv1sor T1rry
Francois, • Negro attorney, also wlll
glw three lectures .. The talb are not
part of any COW'se and a 75 cents ad•
mission wUl be charged.
At t:ie University of CaU!ornJa,
Berkeley, I series Of leclunt b1
Cleaver as part of NI e.xperlmental
course was cut back recently by \ff
boar~ of re11enU to on&.
A
' I
r .,,
..
•
f"rfdlJ, Stpttmbtt Tl , 1968
SoUth .Coa Now
....... ~Oollli It .......
idloe •N, lioqtheulenl Qr1JIP
CounlJ IL where Ibo octlan ii. • • ''Thero bu .. _. been tho degr<e or llLWi .,. " Plt$jll ti .a1J
IClivllJ Ill ooulheutel'll Orange Cout> populaUori llOW Uvu Ill -leni
lollllll tt ...iili: vajw," Jpo -. add· ..... "'If•_." 111.-Ur 'a• ... ....................... .
~~-Ht ""'1tlontd l\004 fQf' , ... ~ con,
..... . ~
lllcl!Men lltalled Alton Allen, 111111
dillrlot IUptrVia<S", for rWAg fTf'A &
tlcl W ond ...,...Ing funding aller
the study was bypassed In the liudget.
E• -tho ·We're ,..ins today," salil. Oranf!P C<>unty: It will 'blW' '!I\' IJ>.
Dlcluon, COUDty plenning . too.WcoUO. 'of ,... and i redevelop. • . ·--mat; Jle 1"dlcted. .
Dlckuon. sPOke ln Laguna Beach at .Bµt. of southern Orange County, he ·
trol.J Jn. ion.Ing an.4 for bUlbOard con-
trol.I, c.lUng the abundance of 1{gna in
Dana POtnt ------
Dlcka&on said there Is a study under
way an undergrounding iutlliUes from
Tllree Arch Bay lo Dana r<>LDt. "Hope-
fully,. It · would be ,. prototype that
wOOJ.d tpread up and' down tbe cout,"
Ile wd.
Ooe of the greatest growth stimU·
!ants ta the area was tlle North Ameri-
can Rockwell decision to bUlld Jts Au-
tonetics plant in the Laituna Niguel
area, he aaid. a ~btr b""8kfast. The audience said there bu ~et been such a de· of about 100 lnduiled b\llJJ1e11 and gree df ~I activity by large Ion<!
~muolt,r lelderl from surrounding oWDl'l"'S as b now under way, Dkk.-:
<ireaa. '"' aald Ulat b)' l993'the county ())I'.,.'. I Tllo planner said 45 peroont of the eat t>OIO.liat!Oll 1.3 m11Jlon) will hive
A milllon square feet of plant ii to
be operat1n1 n .. t July wtlb 7,llOO
employes, be said. He cited Laguna
Niguel'• acquisition of the Cepron pro-
perty (for Sl0.5 milllqn), 1.!oulton
kanCb planning now under way and acttvttln In the communl!Jes of El
land lD Or1111• County ii m·private fournillllon-ts. · · holding.. Tbe bulk of thiJ is in The nezt Avo years will be critical
eoutbem Oranie County and is yet ones in the field (I( e&lbetics, he ind!-
"
"
<
•.
Surprise Offspring
Maureen McRorie'• pet donkey, Flower Power, gave the lS.year-old
Santa Ana Height. resident quite a start the other day when she
produced an offspring. 11We didn't even know she was expecting "
said Miss McRorie, who has named new arrival 0 Sir Prise." '
Pollution Experts Claim
Smog Leaving Southland
Smoe -along with citrus groves
and bean fields -is leaving tbe
Southland.
Air now thickened by pollutants will
be noticeably cleaner in another fiv e
years, a panel of ex perts predicted
Thursday at the University o f
California, Riverside.
"By 1974 or 1975, we will still be
having s001e unpleasant days in the
Los Angeles Basin," saJd Dr. A. J.
Haagen-SmJth , chairman of th e
' DAILY PILOT
ORANGE COAST ,Ut Ll$HIHG CO'.IPAHY
R11b1 r+ N. Wetd
Pmld'ft>I '"" Publl..,,.,..
J1cli R. Curl t'f
Vice Prn ldnll 11'11 Gmt<'t l Mt r.1ftr
n ...... , l(,,..;1
EdilOr
Thomet A. Murph;.,,
Mtnttlnf EGI~
"•wl Nitt•n Allll9ttl1lllil Ol•1dor
C•lf• M ... Otflc•
llO Witt lt'f S1r11I
M1!1in9 Addr1u: P.O . l oJ I 560 91626
OtW Offlcft
N1-I tfKl'I; Jl ll W .. t a.ltJ!HI Boull!Vt'11
Lt tuM CHCll! 122 1"11.-..t Avt"'"
Hunlln91Dfl 8-11: .109 Jlh SIO' .. I
.,
" I
California Air Resources Board.
A UC Irvine m~cal research~,
however, gave added evidence that
smog is deadly in prclonged doses,
noting that during severe sieges the
death rate has risen.
Dr. Stanley R0kaw said smog is
particularly dangerous to infanl!, peo·
pie over 65, and anyone who has a
respiratory or oardiovascular system
disease.
"There is a system of documented
mortality sta&tics dating back to the
1800s showing there have been ex-
cessive deaths during times of smoggy
episodes," Rokaw told air pollution ex·
perts.
Rokaw noted that mpre thar. 2,IXX>
deaths above tile statistical average
occurred in London during a five-day
smog siege Je..years ago.
Studies also now show changes In
the respiratory system functions
amoog persons llVing 1n smeggy areas
such as Los Angeles and, increasingly,
Orange CoUnty.
These changes increase the suscep-
Ubility to disease and premature
death, be said.
Scientists cannot yet single out in·
dividual pollutants aa disease-causing
factors, sald Rokaw's <:<>Ueague, Dr.
Haagen.smith, but they undeniably
cootrlbvte lo Ulneos.
The picture, however, la a:ettina: bet-ter. ·
,,,..._ .... J
CLEAVER •••
o i.oni.r .,., tho olllclsl C<lllle11lon of
whJte racist America. Ht 1al4. It was
no big news W him or h1a felfow Nt·
groes. "We know," be said, "the ques -
tion fs wbat to do about ltf "
Later, be gave his answer. "Blaclc
power for black people. Faculty pow-
er for the faculty. Student Power for
th• studenu. And barbecue for tile
pigs."
'!'be study la beinC pald for, half by
the CC?Unty and half by property own-
en ahd homeowner assoclationa, be
Green Ber et
'Beehives'
.. .
Halt Attack
&AIGON (UPO. :._ U.~. Groen Bents
and South Vietnamese paratroops
leveled dart-tilled anille<y and bWllA!d
apart Communiat attacks today m two
outpcsl! · guarding the Cambodian
border northwest of saigon, klD.lng 2.82
guerrillu against light losses of their
owe.
The two attacks about 25 miles
apart were ~e lat.eat in a 1erie1
against Dordei outposts on guenilla
routes toward Saigon, where anti-in·
filtration patrols are on their toughest
alert since May.
Pre-r ... J
RACISM •.. .
J'aclat view that the wbite man js
superior, that he Ia the IUMdlan angel
The' American power structure is
ttlcldn( UJ', he Wd, but it doesn't
know Jt. "You have been in the saddle
so long you think w~ YOll are dol.Dg is
iational. :Your..rigb.t w1Dt1ei:tremlml ls • • a reaction to breat1up·pd decay."
Father ·. BODpane, expelled from
Guatemala -es .-reVolutionary, said
U.S. rulers claim lo kliow what ii best
for the bl&ct slave at home and the In-
dian in Latin America.
"Th'e indigtnous ·people out of the
!Oil -just like worms out of the soil
-they know what is be st for third
'Wt!rld countries," he said.
He claimed the U.S. mltitary-ln-
dustrial complex Is a monster that
needs warm bodies and Crom It it
makes warm hamburger. "It has to be
stopped. It has to be attacked," he
said.
North VJetnamese 'forces slammed
1,000 mortar #and rocket rounds into
the U.S. Special Forces camp at ThJen
Ngon as a prelude to charging with tea eas into the outpost's barbed
wire.
DO.IT-YOURSELF SAFETY PROGRAM
But Airlines Aren't Buying It
He said Cuba, which he left just Sun-
day, is a country a-t war against
racism. "There are no marginal peo-
ple, no unemployment Jn Cuba," he
said. "They don't say to the dark-skin·
ned man, 'We don't need you.' They
say, 'We need every hand.'"
UPI correspondent Kate Webb said
the American and South Vietnamese
defenders leveled their howitzers and
fired "beehive rounds'' -filled with
tiny darta similar to huge carpet tacks
-into the Communist ranks.
Chute the Works In the long run the peasants wUl
overcome the white mlJI, he said, and
"we will see the beauty of more and
more mixed blood -the international
race." A irlines S purn 'Sa fety Precaution' The conclave participants were in·
vited by the student Orientation Week
Committee and paid an honorarium of
'400 each. At daybreak, the defenders found 33
bodies on the barbed wire md 103
out.Ide.
"It was a real mess," said one of the
GrHn Berets. ''Bl~ of people were
hanging all over the wire."
The "Beehives" cut apart the 400-
man North Vietoatnese unit which ap.
parenUy based itt hope on cr:lppling
the base with the 1,000-round shelling.
No Aniericans were killed. '~'·"'~
Air Cal J ets
Into the Black
POITSTOWN. Pa. tUPI ) - A
1 eporter who tried to purchase an
airlin e ticket at Philadelphia In-
ternational Alrport while wearing a
parachute found his do-it-yourself
safety precaution spurned.
G.ary Ca.tt, 22, of the Pottstown
Mercury, was assigned by Editor
Robert J. Boyle to see iI ,the airlines
ww ld al!ow a passenger to wear his
own parachute on a fll ght.
Catt walked into the airport's main
building with a parachute strapped on
ltis back. A security guard with a
walkie-talkJe followed him up the
escalator to the main lobby but ap·
parently thought he was just "some
kind oi J nlJt," Catt said.
Afr Calilornia has moved into the The reJ)Orter litood in ·line at the
bl'"fo rtlie-first time in the airline's United Airlines counter and felt the
18-montb .fl\listence. 11tares of several Army paratroopers
President Carl Bens :oter t 0 1 d in the next line. One finally asked
'I'hursday'tai\nual s t 0 c 1· b 0 1 d e r 5 where he was headed and Catt replied
n1eeting tbt:l iir line carried more than New York.
70,000 passengers in Auguest and "You planning to get o~t somew.here
showed a profit of $38,500. betw~n here and there? the straight·
Tbe OO:mpany had pr e vi o u s l y • faced paratrooper asked ,
Catt trled to ignore him along with
th e stares of numerous passersby and
a porter who backed up his handtruck
15 feet (or a second look ..
\Vhen he reached the ('OWlter , a
woman clerk asked him about the ob·
ject on his back. "It's a parachute,"
he replied, "it's my first trip and I'm
scue<t."
From Page J
COPTER ...
in the main rotor spindle and LA.A has
Th e girl called out the manager who r epl£'Ced that component in its four re·
!old Catt !lo· couldn't get a ticket malnlng hellcopters .
unless he removed the parachute. The NTSB is expectc:J to hofrl
Further argum ent didn't help and Catt another public hearing into Aug. 1~
decided to try American Airlines. crash Mthln the next few months .
But ag<i.ln he was conlronted by the Both helicopters Crashed within the
manager. This one told him his same 21f.i mile radius, Jeadnig to
parachute might "create panic ' ' speculation of all kinds, including the
among other passengers and r esult "jn possJbWty of sabotage or a sniper on
·a lack of faith in the reliability and the ground. •
safety of our .alrlJnes." No evidence of In.flight expl<>sion
Catt wouldn't check his parachute was found, however , nor indications of
with his baggage and he didn 't get a possible ground fire .
ticket. \Vitnesses to the May 2'l crash in
I-le y.·alked out Of the building, but Paramount said during the NTSB
not tefore hearing a man ask another, he<lring that they heard a change in
'·Are they giving parachutes to all the the sound of the turbojet powered S61L
passengers?" change, causing them to look up.
~~~~~~~~~-"-'-~--=-~~~~=--~ reported net loss of $956,620 for the
fiscal year ended June 30 on revenue
o{ 18.6 mlllion, Benscoter predicted
the O&n'ler would tranaport more than
ooe millioa passenE:ers for the current fiacil yoojr,
Sf»ck in the airline closed at 17'19
Thursday night, and edged up lo l7o/•
this morning.
COMPATICA
Stockholders .approved a proposal t'o
increai;e authorized shares from one
mllllon to thre'e million. A company
s)iokesman said the move will allow
greater Ciexibillty ir. future expansion plans.
Sons' Funeral
F atal to Mo ther
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A mother
collap\td Wind died at. the funeral of
her two ions Tburedi.y .... AU died of
heart attack&.
The sequeoCe of deaths began last
Saturday 'When Peter Tritz, 38 suf·
fered a heart attack at bis home and
died on the way to .ti hospital. His
brother, Geor~e. 451 went to the
hospital to console Peter's widow.
There be collapSed and died.
ThursdaY,, "{ter attend.Ing a double
Mass for tier sons, Mrs. Anna Tritz,
69, a widow. was driven to the
cemetery. She collapsed and died as
the caske ts were being taken from a
hearse. '
Hippie ·Bandit
Flees With $300
A hippil>style bandit held up a Santa
Ana liquor 1ton 'llllD"ldoy nip! and
rot tway with '300.
C!ert Louis A. Kovacl<s of Newport
Beach to'ld Pollce a man about l6 with
d\aggy, dirty blond hair and a
handlebar moustache walked into the
Kettle Liquors, 1314 N. Grand Ave.,
and l>randlllhed a cbrome pioled phlol.
Hr for<edl<ovaclu lo lie on tl>e Door
artd took the money from tbt calb
rert-. Oedng on foot, police said.
I
1l0
1:~ 1-·..,'
Comp•tic• i1 for iht young who w•nt to inv•sf in Cont•mporary Furniture th•t
coUtcfion for livin9 room, dlnln9 room end b•clroom. will •ndu re. A compl•f•
DU.LI AS FOR: HINRIDON -DRDIL -HOITAH
to DAYS NO INTIUST-TUMS AVAILAILI ON APPROVID CUDIT
NIWl'ORT I EACH
1727 W°"clllf Dr., 642~0
ONI NllAY 'nL t
IN111UOU
P.-i ... 1 lntorl., .,.. .... ,.
Anlle•l-11141110
LAGUNA l lACH
145 Herth Cout Hwy,
CHIN NIDAY "hL t ..... , ........... °'-" c...., .... l!tJ ~~ .. .
~ I
'
Meet-Prep Gridders
Two Pirate 1 Diahlos Face VC
' In. Football War.
' ._. ... _ ....... """' .... • lOa RAYMOND
... 91: ... L. ........
Orange COfit c o 11 e g t
water polo coach Jack
Fullerton bM OllOUlh lood
pl1yer1 to fitld tw9 teams
so that's exacUy what he's
gctng to do Saturday when
Area Prep
X-Countr y
' Summaries ·-................. If..,.,. klll!W ..
1. J1v M(~ !Htl, 10:33.1 2. V . M1rllnu (118), 11;5' l. ll:ld< '!•r«
(NM), ll:il 4. •1tk' M(.Clu,. fMal.
fl <l2 J. M. °""9Y_,, CHS), TI :ll 4.
Stelle Arw.N !Ha\, llt21 I. 0.VV
Jtff9 (NHJ, 1\;ll I. ' M'Gw <H•>· 11 :2• t. IC.Win 111t!W 1NH1. 11:!5
11. Chrl1 a11111tY tNHj, fl:ll II. ill.
EloPllll (H8), Ii :ll 11. Sit~ OIYMl'Of'I IHI), 11 ::U 13. Jol\ll Fltkllll' OIH),
11:4111 14. U.w O.Llntr UOO. IL;a
ll-.n ...... 9Mc11 19, N-1 Harlltf
" TOP Fiii!'""": 1. .. rtld! IHI ),
H:SJ.I 2. JI"' A.tilt (MM). 11.jJt
"Nt• Ht-' Hlrt>o<" t .... llm111
record.
..., .....
l 1t11nt l .. dl •J. I r .. H
TOP lltUM Flnlther: 1. Tim
11:oll
·. a.,. --.V.MCO •lsMI 111or. U->0,000 tr1111m\1~t111 probl1m1.
' "
YOlll t it ''" towln,. 1 ''" ro•d· d>Kk, '••t, •fficllftt "'""k_,,,ost
timM "' )lll l -d1y ........ w•tll
M MCO, )'Our tr1nsml11ion c1n be
Pf'OIKtl'd by w1r ~ AAMCO Ctn·
l•l<S co1st to COii!.
--
. ,
JMEW_W•M z umze•••t .az a 11 ill
liv1ry m!nUI• I nd I Mlf, IOml·
-prov•• .•.
,.
~:: Swim Club Awards Set Monday OVFI" fO AAr. CL s-iccs
: t. , \ r... · .. •'.
:: Th< Newport Beocfi iiWilJl
_'.Club will hold tw'~ll
Alamiros Hilb SOMol and Al• ---------...c.:=======:.zc::
Irwin, Athletic Director or jlll!' I!!!' !l!Jl ll!S!!Til!lll i!!"!!:"~··~•!!!•.!!·""'!!!!!.!'!!"!!..,!!!"!!!"!!!m!!."'!!!:l·~i!:'~·.,~,11:1"~"1.!!"!!"::!"'~"~i.!ln!io!!•i!!•~1{1
· : sport. a-.! boilQll<i'. Mon·
: day at the Newport Beach
.. TenrY1 Club at g p.m.
UC Irvine. ( ,.w· /,
Re6ervaiooa can be made Smart g1·r1. by callln& Newport Beach
• Guest speakers are Flip
~~Darr. coach cf Rancho
Te:nnis Club aqu.Btic direclor $
Larry Dellota at 644-0050 ma rt g uv
before 6 p.m. today. J 1
Smart buy. •·
'
Have the NIGHTIME
of Your Life!
.:: NIGHT RACING 1tarts
tue1day at beautiful
LOS ALAMITOS
SUNNY
BROOK
$399
SUNNY FIRST OF NINI RAC!•
MON.-SAT. AT 7 :'41 7.;.ke ~!'le sio of its BROOK
marvelous mildness ~F;:;::::;:;;~a
'
TUrf Ternoa Dlnlnf •••
T1bl• ltntA'atiMt C11f:
_(211) .Ul-ot:la (714) 527-4471
and you'll agree:
there's no 6moother
whiskey than
Sunny Brook
at any price.
•• ----------
the Buclf 1 nch. thelr U168
season by laying host to
!ht &nnutl 'Pir•t< lllYlta·
tion1J.
Ttie lllix-1 t tou.rna.rnent,
leatUJina: t ·two Orance
COr&tt tearYls tone wtttr San-
ta Montaa ty <.1• and
Coll11e of t Sequoias, will
i:et u_nderwa al 9 a.m.
FuUerton dn 't re a 11 y
want to di'9ld hJs squad, but
he wa1 fore to when Los
Harbor Co 1e dropped
out of the to rrnament and
he couldn 't find a Iaat-
mll\l.lle ~la ment.
Top. match 1" th• in·
vitational fig to tile 9
01clock ~ener tween th•
OCC Redi and uoias and
the 4 p.~ f 'le, again
featuring the .R ancJ "Sl"l·
tl8 Menica,
Th< OCC Red< II ~ tti;
stronger ~ the t Pirate teams and wiU 'be by ltt-
terman Dan OU' , who
was Orang• Coatit' •lu<tlnc
sc."Or8f l11t .eason.
Tourney &chedule'
• Ettra Ut~ah Tufsyn
rubber 1dd1.fxtra
, 1tr1n1th to tJi• body
1 and •l'trl 111tlt1 to
the: tread ·
• }.tnr1 lh1n 1,000
1nppi11J 11dg•t 1lv• lr~r.lion tn 1tlrt
tu.ctr -11op •J11h~.r
rain or 1hln1
• Mod"·rn wrap·around.
tread provid11 bett•r
1te1rin11 control ill
!ht IUT/ll
·' . -
Cee Grid ' .
Summaries
oafiEAll
"' l l1tkw1ll f 1f, 11. Tax
Ptt~1111 .. ,. tlllt "" Mtll .... ,. ....
rt th1t fl1ht1 ••ult•,,,
1nd 1ld tir1
$2.35
.36
$2.56 .. 2.~
$2.!l-
20
l.50xl3 =· ::S·&\:
45
Whltowallt only·· -
BUY NOW
Pr;eeutort 1t $3295
11 1 th1 tr11d for lo111•r lift koipro v~• ro1d 1r1, 7.00 1 li Mitt ...
on our
Easy Pay Plan!
Polr ••l•r Cord 111~1. t~.•::_•r.r.!:·.,.
Plbn1l11• Cord B1lt Pllff, l lrll lft
• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SER ING ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
LANE TIRE CO. 1596 NIWPOltT
Ph. s.4t.'2'3 COST A MllA YOUNG
YOUNG LANE TIRE CO. 412 OCIAN AVINUE
I'll. ff4-U66 LAGUNA
ROBINS FORD 2060 HAltlOR ILVO. •
Ph. 642-4010 COSTA MISA THEODOR
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-------,· a 4: 5 u : a •• a 2 311 ¥24¥42& !$ ''"' ee• a* . . ~ 0 • s u a s a .::e::1
__ _DAD.Y P,ILOT EDITOIUill PAGE
Sonie I right Signals
t:erialnly some revmall are In on!.,. when tt mes
to support of public education io lhll commWllty. U esa
Ille volMI really begin to ll'8'1' U>e 1eri0111neU of
ochool1' d-rate !in&ncial plipt, our cl!ildND -lni'I'
ldnderogarten tllrougb colltge -ar. ln for a lower·grad~
oducattoo.
But, poilyannalah as It may be, lilOfe are some '
brl~ aignals.
For one thing, although the Orange Coast C0Ue1e
~ issue l05t two weeks aao, 80 overwhelming ma-
jor!zy Cl( OOC Dicllict voteP, tavoro<I the issue. The
bonch required .two yes votes for every no vote and
fa11ed b1 the slimmest ol ll\Oflins, 11 votes, and 1 re-
count is in procesa. 'Ibat hardly demonstrates ah oVer-
whelmi.Dg repudiation of OCC by ta aupporters and
tupayvs.
AfteT all, 66.65 (instead of 66.&7) percent did say
they were willine to dig down deeper for their junior
college system.
Anqther bright note comes from Costa Mesa's neigh·
bor', the dty of Newport Beacll. In last Octobtr's New·
port-Mesa Umtied School Dictrict l>ond ¢euat, th•
apathy, the non·support of Iha issue~8 N'ewport'•
official city, goverrunebl ,,,., ·..,,,,,. · ble. While
Costa J!ilesa's city council~ ofllcijill~ lhat,good ed.
ucation ~&an essent1aJ part cif'a good.cor&iu,n11y, New ..
port's council was silent to the point 1d wffhdrawal
and at least two Newport councilmen were involved in
negative action against the issue.
That's changed now. ~ Newport council has a
liaison committee with the .school district (as does
Costa Mesa) and has by fonnal vote declared that il
will not Push a financing program for iU new civic cen·
ter until a1'teT the ·ICftool district's need& hale~ re.
aolved. ... ~ •
As Newport Mayor Doreen Marshall put It, "We re.-
I
~; Characteristics
By NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
~ This it the aeason when Americana
, l au :ages, from 'all walks ot lUe, gb
~-·;fJ over comP«:titive sporta. ~very
... <..urday, football steclA from coa:stto
, . <..>3st overflow with wildl,y cheering
·•i:fans while countless million1 watcb on
•\ television as a handful ol robust,
athletically U:Uled and 1uperbly train-bodily complaintJ and the severity of
·ed. young men tl:gbt for their alma e"!11otional reactions to t h e stress of
· mater -and individual recognitio~ high-level competition, he Hats many
, Next.,.... pioru the bo~ th• pooiUve character traJu In the
•\ World Sertel ... tbe time wha :national personalities ol most teen-agers and
., mas1 byneria re.1gm tupreme. And on young adults wtw participate acUvi!:ly
I jiOctober 12. JrOViW the striki.ag in competitive spcrt.s.
, tu dents .and ~ Mexican glMFnment 't. :
} .·~ esolve their grievances, our eyes and 000.VIE REPORTED that IO.ye1r-
1'/t ears will be tuned in to ~QJympic _pld boys, when accepted by ~ na·
. ·1tGames iD Mexico Cl&J.· \.' ( ~lionally renowned Sect.a Clara Swim t·..,, ~ ~ "'€tub, tend to be cool, reserved and in·
''. MANY EDUCATORS decry the trovuted; tbo6e who remained in this
emphasis pn spectator sports in ou'r e1.tremely competitive training pro-
collegt6 and high. scboob. They·"Con· gram until their 14th birthday showed
tend that the atbleilc tail is wagging ireater emotional 1tabWty and biJher
the academic dog and apgg~ takina: ' ~cience development, along with
.away the dollar lip by e!imi.nating mcreued self.assertion and in-
' }>aJd adrnisslof'll, paid coecbea, travel dependence. The same holds true for
· expenses, athletic scholarahipa and fhe · manrl youni1ter1 wbo participate in
+dependence of "other" sports oL foot-~ W.-Jfer football and Little Leaeue
br 11 and basketball. baseball. $o~, these obfector1 repr:~eot op· '* · S~s(ut:atiiJ~i &re achit9'mint-
Jv .• a_ small _nilborlty. For most ori!?.M'iand ~&In great swtiihttlion
/I ~er~cans belie~~ that our way of from their striving to succeed. Like o. ,,. t ~; er.1ng ~,competitive sports li:1 boys of .. Simpson in last &aturday's U.S.C.·
E d_ girls 1n our elementary .. J1;1mor a~d Minnesota thriller. a great athlete i~
t:n1or ~igh schools pays_ div1~nds m at his very be1t when the odd11 11,
furlherl!lg respondble citizenship. And slightly .against him.
that b1gh-level competition during ·
adolesc;en~e and young adulthood con· DB. OGILVIE ,IS convinced that
triQutes positively to character forma-athle\es wbo retain their motivation
tio.b. for Competition sbow. llbe.se personi.Uty
trait.I: ambition, or a: an 11 a tJ on .
deference1 domin.anct!. endurde and
aggreaa:ion. Molt of them are Hlf-con-
trollod, 10lf.....ildenl tough-minded
trustworthy, intelligent, and ex -
troverted.
IN mE RECENT 1968 Olyippics
issues of tm Journal of the A-:M.A.
Dr. Bruce O&ilvie cf San Jose. State
College Counseling C e n t e r sum-
m ariz.ed his years of experience wilb
high school, college. Olympic and Pro-
fe:~i~nal athletes from every 'com·
peUtive sport who had been referred
becaus~ of J>6ychological problems.
Although Dr. Ogilvie has some
1~oubl.i regarding the value of athletic
"mpetition. because of the variety or
Whether good or bad. com~tftiv1
sporU are here to 1tay. Cert.llnly, ou
livet would be less colorful without
them .and without the athletes whn
make them po$1ible -especlall,
th0$e outst~ng ones wtio beconi
our national heroes.
'Grow Up and Go Home ~
"AllY.iy s WI'! hear the plaintive try of
,.,.. f.P.en -ager: Whal can we do 7
'lhtre can we go? The answer is:
Go Home!
"Hang the storm windows. paint the
'~oodwo'"k . rake the leaves. mow the
lawn, shovel the wallc:, wash the car,
Je.arn to cook. scrub the floors. repair
the sink .. build a bo~t. get a job. Help
the minister or priest or rabbi, thf!
Red Cross, the Salvation Aumy. Vi5it
,----89 G-.,,e ---.
Dear George :
Help me, please~ J'm goin&
with this girl and I like her a lot
bul she has a pel dog and every
time I ki11 her she insi sts I also
kiss the dog . Wbat can I do ? I'll
bf. your [T)end for ure. w.s.
Dear W.S.:
Wei!. one thine you can dQ ia
let me knoW the next time you
three 10 to a drive-in movie -I
want to watch. (I've beard of~
etenial trlanele but th11 ii rldiculow.>
CONFIDENTIAL TO MAYOR
DALEY OF CJnCAGO : It 1oea:
"&llob """ ...... ..., breU my bones, but word.I will never
hurt me."
the sick. Assist the poor. Study your
lessons. And when you ue throllgh -
and not too tired -read a book.
"Your parenls do not owe you en.
tertainment. Your city or village does
not °"".~ JOU recreational facilities,
The world' does not awe you a llving.
You O)Ve the world something. You
owe it )'Cur time and energy and your
talents, 10 that no.one will be at war In
povl'!rty or sick or lonely again.
"IN PLAIN SIMPLE words : Grow
up ! Q11it beln1 a crybaby. Get out nf
your dream world and develop a
backbone. not a wishbone, and •tart
actinc like .a man " lady.
, "You'r• JU~ to be mature
enoulit\i to accept some ot tbe
re1J)Ol11ib1JIC1t11 your·parent1 have car-
ried for years. 'Ibey have uraed. tier·
eed, excuaed, tolerated and denied
t:Mmaelve1 nMded comforU 10 th.at
you couJd have every btnefiL Yoo
have no rlaht to ~xpect them to bow to
every whtm and fanty.
fftn Htaven's name, CROW UP
AND GO HOME~"
II>' hclP ~p 8. GUll•m
J•vtalle Coatt
Deaver, Co'9rad.
I
cocnla that the u.ailY'• need to eliminate its
•e~ cla.ssroom &e 1J even more critical thao
OW' ll'Owing space d encies at City Hall."
Jt la high time we eome of these hopeful signs
on tbe bort.zon. More Of our elementary school children
are &olng 011 doubl' lflsi.on next year. More of our high
school student.a are t6lng to suffer from crowded class·
rooms and unavailable classes and applicants to Orange
Coast Colle&• and Golden West College are simply
goin1 to be turnect away because of lack of room.
A Scor~ of the Finest
It is not 1989 Jet, but one very important part of
Costa Mesa's caleadat;. for 'next year should be chalked
up. During the neit few weeks, employes of businesses
and industries in Costa Mua will be asked if they wish
to be contributors to the United Fund for 1»69.
... Employe contributions are the single biggest source
Of>tncome to the ·UF and its 3> wort:hwh.ile agenciu. The
•plcye program allows virtually painless dedttcijons
.tO.be spread over an entire year as a citizen's c:ori.trib1.i·
tion to his comrnunity'1 needs.
Remember, when you decide on your fair share,
you are suppci~g a .score of the finest agencies in the
world -agenetes that build better citizens that com·
bat juvenile dtl~uency , that help the lam~. the halt,
the needy, an4 they an do It without government sub-
sidy.
Giving tnrou1h your United Fund makes you a
PMt.r'!er in ~ta~ Mesa's work for stronger families,
happier yourirsters and better health.
Sign up •hen your tum comes.
c
B,onn Leaders They Stopped t'!_ Help Him
.· .
Alarmed Over
Russ Threat
WASijINGTON -West German
Chahcfillor Kurt Georg · KieJlnger has
quietly empl oyed a bit of personal
dfplomal-y tc crystallize U.S. support
for his menaced government Jn the
wake of Russia's march I n to Cz~bo.slcvakia. ~
Kiesinger sent a close foreign policy
advlsor1 Kurt Birrenbach, on a quick
trip here aa his personal represen·
tative. llrrenbach made the rounds or
influential congressional offlces to
undersoore the West 0 e r m a n
govern t'1 grave C\)lcern.
' B' ' ach is 1 rtlember of the
Dund g who has loiig been a sup-
portal of NATO .and an advocate or
EuroHan cooperation. He is also a
finandal trustee anl counselor for the ~e~l Thr11en industrial interests.
. In i l\rwttO ',c,"l!"essional leaders ~en n:pretsed the fears of the
West German government caused by
the ,v4sion Qf Czechoslovakia by
Ruasi and its Warsaw Pact allies. He
stres d the positioning of troops on
the ·West German border.
' HI~ QUicK .VlSJT here colncided With 1 rouiid. of pfopagawta and born·
but iev·e~ by' Moscow at the BoM gover~eilL At the same time the
Kremµn was assuring odier Middle
Eutqjiean nations, notably Rumania
and llu101l1via, that it planned NO in·
vasioil of their territory.
A3 i •' c~w.ence. U.S. officials w~rP ,led to believe, formaJJr and by
Birrqbach's Informal mission. that
West 'Germany was the nation most
enda~efe4 .. by the move • i n to
r:r:ecMa1lovakia. That 1~ to warnings.
from · Uae Unlted States, Britain and
Frantt, ihat any move into West
German territory would bring "im·
medi!t. Allied response."
Now tbat Clech leaders are saying
that a &ovtet pull-back is in prospect.
U.S. (llt.lrisl1 are keenly interested in
the lltiat o/ "the withdrawal of oC-
cupatqa _ foree1 and the location of
units ~«;h ren)ain in Czechoslovakia.
e1J..r.MR""Cll'S TALKS here were
WflU ·am;;~ Hl1 ' visit came when the
Sena~ ·and House were preparing to
com!l1ete action ori th e ad.
minit1tlnn'1 m billion ~efense ap-
prop tion bill. Some influential
sena . t h ad been questioning CIA
diredor ·Richard Helms, Defense
Secr..pry Clark Clifford and Gen.
Earltl. G, Wheeler. ctlairman of the
Joint lQlieft Of Staff, on international
deveJOpmeritJ.
~lawmakers were told. In closed-
door 1tlmony, that eight divi sions of
Wars w pact troops -more than eo, fighting men plus suppor t un its
-w poslUoned in Ciechos lo..,aJtia
in Pilsen·Cheb area whert they
poted 1 threat to Weit Germany's
-border. The ttnators wtre 1 tpa.rtd to five-• sympathetic to a personal spokesman air·
i I tna;er'" apprehensions.
D11~lte their symp.theUc attitude,
howtW:r, coqres1icnal leaders, like
otbtr U.S. offlciala, were finally in·
clined to like a 1omewhat less .alarm·
eel view of an admittelly ahtrmlng
situation. They reached a tentati..,e
conchalon that Ru1ria was not
1erlou1ly con1l4t}'in. • move into
West Gtrm1n1. '!-
By Robert S. Alie•
and Jou A. Gohl1mlt.k
r
He Salutes the 'Nice Kids'
To the Editor:
To tha.nk the youn,g people wh<l' go on
be i n g the "nice kids" th e y ha..,e
always been but who don 't get the
publicity reserved for the dissenters.
the rabble rousers. the dirty lazy lot
revel in. The "nice kids" don't need it
(isn't e\eryone nice. sort of things ?).
Last Monday afternoon at Beach
and Main in Huntington Beach. the
"lo.aner" car l was driving went dead.
, Hundreds or people passed, a little in·
d.ignant that my borrowed car had a
dead battery and they had to make a
slight detour around me. No telephone
in sight. and traffic on all sides of me
made crossing difficult .
IT WASN'T Tl-IF. m o t o r c y c I P
policernan. who couldn't help but see
~·e stopped up traffic, who came to
my assistance. It wasn'I t h e
policeman in a police car. who
bothered to find out what the trouble
was. but a "nice kid" who DID stop
and who DID do something about it.
While he was jockeyin} into the posi·
tion 0£ alerting the nearest gas 'Station,
aoother car stopped .JiY.iUl three "nice
kids" on their way to the Oei·ch on a
100 degree afternooon, who bothered
to take time to guide my car into the
gas station.
These are just four "nice kids'· -
CLEAN "nice kids" "'ith clothes tn
match. with masculine haircuts \c ;i v-
ing no doubt in my mind who they are
and -·htre they came from.
T salute them -whoever. or
wherever, they are! (I like nice kids).
A. K. nETSCll
One Snd Conclusion
To the Editor:
Suspicion and bias often a r r
generated by fear and -or lack or
underStanding and often result in
stereotyµing of individuals and issues.
Two items appearing in the Sept. 18
iss ue 01 the DAILY PILOT, wh ile
seemingly unrelated, could come
under the stereoty pin g mentioned
above.
One item was the letter £rom a
mother whose 16-year-old son, while
taking a political poll , wa s subjected
to suspicion and indignity, seemingly
without cause. The inference here is
that because he is a youth, some peo-
ple feel he is not deserving of the
same initial trust and right to basic
human dignities that we aduJt:s expect.
THE OTil.ER ITEM was the
headline, ·· J C Bonds Lose by 12
Votes''. Surely it was not the alight tax
increase that defeated the needed
bond issue -an increase in taxes of SS
per year on a S'l0.000 house is
minimal. Also one would have to wear
blinders not to realize the educational
and cultural bene£jts youth and adults
alik gain from our junior colleges. It
uld be interesting to learn why
some ... oted against thi1 bond issue.
and why such a large mrmber did not
bother t.e vote at all -when th e right
to vote i~ one of our natio n'!i cherished
privileges .
ONE SAD conclusion that could be
drawn from both of these Items is that
our tnlightened society contains u:io
r. -·Y wt\<) do not attempt to reason a
situation or issue through, but wbo fa]]
back on suspicion or indifference.
SHIRLEY ISERMAN
Eld..Wfe Cle•t>er
To the Editor:
Eldridge Cleaver 11 an elcque:nt
young speaktt and writer, the author
o! a recently published boot, ''Sdlll on
Ice," a ve.ry moving .account of bit
ody11ey in America u • Black man.
' ., . '
Le11tr• '""" ~-rs ,,.. -· NOnn•llJ wnrera
should """""' Their ......:. .... In :1111 ••o:b or IH1.
Tl>!! ,;gtit le~ .. lette ... lo flt MIKI ... 1llml<!1tt
libel II ratr~ed. All lelte,.. m\l!lt lndlldf ll<:iflllu,.. Ind m1Hl1111 addrtit, buT .,.... Wiii -., wlllll\e .. ...,,_,_
' and although not yet 35. the presiden-
tial candidate of the Peace and
Freedom Party. which won a place on
the California ballot.
Although some people would like to
silence this remarkable young man, I
for one· am glad that wi: live in a
democracy which cherishes freedom
of speech. I urge that you edjtnrially
defend his ri ght tci state ~ case.
MRS. RU'l'H SHAPIN
Blow ror f'reedo1n
To t:1e Editor:
The Newport Beach City Council
struck a. miaill_ ~~ powerful blow f~
freedom of the individual in. r'-jecting
the anti-hitchhlk_ing ofdinance.
The. eotm(!il. is particularly to be
ro1nmended because there w'as no con-
certed opposition to the ordinance due
to the type of person against,-~1om the
•1di n:lnce was directed : in the main,
young people and certainly the lesi; af.
fh1 cnt types.
I am a g a i n st hitchhiking,
personally. But I am also dead set
against the steady increase tn the
number of laws a person has to con-
tend witQ. to merely get tbrough the
day in living 1n these United States.
I am proud today to be a
businessman in the commwrity the
Newport Beach City CouncU governs.
GEORGE L. PERLIN
Bike Clhair f'acu
To the Editor :
ln Wednesday's Mailbox column
relating to bike clinics on the same
day. the head "A Case of Mlsin·
formation., was correct but the editor
should have OOde<l that it applied to
his comments, and rlQ( those of Sam
Chiodo submitting the letter. A phone
call to Westcliff Plaza conducting the
event in question would have provided
the racU:.
Neither the Newport Beach Police
Department nor the Cost.a Mesa Police
Department schedule<! the bike safety
clinic conduct~ at w,stcliff Plaza
Saturday, September 7. This wu done
by our merchants' associalion in an
effort to assist in promoting bike safe·
ty and licensing. Br coincidence, a
Costa Mesa shoPP1ng center also
scheduled a bike safety clinic the
same day. This certainly is no pro-
blem -the more bike Wety pro·
moted , the better.
WESTCLIFF PLAZA, located on
Irvine Avenue in Newport Beach, i.!i
just across the street from Costa
Mesa. Personal visi~ were made to
both department!. Nf-wport Beach
Police De partment assigned Officer
Laughlin in charge Of Bike Safety lo
conduct the saff!ty clinic and a meter
mrud to issue Ucense1 at the clinic.
Costa Mesa Pollet Department
"81'<1 that three ollktn bod U.ady
beep Hsigned lo ta.a Golla J1ou
Quotes
LHI .. lliltlatr, SM Diec•,•• "PM!' People'• Campllp"-"In my sr-mr
)'NII my lamllJ -·~ (but) we didn't 1 t em tolDd our
'rights' that ai. ..,... llflluent lhould
contribute iD .... llill..'1
clinic aad that none were available
for Westcliff Plaza. In further discus·
sion, however. the imprelsion was
gained that, since the Weslcliff Plaza
merchants were paying the
children's bike Ji c ens e fees, it
would be satisfact,ory if we simply
took the names and addresses of the
Costa Mesa cb.ildren applying at our
Westclifi clinic and forwarded the
names and our license fee payments to
the Costa Mesa Police Department.
Such a list was in fact delivered to the
Costa Mesa police station ttle af-
ternoon of the clinic.
AT NO Tll\lE were any fees col·
lected at Westcliff Plaza by any
Newport Beach officer or anyone else.
The entire program costing over $700
\\'as fUDded by the Merchants Associa·
tion. with .the largest expenditure
b~ing the full ps.ge ad in the Daily
P1lot, plus two rree bikes and licenses
for all unlicensed bikea , , . absolutely
free. seventy licenses at ii.so each
were provided Newport B e a c h
children -35 at 50 ceota each were
listed for Cort.a Mesa children.
When the Cod.a Meaa children were
unsuccessful in obtaining a license on
their appearance at the C.M.P.O .. a
letter of apology for th I'! in·
conver.ience, plus the 50 cents for a
License fee, was mailed by the
Westctiff Plaza merchants, to each
Costa Mesa child involved. If it had
been Ulought that pro p e r ar·
rangements had not been made. it
would have been a simple matter to
give Ule children ttle money for t&
license at tbe clinic. But we w&r1ted
the children to use the money for bi.ke
licenses with our compliments -not
perhaps, candy or ice cream. '
WE RA~ NO quarrel with anyone,
only a desire to help promote bike
safety among the youngsters in hopes
that it might pre..,cnt injuries or more
8erious consequences.
Officer Laughlin and Meter Maid
Sandy Turner did .an admirable job of
indoctrinating 114 children, as I am
sure the Costa Mes~ officers did with
those they proceS6ed al the Costa
Mesa shoppins center.
. We plan to conduct another program
111 January, 1969, and again in addition
tc offering safety rules and regula·
tioos. licellles will be spoosored by
the Westcllff Plaza Merchants. Both
deparfDents will again be contacted
for their cooperation in what ttn1
merchant& at Westcliff Plaia believe
to be a mcst worthy cause.
DICK VER:'-.10!\'
Presid~··
Westclilf Pb.i.a Merchants Assn.
TM editof's '10tt OJ>Pfndtd to tht
leitt:r in qU(!'stion apparir:ntlv was
blued on ffTOIU!ous information. Tht
OJ\ILY PIWT rtQTtts the r.rro,,
-Editor
--WWW-
Frjd•y, September 27, 1V68
T/14 fdjtorlcl -0/ IA< Doll~
PUoi Mtb lo lflform Oftd -
M/ata read4n l>tf PNHrlllng Udt
_... opilUooi ...s """"
-torr °" lopkt of lmn•ll """ •IGrdjiamc•, bl! prmdmg •
,_ ,... IA< ··-of °"' teadcn' opinioni, net b# pr<Nfttino tM .u..r.. lri'1I>
poin&t '1f informed obaero,r1
...S IJ)Ok<rm"' on top4ci 0/ tlu daw.
Robert N. Weed, Publlther
•
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the Wind
Ar.e;uments over the naming or
"Brand X HiR:h School" in
southeast Huntin~on Beach un·
fortunately have exceeded the pro-
per proportions of an exercise in
atfl'tchln_g-a label to a school.
The really unfortunate part is
t'lat people have Jost their perspec--
t•ve sr.d rathPr than address
t?lemsPlves to the proposition at
hand . have become involved in the relative merits of persons and I)OW,
presumably, in areas after which
thP school could be named.
First of all, let there be no
residual error about the name the
school was to have acquired -
Thomas A. Edison. There has been
a lot of kirtdin.e;, but the school was
not named after the steam plant.
* There arf! those who found it
necessary to either attack the
reputatiOn of a man who's reputa·
lion is unassailable or to defend a
reputation needing no defense.
Thomas A. Edison's reputation is
far above the poor power of we to-
dav to either assail or defend.
Other names were submitted.
Robert F. Kennedy was one of
them. Walt Disney was another.
Who among us really feels capable
to either assail or defend the
reoutation of these men and the
suitability for having a school bear
th~ir names?
In actuality if it is necessary to
assail or defend, then the name
suggested is not right for the
school. Debate as we may, it is
hardly within the power of those in
J.luntini;!;ton Beach to chanl'!:e the
record of these men as they passed
through this world.
* The real losers in this hassle
have been the children in our hi~h
schools. High s c h o o l superin-
tendent Max Forney wisely op-
posed first getting children in-
volved in something not their con-
rern. After they were involved
Forney was more than a bit in-
terested in seein~ that they were
not doublecrossed. His advice fell
on deaf ears in both instances.
Board members have made
•TJistake after mistake in Utls mat-
'. ."rand for the most part they know
Council Delays
Nursery Proposal
Residents along Cayuga Drive.
Westminster, won't know until Oct. 8
whether the house iat 6401 is to be
transformed into a ward for mentally
retarded children.
At the request of the applicant's
attorney, the city council continued
Tuesday the public hearing on the
proposed six·bed nursery for non·am-
bulatory patients.
The application by Mr. and Mrs.
Plouchard, who live In the house. has
been opposed by neighbors 111nd rec·
ommended for denial by the city plan·
ning department
The Plouchards appealed to the
council after the planning commJs·
sion denied the conditional use permit
late last August
$17,5 Million Big Stink
Harbourites Suing Sanitary District Over Odor
In ao el!ort to ..We the Sun .. t
Beach Sanltaty Di&U1ct sewaa:e treat·
'ment plant pn>blem, 17'1 l)'<ldetrta of
neari>y Huntlnpn Hari>our hava lil<d
IUit for $1? .5 mlllloo dim-.
The suit WQ tlled in Superior OJurt
by John Silver, David BWToutbl and
175 others. Defendants are the
sanitary district, its board of directors
.and Richard L. Harrison, 1 t s
supe.rintendem.
Target of the suit is the dinrict's
treatment plant on Warner Avenue
north of Pacific Coast Highway. It is
adjacent to the plush Huntington
Harbour marina development.
The p1aintiffs contend that the plant
is relea.sing "vile and obnoxious odor!,
smells .and stenches which are carried
by natural winds across a channel and
into plaintitfs' proj>ertl:es."
It is also alleged that waste
materials: .and filth from the pl.ant
have been dwnped on properties ad·
jacent to the nwage plant. Proper
maintenance aod operation of the
facility would eliminate the odor pro·
blem, the complaint states.
The plaintiffs contend that odors
drifting acr06s the channel have
reducer the value ol U.lr 1uxuriou1
waterfront p!'(lpertitt.
Superiotendent Han1lon admlU that
some odor comes from the plant but
~gues that swampy manh lands
°'use moat of the sme.lb.
"Many of these people do not realize
that their homes are built on swamp
land and .tt low tide there are odors,"
Harrison sa.id.
Negotiations to ellmiDate the pro·
blem are now under way between the
sanitary district, tbe city of Hun-
tington Beach .and Orange County
Sanitation District. No. 11.
Objective would be a cooperative
plan to -accept the Sunset Beach
sewage into a Huntington Bead!. main
on Warner Avenue near the plant.
Huntington Beach serves Huntington
Harbour.
Sunset Beach residents h a v e
resi:.9ted 81'1Y alliance in the past
regarding it ias 111 Huntington Beacll
trap to .annex their area.
Frld11, SfJttrnber '27, 1968
~IT-YOURSELF SAFETY PROGRAM
But Airline• Aren't Buying It
DAil Y PILOT 3
.., .. ,, ........
Rubbish Boosts City's
Beach Takeover Stand
School Readies
Second 'Laugh-in'
To Get Supplies
Chute the Works
Airlines Spurn 'Safety Precaution'
A growing ool'ledion of nibbish
along the sides of Coast Highway in
the area ol Bolsa Choa. Stete Bettch
-.has been cited as ooe reason why a
group oi Huntington Beach residents
is becom.ing interested in urging a city
takeover of the local state beaches.
Mrs. Milton Vander Molen of 9472
Mokihah:a Drive said she and a group
of women in the area around Eader
School in sootheast Huntington Beach
are looking into the possibility cf the
city taking over operation of Boilla
Ch.ioa. and Huntington State Beaches.
Director of Harbon and Beache.~
Vince Moorllow:e said that apparenUy
the. $Cate ia 5'lill mulling over an offe ·
by the city to ta.ke over the a-:'·
milllistration en ttie two stae facilitle
Mrs. N. Murphy
To Head Women's
Bond Committee
Mrs. Norbert Mlll'Jfiy, who cam·
paipd for ~ establishment of the
Huntin~on Beadl Pt.aybouse, has been
named chairman of the Women's
DiviQ.on of the Citizen's Committee fOJ"
Par1U and Llbrary Bond's.
In .anB)UDCi.ng her eppointme.nt to·
day, William Schweickert, chairman
of the citizen's committee, nid Mrs.
Murphy was selected for ' ' h e r
spirited, unseUish dedication toward
making Huntington Beach a more
culturally • oriented city."
She has been secretary ol the' flun·
ti.ngt.oo SNcfl Playhouse fur five
years and of the Huntington Beach
Community Coocent. Assn. for itlree
year6, and ba5 served oo the Mlleyor's
Advisory Council as a member of the
City CU11llra1 Committee. She ii alw a
member of the lib!wy board.
With her husband, Mrs. Murpily has
ll1<!na'ged Ile Huntingtoo Shores Mo!<l
fer the past nine yeara.
Persons wishing to wh.Deer tneir
time to campaign tor the combined
$9.6 million in hoods for tbe parks and
library to be oo the Nov. 5 ballot
!Dou!d C0111act Mrs. Murphy er cm>·
mittee heedquon.rs, 30'l Fifth St.,
Huntington Beach, 53&-0355. •
MOOl'house aaid he believes local
control of the two facilities i.a in the
best interest of all who use the
beaches.
Mrs. Vander Molen said she does
not believe the "park r~" type of
administration at the two state
heaches is as conducive to saf::ty of
iieach users a.s is the lifeguard ap·
:iroach used at the city beach.
·'Tin cans, bottles and papers are
· :eginning to oolleot in the area of the
state bea<:hes. The city takes care of
its area," said Mrs. Vander Molen.
Moorhouse, pointing out ttiat his
~peration ia first of all safety oriented,
<;aid ttiat the state operation is "sort of
in the state park classification."
The dty has suggested ta1ting over
admlni.tf:ration of the state beaches,
but the state thus -Car hoa~ been reluc-
t?ant to see its holdings reurned to
local control.
From time ta time there have been
small groups of residents propose the
city take over not only the state beach,
but to buy all of the remaining beach
not in public ownership.
Tennis Anyone?
Lessons Offered
POTl'STOWN, P•. (UPI) - A his back. A security JUard with a
repcrler who tried to purchase an walkie-talkie followed him up the Residents in the Sun View School ~ to the main lobby but .,,...
area laughed themselves into $1,002 airline ticket at Philadelphia In-parently thought be was ;iust "IOllHI
worth of supplies f:or the school last ternational Airport while wearing a kind of a nut," Catt said.
spring and may get a chance to do It parachute found his do-it-yourself The repocter stood in h M the safety precaution spumed. lin again this year. Unit.ed Air es counter and felt the Gary Catt, 22, of the Pottstown • ---of al Arm ..___ Ocean View School District trustees swu~ sever Y para ... ""'!"Jls ~1ercury, was assigned by Editor in ttie next line. One finally alled
promised Mrs. Elizabeth Creasey. Robert J. Boyle to see if ttie airlines where he was beaded and Catt replied
president of the Sun View Parent would allow a passenger to wear his New York. ;
Teacher Organization that a multi· own parachute on a flight. "You planning to get out somewbete
purpose room would be available for Catt walked into the airport's main between here and there!" the •traight-
PTO use in staging another "adult building with a parachute strapped on faced par&&"ooper asked. 1 :
laugh-in." Catt tried to ignore him along witJi
A Halloween carnival, two paper S d p d the stares of numerQUs passersby and
drives and the "laugh-in" last year tu y resente a porter -backed up bis bandtruck 15 feet for a second look.
raised enough money for the PTO to Wh.en he reached the counter, a
buy 40 paperback world atlases, two On Billboards woman clerk asked him aboot the oo.
tape recorders, 16 record albums, a ject on his back. "It's a parachute,"
film projector. 40 dictionaries and 4.1 Grow.ini congestion Gf billboards he replied. "it's my first trip and I'm
reading books for the school, trustees along county freeways w.as tlhe target sc.:.red."
were told Tuesday. of a study presented to the county The girl called out the manager who
Mrs. Creasey, however, warned planning commission this week. told Catt he couldn't get a ticket
them that the PTO might net be able 'I"he ootnJnU:sluners ordered further unless he removed the parachute.
study on ·the problem witti a deUnea· Further argument didn't help and catt to do it again because the Westmont lion of rules to ·help limit the number decided to try American Airlines.
School multi-purpose room they used of billboards. But again he was confronted by tbe
for the show "is now used for Recently the planning staff reported manager. This one told him his
classes." tbet there are 69 billboards In a 16-parachute might "create panic ' •
Board president. Robert Knox, com· mile stretdl of Ule Sant.a. Ana Freeway among other passengers and result ''1n
mended the school organiutlon for its betwe¢n Newport Freeway and San a lack of faith in the rellatillty and
gifts and assured Mrs. Crea\ey "Cir· Juan Capistrano. safety of our airlines."
cle View School's multi-purpose room Applic.Kiott fer Je"Yeral mote signs Catt wouldn't check his parachute
(also used for classes now) should be in ti&fs crea prompted the 1talf study. wif.h his bagrage and be didn't ret a
Registration for fall tennis lessons available by spring." ' One auggestion is a reduction of the ticket.
must be made at the Fountain VaUey So, five fathers, including one number of l'Olld&ide signs through the He walked out ot. the building, but
City Hall cashier's office, not at the unidentified local policeman, who use of <ifidal state dirtcUonal sign6 not berore hearing a man ask anootMr,
first class, city recreation director danced a ballet number last year, can on general aervlces sud! es gas, food "Are they giving parachutes to all Ula
St.an St.aff.ord announced today. begin rehearsing again. and lodging. passengers?"
Stafford said eight weeks of In· 1=='======================================== termediate lessons are SIO, adult
beginners, f7, and children beginners,
$5.
Classes under the direction of Keith
Helmick begin at 9 a.m. Saturday on
the Fountain Valley High School tennis
courts.
•
Surf Shop Theft
Loss Said $200
Over $200 worth of ~s was
reported stolen from the \Vind .and Sea
Sud Shop, 2603 Newport Blvd.,
Wednesday afternoon.
Police said six men's swimming
ruitl, four wet .Wt.I, 18 tee shirts and
one belly board were pllfend lrom the .mp overnight
1».ILT .. II.OT Mafl l'llelt
-
23.00
Great fall walking suit
for misses and half-eiz.es
You always feel so fashilJlofiehr
in this chic coat costume. And,
our town 'n ~avel ensemble holds
its shape beautifully, C-Oloray •
ray0<1 bondeCI to acelate. Our
newest way lo flatter yoo! Blue,
ereen. 12·20, 14~22li.
Budget Dresses,
BufJUms·
'
Singing Marina's Proi•e•
These pert pep leaders are spun1ng spirit this rail
among followers of Marina High School ath.Jetic for-
tunes. Songleaders are (bottom rt)W from left)
\Yendi Weber and Judi Mueper and (top row from
I'
left) Suzi Duvall, Jackie Bennington, Rici.I Martyn
and Teri Thu.rm. Girls practice almoet as many
hours as football squad to perfect intricate routines. Newport Center 1! Fashim lsla!!d • 644-2200 • Moo., Thurs., fri.10:00 flll 9:30Olherdays10:00 li115:30'. , . '
•
..,.,.,;..::c. _._ - --·----c·--:ti~--'!""!"1!!!!"11~p!!W!!!llllll!l!ll ............................ .-.... ----------------------------... !""""-
. .
DAl\.Y Pll.DT f rtday, Stpt1mbtr 27, 1968
Jdword A. MHlr•ntlo WU lined
Sl,;20 In Utica, N.Y., for cbar&es
from a Ulla! ol 122 parting tlcketJ.
Qty Court Judge Horold Rynes or·
derad Ma.Uanelo to pe,y $220 Im·
mediately and $S0 each month until
the balance is liquidated. For every
ticket that is not paid, Hynes ad·
ded, Mastranelo will be required to
spend one day in jail. •
.
:Actor Peter Lawford, f~r brother·
f:
,.,.law Of· the late Pre1We:nt John. r.
ennedu and Sen. Robert Kennedu,
tke m<mJI HollJllDOodites ii sitting oui
his election. "Much tll it pains me to
&hlnk about it, I think Nixon will win
tht election easilu, '' said Lawford,
••so I'm going to vote for SnooP11 or
Pot Poulaen ... in that ordtr." • Police said Lo1sle Thompson of
St. Louis told them he got $300 in
the mail this week . . . money he
identified as c o m i n g from the
$1,000 burglary of h is home last
week.
Four State1 Bit
Student Racial
I Viol@ce Erupts
I By Ullllo4 Prell latonalloall
llAlclal vlollnce and 1tud1nt
"hoodlumlnn" flartd today at 1chool3
In at leutfour 1tete1. Rebel youtha In·
vaded downlow!I otor11 In two dties,
•teollna merchllldiae and 1nwblng
windows. .
'Scbodl were closed at Kalam~oo,
Mloh., and Setllllle, Walll. P0Uc1 brae·
ed for poHlble trouble 1t Linden, N.J.,
High Scb>ol, and raolal attack• were
reported at Trent.on, N.J. High School.
M«e than 200 Negro high school
student.I in tf\e Roxbury section of
Boston hurled rocks and bottles .oit
helmeted police T h u r s d a y. (See
SUry and Picture Page 5)
Black militants demanded the white
football coach at Kalamazoo's c.entral
High School be replaced by a Negro.
The militants battled white slAJdents
lhortly after a teacher wu struck during a school meeting, Fights
out.side 'the Michigan school forced
cancellation of classes for the day
.alJtier ttie noon recess. The school was
closed today.
Dr. Forbes Bottomly, sch o o I
.superln_tendent, &aid the di1trict "can
Dirksen Backs
. Off on F ortas
Endorsement
do no more'' to maintain «du. He
urpd all paronte of otudenta In the
closed tcbool to meet with him tooi&ht
to help restore order.
"We doo't want any ot the outiide
agltatoc1 -the Black Panther• a.od
grouJ>I llke them -m1Wng atound,"
Bottomly said. "The tchools cannot
tolerate hoodlum!am."
George OLloo, principll or \ho S.~l·
tle school, was struck by a 17-year-old
nonstudent earlier this Wffk.
Negro youths r&mp1ged through
clothing stores ift Kalamazoo and
SeaWe. Polict said nearly $3,000
worth of clothinc wa1 ftolen from
Seattle stores. Tbe owner• of two
firms were )Jeaten .
The Kalamazoo High School bu had
racial trouble since last year when
black militants forced int.egratlon of
the pnvtoUJ!y all-wlllte cheerlel4ers'
squad. They demanded that Paul
Baldwin, the white football coach, be
replaced by a Negro, The school is
about evenly divided between white
and Negro student.s.
About 300 students boycotted classes
at the Trenton 1diool Wednesday. It
has been closed three times in the past
year bec.oiuse of racial trouble. Wbite
youths have eomt>lalned that Negro
1tudents have iatfacked them inelde
and out.Ide tbe school .
.Teen Pair Shot
In I)esert; Girl
Fights for Life WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate R"
pliblican leader Everett M. Dirksen,
until now a solid supporter of Abe Fo~· flppolntment, as clUef justice, MOJAVE (UPI) -A teen-age
said today he will not back a move to Campbell, Calif., girl who was 1hot
choke off a filibuster against the nom· and left for dead ln the Maj.ave Desert
ination. with her male companion remained ln
Further, the Senate minority leader serious condltiQn at a Bakersfield
left open the que1tion whether he Hospital today.
would vote for approval of Fortas if Diana Bradford, 18, underwent
the controversial nomination ever emergency sur.e:ery Thursday after
comes to a vote. she was found along a desert highway
Asked whether Dlfksen's latest about 11 miles east of here early
statement would hurt effort.s to break Thursday.
the filibuster and bring the question to a vote, Senate Democratic leader Before going lnto surgery. Miss
Mike Mansfield replied: "It sure as Bradford told Kern County Sheriff's
hell will." deputies she and Randy Jenkin•. 17, cf
• Dirksen's disclosure came as Mans· Salt Lake City, were hitchhiking to
The thief who took Dr. Charles L. field moved for a showdown vote, Sa1t Lake City.
Dale's little brown bag in Chicago probably Tuesday to end the thfet.. She said a couple driving an older
will find when he opens it speci· ~ 981 J™.J?uster bl~i_ng fhe nominatfqt; .. ~modt!!.J:~W Falcon picked them.. up
mens of Jung cancer, emphysen;i3, ,, "'li1any· thJngsl.'lave iln~ entered,-·neit" Battsfield and drOve them lilto
throat cancer, stomach ulcer, hard-the plcfu1';.t• the ?lllnof~ RepubU~an the desert, where both were shot in
ened arteries and heart disease. t!'ld newsmen. ~cited 813,~ of them Uie head wi~ a .25 c:all~r·pfstQ:l •.
Dr. Dale is a pathologist who lee· t~ fact ,that ,~ h ·ace~ Mi.ss Bradford crawled, iO thi'l!age
tures on the dangers of smoking. $15,000 tot nine lectures at Amer can of Highway 58 where a passing truck University last rummer. driver spotted her and brought help.
• But it was too late for Jenkins, who
Two of three escapees from
San Miguel County Jail in Las
Vegas thumbed their way back
behind bars. The two men, one
,; an accused murdere1', hitcMd a.
ride with Sheriff Pat Gallego,
who dr~ them straight to jail.
• ••Boy that's really something
•.. I've been drafted," \V rot e
Lance Cpl. Donald M. Morcom
from Vietnam. That's where the
19--year-old Jermyn, Pa., Marine
was when be received his induc-
tion notice recently from his local
draft board, forwarded by his par-
ents. Mrs. Marcom said she called
the draft board in Carbondale and
told the woman who answered,
"jMy son would be h~ppy to report
f.or induction if the board would
pay hi& fare back home from Viet-
nam."
