HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-10-21 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa...-o-;c,T;;c,;;-, "•fT=::,-.,="""""""'''-.7,-,-;-, -;.---;.,..,,J~;~>"JO~·::-. -.-, ~' ,-. "''•OC"'C-.--T~ ,-·.,.., ---------~~--~-~-_, _ _, ______ ..., ____ ...., __ _ • • •
·a ·guna _Man Found
Dead Weeks Afteri
Mystery Car. Crash
MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 21', '1968
VOL. '1, NO. W. S SICflONI. 1l PAGIS
Birthday Gi•·ls
... ---___ ..;.....•· ---
Coast Pilot Leafls
Darin·g. Sea Resene
. .
In Vietna1n Battle
• I
Spacemen Cool Tempers
. -~"!ft"'" -$ltTER,S CIELE.BIL\TI! '#ITH-CHAMP.AONE, MEMORIES
. , L~-H'rshborgor Uo!t~ and McKinley
' .
' •Big Wing Ding->.
Laguna Beach 'Girl' Turns 90
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of T1lll Dllllt PUii Slaff :
0 [)kl we have a wing ding. We bad
champagne ard the people just kept com4
iog. You shpuld have seen all the bottles.
I'm afraid we got an awful reputation."
Mrs. Marie M. Harshberger radiated as
she described the Sunday party for her
sister, Miss Cora McKinley.
. She was likely teasing about the "awful
repatation". lt was an important event al
lbe Laguna Beach NUrsing Home. It was
Miss McKinley's 90th birthday. .
Perhaps as the cake was sliced arif the
champagne bubbletl in toast. Miss
McKinley's disciplined mind ranged back
O~r ' the years.
THREE SISTERS
There were three McKinley girls,
daughters of a railroad e~eculive,
graduated from Lakeview 1-ligb in
Chicago. "The poor teachers got Ured oI
~lng the McKinley sisters," laughed
Mrs. Harshberger.
The other sister was killf!d in an auto
accident, an occurrence rare in ~
days.
Sisters recall diUere.nt things. "It was
Coast Motorist
Found Dead After
Mystery Accident
such fun in Chicago. You could dance
your head off all night," said Mn:.
Harshberger from her wheelchair.
"I was working, leaching a n d
moonlighting getting my degree," said
Miss Mr.Ki.ngley from her wheelchair.
Miss McKin1ey attended L e w I s
·lnstitut.c; iln engineering school, and \oOk
her bachelor of science degree in
·$emistry at the University of Chicago.
'-'l just like mathematics and
.cliemistry," she said. 11Everything has to
balance."
ART, TOO
· She took art classes loo at Hull ~louse,
·ram~ social setUement establi shed by
reformer Jane Adams in J.889 to combat
juvenile delinquency and aid the foreign
btlrn.
She taught in Chicago for 30 years and
C'1?le to Los Angeles where she finished
oot a half century of service.
She began to teach retarded junior high
beys in Los Angeles and continued tor 20
years. Many she found were not mentally
retarded but handicapped by lack of
English. So she dug into language to help
them.
"People thought you were too old if you
were over 40, IO I asked ror a special
school that the other teacben dido 't
like," she smiled.
"I liked the work immensely," she
said. "The boys used to come back from
high school to have thing• erp1ained."
The sisters had £irst seen Laguna
Beach in 1915 when they came down the
canyon with frietds in a "little bitty
Model-T with a rumble seat."
Laguna Beach resident Arthur Lewis RETIREMENT
Vaughan, who had been miMing nearly "I aald then this is such a beautiful
three weeks, was found ~ead Sunday . place; this is where I'm going to rpend
beneath the wreckage of his auto in a my final days," recalled MW McKinley.
rav ine near Cryltal COve. Mrs. Harshberger, the mother of twinl,
Vaughan, 48, " 3053 NestaD Road, had a son and daughter, had been widowed
last been seen al1¥e lo Los Angeles about early.
2 a.m. Oct. 1. The IOD1 a graduate ol Cil Tech,
Thick underbrush. Jn the Crystal Cov~ became 1 r,tartne pllol In World War II,
Arroyo, just J>I( Pldflc: Coast Highway and laler ..,«! In the K«an War. He
between c..-derMar andl.agluul,'had hi Brig. Gen. Johll p. liar~ (rel)
almoot totall}Sconceal<d Ille wrtclulge ol "E=Jone. mew Jllm u ~ Jllhn,'"
Vaughan'•· car. H1I boctJ waa phmed said hia ·mottier. "'His men adored~
beneath the ml.in auto wreckage.. 'Ihe car ''lfe was ahr•Y• doinl ~. Aft.er
had broken ljllo 1hree pl.._ Other be ttlired. be bailt Ilia Ow. liOcile In
wrectaae wai ICIUtred in the busb. Oregon on~-1 CK.emit Rtver, a
Coroatr'1 dipatlea ..tim1te the Lapno beUlul ""'[ g houk '1!.. ho
man died abOut one _. after' he waa ftl\lred OW. were there to 111
last -In lhe arl1"""'1lhlC boon ol ~·" Ocl ~ Tbe listen .. llr<d to~ Buell la
lnv..U,.tmw mi the 411m1 m .. •P" 1148:11!ld biJUl'Jhotr'llome.
porenUy dlocl ol dleal il\Jln'ko when ho 1 "~ had plan°"' ~ big party on her
wu crushed by the wrecl<oge. 9llth birthdOY but •be broke her. hip (In
_Two boys blcycllq ·In the area , Auaustl ; -~ ""1 ~he'• bere," lllld
d"'°vmct lite car 1bo1Jt 1,u p.m. They Ml'.lo H>rlhllqii'""ho'• I• tho .......,.
Doti.fled authotlUes. • . . bon\8 ,ttiCOYertrlf lt'OJI mrgUy.
The lillc>Y• who n w · th cat. ·john Bu\; If was a 800Cf party anyway, tmt,..
"5\t WRECKAGE, Pece J) • DO(h one. '
' -. . . .
Apollo 7 Crew
Stars in Final
TV Space Show
SPACE CENTER, Houskll (AP) -The
Apollo 7 astrmauts, mellowed alter a day
of air-to-ground arguments, clowned Qleir
way through their linal television show
today and fired their large spaceship
engine to steer into a more favorable
course for returning to earth Tuesday.
(Earlier stories Page 5).
As Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr ..
Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and
civilian Walter Cunningham raced
through their final boUOI in space, they
displayed none of the irritability that
sparked bitter di.sagreeinents w I t h
ground controllers Sunday, mostly over
rught plan changes.
The astronaul! made it plain they are
c11ger to come home after 11 days in
space. They are scheduled to parachute
into the Atlantic Ocean near Bennuda at
4:12 a.m. PDT Tuesday, clima1ing a
spectacular, perfect flight that set the
United States firmly on the path to t.he
moon.
At mid-morning, they pointed the nose
or Apollo 7 north and fittd an eight.,..
cond burst from tho craft's 20,500-pound
(See APOLLO, Pap I)
AU three major network& will of·
fer live coverage of the ApoUo 7
spUuhdown Tuesday morning.
ABC (C~nnel 7) will begin i"
coverage at 3:15 a.m., whilt' CBS
(Cllan,,.I 2) and NBC (Channel 4)
wi U stan at 3:30. Tht 1cH.eduU of
eoentl:
J:fJ c.m. PDT -Main rpacecraft
engine fired fC11' about 10 1econda a.s
ApoUo 1 1oar1 1outhtaii of Hawaii,
1Jowtno u. speed and 1t.ardna it ~
li1clrd.
8:45 a.m. -COft<·shoPfd copwi<
carrving tilt 41tronauCf uparaU1
jrom tilt: main engine.
3:56 1S.m. -Spactcra/t t n t tr 1
torth'1 otmoqhert 400,000 fttt owr
Howton, th< heat ahuld on l" blunt
r.<I /acing 1.,,,,,.,..i.
4:07 a.m. -.n.o 16.S.fool cllmnlt<r
drO{IUC pcm1ChMl<1 dtploJ di 23,000
/et&. to '""' IM <r'Of~• IJNfll from JOO to 175 mllu .. lwvr.
4:08 a.m. -Thru Ba.I-fool df<>.
,....,. 1!1afn ch•ll• dtplot1 ot 10,000
/HI IO ""'""' apced IO '2 m.p.fl. f :lJ ..... -SRlolhdol<m 2!0 milu
t011tlV<outhiasl •I B.,,.uda, "'""''
th• aircraft carrier r .... " ""~ bv for rtcotlf•l" •
Lagunan Leads Res~ue
Dramatic Operation One of War's Most Daring
An Air Farce major Crom Laguna Hills
was involved in a dramatic rescue of six
downed airmen off the coast o£ North
Vietnam Sunday, one of the most daring
jobs of the entire war.
He was identified in a communique
from Saigon as Maj. Robert D. Schular.
37, of Laguna Hills, but efforts to
establish his address were un&uccessful
today.
During the hellish mission involving the
helicopter rescue unit dubbed The Jolly
Green Giants, North Vietnamese gunners
on arsenal-like Tiger Island tilazed away
at the dramatic scene offshore.
Two Navy l•" -their guns empty o! any more ammunition -even made
perilous passes over an island bluff to In-
timidate anUaircraft crew1 and draw fire
away. from the helicopter hovering over
typhoon whipped swells in the South
China Sea.
Sharpshooting gunners shot off the tail
oC the first Jolly Green Giant chopper to
arrive on the scene, where two injured
fliers were struggling int.be chilly, 1G-£oot
waves. • '
A second shell slammed into the big H:J
helicopter, aln~lng it within a few
seainda, but the four crewmen managed
Mesa Chef Shot in Holdup;
Two County Men Arrested
Two Santa Ana men art being held on
chargm of assault with intent to commit
murder, armed robbery and kidnaping to-
day alter the Sunday night shooting oI a
Costa Mesa man.
Booked Into Orange County jail today
on the three charges are James Henry
Alvare1., 23, of 722 E. Walnut St. and
David Thomas Tramble, 25, of tm W.
4th Sl. who allegedly attempted to rob
Me-N-Ed's Pizza Parlor at 1180 S. Bristol
St.1 Santa Ana of $3,358.32.
Gary w. lllnz, a pizza chef ol .160 W.
Wilson St., Costa Mesa, was shot in the
left lhlgh during the holdup, police said.
He was treated and releued from Santa
Ana Community holpital.
. Alvare1 and·Tremble are charged with
NEWPORT PIONEER
JOE BEEK DIES
-Newport Harbor ftS!dcnl end secretory ol the Clallrornla Senate Joseph
Allen Beek died •arl1 today al Hoaa
~ Hcwt•al Ht.waar'I.
Mr. Beek had served more than lour
decadeo u Secrellry of tho Cl!Jlornll
Senate,, Be WU fouodet ol the llaiboo
laland i llll'l')lboal ~ Jn the w1f
yun of blrbor dayelo(lmMI llld .wu o m.... cloMloper on llaU.0. l>lancl. Mr.
ll<tlt was Nnrport illntlor'I l1nl bar· -·
entering the pizza shop about 11 :~ p.m
Sunday, brandiahlng pmols.
Police allege they shot several Ume1
into the noor, while ordering the 12
dlners there into the men'• room and
then placing a juke box against the door.
One of the employe1 was taking an
order by phone whet. the bandits enU!red.
'The woman 1Jladng the order heard the
gunshots and one of the suspect& tell the
employe to hana: up. She notified poUce
but refused to atve ber address or phone
number. '
While the robbers were rorctna dlnert
Into the restroom, Him came from
the back room to • ·what wu hap-
pening. Wben he turned ID !lee from tho
room, he wu lhot in the lea, accordlng to
Santa Ana pollce. \
lllnz and the othtt employe 'wue then
ordered to empty all the money !tom tho
two ca.sh rtglstera and the omce aafe iDto
a white plllow cue, polk:e aid. They
were then tokl to lie face down on the
floor u the lw<> -loft by ..... uit.
A Santi ,Ano police ol!lcer oo hit way
to the ecene uw a car cootalnlna tht
luapecll he..un, In the oppoolte air..,.
lion. When be turned around ID lolloli
them, they •po;! otr, lllfaedly diopplng
the while pillow .... 1n the llreel u they
Oed.
'!'bey llZvCk lhtet pork<d WI ol
Olestnul Ind llaJlodly -then fled
Gii fool. Tromble WU armted A block or
two away and Alvara wu picked up
lhout \ll wben be called pollcQ ID report
Ilia carpi beln llDkn.
to scramble out in Ume to avoid loin&
down with it.
Air Force Pararescueman Steve T.
White, 241 of Los Altos Calif., WU bap-
tized in both fill! and icy seawater on bis
first rescue mission, military spokesman
said. ·
·White swam to lhe two injured jet
jockeys who had bailed out of lheir Air
Force F4 Phantom after it will hit by
groundfire from Tiger Island ind di.sabl· ed. .
Dragging the Injured pair tnto lie
rafts, the four chopper crewmen joined
them In what appeared to be an agonlzi.ng
drift to death as Udes carried tbelQ.
IDward the bloody Island.
Less· than four miles lay between the
· tiny raft flotilla and the Communllt guns,
which began lobbing sllells into the water
as the six doomed -or leemingly so --
fliers drifted.
Rifle fire began u soon as the two
rafts drifted into range, while 2t Atr
Force and some Navy~jets Crom the ca.r--
rier Intrepid screamed overhead, makinc
passes at the gun-bristling Island bluf(1
(See RESCU!:, Page I)
Orange
H'flftther
The morning fog may fill
the air again Tuesday when the
Orange Coast gets more hazy
aµnahioe and the temperature
1t1.y• boga:ed down in the upper
sixttes. Inland. it'll be a near--
tropical 80.
· I N_SJDB 'l'ODAV
M1todyland unwUI (and t1n-
droPf1J l" "Bride of r.....,.01•"
tomom»D, and oll 111t'll be ....,..
ing ii a wedding Nil and 1
tmlle. Set hllrlainlll<nl, POI/fl
10. ·-' :=, ..... " --~;: --" .... ~ ,.
.......... 1•11 ..... . ... ............ ""' -" =· , ...,-..
. -..... -.... -------------
2 DAll.Y PILOT •
Red Prisoners • Ill Vietnam · c.,.se .. fire 1
L SAIGON (AP) -Tbe United Slales and
North VletnllD declared a 36-hour ct.,._
• Ore In Ill !IQ1l4I'< miles aloog the Norih
v...,.meoe coutfor the relwe loday ol 1 H North Vietnam.,. seamtft captunod
., more tbao1two years ago.
1 The cease-Ore and rtlease of the
• ............. c:oopled with the withdrawal of
the battleship New Jersey from off the
coast of North Vietnam and the continued
lull in the ground war, increased specula·
11m 11111 w~ and Hanoi mi&llt be
movhig lllwaril progtesrln lbO l>ar!s
peace lall<s. . ._, N ti .d Diplomats at the Uml.W a ons S8l
F,..,.. Pqe 1
.APOLLO •••
thnmt engine. Tbe blast !hilled the low
J10lnt of their orbital path about 1,200
miles to the West, almost due IOUtb of
Houston over Mexico.
Jt also raised the high point of the
orbital path about 10 miles to 276 miles.
The low point remained at 103 miles.
The control center said this placed
Apollo 7 in a good position for hitting the
target zone on landing. The next time the
big engine is fired will be Tuesday morn-
ing to pull the spaceship out of orbit..
Commenting on the perfect engine
bum, Cunpingbam said: .. That's pretty
good."
The seventh telecast from the orbiting
Apollo 1 studio ended with Schirra
displaying a sign that read: "As the sun
sinks slowly in the west."
"This is Apollo 7 signing off," he said
as the excellent picture faded after _a
nine-minute production.
Schlrra, Eisele and Cunningham also
displayed a new sign which indicated
they are happy to be beading home.
A crudely drawn picture of the Apollo
ship floating on the water was ac-
companied by these words: "Everybod1,
out of the Pool."
Clearly visible as the camera panned
around the cabin were pictures or the
three wives of the spacemen, pastl!d
above their duty stations. .
They also used the camera to zero in on
the heavy beards grown by •ll three.
"I will not admit to the fact that there
Is any gray in this beard," Schirra said.
"My hairdresser's the only one that
knows."
As the astronauts passed the camera
around, Schlrra quipped: "You've got
three professional cameramen up here
now, so when we get back we expect to
get our union cards."
• After passing out 0£ camera range,
: Schirra told th.e control center that they
, float around in their weightless cabin like
; monkeys in a cage, using hands and feet
: to get around.
, "We've really become eftJcient at it,
• like we've gone ape," he laughed.
i After the telecast, the astronauts began
! a busy day of preparing for re.entry and
• splashdown.
They are to trigger their spacecraft
engine over Hawaii and streak through
the atmosphere to a landing southeast of
Bermuda.
' The aircraft carrier Essex heads a i large recovery force waiting to retrieve
the astronauts as they complete their 11·
'. day space mission that has put the
'United States firmly on course to the
moon.
I
i COAST'S OLYMPIC
' " '
·STARS FEATURED
; The Orange Coast's "gold stars" in the
:otymplc Games -decathlon champ Bill
'Toomey or Laguna Beach and Corona del
'Mar's teen.age Madam Butterfly, Toni
Hewitt -are featured in reports dlrecUy
from Mexico City today. '
DAILY PILOT Sports Editor Glenn
White analyzes Toomey's big win, looks
ahead to Niss Hewitt's competition ~
night and covers other local aspects of
;the 19th Olympiad in his on·sc:ene re.
.ports starting today on Page 2J.
DAILY PILOT
....,.,,.._. C.mMtM
" ........ '"'. w,. ....... . ... ........ ... ..... ,..,
CJ.LlfOIHIA
ORANG! CO...ll l"UILllHIHG COMl"ANV
ltoliett N. Woe4
P,_.ldWlt end Pllbll9her
J1clc l. C11rl,.,
Viet l'mllltlll t11C Ge"'rtl M•n.ttt
'Tho11111 K11•U .... n-·· A. .... ,._1"' -·-,.~, Nl11111 ·--""" ... -C.h .-..: »I '#flt ..., $1r..t
,........ lleldl: 1111 W1tl ..... lou~f'f
.....,..._,um~A.-
~ lffdl: • n '"'"'
they believe North Vle!nam wanr. to get
a peace ~emtnt before the nert U. S.
adminlstraUon takes office Jao. 2L But
d.,plte the C011tlnulni apeculation that
the United sta!ea might bait the bemblng
of North Vietnam, American, warplanes
cBrTied out strikes again today in the
Nortb. below the 19th parallel, and more
of the same was scheduled for Tueaday,
military sources said.
U. S. Headquarters announced that 24
Americans were killed today when an Air
Fotce._twin eOline C47 trif,ntport
developed trouble In •ooe engine ed
crashed in the central highlands. There
were no survivor&. The dead included 20
'Alr Feroe men1 two Army mm and two
civilian&.
InformaUon on today'1 raJds over
North Vietnam won't be announced lllllil
Tuetday.
American pilot.!J on Sunday logged JlO
miastons over North Vietnam. An. Al:r
Force Fl Pbantom flah!er-bomber ,. ..
downed by ground fire 20 miles north of
the demllllarir.ed "'"'· and a big llll3 Jolly Green Giant helicopter that tried to
rescue the two pilots also was shot doWJ'I.
The two Phantom pllot.t.Jnd,. t,be tour
helicopter crewmen were'pliUed ttom the
Gulf 0£ Tonkin by two other helicopters
after bombing oo the stonn-tossed seas
for an hour and a baH.
The aircraft Josi were the I09th
Amerlcao warplanea l1llllOWlCed downed
in combat over North Vietnam and the
10th helicopter downed In the North.
The U. S. Mission aai~ in a statement
announcing the return of the 14 5e41nen
to North Vietnam that their release "ii
· Intended' u an action of good will."
"We hope lt will lead to further
release! of prisoners," It added.
Pre!klent Nguyen Vjm Thieu artd U. S.
Ambauaacr.Elllworth Bwllier COlllerred
' !cir an hO!lr·SundtY, theb' f'!'lrtb meeling
in JJve days; promoting more speeulatlon
about a bombing ball.
Winds Delay Doneyi110on
. l
Thleu sald Salllrday there bas been ''no
breakthn>qb" In negotlatloos w It h
Hanoi, but this bas nol l!Opped reports
that Waabingl<.n Is preparlna, or has
already presented, a new peaco package
to the North Vietnamese.
Well plactd diploma!> In tba United
NaUons ouUined points of a U. S. pro-
posal which they said WWI forwarded to
the North Vietnamese by the French in
Paris last Monday.
They said it con~ins a U. S. offer to
>top all bemblllg..ol the .Nortll .aod Wlll·
tilgness to alli>w Ille NOUonliJ'tlberallon
Front, the Viet Cong's potuical iJ,fm, to
pa:rtlcipate in final peace negotiations if
.
Hanoi will lei the Saigon ttglme ~
part, too.
In return, tbe diplomats Aid, Ute
United States Is uking Hanoi to agr .. l
not to send any mo"' Norlb Vie~
troops into South Vleb\1111, 2 to conU11oe
the current lull in attacks on SOuth vtet.-
narnese population centers, and SI Co
restore the demilitarized char~ of.the
obce·oeulral zone !hat ..,parates Norlb
and South Vietnam.
The sourcts said the U. S. propolal
does not call ror withdrawal of either
Americaq or North Viebwneae troops
from South Vietnam, and U;iey expect
~guerrilla warfare to continue in the South
after the boQlbing stops.
Jackie, Onassis Host Midnight Wedding Party
·Humphrey Now
' .
Gains on Wallace SKORPJOS, Greece (UPI} -Gale
force winds, high seas and chllly
weather today held up any plans £or a
honeymoon cruise by .ArlstoUe and J ac-
quellne Onassis. (Related story, picture
on Page 4)
Although bad, the weather did not pre-
vent the departure of friends and
relaUves of Onassis and the former Mrs.
John F. Kennedy, including the new Mrs.
Onassis' two children, Caroline, 10, and
J ohn Jr., 7. Nor did Jt halt the party
a b o a r d the yacht Christina w h e r e
guests d.!inced until almosf dawn.
The entire group of friends a n d
relatives went from Onassis' floating
palace by speedboat several hundred
yards to the fishing village of Nidrion and
then to the ai.t port of Aktion. There they
boarded a plane to Athens where they
will scatter to their various destinations.
The party aboard thtl yacht lasted
through the night with 13 costumed girls
from the nearby island of Levitas dancing
and singing for the guests.
The newlyweds themselvea slept late
but arooe to wish departing guesls
godspeed and gave the childten a final
hug.
The Christina's captain said Sunday he
was ready to sail at three hours' noUc:e
but did not have any definite orders.
Other members or the wedding party said
they thought Onassis and his wife were in
no hurry to leave but probably would
take a short cruise within a few days to
find the sun.
Relatives said any cruise -if there is
one -probably would be brier because
Onassis is now engaged 1n a project dear
to bis heart, a $400 million development
scheme for Greece.
The Christi na, a converted Canadian
World War II frigate, can sail in just
about any weather but is notoriously un-
comfortable in stormy seas.
ll would be unlikely the new1ywed9
would cruise in rough seas, although both
Onassla and Jackie are good sailors.
Following their 45-minute wedding
ceremony in a 1~ by 30 foot Greek
OrthOdox C b i. p e I on Onassis' private
Island of Skorploil oil Greece's western
coast, the couple went aboard the yacht
and toasted each other and fortune with
champagne and red wine. Crewmen said
the newlyweds left word they would be
sleeping late.
Among their first tasks of married life
was saying godbye to M rs. Onassis'
cblldten. The late· President's children
were expected to fly back to their private
schools in New York City.
From Wirt Servlttt
Jn this week's latest ba~b of polls,
Republican Richard Nixon continues to
hold a strong lead in lhe race for Presi-
dent but DemocraUc candidate Hubert
Humphrey Is comllig up, although slowly
and not enough to change Nixon's com·
manding lead.
Time magazine gave NiJ:on 33 states to
sh for Humphrey and the New York Dal·
ly News said Nixon is four percent ahead
in New York state.
·A Christian Science Monitor -poll,
however saJd Humphrey bas gained on
his Republican opponent in 24 states dur·
ing the last two weeks.
Humphrey and lhlrd·party candidate
George C. Wallace leading in six each.
liumphrey also was ahead in the District
of Columbla, Time said.
The magazine's figures showed Ntxon
leading in one less state than was tii his
column in a similar survey a month ago.
Humphrey was said to have lost four
states, while Wallace had gained two.
Humphrey's losses -A r k a n a a a •
Maryland, Missouri and Tennessee -and
Wallace's gains -Arkansas and South
Carolina -were all Southern or border.
states.
Time sald Humphrey is leading in his
home state of Minnesota and in New
York, but described his edge in both
states as "precarious."
Unruh Acknowledges
Eying Race for Governor
County Lawyer
Seeks to Bar
Cleaver at UCI
The newspaper said the gains were not
enough to shJft any of the states, which
have a tota1 or 261 electoral votes, from
Nixon to Humphrey, and its latest survey
showed Nixon ftu1her ahead than on Oct.
10.
The survey gives Nixon 36 states with
372 electoral votes, compared with 43
states with 361 electoral votes in its
earlier survey.
Time said a survey of its cor·
respondents in the SO states indicated
that Nixon is far ahead in 3.1, with
The Daily News' straw poll, which the
newspaper says has been wrong only
three times bi .. 40 years, showed Nixon
ahead in New York w:lth 48 percent of the
vote to 42 for bumphrey and 8 for
Wallace.
The News said its survey covertd 5,000
persons in New York city, the suburbs:
and upstate. The newspaper plans five
similar polls between now and election
day. FRESNO (AP) -Jesse M. Unruh
pledged today that he will resign u
speaker of the Assembly if he becomes
a candidate for governor or California
or "any other major office."
With ·that allllouncement, the influen-
tial Democratic leader formally acknowl-
edged he Is considering running for gov-
ernor in 1970-the year Republican Gov.
Reagan is up for re-election.
"If l am re-elected speaker of the
Assembly next year -and if I sub-
sequently decide to embark upon a cam-
paign £or the governorship of California
or for any other major office -I will
resign from the speakership before em·
barking on such a campaign," said Un-
ruh , who has held the powerful job since
1961.
Unruh 's remarks were prepared for
delivery to students at Fresno State
Colleg1.:.
lte said he will run for speaker if the
Democrats retain control of the lower
house in the November election. They
now are in charge 42-38. But he said the
speakership is too big a job to combine
with running for statewide office.
In addition to governor, t h e Demo-
cratic nomination for the U.S. Senate
seat now held by Republican George
Murphy will be open ln 1970.
Unruh didn't offer to quit as the air
semblyman representing Los Angeles
From Page 1
RESCUE ...
while another helicopter approached.
The rescue helicopter carrylng Steven
N. Northern, 21, of Riverside zoomed in
under the blanket of gunfire with Maj.
Charles E. Wicker, 34, of Baltimore, Md.,
in the pUot's seat.
Northern used a winch hoist to haul
aboard the 50h and 5Ist men he has sav•
eel in 225 rescue missions of the war and
the chopper roared seaward again for
another run.
Maj. Scbular was aboard Wicker's H3
helicopter, but his role in the rescue was
not clearly spelled out in the military
communique received today.
"We were only about 1 lk miles from
the island when we finally made the
pickup," Wicker said. "I've never made a
faster pickup in all my Ufe."
Rescued men were identified as White,
Sgt. Robert T. Anderson, 2fi1 of St. Louis,
Mo., and pliOI> capt. Gerald W. Moore,
31, of Washington, D. c ., and Capt. Lau-
rens C. Davis, Jr., ZS, of Fort Worth,
Tex., all of them h•PPY to be alive.
The Jolly Green Olanta are the most
decora\ed airmen to 8erve in the Viet~
nam war as a resull of counUess acls of
cool herolmi Ill harrowing situations.
Sat-Nortbero, who Is only 21, h a s
•arned the Sliver star. Dlatinguished
Flyll>i -cross, P\ll1>lo Heart and 11 Air
Medals dltrfnl his two years of service
:with the nacue unfl.
Panama Stu(ients
Call for Strike
PANAMA CITY (UPI! -PaMmo
Univer~ty otudents called Sunday night
for a 12-bour tU1ke lo protest the ruling
military junta. The. mllftsry reBtme
pJedgtd to "elevate th6 JCl.le or hwnan
,values" ln Panam&.
The Panama Ur\lversity S t u d e n t
Federation appeak-d to all labor WllON to
1ta,y away from Ulelr jobs for 72 hours: to
protaC. the m.ltltary Junl.I that ovtrthrc-w
Praldent Arnulfo Arias two wetkl qo. ,.
County's 65th Assembly district.
But he said the speakership was too
big a job to combine with a statewide
political race.
"U the Democrats win a majority in
t h e Nov. 5 election, I will stand for re.
election to the speakership -but I
would want to hold t h a t major office
only so long as I could devote my per·
sonal attention to it.
"By the very nature or the speaker·
ship, Jt is impossible for anyone to ful·
fill Its responsibilities and campaign for
statewide elective office at the same
time,'' Unruh said.
A complaint seeking the barring ol
Black Panther leader Eldridge CJeaver
from the UC Irvine campus was awaiting
a hearing today in Superior Court.
Filed 1" by Santa Ana attorney Patrick:
Duggan, the suit names as defendants
with Cleaver, members of the Irvine
Academic Senate, the Center of Partici·
pant Education at UCJ, University or·
HHH, Wallace Disagree
On Recent Vietnam Lull
ficials, faculty advisors, student groups By UNITED PRF.SS INTERNATIONAL and I think any concession ought to be
planning future appearance or Cleaver, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey made public to the American people and
the UC Board of Regents, the state Board says the recent lull in fighting in Vietnam to the people of the world." .
of Education, County Assessor Andrew should be an important factor in the He sald there should not be "any unan· Danger of World ~:s~;w~c~u:~~;: ~~c~~ American delibetations on whether to nounced reciprocal agreements on the
Supervisors. stop bombing North Vietnam again. part of the North Vietnamese."
A • W 'V Duggan asks that Cleaver not be allow-Third party candidate George C. Muskie, on another show (Issues and tOfillC 81• et•y ed to speak again on the Irvine campus Wallace, at the same time, flatly opposed Answers-ABC ), was asked about the
and that University officials be prevented a bombing halt unless the North Viet· former Alabama governor's comments.
Cl ' S T from assisting the militant presidential namese make immediate public con· "Gov. Wallace has been briefed as the OSe ays itO candidate of the Peace and Freedom cessions. He said the Communists are rest of us have been on the present posi·
Party in any preparations for public: taking advantage of restrictions on U.S. tion and he wants to make it public he's
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) speeches. OOmbing to make a "very significant" in a position to do so."
President Tito warned today that the Claiming that he speaks for "himself, buildup in supplies. Pressed for elaboration, Muskie said,
danger of world war is very close and 10,000 other taxpayers living In the First Richard M. Nixon, the Republican "Gov. Wallace will get my meaning. You
th th bl th Supervisorial District and 10,000 other ad· presidential candidate, meanwhile re· can't get my meaning if you haven't been
at e g powers might en use ditional ta:rpayers living in Orange Coun· i·ected, by lnlerence, Viet Cong ..... ..ticipa· briefed." He declined further comment atomic arms. t""' w
In Pro ty," Duggan urges the granting of his tion in any coalition government in except to say "what he (Wallace) said
Speak g at kuplje and Toplica, petition "in view of the foul and obscene Saigon. Nixon also called for "deamer· this afternoon has some relevance to
southeast Serbian towns on a tour of l used . the f 1·can''"Li.on" of the war. v.·hat he knows." east Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav president anguage m presence o ..... said "The danger of a world war is verv females" during Cleaver's recent speech All three candidates made their Humphrey, commenting on the recent .. , on campus statements Sunday. Broadcast comments scaledown in fightifi8, said the lull "has
close.'' He added, "It is not excluded Duggan is a candidate for the First by both Wallace and Democratic vice some significance." He said in a broad· that the big powers would u s e 5 Edmund s · atomic arms," il the war should break upervisorial District seat which wiU presidential nominee Sen . • cast interview (Face the NaUon-CBS)'
become vacant with the retirement of Muskie Sunday both raised the question the combat decline "surely ought to be
out. SupervJsor C. M. Featherly. whether North Vietnam has actually of· taken into account" in the decis.lon on a
"All Yugoslav nationalities and elhnlc The attorney's l2-page complaint sug-fered concessions in exchange for a U.S. bombing halt.
groups • · • must be united and pre-gests that if Cleaver wishes to make bombing halt. Nixon, in an interview published In the
pared for anything. We have achleved further public speeches in Orange County Wallace said in an interview {Meet the New Republic, said he opposed "im·
our sovereignty after a sea of our "he should rent an auditorlum rather Press-NBC), ''I believe now they are position of a roalilion government on
blood has been shed, and now nobody than speak on a university campus." talking about unann 'll•ncl'1 c"r:r.~~roions South Vietnam.
may reach for it unpunished. Whoeve r I ~=~~~~~~~~~~~:;~~~~~~~~=======~~~==========='i tries to jeopardize our independence and II
sovereignty will encounter an Iron wall 0
or our peoples, who have all manifested
readiness to sacrifice their Uves."
From Pqe J
WRECKAGE. • •
Beaton, IS, 722 Mitchell Ave., Santa Ana,
and Danny Enske, 13, of 13862 E. Pon·
derosa St., Santa Ana, were riding north
on the highway Sunday when they spotted
the wreckage in the ravine. offlcen said.
Vaughan's body was foUJ'l(f-later by
police beside his car.
California Highway Patrol investigators
said Vaughan was apparenUy southbound
in hlJ 1964 slaUon wagon when he lost
control or it.
The car cro.ved the highway, struck a
telephone JIOI• and sailed about 200 feet
through the air before crashing Into the
heavy brush in the arroyo on the north
aide of the higbw-r.
Vaughan had been listed u I missing
person llnct he failed to ..tum home
OcL l, a«0n!ing to Laguna Polico Sgt.
Vk: Sagen. He was Jut seen earlier that
mornlna ln Los Angeles.
Pacific View Memorial Park is bandl·
tng funer•I arrangemenls which are in-
complete today. Survivors include a wlfe,
Betty.
Small Bomb Explodes
MIAMI (UPI) -A small bomb ...
plO<fed early on t sldewalk out!ide the
li£fiees of Northwest Ortent Airlines to-
day In downtown Miami.
Police saJd no one was lnjured In the
blast.
Mlulnt ....,_ $4 99 ......... "'"' .
Jewelry O..ltnlnt
A Sptcl1ltyl
OMEGA
Now 2 Grut Stam To Bene Yao
HAUOI IHOff'lle HU"'1N•TON CIM1'0
CllfTll II.I.CH .. DINMI
Uot HAllO• an. HUMTJN&TON IUCff
CIOSTAllllA 14M411 ftWIOI
0pon Mon., Thurw., Fri, 1;111 9 P·""
Your Omtaa
Sales &-Service
Agency
.. _ .. ........... --'"""' 1115 In • varll!'l'r .......
-........ ..,.,.na ._It, .. --~'"" --... """' •.s .. --
-------------------~
r
I
I
Bunting.ton Bea~h · Your Hometown -DAl-lY PILOT _ ---------
EDITION Dally Paper
voe 61, NO. 253, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1968 TEN CENTS
CIAIL Y l"ILOT 11111 Jl'hti.
Who's Fairest of Them All
One of these coeds may be Golden West College's
Homecoming Queen this weekend. From left are
Shirlee Palla, Mary Hannon, Terry Tilton, Gayle
Pearson, Keri Wisgerhof, Kathy Quinn, Carol Walk·
er, Connie Bergstrom, Stephanie McCiymonds, Kris
Schultz and Sandi Brockman. No! pictured is 12th
candidate, Barbara Belobovek.
Spacemen Set
To Return;
Tempers Cool
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -The
Apollo 7 astronauts, mellowed alter a day
of air-to-ground arguments, clowned their
way through their final television show
today and fired their large spaceship
engine to steer into a more favorable
course for returning to earth Tuesday.
(Earlier stories Page S).
As Navy Capt. Waiter»M. Schirra Jr.,
Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and
civilian Walter Cunningham r a c e d
through their final hours in space, they
displayed none of the irritabilily that
AU three major networb will ojr ·
fer live coverage of the Apollo 7
splasll{l.ot011 Tuesday morning.
A Ba· (Channel 7) wiU begtn its
coverage ae 3:15 a.m., while CBS
(Channel 2) and NBC (Channel 4)
will std.rt st 3:30. The Jchedule of
events:
3:43 a.m. PDT -Main spacecraft
engine fired for about 10 second! m
Apollo 7 .soara 3outherut of Hawaii,
sLowtng ils speed and starting it douin.
ward.
3:45 a.m. -Cone.shaped capsule
carrying the astrcnw.ut,, separates
from the main engine.
3:56 a.m. -Spacecraft e 11 t er.~
l'arth's atmosphere 400,000 feet over
l-louston, tlle heat shield on its btu11t
f'nd facing forward.
4:07 a.m. -Two 16.5·foot diameter
drogue patachutes <leplot1 at 23.000
feet to slow the craft's speed from
JOO to 175 miles an hour.
4:08 a.m. -Tl1ree 83.S·foot dia·
meter main chute3 depLoy at 10,000
feet to reduce speed to 22 m .. p.h.
4:12 a.m. -Spla.shdown 230 miles
,,outh-3outhecut of Bermuda, where
the aircraft carrier Essex i3 standing
by for recOVeTt/.
sparked bitter disagreemenL111 w 1 t h
ground controllers SWlday, mostly over
flight plan changes.
The astronauts made it plain they are
eager to come home after 11 days in
space. They are scheduled to parachute
into the Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda at
4:12 a.m. PDT Tuesday, climaxing a
spectacular, perfect flight that set the
United States firmly on the path to the
moon.
Complaint Seeks to Bar
Oeaver. Speech at UCI
A complaint seek'ing the barring of
Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver
from the UC Irvine campus was awaiting
a hearing today in Superior Court.
Filed by Santa Ana attorney Patrick
Duggan, the suit names as defendants
with Cleaver, members of the Irvine
Kcademic Senate, the Center of Partici-
pant Education at UCI, University of·
ficials, faculty advisors, student groups
planning future appearance of Cleaver.
the UC Board of Regents, the state Board
of Education, County Assessor Andrew
Hinshaw, county Tax Collector Don
Mosley and the Orange County Board ot
Supervisors.
Duggan asks that Cleaver not be allow~
ed. to speak again on the Irvine campus
and that University officials be prevenled
from 8&iistizig the "militant presidential
candidate of the Peace and Freedom
Party in any preparations for public
speeches.
Claiming that he speaks for "himself.
10,000 other taxpayers living in the FitsL
Supervisorial District and 10,000 other ad·
ditional taxpayers living in Orange Coun-
NEWPORT PIONEER
JOE BEEK DIES
Pioneer Newport Harbor resident and
secretary of the California Senate Joseph
Allen Beek died early today at Hoag
Mcmbrial Hospital. He was 87.
1'1r. Beek had served more than four
decades as Secretary of the California
Senate. He was founder of the Balboa
Island ferryboat service in the early
years of harbor development and was a
pioneer developer on Balboa Island. Mr.
Beek was Newport Harbor 's first har·
bormaster.
Beacl1 Woman's
Trial Under Way
Jury seleetion got under way today in
Superior Court in the trial of a Hunting-
ton Beach woman accused of obstructing
police officers.
ty, •• Duggan urges the granting of his
petition "in view of the foul and obscene
language used in the presence of
females" duriilg Cleaver's recent speech
~n campus.
Duggan is a candidate for the First
Supcrvisorial District seat which will
become vacant with .the retirement of
Supervisor C. M. Featherly.
"l'he attorney's 12·page complaint sug·
gests that if Cleaver wishes to make
further public speeches in Orange County
"he should rent an auditorium rather
than speak on a university campus."
College District
Beats Inflation
011 Student Costs
Orange Coast Junior College District,
for one year anyway, has beaten in·
flation.
An annual report shows the cost of
education per pupil went up only 11 cents
Jast school year.
The report, prepared for district
trustees by Supt. 1Nonnan E. Watson,
stresses economies.
Despite an inflationary spiral, the
district through economizing held the
1967-68 cost per pupil to $571.45, up only
ll cents from ~71.34 in 1966-67, the an-
nual report notes.
As a result, it is claimed, the district
spcnl less per student ban any other
junior college district in the st.ate except
a couple or desert area district.s with
limited course offerings.
To accomplish this, the report states.
"virtually no new programs were
established. no additional instructors
v.•ere employed and no new equipment
was purchased. Virtually all adult classes
\Vere eliminated."
It is stated the economies were
necessary to keep the budget in balance
because or override election failures in
1966 and 1967.
A $7 .25 million bond issue since has
failed by a narrow margin.
Faculty u.laries, which had lagged for
a number of years, were increased
dramaUcally, according to the annual
report. Salaries are now said to be in the
top quartile of jwLior college districts
statewide.
•
Viet Cease-fire
36-hour Lull Called to Free Prisoners
SAIGON (AP) -Th< United States and
North Vietnam declared a 36-bour cease.
fire in 288 aquare miles along the North
Vietnamese coast for the release today of
14 North Vietnamese seamen captured
more Ulan two years ago.
The cease·tire and release of the
prisoners, coupled with the withdrawal of
the batUeship New Jersey from off the
coast of North Vietnam amt the continued
lull in the ground war, increased specula·
tion that Washington and Hanoi might be
moving toward progress in the Paris
peace talks.
Diplomats at the United Nations said
they believe North Vietnam wants to get
a peace setUemeni. before the ne1t U. S.
administration takes office Jan. 21. But
despite the continuing speculaUon that
the United States might halt the bombing
of North Vietnam, American warplanes
carried out strikes again today in the
North below the 19th parallel, and more
of lhe same was scheduled for Tuesd8y,
military sources said.
U. S. Headquarters announced that 24
A1nericans were killed today when an Air
Force twin engine C-47 t r a n s p o r t
developed trouble in one engine ar.d
crashed in the central highlands. There
were no su;-vivors. The dead included 20
Air Force men, two Army meti and two
civilians.
Informal.ion on today's raids over
North Vietnam won't be announced until
Tuesday.
American pilots on Sunday logged 110
missions over North Vietnam. An Air
Force F( Phantom flghter·bomber was
downed by ground fire 20 miles north of
the demilitarized zone, and a big HH3
Jolly Green Giant hellcopter that tried to
rescue the two pilots also was shot down.
The two Phantom pilots and the four
helicopter crewmen were pulled from the
GuU of Tonkin by two other helicopters
after bombing on the storm·tossed seas
for an hour and a hall.
The '!iwall l<»I """. ll>e,-. 909th An1erlcan warplarieS ·announced downed
in combal O\'Cr North Vietnam and the
!Olh.flcllcop(<r downed In the Notti!. The U. S. Ptfl1111lon said in a statement
announcing the return of U1e 14 seamen
to North Vietnam thal thcir release "is
intended as an action of good will."
"We hope it will lead to further
releases of prisoners," it added.
President Nguyen Van Thieu and U. S.
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker conferred
for an hour Sunday, their fourth meeting
in tlve days, prompting more speculation
about a bombing ha1t.
Thieu said Saturday there has been "no
breakthrough" in negotiations w i t h
Hanoi, but this has not stopped reports
that Washington is preparing, or has
already presented, a new peace package
Cotn·t Will Rule
On Drug Plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court agreed today to decide if people
can be jailed for up to 40 years for ob-
taining marijuana that hasn't been
registered with the federal government.
A test case, accepted for review on an
appeal by the Justice Department,
challenges an important part of the
government's scheme to regulate illegal
traf!lc in marijuana.
Since 1937 it has been a crime to obtain
marijuana without paying a trans!er tax.
which varies from $1 to $100 an ounce.
Only certain people, for instance doctors,
denti!U and veterinary surgeons, have
the legal right to engage in such transac-
tions.
lo lhe North Vietnamese.
Well placed diplomata in the United
Nations oullined polnt.s of 1 U. S. prO-
posal which they said was forwarded lo
the North Vietnamese by lhe French in
Paris last Monday.
They said It contains a U. S. offer to
stop all bombing of the North and will·
Jngness to allow the National Liberation
Front, the Viet Cong's pollUcal arm, to
partJcipate in flnal peace negotiations if
Hanoi will let the Saigon regime take
part, too.
In return, the diplomats: said, the
United States is asking Hanoi to agree 1
not to send any more North Vietnamese
troops into South Vietnam, 2 to continue
the current lull in attacks on South Viet-
namese populaUon centers, and J to
restore the demilitarized character of the
once·neutral zone that separates North
and South Vietnam.
The sources said the U. S. proposal
docs not call for withdrawal of either
American or North Vietnamese troops
from South Vietnam, and they expect
guerrilla warfare to continue in the South
after the bombing stops.
Termination Attempt
Beach Council to Hear
Proposals on Oil Lease
Backing of attempts to secure state
legislation permitting cities and counties
to terminate unproductive oU leases will
be asked of the Huntington Beach City
Council today.
Councilmen meet at 4:30 and 7:30 p.m.
ln council chambers of Memorial Hall,
Sth Streel and Pecan Avenue.
One of the problems In oil producing
U .N. Founding ·
Paid Holiday
For McDonnell
< • I
Ahno11l 123 ,000 f\.1cOonnell Douglas
Corporation employes in S o u t h e r n
Callfomia, 18 other states, Washington,
O.C., and Kwajalein Jslond In the Pacific
today are enjoying a paid hollday as part
of the company 's eleventh annual
observance of United Nations Day.
The holiday, which precedes by three
days the 23rd anniversary of the founding
of the United Nations on Oct. 24, 1945,
provides a three-day weekend for all
company persoMel.
Throughout the we~k. the United Na-
tions flag wUl fly alongside the nag of the
United States at company plants from
coast to coasl.
In 1958, McDonnell Aircraft became the
first industrial organization in the YlOrld
to celebrate the founding of the United
Nations with a paid holiday.
This holiday was selected after a com·
pany·wide vote by all personnel.
"Each year, for 11 years now," said
James S. McDonnell, chairman of
~1c0onnell Douglas Corporation, "we
have honored the founding of the United
Nations.
"Our observance of UN Day is our way
of expressing our belief in the need for
this organization, created to wage peace
and pledged to try to better the welfare
of peoples everywhere. By observing UN
Da.v. we actively demonstrate our sup-
port for the principles and objectives of
the UN charter."
McDonnell, one of the nation'a leading
proponents of the United Nations, has
long worked for its success.
He served as national chairman of the
U.S. Committee for lhe United Nations
throughout tts 10th anniversary year in
1955, and was on thato organization's
board or directors until 1964.
communities has been the holding of land
under an oil lease written decades ago
when oil was being pumped, long after
that prod;.tction ceased.
The result in some communities as
Huntington Beach has been land re--
maining blighted and u n p r o d u c t i v e
because the owner of the land cannot
develop it, or in some cases even clean
up the blight because the land is leased
for oil production. ·
Huntington Beach Councilmen are
being asked lo join with the coonclls of
Torrance and Beverly Hills in urging
state legislation permitting involuntary
cancellation or leases on unproductive oil
lands.
Resolutions passed by boUt Citiea Point
out that '"year after year )and' ownen.
complain that they are unable to remove
an unproductive well from their premises
and obtain clear liUe to their land
without pa)'ing an exorbitant sum for
release.
"In the meantime lhey are paying tax-
es and mortgage payments without being
able to develop their property. This is noi
only unfair to the fee owner, but a1sO a
serious detriment to the conununity. '~
Oilmen say, however, that land held
11!1-der what appears to be unproductive
oil leases often is held in anticipation of
secondary recovery programs.
They point out that leases were signed
by the land owners in the hope of making
a profit and that the operators orten have
invested hug e sums in primary recovery
ll•hich has not paid off and wlll not pay
until secondary recovery programs are
developed.
~1oney requests for release of land b
asked in some cases by the holder of the
lease in order to compensate for in-
vestment not returned because of lack of
oil in marketable quantities from
primary recovery.
CUAST'S OLYMPIC
S1'ARS FEATURED
The Orange Coast's "gold stars" in the
Olympic Games -decathlon champ Bill
Toomey of Laguna Beach and Corona del
~1ar's teen·age Madam Butterfiy, Toni
Hewitt -are featured in reports direcU y
from Mexico City today.
At mid-morning, they pointed the nose
of Apollo 7 north and fired an eight·se·
cond burst from the craft's 20,500-pound
thrust engine. The blast shifted the low
point of their orbital path about 1,250
miles to the west, almost due south of
l~ouston over Meii<.'O.
Charges against Mrs. Jeanne Covell,
26. of 302 Ocean Ave., were filed follow-
ing a fracas last May 28 at the Syndicate
3000 teerrclub. Mrs. Covell and her hus-
band Gilbert are joint ownen: of the
Ocean Avenue night spot.
Officers said they were called to the
club and found Mrs. Covell distraught
and screaming. She claimed, they al·
lcge, that poli« officer James Mahan
had called her on the telephone a n d
threatened to kill her and her husband
if they did not close down the club and
leave town.
Coast Pioneer Thorpe Dies
DAILY PILOT Sports Editor Glenn
White analyzes Toomey's big win, look.II
ahead to. Miss Hewitt's compe.UUon to-
night 8I)d covers other local aspects of
the 19th Olympiad in his on-scene re--
ports starting today on Page 21.
Orange Coa1C
It also raised tbe high point of the
orbit~l __ealh about 10 miles to 276 miles.
The low pointremililed'll tin-mnes.
The cootrol center said this placed
(Ste APOLLO, Page 21
Mrs. Covell was arrested tas; Jµl)'. 19 cm mgea of libeling and slandering
the Huntington Beach Police Department
and obstructing its officers.
It's Your Town
Pilot Publication Tells About It
Your community ii ln the news. H's time for the DAILY
PILOT'S annual publication 0( YOUR COMMUNlTY magazine.
This year's edition, 40 pages big wrapped In a colorful cover
and including a brand new street map and "poinl.< of Interest"
Index. will be Inserted In Tuesday's Huntington Beach and Foon-
biin Valley editions of the DAILY PILOT.
YOUR COMMUNITY Is a perfect "mail·home" piece lo send
lo relatives and friends in other parts of the nation. It's fact and
pholo-!illed pages also make it a valuable publication you'll
want lo keep handy ~II year for read)'. reference. See the DAILY
PILOT Tuesday for 1nfonnat1on on how to obtain extra copies.
Captain Joseph Raymond Thorpe, early
pioneer and promoter of the Orange
Coast and lately-manager of 1 Newport
Beach liportrishing Oeet, died Sunday at
the age of 84.
Services for Capt. ThOrpe, known as
dean of Paci!ic Coast fishermen. will be
held Wednesday.
Until his death, Ult captain was gen·
cral manager of Davcy·a Locker, New·
port Beach sporUishing operation 1 n d
Catalina tour boat service.
Capt. Thorpe moved to the Orange
Coast in 1903. He established a b a 1 s
brt<Clini !arm on his HWltlngtoo Beach
ranch. ll1CI used the dirt removed for
the ponds to build a road aJocg the
coast CXll1l10Clin& HuntJniton B e a c h
ll1CI S.al Beach.
Ile publlshed the first California road
map for url,y motor or enthuslastl
showing pldures of ,...,. crou roods
and listing all blacksmith shops 1 n d
grocery stores that had gasoline pumps.
1'he map became a handbook wllh
suggestions for auto trips such as "Frb-
COAST PIONEER DIES
Capt. JoHph Thorpe
co -Five Days of Easy Running ...
When circulation let" lo 20,000 copies
In 1913, the Automobile Club of SOuthem
California claimed the publication, nqw
known as Westways.
In 1925, Thorpe founded the United
Rabbit Corporalion. The company s o I d
grown rabbits for breeding stock to
people who wanted a back yard buslness.n
The company then bought back 10,000
of the young ra.bblb weekly to ship lo
lht East.
Not a trick was missed by Capt.