21 Million Kick
Cigarette Habit
Oaims Crusader
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -About 21
million Americans have kicked the
cigarette habit -three million of
them during the past two years -ac.-
cording to a pioneer in the an·
tismoking crusade.
Dr. Daniel Horn , director of the
Public Health Service's Dational clear-
inghouse for smoking and health, said
Thursday a smaller percentage of
youngsters are starting to smoke to-
day than 10 years ago.
'"The country can't afford to have
people continue.. smoking when you
realize that one-fourth of the total II·
lness In the United States can be at·
bibuted to cigarette mioking," 11orn
asserted.
was pronounced dead at the scene.
Deputies issued an all-point.s bulletin
for the couple, who were believed
heading for San Antonio, Tex. They
said Mias Bradford told them the man
was about 30-35, five-foot-two, and the
woman about 20 to 25, five-foot-four.
-~uthorlties said the motive ap-
parently was robbery.
Nude Performers
Wind Up in Jail
NEW HA VEN, Coon. (UPI) -
Police mested ten persons on the ,
Yale University campus early today
on charges of indecent exposure and
breach o1 the peace, following a
performanct .OI. an avant garde play at
fhe university theater.
Police said a nmnber of those ar·
m~. six men and tour women, were
in the r,ude and some were "scantily
clad."
Sunshine State Drenched
fair Autumn Weather Distributed Over Rest of Nation
CalifOM&la
Skies _,... mooil!y 1unnv !Odl'I cwu
S.OUfhtr" Oolllwnlt tll:Ullt tor mornl"'
fOll •lld low clwd1 I" COlll!tl 1Klton•.
C0&1ttl trod lnhlrme<!ltl's 'ltlltl'I Wlff
-~. '" lOI """'"'' lltrl IUnlhltW lll"e-Ytllecl in the tlt.rnoon 111..,. "'°'"I"'
~ clouds Ind Ioctl f09 Cl~red. To.
.Jltl"'I hlOI! Wll IO, Wfllle lhU'1dt'l'I
l\191! w11 N. Toni.tht'1 low shoolcl be "· Mo<Mrttt to hffyy 1mo11 .,.., , ...
Porfed toG.t., In me, LOI AlffM!les 8111n
b'I' ffoe A!r PollUllol'I Control DIJ'frkl
.. ,, l>l'Kllllltilln 11 IH'edlcted by 11>1
U.!. Wet.""9r llurNU'I llY9-dtl' fat~
Ull tlld l-11\lra lllo\r"' tytr1M
lnim 11• tMllrMI bs~ --l to -· 11'\fl. A QIO;l"'9 fTMd Is e~ II~ ....,. ..., ~ W.. _.,!Mr
todtl' ~ .... ,. _.,.. Ill ""' ··--. nt. hlltr ,....,...,. -,,..,
1'J. wlllr "'---11 '1. Slllff _,. <JNr .., f!lt "'°""'•In
trHI. wOI! •-' lfYll """'"'•lurfll.
rnctlfnt ,..r IO.
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hl<fhf _,_ Mtr '15, Wfll~ In ,_,
'ltilrt'I tM ""tcU'f'f' ell'"""' f'll•r !OJ.
Coastal
!.1rl• •r>d !1t1 mornltt'll IC>f ..,1111
httl' 1unslllnf b'I 11i.,.,,_ todtl'·
Llot>I, IOOJ!t>wtl!frly 1¥1/ldl, I le lf
m.o.r.. loclf'I'• h!th. 6' to 1$.
~II IN 1-ltt, •1 IOJ, h.c:I Verlero.r1 tem..ertl\lrn r 1 "1 I cl
tflt' netlorl'1 lllthnl ""-"'N•ir Tflun-'""" • !!let> ot n to • low of •· 1 ... dt)I, ...... Nftdlft, 11!¥""9 tnO PIM l•nll 1.,..PllrtNr• ti-Wll 1' lo '1,
Ill .... '""'-'" !ID. T ... w1hlr lel'l·""''tu,. Wtf '7.J 4"' LO$ ANOl:LIES AND VICINITY-"'""'· Hi.ht •lld momlnl loW ckM!t but t::'., -=."!.!' ~ ~;:,.s:i Sun, Moon. Tldu
fl(W'f 71. l'RIDAY
tot.rrH•AN CAl.IFOtlNV. MOUN-J-.d l!ltll • .. U:" 1.111. 1.7
TAIN ARIAJ-SUMY !Mhlrdfl'. FOii lttOltCI low l .oM 11m. t.•
.............. ..._ Stlurdt'r m«lllM. IATUIDAY
o..net'lllV aoMf Wlllr Ioctl """' Finl llltll i 11 Im J 7 Win* llllx"cllr. Finl low • n • m l 1
SOOTHIElllN CALll"Ol!NIA INTfll:· ~ 111911 • 1 11 P"' ! 4
t0111 ANIO IOl:llEll:T ll:EGION5-aun"'" $f(Ot!Cf low IO 2<I P "' ~ 1
.wty wWlf trod tOOltt' SIJurf,fl'. IUND"Y
1.-hlrll# Al to • ..-IN • F'"' l!!olt •• 4 JI •"" l I i. .. ~ YJIJlyt, lf~1 $1NnUIY l"!nf low •• , .. • • • t • 14 I "' 1 }
dfl• *' allll "10 1ot..,.,... StitGncl 111t11 .......... J.U•"' 1?
..... ~ ' $ttond i.w ,, ... ., • ,. " II . .W '·"' 0 0
•
'"
Cle1r tNI OCUllOl\911\' <rlU ftll
-•!Mr ..,.,.,,llftl OYer 1l<n011 11>1
tnllr1 n1!l"" loclfv wflll1 1n -
Soulhl11t 1 ltoPl<•I dl1lurblnu 111\!f.
td ........ rtl!'ll lnlll U>Ulhe.., FIMIOf,. °"' to t l""hes ol ••In lleo.o""'
mocl! flf lt>e IOU!hem 1\111 Ill Ille
SUnllllf'll lltltl Jn !he Predtwn """'1
II I frOlll<.tl! (lfl>teUIOll dtwdled If!
lt'9 G\llf el Me•lto _,, 111 1M lo••"l!r "klrW• Ktn. wino 111111 uo to •J
mlltf tfl "'°"'' •CCO<T1Dtnlftl "" oo.. ... -·· TtOlllUI 4i!O!'m Frtf!Cff. ""'lnwhlle,
COl'Hoved lll """"" •-v lrQm tlle
U"llftl St1le1 tiff• n!t<hl"11 '9orm
•!flu' ltl~ Tllun.!11l' IQmt 700 moitt
l\0'11"•.,.,I "' Be<muott.
E•cep! to• ~ lllUt!T• Wf'•!""• ,,.,.
l~•n In ""9 5owtrott 1t -I .C:•U•rlnt
of <l<Mll In h M""°'"ll 11M ""' ....
(•!I( N.,..,.._I. c..,.r 11<1, .. CO¥f•!'O
1,,. ,..,,.,,lndtr 1J11 llrf <OUf!lr'I.
r
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Temperatures
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" " " ..
" " .. " .. " " il .. .. .. " " .. .. ..
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•
,Friday, Septeinbtr 27, 1968 DAIL V PILOT S
Wavering
Peace Set
Cze chs' Tin y Arm y Shri nks ' . -
In Mexico
·Under New Soviet Demands ·
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -
President Javier Barros
Sierra of the University of
Mexico engineered a shaky
peace on the campus today
between police and rioting
students..--
Mexico Oty enjoyed its
first overnight period of
relative calm after three
d&ys' fighting killed at least
seven persons and threaten-
ed the Olympic Games
opening here in two weeks.
Students nervously tested
the peace late Thursday,
moving back on the National
Polytechnic Institute cam•
pus held by armed troops.
The soldiers did not lift a
finger. The student.Ii -..!hen
went home • ......_
Avery Brundag.e,
chairman of t h e In·
ternational Olympic C.om-
mittee, s-aid in Chicago· he
did not see "one chance in
one million that the Olympic
Games in Mexico City will
be called oil."
Apparently the key ~·as
Barros. After J e n gt h 'I.
meetings with s tu de n t
leaders and his university
OOard Thursday, B a r r o s
w·ithdrew a letter of resigna-
tion.
BOSTON VIOL ENCE -Mah at left runs for cover
as car's gas tank explodes after it was overturned
by roving gaeg of black youths in Roxbury section of
Boston Thursday. Stores were looted and 36
persons, including 14 policemen, were injured as
·-Uil'I Tt""'hGI•
waves of violence swept the area. The rampage of
t>eatings. robberies and sporadic rock-throwing,
which resulted in one death, began after Negro high
school students were refused permission Monday to
wear African native dress to classes.
Negro Dress Sparks Riots
Beatings, Robberies, Lootings Rampant in Boston
•
PRAGUE (up I)
Czechoslowikia's s m a 11
army shrunk sUU smaller
tOOay under llhe pressure ol
Soviet dem'8Dds ror winter
barracks and economic
needs for iKNstriaJ man·
power.
Military sources s a i d
Czechoslovak army units
have been turned out of
Milovice Barracks, main
defeD'sive headquarters for
P~gue, and two provincial
barrack' to make room for
Soviet Uni~.
They said the increasing
loss oI facilities to the
estimated 600,000..man OC·
cupation force was the real
reason for the government
~isi0%1, announced Thurs-
day, to postpone the annual
Oct. 1 draft call.
The govern men l an-
nouncemenl said the draft
would be p06hed back until
Apnil 1 to leave a margin of
civilian manpower for fac-
tory work. It said pro-
ducUon schedules h a v e
fallen far behind quota since
the :4.ug, ·20 lnva.sioo.
CzeChoslov.aki.a has an
army of 14 divisions, com·
pared with the Soviet arn1y
ol 140 divisions. Potential ef-
fects of the draft po&tpon-
ment were not announced.
Disclosure of the military
adjustment! c a m ~ as
government .and p a r t y
leaders announced twice-
postponed talks w i t h
Kromlin leaders "-'i ll still
take place soon.
Czechoslovak and Soviet
party publications ex-
changed crack1ina:
criticiS1Jl4 -so bold on the
Czech~lovak side th at
news~ands were sold out 1n
hours. ,
'f.he Soviet Communist
party newspaper Pra'Vda
printed a major ideological
defense ol. its occupation
Thursday.
It said the flv~r in·
vasioo was justified legally
}>y the need to protect
Czechoslovakia -from
counter-revolutionaries who
threatened "tile VffrY foun-
dations of the country's in·
dependence.''
PoUtika. the w eek I y
magazine of the
Czechoslovak communjst
party. blasted back with
articles condemning
Moscow·s occupation ~
tionale. ·· '
original
light
Scotch
now5~
fifth
There was no definite sign
that campus trouble was
over. Rebel students took to
the streets weeks ago,
demanding the government
repeal ar.tisubver~ive laws
and free some jailed com-
munists. Periodic f i g b ts
with police and troops
followed. .
Studellif. rebel 1 e a d e r s
Thursday said they were
calling off violent tactics on
the campus, the better to be
rid of the troops who have
been occupying the grounds.
They announced plans for
non-campus action.
l'rom Wire Senice1
BOSTON - A Negro high
school senior wor~ brightly
colored African clothes to
class 1.ast week and wias
suspended. The a c t i o n
sparked .a series of class
boycotts, demonstrations,
backla:;h protests and a
violent outburst a g a i n s t
police.
clothing in tfle classroom is
a call for the establishment
of black student clubs in the
junior and senior h i g h
scllools. A black student
union was given permission
to form ~ English but that city's schools and violence
also was revoked later by flared Wednesday following
Welch. a park raliy when rocks and
The denials sparlred a bottles were hurled at police
series Qf weeklorig boycotts as more than 200 youths
by Negroes at many of the stormed a high school.
USHER'S
~~~~~~~.c._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
But Barros sai<i Thursday
night the student fight com·
mittee leaders have pledged
him their support. He said
they t<Jld him of their "fer-
vent desire to get ba~k to
their homes as soon as
possible."
Pleasing students, Barros
advised army troops to
leave campus areas. Most
already had gone from the
campus by Thursday night.
Barros also told th e
students they must not trig-
ger violence.
Red China's
Admission
Before U.N.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
{AP) -Communist China,
beset with internal problems
and still hurling propaganda
blasts at the Soviet Union
and the United States,
hasn't had much luck the
past year in winning new
friends and influencing na-
Uons.
This will be reflected at
the current 23rd session o£
the U.N. Genual Assembly,
where for the 18th time in 19
years the Chinese Reds are
expected to come out on the
short end of a vote on the
China representation issue.
Last year the vote was 58
against and 45 in favor of
the propos-al to oust the
Chinese Nationalists and ad-
mit the Chinese Communists
in their place. Seventeen
countries abstained. About
the same outcome is an-
ticipated thfs year.
2 Embassies
Ass aulted
By Students
MANILA (UPI) -Torch·
bearing students attacked
the U.S. and Briti3h
EmbEssies tonight in protest
against American a n d
British positions on the
Philippines" claim to tht
Malaysian state of Sabab in
North Borneo.
Britain has sided with
Malaysia in tile dispute and
the United States has pro-
claimed its neutrality. Both
stands inf u r i a t e d t.he
studenu -and Filipino of-
Young Negroes in tile
Roxbury slum section have
been on a rampage of
beatings, robberies a nd
lootingis thaf have reached
into private homes.
The disorders which have
brou(ht one death, injury to
36 ffrsons including 14
polic~en, and scores of ar-
rests1 • befan after Ne~ro
high ~i>l students . were
refused permiss.i<>n Mooday
to wear African native dress
to classes.
Thursday a itus·band and
wife were beaten in their
home, a man was robbed of
$150 in daylight on the
street, and firemen were
made the targets of stones
and bottles.
City officials hoped to
curb tbe di.sturbances with
the aid of an influentia'l seg-
ment of young people in the
Negro community.
More than 8,000 of the
21,300 pupils in Boston's 32
secondary schools w e r e
reported absent Thursday.
Abot.it 6,000 of the junior and
senior high school students
are black.
Only 500 of East Boston's
1,100 stude n ts,
predominantly d. Italian ex-
traction, attended classes as
the demoostraton milled in
front o( the red brick
building end shouted their
demands at officials as they
protested ttie • ' p r o p e r
dress" regulations requiring
ties for boys and skirts for
girls.
The bo)75 demand the
right to go tieless and the
girls want permission to
wear slac~.
About 20 boys burned
their ties in a backlash
ceremony aimed at gaining
equal rigtiti with blacks who
originally were permitted to
wear African clothing at
English. The permission,
later was revoked by LJ)uls
Welch, .assistant superin-
tendent of schools.
"ll they can weer what
they want, then we can wear
what we want," said Joseph
Scannelli, 16, a junior at
East Boston.
A!Ued with tile demands
for the rigtlt to wear African
New Premier
Of Portugal
Takes Oath
ficialdom. LISBON (U,PI) -The age
Little damage was done at of Salazar ended today.
'69 Chevy Nova Coupe
.,.~.· .,. .,. .
' ' . { ' ,,•;.. } ·'*\ '\ ~ '... ,, . .)
the U.S. EmbUSY although President Americo Other economy cars may act more modest than richer.
the demonsU'ators smashed Thomaz called in Marcelo Nova but then, they have more to be. modest about. Like putting on new finned Cront brake drwna.
the windows of a small Caetiano t.o be sworn in as We'vedonetbetypeol'thiOptothe'69"CbevyNova Butwedon'trestNova'1cueonlookaandrldealone.
gatehouse. But at the Premier of Portugal to that you'd '"'""""'t only from more -sive can. There's the rest it can ~ve your left foot with ex· BritiSh Embassy, the Y replace strongman Antonio· ---__ .. e·
smasbed down 8 gate, Salaz.ar, stricken by a brain Like freshening up its already aporty appe&tance: c1u$ive Torque-Drive transiniaaiot:l Torqu&-Drive ac-.
roamed througll the grounds hrunorrbage 11 days ag1>. Front. ti on eliminates the clutch pedal and Almolt all abifting.
of the Emba515y residence, caemno and his oobinet Side. You jul!lt flick the lever from-1.if to Hii and that'e i~
set fire to the servants were acheduled to take their And rear. No clutching ever.
quart• r • and tried oaths of O(fice at 3:30 p.m. Li.iul m•ldlli the imllulllent penel doaign lllDlrler, What does this boon Ui 1top.and·JO driving ccet?
.... ,.·
~ ...... .. .. .. '
'•<·
~ . .
' } 'I\
•!
11
"·! • 1 '~
'
The prioe I. 1.,. enouah lot you to lie abl4 lo put youi
leJt foot in permanent ntinment. And you cc ordCt
it for any 4-or &-cylinder model. . ·'
11 you were comporinf Chevy Novi with otbor-
orny can, now you know. -
Thore'1 no com~
Your Cbem>lel d.,. await& .--.....;
Puttln1 JOU first, ... ,. us first__..,!
'
uusuccessfully to burn the ·at presidenUal Be 1 em ... 1 a;nva.ssador·5 car. "., Palace. 1-----.:>-----------------.-----------------<----------------------,'l,-.,.,-----
. -•·· ---·-------------
----------------------------------
(l DAILY PILOT frld17, Sept.ember 27, 1968
Sf'SC Teacher
Trustees Ask End
-S~ Br<JWn Baggers Pack Up Troub"les
To Panther's ~ol)·
SAN l'J\A:NCISCO (UPI)
-Sin 1'randlco'1 com-muters have l9Cked their
-bap. Joel< L!Ule, cllatrman o1 a
"'""" tl>at organized weO'ly Tibro'WD bar days" u a pro-
bullneH, otllor1 lndlcote Geoff Bennett ol M I 11
enoup impact to cau.se con· Valley, 1ald the re1tauratit
bem," he 1akl. "We never boycott waa or 1•oi1 e d
Intended to baw such an im· "stmply to achieve f'1rness
pact on any lin&}e HP.lent aod equity and we now have
ot San Franclsco bua:lnesa ." that la a legal outlet in the
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
In a decision .app1'ude<l by
Gov. Ronald Reopn, state
college trU1tee1 Thursday
ukod San Fr--.CO Slate Co1Jeie Preoldent R<ll>ert R.
Smith to assign B 1 a c k
P&tber faculty member
Ge<qe M ... n Murray to
non-teaching duties,
Smith ptunpUy said it. is
unlikely he will COlllN with
tbe board~• requert.
* * * Aid Urged
For Ghetto
Students
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )
-A critical repcrl oo the
trea tment of "dlaad·
vantaged &~eots" a t
Calllornia'• junior colleges
has prompted an "im·
mediate study" ol the pro·
blem at the 88 campu.ses.
The colleges' board of
governor• voted unanimous
app<'l)'Y11! Of tile 11udy at
their nturlday m e e t i n g
aftor recelvlni a r.,.-t
-by tile state boardofeducall«I.
The repoit dusilled 1l1e
• 'disadventq:ed ttuitents''
., -. comm1 1rom a Jaw·
income family and m:alnly
•• frooi a biack: ghetto or Mex·
ican-Amerloan commumty.
The l'<!"'rt noted thet
juniol' colleges get e larger
p!'O(>Ol1loD of -. students
than do four"')"Nr tcbooll. It
found. however, th8t "only
mi.nima1 gpecific effort! are
being made to provide the
e d u c ationa.1 experiences
which would help disad·
v.antaged students to
overcome the effecta of
diM:rimlDatlon and cleprlva·
tion."
It ai.o aald that wblle
mooey ts the bigg~at
blem for the 1tudeatl, •
small pc:rtion of e
worl<41udy fUndl 11 J>e!nt
allocated to the students.
Chicago's
Police 'Late
In Acting'
LOS ANGELES (AP}--A
Los Angeleo police Offlclal
says violeoco duriDc the
Democratic National O>n·
wnUon in <ll.lcago could
have been ctemmed if police
had , .. -fimtly to the first demoortrators.
The report Of impector R.
F, Rock was made public
Thllrsday by Mayor Sam
Yorty.
Rock said ft wa1 "ap-
parent that a dxingent ef·
fort to avoid a physical coo.-
frontaUon dominated the
tadiics of the Chicago Police
Departmml ''
During the first day Of
demousttationll Rock nld
"nwneroua violaUoos of
llWI OOCUITed • , , but DO
police action wu taken."
Police respoo!e came only
"When the threat of dlrect
violence arolnJt 1l1e COO·
ventloo headquarters, the
OJnrad lilltoo Hotel, was
clear," Rock aaid.
At that tiine, Rock aaid,
many officera. ' ' a c t e d
wllllout ""tralnt and ...
oried force beyood that
nec~rrary under the
~.··
The board's dedsioo was
made after aeveral hours ol
discussion.
MU?Tay wu hlred to teach
Eagu.h to IB>Clerprivtlodged
students. He ii-the BLac.k
Panther party's "minister
of education."
AdYbed of tfle board's re-
quest, Smith said he would
consider it but e d d e d :
''There is a po&Sibility l
won't honor it."
Leplly, Ille board ap·
peared to be dealing with a
stickier problem than the
one that conlrooted the
University o f Callforoia
regents over the hi.ring ol.
mackll'8ntherEldridge
Cleaver to lecture in a
course on racism.
Even Superintendent of
Public Inistruction Max Raf-
ferty, who urged Murray's
remwal from the SFSC
fac\J.lty, conceded Murray
has the academi c
background to be a teacher.
Rallerty 1rged the board i.
buy up Murray's cootract
with SFSC and dismiss him.
''Cleaver i& a racist who is
academloally unqualifiod to
lead!, Mlsray ii ooly the
former,'' the GOP
senatcrial candidete N1d.
"When violence is
brooding over a city, no one
1ilre Murray should teach
cblldren. R's 1 i k e in-
troducing a match t o
gaaoline."
Rea@an called the
trusteet' de cision
"COJAl.gle<:IUI ...
• 4 J support the decision
they have made," t be
governor said before leaving
Sao-amento tor a fund rais·
ing engagement in Colorado.
state Conege Chancellor
Glenn S. Dumke said that
"if ra person is • faculty
member the problem pr.,-ii a much di!·
ferent end • more serious
ooe than if be ii an invited
ouUlde apeakel'," m W'8S
tbe case with Cleaver.
Bill Bans RFK
Autopsy Film
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
new California Jaw -sought
by lri<o>da Of the Kemnedy
family -will prevent
• • aematkmal" magazines
from publiahh>g (ilotographs
takm duriJlg the Robert F.
Kennedy autopsy.
Gov. Reapn 1lgned
Thursday a bill approved a
wtek ""' during • speclal
session of tile l91'aature.
'
U~IT...._
TWO INOICTED ON BRIBERY CHARGIS
Ex-c:ommi11loner Pierson _ .Coun@!m1n Sh•rd
Park Commissioner,
Councilman Indicted
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -oC COlllpiracy and tllreti
A Los Angeles dty coun· coUDia of bribery.
cilman and a f o r rn e r The ind!ctment against member of the park com-
tal to Saa J"Nnclsco' I DtW
commuter tax, said 'n!ur•·
day be was "~ for an
lmmed14!e holt."
Ht aald other poAlble
prot<1I ,...,... .. , lncludint
a "Slop Where You Uve
'lb1I Ch!iatmal" campaign, ..... beln& lhelved peoding
tbe outcome of legal acU<10
aiatmt the •ult.
For more tbln a month,
lhe c:ommuten• group has
urpd commulen to bring
their own lUDcll .. every Fri·
day and atay away from downtown re1tavaots.
Little, who lives J n
Redwood Qly and Wl>r"3
with Bank of America bead·
quarters in San Franciaco,
•aid ~lpotion In ti>• pro-
test 'bu been gn!aler lllan
am:ictpated."
"Wblle 1ome re1taurant1
report lltt1e or no effect on
mission were free on bail to. s:bepard involves three dif-
day following th e i r m. ferent zoning matters. The O.ock Tells dictmenl by the grand jury most important ~·as the ,.
Thursday on bribery charg. rezoning of seven acres of S £ T'
es involving rezoning of real land in Canoga Park in 1964 8 e lin.e
estate. to facilitate coostruction of ·• a··~e~ b--· The VIENNA (UPI) -A West Councilman Tom Shepard, _,, t--.. ._. IA .............
42, who has represented a apartment complex never ~!!tana :,:.n~a:oo.C::i
district in the San Fernando wa~~ning commission device - a clock with reJ
Vialley since 1961, was in-recommended 8 gains t and. green lights.
dieted on eight counts <1( re7.0D.i.ng the Clanoga Park When set aceordlng to a
bribery and one of con· property, but 1U decision woomo.'i menstrual cycle,
spAin>cyt 1 ' ~~rio· r -·~ ar· WU overridden. by the city the green l.lgbt shows on
-.-•~' -u M ~ Y rt "safe days," and the red raignmeot, Shepard pleaded cou."' · ayor ~m 0 Y
innocent. Trial was set for vetoed the council's .action, light on days tte woman is
Nov. 18, and Shepard was',.:b:="::.'.::'•::ler::...:wi::.'thdr=.::'w::...::hi::'•.:..v.:.et:::o·:......:.•:!:pt:..=to.:.c:.:•n=c:.:e:.:lv.:.e·c_ __ _
reieased after posting $2,500
brul.
Mal Pierson, 44 ,wh<J serv·
ed five years on the parks
commission, r e s i g n e d
earlier this year during a
controversy OVe'I' the award
of contract for design or a
golf course on the Sepulveda
Basin.
Llllle said the boycott CO\UU."
"wu dt11gned ent!rely to He referred to a •uit que•·
dramat!Je bow mud! the Uonlnc the legality Of the
purchallng powor ol 187,000 tu broutllt by the boani• of
commuters means to this cl-1~bar1 or San Mateo,
ty and to lake 1aJue with the Marin, Alameda, Contra
uodocwnented claim tbat Costa and Slllla Clara coun-
thll cootrtbulion ii lest than tJe1 .
the cost ot. city 1ervtcea to • • T h l s t a x l s
eommuten. We think tbeae d 1 scrimlnatory,'' Bennett
objecttve1 . .have been ac-said "and that's the reason
complilbed." · we 'are certain that the
The leader ot a Mll'in courts: will rule in our
C.OW.ty commuters: group, favor." ~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii MEET YOURoN ............... .
Next U.S. Senator
ALAN CRANSTON
Saturday, September 28-2:30 to 5:30 PM
The O'Neills cordially invite you to join them for en eft~noon on their
ranch ••• Honorin9 Alen Cr•nston. Alan will be there to meet his
Democratic and Republican friends personally and discuss the critical
issues of this campaign.
Steak Dinner Entertainment
Donation $1 0 per person
Dl,..ctions: Take S1nt1 An1 Fr"w1y to Sart Ju..n C1plstr1no turnoff (Ortega
Highw1y), then !•kl OrtT. Hlghw1y lift (north) 7Y• mllu to
the O'Nllll Rooth Hon1 1m. Follow tho 1ign1.
Californians for Ctanston -John McDonald, Chairm•n
311 W. 8th St., Santa Ana
He was arraigned Thurs·
day but was granted a con-
tinuance until Oct. 11 in
onrer to gi~ his attorney
time to study the c.aee.
Pierson was freed after
posting $250 bail. Pierson
was indicted on two counts
s29a Value!
Geritol St Dura-Wool '1" Pack of 5 29:. Girls'
MEN'S
Socks ACETATE TRICOT
• • ,al.t.C" . •W• • • HU'"1NCITON au.c" • M? .....
snclAL CHILDllNI MATINll
s.t .• Sn. o.tr
12:JI I J:JO-AH ..... 10; ................
• _., ___ 1111 ..
12.oL UQUID
or 40 TABLETS
$198
·Soap Pads
All White or JUMBO BAG 5 Colors
Of 30 $159 44c
lagun1 Be1ch School ol Ari and Design
Reg. s11'
Desenex
Ointment
s1~94 2-Speed
Elec. Blender
s599 Value!
Luggage
FALL PROGRAM
SIPT. JO· DIC. 7 ..,,_,._
10111 IUNll
DAYID SCHNAJIL
R0•11 AIMITION•
AINOLD ICHl•llN
IUTK 01.001
JON STOmlAIT
IASIC AND ADVANCID COURSIS
DIAWIN6
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OIL PAINTIN•
ICUlll'Ull
WATllCOLOI
UPI DIA.WIN•
s... ..,,,,.,.., .,,,. ..... ,.,...,..
6JI "-t•• c-y.. 14. 71Mt4·11JI
73c
Athlet•'• foot tr1atment mo1t otttn~md
•d lly dooton!
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"Lady Vanity"
1244
D•luxe I 5 Grates.
liquetlu, b1tn.
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BL-L
tt 2
' Spark
Plugs
PACK OF 8
9t Laundry
Baskets
~P~!'; 66' "'"' eur·l"P .. han41e'" Won't'.
IOI.I 19.unctry.
Ortat tor fat• .........
s395 Value!
Battery~
Booster Cable
3~3
s1 49 Plastic
FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX FW
MAINTAINING $500 SAVINGS ACCOUNT.
s299 12-Drawer
Kabinette
$233
1 s Grawe.rs
w I t h dt?Sd·
tn.Idsa!to<
• ...,,.. bot,
tons, p e n ..
f:l'&Hrt and
odd.I Ir ertdl.
97c $196 Dish Pan
~u·-33
Reg. 3Jc
Ronsonol
lighter Fuel
21(.
Dt1t for any
runt ltshler:
Zuy..open lpO\ll
$ave lie In ·-
~ Litt 1'tCl:l:I• dlUOned 1parJr:
plu11 for most
cart. Guaranteed
!or 10,000 miles.
39t Tuck
Cello Tape
1500"x V2" Size
27'
(.
l"Ol" c&r• lt&llt4 •lEI ltZl.Jt.. ( by batte:)' fall· Ol<I<* from . u:ret Baff .1.98-popular ltltch· more· t h a • )'tftl
""'' en oolan. lCUJ to 11.-p clean.
eg!tf3r2tc
DOL
Motor on 39t Value! 9uart · Box of 100 8 ,.,$1 Envelopes .... -.. _, ..
~\)'oO 1t. Stando:11 .... 4!1 lllYID,$1 ""1lo"'"1optt fw Umlted. ttmt. 'MUI mint 00. 30, •9-L 11a-.
"'i. ~
'' •
1
I
-----·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~--~-~--~~--~~ ......... "" ....... _, ................................ ZC? ......... ~ ..... '" ....... ,.:a:' ....... oa:--·"il"'"'"'"' ......... ~ ...... ~oe:oe:• .......... .,., ... .,.,,,. ...... ~'1"~1;"'""';;:;;111:' ..... "' .. , ... "" .. ~""":""'"'!'"'"""'"·\"'<::•:;;~I
• , For -The Record
Meeting•
#Mr Viti• ~l..,.., Ml""tc
T-11, l..i !Ml tir.t. HlwMrt
8"dl.11't111.1n. ~ T-fWll•lln. 'Y 11 t I
.MlrlM. 11141 "°""* Dfl"' NIWPOrl lhlcfil, 6;M •.m.
Civil Air Jl1tftl. ~ 11, 10211
Actdl ltf'Ht, Cllll ~ 1i• Ill.I'll. Mtlll'llc S..flr~ ~ Nt. 111, u..-1c T..,..., 1.-It,.., _, ti. ""'*-Jlllcl. N-' ~ J:OO ·~ -Cl'lrl1llM ,..,.__.. Cwn"'!ltlt, .. .._ .. , Cll*. ~ tMdl.
1!)1 •.m.
Divorces
'uvoac•• •11.••
JOlllWI' T.-vt ''-!IN It. T"* Elli L ,....,_ '11 ltCOH1 J , ,......,,
i:ITll!'ll M.lrlwlt •mltfl YI TI11n't1t It·
...
ltllful c. Uwtw, Jt. ft ..... 111 ...
rt'lllll L.,.,... •
INTlltLOCVTOll.Y DICltlll
J11-Jt111 ,~ "' ~ ..... """ ,..,, '"""""" Nl<eMft 0.llHl'ltf VI JIM IEcl'nnl .. ,_
"""' """ KolMfl "' Jall'IUll • """' .....
11:"'*"' M111on1 lll1rbi ft PINY "'*' ,.,,. ..
\. ...... L• ,,_,. '11 DIMll I.II
·~· \.MW , • .,. • ....,. "' ll'Mlt CUrtll ·-Jfll'll I. .... ,,., •"' .& UOlt ....,,
YI lflly A. W..,,.,, ""'· & U'lll -·· l!llM"9 .. L11tHll ,.,..._ 1k1 a"1Y Lou ,.,. v. CfllrM v...._ •Y1
Wan~ A. Cllmltl "' 1t1t1 Mlllllll .,._
•1rt11,. /I.,, Mwton, v. Dclnllll L. .... _
I "fin lll'lllt1
L-1• M. o.ck.,. V1 ltllbyr\ J. Old<e•
&enlt1 o . LI""'"' vt llWltml'Md
Md!J4..Ml"'IC l.1l'ltllm
•11i. 0... W.111 ¥1 J1111t CllmllM Wills
Ocnt11v Loullt WllUOl'I VI WIYl!I
~ WIUOll
Nom1111 J, HOoll, 1llf. & crvu lllflllt.
I' ;§::~l;';~~:::~: ...
P'1trkle J-......_. n J11Mt
~ O.rt \."'"""
I' ~~:.:::::.::~"':
Mlr<t ••~ 1"111' VI Wlllll"' ttlN'l' ,.,,,, Ill
. '""" J. Kil'l"I'-" "' w.. Kil'n'l'Nlfl J1,,_ lromlt)' C...,lon va Don""
! M1r11 c~ ANll C. kllft 'Ill C..,.IC A. •ll'lifl ! Lnlle A. ltllC VI DolWll Mlrlt lt.ed,
11r.ti C..-nthi. 11-t,
John A. w11111 "" •r•h •· w ..... 1
• Jlldllh A. H1n'nOll ¥1 ltotllrt Lir.1Nr
~ H1rmon J ltD!1114 GllDt' VI DiWfl G .... N Gll11r
I ~: ::: : J:ll::~;
•rlCllW
11:1"'°"' Mlrll ...,,. .. 'It 1t•M Ed-
Wltll Anllt llnln M. .._,. .,. 'Wltn"" •· ,._,.. Jlldy ldllll .,. 1"1ul IOIMI
tNt.11 I. Ovnn n Olln. ldwln
°""' ~ ..,.,,ti. L lllldlll vt ltabltl P'1vl 1 ltlkh• f •.tty L D1vlt vt Edntll \., Dlvtt
• Ann W. Klvlblctl .,. ltaMrt w. Klu~ .... /Mry G. Kffrllll YI CiMnl Ttitodorl
KMma, Ill
J....... L1rw AUCUll W Vlrllflll L• -'""""' L-11 Edwlrlll MCClrdY YI P'lo)' Ann
""'"" ~~ M1rl1, H'Yf1 vt flDllll'llY P •
frlnk lt-14 lrnli. VI Oll'.itno P,
Sm!lt1
Emit)' LOUIM ltllC .... lt•Yff!Ol'ld lrwll .....
Ciro! L"fl'lll Ch1ll1tn. '11 Monty Glfll
Chllflln
Clrol A. II/Oii '11 Gr.him I . •lldd
lrvllll f, Grim YI Vlol1t E. Grim
M1r11r.t E. Del Cello YI Jolln Del
Collo
J1nlct ltll AlklflHll VI l(ellf1 WtlllCe
Allclfl!«I
Cllrkl Lomm JdWllOll VI P•ul s .
J~-Slllrlt)' Lff .__ lt-nhorst vs
ctirl1 HuMrt ltllfWll'llont
k1rtn A. All-VI ltCIOlrt A. AllOlllO
IJalel H1mllton YI LI IMrr H1mlh011
J•fl K. lm11t1 Y'I ltoblrt L Sf'l'lllt1
JNNll L MeYt '11 Quln!Ln J. Min
11:11111 M1rll l+Uthtr. YI H1"11d It-Id
Hvoti.t.
Ell.tabllll MM FINlr VI Chlrllt
'°"'flCH Fl<!thtr Chr11Une L. ClmtV1ltl ft ltldllnl It.
(ln'leYlltl
11.tdltl G, a.l'ldtr1 VI Stepf\I" A.
$1na1r, • ,
How1rd At1tiur IC.i, Jr. VI l<ltt!IH11
ICI)' ~
N1ncy Lii TbOmll '111 Lou\': 0,11
Tllarntt Dolorl'I Mtlllend 'II ltldllnl D. Mtll-
YI. c..tlflCI ..... l40Dk, dtflll, • '""' -·· Mltltl llldl ~ Hlr'lm M. hcl1
Jl#t Art!. Catd~1 VI '°"ro Conlw1
L-1111 Hti-vt Cll-WllMr ,_
f i.tM Mlrlt Iii .. VI Htn"J lll'llMlll'I
HMI. Jr.
Lina A. llwt>ln " Jah11 I". llluMn Olttlilll lll MUii, tltl', & er.a *""·
"' J-P'. Miit• dlfdt. &. crc-1 _,_
Glorlt J. Mulllll v. Jahll lt"'"r Mullin
Shltml J. WIO!ltv .... Jdln c:. Woon..,
Ge,..ldlrM J, MOnWOd .,. ltldlltd •• ·--J1111c. Ltih ltlld n Dauol11 J~ ••• llobffi 01vld Slntt:r YI .,,.,on LM
Sl""r
P"g., E. Htl"" V• H1rl1Y D, HlllllS
IC•lt11ttn seen .. s Wlllllm It, Scolf
Clll>r-,I c. Holiow.v v• It-IC O.
Holl_.,
~ Mii Ultlctll YI OurMll Albtrt
'"""' Jiil\ G-, Pl1e. vi CM11M Plkr 't1c1
J•n D. lllldler YI KIMl11'1 •trnttlf
'"""' J..._ 1,.lflll WlllLI-v1 &dut
J-Wlll~ _.,.,.,., JNll Pltfw VI fllcMN Ali111 ·-J1111.'" Wtl* ,,. ltClillwt ~ Wll:o9
lelbMI J-l"ftbilt VI DtnllC Gl'l'llfl ---G11"1kl L11 Dll'llbtfw V1 Patrkfl J1111
01hlbl,..
Mlrlf)'n E. Htlcl '11 l!lnMr t... Held P.111 Wtlllllflvll VI l!dwln It. WeUI,._ 'M •Id Hllftr • fl.ldlll'CI L It..,_ vt C1rolt Jlln ·-Mlirv v. Gornu .,. 111111rn111 11.1<111N ......
l1rtMin OLllWll llJCklr VI Olatlf'
Ml lcll rn It i.dl.tr
lt1tpll Cit 1"11111111 .... 91111111 Ll'l'lrM
De Pllllll"'
Oon11d Alfred IC111H VI Allfl H111ll1 .....
L'"lll' 01¥1d Stra'lltr YI W!nlfrH Ar-
ltnl S1l'Oltler
0.Yld LI Ml'l1'11' '11 Glcnl1rw ll M11llr
MIN E, Goosslll VI Cl~rll C. .......
Winifred M. M\/fldt11 YI lero'f A.
M~nd1l1
v111r11 Mlrl•ne e1k1r '11 J•ck Ltrfftl
lll•~er
l!luflOr It. Wood1 "' O.vld I!. WOidt
lti:obl!r11 La. Stonlthkl YI ltoblrt ....,..
ll'l<lllV Slllroallk1
Sfllrltv Jllll Andi,_ VI Cltl Artllur .... ~
JoseDh Wohlf•~ v1 Mlr\orlt J, Wohl-
foll
JIW'tl D. fo• YI Jahft J. FOii
Cu'Oly11 Dirt ltMI~ Yt Mlclllll ltlV
ltt<11n
S~da~ .~c_hool
Revival Slated
State Plans
Overpass
For Hospital
FULLERTON T h e
state will overpass the San·
ta Ana Freeway to link
state Co 11 e c e Boulevard
with 'Manchester Av~e
near the Orange County
Medical Center, lt bas been
dlscloored.
The Rev. Paul W. Fenton, Supervhtr1 were told by
field representative for the county Road Commissioner
Eimer Sm11t1. iu eroeciw1y, Cool• Assemblies Of God Sum!ay A. S. K--that •1..-plam I.If-Ml. SeNlul Hndlne. •11t lro.dwlY u.,;q. 1Uoi::1
Mortv1N; 110 ,._,,,....,.., eott1 .v.es.. school department, will be call for a high ltvel bridge
DEATH NOTICES
SMITH
EVERETI' guest speaker at Harbor over the freeway which is
LOtT•ln. e. IYlttll. :at 1. H1rtor As•-bly ol ~~ Ch .. -h, air-'" ele a•~ t Utat •lvd., $1flfl AM. SurvlYl'CI lty ~Vi-""'" \,rVU .., "' ~ V ~ a
bind, ,._,, M. .IY1r11"1 -uvori. 740 W. Wilson Street, Oct. 1 point.
1er, 1"1rr1t11 l!dl<K. A11111e1""· •f'ld through 7 at 7 p.m. for a ""-o~~asa will relieve ll'lrTt 1rlflddllldr1111. llfvkft, lllvr-i ·~ • -r a1w. 10 AM. ••H ,,...,.,,,.,.. ow"1. speclal Sunday ' c b o o I a botUene<::k at Chapmari
ln\1rmenl, Hll'W ll:•t Ml-111 1-~ nd vi l A ••ch l ~-j p1,-. en~ 11y ••II •ro.dw•Y NvOr· semllta1 e tt va • venue WJ• 1 u1e on y ac·
1u1rr. 110 •rvllfw't.,.., eo.11 MIN. InchJded in these meeting cess to State C o 11 e g e
HOFF will be special seminar for Boulevard from the ::.,~re~~· ~::1 .J':,~1t1?t1:!1.G;;: teen-agers and co 11 e g e freeway,
$urv1vld ti., 11uanc1, f••nt J. Hitt. student.a tlUed ' ' W h a t ' a Traffic to A n a h e I m 01 1t1e 11om11 1tm11111111r, "'"'· Mir· ..... i-..." -·, will be taught <"•A·u·um --• ••-medical •1111'111 0. Sllv•. Lo. Al'\Olie.1 '""' u~ .LJ.111 ~ "'"" "'"" .... Mr. 1"1v1 Hott. llf woa1111nc1 by til:e Rev. Norm1n F1eld, center v.1ll be a1ded by the
M1111. o,.. ...... 111e HrvlCI&, Mond•Y· 11 Sunday school director for ;-provement. m, 1"1t1t1c vi.w ...... _.1 ,.,,,., ......
Dll'Ktld tw 1"1cH1c v1" MorMrY. the S o u t h e r n Callfomta Koch aald the state will
SANFELICE Dl&trlct. pay for Ute project.
Vlr.cent S1nl1llce ...... 11, of 160t N.J-;:======================\ ,..,._., St"'-Ant. 0.1-If IHllho a.t. '6. 11.on'I...., lty wilt, GlmnM I Hvglllen, Miiiie N1t1il. HVll!lntlon •••c11. 1M J..tllne ltn11vto• ton. Otbrlel S111ftllce1 "'"" bnlllllr•. LDllll, DornlftlC llld .6.nfhon1"1 Ind 01'11 1ld1r, Thlt'ftl. 1t111111rv. IV!WlolY, 7~JI
Jl'M. lmlllu °''"" lt"vlltn MN!. Molld1y, l AM. U lllMll I. JIAI t.111'1-
ol!c Olurdl. lnfl,,.,.nt, a... Shi•
h«d Cerl'ltllrY. lmllt11 Mortl/tlrt, DI·
•ecto .... !llELENDlU:Z
W111d1 Mellridrt:~ Al9 ft, II M1
Wit-. ''°"' Mtn. Jlrvlcft penc11.,., W1tk11N ChlPfl M1rtu1ry, ..........
BALTZ MORTUARIES
eo .... del Mar OR MCl4I
Cetta Meaa MI f.ZGI
BEhL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadwa1, Cotta MtA
I.If.MA
DILDAY BROTHERS
H..U.0-Valle7
M-UJ
lllll BHdl Bl"1.
R .. thortol BHdl
14>'11'11
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAU
CemollrJ' • M«lur1
Qapel
-hdlle View Drtn
Ne..,.rt Btadl. caDferU
~-
PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL nlNEllAL
801111!: --An. Wefbw.... •am
SMITll'I lllOllTUUT
eTllfall8t.
RllltlJIOnBHdl
LB.a.
WESTCLIJl'F MOR111AllY
di It. ITlll 81., c.tta Moaa ··-
how thrlltY
are you
when you borrow
money
Southern C11lfornl1 Thrlfl & loan
sPtC;l11iie1 In ptrsonal, business and
Trost Deed loons ••. Stop in today
and IH how we can solve your Imme.
dl1te money problems from doptnd·
able funds avai11bl1 rtaht now. The
Thrifty way can llYI you money.
-SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
THRIFT a l.OAN
DAILY PU.OT '7
By Phil lntffta'1cll Contest
196t MV•tang.
AH ntw, •II ..,.rt 5 9Mt mM•k.
M9A en1lna than ev•r.
They're Uke no Mustonos vo1/vt tvtr
Ytn befor•l longtr. Wider. Rootnl•r,
front and bock. And for, for 1p0f'fle1,
Toke the new Mu1tona Moch 1. Or luK·
urlout Gro~I. Choot• hordlop, sports·
roof or convor1Tb1t . Then dlp Into o long
lu.t of ootlor'\I and dtslon your Mlllior\g.
Planned
By RCA
• Passport
to the
real thing
Beware or dom11tlo
lmlUitlona. No 1ubttf.
tutt fot crisp. dllkloul
variety prePlfrtd from
• century-old recipe
broutht °'"'from Ena·
land by Heddon Salt.
tllmself. ~mericln and
British CUl'ftncy ch .. ,.
full)' .capt.ct.
H. SAill', eaq.
AUTNIMtlC IMILllN
Gfi.sfi&
G
SHOPPE
CollefJe Center-Harbor & Adams
1969 Totirto.
The winner'• Mck for '".,. •.•
with h'ro hol new Cotire1 te bootl
Torino for '69 comes on fust' 01 hotior 01
lu11uriou1 01 Vo1J !'lear.. Enoln11 ronot
oU the wov uo to o '2&-<u. In. Cobra J•t
Rom·Alr V-8. for Torino spir11 with .xtro
1ovlnep added, chooso hom 1lght new
'69 folrlones. See oil 62 of lhe n9¥t' '69
fords today,
Coat1 Me.11 C1llf. Tel. 546-7914
1'69 '""'· longer. w1c1.,. Quieter.
Ancl alene In 1tt cl•••·
r or 1.969.fotd trocka cnwld• etCocliffoc.
Srnoqth1 VO\Jr ride with a lon ger wht•I·
bate than Chevrol et. Ho1 more front
heodroqm and l1groom than o Orv1l1r lm~rlol. The '69 ford LTD i. deslontd
to ride ..... n qv'9fer thoft the l TD that
rod1 Qulattr than ton .. toyca.
I See by Today's
Want Ads:
• Here's a Kftll.t buy tor
the pl on the So! Jlelutl..
1ul t:runette w1I. wom
-• ..,.,. 135,
• Anyone lntefttted tn •
trade! 5 level alft9 Jn
Yucca Vallfiy for 1 ate
model~.
• Music lawn! Here are
!IOme rn..l barpjna", Jtor.
ner acconHon. ~
itdtar. Enelllh ftOOl'der
-.Ulnperfedconditlml.
e A deb.l.xle room to rert k
• elnlle Gent?
• There hi • nice lflectkin
of h:mes to Re th1I Wftk..
e'l"ld in the Open ~
cplumn!
•
1969 Torino GT Sl)OrtsRoof
The place you've got to go to see what's going on-Your Ford Dealer.
~
•
--------------
• •
}
--...~ ... ~~~~~ ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 'Ill .. ""
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE .
LEGAL NOTICE "·~1:1$4
CEltTl,l(ATE OF l\JSINl!SS FICTITIOUS NAMI! IAlt·l•Jt
Th• ~nd""fltor.ed do (tr111V ~V •re $U,l!lt1011 COUltT 01' THI! iTATI! 011'
1-vcllnt • bvilr.nl •I Bo• JI], Yorbf CALll'OllllllA 1'011 THI COUNTY 0,
LlllCI•, Calll<""'-· und..,. 11'H!' nctlUov:s llrm OltANOE ,....,~vi ESSEJ<tfl,t.L SERVICES atl<I ltl•I Ht. ,t,-'lt14
u!J firm I• com~ 11111' "" follawl1>11 NOTICI! 0, HEARIM(l 01' PETITION
Pf! \Ol\I, ..,lllM ,..rnfl !n tull 8nd oi.cn FOii l'ltOIATI! 0, WILL ANO l'Olt
;ii /nlckft<e ••••• IDl"""'1! Ll!TTl!llS Tl!SfAMENTAllY
l ... VE RNE WALKER. •n ''"~ :SI' Ell•lt or WAHO.r. L FRIEND
,.,K•<lll8, C•lllOO'nU. SINDElt, •11'J known •• WANDA L.
l!LIZABETH 8EltlltY, 611 Ce-ftttf' SI .. llNOER, Oeef8sed,
"eotftll•· C.llf0ml1. NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN T .... t LO'/
t1!1'd Sft>leml><lr 1'. IHI M. McGH 1'111 flied lltlreln • peflllon IOI'
ELIZABETH IERRV ~olNI• of will and for 1 .. 111111d ol LtMtrs
LAVERNE WALl(EI Te.T1menr1rv fo Pt11f1Mef' reft.-.nc• '°
s111+t ol C1llfor11!1, Orl"8t Coun1'Y: W!llch II m1"-tor furttler 111rtl1;11t1rs,
Oft kP!emt>tr lt, IHI, beforil ~. I 11nd Trial tti1 time 1nd P!1ct ol he1rlno 111'1
NOllrY Putlllc In ind for .aid s111e wme /\1' bff11 set fer Oclotior II, 1'61. 11
!>fr-..a11V IPP<!lft<I LAVERNE WALKER t ;)O 1.m., 111 11\e cour!'OOm of 01p1rt-
•MI EL IZABETH llERRY kllOWfl ID me"' mcml No. 1 of .. Id cwrt .•• IOI Nor1'11 br ~ persona~ nlmn lf't iubscrlt> Broadw1v, In tile CITY ol $11111 An1,
td to Ille wlrt.ln ln1lrumt~I Ind C11lllcrnl1. •
aclcr-ow i.t!RO'd ll\ev executed the lotfl't Pllf<I Sti>remller )l, 1961
(OFFICIAL 5EAL1 W. E. ST JOHN
11.oKlle C. Knox Caunrv Cler•
No!•rv Put111c.C111i•o<ni1 ltOIEIT w. ANOEISON
Prlnc:INI Office In NI E11t (1 .. radl 111111nr1rf
Or1nvP CouMy 1'111-1, C1lt..r!IY '1111
Mv Cllml!liHIOll e~o·•~ T1I: l!U) 1""4164
July I, ltn AfMtMY lw l'elllilwr
Putiil•h"<I Or11noe c.,.sl 01itv Pilol, Pub!lll'ltd Ori"" Co.ti! 011IY Pllol,
!>o"l>ltmDer 2(1, '' •llCI OctoW 4. 11, 5.e9ttmber 26, 27 Incl Oc:lober J. 1H.I lhol 1"°"'8. 1'17-4.I
LEGAL NOTICE
l'·tUM C•llTll'IC .. TE 0" IUS111US.
l'ICTITIOUS NAME n.. l/ndtri!tMCI 11o cerl\f~ tt>n ire ~ll"f 1 Wllness at 1S01 WHldlH
Orlvr, Sull1! :ioo. NeWPOrt Be•ch, C1lltotnl•. uncter ltle ncturau. llrm name
af MUTUAL Tll:VST AND INVESTOll.S
1r.d l!\11 11kl firm 11 com~ ol Ille
"11-1"'1 -14111. ..t1o$11 111..... 111 lull
Irie! Pl•cn "" re>kleM! ...... IOI_,:
WALLACE L MITCHELL. II, un
Anllg111 W1v, N,...._, ll e I c I!,
C11!1<lrnl1
ALBEllT E. JA(l(S()N, 11 ! I
S. Sl!1wntt. S1nl1 Al'la. C1lllonil1
FllA.NI( (, COLISTA, 211 Cllfe Tllll·
la. $In Ch!men!t, C1tllornl1..
01lld A1111u1t 1,, 1'6&.
WALL"'CE L. MITCH.ELL, II ALBERT E. JACKSON
Fll:ANK C, COLISTA Slslt al Cllllornla, Los A1>11eln County,
On AUllUll 16, 1'6&. before-· I Nollry
Publlc 111 incl for stld .St111!, 1frSOl\lltv
11> ... arl'd WALLACE L. MITCHELL, II,
ALBERT E. JACK.SON, tnd FJtANIC C.
COLISTA know" to mt to br Ille" person'!
wh<Ke "'"'" ire 1ubKrlbed to lflf wllllln ln1lru~1 •llCI Killlowledfed lhtY e.11·
ecu11d Ille Umt. {OFFICIAL SEAL)
cnervl A, L"em1n Nol1ry Publfc -c1t!tornl1
My Ceonml111on E11Plra
Aarn IJ, 1tn
ALL•N AND MITCHl!LL An..-rw•• 1511 WntcMH DrlYt N .. :t0t
Nt•"'1 IQdl, C1l11«11l.1 nut , __
Publill!ed Or1nfl't COl•I Ott!¥" ~not.
$"'11!mt>tr 1),. 20. 27 incl OCfobtr ~.
1'61 15'1UI
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
•
LEGAL NO'l1CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l'lCE LEGAL NO'l1CE LEGAL NO!'ICE
MIMOIANOUM 0, INTl!JtllT
a l!OUlllMINTI
I'" 11119r'!Mll9oi "''""' Olllyl lllt lleldl Admlnlsl•1t1<>11 8ulldln1
A""'°"lfV, Admlt1ltlr1tlo" 8 u I Id I n I
Rt,,...,,111 90fldt . Tiit tX•d !Otll ,......,nt ol l~ttresl
••v1bl1 on tM Bondi durl"f lf>e Hlf OI
fl!.I Inv. ll'llCl1r lht t bove ••-.al Is
S .. •. • Net lnttr"'t rile 15 Publllhld Orll\fl c ... tt Dtlly P llol
Sf!otrmbtr 27, JO, lfft.
Long Point
Race Bids
Sent Out
IRS Cool
To Cost
Of Yachts
I
By ALMON LOCKABEY '
Oilfr .......... "". lf!I«
lt geb hanter to deduet
the cost of yachts. even
tflougb lt may be uised
primarily for entertalning in
promoting business.
For that matter, even
though a yecbt is chartered
to produce irH:ome the tax
court bas recently ruled
against a taxpayer who
sought to deduct the ex:·
penses of the craft.
The two cases '~·ere brief·
ed in a pamphlet called
Persooa\ Tax Problems.
The first case involved sn
individual taxpt.~'er v.tio v.•as
JOO pereect stockholder and
president or a pricting co,...
poration{ that owned a SS.
foot yacnt.
The boat was frequently
used to entertain personal
friends and business guests,
f()f' a meeting of the cor·
poration's salesmen and to
e n t er t a in corporate
employes.
The corporc:.tion claimed
that the boat was used 75
percent for business
althoogh 90 percent wa~
deducted on the corpOrate
return; thus 75 percent of
depreciation, maintenance
and repairs a n d en·
tertainment expens~ were
deductible.
The ms disallowed the
full amount,, of depreciation,
mainten2.nce and repairs
and '840 of the $1 ,550 enter·
tainment deductions taken.
Then, pursuant to its dou·
ble disallowance approach
the IRS tagged the tal.-payer
with this amount as con·
.l.tructive dividend income.
Under Sect.ion 274. a facili-
ty used in connection with
entertainment is deductible
only if it is used primarily
(more than 50 percent) in
the furtherance of business. nus must be substzntiated
by adequate records of
evidence.
In this case. the weekly
reports kept by the taxpayer
were not sufficient to show
business purpose under Sec·
ti.on 274. because, for the
most part, the reports did
not show the business
purpose of the expt!flse or
the business relationship to
the corporation O{ t he
persons entertained.
The court heid that the
yac-ht was not used more
than 50 percent f o r
business; therefore, the IRS
disallows.nee Of the
deprec:iation a n d main·
tenance expenses was sus·
tained.
However, the court held
that the taxpayer's income
should not be increased by
the full amount of expenses
disallowed.
The chartering c a s e
pointed up even more dif.
ficultiec; the t&xpayer must
hurd1e in claiming dedUC·
tions. He must prove that
the yacht was a business in
the first place.
In this case the taxpayer
bought a 40-foot yacht in ()c.
tober, 1957. !-le intended to
use it for his own personal
use, but felt he could not af·
ford it unless he made the
boat seU-sustaining by mak·
in,g it available to others
through chartering.
lJe did not buy the boot
for resale. nor did he ever
before charter boats.
The boat was n o t
chartered in 1957, but tlle
taxpayer received $957 in
charter fees during 1958.
'nle charter provided that
the charterer. not the tax-
payer, would pay £U ex·
Long Beaeh Yacht Club penses In connection with
has issued invitations to au the yacht during the charter
~ racing sailboat skip· period. The boat was sold
pers to enter its Long Point during 1958 at a loss. On his 1958 return the tax.
Race Oct. 5-6. payer took deductio115 a net
'lbe race is: open to loss on operation of the
members o f tei:ogrJzed boat, depreciation a.nd a l<>ss
yacht clubs who own sailing on the sale.
h'-ualilyi The IRS disallowed tht yac wi q "«" uncLer the first hl•o because the bott
oceen radng, Midget Ocean was not a trade or bul\iness.
radng and Pacific 1-landicap It permitted the taxpayer to
measurement ruJes. Entries deduct up lo S9SO -the
must be filed at Lone Bea<:h amoWlt of fees rece.i''"d
Yacht Club not later than s as Ult expenses incurred LQ. product.Jon of income.
p.m. Oct. 3. The loss on the sale o1 the
The race will bt tailed in boat w;u also disallowed
two legs. ~ first leg will becau11e lt was not used in a
be Saturday from Long trade or business -nor was
Beach t.o LonR Point. it acquired to reseU M a
Oatalina Island !tarting at proflL
11 a .m. Sunday's ra<:e "-'ill -~--===-:----
be from Long Point to Long """111"-rtt !'!<:h, also swtiog at 11 TEETHING
PAIN?
Cal-25s Race
Fourth anoual national
cbamptooshlp regatta for
the Cal·?S Oau will be held
SMurday iand Sunday itt
Marina det Rey \mder th~
1poosorship Of Pa c i f i c
~i2'f'intrs Yacht Club.
w. ~
-"-"" ..... llWQ. liqlricl
P11t aa -p1ln's 1on1. .............. .,,
p.dl1trlcl1111. (111 ••
us1. Brl1111 prolo111tf
rtll1f. Cirri•• Gaad
Houstk"p!n1 •tmrttJ snl. Ast Slhlnnlclst fir
BABY ora-jer ~ course will be in fl
ocean oil the Venice pier. ~----------
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Complete-Printing Service
Top QuaUty -Fast Service . '
64.i-4321
2111 w .. 1 S.la... Im! •
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PEANUTS
'TM!! A5PIRA1'10t-I
~TH!FlUIO WAs c~Pl.ETl!:LY
5UCCtffFUL.
I. l'HINl< YOU~
MR'. THORNE Will
et ,llL RIGHT,
'DOCTOlll:S.
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
HW, MAVE AU. ltl6MT .. IF ¥C1
A. (UP~ IW5'1!tT OU MIN&
C.OFFEE WITM 50 5TIA.IGMT•
)l.f,5H LA ! U.C.EO:
MOON MULLINS
. '
TUMBLEWEEDS
VOi ~p OYEtl: ..OW TWAT I'M MUE, t1J
TWE l'WCIMf TWAT IATiifl NOT TM.K A&OlfT
'IOI WANTW 1'0 JANP\'/ HI IO«H 14! 1
TMJ: AIOGT ™P'f! ~ LAllllWEP IW Ml!t
F4ta 10tU6MT WHEN ME
W.t.NTWO Ml 10 RIW Off
A.Ml' MAJllV Ml""!
OPP ... ALL I .Si• IS A
. SHORT FAT ~1.~ow.
SAY! DID YOU HEAR THAT
PlTIFUL,SCREWllNG WAIL OF-A
RA51D COYOTE DRIFTING DOWN
THAT WAS
NO CO\'OTE ...
THAT WAS
HI LDEG-AR!>
HAM HOCKER FROM THE HIU.SI'
SINGING! .
Mun AND J,EFF
ANYONE 'FOR.
TENNIS?
•
MISS PEACH
fi/,
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Supe~ A1~JE1i ,, ....... ..
Dclll~t.. 012-'INTE~JJA'T10N.\L.
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By Charles M. Scliub
--_,. ....
By Harold Le Douic
By Ferd Johnson
ly Al Smltli
ly Men
~' ., t'....., •.. '..: ~ ... ,,,,. . ,; .. .......
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1-11 •
DE BUT -Don Rickles, above, hosts 11'I'be D o ft
Ricki•• Show,.; whlc!t premieres ton!thl iD color at
9 on C ha n n e I 7. The half·hour C01tvenatlccl Hr•
les will have Danny Thomu aJ Ill fl.rlt auNt to-
nill!t, Pat McConnlck is Rickles'-.-
TELEVISION VIEWS
'Journey' Star
Rated 'Great'
ly RICK DU IROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Network televll!on'1
only anthology series, a 1u1penn entry ..UW
"Journey to the Unknown.'' an1ved on ABC Tlnu'l-
day night with • tale of a )'OUlll man wllo fill• !or
a wax mannequin.
THI HOUR.LONG series is filmed In London,
and Ila bou ta Joan Harrtoon, who tormerly P"'"
ducocl Alfred !Utcbcock'1 tol•vl•lon 1bow. 11:11111
pre11 releases indicate the aeries i• after marquee
value as well as su•P,•n•e. It Is a 100<1 Idea llnee ,
the competition for 'Journey lo the U~" II v~ rough: CBS-TV'• Tbunday nllht movl• ml
NBC-TV's "Dra1net" and D~an Martin. . Virtually all the Londoo-filmocl video senes that
are seen in America boast 1uperior 1cttn1, and the
premiere of "Journey to the Unknown'.' was no ex• ,
ception The mannequin -and headliner -w a I 1
Carol Lynley, who had relatively few lines. But "
Dennis Waterman as the confuaed young man who
is lru.tratod wtth the real world -a!ld falls jn lova
with her -was the real star, and was exctlllnt.
AND HIRMIONI Badderly added a WI' cbolco
scenes as the over·the--hill landlady who ha1 eyet
for Watennan. ~
In the f\ory, titled "Eve," the young man, who ·
works in a department ltore, a1ka: to btcolne a v
Window dresser after he imagines that a mann~
quin in an evening gown in the window hu amiled
at him.
HIS TRANSl'IR la cranted, and then he i.am.
all the wax mannequlnl, tncludinc Eye, are· to bt
replaced by new one1 made of !lber..,..1, and d•
f\royed. Determined lo nve her. he hides tn t h e
llore after clootng, 11 dllcovered by a •upertor and
accidentally kW1 l!lm.
He tlees wtth the mannequin to an art:l.lt lrlllld,
and from there runs again witil, in a chan.ce encoun-
ter with a couple of toughs In a field~ be is knifed
lo death defending Eve, whom the hoocnunu -from ,
a distance -\htnlt to real a!ld want lo u11ult.
EXCEPT FOR the most memorable swpense
tales, which are intellectual as well as theatrical .
experiences, nothing much matters in this genre
of entertainmerrt but the effect of the presentation.
And if there was no particularly ringing and essen·
tial meaning to 11Eve,'' there is no doubt it wu ef.
fective, and an enjoyable beginning to "Journey
to the Unknown."
Another London-filmed aeries, a half~bour 1itu·
ation comedy called "The Ugliest Girl In ToWn,"
had its debut on ABC·TV Thursday nlgl>t. And its
very amiable young star, Peter Kastner, managed
to carry off with grace, charm and manly humor a
very difficult televl1lon chore: being a hero who bas
to dress up much of the time like a &Ir!. Explana-
tion : IT SEEMS THAT Kastner, a novice Hollywood
talent agent with little,rnoney, falls for a visiting
English •tarlet, and she for him. She returns lo ,
London. He can't afford to follow. A photographer
friend coinctdentally asks Ka•tner lo pose aa a fe-
male for a layout for a London magazine becawe
his original pictures were ruined. The publication
thinks Kastner -that iS, the 0 giri" model -is
great, end bring• him (her) over to Loodon. Kast-
ner agrees to go only to be near his girl. Thus b~
gins his masquerade.
Dennis the Menace
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r r!Qy' Stpt tmbtt 27. 1966
Your Worth
·Why Umbrella Insurance?
1lJ SYLVIA PORTER
A pllyllclm ,... ..n.d In
DOt looc .... lo 5-se 1bt
m-.. Gf a woman auf.
...... -deopaadmcy.
Allilr he left, the '""'Wl
)aoP*l oul al 1bt -....
Her """1.ws suod 1bt doc-
tor -1 -• --ol fl00,000.
A -WU lilllnc In bis
ear lo lnmt al • boulo when
a 1rH tell C111 I b 1 -= Ibo ""'1lt!nc in-!mlet Id\ him partlyud
!nmi 1bt nod: dowt!. A jury
---fl.5 mllllt>" In biJ 111111 oealnst u.. propert y -· . A PHYSICIAN and a dtug
manuf~ wen: 1ued
reeeIJ!ly fa< '6 m!IJ!m for
the wrooeful UN ol a drug.
The case bal not yet been
concluded, but tile 1heer
sae of the demand is a
dramatic illusttiatJon of the
huge sums J.ovoived in
liability arlta -and awards
-today. 'l'1e '5 ml.Won 1uit
a1ao Wllltratel how :ftnali.
clally -hund<e.is
of thouu..ndt of wealthy
Am.ericam have become.
A• a protection again.st
crlpjl!ing lanulm, moun1ing
numbers of ~ss ex·
ecutives, doctors and other
professlooals -moderately
well-f.O.do u well u wealthy
-are tumi.DC t.o "um·
brella" Habflity imurance
polides. Today there are an
estimated 250,000 umbreJ!a
policies ln effect, w ! I b
wverage ranging from Sl
million to $.5 million . The
vi$ majority o! ther;e
poticiet have been written
just within the pa-st five
yeani.
An umbrena insurance
policy builds on top of your
exi1ting auto an.1
home ownet'S ' insurance
coverage and, p e r h a p s
landlord3' or professional
m a l p r actice iruiur an<:e.
Umbrella coverage a 1 s o
covers 'you for other types
ot legal action 1ucb as libel
suit.II and false arrest -in·
volving a deductible which
may range anywhere from
'250 to $5,000.
IN ADDITION, umbrella
coverage extench; tQi areas
not usually covered by stan·
dard liability policies; for
instance, rented items rang-
ing from boats to
automobiles. And umbrella
insurance may extend your
America's 1nost
distinguished
nuJtor car
SEE IT NOW!
MERCURY
-------
LINCOLN
Learn How To
Grow Your Own
MONEY TREE
If you're plonning to plant e few dollars in California real estate, this
free serie' of lectures will show you how to make them grow. Keyed
to the everege real estate investor, especially the speculator with
residential property to menage, t he series will cover ell aspects of
the current market in lectures by top-rated experts in various fields.
Plen f'IOW to attend the classes to be held on four consecutive T uesdey
nighfs et 7:30 each evening in Newport Harbor High School Audi-
torium, 15th end Irvine, Newport Bee ch.
Real Estate Investment Series
Oct. 1-1""°" N. Weetl. Welc:ome: Hany lobbftt, "O"""'o County-A
W.., of Ut. fw llual•eu and PIMIUre": Arth•r A. Tumer, "Why
l11•nt la lteal lsMte7" and "Tallorlnq Your Real Estate lnYtstment."
Oct. I-Miit• A. Doutb, "Self or Proftsslonal Mona9ement": Cop
~. ''Whdorn of Lond lnYHhnHt."
Oct. 15--0t-Martin, "lnvH,,.oot In a 5111910 Family lHldooc:o": Roy J.
Wft. "TIM ltd l1Mte &cltaat•" •d "Tht 'Tar FrH' lachcmt•·"
Ticket Information
No ........._, bet tldteh •• required. Thl'f COft be pick.cl up I• advoftct
• ti.. 0.-,. Cod Coll"9• .__ .. at ttlo bally Piiot offices lo
C:-N-N-pon '-II, Hoot!-'-II .. d Log-I~
DAlY PA.OT ORANGE COAll COLUVE
NEWPORT HARBOR· COSTA MESA BOARD OF REALTORS
•
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OVER THE COUNTER
Examine Your
Investment
Program •..
. , .• to 9ive your dollar• a chanc• to 9row?
Her• i1 • ve1ueblt opportunity for you to le•tn
what inv•stm•nf method ;, b•1t for you. The'•
FREE Goodbody & Co. 8a1ic lnv•stm•nt Lec-
tur•s er• d•si~n•d for th• investor who would
like to know mort tbout souncl inve1tm•nt prin-
ciples.
A CHOICE OF THREE PROGRAMS IS OFFERED
FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 540-8121
o• MAIL COUPON
11 I SERIES OF THREE INVESTMENT LECTURES
Tu•scley 7:45 p.m. Octob•t I, 8 & 15
Plec•: Gooclbody & Co., Oreng• Co Airport
Office1 <4501 Birch St., N•wper+ B•ech
I l l SINGLE EVENING INVESTMENT LECTURE
Monday 7:45 p.m. S•pt lO
Plac•: Keyston• S•vin 91 & Loan Auditorium.
555 N. Euclid, Anaheim
I JI KEOGH FORUM , FOR SELF EMPLOYED
Singl• Ev•nin9 Thur1. 7:)5 p .m. Oct. 10
Piece: Goodbody Offic e -S•m• •• (I )
INSTRUCTOR: CLAUDE TAGGART, Ro9;,,,. Rop.
GOODBODY & CO.
!-lem~r of New York Stock Exch11n.51:e
GOODBODY & CO.
4501 Birch St., Newport Beoch
0 WiO Attend. No . of People __ _
111 S•ri•1 of l ........ 12 I Single Eve. ····--K•e9h_
0 Unoblo to Attend But Desire Info. On
NAME ...... -.... -............... _ .......... _ ................... _ .. __
ADDRESS ....................................... _ ... _ .................. _
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1'68 DAILY PILOT \
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_!! DAILY PILOT Friday, Srpltmbtf 27, 1%8
Last of Three A.rt lcles
ElvM Returns to Public,
Schisgal
Duo Opens
At Laguna
Oemente
To Stage
'Heiress' Plans Concerts and Tours •
By VERNON SCOTT
HOU. YWOOD (UPI) -
\Vlllle the Beatles aod other
gro\aps have fiUed sta.:lia
and auditoriums w i t b
screaming teen·agers, Elvis
Presley climbed Olympus.
aloof from the howling,
record-buying youngsters.
Until now.
lie is returning to the
grass roots or bis popularity
in a significant about·face
for the secretive, invisible
Elvis.
"Before too long I'm going
to make some personal ap·
pear a nee tours." he said.
"I'll probably start out here
in this country and after
that play some concerts
abroad, s tarting in Europe.
"I want to see some
places I've never seeo
before. I miss the personal
cootact with audiences.''
\Vh i l e Presley's
bandwagon hasn't rolled to
a standstill, it might well be
sidetracked.
It has been movies and
recordings and that's all.
But youngsters want to see
ttieir heroes in the flesh. It
adds new impetus to a lag-
ging career, creates fresh
excitement.
The adult Presley un·
den;Unds this.
KNEES SHAKING
He grinned broadly: "I've
already taped that
Christ m a s show for
December. And let me tell
you m~ knees ~ere shaking.
Not that they were keeping
time with the music.
"It bad beeri just too long
since I'd appeared before a
live audience. After awhile I
began to relax and enjoy
mysell. Now I'm lookll:lg
forward to a tour or two and
seeing the people from a
s lage again."
personal lnteres~ in a
number of charities, most of
which he keeps secret.
Ooe fTiend said he has
given away more than a
million dollars in the past
decade.
lie once gave a $50,000
check to the Motion Picture
Relief Fund.
.. Elvis is a very generous
boy ." says Colonel Park'er
in his best Micawberish
voice.
M<>reover, Presley has
refused to tnvest his money
1n tax sheller dodges. lie
earn3 a fortune and pays
straight incorne tax on it.
\Ve stood talking on tile
set of his latest movie.
"Charro. ,,. v.•hen a makeup
man called him to one side
to blot the perspiration from
his,tace for the next scene.
Director Charles Marqui!'
Warren stopped by. He w..as
asked wbjil he thought of
Elvis as a straight actor.
without being called upon to
sing a note or play the
swaggering hero sUTrounded
by dancing girls.
WITJI THE BEST
"Elvis stacks up with the
best Of them," \Varren said,
··and I've directt:d Gary
Cooper, Bill Ho 1 den.
Gregory Peck -all of
U1em. I love Elvis because
he takes direction well and
tri~ hard to bring a little
something extra t.-0 his
characterization.
How does he compare
married life and fatherhood
with t h e free.swinging
bachelor days?
"They sure are dif.
rerent," Elvis sai1.
Elvis' father. Ve r n o n
Presley, was on the stage
watching his son wol'k .
Presley Sr. is a tall man
with gray hair. soft spoken
and obviously proud of his
son.
Before t h c millionaire
singer-actor hits the road he
will star in his 30th film,
··Chautauqua."
He has another movie1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I
commitment next March at
Universal. So far there is no
title for Presley's £irst pic-
ture at the studio. but such
details don't faze Elvis.
It is enough for him that
he continues to be in de·
mand by motion picture
companies and that hUi
reCflrds sell like m8g1C.
The details, the money
and contracts art left t-0
Colonel Tom Parker. Elvis
does, however, take a
WAREHOUSE ounET
Fumihlr• and Carpet
Spanish Oak & Wrought Iron
Dining Se~ 48" table 4 chairs
$1'5.00 Set Rog. $245.00
.._,., N)'lo• s~ .. S4.t5 Ml·"·
h11tallcrtlo• AYollcibl•
J. J. KNICKERBOCKER
4001 BIRCH ST., N.I .
l""-tl l'•U'"" a MK.lrtllwl
545-8409
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS • •c _ dancr "'
, 1 Cook d 1 ~ 45 Hold ma~tery " n over certain.way 47 Unusual 'Wrnt with dispatch 51 Numbf!'r lO Pl f 52 .•• ··-and act 0 Str iprs"· lf!'mporary 2 words •
Shf!'l!tr. . 54 Knockrd 14 In a un1f1rd down:
statr: Colloq. 2 words SBC 1 15 Dusty whllt oat ng on
I' ,.0 1.. 111rl.ill
onr "' 59 Prnetta\t · 11111, " In slowly
thr i rmy 61 Muslca l 11-· ··a 'iJUn!: composiUort 9/27/68
2 words 62 ltobtrt .. -: 9 Ovtrc1111t 36 Thanks 11 A.ta. • 2 wotds 10 With 12 • -!:
sprcific l!m r:: 63 Mart rrsull· Down, Cuban z words
2 wor~s iQg from landmilrk 37 Furthtr 19 \/acc1ntt damagr. 11 Grow lik e 39 Sra In thr 20 Glyr:s vr.nt bf NegallYt • ·-· Atlantic
to 11rlta.tron gastous 1011 2 words • Ocran
22. Apparitions '5 Anll-prohl· 12 Srr: 10 Down CO Mass of
2C -:·of lhr b1tionlsts 13 Somrthing ovutr:-bearing
Mist . b6 lllan'$ namr m~ldf!'d: scalrs:
26 Domain of 07" -·-go!": Suffix 2 words
ii countrss 2 words 21 Rrst In 42 Glvr 1n
27 W~rd IJ\r:d cr1tain obliqur:
W•lh rail DOWN po sition edgr: to
and side 23 Card gam r 43 Asbestos, 31 Hal>r:rdash· 1 Fish 25 Omameii· for onr
"Y ltrm 2 Like· -talion 44 Orsr:rts 32 Qurrn's -: of bricks: 27 Grrman ~6 -wrst
Historic 2 words admiral 41 Sprf!'ad ilboul
borsr filCf ~ 3 Hi1w1ll1n 21 Diagram 48 Grrrnland
33 Kind of • wlndslorm drawn on srttlrment
cl gafttlr 4 G111V! offmsr a planr C9 Makr adjust· 35 Equ1nr parent S Rrducr In 29 At thr tnd mrnt In Ult
38 Lrnient 1111pcrt1n'• JO Exrrclsrd controls
39 Un1nlmous 'Sprcltl 'ontrol 50 Upright
40 -· Alto public over 53 Exchange
41 AdJrcUvt asslstanct : 34 Almost mrmbrrshlp
suffix Abbr. ~xtlnct animal 55 Link flrmly 42 FHIS 7 Kind of of USA 5& Esau
sollcihtdr wrlltrn and CanaA 57 Cootrd
43 lord usrd perm ission 35 "To Cuba sufflclrnUy
with kry 8 Run away ind Back" 110 NFL or
and suit with a lovrr -author NHL playrr
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j'Elvis works hard.'' hr:
said. ··He enjoys what he
does and when the day is
over. he likes to let down
and relax."
So far as is kno,vn E lvis
Pre~ey never visits night
clubs or restaurants. He has
a great need or privacy.
E ven strangers visi ling the
set have an unnerving effect
on his concentration.
What or the future?
"Well," Elvis said ... I'd
like to make movies. some
of them straight dramatic
stories: some of them
musicals or comedies. I'd
like to continue recor:fing.
and I'm looking forward to
making these personal ap·
pearance tours.''
Does he think his brand of
music will continue to be
popular?
"It's still going strong,"
he said ... Lots of people are
singing it now. I don't plan
to change that."
Elvis Presley reshaped
the world ol. p-0pular music.
It's his bag, and he's going
to stay with it
ENTEITAllCMENT
Tryouts Set
For Mesa's
New Comedy
The final s~aso n of the
Laguna Playhouse In its
present quarters will open
Ocl 2 with M u r ray
Scttisgal's conipanion one-
act plays. "The Typists"
and "The Tiger ."
Directed by O a v i d
Marlow, w1105e production
nf ··The Odd Cnuple" set
new summer attenda nce
records, the t a n d e m
comedy·dramas will be
presented with s e p a r a t e
casts.
Appearrng Ill " T h e
Typists," which chronicles a
long day in the life of two of-
fice workers. wiU be Julie
Jl aas and ~1 ilt Jianson. Bob
D'Isidoro will be seen a s
"The Tiger," a mail cnsrier
OAILY PILOT Slaff l'llolt.
'Be1·e"s To Yot1" •
Cacstlng for the ~a n
Clemente Commun t y
Theater's first producti* of
the new season. • ' 'ii be
Heiress," has been an.
nounced by the T h e 1 m a
Ruckman, resident director
of the group.
Patty Broderick. w b o
recently moved to San
Clemente [rom Houstoo, will
play tl1e tiUe role o f
Catherine, a young woman
punrued by an opportw$tic
suitor. The latter role of
Morris Townsend will be
played by Steve Reed.
Tryouts ror "The Ir-
regular Verb to Love," the
second production of the
season for the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, will be held
Sunday and Monday even·
in gs.
Di.rector Pali 'l'ambellini
announced that the comedy
by Hugh and Margaret
Williams requires a cast of
four men and five women.
who Jtjdnaps a housewife. This 'cocktails for two' scene lacks an element of
played by Betsy l~ewett. romance a s Linda Baum seethes over Tom Titus' AU four performers have
Completing the cast o( the
19th Century drama are C.
Gordon Smith as Austin
Sloper, Catherine's ooutioos
father and Ruth Taylor as
the meddling aunt, LaviJi,a.
The Ruth and Augustus
Goetz play, taken from
Henry J ames' no v e I
"Washington Square," will
be presented. for n l n e
p erformances, Thursdayg
through Saturdays, from
Oct. 1 0 • 2 6 . Reservations
may be secured by calling
the Cabrillo Playhouse at
492-1>465.
Readings will be held both
evenings at 7:30 in the Com·
munity Center auditorium at
the west gate of the Orange
CnWJty Fairgrounds. Prn-
duction dates are Nov. 22-23
and 29-30.
.appeared many times on the comments in the comedy "Dream Girl," opening
Laguna stage. Miss Jlewett tonight for two weekends at the Costa Mesa Civic
has earned two Vi'ctor Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrowids.
awards for "Under the Yum--~-------=----'---"-----
Yum Tree" and "Barefoot
in the Park": Miss Haas
played the lead in "Romeo
and Juliet'': Hanson last
was seen in "You Can't
Take It With You ," and
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Tumblrs Pmmanll!nl Press g•r·
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minutes of cooling and ftufflnc
puts creases and pleats back-
ready to wear!
D'lsidoro \Va!S featured in
"The Odd Couple."
The one-acts, written by
the author of the popular
"'Luv :· wlll run for three
fREE INSTALLATION OH AU.
wetks, \Vednesdays through
Saturdays until Oct. 19 at
the playb<iuse. 319 Ocean
Ave. Reservations are now
available at 494-8061.
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TOVATT'S
HUNTINdTON BEACH
' ..
Modi! SRP·~
'
\
401 MAIN ST. in Downtown
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Open 10. a.m. 9 p.m., Sat. 10-6 536-7561
Also SPRINGDALE & EDINGER 892-4463
. ' ••
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JODEAN 'HASTINGS '42-4321
Children to Benefit
Golf Buffs
Aid Score
Members of Tiani de Ninos Auxiliary of tho
Children's Home Society are telling a whale of a tale
to all golf buffs.
A Whale of a Gol!-a-thoo will take place Saturday
and Sunday, Oct. 12 and 13.
Courses selected. for the events will include Mea-
dowlark Country Club, Costa Mesa Country Club,
Rancho San Joaquin,. Mesa Verne and Willowick.
Rules 'selected for tbe funding event, benefiting
Chilclreli's 11,ome SQciety will be very .simple, accord-
ing to chairman "Mrs. James Marsh.
'!'be golf pro on eacb course to be played will select
one bole and ·auxiliary members will be on band to
sell chances. For each 50 cent donation the player will
receive a free golf ball if on the first shot his ball lands
wttbin a designated circle.
With a donation of $1, the player receives three
free balls, and any golfer fortunate enough to score
a hole-in-one will receive an award of $25 in recog·
Di.lion of bis skills.
Atixiliary members in pairs will 8laff eacb pre-·
selected course between 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. dur ..
ing the two-day evept.,~&isting "!gular members will
:
•
• ••
, . be new members who were we.corned dunng a mem·
bersliij> t... -lier tlbis montti.
Se{ving with Mrs. Manb is Mrs. Richan! l'>Json,
and also assisting will be Mrs. Robert Vernon,
president.
WHALE OF AN EVENT -Members cl Tia... de Ninos A'llXil-cours .. Saturoay and Sunday, Oct. 12 and 13. GeWng into the
swing of things are (left to riglrt) Mrs. Raymond Anderson aiid
Mrs. William B. Spencer.
\ lary ol the <lhildren'• Hom~ So<i<ty hope to capture memmoth ,
returns :from-theii' golf-a-th.on which will take PJ.ace·on five area
Unusual Art
·-·works Invited •
A briigbt display of mixed
media mt lllnM will be
displayed by 1be Anist'•
Leque ol Seal Beod!.
An •n'CPJll emil>Mion «
stitchery, ftapest:ry, weav-
ing, knitting, l>atik, cloth
Book
Beat
(l!:dlter'f llflft: llle follow'IM (;jlp.
iui. boaill. revi.wt _.. -•Nd for
ltl1 DAILY ~IL.OT b?' W1llff J"""*"',
Huntlntllln 9-dl llbnrJan. Ti. YOl--u"* lwlw t..'I rtUIYed .t the llbl'lll"f'
1nd 1r. 1v1H1bl1 for dn:uliltt.in),
"Heaven Hetp Utl.. by
""'1>ert 1'MT -So -else is new, fresh, fumy and
sometimes serious? Tarr'•
second DO'Vel! It's about an
independent, t deal l 1 tic
young rabbi and hi9 first
cmgregation in suburbia.
You'll recognize the entire
Gi!walt Gettmt from the
temple down to the Poah
No.sh delicates6en. T h e
young mac fights the good
fight throughout his first
year from small incidentals
to intleriai1h int..~ with
rhe Episcopal Cb u r c b .
"Heaven Help U 1 I '•
shouldn't need any belp -it
cater• with 1111y humor end
•nhillng likability to a 1rid•
aud!eoce •
•
collage and slrq and koot-
ting desip will be on
di!l'IBY dl!riog tile ..-. al
N<Mmbe<.
The -Is open to all
area residerD wtlhog to
ente<, but design& mm! be
original and no IUlmped pel-
l.em! will be OCC<llled-All
proie!sitnal or children's
worim lb:Jold be labeled 36
!Udt.
Entries may be brought to ~
the leaeUe'•gallery, 32 Main
st., Seal -· fnlm Moo· cloy, Oct. 28, throu!il1 'lblrs-
day, Oct. 31, betJween 10
a .m . aod 4 p.m. 'Ibey also
will be .:cepted betweet1 7
and 8 '30 p.m. Tuur..iey,
Oet. 31.
A fee of $2.50 for omall
pieces and $3.50 for lm'ger
-will be dlerged.
The -"'1' dat.. of tile
shaw will be Nov. 2, &ncl it
will oontiale through Dec. 2.
The enlrieo will be judged
on opening day and cash
......-.ls ...i ri!jbool for tile
be8t: work in eedl. oategocy
w 11 I be preseoled by the
jun:r et 1 p.m.
WELCOMING TRAVELERS -Members of the
Fountain Valley Woman's Club will form a circle
of friendship to include prospective new members
during a tea taking place between 1 and 3 p.rtl .
Saturday, Oct. 5. In keeping with the theme, It's a
' ,
Small World , decorations will feature dolls from
many diffeTent countries. Selecting dolls for table
centerpieces are (left to right) Mrs. Sta.nley Staf-
ford and Mrs . Curt Burnett.
'Small Worl 'd'
Encircles Tea
Even with the vast distance from pole to. pOle-1 It's a Small World.
Recognizing that the city of Fountain Valley
is a mere 11 years old and m·any residents have
moved in from other cities, states and continent,&,
the., Woman's Club is inviting all feminine mem-
bers ·of the community to join them for tea on
Saturday, Oct. 5.
The membership tea will open with the theme
song, "It's a Small World," sung by a chorus of
members' children attired in costumes from a
variety of countries. They also will sing •'Friend·
ship ...
Greeting gqests between 1 and 3 p.m. in
Tamura School will be Mrs. Olin Hardy, pres-
idem.
Honored guests wiU include Mrs. Robert Bid-
well Jr., Orange District, California Federa·tion
of Women's Clubs' federation and membership
chairman.
Mrs. Willi-am Ballard, first vice president, will
introduce club chairmen and new memben will
be pinned.
Desserit 11pecialties from diperent countriei
will be served at a circle of tables representing the
world and a Circle of friendship. A large globe witb
briglrtly colored •!reamers connecting each tab)•
will fonn the u::ls, and a collection of dolls fn>m
different countries will be displayed, through 1llJ
courtesy of Mrs. Stanley Stafford.
Preparations for the event are being directed
by Mrs. Will Romine, membership chainban.
Assisting are the Mmes. Curt Burnett, co-chatr-
man; William Carron, entertainment; Staffon!,
decorations; James Lilly, programs; Charles
Askin, refreshments and te)ephone; Gary Powley,
Joseph Mortimore, Douglas Carr, Robert £ni:1•Y,
Fred Fupk, Robert Gillum, Leslie Howland, HODen
Lcingman, Gerald Wes•ler, Michael Wellington and
Robert 'Reeves.
I .
Fiance s Family's Sour Attitudes Could· Spoil
'
Roman.ce
DEAR ANN LANDERS o I am
engaged to mart')' •·YOUDC man I have
gone with for two years. Vern'•
mother disliked me intensely from the
moment we met. Hi& fatber &di as tr I
don't emt. I've tried very bard lo wfn
them over but I bave failed mt1erably.
To please Vern'• famDy I joined their
church. I u.sed to wear my hair long
until hi• mother auuelt.ec! I cut it. She
insiaU on belpin& me •elect clothes
because lbe 1Q1 I bave no tute. I
•lopped •-'"I peorliud notJ Poll•h beoouse sbe Ald it JooUd oheap.
It ts agony to have dinner with
Vern's parenta becau1e of the long
periods of 1Uence. Lut nlgbt I at-
tempted to mate some small talk and
Veni'J mother aalil; "wi.,. doo'j yau
ANN LANDERS A ~~
stop babbling?" I was so hurt I almost
cried.
Vern't older brotbtr married a girl
they consider "inferior" socially and
intellectually. Her life bu been hell. I
love Vern very mudl but I'm begin-
ning to WondlT' if l have the mength
to OJIUTY Into tbia family . What do you
th ink? -PLAIN JAYNE
DEAR JAYNE: You don't 11y bfto
about Ven111 attltllde. What doe1 M
uy •bea ld1 parenta put yoa don?
Doti he fa:at att tben Uke 1 wan OD ~
pickle? U 10. you're iolng to wlnd up
ale111lde your foture alster-Io-law.
Tbe key to your fature wttb Vem Ue1
In ld1 1blttty te ·live you the emotional
support you neecl to wtth1tand bt1
parents' bo1tWty. If yoa eu count on
btm, 1ay "yea" -olberwlte, for(et It.
DEAR ANN LAl'jDERS : A close
relative apends a ifNt de.al Of ti.mt in
our home. He is twrce my age and l
besitat.. IO be diare•pectful. However,
our children ere now 5. 7 and 9 and
they pick up words easily.
Thi1 relative calJs certain racial
groups by names which I abhor -
Wop. Kike, Chink , Spic, Spade. Runlde
and so on. I have given him dirty looks
but he ignorea'ftie. My husband s~• it
isn't worth lbe trouble 1 might run into
if I hit blm bead on. What do you say?
-MIDWESTERNER ,
DEAR MID: I Hy clobber Ibo II-
, noramu1. Such tilt should Dot be
tolerated. Clllldren lean 1 treat dtJI
mort from eiample thani fnim lll-
1tncti0a.. ff yow.tw11nt them to be good
Amerfcau, ieacla tbtm to Ttsped all
people.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have
wiitten a lot about .alcoholiJm u a
'
sickness. . What about c h e a t I n g
fathers ? ls that a sickneta, too ?
My father la 44, good-looking, ap-
pears to be youn~er than bl.I age and..l
always tbougbt ,be and my mother
were very · ha WY. Last year my
mothf:r confided in m.e tbat my father
b• been rµnning around with another
woman ... SLoce I teamed of his un-
taithfulne1s I bave been unable to be
civil 1o him. Our homo Hie ii horrible.
Don't t..ll ~ to ta1lt It ov1< wi1h
anyone: T'm tOo aabmned. PlelH tall m• wbat to do. I feel 111 help!-. -
AB~ ,
l>EAR A: Tbue II nolbbll yoa .. ~
do, wldch 11 Wt.; tt•1 1111to~nte '"' motber &ohl 101. 8be lboald line
41cta.ftded la" tomeoM el:le tf • felt •
die need &o • a b • r d e • •enelf., A
eleromu or • eounldor 1"Mlld Uve
beea more jadldou dtolcet.
Gi~e ln OT Ion him ... wba a IUJ
gJves you 11111 line, Jook out! Fw tlpo
on -to baDdlo · the oupcr oejr:
11lesman, cbeck Ann Laaders. JIOitl
hOT booklet, "NectJnc al» Pottlbfr'"
Wb~t Are Ibo Lbnllf!" Send your~
q~st IO Ann Landon ID <ire of i!i!o:.:
¥wapopor, encloainf IO cenll. ID = and a lt'mf, Rim.pee!, HK4dllb . .
tvelope. ' " :,.i;; Alm Lalldua will be llad IO bolp .0.
willl your pr<>blem;, Send tbtm iO 1*
in <ar. ol lho DAILY PlLOT, .....
ID& o ..U-addreuod, llampod_-
lope • , •.
J ·; '•
..!
f
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' .
DAil y •11.at
• -. ~
Stork Delivers Drudgery
Bundle's No Joy Until Later
87 JOAN BANAUER
NEW YOU (UPI) -
'Wboffe:r named oewborn
babies bundle& of :for never
cbqed a dirty diaper at 2
a.m. C.-tried to C0U an If·
teoUonate 1 NJ>OftH from 1
C'l'Oll-eyed, bAld-beaded in·
!ant.
nonworking mother I hid no
exeuH for a messy home,
tbere were tbe b a b y ' 1
di.ores. They weren't dlf·
flcuJt, but that formula·
m a k l n 1 • 1 t erilization, r-... belhlntl. changing,
all had to be done on
schedule, not when I felt like
K.
And 1 waa Juat plain tired
and rundown.
You'll mlss It when the baby
starU to grow~"
One nlgtt I sobbingly con-
ftssed to my bulbaod tbe
fear that t WM an unnatural
motber. He said he ttiought
most women felt as I did,
but I wasn't sure he knew
what he was talldng about
&ince he wun 't 1 mother
himHll. So t began to ques·
d.on friends who were.
-.boot tt,. ptriod by laying,
"Ugh"
Then my dAulbter took
over by &lvlng mt t broad
grin that obviously wu ln·
tentional, not lnteatin.al She
matle ootles at mt ranging
from the traditiOnal ''coo"
to somettinl: that sounded
like ''glonk,',.. which wa:s said
in a loud voice and obviou.sly
meant. "hurry up a n d
change me, mommy, J'm
I
Hospital Volunteers
Auxiliary to Form
Commu.nity·minded women interested in
volunteerinf aervices at a hospital are in-
vited ID Ille organizational meeting or Ille
Costa Mesa Memorial }lospltal Women 's
Auxiliary.
The m .. ling will be ct.llocl to order at 10
a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 2, in the doctors'
lounge ol 111• h .. pital.
Conducting Ille ftrat session will be Mrs.
A. L. Plntl'.)', who urges women to attend AJ a fUMI, it teems ttkely
the term came from a ·
dotlng·at-a-dWance
grandparent. Even adoring
fadlen know better.
Al! thi1 would have been
oUy if my little daughter
even knew who I was or
ahowed 90IDe sign of notic.1
ing me. Instead lbe stared
at me -or the rug or the
Jltpcoven -with crossed
eye1 and a vacant face.
.. , dk1n1t think my kids
were fun until tbey were old
enough to tab to ttie zoo," one friend, whose t w o
children are teenagers, 'told
me.
hungry." '--------------------
What every woman. thould
know about babie1,
parlicularly the expectant
motller walkiQg ll'ound in a
glow ol.. anticipetory love, ia
thllt inf.ants an more like
lumpa then bundles, and the
~ involved reltl more m
whM the Htt1e lump will
become Ulan what be is.
By the ttme tbe baby i1 a
few moothl okl, of coune, it
all changes and infant en·
ten a deli&btful state of
COOi and smilel,
Adding to my mounting
h)'lteria would be t h e
women who would tell me,
"'lbls lJ the wonderful time
-enjoy it wtille you can.
"I fett as if I were in
prison," another s a i d .
alttlougb it didn't stop her
from having a second baby
recently.
A tbird friend reminisced
Washington Wedding
Almost overnight t h e
lump had turned into a real
person who loved carrots
and hated her vitamin
drops. I melted into-a pud·
die Of sentimental etuMi OA
that first smile and never
hardened again.
But l wish someone had
told me v.1\at every mo«ier
ought to know.
Couple Tour Mexico
Colleen Rene Powers
To Marry • 1n
The betrottial of Colleen
Rene J>owers and Scott
La~ h.!argan was discfos.
«I l>1 be' parenta, Mr. and
Mrs. Dllniel Powers ii their
H untingt.on Beach h o m e
during a champagne party.
Summer ·-
MAS. GEORGE T. SEELEY
Morrlod 11 Sia
Speaking fr«n ~ence,
wh•o I flnt broullht my tiny
dlll&l>tor b...,. from Ille
hoopltal I wtii horrlfied IA>
find my m<6.er-love tested
by a rain of wet and IOI.led
dlapon, burplnf problem•
aod opitllng up.
White nowen in white
Gred.111 11l"DI filled ttie
Unlf«I Prllbytorlan Oiurcll
la Olympia, Wuh., !or the
woddlog ol Lym Morl\lll'llA>
Slbokl -and CllU James
Coker.
During the announcement .
party more than 75 relati\>eJ'
and cfc«e fritmdl from Lc1
Angeles, Sia.nta Monies and
San Fernando Valley con.
gratulated tbe couple.
Vicki Beardsell Now
Mrs. George Seeley
. Wbne at .. aboerd the
y«ht. . Wild Gooae, Viet!
Ellen lleordsell ol Ne"!10lt
Be.eh becao•• tbe bride ot.
George Tucter lieeley of
Sealllelcb.
Tbe Rev. Lorm Fllcldngor
per!orm<d b clool>le ring
rit• h the daughter of
Mn. PhylJ.ll M u r t a g h
,-......._~ardsell of Ne~ri Beadl
~ Viet« Beardsell of
West Los Angeles and the
son of Mrs. Evelyt'I Seeley of
, -se.at· Beach.
Given in marriage by her
father, llhe bride wore an
English net skimmer over
whlle silt peau de soie.
VeniJe iace flo'INers were
embrddered vertically on
the skimmer, but fe.llowed
the mtural line ~ the
round e d yoke. Matching
laef: and net were repeated
in her Freoc:fl, proyer bat. Put.I yellow frocks with
lace trim were selected fur
~ bridesmaids, the Misses
Ma?'ti and Cincli Beardsell,
the bride's sisters, Jan
Nelloo and Mar1ba 'Bloom
of Los Angelea.
U1hers were Bob
Prigmore, Boyd Peter a, n:.n Omohundro end Bricm
Sweet.
~ docldng at the Lido
Yecbt~Anchorage . the bridal
couple received 100 guests
aboard for tile reception.
Presiding over ttle guert
book: was Miss D I a n n
Richardson, h b rid e ' s
cousin. Special guests were
Mrs. M:ar.garet Murtagh of
Newport Beach, the bride's
grandmother, and Mrs. Lila
Bluff of Seattle and Mrs.
Fl'eida Seeley <:4 Blythe, !:tie
bridegroom's grandmothers.
Following a H .a. wia ii an
honeymooo, the newlyweds
will reside in Seal Beach.
The bride attended Pierce
Junior and Orange Coast
colleges and currently is an
airil.lne hostess. Her husband
w.as graduated [rem Bols:a
Grande Hig'h School a:nd
presently is enrolled at
California State College at
LoogBeach.
What wu bothering me
wu not tbe mucb d.Jscua&ed
poatnalal depreulon -It wa1 dopreMog reallly. Tbe
pioluro WU tbiJ:
I wu trapped in my own
home, unable to do anything
oo the IPllf of the moment
becauae baby oouldn't be
left alone. I practically Md
IA> lilre a babysitter 80 I
could go (o the
supermarket, a trip tbat
became my idea of
jallbnlak.
On top of tbe housework,
which I attacUd. com-
pul>lvely OIJI of tile guilty
feeling that 11 a temporarily
Workshops
Conducted
Wcrkshops for mairmen will be cmducted by Lo•
Ceniboa llistricl, California
Federatioo ol Women' 1
Club<, Junior Membership,
at 7 p.m. Monday, Sept. 30,
in Ba~mal) Hell, Lynwood.
Attending will be district
officen, cbatrmen and
coordinators, inc 1 u din g
representatives frun the
South C.out Jmior Waman's
<lit>, Fountllln V•lley.
Harbor Council's Movie Guide
(fdll0t01 Mohl: This movie ouldl lo
1>"81.-.4 bv tl'l<I fllm1 commll1" d
H1 ....... CGUntll l'TA. Ml"I. Roberl lo-
l"loltMll 11 •••lcllnl ind Mn. H1rt
S_,,.., lo cam'""'-dlllm'llll. It
1, lnlerdecl II I ...te•ar>es In Oehl ..
mining •11!11blt !1lm1 tar ce•llifl 17l!
ll'WPt IMI wtll -· -.et!v. YCIUf v-1re 111>tk!ttc1. MIU them 10 "'°"'-OUift; Clr'I ol !fie OAlj.Y Pl·
LOT.
MATURE TEENS
AND ADmTS
ANZIO we r COT·
respondent views costly
invasion.
DARK OF THE SUN -
Tribal civil war in Congo
backgrounds v i o l e n t
adventure.
DEVIL'S BRIGADE
Tougti guerilla combat
force is created from a
company of Am er i ca n
misfits and crack Cana·
di.ans.
·:\MES -A suspenseful
shocker about a couple
Bonsai Art
Displayed
At Party
and their guests
amuse themselvM
sinister ge.rnes.
ADmTS
wtio
wittl
BOOM -Film creates a
mo,._od of opulent
decidence w h e n at-
traction and c <1 n flt ct
develop between a
wealthy, dying widow and
a poet.
CLOSELY WATCHJ;;D
TRAINS -A youth's at-
tempt to achieve manhood
is portrayed with eJtttiy
frankness and humor with
Englisti subtit1es.
THE FOX ·-The rela·
tionship between two
women living on a n
i&Ola~ farm is shattered
with. tht arrival of an at·
tractive\ man.
THE GRADUATE -Comic
satire of a young man who
breaks out of t h e
materialiltic world or his
elders.
GUIDE FOR THE MAR·
RIED MAN -Brassy
comedy which hold6 mar·
rloge op IA> ridicule.
HER WE GO 'ROUND THE
MULBERRY BUSH -
Sbocldng musical about
high school tot.
POOR COW -SIA>ry of
Englleb slum dwoller.
THE SWIMMER -En·
counten reveal emptinffa
and bypocrt1y of
IUburbanltu life as he
..nm. home via_ b i I
neighbcra' pooh!.
TWO FOR THE ROAD -s o pbbdcated romanac
comedy t r a c e 1 ttie
bacllgrocmd of QUllTell
mid brief infidelitiu: in a
floundering marriage.
WATERHOLE THREE -a
rowdy spoof of traditional
western with bawdy 1at1re
about grffdy rascals and
stolen gold.
WILD IN THE STREETS -
Bloodcurdling satire of
rock sinJer and his "way
out" fr1ench who take
over 1he country and
widen the generation gap
to infinity.
Mini-Mermaids Formed
Laguna · Coeds Rallied
The Rev. Maurice Haehlin
conducted the ceremony .mu;,g ttie daugbtor o1 Mr.
end Mn. ci..e w. Slbold or
'Olympia and tile 10D Of Mr.
and Mr•. <lmle1 M. Coker
of HIUltingtoo Beacll.
For be< wedding Ill• brid•
.elected a coat dreH of
candleli&ht leTlnO cloth.
The A·line 1own WM design·
ed. with a mandenn oollar.
A Qoor length mantilla of
candlelight rOle point lace
from F,:urope was held by a
floral headpiece of fresh
whJte l'"OllebudJ, stephanotis
and green velvet leaves.
She carried an ann bou·
qutt Of white butterfly
r o s e b u d 1 , 1tepbaooti.s,
.baby's bread:l and fem, and
wore a gold bracelet with a
pearl and told wedding bell
"""""· • gift from . Ill• bridegroom.
Preceding !be bride and
her father do'Nn tbe efsle
were the matron of honor,
Mrs. Joel K. Leidecker, the
bride'c sorority list.er from
Seeltle, -brldem>aida Mn. F. Roger Brown,
another sorority sister from
SeatUe, and the Misses Peg· n and Marsba Coker,
allters of the bridegroom.
Their iMntical g 0 w ll g
were gleevebs blue, green
and ofl·wlli~ striped raw
silk designed with yoked
bodices and A·line skirts.
Fresh daisies in their hair
held blue and green ribboo
curls cascading down one
side and they carried
noseg.ays of daisies and
rosebuds.
Robert Schoepper o f
Portland served as ·best
lllOll and U8hen -· Larry Fl<!ning arid Frank Smlttl ol
Seattle, and Jell and Gregg
SJbold, brothm: of the brfde.
Following the ceremony
the couple greeted 300
guests at a reception in tile
Republican
Picnic Set
MR. AND MRS. CLIFF COKER
Select S.1ttle Home
The date for the wedding
in st.Bon ave .n tu re• 1 Catholic Cllurdl, H1Dttlngtoli
Beacb, II being planned !<Jr
July, ltle9.
The bride-el.ed. ii a senior
etMarinaHighScl>ool.
COLLEEN POWERS
Engaged
Her fiance, ton of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard L. Morgan of
Garden Grove, is an alum·
nus of Loan High School.
Anaheim, and a t t e n d e d
Fullerton Junlo<-Qillege
where he majored t n ----------
bU!lness adm!nJotnltion.
Acrylic
Exhibit
To Open
Yule Items
Exchanged
For Cash
Ayudan t es Auxiliary.
Opening to the public next Children's Home Society,
Monday for a six·week run will stage its Christmas is en acrylic art show by
James Cl utter 1 in· Happiness Sale during a
ternationally known artist sc:lad hmcheoo in t h e
and teacher Whose paintings Mi'M.ion Viejo Recreation
han& in aome ot the: finest Cerier at 11:30 a.m. next
priW!lte cdlect.iom in the M-ood331.
world. Area residents are invited
The Coffee G a r d e n to attend the luncheon and
Gallery, 2625 E. Cha.st inspect. the unusual gifts
Highway. Corona del Mar created by members of the
will be the setting for the 14 Otildren's Home Society
exfllbit and is sponsored by auxiliaries in Orange Cbun·
the Newport H·arllor Service ty. ~ague. Tickets for the luncheon
Clll!lter received h is are $1.25, and gifts range
training at the Otis Art from SI to $10. Women are
Tyee Motor lnn where e at the url.ver&:i.ty and a Institute, Chouinard Art welcome to oome after the
m86Sive arrangement o{ member of Beta Theta Pi Institute, Los Angeles City luncheon to view the
lighted taper-1 banked with fraternity, waa a member of College and tti.e University merchandise from l to 2:30
pale green gladioli and blue the Husky "VV'Sity football of Mexico. His classes at the p.m.
s taclium chrysanthemums' team which awarded rum Clutter School of Fine Arts Furtner informati"on may
filled the barbecue pit. the Flaherty Inspirational. include a worbhop f'OI' pro-be obtained by calling Mn.
Hostess for the receptiOn Award. He will be com· fessionaJ as well as .amateur Edward MitchelJ. auxiliary
was Mrs. Rich81'd Hicks, missioned in the u. s. -::•:;rti_s_.,_·-::-,-;---,-.,.--....'.p::r..,='d::en::t::.·::.8::'J'l::<X!=82::· __ _
and presiding at the bride's Mwine Corps follo~g his The I I
1ab1e wer• Mra. J. R. Cum· graduatioo. Dai y Pi ot Covers Boating
mJngs Sr. <d Mrs. V. G. After a -iding trip to
Sibold, grandmother< of the M•xioo the couple will make Best In The West
bride; Mrs. J, R. Oimminge tbei.r home in Seattle.
and Mrs. Dom Sibold, eunt.s"·=====;;:;:=::=::====================== <A the bride, and Mn. Jack II
Hubbard, the bridegroom's
aunt.
A graduate of Olympia
High Schoo~ the -Mrs.
Ooker is a senior at tile
University of Washingt-on
where she is a member O'f
Pi Beta Phi sorority.
Her htl8band, also 11 senior
FASIDON BREAKTHROUGH
Area Republlcana are In-DAR Group vtted to fo9ow the music t<1
New Way To Be
Suddenly Slim
a campa.i&n kickoU picnic
sponeored by the Huntington Hears Mayor
Harbour ft1publican
Women's Club on Sunday, Glem Vedder, ma.Yor of
S<i>t. 29. L.aguno Beach will be ttl•
The affair has been plan· guest speaker when Pa·
ned a.! an old·fuhioned tJenct Wright c h a p t e r ,
Mneric.miam Day and all Daughters of tne American
Republloan candidates and Revolution hon()f tbe U. S.
incurnbenta have been in· Constitution in the Hotel vited . Laguna al 12 : JS p.m. Tues-
Families wiH gather day. Oot. 1.
science process and can-
not give or sag. It's sur·
rounded by a slinuning
action border. A leather-
stitched panel down each
side of this girdle will
contour your hips if they
are a problem.
Bcnai • hd 9.11-seti en·
thtaiutl are in1'ited to at·
tend the fifth anma1 exhibit
~ will take place two
dliY• beginning tomorTOW in
the ~· County Buddllid Chrcb, Anaheim.
between 4 and 10 p.m. at t.he During the first meeting
C<>rner of F.dgewater and or the fall season, com-
Courtney Lanee in Hun· mittee ohlinnen will give ) • tington lf.-U. report..
Laguna B e a c b u l g h the city and new Jdtas de· lr,.;;;;;;;;;i;ii;i;;~;i;;;;----~~::i;;;;------..
Los Angeles : -An you a
woman whose figure is on
the good side but might
look perfect? You'll be
thrilled by the new ea.sy
way science has discov-
ered for you to become
Suddenly Slim and yet
completely comfortable.
Jf yot1're more than 15
pounds overweight, or
~'Our waistline is larger
than 32 inches, then this
idea is not for you. If yotir
weight problem falls
within this range, then
you can realize a ne\v,
smoother figure today,
without diet or exercise.
The girdle itself is of a
",vonder" Lycra" spandex
blend. It's a new power
net consisting of nylon.
acetate and spandex. Iti!
so comfortable, but has
such slimming strength,
it gives your figure every·
thing that's possible with
a foundation.
Members of five cluaes
iMtrvcCed by John Neka,
-""" ol lb• .'P<-oo..i 1Upporl<r1
; In Ille -• will clill>lay · .-17' a llundrocl plan II. 'l1lorw fa no admls&lon r..,....... ..., Iba public 1. 111-
=~ lo alltnd &om noon to
'"JD p.m. Dllt 5atw-dliJ Or
-lolp.111.Saoday. ,._... will -lit -
lul..at ~ of rocta
1llt'dl .... -... . ~,. ..... ••d • janlpon ba ....
-fmll.111.t• ••N •,
Sctlool coeds are being re· rived by the membership. cruited for a new club · which \fill be part of the Further informatiOn may
Mermaids, Women'i Divi -be obWned by calling Carol
lion of tbe Laguna Beach linduy, 494--7969 or Mrs.
Chamber of Commerce. Burton at 494-3789 or 494-
S t u d e n t s interested ln ·='='=21=· ==~-==joining the Minl·Mennaids tr
are invited to attend the
group's initiaJ meeting in
the home of Mrs Rudy Bur-
ANNOUllCEMOOI
ton. 69'/ Calalina St .. L.aru-Hlltlfltitloo Yaloy
na ~ach at 3 p.m next Ful Gos-J Auembly Tuesday. ,....
The group will meet every "WHERE JESUS IS REAL"
other Tuesday ln the Bur-
ton borne which i1 one block ...., ,. ...,. '" " ....,_
from the hllb ICbooL _,
AntJcfpated projec:U in·
elude doll drive.s , help wtth •n •"'-c.....,._ Ml11..,._
the Menallid project 1. 11" 1 Or-.. Hut1-.. .. 1c .. CbrlaUnu d.-om tw,. _________ _
,•
The Fantastic "m a /!," r. (fU{i
N•wly ArriveJ From N•w
Yer~ City. Sptciati1:i119 in
P•r\cna1 Hair Styling. Ne
C .tr b c n Ccpia1I E¥ary
HairJc • Cr11tticn Ju1f
F11r You !
OPEN 7 DAYS Plu. EVENINGS
. flwi/dt W/)~h COIFFU~~
1091 BAKER ST .. COSTA MESA 540-0341
\
•
,,
Suddenly Slim is an all-
new k.i.nd of 4-oz. girdle
conatructed of science
fibers. One startling inno-
v'1ion is the sheer nylon
front panel. 'l1Us is per-
manently stlHened by a
"Suddenly Slim," in
both girdle and panty
versions, is the pealc
achievement of the Cali·
fornia designer-genius,
Olga. They are availablo
at Buffum's Foundation
Department, N e w p n r L
614-2200. t
'
'
I
I
I
-...... ---.....---~-~ ------
'Hair Ye, Hair Ye,' Pacesetters Fit Wigs
Frid_,, Stptembtr 27, 1968 DAILY '!LDT JI
Horoscope
Libra: Patience
Js Great Ally
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 28
By smNEY OMARR
"Tbe wiM man controls
hlo dec1iny ' • . AJtrology
pcin.W the way."
ARIES (Mardi tl·Aprll
19): Alt« morning hours
you haVe better cbaoce to
d&al with tuperlcra. Wait for
storm to 1ube.lde -then you
get m or e sympathetic,
u n d entmding attention.
One at • distance writes
about money_
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): Utilize creative im·
aginatlon. What was a
dream can be transfwmed
into reality. Key ;,, to fini6h,
complete. Don't bang on to
Jl08L Get goitl« wlttl plans
for future . Erase
unreasonable doubt.
GEMINl (May 21.June
20): New 4!'Pl-oad1 n-1ed
fDi dee.ling with .mate,
p8.rtner. Comprorruse may
be ~ In financial
area. To purcbue or not
may be queatlOll:. If you are
mature, ~.it can be
worked out
CANCER (June 21.July
22): ObWn hint from
GEMINI message. Rela-
tioos with one .j:lose to you
may be .trained. Lend help-
ing beod to one with pro-
blem. Later you can relax
with piieq>le who b o l d
unorthodox beliefs.
CGincidee with chlnt>o r...
love andfOmance. ·you ciD.
get tact. about where you
stand with Import.ant
pers.oa, Be frank, booed -
demand the same in return.
·UBRA (SepL 23-0cl. 23):
ConditJom settle, You are
Ible to intolllgently plan
where home, security are
coOcerned. Be aware of
details. Patience ill great
ally. Sift through ideas -
cb006e the best In calm
manner.
SCORPIO (Oct. :i:l-Nov.
21)' SlreBo today OD deal·
ings with relative. Be Nre
meazings are clear. Tbere
could be element 0 f
mlsUDderstanding. Say what
you mean -mean what you
say. Short journey I I
favored.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. :a.
Dec. 21): You could pick up
genuine bargain today if re-
ceptive. Check v al u e s.
Guard pos~tomi. Look in
out-<1f-way places. What you
need ill obtainable. U perli's·
tent, you find it.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22·
Jan. 19)' Cycle higb -!Ake
imtiative. Good for new pro·
jects, new p«q>le. Nothing
halfway today. D 1 s p I a y
enthusiasm. Exercise in·
dependence of thoug!lt, ac-
tion. Make C'OOUlct -ex·
pre.es yourself.
Valedictorian Heads
Long Beach Sorority
ServinC .. Pl-.,
1.ela c:lllplc', A]jlhA Della
Oil ...... ..., llt Clollbnll
~ qo11qe • Loar
-· .. Mill -11• Moria Bledobadl <I Hun·
IDl*:D .Beach, 1 or m.t
~ iat Oran a•
O>o&t~.
The clau&IUr ., Mr. """
Mn, Poul w. -at· tended HuntlnillGa Beadl !11&1> SdJool While el.tendil>g
()(JC •-ecttve ln ~ Gamma sia.na end Phi
Alpba Mu, Sile r<(lrOIM!ftted
her 19(18 ~ d!ass as -· Ml11 Bledebradli w a s
~-from Oil Stato
.. "'--I.I olterring this:r--••~1111-
-majoring' in llOclal -· Other cbaptora <I Alpha
Delta Qi! .,. loollAld on the
Berkeley ond Loi Angeles
...._., of tile Unlwnity
<I 0.-am at
•
PRESIDENT
Annabelle Blodebod>
Calllomla S4late College •ti=====:::;;:::= Los Alllel ...
Focus Put
On Values
What Would Gno:ifather
Say? i& the name oC the taUt
William M. fuller, a gas
company oonsultant, will
give befOr'e the South O>ast
Club of Laguna Beach at a
luncheon i n Sborecliffs
Country Club, San Clemente
Wedrlesday, Oct. 2.
"I IM' Ml!: '°'
SOIN6 lO DO
MIOUll' 'JIOOillr'S•
!!<XX !Ille A
~tOOm
Celeb<de, of coono!
""""'" ........ of ....
a WomGI if)IGa doft'tloot
Needing moce "good heads'' to help with fund-rais-
ing projects which benefit the Children's Asthmatic
Research Institute and Hospital, Denver are Pace-
setters who invited all interested women to their an-
nual membership tea at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 5. Set-
ting for this affair will be the Newport Beach home
of Mrs. Stan Cohen (center) who with Mrs. Joseph
Bati (left) and Mrs. J. R. Goiphenee anxiously await
a wig show by Roy Alvarado, highlight of. the tea.
Also on the agenda will be a talk by Mrs. Harry Kur-
land, national auxiliary board member.
LEO (July 23 • Aug. 22)'
Accent on s ho wing
aMiociates ttiat you ap-
preciate their friendshi'p, ef-
forts. Many test and judge.
Reveal yourself as one with
warm1h as w e 11 as
showmanship. Smile arid
make others happy.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)'
Good lunar a.pect today
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Your way of viewing
events, pe!'SOl'lll may un-
d e r go t r a mformatioo.
Les6ons are learned -and
you benefit. Realize t h a t
some fears are based on fan-
tasy. Face reality -and
you succeed.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Enjoy yOUl'8eU with
congenial company too.ighl
Lunar accent o n en·
tertalnment, desfres.
The luncheon will follow
an 11 : ~ p.m. social period
to be h-by Mrs. ROOert
Dishmon'• hospdlallty com-
mittee.
MNI. Harry Belcher. pro-
gram chairman, st.ated that
the 1peaker will emJ>haslze
moral and sptritual values
during hi! lalk.
5ke one. How to do Ir?
Beouttfuly, <!ontlonabfJf
Jult wear Gost0rd 's Rair
--bra:M90-
sheer ~ oepe tricot
witti ,.ghtly lined.QtpL
You'll ....,,,;.. .......
Talents Channeled
Welcome gesture of
friendship. Doo't permit
false pride to stand in way
(I( happiness.
Fisher b a conaultant for
the Southern Califonlia and
Southern Counties Ge6 cun-
panieo.
wiMI .... wperb .. ping.
Rfbbo.f wire frmMg
Housewife 'Screens' Community News
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you b a v e
orfginal way of preseoting
opin!Olll!, ar1i.tic subjectl!.
You are sensitive, yet
Reservatiom ma.y be ob-
tainect by oa!lHlg Ml'll. Philip
Towne, 499-1531 or Ml'll.
How.-d Switz.er, 494-8967 by
Monday, Sept. 30.
... it. lite Mototd
-•<hi-t.el ......
Lycr•* spandea clinq1 lik•
arMWU.a.wftM..t
-oolon. Aod -t+M: sizes 328 tt.w «K:>D.
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of ""' 0.011, l'llet 51•11
Remember the old adage,
"no news is good news?"
Joan Boulanger doesn't
agree.
In fact, good news is
the only kind that's found on
her television news pro-
gram.
Not that she's trying to
compete with Chet, David
and Walter. Her show isn't
geared to a national au-
dience ... just a community
one.
Her program is called
University Park News and
can be seen on Channel 10
on the second and fourth
Tuesdays of the month at
7:30 p.m . But it can only be
seen in two areas . . .
University Park and Harbor
View Hills, where homes
are booked up tQ_ Com-
munity Cable Vision.
"I cover community news
including recreation and
sports, ucr activities and
special events in the South
Coast area, giving specific
information such as dates.
cost. phone numbers and
how to get there," said
Joan. a trim mother of two.
Her program usually runs
15 minutes. "But I'm not
bound by a time schedule,''
said Joon. "That's the beau-
ty of community television."
Joan joined the ranks of
newscasters by accidenL A
community newsletter con-
tained an invitation to "any·
one interested in having a
television program'' to at-
tend a meeting.
"There were about eight
of us there," said Joan.
"and each wanted to do
something different. The
manager or the cable station
Wld us what we could do but
so far I'm the only one with
a regular show."
Joan has found her avoca-
tion to be quite time con-
suming. "It's not the actual
taping that takes time, but
the news gathering and
script writing," she said.
"My house really suffers
during the three days before
a show. but fortunately I
have an understanding hus-
band," she said, smiling.
Hubby is Cltarleos BouJanger,
principal of Land.ell Elemen·
tary School.
Now that son David is 6
and in school and son
Steven, 4, is in nursery
school, Joat1 t.hinks she'll be
able to organize her tfme
more effectively.
"lf I just have two or
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION -Mrs. Charles Boulanger doesn't consider her·
self the equivalent of Huntley-Brinkley, but she does feel her University Park
News has its place in the reelm of news programs. A community show on cable
television, she keeps her audience informed QD what there is to see and do
in their own community and tbe surrounding area. Jean Moon is the camera.
man.
OPEN TO THE PUil.JC
The Balboa Bay Club Beauty Salon
NOW IN OUR BEAUTIFUL, N!W SALON
.A f\Jll 1taf1 ot eight ii ready to meet your Pvery beauty
need. including fadah And lace waxing, eye luh and
brow shaping and tinting. .
Call 642~ .,. 541-2211, •st-16'
OUR STAFF'
INOll. LEAH, ,AT, ANTHONY, RANDI, MARIT, GWIN
VJVIAN SLOAN, Owner 0,...,. Dally lac.pt Sunday
"
three mornings a week I can
make it," she sighed. Last
year, in addition to begin-
ning her television show
( whiCh w.as then called
Calendar) and settling in a
new home, Joan was presi-
dent of the Garden Grove
b r a n c h of tlhe American
Association of University
Women. nUs year she's ttie
group's historian.
"My friends in Garden
Grove naturally can't see
me on television but they all
think it's very exciting,"
said Joan. She admits she
hasn't been overwhelmed
with fan mail but she has
had a-few experiences as a
"celebrity."
"One afternoon I was sit-
ting down at a tabl~ for
lllf\Ch when a woman, who
wa's sitting next to me, be-
gan to stare. Finally she
said. 'don't I know you?'
and f told her I didn't think
so. She had seen me on the
television show,'' said Joan.
In addition to the news
program, Joan has taped
two Meet Your Neighbor
shows in which she inter-
viewed interesting people in
ber community. She consid-
ers this aspect or her tele-
vision wock to be perticu-
larly rewarding. f<ll'Ct'!ful. You don't alw.ys
"One of the goal! of my understant younelf. Ottlers TOPS Mermaids
program is to try to make find th11 quality fascinating.
my community like a small Recent emotional letdown fs t n f onnation regac_d:ing
town so that people have a over -you're bouncing memberdtip in TOPS Merg-
sense of belonging," said back. ing Mermaids may b e
Joan, .a former elementary GENE RA L TE N· received by telepbom.ng
school teacher. DENCIES: Cycle high for Mrl. John K~loff at 548-
Phts Good Howsah1 ...
Soalol-for
fashion and comfort See
and try Flair 3'490 Today
...;.,. loolOog -_ ..
''l remember how dif· CAPRICORN, AQUARIUS. 6213. M .. tings take pia<e •I 1!EIE'lC-CJllllrllllll
ferent Uving in Garden Special word to VIRGO: 7 p.m. ~y Thursday in 1J:a K"HM' S mlr
Grove wae;_ 1bere wes don't negled. essential Woodland School, Co•ta
oollting to hold tile C<llll·,._d_e_ta_il_• _____ ......;.,.__M_eaa. ________________ _
munlty together. 1 p~~~:;re ~~~e1 o1v%:_ ft 1ii ,.. .. ,, -..,;,°'9R ..,--...;Mm;· ,.-, .;·;;.-• • 2•1
muni'ty eo that they woo't
feel so dreadfully adrift."
Her belief in a sense of enna. IJ community Wllfl what pro-~.....,-,
pelled her toward the •how MJNIMI F!ROT OUAUTV
inthefirstplace. S/t~UR ·Ill.~ "I'm interested in com-
munioating," .aid Joan. "I
think that people in a new
area have Ml much poten-~ ~':ot 111.:i.~l:;.;ri:: ·s P ·EC 1·.AL I advised of what's going on
around them but amo can be
informed of their · civic
respomlbUties, Hke voting
on school bond issues.
"For this reason the show
is extremely satisfying. I
coosider it a tremendoos op-
partunlty ... and a tremen-
dous challenge.''
Amazing valve on
women's cool shirt
shifts from Pewy'sl
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wld• tradtt le lteiautlhl
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2.99
Empret!O Party Set
7" sil•erplated dish with
matdiing Empress "!'00" for
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"'"'l!fllNATtONA.L
4 ~~~~~~;.':'.!;~ .. LV•• COM~-
l•nlrA'"•ric•rd A Mtt+.r Cli1rt•• T-
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fHar · Shopping ConterJ (Huntington Conhlr) (Fashion ld0nCI}
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F~, Se-27, 1961
BATTERED HEAVY -Badly beaten Mexican
bea.,we2Jbt Manuel Ramos misses witi> . a right
hand dunng his bout with Canadian George Chu-
valo. ChuvaJo stopped Ramos on a TKO in the 5th
round. In companion bout, Buster Mathis TKO'd
James J. Woody in &th round.