Thorpe. Gtnnan sausage makers were
employed and "rabbll pork sausage"
took New York by storm, sellln& as a
delicacy for •t a pound.
In t929, Capt. Thorpe started a logging
and saw mlU oper1llon at Bi.a: Bear
Lake, but by 1"8 be was bac.t at I.be
beach.
Re la llUl'Vlved by his wile, Goldie, of
the lamlly home, 11111 W. 15th St., Now·
port Beoch.
Ot.htt rurvlvors Include a brother, Wil·
liam, and 1 list.tr, Mrs. Vlr£2nla Banks,
both of Los Angeles.
Servlctt will be held at J p.m. Wtdnes-
day at Bell ~way Chapel, Co 1 t 11
Mesa. lnt«ment will follow at Melrose
Abbey Mausoleum.
1,
I
Weatlaer
The nlorning fog may !ill
the air again Tuesday when the
Orange Coast gets more buy
sunshine and the temperature
11tays bogged down In the upper
sixties. Inland it'll be 1 near·
Lroplcal 80.
INSIDE TODAY
Mtlodyland unt>ttl1 (and un--
drape1) IU "Bride 'o/ TornorroW'
Jomonour, and' all •hf'll bt '°'""'
Ing if a weddina wU cmd a
imm. See Entf'rtainmen~ Po.oc
10.
• • n•1 " " ' , ..
" lt·lt , .. •• •
I
•
• :!/ DAILY PILDT Mond«t, Ottobtf 2.1, 1961
Three Candidate.s Disagree on Lµll in Vietnam
i-::.~: JNnlllNt.'l'IONAL • " 711• -a. 9" ...,., ·DYi thli -hill In fighting 111 vr-.i lhoWd be an lm.parta.nt ractor in the
·American ddlberallool on whelber to
"'°1> bomhiac llorlh Vietnam apln. • Thin! party cllJldldate George C.
1\'&llaco, at tbe wne time. Dally oppooed
a bombing hilt unim the North Viet·
... .,... mal.t !mmedlate public ....
.~. He .sakl tht Communist.I are
taking advanl.tgo of rtsttictioaa on U.S.
Pair Held ·
In Assault
OnMesan
Two Santa Ana men are bein& held ori
cbatge.s of aaaau1t with Intent to commi
murder, armed robbery and tidnapin& lr
dl1 all<r Ille Sunday nlgbt 5booUni of
Costa Mesa man.
Booked Into Orange County Jell tod1
on the three charges are Jamea Hem
Alvarez, %3, of 723 E. Walnut St. a·
David Thomas Tramble, 25, of 1422 '
4th St. who allegedly attempted to r1
Me-N·Ed's Piua Parlor at 1180 S. Bri!t
st., Santa Ana or $3,358.32.
Gary W. Him, a pizza chef of 160 \I
Willon St., Costa Mesa, was shot in the
left thJih durilll the boldup, poUce said.
He was lreated and released from Santa
Ana Community hosF.ilal. Alvarez and Tremb e are charged with
entering the pizza 1bop about 11 :30 p.m
Sunday, brllldlablng pisto~.
Police allege they shot several times
Into the floor , while ordering Lhe 12
diners there into the men's room and
then pladng a Jul;• box against the door.
One of the employet wu taking an
anler by pbone wben the bandlla entered.
The woman placing lhe order heard the iUllSbola and nno of tho suspocla teU lhe
emptoye to hans up. She noWled police
but refused to gtve her address or phone
number.
Wblle the robbers were forcing diners
into the restroom, Him came from
the back room to see what was hap-
pening. When he turned to flee from the
room, be was shot in the leg, accordJ.n& to
Sanla Ana poUce.
, Hinz: and the other employe wm then
lll1l<nd to empty ell tho money from the
two cuh reo1sten and tho office safe Into
a wblte plilow case, police said. They
were tben told to lie face down on the
floor u the two men left by a rear extt.
1A Santa Ana police officer on hla way
tq the scene saw a car containing the
llispectl head.Jng ln the opposite direc·
U:m. When he: turned around to follow
them, they s~ off, a111!gedJy dropping
the while pillow ca.se in the street &i they nod .
They atruck three parked cars at
Cbestnut and Halladay irtreets then fied
on foot. Tramble wu arrested a block or
tWo awl)' and Alvam wu picked up
9bout l :ll when he called police to report Illa car bad boon stolen.
Danger of World
Atomic War 'Very
Close' Says Tito
BELGRADI!:, Yugoslavia (Al') -
Pmldeal nw warned today that the
dJnger of world war la very close and
ttiat the big powers might then use -.,...._ Spealda& at Prolrupijl! and Toplica,
BOUtbeut Serbian town. on a lour of
east Yugoslavia, the: Yugoslav president
81.1d .,The dancer of a world war ls very
ck>se." He added, "It is not excluded uiat the bif, powers would u 1 e
alomlc anm, ' U the war should !>real
oat.
•
DAIL V Pl lOT
OlAHOI CO.UT ,UM.llHINO Co.YIAH't'
..... ,. t-1. w.,, ,,...,. ..... ,lltlll"*"
J1~1i •· c.,1.1 Vb ,_kltM W ~1 Mt"'"'
Th•1111t K11YU Elllor
Tli•Mtt A. M"r,hh11
Mlflltl,. fll!w
Alf!l,rt w. ••••• wur. .... •••" ~.. HllllllN*' 11«11
1!11* Clly t:lflt•
HM ..... NIMdiOHke
Jff tth Str11t
M,1n119 A44,..nr P.O. Jt11 7,0, '2•~1 --....... INdl: ttll W1t1t ........ lwtrf
•
c.. .-.. : "' """' ·~., .,..., """"' 9*'1: m ,....,.. •-
, ..
' •,
mtts • maa • "VSJ sJ&alllcmt .. ~ie'i\ U:.:!r:
ledotl. llf --°""' ......... tioa In ., eeelklon to•• •••mt in Saigon. Nlxon also called for "deamer·
icanlz.atJon" ol the war.
All three candidates made lbeit
siaLements Sunday. Broadcut comments
by both Wallace and DemocraUc vice
presidential nominee Sen. Edmund S.
Mll8la Stm:111 l:olh nlJe:I tho qulltlor:
ft 'w l!artb Vie-bu ~ of· , .... c ..... ,..,.. .... uia.
........... I ' .11.-111:1 Ill ............ ,_ tlta
Prell-.HlllC) ''I bene.e ntW' tbq-are
talking ~ unannounced concession.!
and I tblnt any -Ion oughl to be
made pubUc to the American people and
to tht people ct the work!."
He said there should not be 11 any unan·
nounced rec!procaJ qreementa on the
put ol. lbe Nartb V ....... 111"
MllRla, ..... -(-a4 ~ABC), was a.si.ed about the
..,._. Alabama governor's commeota.
"'Gov. Wallace has been bril!fed as lhe
Nit of us have been on the present posl·
lion and he wants t.o make it public he's
1rl a polilion to do '°·" Preued for elaboraU<11, ?.tmtle said,
"Gov. Wallace will get my meaning. You
can't get my meaning lf you haven't been
br!eled." He declined. fW'lher comment
.....,i to 1101 ''wllat Ile (W.U-) llkl
tlt!I an.-ltu -............. what he knows." •
Hwnphrey, commenting on the reCent
scaledown ln fl&htlng, said the tun "bu
some s.lgniflcance." He saJd in a broad·
cast interview (Face the Nation-CBS)
the combat decline "surely ought to be
tat.en into account" in the declaion on a
bombing halt.
Nixon, in an interview published In the
New Republic, said he opposed "im~
* * * .l\lixon Far Alaead
ll"itloa ol. a -™• .,.._,i pn -~ ''Thert la llllle reason to believe that
an imposed OD11H1on government in South
Vietn3m would serve the interests of the
South Vietnamese."
The former vice president a.slo ad-
vocated "small unit action" ln the war
zone as a good way to shift more of the
fighting to the South Vietnamese and
start "deamericanizaUcn ol tbe can(licL"
Humphrey Now
Gains on Wallace
.._ __ ,
ht thla -·· latest bald: of polls, Republican Richard Nixon conttoua to
hold a strong lead in the race for Pres.J.
dent but Democratic candidate Hubert
Humphrey is comlng up, although slowly
and not enough to change Nixoo'11 com·
mantling lead.
Time magatlne gave Nb:on 33 states to
sb: for Humphrey and the New York Dai·
Jy News said Nixon is four percent ahead
in New York state. .
A Christian Science Monitor 'poll,
however said Humphrey h,as gained on
his Republican opponent in 24 states dur·
.Ing the last two weeks.
Carolina -were all Southern or border
states.
Time sald Humphrey is leading In his
home state ol Ml.Mesota and in New
York, but described his edge l.n both
states as "precarious."
The Daily News' straw poll, wbkh the
newspaper says has been wrong only
three times in '6 years, showed Nixon
ahead Ir/New York with 46 percent of the
vote to 42 for bwnpbrey and a for
Wallace.
The News sald its survey covered 6,000
persons in New York city, the suburbs
and upstate.
HEAVY BRUSH -CONCEALS TRAFFIC FATALITY NEAR CRYSTAL COVE
Arrow Points to Body of Laguna Man Missing Nea rly Three Weeks
The newspaper said the gains we.re not
enough to shi!t any of the states, which
have a total of 261 electoral votes, from
Nixon to l-lumphrey, and its latest survey
sho\\'cd Nil.on further ahead than on Oct.
10.
Fron& Pa11e 1
APOLLO ...
Unruh Acknowledges
Eying Race for Governor
FRESNO (AP) -J.,.e M. Unruh
pledged today lhal he will resign as
speaker of the Assembly if he becomes
a candidate for governor of California
or "any other major office ."
With that annowicement, the influen-
tial Democratic leader formally 1cknowl·
edged he is considering running for gov-
ernor 1n 1970 -the year Republican Gov.
Reagan LI up for re-election.
"If I am re-elected speaker of the
'Assembly next year -and If I sub-
sequently decide to embark upon a cam·
palgn for the governonhip of California
or to~ any other major offjce - I will
resign from the speakership before em·
barking on auch a campalgn," sald Un·
ruh, who has held the powerful job since
1961.
Unruh'a remarks were prepared for
dellvery to studenta at Fresno State
College.
He aald he wlli nm for speaker U the
Democrats relaln control of the lower
house In the November election. They
now art In charge 42·38. But he eald the
speakership Is too big a job to combine
with running for statewide office.
in addition to governor, l he Demo-
cratic nomination for the U.S. Senate
seat now held by Republican George
Murphy will be open In 1970.
Unruh didn't offer to qult as the as·
semblyman representing Lo! Angeles
County'! 85th A!H:mbly district.
, But he said the speakership was too
Viet Scrip Exchanged
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Command
in Vietnam today exchanged the military
1crip American servicemen uae instead
of money in 11 crackdown on coun·
terfeltlng and black marketeering. Gls
had 12 hours to eichange U be.fore It
became worthleu.
big a job to combine with a statewide
political race.
"If the Democra~ win a majority in
t h e Nov. 5 election, I will stand for re-
election to the speakership -but I
would want to hold that major office
only so long as I could devote my per·
sonal attention to it.
"By the very nature of the speak.er·
ship, it iJ impossible for anyone to fut.
fill Its responsibilities and campaign for
atatewide elective office at the aame
time," Unruh said.
College Chief
Supports T,vo
Ousted Athletes
SAN JOSE (AP) -Tho preaidont of
San Jose State College hu voiced Ji.ls
support of U. S. Olympic runners Tom-
mi! Smith and John Carloa, suspended
from the team last week for their actions
during a victory ceremony.
"They do not return home in disgrace
but as the honorable young men they arc,
dedicated to the cause of justice for the
black people in our society," President
Robert 0. Clark aaid Sunday of Smlth
and Carlos, students at the college.
Smith won the 200-meter race last Wed·
nesday and Carlos flniahed third. They
stood on the victory stand with black·
gloved fists upralsed, wore black socks
without shoes and stared down u the Na·
llonal Anthem was played and lhe flag
was ralaed.
"l regret that our treatment of our
black alhletes has been such as to
prompt them to feel they muat use the
Olympic games to communicate their
real concern for the condition of blacks in
America," Clark told newsmen.
Onassis Honeymoon Pla11s
Upset by Stormy W eatl1er
SKORPIOS, Greece (UPI ) -Gale
force winds, high seas and chilly
\lo'cather today held up any plans for a
honeymoon cruise by Arlstotle and Jac-
queline Onassis. (Related story, picture
on Page 4)
Although bad, the weather did not pre-
vent the departure of friends and
relaUvu of Onaa5l1 and the former Mrs .
John F. Kennedy, including the new Mrs.
Onassis' two children, Caroline, 10, and
John Jr., 7. Nor did It halt lhe party
a b o a rd the yacht Chri.:ltina w b e r e
IUW danced unlit almost dawn.
The entire group of friends 1 n d
relaUves went from Onassf.s' OoaUng
palace by speedboat 10veral hundred
yanfs to the fishing village ol Nldrloo llld
U:en to the tlr]>or\ ol Aklton There Ibey
boarded a plana to Alhena wbere Ibey
wUl acatter to their various dest.lnatioN.
The party aboard the yacht luted
lhrouah the nliht with 13 <OllWned IPtll
from lhe nearby laland of Levku d•nc.ln&
and slnglng for the guests.
The newtywedl themselva alept late
but aroae , to •!ah dePIJ'Un&: guuta
godspeed and s•ve the chlldl'U a final
~ 01rlltlna'1 caplain 1&id Sunday hi
wu rudy to salJ at three boun' ttOllct
but did not have any definite orders.
Other members of the wedding party said
they thought Onassis and his wife were in
no hurry to leave but probably would
take 1 ahort cruise wltbln a few days to
find the 1un.
RelaUves aald any cruise -If there is
one -probably would be brief because
Onassis Ja now engaged ln a projl!Ct dear
to hi1 heart, a MOO mllllon development
scheme for Greece.
The ChrlstJna, a converted canadian
World War II lrlgate, can 1all ln just
about any weather but ls notoriously un·
cornlortable In stormy seas.
It would be unlikely the newlyweds
would cruise In rough seas, althouah both
Onusls and Jackie are aood sailors.
Following their U.mlnule wedding
ceremOl\J' In a 13 by 30 foot Greek
Orthodox c b a p e l on onmla' private
Island of Si.orplot off Greece'• western
cout, the couplt went aboard the yacht
and touted each other and fortune with
champagne and red wine. crewmen gaid
t.ht newlywed.a left word they would be
Bl«!pln& late.
Amona thtir firlt tasks of married lire
was saylng godbye to ~1 r s. On~is:'
childrC!n. The la te President'• children
wer. ezpected to fly back to their private
oclioola In New Yori City.
Coast Motorist
Found Dead After
Mystery Accident
Laguna Beach resident Arthur Lewis
Vaughan, who had been missing nearly
three weekll, was found dead Sunday
beneath the wreckage of hls auto in a
ravi ne near Crystal Cove.
Vaughan, 48, of 3053 Nestell Road, had
la.st been seen alive in Los Angeles about
2 a.m. Oct. 2.
Thick underbrush in the Crystal Cove
Arroyo, just off Pacific Coast Highway
between Corona del Mar and Laguna, had
almost totally concealed the wreckage of
Vaughan's car. Hi• body was plMed
beneath the main auto wreckage. The car
J1ad broken into lhree pieces. other
wreckage was .cattered in the bush.
Coroner's deputies estimate the Laguna
man died about one hour after he was
last seen in the early morning hours of
Oct. 2.
Investigators said the Laguna man ap-
parently died of chest Injuries when be
was crushed by the wreckage.
Two boya blcycUng In the area
discovered the car about t :U p.m .• They
notified authorities.
The boys who aaw the car, John
Beaton, 15, 722 Mitchell Ave., Santa Ana,
and Danny Enske , 13, of 13862 E. Pon·
derosa St., Santa Ana, were riding north
on the highway Sunday when they spotted
the wreckage in the ravine, officers said.
Vaughan's body wa.s found later by
police besi de his car.
California Highway Patrol investigators
said Vaughan was apparently southbound
in his 1964 staUon wagon when he loat
conlrol of it.
The car crossed the highway, 1lruck a
telephone pole and sailed about 200 feet
through the air before crashing Into the
he.ivy brush in the arroyo on the north
side of the highway.
Vaughan had been lJsted. aa a misaing
person since he failed to return home
Oct. 2, according to Laguna Poli ce Sgt.
Vic Sagen. He was last seen earlier that
morning in Los Anselea.
YOUR
WATCH'\?
t tlHnod t Oilod
t Ad(ustod PEARLS
lt.E·STRUNC
RIH~ SIZED, frwn
The survey gives Nixon 36 slates with
:172 electoral votes, compared with 43
states with 361 ~lectoral vote.! in ils
earller survey.
Time said a survey of its cor·
respondents in the 50 states Indicated
that Nixon ls far ahead in 33, with
Humphrey and third-party candidate
George C. Wallace leading In six each.
Humphrey also was ahead in the District
of Columbia, Tlrne said.
The n\aga:cine's figures showed Nixon
leading in one less state than was in his
colwnn in a simllar survey a month ago.
Humphrey was said to have lost four
Btates, while Wallace had gain ed two.
Humphrey's losses -A r k a n s a s .
Maryland, Missouri and Tennessee -and
\Yallace's iains -Arkansas and South
GOP's Agnew
To Make Only
County Visit
Republican vice presidential nominee
Spiro T. Agnew will make his first and
only campaign vlsJt to Orange County
Saturday as lhe guest speaker at an in·
vitationaJ fund ralalng luncheon at the
Newporter IM in Newport Beach.
According to Victor C. Andrews of
Laguna Beach, chairman ol the Nixon·
Agnew campaign commlttee in Orange
County. the Maryland _ governor will ar·
r ive at Orange County Airport Saturday
morning and depart following the lun·
cheon. He will make no other ap-
pearances in lhe county.
Bids to the luncheon have been malled
to a select number of countlans by
membera of the commlttee on ar·
rangements.
CommlUee members include Dr •
Arnold 0 . Bttkman of Corona del Mar,
chairman of a committee of industri alists
for Nii on·Agnew; Mrs. Thurmond Clarke
of Newport Beach, county chairman of
Women for Nixon-Agnew; and John
Mac~ of Newport Beach, finance
chairman for the campaign.
Apollo 7 in a good position for hitting the
target zone on landing. The next time the
big engine ls fired will be Tue!day mom·
ing to pull the spaceship out of orbit.
Commenting on the perfect engine
burn, Cunningham said' "Thal'• prelly
good."
The 15eventh teleca.st from the orbiting
Apollo 7 studio ended with Scblrra
displaying a sJgn that read : "As the sun
sinks &lowly in the west."
"This is Apollo 1 signing off," he said
as the excellent picture faded after a
nine-minute production.
Schirra, Eisele and Cunningham also
displayed a new sigo which indicated
they are happy to be heading home.
A crudely drawn picture of the Apollo
ship floating on the water was ac..
companied by these words: "Everybody
out of lhe Pool."
Clearly visible as the camera panned
around the cabln were pictures of the
three wives of the spacemen, pasted
above their duty stations.
They also used the camera to zero in on
the heavy beards grown by all three.
•'J will not adm it to the fact that there
is any gray in thi s beard," Schirra 38.ld.
"~1y halrdresser's the only one that
knows."
As the astronauts passed the camera
around, Schlrra quipped: "You've got
three profl!S3lonal cameramen up here
now, so when we get back we eipect to
get our union cards."
After passing out of camera range,
Schirra told the control center that they
float aro und in their weightless cabin Uke
monkeys in a cage, using hands and feet
to get around.
"\Ve've really become efficient al U,
like we've gone ape," he laughed.
After the telecast, the astronaut.s began
a busy day of preparing for re-entry and
:splashdown.
They are to trigger their !p8.cecraft
engine over Hawaii and streak through
the atmosphere to a landing southeast of
Bermuda.
The aircraft carrier Esser heads a
large recovery force wa!Ung to retrll!ve
lhe astronaut.s as they complete their 11 ·
day space mission that has put the
Uni ted States firmly on course to the
moon.
0
OMEGA
Your Omega
Salts & Stroke
Agency
FREE
Sl.99
.. _ ... ----fNm tlU
Ill f v1rlltl'
... 1_
IM!oHl1I
Mrsslnt Ol1imoncf1 lttplaefd, from
S2.49
$4.99
.. ._ .....
•v'°""llQ
lrlll'fl IHI.
wit~ lllr~llb
fr9ft •1• Jawelry be1l1nln1
A Spedtltyl
Now 2 Great Storea To Serve You
HWOI IMOl'PIN• HUNTIN•TOH CINTll
~ CINTll IUCH & IDIHa11
" IHI HAUOI an. HUNTIN•TON IU.CH
COSTA MbA HM411 191·1101
Opon Mon. Tl:un. Fri. Tiii 9 p.m.
·-· ----·-----
t
01'lwr '".,..'-"' -.... --
TllMI
TO
PIT
YOUI
IUMIT I
' -·-
' --~
·.:;; '"Ct; ._..... •••
.
Lag11na Beaeh DAlLY PILOT Today's Closing
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
voe 61, NO. 253, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTQBER 2r, "1968 TEN CENTS
Crystal Co-Ye Car Crash
OS
0.1.ILY !'It.OT Shltf I'""'°
SISTERS CELEBRATE WITH CHAMPAGNE , MEMORIES
Lagu,nans Harshberger (left) and McKinley
'Big Wing Ding~
Laguna 1leach 'Girl' Turns 90 ·.
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 nt O.llY Pl'llt SIMI
"Did we have a wing ding. We had
champagne and the people just kept com-
ing. You should have seen all the boU!es.
I'm afraid we got an awful reputation."
Mrs. Marie M. Harshberger radiated as
she described the Sunday party for her
sister, Miss Cora McKinley.
She was likely teasing about the "awful
reputation". It was an important event at
the Laguna Beach Nursing Home. It was
Miss McKinley's 90th birthday.
Perhaps as the cake was sliced and the
champagne bubbled in toast, Miss
McKinley's disciplined mind ranged back
over the years.
THREE SISTERS
There y;ere three McKinley girls,
daughters or a railroad execulivt.,
graduated from Lakeview High in
Chicago .. "The poor teachers got tired o(
M!eing lhe McKinley sisters," laughed
Pt1rs. Harshberger,
The other sister was \tilled in an auto
accident, an occurrence rare in those
day s.
Sisters recall different things. "It was
such fun in Chicago, You could dance
your head off all night," said Mrs.
Jiarshbergcr fro1n he.r wheelchair.
"I was working, teaching and
moonlighting getting my degree ," said
Miss McKingley from her w[lchair.
Miss McKinley attend L e w I s
Institute, an engineering sc aDd took
her bachelor or science degree in
Officers Raise
Cover on 'Pot'
Under Ground
Not satisfied with driving marijuana
underground, Laguna Beach police Sun-
day night pursued it on foot lhrough a
new clty drainage pipe.
After hearing "voices Crom below" a
manhole cover in the 100 block of Cleo
Street at Sleepy Hollow, Officer Nell
Purcell lirted the lid and wtnt in after the
three suspects.
The chase wu on.
Police Sgt. Frank OiUon said the oUictr
prusued lwo men down the MW 51,,.foot
city drainage pipe to the bell!h whtre
they a:caped in the twilight.
Purctll 1".entttod lht plpc, said Oillon,
and ftrmfld out a pritooer after a short
duh. He was JdenU6ed as Charles
F..dward Allman, 21,:address unkuQwQ. ·
Pollce Aid Allman WU charged lhi.s
momlng wttb being In 1 place where
mariju11111 wu be1n& llSed.
( •
chemistry at the University of Chicago.
"I just like mathematics and
chemistry," she sald. "Everything has to
balance."
She took art classes too at Hull House,
famed social settlement established by
reformer Jane Adams in lBlm to combat
juvenile delinquency and aid the foreign
born.
She taught in Chicago for 30 years and
came to Los Angeles where she finished
out a half century of servic'e.
She began to teach retarded junior high
boys in Los Angeles and continued for 20
years. Many she found were not mentally
retarded but handicapped by lack of
English. So she dug into language to help
them.
"People thought you were loo old if you
were over 40, so I asked for a special
school that the other teachers didn't
like," she smiled.
"I liked the work immensely," she
said. "The boys used to come back from
high school to have things explained."
The sisters had first seen Laguna
Beach in 1915 when they came down the
canyon with friends in a "little bitty
Modcl-T with a rumble seat"
RETIRE!\!ENT
"I said then this is such a beautiful
place; this is where I'm going to spend
my final days," recaJled Miss McKinley.
Mrs. Harshberger, the molher cf twins,
a son and daughter. had been widowed
early.
The soc. a graduate of Gal Teeh,
became a P.1arine pilot in World War U.
and later served in the Kortan War. He
is Brig. Gen. John D. Harshberger (ret.)
"Everyone knew him as 'Iron John,'"
said his mother. "Hi!I men adored him.
"He was always doing something. After
he retired he built his own house in
Oregon on the PtfcKensle River, a
beautiful great big house. When be
retired rive generals were there to say
· g<>O<lbye."
The sisters retired to Laguna Beach in
1"8 and built their home.
"She had planned a big party on her
90th birthday bul she broke her hip (in
August): that's why she's here," said
Mrs. Harshberger who's in the nursing
borne recovering from surgery.
But. it was a good party anyway, that
IOlh one.
Stock Jtlarkets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock marrc.t
kept an even keel late thls afternoon
as il rode out some profit taking on last
week's 1harp gain. Tradlna was aclive.
(See quotatioM, Paat' l&.J.9).
Allhwgh tht: averages were down
slll)>tly. btcause of .... 1me.1s In ,.lected
blue chips, about 125 more issues r o 1 e
!ban ldl on lht New York Stock EJ-
chanse.
·-
:Victim, 48,
Missing
3 Weeks
Laguna Beach resident Arthur Lev.•is
Vaughan, who had been missing nearly
three weeks, was found dead Sunday
beneath the wreckage of his auto in a
ravine near Crystal Cove.
Vaughan, 48, or 3053 Nestall Road, had
last been seen alive in Los Angeles about
2 a.m. Oct. %.
• oun I e
Thick underbrush 1n the Crystal Cove
Arroyo, ju.st off Pacific Coast Highway
between Corona del Mar and Laguna, had
almost totally concealed the wreckage of
Vallihan's car. His body was pinned
beneath the main auto wreckage. The car
had broken into three pieces. Other
wreckage was scattered in the bush.·
Coroner's deputies estimate the L3guna
man died about one hour after he was
last seen in the early morning hours of
Oct. 2.
HEAVY BRUSH CONCEALS TRAFFIC FATALITY NEAR CRYSTAL COVE
Ar row Points to Body of Laguna Man Missing Nearly Three Weeks
Investigators said the Laguna man ap-
parently died of chest injuries when he
was crushed by Ute wreckage.
Two boys bicycling in U1e area
discovered the car about 1 :45 p.m .. They
notified authorities.
The boys who saw the car, John
Beaton, 15, 72'l Mitchell Ave., Santa Ana.
and Danny Enske, 13, ol 1386% E. Pon-
derosa St., Santa Ana, were ·ridlnt north
on the highy;•ay Sunday when they 1potted
the wreckage in the ravine, 0Ulcer1 said.
Vaughan·s body was found later by
police beside his car.
California Highway Patro1 investigators
said Vaughan was apparently southbound
in his 1964 station wagon when he Jost
control of it.
The car crossed the highway, struck a
telephone pole and sailed about 200 fett
through the air before crashing into the
heavy brush in lhe arroyo on the north
side of the highway.
Vaughan had been listed as a missing
person since he failed to return home
Oct. 2, according to Laguna Police Sgt
Vic Sagen. He was last seen earlier that
morning in Los Angeles.
. Pacific View Memorial Park is handl·
1ng funeral arrangements which are in-
complete today. Survivors include a wife,
Betty.
CUAST'S OLYMPIC
STA RS FEATURED
The Orange Coast's "gold stars" in the
Olympic Games -decathlon champ Bill
Toomey of Laguna Beach and Corona de!
Mar's teen-age Madam Butterfly, Toni
Hewitt -are featured in repart.s directly
from Mexico City today.
DAILY PILOT Sport.! F.dltor Glenn
White analyzes Toomey's blg win, looks
ahead to Miu Hewitt 's compelilion to-
night and covers other local aspects of
the 19th Olympiad in his on-scene re-
ports starting today oo Page 21.
Laguna; Hills AF Major
Involved in War Rescue
' ' ' ' . An Air Force ri\a]Or from LagUna Hilla _. ',Less than four mile& lay between the
was invol~ed in a dramaUc rescue or six tiny rafl flotilla and the Communist guns.
d~wned ainnen off the coast of No;lh "•hich began lobbing shells into the water Vietnam Sunday, one of the most daring . jobs of lhe entire war. as the sl.x doomed -or seemingly so -
He was identified in a communique fliers drilled.
from Saigon as Maj. Robert D. Schular, Rifie fire began as soon as the two
37, of Laguna Hills, but efforts to rafts driited irito range, while 24 Air
establish his address were unsuccessful Force and. some Navy jels from the car·
today. rier Intrepid screamed overhead, making
During the hellish mission involving the passes al the gun.bristling island bluffs helicopter rescue unit dubbed The Jolly
Green Giants, North Vietnamese gunners while another helicopter approached.
on arsenal-like Tiger Island blazed away The rescue helicopter carrying Steven
al lhe dramatic scene offshore. N. Northern, 21, of Riverside zoomed in
Two Navy jets -their guns empty or under the blanket of gunfire with Maj.
any more ammunition -even made Charles E. Wicker, 34, of Baltimore, ft'Id., perilous passes over an island bluff to in-
tim.idale antiaircraft crews and draw fire in the pilol 's seat.
away from the helli::opter hovering over Northern used a \\'inch hoi!t to haul
typhoon whipped swells in the South aboard tile SOh and 51st men he has sav·
China Sea. ed in 22j rescue missions of the war and
Sharpshooling gunners shol off the tail the chopper roared seay,·ard again (or
of the first Jolly Green Giant chopper to another run.
arrive on the scene, where two injured l\1aj. Schular Y.'aS aboard Wicker's 1-13
fliers 1>1•ere struggling in lhe chilly, 10-foot helicopter, but his role in the rescue was
waves. not clearly spelled out in U1e military
A second shell slan1med into the bi& 113 communique received today .
helicopter. sinking it within a few "We were only about 11,~ miles from
seconds, but the four crewmen managed the island when we finally n1ade the
to scramble out in time to avoid going pickup," Wicker said. "I've never made a
down witi1 it. faster pickup In all my Ille."
Air Force' Pararescucman Steve T. Rescued men were identified as \Vhitc,
While, 24, of Los Allos CaliL, was bap-Sgt. Robert T. Anderson, W. of St. Louis,
tized in both fire and icy seawater on his r.10., and pilots Capt. Gerald W. titoorc,
first rescue mission, military spokesman 31, of Washington, D. C., and Capt. Lau-
said. rens C. Davis. Jr., 2.9, of Fort Worth,
White swam to the two injured jet Tex .: all of thtm happy to be ali\'e.
jockey~ who had bailed out of their Air The Jolly Green Giants are the mosl
Foret: F1 Phantom after it was hit by decorated airmen to serve in the Viet-
groundfire from Tiger Island and dlsabl-nam war as a result of countless acts or
ed. cool heroism in harrowing situations.
Dragging the injured pair into life Sgt. Northern, who ls only 21. has
rafts, the four chopper crewmen joined earned the Silver Star, Distinguished
them in what appeared to be an agoniting Flying Cross, Purple Heart and 15 Air
drift lo denlh as tides carried them ltiedals dur:lng his two years of service
toward the bloody island. with the resc!ue uniL.
Viet Cease-Fire Declared
U.S. to Release 14 Nortli Vietna111ese Prisoners
SAIGON (AP) -The United States and
North Vietnam declared a 36-hour cease-
fire in 7.88 square miles along the North
Vietnamese coast for the release today or
14 North Vietnamese seamen captured
more than two years ago.
The cease-rire and release of the
prisonen, coop\ed with \he withdrawal of
the battleship New Jersey from off the
coast of North Vietnam and the conllnued
lull in the ground war, lncrt&ed specula-
tion that Washington and Hanoi might be
movtna toward progreu in the Parts
peace talta.
Oiplomall 1l p.. United N1U011J said
they believe North Vlttnam wanta to get
a peace aet.Uemcnt before the ntlt U. ~·
admlnlattaUon taku offloe Jan. 21. But
de.pit• the continuing spccullUon that
lht United Siil<& might hall !ht bombintl
of North Vietnam, American warplanes
carried out strikes again today in the
North below lhe 19th parallel, and more
of the same was scheduled for Tuesday,
military sources laid .
U. S. Headquarters announced that 24
Americans were killed today when an Air
Force twin engine C47 t r a n s p o r t
developed trouble in one engine ar.d
crashed In tbe central highlands. There
were no gurvivon:. The dead included 20
Air Force men, two Army men and two
civ)liana.
lnf9rm11tlon on today's rafdJ over
North Vietnam won't be aMCkmced unU I
Tut.sday.
American pilotl!: ori Sund11y logged 110
mls.slona over North vtetna.m. An Air
Force F4 Phantom fJjhttt-'?'.On1ber wu
downat by grOund fire 20 mil" north ol
lhe dcm!Utnrittd zone, and a big lUf3
Jolly Green Giant helicopter that tried to
rescue the two pilots also was shot down.
The two Phantom pilots and the four
helicopter crewmen were pulled from tJ1e
Gulf of Tonk.in by two other helicopters
after bombin& on the stonn-tossed seas
for an hour and a half.
The aircraft lost were lhe 909th
American warplanes announced downed
in combat .over North Vietnam and the
loth hclr:copler downed In !he Norlh.
The U. S. Mlsaion said in a stale.mtnt
announcing the retum of lhe 14 stamen
to North Vietnam ttiat their rtlcase ''ls
intended a.s an action of good wttl ''
"We hope It wW lead to further
...1 ..... of prl.sooers," ll added.
\
Space Trio Fires
Rocket, Prepares
For Earth Return
SPACE CENTER, flouston (AP) -The
Apollo 7 astronauts, mellowed alter a day
of air-to-ground arguments, clowned their
way through their finaJ television Ibo•
today and fired their Jai'ge speceship
engine to steer into a more favorable
course for returning to earth Tuesday.
(Earlier stories Page 5).
As Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr.,
Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and
civilian Walter Cunningham r a c e d
through their final hours in space, they
displayed none of the irritability that
sparked bitter disagreements w i t b
ground controllers SWlday, mosUy over
flight plan changes.
The aslronauts made it plain they are
eager to come home after 11 days in
space. Thcf are scheduled to parachute
into the Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda at
4:12 a.m. PDT Tuesday, climaxing a
spectacular, ~rfcct ilighl that set the
United States firmly on the path to the
moon.
At mid-morning, they pointed the nose
of Apollo 7 north and fired an eight~
cond burst rrom the cra£t's 20,500-pound
ll1rusl e~inc. The blast shilled the low
point of their orbital path about 1,250
miles to the west, almost due south ol
Houston over .Mexico.
It also raised the high point of the
orbital path about 10 miles to ,2?6 miles.
The low point remained at 103 miles.
The control center said this placed
Apollo 7 in a good position for hit~ng the
target zone on landing. The next time the
big enzine is fired will be Tuesday moro-
inr. to pull the spaceship out of orbit.
Commenting on the perfect engine
burn, Cunningham said: "Thal's pretty
good."
The seventh telecast from the orbiting
tSee APOLLO, Page %)
Orange Coas&
Weather
The morning rog may f i 11
the aJr agaln Tuesday when the
Orange. Coast gets: more hazy
sunshine and tho · temperature
stays bogged down in lhc upper
sixties. Inland It'll be a near·
tropical 80.
I NSIDE TG>DA l'
Melodytand unveil$ (and un-
drape1J its .. Bride of Ton1 orrow"
kml.orrow, and oU .!ht'U bt wtor-
ing U a wtdding t1til and a
!mile. Ste E'ntertainment. Page
JO. ....... • -' CMl11tr11I• • -" t!UL,... . .. H•ll1 .. I,....... .. ,. " ~'-" •• ·-" :=t::.. • OMlll Mttktl ' u -' -·-.... =-...-..:_ ... • .... """ -· . " ''"',....... ... ,. ...... ,.,. , .... 11 ... " "" ca,.. ' :J::: " -" • ·-'-.. --w ...... "
i '
'
Pair Held
In Assault
OnMesan
Two Sanla Ana men an being l1eld on
charges of usault with intenl to commit
murder, armed robbery and kidnaplng to-
day alter the Sunday night shooting of a
Co5ta Mesa man.
Booked Into Orlllll!• County jail today
on the three charges are James Henry
Alvarez, is, oI 722 E. Walnut St. and
Do.id Tbomaa Tramble, SS, of l<ZI W.
4th St. who allegedly attempted to rob
M&-N·Ed's Pma Parlor at 1180 S. Bristol
St., Sanla Alla of 13,351.:n.
Gary W. Hinz, a pizza che! of 1110 W.
Wilton SL, Costa Mesa, was abot in the
left thigh during the holdup, police aald.
He WU treated and rdeased from Santa
An• Community hospital.
Alvam and Tremble are charged with
entering the piz:r.a shop _about 11:30 p.m
Sunday, brandlahlllg pistols.
Police ollege they oho! oeveral llmeJ
into the floor, while ordering the 12
diners there into the roen'a room and
then placing a juke box against the door.
One of _the employes was taking an
order by phone when the bandits entered.
The woman placlng the order beard the
gumbota and oue ol the rapedl tell the
emptoye to hang up. She notlfled police
but refused to give her address or phone
number.
While the robben were forcing diners
into the restroom, Hinz came from
the back room to see what was hap-
pening. When be turned to nee from the
room, he wu shot 1n tbe leg, according to
Santa Ana police.
Hlnl and the other employe were then
ordered to empty ali the mouey from the
two cash regi!ters and the office safe into
a white pillow cue, police 18..!d. They
were then told to lie face down on the
floor as the two men left by a rear el.it.
A Santa Ana police officer on hh way
to the scene saw a car containing the
1111Sped.s heading In the oppoolte cllrec-
Uon. When he turned around to follow
them, they sped off, allegedly dropping
the while pillow eu:e in the street as they
fled.
They struck three parked cars at
Chestnut and Halladay streets then fled
on foot. Tramble was arrested a block or
two away and Alvarez was picked up
about 1 :30 wtien he called police to report
his car had been stolen.
GOP's Agnew
To Make Only
C.Ounty Visit
Republican vice presidenUa1 nominee
·Spiro T. Agnew wlll make his first and
only campaign vl.sit to Orange County
Saturday as the guest speaker at an in·
-vttaUonal fund raising luncheon at the
Newporter Inn in Newport Beach.
According to Victor C. Andrews of
Laguna Beach, chairman of the Nixon·
Agnew campaign committee in Orange
County, the Maryland governor will ar-
rive at Orange County Airport Saturday
morning and depart following the lun-
cheon. He will make no other a1>
pearance1 in the county. ·
Bids to the luncheon have been mailed
to a select number of countlam by
members of the committee on ar·
rangements.
Committee members include D r .
Arnold 0. Beekman of Corona del Mar
chairman or a committee of lndustrialis~
few Nis.on-Agnew; Mrs. Thunnond Clarke
of Newport Beach, county chairman of
Women for Nixon-Agnew; and John
Mac.Leod of Newport Beach, finance
chairman for the campaign.
Small .Bomb Explodes
MIAMI (UPI) - A small bomb ex·
ploded early on a sidewalk outside the
offices of Northwest Orient Airlines ro.
day in downtown Miami.
Police said no one was injured in the
bla!t.
DAILY PILOT
OltANGl COAST PUl\.IS"I NG COMPAN'I'
lolae,. N. Wttd
Pnuldlnl '"" PubUIMI'"
J eclr: II.. c •• 1 • .,
Vk.e Prul*l'll ,,,.. ~al Mmettt
1'1rio1111t IC11vil
Ei»itor
Th•flll•• A. Uurphl~1
M9Mtlnt E•lfot
ltlchtrd P. Hill Po ul Hi11eft 1.cr;-E:e~ A~.!~lnil
.... _ ..... Oflke
221 Forotl Av1. M,;n~, A4'r•111 r.o. 1 ... •••. ,2,sz --Cetlti Mete; Dt W.lf .. , '""" H._, 9"dl1 ml Wt.11 .. ._. tM.llf¥trd
H1111tfflttM ""°""':mt tll'ltlfwt
-lt4l.
DAn.v PILOT, wfttl llilllldl .. ~ ,.. .......................... -' ._ _, II _....,. ............ \..-.o -..0...
.......... aMdl, c.to ~ ~ "9c:ll. .._.... vai..., ..,. w~
....... • ........ N lllM, 0...,.. C...tf ~ """""' •i.rrt. -.. m1 ..., ..... 111111 .. ""'""' ~ w .............. c.to .........
T '11 D '(TI4) ., •• ,."
Q 1 1 ... '4J~lJ1
~,...o.....a... ........ Cito __ ...... ~n-.
-.................. llfmlt -............... ..... .~ .... . .....,.__...,.,......,. ..... ---..... ~ ~,, .... .. ...... , ............... ,
~ ......... .
l, • 1 'L
DEATH TAKES NEWPORT HARBOR PIONEER
State Senate Secretary Joseph Allen Beek
Newport Pioneer, Builder
~oseph A. Beek Sr. Dies
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of tltt DIM~ Piie! Sllff
Joseph Allan Beek Sr., long·time
secretary of the California Senate and
pioneer Newport Beach civic leader and
builder, died early today. He was 87.
He succumbed to bronchitis and
asthma, complicated by chronic em·
physema, at Hoag Memorial Hospital
shortly alter mldnight.
Mr. Beek, founder--0wner of the Balboa
Island Ferry, had served as secretary of
the State Senate since 1919.
"The only session he ever missed," his
widow, Carroll, said this morning, "was
during World War ll. He couldn't make it
because he was with the Army
Transportation $ervice.''
As secretary he kept the minutes of all
Senate sessions, filed amendments and
was generally responsible for a mulUtude
of paper work, which mounted greatly in
recent years.
"Joe showed up for them all, though,"
said Mrs. Beek. "He was even there for
this last veto session."
Mr. Beek's first state assignment was
as assistant Senate secretary in 1913. Six
:;ears later he became secretary, serving
..i5 cons~utive years.
"Joe had a full life," said Mrs. Beek.
It included establishment of the Balboa
Island ferry in 1919, initial development
of Balboa Island at about that time,
development of Harbor Island and 21
·rears' service on the old Newport Beach
Laguna Woman
Hurt u1 Spill
From Bicycle
A 60-year-old Laguna Beach woman
suffered serious head injuri es about noon
Sunday when the rear tire on her bicycle
blew out and she was thrown to the
street.
Kathleen Lerwill, 280 Highland Road.
was taken to South Coast Community
Hospital. She was in an intensive care
ward there today, her condition "guard-
ed'', a hospital spokesman said.
The. accident occurred on Coast 1-ligh-
way in the Emerald Bay area, police
said.
In another weekend accident, little
Sally Lynn Dugger, 3, of 621 Glenncyre
St., suffered a head cut when she fell at
her home Friday night.
Thomas Laverne Dugger. a school ad·
ministrator and chief lifeguard for the
city, took his dau ghter to the hospital
"·here she was treated and released .
high ocbool board of trwtees.
He was on the school board from 1933
to 1954.
Jn addition, some four decades ago he
wu chairman of the citizens' harbor
committee whose efforts culminated in
federal aid for development Of Newport
Harbor. Committee leaders also worked
for passage of a county bond issue to prD-
vlde matching funds for the harbor pro-
ject. Mr. Beek was Newport's flrst
harbor master.
11r. Beek al.so served as secretary.
manager of the old Balboa Chamber of
Commerce, which for years had a ru~
ning feud v;ith the Newport Harbor
chamber.
An avid sailor, he was former com-
modbre of the Southern California
Yachting Association and the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
His survivors include his widow. of the
home address, 528 S. Bay Front, Balboa
Island; sons, Joseph Allan Jr., Barton
and Seymour, all of Newport and 9
grandchildren. '
Last rites are pending at Pacific View
J\r1emorial Park.
Brazen Thief
Snatches Purse
F1·om Lagunan
"I held on rather tightly but he was too
strong: then somebody screamed and
chased him."
This was the account of a great
grandmother whose purse was wrenched
from her arms by a hulking youth Friday
afternoon in a brazen daylight robbery in
downtown Laguna Beach.
Mrs. Msdge D. Traverse, 76, of 30802 S.
Coast Highway, South Laguna, had just
cashed her social security check in a
bank. She believes the youth watched her.
The theft occurrecl'near the 200 block of
Broadway behind Sprouse-Reitz. Mrs.
Traverse estimated that $77 was taken
along with her car keys, driver's license,
other idenWication, checks and credit
cards.
Also taken was a souvenir silver dollar
minted in 1892 in Carson City, Nev. It had
bee n given to her by her late husband.
She said the thief in T-shirt and jeans
weighing about 190 pound!, was "kind of
shapeless". He fled south along Coast
Highway.
~he complained later of pain from the
brief tussle and said, "this is really
ridiculous what is happening.''
Laguna ·Planners Hear
Rezone Proposal Again
A proposed commercial-hotel (C-H)
t.one. wUl be back be.fore Laguna Beach
planners lonlght for Its second public
bearing.
After it was criUci:r.ed as too reslTlctivc
by hotel interest.I . two wee.ks: ago, cilllen
group representatives suggested the zont
be shelved pending m:ommendadons by
the general plan consult.ant.
Planning commissioners will a1ao have
a secood go at an amendment to Lhe
revised precise plan of art.utaJ 1lrtel4
that would 1dd extension of Canyon Acres
Drive to Top of the World to the road
plan •
It was opposed 1dmanently two weeks
•go by Canyon Acres Drive residents who
I
reared not only increased traffic but In-
creased rain runoff from new residential
development the street might open up
above them .
In other business planners are to:
-Consider Ruth Taylor's pending
variance appllcaUon to put 1 maritime
museum on her property at 563 S. Cout
Highway.
-Consider editorial revlslona: to
Ordinance 209, a districting ordinance,
returned from the city c:ouncil for study.
-Review the signing program of South
Coast Motors, 303 Broadway.
-Review a vs.Mance granted to
Laurence H. and Berne« Lloyd to con-
duct China palnUng clMSCS al 155$
Skyllue Drive •
Cuban Crisis Retold
~
•
RFK Memoirs Say M ilit.ary Urged Attack
Froii>Wl<o~
l!'rom•the beginning of lhe 1962 CUbon missile crW., aald the late Senator
Rl>bert F. Kenaecly In his new/y pub-
lished memoirs, the Joint Ch1efs ot Sta.ff
were unanimous in advocating imme-
diate military acUon.
KennedJ wi:ote that Gener~ Curtis Le-
May, then Air Force Chief of Staff MCI
now George Wallace's vice prealdenilal
candidate, argued strongly with the
President that military att.aci was "eir
aenUa1."
The memoirs, purchased from t h e
Kennedy estate for more than $1 million
and published Sunday In McCall'.1 Maga-
l'ronl Page J
APOLLO ..•
Apollo 7 studio ended with Sehirra
displaying a sign that read : "~ the sun
sinks slowly In the west."·
"This ls Apollo 7 a1gnl.nc oH," he said
as the e1cellent picture faded after a
nine-minute production.
Schirra, Eisele and Cunningham also
displayed a new sign which indicated
they are happy to be heading home.
A crudely drawn picture of the Apollo
ship floating on the water was ac-
companied by these words: "Everybody
out of the Pool."
Clearly visible as the camera parmed
around the cabin were pictures of the
three wives of the spacemen, pasted
above their duty statiom.
They also used the camera to zero in on
the heavy beards grown by all three.
"I will not admit to the fact that there
ls any gray in this beard," Sehirra said.
"li-1y hairdresser's the only one that
knows."
M the astronauts passed the camera
around, Schirra quipped: "You've got
three professional cameramen up here
now, so when we gel back we expect to
get our union cards."
After passing out of camera range
Schirra told the control center that thef
float around in their weighUess cabin like
monkeys in a cage, using hands and feet
to get around . ,
"We've really become efficient at it,
like we've gone ape," he laughed.
After the telecast, the astronauts began
a busy day of preparing for re-entry and
splashdown.
* * * Networks Cover
Apollo Splash
All three major networks will of·
fer live coverage of the Apollo 7
splashdown Tuesda11 morning.
ABC (Channel 1 J will begin its
coverage at 3:15 a.m., while CBS
(Channel 2) and NBC (Channel 4)
will start at 3:30. The schedule of
events:
3:43 a.m. PDT -Main spacecraft
engine fired for about 10 seconds as
Apollo 7 soars southea3t of Hawaii,
slowing its speed and st.arting it down·
ward.
3:45 a.m. -Cone-shaped capsule
caTTlfing the astronaut.s .separates
from the main engine.
3:56 a.m. -Spacecraft enter .s
earth's atmosphere 400,000 feet over
Houston, the heat shield on it& blunt
end facing forward.
4:07 a.m. -Two 16.5·/oot diameter
drogue parachutes deploy at 23,000
feet to slow the craft's speed from
300 to 175 miles an hour.
4:08 a.m. -Three 83.5·foot dia-
1neter main chutes deploy at 10,000
feet to reduce speed to 22 m.p.h.
4:12 a.m. -Splashdown 230 miles
south·.southeast of Bermuda. where
the aircraft carrier Essex. is standing
by for recovery.
YOUR WATCH'~·
zi.ne, add new details to h1s hmorlcal
record of the showdown between the
U.S. and Russia in October 1962.
DETAIL'l CIUSIS
l\obert Kennedy's account details how
close the Cuban crisis came ot actual
war in several ways -how military atl-
viSers pressed for an aUack against
Cuba; how advance preparations for
such an attack were made ; and how, as
the. cllma.r. approached, the changes for
mbcalculation by both countries grew.
When the President asked UMay the
likely response of the Russians, Jlobert
Kennedy wrote, LeM«)' insisted t h e r e
would be none. The President was skepti-
cal and told UM~ the Russians could
not "do nothing'' about a U.S. attack
on CUba -that tbey -would reply either
in Cuba or Berlin.
Kennedy s a I d his brother was dis·
tressed that, with the exception of Gen.
Maxwell 0. Taylor, his military advis-
ers "seemed to give so little considera·
tlon to the implications of the steps they
suggested."
He said lhe e1pertenee emphasized the
need for "civilian dlrectlon and control"
and for raising "probing quesUons" to
military recommendalion.s.
During final arguments, Kennedy
wrote, "I thought of the many Umes
that I had heard the milltary take posi-
tions which, if wrong, had the advantage
that no one would be around at the end
to know."
TEW! ACl'IVITIES
In the article. Utled "Thirteen Days "
Kennedy, who at the time w8..s attorn~y
general, details t h e activities of t h e
president and his advisers from Oct. 16,
when It was first revealed that the Rus-
sians were placing missile! in Cuba, to
Oct. 28, the Sunday that the announce-
ment of the withdrawal wu: made.
Kennedy wrote that in the early st.age.s
of the debate over what to do, "most
felt . . . that an air strike against the
missile site could be the only course.''
Ltter during the first day, he said, the
Idea of a quarantine or blockade was
raised.
Although support for a blockade grew,
Kennedy wrote, most of the president's
military advt.sers "argued strongly .. ,
that a rn1lltary attack was essential."
Then Dofeme Secretary Robert S.
McNamara wa.s an early advocate of the
"blockade·• tacUc finally used, Kenned)'
reported.
He described how other preparations
were far advanced for an attack against
Cuba should the blockade f a I 1 •
~cNamarn, for example, already had
figured that 250,000 men would be re-
quir~ for an invasion, Including 90,000
Marmes and airborne forces, and 2 ooo
air sorties against Cuban targets. One
estimate said there would be more than
25,000 U. S. casualties.
The Stale Department was put to work
on a "crash" basis to devise a plan for
civil government of C u b a after an In-
vasion, Kennedy wrote.
As the crisis unfolded: Robert Kennedy
reported, his brother "was not sanguine
about the results ... each hour the situa-
tion grew steadily more serious. The feel-
ing grew that this cup was not going to
pass and that a direct military con-
frontation between the two great nuclear
po\vers was inevitable."
Kennedy said the president made his
decision for a neval blockade instead o{
an air attack Saturday night, Oct. 20.
There was a final meeUng the next morn-
ing where the president was told that
even a surprise attack could not be cer-t.a!" ?f complete success in removing the
missiles, Kennedy said.
Even alter President Kennedy an·
nounced his actions on Monday night,
Kennedy said, military preparaUons con-
tinued.
The late senator said his brother
?n:ler~ the Pentagon to prepare for an
mvas1on.
BLOCKADE SOLlITION
Robert S. McNamara, then defense
secretary and one of the earliest ad-
vocates of a blockade, told .the president
that 250,000 men would be necessary,
Kennedy said.
One of the times of gravest concern,
Kennedy said, was Wednesday when the
quarantine went · tnto effect and It was
learned that a RUS&ian l!'l.lbmarine had
moved into position, just outside th e
blockade line, in between two Russian
:ships.
Describing the president's reaction,
Kennedy wrote, "His hand went up to his
face and covered his mouth. • , . his face
seemed drawn, his eyes pained, almost
gray ••• "
Father ·Questions College
In Expelling of Student
The father of expelled Saddleback
College student Patrick Dinon has written
a. l~r to school administrators ques-
tion~ng the reason for h1s son's expulsion.
Richard A. Dlnon, who signed his letter
"Proud Father," asks whether his son
~asn't expelled because of his long hair
instead of misbehavior.
He notes that his son feels charges of
inappropriate behavior are only a sham
to avoid setting a precedent on the still
unsettled issue of long hair .
He writes that he and the boy's mother
are "very much concerned in all matters
that tend to jeopardlu Pat's character"
and that they will take strong action lo
protect It If published charges that young
Olnon U8ed profanity are unfounded.
Dinon, 19, of Tustin, was expelled Jast
week. Earlier he had appealed his
threatened dismissal to the school board
and was told he would have to cut his
halr.
At that meeUng Superintendent Fred
H. Bremer asked counselor to the
students John Flood whether Dinon had
used offensive language? Flood said he
would call the alleged language used
''abusive.''
Dinion said he was shocked when told
his hair was unsultable. "Maybe you can
call it abus.lve, I'm not sure," he said.
The father in his letter asked that his
son be considered for reinstatement.
KICKED OUT
Patrick G. Dlnort
0
OMEGA
Your Omega
Soles & Servici
Agency 1
.. _,,
·~--"""' llU !ft • ~.,""'
" 0es1e ..
• CIHned • Ollod
• Adiuttod P£ARLS $1 99 OE.STOUNG •
.ltwelry Dnf1nln1
A Spocleltyl
....... ........
... 1'DITwollc:I
....... 1115.
wlll\brKeldl
,,..,.. l lll.
OINr '-motltn
""'MJ i. --
HAUO• SHOPPIN• HUNTINGTON CINnl nlMI
CINTI• llACH Ii UllM•tl lO
UH HAllOI ILYD. HUNT1N6TON llACH PtT
COSTA MISA MM4tS lfJ,1101 'fOUl
Now 2 Great Stores To Serve You I
'--~~---~-~,..,.....,.---.,.,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,..~Opo:::::"~Mo::n~.'.....'.T:h:ur~1:•~F~r~l._T~l:ll~9'.,!p~.m.'.::,.....,!:=='='=""=n==-=:'
c
----·--'· --------------~--~~---
r Nix on Le ad
Hold s;HHH
Moving Up
From WIN: SerYlcfl:
Jn th.ii week's lat.est batch of polls,
Republican Richard Nixon continues to
hold a strong lead ln the race for PresJ ..
dent but Democratic candidate Hubert
Humphrey is coming up, although slowly
and not enough to change Ni.loo's com-
manding lead. '
Time maguine gave Nixon 33 states to
six for Humphrey and the New York Dal-
ly News said Nilon ii four percent ahead
in New York state.
A Christian ScieDCt! Monitor poll.
however said Humphrey bu gained on
his Republican opponent in 24. states dur·
ing the last two weeks.
The newspaper said the gains Wert not
enough to shift any of the states, which
have a total or 261 electoral votes, from
Nixon to Humphrey, and its latest survey
showed Nixon further ahead than on Oct.
10.
The survey gives Nixon 36 states with
372 electoral votes, compared with 43
litates with 361 electoral votes in ii.!
earlier survey.
Time said a survey cf IL'!: cor ..
respondents in the SO states indicated
that Nixon is far ahead in 33, with
Humphrey and third-party candidate
Ceorge C. Wallace leading in six each.
Humphrey also was ahead in the District
of Columbia, Time said.
The magazine's flgures showed Nixon
leading in on! less state than was in his
ctllumn in a _similar survey a month ago.
Humphrey was said to have lost four
states, while Wallace bad gained two.
Humphrey 's losses -Arkansas.
ft1aryland, Missouri and Tennessee -and
\Valla~'s gains -Arkansas and South
Carolina -were all Southern or border
states.
Time said Humphrey is leading in his
home state or Minnesota and in New
York, but described his edge in both
states as "precarious."
The Daily News' straw poll, which the
newspaper says has been wrong only
three times in 40 years, showed Nixon
ahead in New York with 46 percent of the
vote lo 42 for humphrey and 8 for
\\'allace.
The News said it'l survey covered 6,000
persons in New York city, the suburbs
and upstate.
Unruh, to R esig n
As S peaker If
He See ks 'Office'
FRESNO (AP) -Jesse · M. Unruh
pledged today that he wiU resign u
;speaker of the Assembly if he becomes
a candidate for governor of California
or "any other major office."
With that announcement, the influen-
tial Democratic leader formally acknowl-
edged he is considering running for gov-
ernor in 1~70 -the year Republican Gov.
Reagan is up for re-election.
''If I am re-elected speaker of the
Assembly next year -and if I sub-
sequently decide to embark upon a cam-
paign for the governorship of California
or for any other major office -I will
resign from the speakership before em-
barking on such a campaign," said Un·
rub, who has held the powerful job sinre
1961.
Unruh's remarks were prepared for
delivery to students at Fresno State
College.
He said he will run for speaker if the
Democrats retain control of the lower
house in tbe November election. They
now arc in charge 42·38. But he said the
speakership is too big a job to combine
with running for statewide offi~.
In addition to governor, the Demo-
cratic nomination for the U.S. Senate
seat nov1 held by Republican ~rge
Murphy will be open in 1970.
Unruh didn't offer lo quit as the as-
semblyman representing Los Angeles
County's 65th Assembly district.
But he said the speakership was too
big a job to combine with a statewide
political race.
"If the Democrats win a majority in
t h e Nov. 5 election, I will stand for re-
eleclion to the speakership -but I
'''ould "'·ant to hold t h a t major office
only so long as I could devote my per·
sonal attention to il
STATE AWARD WINN ER
Lectur•r Chuck Or•y•r
Mond1y, October 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT 3
A ll Air Views
Candidates Split
On Vietnam Lull
By UNITED Plll!SS INTERNATIONAL .
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey
says the recent lull in fighting in Vietnam
should be an important factor ln the
American deliberations on whether to
atop bombing North Vietnam agaJn.
Third party candidate George C.
Wallace, al the same time, nauy opposed
a bombing hall unless the North Viet·
namese make Immediate public ctlJro
~ions. He said the Communists are
taking advantage of restricUons on U.S.
bombi.ng to make a "very significant"
buildup in supplies.
Richard M. Nixon, the Republican
presidential candidate, meanwhile re-
jected, by inference, Viet Cong participa-
tion in any ctlalition government in
Saigon. Nixon also called for "deamer·
icanization" of the war.
an hnposed coaUUon government In Soulh
Vietnam would serve the Interests of th•
South Vietnamese."
The former vice president a!llo ad-
vocated "small unit action" in the war
zone as a good way to shi.ft more of the
fighting to the South Vietnamese and
start "deameticanization of lhe ctlnfilcL ••
College Prexy
Backs Ousted
Black Athl ete s
DAILY PILOT 51•ff Pl>Olt YOUNG PANELISTS GIVE THEIR VIEWS OF DRUG SITUATION ON TELECAST
Ma rily Marcot (left ), Terrie Fleming Watch Taped Re-pla y
All three candidates made their
statements Sunda,¥. Broadcast comments
by both wanace and Democratic vice
presidential nominee Sen. Edmund S.
Muskie Sunday both raised the question
whether North Vietnam has actually of•
fered concessions in exchange for a U.S.
bombing halt.
SAN JOSE (AP) -The president of
San Jose St.ate College has voiced llis
support of U. S. Olympic runners Tom..
mie Smith and John Carlos. suspended
from the team last wttk for their acUons
during a victory ceremony.
"They do not return home In disgrace
but as the honorable young men they are,
dedicated to the cause of justice for the
black people in our society," President
Robert D. Clark said Sunday of Smith
and Carlos, students at the college. Youths Tell of Marijuana
Wallace said in an Interview (Meet the
Press-NBC), "I believe now they are
talking about unannounced concessions
and I think any con~ssion ought to be
made public to the American people and
to the people of the world."
He said there should not be "any unan--
nounced reciprocal agreements on the
part of the North Vietnamese."
Smith won thejilO-meter race last Wed·
nesday and Carloe finished third. They
stood on the victory stand with black·
1loved fists upraised, wore black socks
without shoes and stared down as the Na-
tional Anthem was played and the flag
was raised.
Panelists Participate in T V Prog ra ni ~1usk.ie. on another show tissues and
Answers-ABC), was asked about the
former Alabama governor's comments.
"Gov. \Vallace has beea briefed as the
rest of us have been on the present posi·
lion and he wants to make it public he's
in a position to do so."
By JACK CHAPPEL
Of l'flt CM.Hy Pllel Sl•lf
"My own mother couldn't tell, you
know, whether I was on it or just had a
good day at work ."
The speaker was one of several
youthful panelists participating in a
televised discussion of marijuana pro-
duced by Community Cablevision.
The program, "Today's Failure to
Communicate," is the high school and
college-age youths' attempt to tell about
marijuana from their side.
They make no claim toward expertise
in lhe subject Age is their only qualifica-
tion .
"You're always seeing experts on TV.
\Ve didn'l want to do that. We're just a
bunch of kids talking about the situa-
tion," said Terri Fleming, 21.
She and another panelist, Marilyn
Marcot, were at a preview presentation
Friday of the program they'd taped the
night before.
Jt will be shown over the company's
cable to subscribers in the TurUe Rock
and University P a r k areas Tuesday at
7:30 p.m.
Participants in the discussion were
students from local high schools and col-
leges.
For an hour, they exchanged U1eir
views on the extent of the marijuana con-
dition, the methods being used to co1nbat
it, drug laws, their personal feelings and
experience with marijuana.
The resulting conversalions, while not
exactly shocking for the young adults on
the show, could stir some of the lethargic
"old" adults who hear it. Amons the
statements:
Complaii1t Seeks to Bai·
Oeaver. ~peech at UCI
A complaint seek:ng the barring or
Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver
from the UC Irvine campus was awaiting
a hearing today in Superior Court.
Filed by Santa Ana attorney Patrick
Duggan, the suit names as defendants
with Cleaver, members of the Irvine
Academic Senate, the Center of Partici·
pant Education at UC!, University of-
ficials, faculty advisors, student groups
planning future appearance of Cleaver.
the UC Board of Regents, the state Board
of Education, County Assessor Andrew
Hinshaw, county Tax Collector Don
ftfosley and the Orange County Board ol
Superv\sors.
Dugg~ asks that Cleaver not be allow-
ed to speak again on the Irvine campus
and that University ofricials be prevented
from assisting the militant presidential
candidate of the Peace and Freedom
Party in any preparations for public
speeches.
Claiming that he speaks for "himself,
P a nan1a Students
Call for Strike
PANAMA CITY (UPI) -Panama
University stude nts called Sunday night
for a 72-hour strike to protest the ruling
military junta. The military regime
pledged to "elevate the scale of human
values" in Panama.
The Panama University Student
Federation appealed to all labor unions to
stay away from their jobs for 72 hours to
protest the military junta that overthrew
President ArnuUo Arias two weeks ago.
10,000 other taxpayers living in the First
SU:pervisorial District and 10,000 other act·
ditional taxpayers living in Orange Coun-
ty'" Duggan urges the granting or his
petition "in view or the foul and obscene
language used in the presen~ of
females" during Cleaver's recent speech
on campus.
Duggan is a candidate for the First
Supervisorial District seat which will
become vacant with the relirement o!
Supervisor C. M. Featherly.
The attorney's 12-page complaint sug-
gests that iC Cleaver wishes to make
further public speeches in Orange County
"he should rent an auditorium rather
than speak on a university campus."
Danger of World
Atomic W a r 'Ver y
Oose' Says Tito
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
President Tito warned today ihat the
danger of world war is very close and
that the big powers might then use
atomic arms.
Speaking at Prokuplje and Toplica,
southeast Serbian towns on a tour of
east Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav president
said "11le danger of a world war is very
close." He added, "It is not excluded
that the big powers would u s e
-atomic arms," If the war should break
ool.
l
Final Lecture on Real
Estate Inve stment Set ..
Final session of a four·week series of
free lectures on real estate investmcnlll
for Orange Coast area residenls is
scheduled fori ;30 p.m. Tuesday.
The $Cries, sponsored joinUy by the
DAILY PILOT, Orange Coast College and
the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of
Realtors, Tuesday night will feature lee·
lures by Larry Webster ("Financing
Today") and Chuck Dreyer ("Yield
Leverage Through Wise Financing").
Dreyer, vice president of the Real
Es taters. brokerage firm, hu just won
the "Best Ei:change of The Year Award"
in California Real Estate Association
competition.
The $600,000 transacUon lnvolving pro-
perty in fotJil' states which won the award
1lso has been submitted for competition
on th! national lcvcl.
Tickets for the windup stsslon of thl.!1
annual series are available at au DAJLY
PILOT offices, at the evening division nt
Orange Coast College and the really
board's headquarters.
Tickets on a space-available basis also
can be obtained Tuesday night at the
door of the NewJ,oOrt Harbor High School
Auditorium, scene of all the sessions in
the current series.
Viet Scrip Exchanged
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Command
ln Vietnam today ei:cbanged the military
attip American servictJnen use in.steed
of money in a crackdown on coun-
terf elting and black marketeering. Git
had J.2 hours to e1changc Jt bcfort It
became worthless.
The fact that I know people who use it
gives me added impetus to try. Kids don't
believe that you go on lo bigger and bet-
ter things (stronger drugs) from mari-
juana. Those that do go on have a ge-
nuine psychological problem." -Gary
Thompson, 21, Cal State Fullerton stu-
dent.
"I don 't use it but l know people who
do . I had kind of a rude awakening when
I got to CQ\lege." -Terre Fleming, 21 ,
UC! students.
"When 1 was in high school (in
Pasadena) you could \Valk in the rest
roon1s and the smoke would be thick." -
D.:;::c Hudson, 21, Saddleback Junior Col-·
lei::e student.
"The school 1 go to. people are afraid
to smoke even a cigarette." -Brian
Longley. ft1ission Viejo High School.
"Since there is such an increase in the
use of marijuana, we just thought we
"''ould like to tell how it's affecting us
now." -Marilyn 1'-1arcot, 24, former
nurse.
Pressed for elaboration, Muskie said,
"Gov. Wallace will get my meaning. You
can't get my meaning if you haven't been
briefed." He declined further comment
except to say "what he (Wallace) said
this afternoon has some relevance to
\Vhat he knows."
Humphrey, commenting on the recent
scaledo\vn in fighting. said the Juli "has
some significance." He said in a broad-
cast intervi~w (Face the Nation-CBS)
the combat decline "surely ought to be
taken into account" in the decision on a
bombing halt.
Nixon, in an interview published in the
New Republic, said he opposed "im-
position of a coalition government on
South Vietnam.
"There is little reason to believe that
Our
85th
"I regret that our treatment of our
black athletes bas been such as to
prompt them to feel they mu.st use the
Olympic games to ctlmmunicate their
real concern for the condition of blacks in
America," Clark told newsmen.
* * * Ousted Athletes
Leave for Hon1e
MEXICO CITY (AP) -Tommie Smith
and John Carloa, the two U.S. sprinters
who were suspended from the American
Olympic team for a black power dem·
onstration on the victory stand, left by
Air Western ft1onday for their homes in
California.
Smith, who won the 200-meter Wh In
world record time, lives in Leftb>re.
Calif. Carlos, from New York. attends
San Jose State.
Anniversary Observance
You are invited to help us celebrate
Tuesday,
October 22nd
thru
Friday,
October 25th •
Please join us for coffee, cake and cookies. Come
into the branch office nearest you any t ime during
banki ng hours.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
HUNTINGTON BEACti: 8899 All•., A,,.n,,.,
11122 8•ac" Boul•v••d
SANTA ANA ·
80::! Noorh ~••n Str••t
TUSTIN:
\
'
\
I
I
11 I
1
Mond11, Octobef 21, 19tl8
Review Set
On Linkin g
Of Papers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -1be Supreme
Court agreed today to rule this term
whether rival newspapers in the same
community may combine their printing
and commercial operaUons without
violating antitrust laws.
A test case involving two Tucson, Ariz.,
newspapers was accepted for bearing,
with a decision to be banded down later
in the esston.
UJ..lpotber action, the court let stand a
F .. al Communications Corrun!Won
(Fa:) order which will limit the pre-
sunrbe broadcasting of more than 2,000
AM radio ataUons. ,,
Ut"IT ........ t
'We lcQmed Ho11ae'
Czech Invasion
Tro·ops Leaving
PRAGUE (AP) -WUU'J Piel oc-
cupation troops began pu1l1nc out of
C?.echoslovalda today.
The Hun1arlan newt agency MTI
reported the lint HUlliarl•n unlu to
leave crossed the IOUthem Czechoslovak
border at tm-ee points and were welcom-
ed home with ceremonJes and banners
strun.c across houses.
In Warsaw, tbe Polilh anned forces
newopaper Zoliorl WoJJ:lo!cl -Soldier of
Freedom -aaJd: "Our aoldiers are
rc!turning home... Today we shall greet
them cordlally on tbelr home soil."
Czechoslovak Informants said Sunday
night that· thousandJ of troop1 that in-
vaded Aug . 20-21 were preparing to
withdraw.
harvests by road . .
Czech and Slovak so!dlers have been
with the harvest sin areas n e a r SovJet
tanks and artillery.
'Break-in' Opens
Some of Struck
'
Schools in NY
Tom GYf'dtrson, de a 1 er in
Choroj<ee, Iowa, for the Sioux City
Journal, bas proof the zip some-
times leaves the zip code. He said
he re<;eiV.ed a letter postmarlted Ma.Y a, 11165, and a check from nesr-
by Royal, Iowa, a.Ulng fur an in·
crease in the n u m b e r of new,s..
papen sent to a news carrier.
Chemkee Pl>otmaster Phil Fassler
said the letter tool< three years to
travel. the 35· m 11 e 1 because "it
didn't have the .roper zip code.''
The court refused to review a lower
court decislOn upholding FCC regulaUons
barring the largely rural stations f r om
cpe:ratiug at a· power of more than 500
watll before & o'clock In the morning.
The court alao agreed to examine a
case involving additional regulatory
power exerted by the Fod:I and Drug Ad-
ministration over U1' field of anUbioUcs
manulacturlog.
FORME R JACQUE LINE KENNEDY AND ONASSIS L EAVE. CHAPEL The sources said hundreds of railroad
cars have been requlslUoned to take the
departing Warsaw Pact troops and lhelr
equioment from tent camps -i n
Crechoslovatla to East Ge r m a n y ,
Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and the Soviet
border.
NEW YORK (UPI) -A boanl ol
educaUon authorized "legal break-in" to
reopen public schools shut down b)'. a
teachers' strike was a partial success to-
day.
The newrpaper antitrust case involved
an appeal of the Arisona Dally Star and
Tucson Daily Citizen, both of Tucion,
from a ruling by Chief U.S. District
Judge James A. Walsh.
Vatican Greets } ackie' s
A few more of the city's 900 public
schools were reporte4 open today than on
Friday, but exact figures were not im-
mediately available.
The board a c t i o n authoriting local
school superintendents to bre ak into
school buildings came as the city's third
teachers' strike this term entered its se-
cond week.
Forty-four other newspapen in 22 cities
have agreementa of the same general
descrlption as the Dally Star and the Dai·
Jy Cltlr.en.
Marriag e with Silenc e
The Soviet.Czechoslovak tr ea ty ,
ratified Friday, provides for most of the
\Varsaw Pact occupation forces to leave
within two months. Informants said about
70.000 troops will remain.
There was no official explanation, but it
was believed the Soviets switched from
air to surface transoort because of cost
and the possibllit.v that transport planes
are needed elsewhere.
The strike, triggered by a dispute
between the United Federation of
Teachers (UFT) and a school distrid in
Brooklyn ezperimenting 'in local ooatrol
of the schools, has affected 1.12 million
public school children.
· B01ton'1 Cardinal Richard Cushing
beams proudl11 aa ht aportl an Indian
headdres1 presented by members of
Sou th Dakota's Crow Cr e e k Siou:x:
tribe in Stow: Foll!. The prelate was
in South Dakota for ordination cere-
monies of R'tv, Paul Anderson, as
bishop coadjut<w of the Duluth, Minn.
diocese. • Police in Soutbl!ampton, Eng·
land said merchant seaman Ka ili
Vi of tbe island of Tonga bad one
of the better excuses tor car theft.
He said he bad to get beck to bis
ship aft.er a party, so be took a car
without asking the owner. "On my
island, if yoo want to go home you
just pick up a horse and release it
when you get there," he told the
patrolman who stopped him. Not
believing in extending local custom
too far, the judge fined the seaman
$72. •
William A. Herron, a Repub·
lican candidate for the Arizona
state legislature, felt it was the
h crowning insult when the Steel-, I.. workers Union Education Com-
l mittee endorsed his Democratic I oppo'nent. A longtime member
~ of Steelworkers Local 3937 and
chairman of its safety commit-
tee, Herron said, "It's not right
t/1at l'm required to pay dues
money that is used to the politi·
cal advant.age of my opponents."
• A taxpayer in Albert Lea, Minn.
is both prompt and poetic wiU1 his
real estate taxes, Freeborn County
treasurer Wil fred Knudtson said.
Knudtson s a i d the unidentified
man always submits a poem with
the second installment of his taxes.
This year's verse:
"Fr?m time to time I get togeth-
er a little nest egg which I prize,
''B~t pretty soon I hit a snag and
the bill for taxes does arrive.
"And by the time l get unhooked,
"My little nest egg she is cook-
ed."
A 1940 agreement between lbe Tucson
papers proposed the merger of their pro-
duction, circulation, buslness and ad·
vertising functions. The idea, they told
the Supreme Court, saved a failing paper
-the Citizen -and saved an in-
dependent news and editorial voice for
the community.
Bus Driver Hail ed
As Crash Hero;
40 Lives Saved
lllLO, Hawail (UPI) -Tour bus driver
Jay Malagday was prai8ed as a hero to-
day for his efforts to avoid a crash which
killed him and three California tourists
and injured 31 others.
"I believe that boy acariliced his life to
try to save h1a passengers,'' said police
officer Louil Akiona.
The 26-year-old Malagday, a part-time
driver for a local tour firm, was taking «
sight.seers on a ride through Hawaii's
scenic volcano country Saturday when his
brakes failed on a twisting downhill road.
Malagday turned the left front comer
of the bus into a solid rock embankment
and lhe vehicle ground to a stop 100
yards later, leaving a trail or blood, glass
and twisted metal.
"That was the only way he could have
stopped it," Akiona said. "He sacrificed
his lire. It could have been 10 times worse
-40 dead instead of four."
The tourists killed were Frank Albano
of Santa Monica, Mrs. Virginia Blount or
Lakeview Terrace and Mrs. Edith Colon
of Los Angeles.
NY Police 'Sick'
Calls Miss Mark
NEW YORK (UPJ) -A threatened
police slowdown with nearly 4,500 men
calling in "sick" fell short of Its mark to-
day.
The 22,000-member P a t r o I m e n • s
Benevolent Association (PBA) had
predicted that 20 percent of its mem-
bership would report "sick". But only 933
patrolmen phoned they were stricken with
"Hong Kong flu" or some oth_er ailment.
The figure could rise, however, because
some precinct switchboards were having
trouble keeping up with the calls. But the
total was expected to fall far short of the
predicted 20 percent.
VATICAN CITY (UPI) -The Vatican
today greeted Jacqueline Kennedy's mar-
riage to Aristotle Onassis with official
and disapproving silence but with private
hopes that it could ' ' s b o w un-
derstanding.''
Tbe issue centered on whether Onassis,
a member of the Greek Dnhodo1 Church,
received a church annulment of his
previous marriage to AUtlna Livanos
before he married Mrs. Kennedy, a
Roman Catholic.
in any event, the Roman Catholic
Church does not recognize the quickie
civil divorce Onassis' first wife got in
A1abama and unless there was an an-
nulment by the Greek church, his first
marriage remains valid in the eyes of the
Vatican.
Vatican officials said privately they
hoped to get information which would
. enable them to reach a decision.
The Vatican silence showed obvious
displeasure in this union of one of the
world's most famous women and the
Greek multfrnillionaire. The wedding dld
not receive a line in . the Vatican
newspaper Osservatore Romano.
Unofficially, a high Vatican source
said:
''The church would like to be in a posi-
tion to show understanding. If we were
infonned, for instance, that Mr. Onassis'
first marriage has been annulled by the
Hurricane Glad ys
Whirls Thr ougl1
Shipping Lanes
CAPE liAITERAS. N. C. (UPI)
Hurricane Gladys, which claimed four
lives and drove more than 76,000 per·
sons from their homes in a mullimillion
dollar damage swath through Cuba and
J?Jorida, whirled across the New York
to Europe shipping lanes today.
The season's seventh tropical storm,
no longer a threat to land, pushed its
85-mile-an-hour winds further into the
open Atlantic.
The latest report placed it about 200
miles east-southeast of Cape C-Od, Mass.
Gladys. boasting 100 mph winds,
slammed ashore near the ~ll resort of
Homosassa Springs, Fla., about midnight
Friday, cul a 30-mile wide damage path
across central Florida, and went into
the AtlanUc. It went inland again Satur·
day near Hatteras, N. C., strafing the
famed outer banks with high w ind s
and rain before slipping back out to sea
Sunday morning.
Gladys Misses Mainland
Eastern Sto rnis Dampen Philade lphia and Charleston
California
$0!,tlM•" C•lllor.,1• r..d ttlr 1~k1
Wllh little cn1119t In l~i>e•llurw ,,..
dev lol!owl119 Ille t"'tom1rv low
clouds •rid IOI ctur!1111 "'-momlnt
hotw1 11""9 Ille CO.II.
Loo ..,""k' •n.d 11lc:lnltv tiff "'" Wnlllllne moi! ol Ille lllY wllll I
llll!h l..,.,_.11Ur• 11 1M C!Ylc: Cef\ief'
Cit n. TIW ftl9'1 Suncl1y '"' 16. The" Air Pollution Control OIJ!rlc:I r-1-
9' 1!9nt ""'" In lllt ~1ln, Tonltlht'1 i-Wit! bt 5'.
TII• bHcn lll:IS wert cl°""'y In tn.
lflOl'n11111 wllll hlJY 1u111nl"t ln tilt eft...-.oon end ~-•!urtt re~cl\oln9
t 111111! nHr 61. Tilt w1!1r ltrfUIUI•
hi ....... "·
'"'""'Int tnd w1m1 temllilrtlures
ta'lllJWf!d In lllt ..,.,rtl. Hltht ~
Ill II-. ilOl In Ille -· 111llrn tnd ....... '° It! Ille ,_, 1111'"'·
T'l'lt U.S. WN!Mr flure1u ... tct~
nt rwl11 •lld ""-r11Ur11 11! ... llY
....... nonn.I hr !tit 111•1 nu. t11Y1.
tom. 111111! ""'-91\irn "°'""'" '"" ..-.C.tf mtxlf!M'W """' for wltcted SWllltnl C.lltoml• l«llllcn lno;!WM; ....... '"°' 1$-11, ...... Monlc:.9 6f.70. 1w119r1k IHI, Mo/flt Wilton tf.70,
~lirftdt .. GM, Jt!Wnld9 -.C. Ptlm ""'* n-n. lekenfllicl rt.7', .... DI... n.a, ...,._ a.111er1 u.11.
LOI AHffLI:• AlllO VICINtt'l'-F'P' "'""9fl T_.., llut nltlll •"" ........... ~ .,., ....... !tit
.... Hlfl'I T.-.., Pit« •· l--· COA'TM. AlllO INTl!Jl:MI OIATE
YAU.IYS -f"•lf' "'"""" ~v. ...... MIMilttn W-, L__. to.
l!lllllt 0 .. .. HW'I T-'t'f 71 ,. •·
MOUNTAIN AlllW -~•Ir fltrowfl nri..r. Lmit ...,_....,,_ ~' IJirrbJOlll AHD OlllftT llllOIOHI _,.,, ......... f..-V. ltttlt ffm.
~ ~ Hlfft Twtdl!Y 1' t. • _.,. "*""' N to ft'. ........ Yt.1--t.w......,, M *ow.it Vil-.............. !..,...
c ......•
Liie 1111111 and .. ,ty _,,Ille toe
'le<lr!ne bv elle-toNy. Lttflt
wlnd1 beamlne ...,.,._!WW ltlls
•"-, I to u m.-.11. ftft'f't 1'11911. .. "'11.
'l't1Mnl•v'1 i.mMr111'Un111 r 1 n t t •
,...., I l'llt!I ti "fo I 5" Cl! ... I,..
i.nd ~ttu"' ,._ W.I 7J le $1,
T ... wettr lef!Wlotrwturt w•1 '5.• ... ·-S••• M-, Tiiie• ......... ,_,., .. MOtitOAY
TUISOAV
. (.JI'·""· l.S '·" '·""· '·'
Fl"'I ..... , ............ l , 1( 1.m. 1 I
Finl 111911 • • ...... t ·JI •.m. •·•
~ -....... ..... •:Ml '""'· •.• StaWllll l'llfll ..... .... 10;0 p ,,,, ~ J
Mell! JtN •:• t .m. s..t1 •·05 '·"'· SM .,._ 7:tl t .tn, H" •11' •.m.
llll'lf Jllnt 0. Jltll LMI 0 ,
Oct. II Otf, al NOY. ' NOY. 11
•
V.S. Summar11
SC.tl1!r~ ...._.. tnd .,,_ t.11
•<rou ~tt111 tnd ldtlto '""''· Mudt ti Ille nallon mloY9CI cie.r, ulsp
111!\lmfl -i'htf".
Hi.l'I PrtMlt"' lrtU 111 Ille W1:1t Ind
fllt '°"I'""'"'° ftl Tht !Int -tliw
I-CHI! 11 C•1I, !tie U.S. W11111tf'
IUrwtil Hid. Cool, cletr _,!Wt' -
v•lltd In mu<ll ti tllt Miion durl,..
!tit lllflll,
....... llCl tlertd l"'-n • ..., ,,..., ... """'°"""" «lCVrrtd lfl MIU!tltr" N1W ~·i.e., Ll9ftt t~ da..-nfd lrNI
fl -""' """ -""'" NN Ylttl. Hurrktl'll Gll<trl Or(lted oo.it 11'119
!lot Al11nllt todly. The tern,,_.! Ct..,..,,,
I '" l'r1Mk, lfl ffsW E"'ltnd, llul
011'1trwltt llOltd nt lllrNI d mor. 0.
.irvctloln,
TM "unlc:tnt Wreed niln SundtY
lrom !fie C•n10,,., ~ Mil,,.. PPIU.,,.!·
""'-' Pa., me11Yrtd I 7) lr>el\<ft,
C1'11ri.11c1n, s e .• -· ltltfl .,. l>lcll.
tnd •1"'9~. N.C .. l'fff'lY fWll llld!tl.
f.,
Temperatures
.-,no;tiOtlH
.t..1111111
f11k.nr1e1d
fl lS"'9rCk
flol1e ..... ,
Chio.t a
Clnclnnttl
Clt ... 1nd
0tn11e•
DH Mol11u
Oelroll
Eurtk•
Fort Worlll
·~~ Hel9n1
HonolYIU
HalU!!lfl
1C1m1s City
LIS '1"911
LOI AA9tfe1
Miami
M!h•1ulc-.
MlnnNl>Ofll
N1w Orlffttl
N ... YOr'k
Otlo;ltnd .......
P110 Rab~
Pll!tldelohia
"""'" Pllbbllr9" --R1111d City
Rl'OI llutt
·~ ..... ........
St. Loul1
Sa!lna1
Sall l•k• Clfv
San OIMo
'" Frtn(lt(f
Sant• l•rtlefl
Sff!llt
-·~ Tllerm1I
W1lfll1>11lon
Nltll L-P'rte.
n " " • " .. • ..
" " .. " " " " ..
" x • " " ..
" " .. " " " .. " n " " " " " n ..
" " " " " • " n • " " " " H • " u ..
M " " .. .. " .. " u " • ~ • ..
" .. n ~
" " • " " .. .. M
" " u " .. " " u » " .. " " "
"'
.m
.m
...
.11
Greek Orlhodo1 Church, ilie situation
would be much easier. But I don't think
anyone here has the facts."
Ecclesiastical sources said the Greek
Orthoclo:a: Archbishop of North and South
America had endorsed the Onassis
divorce, which Mrs. Onassis received on
grounds of mental cruelty.
I'-'
Czechoslovaks expressed concern that
the exodus might strain the nation's
crowded railroad system. Some reports
said the Czechoslovak army will be called
in to move the sugar, beet and potato
The announcement of the "legal break-
in" autborizaUon came shortly after
Albert Shanker, UFT president, rejected
Mayor John V. Lindsey's latest oUer to
settle the strike.
ft uao vcuR ENNE CHARilE ACCOUNT
TOOAYI
SPECIAL BUY!
Dress your windows in
easy care fiberglass I
w.•.,. gorwo all ovt to bfing you thi1 speciol buy! houlifulfy
.. xtlnd 100% glaat fiber"' color.fkh t0Tidl that~ "*"' -r d.cicwl YO\/d 1hlnk thty eort ll'IVd! ll'ICnl Jurt
hond ~ onc:I hon;I N_. irorll F°n«lkl SMnlc llf!d
1tntth proof! Thty'n1 '**' to 0/111 lf*if\ca!ION Ill 2
l.ng!t.. Colon en ..+ilt., belg., bronn or .......
50x54.
50 x 84 floor length ....••. 3.99
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEAC H
I Harbor Shopping Center I (Huntington Center I
NEWPORT BEACH
( Fa1hion l1land I
' I
' ~
'
• • •
•
••; co e ea us a t a I¢
.. •
'
sac : cc a sa us a ;;q ; •. • :. ""~ :x:; r;;a;......-'• r -::-""7" • .-----..... ,. • ~ •• ~
•
JEAN COX, 494--
....,., OdlMI' ftt .. INI 1.• .... 11
Follies Fringe
Learns Steps
Irvine Bowl resounds with ~ato 10Unds of music, dance steps,
laughter and bustling activity .., the Fractured Follies of 1968 cast windB
into its final rehearsal stretch.
Thursday, Oct 24, at 8:30 curtains will part on the .tage of Laguna
Beach High ~ auditorium for a premi..-e of the gala benefit wbictl
will be presented again Saturday and ·Sunday evenings.
At the c.enter of activity at the daily rehearsals, whieh begin in the
early morning and go inW the evening, is directoY-ehoreographer David
Wagaman from Jerome H. Cargill' Productions o! New York, producers of
the extravaganza.
The produotilln will be Wagaman·s first West Ooast show, although
he has been a free lance director with the company for five years. With a
firm hand and wide grin, he is driving his troops tbrou1gb inbicate dance
steps and music routine.s .
Wilh him, Wagaman brought from New York the douling coetum ..
whicli. will adorn the 125 singers, dancers and funny people of the South
Ooast area who comprise the Follies cast.
"You've got to see it to believe it," Miss Evelyn Rar·nolds and Mrs.
Neal Amsden, wardrobe chairman, said marveling at the beauty and va-
riety of oostumes.
Meanwhile Mrs. Gene Brookbank, makeup chairm·an, is rallying
cosmetics and co-workers in preparation f'or the vast makeup task await·
ing her. Joining Mrs. Brookbank behind tlhe scenes will be the Mmes. John
T. Ballew. Ruth Milhouse, Bierta Schwamb and Charlotte Sizemore. Mas.-
cu.line aid will come from Jim Brown and Bill Stapleton.
Mrs. Don Seal, ticket chairman, said tickets are going fast but flOOCI
seats are still available.
COSMETIC ARTIST -Makeup artist Mrs. Gene (Dorothy) Brook·
bank, with years of experience as makeup director for the Pageant
of the Masters, will wield her cosmetic wand for the Fractured
Follies. Sharpening her technique for the Oct. 24-26 produc·
tions. she pra<:tic · on Mrs. Aldon E. Clark. The follies will be
presented at 8:30 \~.m. in Lagurxa Beach High School's auditorium
next Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Presented under the ouspi<es of South Coast Community Hospital
Auxiliary's Silver and Gold Chapter, all proceeds from the benefit will
go lo tbe hospital.
Council Offers
Rummage Sale
Spring housecleaning bas t:ome early this
year for members and friends of St. Catherine's
Council of Catholic Women who are collecting quali·
t.y discards for the organization'' gigantic rummage
sale next Saturday.
The bargain event, to take place from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the Laguna Beach Woman's Clubhouse,
is being planned by Miss Laura Manetta. ways and
means chairman, as the first fund-raising project of
the new club year.
Booths and tables are bei ng set up by co-
chairmen the Mmes. Joseph Bush, Silas Chaney, S.
S. French and Phillip Hopkins. Snacks and coffee
for hun gry shoppers will be provided by food
chairman, Mrs .. Joseph J . Kenny, and Mi ss An n
Reilly, president. will welcome all bargain hunters .
Parish women acting as saJeswomen include
the Mmes. K. A. Bonawitz Jr., Hugh Cavanagh,
.John Croul. Robert Cruse. William Da vies. .I.
William Devaney, Ann DeHaas, Roland A. Gervai ~
G. J . Hankes and Larry Howell.
Others assisting include the Mmes. Ted Ly!
tie, John McAtee, Robert Merritt, Charles J . Payne.
Martin Poldermans, J. J. Quam, James C. Shea.
Frank Streff. Ardath Wightma11 and Merle Zeigner
and the Misses Antoinette Madrus and Marian
Woods .
\
I
Reservations may be obtained by calling Mn. Seal, 494-5720 or
tile auxiliary office, 496-1261, el<!. 296.
Hospital ity Practiced
Mermaids Join
'The Greeter'
Eiler Larsea, Laguna's Greeter, is going to
have some competition from Mermaid's, Women'•
Division of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Com-
merce.
Hospitality with a flair, offered by colorfully
· costum«l women wearing smocks and berets, is a
brand new commodity being oifered the cl>amlJer
auxillery.
Mrs. McClellan Cole, chairman of the new
hospitality committee, said 20 women already have
1ig~ up and she expects the list to double.
The women will represent the Art Colony by
welcoming visitors and introducing them to Laguna
Beacb.
They might, as bas already occurred, meet
visitors at the -Newporter heliport and offer them a
ride to Laguna Beach, since no commercial
transportation to the Art Colony is available.
A visitor from another part ·of..-the country,
cominJ to a seminar or conference, might enjoy a
reception and drive to Laguna by someone who can
point out spot. of interest, tell a bit about the town
and drive a few blocks a1ong the oceanfront at
Heisler Park. ·
According to Mrs. Cole, there will be some oc-
casions at whlcD only one or two Mermaids will be
required, while a large force might be called on to
host a chamber event or some other civic affair. In
addition, they might act as guides and assist with
area tours.
Funds deriv~ from the saJe-will go towa'rd
£ulfilling the churchwomen's obligations to the
parish which include providing altar linens and sup-
plies, scholarships, visiting service to lbe sick and
participation in community and· Archdiocesan pro-
jects.
Those wishing to donate merchandise for the
venture m ay deliver it to the Woman's Clubhouse
next Friday afternoon or call Miss Menetta, 499-
'.!167, so it may be picked up.
SIMPL E ME SSAGE -"Welcome" is a word 1 new
committee or the Mermaids, Women's Divisit of
the Laguna Beac h Chamber of Com merce, wt\11 be
repeating tirelessly. Mrs. Pete Peterson, dr~. ssed
in the Mermaid smock and beret, paints the oommlt-
tee motto while Mrs. Charles Gautbey, a new mem·
ber, repeats it studiously.
Women are welcome to join the Mermaids and
become a part of the committee. Information
regarding membership may be obtained by calling
Mrs. Cole, 494-5979, who also is answering requests
for assistance in events appropriate for the new
committee.
1 .
Hubby Snores, Wife Piling on . Her Floors
DEAR ANN LANDERS: J am gdllng
sick and tired of reading lett.ers from
wivea complaining about their husbands'
snoring. My hU3band mores -loud, king
and every night. So what? He is one nl'
the belt human belnp Ibo good Loni
ever put on this earth.
When the snoring starts and my sleep
is: interrupted, I lie quietly and w1\cb him
get hi> badly need<d reot. When I rod
lba1 .::ime women Ue their husband.a'
jaws abut with lilk ltock1ngs and strap
bicycle horoa to their bead:I, I &et 10 mad
I couSd scream.
Every nlgbt I thank God that thlJ
wooderlul m111 Is In OUR bed ll!Oring.
We have been man:1ed 10 yeara and I
hope the good Lord Ii•'" UI 10 more. -
• '
open doors to peace of mind Md con·
tenlment. It can conquer fear and guilt
ANN LANDERS Q and self hate. It also can overcome
:.~r physical complaints and fatigue and
--__-depreM!on.
CONTENDED
DEAR OON : ftat a Mvely lett.tr! But
wb.De you're uklq -uk for 41 more,
not ti, damm.y !
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two )'e>T1 ago
I wrote (or advice. You said, "Set 1
psychlslrisl." I -your advice and It wu tht most difficult thing 1've ever
done in my life. But it waa the smarte8t.
'
I am vtry poor at ezprt.JSing myself
but I wanted to try. ThanWN or readinc
I can 't undenland why a per90n wou I.his. -NANCY
be ashamed to admit he has a proble I DEAR NANCY : I ihaU continue to
1 ur1e ptoplt lo get prole11lonal help, he can't handle. Does a patient have to bl 1Jtbougb Jam well aware that not all p•
dying before ht I~ to 8 doctor? WhY1 dtntt obta.ln the 1Jowiq , result. yo.J
then should he wait till he'11 ready for a\, detaibe. And lf you wue able to achieve
straitjacket before ht • e e s a I the miracle wlU. yoar orlafnal therapllt
psychiatrist? 1• an lortunale.
Please, Ann, continue lO urge your • Tbtrapy e1111 be maatc for some u4
readers to stop waiting their lives, '1 NMhlnpvtlle for othen. I recommend
especiaUy the young. Psych11try can , profes1lonal btlp for lndlvtdu1l1 wbo tr. I .
I
depreutd, dealn»dlve or In continual
conOlct with tbtm1elve1 and otlten.
Therapy &bat .,,;duce1 even modtsi.
re1ultl beats w~1 around frt&llle:ned.
iaUty, mid at &be world and plagued by
"udl•tnoted" aci.e. and painJ.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : t am a
homosexual .who hu had psychiatric help
and I'm u Well adjusted as I will ever
be.
A few weeks ago I wu turned down for
military ltr'Vict. J told the truth •nd
praented m<dical documentaUon.
Now people are belinnlng IO uk why I ha" not been called up by my draft
board. J've been 11)'1n&, 111 have a bid
hick." but I'm a poor Uar. It ahowa on
my lace. What should 1 aay? -STUCK
FOR AN ANSWER
DEAR STUeK , Ten ... m .... -
Nobody will believe rt. U • few eMds
penl1t la pra1lq fer u aanrer, ..,.,
"Sufoualy, I've tried bat tMy ._'t ....C
me."
JI you ha•• trouble letting oianc wWI
your parents •.. If you can't get them to
lei you live your own llfe, lt!Dd for Ann
Landen' booklet, "Bu(ied by P.,_!
How to Get More Freedom." Send Ill
centl in coin with your requat and a
long, llamped, oelf-add..,.... enYelop<. :
Ann Landera wW be IJad IO belp JOU
with your P"'blema. Sencl -lo ber In • can of the DAILY PILOT encloofnc a :
llamped, ..u.--onvelope. •
I
'
I
\
I
. • •
• .
r
•
-· -?!, 1'1611
Peering
Around
AUJllNI of. the University
of aautblrn Callfcnll were "*" ... bullet luncbeoo ""
tbe U8C camp11 lut Satlltday
belon tbe usywuhingtoa
~-. Dr. Norman Topping, USC
inald<ql and Mn. Topping
and Memben ol lhe boanl ol
-bolled the event. Acc:epthw lnvitatiol'.lll were
tbe ...... and Mmes. Ray
H. -of. Lido Iale; Olarles e. J-ol Seal
Buch, and 'l'racJ' E. Slrovey
. C sta Mesa Rites
,
ows,-Rings_Excbanged-
st. Jobn tbe Baptist Catholic
Owrcb. Costa Mesa, was the
aetting for the double ring
ceremooy linking Maureen
McC«ry and William J. Werl•
lo marrlqe. The Rev. Ken·
-J. Kra111e performed tho
rites.
ol Lquna mu.. '
The !ride, daupter ol Mr.
and Mn. Edmuod MeCorry ol
O»tl Mua, wu &iven in
lllll'!iqe by ber father. Her
candlelight utln gown and
lralo 1.otur.d lace and seed
pearl trim, and • matching
8'tin bow caught ber floor limtitb veil whit.I! 11.oo ...
tended into a train. She car-
r 1 e d gardenias an d
"-& 1M ..,_ ICbolan
who 1t'ere hlD:nd WU Jf!IT'1
llombeak ol Newport Beadl. '
HAPPY Anniversary WU
lllllli by membm ol Weight
Watchers of Southern.
California. A .
Shedding New Light on Old Subject
1~000 ,memben cele!Jro
and festivities wen climu:
wtth a Night In Nevada
party.
Lampo will be among itelllJI from Jewelry to furniture
which will brighten the rummage sale spoJUOred.
jointly by the women of SL Michaela and A!ll Angels
Epixopal Church, Corona del Mar, and the women of st. John the Divine Epilcol".'l Church, Oosta Mesa.
TlHI ·event will take place Friday and Saturday, Oct.
Horoscope
25 and 26 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at St. John'•,
2043 Orange Ave. Profits from the sale will be used
to support guil~ proerams. Seeing that the sale will
be a shining event are (left to right) Mn. Paul Col-
lins, the Rev. ·John D<>naldson and Mn. Robert
Johnson.
.
PLBDGING Phi Ka p 1
Chap!er ol Delta Della ta
at California State College at
Long Beach WU Mary Di ne
Fortune, daughter of Lt. .
and Mn. Mart Fortu ol
Hunf.incton B e a c b. M s I Fortune atlellded Marina 'gb
School where Ille was · e In
student gov~t.
Leo: Avoid Deception
Ball Plans
Unmasked
At Dinner
ALPHA Phi is the
Linda w ...... , daugbter
and -Paul Ni Newport Beach. Miss
M!jeded .... ol tbe
oodal.....-and
chapl6 ... tbe 00;,~ify
Montana campus. TUESDAY '
OCTOBER 22
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIF.8 (March 21-Aprll 19)'
Your powers of intuition are
enhanced. You are able to
perceive events of importance.
Follow through on bunch.
Heed inner voice. Spread in·
fluence and interest.
Write, read--eipand horiz.ons.
TAURUS (April 2 O ·May
20): Chanie in work con-
ditions iiific8ied. You are able
to successfully c o n v e y
thought.II, ldeu. Greater ap-
preciation accorded your ef·
forts . Be strong within. Know
your own worth. · ·
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20);
change in work conditions in·
dicate.
CANCER {June 21.July 22):
Good lunar aspect today coin-
cides with love, Romance, es:-
citement of discovery. You
find that what i!I close is real.
LEO (July 2.3-Aug. 22): Con-
ditions at home demand at-
tention. Don't deceive yourself
about costs, desires. Get to the
heart of matters. A v o I d
overextending yourseU. Get
only what you can afford.
VIRGO ~Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Journey corinected with past
responaibilfty could be on
agenda. SJ.rive to arrive at
reasons. Don't be satisfied
that something happened.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.Wct. 22)'
Accent on money, income
poteollal. YOU get rid ol
_restricting b u r d e n . Op-
portunities appear. Recognize
them. Ta_k,e lnitfative. Ypu can ad~ to f~ secm:ity if
aware and willing.
SCORPIO {Oct. 2.1-No\r. 21):
I.Amar cycle high. Means you
get breaks -puzzle pieces fall
into place. You tee clearly.
SAGM'TAJm.JS (N&v. 22-
Si:>ecial Restor permanent beautifies
.Your S\lmmer-dried hair,
'falue 30.50 20.00
This ·is not jLlit a wonderful permooent
but includes our 7.50 Ultra Magic
treatment. It .helps bring new vibrant
health and ·beauty to your hair; your set
lasts longer, And, for shape asSjlrance,
• inch~• • petsonalized hair-tut,
Bol!utv Studio, ell stores mept'Maritla
Mln~es, f*liclfes, tecial:s alld electrolysis
N..,.,t #I fefhlo11 lsl1M, N1wport leeclt
T •I•,,_. 644-2200
/,
' .t.
•
Dec. 21 ): Be discreet. Secret
is revealed. Utillu sense of
what is rlght. Don't reveal all
you Joi.qw. Some trust you with
valuables. Be honest lWlhOUt
being fooUsh. Message clear
by tonight.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Accent on Jrlends, hopes,
wishea. Greater socl&l acUvity
indicated. Contact..s yo4 make
work to your benefit. Be flex-
ible, versaUle. Gain indicated
through special study, report.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 7»--Feb.
18): PresUge on rise. Standing
in community is enhanced.
You aolve p.izzle w hi c b
enables you to overcome
roadblock. Be aware o t
details, regulations. Could be
smooth aall1ng H you uUlize
knowled,ce.
PISCFJI (Feb. It-Marci! :Jll):
Good lunar upect today coin-
cides witb favorable reply to
inqlllry. Keep communicatloo
lines clear.
Dsmas de Caridad began
miking plaos fer tbelr eighth
annual Bal Muque II a msn-
nequln-florllt dinner In tbe
Saddlebact Inn.
1be benefit ball, ICbeduled
lot' Feb. 8 will feature frtsh
flower masques created by the
flori5t.s. Prizes are awarded to
winners at the black tie dinner .
dance staged for the benefit of
St. Jude Hospital.
Mrs. Harold Mustoe, man-
neqllin chafrmao, introdllced
women who will model the
creations. They are the Mmes.
Woods Bameson of Balboa,
and Carl O. Harvey, Jac-
queline Knott, William C.
CWnmlnp, William Moore,
Walter J. Pray, Owles Qir.
rier, Jay L. Reed, Ralph Har·
rlsoo and Edwin' Ettinger, aD
of Orange Coonty.
............................................
BARGAIN
BUNTERS!
STOP BY
SINGER
NOW!
' . .
.
TWO IPANISll area. dated 11m and
beeQ. turned '1'1fl
Newport Beach
Soclely "' Mn. city ctert.
'I'be maps are of
del Mar subdivi ·
Fultoo Co. showJ
PsrkinsOO Island,
Ranch cattle gra
the Newporter Inn
and all of Newport
a goU course.