Ji DB's 72-0 Win
Frosh Kicking_ Whiz
.Claims CIF Record
Achtung, college foothall llOOUU.
Mark df your 1971 calendars for
eyeing HUDCinl!IOO Beach Higll football
game..
By tNrt time freshman kicking
sensation BrMt White will be a senicw
and ready to move on the collegiate
gridirons. And by tll.at time his kicking
talents figure to be in great demand.
White, a 13--year-old freshmm at tile
j)iler institution, is claimant to a CIF
record for having kicked 10 strailht
conversions bi the same j!ame as his
mates destroyed helpless 'Imtirl, 72.0,
Thursday afternoon at Huntington in a
Cee divisloo duel.
CIF commissioner Ken Fagans WM
impressed with White's effort when
asked if it might be a reard. ''We
doo 't keep statistics like that, but get-
ting IO in a row in the same game is
ra.ntasttc. l would have to say that it ii
probably a record."
Official Wendell Pickens, recentib'
Sponsors Set
To Support
Golf Revolt
r«ired Clrqe Coast Ccllege baseball
C08dl. told the DAD..Y PILOT: ''I've
been officiating longer than anyone
ellie in Orange County (2.'i Yffl'li) and
I've never seen anything like it."
Brett, son of former Huntington
High and OCC athlete Jack White, also
came clo1e to making a 3.5-yard field
goal. kickiog into a stiff breeze.
Huntington athletlc dlre«or Ken
.......................
WHITE
WASH
''*'''''''''''''' ''·
Moats say1 that in a fily1ical educa·
tion class earti.er in the day, White did
click "" a 35-yard lleld goat
White is 5-6 and wetg!ls 145 pounds.
Tiie o&n, un.......i on alter lut
week'• 0.0 tie w:lth AJba.mt:ra, led 35--0
at halftime. TUBtin lost to Elltanc11
laat week, 80-0.
Checking oot tile rest ol the sports
circuit:
Reports from hi#1 altitude trairung
at Lake Tahoe reveal that U. S. Olym-
pie ham.mer throw competitor Ed
Bw-ke is throwing over 230 with
regularity in praotice.
Chuvalo Stops
Ramos in 5th
For TKO Win
NEW YORK (AP) -George
Chuvalo. a winner at. last in a major
fight, may take on Jerry Quarry,
Floyd Patterson or Buster Mattiis in
Madison Sqoore Garden Nov. 14 .
The durable Canadian heavywei~ht
champion. alwayfi an a t t r a c t i o n
because ol his llA..llingness to trade
pundles and a loser in hig important
tights, w~ back in the limelight today
on hls fiMi-round technical knockout
of Mex.ico's Manuel Ram05 at the
Garden Thursday night.
Mathis, in the co-featured bout,
came k'om behind and slopped James
J. Woody of PJeW York in 2:59 of the
itixl:h round after doing virtually
nothl.ng but dance around the ring for
five rounds.
"I'm going to try and match
Oluvalo with Jerry Quarry, Floyd
Patterson or Bustec Me this for No\'.
14," said matchmaker Teddy Brenner.
"Ohuva!o was supposed to have
fought Quarry instead of Ramos but
Quarry couldn't make it because Of a
bad back. l hear he's back in ttie gym
and I'll try and make it. If not it will
be either Paturson or Mathis."
"I'd love to take on that Clluvalo.''
said MaltWi, who watdled the Cana·
dian's tnlumph after hili own light.
Buster. down to 223 pounds to his op-
ponf!!lfs 2031h, made up lost ground
with a .fiery attack that dropped his
smaller foe and brought tile referee to
Woody's rescue.
Rustlers Ro~p, 34.3·,
In Fumhle-f illed Game
BJ 1!lAllL GUSTKEY
Of tlM °""' ...... """
OU. Graham bal old: "A focd>all
-.am 15 u •trooc at Ma well:relt
link."
Cy-1 Junior Cellep'a -k Unit
la 111 o11-. u could """'1!1ulall
just 137 yanla al We111ent Hllh School
Thltnday nllht and dropped • M-3
decialon to Golden West.
The victory w• Golden West'11 first
of l888, balancing the R.ustlen' rec·
ord at 1·1.
It wun't an artful display -•
yanll in pen~ Up! the crowd o(
3,412 fairly borad throu--
There were a1Jo 16 puntl and nlne
fumb&.
RUltler he.t co.ch Ray Shackle.-
ford, a!U....gh ploaaed will! certaln
indlvklual performances, waan't at
•11 Mm with the total picture.
"We'ro SOb>I to haw lo lmprow
qulta a bll II ,...,_ lolnl to ba eom-
pelltive la the South OoMt Confer.
uct,'' be Nld.
"We didn't play u "ell toolaJtt M
we cl1d as:alnlt E11t LA in U. open«
(GWC Iott Ula! one, %7-11)."
TM Individual brilht apoll were l'<'>-
Yided by q""'1Nbacl<t John Inglohart
and Sieve Grlfllth, l>O<b Nell Writht
and Dan Boera, flanm Randy Vataba
and Tom McMahon.
lnl&eharl picked up where he Wt
oft 1Mt week, completing 14 of 2.1 for
lU yards. EarJ.y lQ. the 1ame. be was
1lx-for-efght.
Fre&hman Griffith made his flnt
~arance ln the fourth quarter and.
gulded GWC VI yanla in I.! pt.ya fer
1ht final touchdown.
Wright and Boers chewed up Ute/ yarda~ au n!ght long through th(
Tonight in LA
Champs Favored
In Title Bouts
LOS ANGELES (AP) -World
lightweight champion Carlos "Teo"
Cru:z of the Dominlcu Republic and
World Boxing A11ociatio n
featherweight king Raul Roju of.
California are favored to retain their
laurels in twin.title 15-round tlghUJ
tonight.
The 3()..year-old CTuz, who whipped
Carloti Ortiz in 15 rounds for the lJa.
pound d..ivi!ion crown June 29, is an 8·5
betting choice to turn oU the dream ot
een-ager to win tne lightweight title.
The Long Beach youngster will be aJ
Nov. 15.
Rojas, 2.6, Ramos' stab~ate from
neighboring San Pedro, is a fl·5
favorite to reverse a 10.round decision
he lo st here June 6 to Sho Saijyo or
Tokyo in a nontiUe struggle at the
Olympic Auditorium.
The Olympic Boxing Club's pro-
moter, Aileen Eaton, moved this twin-
foaturo into huf• Memorial Coliseum,
a demand declaion becaute of the
tremendous populsity of a.mos and
Rojas with looa..I fans.
Cruz wu KU&rant.eed _,,000 to
make I.he first defeme of the title. Ro-
jas gets $40,000 and Rame>s and Saijyo
each will collect $10,000.
The main events are 11cheduled to
sbart around 9 p.m.
Rojas has stopped 22 opponents. All
hi.3 figM.s except one. in Las Veg~.
Nev., Dave been in California. Saijyo,
21. has JI knockouts to hi! credit and
ha1 never been stopped. The Japanese
has had but 24 profes&ional fights.
Cruz in IO years in boxing has had 01
matches and 22 of h.is 51 victories
were by knockouts. He was stopped
once by Carlos Hernandez in 1963.
Ramos has a 2.1-2-0 record. with 14
knockout_, to his credit and none
against him.
O!:argers' middl .. Toptber they dt·
felted 1B8 yardl in ~ carrlee.
Vllltaha ma~ 'the prettiest play of
Ille n!gbt, catdiinl an lngloharj pa"
on the five, ~vening his field on a
dime and 1coring on the 17-yard play
In. the third quarter, making It 27-3.
McMahon. who started at QB in Uie
Clpenef, dUplayed. uncommon versaliJ.
ity in playmg split end, tailback and
fianker. Also, be scored a touchdown.
Cypress' offense Will strictly zilch.
Coach Carl Schiller's hapless crel''
1cored first, OP a ~Ytrd field goal by
Larry Cookus, but affer that fumb1 ed
away evey scoring chance they en-
countered,
The Chargers seem eve.n weaker
offensively than they were last year
but a stronger defenae prevented
Golden West from producing the long·
bomb play Thursdaoy night.
Scoring •tars for lhe winners were
Vataha with two touchdown1 whUe
Wright, Martin, and Been IOI one
each.
Jack 5eibert added four conversion kicks.
T•MI lTATISTICS
Firs! CIOWfll RISl\lne
flint dllWM Nl&lnt
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1 1 a ' .1om 1; ~ l '~ .~1?
$25.5 Million Speedway
Hit by Taxpayer's Suit
By DEKE BOULGATE
Of illl Dolly '°llfl Si.ff
ONTARIO -Thue's trouble !he.ad
for operator& ol tlhe 125.5 million On-
tario Motor Speedway.
Impressive ceremonies attended the
groundbreaking for construction of the
plant dubbed '·Indianapolis of . the
West" early ttlls week, but civic tJf~
Hciab were unable to tum ttieir
shovels and cover 1.1p a taxpayer's
lawsuit that ttu-eatens to bring the
construction to a halt.
Dllll W. Lufkln of New York, board
.chairman of the speedway operating
company, wu handed notllce d the
su.it by .a pr~• server just before he
took the podium for the ceremonies.
The suit, heretofore publiclzed only
in the local newspaper, was filed last
July 31 by Mr . and Mn. Thoma11 S.
Duck ol Ontario in a branch hert of
!tie San Bernardino Superior Court.
ll alleges a pattern of acdon to
"corrtr.ive a fac11de ti purported
beneficial involvement of the city" in
I
wtl.at. the Ducks call a private com·
mercial business.
The complaint chacges:
1) That the city of Ontario illegally
made an agreenlent with speedway
operators to allow financing the
stadium with municipal bonds.
2) ~That the stadium 1eneral con-
b'actor. Stolte. Inc., of Sacramento
kas been paid $257.386 out of municipal
revenue bond £unds for options to
purctiase land which expired nearly
two years ago and are now worthle.s11.
3) 1'181 Stolte. Inc .. was awarded a
S12.5 million construction contract
without notice and w1thoot calling for
competitive bids, and that the price of
S12.5 million ii too high.
4) That the cKy had no right tn con·
duct negotiations over the 80().acre
8f)eedway site, since it is not withln
ttie dty limits Of Ontario.
5) 'Ibat on two occasions. May 21
and July 2, the Ontario city council il-
legally 1uthorized loans totalling
110,IXX> \o the 1peedway corporation.
the speedway and I.hat numerous city
employes are in effect being pitid to
do work fer the speedway in violation
oi the state constiWtion.
7) That the city has illegally
delegate its authority to enforce
lers of the municipal bond agree-
ment.
Answer~ lo· the chacr~es have been
filed by most of the defendants, and
both ·sides are taking depositions
preliminary to a hearing Gn the Ducks'
request for injunction to stop the con·
struction and invalidate the whole
transaction. A hearing date has not
been set.
Meanwhile, earth moving equipment
Is in action at the site of the future On-
tario Motor Speedway, Io c a t e d
nor(heast of the Ontario Airport ad·
jacenl to the San B er n a rd in o
Freeway.
LOS ANGELES !AP > -The dir«-
tor m fjve major golf tournamentg
wb.h combined purse1 of fl00.000 an.
oounced Thursday the sponsors ;'have
inc!icated complete "support'' of the
newly formed American Professional
Go11erc in its tight with t h e
Professional Golfers o! America.
Burke, Newport Beach resident and
Orange Coast O>Uege hi.atory pr<>--
fessor, will probably bave to toes 23.'i
to garner an Olympic medal next mon-
th at Mexico Qty.
-Les Cutler
fl) That 1ht city Ul required to pro--
vide utl.llties and improvemenb for
The first race is planned for late
1970. According to the prospectus
issued to bond purcha1ers, ttie race
will draw a crowd estimated at 175,000
spectators.
Paul C. Warren, the director of the
AtlanU: and Philadelphia Classics and
the Florlda Citrus. Jacllsonville and
Cleveland opens. said his f'ive spon.sors
fer the li69 tournaments "have in·
dicated tbeir complele support and
more desire and intention to contract
with the newly formed APG at such
time tllat they might be permitted to do so.''
Warren, vacationing at 1.a Costa,
1outh of Los Angeles. Issued the atate·
ment Utrougti a Los A n g e J e :i1
spokesman.
"At the lnd.i..,;dual direct.ion of each
of my five sponson, I Arn prepared to
accept the dates offered my sponsors
by lbe APG in 11169." · w..,.._, ol Cleveland, who ia &lao on
Iba ~ o( dlrecton "' ... ~. atonal Golf Sponsors AslOCiation, con-
tinued : "l and my five apoosor1 in·
~Cly have made this dfdsion
in:all JOOC1 omtclence for the beat in· -at roll.'' W-t• Mid. that H hi~ U J.ut
-.. lG& ilie4 to keep Ille lwo ...nii-·--· Jir W'M' .on, P(}A Pruldent MaJC
..., _ ... -wllb tllo ...,.,....,.
· o'-W~ la Nri YC>'k 14
61 d .... cm pouiNt Cl'llllUon of a
ti,.:r.::t,=:.~ PGA ...... _..._ , w..,.., did aot llleDd Ille meeling,
Iii .-is. ' ·' .. -
• '
His American record ie 236-11.
Would yo• beUeve ill•t 011mpl(
1booteri Are bothered b1 rareHed air"!
A story oat of die New Me:dcfl
trabU.nt Cllmp ny1 tbe cby plfeon
Oy fuier in the tbht air. tba1 throwf•.C
•ff tbe aim of the competitor.
That'• the best on -beat ''°'' ''"' beard yet co1eeroln1 the artltadt.
You hive to wonder how much
longer Carl SctHller will last as
Cypress College football co a c·h .
Sehiller'11 outfits would Jrobably ht"
h.ard-pres1ed to beat an averaa:e hlgt1
school tNrn.
How tmbillTLWngl
PILOT TO OFFER
OLYMPIC TJI SLATE
•
Forty-three hours of Color telec•sb
tr<n thti Olympic G•mu will be
av.uable lo Orange CoMt Arla
vie~1 Oct. 12-27.
The comprehensive ~ p 1 • n n t d
coverage will offer a gUmpst al moel
all 0( the 19 competitions al Mesico Ci·
ly_
The DAILY PILOT will offrr lb.
reader11 • complete Olympic television
1chtdlle .in next Tuesday 1 sports RC*
tfon to cUp 11nd save lor handy rtftrftnet.
'
Oly mpic K ayak Performer
F'or Lester Cutler. kayak
canoeing was sb-icUy for ttle
Eskimoes.
That was f\ree years ago.
Now, kayak canoeing is aJso
for Les cutler.
Thf' former collegiate !!"Mm·
ming Mar was introducfid to thf'
off-beat U.S. 5port three year~
e~o by Newport Be9Ctl'1 Blll
.Jewell -him!iell a two-timf'
Olympian.
eut)er, an aquatics coach al
Estancia High S c h o o I , pro-
,iuessed •wiftly i.mder Jewell's
s:Wdance and is now a member
paddle doubles in the OlympiCA.
sqllad wbk:h. will perfOl"lll next
month In Mexico aty.
AlllloUllb ba placed higher l•
singles competition at recent
U.S. teem trials in Lonir BcRch.
Cutler it C\ln"enUy UCJ>eted lo
paddle doubles !n the Olympic11 .
He ii a strong paddler and w11s
noted for hi• swift finishe1 s.t ttJU
Lm( &llCh qu~ meet
CuUer spent the au.mmer in
Sweden. pieking up valuable pad·
\
LES CUTLER
riling technique,: from ht Ill.·
tton'll stars. Sweden has record·
"'1 the b e 1 t Olympic kayak
J)lltfcnnancet in the put. pick·
lng up seven of 13 pos!dble gold
medlil1.
Angel s, White So x Mix
In Battle for 8th Spot
Even U the CalilOrNa Angeli win all
three g1mes left en their 1988
Amerioan League schedule they will
still finish with the poore!K record in
thW eigtlt-year history.
They hive 66 victories th.is senon
anJ three more would put them a
game back o( the number W'On in 1961
and 196.1. But they must still fight to
avoid falling int'O ninth place.
The Angels, idle Thunday, open
their final home stand of tile year
tonight with 11 set agaJmt the Ctncago
White Sox. just a pme behind the
Californians.
Joe Horlen, 11-14, blkt111 the mound
for Oticago to oppose A n d y
Ml!lseramtth, 4-1, • bright young bope
o( the Anl<la -
MMsamnlth 1111 p;tched 75 inniop
tbfJ year, lllowecl jlllt 38 hit! and ha."
walked on)y l1. He hN etruck out '8
and hu a I.ti earned T1a\. avera1e.
On Stlpt. &, he made hiis major
)ffgue atartlng debut with a twG hit
4-0 ohublt of the B .. 11on Red Sox. On
Sopl I.! he allowed jusl four bill in o
4-1 triumph over Chicago.
Tlils lo t!te Jin! trip for Ile While
' '
Sox 1lo Anaheim with Al Lopei In the
managerial position. The veteran pilot
came out of reticemenl to take over
when Eddie Stanky resigned but miss·
ed his club's last trip to Anaheim
because of an attack of appendicitis
r..quiring surgery.
15
Days TH the
Olympic Games
BARON ON LOOSE -Fountain Valley High's Don Harris (44) tries
to elude El Modena ddender Steve B¥er during Thursday night loot-
DAILY .. ILOT l'llot. • ., LM ... ,...
ball hostilities. El Modena rallied for 14 points the last hall to defeat
the hard-luck Barons.
Newport,. Costa Mesa Mix Matadors'
Offense Aims
At Sea Kings In Rubber Game of Series
Legally. tonl~'s Newp<et Harbor-
Oosta Mesa football game at Davidaon
fi eld is the rubber game in the seven-
year series between tM two rivals.
The first game of the series in 1961
wai; wo n by Newport, 14-13, but the
game was later tbrawn out because
both teanu, it seems, fielded ineligible
players.
So disregarding that one, both have
each won three times. Mesa won last
year on a field goal, 3-0.
And it woold seem that Mesa has tbe
psychological edge foe the '68 tilt
Both weni winners 1n their openers
last week but coach Wade WatU at
Newport was plainly unhappy over the
way his athletr:s performed. Mesa's
Neil Pee k, Oil. the other band, was en-
couraged,
Of his 14·7 will ov« Orange last Frl·
day, he says: ."We're opUmlstic over
.........
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Wills Leaves
Pirates in Huff
Pl'M'SBURGH (AP) -The
that ooe. Our kids think they 're going
.to beat Newport and I do, too,
although Jt'll be close -just like last
year's.:·
Watts says the Tan can't win with
the game they played in beating
Corona del Mar by a 21-6 score last
week.
"We didn't look good. We made
every mistake in the book. We won't
beat Mesa with that kind of. a game."
Of particular irrit.etl.oo to the
Newport coach was "three scoring op·
portunities that we just Ripped a way."
Peek was so pleased witb his
quarterback, Claude Kelly, that he'll
Jet him run the show by himseU
againstthe Sailors tonight.
"We might tell Caude to run a cer·
tain series but be cam bis own plays.
H~ threw well and was very good
against Tustin.'"
Peek's only lineup change will be the
insertion Of Tom Neth at fullback
because Of a shoulder 9eparatioo suf·
fered by starter Gary Steele against
Tustin. He's out for two weeks.
The only bright spot in Newport's
CdM game, according to Watts, was
the running of halfback Bob Curry.
"He made several nice runs and
some of them were nullified by dumb
penalties."
Of his opponent, Watts says Mesa
"doesn't have the backfield persoonel
it had la&t year but it's more balanced
and probably is more effective.''
Peek rates his club the equal o!
Newport.
"We're similar in size, speed, ex-
perience and both of us hit pretty
~."
Bolsa Grande High School, a team
that loves to move the ball up and
down t.he football field, figures to get a
lot of offensive practice tonight when
tlle Matedors play host to Corona del
M&r in an 8 o'clock non-league game.
Defense isn't one of Corona del
Mar's strong suit! and Bolsa Grand.e's
pro-type attack is designed to give any
defense trouble,
In their season opener, an 18·14 win
over Lynwood, the Matadors rolled up
nearly 400 yards in a total offense,1
that featured the running of Roly
Troncoso and Rick Daley.
Both boys gobbled up more than 100
yards running, and figure to have
another big night against Corona del
Mar.
Daley also is a dangeroUI passer. He
hit on eight of all tosses against
Lynwood !or about 160 yards and one
touchdown .
The Bolsa tine is anchored by right
tackle John Robertson, 22()..pounder.
The rest of the Matador linemen are
light, but quick.
Corona del Mar's offensive figures
to center around fullback Rex Snyder
and halfback Mike Ezzell. both of
• whom ran well against Newport last
week.
In defense, the Sea Kings still will
be miuing tackle Ray Berg <bad
knee) and halfback Randy Johnson
(separated ribs).
C-Ml Mt r llS Sttrn '"-, .. Ytdl •M-UO Orl1wotd
lff S.lt11r uo o.ttlltr
lJO T1rrv
1'2 You,.
1'° Emit
110 lnfdtr
..... Or111l11
LI!• koll
LT Wlllltn LO Ltl1iOll
C SQ\llr11
JIG S«rlrn
JIT Jlobtrt-
RE Mtlllt 01 Oller
wa •••-Tl T!'Ol'llCOIO Fl Jors
•• ·~ "' •c ·~ "' •n •• '" >M !U
Fr~, Stpttmbft Z7, 1968 DAILY PJ(DT j ll
Misfortune Plague$ FY
Fountain Valley
Takes 14-7 Loss
B• llOGEll cAIWION
ot• .. Dtur .. ...,. ''""
II was U day1 llnc:e Friday the 13th,
and Fountata Vlllley IDll> Sdlool'1
varotty football team IO<md ' late
apinlt lt u the Barona lolt a heort-
breaking 14-7 declllioa lo El Modena
H!gll Th..-Bday Jllilit at s.nte Ana
Stadium before a crowd. of 2,m.
A series ol mllfortme1 plagued
coach Bruce Pickfon1'1 Baron 11
almoat trom the outset of the game
and cmtlnued r!ll>t down lo tile final
mlDut. cl. action.
Hwe then, ii the teries of eventl
-1ranspired oa Iha field to ltnock Founlain Valley out cl. Ito HCood v!(:.
tory ol tho young seuon.
UNO -Early in the first quarter,
John Carroll drove seven yard.a to the
Vanguards' 1o;.yard line only to have a
rnotioo penalty oat the baU back on
the 22. .
Fountain Valley ended up trying a
36-yard field goal that wa1 ltraigbt -
but three yards short of the mark.
DOS-On the Barons' next S!l"lec of
dowm, quarterback Tom Malone fired
a pass to Don Harris far a 14-yard
gain to the El Modena 26 only to have
an illegal receiver downfield infraction
set the ball back to the FV 40 with a
loss ol a down killing the drive.
TRES -Founlaln Valley's nut
drive was broken up with a.n In·
terception on the El Modena 35.
Time out for Fotmta.in Valley's lone
drive without mishap.
Malone led his mate& in a 65-yard
march in 14 plays with relentless
pounding through the El Modena mid·
dle and left aide on straight dive pllya.
Mike Kato, Dan Shaw and John Car·
roll worked over the Vanguards
Ulll1ler0lfully wllh bull·Ilke rushes.
Chllden cracked over his rlgbt
tackle trom a toot out for ttie tally and
David Schoooover .added the PAT with
5:52 to go in the half.
QUATRO -Malone rifled an a.p·
parent 30-yard touchdown pass to car.
roll with 1: 57 left only to have an ll·
legal receiver downfleld penalty called
on the BB.l'(lns again, moving ttie ball
back to the 45 to thwart the drive.
At tile half, Fountal.n Valley bad a 7-
0 lead despite rolling up 159 yards and
11 first downs to minus 20 and no first
Air of Optimism
dowm for the· tvtnluol -L CINCO -A' fllmbl• cm 1lle El
Modena t1 1ave the \lepwdl
po11esalon and they came ti.ck. to tie
it up at 1·7 -• BS-7anl drive m ntn.
play1.
Pete Sproul mada. lbe bl& play with
a 24-yard scamper up ~ 1ett aide for
tho TD. Ales °""ga booted 1lle PAT
with 7:48 lett In the pme.
SIES -Pickford'•· squad tool!: tho
ensuinl ldcltci.f and marched 43 yards
lo the El Mcdena 2f. Keith Arled(o
pushed five yards ahead lo tho 19 only
to have a 15-yard penalty aet the NU
bact to the 39, smashing the drive
again and lordng FV lo punt.
SIETE -Alter ,..)ng t h e
Vquarda' Sproul race 85 yards fer
the winning touchdown with 2;24 Wt in
the game, on a pitchout around ttle left
side, the Baroos had ooe last chance.
But again, an offsettin1 set rJ.
peoalt!es lcllled what llMle hopes Foun· tam Valley had on a first dawn-making
play and the Barons eventually gave
up the ball -and the 1ame -wttb
1:19 to go on the losers' 21.
,, . .,... ,..,_ -· TC>hlll ... ,. .....
.,_
TCI TO 'f1. "" l•l!lli r n i ,11 I 0 J ..S.C
J 0 • ·t.' irlbi::
11 1• • •1.1 '!:' .. 3 ~o ih: J:l
l • 0 '·' D IOol It •.S INDIVIOUAL ,ASSIMG F""lt lll VlllW '°' PC PMI YO Pd 1!1lt.2N
'''Ill"' 0 • ••
Pirates Continue Drills
For Rugged Harbor Tilt
By JOEL SCHWARZ
OI lttt Ot MJ ,lltl 11111'
A quiet air of opti.mism, tempered
by a good deal of l"efjpect, ia: apparent
.as Orange Coast College continues
drllla for it! Saturday night non~
ference g.ame with Los Angeles
Harbor College In Wilmington.
A sellout crowd in Harb«'s tiny
3,500-seat stadium is expected for
what appears to be a wide-open, high·
scoring contest.
The Pirates have been splltting their
afternoon workouts between oUense
and defense under sunny sides and
mor.alt .la still high from OCC'1 im·
presslve 23-7 triumph over former·
nemesis Cerritos.
"If we get by Harbor. we can stay
with anyone and give them all they
want," said head coach Dick Tucker,
relaxlng after Thursday's workout.
"We're afraid or Harbor. With their
size, strength and speed any team
should be afraid of them."
A member of the Western Stahl
Conference, Har~ ba1 been more
than impressive in Us only game -a
40-12 whipping of Rio Hondo--and two
scrimmages.
In those 1crlmmages. Harbor ICOl'ed
two touchdowns agaJnst Fullerton
wb.Ue holding the Hcrnetl scoreleu
and them walked all over LODg Beec.b
City' College.
OCC's defense, which per£ormed
better than Tucker expected age.last
Cerritos, will get a thorough workout
against Harbor.
The Seahawks have a floct of rwift
.-ld big runners headed by 190-pOwld
Clarence Palmer and h al f back
George Lumpkin.
And in the air, H"'bor is equally
dangerous with a pair Of fine field
generals. Letterman John Timpe wUI
open at quarterback for Harbor, but
his day.s ai the Sea.hawks No. 1 QB
amy b~ numbered because his backup
man, James Sanders, may be even
better.
Sanders, who was an All.City ae1ec-
tlon in Los Angeles last year, was at
the University Of Utah for one week:
before becoming disenchanted and
hurriedly retumed to Harbor.
He's en excellent tlrower and the
main thing that's keeping him out of.
the starting lineup ls an unfamiliarity
With Harbor's offensive patterns.
Pittsbur~ Post-Gazette said tn tts lut
edition today that Maury Wills has told
sports writer Charlie Feeney he's quit-
ting baseball after a dispute with
Pittsburgh Pirate general manager
Joe Brown.
Wills failed to accompany thr
Pirates to Chicago tor the la.It threr
games of the season following an
Mgument with manager Larr Y
Shepard over a '150 fine deducted
from Wills' latest paycheck becausP
he failed t.o abow up for a routille
physical checkup earlier this w~k.
Baseball Standings
The Bue lnfleldtr, accord.lng to thE'
paper, said he bu notified Brown that
he has no int.enUon of playing base.
ball again.
Wills, 35, and a third baseman since
he was obtained by Pltbburgb follow·
lnl the 11811 aeallOD, stole a record 104
bHel In 1182 fer the LOI Allfeies
Obdgers.
KEY INTERCEPTION -Jerry Reilly o! Costa M .. ti rlllurns inter-
ception in Mustangs' 14-7 upset victory over Orange HigJi lpst week.
Mesa assumes the role of underdog for second str'alght wee.It in game
with Newport Hamor tonight at Davidsoo Field. Kickoff Is. set for
Bo'clock.
UCI Seeded 1st in Tourney
• 'Ille Soottitrll Califonlia col!eliate
-pol<> pidU!" -be in Clure< fdcul Iote Saturdn. alter Ule ooe-day
UC Irvine ~ent. _..
7Jlght 1 .. m1 will "°"""""' including tfadltionoJ South-power< UC!,
lfSC and cat State <Loac Bead>). nie ftnl 1Mitd! otarta at t •.m., I>l"
ting UCI and Claremont. An hour _., cat Poly (Pomone) laces UC
SOnta Barbora IDll 11111 U'1 USC aod ..
SU Diego State. The final !Int round
match at noon matches UC Davis and
C.I SUU, ne champiorabip pme wtn be
played at 5 p.m.
A 11 adml.ulon chargt wlll bo uked, benelltlne tile Dr. Wayne Crawford
Mamorill Fund. .
lrYlne bu won tl>e-prevtous two UCJ
tournament& and ii seeded first Udt
time. Coach Ed Newland'& Anteater• °""""" UleJr ICbedule wedneoday
rdght w:l.UI a 1M victory over out-
mUll!ed CerrilOll JC.
Newland says USC wil be typ;.:a1Jy
stron& and well-balanced ttUs season
but calls C.1 Sta1e a potenlillly "super atronc" team. •
"Long Beach be.I tl>e power lo go all
tM way thfl year," 'he 1111. .
The l:roj"1.1 !Ott ooly one jlla7er 'off
la.st year't team, BID J~on, but be
wu UleJr beS, wwwdlullo N-
NATIONAll LEAGUE
Won Loll Pct. GB
xSt. Louis 95 64 .597
San Francisco 86 73 .541 9
ClnclnnaU 82 Tl .516 13
Chicago 81 78 .509 14
Atlanta 80 79 .503 15
Pitt.burgh 80 79 .503 15
Lo1 Anr•kw 7f 85 .'65 21
Philadelphia 74 85 .'65 21
New York 72 87 .453 23
Hous1oll 71 88 .447 24
x-Clinched peMant.
No ""'" 9dledulld. TtMr't 06IMI
Pllltb.orlll !Moolili •tO) t i ClllotlO (Holllmltn ,.,.,
Lat MIMI (Ot'"n lt·11J t i #ti!ltlltt flt. ...
ll·l"IJ, 1119111
........ IDl«t.t 11·1.fJ ti 11. Lout. IGlbMll
21 .. , , """'
'"".......... (JI/NS U J •I "-vm (Mo> ,.,.,,._ •n. "'-"' k n Pl'lllellm CPtrrV If.ISi ti Clr!Cill~tl !Cl.It-
-11·1'1, """'
AOIEJllCAN LEAGUE
Won Looi Pct. GB
xDetroit 103 56 .648
Baltimore 91 70 .S65 13
Boston 85 74 .535 18
Cleveland 85 75 .s:n 18\1
New York 81 78 .509 22
Oakland 80 79 .503 23
Minnesota 78 81 .f91 25
California II tS .415 37
Chicago 65 94 .409 38
Wsshlngtoil 82 96 .392 fOll
x--Oinched nennant. ,.....,..,.. ........
~7,Clwtltl'ldl °""' ..,,. td'tMlllH. T'""t ....... CllWl..W (Hl~n •in I I fltlllrnort (Nt!Mlfl .. .,,.~
W1llllllfloll ((oMn\111 11·1'1 ~ Olfrwll (Hiii" ...,. ftllllt
frttw Ytort rv..ti.111ti W) ti lorfilWI C•l1•-'fl ,,.7), ........
MIN9M!1 lkloat 1•111 tot 0.t...... !Detlten
11·1(), l'lltM Ctiic... CMfrlM ,,_,.., ~ Callfl>rttlt C*-
""-•II, llltM
Johnson & Son
900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, N,EWl'ORT l l ACH
6414911 54U271
,
---------·-------------------------------
-
IT'S
MERCURY
FOR
1969
Ste tlie Ch•mp
On
Fricl•y Stpt. 27
•l'lfl 4e11't Mitt ft.. b1t'fllll
ef 111 H--'61 COUS.AltS
-.. -..Jffi ffi1 "'''' lfkr1I w....., If .......... .
2 Year ..........
5 Year----·-CAU fODAT
-·
'
" '
1
(
J& DAILY PILOT
El Rancho
Invades
Lions' DeJ
Two of the CIF's more
1'igh.ly regarded team a ,
Westminster and El
Rancho, both will be looking
for their first 1968 victories
torrigtit at Westminster'•
field.
Ooach Bill Boawell's Lions
were ·knocked olf in tbett
operier last week-b y
Lakewood, 21·12 and peren-
niel power El Rancho trip-
ped over St. Paul, 21-6.
For the Lloos, El Rancho
represents anothe:r Friday
night of trying to stop .a
deluge of accurately thrown
t->asses.
Randy Drake, yoooger
brother of the former great use receiver, handl~ the
t"Ontrols of the Don offense
and Boswell isn't looking
forward to the test.
"TheY. tell me Drake b
the best all-round athlete in
lhe hilitory of El Rancho,"
1e says.
"He's a very difficult
••
~er to rush. He geti rid READY TO ROLL -This is the starting backfield of the ball in a hUIT)' and Hi h Aki he's 8 great 5crambler." Laguna g coach Hal ns will use in tonight's
•
Brian Bagley and halfback Jim Kuhn. Laguna
opened its season last weekend with a 13-7 victory
over Katella. Last weekend, Boswell's game against Brea High. From left: quarterback
troop& 11 u cc um bed to _Ste_v_e_W_i_e_z_bo_w_ski_·_,_h_alfb __ •_ck_G_en_e_M_o_I_w_a-'y-',_f_ull_b_a_ck _____________________ _
Lafewood.'1 skilled Mike
Rae.
"Our pass defense didn't
look rood-at all against that
guy. but be is a great
~·"
Tri tons
In Desert
Tonight
Oilers Tackle Tustin Tonight
Ernie Jobnton, the
celebrated El Rancbo coach,
is impre11ed with
WeRninster's liu and
strenstt>.
In Duel of Ru11ning Attacks
"We're just going to try
and survive. I don't think
our team will jell until our
first leaiue game. We made
a lot of. mistakes last week
and that's what beat us."
Johnson will bring 16 lel-
termlm. for the first-ever
meettipg between the two
schools~ . He wishes they
were all as tough as his 140-
pound split end, M a r k
Valdez.
Hot.et spas, s w i m m i n g
pools aNl money are three
very commoo items in Palm
Springs.
Good football teams at
Palm Springs High School
also .are found frequently in
the desert community.
San ClemenfE's varsity
roooball team will find out
just how good Ptlbn Springs ... ,,..._
LE -L'"" SI"°"""" LT -C~ud< Sul« LG -s1.-., 11111
C -Gre. McC•nh
A:G -G•ry N~n A:T -JoP\11 MeL1119hhll
A:E -0...111 5"'111
is when they take the trek ~~ east tonight to enga.ge the
"1 Indfans in its second -non-"' • league grid game of the
Oii -Ed line
T 8 -Mlll ""'YMI Hll -RDll Sl>h>llerd
Hll -D•rTyl le~ 11 ll•llCM
L.E -si.w Ni.lo
LT -A:..., M.llrlMr
LG -1111 lurton
c -G•,., Win...,.
llG -OGl'I 81"'1
RT -Jol'lrl Well!. RE -Mart. V•'dtl
QI -A:•ndv Dr•kt
LH -O.w V~'1!11911
RH -KWI Ml""'" Fl -Mil 1'1111111'1
~~ year. ,.., It's the last tuneup for 1: Crestview League action,
'" and Coach Tom Eads is hop· ''° ing that he can find the com·
1•1 bimtioo that will put the "' us Tritons into a contending
: position in }eQgue action
u• after dropping a 37-6 verdict :ll bl Neff la.st week.
no Eads has shaken up his •• -----, becklle\d, inserting two new
tlOYSI
THROUGH 13
-_ENTER OUR
PUNT, PASS
& KICK
COMPETITION
NOW!
IT'S FREEi
N.ces at the halfback slots
with Tony Plowden and
Steve Castle in hopes of fin·
dIDg the right offensive
combo.
"'"" S1>rl,..1 LE -R•!>Cly Svoboff '" LT -D•nllY Flotn ~· LG -Nl<o bhll1 ..... '" ' -Jllhn Ourtn •• A:CO -Wll!I• H~tllnd "' A:T -l!lob HllhlWIY '~ A:E -Ed Wilton "' Q8 -Loult Polit "' LH -Jnw V•ilkr•I ·~ RH -Dlfl11]1 A:CIOJ9t'IY ,.
Fl -Jerry LfW!I "" 1111 Ci..o.Mlt
LE -A:ob!n A:e1c"•n ,.
LT -Wtvne S.oer ,.
LG -Rlclr. .-,nd., ,.
' -l'U~ Mc01"lel ,.
A:G -D~llY A:-'" AT -Tim Ouvtll '" A:E -Rick Geo!I"' ,.
Qll -M•rk He'"'""" "' LH -Stove C11llt ,.
A:H -Tony Plowdlfl ,.
Fii ,.. ltrk~ l urcl'> "'
Football fans who like an
old-fashioned running battle
should talte in tonight's 8
o'clock game between Hun-
tington Beach and Tustin in
the Oilen stadium.
Both teams like to move
the ball on the ground. and
both succeeded very well in
their sea.son openers. Hun·
tington bombed Lof'I€ Beach
Jordan, 2&-0, while Tustin
towled Estancia 19-6.
Huntington, which sports
a more versatile attack than
Tustin will be back at full
strength. Fullback B o b
Pestolesi, who mi~ last
week's operier. has reclaim·
ed his starting job after
being slowed up with knee
troubles.
Heading the Oiler attack
will be the dangerous TOily
Bonwell a t quarterback.
Against Jordan last week,
he wracked up some im-
pressive statistics.
In just seven tries at the
Jordan line, Bonwell ripped
off 112 yards -that's a
fi(J9Sy 16-yard .average -
and scored twice. In the air.
Hu11!1...-ltKll
LE -Mark WhlHlekl '" LT -Hutll Sult!vtn "' LG -Plltl H .... lrlr '" ' -Geor1• Ollv1t "' RG -Tom Arr>ald "' RT -lob Slleldon '" A:E -Mlk• Priddy •• 011 -T.,,,y 1 .... we11 "' LH _ .. ,~ Smith ,.
Fl -llob Pntolell '" WI -K•rl Peoersen m
Tvs!IR
LE -A:lck OtY •• LT -Jim Wtddell "' LG -P•I Gorr'"" ,.
' -$r.v1 Nlcl'loll "' A:G -1111 Hill "' RT -Amit Fr•ndl ,.,
A:E -lrl1n WMtbr!~d ,.
QI -Otve .-.vdeloflt ,.
Fl -flob Sltvt '" F8 -lob kl'lotllt •• Hll -Tony WhlpJle "'
FUN! iii GELS
REGISTRATION ENOS
OCTOBER 41 HURRY!
You h1Ye • good chance of wln--
rJing one of these handsome, all·
melal trophies. Wfi wlll award a
1st. 2nd and 3rd place trophy for
each age group . , , tot a total of
1 a local awardll
YOU coold be OOI of the lucky
. iN. BEAlliiF.iiC .A.NAHEiM. ·stAtiiUM -.............. -................................ .
llCKITS: >.r-lieim S\tdlwn -9 '·""ID 5 p.M. • ,l,JI Muhltl ~ • W111ir:h'1 M<nlc Citln
.-.~ Uf\li.d C.lotomit Stoia. 111 OunlO Couf!b"• M'11 ~ An.U Tlcbl Office, AMl!elm, Ctl•I
Last Bi9 A Home Stand af Season •
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
TONITE. TOMORROW 8 P.M.
SUNDAY FINALE, 2 P.M.
he picked up 87 more yards
and threw for a third
touchdown by completing
six.of 16 p&;ses.
Oiler coach Ken Moats'
offense could be even more
potent if Huntington Beach's
offen.sive line improves its
execution, particularly its
blocking. That's something
that wasn't too sharp
agaiJllst Jordan, but has
been stressed in Oiler
workouts this week.
On defense, Huntington
Beaob ml.J6t zero in on
fullback Bob Schostag and
halfback Tony Whipple.
Rebuilt Mater Dei
Tests Hefty Loyola
Mater Dei High football
coach Bob Woods has just
gone through a complete
spring cleaning -and right
in the middle of the grid
season.
The cleaning, however, in·
volved the Monarch pigskin
forces as Woods completely
overhauled his defensive
alignment following the 31·
13 1056 to Santa Ana last
week.
Hoping to get back on ttie
victory trail Saturday night
when the Monarchs square
off against Loyola a t
Inglewood Hi;gh, Woods has
made the following changes
in the defeme:
Both encks, two o( the
ttlree linebackers. one
tackle and two defensive
halfbacQ wi u be starting
for the firot time when they
go against. t he Cubs and
their aflti.quated single wfug
attack.
That makes seven new
faces for the Red and White
Woods blasted last week's
61tarting defense for lining
up wrong, keying wrong and
generraily not perfonning
well.
Woods ex.peels the usual
Loyola ....Wt t h e
tailback (Tom Schwart%)
running the ball 85 or 90 per-
cent of the time.
He cell8 the Cubs a com·
plete1y different team from
the SaOOl Ana powerl!oose
he ran into lest week.
SECOND TIRE
-When You Buy The 1st Tire at Our Low Price--
ILACkWAU WHnlWAU
T•MI-l•W..
11t Tiii 21'1111 Tiii ltt Tlal 2H llll SIZB .• ,,,.
"' -'" competltora to go on to more ad-''-::====================~ll vanced compeUllona and even wlnt,.
a lree trip lor YGU"tllf and your
dad to M NFL game , ••
1~--1
650/700-13 14.60 7.30
7~68-
17.55 1.71 .....
IUlc:k ---.... 9:1,-
AND YOU may be one of thl
National fin1!"'8; and go to the NFl
Play-Ori' u-me rn Miami, Florida,
and the "Tour of CMmplona" to
Walhlngton. O.C .. with fOUl mom ........
Qrpt tun and W.Wtely FREEi
Enroll In Punt, Pal I. Kklll: eom..
pMltJop NOW. Jull ·bring yaur
mom. 'did or.Jjtgal ~•dian with ,.cu ..., reg'9ttr. Oet our FREE
~ ~ HliL .wa, wtlh atortu
olWI tJpo .. --ng .,,,
SPECIAL!
GENE AUTRY'S BIRTHDAY PARTY!
Suncl•y, September 29 et 2:00 PM
ANGELS vs. WHITE SOX
n.. Cewltey h •l.t"' Lept A11,.t h-.:
1 -1969 CHRYSLER NEWPORT
1 -1969 PLYMOUTH FURY 111
·-Got •-PP&tcfln, "'°'1'::=================:::11 _, 011oo t1>e lllltl Ir
ltlGISTltA TION ENDS : OCT0911l 11. ••
INTIR NOWI
THIODDtll RDllNS
l'OllD .............
c.te -'4UD10
PLUS. • M1.t<, '-119' lty 100 Yeke
"RIVERSIDE SING-OUT"
PLUS ••. Free to All:
'!i.60· l!i 15.35 18.25 C!wvrolet
""'"" 7.75 -t 4 "'"""" 16.40 8.20 19.35 9.61 ,_~
1.1s.1 s M~-1.2s.14 .....
18.85 9.43 21.80 10.90 F1lri.119
1.15.1 !i IUvl'lr•
~OllUIC l .5!i·l4 ---vw.
1.45-15 21.95 10.98 23.55 11 .71 ··~ Escl11 r, .. S2 .!i4--1 .. ch11191 •fhi1 1is----4 ply rtttd
NO MONEY DOWN
• USE OUR OWN CHOIC~ CHARGE
• BANKAMERICARD • MASTER CHARGE
.. ·-•• • --••
Will Face Brea Tonight
Ailing ~rtists Back
.
·One of Oreolt County's
ojdest loolball rlvalrl"
NtUmea ti>night w he n
Lag\q a.nd Br,. collide .t
tll_e Ar1llU' ftekl •.
Artllts' li&nal caller, along
wllh end Dean Sbootrom and
guard Jell .-. hllYe oil
reluroed lo the iAl&'ma
01Mse1 and ~ expected to
-tbelr ~ular 1"rll on the •t!MWc elf!l'Yen,
~ i... .. -. yardl.
When last aeera, Brea
Uunpld T.jgaa, .. 7.
''Our kids were pretty
aetmned atler bit game. I
-lo set that -wt ol my mouth."
Wle11>ow&ti -a btg f.ac. tot in the Artistl' 13-6 vie·
tory over K*Ua in the '68
npeaer, pln1nt !IS yerdJ
rushing, scoring Olllt' TD and
Anolher brl&l>I apot in the
Laguna camp ii the presence
ot more players. ~ now
bu 35 tlrldden in tho fold
all« 1ttuggilng through pro·
aeason practlc, with a1 few
.. in,
So aa,ya coad!. Hal AkiM
ol I.e&o>Da Beach in rogordJ
to hia team 11 opponent
imght ot Red Guyer Field
on the Artists' campus.
In "'8nlng ill tint game
owr Katella, Laguna waa
going with only 22 players.
Kld<olf ii echoduled for I.
Akins ia all smiles with
the unexpected return ol
three gr.idder11 who were
counted out ot the Brea
game due to illne9s.
Steve Wiezbowski. t h e ·-LE -K.-.ln Pleru
LT -llrlen lerv•"'l•n
LG -Jim McC1H c -A:ldl kl'lw•rtl
llG -JI~ Slr1w
Ill -Gonllt MeWllll•ms
lt.E -Pllll Oli:1rld1boun1
QI -Jiff Ouncllbolirt
1.,N -Pit Hutdltr-ltH -It.Id Mertln
Fl -Olde Curnt ...........
LE -Miki M1WY
LT -Ttlftl SC:htr1r
LG -L1nv Harvw
C -st-Kloil!itrl'l'll"
ltG -Jtlf J1lll'lu.
A:T -Clll'lt BtwrM11 ~ -°"" Sl'lot-QI -SI...,. Wllltlowllll
L'.H -Jim Kllll"
RH -P1ul MCINn"' F8 -lrl111 l .. lly
ittldt ..
Tran sf er your account TODAY I
Easy to do ... just. coll or come in.
~Mt ~-no»f. ••• ~
ma& a. tlJl~tAIMU
ASSETS OVER
$425,000,000.00 •
MUTUAL SAVINGS
A N 0 l.-OAN ASSOCIATION
CORONA DEL MAR
2~7 East Coast High....,, Corona Del Mar, Calif . 92625
telephone: 675·5010
HEAD OFFlCE
315 E. Colorado BIY<l.
Pasadena, Calif. 91109
inlephono: 449-2345
OTHER BRANal
OFFlCES
Covina, Glendale
we.i Arcadia
Open Saturday, October 5 -9:00 a.lift. ta l :00 p.l'l'I.
" I
-------
'
Friday, SrptHni»r 27, 1'168 QAli v '1LOT I•
Meet Prep Gridders Two Pirate Teams Dialilos Face V~ -
In Football War
•
In Bue Tourney
•IL.L. CKAMl'toM
l'wnt1 .. \'11"1' L.llM-•
ltOGIER KIEHMIE'I" H1WH11 H1rbor Ll-111
•O• ltAYMOJID
ltt.llC .. " ........
Orange COMt co11e~e
water polo coacb .J ack
FuUertqn bM enough Jood
player1 to field two teams
so that'• exacUy what he's
going fo do Saturday when
Area Prep
X-Countr y
Summaries ·-tMlllM .... 21. ..._. KafNr U
1, J•v ~ U1B\, tt:l) I 1. V.
MarlfMI IH.), lf:M l. ll:ldi I'~•
(NHI, 11:02 .&. ll!ck McClur• CHl l,
ll:ll 5. M. l>onoYlll (HBI, ll:ll i. lil1v• Alwerd {HI), 11:21 7. Dlwy
Je,... CNtfl, lJ:U I. I'. M¢Off
tHBl. ll:M t , Kwln 811tW CHHl, \J:U
10, Cl!rls 81111WP (NH l, ll:ll H. It.
Euoltt. tHll, ll:JI lt, 11111 Dl-1
IHI), \1:)4 lJ. Jol>rl Fltlctwr {NH I,
H:• U, $ ...... De!.M\' (NH). 11:5) J••-
Hlllltl ...... It, ..... ,.n H•rHr Y
'Tap Flnllhtn: I, 81!-11 CHI),
11:27.7 1. OlttnY Cll"" (HHJ, 11 .J).~'
Hunllltll'11 -..Cll It. M--1 H.,-.,
Tap F!nltM .. : I. ll<lrrldc lHfll,
11 :57.I 2. Jim A.<'11• !NH). 1!:51.t
·"6e"' Ne""""" H1rbor lr11~m•~
r'!<orO.
~
£-,. WMk MMCO ...i>ar.e. -tlW\ te,000 tninMlfplon probl1tm•.
Y-pt fr .. lowlnf. I fnl• POMf•
c'-k,. fnt. llfflcient 1Prvic+-mo1t
lifnH ill just -day, And wltlt
MMCO, )'01.lr 1 .. 11sml1sio11 c1n be
protfl:t1d by cw1r 500 MMCO Clll·
t.n. cont ~ co11t. Ev.ery rnirttthi and 1 ...,, _....
-~···
~ ... ,,..t,_
......,.,,_ .. AAlflCDf'
1741 thwpotf If, .. ,.1 ,,,
Swim Club Award s Set Monday Sant• An• m IL l"lnf St. NJ-MJI
011Et: 6C AAIVICC SH0~S
1-.. (A 'FCll'-.; t>
The Newport Beach Swim
Club will hold its ineuKUial
sporbs aWIM"d banquet Mon-
day at t.he Newport Beach
Ta"Ds Club at 6 p.m.
Alamitos High School and Al -----~-------------
Irwin, Athletic Director of
UC Irvine.
Guest fil)Elakers are Flip
Darr, coach of Rancho
Reservaions can be made
by calling Newport Beach
Tennis Club aquatic director
IAlrry Dellota al 644-0050
before 6 p.m. today.,
Have the NIGHTIME
of Your Life!
NIGHT RACING starta
tuesday at beautiful
'•
LOS ALAMITOS
PIRST Of' NINE RACES
MON.·SAT. AT 7:4!5
Turi T•rreea Dfnlnr, ••
Tobie 1t.-v1tion1 C•ll:
(21J) 4Jl.Q922 (714) 527 ... 71
I• I
Smart girl,
Smart guy,
Smart buy.
SUNNY
BROOK s399 ·
7 a:-e ~!"e sio of its
marvelous mildness
and you'I! agree; ~.
there's no smoother ·
whiskey than
Sunny Brook
al any price.
'I
~--@~
SUNNY
BROOK
the Bucs launch thetr -1968
teason by playing hCM to ·
the aooual .Piret. lnvit.11
tiooal.
The si:r-game tournament,
featuring Ul• twf' Orangt
Coast teama •kine witil San·
la Mooica City College and
College of tht Sequoias, will
get underway at 9 a.m.
Fullerton didn't re a I I y
W3flt 00 divide hiS squad, but
he. wa11 forced to when Loe
Harbor College dropped
ool of the tourrnament and
he couldn't fiJl<t ·a lMt·
minute replacefuent.
Top matches in the in·
~tational figure to the 9
o'clock operier between ttie
OCC Reds and Sequolall and
the 4. p.m . linale. again
featurine the Red& &(ld San·
ta Monica.
The 0CC Reda MU be tbe
stronger of the two Pirate
teams and will be led by let-
termMI Dan Oirlsty. who
was Orange Coast's leading
scorer last &e aaon.
Tourney schedule :
• BJctr• tough Tuf1yn
rubber eddt extra
1tren1th to the bo~y
111d 11.tra mil•• 1a
th1 lr11d
·•More lh111 1,000
tripping 1d111 1lv•
lrl\cllon to start
iurer -•lop f•sler-
r~ln or thine
• Mndern wrap-aroun.!
trt!!11d prO\'ide1 berte;.
llt!!t!!rlng control In
!ht tum1
Cee Grid
Summaries
By ROGER CARl.~ON ., rw ._...., ""',....
Jn the11 day1 and tbM«,
th~ "VC'' Jan't .omethin&
mo.st people consider friend-
ly.
E"'Pfi(.'lally people from
Mlsslon Viejo Hilb School
beoaust the DN.bloe wlll en-
couter 1 domestic form f>f
"VC" In VaUey Chrittian
High Soboo1'1 var 1 it y
football team.
Coach Ray Dodge ls cOun-
ting on two p&lyers In
particular to ootnt through
for him when his team takes
the field at the Artesia
school °' 8 eonllfll.
T h e y are quarterback
, I
l l11:kw111 Fed. Ex. Tex
end old tire
$2.35 2.36
$2.56 ,,.
$2.81
10_,
&.0011J .,. .....
bf.CU.If, ~ue•.• P:N .D:.TU .,. .. 11111 t1Ni
30
45
7.75x14 :=.. =:.~ ..
•ml Ohl t!n11
Mitewon1 .. lyt -
our Newest POLYGLAS" tire
POWER CUSHION
.......... tltti tMt Ms MMt .... , ••• ~ .... ~ ......... $3296
1 A tire th•I liah11 1qulr111 ,,,
11v11 the lr11d !Gr IOfl11r llf•
BUY NOW
on our
Easy Pay Plant •nil lrnprov11 ro1d frip. 7.00 • 1S,,......
•Two Polyt11er Cord 111!11. '~':.t;':."f.•.:J·71
• Two Pllltrsl111 Cord lelt plf.., lld tfft.
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SERVING ALL SOUTHERN .CALIFORNIA
YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO.
YOUNG &.J.ANE TIRE CO.
THEODORE ROBINS FORD
UN NEWPOltT
Ph. 5411-HU
412 OCIAN AVENUI
Ph. 494-6666
2060 HAlllOll ILVD,
Ph. 642.0010
COSTA MISA
LAGUNA
COSTA MIU.
-,--------
I
I
•
DAILY PILO'l' EDITORIAL PAGE
'Tin Can Beach' Again
•
"Tin can !leach" needs lo be cleaned up. Fr<lm
Sunset Beach lo the bluffs along· CJoasl Blgllway in
Huntinttnn Beach, the road ed5(es have Ill 1the chum
of a city dump.
Trta.sh of all kinds mars this entrance to the city.
On the sea aide the mess extends to the state beach
acroa the strip of sand owned by the Southern Pacific
Rallroad.
On tbe inland side, it spoils the view on the road
edge ond on property owned by the Bolsa CorponiUona.
The trash is the residue of a summer of swimming,
surfing and sunning by thousands from all over South·
ern Californi1. But it'a the city now drawing the repu.
tation of a dirty town.
No oo.e is cleaning it up. No one apparently is in-
volved in cleanup responsibility. The city is not respon·
sible, the state beach officials say it's not state land and
the private companies say it's not their mess.
So while the agencies admire their "clean skirts,''
the beach area is regainin,f the name by which it was
known for so many years-Tin can Beach.
SUrely there is sDme way to clean up tJ1ia.. mess.
An Excellent Report
Members of the· Prestige West Homeowners Assocl·
ation in Huntin.irt.on Beach presented to the Airport
Commission a report on the Bolsa Chica site for the pr<>-
posed county regional airport so reasoned and oomplete
that it drew favorable comment from the commission.
Commissioner Dennis Carpenter echoed the feeling
of m0&t of the 1,400 persons bearing the team of speak·
en representing the homeowners when he said, "J com·
mend you for a job well done."
Seldom baa a gMUp of proteston made such an
In-depth study of all the factors which led them lo oppooe
a proposition. Hours of labor and much talent were used
In coming up with a soUd argument against putting an
airport in Huntington Beach.
The DAILY Pn.OT, too, commends the homeowners
and their president, Joseph Hallsky, for an excellent job.
About the only falling of the 65-page report is the
same one which bas marked all opposition to individual
sites for the airport-a lack of suggestions for alternate
locations for a county m. facility.
Improving Driver Training
Judging from the sJaughter on California highways,
high school driver edu.Mtion has not been the complete
answer to traffic accidents.
Administratllrs of Huntington Beach Union High
School District have an idea which might help in better
training our young drivers. The district is considering
driving simulators for classroom use.
With the simulators-Link trainers have been COO·
Mered-teachers will be able to recreate problems
which would be acddent.s if demonstrated on the streets.
The new program involves at least 12 hours use of
the trainer and four hours behind the wheel of an auto-
mobile on city streets.
The process costs a little less than the present driver
education pr6gram and might free some money to aid
students with individual difficulties.
Driver education is critical because it is the one class
where failure in the classroom could result in death on
the highway, not only for the student. but for many
innocent victims as well.
-' 'fl
' .!
' •
H
Characteristics Bonn Leaders
Alarmed Over
They Stop~d to Help Dim
Of Fine Athletes Russ Threat
By NOBMAN NIXON, M.D.
'lbiJ is the aeason when Amerieana
r f all agea, from all walla5 Of life, go
daffy over competitive aports. Every
Saturday, football stadia from coast to
coast overflow with wildly cheering
fans while counUesa rnillioos watch on
television 8'! a handful r:I. robust,
athletically skilled and; superbly train·
ed young men fight for their alma
mater -and ind.lvldDal recognition.
Next week marks the beginning of the
World Series, the time when national
mus hysteria reigns supreme. And on
October 12, provided the ltrilting
studeata and Ille Meiiean government
resolve their grievances, our eyes and
ears will be tuned in to the Olympic
Games in Mexico City.
MANY EDUCATORS decry the
emphasis on spectator sports in our
coUege.e and high school!. They con·
tend that the athletic tiail is wagging
the academic dog and suggest taking
away the dollar sign by eliminating
paid admissions, paid coaches, travel
expenses, athletic scholarsbipt; and the
dependence of "other" sporrQ on foot·
ball and baskeCiall.
So far, tbe:se objecton represent on-
ly a small minority, For most
Americans believe that our way of
fostering competitive sports In boys
and girls in our elementary, junior and
senior high schools pays dividends in
furthering responsible aitlzenabip. And
that high-level competition during
adolescence and young adulttiood con·
tributu po6itively to character forma·
ti on.
IN mE RECENT 1968 Olympics
issues of the Journal cit' 1he A.M.A.
Dr. Bruce Ogilvie of San Jose State
College Counseling Ce n t er 1um·
inarized his years of experience with
high school, college, Olympic and pro·
fessional athletes from evecy com·
petitive sport who had been referred
because of psyclJological problems.
Although Dr. Ogilvie has Some
doubts regarding the value of athletic
l'.Ompetition, because of the variety of
Everyday
~
bodily complei.nts and the severity of
emotional reactions to t h e stress of
high-level competition, he lists many
positive character traits in the
pel"fiODalities of most teen-agers and
young adults Vr'ho participate actively
in competitive sport.II.
OGILVIE REPORTED tlwlt 10-yeer·
okl boys, Vr1len accepted by ttie na·
tionally renowned SarM!a Clara Swim·
Club, tend to be cool, reserved and in·
troverted; ttlo8e who remained in this
extremely competitive training J'l'O·
gram until their 14th birthday showed
greab!r emotional stability and higher
conscience development, .aiong with
increased self.assertion and in·
dependence. The same bOl~ true for
many youngsters who participate in
Pop Warner football and Little League
baseball.
Successful athlete! are achievement·
oriented and gain great satisfaction
from tllleir striving to succeed. Like O.
J. Simpson in last SMurday's U.S.C.·
Minnesots Ulrilter, a great athlete. iii
at his very best when the odds are
slightly ag.ainst him.
DR. OGILVIE IS convinced tilat
athletes who retain their motivation tor competition stiow 1bese personality
traits: ambition, organization ,
deference, dominance, endurance •nd
aggression. Mo.rt of them ere self-con·
trolled, self-<:onfident, tough·mil'l'.!..,j ,
trustworthy, intelligent, and ex·
troverted.
Whettler good or bad, competitive
sports are here to stay. Certainly, our
Jives would be less colorful without
them and without the athletes who
make them possible -especially
ttiose outstanding ones w\io become
our national heroes.
WASHINGTON -West German
Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger has
quietly employed a bit of personal
diplomacy to crystallize U.S. support
for his menaced government in the
w a k e of Russia's march i n t o
Czecho6lovalda.
Kiesinget sent a close foreign policy
advisor. Kurt Bi:rrenbach, on .a quick
trip here as hi! personal represen·
tative. Birrenbach made the rounds of
influential congressional off.ices to
underscore the West Ge r m a a
govenmleflt's grave concern.
Birrenbach is a member of the
Bundestag who has long been a sup-
porter of NATO and an advocate of
European cooper.atioo. He is also a
f'iiwlcial trustee anl counselor for the
poY1erfui Thyseen industrial interests.
In talks with congressional leaders
BiITenbach expressed the fears of the
West German government caused by
the invasion of Czechoslovakia by
Russia and its Warsaw Pact allies. He
~sed the positioning of troops on
the Czech·West ~an border.
HIS QUICK VISIT h e r e coincided
with a round of propaganda and born·
ba& leveled by Moscow at the Bonn
government. At the same time the
Kremlin was assuring other Middle
European nations, notably Rumania
and Yugoslavia, that it planned NO in·
vasion of their territory.
'G row Up and Go Home'
As a consequence. U.S. officia.is
were led to believe, formally and by
Bimmbacb's informal mission, that
West Germany was the nation most
endangered by the move in to
Cuchoslovakia. That led to warnings,
from the United States. Britain and
France, that any move in~ West
German territory woold bring "im-
mediate Allied response."
Now that Czech leaders are saying
that a Soviet pull-back is in prospect1 U.S. officials are keenly interested in
the extent of the wittldraw.al of oc-
•
"Always~ hear the plaintive cry of
the teen-ager~ What can we do?
Where can we go? The answer is.