SINGER Sew & See Guarantee: with
every used sewing machine goes the
SINGER guarantee of money back lf not
satisfied with purchase, or full credit
toward the purchase of a newS4NGER•
uwin1 machine, within 90 dlysl
'
IUINA PA•I
&DI Oft T,,. MloH
TAf.154 --~•rt e.,,...
COSTA MUA
D» Kirbo!'.,,,,..
Kl P.11 .. -"""'
Watch SINGER pr-• nv1s' ..
Tuesday, December 3, NBC-TV
;n color, 9 to IOP.M., EDST.
SINGE
ANAHllM
l'IJN. \.oerw
J:B.112'
MIMI"' C."'9•
COSTA MU.&.
!lr1•'91 . s..if..,.... ... ,.,,
llllMICNW~n.
LA MIU.DA
1.tllM S. Llll~l..
U >.-U#l ...... c.t.r
C-Orooa
of K. I.
Lido as
Irvine
ng where
ow stands
eights as
MRS. WILLIAM J, WERTZ
Carpinterie Home
~ Mn. Dale Jost, the bride's
llater and matron of honor,
wore 1 red velvet gown. Wear4
Ing identical frocks were
Brenda Andenon and Nancy wen., brideamaida.
The bridegroom, IOn. of Mr.
and Mn. William H. Wertz oC
Laewood, ulted p h i 11 p
Maurer to be hil belt man and
Lury Cooper and Guy Butts
were uahera.
A reception for 130 guests
followed in the Monticello
To-ball
Alta' booeymooning In San·
ta Barbrarii, the bridal couple
will reolde In Carpinteria. The
llride la a &raduate of Costa
·Mea High School and al·
tended Orange Coast Collegf'.
Ber butbud, a graduate or
10......i High School, aerved
in Vietnam.
Joi,, .. far .., exciti119 mlll<J .... ing far llio ontiro 1 .....
ily lo Moy Co's T errece Room ...+auranl, Friday, Oct.
25th, slariin<J at 7:00 p.m. f.., 2.50. you'! ...joy:
• a aocial hour around The Glogg Bowl
• a family slci fashion show
• a skier's dinner pre1>arecl by Chris Raell'ltl.l-
formerlv of Scandia
d;,,,,., indvGet
le,,til IOUp witt-. sliced fronkfurten
saue-rlcrout with smoked pork '°"-
1alt pretzels
koiMrschofm with lingan&em ..
After dinner you'n see en interesting color fi1m on sl-i-
ing Mtd participate ;.., an informal ski tal:-out with Adi
Muahlegger, certil1ed Austrien P.S.l.A. ond A.S,l.A. in-
sfruclor. S<iers door priftf will oho be 9iven, It's,.... fo
be a most enjoyable evening so ceR 5-46-9321 , e.t. 20 I
and rna\:i, your reservations rM>W. B.v1rieft bHn: Md ;,,..
ported wines wil be 1v1il1bi. for your pleasure.
•
CC>
may co soulll tOlsl pll11, Sift ~itoo lwy al bristol, cosla mesa. 546-93,21
shop mo1diy lllrough salurd1y, 10:00 1.in. to 9:30 p.m. (
• •
Nixon 's Other Pat
Pushes for Happy Ending
Ry MARGUERITE DAVIS
WASHING TON (UP!) -
Pat Hitl, national co-chairman.
of the Nixon-Agnew campaign,
ls nown u "Dick 's other
Pat."
It's been that way al.nee
1946, when she tucked her aon,
2:. into a stroller and trundled
him along on a door-to-door
campajgn in support of
Richard M. Nixon's fint bid
for political <>fiice. He won
election to the House that
year. Now Mrs. Hitt is work~
Ing for an equally happy en-
ding for her candidate in the
1968 elections.
February to w9rk u natJonal
co-chairman ol the NlJ:on for
President Committee, a n d
now, as a regular attendant ol.
the weekly strategy sessiOlll
in Nixon's New York head-
quarters, is the only woman
with a voice in the campaign's
policy.
Mrs. Hitt Is . a slender,
smartly dresied woman wltb
coloring t)rpical of her Irish
descent -blue eyes, dart hair
now fashion.ably frolted, and
Wr complexl<>n.
"It'I not so fair Jn
Calitornia; there I usually
have a tan from playing golf,"
she &aid. "But that's ooe cl
the things I gave up when we
came here.''
llnll• out opeclal tarset .....
for the Republican campaign.
But when proased abo Jn.
dlcated the hope that -at bolh end> ol the ap opeo-
trum -lbe ''coldeo yem"
dtil:ena and the dlsenchantecl
young -will vote for a
change 1n adminlatrallon.
The JDUJ have two chlldren~
John, 24, married, and
Patrick, 20, a senior at the
University " Souther n
caJllomla.
"He llveo In hlo lratmdty
house, .. hlo only adjumnent
WQ to learn to UM the local
wasbalerla, instead of br·
inging hiJ laundry home," hia
mother u.ld.
1be 'adjustment was COD-
alderably more for bi l 1
• Mond•y, October 21, 1'68 DAJlY I'll.Of 111
Weddings, Troths
·-Pilot's Deadlines :.
To avoid ~appointment, Pl'OI~·
bridu are reminded to hava tht!r wedclh!I:
stories with black and wblla J1011y pis~
irapbs to the DAILY l!ILOT Soc:iety De~
ment prior to or within ont week after ti '
wedd!Jlg. ~ • •
For engagement announcementl j\ ;ii
suggested that the story, alao aecompllfad .
by a black and white glossy p J c I u r e, bf.
1uhmitu.t early. H the betrothal -
ment and wedding date are si% weeka or I
apart, only the wedding photo will bt IC>"~-.
cepted. •
To help flll requlremenla on both ftdo,,: .
ding ind engagement stories,, forms are a•~ -.:. able in all of the DAILY PILOT oftlceL
Further questloos Will be an.swered by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9414.
''Some women are
motivated to enter politics by
issues wlllcb concern them
deeply, but for me it was
tremendous respect and ad-
miration for someone I knew,"
she sa.ld.
Her husband, Robert J. ffitt,
took a year's leavl!: cl absence
from bill public relaUons and
management consultant firm
in Orange to servl!: u ad-
ministrator of the Nixon office
bere, a satellite operation to
the New York headquarters.
)>&"'ota, a11e ukt. nier. 11aa South Pacific Vacation *n no time for the e n-'
Like Nixon, ahe grew up in
WhiUier, and attended public
schools there, although live
yean behind him. When he
returned after World War lI to
begin private law practice, her
father, John B. Reilly,
persuaded him to run for
Coogres..
Since then Mrs. Hitt ad-
vanced in the GOP from the
precinct worker lo top pooi-
tions in the state and national
GOP. Sbe moved here last
"He says he moved S,000
miles to becoml!: a campaign
bachelor,'' hi:! wife said.
She travels extensively dur-
ing the week and spends most
weekends at her desk. with lit-
tle time to be with her hus-
band in the big.three-story
house they rented here.
Mn. mu does not like to
Demos' Girl Friday
~th~ pl=::;0t!;':~ Newport residents (left to ri5!>t) 1'!r. and Mrs. John Jakosky Jr. and Mr. and
leisurely weekends t!:xploring Mrs. Kenneth S. Ross sail-to Honolulu for a vacation aboerd the SS Lurline.
the aWT0W1diog Virginia and _T_h_e_f_our_s_o_m_e_l_eft_I_a_st_w_ee_k_. __________________ _
Maryland countryside went
glimmering.
"We've been away together
just twice," she said.
They will return to Orange
after the election.
"I plan to celebrate election
night and sleep all day Nov.
8," she said. "We'll take a
vacation, then -home in time
for Christmas."
Breakfast
Applauds
Executives
Government, Education
Reviewed by Las Olas
Presenting an opportunity
for each individual to better
understand our government
San Clemente Toastmistress will be Las Olas Toastmi.s-
Barbecue
Coals Heat
Prospective m@mben wlll
be entertained during a bar-
becue at the Garden Grove
home of Mn. John Haden
when Iota Upsilon chapter,
Sigma Phi Gamma sorority,
hosts a ruah party Thursday,
Oct. 21.
Supporter Shares Spot
Club hosted offiei!rs of other tress C I u b of Huntington Beach. San Clemente women's clubs during an Exl!:CUUvl!: Breakfast Education and the Comtitu·
this morning in the Municipal lion will be discussed whtn
Goll Clubhouse. the groop meeta at 7:30 p.m.
uded Wednesday, Oct. 23, in the
wll1 be Mrs. Ralph Almgren,
toastmlstuu, and evaluating
will be Mn. WUliam Wood-
ruff of the Orllllie County
Toastmistress Club. Trainee
evaluators include Mrs. Phil·
llp Billington and Mn. Clar-ence Double.
All area women are invited
to attend, and addlliooal In-
formation may be obtained by
calling Mrs. Calvin Olcott,
Members and guesta are in-
vited to "go weslem" in
, drtsa in keeping with the
party theme. Get·ecqua!oted
, ..... will be played during
the evening.
Guests will Include the
MW<! Pat Fodor, Hilda Har·
ris, Donna Ingdabl, Kathrine
Phillps, and Mrs. Vern Mer-
idith and Mn. Jolin Schaotz. as directing women's ac-
tivities, and her e:iperience
prepares her to handle both
roles.
Volunleera for Stevenson In
1956.
Mra. Joseph brings good
loOks aa wl!:ll as br•ins to her
new assignment. Her dark
hair Is in dramatic contrast to
The program incl a Surfside Condominium Club--
repeat of a television panel house, Atlanta and Surfwood
discussion featuring M r s · sts ff tlngton Be ch R bl'
Frances I r ving as Mn.~lan Ken:~ will epu 1cans
toastmistress. Evaluators rpeak on current events, and Mrs. Walter L. Doucette
were the Mmes. Charlea Mrs. Calvin Olcott will be in HB Auxiliary will be hostess to the Costa
847-1!8!.
VISIT US
ltefort
th.
Storl:
Vi sift
You
For Yo1r
C•mpl•t•
M•f•mity
W•rtlr•b• et
....... ir..1.
price• • • •
• • •
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
By MARGUERITE DA VIS
WAS!llNGTON (UPI) -
Geri Joseph, vice chairman of
the Democratic National Com-
mittee, believes her party
must pay special aUenUon to
suburban voters, young peo-
ple, and the "core" city areas.
Her belief is virtually cer-
tain to be translated into ac-
tion. Mrs. Joseph has a voice
in setting party policy, as well
She served as National Com-
mitteewoman in Minnesota for
the last eight years, after a
two-year stint as S ta t e
Chairwoman of the
D em o c r atic-Fanner-Labor
Party and heading ,Women 's
her blue eyes.
She wears her clothes with
the flair or a model, which she
was not, and chooses her
words with the precision of a
prize-winning n e w s p a p e r
reporter, which she was. She
is forthright and articulate,
whether discussing her
children, who range in age
from 11 to 21 years, or plans
for the presidential campaign.
Swain, Edward H'Ard and charge of table topics con-I w .. c....r-21tl:1Mlt. J J hnso American Legion Auxiliary Mesa Federated Repub lean c .... .._. ~~lfll
e,fVe e~ent ~ one of two ac-cemlng the Constitution. of Huntington Beach gathers Women's Club on Oct. 24, at I '::~~~==~~~~~
tivities which the club staged Speeches by Mn. William in the American Legion Hall 10 a.m. 1-
in commemoration of the Vellutini, Mrs. Gary Giles and at 1:30 p.m. the first Thursday The meetl!!J will include
organization of toastmistress Mrs. Paul Bronson also will of each month. On the third election of otf1cen and a re-
OCTOBER
BEAUTY SALON
SPECIALS
Mrs. Joseph discussed in
broad terms the three fields in
which she believes her party
must wort bard.
"Democrats really haven't
done too well in stirring up in-
terest amoog 1 u bur ban
voters."
But projects to correct this
Th. Dally Pilot; !. -·-clubs 30 years ago. be concerned with phases of Thursday members may call port of c l u b accomplish·
The television panel governm@nt. Mrs. Arne Jensen, 536-2777, for ment.s. All members are urged Covers Boating
discussion, which took place. __ 1n_1r_od_u_cin__;:g_t_h_e_s..:pe_•k_en __ 1oc_a_u_o_n. ________ to_•_tt_•_nd_. _______________ _
last week, saw Mrs. Harry-=-
Sharilll and Mrs. Barbara
Whitmore explaining the func-
tion of the club and Mrs.
Chester Chapin relating ac·
tivities of a toastmistress
meeting.
CM Overeaters
Overealerll An onymou 11
gather every Wednesday at 8
p.m. in Bear Street School,
Costa Mesa.
Beauty Sa.lo ns
deficiency will not slight Lbe•li==========.I companion need for cam-
paigning among voters who
live 1n the decaying central cl·
HUMAN HAIR
STRETCH WIGS
,100 Value ........ $65
A gre•f buy on
lnstent Beeuty.
CAREFREE
LAMP CUT
.,;9. $5 --$).50
Comfort 1p•ci•I ..•
no mot• pins, roll•rs
or dryer1I
PeRMANENTS
BY DUART
Selon ••• , • $10
Studio • , •• 14.50
Both with 1tyl• •nd cut,
HUMAN HAIR
SPECIALS
wigl•t1 , • , . 1.18
cesc•d•1 .• 11.H
falls •• , •• Zt.H
frosti•• •••• 4.99
Appol11tme11h flot •lw•Y• flt c••••ry,
from An•h•im Phon• IJl-8121
fr.im N•wpor+ Ph•"• M4d212
frem Hafltiflgton l••ch Phone lf2°l]J I
IH11ty S•le11., 601
-{fJ3R.C:>.ADWAY
ty areas.
She believes her party must
plan a special welcome for the
21-to-30-year group, although
she dJd not concede the valid.i·
ty of cmnplaints by some that
they are given no voice in the
campalgn.
The Democratic campaign
will rely heavily on women
volunteers.
"We couldn't function
without them, although many
don't realize how in·
dbpensable they are," Mrs.
Joseph said.
She has been caring about
Hubert H. Humphrey's
political fortunes since 1960,
when she traveled with tbe
family during hla brief and
unsuccessful campaign for the
presidential nomination. She
did so again this year, and
now she ml!:ans to do all she
can to see that he wins the of·
flee.
Observers have speculated
that if Humphrey does win,
Mrs. Joseph might be con·
sldered for Secretary of
Health, Education and
W@lfare.
After her graduation magna
cum laud@ from the University
of Minnesota in 1946, she went
to work for the Minneapolis
Tribune. There, according to
her official biography, she
specialized Jn health, educa-
tion and welfare reporting and
wa1 the only woman to win a
Sigma Delta Chi award.
Like Muriel Humphrey, she
ls keenly Interested in mental
health, and 11 first vice presl·
dent of the Nallon1l Alsocia·
lion for Mental Health.
Sea Sirens
TOPS Sea SireNI meet tn
JClllybroott!: School, C o s t a
Men, ever'J' Wednesday at 7
p.m.
Trans-Seasonal Fall Sporfswe1r
Tops 1 I 3 llo-
Slclm Off C•rls
~'"r~, J424 VIA UDO -NIWPOIT llACH e 01-ylancl Helel e UCI Town C...tet
The
Town
Crier
Orange County
Calendar
This spec• he1
b••n reserved
for •
CALENDAR
OF
COMMUNITY IVENTS
within
ORANGI COUNTY.
Every Monday
for th• next y••r
we will be heppy
to publish
fr•• of ch•rg•
the dete •nd time
of worthy •vents
in our
· Oren9e County
Communitie1.
If yout church,
PTA, Girl Scouts,
Women'• Club, •tc.
is pl•nning
an •v•nt,
WRITE OR CALL
P•9 9y T1ylor •• W •aadway
Mortwy I 1cfdr•1s
•nd phon• numb•r
below I •nd we
will 9ive you
a FREE NOTICE
in this .column.
BELL
BROADWAY
MORTUARY
llOBtoadwayS-
Cosr. Meaa. California
Tel. 548-3432
••
i •
~ o\\
'
" ' f
f h
i
' • '
' ~
I •
'
~~
,
' I
" ;...;
ON OUR NEW "CAROUSEL:' CUT ...
topped with your CUSTOM-CREATED COLORI
Thanks to ingenious Roux, our new push-button,
dispenser lets us create a literal kaleidoscope of
hair colors -so we achieve precisely the shade you
want. And then keep it unchanged, retouch after
retouch I The perfect finish to our style artistry in
creating a softer looking, younger looking you.
COSTA MUA. CAUJI.
177 •. '"" llrwt
COSTA llllA. CAUi'.
.. "'"*' ·-
COSTA M~ CALIP. "'w. lttll .,,.. Mll'telr Ctnltr --·--K<Mtrt l"lfla --
-.
'. ~ .. ·
•
CllEME llMll M
COMPLETI: 511
OU.MM.""" ltM w, CMlofMll --NIWPOlf llACH, CA.UP. POUNTAllt YAUIY, CAUP. IANf A AJllA. CA.UP. 1111 .......... ,.,...
Metll9t ... II« .. "',. ,.... .. ,.,. 11tJI MMNll.t VIII ... C""9r ·---C~i~ ,. t -'
) t
•
. '
I I
I I
I
L
(.
Ja j DAILV PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE l'·llS.U
C••TIPICAT• 0,. SUllN•SI l'ICTITM)US Pl•M MAM• ..... "" lf9. I' M4l I • Tiit 11ndl>f1!9nM do htrtby-art11'Y tti..t °" OdOber :II, 1HI, •I U :to A.IA,, ti fMor ••• C'Onductliw • clruv1kH'• bullneu 1f1t fl'l41n enlrt..ce '9 mJ W"t a.11 lld., 111 Co-¥1rtne"). 11 1 Mon1rcll ll1Y PIA:.,
Cllv (If AMhtlrn, (t!lfornl1, Rol\9ble l..11,,,... Nl1ut1L CtlllO<'nle, ......... WW lie·
lnvn"-<lt C~flo<l, 11 TNll ... llllder tit!-tit"' -flf MONARCH IA'I' .. t OOo.ci of lnAI lftack l:Pr Ctrl E. Colsorl OltUGS 1nd ,,._, Hlcl firm II COl'l'IOOHd o1
111d R"OHrnery ~ ""lblnd irtwl wtt1 ttle tollowlftt ---.S Mmft In full
•• 1o1 .. 1 9-nh '""' ·~ """' I, -, .. _ of rtildttll;OI .... II lollows, Jo. JM. In look t15L l't" 213. flf Offfd.til Wit: ~ flf Ortl'lll Ctuntr", Calltorl\11, JIAUL LOMIAltOI, LI .... ,.. Nlt Ulll,
1t11 ... la Meutt '" lftdottlol"""• 1n ftvw C1llfwnl1. fll EcM1 ... Slfftl, Tru11M fer M1rt GE1tia.LO HEFTElt, 1111!1n, CtlllCJt'ni.
•o&1n""" Tl'lllr bl< retlOfl ot IM t1te1cti Clf MURRAY MOSCOWITZ, T111tln. C1ll-cwt1l11 tbll1111on1 1tc11,ed ll'lefftW, llO!lao lomli
ol wl'llcb -I '~ JllM 26, 1961, In JACK l. TU8LIN, arooklyn. N ... Ioele N4.1, Pltl 6'13, of Yid O!tklel Yori!.
llKl'l'lfl, will HU It tllbllc llldkMI Ill IN ll091!11tT TUBllN J.omll'HI Nt J«. lllllW•t bidder tw c1111. 1111r-ble 111 ........ ...,. ' ' •
flll ,,_... of ""-Urllltd 5t1tu 11 the 11tne Dt1tc1 0ctoti.t l IHI
al w it, wllMut ••"•nl'r •• '9 tli., PAUL LOMBAlllOI --*' or-~Ille'"' -lnier.tf ••• CMW'l'H t.:i and -Mid 11'1' 11141 T""IM ALO HEl'Tl!'ll MURRAY .MOSCOWITt \llllle!' llld Petd of Trvst, 111 •NI "-TIM JACIC: L TUBLIN ftlllcrwl.,. dhcrllHd •~• to-wt!: llOBEll:T TUBLIN
LOI 17 ol Trett No. lj,C), ll ,er ""°P STATE 01' CALtl'OllNIA I
'tc.Of'ftll 111 8ooll "· "" '2 Cit COUNTY OF OltANGE 'I ml$Qlll.._.. ""'~ In llM ol'llel "' TIM On October I, lHI, Mio•~ : •• • Not1tY counf'f' rtclff'lMr of Yid counl'r Public In el>d lot" Ylcl County i nd $1tl1 fOJf -PU-ol P•vl... ati11nn-• HCIWed .,,. wld c..cr lncludl"9 '""' -l!v •P•1•1d l'AUL LOMBAltOI, ~rt11!$ 11111 9Ul!IMS o1 !Ill TruslM end Gl!llALO HEl"Tl!lt 1nct MUllllAY
et ult. MOSCOWITZ ·-Ill me hi ~ TM 01ttd : :Mo!ffllbolt JI, 1..... 111..-whoH "'""' 1rt wblcrlbtd 11!1 lltlabll' lnvntment tlll: wttllln ln1trvrnenf, •"" 1ck-~ed tor'-~. Trvst.e fo ""' "'4ot fhtv ~tcllled tM i1rm. a, """"'l• c. P_, Wltneu mv lwlncl 1!111 M91. Stcrtt1rv !OFFICIAL $EAL)
SU" DoNIO P1r!ln Publllhlid Oii,., COQI O.llY ,.llClt, Hol1rv Pub llc<1tllornl• Ocltbtl' 7, IA, 21, IHI 1727... Prtn<;INt Ollie. In
LEGAL NOTICE
O"t1tt C11<1nh' My Commlnlon ExPlr~
SftllttnW 27, 1tn STATE OF NEW YORK PUBLIC NOTICI! COU NTY OF KINGS Tp All Collcl'rllllCI: On 1111> l'tll day Gt Octobe• IMll
Tiie B<Mnl Oii Dl'tcton pl 1tle Coilll P11W114111Y ·-•red betote me JACK L, ~ COl.lflty W1tw Ol1trlct ,_...,.,. tlvtl TUILIN 1nd llOll!llT TUILI" 10 be
Ml'k9 11191 fl'llY wft1, 1t 1:00 o'dod. ,..Ht. knowft i ncl known to me to be ttw !ncll·
1111 TPw.lftd•V• NpyM!Mr U, IHI, •I 1111 Vldu•lt cln(rlbecl In 1nd Who tKetv lecl c...,.r.nc. ll-11 Ill ,.... Cwnc:ll '"" llOk Oii Thi rtYtrM 1H:rt titted, ....... Ol.fl'ftblft. T1 1"1lr Ori.,., Colli Mesi, bel119 by mt duly 1worn did 1dr.11ow~ °"'"'' CovnlY, C1lllort'll1, recel"' 1 ... tdtt !Ill ••Kiiiion !!>er.of, .. 111111111 Ill Ill• hlr91Mflv dKC rfbecl rtll (0FFIC1.IL SEAL!
11J$9rty CorllPOMd pl •1111ro><lm1ttly 7.XI Vlcl'Or Fuico
IC7U, Pfl Slrlftlllll S!rttl Wnt ot liol•rv Public Monrt!¥11 A'ltftlll, Cott• Mesi. TM .. .,. S!lte pf Ntw Yofk
pwy Is -.C,lbtd 11 followl: No. J4-1ln70G A ~ pl Lot 1012, NfW'll'G"i Mtt.1 Tnod •llutl<t<I In !tie CllY Oil Coel• Q~ltllecl Ill Kl .... COU/lt'I C°"'mlQloll E~PlfH MeM, CovnlY ol Or'"''· C1llfor11l1, t t Mtrdl JO lfO "'°""' on • MIP flltreel Reco<'ded In MILO M .. llCHl!fTt, Jll.
&-. S, "''' 1 of MIKtllllltOUI Mll'S, AltlrMY llecll"dl "' o .. ..,.. Covn!Y, Ct!lfofn!• J MtllU'<:ll •• ., Pl111 $\Ill• 10
"'61'11 ... ttlcvl1tly dftcrlbed ti l0Uow1 : L .. lllll Hltutl, C1Mkr1111 "'" flEGINHING 1t Ill• 5otJ!hWt11lt flY Ttt OUJ 4M-UOJ '"'''°' ~ et P1retl "A", 11 1how11 on ' ll~lillod Or1rtv1 Co.ii O•lly PHol. Mii llllKtlnled 111 loolt 17, Pitt ll of .. _ Ptrc:tl Min, llirc:orch ol ulcl 0,..,.1 vuoblr U, 21, :Ill tf'WI Novomber 4, 1'61 C-h': ltlenct North O*lMl" W~I 177).4.1
tlon9 "" W"''"" llM "' M id P1rctt ".I", I clllllfK<I ol lOO.ll'l IHI 10 llM LEGAL NOTICE
NOr1!1.,...Mh' corrwr ol uld P1ru11--------------1 "A"l IMnce NPrltl trn'SS" E1il 1ion11 NOTICI! 011 TltUITll'$ l•LI
"" "'°'1'ltel'IY NM ot ltlcl Ptrcel "A".. Nt. 14f1
In Brief
Sales gains are expected to
be modest lhis year for the
nation's book publishers. Text-
book sales were off 2 percent
in 1967 as federal aid to educa-
tion spending slowed down and
total sale! of books rose less
than 6 percent. With federal
spending getting eve n tighter
"the neeessities created by
lengthening periods of formal
education m!y find o n I y
meager reflection in sales
gains of most publishers."
The shoe industry report~
relail sales are climbing and
probably wiU continue to do so
judging from the reorder rate
on fall !tyles. The industry
said retail sales during the
first seven month5 this year
were B.S percent ahead of the
same 1967 period. The only
thing that may hurt improved
sales is possible consumer
resistan~ to a proposed 3 to 4
percent price increase.
"No matter who wins the
White House in November,"
Prentice-Hau, Inc., reports,
"business managers will have
to continue taking into con-
sideration government actions
and policies." It add! that
"the next four years will pro-
bably Stt some major changes
in tax law ; labor relations law
and policies; an titrust law :
enforcement of consumer pro-
tection laws: new forms ol
financial aids to business to
help rebuild cities. provide
housing, train w o r k e r s ,
alleviate pollution and utilize
new technology." dlsl1!1Ct ol 5Q.l,06 IHI IO Ille On Ocf'llt>!r tt, 1961, •I U:DO 1.m., "°"""'1hlrh' ciorMr ol wld P11c1I 9ENEFICl•L SERVICE CO.,• C11\lor"lt "A"1_ ll'>lllc:I 5outll t'U'JI" E11t 1lo"' cori>0r1!1on a• du)Y 11>POl11te.:r Tr111lee
tlle l;11ler1Y llM ol 11ld P1rcel "A", • IHldlr tnd 1>11rsutnl 10 Offd ol Tr111t A five.city survey Of CJlff.
.it.llll(f al ll.112 IHI ICI I II• di~ July t, IK2, tlltcultd lw l'REDRIC d II I · NPl'thniterll' or111r Ill i-1rcet "C'', ., E. l!IUTTON Ind IETTY L. BUTTON, we er• nd1cates apartment
.,,,,.... on 11Jd P1rc11 MIP; '"""" 11ti1birM1 '"" w111 •rod •K«Cled JulY 17, buildings of the future will SPiii!\ .. .,.,.sr• Wtll t1Dr4 tlle Nor!Mr· IK,, •• IMtr. Ho. 11111, 111 -. 'llO,
IY '"' et 11Jd Ptrc11 "C" • dlAl•nc'I "' p1;t m , a1 Otflct•I RtcMd• In TM ofllu need a personality custom·
u1.oo t...i ... tl'lt No<1flwtllll'h' 0>r111r al n.. COll!llY Recor6e• Ill Or•"f• C011f'ltv, made fo •• t •· el' 111d P1rctl "C"• lllenot 511<11'11 C1lltorllft. WILL SELL AT PUILIC AUC-r •ue enan ....
O'lt'W ' l!•lf llOlll IM WnflrlY HM Ill TIOH TO NIGHl!l$T BIOOEll FOR CASH The survey of Owens-Corn· uld P1ra1 "C", llt.00 Iott "' tlwl fNY1bl1 11 time of ult 111 l1wt11t _., · F' 5outltWllterlY air..., IM•l'ol1 ltlellCI 111 Ille unli.d s111es> 11 '"• Soult! Front tng 1ebrglaa Corp. covered NOl'Tll ff'2'.]'S7'' E111 1lonv tM Souther Iv entr•111:• 10 ""' Or•t1t• c o u n t l' I 800 garden a pa r t m e t llrte of Mid P1rnl "C", 1 clllf111Ct al Cour!hou1e. Cit!' ol S.nlt Ant, Stal• a1 ' n u.oo,.... 10 tM Hor1t1Wt1tt1r1Y cot"ntr ef c1n~11, 111 r1o111. llfll 1nc1 1ntu111 COii-residents in Atlanta, Detroit,
111rc.i "8", t1 111Pwn on ulci P1•c11 "t'f"" fo ,..., l'ttfW lltld 1w 11 lltlder uolcl Minneapolis, San Franc'••o, M111; l!Mnct 5oulll O':N'JI" Etd t lono Oftd of Trull 111 Ille ""°"rtv 1(tu1ftell 111 ..,._ ,,,. WnMrl¥ llM o1 111c1 P•r<•I .. , . ., 111d c....,.tv ,..., s111e dtKrlbed 11: and Washington,
lft.DO fltl to "" Seutllwuterty car111r Lor :rn a1 TrKt No. tot •1 lllowlO on a1. ~kl P1rc11 .. ,. .. , t11e11U 511<1111 • Miii •IKWdtd rn eoo11 H, P•tn 2s 1co A survey conclusion was
1t n ,,... wnt '""" "" 5ou!Mrl¥ ,.., 111c1us1.... a1 MIK•ll•-MePI •"at "man e te Id boulldl,., 1111e .,,. Mid Peret'! "A''. , •ttonl• °' or•t1t• Coln,.,, Ct llfornl• • u 1 Y r n rs con! er dltt•n<;• a1 m .oo ftet 1co "" Po1n1 111 511d ,.1e wtu 11e ""°'· 1111t w1111ou1 apartment renting similar to B1tlmlt1t fl/I t1111 deKrll'tloll. ccw111111t Pf', w1n•nl'r, •••lftl Gt" 11111111ec1. motel Jiving. SUBJECT TO: AN covtMnt1, •191111, rl91rdl1111 tint, l>OIHHlon. or en-
rl1tllHlf•WIP 1<111 "ltflltllll fl/I rteorcl, C1111'1br111C19, 1a .,., fllt rtm1lnlflfl prln·
11 I> '"Uftl.cl 11111 fht ol'fll't IO ci...I """ Ill fllt nohl 1tcvred by $lld LEGAL NOTICE turd'l111 bl-In '#t'ltl1111. CD111 Mtle Cou11-Oted ol Truat, to.wit: 137,144.16, wllll 1"'1------~~------1 IY Wl,l1r 01•.,.lcl lo.rd of OlrK'fors ..,..II from Aprll !, lfll.I, •• In 111d note P..J1$14
rnervtl IM rltllf Ill Wtlvtl lllY Ir. pnwJd«I, eclvt rocn, If ,...,., Ulldtr t11t CllltTll'ICATll 01' BUSl!ltlSS rto11l1rlt1ft, to rtltcl M Y lrod Pll alftrL lem\ll ot uld ......... of Trull .... PICTITIOU• N••• Md 11!1 IMtPtlth wtlfl ~,.. for tl'OI bell ~ ' ...., efltt obfl!Mblt to 1M Wlllr Ols ... ld dlel'HI Ind 1~11111111 fl/I tl'OI '1'ru1l1t IP'd T1'll Ull6tt'sltlled do ~ IMY 1111 A 900ld f1ltll ••Y-~I 111 1.S.(IOO,OO lliould al 1111 ll'Wls CPM!td IPY Sl!d Died al <:olldvcilftt I llu1in111 t i P'. 0, 8vo 2112,
l<.tomNllY tllt atltr 111 1ftt torm ol Tr ... t. Coal• M,.., C1lttoml1, U!'Mltr Ille lie·
C.1hllr or unllltd cr:..a. ••rtbll "' "" Thi bll)efkl•l'Y ulldtr uold Ottcl al tl!klo.t1 firm "'"'' Cf OUllAMAX erclft' of !hi Cotll Mn.e Cbullh' Wiler Trv1I, lw rt11ion ol • brt1tt1 P• dl1tutt In l!lHTEllPllllSES 11111 ""' Sl lcl firm 11 Ol1trld I rod wtoldl wlll bl ,.,turllllCI Im. 1111 obll91llons '.k'll•td I II tr• b Y' COITIPotecl ol tlle follow I"' Ptrion1, wtoau 1t1ec1l11t1Y II otr., 11 not •<Ctl>ted. "'~~tolot"e •~ecuted """ c1tt1 .. ered 10 1'111 111me1 In tvlf 1nd pl1cts ot rnlcltnct ire lllY w11t11;1 uno.rihl-I written Decl1r1111111 of 11 l'llllowJ;
5tcrt1llfl' Deftull •nd ~m•ncl for S1l1, •rod written John W1l~r Vtl•rdo, lft.11 Eit~ry Cot•• """ countv 110llce Pl brt!•tll incl Ill •lttllon hi c•.ne L1.,., Hu11tln1110t1 •etch, Ctll!. Wiltr Olstrlcl 1t1t Vlldert19ned hi 1111 u lcl P'°""" " Ltl .l.nlt!ony .st1rrett, :ml tow1 PubWllltd °''"'' ColJt 0.llp Pilot wlltlT uld PbllGt!lont , •1'11 lll1trt1tter, on Street Cott• MHI Ct llf ~ 11, 21. 21. lHI 1n...i JUM 25, lHI. "'-unlftPlltned ulllld u ld 011111' Octeber 11, iH1 ·
LEGAL NOTICE
llO!ln ol brndl ll'ld of llt(lloll to "' Joi!" W1tttr V1llrdo t'«orded In boek 16.11, P'" "3, Ill' Mid LM .1.11"'611Y Sl1rre" Otllcl1I Rteordi, STATE O• C l 01t1:· Sel>tft'llbef 16 lffl A ll'OllN1A, NOTICI 01' TRUnll'S SALi! . BENEl'tciAL Sl!llVICE co ORANGE COUNTY! ,,_ .. -~-., .__ • Oii Ocloblr I\, IHI, birfO!'I mt, I ""' ,.__y, nll'llfft.....,. 11, 1He, I I It'll "-Hld Tnnllt. Hot1ry Public In 111d for 11ld St11t1, hOur ol f :)O .1,M,. II ltlt ofllct of 8y A. l. T11r111r, 11tr1Pr1111J 1-r~ JOM Wl~r Vellrdo NIG91E ~ HtGllE, nt Mlrtnt AVllftlH!, VIC. Praldltll Incl Lfl A"ll\Pflp $t1rr1tt known la me hi ltlbot hr1ncr. Cit!' Pl IWwPOrt lkldl. IPI ,,... "' .... "'''°"' wtlOlt lllfMI ... 1ubter!t•·
CounlV Oil On.,_, CAllL M, 81.ICK P11blhtled N•-1 H1rbpr Nf'WI "'Kl wd 10 fllt Wllllln 1 ... lr\Mlltnl I nd tUILOING co~ ti wbllllyft TRUSTEE, ePmll!N <I wlltl 01llY "''°'· N.._,., •c•nowlldtlll t!ln; uecvtM ""''"" wm Mii 11 Nblk l llCrlon "' Ille t\19114'11 9•1Cf'1. C•llfor11!1, Oclabtr 7. u. 21 . (Ol'F ICIAL Sl!'ALI .
....,.... IW Clltl, In l•wl\>4 _., "' IHI 17fit.61 T1rn1r1 Aloom .... Unltll 111111, •ll HV•ble •I "" Not1rv i-u1>11c • C1Mfor1111
ttrne Pl M ill, •ti ltltl (trtlln rqf ··-LEGAL NOTICE Prlr!C1HI Ol!ICI 111 "" 1l1V1fled 111 n.e CllV Pl N-rt o,.,_ CounlY
a.teclo, COlllllY Pl °"·-· Stiff Pl C.I~ N l$42 M¥ Commlulon ExP1rft ..,..It, de$Crlbld 11 l'oltow1: ClllTll'ICATI! 01' IUSINltt JuM l'f, 1f111 lot " Pl Trti:t 'In, 11 Pt!P MtP l'ICTITIOUS l'lllM NAMI! ,.ublli.lltd ortr1tt C0t1l 01111' P!lol, rKorclll 111 IPOk IM, P•fll n te 1J 1.11t lf7t OC~ u. 21, :t. 11111 No\ltn'lbol r '· lr!Clvl"'-• Pl Mltc1Utr1t0111 M•PI, llet• The """tr1!9,,.,, do ner"¥ ctrtllY lllll IHI ln'IMI onu 11 111d CWftl\t. Iller '"' conducllng • be1vtv -1¥1--------------TOGl!lTHElt WITH 111 wnalvldtd buolMH I•• Ce-Part-0 11 lOfl Oct1n LEGAL NOTICE
"""' lntttltt .. Lii" "Tr1<1 ""' A .. ,., L1111111 BHdl, C•l!lt•lll•. uncle• .... 1--~~--~-~-----
1'1'11 "" wHI Ill """-wllllovt WV· lktl!laua 11"" ... ,,,. Pl ltO,.AGE MOT!CI 01' T11un1l!t U.Lll lf'ltlll er ,..,,1111" PMlrdll!I tllle, -flEAUTY SUPPLY tnd llllol 11Jd llrm 11 Nt. T/S tM
Miiion W lllCllll'lbrlM .. 1C1 11tt11y 11M COIY\PO .. ot tlM lotlowlM l!lnalll. """-0.. W.or.14fy, Oct<lbtr Ill, lttl, 11
<61t11n.i ttcllttd ...... e/Od "'""'"' to, :::r::~ 1\1~!~ tllCll Of/ rnl"'11ct ''' 11;00 A.M.. CAPITAL ALLIANCE "°' _, of wi. ~ In It'll! cer· Ptul Lom.U.roi. lHUlll Nl911tl COllPOllATtON 11 duly 111..olnled '1'ru1· ltln deed ol trvtl 1111CVIW b' 8R UCE CllllOO'nli, ' Ill llf'dlr trod ftllfllll"I ft Owd fl/I 'Trutl C. Cillll IM NANCY C. G!lll!ll, 11 ~flkl Helhlr '1'\>il!n C•lllClrnll ftltd FlblVll'Y 'H, lNJ, l~KU!td by
Trv""""' 'TITLE INJUllANC:E ANO Murrtv ~l!J., T~ttln, citltOmie. LUTHl!ll l!l. HAMPTON 111([ HELEN I', 1'1tutT COMl'Af'IY, I I T""''"· tor "'" Jtcli; L. Tublf", B•oolch'n, Ntw Y•rk HAMPTON I nd ..-crtd JfeOrv.ry ,., """'' ~ *"'"' .. lll!lJAC COil,.,. llobe<'t Tubl!n. Somt•HI. New Jtr'H'Y. lffl, •• IM!r. No. 20fli, 111 btld! '40, I ~ntll, II hi tll IJlldlvldM Of1fo. Oiied Oc1-r ), IMI Hit Ii'. ., Ofll(lll "Konll In Ille ciftlct Jllllt'~ 11'1t ICltllOY SHotl-.ING PAUL t:OM9Alll» Pl tM C011ntv lltcOrdtr pl°''"" Coulltr, CENTElllS, INC., I CllrllOI'•"""' ti 10 GEllALD HEFTE ll C1llP6n'll1, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AIJC· '" ~ -""'" lnltrut, el Ill~ MUltRAY MOSCOWITl TION TO HlGHl:ST 8100Elt JfOlt CASH ~ry "'flld Otoctmbtr 17 lffl, t!'ld JACK L. TUl!ILIN IHrtbll' el 11t!M Pl Ui9 111 lllwtul _.,
-
' ' llOlllERT 'TUBLI N al -Uf'll'9CI S"lftl 11 -tn1ln tnlr1!1ai ~IPllllrv J, 1""'• In loali. ll6t, STATE 01" C.1.LIFOltN!A 1 11!1 MlflMr'I Slvl"'I •!Ill LOI~ A1l0Clltlon,
p-"''· 11 DoCvmlllt He. UU, ()ffl-COUNTV 01' OllANGE l •• UIJ Wtsll:llff OrJ .... , HtWPPrl llt1ct!, "°•~-~~. ~"" Off< lat,., ot .. ~,, ~Iv On Ocll'.>bor 1, '"*· btfort mt. • ~ .. ,., C1llfoml1, t it rl1n1, t!tlt 111([ IPll'""' c1111· _,... ....-.-°""'" .... Ol'lhe. Publlc In 1nct tor ••Id c;91111ty incl 51119, vtftd It! •rod -Mid by II ""°"' llld r119 btlll(kitl '""'""' lllllkr IM ......, """""llv •-tre.:1 l'AUL LOMIAROI, Dtlcl of Trvtt I" tlW pr-ti' 111111111<1 '" '1A lfvtt •M ll'lt _,11111-•ICtilred GlltALO HEP:Tl!lll, •net MfJllltAY fllt cllY f1f C111t Mt11. Ill 11ld COiin,., Incl
lfWrtbY WWI tllltllld le (.I.Ill M, MOSCOWftz --n ... me hi be It'll Strie cltl<l'lbld 11: BUCI( BUILOIMC co.. • c1tHom11 ",_ wllOM NI ........ , -<•lbtl:t ft Lii I Ill Trl(f Ho. ,.,., ln "" c-iv ""-•'tlofl. lrlv t" u1ltnmen1 11111111 ttw wllllln 1111'"""""'· •!Ill ldo:-ltdtH lit or1.,.., SllM ot Ctllfomle, 11 "'
Slll>IWll'lltltf U. 1"4,, l tllf rttonMcl ,... fo mt 11'111 fllty f>.KU!ft 1f>t """· ml• rteordtd In btClk f;3, Mfl JO pf llll'l'lbtt Ji. l1llM. If! llldl 7nt. llt" Wllnft1 mv 1111111 e"41 -I MIK:tlll_,, Me", I" 1111 ol'tln ., !tit llt, Detvmenl He. ll'Jllll'. ott1ci.1 llec· {Of'l'!CIAL Sf AL) . C-h' lltcordtf' ot l•ltl c;:....,.t'I. 11(111 Ill "" Ofr+e. ot "-c-1y Reconttr Clonild Pirn" llld 11i. Wiii bt midi, "'°' wtlllovl ., wloi c-tr. N• -, .. ,.,., II"'-I ~Ill •r •• ,,.""'· llt!P•bl or 1,,.11ec1,
--t
NEW MERCEDES -Briggs Cunningham, (left) local sportsman and owner
of Briggs Cunningham Auto Musuem takes delivery of new Mercedes. Benz
300-SEL from dealer Jim Slemons. The car is said to be the first of its kind
off tile assembly line, the first to be deUvered in the U.S. and the fastest regu·
lar production sedan in the world.
300 Boys Compete in Punt,
Pass, l(ick Football Contest
By €ARL CARSTENSEN
Nearly 300 boys competed in
tbe recent Ford sponsored
Punt, Pass and Kick football
contest with trophies being
awarded to winners at a party
held at Theodore Robins Ford,
Costa Mesa.
Winners compete a g a i n
Saturday, Nov. 19 at Orange
High School. Finals of the na-
tion-wide contest will be held
during the NFL playoff in
Miami on Jan. 5, and the 12
national finalists and their
parentrwill be awarded a two-
day trip to Washington D.C.
by the Ford Motor Company
In local competition, the top
three boys in each age group
were:
8 YEAR OLDS: I. Don
Burns. Newport Beach; 2.
Patrick Gallagher. Cos I a
Mesa; 3. Michael Neal, Costa
Mesa.
t YEAR OLDS : I. Billy
Vivers, Newport Beach: 2.
David Adams. Costa Mesa ; 3 .
Colin Warfield, Newport
Beach.
IO YEAR OLDS : 1. Bill
MacDonald, Corona del Mar;
2. John Pearson, Newport
ach; 3. Paul Shook, Foun tain
Valley.
U YEAR OLDS: I. J oseph
W. Sabia, Costa Mesa; 2. Bill
Moss, Balboa Island; 3. Kurt
Clarke, Costa Mesa.
U YEAR OLDS : I. Brad
McNamee, Corona de! Ma r; 2.
Scott Henry, Newport Beach;
3. Bfett McCulloch, Newport
Beach.
13 YEAR OLDS : 1. Bill
Morse, Costa Mesa ; 2. Gerald
Ka iser , Costa Mesa; 3 .
Richard Purpura, Costa Mesa. • • •
DODGE MANAGERS
WIN VEGAS TRIP
C. P . King, Dodge regional
manager. announced that Bob
Swick, general manager of
Haber Dodge was one of the 13
Dodge dealer sales managers
that had won lhe region's sales
contest, "Swing to L a s
egas." The co nle s t , com
last week offered all~xpens·
e pajd, three-day trip to Las
Vegas." The contest, complet·
and his wife . • • •
COUNTY AUTO SHOW
TO BE ELABORATE
Elaborate specia\ly-dseigned
decorations will fonn the
setting for the new 1969
· automobiles at the Orange
County International A u t o
Show, Nov. 6-11 in Anaheim's
Convention Center, according
to Jim Slemons, general
chairman.
Slemons said the 100,000
square-fool exhibit hall at the
ecenter will be carpeted with
royal blue floor covering
which will be accented by
perimeter walls of white with
swag light! and chandeliers in
shades of red and blue.
Decor to complement the
new line! of foreign and
domesUc cm will be by Sbow
Specialty, 1 division of Canvl!ls
Specially, one of Southern
California's noted s how
show decorating firms, Siemer
mons added.
He said 60,000 yarcls of
salins and other fabri cs will
be used to form a colorful
backdrop for exhibil! which
will range from I u x u r y
limosines to economy compact
automobiles.
The show, sponsored for lhe
fifth consecutive year by the
Motor Car Dealers Assn. of
Orange County. will spotlight
31 domestic and imported
Yo11r ltlo1iey's Worth
Are Banl\. Policies
Really 'Too Safe'?
By SYLVIA PORTER
How can we clamp down on
the supply of money in order
to make it tough to get in·
flationary loans and thus to
curb inflationary price in-
creases • . . without unfairly
penalizing millions of you who
want lo build and buy houses?
What level of joblessness
must we accept to assure
relative price stability and do
we really have lo "trade off"
more unemployment for less
inflation?
IS IT "sound'' for our banks
to have such superbly small
losses on their loans these
days or does this actually
mean our financial institutions
are not taking the Tislcs they
should on loans in today's
society?
At this point, 1 wish I could
submit trustworthy answers to
these questions. But I cannot
and neither can anyone else
because we simply do not have
the definitive answers to these
and hundreds of other pro-
foundly important problems.
We know enough to make
guesses, and perhaps our
guesses will turn out to be ac-
curate. We know enough to
start asking the right ques·
lions and perhaps by asking
the Tight answers .
taken a giant stride toward
the irght answers.
BUT THE fact is that In the
world of banking and finance
we are geared to ;lnswering
the questions which dominated
our economic society in the
t930's, rather than to an-
ti cipating the questions which
will dominate our economic.
society in the 197<l's.
Most of our ex.isling laws
and regulations are, in fact.
directed toward p r ob I e m s
which no longer e1ist.
As just one illustralion, con-
ciser hank lending policies.
Since the creation of bank
deposit insurance in the !930's.
the danger of bank lailures to
the natioo has been minimiz·
e.d. But regulaUom governing
"risky" bank loans and our
bank."I' 11ttitude.'I toward these.
Joan.~ continue even more rigid """-.. Butllf BUILOIHG CO ''' • '"'"1 ,..t,_I ... rlllt, -lHtkNI, « -.,... ,.., · 'W11 "rl!ICle•I Olllct l" °''"" C1111flll' CUll'llwt l\Cl9, ... "'' """ ,_1111.,. ..-1n-I--:;.-===;:;.::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::=======:;;~-......... '"" "*'""''"' " T""'" My Com,.,1t111111 E••I"" c1 ... 1 '""' a1 ,.,,. no1e MoCUred tty u ldl 11ndtt ll'lt ...., el INll 0. • •wb1Tltu-"",_ber 2i. 1t'1 Ottd fl/I Tru11. te-wlt: 111,0.0.01, w!tll '"' "°" 4111W J-21, t .... end recordlill lT.l.Tf 01' NEW '1'01111( 11,..11'"'"" ANll 15, lNI , 11 ln 11111 -'-fl, 111111. Ill llellk MA , ... IJO, COUNTY OF ICtHGS -ldtd. edvtncn. If •fl'f, t!Nltr lllf et ~ fH,, ll'IM., Offkldl ._... 0.. ft'llt. nfi Oty ot Ocletrtr lNI '-' 91 r.tfd 0.... ot Trvtt, ~ dwlrtn
In .. OMclf "' .. Cllllltr lt«erdllf' __,.1ty •-l'td llefort "" J.ICIC L. lfld ''"'"''" pl -Trv11'M and p1 1111 ., .. w C-tv. TUIL1"' '"' ROlfltT TUaLIN "' bt lnlsl> C"'l!M IPY .. 111 DMd et rruu
Helle. ,,, ...... " ,,. •ltdltfl " tell t-.... --Ill "" "' be "" 111111~ Tiit btM!kl•,.., ""'"' llld Oetd "' Milt ...,.,,.. ""l ~ .,..,._. !lot -1!1 lletc;rtbtd In tM ---~ f11t TM1. W l'ff-ot 1 brttdl er Ml1vlf lfl
.... el trwt Wit _,,.. -JW111 11, -Pfl 11111 ,.,.,.,.. •hH !!>erf'PI, wtot -flllltl t!IOr>J IKM"" I~~ r' II V, ,_ Ill .... 1M1. P-Dl. U ~ 1111111 11'1' .... lllllY 1-n llld KIC_ ..... ~I lltcUltd trod .. II-eel I'll ""
_,.. """ 111# Ol'ldll ,..,.. " uold ..... ••KWllPfl lNlr.... ~""" I '#t'tltPfl D«lwtlloll "' "•""' • (Dl"FIC IAL. SE.Ill o.t111u Ind Oeme/Od '°'""'Intl wrllltfl
'CAltl .... BUCIC IUILOING (0. Vidor FIPICll 1111'1\(t ol btttcll encl tlKtltlll ... GIWM 1111!
• C.t"°"'ld C.Mnot* :'~ryOfl"=:,c Ytrt :ic::,~"..":' oer'T..11.::!., :!: =~. : Bri Clrl M. ... H• 1t.1W10f J-11. 1ftl, """\>lldltJllntd CIUled 11~
•---· --°""llt!W In IC I"" ~ notlu of brff<l'I ind Pl •ltcllPfl " bf -..... c--....... ......... ~ 111 .,,,. M6l. ..... fil pl ... Id tlf ....... _ Merdl .. IMt Otfldtl ill:_. ...
~ ....... ~ MMI Mll.f MA.tt(MITTI, Jll, 0.lt: S..lfn'lbtr 1'. IHI ,. ... tnft ...,.. ........... CAi-lf A\, "1.l,IAlfC( ,.,,.._,. ... ......... I_.,.. '-' p.iau,..,.. 1n COllltOllATIOH l'rJ.............. ....... ...... ~ f'W'7 11 Siii! Tn"ltoe
,......... ,.._.,, Nii,._ ..... ~ t• (Jiii ....... ......... l 'f Ctlrt S. '"'" ~ W1111 DllM'( ....... ~ ~.,_. CJn• C:..51 Olll'f l"llet, .l.uhltM s.ct'fl•r'Y ...ol. ~ ~ ll. f', .. Oc'9W u, tt. 111 111d """""bif,r •· Publl"'" Of1.,.. Geltt 0111¥ l"tlol,
,,.. l'11WB t• 1n•-M o.c"""" '· u, "· '"' '"""' t
•
Walter Winchell 1ay1:
"'Drive • New 1969 C.r .. fore
Your Sp.ciBI OrW '69 Anivet.I"
'I lhc MW 1%9 car yau w•nl hl.1 10 Iv
1pcc1•I ordtrt:d, EJ.ecu1iut lt"tl you 1n
Qlhcr '6• 10 d1lvt while )'QU wa.i1! And bt·
c•wc Exerurlvt j, Ille larabt car 1tl.11ni:
Mrnpany [n Southern C"alifof'l'i11, '' Je''
pr1Qti1v Oii doehVi:rY of oll nrw •9·,1 Bcut• fllf El.tt\Jt!Yi!t lofittY
Kl 7-3011
EXECUTIVE
111 Let ••••
Ol 4-1000
111 n.. w.11..,
IT J 0 JllO
CAR LEA.SING 1201 _Etit r1 S r••I, COMPANY"'
s "'• ""!' -•
. .
Curtis Set
To Transfer
'Post' Mag
BOSTON <UPI) The
CUrtis Publishing Co. will
'transfer the Saturday Evening
Post and its three olhcr re+
mainlng magatine!! to a new
corporation in which Curtis
'Ifill have only • minority in·
lt:rt:sl.
Ptellident M a r t I n S.
;.ckerman told the Boston
Advertishtg Club T u t s d a •j
Curtis will keep at least 11 $5
million interest in ~ new
magatine firm, to be called
the Saturday Evening Pom Co.
A mJnlmum ol $10 million in
new apita.l from outaide
sourca will bt lnvesttd in the
company, which also will take
nver Holiday. Status and Jack
Md Jlll1
Curtla 901d the Ladles Homft
Journal and AmeMcan Home
lo Downe €ommunications,
Lnc., &Orne weeks ago.
:1 J.: .1 :F -:ip"lOfO
•m Sko '! •m.S Of\ ams l'f1 Ir WOO!! "rw l>t2. 25k an:1oen l.U lock 10 emll\l (;eil! ~lnl" ~PnAlnv AmOU A Tr1n ~5 "e<>Bfnt A '~"~ ·,~ '""""" ' EIK T 6" nFltt 1C1
!!I'> FO. ?Ml en HO:U
"" ' 'Jiii nlni1 '1fl Miii• IO GM I~ Pll 7i GenMo! T IOll ...... ! G Mot Plt.7
Gt>nPCem IO GPubUt 1.60 Gen ~efr-c:I Gen Sig 110 Gen$gp1i
G Slllrw:I I 2C G TtlEl l .. Gltl pl!ll :JO GenTlme ICI
Gef1 T <1! I Gl!HIKO 1 60 GonulnPI 10 Ga PaCll c 10 G1P1c pl\ M
GePac ?fl c G~ber 110 GettYOll 12t
Gt>rh Pll 20 G 1nt PC to G lt>ralt Fii>
G de! Lf'W 10 G llt11e 1711
G ml>l'I !Ir I Glen Aid 17P GlfnAI l'n 1S GenAd pf3 Gl1M pf2.2l Global /<Mr n
G obeUn 8G Goodrldl 1 n
(;QO(lyr I 50 Gorc!Jw y 4 Gra~o l SO GranbYM 6(1
Granctu '°" G 1..c.51 &O Gren le" .o Gr•nt l XI G1nrp131s G•YDUl~ GI A&P I Joa
G AHold l "° c 1wnun l IO
G NorP pl .cl
Gl Nor R~ 3 G ffr>Gnl 88
V NoP"p 1 ~ ';INQlr 1 lSD
GI Wttl Finl uWUn P!I 811 G~ns~ 110
Gf1''!'1lound 1
Grevl\ CVP! 3 Gro er 16(1 G uml'IAlrt t
Gl!UMO 2.i!OI G11!! 0 ! l Gull oa "" Gu I Re)<C~$ GullRfS pt 20 GltR~ "fl lO GullS!~V! M GuUSU p!S OS
GulfSV ~' oO Gu IW!n llXI Gu!IW pll 15
Gu IW pl] 50
GulfW pf] 81 GulfW i>IS IS G11 ton t.c
•
Monday's Oosing Prices -Complete
Mond'J' Ottobtr 21 1%8 DAJLV PILOT J1J
New York Stock Exchange Li st
•
Stock • '
I
I
I
I
·J
I
I I
•• -. -.......... ,
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Startling Pos·sibilities
With the presidential eleotioo ooly lfi day< any,
some startling possibilities are coming to tbe surface
as the intricacies of the antiquated electoral college
system come under closer .scrutiny. For example:
-George Wallace oonceivably could become Presi·
dent even if he wins only a handful ol electoraJ vote.&,
provided neither Richard Nixon nor Hubert Humphrey
wins a 270 vote rnajorlty. Under the Constitution, an
elector bas ttie right to vote for any man or women he
choooes for President and Vice President.
-ll any one of the three candidates receives less
than 43 electoral votes, Nelsoo Rockefeller or Ronald
Reagan could become Presideii.t. If one of them could
persuade his state's electors tx> vote for hUn, then his
name would go before the House of Representatives,
rep!acing ttle third highest man in ttie election.
-The nation could find itself with Spiro Agnew, E d·
mund Muskie or Gen. Curtis LeM·ay as President, if
the House deadlocks and the decision goes to tile Sen-
ate. The Senate can select only from the two h1.ghest
candidates for Vice President.
Thus, this eleotion could work enormous mischief.
A 5.rSt order of 1969 business shouJd be to overhauJ the
electoral college system.
Bridges of Friend~hip
With litlle fanfare or concern tor persona! recogni·
tion, ttie men of the C·alifomia Partnel'l!i of the Alliance
for Progress have thrown up bridges of friendship the
paSt two years in several of the western states o!.
Mexico.
In cooperation with MeX'ican counterparts, tile
Ins tilling
,Empathy in
The Police
At a meeting of police officers in
Chicago last month, Chief Fred Ferguson
of the small California tcwn of Covina ,
told his colleagues about putting into
practice the "empathy approach" I have
been recommending to police officials for
more than two decades.
ln training his 44-man police depart·
ment. Chief Ferguson has them booked in
jail as suspects, walking picket lines and
living on Skid Row -in order to get a
feeling of the way the dispossessed and
the dissenters are treated by the Jaw.
JN ONE €ASE, he reported, two
"winos" walking along the Los Angel~
Skid Row turned into a parking lot and
shared a drink from a bottle nne had
pulled from his pocket. 'J'wo uniformed
L.A. cops appeared, spread·eagled the
winos 8gainst a wall and searched them.
One of them. panicking and afraid of
the treatmenl he might receive, blurted
out his true identity -a policeman from
suburban Covina. assigned as part of his
training to play the role of a wino.
r can'! imagine a more important
aspec t of modern police training .
especially in the increasingly urbanized
areas of the nation. 'T'he need for police to
"empathize"' with the poor. the foreign·
speaking, the uneducated. the minority
groups of all kindi;;, has never been more
pressing.
fT IS EASY TO blame the police or the
slum dwellers. or both. for the civil war
that rages sporadically in such
Dear
Gloomy
Gu s:
li our tax·su pported unlversitie.,
continue to teach the "Cleaver
Method," our children will soon
be holding four-letter-word spelling
bees at the dinper table and dis·
cussing how to Overthrow our sick
but wonderful country for the
Commles.
-A. S.
T~lf ... hln nflKll n•mrr vtrn llff __ .. ,. -.. ef 1111 _ .... ,. h4wll
l'9W "' ........ 1 .. ,,.,. h" 0.11'1' l'lltt.
neighborhoods. But the fact remains that
both are the victims or something bigger
than themselves -the technology that
has eliminated foot-lo-foot and face-f.<>.-
face contacl belween the. police and the
inhabitants of such areas.
Policemen used lo walk through the
worst slum sections of New York and
Boston and other cities without fear of at-
tack or even taunting. They knew
everyone on their few blocks, and could
easily separate the sheep from the goats.
NOWADAYS, THEY confront just a
facel ess mass, staring back at them
balefully, auspiciously and con-
temptuously -because slum.dwellers
know they are all considered an equal
threat and menace to the police, who
have neither the time nor the facilities to
distinguish among them .
lf it is too late -and I suspect It Is -
to bring back the C1>p on the beat. Covina
is doing the next best thing, in giving its
policemen first-hand experience at being
on lhe other side of the shield, the !tick
and the gun. Strangenw begets fear, and
rear begel<i force. When the police begin
to comprehend tht. needs, the feeJings
ann the responses of the "enemy," they
might find they have more frlend1 than
foes in that n£>.man'11.Jand they now
patrol .so warily.
Art Hoppe's New Book
Thi! cast nf characters ls famil iar.
omer T. Pettibone; Sir Ron a Id
f Holyrood; the Kindly Old Philosopher ,
I mythical President who visits a
·nythical Alliance for Progres.'t republic
:>mewhere south of Texas. There'!t
';eneral Hoo Dal Don Dar, benevolent
eader of an unlikely nation called West
'i tnng (and another general , l-loos on
hirst). The se. and other im p s,
hobgoblins and elfinfolk are the creation~
oJ Arthur Hoppe, an American Jonathan
Swifl. They have become familiar to a
large pubhc, and as endearing, as lhf'
llenizens nf Chllrles M. Sch u I z ' s
.. Peanuts."
They turn tJp In \\•hat t. rec:kles.<i
rcvi~cr (and colleaguei might call this
generation's "Gulliver's Travels." a win·
nowing or the best, or most pertinenl, nr
wit tiest, or most represent.1tive Hoppe
comments rrom some 1500 he has
delivered over the past five years. The
book'fi pcrfecl. IJllt, "The Perfect
Solution To Absolutely F.vf'rylhing.''
mESE PIECES hold up wonderfully
well between hard cover~. T should think
that at ltast the thousands nf Hoppe fans
wbo read his daily newspaper column
alone would WBinl lo 01,1,·n his book.
F« h.iJ report on the League for Total
Dirth Control, for cumple. whiC'h will not
n. "'9tflllCt ............ .........,. E...,.,.no ...... ,. ..,...... ~ c..,... .,,. •111Un ..._..,,. ~
*'ti ,., ,.,, .....
only 10IYe our problems. but will ~olve
them in a sJngle ieoeretloo. Bot everyone
wil l have his favorite Hoppe sequence -
the Ban lbe Mom piece, maybe whf!n the
ToW Bir1h Control peopk hold lbttir an·
nutl Mother'• Day prolHi. man:h and el·
81!l' burning. Or 1111aln, lhal Brotlitrhood
Weck down tn Wein Vhb\ng w~n a Chrl!\-
UM' lamlly move1 into an aU..Suddhbt
neighborhood and two Buddhist boys at-
tend a Christian school without being spal
upon. Or when victory in that mythica l
1ungle war is Just ~round the corner.
l\ga1n .
HOPPE KNOWS that all th• em·
peror!t are naked as Jaybirds. and says 110
with wit and Intelligence, These are all
important enlrie11 in his very own
"lfi!ttory of !he World. l9f)()-1999." An'd the
curious thing is that they can be Im·
portant notes lo any real history of the
period which one day mighl be written.
r.o~ .Hoppe '.s b 1 i l ht' spirit registers 11
c1v1hied dissent of loday'11 widely 3C·
cepted Establishmenl mores. politic111J
and military moonshine and other
absurdities which mark this partlcular
l.illipul we have come to Inhabit.
Some peoplt . thank C'.od, have not come
l.o inhabit it wil\Jngly, In 50me measure
Hoppe: is lo be. thanked for that. In speak-
inlj: out against some of the worst of-
fenses committed in 11 grolesque: F'an-
tasyland. he makes one lauRh, think and
once in a while: dare to hope. He Is the
original Kindly Philosopher who would
not make the worst President of
Ab.-.nlutflly Everything. JuM. think -no
more problems with sex eduCation, stu·
dtnt sit·ins, 7..-bombs, l..tadtrs of the
Week In our only Asian bastion, no more
n1lssi les. booic. n111tlonal political con·
vention11. rut~haga . His book makes Ideal
campaign literature.
Wllll1m lto1••
t
Pariners are ..tablishlng workable lines of economic
and &ocial sell-help. 'Their projects are providing per·
10nal, face-to-face relationships between men and
women of. both countries.
Their activitie! reflect a concept of inter-Ameiican
relations which alleviates the impersonality and remote-
ness of government-to-government foreign aid. The
Partners' efforts are undertaken to supplement govern·
ment programs, without spending government funds.
The Partnership of the Alliance -active between
other U. S. stet.es and Latin American countries as well
-means many things in tenns of sped.fie accomplish-
ments.
For the Californians, it is Newport Beach water
safety experts show\ng the people of a Mexican city
near the ocean how to set up a lifeguard program. It is
Costa Mesa firemen locating equipment for a Mexican
volunteer fire department, then training the volunteers.
It is these same firemen of both countries traveling
together back to Mexico, none speaking the other's
language but content in the knowledge of being with
lriends .as they travel 1,000 miles in a vocabulary of ges·
ture5 and smiles.
It is a Corona del Mar businessman writing a check
for a crucially needed and expensive ceramics machine
tt.t a crat.t.5 center in La Paz where uneducated teen-
agers are learning skills to lift themselves into the
economy as viable wege earners.
The reward for tile California Partners has been
a lively and lasting relationship witll their Partners to
the Soutti. It was expressed like this recently in a Jetter
from one Mexican to a Newport Beach men : ''Receive
this hearty ernbra~ from a friend and carry in your
heart the knowledge that it is people such as you who
place your countTy's name in high esteem."
Catulidutes Lack I ke's Appe al
Trust and Affection Are Missing
WASHJNGTON -Genera l
Eisenhower's recent illness, from which
he has gratifyingly recovered, caused a
great deal of introspection on just what it
is about him that has caused the
American Rf<!ple generally to take him
into their hearts.
Many thousandl of words evaluating
his contributions to American life and
history, written during his recent illness
for newspapers, magazines ahd radio-TV,
remain mercifully unpublished and un·
broadcast and have been set aside for
what is hoped to be a much later day.
The central point of these evaluations
must necessarily be that Eisenhower is
trusted. A great majority of lhe people
have been willing Ul place faith in him,
even though they may have disagreed
with or deplored what he did or failed lo
do. The heart forga ve him if the mind
did not.
EISENHOWER WILL not be rated by
the historians, at least for some time to
come, as among the "great" presidenL~.
but if these historians have any percep-
tion at all, they will have to rate him the
most universally liked president so far 1n
this century.
This is apropos today because the
American political system has not pro-
duced anyone on the current scene with
amiable qualilies which arouse trust and
love. Strangely enough, Gene McCarthy
came as close to it as anyone this year in
his image as a "good'' and "clean" man
so unlike the C1>nniving masters of the old
politics who are now vying for the
presidency. M'iny who were attracted lo
clean Gene merely set aside their
reservations on his qualifications lo lead
a great nation as secondary to the purity
of his heart and purpose. Some were not
e. v e n interested in the validity of his
view11 on the Vietnam War, bul recogniz-
ed in McCarthy a philosopher with ·;:i
poetic soul who might restore ,to public
life qualities of decency, compassion and
urbanity which have been entirely lost in
the vicious controversies and vulgarity of
life in our day.
HUBERT H. HUA1PHREY knows what
is missing in the political campaign but
he cannot for the life of him arouse his
public to clothe him in raiments of trust
and affection. He can only arouse a com-
parison between Nixon. Wallace and
himself on this score, which he is now
assiduously trying to do.
"I'll tell you what l think the issue is in
this campaign," Humphrey said in a
rece ntly published interview IU .S. News
and World Report). "! think the issue is
this : Whom can you trust? I think that's
what it's all about. And I think the voters
are looking over these candidates -
th~y 'rf' looking over myself. Mr. Nixon,
Mr. Wallace. They know there are
troubles. They know we live in a
dangerous world. They 've had it brought
home very clearly to them again in the
Soviet invas ion of Czechoslovakia. They
know there arc riots and troubles -even
though there haven't been as many as
pretlicled . And the question they 're ask·
ing is: Whom can you trust?''
THE TROUBLE is that there Is n()
overwhelming inclination on the part of
voters to trust anybody. And the question
is who is to be least distrusted. This is an
age when promises cannot be fulfilled
fast enough nor C1>mp1etely enough to re-
make America in any span of time which
has current political meaning. All the im·
portant basic readjustments which are
discussed would await decades fGr
realization . Even those who are changing
their views on the Vietnam War, Wke
former presidential adviser McGeorge
Bundy, accept the physical presence of a
large, if reduCf!d, American armed force
in Vietnam and Southeast Asia for as far
ahead as man can see. So, for all we can
lelL did McCarthy and now Nixon and
Humphrey, with all their emphasis on
shifting military responsibility to the
South Vietnamese. Even the most ardent
oE the publicly recognized opponents of
the Vietnam War would have removed
American force no fa rther away than an
Australian base.
'Obscenity Remains an Obscenity'
To the Editor:
What is UCI Chancellor Daniel G.
Aldrich trying to prove wilh his state·
ment defending tht. militant Blank
Panther Eldridge Cleaver and hi s
obscenities of Sept. 26?
According to press releases, Aldrich
was quoted thusly :
"l am aware of the obscenities ln
Cleaver's talk. , .But. what we consider
nbscene, arising out nf our Judeo-Ch ris.-
tian heritage and it.s conCf!rn about
references to the body and sporting In the
bedroom. studt.. 'ts don't c n n s i d e r
obscene."
Simply because someone has nol been
taught what obscenities are does not
change the fact that an obscenity re·
mains an obscenity.
Someone should tell these young pecple
that profanity is a tool used by the weak
of mind to express one's self effectively
and forcefully.
'T'hose who att not weak o! mind don 't
need it. JERRY MYRE
r r oposltlo n 9
In re p ly to the OAI~Y PlLO'T's
editorial relative to Propos1Uon l·A, wt
have decided to offer a homeowne~'s
point or view w h i c h has n?l been l~
fluenced from the fear or an increase 1n ~ate income taxe."I which will ~sibly
occur if Proposition 9 becomes law.
The editorial purported to support
Proposition l·A 8 Reagan-Unruh com·
promise, 00 J~ merits. tt said, and I
quote, "Proposition 9 lJ .as bad for the
weUare or the average citizen as Propo.11-
tion l·A is good." The edilori11l furl~cr
i;;tated that "Pr~ition 9 ls 11 dectpl1vt'
tall'. trap."
Governor Reagan promised In his elec·
~r George : .
Your 1dvict to Seiu Opportunity
ind Uve Life Now wa1 In·
splrational to me. I can't u,,.
derstand why 1 worked at that bani
M> long -it's nke here tn Acapul~
and l haven't even opened the big
suitcase full ol bills : still w:lng the
valise. Having wonderful time, wbh
yoo were here. INSPIRED
Dear Inspired:
Sometimes I'm t~pted to get
flllt nt lht. intpiralion1J racket.
' 1 '· '
l.tll•l'I from readlr1 •r• weleotn*. Normlllf wrftel'I
•houlcl co1wev !!Mir mes .. 9• In ))0 wortt1 or lei.I.
TM r;e111 to CO!\denH letters to Ill ui1e.e '" ellml~•'lll>el 11 '"M<!!rvtd. All ~ll1rl mint 1nc1uo. •1en•lvte
•nd m•I!!"' '4dren. but n1m•1 wm bl wtllllltlll
Oft r.civ-1.
tion campaign lo lower real properf.y tax-
e11 in California, for he loo has vigorously
C'Omplained O( ha~·ing to pay A $10,000
annual property tax and is aware of the
i;train that government has placed upon
I.he properly owner. Has Proposition 9
gone too fer for Mr. Reagan? No , we do
not believe it has.
BUT HOW CAN I high public nfficial
~upporl a proposition that will ultimately
throw the burden of new legislatioo into
an arena where Republicans a n d
Democrats can only compromise and
come up with a bill li'e Proposition l·A.
As a compromise measure, Proposition J.
A does not offer tax relief. it has offered
a bribe. tn the voter, a $70 payment if he
will support the measure.
Is "Proposition 9 a de c e pt i v e ta:1
trap?" Proposition 9 was initiated by Mr.
Philip E. Watson, Los Angeles County
IAX assessor Let's ask ourselves why a
tax assessor would propose tax reform?
He is in a position as tax assessor, of a
very large county, that brlngs him inlO
daily confrontation with the taxpayer _ He
is aware that there is no ceiling or
limiting of laxes under the present laws.
THAT TAXES WlLL increa!'il! with
government spending in creases and lhat
the only way to limil. not abolish pro-
perty laxes, is to have the people, not the
compromising legislature, amend the
California Constitution. Does Proposition
1-A liniil taxes to a specific and final
amount? No, it does not! If taxpayers gel
;t SiO rebate through proposition 1-A, lhii1
amount will just about pay for any pro--
perty tax increase over last year's bill,
according to Mr. Watson. What about
next year's bill? If Proposition l·A passe~
we will all gel another $70 rebate th~
following year. But what about anothP.r
lax override or another increaSt. in
government spending? Won't these In·
creases nullify the Proposition I-A trap?
Let the vote r be in/or med! Let him
reform California's tax structure and
make ii what it should be. Lets all vote
yes on Proposition 9. no on Proposition I-
A.
PETE AND ANN FENTON
Propo si tio n 9 Me rely a T ax Tr a p
Your Nov. 5 ballot will list two property
tax relief measures. They are Prop. I-A
and Prop. 9. Which one, however. is the
rea l tax relief measure, the "real
McCoy?"
Prop. 9, hs supporters claim. will give
ynu 8 SO percent cut in your property ta:x·
ei1 within Hve years. Unfortunately, you
are bcing Lold only half of the story. This
i~ where Prop. 9 fail s as genuine tax
relief and becomes merely a "tax trap."
For example, Prop. 9 removes from the
properly tax $2.1 billion for the support of
schools. However, ll makes no prnvision
fnr replacing the~ funds. ll leaves this
problem up to tht st..ite.
Al.SO I.EFT UP to the state is the pro-
blem of replacing other funds com-
muhiUes will lo...e that I.hey "°"'' receive
from the property tax for weUart ,
libraries, recreallon, and so forth. The
total loss is estimated at $4 .2 billion a
year.
Of COUTM:, tht stale docs not heve to
replace H'lese funds, but it will. For if it
does not , our acbooL't, our welfare ~
grams, and many of our other scrvice5
literally will fall apart. California, ln-
atead or being a state that attracts
business, industry and prote.ssional Jl'-(>-
ple. woulrf become a place nf chaM due to
lnadequatfl ~ucatJnn, ~tioo ind
other services.
l',iscal experts say that the only
realistic way the state can replace these
lost fundi1 is to raise the sales tax lo 12
percent, or the income ta:x by 300 per·
cent, nr a C1>mbination of tall'. increases.
You, of course. will pay these, whi ch
m11ke11 Prop. 9 not & tax relief measutt
bul merely a I.fix shirt proposal.
PROPOSmON l·A, on the other hand,
while it is not the: ultimate amwer lo
much·needed tax reform in California,
does provide genuine t.ax relief.
Tht terms of Prop. l·A provide each
homeowner with a $70 cash rebate of this
year's property taxe•. Alter thi11 year,
each homeowner w111 receive 1 $750 e.1·
emption on the J$Sessed value of hi~
home. which amonls to about lhf: same
amount of money.
Renters also benefit if Prop. l·A
passes. They can double tht.lr standard
deduction for state Income taJ"es..
Everyone wlll benefjt In another way
because property taxes on household
fumlshln&I will bt e 11 m I n • t t d .
I
Busillt'ssmen will benefit because nf 1t \&
percent reduction in inventory taxes.
'T'hese are actual cuts, the ''re.al
McCoy.'' They make Prop. l·A genuine
tax relief. If you want the "real McCoy,''
vote "Yes" on l·A, ind "No" on Prop. 9,
the ''t8.X trap.''
Educadon New1 Strvlct
Monday, October 21 , 1968
Tht ediforfa.I pagoe of tht Dcil!I
Pilot teelc.s to inform and 1ttm.
ulot1 reoden b\I pre.sentingo tlW
ntwspoptf'I optnkm.s and com..
m.tnic,., on topic.I of inkt'e1t
and ,;gnlficot1tt, bti pro1"dlna •
forum for the expression of
our reader1' opinioru, and b\I
pre.senti.ng the-dlver1e view-
points of inf01"mtd ob.stf"ln11
and spokenntn on topici of a..
do¥-
Robert N. Weed. Publ11her
'
--------------------
I
...... __
. -·-
Ne.wport Harbor Today's Closing
• • • EDI T ION N.Y. St ocks
YOC. ir, NO. 253, l SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1968 TEN CENTS
Cease-fire Observed •
Newport Pioneer Su~~umhs
Jos eph Beek Sr., Builder and Ci vic Leader, Was 87
By JEROME F. coums
Of ~ r..uy Plitt St•ft For Release of Reds
Joseph Allan Beek Sr., long-time
secretary of the California Senate and
pioneer Newport Beach civic leader and
builder, died early today. He was 87.
He Suceumbed · to bronchitis and
asthma, complicated by chronic em-
physema, at Hoag Memorial Hospital
shortly after midnight.
Mr. Beek, founder~wner of the Balboa
Jsland Ferry, had served as secretary of
the State Senate since 1919.
"The only session he ever missed," his
widow, Carroll, said this morning, "was
during World Warn. He couldn't make it
because he was with the Army
Transportation Service."
As secretary .he kept the minutes ol. all
Senate sessions, filed amendments and
was generally responsible for a multitude
of paper work, which mounted greatly in
recent years.
"Joe showed up for them all, though,"
said Mrs. Beek. "He was even there for
this last veto session."
Mr. Bee.k's first state assignment was
as assistant Senate secretary in 1913. Six
years later he became secretary, serving
55 consecutive years.
"Joe had a full life," said Mrs. Beek.
lt includid establishment of the Balboa
Island ferrr in 1919, initial development
of Balboa Island at about that time,
development of Harbor Island and 21
years' service on the old ·Newport Beach
high school board of trustees.
He was on the school board from 1933
to 1954.
In addiUon, some four decades ago he
was chairman of the citizens' harbor
committee whose efforts culminated in
fed.eral aid for development of Newport
Harbor. Committee leaders also worked
for passage of a county bond issue to pro-
vide matching funds for tbe harbor pro-
ject. Mr. Beek was Newport's first
harbor master.
Mi'. Beek also served as secretary·
manager ·o1 the o1d Balboa Chamber of
Commerce, which for years had a run-
ning feud with the Newport Harbor
(S.. MR. BEEK, Pa,. Z)
DEATH TAKES NEWPORT·HARBOR PIONEER
Stet• Senah Secretary Jo1eph Allen 8Mk ...
SA:GON CAP) -The United States and
North Vietnam declired a 36-hour Cease-
fire in 288 aq_uare miles along the North
Vietnamese coast fc!r the release today of
14 North Vietnamese seamen captured
more than two years ago.
The cease-fire and release of the
prisoners, coupled with the withdrawal of
the battleship New Jersey from off the
coast of North Vietnam and the continued
lull in the ground war, increased specula·
tion that Washington and Hanoi might be
moving toward progress in the Paris
peace talks.
Diplomats at the United NaUons said
they believe North Vietnam wants to get
a peace settlement before the next U. S.
administration takes office Jan~ 21. But
despite the continuing speculation that
the United States might halt the bombing
of North Vietnam, American warplanes
carried out strikes again today in the
North below the 19th parallel, and more
of the same was scheduled for Tuesday,
military sources said.
U. S. Headqllarters announced that 24
Americans were killed today when an Air
Force twin engine C47 transport
developed trouble in one engine and
crashed in the central highlands. There
were no survivors. Th&-4_e~ included 20
Air Force men, two Arm}--inen and two
civilians.
Information on today's raids over
North Vietnam won't be announced until
Tuesday.
American pilots on Sunday Jogged 110
mis!iOOJ over North· Vietnam. An Air
Force Ft. Phantom fighter-bomber was
downed by gI'9l1Dd fire 20 miles north. ot
the demt11~-..anc1.·•:·b!1'11111S•
Jolly Green Glint helicopter tllat tried to
rescue the two pilots also was shot down. . w~~·";Jr··· .... 'ft! . ..,.B t ..
Owner P~lili<>ns · '. Tempers Cool in Apo · o 7
The t\fti Pharitom pilot.a and the four
helicopter creWmen were pulled from the
Gulf of Totikin by two other helicopters
after bombing on the storm·tossed seas
for ah hour and a half. CG to Resume
Search for Boat As Crew Awaits Reentry
The aircraft lost were the 909th
American warplanes announced downed
in combat over North Vietnam and the
loth helicopter downed in the North.
The U. S. Mission said in a statement
announcing ·the return of the 14 seamen
to North Vietnam that their release "is
intended aa In action of good wlll:"
""\ By PAMELA l'OWELL
" Of tM 'Dllitt Pit.I Stiff George W. Drucker, o~~r of the miss-
ing yawl Tiare, today petitioned tbl!! U.S.
Coast Guard to resume the search for
Robert Emigh, his wife Pab'icia and their
three children missing aboard the 41).foot
yawl Tiare since Sept. 28.
Drucker, who has gathered together
nearly a dozen prominent Har.bor Area
residents to protest the suspension of the
aerial search for Ute Newport Beach
family, said today he will present the
Coast Guard with a private meteorolog*
ical report which Indicates the boat may
be farther out than the distance covered
by the search planes.
"There is no doubt that th(ty conducted
a Vf!rY thorough search," Drucker said
today, "but we believe that.. the boat is
farther out to sea."
The Beverly Hills attorney's contention
is that in order to avoid the tropical
storm Pauline, which battered'the Baja
California coast Oct. 1, Emigh headed the
vessel out to sea. •
Coast Guard officials at Long Beac~,
who covered more than 215,000 miles dur·
ing the lo.day search between Magdalena
Bay and Puerto Vallarta and some 180
miles west, discontinued the search Fri·
day on the grounds that there had been
no evidence to indicate that the vessel
would be found.
Emigh, 35, and his family left San
Dlego Sept. 25 on the first leg of an ex-
tended cruise to the Caribbean where
lhey were to charter the yacht. When
they did not meet Drucker ift Puerto
Vallarta Oct. 4 as planned be notified the
Coast Guard. Since then there has been
no trace of the vessel.
The Coast Guard when told of
Drucker's meteoroligacl report today
said the report alone dJd not constitute
sufficient evidence to reopen the search.
"We receive reports of our own from a
Naval survey • wider the Commerce
Department," a Coast Guard spokesman
said . '1From our reports we beUeve that
we have covered sufticlenUy the area the
vessel should have been in if the firSt in-
formation we bad was correct."
Tbe Tiare, which bas sailed In
· numerous races includJng the 1965 and
1967 TransPac, was equipped with all
emergency gear ineludlng three high.
powered radios, a four.cylinder Mercedes
diesel engine with • range capacity of
J,700 miles and enough supplies for over
a month.
Stock Jlfarr...u
NEW YORK (APJ-_ The slOCk mart:et
kepl an even keel late this afternoon
as tt rode out sorne prof.it taking on last
'lltffk't shlQ gain. trading wu active.
(Set quotatloos, -p'll., 1~11).
I
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -The ·
Apollo 7 astronauts, mellowed after a day
of air-to-ground arguments, clowned their
way through their final television show
today and fired their large spaceship
engine to steer lnto a more favorable
course for returning to earth Tuesday.
(Earlier stories Page 5).
A! Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr.,
Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and
civilian Walter Cunningham raced
through their final hours in space, they
displayed none of the irritability that
sparked bitter disagreements w it h
ground controllers Sunday, mosUy over
flight plan changes.
The astronauts made it plain they are
eager to come home alter 11 days. in
space. They are scheduled to parachute
into the AUantic Ocean near Bermuda at
4:12 a.m. PDT Tuesday, climaxing a
spectacular, perfect flight that set the
United States linnly on the path to the
moon.
At mid·morning, they' pointed the nose
of Apollo 7 north and fired an eight-se·
cond burst from the craft's 20,500-pound
thrust engine. The blast shifted the low
point of their orbital path about 1,250
miles to the west, almost due south of
Houston over Mexico.
It also raised the high point of the
orbital path about 10 miles to 276 miles.
The low point remained at 103 miles.
The control center said this placed
Apollo 7 in a good position for bitting the
target zone on landing. The next time the
big engine is fired will be Tuesday morn-
ing to pull the spaceship out cf orbit.
Commenting en the perfect eng:tne
burn, Cunningham said: ·"That's pretty
good."
The seventh tele!'ast from the orblUng
Apollo 7 sttidio ended. wttb SchbTa
dispfaying a sign that read: "AJ the sun
sinks slowly in the west."
"This is Apollo 7 signing off, '1 he said
as the excellent picture faded after a
nine-minute production.
Schirra, Eisele and Cunningham a'lso
di splayed a new sign which indicated
they are happy to be heading home.
A crudely drawn picture of th"fApollo
ship floating on the water was a~
companied by the·se words: "Everybody
out of lhe Pool."
Clearly visible as the camera panned
around tJle cabin were pictures of the
.three wives of the spacemen, pasted
above their duty stat.ions.
They also used the camera to tero in on
the heavy beards grown by all three.
"I will not admit to the fact that there
Js any gray in thls beard," Schirra said.
"My hairdresser's the only one that
knows."
As the astronauts passed the canlera
around, Schirra quipped : "You've got
three professional cameramen up here
now, so when we get back we expect to
. (fleo APOLLO, Pa1e 2)
"We hope it will lead to further
releases of prisoners," it added.
President Nguyen Van Thieu and U. S.
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker conferred
for an hour Sunday, their foUrth meeting
in five days, prompting·more speculation
about a bombing halt.
Thieu said Saturday there has been "no
breakthrough" in negotlaUons w i t b
Hanoi, but this bas not stopped reports
that Washington is p.reparing, or has
already presented, a new peace package
to the North Vielnamese.
Well placed diplomats in the United
CO AST'S OL YMPIC
STARS FEA TURED
The Orange Coast's "gold stars" ln the
Olympic Games -decathlon champ tun
Toomey of Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar's teen-age Madam Butterfly, Toni
Hewitt -ai'-e featured in reports directly
from Mexico City today.
DAil. Y PILOT Sports Editor Glenn
White analyzes Toomey's big win, looks
ahead to Miss Hewitt's compeUtion to-
night and covers other local aspects of
the 19th Olympiad in his on·scene re-
ports starting today on Page 21.
'
Winds Delay Doney1noon
Jackie, Onassi.s Hos t Mi.dnig ht Wedding Party
SKORPJOS, Greece (UPI) -Gale The ~rty aboard the yacht lasted The Christina, a converted Canadian
force winds high seas and chilly through e night with 13 costumed girls World War II frigate,, can sall in just
weather todaY held up any plans for a from th earby iJlaDd of Levka.s dancing aboot any w~ather but is notoriously un·
honeymoon cruise by Aristotle and Jae-and sin g for the guests. comfortable tn stormy seas.
queline Onassis. (Related story, picture The newlyweds themselves slept late lt would be unlikely lhe newlywedi
on Page 4} but arose to wish departing guests would cruise In rough seas, although both
Althouglt bad, the weather did not prt-godspeed and gave the chUdren a final Ona$Sls and Jackie are good sailors.
vent tbe departure of frierub: and bug. Following thelr 45-mlnute wedding
relatives of Onassis and the former Mra. The Christina's captatn said Sunday he ceremony in a 13 by 30 foot Greek
John F. Kennedy, including the new Mrs. was ready to aail at three hours' notice Ortbodox ·C h a,p e I on Onassis' prtftte
Onassis' two children C8rollne, 10, and but did not have any definite ordera. island of Skorplos off Grtect's western
John Jr .• 7. Nor did' it halt th& party Other members of the wedding party aakl c:oaJl, the couple went ' aboard the ~
a b o a r d the yacht Chrisllna w h e r e they thought Onassis and his wife were In and ~ each other and fortune wllh
guests danced until almost dawn. no hurry to leave but probably would champagne and red wine. Crewmen lakt
The entire group of ftienda and take a short cruise within a few dlf1 to the newlyweds left word they would · be
relatives went from Onaaala' fioating find the IWl-1 1teeping late. ·
palace by speedboat several hulldred RtlaUm saJd aey crulte -~ ~e it Amona their ffist ia•!<' o! mmle<I Jlle
yardt la the llshlng villa,. or Nidrlon and one -probably would be brlel because WU laying godby. lo M r I. OllWb'
then to the airport of Aktton. '!'her. they Onassis It now enpged In a Jll'OJeet dear children. Th• !ala PtW6"'11'• children
boarded • plane to Athens where they to his heart, a $400 mllllon development Were elj>&Cted to f11 back to tbe1r Jlflvate -
w!U acallar la their var!..,. destinations. acllem• !or Ottece. ocboob In New York City.
' . '
NaUons outlined points of a u. S. pro-
posal which they said was forwarded to
the North Vietnamese by the French in
Paris last Monday.
They sa1d it contains a U. S. offer to
stop all bombing of the North and will·
ingness to.allow the National IJberation
Front, the Viet Cong's political arm, to
participate In final peace negotiations il
Hanoi will let the Saigon regime take
part, too.
In return, the diplomats said, the
United States is asking Hanoi to agree 1
not to !end any more North Vietnamese
troops into South Vietnam, 2 to continue
the current lull in.attacks on SOuth Viet•
namese population cent.en, and 3 to
restore the demilitarized character of the
once·neutral zone that separates North
and South Vietnam.
The sources said the U. S. proposal
does not call for withdrawal of. either
American or North Vietnamese troops
from South Vietnam, and they expect
guerrilla warfare to continue in the South
after the bombing stops.
Promoter of Coast
Newport Fishing Dean
Captain Thorpe Dies
Captain Joseph Raymond Thorpe, early
pioneer and promoter of the Orange
Coallt and lately manager of a Newport
Beach sportflshing fleet, died Sunday at
the age of 84.
Services for Capt. Thorpe, known as
dean of Pacific Coast fishermen, will be
held Wednesday.
Until his death, the captain was gen--
eral manager of Davey's Locker, New·
port Beach sportlishlng operation a 11 d
Catalina tour boat-service.
CS.pt. Thorpe moved to the Orange
Coast in 1903. He established a b a s s
bretding farm on· his· Huntington Beach
ranch, and used the dirt removed for
.the ponds to, .hlllll!~.1~~ ~.the coUt connecthig · nunwigwll> B·e·a c b
and Seal Beach.
He publlsbed the fin! California road
map for eirly mot.Or car enthU!luts
showing plctur<s or ev.,Y cross road<
and !!Sting au blacl<!mlth '"°"' • n d grocery sloris that had , ... u.. pumps.
The map became a handbook with
suggestions for auto trips such as "Ffis.
co -Five Days of 'Easy Running.''
When circulation grew to 20,000 copies
in 1913, the Automobile Club cf Southern
California claimed the publicaUon, now
known as Westways.
_In 1925, Thorpe · rounded the Unlled
Rabbit CofporatiOn. The' a>mpany a ·o I d
grown rabbits for breeding stock ·ta
people who wanted a back yard buslness.n
The company then bought back 10,000
of the young rabbits weekly to ship to
tl,le East.
Not a trlck Wall missed by Capt.
Thorpe. German sausage makers were
employed and "rabbit pork sausage"
took New York by storm, selling as a
delicacy for Sl a .pound.
In 1929, Capt. Thorpe started a logging
Ind saw mIU operaUon at Big Bear
Lake, but by 1948. be was back at the
beach.
He i! survived by his Wue, Goldie of
the family home, 890 W. 15th St.1 N~w.
port Beach.
Other survivors include a brother, Wil· liam-, aQd a siste~. Mrs. Virginia Banks,
both of Los Angeles.
Services will be held at 2 p.m .. Wednes·
day at Bell Broadway Chapel, Co st a
Mesa. Interment will follow at Melrose
Abbey ¥ausoleum.
College District
Beats Inflation
On Student Costs
Orange Coast Junior College District,
for one year anyway, ha! beaten in~
flation.
An annual report shows the cost of
education per pupil went up only 11 cents
last school year.
The report, prepared for district
trustees by Supt. Norman E. Watson,
stresses economies.
Despite an iDflaUonary spiral, the
district through economhing held the
1967--08 cost per pupU to $571.45, up only
11 cents from $571.34 in 1~. the an-
nual report notts.
A.s a resuft, It It claimed, the district
spent leu per student han any other
junior college district in the state except
a couple of desert area dlstrtct.s with
limited course offerings.
"To actompll.'11 this. 1)1e rtport stalt!,
"vtrtual1y no nepr programs 'tf4J"t
· established, no oddltloul lns1ructors
were eli\ploytd and no n~ equipment
Wa! purcliuetf. virtually aD adult cWseJ
were elfminltetl."
It ' lJ ' ltated · the ecooomiea wm
nec1....,. to"ke!R the budiiet In balalfco b<citule ol '.Veinde electlon lailurel·in
19M and !1!17.,
A 17.1$ inllllOI\ 'bent IJsue since bu
!ailed by a narrow Diiiiio.
C_OAS'I:· SKIPPJ!R Di ES
·Capt. _Jc>taph 'Thorf» '
Row of Pilings
Stands Pounding
By Surf, Tides ·
A row of sleet pilings pounded Into the
surfline at 44lh Strtet in West Newpbrt
took a battering from six•foot surf and
high tides over the weekend, but with·
stood.the onslaught. .
Wor.kers sloshed back to the job this
morning to restime ·installation of the
250-foot long groin, final 1pha5e of a S117,~
000 beach restoration project,·
A 6.3-foot Ude at 8:3 Oa.m. today ca~
ed ·an ovei'rush of seawater almost to
property lines. There was no danger· of
significant sand loss, however.
"We'll just have to wait for I.be tide to
subside a bit," said George Davis, ll.S.
Army Corps of Engineers representaUve.
Coru;truction of the groin is a Corps
project. It is the second of what is ex.·
pected to be a field of five stretched
along the West Newport shoreline from
4oth to 56tb streets.
Orange Coat
We ather
The morning fog may f i 11
the air again Tuesday when the
Orange Coast gets more hazy
aunshlne and the temperature
stays bogged down fn the upper
alxtiea:. lnlan<l It'll be a near·
tropical 80.
INSIDE TODAI'
Melodt1ltmd unve!U (cind un-
drapes) its "Bride o/ Tomorrow"
tomorrow, and all she•u be tofa1'-
ing is . a wcddlno t>dZ and a
mi~. s~ Efttmatnmrnt. ~
IO.
:::::" • -... • •• -" (: ... ~ ..... .... ·--.. c-•u " o,..... (11111111 u =-..: ... " -·-.. • t.d•I «*II~ " ·-• s.$1 .... . ... .............. _ • -.... ................ .. ·-~ t•1• ....... 1•1• -" '"" C1• • -" ·-.. -• ... .._. .. --.. -... •
..
- ---------------------~---,----------~--------------------------.._ __ ._...;_~~----...;_--"-'---....:.--._ ....
l, D.\11.V PILOT -·-=-_.:...__-Mondi$', October 21. 1968
I
'
Pair Held
In Assault
OnMesan
Two San\I Ana men are belng held on
chor(ea of uaaull with lnl<ol to cominll
murder, armed robbery and Jddnaplng to-
day alter the Sunday night shooting of a
Costa Meu. man.
Booked Into Orange COUnlY !all today
on the tlU'M ~ art James Henry
Alvarez, 2S, of 722 E. Walnut St. and
David Tbomu Tramble, 25, ol 1422 W.
4th SL wbo allegedly atten}pted to rob
Me-N·F.d'a Pizr.a Parlor at UM> S. Brlatol
St., Santa Ana or IS,3511.:12.
Gary w. llln%, a J>ino chef or llO w.
Wibion st., Co6U Mu.a, WU shot in th6
left thigh during the holdup, police said.
He was treated and released from Santa
Ana Community hospital
Alvarez and Tttmble are charged with
.. 1er1ng the plua llbop about 11 :30 p.m
Sunday, b..,.ndlshlng pistols.
Police allege they shot several limes
into the floor, while ordering the 12
diners there into the men's room and
then placing a juke bo:i against the door.
One o( the employes wu taking an
order by phone when the bandits entered.
The woman placing the order heard the
gunshots and one of the suspects tell the
employe to hang up. She notified police
but refused to give her addreM or phone
number.
While the robbers were forcing diners
lnto the restroom, Hinz came from
the back room to see what was hap-pening. When he turned to nee from the
room, be was shot in the leg, according to
Santa Ana poUce.
Hinz and the other employe were then
ordered to empty all the money from the
two cash registers and the office safe into
a whlte pillow case, police said. They
were then told to lie face down on the
Door as the two men left by a rear exit.
A Santa Ana police officer on hit way
to the scene saw a car containing the
suspects heading in the opposite direc-
tion. When he turned around to follow
lllem, they sped off, allegedly dropping
the while pWow case in the street as they
fled.
They struck three parked cart at
Chestnut and Halladay 11treets then fled
on foot. Tramble wu ~ a block or
two away and Alvarez was plCked up
about 1: 30 when he called police to report
h1ll car had been irtolen.
GOP's Agnew
To Make Only
County Visit
Republican vice pres!dentlal nominee
Spiro T. Agnew will mate his first and
only campaign villt to Or8J!ie County
Saturday u the guest speaker at an in-
vitational fund rallllng luncheon at the
Newport.er Inn in Newport Beach.
According to Victor C. Andrews of
Lagml& Beach, chairman of the Nil:on-
Agnew campaign committee in Orange
County, the Maryland governor will ar·
rive at Orange County Airport Saturday
morning and depart following the lun-
cheon. He will make no other ap-
pearances in the county.
Bids to the luncheon have been mailed
to a select number of countians by
members of the committee on ar-
rangement.s.
Committee members include D r .
Arnold 0. Beckman of Corona del Mar,
chairman or a committee of industrialists
for Nixon-Agnew; Mrs. Thurmond Clarke
of Newport Beach, county chairman of
Women for Nixon·Agnew; and John
MacLeod of Newport Beach, finance
chairman for the campaign.
Small Bomb Explodes
MIAMI (UPI) - A small bomb ex-
ploded early on a sidewalk outside the
offices of Northwest Orient Airlines to-
day in downtown Miami.
Police Aid no one was injured in the
blut.
OAllV PILOT
OAANOS (OUT l'VllllHIHG COMl"AN'I'
l•Mri N. W••• '"'*"' .... 1''*1.,_
,1,,1r; •· Cwlrr
Vb l"'rai.r.I -°""' .. ~"''
lt-•111•• x .. .-11 ·-n. •••• A. M111r,hl111 ~l!:fllwr
Jer•-f, C.111111 r•111I Niu111 ....._.. ..... u-flllf-. CtlJ' hllW Ok'KIM" ---2111 W1al 8111 .. 1 l 1111!1•1rl
M1llh11 Mllr••n r.o. In 1171, tll6J --c:. .. -...1 .. 'W ..... , """
l..NillM """'' m ,._. ... _
Hu:Jt ..... lklall -"" '""'
t
= -
DAILY 'ILOT lttlf l'Mtl
Barbor High Queen
Bonnie McDonald, 17, was named 1968 Homecoming Queen at New·
port Harbor High School Saturday nighi during colorful h<llflime ac·
tivit:i.ts at Harbor4 Western football game. Escorting happy queen is
Student Body President Doug Dovey. Evening wai complete as Sail4
ors W'OO fifth straight to remain undefeated.
Police Quiz Witnesses
In Mesa Girl's Slaying
A crew of e.ight Costa ~1esa detectives
working almQSt around the clock in-
terviewed potential witnesses in the Rose
Marie Weidner murder case over tf\e
weekend, but added little to what they
already know.
No new information was brought to
light in the brutal, ambush murder of the
pretty cocktail waitresa last Thursday as
she walked toward her apartment after
getUng off work.
The 24-year-old woman W&! cut down
by four alugs from a heavy caliber pistol
while walking between two carport& at
the Acapulco Apartments, 741W.18th St.,
where she Jlved with a boyfriend.
Richar" Surface, 28, was cleared as a
suspect, u was Mrs. Weidner 's estranged
husband, James, 28, of El Monte, who
fainted when Baldwin Park police notified
him of her death.
Weidner said he hadn't seen hls wife in
a year and a po!Ygraph test administered
Thursday night 1n Costa Mesa supported
his alibi about where he had been at the
time of the murder.
Police believe the slayer who lay in
wai t for Mrs. Weidner, just starting her
fourth week of employment at the
Orangefair restaurant in Fullerton, may
have been wounded himaelf.
A ·trail of blood drops led from the
patio area where the victim fell -
mortally wounded -and samples were
taken for analysts by the Orange County
Sheriff's crime lab.
Costa Mesa Police Officer Randy Nutt
was patrolling ln I.he neighborhood when
he heard a shot, screams and four more
shots, but he wu unable to determine the
source in time to catch a suspect.
Residents in the apartment complex
reported hearing a car roar away
moments after Mrs. Weidner was
murdered.
QuesUoning has since shifted to her life
during the past year, with co-workers and
associates being questioned about who
may have felt be or she had reason to kill
the vlctim.
A Tuesday funeral service is scheduled
at St. Mary's Cemetery In Lancaster,
N.Y., with arrangements being handled
by Westcliff Mortuary locally.
In addition to her husband, Mrs.
Weidner leavea her parenl.8, Mr. and
Wade Fairchild
Funeral Held
Private services ..,ere held for retired
Corcna del ~far merchant Wade Fair-
child Saturday at Rose Hills Memorial
Cemetery, Whittier.
Mr. Fairchild, a resident of Coronn del
Mar since 195.J, died suddenly last Thurs-
day at his home, 3000 Ocean Blvd. He
was 78.
He v:as the proprietor of men's shops
on the studio lots of both MGM and
RKO studios from 1930 to 1950. He op-
erated Fairchild's Shop for Men in Cor-
ona del Mar for several years.
Survivors include his wife, Dorothy, of
the home, and a sister, Mrs. Geral'd F'.
~tessmer of Corona del Mar,
Woman Wins
$7,000 Contest
M everyone know•, the best laugh Is
the last laugh. But it is aJso the most
profltable, aa Mn. Irene Lovelock, 900 ~a Lane, CorOl\3 dtl Mar found out.
She won $7 ,000 in the KHJ radio Laugh-
Ia. contest Sunday by correctly tdentlfy-
ln.r thrtoe 0 mystery laughers."
Por aeven days the tape rtrorded h)'S· t-of Tommy Sandi, Agnes Monohe•d
and Joe Namath had tlUUated, but dumb-
IOWlded ccintest guess<rs.
Howewr, at 7:11 p.m. Sunday on the
Charlie 1\ma Show, Mn. Lovelock, us-
ing the clues a:tvcn by the station, did
eu ... corrtctJy.
Mrs. D. Sabio, of New York, along with a
sister, Dorothy de Piw, also of New
York.
Pair Arrested
After Assaults
On Policemen
A 53-year-old Costa Me&& woman and
a Garden Grove man were arrested on
charges of assaulting Newport Beach
traffic officers in two separate incidenl!
over the weekend.
Mrs. Ad a Nathalie Marques, 981 W.
18th Street wu arrtsted Sunday on
charges that she kicked Patrolman
Creig Johnson repeatedly in the groin
after she was stopped for a traffic cita-
tion.
The alleged attack came Sunday
morning at Bayalde Drive and Beacon
Bay as the woman was placed under
arrest for reportedly tearing up the traf-
fic citation Johnson bad issued her.
The woman, clad in a knit dress and
high-heels, was released from jail Sun4
day on $625 bail.
Police said Johnson was unable to re-
turn to work today . He was released
Sunday after treatment at Hoag M~
morla1 Hospital.
Leroy Wallace Beach, 22, 11871 Euclid,
Garden Grove was arrested early Satur-
day alter he was stopped on reek.less
driving charges by Officer T. B. Smith.
Beach, who police aaid wu wanted
by seven other Southern California law
enforcement agenciea, was jailed after
a scuffle with the patrolman.
Smith said he had clocked Beach at
excessive speed in a 15 mph zone in
Corona del Mar. The officer also sald that
Beach had run several stop signs.
Beach remained in jail this morning
under $13,639 bail.
Planner Mayer
Agrees to W 01·k
As Consultant
Newport Beach Planning Director
Ernest Mayer Jr., who Is leaving Nov.