Go Home!
"llang t.ht storm windows, paint the
woodwork, rake the leaves. mow the
lawn, shovel the walk, wash the car.
le.am to cook. scrub the noors, repair
the sink, build a boat, get .a job. Help
the minister <r priest or rabbi. th11:
P.ed Cross. the Salvadon Army. VUit
B11 George
Dear George :
Help mt, plr:ase! J'm going
wiCb tbl& girl and I like her a lot
but 'he has a pet dog and every
time J kiss her she illsisU: J also
kin the dog. Wh11t can J do? J'IJ
be your friend for life. w.s.
Dear W.S.:
Well, one thing you can do is
JM me know the next time you
three go to a drive·!!\ movie -I
want to witch. (I've heard of the
et«DaJ trlang]e but Uii~ is
rldJcuioUI,) -CONFIDEN'l'IAL 'tfl' MAYOR
DAL£Y or CBI~, 11 , .. .,
''Stieb aod atooa m1y breM
my -but _..,, will .. ver
hurt me."
'
---·-
cupation forces and the location of
"nibs which remain in Czechoslovakia .
Guest .Editorial• BIRRENBACH'S TALKS here were
• " '>,. ~veU timed. His visit came when the
___..-Senate and House were preparing to
the sick, Assist the poor. Study you r complete action on the ad·
lessoos. And when you are through -ministration's $72 bilUon defense ap-
and not too tired -read a book. propriation bill. Some innuential
"Your parents do not owe you en-senators had been question:ing ClA
IA.r\ainmooL Your city or village doe s director Richard Helms, Defense
fl1't uwe you recreational facilities. Secretary Clark Clifford and Gen.
The w<rld does not awe you a living. Earle G. Wheeler. chairman of the
You owe the world something. You .Joint ariefs of Staff. on in1ernational
awe it your time and energy and your developmerits.
talents S'6 that no ooe wilt be at war in The lawmakers were told. in closed·
poverty or sick or lonely again. door testimony. that eight divisions of
"IN Pl~AIN SIMPLE words: Grow
up! Quit being a crybaby, Get out of
your dream world and develop a
backbone. not a wishbone, and start
sc".uig like a man or lady.
"You're supposed to be mature
P.nough lo a~ some of the
respoMil>ilitie:o1 your parents have car·
ried for year~. They have urged, beg·
ged. exr\lsed. tolerated and denied
themselves needed comforts so that
you could h.Bve every benclit. You
have no right to expect them to bow to
every wtiJm 311d fancy.
.. In Ji~ve."11 1 name. {;ROW UP
AND GO HOME "
By Jvdf< Pblllp B. Gilliam
Juvenile C@art
Duv~, Colorado
Warsaw pact troops -more than
60.CXXJ fighting men plus support units
-were posjtioned Jn Czechoslovakia
in the Pilsen·Cheb area where they
posed 1 tbreat to \9est Gennany'3
eqtern bordtr. T h e .-nator1 were
thutJ: prepared to give a sympathetic
hearing to .a personal rpokesma.n air·
ing Kieslnger's apprehen5ion1.
Despite their sympathetic attitude.
however. congres~ion11l leaders, like
oOler U.S. ollicilla, wen fin.ally in·
clined to take a somewhat less alarm·
ed view ol an admittelly al.rming
situatic11·1. Tht1 reached• a te.ntative
conclus.ion thal.., Russia WN not
ser1ously considertns a move into
We1t G<nnany.
By Robert S. Allea
1od Job A. Go'tmJI)
He Salutes the 'Nice Kids'
To the Editor:
To thank tbe young people who go cm
be in g the "nice kids" the y have
always been but who don't get the
publicity reserved for the dissenters,
the rabble rousers. the dirty lazy lot
revel in. The "nice kids" doo't need it
(isn't everyone nice, sort of tirings'!).
Last Monday afternoon at Beach
and Main in Huntington Beach, the
"loaner" car I was driving went dead.
Hundreds of people passed, a little in-
dignant that my borrowed car had a
dead battery and they had to make a
slight detour around me. No telephone
in sight, and traffic on all sides of me
made crossing difficult.
IT WASN'T THE motorcycle
policeman, who couldn't help but see
the itopped up traffic, who came to
my assistance. It wasn't th e
policeman in a police car. who
bothered to find out what the trouble
was, but .a "nice ldd" who DID stop
and who DID do something about it.
While he was jockeying into the posi·
lion of alerting the nearest gas station,
another car stopped with three "nice
kids" on their way to the beach oo a
100 degree aftemooon, who bothered
to take time kl guide my car int.a the
gas station.
These Sn! just four "nice kids" -
CLEAN "nice kids" wilb clothes to
match. with masculine haircuts leav-
ing no doubt in my mind who t~ey are
and 1vhere they came fr001.
I salute them -whoever. or
wherever, they are! (I like nice kids).
A. K. f>ETSOI
One Sad Conclusio11
To the Editor :
Suspicion aTJd bias often are
generated by fear and --or lack of
understandin·g and often result in
&tereotyping of individuals and issues.
Two items appearing in the Sept 18
issue oi the DAILY PILOT, while
seemingly unrelated. could come
under the stereotyping mentioned
above.
One item was the letter from a
mother whose 16-year-0ld son. while
taking a political poll, was subjected
to suspicion and indignity, seemingly
without cause. The inference here is
that because he is a youth, some peo·
pie feel he is not deserving of the
same initial trust and right to basic
human dignities that we adults exped.
THE OTiiER ITE!\'1 was the
headline. ' J C Bonds Lose by t2
Votes". Surely it was not the slight lax
increase that defeated the needed
bond Issue -an increase in taxes of $5
~ year on .a $20,000 house is
minimal. Also one would have to wear
blinders not to realize t.he educational
a.nd cultural benefits youth and adults
alik gain from our junior colleges. It
Dear
(;loomy
Gus:
The Civil Aeronautics Board's
omnl1>0tency is such that, Hke
it or not, we're going to bave a
lot more and blicger jet air·
plAnes operating in Orange
County In the. future. Thi! could
mean a btg airport in Huntington
Reach. or nearby, like it or not.
-S. D. L.
Tiii• ... ..,,.. ... ~ .......... ...._ .. -uv llltie ., ... _._,, """" ,,_. .., ,...... " .._., ... o.... .. ....
lttttl"I """' '"'del"I .... --...,_1b0 Wrlttn ll'loUld con....,. tMlr IDISU9t Ill 300 Mnfl • ....._
The ·~"' to CO'ldtnH '""""' Jg flt -m or t llmin.19 llbt:I II rese.--ed. Jilt lttten must lnc:lude ftt'IMfv,. -mam,,. eddru.. but n....,.. wlll be "'""""Id
on r....-t.
v·oold be interesting to learn why
some voted against this bond issue,
and why such a large number did not
bother to vote at all -when the right
to vote is one of our naticm's dlerished
privileges.
ONE SAD conclusion that could be
drawn from both of t?iese iteQJS ii thal
our enlightened society contains too
many who do not attempt to reason a
situation or issue through, but who fall
back on suspicion or indifference.
SHIRLEY 1SERMAN
Biggest TaxpalJe»
To the Editor:
As an avid reader of BW Reed's "ln
the Wind" and any other of his by·
lines. I feel I must speak out with
regard to hls article of Sept. 12.
It was written "In the Wind" that
it is traditional for the Huntington
Beach Union High School .District to
name its schools after the regional
areas they serve. Let it be known
that it is also traditional for ~
Southern California Edison Company
to name its steam plants after the
cities in which they are located; i. e.,
liuntington Beach Steam Plant. U it
was. in fact, b"ue that the naming of
the school was after tile Edison pl.ant,
or after Thomas A. Edison, I feel
that it would be an honor for the city
in either ca.ije.
MR. REED ALSO menUoned the
"belching wastes" of the Southern
California E<tison Steam Plant. Please
remember, and !:et your readers be
aware, that the Southern California
Edison Company "belched" $476,231
in direct taxes into the Huntington
Beach IJ'easury in 1967 with $1,745,964
allocated to Huntington Beach schools
and an additional $1,014,~ in other
taxes for a total tax ouUay of $3,237,.
126.
The Southern California Edison
Company is the biggest taxpayer in
Huntington Beach and I.I and has been
working most diligentJy to alleviate
emissions from their plants. No ane
has the answer yet, but when and if
this problem can ever be solved, lbe
Southern California Edison Company
wiU be one of the first to initiate im·
plementntion,
MRS. F. J. WHITE
Helping Youth
1'o the Editor:
On behalf of the entire membu-
ship of the Fountain Valley Kiwanis
Club we wish to thank you for your
many articles in regard to our recent
Kiwanis Luau.
The Kiwanis Club of Fountaln Val·
ley is endeav<ring to help the yoyil\
M the community and through this
Quotes
Rla.c Crosby -"t won 't ret.n. J'd I'll loo many people out ol wort And,
I'm havine too much hln"'
Lou.he Sl11elalr. S.11 Dtep, o• ''Pr.or
People's Campalp"-"ill my gr<>\Ving
~ my tam.lly was very poor (but )
ft didn't 1 t t m to demand our
'righll' that the more lifluont "'°uld
oonUibute to oi.r kt."
fund-rahing event. we iqJe udl ,_.
to build • ·----" aid in our }'CUth work. Yoar artk:illl were most beneficial to our ........
lion and the support al ndl ......
ao )'Ollrlelvea .,...ill .._... illl
youth a! the Oran.p CouDIJ _._
nities.
Eldridge C'-"r
To the Editor:
Eldridge Oleavw ii an Ml:; 1 '
young speaker and wrlWr ... ..._
ol a ""911Uy pub--. "a.•
Ice.'' a 'very movtn.c .ceaaal If a.Iii
odySHy in Amtr1cl U 8 Bl.la .....
and~ not yet a, u.. .. oe'Fr
tial candi-" Ule -... Freedom Party, wlllcb -I piM9 •
the California ballot.
Although -· people ·-.. " silence th.bl remarkable )*omll --. t
for one am g1ad that we lw ta •
democracy whim cMrilbes tr-..
of si-11. 1 urp tbal 7oa dlorloll7
defend his right .. state 1111 -.
MRS. RUTH llW'Vf Gr...,,_
To tht Ed.it.or.:
Not being the 1<lnd ol hum-. -
lets his ears and eyes decide wtl.M'a
right or wrong with uy IUbject. I do
not watch TV nor Ustn te ndio.
wbieh only gives one the oltoaJ tblll
that they are paid to 1bow Or ten -.
I must reed at leut f • • r
newspape~ an eveninC ta ardlr •
"get" the thou,.,. and -ol
editoc1 and 14 newsp1per oobmuli:Aa
who are all lri the folr newt~
lN THE LAST aii: Cll' aeven ,..,.._
editors and publlshu1 « t....,.na
Beadl papers have come ind FM fML
1amsurpriled1hll the DAILY PILOT
wouJd prklt on Commeat Pqe.
"Grand Jmn et the WbJt.e a-.
Door." It was wonde:rfUJ redllc md
the truth.
I wonder why our IAiuna PIPll1I
haven't printed tbt little Jiptn111
lady's prophecy of "Johm4e .. ,
serve his term out" -and HW11ptlt9J
will become "It" and we will be pl••
ed into the worst w• that bu t¥tt
happened.
' BUT WJ1'l_I NIXON. Hum~_.
Jolm!on (all -1 11 -before election, who t-llf: can nde ..
day for crood jam at 1he Wbtt.t -door?
U Richard Nixon do. wt. m
November, milUona of ~ wUI bl
eagerly waiting to heu b:la plim: • _.
the ....... One of them wj]J be RlclioN
Nixon. Remember. N'b'l)ft ls tM ume
Nil: on ~o served In the El 1 ' 1 ••
Adminiltnttion when 1bt Mt1M .....
h!red three. ~•Iona.
CHARLES A. PEDDICORD
-~--
Friday,September 27, 11111
T1lc «litortol -•I IM Dolf
Nol ••b Co .. , ..... """ -
--bv .,,._dot .. -· "'""'°"' .... -.... ..,, .. Copla of -
cmd rigftl~. bv ~. lorwm for U.. api.-ot °"' read<n' ~ad .. .,,... .. 1!tlcr u.. cl-.. -Poinll ol iltfonMd -,_.
cmd IPO,._,.,. °" topb of UY
de¥.
Robert N. Weed, Publldw
•
'·
•
.. .. . ------------· ~---··~-------------------..,...-~--11111111'!1-"ll!llll!'lll
IMME·DIATE
DELIVERY
' THE
REAL
WINNER •
AT RAY VINES, YOU WILL FIND
SWEEPING NEW DESIGN, WHERE BODY
AND FRAME ARE ONE.
•1969 CHRYSLER
.·NEWPORT . . .
This Is The Look Of Your New Car
PLYMOUTH FOR 1969
ALL NEW ,FOR 1969
··44 GllEAT NEW
PLYMOUTH STYLES
TO WIN YOU OVER
(lllf/lfEDIATE DELll'ERY1)
'67 IMPERIAL
2-door hardtop, and complete
power illcludlng factory aiJ: con-
illllonlnl and Ille finer luxury ap-
pointments,_ bolanoe of factory
WUTID\y. ooock No. Ul881
s4495
'65 CHRYSLER ~80
Hafdtop, full and romplete power
lnclu\llDI e1ectrlc windows. Stock
No. Ul519 '1995 .,·
'85 .FORD
10-puaenger country Squire sta-
tion waron. Full and complete
power Including FAq'ORY AIR
COND. Stock No. 1572
'66 CHRYSLER·
9-passenger stat.ion wagon with
air conditioning; beautifully
equipped, full and complete pow-
er. Stock No. Ul825
'63 'CHEVROLET
Sedan, VB, automatic tranamis-
sion, radio and heater, air condi·
tioning. Stock No. 4121A
'63 IMPERIAL
4-door hardtop, full and complete
power with fictory air condition-
mg and leather interior. Very
nice! stock No. 4240A
OPEN 7 DAYS
. A WEEK
8:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. '
'66 BUICK RIVIERA I
Full and complete power, factory
air conditioning, electric win·
dows; a beautiful car. Stock No. 4916A
'64 DODGE
9-passenger station wagon, auto-
matic transmission, radio and
heater, power brakes and AIR
CONDmONlNG. s t 0 ck No.
4715A
'63 OLDS 98
ikloor, full and co~lete power,
factory air conditioning. electric
seats and windows. · Stock No.
4799A
'895
I •I
' .
•
UP
TO
LARGEST STOCK:
IN · SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
·ovE-R I I I
1968 PL YM'OUTHS AND CHltY-SLER
$
4-door hardtop, automatic tran>
miasi"'!1 Ndlo anil heater, white
sklewiw gold in 'oolor witli matching Interior, A· very nice
car. ·
'S5 DODGE
!> ton loog bed . pJfk up with
automatic tran1mlssion, radio
and heater. Stock No. 4389B .
'63 CONTINENTAL
Full and complete pqwir Includ-
inl air conditioning and full Jea-
tho:-interior; very nioe. Stock No.
4475A I
. I
--
DOWN
CASH OR .TRADE ' .
Of ~nythin9 of Y cllittt ..
·.·... DELIVER --,. •·
Any of the Bra~d New ,
. CARS ABOVE .. '
*Tax t, Llc•nie on 'ApfirO~ CNdlt
• • • ' ' 1 • '
·'A -CHRYSLER
Custom Newport, low, low miles,
full factory wmanty; a rood buy.
Stock No.'U1e20 ,
$3895 :
, I
:
165 CHRYStER· Npt.
Hardti>p, full and ~pow
er In.eluding l'RctotT air i:cndJtioD.
Ing; aee iU Slod: No. 49ll .
'55 FORD. T~BIRD -'65>M0$TANG . ' ' -
Very tlhai'p;· automatic • ttansmls-VB, ndlo and 'heater, stlClt -
slon, radio arid heater, white mlalion; . .., Dice. Stoc;k No.
aldewalll. 1536A ·
•
'65 IMPER·IAL '84-'VW
Sharp! Fiill. llld complete power SUtion wagon, radig Incl healer, Including factory air conditiol). Ing and leather interior. Sl«k low, low mil"8; very· aloe. Stock
No. Ul683 No. 4el0A
$2495 ' $1295
llGILUI TAG. ,.
SAU• .. •., ..
NowlnP1.o .... u
'CHRYSLER • PLY MOU .I -Ii.· IMPERIAL .
"42-01 ILLOW ,-. ·LONG BUCH· ~-·.~-
., THE LAKEWOOD T RtfOFF " . FROM ORANOI COUNTY
OF THE IAN DliGO FREEWAY 426-7301 , .. 543·6663 527'4341 -~ ' -,
I '\
I r
1
•
I , I
I
I I
... ~ ..................................................................................................................................................... ~.~-~--------~----~~ ---
.
DAll.Y PIUlf
£voryOM Hu
s-..-..lMt
S.-..... S.. Wontt-
•
lil.talltftPLU'S •• IW 'J'llB OR.4NGE COAST-P•81VE DlllECT U.""7a
y.., ~n s.111,
Rf!d It, Trado It
With 1 Wont· Ad
''I• ..;HOl_..Ul;..;l;..;S...;fOl_,_._IA=L;:lc.....H;..;O.;.U:-;S;.:E;:.S...;FO..;;c;.;R...;SAL=:::.1_1 ~HOU::S~IS~POll~~IA:~~l!=~HOU~~SE~S~l'Ol~~SA:>l.~E=:l!HOUl~~U~'~O;ll~SA~LlE~~H~O~U~S~ES~F~OR~U5L_!!~~l~HO~U~S~E~S~FO~lt~SA~L~l~HOU~~S~lS~FO~R;SAL~I~ :~.!~11~11~;r•~l!i!!!iiiiiii.i'i000Giii~"i;lo;r~o~I O!iiiiiiiiml!*:~iJ :--'•'--~--IOOOGeMral 1000 9111 ,.. 1000 General t• f'Hneral 100f Gwr•I t• Oenlrlit 1000 mllda ~I ma,. IUILDERS CLOSi OUT. -BIB
HOUSIS FOR SALi
At. ./JIUW/11
PRESENTS
;:/)11 ofanc'J-/Za/ &tat11
FOR ACTION
ONLY 12 NIW HOMES AVAILAILI 1ai9aht HIMIWI
RANCHO LA CUESTA, In Huntington Beach, bu An --a..' o
the best values in a new home in l.he entire areL · BectroGm home on R..J Jot
OPEN Hc;>USll SAT. AND SUN. 1 TC?, 5 ·flt,xl le FcunDy Find 411 Acacia, -c....,. 4ol Mor ........... .S00.00
Buy from owner and save $1,500. Tb.114 bed-
room 2 bath borne has a dNlam lltcben with
built.ins and dishwasher, abag carpeting and
custom drapea:. A-1 condition and ready to
move in. Walk to 1)1 ochoo)I, 50 acr0 park,
and ju.t 2 minut .. to South Coasl Plua and
major freeways.
1 & 2 story, s & 4 bdTma, 2 balba, quality eom.lruo-
tion including all kHchen built-ID!, !lrepl~ce;f\lllY
carpeted, sh ate roof, concret:t driveway, large
Iota. Walking diatanco to Publie BeaclL
lli&l>lll' .,.... ..... -"""* l.boft 'h hll:hw11.
Atkins only 129,0>0 •
Would c;aWder ao odlm> """ m.,.. only,,.,. don.
Y-..,,,.._ ef llvlnt .,.,,.,.._ lo thlo >. rarity! Old tublolled quality and 111111c
IWW H .... lorl4 -charm combined la thls one ot a kind home. * I ~ & family-dlnlni area or 3 bdrm - 2 bath! -family room -ocean View' -An ei<cellent buy at $26,500 with 90% c~n.
venUOnal financing available aod monthly
paymenta of f166 principal and interest. You
$15,ci50 i. $27,700
FHA -VA -Con,,.,,,ionol
Ev ... 548-8863
You Co•ld * 4 ~ plua family room, plus plus one ot tbe quietest loeaUoos in CorDna
d.inlnl area, or del Mar. · • a bodrooml .. dinlllg ..... plus separate motber·lzl.law arrangement; 307 Jasmine, Coron• del M.r ........ $56,500.00
all with 2114 both&, bandy built-ID tilcben Two • 2 bdrm houaes on a tarae 50 ft wide
lncludJaa: relrtiontor-freezer. Fenced· yard lot near main beach. Bi<cellentrental history.
comp!eu With cllllclren'• pllyhouse " sepa-OWner bu moved and waoll an offer this
rate doJ run. week.«Jd.
mUll aee to appreciate.
2751 Portola Drl'HI
Sales through the 'Muf*i.~li lf ltlftij
Call 11irow a Dolkw
frotn tbJa; home to tht 84\'
11.Dd BEAP1 eYett u.,qp a
doUat doeci't iO .. fllr ..
it did In Georfe Wuhinc•
day. CtJsroM ·QUA(..
3 Bedroom J kth
. Living Quertiet'I Oil
oor to take advutlp
10417 MAIUNIRS DRIVE 3600 S.ivlow, c0....,1 chi Mor ...... $69,500.00
PIN SAT /SUN 1 • 5 Rusilc Beauty! Tbla lovely 3 bdrm home ia
Tre•Shaded Provi"nci· al Home toaded with panelling, and ia iocated on ,
Service of the Newport Harbor 1-
C~&ta Mesa Board of Realtors ,
totaled $35,268,700 for the first
(~and ..,_jlljjl · 10 ,,,::! ;,,
• ftloe ki~ ' ~ • with hardwood
d. View. Deluxe llevalDr
from gll.1'8ge level. ht
stmPe LDt (you awn !*> •
corner lot only one bloc.It to the beach. Large
' bedroom & fllllll1 room, loaded with ak;illl firepllces In both the Jiving room and lbe "'cnfti. IM&• pool, oop1r1ted from yard full family room, built-in tltcben aod like new ot bit U-In Barllol: l!lilJJmld.s. conditlon Inside and· <>ul Don't let thia one slip by. Picturesque
Doscrll>oo the vii!" from the family niom &
living room to pool & garden ID this lovely 3
bedrOom home DMJ' Dover Shores.
1000 NOTTINGHAM
OPEN HOUSE SUN 1 -5
Open House
2'21 CLIPF DltlVI
OPIN SUNDAY 1.5 .
2854 Carol" EHtbluff .......•..... $41,950.00
Price jllt!lt reduced for quick aale! owner has
bought aoother home and will give immedi-
ate oocupancy. 4 bedrooma, awinuning pool,
separate dining room.
28281.CoastHiway
' Col'Olla dtl Mar
673•3770 .
, wet be.r, p u 1 ftoor'L • Dbl garage • Extra btraa. Doo.ble p.nage large yard with alley en·
with extra p&rldnz. A truly trance. A rare find at $21 ,950 8 months of 1,968. List your prop· teaut!M bo.,.. All quality • 10% _,, or ""' down
lhn:JQrbout incl, lu.sh car-f11A .•
erty with a Realtor today. ""'"'· College Park I :~·========~~~~~~=~~! $99,500 R1re 4 Bedroom
finer homes
IAYFRONT
11' 8ayfrmt with Piel'
" 1"11»1:. 5 Bdrm, dining
rm, ~ Bufroot
patio. 3 car gar11ge, •
~ ""· Only $119,500 Shown by Appl
ALSO Trim and neat with ~ Ba.till.
Open ·oaity 1·5 P.M. • Large kitchen m ·a llP8<>
1359 E. 81fbo1, Penn. iotla )ot with lots of trees
Only <rte left. One bowM! and sbnibs. $25,750 • l..mv
from ocean. Upper wUt has down FliA or no down VA. · LLEGE , , ""'1room>, 2 """" "" Qill oow ,., •.iaia.
REALTY ""'· 1.ow .. unlt ... '..... Big 4 rooms, 2 baths plus powder 4 Bedrooms, :J baths with
room and dea. A1ao wet l{lrllcl family ~ Full Price $11,600 'baz' and l.ftundry room. AP-lY ous ted and~dranped
Only nn per month. incl~ prox :l:JOO tq. ft. I>o¢Me: car-Oxn~ Elec kitchen, la-~ taxes and inlure.rM;e Ol'I tbil age pla. extra· puking Mft, _.e _ uu.a
cute 3 BR home with • $79.~ • Eiccellent 'tmns· .reened 119tlo. -RoQn1. :t4t
Price ~.ooo
Eveii. 548-81168
Ont llock
To Oc:ta11
Two l -tio.i-"' 11,7 R~ Lots. Cullom • built
IP9dowi ro:ira Rar lilNt
ke.sed O S2'l'5 ptr Mo. Ptb
...,. $89,SOO.
Owner will CU?')' lou
o l'ftll008.Wli!: rate.
Ev ... ..,._
Bay & Beac:ll
Rulty, Inc.
675-3000
2-K71 E. Cout Hwy., ~
---
HO DOWtf . , A unique & udting 2 beclroOm contemparjry
modem. with marvek>w BAY~;Booquet
cao,... stone wlllil! Mabopbr p~(
throuahout! Beamed collkipl ~uded, •
wooded paUo. Not leesed l.aDd;
P•TI l~«m
·· RaLTY
.64N200
Eleg1nce & PriY1cy ELEGANT .DUPlll
DOVER SHORES
Every room hu a mag·
niflca1t Bay &: MOUlltaln
View. SUdlng glau walls
apellina: OOlo the large
k.odlCl.ped ~-Bil-
liard rm, f.amlly nn with
~ l walk·ln wet
bar. 4 or 5 Bdmu1, 4%
'bl.th&. Owner prd!tta
txchanie l o r smaller
bidme or lot.
~ ... <1own ..,..,.., ~ 673-9200 Evu. 541-4966 ~!: .. ':"::' !,;. 0: $189 MONTH
""'re ' Vet. lluny "' this Bay & -lleac:h """""'--lll.SOO -Owner buys this tine 3 Bit 2 llolll
one. WOWI ll11lty, Inc. . will pay points tcr nlA. ot Ka Koll borne loeated J
EASJ'SJDE C.M. ~ Pride -«.
ownenhip property. Two
low.JI tWD Bedrocm uni.ta
leJllJ'l.ted by l(U&l'8. Beau-
tilully le.ndilcaped lot • lhade
trees. MUil-be aen to ap-
predate. CAU..TODAY!!
It'• ltil1 pool weather -no
-about""" -not .lee dlll t>Kt • " family wttll
3J25 W. Balboa Blvd., NB VA. bJoc:k from .i.o._,.
~ --= ---
8/B • -· <Ml C.IH. lffilla -' .
OctClll FTollt &a1ow.aalby ·----. .-. Jml; ,...,."Ullhood oa. quiet lalbaa
I "'*°""1. 5 bath home. at de 8iiic. You'll mJo7" 11.
i,.... aMrw room. ~ ftl.uaed We irJ larie 4 BR
.. roe& B1·tfl*1'b' ;, ~ I den lprie. 2
1• I t t!, ma 117 extru. ... + powder-nn. Large
l.lllartoul. muter aaltf bu fin!plaiee •
$125,0XI ...._ rm -llWIY many
ALSO --..... 'Ibis-home lruly ,.... -m oondHJm lellllfiful Wal< In ll"'d• o:booll, Cnr-
uci. hit 'Home ::._ dol "'"' 111 -&-
-"""' ...... .... Prioo -... M6 500
lamtl1"""" """"""' --OllV """""""'~ ...... ,.-i -· Larso""' Bkr 642-7000 ner kit. 3 bed!~ 3 tetbl. ~ 0 .,.... • ""
"""" --.,.., Ill--· ..... -ditliml rq:im tor omoe or ar drtv. by:
Built around a court yard
to a.ccomodat1 a p:d or
aeduded sarden mtry. Thia
hl:ICne is planned for worry.
fNe l!Dtutaining I famill'
comfort.
WJth 4 BRI 3 betbl, thl
m.Uter IUlle, betuned • .:.Q.
in&: living room, formal dino
ln& room, k:.l'cbm with
~aatnook • r 1 «Kn-
pleteiy doled oft fn:lal the
[amlly room A: ~n'1.
wtnc. The ~ lf;web' pl~.
ture 1a tied togedw with •·
¥1 beeutlfully Wed. lllllerY.
The painstakinc craftsman.
ship cl. IV /\N WElLS' ..
81.ltt'S ~ dilCfimtnating
buyeor belt or everything in-
cluding VIE\V. See this
NEW borne tcxlay. fr'.500
Roy J. W1rd Co.
IBaycreet OUJcel
1842 Santiago Dr. 646-15r50
~ ... -... -W\ 2409 Bonni• Pl., C.M. .... , 900 1·cL-1· ontr. Wiii -..-... (WI Suta ,_ nr •. IMle). , <r"' , ..... p
far B!mtwood or tar .-ii. OPl!N HOUSI DAILY * s BJI, s ba, tam nn
• lane cm Udo ble. , 'til sold * Z.story, 3fm 1q tt.
,... l'ljce; _.;l!i!. -* Hup ,_, ALSO ~•Ex--.i11ome
Fint Timt LJst9d 1601 lonnio ~ ·~ -LU•k
. ~ ' ..... -... lrYint Ttrrac:t • V.aoant, """'· and '""' e to ".::,6' ~~\.::i SPECIAL II tar•""' tomlly
"""I' and Tmm O>art. -POOL & VIEW-OPEN HOUSE
l.&ip """"' Id""'" ond ! BR, 2 bo, FA. bit-in ... SAT & SUN I 'Ill Dusk
-,._ _.,.., -Id~"'" pon:h. dbl gar; "'4'> 912-lo!Jlo. IHtbluff ~ 1o111 den. ~ ..., am cruet nn. Low ~tdd. » " °""' o11 --.. ""' """· ,...., BUT bo.i • IASTILUFF o.n... puidluloo .....e..r .....,..,.,,., $13.500. A-1. ..,_ _...,._ REALTY
~ -:'.ic.,. CURT DOSH, Realtor
mm. ---Bav & ltac:h
bolty, Inc.
"" W. &I"" llMI., NB --=-
,
1'T.J) W. Coast Highway
60-6472 VIES. 673-3468
NEED A
GUEST HOUSE
2t14 vma Del Qr,, ,,...,,..........,
644-1133 EvoL ~505
MESA VB!DE
MmtUM .JIOWll
f.H.A.
J'Q'. bedm;ml + den +
1*llnc Room; l"-a.GI home
b''$35,:i00!! YoO'D be thrill· ea wtth ll*e tor nir fam.
11y to_rQPMt, on um cozy
OOMER ' nstled within
euy ftlk" to Fairview Rolld
Shops, all 1Cboo11, Including
sr. JOflNS PAROCHIAL,
THRU 0 .C.C. ENJOY the
nice yw,rd, OJDcftte blocic:
w.111 A: 11.lumtnum covered Patio for plamtd prjVBcy •
euy Aecf!Sll boat and trailt'!' ....
PrlM to RD
$89,""
Call tor Appl:.
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
View Home with 4 Bd-
mu, pilll famil.Y nn.
Ottered at $39,500 1or
quick ale.
OPEN SAT & SUN
716
C•meo Hi9hl1nd1 Dr.
DOVER SHORES
Mqnitkent v)ew home
by Harold w. Levitt
A.I.A. feaured in Archi-
tectural Digest. A spac-
Jow: llvinif'OOl11. with II.
lbodt!m tln!plaoe wall ot
unfilled W mi.polished
Travu11ne.. J bdtm11. plu1
mepuate guest cabMll.
~ u • l'aNI: roont
and a c&IUll littin& UH
"""""""""-'"" dln1ngroam with ..title
wall trJnM 8Dd textured
Eventnp Call ~ . wool dnperles. The aim-
Art You. R.....&..7 "",_,_,,,., ""''"" -1 OM\tuall' the ~ance o(
For the ~ PlU1Y ha OM ot. the finest homes AG~ 4 Bt. Home in Newport Ha.rt:.c:w. nu.
A mlnl•nn ettllte cgntb ol la cne cl the most bM.u-
• llpm'kllh1, cool. pool. Hor;'
could you mi. on a da1 lib
this It '29.500?
Collage Rutty 546-5880
1500 Ad&m11 at Harbot' .
(Near Clnem• Theater)
Renters Blues
11.n acre) m pnt'tlae um. tiful homes we Mve ~ """~.......,. ... ""'""to"""""""...,_ ORANGE COUNTY'S
tio and beatod -11",500. llc. LARGEST '
--
MUST SEU
SpoHns Octt.n Vi!'W. home
in exclusive Came:o Shorel
decoraled by OUmell
aum.n • O>aft1o
landscaping by BeelOO
• bedrooms • dftl
tantutE Oc:e111 View
critical iUneN
neceM:it.s.tes
1'\l I ·\\11111
~· Ill \ Ill \\
I!! I 1 < l • '' 111 _.,...,.. o.., N.B. o.n fur Awl 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
Open Sat& S1111 l ;g Country Estate ll8I -... c.M. -·
• to • john macnab rt·• -'° .... ...,. 1rom 4 Bed · On Lazy Lagoon ... t ..... city w.""' .... room
In Frlandly REALTY CDMPANY into tbll: ~ 3 bedroom,
N rt S•-881 DO 2 ba.th borne with dinlrl&" ewpo nvret VER DR. •ra. PNce 11.nd quiet for Sparkling home in beautiful
• BR, ''1 B~. 2 1tor)r mod. NEWPORT BEACH SztJXXI. Mesa Venlf!. 0wnf!r trans-MESA ·YEID£ N""' 2 brm. horn • w;th >d-$23,500 "°""' m..., ""'ch. C.O.. (714) 642·8235 f "ring" """. ""'""., ..n. i..u..,
s dltional room to finish )'OW'< 3 B ... _ munlty swim pocil, teM.ls I R SPRING family room, all built • ins,
BeauWul Town I: Ollmtry aelf. Plus 1 brm. guest house. R 2 uetla, h u g e .l pl.a.)'lrnda. Shawn by IC>fll. ND-. new carpeta, hUge master
-3 BR 1amU> """' "-· '""~de co""' lot. !~o ;\~N ~ 14'1.500. PRICE .. -• REALTY """"""'· 2 "'"" & ""''· l"faod --· lAo22 -G.l. Onty 21,SOO. ~-., •"'-•" i.nt -hood. M""" ............ --.... JEAN SMITH, LOW DOWN AIL 0'111· M. E. v ... 1. •ro1t1r ' REDUCTION an,, ... _ """"" """""'· 0 n t y hie ..-.ee. .., empdmc ERS. $19'1' per mooth 6424n7 Shorts Quallf7 2529 Harbor mvd., c .M. $27,96G • 10" down. CALL
"""'-6 ....ty point-REALTOR ~.in::: w_;;: f:::: w!lll 3 BR:° 3 ballu, Glint SlzM Family Rm. MR. BLA<X 5IOllil ,_
..i. Ill.Ml. $\I" i-.. ,".'"..,.,....._,,.....,...,...,.., Walk to .. """""'. B/B -,,... beouttful muter ..ite $22,SOO ""'r_,1·,....,,_ ___ _ be a.wed.. o._. bu berm 00 Seduded pool 4 prln~ Yau won't believe it 'Iii YoU ,~ ~-... • -",._ Harbor Highlands .. .... Presfl11a ~.-1.o• ...... 11•,500 ,:.,;,'~=.~= --;i;ir -.-=J
cant P\dl price anb-$30,~. NEW UsnNG • Cor. lot, • CO.An r ..._. ...... , na: ell~ walllll, enticing •-• -
1PBcioo1 modttn 4 bdnn. & ~ -~
tam. rm. "' "°""· '••· onc1. BayfrOnf l.elsehold place. ...,_. """'°""'· 2 WOWll lanai plus end, brttzeway, WALLAC! baths. Hom,maker's pride Just Lisll!d l Sharp 3 Bedroom
Q>t I drnpea, hlt-in's, idelll REAL TORS ArtiJ:tic •tttnc. large modem bl.lilt-In kitchen. Sliding doors on corntt. f'reMly P&lnttd.
)p. fa mily hernf' _ $55,IXll. -.546-4141-4 bedronm, 3% blllh. Exttl-Colclwell, Banker & Co. lt!lld to lovely .yard. 5-t().17'JO J)e(>p Pile Carpets. Bf>11uliful
Tf'mU to bt' arn.nltt"1. (Open &venl,...J ~ooocUtlonf ReduCed trGln nao E. ee." HW-r TARBELL ~ Hubor modem kitdlen for Mom.
.,C" THOMAS Realtor 1125,000 to Sloo,ooo. Owner "'':r""'~i~11 c:i;:;...., lOOkl 4 BEORM Completely fenced yard. 1~ ....... az.u644~111 Di! w. <but Hwy., Sfa-4511 •nxioUa ·too Wge 60' trnnt-MESA VERDE -$24 950 Room for Bell.I or 'J'taile'. ~'· 79 Newport em. ~ M.5-564.1 WANIED ~-50' ,,.. ..d llil jar I Lowest priced 4 bl!dr~n m Vet'• Total O::M!t " $47.liO.
bod. •• · .·(J\. A_ J ii I Preetlce loca.bl 2 btithll Vlfll')' low Dorn ntA. CALL DAVIDSON Realty OPEN DAILY JN com KESA · .. m-. '. -m4!10 ...Lhliahl u faJDD> """'-"'" ,,_ ..,,_: WALICEll• LEE
l'M LONRY 219 , __ , "'old.<-w!ll do_. lay If leac:ll ' If -tbe-..ldlclwnw!lll 'llllllntlngtt
Mp ....., loll a. -· -.mint, CdM n..1 ~ " -.. ..t111 . Lot I CONDOMINIUM All .. """' -m ,._,__ ...-"' ""5l4-0 Dl:e't 190. mad a J BR 2 1~ down. Prime headi k> 1~ '811» JB' YMf tDcorm m w. s.2:.. :,.~ NB 2 8ft. thaths, cliotce area F<tted.air ~~ Kell.f' ~ ()psi EvPi. •tt. homtf o:JNg A Mt Cltion with view 3 Bill 2 will exchanrt lllJ or put ., Pool, Qub House, e:lec/blt-tn car,>eting. Brick patio. Bet· S I Op
me at 1ZJD <>rep Ava. btl, U•illi room + family, olbil~.CanOUT)'back s::o s· --ftrept.ce Lo•N.l' terhWTY'-call640-IT20. Ill portunlty
OleM Verde), ex. •l • ~ace, FA beat. complete-a tr\llC deed" nea-or will OM ""°"ta' Pl~ tile, door dbl TARBELL 2955 Harb<r Small. hll orp.n1Zled o~ -, .,.,, """°' pon:h, 3 car --.-" S<t.500. $9 Total Ccnli -· "8.9!0. FIXER llNlalo w!lll _bl,_ dlmtole llu
.... :mo-•OI -.. on.,.. -W.w<!21ALEEKr.""""' -to-. .... ~-ltlchor4-ltaolty "Ul"rn: ........ •ddillmal .... --5't111 tulr. -Ev• ..,_ -.,._ --. .... ~· ..... """"" -tlal " ~:t~~~~:J~;·: .. ==~i=·=~I -...., --a..." -E. "'"" u..,., Olli
2
,.. -M i..., l1lll> to 11<00 ........ 111. ... MYE~ ....,,.." •••••I' and 675-40a1 1o1. -1Ta. .._...... <lllt & "°"" .._ v..i. I I• .. ••• ... IE '*" 1 1itl ,.. • a. "--Alb>rs11.soo 11a111. -·
·::. + ~ •'::. +~ i.:.:::::.. ~IS -'"1lo ":" llK A .... + = ::.."' .. ;-: i:: °"1fX I.Mn~, ..;,hw · l•lllii!i!i!-i~'!'!!!lll-
dald to • -,..._ Olll' .... , BR Al'l -..::: -Ualt. to .. CdM ...... __ , ......... VACANT
.. 1IO U -Udo -. -2 llR _,, -. h&nlwood °""" -l!IU 1-6 !mmoc. .,,._ loc. IM Ri.111...i-llM~ ..,. $13.,.!IOO."'"' Shop. COlllN·MARTIN ~ ""'"'' ,.,..... good 1167 "'""'' '"'·· C.M. ptua tam rm, A furmll dtn-. ' c-...-...... -....__ .. ~ .. ..,. """ Homf' It am 1-ve: ~ lrw &Ha. 5'4" ntA-'Ul"'dn "'3 £.<:out" H"1, Ct'ilJrlt WWlamaon, RJtr. IUL TORS ~s._.........,. ....,,......, 1..ot 80X140 with 2 BR born . * S22,9Se *
'7s.ll ft'B E..._813-l5SI 3036E.CoutHwy,C4M, WolWof'lllo,Rltn. """-1.tmn '· MIZELL REALTY io;::tz -.7 .. '"' ""rt'-I . ... m ...... PtCIOO. • -I · .._ -""".,..,_, "' :llUWEl'la.DTDRmC -N-BM:,CM. TIX'HAtl, llOKIR
Dtol -At..,. • Go-Got Dial 64"'11 1or ~LTS 646.7TU °""" """· ... mt "-· ..._ fH&.11"4 "< --~:
•
Wondetful """"1. 0vm1ze4 """'1o c1o.
W nff tacbed prage. Kitchen blfi ntc: "' the bu!Jt.1no, .... _ ""!
A dretm come true • It you gold nylon 5a:l OlJ'PrtttQr ~
are lookfne for the best for • used brick flnplaoe Wit
the lea.st. • 3 bedroom!, 2 make your winter r.t44du&i
betba:, custom dn.pes, new • pleasure. Call now!
"""""""'· ""' """' • ••· $22,500 VA poSa.l. -Nice covered patio
ll n d shuttleboard courts.
42,950 Easily tmanced.
546-2313 646-7171
THE rJEAL
E S TATERS ---
., Clote out. Last one I. 3 Bdrm, I % bath.
Hu nerytbhlcl 1101 Valley
Circl• C.M. May lease op.
·on. 642-Sllli
PERRON .. .......... , ' -
l)AlLY PILOT WOO ADS
BRING R:EmILTS! * 642.1n1 .Anytlmo '*
Coldwell, . Banker . ·
OFFERS:
Bayfront Pier .. Slip
s BR· s~ ba + fom. rm on xtra. lge. f.-
limple Jot. Near jelly OD pri llreill, aroil
d.,.igned It ·<Ult. bll Aulous owner ..t-
ing ..... : ............ --...... •t&5,000 .
Joe Clarbon
Prntlge Home • Udo hie
Cust. design. 4 BR's + ronv. den + f11m.
rm . w/wet bar. ;Formal din. rm. Swim pool
w/xtra lrge. patio. l..aDICeped by &ee.on.
Parquet firs. 50' SI. !<> st. lot ... '117,SOO
Mrs. Raulston
lftt View + Pool Buy
Absentee ownel' hu redl>Ced price for fut ·
sale or trade. 3 l!R and IUest BR - 3 bttllll
W. ~:Ogorage. Beauttful pool. •. H7,50tl
Udo Isle • 70' Lot
IAvely 2..tory bom~, S Bdrms, ·~ 2800
sq. ft., •unkenL~Villg rm., eiqu~ite new :.~~~~·-·s·u·~.~~~-~~~. ~~~~~ f:g:1:0
<ltarlotte IAng
Opttr Sunday 12·5
lrvlnt Ttn'Oc:t
Compleuly private & clu1nn!ng S Ir COllT.
don w/cbOOl'ful Flt RM. lg invltin( t>Ool.
Spactoo. _paUo. ........ '. . . . . . . . '81,!500 Mrs. Manon
OFFICE OPEN
SATURDAYS
COLDWELL, IANKER & CO.
22oo L COAST HIGHWAY
NIWPOltT IEACH
Kl f.3351
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I
Daily Pilot Classified
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Hours-Re9ulations-D1ediin•s
1"1110.,.a. Mv.riLNN -"•"Id -""" tttelr •*' e•fl' •11d rtpert lmmedletely .,,.,..
• , mlaol•IUutlellL THI DAILY fl'ILOT • ...,m .. ll•blllty for erNN enl)'.
the~ 9f publt1hlr10 th• edvertlMmtnt eorl'lllDtl)' ene ti,.,.,
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR !.4LI HOUSES FOR SALi
'
l•Go;;;"°';;;1;;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1;000;; CMn1r1I 1000 Cottat M... 1100 Howpo!! lea<!'
No DOW
N •23 ..... FiiA / VA ·-. -No_o_o_w_" Volleyball Anyone!
1200
PARK UDO
On~ of the mott deluxe trJ.
)eve) Oon~-· tn Ulll' N.B. tftvelooment INtwins
3 BR. dea & built-bl bar, A
decorator'it ddlabt.
~ cltl Mai:__ 1~ Hun11"91on ... ch 1
SJEN biJ[f f · j Government Tr1ntftr
705-70S'h Narcissus 0wn.. m"" "" ..,.. ' n
"""" """"'· dr-.... pe.tio w I ftr'fJl'tnll. _..'"'1
..... """· Prioed .. ..n ""I
It on.il' $25,500 • G1 •.f'8' wma. . ..
OE.ADLINI FOii COPY AND KILLI: 1:90 P.M. the day Mttre pu..iic9tlon, ooeptf'9r OPEN DAILY 1-4 l w .. MNI ldltlN af\d Monday MCtlene wften c:I01ht1 ti"" • 1:90 ,.M. Friday. 400 Bo&ero·W1y
.. ,o1W Rarnbtin,a; Eutald• rM<"b
Decorator'• drtam home·..,._ .eyle borne with hllie t.m.ll)'
u--1 Oec:ar. Attnctiw baUt" room, mu&ive fireplace,
~ ldtcben fW!ll ~ hqe cove.red p&tio-. 2
~. a tNdroomJ. ·.2 1P&rldlnc batha, all bWlt·lna
bft,tb,I, 1A.rat NIU' ye.rd. ~ A. immaculate t'Ond.itlon·
mlt no dowo CJ. or )t.M> daWC Ex c e 11 en t ne~
to Olbl!n. H>-1'121 Owntt boU&ht 1atSe homto •
TAflBEU.. 2ll":6 Hatbor mv.st ttU. CAl.L. MG-ll.$\ ................ 1 {<>pm e'Vet) lledtla• R06l
Stretch a nel In treat of tbil
-Dyplex ••• ""' ~·,.. MdJ' 1or aetSon. Kil ..,.. ...... ,... ... w ...
B&y -dOM 1lo the 0ctttt.
pobll< Bay-· .........
~
2 PNM Z Bdrm for only
J.t.1.~. ccm~ with
othen at lfi0.000
NEWPORT BEACH
REALTY
67>1642
P1ul Jonos Roa.lty
S47·U66 Eves. :136-ttl(
f VOU MUIT HAVE KILL NUMl!lll Whlfl klllh1111'1 •• -..,.. ., 1111tok ,...,.tta, CcorotSVperlcra'flacential I IM aur. te make • ""°'' ef th• klll ftumber ti..,.,. ye" by your a; t1ker aa .. TWILIGHT SHADOWS: 1 ,"'~"::.:'''-~~~~PM.O& I: quiet by the pool or JOB trantf!I'. ·M\l!ll tell
look out to me, ccean V-ieW. eYtl'Ylhirc. AWi'• Ir fUm.
-··""
Also NEW DUPLEX CHOOSY?
Ytrt;fk.9illft et' )"IUr .. 11.
I i very •ff•rt II mad• ta klll er oorNOt • new •II Utat lo.11 b"" 11'd11'd, ltvt we tlft• PERRON -..r ~ .,;r.~.-,,-:-~
4 B.:lnna too, 153,00J. ett:;. 3 BR 2 BA. blt·kui:. Another Wtst Bay Beauty:
Gold MedaWM. sale or
trade· Opei SUn 1-6 64&-4alO See ttdl uqull:ltel,y -...U.
ed 5 BR bmnal dWnc romn CUST. 2 BR. 2 Ba. plua den. hnme. Unch!r $31.<m. [ not 11.1arentea te tie .. 11ntll ttt• all ha• •PP••l'N In th1 ,.,.,. " . DIME·A·LINl ..... ,.. etrtotly cath '" •dvlnh •Y INll .,. et'""'"' alaur •tf'loff. * 642.1771 Anytime*
Orin .. Co•st Proptrty lirepi, 2 ~-~ ~iain Sin&le rtti.dencr 3 BR I: 2 m Martuerite, c.dM sr.. ;r.;o rumpw1 n'll, ll!IW equity. baths; f'O()m M lot tot addi. ............................. 1 cub ti ' ?>elpente. ad tional improvrmmf $47.~.
'-< ....,.. lG' vi.w lot. LISTER M2~
$52,000. Owner 673-4869 16612 &.di Blvd., HB
I NO· tfhOM ."' .... ~ 2 BR . 2 Ba., aunken den;
: Th• DAil. y I'll.OT HMrvet tM right te •••• tty. edit, oen .. ,. ., NfUM ... ,. advar-quiet lltreet; poolaiu lot.
* BLUFFS . beautituU.Y =":.:'":::·..:-;::.=:,,....~~-IURR WHITE, Retltor
decor1ted il landscaped BY Owi1er an., Bluff'1. Oct'8J'I_ 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. llllboa ,.,,insul• 1300 GLEN MAR
SPECIAL [ t1Nm1nt. 111d te Clll•ntt tta ..U. 111d NfUIMltn• wlthwt Drlor notie.. San Gab. Vallf'll arM, SM
[ AdvertlMrt rn1y plaOI their a8ec Iii)' telepfl~t. Marmo Sehl. ctist. m,000 By
3 SR + ~. &plan with Yiew. I Br. Pll'M!lled din 67s..4630 OYeS: 675-0991 OPEN SAT l SUN 1-4
cust~ d~tt~ La=i:'· nn .. ~ Floer to cei]. OCEANFRONT DUPLEX ClT Seville 4 tr BR1, 114 be .• eptl/dl'pl. t DIAL DIRECT 642·567S °""" ru: ,.,.73 patio. · · tni frlllc. Dbl pn.p. Mmy 2-:l BR. Aptz., 1 new, bJm. ~·1 SHI Buy Ntce t.'«. lot. Need& ..me
eirtru! 960 DclwOOd $t. CM Good beach. S 6 4 , 9 ft 0 . S BR. ~ bo.. I yr1 Y'JW\C work. GI or FHA • 123,!liO • t I WESTMINSTER '& NO~TH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 ' .
I Huntlnrton l!M<h • * 1220 L .. una llNch 4""'466
,1 · . · Phones Are Open 1:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m •
9 to Noon S1turday-Closod Sunday
CL.AlllF'IED COUNTE"I aN 1oc•tl4 •• fell.w1:
12:11 WW ....... 11 .. 10•4. ,._.,... ~ Jll W• ley ...._,, C.... ..... JOt
Pfftti Strwt, M11 .. tllttf'" IMcL W ...... AMII•, L9plMI INIJI. t:Je.1~0 ...... s.t. • ....
Mall Addre11: lox 1175, Newport •••oh, C11ff.
HOUSES FO'lll SALE -:::= ~~~:,.,
lllNIEllAL ''" ·•~T lltOl•I
.. ...
"" -•m
OIMOllTtOll """ OIAfl'TIMe SllYICI '6ll a 1.ACTa IC.t.&. ""' a•UIPM•NT l•#TALI "51
ll•NCINe UM I COITA MIU ,,. wasTCLll"P
llA OlrL MAI '''' UNIVElltfifT'I' PA•• M•SA YIU• e.t.Ck eAY '' COLLI•• l"Alllf 11\J IAST &.I.UPP
.. ... ... ....... ....
l'"UIMAC• l•l"Allt. .,.. "1t
e.uo•N•N• · "911
e•M•IAL l•IVIC•I .. u 1 NllWl'OllT tl-.CN Ifft CORONA D•L MA• NlWl"OIT Hl,leMn 111t tALM)A i l.t.LlOA COVIi 1-111 eAY ts!..ANOI
NIWl'OIT INOlllal lftl LIDO ISU: -... eltAOIM .. OllCIMe ...U
eL.AU "''' ....
UYCIUT Im IALeOA ISL.ANO
IA'l'IHOIEI ltu HUNTINOTOM elACN "" -"" "" ....
eli•IM TMUMe ,,_
eUM INOI" •'11 Ha.t.LTH CLUll •72'
HAULtNe U1t OOVElt IHOlllS l!ll '0UNT.t.IM VALLaY
wasTCLll'"I" IUf SIAL ll!ACN HAIMll Ml.HLAJIOI JIU L6N• IUCN
UNIVERSITY ....... 11J7 OlllANGI COUNTY
HOUSICLIANtMe '7U
IMT•ltlCll O.COIATltlle •n1 ~~~1:111,,., 11:: eAµaN e10YI
l!ASTILUF, IMI WllTMINSTll
-"" .,, IMCOM• TAX DM ... ~ .... ,151
llVINI TlllllAC'I lNf MIDW .. Y CITY
COIOllA Dti. MAI 1* UMT,li AkA
... •M lltOMIMe ''" INSllLATPle '1 .. --INMIUtrotC• '"9 1Nvan:1GATIMe. ~ •ne e.t.LM>A •aNINIUU I• SANTA ANA H•lffn
IACON UY 1Jtl TUSTIN
UY llLANOS j 1151 COASTAL LIDO Ill.I IUI LA.eUNA elACH "" '"' "" "" "" -....
JAMITOllAt. '"' JIWILltY lll"AI ... lk. 6IM
UillOICAl"IMe 6111 ........ "" -µLtOA ISUNO l:W LAeUMA NIOUIL
HUNTIN6TOM aU.CN 1611 SAN CL.IMaNTI MUOHIY', llltcK ._
MOYllille & fTOIAH _.. NUNTIN•TOlill HJ••oua 1.U OANA l"Olll'T
llOUNTAIM YALLIY ,'..,'11 :r::.:;lill~M PAIMTINe, ,._,,...1111 UH
PAlll'TJNe. llpl 6111
l"ATIOJ 6M4
l"HOTOltlAPHY "70
SI"-e1.t.CN
IUNUT IUCN 't't:. RENTALS ro::'m"1:A~:ov• ,... Apts. Unfurni1hed l"t..AJTlllNG. l"ttd!. INtlr 6tM
l"t.UMllN• "" U.ICllWOOO Hit elNllAt. -ORANG• ~ 1• COSTA MltA n• T OP Cd)JN'TY ,... M•IA YIEIOI 1111
OUT 0, ST.I.Tl I.el NaW,-ORT l•A.CH ntl
l"OOOLa e100MUle ""
l"OCIL s••v1c1 •n1
'TANTOlt "11 NIWl"OltT MlleNTI Ult
ITMlNSTaa. "1! N•WHltl' SHCMrll Int
POWll Sftl,.IN• ftll
,.UMP 11:avtc1 •m
IDWAY CIT'I ' 1.... WllTC'Ul'I" a•
fA,NTA ANA lC• UNIVlllSITT PAii 1tl1 ---UOIO, ..,. .... ~ "*' laMOOILINO I lll"AI• ff4I
l•Mao•LIMO, KIT'CNINS ff4S &ANTA .t,NA M•Tt. ~ eACK UY ltN ~ltANG9 1611 •UT eLU-1'• IJtt
'USTIN "'41 CORONA ltlL MJ,I UM NOltTN TVSTIM 1'41 IALIOA Ute
ldlHn ..,.... mt
SIWI" '"' SIWINe MACMllilll lll"Alll ,_.,
Sl!l"Ttc T'•U. ,_.,., .... .., ~ ANANl!IM 1'91 e.t.Y tsUNOI 115' ~ SILVllADO C.utYOM Ulll LIDO !St.I llll TAIL.otl... '"' TalMlft coNTtot. tf'7t
TILE, C-ll'lc m4
r LAGUNA HILU ,,_ lfUNTINGTON l•ACN Mel
UOUNA a•ACll ,,.. l'"OUNTAIN ,YALL•Y Mlt
U.eUNA NIOU•L 17tJ l .. L.eOA JSU.ND QB
SAN CUMINTI 1111 sut. ••ACM MM
Tit.I, LIMI-& M•rtole "7J
SM JU.ul CAPllftAN9 lnl LON• Ill.ACM -
CAl"ISTUKO e•.t.CM lnl Ol:AJIOI' COUMT'I' -
T111 s11vtca '"' T•LIVISION, ...... ,.., • ..._ 6"i
Ul"tfOL.SnlY' ttM
WIUtlffe '"5 OANA ..OIN'T lnl eAJtO•N OltCW'I MH
( O.ILleAO l:NI ftlTMUtlTI• un JOBS • EMPLOYMENT ~ OCIANSIH I "" MIDWAY cm "'' UN 01190 Tm UMTA _....,, ... JOI WAJITIDO -
•IVl!ISIO• C04ftO'Y 1• SAWTA AMA M•fOHTI SOI Jtla \ttAMTIO, W-• HOUSIS TO ea MOV'19 JM T1JITIN UM JOI WNITIO,
ONOOMfNIUl&t lf'St CGASTAL l7lt MIN 6 WOMIN
l"Llxff 1'"011 SALi 1'71 LAGUNA eucM IHI OOMUTIC ... ~ A~Al(r'Ml!NTS POil SALi 1.. U.OUllA lltltvlt. l1'J AOatf'CtU. ,...
RENTALS IMI CL•M9MTI mt 1111.1' WAMTIO. ...
SAN JUAN CAPIST'llANI 1111 AOIMCIU W ......
Houses FumishH OANA l"OIMT .,. H•l.l" WAMTIO. --REAL ESTATE, Jo•~ a•-e•NIUt. JINTALS TO SHAii
OITA M•l.t.
I 11\•IA OIL MA• MllA VllOI
.: cou••• ,.A•J 'I N•Wl"Ol:T llACll NIWl"OIT .. .,....
N•Wl"OIT SHOlll
IAYIHOllS El Sffffll
STCt.lfl;"
lllVllSITT f'Alk
VIHI:
CIC INY
l!UT tLUP:,
; utYINI Talll.UI 01.0NA Olt. MAI
Mt.lo.A IAY ISUNDI ~
IDO ISLI
ALIOA ISLHl'D
UMTIMGTOM llACfl
NTAllill VAUit
AL au.cw
Ne el!ACN
ANG• COUNTY
YA ANA
aSTMINSTl!I
OWAY Cl'tlti NTA ANA.lleHft
AITAL euNA II.ACM
eUNA NleUIL
N CLIEMllillTI Ill JUAN CAl'llftjlilf0
l"ISTltAMO 1a.W:N
NA P'OINT IV•ISIO• COUNTY
CATION l•NTALJ
DOMINIUM
l"LaXIS "UlllL
ENTALS
--,,. nm
"" "" ... ... -m•
"" "" "" ... •• ftft .... ---"" ... -.... ... -...
1111 .. ,
"" .... ... •• "" ...
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HouMS Unfurnished
NltAl. -A MalA ,, ..
A OIL MAI 11•
au, Vllbl 1111
t.aOI l"AIUI Silt
1"0111' llACM Im
IT N•TS. a1e
f'Oll.T SHOllt 0
YSNOl:l!S -v•• sHo•• nv ISTCLll"• Jtlt
V•IMfY .lllAll Jim . -MY -T ILUl"I" .ft42
!!Ill ,.. ..... Cl -:lo OIL MAI ml .. -"" "" ... --M" -·~ --... .... .... -.. .. .. ""' .. ... •• .. ..
A•INCra, MM .. ·-Genentl scNOCIU a 1t11TWUCTI09tl
Tlll'LP,..... -JOI l"lll"AIATIOll
CONDOMllilllU,. Ml 111UTIUCAI. 1"I
••NTALS WANTS• .... MERCHANDISE FOR :::' .~:1 = SALE AHO TRADE
MOTILI, TtAILal COU'll'T'S J"1 Ptltl.MfTUll ....
OUIST HOMO ..,. °"''ICI l'"UlllrTUll Mii
MISC. laNTALI Dff Of'Jl:tCI ltull'M•NT 1111
IMCOMI PltOl"•IT'I' &tel STOii ICftJIPMINT tll' IUllNl!U PIOPlllTY ... CA"I• ll!STAUIAMT •U
1'1:-.iLll PAID -IAI •OUIPMSMT Mii eUSIN•SS llNTAL "'9 KOUSlllOU OOOM llM
OJl:P:IC• ltlNTAL • ..,. •AUOI SAL.ll mt
INOUITllAL l"IOP•llTY "'9 l'UltlllTuta AUCTION -5
COMMlltCIAl .. "-"l'LIAMCD •1•
IMOUSTllAL llll'TAL "" .-.TIOUll 1111 LOTS ,, .. SIWIKe MACKIKll 11tl
IANCNll •tM l!lUllCAL IJlllTRUMINT 1115
CITllUS elOYliS IUI PIANOS a Ol-Mlll IUI
ACll.t.e• illll llAOICI net
LAKI IUlftOltl f2f2 TIUYISlell alt
ll!IOIT "1tOPllln' .,.. MH't • ST•••o a111
OltANO• C:O. 1"101'1!..,.... .., TAJtl JIECOIDaltl mt OUT 01" STATa PROP. "111 C:AMIEIAI & •OUll"Mllf'I' UM
MOUNTAIN & OllllT ltte HOllY SUl'PLlll ....
SUIOIYlllON U.110 UU ll"OITINe OCIOOS -1t•AL •STATI SllVICI •211 elNOCULAltl. ICOPll ll!I
I .I . IXCHANG• •HI MISC.Lt.MIOUI Mii
It. I . WANTIO 1161 J1Utc .......... 0 Wll BUSINESS and M.¥MINl'IY; at& mt
FINANCIAL LJ::::. =
eUSIN!!!IS Ol'l"OITUNl'Tllt Oii IUIUllMe MAT•llALI I'"
tUSllillbl WANTaD ..,., SW"" 17'1
llfV•fTMINT a...n..,111.. Ult PETS incl LIVESTOCK lllV•STM•N'T WAllTIO tJ15 MONIY TO LO.Ill me l"l'TS. ..... I.AL ...
l"•ISOMAL LOANS UIS CAT'S ...
JSW•UlY LDANI UM DOGS -C0LU.1'1AL LOA.NI ,,. MOISIS MM
R•AL ISTATI LOAMS U.. UVl:ITOCll ..
MOIToMIS. no.it _.. •1• CALIFORNtA LIVING
MOM•Y WANTID Olt NUllll•l•t ANNOUNCEMEN·, IWIMMI,.. l"<MM.t '
1ncf NOTICES :~i1:::es
l"OUNO CJI',.. AMI ..CATIONS ~SOttALI :: RANSPOITATION
AMMOUMCaMlll'n .. ,. eGATt° e Y.t.CllTS ...
ellnl.S 6411 SAILMa.ATS "11 FUNi'ilALS 64ft POWll CllVIMll ..,_
f'AIO OllTUAIY '411 SPa•O-SK1 OOATI ...