15 to become chief planner for the city
of Long Beach, will continue working aft-
er-hours for Newport as a paid consul-
tant for at least six months.
Newport Mayor Doreen Marshall said
today Mayer bad offered his servl~ at
least until the Newport Tomorrow pro-
ject is completed.
''He made the offer and we just
!napped it up," she said.
Mayer is the originator of Newport
Tomorrow, the city-eitizens long.range
goals study.
''I want very much for the program
to succeed ," said Mayer. "So I'd like to
keep helping it as much as I can."
His new employers in Long Beach
have agreed to the ''outalde" consulUng
assignment.
He wiD be paid on a hourly ba!ls, said
Mrs. Marshall.
From Poge J
MR. BEEK ...
chamber.
An av1d sailor, be was former com-
modore of Lbe Southern California
Yachting ASloc!JUoa and the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
1111 '""'1"""' lnelude h!J widow, of the
home addrw, 511 S. Bay Fron~ Balboa
Island ; sons, Joseph AllRD Jr., Barton
and Seymour, alt of Newport, and 9
crandchlldren.
Lost rltta att pending at PecUlc Vlow
MemorlaJ Park.
•
Cuban Crisi.s Retold
RF
Frtm Wlre 9tr •tea
the bOgiMing Of Ille 1962 cuL.n
mls311e crisis, said the lat.e Senator
Robert F. Ktnnedy In his newly_ pul><
lilbed memoirs, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
were. unanlmoua ln advocallng Jnune-
dlate mlUtazy ecUon.
Kennedy wrote that General Curlis Le-
May, then A1r Force Chief of Sta.ff and
now George Wallace's vice presidential
candldale, argued strongly \flth ~
Prelident that military luack WU 11~
aenUal''
The memoirs, purchased from t h e
Kennedy estate for more. ~ it mUUon
and publiahed Sunday In McCall's Maga-
1.ine, 1dd new detail! to h1s blstortcal
record of the showdown between the
U.S. and Ruaia in October 1962.
Robert Kennedy's account detalla bow
close the CUban crill:iJ came ot actual
war in 11tveral ways -bow milltary ad-
visers pressed for an attack igalnat
Cuba; how advance preparatlonl for
such an attack were made; and bow, aa
the cUmu approached, the ~ea: for
miscalculaUon by bolh countrtes grew.
When Ille President asked LeMay the
likely response of the Russians, Robert
Kennedy wrote, LeMay Insisted t b t re
From Poge I
" APOLLO •..
get our union cards."
Alter passing oot of camera range,
Schirra told the cootrol center that they
float around in their welghUess cabin like
monkey• in a cage, ualng hands and feet
to get around.
"We've really become eUlclent at It.
like we've gone ape," he laughed.
After the telecast, the astronauts began
a busy day ot preparing for re-entry and
splashdown.
They are to trigger thelr spacecraft
engine over Hawaii and lltreak through
the atmo11phere to a landing southeast of
Bermuda.
The aircraft carrier EslleX heads a
large recovery force waiting to rebieve
the astronauts as they complete their 11·
day space mission that has put the
United States f1nnly on course to the
moon.
"I'm lookln1 happily to Tuesday,"
Sdtlrra said Sunday night u the
astronauta e:rchanged lighthearted banter
with f.ound controller11 and tenalon and
comp alnts were gone.
* * * Networks Cover
Apollo Splmh
All three major netwofks will of·
fe r live coverage of the ApoUo 7
aplashdown Tuesday morning.
ABC (Channel 1) will begtn its
coverage at 3:15 a.m., white CBS
(Channel 2) and NBC (Channel 4)
wilt st.IJTt at 3:30. The schedule of
,euents:
3:43 a.m. PDT -Main spacecraft
engine fired for about 10 seconds as
Apollo 7 soars southeast of Hawaii,
slowing its speed and starting it down·
ward.
3:45 a.m. -Cone-shaped cap.tule
carriting the rutronauts separate.t
from the main engine.
3:56 a.m. -Spacecraft enter .t
earth's atmo.sphere 400,000 feet over
Houston, the h.eat shield on itl blunt
end faetna fonoard.
4:07 a.m. -Two 16.5·foot diameter
drogue parachutes deplo11 at 23,000
fret to .slow tM croft's •peed from
300 to 115 mUei an hour.
4:08 a.m. -Three 83.S·foot dia·
mel.tr main chutts deploy at 10,000
feet to rtduce speed to 22 m.p.h.
4:12 a.m. -Splashdown 230 miles
south·southea.rt of Btrmuda, where
the aircraft carrier Essez ii standing
by for recovery.
would be none. "'Ole President wu-.u.
cal and told f..e.May the Russians &Uld
not "do nothing" about a U.S. attack
on Cuba -that they would reply either
ln Cuba or Bertln.
Kennedy 1 a I d hla brother wu ~
l.rwed that, w1th the e:rcept,¥>n or Gen.
Mowell D. Taylor, h1I mllitary advJ.s.
era "seemed to give so' JltUe conaldera-
tlon to the bnpllcaUona ol the steps \hey
suggested."
He said t.be e:rperlenee emphaslud the
need· for 11ctvil11n dlrecllon and controllt
and fOf' raising "probing questions" to
military recommendatl~
Ourtna: 'final arguments, Kennedy
wrote, "I -thought of the many times
thal I had heard lbe military take posi-
Uons which, if wrong, had the advantage
that no one would be around at lhe end
to know."
In the article, titled '"'I1l:l.rteen Days,"
Kennedy, who al the Ume was attorney
g-ol, detalla I h.e acttvttles or I h e
president and bl.I advisers from Oct. 16,
when it wu flnt revealed that the Rus-
11lan11 Wl!re placlng mialiles in CUba, to
Oct. 21, the,sunday that the announce-
ment of Lb e withdrawal was made.
Kennedy wrote that in the early stages
of the debate over what to do, "most
felt • . • that ~an air 11lrike against the
mi!11lle site could be the only course."
Ltter during the fl.nt day, he said, the
idea of a quaranUne or blockade was
ralaed.
Althou&h support for a blockade grew,
ttac-k
Kennedy .nit, most of the president's
military ad'fisers "argued strongly .••
that a milltary attack was essential."
Then Defense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara wu an early advocate of tho
"blockade" tactic finally UAld, KtnMily
re~rted. ,
He described how other preparations
were Car advanced ror an attack against
Cuba should the blockade f a i I •
McNamara, for example, already had
figured that 2!50,000 men would be re-
quired for an invasion, including 90,000
t.farines and airborne fo~, and 2,000
air sorties against CUban targets. Ooe
estimafe said there Would more than
2.5,000 U. S. casualtiea.
The State Department was t to wofk
on a "crash" basis to dev· a plan (pr
civil government of Cub a ter an ln-
va.!ion , Kennedy wrote. ~
As lhe crisis unlolded, Ro .Y--.
reported, bis brother "wa.s not sanguine
about the results , .• each hour the situ.a·
tion grew steadily more serious. The feel·
ing grew that this cup was not going to
pass and that ·a direct military con-
frontation between the two great nuclear
powers ·was inevitable."
Kennedy said the president made bis
decision for a naval blockade Instead .of
an air attack Saturday night, Oct. 20.
There was a flnal meeting the next mom4
ing where the president was told thf,t
even a surprise attack could not be Cer·
tain of complete success in removing tjle
missiles, Kennedy said.
Laguna Hills AF Major
Involved in War Rescue ·
An Air Foret major from Laguna Hills
wu involved in a dramatic rescue of six
downed alnnen oU the coast of North
Vietnam Sunday, on! of the mosl daring
jobs or the en Ure war.
He was JdenUfled in a communique
from Saigon as Maj. Robert D. Schular,
37, of Laguna Hills, but eUorts to
establlab bil address were unsuccessful
today.
During the hellish ml!!Joo tnvolvlng the
helicopter rescue unit dubbed The Jolly
Green Glanta, North Vietnamese gunners
on arsenal-like Tiger IBl&nd blued away
at the dramatic scent offshore.
Two Navy jeta -their guns empty of
any mare ammunition -even made
perllous puses over an island bluff to in-
timidate antiaircraft crews and draw fire
away from the helicopter hovering over
typhoon whipped swells in the South
China Sea.
Sharpehootlng gunners shot off the-tall
of the first Jolly Green Giant chopper to
arrive on the scene, where two injured
filers were 1truggllng in the chilly, l~foot
waves.
A second shell slammed into the big H3
helicopter, sinking it within a few
seconds, but the four crewmen managed
to 11cramble out in Ume to avoid going
down with it.
Air l<~orce Pararescueman Steve T.
Whlte, 24, of Los Altos Calif., was bap-
tized ln both fire and Icy seawater on his
first rescue mission, military spokesman
said.
Whlte swam to the two Injured jet
jockey.!! who had balled out of their Air
Force Ff Phantom after it was hit by
groundfire from Tiger Ialand and disabl-
ed .
Dragging the Injured pair into life
rafts, the four choppe:t crewmen joined
them ln what appeared to be an agonizing
drift to death as tides carried them
toward the bloody Island.
Leu than four miles lay between the
tiny raft flotilla and the Communist guns,
which began lobbing shell.a into the water
as the si1: doomed -or seemingly so -
fliers drifted.
Rifle fire began u soon as the two
raft.a drifted into range, while 24 Air
Force and some Navy jell from the car-
rie.r Intrepid screamed overhead, makin,g
passes at the gun-bristling island bluffs
while another helicopter approached. ,
The rescue helicopter carrying Stevt.r1
N. Northern, 21, of Riverside zoomed 'n
under the blanket of gunfire with Maj.
Charles E. Wicker, 34, of Ba1Umore, M~.
in the pilot's seat. •
Northern used a winch hoist to ha\11
aboard the 50h and 5lst men he haJ aaV·
ed in 225 rescue missions of the war and
the chopper roared seaward again for
another run.
Maj. Schuler wu aboard Wicte.r'a HJ
helicopter, but his role in the rescue was
not clearly spelled out in the military
communique received today.
"We were only about l lh mllea from
the island when we finally made the
pickup," Wicker said. ''I've never made a
faster pickup in all my life." •
Rescued men were identified as White,
Sgt. Robert T. Anderson, 26, of St. Louis,
Mo., and pilots Capt. Gerald W. Moore,
31, of Washington, D. C., and Capt. Lau·
rens C. Davis, Jr., 29, of Fort Worth,
Tex., all of them happy to be alive. ·
The Jolly Green Giants are the most
decorated airmen to serve ln the Viet-
nam war as a result of countless acls ,Of
cool heroism in harrowing situations.
Sgt. Northern, who is only 21, has
earned the Silve.r Star, Distinguished
Flying Cross, Purple Heart and 15 Air
Medals during his two years of service
with the rescue unit
Mesa Police Seeli·
Hit-run Motorist
Costa Mesa police today are seeking 'it.
felony hit-and·run motorist who struck
a 16-year-old boy on his bicycle Sunday
at an intersection, then sped away.
Bryan M. Kimbell, of 900 Cedar Place,
was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital
for abrasions and released, following the:
accident at Newport Boulevard and East
17th Street.
The youth was riding northbound In &
service road at low spetXS when hit, po-
lice said.
0
OMEGA
Your Om.cgoa
Sale• & Sertnc1
Ago ency
.._
"'"-··-trorn 11U
Ill I v1r"1'Y ......
YOUR WATCH'~·.-~-... -et.Mtd-~·
• Clunolf • O!LM WM~ Y .. W•t FREE
. • >
&
• Adl••IM .. ~:t:~. Sl. 99
$5!!1ETE ;i;. :.:
Jewelry Dftll"lnt
atoaosnoll • Self· A lpocl11lyl
wla4ers 1U1b11J ~111<r:
~~\l//M'PAST DIPINDAILI SlillVLCI
• • • ~•1 KIBK
. -y (1/1 ;t't,.f --
Now 2 Great Stores To Sent You
MAUOI IMOff'tM• HU NTIN•TON CINTll
CINTll IUCH A IDINell
JIM MAllOI II.YI. HUNTtN•tON llACH
COSTA MBA Ml-t411 192·1101
Dll-...t ':.• s..m.1t.. ...
~-... .,_ 11u. --.,_ tuo.
Olt'llt •• .,, .... ,.,..
ll"lnl "J II --
TllMI
"' ... YOUI
I UDHT Opon Mon. Thurs. frl. TIU 9 p.m. 1_____::__,,,..,,...,,,.--=~~:::.=;~:,;;;,,;;,~-==~-
l I I
---~~---·-------------··--------------------------------------------'
'
\
• " -• ,-v-·----.--• -,
•
'
' -
BEFORE ••• THE WORK BEGINS AFTER • , , THOUSANDS OF HOURS
A House Becomes a Home
PUTTING ON A NEW FACE ~ Debris strewn kitchen
gets a thorough cleaning before artists (below) Charles
Mrs. Clyde Workman paint cm a fresh. elem look.
crrea (above)
Boswell and
By BEA ANDERSON
D•llY Pllol Sod•IY e:.itw
Doing their thing for city
beautificalion a r e stalwart
volunteers of the Costa Mesa
Art League.
And, when lhe league opens
the doors to its new facility
at 513 Center St.. Costa Mesa
for public viewing next Sat-
urday and Sunday members
will be bursting with pride
•.. justifiably so.
For only the ambitious and
confident would have accept-
ed such a challenge.
The league was looking for
a home.
An offer was made for this
property, rent-free for one
year, with the proviso that
members handle repairs and
renovation.
Most would hi!ve thought
this undertaking might be im-
possible or not worth the
effort, but the league snapped
up the chance.
This 40-year-old house was
on the verge of being con-
demned as a fire hazard.
It had been vacant for four
and one-half years.
During this time it deter·
iorated. '
Windows were broken, paint
weather beaten, trash accum-
ulated within, unknown "ten-
ants" used it for shelter and
even cut a hole in the floor
for a makeshift fireplace.
1be interior was completely
smoke covered and paint blis-
tered from the open fire .
The structure was practic-
ally hidden by a giant bou-
gainvillea which grew twice
the height of the house. The
weight of the branches rest-
ing on the roof proved too
much and the red tile gave·
way in one area. The porch
ceiling was falling down, too.
In general, it looked like 1
slum dwelling.
Unda unted, league mem-
bers gathered paint, brushes,
hainmers, nails, saws and
lumber and started to work.
George Burkhart, Patrick
Shepard, Adrian Ralph and
Stan Wheeler devotedly su-
pervised the repair and re-
newal committee.
They w e r e assisted by
about 20 others working eight
hours a day, completing the
renovation in three months
which was sooner than antic-
ipated.
Roy Erickson, chai rman of
Costa Mesa's beautification
program who was in~t!"llmen
t.al in securing the house for
the league, also spearheaded
used for arts and crafts work-
shops and will house a dif-
ferent art display each month.
According to Mrs. Richard
Ingram, president, the exhib-
its will be open to the public
at least two days a week. De-
pending on public interest and
volunteer staff, hours may be
extended.
Receiving visitors at the
door next weekend will be the
president and board mem-
bers, the Mmes. Anthony T~
to. Paul Friebertshau.ser,
Hans Linhardt, Alex Miller,
Grayson McCarty, Betty Ke1·
ley, Lila Mcintyre, Arthur
Williams, Charles Luebbert,
William Ludlam, and 11:iomas
Beckwith, Capt. R ob er t
Moody, John Thorley and
John Burgess.
About 100 city officiab, dig·
nitaries and friends preview·
ed the facility yesterday.
donations of building mater· ·----------------------· ials from area tradesmen.
Members who were unable to
give services donated money
for supplies and t r a d i n g
stamps for furniture.
Now the Spanish-style house
sports a fresh coat of adobe
colored stucco, new roofing
and landscaping. The interior
ls painted in off-white: three
rooms which are being used
for exhibit areas have new
tile flooring, while blue car-
peting has been laid in the
two work.shop rooms. The facility, which is too .,. ___________________ _
small to conduct meetings for
the 250 membership, will be
BEA ANDl;RSON, Editor
IM!ldey, ~r Jl,,IHf "•.CM ... , 11
A FITTING DISPLAY AREA -Smiling her approval over a job
well done is Mrs. Richard lngram, president of the Costa Mesa Art
Learue who will be on hand with her board to weloome visitors
at the league's new home next Saturday and Sunday. The public
is invited to tour the facilitv and view the current art exhibit
Hubby Snores, Wife Adores Sawdust Piling on Her Floors
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am getting
sick and tired of reading letters from
wi ves complaining aboul their husbandii'
snoring. My husband snores -loud, Jong
and every nighl. So what? He is one of
the best human beings the good Lord
ever put on this earth.
When the snoring starts Md my sleep
Is interrupted, I lie quietly and watch him
get his badly needed rest. When I read
lhat some women tie their huibande'
jaws shut with Jilk stockinp and strap
bicycle horns to their heads, l get 90 mad
I could scream.
Every night T thank God that this
wonderful man is in OUR bed snoring.
We have been married 10 years and I
hope the good Lord gives ua 10 more. -
-~ ---
ANN LANDERS
CONTENDED
DEAR CON: What a lovely letter! But
1'biJe you're uktng -ask for 40 mort,
not 1t, dummy !
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years ago
t wrote for advice. You said. ''See A
psycbiatrisl" I took your ar' ice and it
was the mosl difficult th"n11 I've ever
done in my life. But it was the smRrlc~t.
'
I can 't understand why a person would
be ashamed to admit he has a problem
he can 't handle. Does a patient have to be
dying before he goes to a doctor? Why
then should he wait till he's ready for 11
straitjacket before he s e e s a
psyc hiatrist?
Please , Ann. continue to urge your
reader& to stop wa.stJng lheir lives,
especially the young. Psychiatry can
open doors to peac~ of mind and COO·
lentment. 1t can conquer fear and guilt
and sell hate. It also can overcome
physical complaints and fatigue an<!
depression.
I am very poor at expressing myself
but I wanted to try. Thanks for readlng
this. -NANCY
DEAR NANCY : I 1ball conttnve to
urge people to get professional help,
although I am well aware that not. all pa-
tients obtain the glowing results you
detcrlbe. And if you were able t.o achieve
the miracle with your original therapl1t
you are fortunate.
Therapy can be magic for aome and
Nothlng1vUle for others. I ttt0mmend
profe11tenal llelpJor Individuals wtto are
depressed. dutructlve or In continual
connlci with themelves and othen.
Therapy Ulat produce1 even modest
result.I beats walking around frightened,
guilty, mad at the world and plaped by
"uodlagnosed" acbe1 and palna.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a
homosexual who has had psychiatric help
and I'm as well adjusted as t will ever
be.
A rew weeks ago I was turned down for
military service. I told the truth and
presented medical documentaUon.
Now people are beginning to ask why I
have not been called up by my draft
board. I've been saying, "1 have a bad
back," but I'm a poor liar. ft" shows on -
my face . Whal should I say? -STUCK
FOR-AN ANSWER
DE.l'R STUCK: Tell them Ute tnth.
Nobody will believe It. U a few ~
penllt in presslq: for an answer, 11y,
"Seriously, I've Vied but they don'C wue
me."
If you b.ave trouble getting &Jong wiih
your parents ... if YoU can't get them to
let you live your own life, send for Ann.
Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parenti?
How to Get More Freedom." Send 50
cents in coin with your request and a
long, stamped, sett-addressed envelope.
Ann Landers will be glad lo bdp JOO
with yoor problem.. Send them lo ber In
care of the DAILY Pn.or eoclosl.na a
ltamped, ocll-oddreo>ed envelope.
\ .j
I
•• •
I
I
11 ' I
••
" .
14 ~AllY PllOT
Peering
Around
ALUMNI ol the University
ol Southern California were
auoata at a buffet luncheon on
the USC campus tut Saturday
belcn the USC-Washingtoo
football game.
Dr. Norman Topping, USC
prelidenl and Mn. Topping
and Members ol the hoard ol
trulteel boned the event.
Accepting invitatlOl'll were
the Me;un. and Mmes. Ray
H. . Benaon of Lido lale;
1 Charles H. Jones of Seal
Beach. and Tracy E. Strevey
ol Laguna llll!J.
Among the -scholan who were honored was Jerry
Hombea~ol Newport Beach.
Costa Mesa Rites
Vows, Rings Exchanged
St. John the Baptist Catholic
Church, Costa Mesa, was the
setting for 1he double ring
ceremony llnk.lng M:aUN!en
MeCclrry and William J. WertJ
in marriage. The Rev. Ken·
neth J. Krauee performed the
rites.
The ~. daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Edmund McCorry of
Ciolta Mesa, was given in
marrllge by her father. Her
cand1el.lgbt aaUn gown and
train featured lace and seed
pearl trim, and a matching
11tin bow caught her floor
length veil which also ex·
tended into a train. She car,
rled gardenias and
stephanotis.
Mrs. Dale Jost, the bride's
alster and matron or honor,
wore a red velvet gown. Wtar-
tng identical frocks were
Brenda Anderson and Nancy
Wertz, bridesmaids.
Sheclding New Light on Old Subject
HAPPY Anniversary wu
aung by members of Weight
Watchers of So ut hern
C al l fomla. Approximately
141000 memben celebrated,
and festivities wen climued
with a Night in Nevada press
party. The bridegroom, son of Mr.
·and Mr1. William H. Wertz or
Lakewood, asked P hi I i p
Maurtr to be his best man and
Lury Cooper and Gary Butts
were Ulbe:rs.
Lamps will be amoog items trom jewelry to fumit.m
wbidi will brighten the rummage 1111<! sponoored
jointly by the women of St. Michaels ond All Angels
Episoopal Church, Corona del Mar, and the women
of St. John the Dlvlru! Epis<opal Church, Oosta Mesa.
The event will take place Friday and Saturday, Oct.
Horoscope
25 and 26 from 9:30 Lm. to 4:30 p.m. at St. John's,
2043 Orange Ave. Profits from the sale wll! be used
U> support guild programs. Seeing that the sale will
be a shining event are Oeft to right) Mrs. Paul Col-
lins, the Rev. John Donaldson and Mrs. Robert
Johnsen.
PLEDGING Phi K a pp a
CMpter of Delta Delta Delta
at California State College at
Long Beach was Mary Diane
Fortune, daughter of Lt. Col.
and Mrs. Mark Fortune of
Huntington Be a ch: Miss
Fortune attended Marina High
~hool w,here she was active in
student government.
A receptkm for 130 guests
followed in the Monticello
Townhouse hall.
. Leo: Avoid Deception
Ball Plans
Unmasked
At Dinner
ALPHA Phi is the Choice of
Llnda Nissen, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Nissen of MRS . WILLIAM J. WERil
After honeymooning in San-
ta Barbara, the bridal couple
will reside in Carpinteria. The
bride is a graduate of COsta
Mesa High School and at-
tended Orange Coast College,
Her husband, a graduate of
Lakewood High School, served
in Vietnam. Newport Beach, Miss Nissen Carpinteria Home
selected one of the oldest--------'----------------------
social sororities and pledged a
TUESDAY
OCTOBER 22
By SYDNEY OMAllR
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)'
Your powers of intuition are
enhanced. You are able to
perceive events of import.once.
Follow through on hunch.
Heed inner voice. Spread in-
fluenet and intere st.
Write, read~xpand horizons.
TAURUS (April 2 0-May
20): Chang~ in w o r k con-
ditions indicated . You are able
to successfully c o n v e y
thoughts, ideas. Greater ap-
preciation accorded your ef-
forts. Be strong within. Know
your own worth .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20);
change in work conditions in-
dicate.
CANCER (June 21-July 12):
Good lunar upect today coin-
cides with Jove, Romance, u-
citement of discovery. You
find that what is close is real.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Con-
ditions at home demand at·
tention. Don't deceive yourself
about costs. desires. Get to the
heart of mattel'8. A v o i d
overertend.ing yourseU. Get
only what you can afford .
VIRGO (Aug." 23-Sept. 22):
Journey connected with past
responsibility could · be on
agenda. Strive to arrive at
reasons. Don't be satisfied
thatsomethingh a p Pen ed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22):
Accent on money, income
potential. You get rid of
restricting b u r d e n . Op-
portunities appear. Recognize
them. Take initiative. You can
add to financial security if
aware and willlng.
SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 21 ):
Lunar cycle high. Means you
get breaks -puzzle pieces fall
into place. You see clearly.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22--------------------
•
' .
,. ''Rsslw paz&&Mt beodifies
Jllllm--.dlied Mir,
Wllun 8IMIO 20~ 00
•• llOt ,ill! a wonderful permanent
llil ll1hillc 1111r i'.50 Ult111 Magi c
llllll::111t. I .htljlc bJing new viblant
11111111 a.I~ lo yD!lr hair; yoor set
........ Md, fur sltape &SS!Jlanoe,
• lllMdl • paflO!laH!!!d hair~.
BMllllf lhldio•llll 9le!es 1111eept Maritle
• '
1
•• 'I , ••••• , 11i1lt1~
Buffums·
Newport # f lf•1hion l1l1nd, N•Wport l••ch
T olophOfto '44·2200
Dec. 21): Be discreet. Secret
is revealed . Utilize sense of
what ls right. I50n't reveal all
you know. Some trust you with
valuables. Be honest with<>tlt
being foolish. Message clear
by tonight.
chapter on the University of ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~, Montana c:impus.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Accent on friends, hopes,
wishes. Greeter social activity
indicated. Contacts you make
work to your benefit. Be flex-
lble, versatile. Gain indic:ated
through special study, report.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Prestige on rise. Standing
in community ls enhanced.
You solve puzzle w h j ch
enables you to overcome
roadblock. Be aware o t
details, regulations. Could be
stnooth sailing if you utiliie
knowledge.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Good lunar aspect today coin-
~lde~ with ~avorable reply to
inquiry. Keep communication
lines clear.
Damas de Caridad began
.making plans for their eighth
annual Bal Masque at a man-
nequln-nonst dinner in the
Saddleback Inn.
The benefit ball, scheduled
for Feb. 8 will feature fresh
nower masques created by the
florists. Prizes are awarded to
winners al-the black tie dinner
dance staged for the benefit of
St. Jude Hospital.
Mrs. Harold Mustoe, man-
nequin chairman, introduced
w.omen who will model the
creation&. They are the Mmes.
Woods Barneson of Balboa,
and Carl 0. Harvey, Jac-
queline Knott, WiJliam C.
Cummings, William Moore,
Walter J. Pray, Charles Cur-
rier, Jay L. Reed, Ralph Har·
rison and Edwin Ettinger, all
of Orange County. =-
TWO SPANISH maps of the
area, dated 18a2 and 1853 have
been turned over to the
Newport B e a c h Historical
Society by Mrs. Laura Lagios,
city clerk.
The maps are of a Corona
de! Mar subdivision of K. I.
Fulton Co. showing Lido as
Parkinson Island, I r v i n e
Ranch cattle gr8zing where
the Newporter Inn now stands
and all of Newport Heights as
a goll course.
Secretaries
Orange County-Harbor Area
Legal Secretaries Association
meets the third Wednesday of
the month in various places.
Further information may be
obtained by calling Miss
Sheron Dresser, 5 4 0 -0 9 5 0.
Members gather at 7 p.m.
BARGAIN
BUNTERS!
TRADE-IN
sewing machines
Portables FRoM~95
STOP BY
SINGER
NOW!
Consoles FRoM
5l995
Zig-Zags FRoM
52995
IUINA PAii
UIOOn Tht ,,.,_II
TA 1-l'SCI
lhM!M Ptr11 C.,...,
COSTA MUA
23llO HtrlXI!' l!IM:I.
ICI .. llfi
H1rbo!' Ceflltr
SINGER Sew & SM Guarantee: with
every used sewing machine goes the
SINGER guarantee of money back if not
satisfied with purchase. or full credit
toward the purchau of1 new SINGER•
sewin1 machine, within 90 days!
Watch SINGER presents ELVIS •..
Tuesday, Decembe(3, NBC-TV
in cofor, 9to 10 P.M., EOST.
. SINGER
AMAHllM •AIDIM •IOYI
5151\1, LCMr. '?'1 ""-m.112' ....... AMl'llll'l'I Ctlllff or.... C""'"" PMU
HUNTIM•TON SANTA ANA IU.CH ---•-,;.•19"Cll .11)1 w. ""Sf, .... kl '"""' ~•t1te11 e.....,
COSTA MISA
er!lf'OI I. $i.-'1flowtr ..., ...
SclvtPt CO.if PltUI
LA MllADA
HD:U S. Lvll'llwller ",_..,,
L• Mir..,. Ce~i.r
Join lK for 1n excitin9 skiin9 evenin9 for the ltfttire fam-
ily in M~y Co's Terr~• Room rertaurarrt, Friday, Od.
25th, sl1rt;n9 117:00 p.m. for 2.50. you'! enjoy:
• a social hour around Tho Glogg Bowl
• a family ski fashion show
• a skier'• dinner pre~ared by Chris Ra•munen
formerly of Scandia
dinnet lndud"
lentil soup with sliced frankfurters
scv&rkraut with smoked pork lo'-
10~ pr•tz•I•
koiserschorm with lingonberriet
Aiter dinner you'll see .., int1restin9 color film on ft; ..
ing and p.1rticipate in an inform1I ski ttl..c>ut with Adi
Muehleq91r, cert;food Austrion P.S.l.A. ood A.S.l.A. in-
structor. St.iers door prit~ wiH ak:o be given. It's sure to
be a most enioyable evenin9 so c1ft 546-9121, ext. 20f
and rna~11 your reservations .now. Bavarien been and ......
ported wines will be availabJ. for your plttsure •
may co soulll coast plai1, san dlego lwy at bristol, cosla mesa, 546-9321
shop monday through Sllurday, 10:00 1.m. lo 9:30 p.m.
I '
---------------=-..,.-~---
• -· -
-
• fosia Mesa Today's Closing
VOL 61, NO. 253, 3 SECTI ONS, 32 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CA~.IFORNIA • MONDAY, OCTOBER 2f, '1968 TEN CE NTS
U.S. to Free 14 Reds
36-hour Cease~fire Callel1 by U.S., North fietnam
DAILY ,II.OT ll•ff !ttlolt
SAIGON (AP) -The Uniled States and
North Vietnam declared a 36-bour cease-·
fire in 288 square miles along the North
Vietnamese coast for the release today or
14 North Vietnamese seamen captured
more than two years ago.
The cease-fire and release of the
prisoners, coupled with the withdrawal of
the battleship New Jersey from off the
coast of North Vietnam and the continued
lull in the ground war, increased specula-
tion that Washington and Hanoi might be
Student Plans
To Fight Mesa
'Hippie Law'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
0 1 Ill• D•llJ" 1"1111 Sti ff
A Balboa Island student today w i 1 t
challenge a proposed Costa Mesa anti·
hippie law when it comes before the City
Council tonight for final adoption.
Happy Mesa Queen
John Yeamans, 17, of 118 Onyx Ave .. a
UCI electrical engineering major, is be-
ing coached in legalisms by his father,
a USC doctor of law and California
Savings and Loan Association executive. Cathy Ferryman, 17, 8nd escort Dennis Hall share happiness af~er
Cathy was crowned 1968 Homecoming Queen at Costa Mesa High
School druing halftime of Mesa·Estancia football game Frid;ay. Cathy
is daugbter of Dan Ferryman, a district manager in DAILY PILOT
Circulation Department.
The UCJ freshman said toda.v he docs
not know how many people will respond
to his one-man campaign against the
crowd control ordinance, but hopes for
at least 30 who have voiced concern to
tum out.
TemperS' Cool in Apollo 7
As Cre~"Awa1r;Re~itiry
The Costa Mesa City Council meeting
apcns at 6:30 o'clock, with second read-
ing and adoption of the controyersial or-
dinance the first scheduJeg Jtem o[ Jlusf·
ness.
Ye amans served not.ice nf hi!! inten·
lion to at least open some dialogue on the
cro1vd control ordinance .with a story in
the Oct. 17 issue of "New "University."
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -The
Apollo 7 astronauts, mellowed after a day
of air·to-ground arguments, clowned their
way through their final television show
today and fll'ed their large spaceship
engine to steer !nto a more favorable
course for returning to earth Tuesday.
(Earlier stories Page 5).
As Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr.,
Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele and
civilian • Walter Cunningham raced
through theiir final hours in space, they
displayed none of the irritability that
sparked bitter disagreements with
~round controllers Sunday, mostly over
rJight plan changes.
The astronauts made it plain they are
cager to come home after 11 days in
space. They are scheduled to paracbi11,a:
into the Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda at
-4 :12 a.m. PITT Tuesday, clim8xing a
spectacular, perfect flight lhaf· set the
United States firmly on·the·plth to the
moon.
At mid-morning, they pointed the nose
af Apul}t). 1 rrol-th and fired an eight-se-
cOnd burst from the craft's 20,500-pound
thrust engine. The blast shifted the Jow
point of their orbital path about 1,250
miles to the west, almost due south of
llouston over Mexico.
Jt also raised the high point of the
orbital path---about 10 miles to 276 miles.
The low poini remained at 103 miles.
The control center said this placed
Apollo 7 in a good position for hilling the the UCr student newspaper.
target zone on la.oding. The next time the Nothing was said at the earlier public hearing on the crowd control ordinance big engine is fired will be Tuesday morn--patterned after others adopted by
ing to pull the spaceship out of orbit. Newport Beach and Laguna Beach -but
Commenting on the perfect engine .Yeamans believes the C.Osta Mesa ver·
burn, Cunningham said: "That's pretty sion is worse.
good." He said his father. who I! senior vice
The seventh telecast from the orbiting president and general counsel to the sav·
Apollo 7 Studio ended with Schirra ings and loan firm. seeS-the ordinance
displaying a sign that read : "As the sun as· sloppily drawn, leaving out questions
sinks slowly in the west." of intent where offenses are involved.
''This is Apollo 7 signing off,'' he said "The Costa 1ttesa City Council h a ~
as the excellent picture faded after a lentati velv approved a municipal ordi·
nine·minute production. nance which, they hope, will give the
Schirra, Eisele and Cunningham also police the power to arrest almost at
displayed a new sign which indicated \l'i!I," Yeamans said in his UC! news -
lhey are happy to be heading home. paper story.
A crudely drawn picture of the Apollo "This ordinance \vould make such
ship floating on the water was ac-things illegal as playing any musical or
companied by these words : "Everybody percussiirn instrument in any park or on
out o( the Pool." • -'...-ttJY public way without a permit issued
• Clearly visible as the camera panned by the City Council," he continued.
ar'taflnd the cabin were pictures of the Yeamans foresees a situation in which
lhr~. wives of the spacemen, pasted someone sitting on a curb watching a
above their duty stations. friend fix a flat tire could be arrested by
They also used the camera to zero in on a passing ooliceman although his act
the heavy beards grown by all three. (See HIPPIE LAW, Page Zl
"I will not admit to the fact that there
is any gray in this beard," Schirra said.
"My hairdresser's the only one that
knows."
As the astronauts passed the camera
around, Schirra quipped: "You've got
three professional cameramen up here
now, so when we get back we expect to
(See APOLLO, Page I )
Mesa Police Seek
Hit-run Moiorist
RFK Memoirs on Cuba:
Costa Mesa palice today are seeking a
felony hit-and-run motorist who struck
a 16-year~ld boy on his bicycle Sunday
at an intersection, then sped away,
Bryan M, Kimbell, of 900 Cedar Place.
was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital
for abrasions and released, following the
accident at Newport Boulevard and East
17th Street. Military Urged Attack The youth was riding northbound in a
service road at low speed when hit, po-
lice said.
moving toward progreM In the Pari.a
peace talks. •
Diplomat.! at the United NaUona said
they believe North Vietnam wants to get
a peace settlement before the next U. S.
administration takes office Jan, 21. But
despite the continu.ing speculation thal
the United States might bait the bombing
of Nor~'; Vietnam, American warplanes
carried out strikes again today in the
North below the 19th parallel, and more
of the same was scheduled for Tuesday,
military sources aajd.
U. S. Headquarters...announced that 24
Americans were killed today when an Air
Force twin engine C47 t r a n s p o r t
developed trouble in one engine ar.d
crashed in the central highlands. There
were no survivors. The dead included. 20
Air Force men, two Anny men and two
clvlllall$. ·
Information on today's reJcts over
North Vietnam won't1it anndhnced until
Tuesday.
Builder, Civic Leader
Newport Pioneer
Joseph Be·ek Dies
By JEROME F. COLLINS
01 tbt 01Hw l'lllrl Stiff
Joseph Allan Beek Sr., long-time
secretary of the California Senate and
pioneer Newport Beach civic leader and
builder, died early today. He was 87,
He succumbed to bronchitis and
asthma, complicated by chronic em·
physema, at Hoag Memorial Hospital
shortly after midnight.
Mr. Beek, founder-owner or the Balboa
Island Ferry, had served as secretary of
the Sta~ ~enate since 1919.
"The on1y session be ever missed," his
widow, Carroll, said this morning., "was
durin& Wbrld.War U. H~c'Ouldn't make it
bte~e be was· with · 'the Army
Tr~ $er.Yie!e.'.! t.."-
AS SttrebirY he It'. the minutf!s of all
Senate sessions. filed amendments and
was generally resporu;ible for a mulUlude
of paper work. which mounted greatly in
recent ye~rs.
"Joe showed up for them all, though,"
said Mrs. Beck. "He was even there for
this last veto session."
Mr. Beek's first state ·assignment was
as assistant Senate secretary in 1913. Six
years later he became secretary, serving
55 consecutive years.
"Joe had a full life." said Mrs. Beek.
lt Included establishment of the Balboa
Island ferry in 1919, initial development
of Balboa Island at about that time,
development of Harbor Island and ~l
years' service on the old Newport Beach
high school bocird of trustees. ·
He was on the school board from 1933
lo 19$4.
In addition, some four decades .ago he
WIS Chainnlll Of the dtlzenl' "harbor
committee whose erforts culminated in
federal aid for development of Newpor\
Harbor. Committee leaders also worked
for passage of a countv bond·issue to pro-
f See MR. BEEK, Page %)
Promoter of Coast
Newport Fishing l)ean
Captain Thorpe Dies
Captain Joseph Raymond Thorpe, early
pioneer and promoter of the Orange
Coast and lately manager of a Newport
Beach sportfishing flee t, died Sunday at
the age of 84.
Services for Capt. Thorpe, known u
dean af Pacific Coast fishermen, will be
held Wednesday.
Until his death, the captain was gen-
eral manager of Davey's Locker, New4
port Beach sportfishing operation a n d
Catalina tour boat service.
Capt. Thorpe moved to the Orange
Coast in 1903. He established a b a s s
breeding farm on his Huntington Beach
ranch, and used the dirt removed for
the ponds to build a road along the
coast connecting Huntington B e a c h
and Seal Beach.
He published the first Californ ia road
map for early motor car enthusiasts
showing pictures of every cross roads
and listing all blacksmith shops a nd
grocery stores that had gaSC1line pumps.
The map became a handbook with
suggestions for auto trips such as "FriJ..
co -Five Days of Easy Ruitnlng. ''
When circulation grew to 20,000 copies
in 1913, the Automobile Club of Southern
California claimed the publication, now
(See THORPE, Page %)
COAST SKIPPER DIES
C•pt. Jos•ph Thorpe
From Wire Services
From the beginning of the '1962 Cuban
mi ssile crisis, said the late Senator
Robert F. KeMed.y In his newly pul"r-
lished memoirs, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
v;ere unanimous in advocating imD*
diate mililary action.
Kennedy wrote, LeMay insisted t h e re
woUld be none. Ttle President was skepti·
cal and told LeMay the Russians could
not "do nothing" about a U.S. attack
on CUba -tbat they would reply either
in CUba or Berlin.
Winds Delay Honey1noon
Kennedy wrote that General Curt.is Le-
1\tay, then Air Force Chief of Staff and
now George WaDace's vice presidential
candidate, argued strongly with the
President that military· attack WI$ "es-
sential."
The memoirs, purcllaaed Crom t he
Kennedy estate for more than SI miWoo
and published Sunday In McClll'a Map-
zine. add new detail& to hi& blltoriCll
record of the showdown betWeen the
U.S. and Russia in October 1961.
Robert Kennedy'• account details bow
close the Cuban crisis came ol actual
war In several ways -bow mllit.arr ad·
visers pressed for an attack against
Cuba: how a;ctvance prtparatloM for
such an attack were made; and how, a.s
tilt climax epproached, the changes for
mlscatcuJaUon by both oountries grew.
When lhe President a!dted Wlay the
Ukcly ~sponse of lbe Russians. f,8bert
"
Kennedy s a i d his brother was dis-
tressed that, with the exception or Gen.
MaxweJI D. Taylor. his military advis-
ers "seemed to give so little C1>f\Sidera ·
tion to the implications of Ute step15 they
suggested."
He said the e•perience emphasiied the
need for "clvUian direction and conLrol"
and for ralalng "probing questiOfl.'I" to
miHtary recommendaUons.
Doring final argumcnta, Kennedy
wrote, "I tbougbt of the many Ume.s
Illa! 1 had bwd the military take posi-
tions which, if wmng, had fhe advantage
that no one would be aroiJnd at the end
to know."
In the article, tJUed 011lirteen 08)'1,"'
Kennedy, w.ho at the time was: attorney
general. details t h e acUvitla: 'Of th e
president and his advisers from Od. 11,
when il was first revta1ed that the Ru8-
sfans were placing mlsslles in CUba. to
Oct. 23, the Sunday thol lh< annOtJDCe-
(S.. MEMOIRS, Pop %) ~
Jackie, Onassis Ho st M id1iiglit W edding Party
SKORPIOS, Greece (UPI) -Gale
force winds. high seas and chilly
weather today held up any plans for a
honeymoon cruise by Ari stotle and Jac-
queline Onassis. (Related story, picture
'on Page 4)
Although bad, I.he weather did not pre-
vent the departure of friends and
relatives of Onusls aod the former Mra.
John F. K<Medy, inclUding the .. ,. Mn.
Ona.s.W' two ehlldrtn, carollne. 10, and
John Jr., 7. Nar did it ball the party
"aboard the yacht Christina where
auests daqced nntU almost dawn.
The enUre group of friends a n d
.rellUvtt went from OnaMis' Ooating
polace b7 sptedboat ,.veral hundred ·
7arda lo the fishing village of Nldrlon and
then lo die airport of Aktloo. 1l>ere they
bolU'ded a plane to Athens where they
will x atter to their various dcstlnaUons.
The party aboarrl the yacht lasted
through the night with 13 costumed girls
fram the nearby island of Levkas dancipg
and singing for tbe guests.
The newlywed• Ulemselvcs slept late
but arose to wiah departing guest.!
godspeed and gave the cl!Udren a final
hug.
The ChrisUna'1 capt.aln said Sund11.1 he
was ready to .,.u at three Jioura' Mtice
but did not have •nY definite ordera.
Other memben of the wedding party said
they thought Ooa..ta alid hlJ wife were ht
no hurry to leave but probabljr would
take a short a'UiM within a fc'ff daya to
find the sun. •
Relatives said any cruise -tf there Is
one -probably would be brief btc&US6
Onwis Js now engaged in a p;roJec:t dear
Ip hlJ hear!, a $400 rl!!Won dcve!opmcnl
~me for Greece.
'
• The Christina, a conv~rted Canadian
\\lorld War JI frigate, can still in Ju•l
about any weather but ls: notoriously un·
comfortable in stormy seas,
1l would be unllkel)' tile newlyweds
would crutM m rough 1eas, although both
OnasalJ and Jackie are (ood saJJors.
Following lllelr 45-mlnute wedding
ceremony in a ll by *> foOt Grttt
Orthodox C h a p e 1 on Onassll' private
bland ot Skorplos o(f Greece'• westetn
coast, the couple went at»ard the y1cht
and toasted eilcb o·ther and fort11ne with
clui.mpaaoe. and red wine. Crewmen l&Jd
the newl)'Woda left word they would be
sleeping late.
Among their lirat tasks of married Ole
was 11ylng godbye to M r s. Ones.ala'
children. The late Preskle.nt's children
were expecte<t ld f11 hick to their private
1ehoot,ln Nm. Yori Cily.
American pilots on Sunday logged 110·
missions over North Vietnam. An Air.
Foree F4 Phantom fighter-bomber wd
downed by ground fire 20 miles north of
the demilitarized mne, and a big llli3
Jolly Green Giant helicopter that tried to
rescue the two pilots also was shot down.
The two Phantom pilots and the four
hellcopter crewmen were pulled from the
Gulf of Tonkin by two other helicopters
after bobbing on the storm-tossed seas
for an hour and a bal!.
Mesan Shot
l1i Holdup;
2 Men Held
Two Sjinta Ana men are being held on
charges of assault with intent to commit
murder, armed robbery and kidnaping to-
day after the Sunday night shooting of a
Costa Mesa man.
~ked into Orange County jail today
on the three charges are James Henry
Alvarez, Z3, of 722 E. Walnut St. and
David Thomas Tramble, 25, of 1422 W.
"1th St. who allegedly attempted to rob
~1e-N-Ed 's Pizza Parlor at 1180 S. Bristol
St., Santa Ana of $3,358.32.
Gary W, Hinz, a pizza chef of 160 W.
Wilson St., Costa Mesa, was shot in the
left thigh during the holdup, police said.
He was treated and released from Santa
Ana Community hosOitat. · ·
AJvarez and Tremble are char'ged wilh
entering the pizza sbOp about 11':30 p.m
Sunday. brandishing pistols. ·
Police allege they shot several timu
into the floor, while ordering the 12
diners there into the men's rootn and
then placing a juke box against the door.
One ol the cmployes was taking an
order by phone when the bandits entered.
The woman placing the order heard the
gunshots and one of the suspects tell the
employe to hang l!P. She notified police
but refused to give her address or phone
number.
While the robbers were forcing diners
Into the Testroom, Hinz ·cam~ from
the back room to see what was hap.
pening. When be turned to flee from the
room, he was shot in the leg, according to
Santa Ana police.
Hinz and the other employe were then
ordered to empty all the money from the
hvo cash registers and the office ,sale into
a white pillow case, police sald'. They
were then told to lie face down on the
floor as the two men left by a rear exit.
A Santa Ana police officer on his way
to the scene saw a car containing the
suspects heading in the opposite d.irec·
tion. When he turned around to follow
them. they sped off, allegedly dropping
the while pillow case in the street as they
fled:
CUAST S OLYMPIC
STA RS FEA T URED
The Orange Coast's "gold stars" in the
Olympic Games -decathlon champ Bill
Toomey of Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar's teen·age Madam Butterfly, Toni
Hewitt -are featured in reports directly
from Mexico City today.
DAILY PILOT Sports Editor Glenn
White analyzes: Toomey's big win, looks
ahead to Miss Hewitt's competition to-
night and covers other local aspects of
the 19th Olympiad in his on-scene re-
ports starting ·today on Page 21.
Orange CCHUt
. .,.
Weather
The morning tog may r i 1 I
tho air again Tuesday when the
Orange Coast gets more hazy
sunshine and tile ten1peraturc
stays bogged down in the upper
sixties. Inland it'll be a near·
tropical 80.
I NSIDE l'ODA Y
Melod11lo·nd unodb (and un-
draµe1) its "Bride of Tomorroio"
tomort01.0, aJid aU 1ht'U be Ultot"
ing i.r o wcddino NU oftd o
smile. Ste Entertainment, PtJVf
10.
--....... --------- -~ -'---~-------.;:;~ .... -~~:,.;,..;, ________________________ ... ~l>-C ~.~~---------_... ___ .... ____ ..
•
\
I
\
~I
' •
'
)
.2 DAILY PILOT
FroM P .. e I
MR. BEEK .•.
"" vlde maldllng fundl for lho harbor pn>-
jecl. Mr. Beek WU Newport's llnl
....... 'Q!lllar.
Mr. -allo !O'Ved .. lllCl'tlal')'·
manager ol tho old Balboa Chl!nber of
Commerce. wb1ch for yean bad a run-
nin& feud with tho Newport Harbor
chamber.
An avid &aUor, be wu former com·
moclore ol tho So.ilhern Calilomla
Yllcbtlng AJaoclol!OO and the Newport
Harbor Y llcbl Club.
Hll ...-viVUI Include hlJ widow, ol tho
home addreu, m s. Bay Fronl, Balboa
Island; IOM, Joseph Allan Jr .• Barton
and Seymour, all ol Newport. and 9
grandchildren.
Last rites are pending at Paciilc View
Memorial Park.
From Page I
APOLLO .•. ..
get our union cards."
After pauing out of c1111tra range,
Schirn tcld the control cent.er that they
Ooat around ln their welghtleu cabln like
monkeys in a cage, using hands and feet
i. get around. "We've really become efficient. at It,
like we've gone ape," he laughed. ~ After the telecast, the astronautl began
a busy day of preparing for re-ettr)' and
splashdown.
They are to trigger their spacecraft
engine over Hawaii and streak through
the atmospMre to a landing 10UUleut <lf
Bennuda.
Tbe aircraft carrier Essell'. heads a
large recovery force waiting to retrieve
the astronautl u they complete their 11·
day space mission that has put the
United States firmly on course to the
moon. ,
"I'm look1ng happily to Tuesday,'
Schirra said Sunday night as the
astronaut.a exchanged lighthearted banter
wilh ground controllers and tension and
CQmptainta were gone.
* * * Networks Cover
Apollo Splash
AU three nia;or network.I wilt of·
fer live coverage of the Apollo 1
splashdown Tue.sdau monting.
ABC (Channel 7 J wilt begin it!
coverage at 3:15 a.m., while CBS
(Chamul 2) and NBC (Channel 4)
wiU it.art at 3:30. TM rchedvfe of
«Hnt.I:
3:41 o.m. PDT -Main spacecraft
tngfne fired for about 10 second.a as
AJ)OlEo 1 1oar1 southeast of Ratbaii,
1lowfna jf.I 1peed and starting it down-word. '
3:45 a.m. -Cone-sflaped capsule
carr¢ng the cutronaut.T separates
from the main engit1e.
3:56 a.m. -Spacecraft en t e Ts
earth'• atmosphere 400,000 feet over
HotUton, t1u heat shield on ft.s blunt
end fadng forward.
4:01 a.m. -Two 16.5-foot diameteT
drogua parachutei cUplo11 at 23,000
feet to •Iota tllc ere/ft IJl<td from
300 to 115 mU:t1 an hour.
4:08 a..m.. -Three 83.5-foot dia-
meter mo:in chutes deploy at 10,000
feet ta reduct spted to 22 m.p.h.
4:12 a.m. -Spla.!lldown 230 miles
!Outh-southeast of Bermuda, where
the aiT~aft carrier Essex i~ standing
b11 for recovef'll.
Auto Accessories
Of $750 Taken
Automotive accessories custom pro-
duet!!d by a Costa Mesa firm and valued
at more than '750 were discovered stolen
by burglars Sunday while the shop
ownera were away at a car show.
Officer Patrick Rodgers said lhe seven
bright orange Volkswagen fenders , one
rear deck hood and a mold used to form
the unique Items were taken out the rear
door.
OAilY PllOT
au.i.GI <CMlT ..v-.IStnNO COM'AH'f
tl•i•rt N. w,,, ,,__, .... ,.,.lll'lft'
J1,1t k, C11rl1y
VloJ ,, • ....,, tM Ge••* MINtoe•
Th•m11 K1111ll
f.tlllot
Th111111 A. M11rphi111
/NM9111!1 t•llw
P1~f Nl1~11 -0-eewN ... Oflflu
JJO Witt lty Strief
M1ln111 .Yolr111: P.O. ••• 11•0. •1626 --Hc-1'1 ludl: ml W•I ..... tou~rd '--~:mF-tA.,._
H1111tlflttlll INCi! »t ""$:!' .. I
• •
Monday, Oc-21, 1'1611
DEATH TAKES NEWPORT HARBOR PIONEER
State S1n1t1 Secretary JoHph Allen BHk
FrotH Page I
KENNEDY MEMOIRS •••
ment of the withdrawal was made.
Kennedy wrote that in lhe early stages
of the debate over what to do, "most
felt _ . • that an air strike against the
missile site could be the only course."
Ltter during the first day, he said, the
Idea of a quarantine or blockade was
raised.
Although support for a blockade grew,
Kennedy wrote, most of the president's
military advisers "argued strongly , , .
that a military attack was essential."
Then Defense Secretary Robert s.
McNamara was an early advocate of the
"blockade'' tactic finally used, Kennedy
reported.
He described how other preparations
were far advanced for an attack against
Cuba should the blockade f a i J •
McNamara, for example, already had
figured that 250,000 men would be re-
quired for an invasion, including 90,000
Marines and airborne forces, and 2,000
air sorties against Cuban targets. One
estimate said there would be more than
25,000 U. S. casualties.
The State Department was put to work
on a "crash" basis to devise a plan for
civil government of C u b a alter an in·
vasion, Kennedy wrote.
As the crlail unfolded, Robert Kennedy
reported, his brother "was not eanguine
about the results ••• each hour the situa·
lion grew steadily more serious. The feel·
ing grew that this cup was not going to
pass and that a direct military con·
frontalion between the two great nuclear
powers v.•as inevitable.''
Kennedy said the president made his
decision for a naval blockade instead of
an air attack Saturday night, Oct. 20.
There wu a final meeting lhe next mom·
lng where the president was told that
even a surprise attack could not be cer·
lain of complete suceesa ln removing the
mlsalles, Kennedy aaid.
Even after President Kennedy an·
nounced his actions on Monday night,
Kennedy said, military preparatioru con-
Unued.
The late senator sald his brother
ordered the Pentagon to prepare for an
invasion.
Robert S. McNamara, then defense
Pair Arrested
After Assaults
Oll Policemen
A 53-year-old Costa Mesa woman and
l Garden Grove man wel'1! arrested on
charges of assauIUng Newport Beach
traffic officers in two separate incidents
over the weekend.
Mrs. Ad a Nathalie Marque!, 981 W.
18th Street was · arrested Sunday on
charges that she kicked Patrolman
Creig Johnson repeatedly Jn the groin
after ahe wu stopped for a t.raffic cita-
tion.
The alleged attack came Sunday
morning at Bayside Drive and Beacon
Bay as the ~·oman wa:o1 placed under
arrest for reportedly tearing up the traf-
fic cil.atlon Johl\$00 had IS5Ued her.
The woman, clad in a knit drds and
hi.gh·heel&, was released from jail Sun-
day on IQ5 ball.
Police 1ald Johnson wns unable to re-
turn to wort ws.y. He was reltased
&lnday llter trutmeni at Hoq M ..
morill Hoopltal.
Leroy Wallace Btacb, 12, 111'71 Euclld,
.Garden Grove was aITt4led early Sahli'·
day alter bt was stopped on reckless
driving cbarau by Olllcer T. 8. Smlll!.
Beach, who police said was wanted
by 1even other So.ithem C1Ulomla law
enf ...... ent agenci6, WU jailed after
a ICUIDe wtll! lhe patrolmon.
SmJth said he hid clocked Beach at
e1ceulve speed in a 25 mph 10ne In
c.nina d•I Mar. '!be officer af10 aid that
Beach hid nm aeveral stop slgnl.
ll<acb r<malned to Jill thla morning
uncler fll,sst ba1L I
secretary and one of lbe earliest ad-
vocates of a blockade, told the president
that 250,000 men would be necessary,
Kennedy said.
One of the times of gravest concern,
Kennedy said, was Wednesday when the
quarantine went into effect and it was
learned that a Russian submarine had
moved into position, just outside the
blockade line, in between two Russian
ships.
Describing the president's reaction,
Kennedy wrote, "His hand went up to his
face and covered his mouth . _ • his face
seemed drawn, hl1 eyes pained, almosl
gray ••. "
"Inexplicably, I thought ol when he
was ill and almost died; when he lost his
child; when we l~arned that our oldest
brother had been killed ••. " ·
The late senator sald there was regular
cont.act with Khruahchev.
The real break came in a letter from
the Soviet premier received Friday
morning in which Khrushcht?v first of·
fcred to withdraw the missiles.
A meuage received S a t u r d a y ,
however, from the Foreign Office of the
Kremlin, demanded that the United
States remove its missiles from Turkey
in e1change for the withdrawal, Kennedy
wrote. This wu rejected.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff, KeMedy
wrote, recommended "an air strike on
Monday, followed shortly afterward by
an Invasion , .. "
Jn the midst of the meeting news came
that the U2 plane piloted by Maj. Rudolf
Anderson Jr. of South Carolina. one of
the two Air Force pilot.. who had carried
out the original reconnaissance missions
that uncovered the missile preparations,
had been hit by a Russian missile over
Cuba, Kennedy wrote.
"At first, there was almost unanimous
agreement that we had to attack early
the next morning," the late senator said,
but the president "pulled everyone
back."
He related lhat President Kennedy
"pulled everyone back" and lhe strattgy
nf gradual pressure through the naval
blockade was conUnued.
Robert Kennedy said the first days of
slrategy meetings were dominated by
con!lderatlon of the "mora1 question" of
whether. despite what had happened the
United States could attack a small naUon
like Cuba and still maintain a moral posi·
lion at home and in the eyes of the world.
College District
Beats Inflation
On Student Costs
Orange Coast Junior College District,
for oae year anyway, has beaten in-
fl ation.
An annual report shows the co.st of
education per pupil went up only 11 cen\I
last school year.
The report, prepared for district
t.rustec3 by Supt.. Norman E. Wataon,
stresses economies.
Des pite an inflationary spiral , the
district through economiting held the
1967-68 cost. per pupil to $571.45, up only
11 cents from $571-34 ln 1966-67, the an-
nual report Jl(ltcl.
Al a reSllll, It ii claimed, the dlstrl~
spent leu per atud<nL han any other
Junior college district to lhe stale ucept
a couple ol desert area districts with
Um!ttd coune ollertnp.
To accompllah ll!la, tho "port at.Ito,
11vlrtuatly no new programa wire
establlliled, na addlUona! lnstructon
were employed Jnd no ne" equl=
was purchaaecl. VlrtuaDJI all -t
were ellm.lnatfld."
rt ts stated the economies were
necessary to k .. p Jhe budiet to balance
btcaWJI of overrtd1 elecUoa failures in
19"" and 1987.
A fl.IS mlUlon bond 1111110 linct bu
ialled by a narrow maram.
. -.
Lag11na~ Leads Res~ue '
.P~amatiC Operat~n One of W m{s Most Dari11.g
'-All'F_ .,...._-._ llWa
-9"""" ID I dnlllallc-...... IJf lb ..... ""-Oil tho .COUI ol l!Ol'th
WlilMi &lnday, iine' ol lbi -darioi jollo d' the-enU,. war.
He wU JdenUHed in a communique
rrom~Saigon· u ·Maj. Robert D. Schular ,. :rr, ol l::aiuna lWb, but eflorta to
eatabllsh bla address were unsuccessful
today.
Ourinl the belllsh lnllsion inVolvlng"lhe
helloopter rucue unit dubbed The Jolly
Gretn Gjanll, North Vielna!l)ese gunners
on anenal-lik& Tiger laland-blazed away
at ~ dr~~ sceno !Jf!shore.
Two Navy jets -theii' guns empty of
any more ammunition -even made
perilous passel over an island blu!f to in.
, tl.mldlte antiaircraft crewi find " dr8w fire
away from 0. helicopter bovmn, over
typhoon whipped swells ln the South
Cblna Sea.
Sharpshooting gunners shot off the tail
of the first Jolly Green Giant chopper to
arrive on the scene, where two injured
fliers were struggling in the ~y, 10.foot
waves,
A aecorld aheU slammed lnlo tht big H3
helico_pter, sinking It within a few
seconds. but the four crewmen managed
Front Page I
HIPPIE LAW • •
would be innocent of malicioUI inlent.
T h e ordinance ts designed specifically
for use in such cases as the Aug. 3 to 4
Newport Pop Feattval at Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds, which brought about
100,000 people to the Harbor Area.
"Clearly, this law would have to be
enforced selectively," says Yeamans.
"What policeman would arrest an old
~·oman sitting on the sidewalk beating a
tambourine collecting money for the
Salvation Army; even though her con·
duct constitutes a poHible double viola-
tion of the law?," Jilil article continues.
What Yeamans Is getting at ts this:
he belleves the law a11 It is drawn up
now could be used as a weapon against
the youth <>f the communJty and would
be a po lied unfairly.
Another point of the ordinance requires
curtains in surfing vans which are grow-
ing in popularltv -or any other method
or screenJn.e: vision -not be used to
bl6ck view into the vehicle.
Yeamans said in his father's opinion,
the state has virtually pre-f:mtrled th e
field in motor vehicle control legislaUon
and the city may be powerleu in this
area.
City officials were caught by surprise
at Yeaman's UCJ announcement, which
should bring a conttn«ent to City Coui:s·
cil chamben at 71 Fair Drive to dl3·
cu!!I the matter.
"I don 't thirik they'\•e really tri&t fo
find out what It is." said Fred Sorsabal.
administrative assistant 1t1b!tltutlng for
vacationing City Manager Arthur R.
McKenzie.
"I don't really have any comment,"
said Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, su,1,re.stlng
that what Costa Mesa doe3 Ahouldn't con-
cern anv UCI students except those living
within the ~Uy limits.
If apprt1ved and r.iassed on as rJnal at
tod11v'ii: Cltv Co11ncil session. the r"owd
control and sanitation measure will fi!O
Into effect In 30 days, according to city
officials.
Vietnam Hero Fined
For Drug Possession
SYDNEY, AuslraUa (UPI) - A U.S.
Marine recommended for two Bronte
St.an for bravery In Vietnam was fined
$224 today on a charge of marijuana
possession.
Steven Lemar Bailey. 20, of Colusa,
Calif., appeared before Judge C. S.
Rodgers on the charge. He was arrested
at Mascot Airport Oct. 12 on arriva1 in
Auatralla on leave.
.
to -ble 111,1\-IA ~ to avoid fOlac
-•hblt. A.ti:. ~ P11are.tcUtman st.Ye T .
Wlii\e, 24, of Loi Allol Calif., WU bop-
UUd In botll11re and Icy seawater on !il3
first ~e m.ls.lion, military gpokeimao
said. .
White swam to the two Injured jet
joc.keYJ who had balled out .of their Air
Force fl'4 Phantom after It wa• hit by
groundf1re from Tl&et laland and dlaabl·
ed. .
j)raalng Ille Injured pelr Into Ule
mt., ·the --chopper cmnneo jotoecl them In wtiat appeared lo be an qonlzln&
. drill lo death u tldea canted them
toward. lhe'bloody ll!llld. -
Lea than four m1let lay between the
tlnj' raft floWla and the Commun!SI CUJ!S,
whlcll began lobbln& sbellJ lnlo the water
as the slx doomed -or seemingly IO -
filers drllttd.
Rifle fire began as soon 11 the two
rafts drifted into range, while 24 Air
Force and some Navy jets frpm. the car·
rler Intrepid acreamed overhead, making
pasSeotat the gun-brtstltog Island bluffs
while aJIOlh<r helicopter'owroached.
The rescue hellcopter c~ S~ven
N. Northern, 21, ol Rlvenlde roomed to
under the blanket ol gunfire with ,Maj.
Cbarlel E,JOc:ker, 34, of BalUmore, Md
to tht P!M'• ill\.
Northorn uoed a winch hnilf lo g1111
aboard the lGb and 511t men he ha,, aav·
ed In 225 rescue missions or the war and
the chopper roared seaward again for
another run.
Maj. Scbular was aboard Wicker's H3 :
heUcopt.er, but his role in the rescue was
not clear!)' spelled out ln the nillitary
communique received today.
"We were ooly aboot 1 \I mpos !run
the Island when we finally made tho
pickup," WJ.cker said. "l.'ve never mJde a
faster pickup 1n all my life."
Rescue<(. men were identified u Wblte,
Sgt. llobert T. Anderaon, 20, ol St. Louis,
Mo., and pllobl Capt. Gerald W. Moore,
SI, of Washington, D. C., and Capt. Lau-
rens c. Davia, Jr., 29, or Fcrt Worth,
Tei., aU of them happy to be alive.
The Jolly Green Glanta are the most
decorated airmen to serve in the Viet-
nam war as 11 result of counUess acts of
cool heroism in halTowlng lituations.
Sgt. Northern, who ia only 21, bas
earned the Silyer Star, Dl!tlngu1shed
Flying Crosa, Purple Heart and 15 Air
Medals during his two years of aerv1ce
with the rescue unit.
Police Quiz Witnesses
In Mesa Girl's Slaying
A crew of eight Costa Mesa detectivei
working almost around the clock in·
terviewed potentlal witnesses In the Rose
Marie Weidner murder case over tne
weekend, but added litUe to what they
already know.
No new information was brought. to
lJght in the brutal, ambush murder of the
pretty cocktail wa!tres.s last Tburaday as
she walked toward her apartment after
getting oil work.
The U.year-old woman was cut down
by four slugs from a heavy caliber pistol
while walking between two carports at
the Acapulco Apartments, 741 W. 18th St.,
where she lived with a boyfriend.
Richard Surface, 28, was cleared as a
suspect, as was Mrs. Weidner's estranged
husband, James, 28, of El Monte, who
fainted when Baldwin Park police noOfled
him of her death.
Weidner said he hadn't seen his wife in
a year and a polygraph test administered
Thursday nlght in Costa Mesa supported
his alibi about where be had been at the
time of the murder.
Police believe the slayer who Jay in
wait for Mrs. Weidner, just starting her
fourth week of employment at the
Orangefalr restaurant in Fullerton. may
have been wounded himself.
From Page I
THORPE ...
known a3 Westways.
In 1925, Thorpe founded the United
Rabbit CorporaUon. The company a o 1 d
grown rabbits for breeding stock to
people who wanted a back yard busl.nesa.n
The company then bought back 10,000
of the young rabbits weekly to ship to
the East.
Not a trick was• missed by Capt.
Thorpe. German sausage makers were
employed and "rabbit pork sausage"
took New York by storm, selling as a
delicacy for $1 a pound.
In 1929, Capt. Thorpe started a logging
and saw mill operaUon at Big Bear
Lake, but by 1946 he wu back at the
beach.
He is survived by his wile, Goldie, of
the famlly home, 890 W. 15th St., New·
port Beach.
Other survivors include a brother, Wil·
liam, and a sister, Mrs. Virgi.D.ia Banks,
both of Los Angeles.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednes-
day at Bell Broadway Chapel, C o s t a
Mesa. Interment will follow at P..1elrose
Abbey Mausoleum.
A trail of blood dropa led from Ille
patJo area where the victim fell -
mortally wounded -and aample.s were
taken for analy&i.3 by the Orange County
Sheriff's crlme lab.
Costa Mesa Police Officer Randy Nutt
wu patrolling in the neighborhood when
he beard a shot, screams and fotD' more
shot&, but he was unable to determine the
source 1n time to catch a suspect.
Resldenta in the apartment complex
reported hearing a car roar away
moments after Mrs. Weidner was
murdered.
Questioning has since shifted to her life
during lhe past year, with ~workera and
associates being questioned about who
may have felt he or she bad reason to kill
the victim.
A Tuesday funeral service Is scheduled
at St. Mary's Cemetery in Lancaster,
N.Y., with arrangements being handled
by Westcliff Mortuary locally.
In addition to her husband, Mrs.
Weidner leaves her parenta, Mr. and
Mrs. D. Sabio, of New York, alq with a
sister, Dorothy de Plzo, also of New
York.
Mesa Mom Still
Waiting for Word
. On Sweepstakes
A Costa Mesa woman who arrlved
home Friday with a $4.25 profit out -Of the
$8 she took to Las Vegas -to learn she
could win up to $200,000 In Saturday's
Irish Sweepstakes race -ls still waiUng
to hear today. ,
Mrs. Rulh M. Warmlngton, of 238
Palmer St., is guaranteed about $2,000 for
her ticket, but her horse, Exchange, plac·
ed fifth after being tabbed a 7 to l
favorite to win.
"It didn't exactly CQme in a favorite,"'
said Mrs. Wannington, a widow who
, WDrks at Lido Mobile Home Park,
Ne-a·ROrt beach, aa a bookkeeper.
The ,Trish Hospital Sweepstakes totall-
ed $4.8" million this year and Mrs.
Warm~~ notified last Friday thai
she had been drawn for one cf the top
ticket spots.
Her daughter Kathy,· )8.. • t'o'U -~av~
the telegram when Mrs. Warmingtoil"•r·
rived home from a week in Las Vegas, in
which she parlayed her $8 stake into
$12.45 in the nickel slot machines.
0
OMEGA
Your Om.!go
Salt1 &: Se"'ic' Agency
,,_
l1ct1!-H
~"""" 1121 "' ·: .... ,,..., ......
RINGS S2 49 SUED, '"'" • O.tHltt -. .... Mlul111 Dl.amonOI -·-$4.99
.hnlry Dnltolntl
A Spoc11ltyl
Naw 2 Great Siar" To Sene YOll
HAllOI IHGmQ HUNTIN•TON CIKfll
CllfTll RACH • IDllf&U
UM HAllOI &ft. HUNnN•TOlf RACK
COITA llllA MM411 ltJ.lltt
Open -· Tliur .. Fri. Tiii 9 p.m.
-.. ffMo 1111. --"-11-. --... --· --'
• •
Mondly, Oetobtr 21.. 1968 DAILY PILOT 3
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Youth Drug Use. Troubles Lyn~h
Reeds •••
,.,
" In the Wind
,_ The Cancer Society points out in
.: a news release just crossing my
desk that it has been estimated that
if present trends continue one rniJ ..
lion children in school today will
die of lung cancer eventually.
"Many of today's children are
laying the groundwork !or cancer
later in life by early adoption of the
cigarette smoking habit," says the
American Cancer Society.
In my family we do not consider
the possibility of lung cancer as
_ some distant point in time as a
< light topic. We have been struck by
lung cancer and .(now its impact
not only on the victim, but on all
those around the dying family
member as well.
* It is easy to be preachy about
lung cancer and smoking, but we
try to avoid that. The American
Cancer society leads the way by
;bowing that education is the best
means to avoiding suicide by
:igarette for our children.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Ca!Uomla
AUy. Gen. Thomas C. Lynch is "deeply
coocemed" over the rttenl upsurge in
dangerou.s drug arrests among young
persons. ,
He noted marijuana offenses dropped
from 70 to 68 percent during the first six
months oC the year compared to the first
half of 1967. However, dangerous drug
violatiorui climbed a surprising 3Z4 per-.
ent above figures reported for a com~
• arable 1967 period. ,
Included io the dangerous drug
category are LSD and ampbetamlnes,
known as "acid" and speed."
"I am deep I y concerned over the
appalling increase io dangerous drug
arrests," said Lynch. "To bO dliermined
and quickly, too -is wbet¥1\there ii
solid correlation between the decrease ln
marijuana violations and the UpsW'ge in
dangerous drug arrests."
The Attorney General a a l d juvenlle
DAILY l'ILOT $tiff l'htt.
The society has developed an ex·
tensive library -0f films on the
smoking topic which are designed
;o show that little good comes from
smoking and that death could be
the result.
Information on how people can Planning Halloween Treat
~ promote cancer education in school
or community can be obtained by
calling: the Cancer Society office at
838--0510. There is a weal·th of in·
formation available for presen·
... tation to all from the toddlers to
adults.
Girls of Huntington Beach High School's Tower Club will play host
to 65 youngsters from Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa next
Saturday at old-fashioned Halloween Party. Choosing pumpkins for
event are (from left) Illene Barranger, p_arty chairman, and helpers
Sue Barry, Anita Ruud.
* The imp act of discovery that
someone you know will die soon of
lung cancer is interesting to
observe. Those of my immediate
family, including my wife and I ,
quit smoking immediately. My
children have no inclination to
smoke nor a model in the hom e to
show them how to smoke cigaret·
tes.
Watch Your Mannerisms
'
Around Claims Adjuster
But just as important, a lot of
people I know have stopped smok·
ing cigarettes. As t hey say, "I
don't really know whether cigar·
ettes cause lung cancer or not, but
I don 't think I'll take the chance.,,.
There are some persons con-
nected with the family who eviden-
tally fee] guilty that they have not
quit smoking. I hear often that it
really is smog and not cigarettes
causinf;! Jung cancer. I don't really
know . but I hope to wait around a
rew years to see what happens.
Valley Schedules
Competitive Swim
Classes for Youth
A compeUtive swimming class for
Fountain Valley residents between the
ages of six and 17 begins at 6 o'clock
tonight at the Fountain Valley High
School pool.
Coached by Jack Strapp from La Quin-
ta High School, hour-long classes will be
conducted Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays for the next eight weeks.
Registration fee is $5.50 and can be
paid at city hall, 10200 Slater Ave.
Years T laat Is
WASH1NGTON (UP I) -When the auto
insurance claims adjuster comes to call,
be may mark you down as a knuckle-
cracking, liirsmacking man who talks
like a girl.
Or he may report that you have "hair
in nostrils," your head i:s: "flat on top"
and you click your teeth.
Why does he collect this type of in·
formation ? Some insurance companies
claim they need it to decide whether to
take a case to court or make a quick set·
Uement.
Strategy on how to settle an auto in-
surance claim was collected by investi·
gators for the Senate Antitrust and
monopoly Subcommittee which is exp-
ected to reopen its hearings on the
multibillion dollar auto insurance indu-
stry when the new Congress opens in
January.
Some of the firms, in their written In-
structions to adjusters, outlined some-
what complicated procedures, while
others recommended a straightforward
approach.
The committee file showed that All·
state Insurance Co. of Skokie, Ill., gives
its adjusters a guide for reporting on a
"claimant, Insured or witness" that in·
eludes items like whether his "eyes are
cocked ": if he likes to scratch himself, or
indulges in "excessive spitting or slaver-
ing;" how he laughs-loudly, or quietly;
whether he hangs around "five-and·IO
cent stores," or if bis lips are "red, pale
or blue."
Settling the claim itself involves a dif·
Six Here, Three
By BRIAN SUU.IV AN advanced space vehicles al the 19th
NEW '\'.ORK (AP) -To those watching Congress of the Federalion. More than
back on earth, it would take six years for l 600 scientists from over 30 countrles are
the space vehicle and ltl rid.en to rea.cb' ... att.ending.
the nearby star Alpha_ Centauri. For Because a space vehicle cannot fly any
those aboard, tbe Uip would last three greater than the speed of light, he said, it
years. was believed that the human life sp~
Because of this, and other reasons, a would limit the range or interstellar
space expert asked the International travel to a few light decades, to only the
• Astronautical FederaUon 'I1lursday to nearby Milty Way.
• lead the planning for manned interstellar But the time dilation means, he said,
; flight, which he aakt mJchl begin In tome that tbe actual physical aging process of
• form at tbe atart~ol the next century. both the space tra'felers and the vehicle
• The time diHerence ii baaed on Einl-ltleli would slow down by earth stan·
tein's special relativity-U a vehicle al>" dards.
' proaches the speed oC light, all To fly to the farthest known star
dimensiono along the pa!lt, including ,ystem, 30295 in the Constellation
. lime, will shrink from the point of view Beetes, Froning said, would take ao
: of the vehicle and itl crew. billion years by earth calendan at the
: "As a consequence," tht npert sald, speed of light But to space travelers, the
; "there ls the intMesthag and ex· trip woukl last 45 years.
. traordinary pQSSlblllty that enormous For fuel, the use of hydrogen atoms
-astronomic distances could be traversed round In space, scooped up by the space
• by 11uch a craft within reasonably abor1 vehicle and proceued by fusion, has been
; intervals or vtblcle Ume." , suggested to achieve speeds near that of
• The review of iotentdlar Diibl studl" lliht.
was made by H. David Froning Jr., pro-"Ramjet·llke vehicle systema," Fron-
' ject manai'I' of 'Advanced systems and Ing said, "which can also collect and por-
• l<chnology for McDonnell Doullu COrp., COii the eoergy that exlsta within the
t Santa Monica. Calif. ttnuOWI yet enormoua fabric o( cosmk
Fr~g gave a paper to a sess;,on on space appear to show the only ~
fereat set of rules £or some companies.
The Ohio Casualty Group of Hamilton,
Ohio, put it this way:
"Claimants who can be isolated from
helpful friends and relatives at settle-
ment time are not only more susceptible
to settlement, but are somewhat Jess dif·
licult to deal with."
This company said the claimant's
lawyer also can be a target for special
handling. The best time to get a settle-
ment from him may be when he "has
just lost a big case" and his morale is
low, or if "he is starting a new fiscal
year and hasn't reached an upper tax
brackeL"
AF to Reinforce
Wings of Fills
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Air
Force swing-wing Fill fighter-bombers
grounded since late September are back
on flying status but will be modified to
reinforce their wing structures.
Wings will be strengthened on all Flits
to be produced and the approximately
90 already delivered to the Air Force
will gradually be called back to the
factory for reinforcement, the Air Force
said Friday.
UnUI the planes' wings are reinforced
they will fly under restrictions limit-
ing violent maneuvers by the pilot. The
same restrictions were in effect before
the ground.in& began.
• Ill Space
for such relativistic night. ..
Such a spaceship Is beyond man 's
technical ability now, he said, but it uses
known physical processes and doeSD'I
violate known laws of Physics.
"This is not just conjecture," Froning
said. "It is theoretically possible. There
do appear to· be ways to do it."
Based on the rate of technological
growth in the last 30 years, he said, a
beginning might be made in the early
2000s.
Froning offered a" equa~on ror the re-
quired density of hydrogen gas to keep
the ship going. And hi! said the relA.tlvbo
Uc cooslderatlons mean the requirement
would be Jess as the journey reached
outward .
"Therefore," he sa,id, "the demonstra-
tion of a aatisfactory margin of vrhicle
efflclency and Interstellar fuel aupply
durin1 •horter journey• to the most
nearby star aystems may provide the
nectssary technological assurance and
courage to embark upon longer journeys
to lbe further rtacbts of the unJvene."
11Such an awesome international en-
deavor,'' be ad4ed, "wquld wrtly have
no chance of tuceest without a level ot
harmonloua human rtllUons far bo)'tlld
that whlch exlst on our plaoct today."
dflli arrests between Jan. t and July t
escalated 165 percent above the first half
of 1967. During the p a s t eight years,
Lynch said they have ioata.sed 2,000
pe«enl.
Youthful drug arrests in many of the
state's larger counuea more than doubled
this year. Los Angeles drug arrests in-
, creued from 2,750 to 6,139, Orange
County 'tram 45.2 to I,176 and San Diego
from 37t to 1,045.
Juvenile drug arrests during the first
Golden West JC
Sells Canadians
On School Aids
A group of Canadian educ ators a n d
architects are returning to t h e i r
homeland today sold on American
teaching' aids used at Crlilden West
College 1n Huntington Beach.
The visiting delegation headed by Pier·
re Bisaillon president of the board of
trustees of College Edouard-Montpetit
hopes to incorporate Crlilden West-type
electronic devices in the classroom
design of the college's new Montreal
campus.
"What we see on your campus con-
firms our belief that multi-media is the
direction of the future ," said Bisaillon,
whose four-member party spent an entire
day at Golden West and Orange Coast
college, Saturday.
Golden West innovations include an
"audi~tutorial" freshman biology class,
mearung students go to lecure on Mon-
day and do tape-recorded Jab work Tues-
day through Friday.
The library maintains a "listening lab''
for a variety of courses. It's outfitted
with slides, movies, tapes and radios.
Closed-circut television and a syn-
chronized movie-slide device have been
built into the Forum lecture hall plus
outlets fllr computers which are to be in·
stalled later.
'Is Paris Bw·ning?'
To Be Shown Tuesday
The movie "ls Paris Burning?" will be
presented by the Irvine Film Group at 7
p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Tuesday in UCI Scien-
ce Lecture HalL
Admission will cost $1.
half of Ult year totaled 672 In Alameda
county, r.15 In San Francisco County and
320 in Contra Costa County.
Percentagewis(', greater increases oc-
curred in the San Joaquin and Sacra·
mento valleys whlcb Lynch noted had
previously been "non-problem artaa:."
The mid·y,ear report showed juvenile
drug arrests in Fresno County rising
from 21 in 1967 to 154 the first haU of
1968. In Kern County, the increase was
from 19 to 192, Shasta from zero to 22 and
Yuba from two lo J9.
'J'he r e p o r t alao showed dangerous
drug a r r e 1 t s .lncreuing 86 percent
amOl'lg adults in Calilornia and mari-
juana arrests up 37 perctlllt during I.bl
first aix months ot Ult year.
Lynch also announced that for the lint
lime juvenlle arrests ln Alameda Coun&y
topped the 1,000 mark at 1,849. Leading in
this category are the counties ot Loa
Angeles, 13,999; San Diego, 2,72S;
Oranae, 2,014, and San Francisco, 1,920.
Dull Campaign?
Political Biittpn Savers Vnliappy
VICTORVILLE (AP) -It's a dull
campaign for the poliUCal button col-
lectors, says Elmer A. Piercy. His own
collection -which he values at $50,000 -
contains 20,000 political item's dating back
to George Washington.
"I sometimes wonder," Piercy said to-
day, "if the campaign button as such
may not be vanishing from the American
scene.
"It seems that nobody's wearing them
any more, except for the novelties -
'Vote For Someone' or 'Elect Pat
Paulsen' or 'Vote for Snoopy.'"
Piercy says Nixon buttons like "Nixon-
Agnew ?• or "Tell It Like It ls" are not
what he considers sparkling. He notes
that Humphrey 's supporters have rested
mainly on the "HHH" monogram. And
the Wallace camp has even less, says
Piercy.
There is nothing like the "hole-in·the
shoe'' pins for Adali Stevenson or the
John F. Kennedy rocking chair, he feels.
One pin, however, has caught Piercy's
rancy : "Nixon Has What He Needs -A
Gnu Face."
According to Piercy, the battle of
slogans was especially bitter when
Wendell Wilkie opposed Franklin D.
Roosevelt -"Or. Jekyll in Hyde Park"
-in 1940.
WiUde's people turned out 600 election
Items. Yet some are so scarce, a single
pin now may be worth $45.
For real interest, Piercy likes to recall
the McKinJey-Bryan race of 1896. William
McKinley's supporters turned out 900 dif·
ferent items while the Wiliam Jennings
Bryan camp came out with 300.
McKinley just sat on his front porch,
says Piercy, while Bryan stumped the
country. McKinley won.
One button from his campaign shows
McKinley and his running mate Garrett
Hobart facing each other in profile. It's
valued at '2i).
New, Safer Windshields
Designed to 'Save Face'
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -PI as tic
surgery on traffic crash victims tor facial
lacerations will be a rarity in 10 years
because of new car safety windshields, an
anatomy professor has predicted.
"We used to see some horrendoU.s
lacerations but since the 1966 models with
the new windshields the facial injury
reduction is so tremendous that plastic
surgeons will not see these types of in-
juries any mo r e," reported Donald
Huelke of the University of Michigan.
Huelke, a staff member ·of the
Our
85th
university's ltighway Safety Research
Institute, discussed the safety provided
by shatter-proof windshields at a meeting
of the American Association f o r
Automotive Medicine .
''The windshields since 1966 are to
plastic surgeons as the decay preventer
Oouride is to del)tists," Huelke said.
He estimated that in 10 years almost
every motorist will drive a car equip-
ped with safety wind.shields. He said at-
trition and glass replacement "would
flush the old windshields out of the sys-
tem."
Anniversary Observance
You are invited to help us celebrate
Tuesday;
October 22nd
thru
Friday,
October 25th
Please j oin us for coffee, cake and cookies. Come
into th e branc h of fice nearest you any ti me during
banking hours.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
HUNTINGTON BEACH:
M9U "°''"'Av.nu. t '1122 Be.ch 8ovt•Vllilll
SANTAANA:
W2 North M.in &lrMt
"IUBTlN:
19t Wld N9"0rl""""""'
I
j
I
)
•
DAILY PILOT M~, Octobef 21. 1968
Review Set
On Jjuking
,
Of Papers
W.\SlllNG'l'ON tUPI) -The supreme
Courl qreed, faday to rule thll term
~ ~vat newapa~ in the same
community may comblne their prlnUng 8nd comnierclal operaUoos without
violating antttrust laws.
A tell cue involviq two Tucaon, Ariz.,
newSJllPUI ,,u accepted far bearing,
with a decf!icm to be banded down later
In the session.
In another ad.ion, the court. let stand a
Federal, Comnnm1catlons Commission
(FCC) onler whlcb will limit the pre-lJllDl'iae broadcuting ol ...... tbao %,000
~·--· The cowt re.fused to review a ktwer
..,,. T ... lllQ
.. .
'.Weleonaed Denae' -... -...
Czech Invasion .... ... ..
11: .. -
Troops Leaving
... ... ..
~ • ~ •
PRAGUE (AP) -Wlnaw Paci. oc-
cupailca · troopo began pulllna out ol
Czechoslovakta today.
The Hungarian new• agency MTI
"'ported tbe Ont llmlprlao unlll to
leave crosaed the aoutbem Clfehoslovak
border at tine potoll and'""" wolcom·
ed home with .... moa1e1 and bomt<n
lt:n.lnR acroa: hollies. .
In W1r11w, the POll!b armed forces
newspaper 7.ollerz W--.Soldier of
Freedom -said: "OUr 90\dlen are
retumlng bOme. Todoy ... aball greet
tbem conllally on their home soil"
Czechoslovak informants sal4l Sunday
nigh! thal thousand! ol troop! that in-
vaded Aug. 20-21 were JftPUing to
withdraw.
harvests by road. ....:
Czech and Slovak soldk!n have beer\':~
with the harveet 11n areas n e a r Soviet •
boob and artillery. ;
'Break-in' Opens
Some of Struck
Schools in NY
'
Tom GUNierson, dealer In
Chercikee, Iowa, for the Slour Cily
Journal, has proof the zip some-
times' ltlllv .. th.e zip code~!~!rsaid he ·nceived a letter po ked
May 1, 1965, and a check from near-
by ·Royal, Iowa; askbig !Qr a11 in· .
creaae in 1he n u m b e r -ol. news· ·
papers sent to a news carr\er.
Cherokee . Postmaster Phil Fassler
said. the· letter took lhree yeai;s to
travel t.he 35 mi I es because 1'it
dich\'t hit.>:e 11Jo p-zip code.''
ooort d<cllioa upholding FCC regulations barrihc the Jargel)r rural stations from
operaUhg at a power of more than 500
watt.s before I-o'clock in the morning.
The court · also agreed to ezamlne a
cue involving addlilooal regulatory
power eierted by the Foe>! and Drug Ad-
ministration over the field ol anUbioUcs
maoolacturJni.
FORMER JACQUELINE KENNEDY AND ONASSIS LEAVE CHAPEL Tbe .....,,.. said hundredJ of railroad
cara have been requlsftlooed to take t.he
departing Wanaw Pact troops and their
equJpment from tent e&mPI i n
Czechoslovakia to Eut Germ a n y ,
Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and the Soviet
border.
NEW YORK (UPI) -A boanl ol,
education authorized "legal break-bl" ta:
reopen public school& shut down by i
teachers' strilr.e was a partial auccess to-
day. ' ' .
T1le newspaper antitrust case involved
an appeal of the Arlz.ona Daily Star and
Vatican Greets Jackie's
A few more of the city'• 900 public
schools were reported open ~ than on
Friday, but exact figures were not lm·
mediately available.
The board a c ti o n authorizing local
scbool superintendents to b r e a k into
school buildings came as the clty'a third
teachers' strike this term entered its se-
cond week.
· Toclon Dally Citizen, both of Tucson,
from •a rullni by Olief U.S. Dbtrict
Judge Jama A. Wallh.
Forty.four olh<r oewspapen Inn cities
have ag:reementa: d. the aame general
description u the Daily Siar and the Dai·
ly Citiun.
Marriage wit.h Silence
The Soviet-Czechoelovak t r e a t y ,
raillied Friday, provides for most of the
Warsaw Pact occupatloo forces to leave
within two months. lnformanta ll1d about
711.000 troops will r<maln.
There was no officlal explanation, but it
was believed the Sovletl nttched from
air to surface trall!port because of cost
and tbe ]>06Slblllty that traosport planes
are needed elsewhere.
The strike, triggered by a dispute
between the United Federation ol
Teacberl (UFT) and a ocbool dlstrlct In
Brooklyn experlmeotlog In loeal CODtzol
of the schools, has aHected 1.11 mlWon
public ocbool cbildml.
So1ton'1 Cardinal Richard Cushing
beams proudlJI at he aporta an Indian
headdress pre$t11.Ud by membera of
South Dakota's Crmo Cr e e k Siou.s
tribe in Siou: Felli. TM prelate UW'
in South Dakot.a for ordination cere-
monies of Rev. Paul Anderson, as
bishop Coadjutor of the Duluth, Minn.
diocese. • Police in Southhampton, Eng-
land said merchant seaman K11fli
Vi of the Wand o! Tonga had one
of the better eX<:USes for car theft.
He said ho had to get back to his
ship after a party, so he -·a car wilhoat as1'ing the owner. "On my
i.sland, U you want to go home you
ill't ]>iclr up a ho..., and release it
wben .you get there/~ he told the
patrolman who slxlpped him. Not
believing In ertendiog local custom
too !ar. the judge fined the ~eaman
$72. •
William A. Herron, a &pub-
lican candidatt for tM Arizona
state legislature, felt it was the
crowning insult when the Steel·
workers Union Education Com-
mittee endor1ed his Democrotic
opponent. A longtime membtr
of SteelWOTker1 Local 3937 and
chairman of its safety commit-
tee, Herron said, "It's not right
that I 'm required to pay dues
money that is wed to the poUti·
cal advantage of my opponents. n
........................... .,..,
' . A taxpayer in Albert Lea, Minn.
is both prompt and poetic with his
real estate taxes, Freeborn County
treasurer Wilfred Knudtson said.
Knudtson s a i d the unidentified
man always submits a poem with
the second installment of his taxes.
This year's verse:
"Fr;>m time to time I get togeth·
er.~ little nest egg which I prize,
B~t pretty soon I hit a snag and
the bill for taxes does arrive.
;; And by the time I get unhooked,
My little nest egg s he is cook·
ed."
A IMO agreement between the Tucson
papen proposed the merger of their pro-
dudioo, cireulatloo, -and ad· vertis.ing functions. The idea, they told
the Supreme Court, saved a falling paper
-the Citizen -and saved an in-
dependmt news and editorial voice for
the community.
Bus Driver Hailed
As Crash Hero;
40 Lives Saved
lllLO, Hawaii (UPI) -Tour bus driver
Jay Malagday was pral9ed as a hero to-
day for hill efforts to avoid a crash Which
killed him and three California tourists
and Injured 31 others.
''I bel1eve that boy 1eariflced hia life tn
try to aave bis passengers," said police
officer Louil Atiooa.
The :ZS.yeat'Old Mala(day, a part.time
driver far a local tour Orm, was taking 44
sight.seen on a ride through Hawaii's
ICl!llic volcano country Saturday when bit
brakes failed on a twisting downhill road.
Malagday turned the left front corner
of the bus into a solid rock embankment
and the vehicle ground to a stop 100
yards later, leaving a trail of blood, glass
and twisted metal.
"That was the only way he coold have
stopped it," Akiona said. "He sacrificed
his life. lt could have been 10 limes worse
-40 dead instead of four."
The tourists killed were Frank Albano
of Santa Monica, Mrs. Virginia Blount of
Lakeview Terrace and Mrs. F..d.ilh Colon
of Los Angeles.
NY Police 'Sick'
Calls Miss Mark
NEW YORK (UPI) -A threatened
police a1owdown with nearly 4,500 men
calling in "sick" fell 5bort of iU mark to-
day.
The 22,000-member P a t r o I m e n ' s
Benevolent Aa9ociation <PBA) had
predicted that 20 percent of its mem·
bership would report "sick". But only 933
patrolmen phoned they were stricken with
"Hong Kong flu" or some olber ailment.
The figure could rise, however, because
some precinct switchboards were having
trouble keeping up with the calls. But the
total was expected to fall far short of the
predicted 20 percent
VATICAN CITY (UPI) -The Vatican
today greeted Jacquelloe Kennedy's mar-
riage to AristoUe Onassis with official
and disapproving silence but with private
hopes that it could • • s b o w un-
derstanding ...
The iuue centered on whether Oruw.is,
a member of the Greek Orthodox Church,
received a church annulment of ·his
previous marriage to Athina Livanos
before he married Mrs. Kennedy, a
Roman Calholic.
In any event, the Roman Catllolic
Church does not recognize the quickie
civil divorce Onassis' first wile got in
Alabama and unless there was an an·
nulment by the Greek church, his first
marriage remains valid in the eyes of lhe
Vatican.
Vatican officials said privately they
hoped to get information which would
enable them. to reach a decision.
The Vatican silence showed obvious
di.Bpleasure in this union of one of the
worJd'a moR famous W\'.llDeD and the
Greel: multidilllionaire. The wedding did
not rtceive a line 1n the Vatican
newspaper Osservatore Romano.
Unofficially, a high Vatican source
said:
"The church WCJUld like to be in a posi·
tion to show understanding. If we were
informed, for instance, that Mr. Onassis'
first marriage has been annulled by the
Hurricane Gladys
Whirls Tln·ough
Shipping Lanes
CAPE HATIERAS, N. C. (UPI)
Hurricane Gladys, which claimed fwr
lives and drove more than 76.000 per-
sons from their homes in a multimillion
dollar damage swath through Cuba and
Florida, whirled across the New York
to Europe shipping lanes today.
The season's seventh tropical slonn,
no longer a threat to land, pushed its
85-mile-an-hour winds further into the
open Atlantic.
The latest report placed it about 200
1ni}es east·southeast of Cape Cod, Mass.
Gladys, boasting 100 mph winds,
slammed ashore near the gulf resort of
Homosassa Springs, Fla .. aboUt midnight
Friday, cut a 30-mile wide damage path
across central Florida, and went into
lhe Atlantic. It went inland again Satur-
day ne.ar Hatteras, N. C., strafing the
famed outer banU with high winds
and rain before slipping back out to sea
Sunday morning.
Gladys Misses Mainland
Eastern Storms Dampen P hiladelpliia and Charlesto1i
C•llloMd•
Soulhem C.lltomi. ~ f1\r 1~\f1
•It\'! lllttlt d\s"IM In 1-rttv,_ lo.
div ftll'-111'11 !tie c:11111tmtno low
clouds •nd lo. d11r1"' l!!t mo!'n!M
MIF'I 11-The COllll.
La A~lft incl vlclnltv ti..:! ti11v
Mlllll!hw mos! d TM <llY Wiii! • l'lltll lwmperwlvT9 If Hit Civic Clli .....
d 71. Tlw hftfl s......-y w.1 7'. T"-
Alr Polluli.t control Dlslrlcl ,._1.
ed llvfol "''" In ~ bliln. Ton11111•1
'-Wiii ti. SL
The beech ll''NI wer1 dou4t In lt>e
fl'IC!ml"' wflh ,._ry aumhl"-I" ""'
an.n-Ind ~"""'lvrH -.1clllM • 111111 _, "· Tlla w1ter temper ..
ture .,..., ...
Slntllll"-•nd Wlml ftrnH'l'll\ll'T'I -ilnuld In the dftlrts. Hlell1 _,...
lfl tht • 11'1 the ..._-v1lllyt •lld .0-tt Ill nw ._., v111orn.
Tiw U.S. W.""" a-~le"" ,. nln •NI -.r-1111,... 1llthllv
....... _, for ""' ... 111 flv1 "'"'·
semi. Niii ""'--"'"" SUM.I' '"" ~ m1ll1muml hldaY fer M+.l:Md
........ Cal".W klatlaM k'ICIUdleCI:
....,. ._,_ 7J.n, s.m1 l'llW!lc.I •10. kt.M IHI, fMNM WllsOll .,.,.,
,,.,..._, ..... ltlftn,Nf IMO'. '•Im
....._ ,,..,, 111119"'lltd n.n, .S..n
°""9' n• a.nte ......,., u.11.
U)l AHWt.b AND \'ICIHITY-
Palr """"" ~ .... nlllll ft _.. .... a.. .......... ...
c.t.Hlllll~--L .. -& COMT~ AHO IHTfllMECHATI
VAU..l'l"I -~Ir #wWlfl Tllttdn. L""' fli1ww•11n•w cMMe. ~ too
..-itO .. a.HJliflni-MY1' ....
MOl.HfTIJfll A•llM -f'•lr fttfWllt T....,. CHrlt .......,.""-.....
1ffTa1ttOA AHD OIJlltT ltfGIOHI _,..Ir fll"""" T ...... v. 1.lttlt 9-...,.,,. "*--Hlllfi T_,.t n .. .. ....,. .......... "' . ..,_.. ....
,.,... Law ........ -0... v ... ........ _. .........
Ceuial
L1!t l'lltht '"' _,, "*"""-... c:le•""' ..... '"-tllkY, 1.•• w lncl1 beall'nl!MI ...,.,._.,.,,,. ftlll
1!11t,_,, I "' II .,.,,,II, T...,... 111911. ,.. ro n.
Ytt.,.•V'• ~llH'h r • n 1 e •
,,.,. • "'-" cl .. 11 • low d •• 1 ...
••1111~1\rr't,.,.._ni.a.
Tlw .,...,. ...,,.,....tv-. w1i 6U -. -S••• M-l'Wes MONDA'!'
l«atlf -............ , 4:llt 1.M. t ,I
........ """ ............ ''"' '""· l.t TUISOA'I' ''"' '°" ............... J:1• ...... 1.1 fflnl llltl'I .............. t :ll ........ .
lfCorlf 1iOW ............. l:IO 1.m. t.t
S«Wld """' ............ 111.u ....... ,
MMll .... ,:.. ...... ht• ,, ...... .
.... • .... 7113 .......... j :lt '·"'· ,..., p"" •. ,.. ..... o. 'ti 00. a N.,_ 4 Nw. ti
-------.
s ........ .,,
kll'tl.... ~ .,.. ·-fltll
KNiii Miii ... Mii ldaM -.Y. """"" II !hf lllllelil lft'°"41 tlffr, crlSI
"'"'""' -"""· Hlotrt .,.._,. 91'NI In ltll Wnl llfld
£1Jt c:onlrl!Mtd Ill ltll n.,. .e1111tr
ll'fll'l'I t011t lo c11111t, Ille U.S. Wt11her a-11111. Cool. dffr -ltllr ,,..
.. , .... Ill n'MtCll of lhf lllrloll Mll'lll
flw nllifll,
A 1.-tel"'""' .-W.n ind -~ ootvrrN Ill '°""*"" .....
Malm. """' ~ ...,,__. ...... of _,.,,. llfld nwthitnl Htw Yol'W:.
Hvrrtc.111 Glld'n 4rlf'ltd 11111 lllla
Ille Alltnllc tod111. Tiw ""'"'' ~ I ... •rll'llli.1 Ill New l1111tM. bolt
~M _.. 111 tllrMI of mo<Y ff.
1trvctllil'I.
TPll h11rr~111 tll!'#d ,..11'1 "'""''
'""" "" C1rolln.1 to Matrw. l'hn~ ..
.rii., "'~ ..... 111M l.n 111C11H. Chlrll1Mll, 1.c., l'!IClr'I """n 11'1 llKl'I. _. l\1llWll. H.C.. _,.,, ,_ IMIM.
~
Temperatures
,..nd'IOf'HI
"''1•nlt
1111c..,11e1d
111..,..rtk ..... .....
"""' Clnc:lllt'tll
Clp¥11111d
~nver
Deot MolMI
Pllrolt
Eu..tl.1 ~ort Wortrt ·-.....
Honol\0111
·~ ... K1nus City
Lis Vn11
LCM Aneit!K
Ml1ml
MllWloUltet:
MlllnelillOlll
N"' OrlNM New York ...... ........ '°''°II_.,. Phllldelllli!1 _,, ........... .......
11:9Jlld City
fl:ld I ll/ff ·---· SI. laul1
'""'" "'" Ylr:1 City S•n Dleee
Sift l'T91'1C1tto
S1nt1 .. r'IN!r• '"",. -·M T"'""11 w-..
Hltll ..... 'rte.
" 0 » a .01 " . 71 " 71 l1 .. ~ " .. .. ..
" " . " " .. ,, .,
ti l2 " . .... . " .. " " .. " ..
n " n " " . u " . ,,
61 •S
" " . " ... . " n " .. ,,
" " .. " .. ~ .. .... ....
" " " " . " ,, '' .. " " .. .. " " " 56 .u .«I
50 » ·" " " ,. .
Greek Orthodox Church, the situation
W'DUld be much easier. But 1 don't think
anyone here has the facts."
r-ccies1uttca1 soun:es said the Greet
Orthodox Archbishop of North and South
America had endorsed the Onassis
diwrce, which Mrs. Onassis received oo
grounds ol mental cruelty.
,,
Czecboslovab eJ:JftU'd concern that
the e:ri:odua might strain the nation's
crowded railroad system. Some reports
said the Cuchoslovalt army will be called
in to move the sugar, beet and potato
'lbe announcement of the "legal break·
ln" authorhat!on came lhorUy after
Albert Shanker, UPT Jft:Sldeot, rejeded
Mayor John V. Lindsey's lat.est offer to
settle the strike.
SPECIAL BUY!
Dress your windows in
easy care fiberilass I
w.·,,. goi-. oll out to bring you thi1 Apldol lwyl hcMifullp
~ 100% okm fiOw In~ IOftdii thot ......
....m _,, ~I You'd ~ ri11Y allt fllUClt lllONI Jud
hand wait! .. horiol ......,... hnl ,..,..., ShWc ....
1imdi proofl n.y,.. ..... '° ...,. ~ In 2
~ Colon ... whii. ........ bronn fl/( ft'tt".
•
2.
50x54
50 x 84 ·floor length ••••••• 3.99
COSTA MESA
(Harbor Shopping Center)
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
I Huntington Center) (Fashion Island)
~
Monday, Octobtr 21, 1'68 DAILY PILOT 5
Five Dead
In Mass S~hirra 0U1n Man in Space, ~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~:U~
H • 'M • k _f M ' T armed with stave.a stormed chanted abd-~ 11og&M
Murder
its lC ~y ouse ests the defense headquarters to-,and carried rec1 bannerl anc1 · day but were hurled back by llO'ler• ~enounclng the "•I•
1,000 riot poUce using high greisive U.S. war In Vjet.
pressure water guns and tear ' na.m."
SPACE CENTER, Houston "We did not get the resultsl.-"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;i
UPI T ..... hot.
All-A111erico11 Jtleol
An ordinary football fan? Not exactly. This hot dog
muncher is Pittsburgh's first heart transplant pa-
tient Ben Anolik, 46, who looked as healthy as any-
one at Sunday's Pittsburgh Steelers-New Orleans
Saints football game. Anollk , a former boxing pro-
moter, was given th e heart of a 22-year-old acci-
dent victim last August.
Widow of Cuba Crisis
Pilot Blasts Air Force
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) -
Five bodies were found today
in a burning home apparenlly
set afire, police said, in a
futile attempt to wipe out
evidence of mass mul'd~r.
"A preliminary investigation
has produced evidence that
I.his ls an arson-homicide
case," Police Ch.ief Harry
Wilkison said.
The bodies of M r a •
Katherine Lovette, 40, her
three children end a grandson
were found in the ruins. Mrs.
Lovette and three of the others
had been shot.
Mrs. Lovette's husband,
James, was hospitalited in
critical 'condition from burns
and smoke inhalation. He was
unable to talk to poli~.
The others who had been
shot by a .38 caliber revolver
were Mrs. Lovette's daughter,
Sandra, 19, a son, Todd, 8, and
Sandra's son, Scott, 1.
Another daughter, Karey,
16, was dead of undetermined
causes.
Wilkison said the weapon
was believed to lie in the
ashes o! the home and an in-
tensive search was being
made for it.