Jl:UNll.At. OlltaC:TOI' '4tl eOAT ftAll•ls ~ l'LOllm .. II 90'.T MAl ...... MANCI _,
CAllD OP 111ANU .n• .OAT t.AUWCKIN• tnl IM MfMOf:IAM ~' JUJllNI •M.11111. llUI
caMETl:ll'I' LOTS '411 IOAT ILllll. MOOlllW ' tt»
CIM9TlllY CIY"TI Nit tuT Awtc:ft _,
CllMATOll•I Mtt toAT llNTAU ~
MIMClll.t.L 1".Ukl ...rt eOAT CMAITlll "" AUCTIONS .ae lll'ININO llOATS """
AY1ATIOll lllltYICll Mii IC)\T MOVIWe ....
TIAV•I. UIS •OAT rro•A•• ...
All TitAllSlllOl:T.fTtoll .... 90.ITI WAHTIO ... .a.U1'0 Tl/ollln>OITATIOtl .... AllCU." .,.
1.ltAL ltOTICll'S ._ PL.YIM• LUSONI tt•
MIUMM • TVYOlll-... MO•lt.I MOMOIS ...
SERVICE DIRECTORY ~1..1T""'a :1
ACCOUNTINe .. IL•CTIK CAii tl1ll
ANIWlllNO MltVICI AMI MINI e11C-IS fl71 .t.l"l"Ll.IMt'I l•PAlll, J'111t 1'11 MOTHCYCLll '*
Al"PllAIS.... "'2 ManHtteOOTlltl tM
ASPHALT, .. ... .t,UTO l•IYllCll a PAITt ._
•UTO llP•IU -AUTO TOOU a -.UIP. M•
.t,UTQ, s.t .... T-., llloL 6M TtAK.lll. TRAVn tal
tA1nmo1e ... n:.a.tLsttt. llltlMY Mii
MAT MA,1'"911 .... CI ..,. CAM1'1U ....
lllCJI:, MAIONltY. tft. llMI ,..UC:l(t ....
eUllNISt llltVICIS ~I •ll:•PS tl11
eUILOllU '5Tt OUNI ll*ctltf BU
C:AT•lnte tJ,, lliolll'OttTP .IU1'8S ...
CAelNSTMAklfll• 4Mt ll"ORT c.Altl tlll
CAl"'llTtlMf• '"9 AMTJOUIS. C:U.SllCt ffll
CaMalfT, c-'llt ... ll.lC9 CAu. ROOS ""'
CMILO CAii• UMltM tftt AUTO rtWWT'S Im
COW1'-..cnMtt ... AUTOI WAM1'9• ""
-CM"91' Cl.UlilllKe ... aw CAl:t ..., .. CAINf l4'1'1 ... lo• llPAtl .. ,,. AUTe ......,_ flttt .,.....,..... ...,.._CMS ...
: . . •
,
i
HAYE YOU LOOKED FOR
THE HIDDEN DOLLARS
' IN YOUR HOME LATELY?
I I
·--·-· -~~---·--·-·-~---~~---
'
OpenHo~ses
THIS WEEKEND
..., .... '-'¥ ... ..., ..... ,.. till ····-· • ................. .u ... 111 .......... .....
.... l .............. ~M: ........ .....
.,_ 11 ...., .. DAILY PiLOT WANT ADS. ,..._ ..... , ...... ~ ..... ., ......... .....
t.lhtwiil .......................... .
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 BR. ind Family or Den)
2928 Cliff Drive (Newport Height..) NB
642-5200 (Sun 1·5)
2518 Via Marina, Nev.'Pbrt Beach
541).1720 (Sat & Sun 1 ·5)
(3 Bedroom)
9ti0 D<>Qwood SL, Costa Mesa
548-9419 (Daily 10-5)
*1601 Bonnie Doone Irvine Terr., Cd~~
642·6472 Ev .. 673-S468 (Sun 1-5)
893 Towne St. (nr 19th & Placentia), CM
646-8811
417 sevme, Balboa Peninsula, NB
673-6900 (Sat & Sun 1-4)
1226 Polaris Dr., Dover Shores
642-8235 _ (Sat & sun)
13 BR and F1mily or Den)
3210 Oregon Ave., (Mesa Verde) CM
549-3486 (Sat & Sun 10-6)
17408 Walnul St., Fountain Valley .
540--0256 (Sat & Sun)
*2395 Tustin Ave., Newport Beach
(Sat & Sun 1-5)
929 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle
675-4031 -!Sun 1·5)
*1000 Nottingham (or Dover Shores) Cdl\f
642-5200 (Sun 1·5)
466 E. 16th Street, Costa Mesa
540-1720 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
700 Malabar, (Irvine Terrace) CdM ·
675-2000 (Sun 12-5)
2519 Va!sar Pl. (College Park) CM
642-1771 (Daily 1-6)
2020 Aliso. Costa Mese
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(4 Bedroom)
351 52nd St. (Newport Sboroc) NB
675-0144 (Sat&. Sun 1-5)
* 1336 Galaxy Dr., Dover Shoreo
642·8235 (Sat & Sun)
1000 WestwiJtd Way, Dover Shores
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
(4 SR and F1mily or Dan)
*1829 Antigua Way (Dove< Shores) NB
5411-6332 (Sat 1·5)
2409 Bonnie Place, Coot• Mesa
642·7000 eves & wknda 642-8381 (Daily)
718 Cameo Highland.. Dr., CdM
642-8235 (Sal & Sun)
1751 Pitcairn Dr. (Mesa Verde) CM
54().1720 (Su n 1·5)
3124 Coolidge, Costa Mea
540-1720 (Sat & Sun 1-5) * 1924 Leeward, (Baycrest) NB ·
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(5 BR and F1mily or Don) ** 1350 E. Oooan Front, Balboa Penn.
673-9200. Ev.. 548-6966 (Daily I ·SI
912 Belll!, (Eastblu!f) NB
644-1133; evea 644--05-05 (Sal, Sun I t~
dusk)
1417 Mariners Dr. (Harbor Highland) NB
642-5200 ISat & Sun 1·5)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
(3 Br & I Sr)
**31& Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle
875-5200 (Sat 1·5)
(3 BR + Dan ond 2 SR + Don)
1359 & Balboa Blvd., Balboa PeM.
673-9200; ev .. 5411-6966 (Daily 1·5)
13 Bedroom Each)
509 in.. Corona de! Mar
646-4080 (Sun 1·5)
CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE
403 Feliz !Eaat Bluff) NB •
644-0074 (Sat r.. sun 1·5)
400 Boloro Way (Park Lido) CM
.U.!'771 (Dtlb' 1~
INCOW PROPlllY FOi SAU
{2 w-Eecl.)
~'IOll~NlrdMul, Oil(
17&-1842 ..... ........ ,. ...
543-9419 S48--089'1 or 673-,769 Sllllbtiry RltY 673-6900 BRASHEAR REALTY
GOU' COURSE HOME ON evea/wkends. -• ·-8•7.a.531 Eves. Ml 2442.
FAIRWA'f !>F THE ...,... ~vn:w'=-dupl~.,.-, ~.-.. ~,-BR.= Lido lslo 1351 ~·-G :.._, V~E <DUNTRY (llJB. No uvwn -l. Stiper --.,!. ~ llorY ' Br. "' fUIUb Walle w be8cb. ebop. y~ Comp&etely • BR <r 3 BR., M. -~
romJil· m-.KornM Dr. i.e.. $.000: low down. Chlrmlng panelled den. Extra ~
546-51 * U0.000 548-0R91: 67l-6T69 eve/Wknd Smalls' Rome on 1arae lnt 1500 sq ft delwm •tw
... S.crlfl__.oducod °"""""'' 2 B<lnns 2 """"' -· ' potlat. lll!Q, 3 BR., 11n l:lelhl, pr., ' ~ w/-l\be bMut:iuflif '~-· fruit J M. l~ bl.lhl. Newport ~for mire room •
Will G ' ~ ~· -.....,. lot -·-N like -• "'""' "' --c-, trees. . ... vvcu .-... • ..--..,.I\..._.._ C. G"~, "-'ty P. Robtrtaon Rlty 847-.al ai Towne St. I'll' 19dl ~ Bltr. 673-6758 ~~ ~ ~-~ hkr ,· .. ~·~-~Lido::;:· ;;....,.~=~~ Prestige 3 Br. 2 Ba. ..---~ ... a. · MOVE ln! Nr. new 4 Br., tpl, ~
OPEN HOUSE Sat A-Sun 9-6 new cptl., dr'apee; nr bdd'L OPEN SUN 1 ~ 5 ~T :·00~~ !t:
,., -• -......... ""'" "-· 361 .~ f Excell~nt aret, 3 BR, 2 BA 62nd St. Ownl!I' 675-0144 929 Via Lido Nord BltM. Fncd ,,...., Dbl IV•
FHA 5"-'Ao· Must eet: to ap. WA....,..,rnCfil' J b:lrm ~62 101 ft frontage boat dt. Many, many tm-$27 8X> Mt-Ui6:1 l.c.IW'"" • $110,000 • 10-P, down prov~enta. S28.B. Own«.
pttciate. · ' Balboa <l:>ivfe. $60,1'.m. Would Rlch•rdton ~lty M2--&UO
GOOD Inveltm't. home with pret'!!r tellQ:I tn trade. 2443 E. Coils! Hwy, CdM o~ Gd&!ll . West
'" ~ --~ 675"4 "°""· H.B., ""'· Dqtol 1' un it 125.~ ·Bo*h -Nited Ll.&.Tm 031
lmnw.c, ~--~li1"'111P• ...... ~ BLUFFS .,_; 3 BR. 21 ========~ Golden WMt Cell. I BR. 2
Me .. Del M•r 1105 Batb9: t!(Udo., next to poO!. &., tam. nn.; ~ e -
lly """"'· Ul ...... -IAYFRONT ..... Low 5\4% VA: -
By Owner
Save 2•/o and get
Hit lilly hi,
DELVXE..Conda. 2 Br. 2 B•. 3 BR, 2 ba Home nn Nord pyt. Sl«i; $)1,%l0. 89?-l.W
Pool. ~· pa.tio. UiOO Dn., with 1 BR Apt. El<cellent YF:ARLY l!!e. f.?;O. tJkie new
$28,500. 6~28:6 !Utr. financing. fl00,00>. clean 2 BR, Z ~ P<d,
Mesa HI Mar
<~I bod> t.lth --....... -· tldlMnJ. n e w pelnt and
NtdY tD mcwe tn oondition.
Mu.t 1e1 fo appreciate this
tine .horn• and ~
bu,v. Cbnventionel loan avail-
able with payment.. Clf $166
Prln . .ri intft'Ht, or can ••
attn~ our mortaag~.
2751 Pol'ttil1 Drfv1
Call,5(6.1337
Ml•• v.rc1. 111D
* PA<tESEI IER HOME *
2 atory 4 BR, + lal'hi.ly rm.
Ab90lu\ely Jmmae. Many
xtn.11 ins.ide & out. 8" to
appreciate. 545--518!1
REPUBLIC. Home; 4 BR.
with atrium~ tam. rm .•
many ednu!. $34,900-Firm ......-
""-· cul-de-<ac, ' BR. 1~ BA, fam. nn, b'plc,
blt-0, lhag crpts. cust·
om dr'JM;. $26,500. 54S-3486-
J Bdrm 2 Bath
Priced •t $24,500!
.. 546-289) •
CONDO., I BR., 2% ba.,
qXI:., draf)es, bltns; pool.
Nxt. to County Cb. 5t6-«m.
Now['!rt I.Och
· Tiie ~uffs
By ONr
1200
Oiretree livin&: ~In f'Xqw&ite
.rttin1. Split • lievd a Bit.
21,.i ti., trplc:, beautiful wool
oupol. -....., -... fantutic stona•. MJnt cond.
Reducftl tor q u l c: k u.li
$34,500. 644-(1189
4 or 5 Bedrooms
Newport Heights 1210
BEST BUY Di AG.EA • Quiet
irtrttt. 'I'rft. 1haded, I BR,
f!i>lc, dbl gar, extra peu1dng
oH al1~. $24.~ • 10% On .
ll5'l mo.
Graham Realty
Neer N.B. Post Ofc. l).}6-2414
• PLEASANT Olff Haven 3
Br, 2 bl. + 2 Br 0cl!'llll Vu
inCMle Apt. $49,500. MS-7249
Dover Shor., 1227
KEEP
YOUR COOL
FEEL & SEl
Forced air • ftir condlt1:CJned,
lwcuriotl1 M-Jst. blt. 4 BR.
3\h bath home. Pool, t!'!'l·
dOAed Indoor-outdoor lanli.
F!t! simple. Just reduced
$3500, .xcellent ftnancini.
Hurry!
Martin R.E. 548-6332
We1tc:liff 1230 --·-*BAYCREST CUSTOM
3 BR .. 21ii M ., llv. rm .. for-
mal din. rm.: «Xtrll ilj't' film.
nn. & I~. mstr. Br.; aJI l)f>l"n
onto ifP. «W. perto: many
t!Xln!. 5% '%> Int. $59,500.
MS-80111. Dpefl SAL & Sun.
1-5, by <l!Nner.
lO'Zl Nottingham Rtl.. N.8 .
1242
TI-IE Bluffs condo. 3 BR, 21,i
b&thl split level. Prol
decor 1 t ed. Overlook.I
bee.utitul rree:n belt. $36.SOO.
Ownm-644-0074. ~ Silt &
Sun 1·5 403 Feliz.
1250
with 3 b1tha, custom featur-Reduced for C•ah
"· Extna large lot. Immecu-~ BR, 11.li bathl, plu11 2 BR
late. Moving nOfth -11.tnnit Apt. So. of Hw)'. LM.n 11,1)-
on tenns. prox: $38,000. Price $46,000.
HAFFDAL REAL TY I=.,,_..,,.=~~---~
__ ..:;:c;;.~~=;8'>44a;:.::.= HOME & Income; newly
BY OWNER decor. 2 hr .• 1 ba., 11rage
Bide lay Hom• •pt. 2 br. 114 b«, lftl"b. cth1p.;
KMtty pine wood interiar i.~ dbl. 1ar11e.
hil'i beemed oetilnp. 3 HK, Nar Fu:trlM UJ.Q:I
:? bath, tami1y nn + hlWI! e 702 Avoca&, OIM e
game mom Dt116x.l.1 ti ipool. LOVELY
W/W ""'"·all '>I""•· '40,000 CUSTOM DUPLEX 23ti Tullin Avr, Tut be111 o1 eov!f'Yl)Ung, 2 * BAYCREST * Bii. 2 "°"" + 2 Bii Apt
Attractive 4 BR, apt1, dJlll, $49.SOO 'ftrm
trplc. ~.950 ' 613!1494 aftf!r & pm
1736 Hiihland Dr., NB 2 HOUSES ON A LCYI'
~ J.. • $ • So. cl Hwy, 00.t . Fortin c.o.
OWNER/Bk!". !143-!l'ie9 60-6(Q). 548--0390
Wilker Realty beach. B&y1irie VW• (21.J)
ll.'l6 Via Via Lido 615-5200 222-4:m. Adults, no pett. -l.D\Tll.Y ~ Baytrnl on 40' Fount1ln Viii~ , J~IO
lot. Pier I: llip. One oI Lido's · ·
flnt!t_t. _J!85~ by owner. BY Owneor; • Br. % a.. )at
6'IS,1(l6'! pa;ntod: ""'' -r.d., sprinklers; 1 blk. ldxlol.
Huntington Balch 1400 1 hop1, S•• lt1•10
Fwy/Macnotia. $21,950 .
NATIONAL MAGAZINE 847-9822
AWARD WINNING "'sEA=ur=-. .,.,-...,.-.-..... -~ ... -.,,
HOME .1 BR .. 2 Ba., -. -·· Live ln the excitinl bcnl.e cpts.: !rpl., blln8; fnot a,
call.ed 1968 ·~ sett•" ewner. szr.soo.. M7-1'8J
by "HOUR & Home" Mtp· WESTMON'E ilmili:•j" BA-, 1
zine! This brand new 4 be.tlul + 1x1mm· ~. ,.'.&.
Bdnn. 2 bath home cephlttl Fenced. By 'own« $25,900.
the Jmaginahon of thifl fam· 16644 Buclwd st. l.11-«:m
?°' m~garine's d~t. 3 BR. 2 Ba .. w/w a,it'r .
mg editors. Locllted within Cov patio Nice lndacll' By
hiking distanu to Huntin&· owner. 54~ I ·
ton Beach Sl•le Pvk. lt'•i=========::. I
'rot everything you've ever S1nt• An1 1620
wanted incl. a low. low, IOWI---------'-'· I
price, S?;,235. No down pay.
mt. Veta, or FHA I conver>
tlantl term1. W /W Qui:let-
inr. fenced rear yard, tront
lawn & landacaping. A cozy
fireplace &; an all gl1u kitcb-
1!11 with G.E. built-ins, fnd.
diAhwallher. Wow, what a Exclusive N.W . .S 111 t•
way to Uve .i you can moYe An• llt'e&· What Q't ol.
In today! Call 540.2751 woman can IW'Pri• him
5 BEDROOMS .with a romplete.J.Y pltah
3 batM, top loclitioti. Walle to VillA'? Prtv.ate femal• •
1hopping &. school11. FHA• ~· S56 thou.~fiq.J015 .
praiM.I. lt'1 way low al ·
$31 ,950. Big home on !tree Laguna leech 1705.
lo!. Separate tamHy A ,lJv.
Ing room. kitchen 9()8doua
with plenty of cupboen:la i:
brMkt1Rnook, bullt·io ranae
l OVf!'fl. Owner' in Dll'ope
want.I ll llOld. See today.
1llage Real f state ~ ..
962-4471 lopen f!Ves. I 546-&103 • ... Qj
BY OWNER ARTISTRY ~ awtH ;if
Extra Sharp~-• BA. l" BA. demaned. newer °nfJmll11«.,
CarpelJi &-drape1 thnlout. young tamil,y mello'lr wand:
Newly dPcora1ect. Landacap-eeilin&' ~ghout tiled
f!d cnmer lot. Oo&e to~~· norr in entry, ~ nn. 6 S23.900. ($7,500 to exu1ting kitchen 3 bedrm1 2 bll.thll
S'A'A>lo1nl.$133molncludes lov~y 'patio with yW :
All. 962~036. Drive by Ma-$39 500
rinA Lene Ir Adiunt Blvd., ' ·
Huntington Besch. EMERAlD BAY • -.
Yiew ham« cm ~, U*
Vl•w Of The V1lleyl sac, 5 ~ t '-tbs.,_.
lmmt1.c. 3 BR with loads of elled '.""'· ~ tn ·...,
C111b:>m m.r!ls JYfl " ~ lot fer ante. tge J -Sllll.500.
with FHA or VA. tmn11 at TUR.HER ASSOC.lA:rlS
• f&buJoug pm ol $23.!fiO. 682 No. O!ast Bl.Yd.
Pad.lie Sboreti Realty Laawa BMch (n4l ~U77
.. ,...,. £<,,.. "16-981!6 Laguna Hideaway ·
S@1\~~-~ti~s·
Solve s Simplf: SCT&mbltd Word P~le for s Ch~kle
0 Reomi"°" lltt.rt of tN four ICl'Oml:ilecl -dt h.-
low Jo fCltlll four limple wonti.
ISIDMOW I I r r I I I DYSON I I · I r-I
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642-56·78
Just say: ''CHARG.E ITI''
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WANT ADS
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NEW~LOW-RATE
3. LINES
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52.00 :
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rr1W, Stpltnlbet 27. 1968 DAILY ,tLOT H
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01nlonG,... NI
llXIY OllllN
I " 3 BR. '!OWN -Famlly,....·1"1Y ........
lip ., 11!00 ...... INI
• Oottlnl llr --
·Mu. ---~.--wardrobes. dWrwUbln
• lodlvldul _,dz7cr
• Walk to aD ICbooll
. ~ ~ ..... ---~~-·-·~·.._......·--...--·--..................................... '" .......................... ~ ................................. ., ....... ., ....................... !111111!'11!111!!~1111!~
1011$ a EMPLOYMENT JOllS a EMPLOYMENT JOllS a EMPLOYMENT JOIS a IMPLOYMINT
~P Wonlod, Min 1200 Agencl... Wo"""' 7300 ' l!olp Wonlod HeJp WantM w ....... 7400 w-7400 . Jt/j_ newport . i L,t.i>IE' A ... 24j personnel r;rowing C<>st1 Me,. ROBINSON'S iJiiltD. OPENING
' =IHI&-for i manul1cluror ,..b: agency • CJA'·RA'= . I NEWPORT omce ·~ -~ 111 rom> ' Proltulonal Service ' ' for the •mp1oy•r ..,.,v...,., ..... J!:q<r ...
jt T~cbnlc1I Slits ..m~io-llCJI'~ ond \ho •rrlle1nt Hu optnlng tor
133 Dover r., N.B. Cosmetic Sales ::"·!Dr dPI sltt" .... . boftenb lod\id""'' Administralor 6-42.3170 549.1743 Top Une demonahtor. Exp • tom~vie Medical mil>· SoWyplu•-Pu . SH BettY Bruce at APOlf -1<>4 Semi-Conductors • Group Llle 1-. mi~~lxec M,...1'rl • Profit lhtrlnr retire-.. Fublon llland ment t:ruJt t ~ lnakle tectW. Nt"#'PQ11 Beach • EmJlk>ye• AvlrlP Dian :· cal motd!Jlator for Wi-AJI,eney for Career cw. An equol ._...,ity • Profit abar!q: bonus
• cetian • CU1tomer bBdt-410 W. OlUt Hwy., N. 8. employtt ..,. Slmllu experience By appoint. ~ Pl~ write: S&teco ' Intur-._..,..._ Xlnt ....... EXPE>llWCED ance Corp., ~Ill Dept., ............ °"'""" F4rl -· 13730 R.09COe IDYd., P~ Steiker. Help Wanlod PROOF OPERATOR ram.a City, Oal. 91400 w-7400 • Equal opportunity m:pjoyer
PART TIME .
• OualilJ Control CREDIT CHECKER NIGH·T ITT JABSCO UNITED CALIFORNIA Manager BANK NURSES 222 OCEAN AVE, 'M.mt be eompetent man. BilRng Clerk LAGUNA BF.A.CJ{ Xlnt--ly. -R~ste,..d NurM1 for Contact An:bie Brlinanl. !Temp> nlg t shift. Exe9llent An equal .,.,,.,...Uty 11l1ry ind Mnefitt.
Semi-Condudor ·-• For 801DeoDe who ii lookina: Sre&ETARY fix' mnall, pro-ST. JOSEPH fer I 3 to ' month& job. ~ aperoua. bard W 0 r k i D &:
Device list group ill order IXUOCSI 1dverti1ing agency.
HOSPITAL ire and billlng. Prefer IOOle Challen""'1: job w Ith
Engineer clerical e;<p., ideally with rewarding future I« brigbt,
Friden ~· tho oot qU.11*, wtll educated career Or1ng• 633-9111 requiml. woman wbo can dem·
Must haw ~enee ln ' amtratt 1 \I p e r i o r skills.
dJ11'uaimi. Prefer JIO'Wft Saluy ..... Write fully. Experienced NCR
tranmten. Cc::ntact Ar-EQUAL OPl'ORTUNITI' The Lenadale Co., PO Box 450 Proof chlellralnM!. EMPLOYER 686, Balboa.
Radio-Telephone Operator
D~!!e Sem1..Conductors 141S D1lo Way Dispatch Giri Full time poeition.
225 Paularino, O>sta Me.a Costa Mesa 25 or ewer. Must know local • S4Q.4160 • Phone: (714) 54S-1251 area. Apply in pers:m Apply ot:
Westminster YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St. S.curlty P1clflc
Costa Mesa. N1tlon1l Bink
EXPERm!CED BABYSITJ'F.R .....i.d ,.,.
AREA mt'ditely '" working Fountain Valley Branch
PROOF OPERATOR mother. Lovklg care fQf' 1 17970 Ml.i7W>lia, F.V.
yr ol.d girl. 3 Daya week. 962.3361
FULL TIME OecsJ;. evea. Extra houn, Equal Oppty Employer
. $2.50 PER HR. extra pay. can aft 3 PM
UNITED CALIFORNIA 642-1334
BANK P·T SOCY u Ge.I Frld&y, EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY llTRA MONEY be)ping att wtirotitable SUc
4525 MacArthur Blvd. Mkt operations. It'1 fun too!
N•wport ~1ch -h<lplul. H°""' T o p Executive Secretary IMMfDIAmY 540-4424 and pey ~ 54&-'T.m who only wants to worlt or 673-1871 haJ1 time wUh occasional
Call 593-8931 An equal opporttri"1 FOOD Wattresaes, O>cktall full time vacation fill in.
employer Wa1tresses and }lostesses. Mu1t have been a:n excutive
~ly in persm 10 to 12, lll!'Crelary for two yellI'I and
Bletro'1 Restaurant, 2500 W. have full akills. Aps)ly by
Cbast Hwy. N.B. MR. SMOOT letter to: Cocktail Waitress YOUNG lady, full time, to Personnel D•p•rtment
Dishwashers design • odl window DAILY PILOT Hosless shades; w!ll train. Cuatom
Sha .. -· ..,. E. Cout
P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mea
Hiway, c..-d<I Mor. Ftill Tim. Age n or older m.1&10 • Receptionist $116 Hr plUI tipa .
Over 18 MATURE H ou1ek e e per General ottke dutie.. '"""""" wanted, Jor 2 9dult1 &: 10 l'oyroU ~. immedia.te opening me>; baby. Pvt rm, bath, Apply in Pf!T'30n Apply In person ri,pply 1n per.lOf1 TV. Perm. Job only. JtnHn Mlrln• Corp. Bet\\•c..on 10 AM & 5 PM 9-5p.m. 540-9480 235 Fiacher, O:>Zta Meu REUBfN E. LEE Plai n ilBINY'S HOUSEKEEPER.
1S1 E. c_.,, Highw1y cooking for ooupl.e. 5% days, TEENAGE Baby1Jtter need-
Must drive. Refs. Pri. ed for occasional evenin11.
RESTAURANT N•wport Beach room, bath, &: TV. $275. Should be "' immedia.te
HWltington Harbour 592-5380 vicinity ol WU.On • Pomona, Coot• 3170 H1rbor Blvd. SALESLADY BABY'Srl"l'm Wanted in my Me11 .
&42-1682 after 6.
Cost1 Mina Exp ill Fine Ready to wear & home, Mesa Nordl Apts. fDr e SALES-DREAM JOB e
MES'SENGER Spcctl wear. Full time. 1-2 yr old boy. Tues hu
Sat 5 days 8 to 5:30 $30 wk Keep your important job 11 . GENE'S Dilly Pilot fQf' mature person 540-2699 wife A: mother A earn a
Oi1p1tch D•pt. 2300 Harbor Blvd. CM e COOKS wkJ¥ pe.y check. 548-9526,
544-3!1.54, 636-3497 needs YOUf'IG' man with driv· Ex•cutlv• Secretery Good pay, excellent hmn • FllLLriiE'l'ful 12. lu-er's llcense for interesting Managerial position open in 6 am to 2 pm, no weekend
diversilied work. Pre f e r retail shop. Interesting fash· or holiday work. 833.0000. guar.
e Management trainees , someone whose miJilary 00.. ion ce.reer. Call APROPOS, rxt. :.'006
ligations have been complet-543-3<22 Town &: Country, SALESLADY Hunt. Bch area Mrs. Dreea . 540-1932 l!'d. Opportunity for advance. o.-ang, Experienced for new Card & . meat. °"""""' benefits, CAREER GIRLS Party Shop, «l hr. week Call B ABYSITTER wanted
etc. See Mr. Rich 3 PM to Thi.In. 10-4 PM. 2 Oilldren.
5 PM. ..,..,_... Sol<aglrlS and/ 847.1773 foc appt. $1 hr. Lite hskpg. n.so hr.
DAILY PILOT or Managers.. 2 years exper-New Toy Store Mgr, CdM.644-0905
ience in womens w e a r. lll W. Bay, ea.ta Mesa Eveninp. Exper only Waitress & woman WWlted, APROPOS, Town a: Country, 548-ffill CM I»ys, OWn trans. Arpy'1 COOKS °'"""'' 5U-3llt!2 Coffee Shop, 3021 B Harbolo DRIVrnS RN PT Tm 3-ll &: 11-T. LVN SITI'ER Needed, bef. ' aft. Blvd. Costa Mesa HELP! IChl. Girl g yn:. Corma del
FULL -PART TtME full I: pt tm 3-U. Xlnt saI I: Mar Elem. IChl. S4()..B804 WOMEN Pff W/ ""· '. EVES. Late Nite fringe benefits. Parle Udo. daya. 61J..:;309 eve. Fullerette HB. $2 hr guar.
6'12·9498 Oinv. HOlp. '42-2410 LIVE-IN bskpr. for happy Lynne Brown 540-1932,
NOW! NEED Reliable exp h!!kpr 1142...:7692 fam, l dlild; priv, rm., ba., PIZZA ~fAN 12:30 • 3:30 daily. Mon-Fri. Np! home. Sal. BABYSrITER, OUR HOME, ope n
WELCOME ABOARD! lfarbor Hfill. Own """" 548.3880 11 to 6 PM Newport.
The new Balboa Bay Club ......... 5'18-2838
Spa. Full-time spa attend. SHARP BAR MAIDS & GO Be.byt1ltter for kindN' BABYSl'I'l'ER. wanted; yoor garten boy, afternoons,
ant. 6 Day ~. Salary GO DANCERS. Top wages. vie 2nd I: Walnut, H.B. home' at UC! student boua-
open. 35 Years or older. $2.50-$3.SO to 1tart. Call for 536-1167 after 4. ing. 833-1149 Anytime.
Call: 5$.22U, ext. TIO interview. ,.,....,., SASSY BABYSITIER Com>a d<I LA$Y 2901 Jtarbor, C.M. OENrAL Assi..stant·aecretary, Mar area Ref'1 ~·d. experi.eoc'l!d :5 to «>. Hunt· GOLF Ida"""""""' work, ~LADY, E>o>ert"""': lnaton Beach. Apply p. 0 . .... ,,,, "' .... ,,,.
outdoors top -working con-~time. 8'•tt Walker Box 1401, Huntington Beach .dlt 10111, rel iab le. Jewelers, 35 Fashion laland., Jobt-M•n, Worn. 7500
,P!:nnanent Costa Mesa Golf Newport Beach. 644-2494 COLLF.GE girl or woman to
A: Country Oub. ~1799 Two Man Office clean. apt 2 PM to 6 PM. 5 Wanted days wk. 49'1·lO'ro eves. . Mr. Larry Muns desires experienced legal lmmedlotely CHOPPEll GUN aecretary, 542-3989 e MANICURIS T. Ex·
SCHULMAN & DIXON perienced, Lido area. Phone Neil. lndustrlou1, bondllble.
' OPERATORS Good drivlng record. over 21, LIV-IN babysitter, I I I e OR -35930 rrom 9-6 p. m. Columbl1 Y1chts ,,.. .. ,.,,. for work in a: high school education. For
275 McCormick Avo. e PART-nME e Illes work In Orange Count)'
C01t1 MeN mothB A: am boy. 6'13-6356 WAITRESSES -Over 21 for Drapery Hardwatt, Work wtends or aft.er fi p.m. • 545-111163 • 1UpPlle1, Trimmina;, ...__ room
SALESMAN H OUSD<EE>'ER. Spanish MOTEL Ma1d-Sat & Sun. Dec:on.tive .,,,.,,.,,, polu : >---OK . ..... ... &-1 bn ~day. P4!rmanent and woven wood bUnda. Sal· . ruu Ume, neet iii lll'PfV" -· 1150 """ N.B. 548-"'37 ary, comml.ulon plus tran. : ~-anne. coU ltutlmt <*. Apply ..,..,868
PART Thne bebyattter, ' ..... lion. Open "'"' "" 2'i8 Newport Blvd. C.M. WORKING mothu """' 2 DRILL PllESS """'""" :hi eve1. M1 High e9minp ln protective .. be.b11Uter, for 2 mo okJ., home. • Q62.2586 ''"'""'" OPERATORS my home, """ 3 d.,... SOUTHERN COUNTIES
P•rm1n.,,t gn.2743 PHONE SOUcltor -Exp. Par1 DISTRIBUTORS Ume. S5 hr. pl111.
E1tperl•nce Preferr.d. MATURE tnlsekl'!f!Ptt, rood 548-4779 btwn 5-T pm 208S Charle C.M.
646-9611 English, motherlea borne. 4 Haun for interview 8 • •:30 Year old clilld. Huntin&;lon WANTED-Mary Poppim for
~xs Betwem 10 lbd JS 3 cl>ildrm :Z:JO to 9:30 WANTED; o.y or eventnc Harbour area. M7-12ll ,..,.or ... ~--beau!)' COl.J.ep 1tudenta for _..,, Good -LOCAL ~e tor Ute IAll claan. ,_ LI P-
OtD Bob •t 8D-U15 deeklg. 300 E. Cit. Hwy. Wanted Oiiair S)ck Dana Point. 1: 496..fC.16 N.S.. • In Met)' ITJ..1122 ot DENTAL AllSISTA>IT
DRXVER, .... **.-.S --caD!l<MISll MaJd • Ma.lrlL Mtn. Cple.. «
~a.-.... _
rutL TDIE -ldOl'EL MAID ltbllle. Nffl!ICI far Mott! A.ptL
..... Men ... $.1GO mo. 23?6 Newport BMS., CM -Alrlalq. ~ llflOb' kl No SAT t11 SUNDAY '#Ol1I:
pt!f'DI. Rootftl.'• ~ ~ RAIR Slylbt with l"1owtn( .
FUU. TIME ~ Oxat Plaa. CM • BABYSITl"ER W a tt t e d wanttd to wort: In rt«N1 l'OOD On.I
495 E. 17th. C.M. HOUSEKEEPER ... !H dli)'I Wftk. tn my Mn. new lltlop. ~TllOO
perlf!llCf!d: Verde Home, S45--S302 OOUPLE For ,tanltorb.1 wodt
l\AND balr 1tylielt 1ot' I~ ~in. Salaey CIPfft. anLD c:a.re for J childrm S rillet I wk. ff.B., A Mir-
N...-...... toll-"""61< Whittier idlooi arM. Y0t.r '°'""'C w.. 9Q.2M'I' ,...,'"""· -<XXXTAIL Waltrea. Me. -·--BL~ Be<t -~,,__ Dinner
""""tr°'*" !--. -.. -11111 plJIT.'mfE IO!lllU:rAllY oiok. W' ... $30. --'46-7Q6 . -··°""""-..... I up WeJtrlM fViil.
I
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Friday, Stptember 27, 1%8 DAJLY PILOT
JOllS a IMPLOVM_ElfT MERCl!ANDIS! fOR MERCl!ANDISI i'OA
)oloo Mon, Wom. 75bo SALE AND TltAOI SALi AND TltADI -fumlturo IOOOFumlturo IOOO
llEGISl'ERED NURSE
/Jt:ll A P ... l OM World M!I) ?All TEal!IOUXlln
~-) -~AIDS Mediterranean
idoya .. ...,..i Spanilh Furniture ;it.RA~ OIU>ERLY
' 01'1'0 • PAR'l','llllE
R.ecelvM cancell•tlon of $22.000.00 (W~a 6 poa"w)>ard)
roao SERVICE WORKER Sptnlsh ind Medlt•rr1nean Furniture
OISHWASllER All .... , .. 9Mlfty ..... .._
ROOSFMAN A hut-'• Dr.II H ... I& 0. 0......,
TRAYGUU. ltew as fellows: Gorgeous 8 IL cmtom quilled
SR ACCOUNTING Q.J{ oofa with separate 1QOSe pillolVI with heavy oak
WQt:minstw Community _ ... trim decor and wlcbing chair, 3 matching oak
214 HQllPlt:N Cttde, Wtatm occasional labl.,, (2) 58" WI decorator lampa,
"""'"'1oxt"1 banging chain swag lam~ wrou,bt tron, an
An equo1 ..,,....,.,,,. II-piece kinJ site master m swle in pecan ...... ,,... faJleDed edlterranean style with top quality
PROOUcnON WORKmS 5 yr. warranty king size mattress & box spriop.
Good ..-... -Spanish decor dining set, etc.
jobs wttb a=elmit IJ'OllP In-...................... ,,,n. ..
l\D'UM..'eo profit lharq and ::'o~~~~~~-·---·-.. --··-··--$698.00 tttlrtment benelita.
GLOBE UNION INC. Any Pl9Ce Cena. Purch1Md lndfwlclually 1550 E. Kirnberi.Y Av..
Fullortoo Terms Av1ll1bl•-Newcomert to Callfoml1
Art Equal O pportuatty Crodlt Approved lmmodlatoly ,,,.,..,. ..
Women • d.ec• atudenll At Harbor Blvd.
Prr,
20 hn week. $42.50. FW1er BB BNsh. 546-6339, <SU 7-9 PM
Furniture Agencies, M.n a w..,.. 7550 1144 Newport Blvd. Costa Mna !lllllyJ
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT """ ...... 'ti t -..... ht. ' .... 'ti '
FactorY trainees , • St $2.00
Salesmen. • • • • • .. • • • • • • • $2Jl
Girl Friday •••.••• , • , IO $«X> Furnltvl'9 8000 G1r1ge Sale 8022
Gen'l Ok CUhler ...••• $.125 SCRAM~LETS MOVING
ARGUS EMPLOYMENT to smaller home
roNSULTANT AGENC'l ANSWERS MUST SACRIFICE
200 Westc:Hff, N.B. .... ,,,. s rm.a ct f\rn.lture, ciothina.
1624 E. 11th St, S.A. 547-6336 Wlsdool -Synod -Skier -toob, miac. 10 AM Sat. 18'7
Part time wool presser Wiggiy -WOOK like a DOG Tahiti Dr., C.M. 546-.1428
Corona de\ Mar A iOl)d teCtttary is expect-UNLOADING! Retrig
615-0310 or &48-TI97 ed to look like a gtrl, think washer, mpl. bonk bedl,
like I mill, act like I. lad;)t Dan., IOfa A: chair. '67
Schoola-lnatructlon 7600 11nd WORK Uke a DCXr. c.maro tor baJ, 16' boat -w/75 hp, all barga.lna! DENTAL & MEDICAL SPANISH Din 'lb!, 6 O\ra, ..,.,. ..
ASSISTANT Deak, unusual, xlnt cond.
Dual O>mer Bede, CUshnd. GARAGE Sale SM. 6 SIJD., Women to train for position &d<B, CUBtom Cover, like after 10 AM. Maple • pc.
&I A.Wstants and Sectttarlea new. 2121 Ducanlcl, ''The corner unit: Maple pl.adorm ln Docton ~1 and Hoa-Blutt." Fri-Sat.sun &M-1628 1'0Cker; -deok • pltala. Short Course -Com-nU8c. galore! !MS Vktoria,
plete Training. Receoptlonilt, MAPLE end tablea & collee C.M. 548-4903
Public Relations, Lebora· table 1et Pl for all. Seven.I
lamPI $5 -$10 each. 2 -9x12 PCftTABLE Generator;
"""· -""' Charm. rup $5 Ir: $10. 2233 Rutgen E"'d< -.. pump;
Age J.8..SS. Married at .mate. CM. {Upper rear) ev-....... lqe;
WUI not interfere with pres-
ALMOST New 2 Rlriera Sofa Davis-Wei.la: 6" jointer;
eat job. Bl< College of other m!ttc. :ml Wallace,
Medical &: Dental Assistanb:. bed•, w/eorner tab 1 e, C.M. lamps, chairs, twin bed!, Write givin&: address and TV .. 613--6162 · GARAGE SALE telephooe numbel' to Box SAT. A: SUN. M'lSl, Daily Pilot. ORTIIOPUJIC dble mat· Housebol.d ltema, BR tum. tre•, IPrinl;s $35. Roll·aw~ Jt/j_ newport $20. °"""" ni. Bunk ""'
Surfboard• Mlac. Goodies
Coral &: So. &y Front $25. Lamps. 580 Hamilton, Balboa Island school of 642-8222 GARAGE SALE! SAT &
business NEARLY new double box SUN. ALL DAV spring, mattreu • frame 213 35th St., H.B. $25.543--0033 13J Dovor Dr., H.B. Furniture, Girl.I A ladles
64641S3 * SOLID Maple Ml 1!.ze clothing. All gOOd! Mile. ' headboard. Beautiful cor'I-ROILAWAY beda. Biby LlFE:l'IME lift, typewriting. ditlon. $25. 54~ • beds. Just &bout everything~ Chlldreft &:randchildl'l!'fl, or BLUE Dan.Ith m o dern 1006 Lernn01 CMesa Verde) )'OUI'!eU' ! Individually tu-naua;ahyde couch, S 2 5 .
tored. Qillcoat 10 lel!!On typ. 642-3.165 after S PM A~.Pli•nc•s 8100 lng school. 1'13 Del Mar, CM C1sh for Furn., appll. 54&-2859 MOVING • Must u crUke! & tools. 642-7015/MU:i974 Lady Kenmore coP{ll!rtone COSTA Meaa Pre-School I: rI'ALIAN Pronnclal dining Klnd-. Opon 7 AM • table, 2 ~nalons A 4 washer. $6.5. Xlnt """'· 642-32'5 5:-45 PM. Full 1: 1i9 dQ """"· ~. -lealons, Planned proenm. mo EKro.mVE DESK Mahoi;any Obi.. drnaer $50. 2
Rea rates. 5C&-9fKl1 commodea $35. ad cmd. GXM", Walnut, tonnlca top TUTORING Mahopny bed $50. w/box $65.-sprp le matt. ~1137 AD levels math, inf llChl ---· acl., HS physle1. 962-Kl!i Offtc• Furniture 8010 Mlytag W111!or $SO. * ART CLASSES ... • ~716 •
SACRIFICE!-New deluxe by Robert Thompson o.fflce furmitw-e. 4500 Cam~ 60 CU Ft Rl!9.cb In rmiger·
fl.tor, 5 doors. Battaln! 2023 Harbor Arts 642-9590 pus Dr. Suite :zsl. N.B.
YARN ART CLASSES -.
Harbor Blvd., C.M.
by Charles. Tapestry, wall ---· Apartment Sized
hangings, ruas. m..m38 Office Equipment 8011 REFRIGERATOR $2).
fi13.383.1 AJt 4 PM PIANO l..F.SSONS: Begtmera ANSAPHONE: w I c all
thru mtenned:iates. Mn. back control, never used. GAS renre look& • workl
Bailey Thompeon 642--0332 perJect $ 4 5. Good $2S(). 536-1235 eves.
I refrigerator $3). &46-45.57 MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TltADE C•fe, Rftt1ur1nt 1014 Antiques 1110
Furniture 8000 PUBLIC AUCTION -Mille.
resta.unnt equipment inc ANTIQUE SHOW
MA1CHING couch I: chair, bv fixtuttl -2 pm Sept 30 & SALE
lair cood. Green recliner -21546 Laguno c.,,,..., Rd, Long Beach Municipal Audi-
ct.ii',, xlnt cond. Rollaway Lei:una Beach -494-9'154 torium, Ocean l 'Lon&' Beach
bed, .......... ""' tram<, -Blvd. Sept. 26, TT, 28, 29.
dbl ""' w/headbrd, Household Goods 8020 Tburg.Sat 1.10, Sun 12"6.
matchill&' vanlQ< &: 3 draw'er
LEA YING dty '-Muat sell, MtN. Grandfather clock app . dresser, 5 dnwtt dreaser. 24", over 100 )'1'1. Good round walnut dinette w/6 Duncan Phyfe tolcHni cha.Ira
chairs. 2080 Republic, CM $5 M, 4 drewer tile cabinet cond. & work. order. $65. .,..,.,.
646--6700 w/lock $17.50, 4' delk ns.
new Sunbf'am Mlxmutrr i:aiOP EARLY FOR XMAS. OOMPL Bed lrt $12;. 9' llOla $19.50. ~ $5. n. beaut Antique dolls, clot b ID 1.
A: matctin.: overstuffed chr. er1try t.Ne $18.50, punch wip, mini1ture11 furniture $250. Dlttan Ph)1e din ti axl material. 675-2.184
4 6 newly uphals d\n. $100. bawl w/24 rlulel $14.50.
2 ove:ratuUed rm ctn. 25" 19361 B<ookhun~ ... us, OAK CHlNA CABlNET
rnd table .. , ..... .... H.B.968-2:'m. CURVED CLASS
Lamps. Make dfttl All tn • 646-2895 •
G•rea-Siie 8022 perfrct rond! 8'13-0C12 MKRBLE top tal>le fl5. 3
DAY Bed, Jove teat a\zr!, GAR.AGE SAlE: Bric • a • drawer dreuer $85. Cane
beck chr $2$. &M-12:1; aft &. dark; green 11at1n; xlnt cond. Brae, Bath En.1 emb le,
SlM; pme l1ble, 50" round Silver, Dillhe1, Llnftll, Stm. -.
• cba.ln, llsht wood black Iron, 2121. Deacarmo, "'nle Sowl"'· Mlthln" 8120
•l•I• ceonter, "'*'1· dialn, Blutt" Frl-5at.Sun 644-1623 1967 SINGER. complete wtth S14S. ~1.$19 TEAR Drop 1Ai eabover Cam-walnut cabinet! Ser v Ice
BEAtrr Jounre c:ha1r Ir ot.. per like MW ~ incl.
Wmsn. decorat« fatfrte, jacb. Bnmlwidt ~ man Jeavtr:w area. .Auto.
z 11 z 111 a • toucb-0-madc.
$125 (COit 131Xl). Lad:IM an-pool tbl, new oond, $500. but1m bolelll, blind hem&. ..... ""k .......... --OW!?C!Ut1 w I t b o u t at;.
$100 (O»t $25(1). Mile ttau. nm.N; incl btreh Br. Rt, tacllmeots. Auume $3.SJ
~926 m1a, lawnmower, -.nUquea, mo. or $33.22 cMb. Call
s PC. Mattu. uv. rm . .Wte, ~u~ Th~1·:rois4'8 -· f250 ; 5 Pc. bdrm. lllit• $175: a a -Musical fntt. :Z IJt. lamps $20 ea.; 2 aets A Swinging Affafrl 1125
dbl. mattrum A: box avrp. 6 l&mily 1an.ie Ml.e
S4J ea. set; AD only :I mot S.t, SUn 1()..6 5* River, NB Rl:AL Bcplnll II baa
Honer ~; a.Int okl! ~ Aft 6 P.M. l'RDOl PH<XiE, f u r a • Span1tb aultar; E n I 11 a b
MAPLE: 2 dmb, table Ir ti ntdio, '""''• Mo~ e I ' 1 ~; au tn P:Stect dllJn. ean. tlille. s daJrl dOlh!<I. 2217 lti.rbor, o. M. ooo4. Coll' -.. J pee -1. lt.olr!c. Bolt CM ..... llB1
t.ulk • bl*lll lbarilr. a.a ~.lTY'M'NlE ... ,...., KINGSl'ON' a.. •• st. t.
---.... -Oct. lit. ""' . ' Piil ,,,. ..... 1'id><IJ. --11111 a:tmJRY C411 ilDIJCll11 MedM>cblt Cllurdi, GO W. ltrlnp $50 er Bell cam
--..., -19th St; C.M. 56-0iOS
l300 . .,_..,. $!7li, Pefect GUITAR, drums, ........... DUAL -aqljlllir
eond:ltkln. &M--1S7't io-nrt.. _.,. boob A: SSOO; Slnale s b o" m a e
C\JSTOM I' ICU, ~ caotbea, etc. 513 5"11.te OL amplinet $350. Xlnt c.-4.
"'ted iso. Pok or blue ..,. 54M'710 ...._
NI dM.1n '25 _.,..,,... a.annNG. _..,, fin. a..AJUNET, Boos17 A
80Ul) 11 .... KDN Holl-Good ~ ... Alloo, HI-l -$40. Good
135. 2 louoco dltlrt~ A N'JI, l!udl. MHIG; SM. -.,....,...oood. -·-'"'"' ... _ ...
I ' ,.
MIRCHANDISI FOii MERCHAHDISI F
'lll AND TltAD! SALE AND TltADI
furniture IOOOfurnlluro IOOO
~~-=~\'SI
Boutht Mlnufocturor't ShowrMtn Sompl• I . Al Terrific Savings!
8' Wood cuved arm divan, lg. man•1 chair; .
beaut. fabrico. 5 Pc be.tuon dark oak din.
.. 1, w/blact or avocado tramed cblirl; 5 Pe
BR seL 9-dr Mr. & Mn. dresser, lg mirror,
2 comfnOlli!i, decoratlve headboard in Spm-
!sh oak or avoc1do delign.
Item Sold Individually
Shoi Around-before you buy ... us1
V LUE $HS-FULL PRICE $429.fS
or .. ""' as low as $3.00 WMk
No Down-Use Our Store Charge Plan
No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Values In.side
APPROVED FURNITURE
2159 HAllBOll, COSTA MESA
12 Years aame locaUon~ame owners
~ D111y9·9 ~ \s"S::~~s,
Pia-A Orpno 1130 Sportl"' Gooch l500
SALE
Plenoa Organs NEAR N"' r JJY' GAS
....-:d. l'am!oy V-bol-
Rebuilt """" ..... $089, tom. $95 « belt: alts. A1lo Wulltzer new ccmoler, from w Qula$3S......._ $634, Wurlitzer Orpnl, floor
modela, ..... ""· Mlacell1neous l600 SAVEm
Regf1ter fer cbildrtn'• pi&oo NEAR NEW PEMCO """". ,. ... aquutwn. ~
WAl.J.ICHS MUSIC CITY It~ ecmtruc&n. 'I'h1I ta
3400 So. Brtatol standard <4'"sl6''XZ2"). }D..
o:i.ta Me.a * MO-:nti6 eluded: StafJlle3S-bood w/2
USED PIANOS Gn>-luc lamps, ~-
Antique white IPinet • • S3B5 aide filter, tm:lde ''Mhtdt
Walnut Oiicke!fnl COD • $845 :ftlters", -... .......
Fr. Prm Gt8!14 ••• , • • $ll!> lbnd .. _Wlthpir.
Starr Studio ............ $395 c:hue owner wJll Pt •1'11
Wirlltur Spinet ........ $4115 -• -1T pl. -tank; Completely Guaranteed with ltatld, hood, PJ!tt),
Tmn• heater • "M!rade fllfcn"
Gould Mualc Company $150. or tut otter. M'Ufi84
(O\r S8th YMrJ oft 6.
2>45 Malit, S.A. MT-0881 SWIMMING POOL F1NAL DAYS or
OUR PIANO SALE 11 n Pool, nter, Sarfaot
DON'T MISS IT II ...._,_lilt.
COAST MUSK ntEE Ground l'WI.
$149.81
SEU.RD POOL
1139 Newport 'lvd. 323 s. M'aln, Oronae 646.0271 !132-1991
Sele Green Teg Put )'Otftelt 1tt Otr Paee
""-Slvd().I'l'beetn Sept brlnp thil f1mOU1 Ille
3700 McFaddtl\ S.A. , of fine pianos & orpns.
Every piano & (ll'pn marlr.ed SWAP MEET in creen · carries dlacounta
to 90% "nle best deell: are Startt Aua. 17 alwa)'I at: 531-1712 aft 1 WARD'S BALDWIN m.ft>JO STATUES, ETC. 11"'-Newport, C.M; 64U484
. Open Sunda,y aftemoona nn1a:bed •••• to
IOJt your decor,
Hammond Spinet organ See oar dlJD].ayl at ••• ,
3419 Via Oporto, N.1. w/pm:usslon, Nftrb • ....... Save $225 • TREASURES OF Uled spinet piano, $395. AU BABA -SCHMIDT.PHILLIPS CO.
1907 N. M11ln O 20th SAW ShopsmHb comllbr6m
Santa Ana homo ....,.,_.... ..... fl40. ~mJncton rlfJe 3XI PIANO, 1pillet, b e a u t i I u I Savage w/tcape $90. Metal dark roahog., wlth benc:b. tinder, $20. Dance eo1tumet: $325. 6~ 1569 .t: Victorian chair. Belt of.
Wurlitzer Olord Ori:an, fe-r. 675-2342
f!XI or make''otftt WROUGHT~ ' '
546-4729 or 846-1585 sz: aa• ~ iz: t!lhinl
W1JRLlTtDt BP1net Pl~. polet SS; mrt nn 'RadiO
Good oondidon. Make otter! $20; Door $5;.12 YOl.t bltttery ....... ,., $5; vanlty chair $25; odw
Miae. 611 Marguerite {ttflf)
T•levlslon 1205 CdM. ~2456. SEE SAT • .. -RENT GOOD, Used carp et In r.
Sacrifice $1. yd. Bel ..
New Color TV bkJmd~ _.trlp'ed
646-1'51 $9 PER MO. UPHOLSI'ERING -179,SJ, 2
RENTAL CAN APPLY TO po. (European cnrum.oJ
PUl!CllASE Free .... del, Ill~
ORDER BY PHONE Maln, HB "~' '
548-1511 KENMORE ra.ne.e $3 0,
°""""' --""· 9AMto9PM 7 ""'"' Schwinn boy'1 bike $25. MAGNAVOX ·BIW, It~· .........
AM-FM. Walnut Ft n I 1 b ,
WO!UD --o.ru.ti. i(.'3 pm 646--6714 125. OWd "'It 125. blood
Hl·FI & St•roo 1210 dre91er, bed complete ;;o.
~· Stereo · dlx COMOle 1968 BAND Saw $65. Imm
aolld 1tale with 4 speed Fairchild, .,..,. movi•
chana:er. Left on lay·• camer11, project~r " way. Pay bal o1 $18. or 1peaker. $200. 54S-8916
IUlall pym.atl. Credit Dept. AUTUMN Haze Mink Stolt!
• 53.S-7280 • $300. Coll Mlos Hunt
C'OMPLETE 1 t e r e o eatn· 6£..93T1 or wk endl 642...J849
p:mentl, Harmon KArdm SW1SS Girl sen. nne lov".11'
ltereo receiver. Gerrard Cluiltmu, Swill m D 114
tum table. Marn av ox boxN $8 to $25. 497-1618
amplifJers &: lpie&ken. 2233 OJRNET Cue • book" '4:11 Ruta-en CM. (lWef Rear) Good for ltudmt. llUlrtte
HARMON KJirden AM. FM nwigle $3'.l. S4&--0'l81 ,
~Iver SSO. Home Stereo G.E. Delux ~ tum.: tape $50: Scott l(>eakft'll $30 acea. per. cond. aacrifico6 each. ~1284 noo each. p .0. Box l.12i m
Garranl tumlll"1o 135
Mod<! 50 CARPETING, 60 yds QY~
lvo<y. $1.00 ... yd. Gd • -a>!>d. 548-3667
MAGNAVOX St.ffto Cml80le 5 PC RATI'AN -· Waln.u:t, modern de 111 D. dlaJrs covered in _ bef1 1100 . ....-nauph,,i. $50. -•
Tofl! "-rdon mo DRA.Fl1NC madllne wf1:
.-. """" -$15 W!STINGHOOSE S t er e o ........
tape l'teelldt:r $'130. Evm-BEA.Irr. bnm@tle wig, _,
lnp ce.0: 64&-2577 once nc;. lronrtte ~G' .. $!JO. Xlnt cond. 6"-1083
Cemer1s & Equip. 8300 ' HOOVEI< vocuum 110,
KEYSTONE I mm mo'fle Sd>wlm bike .... 17. l>oW>k
bed OONP{ete Pt. s.s.4104 ClftMh W/#:/OID J.enl .I Kif
thnodJna ... lee... $JQ), NEAR ,,... Col!ee A Ollldy
"4-.om -.. "'""""""' ...,.
r1 ....,. .. i4Mla
~portfilt Good• l5.G9 1llAS!_..,_ .....
KNEIS[. tfQI .... ?Ws -... $!!).~ .....
1l.JO, B,. ll'C bucikel•d -#BTr-~ -fll)( -I'll-Du'1 ~ ,. ,.,... "' """· lltiil Lat.. .. + Iii>
coad. 875-1"5 oft 5 PM C111 '•1& m. SW
!M!i'8QARD II' """ ccod. BAA bdle Ill--·-.... °"::J: nder I ,.. -ll. llritlD -..... JM"'• mowrer SlO.. Dl-«904
SURnOARD. --8'!'' near-nnm. BllJ1 J'olm. -.... -$S. l'!ls .... tel:ile: • """ .... .... CID~ -.-.
.. 1 I ...
-------------------------------.. ---~ ----,, --....---,...---_________...... .... --~ -·-· -..~ ..... ~ .
IWl.Y 1'11.dr _ FrldQ, $._... 27, 1961 IRR»i IJJ:~:JjiM~~ M 4NDlll PDR SALi AND TUDI IALI AND TRI.DI ULI AND TU.DI
M!Mollo--Mlocofl1neoU1 l60Clli\IMlll1neou1 MOO
MllED fDllCS
l
I \
W• t•lil "'••• 11•w T.., ••• ,
111 th• ........• i J1111t , J..ly ....
A1191nt tl!e11 •11y ethe, ,.., ...
D••l•r I• the U111 .. 4 Stet.ti
Tiler• "'"'* r.. • ''''"" , , , eM ... .,., It. .. ,.,, ye111 aiillY
lk•• "'" ., 1111•4 ,..,. ... , ... 11,,;,, ., •••• ••11'1• '" •'"' ...
''" "'"' ,....,.,. ''""" , •• m. ti ••• efferfftj "" tt.. fl11•tf .;. tr Stt. Hrtlte f• wm IJM. "WI CUI at DnoN 11oi-
1$100 llACH II.VD.
WESlMllSlll
194-3322
• ..
OAC + Tu • I.le.
-lll>dto! """""' 998 lo. Cout Hwy, I. B. ....,,. """""'
Siles, Service, P1rts
ComplM• new MG blventory
TRAN.l'OllTATIDN
lmporllld Au!ff
Mei
·~ MG mMS.il:el, xlnt
wire whet-la, Riii, $1095. KI
s-162i
MGTI), ltml .
car, "1lll fine. MUil lell. A
........ i;:o;, MMll!C!
SPRITE
'60 SPRITE $450 ....... ,
See And Drive Tod1y
..PeanltmiA \Iii 111PORTS
1966 11arbor, C.M. ~9303
TOYOTA
HUDQUARTEM
ELMORE
~ the new Aultin America 15300 Bl!llab Blvd., Watmnttr
Htrt Now! Phon• 194-3322
Jlrluport
31inports ·
1100 W, Coalt Hwy.
N1wport Btttill
642.9405 540-1764
Autbarbed MG D1aJ1r
1907 MGA
Good condition l3!IO
2!>13 South Ollve, S1nt1 Ana
'
TRIUMPH
63 TRfUMPH TR 4, Con-
vertible. R./H Nl!W tires.
Ex. running corid , Askinl
$1450 or make ofter.
MG-4726 or 64)-U3S
'60 TR 3 Xlnt conQ, Btlll t1f-
fer or trade. l!lquire I02
42nd St., NB 6ft.-123T
awtGJ: ITI
Auto Services & Porto '400 lmportetl Autos 9600 lmpertld 4Ulft 9600 Im port.cf Autos ------TWO • 14" MUI with I"
caslcn for Oievy; Delco
aiNhoekl far Chevy 11. -·
IAVINOI UP
TO $900
1961 COUOARSI
mu. A N.,.J
GO~l'Ul'l lllRtlON, S~ll wffti; Mt. Net llMt•I w'"'"' ti t ll .. _., I f'''• J4.oot fl!IU .. I I .,.., ff,•
000 ... 11 .. (Ori .. ,,., ••
ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST
Factory Authorized
DATSUN DEALER·
COMl'LEll SALES-SERVICE AND PARTS
Now Open For Business
WI! HAVli TME RNIST STOCK OP
1969 DATSUNS
AVAILAB~E FOR DELIVERY NOW
2000's • 5 Speeds • I 600 Ro1dshrs -4 Sp eed Pick·
ups • • Speeds • 2 Door Sed1n1 • 4 Speech 4 Door
Sed1n1 • 4 Speed or Automatic • 4 Door Station
W111on1 -4 Speed or Automatic.
18135 Beach Blvd.
llUllTllGTOll BEACH
142-7111 or 5411442
$AW Dil"T. MOUllS:
I 1.m •• 9 D·"'· Mon, th.,, Fri.
Sil. I 1.m •• 5130 p.m.-Clo1ed Sun.
llRVICI Df'1.
a.& T u11$..fri. 1·9 Moncl1ya
.... ~ .J DOT ----DATSUN
••111ru ..
A.DAMI L
-r•cn•IC COAST HWY·
·. \
-... --. -----·r-r-----------~---··-------~:--s~:p_a _____ a:•z-s~-=-••t•c~;•:-•css~o~o~c--••~•~c~s~~O~S~;•_•,L•v •,1•L0-•7 •saa~t•c~]~
rrld.IY. Sfoltmber 27.1968 wu }.J "'HOO°"""lllOd""""'cn~.;,...;.;.=........,"°°"""'.-..u;::: ... =c.""rw"'"""-""""'Mi ..... TRANSPORTATION TRANJPORTATION TSIANSPOltTATION TltANSPORTATION -TltANSPORTATION
I-led A-9600 ~U.:::10d::..::C::.;•"'=----'990Q"";.;: lllo4 C10't0 9900 UMd c..... 9900 CHEVR01.11'
VOU<SWAtiEN IUICK CADILLAC CADILLAC CAMARO
'---------------1964 Ch0¥ lmpol1 Cpo. 1-----------·----------'17 CA.DDJ...\C eon....ut>te. '67 CAMAJU> In VI. Auto, ~ n.tnc, auto. trem., '67 VW St1tlon WlfO• 1963 Buick -1 w. Pv• 11 • ·..-· All Blacio, Loodooll swr., Pl, 1o m1. v.,., ..... ..,, ,_ • 1oo1 .... ,. -tlM
f l*U. • ........,. ...S with 1u<o, Ml, F04 -~ -ndlo A tape, Pri ....,,, lml. l<M034 alt t -wt1!J -lo
while top. Spilt _,., 21,lllO U9l5 * l<T-* Codlllaco * 14675. 6jUITJ 1961 CAMARO 0.W, RS Ex· -• R-lo actual miles. Eeanom¥ p1111. '63 BuJck Sk;ylark, eood AU oolon, modda. full tru! Private Jlr11, 96J-1CKXI $1295 w..-St>oclol -• "°°· pwr, air ....u-.. CAMARO alt s 111 ... 1ot .., ,.,_ Blvd.
$20tT. • 615-4$C Save ~ to UIOO! JOHNSON & SON Coo.....,..Uorpvt~ '5' BUICK llovtcta. s..., ALLIN '67Ca,,,.ro R1llySport CHRYSUR ' L•-•-~-....
mesita u low N $24 per OrtU H1vm Gard• n Oldsmoblle<:a"Ulac 3&I> &I. Gold with black Ian---.-------·~---, mo. O.A.c. . C..too'. IZIO. mo So. Oout ,_,. da• top. 4 ,..s -. .. ,,,.. 1962 Chry1lor St1 W11 O.t& Men Broulcb ELMORE Lqtma Beach •10M wheel•, loaded wt.th extrta. ruu ,.,,_, ut.o u.na., ,... 1'U Harbor llvtt.. 6a-'Jtl50 ~e<.,...,.~T;..i,1:: '67 ELDORADO Pooltlvdy lmnMocuJato, dlo • heator. ThJ,, lo the 4 SPEED
MOl'ORS $13116. _.,., Pm-o whlle 1"'dau top, -sm;, """' lwourioul It&. -· "' SPEC''"·USTS TOYOTA BUlQC '00 Le Se.b 22 000 red bottom. Haa bad~ Can finance all or part PQ-~ market . Priced far Jut lllll ,
Ph. 8$4-3a20 mJ, A/C, pow ... ~ ~. care, dlr, AM!TM steno HQ menta as low u $33 per ale HIGH PEllFORMANCE
!ISOO ... clo BlVd. W-ramu, ev. mt1o 51&-Ml)l ._.,,..,, 1215 -delo, mo 0.A.C. $79S LARGE.Sr SELllCl'ION JN
:. or wW tab o&der lrldt. wm ELMORE ht car lot on Ha.rtlor Blvd. ORANGB'CXXJNTY 1969 CADILLAC lloanco "'''"'" ...... .,... JOHNSON & SON CUSTOM CARS YW ll, Gl-9'l'll or -· MOl'ORS Llnooll>M=y Selec:Mcl Auto
HERE NOW '65 Cldlll1< Cpo DtVlllo ·a CADILLAC Sedan o1e Vlll• TOY OT A °"'11 Miu Branch Cuter
Pale )'tllori 'ffith b*k 1-tb-ALL POWER lndudln& air Ph. IN-mo 00 Haztxir BIYd. M).'ftEO 1
!!r tntaior. 1'ull ptWe: A: air oondltionina, POWtr merq, lm Bet.ch Blvd., W.trnnstr '47 CHRYSLER t dr R/H 13032 Harbor Blvd. 537-4646
ocmd. Immaculate ttiroup. )IOwer brakes, llOW .. wfn,. ''7 CAMARO Blk. &: pd• orfa, rd cond. Price Qt Nl9 '6T IMPALA IS. G7 4 spd. I ~t. Weekend Special dows. &.way •I. auto. trwllc' l50SS • RS ~uto many vc: $5Cl'.I. 54S-49ltl tndc It!~ bucket seats,
ELMS29950. RE ::i :=:· ~!~· •0~ 1n1. xint cond. 642-9345 -:i.~1': :c ~
-<J'ull ..... I ··~ . CHIVROLIT 615-5'168 alt ' ""'
iii n.r:rrwOOD '67 CAMAlt.O Spt Cpe '56 CffEV. 2 * HT. PNrl 1966 CHEVU.LE sup 1 r MOl'QRS
TOYOTA .\ll-""""-· -ed "'P Gndan gold .-lib oonm>stiJ>i ..U.. black bu<.., tuck lot Sport, 396 Ill · ,,...._ 4 ..... 8"iae control, tilt wbM1. -black interior· Nkest in Qr. Xlti; CUld. $615, BU-1302 ill JK18l. Complete oew
Ml. tsi-3320 'ab ~ ... ootlletX eon-Jnlt ~. Onb' 'Sf NOVA S,,. V8, pwr atr. dutch uaer,bly $2000, Ast
14f00JOI -671°1191 1P'.IO ~•ch B!'fd., Wshnnltr 4ition: Jlri .. ,. party, SJ!50, $2267 UH, low DW.1 Owner. Like for Gary m..ufil aft g pm. 1t70 HA••o• ILYD. '6.l CAD ~-~vu1 au.....117•1 ,·""· 'Do. .. _ COST A MISA ' ....._... Ullil ' ~ CU ftnuee all or part • -· new S1S90. llH-l:w.1 '6'1 Q{EV II SS 321 t spd
'66 VW 'LIKE= $1,900 '&T CADII.J.A.C Lico, lo ~~uk1waa$29permo. '55 CHJ;V. LoadtdltB1der1~.A1LS
Th I B ....,_, miles, new ttr ... no dtntl. · · Sl.Ml. :P.M. Sf0..5601 1
e popuar ug, ....... """' '61 ~CAD OONV, all b!ack, PriY --. w....a...i-. ELMORE 281 N'a.u Rd., CM. -1d 1mmaculale lhrnugh. ,_....v ___ ,,,.,,.~ 1967 CHEV El Camino. Pwr:'
•"" • stereo tape deck, new tires. N'ust •ell tbta week! '900. '67 CHEVY · U. m, Hunt ' atr'g, brk.s, fae 'afio acnd.
out -only n:: Ila kind. """"· ...._, Mr. WCIOd -MO'roRS .,,...i fl,lllO, -$2495 642-4~ <Ml ;
CJn finance all or part Pt>'-'tll SEDAN DeVIDe. Ori& '81 ·!l!i>AN de irue, S win· TOYO'l'.A '66 CHEVELLE Malibu S9t. 'M IMPALA, ps/pb; $800 ar
D"1ent1 as low as $1).00 per owner, lO~ mi, full ,pwr, dow HT, full pwr, air. f625. Ph. 894-3S20 Cpe. 283 •tick VN bound. btat aCfer. lJ132 Red1udl
aio 0.A.C. air, extru. 494-8794 MS-4770 att 5, prh' party. 15300 Beach Blvd., Wnmutr MS-3211art4 :30 J:)r,, I .A. 54f..8S3a
ELMORE
MOl'ORS
TOYOTA
Ph. !IM-3320
15300 Beach Blvd., Wslmnttr
'85 VW Dtlux1, Om't mJ51
this one. No dMm1 OAC
payments only S3B per mo.
&<2-4«15
1'7 vw t>eiluxe. P•• UUa one
and .)'OU Iola. No down OAC.
Paymll)t! only J46,50 per
mo. 80-4615
'63 GOLD vw I>eluxe nice
car. No down. OAC
paymentJ onl)' '31 per mo.
312-4615
'86 vw Dellwo Spoolll. Elllro
dean. No down 0 AC ,
Payments cab' $44 per mo.
142-4615
VW 67 Squareback, Llke new
Paint. Ex. Mech rond. New
radio--mats $1975. 54J..OQ7,
,._7 PM
'6' VW Mutt iet. Beauti.ful
1rea $50. down 0 AC
parmentt onb' $U per mo. -
'67 vw. ld:ill' d5Nl>. l\ldio,
heaterj WI w/bllclc vin)lt
inttrloc. MP-07<1
'Ill 1600 SQuarebldl. Blue
39,00) mi. New tire&. Prrf
cond. $1800. 17i-37ro
'M VW autcmatie, red, 4'°°
mile1. $19!!0 or belt offer.
64>-~ '67 .l-1 --~. w/walll. By owner, $1350
968-1993
1902 VW Bua, ~l'iiffi: Q:rvair
eng & VW t:nl1S, """"' paint
l .......... IHOO. 6IMfll!
Antiques, Cl111IC1 9615
311 01..DS CDt!Y CO \I P e
w/rumble &eat. Gd ori.Jlnll
cond. Runs tair. Mwt ltll
'500. 96~74 HB
Aut• W1nted
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR
USED CARS
CONNlll CJIVROl.ET
2821 Harbor Blvd.
Cotta Mt• ~UOI
WJ; PAY ••• CASH
!or -..... -l\111 call ua Jlx' he ealimUI.
GROTll CHEYROllT ....... ~-
18211 -Bl .. Hom"-lltaclo
Kl~
Wiii Buy
rour Volklwaaen • PtncM .,., ... -....... or not. Call ...
673-1190
UHCI C10't0 9'00
NllD A CAR?
CAN'T U: FINAllCD>T • .....,., •bl~• l'nf .... a.II,·-· ·~!!.."' .. _,
:Ci.iii'tN =a
lQ) So. Main • &' ••
UbloobN.ct-_ ...... _
RENT
Automobll•'
$12 PER MO.
Jltent.J CM apply to P'fthllt
0 .A.C. Order by phma.
548-S294
I AM "' 9 PM T !Jon
SOCK rr 'tt) "i!iii
t
•••••OF NEW
IT ISN'T OREN THAT NIW VOLVO
PRICll ARI ILASHID POI MODIL YIAR•
IND CLIARANCI • • • BUT DEAN LEWIS, .
IN THIS IPICIAL SALi, WILL CLEAR OYER . .
30 BRAND NEW · 1961s THIS WEIK AT
. I
IPRICI RIDUCTIONS llLDOM, IP EYER;
EQUALLED! FIRIT COMI, FIRST SIRYED
. 'v .
ON 2·DOORS, 4·DOORS, STATION WAGs .
• • t . ~-I
ONS, & HARD TO FIND J 22 2·DOOR1i
ACT TODAY!
'
NO MORE
•
WHEN THESE ARE GONE!~
( )
'
'I
~y
RECONDITIONED
and GUARANTEED ·
Fine automobiles ... that qu'alify to b• 111ld
under the sign 11f th• highest danduds ••• -
Mike McCarthy Buick!
'8& RIVIERA '• OREY. OAPRIOE
i~Cl\;~53399 5ini:51899 .. ..., ,_.... ,... atn! 11111111115. lllwtlr -q ...
lfM 141. It 111'7 II !Ms llt<t. • ,_ ....._ -lnler. Wt
. .. -· Sltltlltl Ur. ... ~ 141. ~ MERO. WAIOI •• FAIRLAIE ITI
'II MU.STAii
i:'l •• =. s1599 ... _.... '
w..tt h I 'Jin .......
lo!-..... -·"""*~ oilf!lMltl.
'• POllTIAO . , ~~~.~ ... ~s2399· CONDITlpN .. · •
INO. AutOm ... . ttc tr•ntmlallon. ......, ,,..,.
t ... -MklO, Vlnyl .....
Tift at9et'lnt whMI. IMle anti
hMhr. Thia ll a prgMUI earl
• .... 21.
'86 8ALAXIE 900
::,: s1499 ...................
It.kin Ill.
'87 .PL YMOU1" Y .l.P,
l:Olr::t. "'699 llf1lllllll, --. I. . II ht &\Jl1L ,_ dtellt. p,.. ·----'--""' ""· i-. Mlpllklll "" u.. Mo. m 111.
'87 ora-
~:~~l6.7!
cw ._,c Lt..._ YIY114.
'88-LISDRE .
S!:5 s1399 ----....... .... ..
-· 0. -· 14111 "' to .,. pu..ito.srrm.
• We Lease All Mikes and Models
' ililWl'OOCI ....
• ..,. ftlrir l'r,ldlJ 9 UL 'ti 1 t ,.._
'SllDJ ..... 'ti 6111& 1551 .BEACH BOULEV41D
WESTMINSTEI
(
.. , e •h---oo·-·----~-·-·---·•-i.W _,.,.,At• ••.••,...1 •."••·•~·..._------._._. ---·-~·-- -------------------------------------..::..._ __ _z"'
,
QAl!.V PllOT 'rW1r. -17, 1!68
'\ n!.\i{SPORfATJON . fliHSPOlfATION '"ANSl'OllTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOllTATION TRANSPOlt;TATION Tltl<NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
,.
~ ~ ~ ' " ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
UMd Can 9t00u...t C.N '900Ueed Can 9900 . Uood Can 9tOO Uood Ce,. 9900UMd 'Can ?fOOUted Cora 9900 Used C.rs 9900UHCI Can ~iiimii~~iiiiiiiiii~~~iiii;i;iiiii~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij . . '\
CONNELL ·.CHEVROLET'S USED CAR UNTER SPECIALS
VERY GOOD 'SELECTION OF
'66 RAMBli-ER YAC4 TION CAR$
• OuEc no ...., .... 11.000 ml1K, tur. At Grectt Savings!
-------..... '65 CHEVROLET~
li .... .,..bide pickup. Tunju .... wilb
fawn Interior. CT30066) •""'" Wl1h ...... oqlle Int.nor, ...... '
,_,.,, ...... , ....... ...., .. (TSB1%1). '66 coavEnE $1095 $4899. Hardtop. t speed transmission, AM/FM · r
1
• " I , radio, red ·wi red biter. Sil: #P15tiOA ======' ======= I 's3299 '64' BUICK
Speclal deluxe wqon. VS., automatic.
power steering, r8dlo, ~t;r~lem a:okl w/bclp vinyl trim. ( )
.$1495
'65 BARRACUDA
H.T. coupe ~ utofuattc, radio, heater,
tuxedo blaCk ,,,. eold vinyl interior.
(NOZ495) •
'64 VOLKSWAGEN • Bui . .f •l)Hd transmlsalon, rood runner,
hew lnttrtor. CFMC467).
'66 RAMBLER Am'-e. 990 custom ledan. V8, auto-11\ltlct 1teertnr. factory atr, ex-
ceptional. (TSM283)
~995 s-i495 ::=;:;::;.· ;;;:;:=:· =· ==== '68 IM ALA '66 OLDSMOBILE
Custom Coupr. Super Sport equtpm,enJ. , F-85 4 .a~ aedan. V-8, automaH'" radio, factory air cond.., pawer stra., autbm&tlc UUU1 ...., trans., ~ A heater-RJ"Otto blue wtth heater, power •teerlnr and fini!hed in b~ok -53;95 VR~~ ~uo~"S1695
N•C.r==
'
· '65 '!)OD.GE . ~
euatOm 880 . " ' h. WOod artln trJm.
F«etory air, =matte, power ~'
radio, heatd'. (RHY26{)
1295
' ... 7 CHEVROLET
Caprioe. Uke neYJ, automatic transmll-
L '\.~ · 1lon. power steering. radio. heater,
'' . (UOE689),
~499
'64 EL CAMINO
With bucket seats, stick shift w/over-
drlve,. 283 va. J)OWer steering, radio,
heater. (Sil:. #1727)
$1595
'66 CORVAIR
Coupe, AT, R&H, gold with bcige fn.
terior, 13,000 actµal miles. OK Used
Cu Warranty. Uc. No. SUB392 $1495
------~----~·
'67 EL CAMINO .
CUSTOM. VB, automatic, power oteerlng,
R&ll, ermine white w/black vinyl Inter-
ior. (V42925)
$2595
'64 CHEVROLET
Impala hardtop. Turquoise wth tur-
flUOise interior, automatic, p,ower steer.
mg, radio, heater. (EIU933) ,
$1399
• CHEVROJ.ET ' '65 '63 RAMBLER
Unpala sport coupe. ~.ijow-Witb black in.
tenor, automith: ~ ~&dlo.
Meier, VB, ~r •teertft&, S; No. 87U. ' $1599
'
Ambuudor. VS. auto., air oond., power-
steer., RtiL reclin1ns ..ta. (0KM633)
·s195
.·
•
'68 'CHEVROLET '64 FQRD
6 ~nger count..tY ~· Satin ailver with ~ lnterjor. Au~a. f .S., radio,
heattr: (MYG{)22) I
' ' $1095
" Ton Pickup with cab-over camper,
6,ply tb'es, law i:nileage. LJ.c. No. Q9lll5
1695
..._ Car Pactory WaM'llnty
•
'64 COMET · '66 PLYMOUTH
Fury m 9 pusenger station wagon.
Automa.tic, power steering. rtdio, beat·
er. CSVY370).
Caliente RT. Coupe VS, abt.omatic, pow·
-er 1ieerin&', radio, b~ter. Em:Unt white
with blue vinyl interior. (WBJ434)
S.W295 . ' t
$AVE
'67 CAMARO '64 PONTIAC
327 V8, automatic, ra&o, beater, power Cat:al.lna .4-Dr. Sedan. Automa~ power
steering, radiet, beater, red with w tt top.
·~-(ULSl.85} (WTG574)
\ 1495 _.s595
'62 CHEVROLET • '65 CHEVROLET
•
% Ton P)ckup.' VB engine, cu5t. cab, betvy
dutf, rubber, 1pUt~rima, atep bumf:; t9ol· boxis, extra raclta, ideal ·tor pltn'n , etc.
&D. 1;995No~
w;.,.on-VJ!. O\'erdrtve-, radio, 1.lteater,
Ugh ~ wftb matchtni ln~or. (IFR37 )-. ~ . $ 9 .,,. 5 5 ,
' ... ' ' f ·• • ' -.,
CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
•
•
'
USED
CARS 546• 1203 CNA~ 546~120~0;
. ~HEYR,QLET ~· CO~ET CQJtVAIR . , , . D~ ; ,
-'8'1-, -CllEV""'--C.-iq:e-'""",-1-¥-11 :'IT QiEVY ~ xlnt '61 ~. w~ new '63 COME'i'i\~~e~ble '63 cHEV CORVAIR '63 D~i1rt
power, 18,000 mtleL Still tm. cond. thru~t. Must Rll lm-brakes. t r a n 1 .rd 1 s s i 0 n White, Xlnt Cond. $«XI. 4-IX>OR $450 zro 2 dr Cub. Pdar wtdte tliif new car Wf:ITUlty, Xlnt mediately! Best of 1 er. rtterifly overlisuled. $1675. 675-J617 • 833-2Gl6 • with It. gm interior. Auto.
cciod. Priv. party. 87T-J8.t7 642-0787 eves. 962..-7351 MUST Sell •66 Comet, 4 dr, ,65 CORV,AIR Moma, red, Beautiful ccnd.
1iO IMPALA 'Coovertible. '57 'BEL AIR, 4 door, RAH pb/ps, y...g, .aute. :I.Int con-excel. cond. Pvt. pty-asking Only SS!fi,
New tDp " diffttentlaL V-8. Good cond. $285 or best ot. COMET ditlon. 615-5809 n100. 549.(641 aft 5. Can finance all or part Pay-
P/S. $450. 675-3"M fer. 644-2629 ments as low as $18.00 per
'56CHEV New'""""· !ran•. '66 CHEVEl,LE Super Sport, COME!' '65, C>ll<nt• """ CONTINENTAL CORVETTE mo O.A.C,
.Poai; h~rs. Mn-pl.int. 2 door Htr, 4 llpd, pow/S. vert, 6 cyl. auto, 36,000 mi ELMORE
664-2911 Pvt. pty. U965. 8414917 exc cond $1300. 673-6782 ~61 CONTINENTAL '62 CORVETT E . Red ,4
Full power, factory air, 1 Hardtqi conv. Auto 377. f.fOTORS iJ. r~~~~-i9600~~1m:po:rt:od:A:-:·::9:600:1m:po:rtt:od::A;ut;ot;~9;60031!~"""'~r~locol~~"~rcarelUll~:y R/H. Pwr windows 1: brks. TOYOTA .•
1
maintained, $875. Xlnt cond. $2,COO. 968-.2322 Ph. 894-3.m
642-8235, eves. 673-7549 alt 5 15.lX> Beech Blvd., W!bnnstr
'67 CONVERTIBLE '68 DODGE Oiarger, loaded.
REBE 1 =~~r~~~~::~~ '67 co~c':~G!R pwr. ·~~:,~:~'·: :::,
644-lE str. & brks. Fae. air, like 6. Auto. R/H. Nu tires. Lo
· 8 • ---new Call alt. ~ PM. mi. $2,295. Pri prty_ 842-&f!O
ii•• .... • CORVAIR ,,, • .,,111 DUNT ""' It "'''" ... 1968 COUGAR. quick cash tor It with a
'61 MONZA • 4 speed. Real Air, all emu. Priced to sell. Daily Pilot want Adi
be~ bomb! $325. m-O!m 962-4678 642-5678 '
We're Brand New
Did You Know We're Here?
BILL MAXIE
' '
T 0 y 0 ., A
AllTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE
INVITES YOU
TO SEE THE LARGEST STOCK OF
1969 TOYOTAS ~· ~ FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I~ • '69 COROLLAS
• '69 CORONAS
Imported Autos 9600 lmoorted Autos 9600 lmport9d Auto1 9600
THE HOT ONE
• • '69 CROWN PURE LUXURY $2819
l • $ ~ '69 LAND CRUISERS TheW0<1d'1Finttl 2855 ~
5.
~ ~ ~ ;o ~ ~ ~
•A.DD ONLY FOi LIC. I SA.US TAX
TOYOTA
, CORONA ' 4-door sports Miiin Ii 2.foor iantt111
EASY TO REACH AT
GARFIELD & BEACH
18881 Beach Blvd.
· Huntington
Beach
Ph. 847-8555
3 Ml. North e# Pacific Cotti Hwy.
• I .On_,, ......
' I
llU MAXIY
TOYOTA
:;
ADAMS 1---
A.
NOW!
We ore THE
Dealer for
the World's
Most
Adv•ncod 4
Wheel Drive
-DAtD
PATROl
WE'LL PROVE IT
TOOAY
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY!
Esp4'Ci1lly . the all-new Oatsun/21' Here's Two-Door
driving et its sporting best Five passenger room!
96 horsepower acceleration I 25 miles per gallon
economyl 'Safety fron t disc brakes ! Every fine car
feature proven on Datsun's famous Sedan I Check aU
1he MW Datsuns. Get 111.Dit&Un's ~ engi ..
Mtfing. ouatity workmanship. Precise attention 10
luxocy. comfort, safely I Sedan to 4~wheel drift
PWOL flft"' .. '' Datsun for your driving neects ... your
pock•tbook. Sea D•t1un'1 Big 7 for '69 at
Zimmerman D•tsun. ·
DATSUN TlAt~NS
~.... •o Sitert' C.n
I l111f*ft ,. S.IMt m.111•
GEORGE ZIMM.RMAN
'DATSUN
SALES A .ND SERVICE
,Costa Meta I'll-540.6410
.-1968 AUSTIN AMERICA_.. I
'
hlir F.ctorr lq111...-
111e1H1 .. An-SC r ... -.
NEWPORT . JMPORTS LTD.
3100 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
642-9405 CLOSD SUNDAYS 540-1764
\
_ __._.._ _____________________________________ , _________ ~--------···--
t,
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TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI ON ' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 'TRANSPORTATION
6··R EE
6 New Buitks to be given away dur·
ing Buick's ~Announcement. Register
in Tl!RRY BUICK'S show room.
Na OBLIGATION TO BUY.
DRAWING TO BE HELD NOV. ht
. . '
. ,-
1 j • • ' A"T /
• ·r T -ERRY :BUICK
! HER.E NOW ·!
BUICK ELECTRA
DO SOMmfiNG NICE FOR YOUR
THE MOST R.VOLUTiONARY $YSPENSION
OF THIS GENERATION .••• ·
A BUICI( EXCLUSIVE
1969 BUICK WILDCAT
' I""' \ . -~· .
IN 30 SECONDS .t~LL. KNOW THE NAME
' . .. ' . . " . r'.T . . ' \ ~ ;:; OF :rOUR,1~J;il. I N!;W 0AR •• r . 1%9 SKYLARK SPtlR'Jt 'CQ\lJPE ' , ' / Bulrk wilJ.tat At i~_,,, Bu14!li' ""
• 122.-St STJEET
HUNTINGTON BEACH
l/2 Block off
. ' ' . ,.. . ·-) ........ ...... -· . r35 Years Se1Y1ng · Oran9'-''t C~un.ty
BEAUTIFUL 1969 B\Jl<;KS AWAIT Y°'>' A1 1i:2 ·.~sth Street .
-·' "·-. i... . ,,..,,. • ' Hu.n~ington Beach
' ·lfi · l&OCK"OFF P~CIFIC ·coAST HWY •
Pacific Coast Hwy.
. Ph. 536-658&1 PH. i53B··6'588
OPEN SUNDAY OPEN SUNDAY
TRANSPORTATION SPE IALS1
2 YR •• 24,000 WARRANTY ~NY CAR '67 ex>L Pk w """ ,... •tr 4 SPEED 4 SPEED 'Whol.,.I• to You" '64 JHp Station Wagon ...,. bddact a;, A-1 oond nu SPECIALISTS .
1963 °"""" """ Sto. Wag .. 4-whrel drive, beautiM con· """· Mu.t ..n """"' .. ol· SPECIAUSTS . . ' sg, g: ,oo T"' 0 . ,s_.6 9 9. -Tbe °""" in tho Fool Uno ddloo, 25,000 mil ... Drive to ftt 968-""' MIGH PEttFORMANCE HIGH PERFORMANCE
Sta. Wagon. PoY.w 1tee~ the market or ~ the road '65 ~ ~· i .. dt., all , ~ C':J$Tp~ C~RS CUSTOM CARS ·
&: bnlke6, auto trans., radio fun. pwr., F/tm, vin. int. Io mi •• t.ARq~ SEl&ECI'l.ON lN: 1L\RGE&\SELFCEION IN
& heater. Reduced to whole· ONLY $1395 Nu tn-$1~-1)42...n40 ORANGE COuN1Y ORANGE COUN'IY ·•
PLYMOUTH MUSTAN& ·MERCURY JEEP PORD
' .I '
El• Can flmmoo ell., pact p.,._ '62 Moot.,.,, 2 dr, R/H, f\tll ~eel . Auto . ~.1~-.. A..... s99.o. .. '59 FORD '57 CHEVY 2·dr. $975 "'"'" .. iow .. $18.oo ""' ,.... XInt cond. Priva -.77'Z . ' . ., , ~·"" .•• ,. "I' "8. "CHERRY"
Full Pri"' mo o.A.c. owo". 14!6. <!644.14 ,. ' ,1Center · , Center . VI AUTO. w
ht car lot on Harbor Blvd. ELMORE ,68 COUGAR Type 91 PS I µIP.2 it'11rbor Bhd.-5S'l-4646 u:621
Rut>or Bll'd. 537-4646 ll-.r--i'~· ~·"!""~":'""'-----+-..;_---------j•I JoH~~!;0N MOTOR•A ~~. :.~ Cell S40-3490 aft.: oLDst.toan:E · : ·~1~~~·=· 19.tjoct1 'ea p" vMoUTH $299 '59 oLDs
'
Costa Mesa Branch TOYOT ,62 OLDS n.-.. -•A· -, •'dr ,. ·•.,ttres. IS65. ~7 STD 6 CLYN HT VI AUT.0 1911 Harlx" Blvd. 642-'lffiO Pb. 8S4-33>J MUSTANG _,._.~ -' • • • • ' . •
'67 SQUIRE Wagoo; 1u11y J.5'XJ S.acl> Blvd., Wstmnm HT "°'· Pvt pty. PONTIAC
loaded beauty. Under war-1965 Mustang 646--0427 $ 0 '59 CHEVY $299
962-8311 • ate U'iC8 wtth 189" eng. A owner. Xlnt mech oood. VS AUTO '61 CORVAIR ,
4 DR. STD.
,...1y, 22,000 Mi. $2995. LINCOLN Factory'"' cood. Thi•" 1"e 62 STARFIRE coov. Orig ROY CARVER . 990
68 TOOfNO • GT .,,.,. ,.,, 1964 L1ncvl• . ....,tlfttl flom>tino gold wilh ""1. 673-5681 PONTIAC · •
PS, AT, R&-H, air,, etc'. Continental "~ Plus" 4 2 tone interior decor. Price e $250 e 2925 ~ et., Costa N:. \l .. --!!'!"l'!'-...,.--------!r----~------1-1
19.000 mL 13100 l 1' m. Dr. Foct. ~ cond., fltll '"1« "'-'; .,...., ..,. "°"" '61 Old• 98 Oonv P'l pb "' JCl 6 t4'44" · • : .. ,,19-·-, ,'..Ir.A CORVAIR ' •399 "60 'CllftY 673-UOI ~. P!.atini.m ener19r ~ . .;. . , ~·i 847-1329 · . ~ 1 ~llMtvt . •· VV
1981 FORD. ....,,.;;.... Good ~lh ,• 4ooe matclrlng inter-· $179S •sJ Old>--Run• Good ~% ""~~ ~""' AUTO AUTO. P /S
cond . ..,g,oo:-~-~ 1 ~ustsellt:hiSW~.Flllf 1st 'Caf'_lqt 0t1 l-larbor 8!vd1 $1(() . .'I·).* ·~9112-l~ ~Uy. / ,:·• :: ) 1_ .. _, -· ·_: ·---------:~----------.... * ~'l'.i:lt * ' $1950 , 1 _JOHNSON & SON CHA!tGE'Yom' wanted now. SOCK IT·TO 'EM!
""1 !'ORD F~. a...,r utJoa, lot oali"oo'l!!V<f. Lincoln,M"'-""'Y , ::;;~""';:;;~="'=-:,,=O~====== $1-· 9 'S9 HILLMAN $39'9' '62 FALCON "· """' ""11· 2 ""tire,. JOHNSO ... :• c,,... '(»<ta: M"' 8'ancl> Wt'!!.t.i~ . 9100111-Cars ' 9800 : $100. * 842-45ti6 . 1"\ ~ ,..,~ J!ll '.H!'& Blvd. 642-7ili0 · · ·.r 4 DR. STI(. .2 DR. j
'59FORDStawgn.Red.Xlnt c~00r!f~h '65 ~ 6 cyl, autO. · I ~~· .;.·.;,;;;.·--~-------lf-----:M~~-~---'ff
cond. Sacrlfi"'. 531_,..9 1941 HMb<>r Blvd 642-700) lnn" R • H, Hr • ..., $' ''I' 8 PLYMOIWH .. $399 .. 'Lit .. •" llill&aa•UR •
'""' FORD '" .mn_ Good Noed a G-le? miloag• llJl'I>, 546-5686 . 199 'I"'• .. • ·.M<5 --
ruming cond. 1215. "'""'" Ftod It wllh a,..., edl o.u:;YRINPlLCfrG • ..!~TSIAIJS j tf;T. VI AUTO'. , , Al(l'O:,PJ~ ,VfAG. White eleplla.Dtl? Df?l~-ltM Dally Pilot Want AdtJ I , ™uM • . ... ,._, , . . _ ..... tNow..~~~·. 9BOON-(An • 9800~ c.,. 9100 $199 '19 FO.RD $4"'ift· '61 OLDS
2 DR. VI AUTOi 77 AIR P /S P /I AUT
THE MAGNIFICENT 1969
LINCOLN MERGURY MOTOR CARS
, ARE NOW ON DISPLAY AND
;· ~
')...V'..\t~BtE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
' .
' ' '. I ' ~. j 1
I
" -. "
'' "
r _,. ,....J: -1 :· • ,
' .
·'60 FORD $499 '63 RAMIUR,
AIUTO WACi. · AUTO. ;NICI :
$29.9 'S.7 ~RClfllY · Ya • H.T. AUTO,! • . ~ ~ ~ -
'2""9 '•• ~~·· Y · AUTO. W.AG~
' ' $~ '19. LIORD .I. 7 ·7 l Dlt. YI '
O" APPIOftO CUDlf ·~
/ 'ss ·NOMAD WA , V~ N~!\, Hf'!', •
'
'
2004 HARBOR · BL VD.
COS,T"-. MESA.
J'vro ·
Dilcoiint Center
I
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I
I
I
,,.. ·-.... -~~--...... ....--... -----~----...... -------------""""---------.-........ -------... -... ------.............
'
'68 BUICK
Spart Wqon. Thill atattco waaon ii ab&olute-b' loaded with autot"natlc. 19dio, healer, power
iteerln&, power brakes, power windows, power.
tall ~window, and of course factory air coftll1I leluttful blue with alm. Wood
IJalD and mateblns blut Sntarlor.
l>an't lnlll one at: onl7
SALi $4222 PRICI
11,7 cADILLAC .
Co<lpe do Vlllol.lleauUlul lfon-Groen lln-lab with alack~-~ and fUll lH.t.hu ln-terlor. Futt C.cfl!Jac pown-tncludlna power
vent wtndowl and of coune, factory air con-m-
SALi $4666 PllCI
'65 BUICK
'nle luxurious Electra 225 Culltom { door
hardtop with all the power aC«Saorlet in-
cludin& power st.eerlna. power brakes, power
windowl, power seat, factory air condltlon-
tn1. Alpine white with black landau roof
and b&rmonizin1 lntttior.
WI $1888 ralCI
'65 CADILLAC
Sedan de Ville. CMflllac'a ftnelt and fUU)I'
power equipped for hDNey drlrinJ. Of eoune.
thill includes factory alr eondlt1onln&:, power
wind.owl!, 6 way power 1e1.t, tilt 1tffrina
wheel, and finiabed ln 1leamtnr Turquollle
witb harmonizinc leather and cloth interior.
. SALi $2555 nlCI ,
'65 PONTIAC
Grand Prix. Automatic transmtulon. power
1teerlna. power brakes, radio and heater, buc-
ket •ta, cents CODIOJ.e. tacbometer, white
aide wall ttru.
WI $1444 PllCI
•
'· '
•
·.
166 CADILLAC
CouJ: lie VW.. Solld..J::.n ftnlah with "'"" lea r and l\Ykm ln . Full Cadillac power
eqlupment pl111 factory air conditioninc, tot.
1tttrln& wheel. power door lockl, 6 way Ifft
and man)' other of the extra ottered by Cadll1ac
WI $3888 rate., ·
. I '66 MERCURY ;', ~c:~ ... k~ ... ., .... ool> ~ _ .....
1<1ry air and powor. Ir. melt. Bff.utttul Ivanhot ll'f6D With full · e Ieatb-
er interior. Hert'I quallf1' at a•bla uvinpl CSVY!l31) •
SALE PRICED
• 166 'CADILLAC . , . eou,c •'Vine. loll:IJ[-llnilh wltb ...... lea r and nylon tn or. Full C:.dlll•c pow ..
er c.:=t· ~ fac:torJ alr 1oow'W~· tll wbeel,. power door loUI.., e. ..., -• and: otbei ot Ibo --i,-Dm"~ $3ia8 ~ :··
• . ..
•
L •
•
· '64 CHEVROLET
Otftlle Mallltll Super SporL A beautiful ~ black exterior with black bucket .teal
tbtertor. 4 t1peed tranamlt1slon. . poeltractti:t ~ tuel ~tlon. f::ker windows, w ~· ·-~ "ibeti,'. k, wide oval tlres, ~o &nil. ~ You wan't want to mill ~ ontJ. • ',.~I ;
fALI PRISER
'67 CADILLAC
El Dorado. CUhmere l~ ""Ith · 1111,~ cloth and leathrr interior it _padded root.
All of the Ca4lllae powtt ~with atereo rad.1~ factory air conditi ~ ud V~premlu.m tires. Thli Is .~fine~ at low ptiee, . . ·
sAU · f ~999 f~', .
'" .'67 Ot:OSMOBiLE .·:.:
Olatom Delta 4 Door ~ ~ tdr conditioned with power atee ~and--Ponr ~ .aueom..Uo .tralllnllalkia. ~ am
-· whlw dde ....n -·-IUW>!-... tiful. SatlD 11iver utertor ..wt-barmonlzl.D& ·ID-.
SALi .$2888 l!lic* ' . • . .•
-:. ..
OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SEL~CT FROM
All New 1969 Cadillacs Available
ALSO
For · Delive~Y:.,
' ;
Large Selection of, '68's at Tremen49.µ~ .·Saving~.
LEASE · DIR .ECT
e brp. hleetion • Choice Of Colors • Models .. &. Eqwpment • Fast Delivery • FaiJt Service
-------SALES 'DEPARTMENT OPEN-------·
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY~ 9:00 AM to .. 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
YOUR FAG:'I'ORY AUTHORIZED CADilJ.AC DEALER SERVING THE ·oRANGE. COAST HARBOR AREA
.NAB ·ERS •
2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540.9100
S& THE AU NEW
'69 OLDSMOBILE
TODAY!
111 014smobiles
At Final Year Eid
DISCOUNTS!
La,..st Stock In
Oran .. County
ly Factory Count
Over 20 Executive
ucl Demo Cars at
hen Greater
SAVINGS •••
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2IOO HARIOR ILVD.
COSTA MIS.A 546·5550
"
1161 .MllCUIY
I INCl.UOIN6 THAT HARD TO FIND MONTKO CYCLONE -
TIU DAYTONA CHAMP!
FINAL YEAR-END CLOSE OUT PRICES. SUISTANTIAL SAVINGS
DON'T WAIT TOO LON&. THE ·o·s AU NEARLY HERE.
2 YEAR -u,ooo Mlle
AND
511AR
WUl!IAN'JIY
Mtm'.>RS
TOYOTA
Pb. -.WO
lm!llnohBm!.,W-
' 4 SPHD
SPICIAUS1S
HIGH PERFORMANCE
, ClnTOM CARS
LARG&n SEIJOCTION IN
ORANGE COUNTY
Selected Auto
Center
RAMBUR
'G RAMBLER ClaKic, xlnt
cmd. Rftnlllt erwDie • new
paint. Must t1ell. Ask $4.29.
"'"""' '59 RAMBLER, runs xlnt.,
low mile.: clean; $300 or
trade. 646-1212
T·BIRD ·
'60 T·BIRD
HARDTOP
:0.lnt cood., rh, dlr, pny !l;te@T-
inf. Just bei!n r>aioted -God.
de• gold, plush "'hltf inler-
ior, bucket !ICAts, t\11\s per-
fect! Must Re to apprec.
YOUNG Salesman wtth CODI• Take older car or flS <»lb.
,.... ..., ,...idecl Illa ·'11 Tal<e low..,.....,,.., alter ID, GT0389··--..._ .. _ trua., Bil A Ben AM/J'M 1157 OUS1c T-Bird -·----..-.-->Qot oontl.. ----....... .... "" - - -----· ...... °"'" -~ Ill 'Nie OYW *-lJJ.O. ew& 546«29
...,_ ....... '86 T.aDU> Ulcvm:ible MW
'61 '9nffH til'ft, reuint lea~ ~
lhnn.vlUe terior, atmio tape, all the
HT, bu ~ .. , YOU mru. $2400. OJ 49J...ll29
nante It! Must lll!ll now. VU')' I '57 T-BIRD Bl • A kJw mn.. wm tMt older • IM'. uto.
·-Clll Tod, -JJ, -.... Stoc~ ral>lt --~---"'1-. ._.., .. I_,,_ * 6G-KU *
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•
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'69 RIVIERA I '69 ELECTRA
-I , . I
.· . .16. 1.e·_sAB~E '. . .. '6'9 WILDCAT '69 S~RK . . '69 SPEC.IAL ~ j
... -.-... ·-· •... ,.~.----•:•. -· ------····----------...-.~ .. I . :: .''"·' , ·~·
-WI.en you -c.IJle to set · -~~
• ' . '
i ... ' •
" .• -. ' ' • ... ... l
'
~ J ' 4 , .. 1 • • • ' ' • -"' • --..
. . .,, . . ., .. -
,. . ..
''ff ~·· .,,_ y L . II ... ·; ... ·. ·.' ·"~:r;,'"'-· .1 ~our ,p~91Ja9e
' . " . ' -. -" .. · . ' . . . -. , i : . ~. . . . ~ -, .... . .
Mik•:.tt\cC~nhy ···l ····~-1 ... :';\ ··~ -. ~ -. '. ---. .,.. - . --.J .. ~ '. ·--
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. .
• • -,_,,· • ,,; t;. -
• ~ ~ T • ' •
'• • ~ ti• ,. . ' ' •'. '1 \ -\. ~ • J '. ' > < '' ' • I
If ,ou live ip ~J·~ ~~llfJ . .It wlll . ~ ~-••!~~rJ· ~r!w• ~·'-' Int~ !u~.!aclll~
pay you ;·10 1rli."10 ,.lltlli Jtcarthy ~· '·w\~r• ,;pakttlt9 lplc• ··tor"'ifti;it' fflan ... ~ . -, .,.,. . ' . . .·
luick ••• wMN 31. mafttl:H1!' 1969 1.00 customers ..Walts · your convtn• . . . .
luid<s are on dlsploy Jn :Ind around .ltnce~ hllow: the..tlght•· ••• a"d wel·
...., .illowroom. Alt· .O.._el~ and color ~~;to· ~lkj Ma~hy-pule~! . . .
co .... Mtions are avallilM: tor fist , ~· --.:.·1-1, .. t'Jf. -· · ' · : ,.~~
I I . " . ·::
-,, ,... '•{ .....
I
.. \'''"'-
• -'...... •• • \I I '-... "( . ·-
. . . ...
• . .
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"1us1c & . (J
..
'·· Refreshments ~
· for the Family!
. . lllVJCI DIPT. lf9UU .:. ·,-;,. ........... ,....
T-11111 •M, 11MI •·"'· 'ttl ttlO , .....
lllPAIU ON ANT MAICI·~ MOoti. CUSTOM IODT IMOP ·
•• .:.J _ ---...... •
' J
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I
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...... """'"'' ...... 10 "'"" • ..,...,., .... l•n•st 'tll '6 p.m. ,
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F...,, s .. t.mw Z7, 1961
1969 POll11AC GRAND. PRIX-
OUR lft.JIMA lf BREAK AWAY CAR.
7 2 ?1 ¢ 2 M'ds ' -
':...\
SAY GOODBYE. TO HUMDRtl4 DRIVING
WITH A 1~&9 mAc. ....... ··, ' .. . "'~,. ', PONTIAC -
T H IS .Y e<A. R ' S BREAK
AWAY CAR WILL MAKE
YOU FORGET ABOUT HUM-
DRUM DRIVING. THE 1969
PONTIACS OFFER GREAT PER-
FORMANCE, e 0 M F 0 RT AND
SAFETY, B EAU TY AND LUXURY,
AND JUST ABOUT ANYTHING ELSE
YOU'D WANT IN YOUR NEXT CAR. SO
DON'T BE STUCK WITH THE HUMDRUMS.
SEE YOUR PONTIAC MAN FOR A BREAK
AWAY DEAL ON PONTIAC-THE BREAKAWl\l'CAROFTHEYEAR.
THIS ISN'T JUST A S.HOWING.1 ••.
WE ARE SELLING ANP DELIVERING TODAY I
... WITH THE BEST PRICES AND TERMS 'lljf T WE CAN POSS~L Y OFFER.
WITH AN EXCITING SELECTION 0 F BRAND NEW I 969s EAGER TO
GO! BREAK AWAY TODAY AT ROY CARVER PONTIAC!
JOIN TII GREAT POlffiAC BRUK
AWAY AT ROY CARVER'S I
AND YOU'LL EXPERIENCE
A KIND OF DRIVING THAT
YOU THOUGHT WAS FOR
VIP'S ONLY.THAT'S THE FEEL-
ING YOU GET BEHIND THE ·
'69 PONT I AC BREAK AWAY
CARS. WIDE -TRACK RIDE ••.
POWERFUL PERFORMANCE ••.
COMFORT AND SAFETY. THEY
ALL HA VE IT. FROM GRAND PRIX
TO CUSTOM S. YOU NAME IT. AND
WE'LL DEAL ON IT •
•
,\ ..
,...
, ,
'69 FIRBIRD-
THE BREAK AWAY SPORT$ CAR
'
, 's L-' 0 M • 0: • e .... _,,...,,,... ... _,_._. .... h •' ·t·e .... .!,-9'1.A.• ... .="-..-•--
•
' t •
I
I
-.. • ... --.. -........ -·-----. ...,....,....,.,.-·~-~=,...,. .... ., ... ...,_..,, ..... ,..:..wc,.·>>"'-"'°""'*"'wo.,w .. p.-.-,...•""*'*"'*""'* ..... W,...."'""**'"*.,..* ... w.-. .. .-w'W"'WW'4W ... WP'IW""'W"""*'"* ... 4FWC .. f4?fl•U-Ql'<ljlll"'C_M .. U_4 ... W ... 41"WU"4-4*441"CZ'"M ... s:;"";o'*'"' 411"fi4*1 4 ..... W ... +,~ • • ,. '.,., ... ~ ... ·~ ... , -,_ •• , -• • .... ... • • • • .. • .. • • .• • ........ -y-..-•• , ' ....... ··-·· ... , . .,, ,..,. • .,
!IAll.Y , .... ,
1969 VALIANT
Fully f•efery eq11ipptd. Httfer, t1tc:. wiptn, ll<ghftr, •111•r·
9111c:y f11ll1ttt, front I rttr 1••t btlti, 1ho11ldtr htrfttln,
peddtd dt1h. No. Vl2119EI06l77
VI •111lnt, 4 1pttd tr11111,Uulo11., h.Mltr, t l•c:tric wip1r1, ,
llth+tr, lin1tr9111ey fle1h1rs. lrent I r•tr 11tl belh. 1ho11ldtr
her11e11, ptdcltd tl1U., No.)li-it21Htlil011&9
$ 5195 Down
550 Mo.
$
,,., Ta • :.:.. Immediate Delivery
All 11H cor ,_.. .......... MtH •• JI J110lltlll l1d1de ta & lie. •
fl....a a..-.. .,,, ... credit " Clrtll• CN4h' c.,,.
'66 FORD 4 DOOR
1"11llY 1!11111pped llKllllllnt -•l•rlne lo ,...ny ~1. l k. M1. UDA 311
'877 ';, ... ~ '29 E. s29 E
h 11.UI IOOI PllCI $1 ltl
'65 DODGE DART
Al.rtomltk. redlo. lte.,..-. lie. No. NllC a
'977 = 133 1:. 133·= + T1i I lie. """' ,..,.,, ILUI 1001 PllCI 11211
'67 MUSTANG
J'U ll'I' .. u'-d. Du1111M(l'lf IUtornoblll. Lie. No. V!J 7IO
'1677-::::! s57 1:'. '57 ~~ + Tmc a L.k. l'ywit. PJW,
ILUI IOOI PllCI 12060 .
'68. DODGE DART G.T. /
s1H~7s~ Mmr,. ~¥67:=.llc.$6 7'=
1969 FURY 2 DOOR •
F11lty f•~f•ty •q11ipp.d. H11t•r, •IMfrll
wl,.rs. li1hter, •nwrg•ncy f111h•tt, froJ1t-
r•1r •••t Delh, 1h111ld•r MrJ11u., petltled
dool.
"
•2217:
. t 1'111.f/l'ew: I. Lie.•
$195 Dn.
n59 Dn.
Order Yours Now
48 MONTHS BANK
FINA·NCING +Tu& Ut. Py.t, .J:t-· ... -----·ll./,(····=··0···'U·Cl-1J·•·"··-··---··· ,. AVAILA~ -~'AU. MIW 196' CHIYSl.llS AND PLYM· £ Ji -I Oil1'IS fN ST~ ON.•APl'llOVID "'"II CllDIT AT COM· '64 DODGE DART GT • . M~~·MTJOIW-u11a IN WIS~lflStll.
$6""'7'7·"'"".;.~ .. ., ~ lndlld$"' bllcklf _.._ ~-2~0·;"1;... ' ..... -. ., .......
+Tu& Lk. \. ..,..; ' Pr••
ILUI ~I I Sl'JI~ "'!
;a;c
IDollr. J'1111y "lllOplilll · Mllnt r•dl• Ind ht1ttr. lie. NI. IYC llS"I
'877 = '29 1'.'!'. f29 ~-:'., • + Tiii & Uc. ,.,,..., ,,.,
( ~ lLUI IOOI H:ICI 11111
. ''4 PO;NllAO GRAND · PRIX
t o.r-IMrdloo. F1ctorr 1lr, "°""' ~1'19, 'reille, lt•ttr, 1\ltOITllUe. lie. N-. IOI 1111
1677 "T.;;,i' : .• , ,,_.1 2"': ·T""' • s23 '''"'
OPEN
7 DAYS
l'rke ' .~ '· • • . ' ' ~ .... ~ ....., + TQ & I&,. ·:-Pym. ,.,..,,
ILUl-IOOl(.ftfCI $1711 ' ·
ONLY '-
MINUTES
AWAY
'Tll 11 P.M.
from where, you t.va
-e•sy to ruch from
1ny •r¥ hi Orange
County.
I
'
•
--_ _. _____ _
I 'ALL :: WHITE
~ SEAL .
u ilSED 'CARSHAYE
'. YOUR 6UARAN1H ~ oit . ~-"' USID CAI . WITH A
n GOLD SEAL 11
It ON ANY USED CAR WITH A I:
I 00 % UnconcUt loftal Guaran-
tes -Th l 1 Star St1t11 in
,1 Writino that Wfiitt Chr(sler-
' ·-h " P11rnouth· 9uaranto11 t t" cer " THE FOLLQWING
• h ;. ~. ', I. I 100% Against t.ilechanical d 11 FlftlSl.lr ........ Tltoa I f•ch for 100 d•y> or 4,000
'Ir .... Nfw ""9rJ Mllto WMch E,,.r ComH Finl ~
•All 4 lrabt Hav-e-leen After Purch•.••· Thl1 lnClud11
n RellnM With Bonded Lfnlnt " All Mechanical Parts El•ctri-" , r :: •w• Do the'Abow for cal Equipm9"f, I at t • r y, ' .II 2 Reasons II Spatdomef•r, Radio, H'aatar ::
'' I. Te ........... ....., fM ~ on All Can. "This Guarantaa
.t _. UlltlMlf'I ....... ~-11 I. T•· _. .,. _ _. ,.. ._, Covar• All Parts and Labor
II w4 ... .,.. .. ,.. Ftaa To You!
•
5195 Down ~69 Mo.
,,., Ta • .... lm,"edlat• DeRvery
'. . '
All ffM eir ...,_..,_ -...... HJ' ....... IHI ... ta & lk. &
~ .................. .,,, ...... afflt. lty arya. CNtllt c.r..
'64 FO~D COUNTlY S9UIRE
'''"'"'.....,,, ~ 1t•r• ~ rldlo 11'111 llMtw. lie. Mo. U'NW 124
$ 6 77 ~'= '23 1-:! '23 :;::', _ _ + T11 I UC. llylllf, Py.t.
·f ILUI 1001 Ill I Cl $1110
'66 MERCURY CAPRI
c-. t llo9r' ~. fldwy •Ir conlllttenlne, ,_, 11'Hrlne, •""""tic. rlllllo, hfflw,
lie. IM. Wl!U77f
'11,1 ;...uc. '40 E '40 e
ILUI IOOI PllCI 12140
'68 DODGE DART G.T.
"I tlDor hlrlltO!t. llllflo. tiM•, l \ltOIMllc, lk. He. VU WI
'1877 ;:.~ 163 E '63 S
ILUI 1001 PllCI 12701
'65 DODGE POLARA WAGON
L111dtd wff!I ""'""*"· Lie. No. TJN Ill. '1477-::::! 1501~ '50 ::,:i, + Tix I Uc. Pymf. Pyt-.
ILUI 1001 PllCI t1140
·. '64 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR
lledlo, lloMtw, wll!Ntk. Jl(IWlr 1t11Btlllfo lie. Ne. JIN 1'f
s477 ~:; ..• uc.
516 E $116 g;
IWI IOOI PllCI 11111
'65 CHEV. IMPALA HDTP.
4 0-. fl1dllrY elr, r1dio, fie•!•" IJVla.,,..... ....................... "1 V-t. llc. Ne. HIN Jll
'1077-::::! 1361::'. '36::,; + Tl~ & Uc. l'yllt. ,.,.,
ILUI IOOI Pl:ICI 11711
'68 PLYMOUYH FURY Ill
2 Si67f i~ pOMr ••rlr& 'J9(;~=·59() "'Li,,.
+ Tit & UC. P'yMt. PyMt,
ILUI 1001 PllCI SJJ21
'67 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR
J'KfON t lr, rH'ler. Meter, llltll'Ntk. '°""' rtltt'IM. DM't 11'1111 .... -· lk:. "'9. TVC 1"I
'1477 = '49 = '49 = + t11. u.. ,,... ,,..
ILUI IOOI Pll I n II
:63 FORD COUN1RY SEDAN
'"-..... IN. 1\llolNfk trllltmlttlell. rtdle IM l'lletw. lie. HI. IDK In
'577 = '191~':'. '19 = + Tiil-& UJ. ,,,.. ,,.,
ILUI 1001 Pitel $961
'65 PLYMOUTH FURY II
llttloll •-· Air C9fldltlonl111, __. ......... IVflll'Mtk. f91119, ...... Lk. Mt. ltYJ .nt
'1377 = '46 = '46 ~-.; +Tu: a Uc. ..... ,,..,
IWI IOOI PllCI II•
' \
\ I
I
. I
,
l 0
FORD SOPER
Center·
ECONOMY CAR
CEH11R
Authorited E;;TI;h Ford S1l11·
Service. On1 of So. C•lif.'1 l1r911t
model "C" inv1ntori11.
HIGH PERFORMANCE
CAR CENTER
Or1n91 County'• on.ly 1uthoriz1d
S1l11°S1rvic1 for Sh1lby-Am1ric1n
Cobras. All models r11dy for im·
m1di1t1 delivery.
FORD lRUCK
CENTER
F-100 pickups to h11vy duty reedy
for imm1di1t1 d~iv1ry. Extr1
h11vy duty to order. Complete
1uthoriz:1d service end JM!riS.
CAMPER • MOTOR HOME
CENTER
Truclc°C1mp1r units, campers for
your truck. Self cont•ined motor
hom11. Sales, service ind r1nt1I
by day, week or month,
FLEET CENTER
Fleet experts speCi-'li:r:e in lerge
or small pessenger and truck> fl~et •·
seles and service.
FORD DIAGNOSTIC
CENTER
So. Celif.'s first. Wetch on your
own diel1 as your car li!•ts over 130
vital tests et enchored speeds up
to 70 M.P.H. Written report in-
cluded in full price of only $9.95.
Service Center
74 ultra -moClern beyt. manned by
facto1 trained techniciens. Com-
,..., ody '"d peint ~ops.• Alt•
port type d'i!Patch .tow.tr _9lv1s_ y~~ _
faster, better service. Finance
• c-~ plans to 5Jllit your budfet. ·
ford Parts
Center
10,000 square laet v.;ith over $100,-\
000 inventory of genuine Ford
p.rts.
Goodyear Tire
Cen!lr
Complete sales and service. New
and gueranteed retre1d1 for all
cars end trucks.
lease· Rental
Center
M•mh•r Fora national leis• plen.
All f,opular m1ka1. Ford daily
r•nta 1 at Robin's 11vin91.
Finance -Insurance
Cenlen
Tr1ined cou'-ns•,.or1 •lw•y1 reedy
to help you with fin1ncing you
want. Full cover•ge insur1nce c•n
he included in your c•r payments.
"Trolley" Tour
Ride one of our 91ectric "trolleyi"
for enjoyable 1hoppin9 through
over 5 acres of n1w and used cars!
Courtesy Bus
Service
Our modem buses li\:1 you to •nd
from home, work, or shoppin9
while your cer ii b•ing 1erviced.
-'1 , ··1 ··e·'•'
. ---..--------· --..
' r \. • • I.
Almost 60 Different 'l\lodels on"DDpl~y
See · Test Drive Ford for .?69! · · .. ~
PREMIER · CELEB II !
1 ALL . THIS .WEEK
WIN! A. NEW FORD!. FRl.-SAT.-5 ·
OR HAWAIIAN HOLIDAY FLING FOR TWO
REGISTER. FREE IN OUR BIG
''Going Thing Fling''
UNITED · AIRLINES HOSTESSES
\
H~!E IQ . G_~EET _YO.U! .. . -·. . ~ ., . . {
'· '•"'-," ·~ '• ·I.·,
' ·~j ...... ·~ ~' -~·. !. ...
•
A fl~IZE FOR EVERYONE -REFRESHMENTS -
STUFF FOR THE KIDS -FUN AND
• -.. '·, -";! .. ' ' • '' ' '
-EXCITEMlNT FOR "f.HF ,WHOLE ·ff4W'¥
SEPT. 27 • 28 • 29
GOOD BUY 16Ws-!·
' ' LAST CALL l=OR FINA~~ ;.. , \, ,:
DISCOU~TS·:~ ,-~ ~L~··\1''
On All R11P1ainl11CJ "!~!' .' .1 J\ .
NEW, DEMONSTRATORJ1 --· anit
EXE · Utl.~E. CARSi. ~,.~,
--.. . ~--· -·-
;~ ~~~.!;~~~~P.. '" ,;_.s495
ar fr•d1 $2J p1r mo., 24 mont"'· :~~ :.~~!Y,J~~"" "' •··· .~495 tr1d1 $2) pl• mo., 24 monll11,
Transportation Specials
Now averaging 15 cars per week end now
can he r1t1il1d et wholesale to the public.
Beat the dealers on these older cars.
SAVE!!
:~? •~~.~~~~;o, >HIM, ITRJ514~1295
201. down or tr1d1 $)' p1r mo., ]6 1no.
;~~ .~.~~ .. ~!~~~"·· '"""1$895 20'1. down or tr1d1 $l2 p1r mo., JO month1.
:~.~ .. ~!~~~~~ .~!~;.,.51195·
173) 20% down or tr1d1 $44 ,.r mo., lO
mo11th1.
:~~;,,~h,:~: .. ~!?'!~~ ... !2295
r1lly 1pt. 4 1p11d, !TZWllll 20% dowft
or tr1d• $6] p1r mo., 16 mo11th1.
:'.7c,~~~~~~.?H~v!""' , .. s1.895,
fory w1rr1nty. 20% dow11 or tf1d1 $.!i2 \ • ,
per mo., )6 mo11th1 . 1
:~~ ~~~c; .. M,.~r~u~~r,~1495·
211'1. down or tr1d1 $52 per mo. 30 mo. 1•6 \
~~ .. ~.~~~!~~.~!~~." ,.,s495 \
down• or tr1d1 $21 p•r nu:o., 2.( month1.
:~?.!.:~~-~~~.~~-~TSYs3495 .
I JJ ) 20 % dn. or tr14-. $,l per mo., 16 mo1.
MUSTANG SALE '64 Thunderbird HT $1295 '62 Corvair Monza s395 20 to ~ho··· tr-....... a. .. , .. cyli .. d., ... 4 •p••di. 1 utom1ti~1. So1J11 with powo1. il1•ring l 1ir con• Fully 1~11ipp1d. l l1di; top. WOEI;!]. 20% luc~•I 111h, 111to., r1clio. h11l1r. 20'1. down ditioninq. 1•65 thrll 1967 mod111, conYtrtibl•i.
dow11 or tr1d1 $56 per mo .. 24 mo, or tr1d1 $11 per mo,, 24 mo11tft1. coupei, ind 2 +2 f•itbic~ .. bi,n,J•:
'64 Rambler WCICJOn $895 '64 Dodge Pic,kup , 1 $895 :~.5 ,,~~~t.~~?.H. ,1, .. ,.~895
660 11ri11. Eq11lpp1d. fUJl974l 20'1. dow11 or v,•,,· •.·,'.',',·,".",',,«',.' 20% own or tr1 • ll 151) 20% dn. 0, tritli $)1 pir mo, )0 mo. tr1d1 $19 p1r mo., 24 moltlh1. n
USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOURS· ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT.
) . 4 ( '
I ' I
p b tr . . . -. . --.. '"" --_..., o :e r *--'----•~ -t
D~ ROBERT ANDREWS,
CME OF 200 PEDO~
TIStS IN THE UNlfED
STATES, ·15 THE sua.
JECT OF_ D 0 R 0 T H Y
p I E RI s MEET THE
PEOPLE FEATURE ON
PAG.E 3 TODA,Y.
THE LYRIC OER,A SEAS-
ON OPENS TONJGHT IN
LAGUNA BEACH WITH
LA BOHEME, THE SEC·
ONO OPERA. ~RRIAGE
OF FIGARO, WILL Bl!
PRODUCED ON OCTO.
BER 11 AND 12. S 0 M E
PICTURES ON PAGE 7
SHOW THE FABULOUS
COSTUMES OF THE SEC·
OND PR6DUCTION.
0 U T 'N' A 8 0 U T E R
CHARTS THE COURSE
TO THE S.S. PRINCESS
LOUISE, D 0 C K E D AT
TERMINAL I S LAN D,
WHERE ONE CAN DINE
A F L 0 A T ON A HAND-
SOME SHIP WHICH USED
TO PLY THE WATERS OF
ALASKA. OTHER FINE
RESTRAURANT FARE
AND ENTERTAINMENT
NEWS ALONG THE OR·
ANGE COAST IS IN THE
C 0 L U M N ALSO. SEE
PAGES I THROUGH 12. THE FIN rt ·s
; ..... .
.
'.LL BE T.H:.E.A:E.
Speeial Events
DANCE -Bl& Brcldlla' Md tile HoldlDC CGmpmJ f1ua tM .._... Gk1rJ will pnMde m-* fw
a dwe tmtpt, Sept. rI bl Campm BaJl at UCI.
•• In1De St., JntBe. ~ at I p.m. Ad-
mildoa .,.,. ltudeN •. 50.
LYBIC OPERA -Tlae Lapna Beach Lyric Opera
A1aodati-pramtl ''La Babeme,. t.y Pucdld
Sept. rI u4 •; lloart'a "Marriage of Plpro''
-Oct. 11 and 12 • tJlle lnble Bowl, 650 LICuna
Canyon Ro9d, Llgma Bach. Tk.Utl pricecl
from atiO-f'1 .eo. oaJlable at the ln1De bas
Clllice .. pballe 4M410t. See ieabn Oil Pee '·
POP CONCERT -Tlae Beach Boys, Sweetwater
and the Gfui Roots entertain OD tbe Melody•
laod Theatre stage Fri., Sept rI at 1:30 p.m.
and Sat, Sept. • at 1 and 10 p.m. ncbtl, tram
S.1.50 to '5.50, Oil sale •t lklodyland and WaJ.
llcb'a Muac Qt) store. PbaDe m-7•.
OPEN-AIR OONCEBT -A pops concert will t.
conducted toaigld, Sept. ZI at 9:15 p.m. in the
Fashion Idand Cent.er Mall. Padfic Cout
Blgbway at MacArthur Blv.l., Newpart Beach. .
The Pops o.cert Cftbeltta 11 under the ~
Uon ol Henri Brudon."!'bere ii no edmiaJ•
charge.
TEEN DANCE -A 4aDCe for higb tchool agecl
Wutmimter teenagert will be held eaela Frl.,
from I p.m. to midnight in tbe Comm11Dity
~1 BufJdins of the CiYic C'Gter, 1140
.Westminster Ave., Watmiuter. A live band
will provide mule: Ad.m.lulon $1.50. •
BENDIT w.tn -Gtnt Mlrimcdo and' ~ Maertce Ciiaiwt JMllet' C.U,..., will dadce
"Adagio for SCrbt.11 .. and ''The P'lfth Day."
~ur~sal~~tt:'··~-~
"Excunioaa Into Jas" in a benefit ballet con-
cert for the Rebabilltation Cent.er In Orage on
Sal, Sept. a la tbt Gardea Gl'ove High School
auditorium, t127l Stanford. Garden Grove. CUr·
tain time 7:30 p.m. '11cbtl, $3 for adults, fl.50
for children. available at the Garden Grove
High School auditorium box office. Phone 538-
833> for further Information.
DIXIELAND AT DISNEYIAND -Turk Murphy's
Jazz Band plus Santa Pecora's New Orleans
All star, Teddy Buckner and his band and Pete
Lofthouse'• Second Story Men with Barbara
Kelly will star in the annual one-night jazz fefo
Uval at Disneyland, 1313 S. Harbor Blvd., Ana.
helm Sat., Sept 1.8 from 8:~ p.m. to 2:~ a.m.
unlimited use of park attractions (e~cept shoot·
galleries) will be available for 1 single ad.mil·
lion Jrioe. Advance tickets, $6, on sale at all
kancbea of tbe Bank of America and Wallichl
Music City store. At the gate, Sept. ?.&, ticket.a
are fl.50. Houn: Open until 6 p.m. tonight, Sept.
71 ; Sat and Sun., t a.m. to 7 p.m., Closed Mon.
and Tues., open Wed. through Fri., 10 a.m. to
S p.m. Phone 53S-445S. See feature, Pages I t 7.
IVRFBOABD CHAMPIONSHIPS -The 11th an-
nual United States Surfboard Championships
will be held near Huntington Beach Pier, off
Paclflc Cout BlthwaJ, oD Sept. 2B and 29.
Events beein at I a.m. both days and eod at
2 p.m. There b no admission charge. See Page
• 3 for more information. ... •tff
.. .,,.... a.I
A ... •
-
10 .
(
..... ' ..
. .. ..
ICE f'OLUES-AD Jee skating rewe, tbe le. J"oJ..,
Ila, will l»e lta&ed attthe Forum, MandietCler
at Prairie. Jqlewood, through Ol:t. .. Perfor.
mances: TuN tbroqgb Fri. • p.m.; Sat. 1. I
and t p.m., a.I Sm. 1:30 and .1;30 p.m.
'l'k:btl, _prtced tnm $!.SO to '5. are aftlWlle bJ mall }ram tbe FONll[l box office ud tlc:bt
agendel. Phone ~113-1) 6'73-13a0.
~ . ' BYPNO'l1ST -Pat Collini, the hip bypnotilt, wlB
entertain on the 'lfelodyland Tbe.atre stage, JO
FreedmD Way, Anaheim on Sept 30 '9gl,n.
Ding at 8:30 p.~. Tickets, from '2.50 to tuo.
available at the llelodylan:t box office or WaJ..
licba Music CU,. store. Phone ~7480.
Coming Up
TRA VELOG -'lbe Newport Barbor Kiwanis Club
presents the first of their aeascm'a tu"1 pic-
tures Oct. 4 1n tbe Orange Cout Collep AD-
ditorium, flOl Fairview Road. Costa 1ilea Da
Midgley will narrat. "Y ellowstooe, Tetanl ..t
Glacler Part." beginning at a p.m. TicWI ...
on aale at the door, $1.50 for adults. 'ISe for
students. Seaaon 11cteta for the sis lecture lel'-
ies, '6 for adu.UI, $.1 for students. PhGDe
M&-2.163 for further Information.
OOUNTRYMUSIC-BonnieGmw,SomiJJam~
and the Southern Gentlemen, ~p Jones,
Don Gibson and Willie Nelsoo comprlM the
cast of a country. music show OD Fri., Oct. 4
at the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Ka-
tella Ave., Ana.belm. Tickets, $-1, $4 and '5, IJ'8
on sale at the Convention Center box office, and
Walllchs Music City store. Phone 63&-5000 for
further Jnformatton.
CHILDREN'S TREATER -The children's wJng of
the Orange County Performing Arts Fo\JDda.
tion presents .. Slnbad" at the Melodyland
TOOatre, 10 Freedman Way. Anaheim on Sal
mornlnC•, Oct. 6, 12. 19 and 26. Curtain time 11
a.m. Tickets, $2 for reserved seats, on sale at
Wallicb'a Music City store and the theater box
office, $1 for unreserved seats at the box of· nee. Pbooe 776-7460.
ANGRl.3 ' BAllCBALL -Callfomia Antell vs the
Qtlcago l'tfltdie Sox, Sept. %1, Sat I p.m., Sep(."\
29 at 1 p.m.'Jn the Anaheim stidtum, .., ~
. • College Bmf., Anaheim. Tackett oa.bable iD Oran&~ ~ at lJnited CaUf. ~ ud WaJ.., "I
-~Mulic City stores. Phone~· ... \•
' • DODGERS -... fte Los Anfe)u Dodlera VI ~ · l ·,
St. Louil ~ Sept 10· at I p.m. Sept at, '
22 at 1 p.ill. a Dodgers' Stadium, l'ISO SUldi.Jlm
Way, Lal A,qe.let. Ticket.a available locally at.
Wallicbl llu1c Cify ~· I ··
QUARl'ER HORSE RACING -Night racing at Lot t ~·
Alan.itOI Race Course, 4961 East Katella, Los .!;
Alamitol, will resume Oct. 1. First post time t
7:4.S p.m. Alone 52'1-2231.
~·BA<JNG -The Western BameS1 Ra0o
1ng As.sodation bolds nine race• ~. Mon.
through Sit. at Hollywood Part, Centur) Blvd.
at ~Ave., Inglew~ First P.t, l p.m.
COVER: Mickie and Fred Fina will be part of.,_. Dixieland at Disneyland. jaza fete tomor·
row Jiighl~ September 28, when • groups do
a 1'ail Gate Ramble through the streets of the
part and then play in designated spots unUl
2:30 a.m. See story and pictures on Pages I
and7.
ORANGE COAST
Page!
Pages
Page 3 ~
Page 4
Page 5
Pa,e I
PaJet •. 7
Pace 7
Pagea 8, 1%
Page I!
. Page 13
Page. IS, 14
mmaaammaa MAGAZINE
September rz, ua
-C..11 ...... 0. .......... ,...... ........,. ....
---ti ... OMLY "LOT 111r t1ll ~ c:..t ~ Cl,. ....,., ... di. u ........ le9dl. c:.,. .... u.... .... .... ........, 9114 ........ Yaley, ~ ............ ~ ... """ ....._, ..... ~ '*"
Pltoae MMS!l
1Ac1 Bel
Ar:idrews' Goal Is Happy Smiles From Children .
It is hard to imagine a dent.tit being a pioneer, but Newport Beach
residem Dr. Robert Andrews il .. He is one of only 200 pedodonthtl, speciti-
ists in children's dentistry, in the United states.
Born in Hawaii while his father wu ttatloned tn the service there,
Dr. Andrews was reared ta La Verne, Califomia where he attended Bonita
High School and Chaffey Junior College. He enrolled in the University of
Southern California dental school and was graduated in 1Mt
After serving two yean in tile Navy, Dr. Andrews opened his office
in Newport Beach to practice g~al denttstry. At that Ume the city had
only three dentist!, Robert Andrews, bis father, and one other.
"I always wamed to be a abildren'a dent.ilt," Dr. Andrews said, .. But
at that time there just weren't enouth people here -really not even enougb
children.''
AB the harbor area grew, Dr. Andrews began to realiie his dream.
After studying pedodootiStry st USC part time for several years, be passed
the American Board of Pedodonticl examinations and became one of 90
SURFING CHAMPIONSHIPS
The tenth annual United StatH lnvlt•tional Surfboard Ch1mplonship1
take place near the Huntington INch Pl•r this weekend. Competttor1
from 111 over the United Stat11 H well •• 1om1 from Mexico, wlll begin
their battle with the wn11 at 6 a.m. on Sat~ay and Sunch1y, S.pt1m1Mr
2J and 29. This yHrl eonttst 11 dedicated to Duke K1han1moku who died
last J1nu1ry.
M11191111e ~D.JILY rlLOT
~, ............ 17. ,,..
,Pedodontisl4 in the United States. In 1957 be limited his practice entirely
tocblldren.
Besides bis own practice Dr. Andrews was the chairman of the undeJ1.o
craduate department of Pedodontic• at USC for six years and when the
unlverlity founded the first graduate department of Pedodontics on the
west coast be betame chairman.
"The growth of knowledge In this f t e 1 d has been so great in the
Jaat six to nine years, the young denUst tod~ must take two years 1pecial·
bed study after he bas been n&Uuated from dental.school in order to quaJ.
fly to take the American BoaM of Pedodontics examinnon," Dr. Andrews
explained. .
Spreading his knowledge outside the borders of the United States in
the past year be lectured at the First International Meeting of Pedodontics
at Cordova, Argentina, and at the Fourth Annual Pedodontics Conference
of Brazil. Each of bis lectures was transhlted into Spanish.
Why do children require a special dentist?
''Our goal is to helP. the child 'accept dentistry the rest of his life,••
Dr. Andrews explained. 'His first impression is the most important. Our
whole procedqre is geared to the management of children."
When a child visits the pedodntist for the flrst time, usu~y when
he is about three years old, be and bis mother meet Dr. Andrews first in
bis office. "The child sizes me up and I size him up, while the mother dis-
cusses what concerns her about the child's teeth," Dr. Andrews comme114
ted. .-.
Then the child goes along with Dr. Andrews to the operatorium
where his teeth are cleaned and x-rayed and fluoride applied. Here Dr.
Andrews discusses any problems, such as thwnbsucking, with the chtld to
determine bis attitude away from his parents. The interview enda with
.mother talk with the parent in wblch Dr. Andrews eV'Bluates the child'•
dental outlook.
Dr. Andrews is past president of the Costa Mesa Kiwanis, a member
of the American Dental Association, American Society of Dentistry for
Chlldren, the American Academy Cil Pedodootists, a Fellow in the Amer ..
lean College of Denti5ts and the International College of Dentists and an
elder of St. Andrews Presbyterian Church.
In his spare time he enjoys swimming and gardening.
Dr. Andrews and his wife, Patricia, have four children : Leslie, 20,
. who attends the University of Missouri; Lucia 16, is in school in Switzer·
land; Malcolm 14, who goes to Newport Harbor High School and Brtan 12,
who ii at Horace Ensign Junior High School.
AJ Dr. Robert Andrews builds his small patients' sense of security
through bis gentle and accepting personality, he also constructs for them a
strong foundation ror lileiong good health.
-Dorothy Pier
AnENTION RESTAURATEURS!
NOW SAVE I 0°/0
WE DON'T NEED SAWMEN •
• • • AND NEITHER DO YOU I
Countlen restaurants esk us to Hnd 1 selesman out to IH them. We can't
do this because we like to pen the I 0 ,-. commiuion on to you in the
form of lower produce prices. AU you do is cell u1, or we'll cell you, and
you'll uiv• the I 0 ,-. that 111 produce companies pay their~ selesmen.
SA YEI SA VII CUP THISI COUPONS
r - - - - - - - - - - -- --1
llYINI CHOWN I LAI•• YALINCIA I ICHOOL IOY I DWCIOUS ORAN GU DRICIOUS I
I Watennelon I , 00 I APPLES I
2 10 LIS. I 10 •100
I c LI. I 41 .... c.t.. SI.It I LIS. I
UMIT J UMIT 1 C•ITON UMIT 10 US.
I WITH THIS COUPON I WRH 1Mll COUPON I WITH THll COUPON ______________ __.
COUPONS IXPIUS OCTOlll I
These fine restaurants demand the flnt1t for their cuttom•m Gayw's a.y.lcle,
Swiss Chalet, L & I Food s.dct, wltll _,...._ II A.._... l•1•Q, C.-.. .
ladlo ..ct lertta. CllMI n• 200 ...... How about you c1llln9 u17
NEWPOR.T 161'
PHO Nit N..,_.
PRODUCE IW.
673-8715 .. ...
Ormte Ceut(• ...... .......... ....... ....... ~
Or'llttl CNtt . .....,
·"
3
~---~----~~--~~------------------------------------.-; ........................... .. .. .,. . ...
Now you can control Pally Rina fungu•
on Dfchondra and Gra11 Lawns • • •
Alio
o;een Mo11, lrew"
Patch, Dollar lpot;
lllnte Mohh end·
other Lawn fungi.··
.
NOW Cltt·l•·C. FUNG·O·ODE
..... tht cOllfnl ef Llw• llt•ts
WY-JUST SPRAY ON
Dll't ... .,. w...
Lqwn Moth Wemis, Cutworm•, lock of wot• end
_..., for 1fd looktftt lawne. Turf diaeosn ore
more common thon you think •• , Eotily controlled
witlt Cho-ICM.CO FUNG.().CJDE
AIM
hr OINAMINTAU •• • Celierels AULIA 111M
eM IUD KIGHT, ldSI
IUIT, IUST on CHIYIAM.
119MUMS, CAllNAnoN
UAf IPOT, IY~ll
IUGHT -4 other
.......... 0 ............
I Plitt cown 4000 to 5000 IQ. A,
In. $2.lt Pt. $3At qt. $5.7t
Remember ftlR·O· VITE 11
THI COMPLm flRTILIZa for
; . ALL LAWNS and PLANTS,
; TH! Son Condlftontr for ALL W .. tern 10111, THI
Pfont Tonic for Side LQwne, Tren olld Ornamental•.
Well nouNMd l9Wftt and Pfonte ore yOVf lest
lneuronce eoalnat diatata.
LAWN CAll-fverythlno from Soll Colt·
ditfonlno and Tur# Nvtrltion to Control of
lnNd P..tt and.Plant Ditto•t1 explalntd
ht detod fn the
•• i •... ...
IClW DITIOll of ''Doc" ~·a
IOITICUlTIUL •• -flll It ,aur 81nleft Suppf1 Dealtr or write
FOR: ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER MAGAZINE
··Piton• 64~-4321
. . . . .. .. ..
~\ ... \. .. ... .. ' . ~ ..... 't' .. . .. ., "·····':""'!"I,
... .
Some
I S'18~~0D8
~
Snap less
One 9"my fooaest Childhood memories is picking a inapctragon blos-
1om and squemng tt IO~ the dregoo's jaws would map~pen and closed.
My gr.andmother never seemed to mind this bec8lJse mapdragcma a r e
prolific bloomen Ind a bloaom or two from a .pt.e wouian•t be mtneil
$napdr..-are~ popular ,ancf the number of varietlel hum.
creesecl considerably since the days grandmother grew them. Snapdragon
plant& are available tn the bedding plant section of the nurseries now an4
are ready for immediate p1anting. Here are some of the newer variet!es fo toot for.
I
lellfower ma~: These are without the map -more'• thtt
pity. 1be petaJt open giving the flower a penstemon-like appearance. Ac-
tually the flowers are tnteresting -and pretty -and mate for an unusual
display. Bright butterltt'81~ a simllar variety. .
Supreme 1napdra&ona: 'lbeae are fully double Fl hybrid snapdragons.
By the flowers bang double it makes the whole appeer folly packed with
flowers. lbey are also exceptionally long lasting when cul
Sontlnel mapdra,ona: Tbese along with Topper mapW&1ons 1 re
the tallest growing vanetiea and will grow over three feet high where th•
average snapdragon will be around two feet tall.
Rocket mapd.ragon.s~ '1bh recent All-America winner is a nry ro-
bust grower and w1Il often reach three feet in height.
Floral carpet mapdragona: 'Ibis is the lowest arowing variety.Th•
1preading pwu grow only about m to eight tnchea high. Tbe)' stay in
bloom over a long period of time and make splendid bedding and edging
plmrtl. Tlley are available fn mlXed colors or in Floral Carpet Rose whlch
el.so won the All-America award.
Super Tetra anapdragom: 'Ibis la an improvement on the famout
regular Tetra mapdragons. 'lbil ltrain ii clWw:teriled by vigo1'. pure
colors and large ·florlets. Super tetras grow about two and on&balf feet tall
with many aide branches.
Plant snapclraoons in lull 1un and apace the standard h'tight varieties
about 10to12 inches apart. Spece the floral carpet varlet.tea about lb inch-
es apart. They need a rich toil and good drainage. For maximum bloom
production feed them once or twice with an all purpose fertilizer.
The wont enemy of ma~ons ii na.st. Most modern varieties are J'Ult res1Jtant but none la ?Ult p Unfortunately rut 11 particularly bed
In 1 cool climate such et oun. 'lJle best preventaUve measure 1' to alter•
nate planting lites and never water over head. · ,
_.......... •I
. . J', I MIW'r-UAYNn ''t ~·" ; w.--1
•
LAGUNA BEACH ART IXHIBIT I
The first Memorial Show for illustrator Ben Kutcher is on exhibit '
through this weekend in the Laguna Beoch Art Association's Lower Gal·
lery. Many of the artist's pen and ink drawings on -display will be occom•
panied by the published book which he illustrated. Kutcher has drawn ·
illustrations for works by William Shakespeare, Thomas More and Oscar.
Wilde. The photograph above shows his sketch for "Venus and Adonis"
by William Shakespeare.
I
His drawings of Hans Christian Andersen's "Fairy Tales" and .
Lang's "Crimson Fairy Book" are among the 75 pieces which should es·
pecially delight the youngsters.
Kutcher was born in Kiev, Russia and came to America with his
p~renh when he was ten. The Smithsonian Institution is presently planning ~
to use his pen and ink illustrations for a USA-USSR cultural exchange .
show. Eventually they will be permanently ploced in the Pennsylvania Aca·
demy of Fine Arts where Kutcher attended four years on a scholarship.
The Memorial Show is presented through the courtesy of Mrs. Ben
Kutcher of Los Angeles and coordinated by Captain Kenneth Witt. '.
Two other shows are currently on display at the Laguna Art As-
sociation Gaflery, 307 Oiff Drive in Laguna. The Annual Membership
Show may be viewed in the Main Gallery and Art from the Black Com·
munity in the Entresol.
l ' '
• , ~ . , . ·-• , <Dallery hours are Monday through Saturday noon to 5 p.m. and
Sunday I to 5 p.m. Admission for non-mem bers is SO ce nts.
~ ..... D._,l.Y I'll.OT
F•*°"• S.Nmlltt' 27, IHI
\
ti· ,. \
I W
D·11·1G11·11' I
.
Cliair Baca
IY J. RUSSELL TUMELSON, ORAN&I COUNTY DES16NER-DECORATOR
,
Whether y o u h 1 v • Tnherlted
antiques or would like to fumi~h 4
new home with repropuctions< you
can leam to identify choil' styles by
their backs.
The splet .,. has o fl~t plece of
wood, vertically cent.red. which con•
nects the back of the ~qt fro~ witf\
#le top of the <:heir bed. The 'splat
varies In design end may be ·shopecf
as a fiddle, an um or hi-~ classtc
motif. A good example of this type
of furniture is the Queen Anne choir.
The shield back was designed by
Hepplewhite. The outside frame is
~hoped Gke o shield with a wide vari•
•ty of ·designs used for the ceater.
~ection. "' t
The pretzel back is o type of lod·
der bock in Chippen·dole design. An
especially beautiful Chippen(lal•
'tt'Ork, the ribbon b4ci, is veer deli•
cately and elaborat.ly carved to r&4
1emble rippljn9 ribbon:s.
' , The bannister b-" is typical of
17th century English and American
styles. A row of vertical spindles,
plain or turned, forms e balustrade
across the bock. Some hove flot slob
9r split turnings. .
· The spindle .back has .upri.gflt, sup-
ports whrc~ usually are thinner dnd
~re groceful >than the bannister
~ack. The spindle bock ts deri\lecf from the Wlndso( ch~ir ,iY(~iph origin ..
eted. neor Windsor C01~e. England,
tn th~ early 18th century .• Variations
lndude the bow boc~, fan back.
braced back end comb back.
NEXT WEEK
. . QUEEN ANNE fVRNrTURE
t , t 1~ \ {• '. ''J 1 11
' I
Please address lnquf~i• anCI que.ttoft. . .,,-....., fos o..l91'M Not•~
Weekender Ma;uine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beech, ~tf.
.....~& .......
. ~' ~ , ,
;DIXIELAN.D AT DISNEYLAND .'JAZZ ..
The aver favorite ''Fir•
houH Five Plus Two,"
above, will be among the
starring groups In the
Ian night scheduled to
atart at 1:30 p.m. Satur·
day, September 21.
Santo Pecora, one of New
OrlHns most f a m o u 1
trombonists since his first
r e c o r d 1 with t h •
"Rhythm Kings" In 1925,
will bring 1 o m • of the
greats of Ian with him,
plus two street dancere,
Pork Chop• encl Kidney
Stew.
Teddy Buckner end hit
INnd wlll be r I g h t et
home et this festival,
having starred with hit
trumpet In the first four
fe1tlval1, again In 1967
end during the peat sum-
mer In the Park.
N I N E G R ~ U P S. T 0 I E ST A R R E D
IN THE ITH ANNUAL fU ,N f!EST
•
Missi111ippi 4 el ta ma&ic, created in music, mood and pageantry,
comes tbta Saturday · (September 28) with the eighth annual "Dixieland et Disneyland."
Nine of today's top Jazz bands will brlng ~sounds of New Orleans to the Part during the one night festival, set from 8:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.
Dlaneyland street. wUl ring wUh the Southland beat aa the celebra-
ted banda move along in the ''Tail Gate Ramble,'' biBJest and most color· fUl in the history ol the annual event.
Boarding torch-lit wagona for the ramble at 8:80 p.m. will be the
top-rated Dukes of Dixieland. Twt Murphy's Jazz Band, Santo Pecora's
New Orleans All Star!, Teddy Buckner and his Band, and Pete LI>fthouse's
Secood story Men.
Alao in the wagon-parade will be the popular Firehouse Five Plus
Two, South Market Street Jazz Band, the Young Men from New Orleans
and the whole gang from the exciting Mickie Finn Show as an added at-
tractlon.
From the end of the procession, climaxed by a shower of fireworks
above Fantaayland, unW. 2:30 a.m., each of these groups will perform in
a dlfferent Disneyland·location.
Featured1 on a Tomorrowland Stage in the three hour-long shows
will be the Pete Lofthouse group, including Barbara Kelly of TV's Hurdy
Gurdy and the Mickey Finn cast. Shows are set for 9 and 11 p.m. and 1 a.m.
Both the Dukes and'the Turk Murphy organization are making their
third appearances in the Dixieland f ete at Disneyland. Returning for a
~econd engagement is the sensM:ional South Market Street Jazz Band , a
San Diego-tesed assemblage of college students, who proved to be one of
the biggest bits in last year's festival.
Teddy Bucli:ner and his ensemble, Firehouse Five Plus Two and the
Young Men from New Orleans all bring a summer full of successes to the
DWefand session this ~· All three contributed significantly to Disney-
land's record-breaking summer entertainment season.
Admission to "Dixieland et Disneyland" includes unlimited use of
all "Magic King4om" adventures (except shooting-galleries) for the price
of the single gate ticket.
Wallich1 Music City, Desmond 's and Southern California branches
ot the Bank of America (with BankAmericards) are handling advance
ticket sales. Price is '6 per person.
In recent years, the jazz gala, consistently one of Disneyland's most
popular events, has b~ a sell-out. If tickets are available at the gate this
year, Uley will sell for $7.50 at the Disney1and ticket office only.
On the day of the event, the park will open at 9 a.m. and close at 7
p.m., reopening in time for the "Tail Gate Ramble" that will introduce
"Dixieland at Disneyland."
j
f •
. ~~~-----------------~-~-=---:---==========-=-=--=-::::===~~~~~~~
. t .... •ii' . ...
:.t ~ " ,,.
"' ""' t 11o1 .. ll u ~·~ .. < ..
.. ·~ j
Turk Murphy, whose exciting b,nd hat
caused a revlvaJ of jazz in San "F'rancisco
during the put few y e a r s, is making his
third -appHJ~e at Dixieland at Aisntyland.
With tum . •Ill bJ vooalist Pat Y•" and
some of tM. Wt•t Coast's .iidemea... Other
groups to delight the audience will Include
"South Market StrHt Jau Band" of San
Diego, • 1urprl,. sensatipn di I a' 1 t year's
fete. Comprised of llOffege .tudent's, t ~ I 1
group has some outst.nding talent In new•
comers to the Dixieland field. The ''Young
Men of New Orleans," whose average age
Is c I o s e to 60, will be playing for dencin9
aboard the pMkllewheel steamboat, "Mlrk
Twain."
MARRIAGE OF
I
1
r
· Out 'N' Abouter isn't venturing into boat.
ing editor Al Lockabey'1 domain, but per-
hape be and his fellow mariners can deviae a ·
way to help Orange Cout retfdenu navigate ·
an unerring rGllte to the S.S. Princess Louise.
a ·.·
I
I
ThiJ fine old r~tired 1 n;cty of the seas is
justifiably famed for the cuisine fined
since she ~oned the wate.rw&~ opened u a floatinf restaurant at
Island two rears ·ago. . ' . '· ' ' , .
' ' . l ' tt la ~tu fain.a for btihf'IO bard ..
to find. Owtlfts Jerry 8btta IDd Len. Udell I
figure they bave served 1,400,000 customers
and calculate tbat another one .pliJUOA lost
th~ way en route.
Just so it can't be aald tbat Out 'N' A-
bouter isn't thorough and detailed in lts din-
ing and drinkin( r~earch. herewith are in-
structions for finding tile S. S. Prine~•
Loulae frorn tb.e Or.anee Coas~ ~
· ' Drive up l'aclftc Coast lllgh~ay toward
Los Angeles f».Ut Sam's Seafood( we will
talk about that another day) until you · get
to Second Street.. That's where the big Edge-
'"'''" FAMILY STEAK HOUSES
1-Juntlngton Beach • Costa Mesa
Make Monday Night ----
Your Family Night!
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
lncllHlta loktd or Fr.11ch Frl•d
Potato.a, Roll I lu#tr.
Clllldren1 Portion Yt PrQ
Mid-Week Special----
Wednesday Nights Only!
NEW YORK
STEAK
f,.cludta •••-' or Fro11c~ Fri~
Potetota, l oll I l ufftr.
Clll..,_.. ll'tr1tlll l\ htc.t
TOWN • COUNTRY
24 ....
SI.It
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH I
tllSl IMdl • .,,.. MW'11
Hlll GltEN SOUAllE
I EHINO TEXACO STATION I. 11111 A 5111ta AM '614tt
D o.....c... ........
I • .
z
l
\
.)
p,·u1 ~N' .A.B .O~l: c
I
I ' . ~ ...................................... .
nJel' Io. (aee another tutu.re col&QU) ts. , ~ left. Becond Stniet ultimatel,y l.U tnta :l
Ocea Boulevatd, tone Betlch'• ~tnon 1
thOl'Olllbfare. F'ollow Ocean BOulevanl H.Jt
tile Arena and onr Ole Short b,w~ c~
the. JAs Angele;' Rtwr. ~ ~ ~11--~1
,ver -~ Del' Midge that . replaced the ~· :
toon bridge. · · n
Ocean Boulevard is now Seuide Boule-
vard. Stay on Seaside Boolevard uatil you
reach Ferry street. Ahead ot you will be the
giant Vtnceni 'lbomu Bridge. Don't 1et on
the V~t Tbo!DllS Bridge. Turn OD -Per,y
Street Brit. Drive on Ferry Street, toward
the Ocean, until you get to Terminal Way.
Turn rtght on Terminal Way. When lt stops,
you lhould too. You have arrived at the S.S.
Prinoesa Louise.
• VoU' HAVE AIUUVED ~' '.
Having arrived, you may wish to dp IOIP.. 1 research of )!OW' own on the history of the ·
"Queen of the North Seas." That's what abe -
wu known at from 1921 until her retir~t ..
' I
·; ':l>o1t ~i,.~6 F•mlly R~tavrmt
· "'Wiier• tll• Foo4 It Me.Jcu;-
No l1111totloo ..
'"Ow"-'. ...... a"'"".._._.
...._ ... n.n.11 .... 1t P.M. e "1.·le&. lt ..... M*-
19t5 HAuOR BL VD., C.M. 541-9927.
Howdy end Art Present
THE NEW LOOK
JOSEF'S
• Quiet ••. Private Dining Area
• New Cocktail and Dance Area
• Private Banquet and Party Room
Drop 111 $0011 ••• We t!Mttlr you'n lilce ttle "Now L .. lr ..
• Luncheon • Dinner • Litt Supper
2121 L COAST HIGHWAY
At The J1m1ci1 Inn
CORONA DB. MAI
ENJOY DINING AT
671-1180
SCHROEDERj'S
STEAK HOUSE
Formerly the Chef s Inn FIATUllNG: STEAK e CHICKEN e LOBSTER
AND BAR-8-Q'O RIBS
HOUSE SPECIALTY: 15 OZ. T..aC>NI STIAI
NOW PUTIN•
MARK DAVIDSON TRIO
WIDNISIAY THIU SUlllAY
0,.. hit lxeept T••u I '• I• •11 4 p.a. SJtl I.AST COAST Hl6"WAT -COIONA 111 MAI
.. 111 ...... ,..., .... 175-0471
• w pu.d · the 1RIV• taetweea Vancower.
B.-C. m4 St.apay on the Padfic--Nol'th-
west's Inside Pas1ace.
If history is· secondary te yem dining
curio.lity, )'OU wtU be afferecl a mall Just a
shade on the · expen~ive 1ide but not but of •
the world .. To get a fix, abelone steak ii 4'.-9.\
veal Osbr -'5.tl, ~e rlb $5.95 and English
sole Princeu Louise '4-75. · •
'.
The S. S. Prln~s Louise mates a spe-
cialty of parties and. caters up to 1000 at a
seating -that's right, 1,0001 The kitchen's
under the watchful eye of Chef Paul Peron,
backed up by Sou1 Chef Leo Roy. Juggling
people up and down the various decks and in
and out of the various dining rooms are Mike
qi~-~~
NOW
APPEARING
HERB & JOE TRIO
-..--..u.t.I ....... 1:41 ......., ......
e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING
FOR RESERVATIONS: 536-1421
21112 OcMn Avenue Huntfnato" IMc~ C1Uf.
'4M111
F .... rlllf CUT CMlllTOPHll ,......,.....,__ ..........
l ~
Or9te Cutt
HHd ... mt .. hrAI
Olympic loxlllg 11detsl
tLLIAllD aOOM-UDID WR.COMl-
BILL MARTINI
COCDAIL LOUNM
Ut L 1M COSTA MDA
NOW OPEN
HEAYE·HO!
To An Exciting Adwntu,.
AT THE •• •
Pirates
Inn
BLACK ANGUS STEAK
CHARMING ATMOSPHERE • SEA FOOD
HOURS:
6 P.M. nLL •••
675-2051
FREE CARAFE
of .......... Wllll dlMer I
---------------1. Morrell 8ll4 Dick Fu, boat ti wbelD q..w,
as saUon now that they can alll thi-·1Nlll ot·
the dlninl rooms hulkhe&U.
Now tbat yw bow 11le eeeret -Ian
to get time -bie a iuod nftcHJ-. U ,.a .aee ·
puzzled folks . meanamnr atmt•dr moomt
Teminal bland lift crew ~ of the
loat .F\yinl Dutchman, help them~ filld the.
Princess Louise via Out 'N' Alaoutarl' bandy
street guide.
We could tell ·you bow to get there via
the Harbor Freeway but thSt would take two
_. a half more columns of type.
We Get Letters
-~
l : .. '.
• ~· f
· Reader Lucy Bernand offers-kind *°1'ds 1
about thi5 column and Weekender restaurant ·
adftrtisementa, then says a lot of people are
'1e1a1~~ ~· FRENCH '
RESTAURANT
r Twe L111..... • • •
COSTA MESA c.....e1.....,. .....
540 -3641
OIWLM.--....... IHdi
0,.. I P.M.•11 P.M. Cl.OSe MONDAY
~i~-.-
IN1BTAINNINT • 1 NMHfTS A Wiii
DANG NG
WED THflU SUN. * HAP HALL DUO .. '* ..........
RHr-Mesl Thelter .:J1:. Coif• .._
.. lttta St. Just off N,.,.,t aMI. ~, .. ..;,.._. ...... ,...,..._. ............. -
OMAR'S RESTAURANT
SAN CLEMENTE'S FAVORITE SPOT
I PRES~~~N TERRY
....._ ltCllll DHllY "''°'
...... 'J~f1.141Q
•t Tiie Keyl>oaNI
ffl..Stt.-S.11.-T•"· l :JO.I 1JO
~HN COOK
P•p•lar 5-ltarlat ·
.;:, TUISDAY I W£DNUIAY
JJJI S. If C.MIH Rul
S.tt c ........
Reser.atiOM 492-1172
Real
ClllHesehM .......... ,
.. home.
Sil&
OlllWIO
... . ~··.· . " . ~ '
'·
~·Mr•. Hernand lB right. Out 'N' Abouter
bas sampled Don Roberto•s '°uth-of-the bor-
der menu and find.a it indeed of high quality.
One t1nal b1nt from the intrepid Mri. He~
nand: "Don't drive by going more than ten
miles per hour -~'re lhtble to miss it complet~ly. It'will be yo'ur'loss."
Ladies ,Day
•• Baitendera hat\ their day in Newport
Beach when . they sampled the cuisine, ele-
CONTINENT AL CUISINE
COCKTAILS • LUNCHEON
D1nclng & Entert1lnment Nltely :=: Gary Ryan Trio~:=!
18582 Be1m Blvd. 1t EUia
lfl Tiie NftW T~ t. tol/nr1Y ~ Qn11r
Huftflf1910ft 9Nd1 .. ,..... __..... ..... I
VILLA ROMA
SpecWlll.. .. ITALIAN DINNDS
U Varieties Sea Food
Lobster ~ Scampi
NY St6at PiZzailoa
14 Varietiea Pina P•Cl.\~TMCI etn' Oll\.YI
SPA&JilTfl D(NNERS 35 Varieties Pasta
· "'"' tvr w11c-. ,_, -111u1 • Prawns Scampi Ciopplno t _. 111111. H rllc INCt ... tw
" .,, "'"' ""' ~ .,._ 12 Varieties Veal 0--. ............ -·., i.,....
(411'1* "' d~ (10fl1al1111", no Scaloppine dlllln .. •Ill. $1.45 8 Varieties Chicken
iMS No. Newport Blvd., Newport lo.ch
Opon 4 p.m. 12 p.m. Ml 6-4929 CLOSED TUESDAY
I I
I
DON JOSE
presenh
,.. Fabulous
MARIO SAID
TllO
Dr II ; Miit
by popular demand
ENCH&DA. & TACO .....••. $1.30
CHIU IELLENO-ENCtlLADA •• $1.45 .......................
I • COCKTAILS • ..
t0H I. MIMI Cit Ml•..U.) Hunt. lwh f62.1f11
C~ent1~r ·· ..
Tb~ ac~ae was 1et up especially for the
California Bartenders Guild when the bever-
a1e eiperts heste4 their annual ladies day i
·luncheon. ~y ~ed ab~p wilh Smith,Y Low .. ·
tber, St1dt 9iilf bar 1D1Dager. and cruised tht ."t
bay.
Question~ what d0et a bartender order
te drink en hi• clay off?
I • ..
.I
On the ~ of beverages, Out 'N' A· , ~tel' was cleeoiy 1n'tolved last week' in the 1 subject at tequila and marprltas and where
they were at tbtf.r finest. Comes now one
~ur c. Getber with some thoughts of his .
own on the subje<.1~ ·
''Carrambaf
''One of . the best margaritas on the
Orange Coast ia to be found at El Toro, owne
ed by former Seal Beech mayor Stan Ander·
son, and located at Warner Avenue and Bolsa
Chica Road ln Huntington Beach, just 1cro11
the line from suns~ ~ch. Mattet of fa~ they have to have several one or two quut
pitchers going at one tUne every Friday and
Saturday night. · '
"stan ts a onetime acrobat who, alonf
ContlnU.d on P•1• 11
':{ ..
.
. ~LIDO· LOUNGE ~
Ti. r~ n.wr i~ w~ ... ~
){ondq ihr~itl Frtdar •"• .11 :ao ~ !:SOP1'
AncJ, fMll g:oo ~ to cloainr-IOft
Jjfht;; roomr ct)1b cbala. ~tails, •· tinnoua :music tor de.dnr: _
Biii McClure Due • , • Paul Mennera Trio
~BISTRO
A touch of Paris-open from '1:00 .A'M.-
Breakfast, Luncheon, Dinner, Snackl•
American Bar •••
EVERY -SUNDAY!
JIUNT )JmarAS't ••••••••tr30 AM·l100 PM
JroEVOS MHCllDOS •., • .. ti30 AM·l100 rM ..
r ~
NEW I 11 ''' N1wpo''''
SUNDAYJNTBB . LIDO LOUNGE
THE HOST TABLE ... 1100 ?M-9100 N
J. JOON't1FrJL IUNDA1 SPREAD
JlOSIO • • • DANCING
~ NEWPOBTER INN 644-1700
,,~ 110'1 JAll80Bll JU)., NEWPORT BB.Im!
'·
' I
....... !
1,'
) ~
4
c
4
•
4
• t
• • l
4
l.
t.
~
I
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t
CHRIST MAs jn MEXICO
16 DAYS I . ~fi-.. From $278' p_:, Person Sh1rin9
PW~ All Fill
ASK M,R· FOSTER
TRA V~L SERVICE
Come In Or Cal & Charge tt .To .....
ROBlllSOl'S . Newport Center 6"-2800
TH' DORYMEN
. FISH 'N CHIPS RESTAURAN"{ .
"NEWPORT SM£" mm TO TAIE HOME
Complete MNls
POil I POil • FCMl I
FISH 'N qtl'S . $2.~. ~.25 .. $4.00., .
CHICQif 'N <HtPS .. u 14.U. : us! . ~
SHRtMIL'N.CHIPS . 4.00 . 5.:00 ~
•. Call In your onlet-Pldc It up on atrlriJ •
1 ,.. ~ twt1fk a.. cw. .. flU wM ... IMtctillt ,....
chiW: ..... Ocl*r.
2100 • OeHn Front ~ • Pjtone 673-noQ
Nt,•fOtt,... 11 A.M..t .. .M. Cl! A:M. frt l W.~
l• \ \c ~
!:,. ~
Three's Company
P.oplt an la7in11
"Su})trb tnt.rtainmtnt •• , •
J'Cred talent blend ••• •
"Belt new rroup in ftUI , •• •
Jenttrtalrunent and Wdq
11l1hi11 (except Suaday) Uom
!line iA the bta11tuul s.fWe Lo~
GRAND HOTEL
WELCO-~ ... ABOARD
The piano artistry and
vocalizing of Denms Zu-
vjch, I • f t , .tbo.rd the
floating restaurant Pri""'
cess Louise,. ·ii iust· one
of the delights of dining no.rc1. The IDYely 1ec1y
celebrated h • r HGond·
birthday at ·her home .at
Terminal Island this .past
WMk end .Zuvich provid-
ed an added flllip to ~ party. He may be hHrd
week nights f r o m 1:30
p.m. and on Friday eod
Saturday nights from · 9
p.m. See Out 'N' About,
P• I, for directions.
"" . "' . . . .... • •
Continued from P•te t
with hia partner, performed before the
crowned beads of Europe, including ~dolf
Hitler, who they ctescribed as a nice guy who
enjoyed their act."
You Pick It
A fast look et some other entertainment
along the fabulous Orange Coast:
Herb & Joe have brought their special
brand of cl01e harmony back to the Sheraton
Beach Inn for an extended run ... Vina Har-
mer Trio still at Bob Bums, Fashion IalandJ
the Dick Powell Trio sitting in on Sunday ..•
Siler Brothers (Rick and Buzz) rocktnf both
softly and hardly in the lounge at the Villa
Marina Tuesday through Sunday • . . down
at Omar's in San Clemente, Julen Te r r y
weaves intricate piano stylings on Friday,
Saturday, SUnday and Tuesday, stepping a-
side on Wednesday and Thursday for vocal
and guitar harmonies offered by John Cook.
They do things a little different in the
Lido Lounge at the Newporter Inn. The Bill
McClure Duo sets a relatively quiet pace
from 5 to 8:30 and after 10:00 p.m. the Paul
Manners' Trio spells out its brand of music.
And in between? In t.hat 90 minutes from
8:30 to 10:00 p.m.? _
MAITRE DE' -2121/l -FRIDAY-Dally Pilot --• ..,.. --·
"II I Were People''
I'd CJO to tM
MAITRE DE'
RESTAUR~NT
719 W. 19th ST •• COSTA MESA
Where Goo4 Timer• Go
Appearing Ni#ltly * BILLY IAllER DUO
ILUH-HONKY TONK-&OOGllE
STANDAJlDl-DANCING
COCKTAILS
.
lltwr -4t·
11r1'4 .. ,,. ~
Gn-4Mwl•
•
...................... "......,
,.,....y, .. ......, "· , ..
Why, they join forces, thas's what. A
• duo and a trio mate a quintet and there 11
excitement galore.
A Seeond Place
What'• this! Anodler resaturant in New·
port Beach?
Yes, indeed.
Distinguished restaurateur Pierino Ben·
igni ( .. Pietro" to his friend•) announces his
plans for a colorful n.ew re1Ja\U'8Jlt bearing
bis name in Newport Bea~. His new acquisi-tion unw..tro•s,. is located at 2500 Pacific ' .-,..,. ' Coast Highway; and it will bowie an eatery
inspired by the picturesque culture of the
Italian peasantry.
Roman-bom Pietro ls j,ast the man to
bring tbe ring of authentttity to this under-
taking, along witb the good taste t.bat charac-
terizes bis other d:ining spot, renowned
Karam's, also in Newport Beech.
Pietn> promises an informal and inUmate
atmosphere, complete with Italian art, cos-
tumed musicians playing the mandolin, and
other of his inimitable touches. The 100..seat
restaurant will be a no-reservation house,
and the menu will include traditional prep-
arations of pasta, veal. chiCken and seafood,
as well as a full cocktail bar.
Opening is planned for early December of
this year.
Continued on P ... 12
ftMERA
RE&tAUUNr
Centlnental Cuisine
Cockt1ll1
Senrlng
Luncheon and Dinner
Monday through Saturda~.
Closed Sundaus
Open for
Private Parties Onlv
We are loc•ted on the
Bristol Str .. t aide be.
fwHn Mullen and Bluett
Hd the M•y Co.
JJJJ ........ c.... ..... 140-1140
.... .u..... ......... _
............. _,, ..... p
ll PRINgw LOUIJE
SHIP RESTAURANT .
VISITORS WELCOME
lri99 ,.., c._ .....
No Ad"" Chg. -Fr .. Po.ting ... :E7&
,.,.,.,. .... ....... ,_ ......... .
mBYAlK*S '
Ul-!Ul 77S-D41
~D6,MUa.....l
PettefLMA.tti...TwlllHlw..f_
PIHINO llNlaNl'S
. -YOUU ENJOY OUI
SUNDAY
BRUNCH
11 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
3801 1!.\$1' ~ HIOHWA'f'
C.0.0NA Df.L MAa. CAUPOltHIA
Pti<>NF.: (714) 675-1374
1111 COAST H .... WAY
NIWPOIT MACH
.,..., ....... l l•a.& I
IUSElVATIONS SU66ESTED
"42-7110
litl ...... Jttl ..... Delly
"Featuring th1 /fflllt fn Ctdstne
mid Bevnaq•• --
Luncheon and Dinner, D•lly
lenquet Room•
Dick Web1ttr'1 S!lf?lphon11 fn Rhuthm
T1~uradcu, Fridav and Saturda11 Eocntngi
PROUDLY PRESENTS
THE
SiLER . BROIHE·RS
HELD OVER BY
POPULAR DEMAND!
.id ~ tWr W• Ceilt ....
NIGHTLY .... TUUDAY THROUGH IUNDAY IN OUR COCKTAIL LOUNGE
DllCOtheque Lighting Rtd Velvet RMm D1~lnt, Harclrodi, loft (Fri, A tat> (CloMcl Monday
NeC....eNeM .... •
1045 Bcay•lcl• Dr., NelJ!'POrt leach • PlaoH 671·0200
°'==11
. ....
....,.
I
I
I
• l
I
I
' • • • ~
•
' • • t
4
• ~
r Centtnuecl fJo;fi P-ie 1•
· Time for some IJmllr·brPe Items Tbi kids~· just be thrill~· tci aeath to~ that • Wishbone (a morning JdCi's .favorite·
on will be banding out balloont and
dcring · thing at Mr. Steak, ~ Fairvie\f
Road, Costa Mesa at 4:00 p.m. this Saturday.
*· Another personnel note: Barbara Kelly,
the swmgt.n' beauty who rocks the joiut a~
Huntington Beach's Town and 'Country Inn,
was tapped to jotn in the Dixieland basb at
Disneyland this weekennd.
With cheese, 10 cents extra.
~
Out 'n' Abouter solicits comments,
crittclsm and praise about Orange Coast.
restaurants and night clubs. If you have
something you would like to say, write
Out 'n' Abouter, Weekender Magazine,
Box 1875, Newport Beach, California.
I •
1: - . . '
1
1
• CU·!'R.~~r:
ARi .:
1 IXHIBITI
LAGUNA ABT ASSOCIATION -3'f1 Cliff Drive.
Laguna Beach. 'rlne aeparate . lhow• -are on,....
diJplay through Sept. 29. The Annual Member·
lhlp ~ow may be seen Jn the Main Gallery;
Art from ~ ]Jlack C~munlty 1n 1be Elllniol
Gallery; and ~ f}rst Memorlal Show lot ~~
Katcher fa 't\t Lower GaDery. Houra: 'Mon.
tlnugh sat!, iloOd to I p.m.; S&m., 1. to l p.m.
General admission l>c. Members and one iueat
are admitted free. See feat\D't on Page 5.
COFFEE GARDEN OALLERY -ms .R. Coast
lllghway, Corona del Mar. On ~t'Mon.
Ch!ougb Sat. 10 a.m. t.o t p.m., paintings and
drawinp of Jam.et Clutter, aponsored by the
Newport Harbor s.vice League.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Baylide
Drive, Newport Beach. Etchings, painttngs and
drawinp of Newport Beach artist, Jeanne' Ray ..
mond on uhlbit durinf regular bustneu b~
011 IEllTIFIL BLIER IF UIEllTllll-1·
IElilDS monaav, SEPTEm•11 3811 . . . . r---------~~--------~--~1 I
7
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$!ao" ...
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2
10
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to
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•ufkMY MONDAY I TUUIW\V I ·~UCMY I TINMDo\'f' I "'1MY
KHJ·TV PROGRAM SCllEDVLS-.-LL 1988
~
RELIGION CARTOON CIRCUS ~·corra.a.o MntOfelln .. A~N WDTEJUll STAll1"MIATltE "• . . MO IE'S ·.
, ~ HOLLYWOOD a THI STARS•> ..: . ···~· 1 . • ..,o.
t:b.A.ftls ·THE M~NIN~'MOVIE ..... ca&.-.
HIGH TVJNllWS URI OOLOlll
AOVENTURI . '{• CGl.09
SPORTS
TEMPO ~· llHl'tlc~ . .
auac • ""· £~=-·,. ~
MILUOH COl;S• --~ • MOVlll . • TIMMY a USSIE . ... ........ REAL MCCOY'S
SHIRLEY F TROOP COLOlll ~~K GROOVY SHOW HOST't MM RIDOUI UV9 eol.Oltl
TIMI~. I s PY ~.euut-•IU.CIOSI T 'Lt' ti! .. c., cxx.oM /
HA~ -WHAT'S MY LINE? tiDY1 ISTlllVNtcO&.OM H091't WAI.I. V IMIHllt
MILLION$ MOVIE a
=7HIOHT8M=~ °" PIC'IU .... ' VlrMl
-~
.. '
KJMllA OO&.Ot11
ACTI~ MQ.YI
C(Ol..OIW
BE8'f.-
OF'l'H£ WEST
COLOllf
,MTUaD:AY ... ---
N:.Al18n·
TH.EATAK
sntANGa
TALES
""·-~
WAGON TRAI~
COi.Oii! ,_ ..
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'-M$M NEWS NID mr..t. &.oe AHO&lr 810019T MllClt Ill 90T 8UY'r I ·,1 ~· I·. TWILIGHT ZONE RODtlN.IHe THGh -
MOVJa ~, .
Of'TIC THE NEW NINE • WIDC I IX =-===-· CO'-Olll CINEM~ ...,,..,,... :sl.,..mlTN "==::=f -
IMl'ACT
I
I I I, I ~-------~--~-------------~J
' THE SECOND SHOW THEATRIE 1
TV 9 NEWS FOLLOWS THE SECOND SHOW ~
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ltBWPOBT BARBOR ART MVIBl1M-:i.~~a Pa-. :::C: 2~u:t·8e'::°8uie <;::.r ~t I . or. Photographs ot urban Amet1ca *'ont 1935 to ·t UU. Hours: Moo. 6 to t p.m.; Wed. thr-ough
Sun. 1 to 5 p.m., c~ 7;~ There is no ad· umslon charge.
NEWPORT BEACH CITY BALL -3300 Newport
Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit during regu-1ar business hours, a collection of photographs
of Russian people and 1cenery .. by Herbert
'fyrnaurer.
OCC ABT GAll.ERY -2701 Falrvtew Road, Cos-
~ Mesa. On exhlblt begtmdnf 9et· l , draWings
by members of the Society of mmtrators of Los
Angeles. Hours: 9 a.m. to f p.m. dally, 1 to
10 p.m. Wednesdays.
SF£VlUTY FIRST NATIONAL BANK -196 E. e St., Costa Mesa. 011 palntlngs of CO$ ta
aa Art League members. !A>\d.le WUli8!J1:--'1-
cella Stanley and Theresa R~cltl 'ire on
ct1splay during regular bU$1ness bi>urs.
CBOCKER CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK -Har·
bor Shopping Center, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. On exhibit to Oct. 1 during regular busi-
nen hours, pastel sketchet and oil paintings
by Loil Dietman, Phyl.UJ Biel and Artie Pollom.
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -568 Center St., Costa
Meta, Currently on display during regular bus-tpes~ hours, oil paintings of A 'E. Stelly and an
autograph and manuscript co~on loaned by James Currie.
SO. CM.IF. FlRST NAT'L BA.Ng -17122 Beach Blv~ Huntington Beach. On 1 exhibit during
NgU1ar business hours,· oil paintings by Larri -~· ' -.
&TANJ'ON PARKS AND RECREATION.-Center
· · :Vfp) Katella, Stanton. Alt 1work Jn various me·
· -dii-ft'y artists Rena Spencer, Qharlei Boswell,
,. ·~ ~· McCarty, Ferne Wllllanu, Lucy San-
' ford, Emma Parker, Marcella staDJey, Mar-
Jayn Beemer, Marian Fict11, ¥ariao. Ries and · ~l{elley. 1' .,.,. •
CBARi.ES BOWERS MUSEUM -2002, N. Main
St., Santa Ana. Hours: Tuel. through Sat. 10 -.... t.o f :30 p.m.; Sun. 1 t.o S p.m.: Thurs. eve-·ldlt 7 t.o 9 p.m. No admisaion charge. Currently , on ~bit, handicrafts · 'Clone by Cuna women
. ~ • ·~ ~las Islands, Panama 1*1 ll&intings and
. -~ of Raymond Lar~ . ~-.
• IACK BY DEMAND-S • 'l1 28
'SONNY HELMER
. WORl..D'8 QREATUT lll}Dl DRINKER -TROMBONIST'
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'OfiNING THIS . WEEK
'"1111 Tlflr'' ... 'Tiie ~
Two one-eet c • m e d i e a, 0 Tbe ~· Ud '"11» ~ w1ll·bt ataced at the Laguna ~
S19 Ocea Aw., t.guna Beaeb, Oct. 2 ...... Oct..
19. P.-.meitctl Wed.. through Sat at I:• p.m_
, ;Phone 4K8l. " '
' .. '-= .:. . · ~'Dream Girl" . , ' A comedy of a joung girl lost bi her claydfeanft, ·
"DrelJJl tirln 1'in be staged Sept. '11 ~ Oct.
5, Fri and w; "'Ota at I:~ p.m. by the Calta Meo
sa Civic ~, west gate Orange C., ll'lir·
grounds, Cotta Meaa. Phone 834-5391 for further
informati~
,-snu. RUNNING -~ IJ
"The Homeeomtng"
A Harold Pinter.· drama, "The Homecomtni," fl
on st.age 'llnn. through SUn., closing Oct. 11
at the Soutli ~ Repertory, Third Step Theatre,
1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Curtain t1mt l:IO
p.m. Phone 6t&-0363.
SOU1H sos
TROPICAL FISH
Largest Seleetloa al
Tropical J' .ll ll .. 6
Supplies ln the area.
New 2 LecatleM
111 '#. WIUOlll, 61inA -.A
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''TH WA• OF HAIRY RtOG-
witli Pea1 ,._....
Fat=• ... -..,.,. .. !Ill! •,-.ma
Op.a Todly .titl
Sat •• Sun. IMS ....., .,..... ..
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OPININa. SOON
Eve Show Startt 6:45
Continuous Show
Sunday from 2 .P-m·
TWO. llG
FIAlUUS
in A
Norman
Jewfson
Flhn.
FOR ADVERTISIN&
JN THE
WEEKENDER MA6~1NE
Phone 642-4321 .
............ ,
~I ,.ITY"
............... It
n--__;~---~· 'Heidi' '1."'..: 50c
"' ... ,.. .... ..... ..... "1111 •Aln-
lAlf COMPUTI •ow ITAllS AT t ......
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AOUL Tl (,. w tV•) ONLY
COOUD IY UNl .. ltATICMI .._. Tueeday
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Hom• of Rod1i119 Ch1lr
lo9H
l1lbo1 Pe11ln111l1e61l-4~1
Child With P1rt11t Only e Optn Nl9htly 6:45 e
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER
"BEST FOREIGN FUr'
Simone Slgnoret
In 1 Fucin1tin9 New
Adventure 111 Su1pen1t
"GAMES"
-Tecll11lcelcw--
llATOW. FiiXSOUTH COAS1'
ClllRAI. PLAZA THEATRll
COllPORATK>M Sin Dlecq F'r.-way at BrittJJ ~ 546-2711
ALL NEW!
ALL WONDERFUL!
''HEIDI''
IN TICHNICOLOR
THli CHILDREN'S CLASSIC
Shown at 12:30 and 2:30
Saturday, ~19mbw 21, and Sunday, S.ptem_,.r 29
Atl ·SEAT·S SOC
I -
HOLLYWOOD RIPORT
By VJRNON SCOTT
UPI ...... C:•m.irl • 11
An extraordlnarlly beautiful actress said
an extraordinary thing about beauty the.
other diy:
"The only time a girl can enjoy being ·
beautiful is when she ls wtth a man who
believes she is beautiful." Gayle HUllJlicutt•a
words were Sincere. She Is star~ in b~r .
third movie st MGM. Her previous roles
were in Univ_ersal's "P.J." and "Wylie."
As with aimost all foung act~esses, to
become a star , Gayle must compress as
much acting experience as possible into the
relatively fe~·years of her youthful beauty.
Otherwise oppo~ty will ,Pass hel' by. She unquestionably~~ the facial beauty, but now me must ~at e years it takes to become a
top actress. Gfl: e knows this. •
11l've been acting since i wu 14, .. she said.
"I worked in high sch. ool plays, college
theater little theater and studied with Jean
Renoir.' I think rm prepared to play a variety
of roles." ·
Still lt b Gayle's ~uty that stops you in
your tracks. DoQbti~s tt helped obtain for
her the role ln "The Little Sister," in which
sbe co-stars with James Garner. 111t•s not all
physical attraetiveness," she said. "Otherwise
dozens of models would become stars.
"I bttleve a real actress or actor is born
with a potential talent. It ii u much a part
of these individuals as their physical ap-
pearance. ttts very rare today for a studio to
find an attractive person and build him or
ber into a star. There'• a psyche involved
that can be channeled for the future."
Gayle wa• nm~nclecl that 1f she resembled
Phyllis Dilla<, say, her chances of playing a
tOIJ\antic leading lady would be diminished to some extent.
*'Oh, l'tn not saying anything a.zainst being
~sicall' attractive," she said, smiling. 'for any WOD1an. actress or not, it is a divine
ble$sing to be beautiful. But then most
women have a beauty that can be brought out
1f sbe knows what to do with herself.''
At 23, Gayle finds herself vying for parts
against some of the toughest competition
among young talented and beautiful ac-
tresses to come along in 20 years.
Others fn her age bracket are Mia Farrow,
Katharine Ross, Jacqueline Bisset, Sharon
Tate, Catherine Deneuve, Leigh Taylor-
Young and Julie Christie.
uThtr•'• an abundance of young and
beautiful actresses around today," Gayle
said. "It's a matter of finding your own way
-which I plan to do."
*
1erence Stamp
Carol White '" ••pOOR, COW"'
TECllNICOLOR ~
. I _ _..._.. Time $hown
T~r Anphtrel
-t-wo•Outstandint
Popul.,-
Matlllllf ltdllft DA IL Y flll OT
P.-y, S.twrMtt t1, IHI . .
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280. Lea.-4 c.Ma S.lectM , .. _
1tU-6f. Selected Poems represents Cohen'• own choice from hls work,
ronging from ttle ~ik love poem1 of
The Spice-Box of £ortfl to tnought-~-~ NI considerations of teltofous ond to-elol problems Included In thrM vol-
IMTla previously pUbllshed only In
Conodo. $1.95.
28 I. A. P~ ef ... A.rfftt • • Y0ttflt Mlle by Joma Joyce. $1.45.
282. The P....W. S.. .. 1dl lnelud-
k-.g Of Mice and Men and The Red Pony. $1.95.
283. U•'-Pe.a C...... A ec:ientlffc forecast of new
Arc Beoks
eourc:es. $1 .45.
290. C:...le•'P. GiN• ........ n.. · JM. by Russell H. ~r. How you
can eom from $500 to $5,000 In o
ec:hool year wltt»uf IOCrlfklng study
tlmt. 95c.
g91. Prectk. fw Smlnd 1•'1& ~
T .... by Edward Gtuber. ~000 SAT-
~ questlone ond °"'""1 triof testa.
iH.1 .... .._._ ..... T_
,..... by Robert A. Former. Suooat·
ed themes, opprooehea, raeon:f\
• • •. 293. Sf-Wt: 1100 S..,. te Meetw v-~ .... .., by
....... .......... D•flY PU..OT
.......,,, ..... .. 11, ,,.
265. he Te Quam fH1• ..,....
0. c..enil ... A ~ the IClllnls
repott al IOf'ne of the matt dwnomie ~ shows ~ bot CBS "'""" ly fNd W. Fr~y. $1.95.
266. t,...,.'1 1-'J by the author of Ufe Agoinst Deoth, Norman 0.
BIVWI'\. $.I . 95.
i67. -... w..-. by Che Gue,.
voro. the outhorlud tronalotlOn.
• $1.65.
268. u..,_ by JClf'MI Joyce. 'The
1 ClOmplefl Oftd unabfidged text, GI
corrected and entirely NMt In 1961.
$2.95.
275. W.W.. ond Ot'-Writings of
Herny David 1'horeou. The first com-
prehensive, single ¥Olurnt edition of
the writings of Thoieou. $2.~S.
276. HI .. "'91' ef ....... O'Mell.
Including Str1>noe Interlude, Dal,.
Under the Elms. The ~Jona
ond others. $3.95.
2n. TM C-,a.t• Teles • , .... ti U,.r A.la.. PM. $3.95.
278. w., -4 P.-. by Leo Tobtoy.
Complete ond unobridged In one vol-
ume tronsloted from t+\e Russian by
Constance Garnett. $3.95.
279. Sfel>pe-eff by Hermon H.se.
$2.45.
weo~ edited by Nigel Colder.
$1.95. .
~84. A~ J111 ...... Welle, ._
lted by Artthorw Buroeaa, written liy
Jan'let JO'(OI. $[65.
28S. 0..fk ., • S.leote•. The Pul·
!tar Prliat • ~.-.,q ploy by Arthur
M1119f. $L~5.
i86. n. ........... .,..... Tiie
profeulonol .trolni1"19 of on octOf. By
Sonia Moofe, $1.25. .
287 .............. GrcidlMff
Sdl..S.. Con'IA'ellllill~lve Guide to~
uote oncl Profeulonol S t u d y In the
United States.· $3.95~
Slldy..._ ·/
W of the followtno !•-.i• Wa .. IY•"x10"9., 11'1 .a.. ond hov9 ewer
600 lllul91utiol•. AJI boc*a hove o loroe, eoay-'°'"'* b-rnot, ond ~
compi.t., euthoritotl'te, how-to "''°""°'Ion ...... ..... .. °' Slhoto0·~
drowlng(, ~ ~ dlooiot.. · ~
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330. c ...... ~c...e.,. $1.95. ll'· .. • .. ~ ......... $2.95. • •
331. s ............ •t:t5. !3' ..... • r., Dll.w.. $1.fS .
332 ..... atiil~. StJ5. .,U7. ~.••11• ...._ $1.9$.
333. Decliatl• JIU '•rr· f 1.95, 331. Ciel ..... el o....., $1 .fjt.
33'4. L.dm ................ u.t.f. 339 ..... fw .......... ·~ ·
$2.95 • • . 11. .. & •• '$1.f5. • . . .•
Your ~ to undef'ltondlng the WOf1d'1 oNOt llterotvre-over 325 mt.I.
1350. He..W. $1 .00.
351. ~Tes.. $1.00.
352.. n. See.wt l.ettef. $1 .00.
353. Ti.. CM,wey. $1 .00.
35... M9'r DkL $1.00.
355. a.... el n. ..... $1 .00.
356. en ..... ,. • .., ..... $1.oo.
J57. AT•-' T-Cittee.. $1.00.
351. ~. $1.00.
359 .• ...,, Trevele. $1.00.
360. Httelle'-ry r11111, $1.00.
Jd 1. , .... •'"' , .. ,Miu. $1.00.
362. W ....... ltl Hef1 .... $1 .00.
U3. ~JI•. $1.00.
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