(AP) -In the 16 previous that you're after. We dldn'tll
American space £light.a there get a damn thing In fact."
have been times when · At another Ume, Schirra ex·
astronauts took issue wilh ploded :
orders from the ground .. But 'jl have had It up to here to-
neve.r before has a· spaceship day and from now on, I am
commander become netUed as going to be an onboard flight
often or as verbally as Navy director for these updates
Capt. Walter M. Schina on (r'evlsed schedules). We are
Apollo 7. not going to accept any new
He has talked of "Mickey games ... or doing some cra-
Mou.se procedures;" tests tha,t zy t~ts we never heard of
were ill prepared and hastily before."
conceived b)' an idiot; and has The ground barely had a
mentioned sarcastically that c~ to Sl_lY "Roger" when
"I'd like to talk to the man or Schirra cut m:
whoevl#' it was that thought "~ch test is going to be
up that little gem." reviewed thoroughly before we
Particularly, he has directed act on it •.• and I suggest
his ire at tests that were not fanity from spacecraft to that when something like this
in the original plans. ground on the Apollo 7 flight ~mes up again, that you take
. At one point Sunday, Schirra than any other. The ground 1t over to the simulator, run it
told ground controller Jack through. U it wrings out we
Swigert: "We have a feeling said at one point it could wait may try it."
you are believing that some of until the ship was over the The many causUc comments
these experimenters are holier next tracking slaUon to copy prompted Paul Haney, public
than God down there. We are some data. affairs director for the Man-
a heck of a lot closer to Him . "You won't miss a hell of a ned Spacecraft Center, to tell
right now." lot if you don't get it here," a ·news conference:
There has been more pro-came the reply from space. "I think over the years a lot
* * * * * * Ancient Technique May
of you and certainly others of
us have seen ready examples
of the Schirra wit and charm.
This morning you saw some or
the Sc.hirra temper. You may
not have seen it before, but I
have." Clear Astronauts' Ears At another point, Haney
made a comic reference to the
astronauts' irritability and
SPACE CENTER, Houston the ear. If the tubes are block-their inability to shave.
(AP) , _ The Apollo 7 ed, they must be unblocked, or He Sflid: "Show me a man
astronauts will likely begin the middle ear will give way with a beard and I'll show you
s~~~.
18 Fashion Island
Newport Beach -'64+ 1380
VALDOSTA, Ga . (AP ) -
The widow or one of two Air
Force pilots credited with the
discovery of Russian missiles
in Cuba says she gets a cold
shoulder from the government
"Four of the five bodies
recovered from the fire had
bullet woulds that c o u I d
possibly have caused their
deaths," Wilkison said in a
statement "Further evidence
has been uncovered that the
fire was deliberately set. This
will be confirmed or denied
arter invesligation by the state
fire marshal."
to equalize the pressure. a protester."
taking some 20th century I_:.:...:::::=:...:::...:::::::::.::_ __ __:_!:==:.:....-------"=====================
medicine to make it easier to
Navy Sets
Restrictions
In Da Nang
when asking for an increase in clear their ears when they
support payments for ber Arabs Blasl plunge to earth Tuesday
children. morning. "The old Air Force story of
'pass the buck. shoot the bull Israel Tanks But during the last six
and make 13 copies of minutes of their drop to earth,
everything' sums up what I've they'll use a 17th century
been through' the last few United Press International teclmique to finish the job.
years," said the widow of Arabs opened fire on two It is a simple method that
Maj. Rudolph Anderson Jr., Israeli halflracks today and pressurizes the ears by
whose husband's U2 recon-lobbed bazooka shells across holding the nose, closing the
naissance plane was shot dov.·r the cease fire line onto a set-mouth and blowing. Devised
over Cuba Oct. 27, 1962. tlement in upper Galilee, an by a Renaissance Italian doc-
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's Israeli communique reported. tor named Valsa1va, it has
memoir of the Cuban missile A Jerusalem spokesman proved as useful to jet age
crisis tells of President John said bazooka shells landed on fliers as to 17th cent\lry
F. Kennedy's recognition of the Maklia settlement in upper Italians.
.\ Aft Peaney Stores Opett Every Night Monday Throegh Salwdaf
!i'.Y'~'IJ THRU SATURDAY ONLY-1
15% off on all lamps 21.98 and over DA NANG, Vietnam (UPI)
-The U.S. Navy recently im-
posed re s triction s on
American servicemen in the
Da Nang area because of
racial incidents. a military
spokesman said Sunday.
Anderson's contributions to his Galilee near the Lebanese Astronauts Walter M. Schir-
country. "He spoke of Maj . border. ra Jr., Donn F. Eisele and I
Anderson and how it is always In another incident Arabs Walter Cunningham will reach
the brave and best who die," opened fire with bazookas on into their medicine chests for
the senator wrote. an Ilraeli halftrack on patrol the small hoard of deconges-
RE U E I The spokesman said the
restrictions were imposed Oct.
12-13 following two con-
frontatiOns that w e e k e n d
between whites and Negroes
and after a Negro entis~
man opened lire with a pi~t~~
and a shot from the gun killed
a Negro guard.
The shooting was not
necessarily the result of a
racial dispulc, the spokesman
said.
The restrictions banned sale
of alcoholic beverages at all
naval installations. limited use
of facilities at the Navy's
Cap Tien Sha to naval sup-
port personnel and allowed on-
ly authorized Navy men ac-
cess to the China Beach Rest
and Recuperation Center.
The Navy said a group of
Negroes disarmed and beat
two Navy guards and that nine
Negro Marines and soldiers
were arrested a few hours
later.
Andersoo was pos~~ly lri lbe~ Valley, the com-tant. pills remaining. They
awarded ~the l>istinguished mwilque said. have endured the
Service Medal for his part in The spokesman said 20 unpleasantness of their cold
discovering the missile sites in minutes later another Israeli symptoms these last nine days
Cuba . He also was awarded halftrack came under light to save the last twelve pills.
the Air Force Cross, the arms fire in the upper part of That alJows them one each
Cheney Award and the Purple the Beisan Valley. every six hours beginning late
Heart. today for maximum effect
Mrs. Anderson is batting ff ope Daughter during their rapid descent to
zero in her efforts to get her earth, when air pressure will
representatives in Washington increase sharply.
3nd the Air Force to listen to Linda to Marry Their nasal passages and
her requesst for more money eustachian tubes are clogged
for her children. NORTH HOLLYWOOD, and their ears feel stuffy and
She said she receives about Calif. (AP) -Mr. and Mrs. full . It is partly due to
$333 per month for all three of Bob Hope aMounced Sunday ordinary colds, partly the ox-
them -Rudolf, ll, James, 9, the engagement of their ygen they breathe in their
and · Robyn Jane, who was daughter, Linda Theresa, '-° cabin.
bom 1seven months after her Robert G. Lande. Theeustachiantubesarethe
father's plane was shot down . A 1960 graduate of St. Louis vents to the middle ear, the
The widow cited a 1966 law University, she has acted and .only way outside air pressure
she says sets the maximum taught school. can equalize the pressure in
Social ~ecurity payment at--'---------------------!
$415 per month for children of ll viclims of the Vietnam war.
a .,
Have a Helene Curtis
'Triumph' permanent Soulhern California Thrift & loan
specializes in personal . business and
Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today
and see how we can solve your imme.
diate money problems from depend-
able funds available right now. The
Thrifty way can save you money.
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
THRIFT& LOAN
170 £1st 17th St., Colli Mna ••• ,,646'·5045
1359 Wllshlrt Blvd .. LosAn1elss.,.m .122a
only '10
Foslrion cut------2.SO
Shampoo and tot
Mon., Tue.. Wed. on!r----•3
NO Al'POINTMlNT NKISSAIY
flULL•aTOflf
Or1nlllf1lr C""9r
.., lloar. tn-41111
MUNTINOTOJf .. IACtt
H"""~ C9flltr ... "-·~
NIWl"ClaT •SACM ,..thloft ltlMlll '""floor • .....nll
BELOW ARE JUST A FEW OF
THE MANY STYLES AVAILABLE
TO LIGHT UP YOUR HOME!
Choose frotn our
elegant modem and
traditional styles!
Your choice
Reg. 21.98
NOW
18.69
For tf10Se who prefl!'I" trad'rtioncif ••• Ifie bross fin-
i.t.ed bwner lomp with its linen o.oer poper
porchmont shi:Jde ••• for modem doc.or, a ll!Olti.
~ \'me styk lantp °" a rnatchicg cnetol
"'°""''with liiaJ en Wiyl shode.
YMli'!icllllal 3 N .. Med cha;11 lri """"'-...Mi... WiM _... t"-
Your choice!
&tty ""'*•kiiPI fNtt
t..wf .t\'I• tobl• l•mp
Reg. 32.98, NOW 28.03
NEWPORT BEACH
(Foshioft Island)
TDDAYI
....... :wdt1:A al hdr........,"""'-..._"-cl,_ .. -...,.. ..................... ..,.. -----
Your choice!
Reg. 26.98, NOW 22.93
HUNTINGTON BEACH
(Huntington C.nkr)
• •
..
' •
I
I
I
I
l
l
.. - - -.. ~ --.. ---- --..... -...,...------~ ~----.. -..----... -., -
•
~y PILOT
'
M~, Ott.obtr 21 , l 9ba I
UC President Yields Anotlaer Study?
Mexican-American Demands Met Cal Expo Finances Shaky
BEBKELEY (UPI l -
UDlv<nlly qi Ca!Uarnla PJ<.i.
d<ot Charles J . Hltdt ...
DOUllCOd Sunday be b I I
..,...i, portlally 0< wholly, to
......UdenwldaoltheMes-
Jcm Amtrlcao. 1S t U d e n t
Colledonlloo.
1111 -t .... bail-ed u ~L.Diajor, temporary
vkiory'' by a spokt.smsn fot
the ...ie<1er1Uoo. A del<p-
tlcn ol members met at leogtb
wllb !Didi Friday.
'lbe president utd aJJ pen-
db!c dlaclpllnary -by the Univenlty agalnst a groop of
-II who held a sit,.Jn
oalllde hll olllee WI MoJl!lal'
baa been droR>ed-
ln addi&o. be· dlrecled his
-to urp leniency ID court
'"' u ol the lludenll amstod
by police oo -charges. llltdt, ID I !<tier to the COO-
lederailoo, said I special -t to the pre>ldeot ID
charge ol Meslean American
al!.lln 11 Ill nine campuaes
will be named by the end ol
the month. 'lbe confederaUoo
will ~end candidates.
"Among hll dutlet will be
respcm:1hillty for working out
propooali dealing with the
maUer ol ecbolarshlpg and
atudeot aid, admislion of ad·
ditional,, Mexican Americana
undeMpecW procedures, and
all other llllhject.s rellllDi to
increasing educational op-
portunities for such students,"
be said.
The c:onfederaµon . h ad
demanded special ICbolanblpo
for the children ol farm
workers and 400 special ad-
mllfiooa ol quaJlfied Cbi<anos
(Mexican Americans) "beyond
present recruitment efforts for
1969."
IDtdt repeated the uninnl·
ly "cannot take a formal
stand on elther side" of the
California grape boycott con·
Producers
Enter First
Labor Pact
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
About l!OO ol the hlgbeat paid
workers !n the world have
negotiated their first labor
contract. It e<1ntains a union
shop clause and provides a
pension plan 2!-nd medical
benefits.
'The lG-year pact covers lbe
producers of motion pidurts
and television shows, a third
of whom earn an estimated
$100,000 or ~ yearly.
The Producen Guild ol
A m e r I c a , repraen.ting In-
dividual producers of show1,
reached agreement With the
Association of Motion Picture
and television producers, rep-
resenting the corporations.
TenM of the pact ~
nounced Sunday include an In-
crease in dues to one percent
of a member's annual salary
which can be assessed on no
more than •100,000.
That way, no member bu to
pay more than $11000 dues an-
nually.
Reason for the contract was
that producers did not receive
the Jringe benefits pn>vided
workers in show business.
The contract provides that
percent of the producer'• sal-
aries and the producen 21h
percent for a pensjoo plan.
Management will also pay ?'fa
cents an hour to cover hospit-
al and medical benefit..
Poll Shows
Cranston
Leads Race
LOS ANGLES (AP) -Poll-
ster Don Muclnnore reports
that Democrat Alan Cranston,
fonner state oontroller, is re-
taining a aignlflcant lead over
educator Max Rafferty in their
U.S. Senate race.
RaUerty, the Republican
standard bearer, is currently
state superlntendent of publlc
instruction.
U the election were held Im-
mediately, the survey a aid
Cranston would draw M per-
cent of the . vote, Rafferty 31
and don't know 13. Paul Ja-
cobs, the nomJnet of t h e
Peace and Freedom party,
would get 2 percent.
1be latest analysis was pre-
pared 00 the ballls of 1,007
personal interviews Oct. 12
and 13.
The last previous poll-taken
Sept. 28-29 -showed Cranston
with 53 per<en~ Rafferty 32,
Jacobi :Z, and don't know 13.
Muchmore said his Oct. 12-
13 poll lndlcated Vice Presi-
dent Hl!l))phrey still trails
Rlcbanf M. Nixon among Cali-
fornians who will vote in the
presidential race.
Bomh Blasts
Free Pre.ss
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A
bomb shattered windows and
cracked walhl Sunday night in
the offica of the Loo Angelea
Free Press, an underground
newspaper.
Police saJd the blast ln 11.
bathroom at the rear of lhe of·
fice1 was caused by some sort
of explosive device. The Police
Bomb Squad was investigating
·the blast.
No one was In the building
at the time the explosion oc-
curred shortly after 10 p.m.
Windows on the first and third
floors cf a nearby apartment
house were broken but no
residents were injured.
It was the second time the
newspaper bas been bombed.
Last May 1, the old cffices of
the Free Press in West
Holly.,..ood were damaged by a
bleat attributed ·to a mall
bomb.
Brown Expects
Close Election
MODESTO, CalU. (AP) -
Former Gov. Edmund G.
Brown says "if VJce President
Humphrey carries California
he will carry the country."
But, Brown tokl a Democratic
dinner here Saturday,
California w1D be close.
Goat Leads Children,
Police ·on Wild Chase
ARCADIA (UPI) -A wiM onlmal didn't try.
go.t bounded out of the moun-Attempts to lasso the goat
talDll tnto the backyard or a met with no success and
atartled housewife Sunday and disapproval from a crowd of some 200 persons w b o led polJce and gleeful children gathered to watch. Children
on a two-hour chase. fed the goat sandwiches aad
The Barbary goat, weighing potato chips.
aboat 100 pounds and standing A \'eterinarian finally sub-
four feet high at the shoulders, dued the goat wt.th a shot frmn
first appeared in the backyard a tranquilizer gun. The slum.
of a Monrovia home near the pering goat wu taken to the
base of the San Gabriel Moun-county animal shelter in
talns. Baldwin Park where officials
'l11e housewife called police were wondering what to do
·and the goat took off through when It wake1 up.
batkyanll aod •treels in -• -----1
.. ven-toot leapo. Netshborhoed -clllJdren were joloed ID the
;:.-~ ~1: "'= WOMEN OREN
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday
~[]~[K][])J @)ffi)J@
~ gtilrlfl old~mencan C'f raditio11.
tHRU SATURDAY ONLY
15% off on our entire line of
decorator type light fixtures
Brilliant elegance!
Prism chandeliers
in cut crystal •••
Dehcate scrolls and cut crystal prisms wiH
lend a soft sparkle to your home with
their reflected light , •• 2 sizes, both with
Ii lights. A speciol value. 22" spread.
Reg. •49
Now41.65
Pay as little as $5 per month
18" sprHd Reg. $39
NOW 3315
TODAY I
iave on leaf pattern Tiffany style fixture
·lent glass fixtures I for a Victorian glow
. hey're 14" square, priced s Add the atmoaphere you've been
you can buy several; they'll wan ting at this special price.
any decor. Buy naw.
Reg. 2.19 Reg. $59
NOW 50.15 NOW 1.86 Puy a•' 11ttt. • $5 per month
Silk screened flora l
Tiffany style fixture
This is authentic styling ct a great
savings •.. chain huiig amber-
gl-.
Reg~ $19
NOW 16.15
NO MONEY DOWN ••• use_ pen"!Y' ,Time Payment Plan
Territic savings on
48" fluorescent light
Ideal for home, shop, office;
with mounting cha ins and ?. 40-
watt tubes.
Reg. 10.99
Now9.34
Animal Control Departmon1 HAYE BLADDER IRWITATION
Md ... fin the Sutt fi'o1:':'#_:~':: ~oJ::':
Jletaatuwl oC. Fish and rMn. OUtn tea1nc ttnMMlll and.1--------------------------------------------------------. ~~ r,trY0111ont• frozn.tuquent. burolnf. II
\NIWS. ' tdllnf 11rlnallon. Sft!on~ vw~ .allYl ~ ~ Into f:lk~tt":§ ~~ a::::r.~ """· d• , _ '~ .,~ • IOI"' P".fl'f4. bl. llldl outs. crlTEX u•v· _ _........ ~ .... _,_ ai!7art1t•rtllicln~fottltycvr1>-~ a ...,_~ IPMJm 1nr ~ In 1cld urhw, and euinc
lilllr -AithoaP the pl -Go<CDT .. M_u....,,
-..... cJend ..
' . -
,,
'
--
NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
{Fashion Island) (Huntington Center)
•
-----.-··= -znmnnszancarcfi r:at f
r =.., e-. '
For the
Divorces
OIVOllC•S
111terllcuten Deel'ffl
8111Nr1 D. McF1rl.IMI vs Ar1ttvr E.
McF1rl1pd J1nlce Elliln Moor'I vs Ci•rY Lvnn -· Jadll• Lft McWlllllm .,. Larned
Wllllem McWIUlarilt
K1ltlleftl IE, N-l'rteft W Chuln M. ·-Mant Alt1M lle.-il "" l!llMI' ~ .... e.l'IY M. ~ vs Lnt.r L. Lotg1
Ger11d D. ~'1111 vs Ml.WMI ... ~rlltt
SUH11 J, Cluff n L.efT'I' Fr11'1kll11 CllM JCWll'lle \.yflll L.acMttl .,.. P'uwa1-1"1ul ,.....,
~ A.. Y-'ti Shpht11 E. You119
Mar11m Nrri ~...., vs wi111~ •--E_..i. B. Har-"" ¥1 Mu I lla -Vl111lftl1 l# ._,..... "' ltld\tnf wrcllffe &ownr
C1rol '41111 111"'" vs Robert J.nlS .. ~ ltulh Alnbunl.., "' Alberl Ambl.lrorr Flul DK,_.
Fr9d&rldl F. Plrkft" VI Vl111lnl1 "·
'""" SIMI~ Stanford W ll:abert St1ntord
C ... rln Holll1 n C111'len'n E. Holl11
Shir..,, F ....... YI Wllll nl W. A1k
SIJM;n LY11n Mctnfn VI P1trlck
O'Mall9v Mcentre
loll MM Coll VI Elrl Herbert Coll
sn.ran Mn S..lldi YI flern1rd J. S.l'ld1
DI-M.. 81lau VI W1l11ce G. 8el1u
Jayce l . Anllel ..,. S11muel Art Angel Do..tllv N. FIVll VI l urt E, Fa"'*!
Miry P. Pith vi Jol1n C. Pitt$
Ci.tri-Anllf'• n Wllllllm Andre
DEA'l'B NOTICES
"ROCTOR
8 111 I!!. J....tor. 1$1 W1lt9 UM,
Hunll"91on Bt<1c:h. SUnrlwcl b¥' wllt,
Evelyn; IOllS. L1rrv J. and Jahn I!!.
Piixtor; d1u111hrer. Kimberly Lyn;
brlllher, St1nln' R, Proctor; 1l1ters,
Corffn9 ICull~off Ind tllulh l"IM>H.
kr\lla1, Wf!dnll.oHy, 10 /4M. Pnk
F1mlly Colonl1I Fu,....I ~.
THORPE
JOH"Ph ll1vmond T'"'"'9 (C•Pi). ttO w. I~ St., Nt-1 atedl. eorn
Fett. 11. l_.; died Odllber 20, 'thl.
AH U. lllKldent of OrallH County
1lnce U03. SuM'l"fd by wff•, Golllll<I,
lml!Mr, Wlllllom "· l'llor'pt, L,. Ar.-
9tlts; 111tl'f', Mrs. v1r11lnl1 e1nlu,
Los Anve~. Sotrv!art. Wed.-.Hv. 2
PM, Belt BroedWrt Cha~. I~.
M!'lrose Abbrf ~usole\Jm. DlrKllKI
by Bell 1rNC1w1v Mortuarv, na
lro.llWllv. cost• Mell. McMURTBY •
H~rbl'f'I a. MCMl.lrtrv. ni I!!. 20ltl St.,
Cos!• """"· SUl"YIYlll by WI~. Cl1r1.
of the homl1 deuthtl'I", Mrs. II. L.
Lvdth1rdt, of 2411 £. 'JOlh St .• Coste
Mtt1; sis•~. Mrs. M<ibel H-!tt,
l"tnn1v!V11nl1r 1nd lhnie 111'111dchllcl"'°".
$e"'I"°'' Monc11y, toc!IY, 11 2 PM.
First Metl\oclltl Orurdl ot C•t1 Mls1,
ao w. 1ttt1 s1 .. wllh lllY. 111cn1n1 J.
Dunllp olftcl9tlnll. lntennenf, West-
mlru!"' M~orl1I P1rtc. Olritet.d bV
Wesklllf Chl ll!'I Mortu1rr, ~
PRESSLEY
J•~ Wllll1m Pl'ftSlf"I'. m •. Wllsan
SI .. C""'!' ,...... Sefv\Ctt Plftdl..,,.
WH!clllf °''"' Mortuery, """""' WEIDNER
llow Merle we1c1 ...... t• w. 11th SI.,
Cesf1 Mnl. Ate 2~. SUrvlwd by hlll-
band, JemetJ H1"91'1h, Mr. 11\d Mrs.
o . Seblo, al New Yor1r.1 11lter, Doro>
lhv 01 PIIO, of Nf'W YDri!. ~ICK.
Tu~1y, $1. ~l"Y't Cemtltf'V, L1r.-
ca111'r, New Yorlt. Wt!tklfrf Chal>e'I
Morl!J1ry, ~II. F-1nt!ng Dl-
redon.
JOHNSON
Record
Fire Calls
.....,.,.. INcil
•:Ill •·"'· s.tvTd9y, tran fll'I, fOUltl of Unlvtnltv Drt¥9
7:DI P.m .. ar fll'I, AH N. """port
fllYd.
1:11 1.m. kind..,-, wrvle9 Cllll, U lll-
l'Gnll St. '
S:5l P.m., ""'~· ft'O W. 1511'1 SI. •:n P.m., servk:e cell, lit J.Ot AY9,
7:12 p.m., tlrw l"vestio.111111, 211 i.tlll "· C•I• MIN
11 :09' 1.m. Seu!rd•V. 1c:cklenl1l 1llm1,
12'1 W•ref!OU•t ROlcl
11 :25 1.m., febt 1l1nn, Mesa Venk
WHI and ClubllOUSf! Road
l :li p.m., 11nf(;tul'9 fire, 211' 1111<1lth Ave.
1:20 p.m., fllse 11Mm, Gr.c. L.1111
lflcl 81ker Streft
J :M P.m., t11M 111nn, G.-.ce-Line
Incl ll•k« Sfl'Mf
6:U 11.m., t11st 1l1f'R'I,. Hlmll!Dll end
Pl1at11J1
7;t7 p.m., tlr. 1-t111!lofl, lfl hktr "· t :ll 11.m., ~. 1'° Radlnttt A .....
111:27 p, m., fllle 1llnn, 11tfrt Str..t
Ind S1nt1 Alll A-
J :ll 1.m • .S.Und1y, 2'ol E. 11111 tt.
t :O 1.m., r.cue, t74 PIM:ln!ll Aw.
ll:lS 1.m., t1!se 1l11"ff1, Mn.It V..-cll
Wftf end ClllbMuw llOlcl
lD:«I 1.m., -wa. m E. Wllsllll SI. ll:n 1.m .. ftlM allrrn, MID ,..,,....._ ·-1,llO 11.m., 11>1rlmlnt fl~ a» I'.
11tfrt St., Apt. C.
l :ot 11.m., !1'5111 ii.rm. Hlrtlor eaui..
Ylrcl Ind ~~an W1Y
1:56 p.m., mbcllleYOUt 111mi. a1
Hlntlnt WIV
l'wnteln Yllllr
•:111 IJ'I\. S.1Vrcl11Y, 9trvc:lvrl fl/'I,
16611 eeiter Clrele
n :«1 1.m •• rescu., Ge-Ider khool 11!1,
Flkan AY9flUIP Ind ~ Florei
""" 1:01 11.m .• re$eut', Fount1ln V1lllV
Hlgh ~"'I"'°" IHclt
12:U P.m. S.l!JnSey, ttnlctllN fll'lt
'111 TIYlor'
);:lot P.m.. atnicturwo flt-. tl»l2 ""• ~· J'clt P.n>., IHll IMk, 1171 l..lrnblrt ... ~
ll:fl p.m .• med!Clll 1W, 11Di '°""" nev L11M
t :• 1.m. SUl'MflV, -.... IWdl wrvlce n.I pe"'-f~ IOI
t :Ol 1.m., strudur. lire, 7"" •tne
10:'5 •.m,. c..-flrt , H19hl1nd dub-..... 3:0 11.111., 11n1cturw Hrs. «111 aobbie
Circle
6:3S 11.m., 11r111 firT, llroakhurst 11111
Aclami A....,,.;e
6:41 P.m .. tr.JI! llrw. 1"31 INdl llvd.
WM!mht1tw
4:07 P.n'I . .$aturdev, ttrvdurw fl ....
lllll IOI W1y
1:47 p,m., ,,._.,, ft rt, Ml 15th St,
t :IB 11.m., tnoJll f!rt, Sletltt P1rlt
5:02 1.m. SUnd1y, trud!; "'-ffll
Glrden OtCN• srwr.
6:05 1.m., 1tNCtur1 fl"" 6111 Choe-,.,. SI.
1::11 11.m .. ml!dlctt 11d. 7I02 lflt! St.
l :Ol p.m .. ml!dlc•• •Id, 13131 Wllsan
f :ll 1.m. Monct1v. c.r tlno, ow"''"
IJf San Dilg.a F-1' 11 Goldtn
Wnt Incl llob1.
Anet""' Shrfrid J Ghruon. 1206 Df:~on
L1111, N-cor'! IMl;f!. AH 75. SUNlwd
by wife, eettv. a1 IM 1>ome: ""''
Allin JohnlOl'I. °' HIWPOrl llN cll:
brO!t'lef', C1rl of 9ant1lnt1 two bruflle•t
i ncl lour slstln In s-dlnl end tllt'M
or1ndc:tilld..n. Servlc:n, Tuncllv, 11
1'M, $!. And,... Prtt~lln Cllurdl,
wll~ Dr. P.1~mond I. Br1~em1 1Jfflc1-
Rl1nu. M11Dfllt IM'YICH w!ll be lllld
•I Paclllc view M.,,.,orlt! P1rtc. DI·
r<!cied by Wtitclllf ChlPll Mar1u1rv. Pilot Visitor•
;;= .... ==""=·==============~1
BALT.! MORTUARIES
Coroaa del Mar OR S.MSI
Cotti Meu Ml ... uu
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadwa1, Cotta Mea
LI ~
DILDAY BROTHERS e..-,... Valley
Mortuary
179U Beach Blvd.
Bunllngto• Beach
841-l'Tll
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mmury
Chpel
1511 P1clftc View Drh't
Newport Be1d:, Cl.Won.le
144-mt
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
1111 -A ... W-"-IJUIUI
SMITH'S MORTUARY
m Mm !IL
Bulla"°" Bado
LEMAt
WES'laJJ'1' llOR'ftlAllY
U7 E. 1'1111 81., Colla Mna ··-
Tou.. ,,.. concl\H:tl!d Mondm 1nd
l'r1CllYt tor 11;h001 dlues tit """
,.~ ""'"" ~ uo... .. .,... -
""IU tlOlll of II 1-1 ffllt •H fit¥.
el. Intern~ ,,_ INY a ll Mr.
Oud11V lid!. "2-411. l!Jtt. m.
Huge Song
Festival
Set Oct. 26
BUENA PARK -A massive
festival of song, dance and
drama will begin here Oct. VI
with the first production of
"Festival of Sounds," an
e.igbt·month long eompeUtJon
for Southern California young
people l]>Onsored by K:lotl'• Beriy,
'Ille program, open to school
spoMOred groupt o r in-
dependent young p e o p I e between the II" ol 1' and ZI,
II bued oa the theory tha1
hlgb """"1, junior coilege and
college musical and drama.Uc
achievements often go un-
ooti<:od ..,. the -al publlc.
A-olcuh11r ...... wllicb wiD total .-,ooo ...,
the enllrt pttlod, wiD be lllllde
on a treekly, 8'Klllthl1 and
llY!Ollal -. ranglna !rm> •
minimum ol '7S a week to
IZ,000 a......, fer~
perlonnen.
Reglltratioa blanu and ad-
ditional lnfonnauoo 1 t e
avatlable through F e 1 t I v 1 1
Direclor Champ gabler al
Knolt'a Borry Farm, US.IUL
BUY. ONE FOR 7.00 BUY TWO FOR 13.00
•• , SAVE 1.00
BUY THREE FOR 18.00
• , , SAVE l .00
BUY FOUR FOR 20.00
, , • SAVE 8.00
M_,, Octobef 21, 1%8 DAILY '11DT 7
SPECIAL KODEL• PILLOW
OFFER: THE MORE YOU
BUY, THE MORE YOU SAVE
Here 's a great way to fumish every
bed in you r home with a most
comfortoble Kodel" polyester pillow •
ond sovo from 1.00 to 8.00! Tho
• •
whole family will have sweet dreams on
t hese soft, yet resilient pillows. With
removable no·iron cotton cover. Each
e Iorgo 21 x27" size.
I ll_>-''-•->-WA-Y-
ANAHEIM
444 N. Euclld e 111-1121
Mon. fhru Sat.
1 o ...... lo . •:lo ,,..,.
-------~----· ---
· ...
' '
(
. I : ' •
j '
NEWPORl
' I
I
I
EXCEPTIONALLY PR(cED
I
I
SHEETS BY J. P;' STEVENS
IN "PETITE ROSE"
I At these prices, yo!I may consider
stocking your linen ·~loset. First quolity
cotton percales in1 pure white with'
' delicate rose , ix*ders in pink, blu1 or
gol d , , , ovo,rloll print on bottom sheet,
I
4.50 twin T2xl08" flot or fitted 2 for 5.00
5.50 fu ll i Ix I 08" flot or fittod _ .. ch 2.'lt
I I .SO kii/g I 08x 120" flot or fitted .. cli 6.99
3.ao/~r. pillow coses 42x38" _ peir '.1.91
I
4.80 pr. king coses 42x48'' poi< 2.3*
I
Sheets, 2; B<dding, GS, all llol'll
47 Fuhlon hl•~d • 644-1212
Mon. thnl Fri. 10 •.m. lo •:lO p.m.
S•I. I 0 •·"'· ,_ 4 !!-"'•
HUNTIN6TON BEACH
1771 Edin,., A•.. • nt.JJJ (
Mon. tlin Set.
.10 ..... l:e JllQ ......
')
I
f
I I
I
l
" . ,
•
\
8 OAILV PILOT Mondat, October 21, 1968
Tour Planned
Jail Dedication
Freeways
Boon to
Industry
,....a_-UEEN_-_1e __ .,.._...a.c-y Ph_n_'"-'''-'an__,dl County Lun~h Bun~h
Slated Oct. 30
SANTA ANA -Dedication
ceremonies for the county's
new $10.4 million Jail and
Sheriff's Faclliites will begin
Oct. 30 at 2 p.m.
Chief Deputy Attorney
Genera] of California, Charles
A. O'Brien, will give Ute open-
ing address, which will be
followed by a public tour of
the new comple.z.
Prisoners are to be moved
into the new jaill after the of-
ficial dedication, but it ls not
expected to go into full opera-
tion until Nov. 2.
Designed to hold 1,800,
persons the new jail Is replac-
ing the existing county jail
built in 1924 to accommodate
280 inmates.
Three -in le rconnecling
buildings form the complex on
the new Civic Center site at
Sixth and Flower streets: the
two-story s h e r i f r ' s head-
quarters, four-story men's jail
and two-story women's jail.
Each unit has been designed
for maximum security, utility
and Uexibility, Sheriff James
Musick said.
The jail incorporat es
electro-mechanical I o c k i n g
devices, au tom a tic al I y
operated doors from protected
control stat.ions and electric
door int.erlocks throughout for
the ultimate in security.
Monitors allow deputies lo see
into even the most remote
areas of the jails.
lnclL'Cied in the 6 I . 5 0 0 •
square-foot sheriff's building
are the patrol , investigation,
records, civil, p e r ~ o n n e I ·
training and crime l a b
divisions.
Space is also provided for
communications, squadrooms,
classroom, employe coffee
shop and press.
THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE
COMMITTEE FOR ARTS AND LECTURES
Presents
ANAl1EIM -State traffic
engineer G. L. Russell says
California would not be one of
the industrial leaders of the
world had it not been for the
decision lo construct the
stat.e's freeway system.
Rus.sell, speaking last Fri·
day berore the Freeway Sup-
port Seminar at the
Disneyland Hotel, compared
the growth of the automobile
and highway transportalion to
the growth of the railroad
system and its significance to
urbanization. a
The freeway system cur·
rently in use throughout the
state comprises only 25 per-
cent of the planned system
~~10 ·1.I
4'I wish he'd stop comimr up with aolution& •
and only two percent of the ---------------------
total miles of streets, roads
and highways.
"Incomplete as the freeway
system is, all Californians can
lake a great deal of pride in
the progress we've made," he
said.
Second Registration
Set for UCI Pre-school
Court Workers En joy Noontime Sun
By SANDI MAJOR
01 1119 D9117 l"lltt ii.tr
just to rest for a few "I've seen parents bring
momenta. their children down here to
SANTA ANA-Summer has A few children romped on a play on the cannons," she ad·
eb~ away from Orange p a r t of the lush ei:panse of · ded.
CoUnty, but downtown Santa grass in front of the Children will sUll be able to
Ana workers are enjoying the courthouse. play on the guns in the im·
waves of breeze and sunshine Tbey had all apparently provlsed park after mid·
flooding across the courthouse chosen the courthouse lawn November, when the new
lawn while they can. because the nearest city park county courthouse opens. The
Warm autumn days bring is blocks away. old legal center will staud, and
workers out of their office Mrs. Chris Kilcyne, who with it, the "park" will be
buildings surrounding the works for the county clerk, preserved.
courthouse to snack or just said she had seen men dressed But the secretaries, court
relax their lunch hours away. in suits lie back on the grass clerks and a few other county
"They ought to add some for a quick doze. employes who have enjoyed
benches or seats," suggested A few hippie-types had nap-the land marked oil in 1869 by
Mrs. Dorothy Hayward, as she ped there too, she said as she Santa Ana founder , W. H.
sat with a co-worker from the cruntbled her lunch b 8 g and Spurgeon, won 't get to enjoy it
county assessor's office. got ready to go back to her of-when they move into new
Two two women had found a (ice across the street. quarters.
shady spot on the wall running1J~~;ij~~------------ijjjiijjiiij---ijjj'j along Sixth Street in front oqi
the courtbowe. Mrs. Hayw"drr1 j
had stretched her legs out t I
.the lush green grass and her ~ friend, Mrs. Helen Raymond,
was munching an apple.
"Preparl for
They said they had s~nt S h I f B • many lunch hou... sitting in c 00 0 us1ness
the warm breezes instead of ~~
the future .••
Toda~!" e S1cr1t1ri1I
eating lunch at a restaurant or ~ ~
in their offices. ~· other women in slacks and
dresses, and men clad in suits
and overalls, had picked out ABC SHORTHAND
e Medical
l"1Url"CI
e lookk11pin9
e 01nt1I
A11idl"f
"THE MANHA TI AN FESTIVAL BALLET"
Sunday, October 27, 1968
As a graphic example of the
inter-relationship of industries
to freeways Russell used
Disneyland itseU.
A second registration will be
held Tuesday for UC lrvine
pre-school.
sections along the stone fence 118 W. Sth Phone
lion. It is called Laboratory on wbich to eat their lunches, 543•1753 or S43-8721
Sch 1 :,._;;w;~~t~un~lil~ti~m~e~ro~groiba~c~k~ro~~~~~5~·~··~·~A~·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~ oo because professors and the office or into a trial, or college students will work with
in C•mpus Hall
8030 P.M.
General Admission $3.50
T;ckets AvoHoble ot the
Fine Arts Box Offi ce
WEEKDAYS -II to 2
TELEf'HONE RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED
Ticket Information: 833-6617
"Walt Disney didn't happen
to discover the Santa Ana
Freeway after building
Disneyland. As a matter of
fact, his staff visited with the
Division of Highways several
times during the search for a
suitable location.
Russell spoke of his amuse-
ment at those who condemn
the entrance of freeways into
their communities then ad-
vertise in real estate journals
that homes are located with
access to freeways.
Parents of children ages 21h
to five should bring them to
St. Mark Presbyterian Church,
2001 Eastbluff Drive, Newport
Beach, at 9 a.m. Tuesday.
School will start Oct. 28.
Head of the pre-school, call-
ed UCI Laboratory School, will
be Mrs. Eleanor Wynne, past
director of a Montessori school
in Albuquerque, N.M.
The school is co-sponsored
by UCI's Department of Social
Science and Office of Educa-
the children.
Description of the children
in an earlier story as "guinea
pigs for studies" may have
been misleading, Mrs. Robert
Taft of the school said.
said.
The professors and students
will observe the children 's
teaming experiences and work
with them in ways that are
beneficial to the children, she
said.
r----------------···············-, ~ famous recipes tram famous cities/ I
I
I
I
I El Rancho continues to bring you interesting meals from around
I the world, with recipes from famous cities, where food is an art!
L----------·-••••••••••••••••••••~
1i a. .. c....:,,.c.-
~ .... ~ 471f~
Rutabagas ................................ 1 oc
Ever had "Kutabaga Ring"?.,. get our recipe!
Aunt Jane Pickles ............ 49c
Kosher Sticks ••• Polish Stidcl ••• No Garlic .•• ! 26-oz.
Heinz Ketchup ...... .... . .... 19c
The alow one ••• rich, thick! 14.-oz. htle..
Tomato Juice ·-······-·······-... 29'
Doi llloot.t ••• 41k><. ean ... wake up appetite;!
Gerber's Baby Food ........ 10'
Strain.Id ••• ehoalt bei>Y.'• fe...nte kiodsf
h> ~ .
'
St. Pa.u.J,.Minneapoli.s • --• sha.ri?t(J the hist-Orie lor1; of the
northern states .,. heritage of the Sioux ... th.c. u;o1i.der3
<>f Minnehaha Falls and lVinneta11~·a Lake ... and the delightful
recipe$ in herited j ro1n hardy 71io~ers!
Stew Beef ......... 79~
Lean chunks of hearty beef ... just \\'hat you'll ...,·ant for the
famous "Beef Parsley Pie" l Be sure to get our recipe!
Halibut Fillet ..... 89~
True to the tradition of Sca nd inavian ancestors. Minnesota is
famous for its fish! ••. and so is El Rancho !
TENDERLOIN p k 98 c Of FRESH or . . . . . . . . . . lb
So ~an ••• so S"'eet ... fresh mid·'A'eslcrn pork!
Sharp Cheddar 69c
Cracker Barrel ••• 10-oz. sLiclu , , , flavor with authorltyl
Cream Cheese 29'
Borden's 8-oz. Neufchat.el ••• for our "cheese log" recipe!
Pr-ices in. effect a.t all sl<>rt$
Mot., Tues .. ~Vcd., Oct. t i ,!!, fj
ARCIDtA: Sunset & Hunlington Dr. (8 Rancho Center)
PASADEHA: 320 West Colorado Blvd. • $DUTii PASADW: Fremont & 1111nt;nrton Dr.
IV"'INQTDN BEACI: Wamir al1<I Algonquin (Jost Cast of Hootinrton Harbour)
_.11W1t Z1Zl Uewjjllll lllvd. ~ 1b55 fastlllufl lk. (Eal~ Vil.9 C1D1111
THE CANDIDATE
Big screen color portable has
vivid, true-to-life New Vista pie·
lure, Sportabout Chassis with new
Solid State Components, pop-up
handle. EL-442
• 180 sq. in. picture 250
THE SANFORD
Per
Week
Our Value Winner co1or console
with a giant screen and low,
low price. New transistorized VH F
tuner, Solid State UHF
tuninc, New Vista Chassis,
contemporary cabinet styliitg
and the big 6" oval duo·cone
speaker, all· range tone control.
Gl-610 • 295 sq. 1n. picture
SEE 7 HISTORICAi CITIES
VIA WESTERN A/RUNES •• , IN HERITAGE TOUR
ff' Win four fabulous West. ~-IJnd 1rn H1ritar;1 Trips far Cf two Via Western Airlines!
Fly to 7 famous Western
~l Y 1un a11d sun. spots •••
circle ths scenic Wist, ••
• FREE Entry Blanks
FREE
4
FLYING
TRlPS
PLUS
Dozens of
FREE
prizes!
-no oblir;ation, of cDurse.
Hurry, RCA'Month Sweep·
stakes llldS October 31.
1968!
BE A WINNER/
• RCA Home Entertain-
ment Center
• Big screen color con-
sole
• Color pDrtable TY
• 3 black and white por·
table TVs
• & portable stereos
• 25 dock radios
THE ASBURY
Ou r biggest screen portable color
has new Vista Chassis, metal
cabinet with easy-to-clean vinyl
finish, 4" duo-cone speaker that
works Hke two. 300
Per
Ft.·520 • 295 SCf. fn, Week
WIN NOTHING TO WRITE BUT YOUR NAME •. •
NO OBLIGATION! REGlSJER AND WINI FREE •
TV & APPLIANCE
CENTER
HARBOR CENTER
2300 Harbor llvcl. Pli. 540-7131 Costa Mesa
Transit .at Stake
Voters to Decide on Huge Systems
ClllCAGO (AP) -Nov. 5 ..r..-.. propooall to
create new rapid transit
systems ln three of the na-
Uon's ma j o r metropolitan
areas point up the renewed in-
t....i In lhil form o f
transpC>rtatlon.
Residellts of Loa Angeles,
Atlanta and Washlniton, D.C.
wW vole on financing pro-
poaall for new rapid transit
syatems. New Jersey reaklent.s
wW vote oo a mulUmllllorr
dollar bond issue, a major
portion of which Is earmarked
for improving c om m u t e r
railroad!.
network would cover the San
Fernando Valley, the San
Gabriel Valley, the Long
Beach area, the South Central
region, the Westwood-UCLA
complex and ~ Airport·
Southwest area.
CTJ,OOI ~WLE
'Ibe S o u t h e r n CaWornia
Rapid Transit O is tr i ct
esUmates more t.h&n 4T7 ,000
passengers would use the pro-
posed system on a typical
weekday by 1980.
cent of the flnanclal support.
The p1ao lot the Atlanta
area alao calls far improved
bu8 service to provide COOo
venlent transporta.Uon to and
from rapid transJt station!.
$ZG'I MIWON SOUGHT
In the Wa1hin1ton
metropolitan area. proposed
bond Issues tolalllng $207.S
mllllon for rapid transit con-
strucUon wW be considered by
voters in a major Maryland
county, and two coonlles and
lwo cities in Virginia.
The bond issue w o u l d
represent s u b u r b a n con-
.. __
• --·-I '
_,, Oct*r 21, 1968 DAILY PllOT 9
Old Cars on Auctwn Bl.ock I
.
LONDON (AP) -A plush which wu In the ~ fn the Ille to be oopducled by
J1mou11ne once uaed by IO In-of 15,000 to •.ooo °' more. ' Sotheby'1, II an 1111
dtao mablrljlh to IO Uaer Another notable aa!!I offer Dechamps motor lrlc:ycle but
bunllnc and a bull-led la I tll!I N.A.G. lf>Ol1I two-equally lnteretllnf la a llOt llOlla-lto1Ct uoed lo inope<I oeater which hod a leading
1roop1 In ll'rance during World role In the mm "'!bole De DIM-Bouton Wlllcb wu
War I come undtr the ham· Magnificent Men ln Their dllcovered In an abandoned
mer at a London aucUon oext Flying Machines." cycle workshop at Crewe,
Frlda,1« Also oUered i.. a 411<-llter England, In 1933. To get at the
The sale includea 74 veteran, BenUey sports saloon which in -relic a tree wblcb bad grown
vinlage and thoroughbred 1939 set 1be one-hour record up outside the workshop door
horselts1 carriages d at l n I for Ill clasl with an average had to be chopped down.
from the pioneer d~ of of 107 miles an bour. Thei:jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii mOtoring, •and collecton are driver waa i~ ace Capl. II
led 1--........ of ..,...... HAL AUllCHll expce ·-many ..--George Eyston. HEARING AIDS
the world. · Only three ouch mode'· Al,._ •• , made In the lAM-.j.lJ Cu1tom A11r•I Ampllft••tlM
OU\fU61' -· were made and the other lwo No uuSM.1• a speClally venWated Lan-were destroyed during World Mot I. COAST HW'f. chester la claimed to have on· c... ,.. Mw
1y done 4
1
000 miles. Jt wasli•W~ar~n~.:~~~~:~::'"'::•:""~"'~'-~'~'~"=.,.="~'~ owned by the Mabarajlh of The oldest powered vehicle
Rew-. Jt bas two outrider
Rats on each a I d e , 'Ille ....Wt of the voting, said
Dr. Wllllam J. Ronan, presi-
dent of the InsUtute for Rapid
Tranalt, will determine
"wbetber the people wish to
have an efficient balanced
transportation system. . .or
whether they wish to continue
to atruute along with in·
crea&lng trafflc congestion by
depending almoet aolely on the
'Ibe city of AUanta and two
neighboring counties wW bold
a separate 'referendum in the
general election on financing
pniposab for a sm rnillioo
bond issue for a new 40-mile
rapid transit system.
tributions !or construction of a ~
95-rnlle regional rapid transit =11¢'
system. -_ •
ptttUmably for tJaer spotten
or for aboot.ers.
~.star Item in the sale Ls a
1914 Silver Gbosl Rolls-Royce
ContJnenlal Tourer which is
beHeved to be complete lo
original specWcaUon. Bullet
marks on the bonnet were
made by Germ.an snipers u
its first. oWJJer, Col. Sir Fran-
cis McClean, toured batUe
areas of France.
I See by Today's
Want Ads: The total cost of the
transportation network is
estimated to be $750 million.
Additional funds would t)e
sought from state and federal
sources.
In the Marylaod county ol
Prince George, voten will .£:::::~====::::~===:::::::::::::=.. consider a pcopo8ed $ a I e PENNY PINOlllUI • • •
Qusl11ed od, 3 -2
lim<s, ooly$2.00I
· automobile."
NON-PROFIT
'l1le l.nsUtute· ls a non-profit
industry orgJ11}izailon head-
quartered in Chicago.
The Loa Angeles referendum
calls fcir construction of a $2.5
billion rapid transit system
which · would consist of five
major •'oomliod' r out e s
totalling B9 miles.
The re!erendum, must win
the support ol ~ peiunt of
the votert to be approved.
It would a~rlze Los
Angeles county to lpcrem the
s3Ies tat by \I of ooe percent
to guarantee bonds) for fman-
cing ol the projec~. -The new ~stem · Jn-
clude 6S ataUons 1• fieet of
756 airoonditlone4 r a p i d
transit cars. ll Would be
augmepted by 850 'buses
operaUng over 3lQ VUleo of
new~tel. I
The propoaocl transgortaUon
I \
The referendum requires a
simple majority for approval.
Under the proposal, the city
of AUanta and Fulton County
would divide n.7 percent of
the bond issue on an equal
mileage basis and DeKalb
County would provide 2$.3 per·
28,132 Enroll
At Berkeley
BERKELEY (UPI) - A to-
tal enrollment of 24,132 stu-
dents. was reported wecme.
day for the fall quarter at the
Univ.~ity of California Berk-
eley campus •.
Ull.iversity officials said the
figure is 700 less than l a s t year's totaJ'.. In an effort to
keep enrollment down, more
than 2,000 eligible applicants
were ·turned down this year.
million rapld transit bond
issue.
In Virginia, a $11.9 million
bond issue Is on lhe ballot In
Fairfax County and a $M
million bond issue is up for
vote in Arlington County.
Fairfax Clty voters will con-
sider a $2.6 million bond issue
for rapid trans.it construction
and residents of Falls Qrurch
will vote on a $1 million bond
issue.
JERSEY TO VOTE
New Jersey residents will
vote On a proposed· ·$640
million transportation bond
is.5ue Nov. 5. OL thil .$200
million would go· to public
transportaUon, principally for
improvements lo commuter
railroad!.
This, would l'nclude · new
equipment , and more elec-
triflcaUo~ for lhe .Penn Cen·
tral, the Erie Lackawanna and
the New Ycirk and Long
Branch railroads· and the Cen-
tral Railroad of 'New J~y.
You can
listen.to the~
mo11ey ·y0u'l1
save on one
of our
car ·oans.
It'll pay for )'OUr radio.
\Ve may give the only car loans in town you can actually hear. Because
you'll save enough mooey on one to buy the radio for the car you buy.
You see, we offer:
A hlllblyinteresting checking account. It's free for the life of your
loan. Say your monthly s~ce chaige now a!crages $2. When it'• noth·
ing at all, you'll save $48 m two years; $72 m three years. For. that you
can buy a nice radio or a very nice f;\dio. .
Loana oi Uttle interett. LOw. Lo~. That la the only way to describe
our intutat iatea. And you don't have to be a famili~ ~ce. tb get ad~
After all, m1\lng fuyal cusl.omen of #ect strangers made us the $9oo
million bank. we a:e today.
So no mauer whether you want a
radio orwhitewalls or pawer brakes
for your new car, if you get a loan
from utyou'll get a little extra.
100VllllTT Pill<Omca: 18022 Culver Drive, InlDa
•
Survey Shows Typical
John Birch Member
LOS ANGELE:S (AP) - A A Protestant Republican and
University of Southern often a member of a fun-
CalUornta study -aimed at damentalllt led;
finding out what the typical Active politically but seldom
John Birch Society member in involved in community a!fain
the state is like -came up generally.
with this profOe: The study was conducted for
A well educated, middle or USC by Dr. Barbara Shell
upper class Caucasian who Stone of Glendale who is an
feels his enUre way of lite to assistant professor at Pep-
be threat....i; perdlne College. :=::=::=::=::::::========
Rolls-Royce Sliver Ghost..
are regarded by collectors as
just about the ulUmate in an-
tique autos. As glorious relics
of a bygone age, they now
change hands at auctions at 10
times tbe1r original cost,
NO. I
Ort• of tht 111011 1'0pwl1r
11ow1ptptr fttt\irt 1 111 tlit
ontirt U11ittcl Sttt•1 i1 the
Ai111 l•11dtr1 column. 1!'1 •
d1Uy hthire of tlie DAILY
l'ILOr •11111 owr retlller1 tell
01 it'1 our Ne. I col11m11.
I
e Johnny ,.,,,,.,_ -Yoo
planted !JO well, mmeone
baa an abundence of ·~
pies -for sale.
• Uttle Boy mue, come tmv.-
thls """' • • • Clm1mt l<r
"""
• Fishin& for anethlnC t.o
do"! 150 Ul!led aqmrtums
tor ~. CHEAP.
e DAILY PILOTWJ.NT ADS
BRING RESUL'IS! ! !
Will. you IJt and feel your beat for the feetive ~-========-------========::]~ holiday 9eUOJI? Will ;rou be proud of your figure
for the approachin&" BeUOn of part.lea and family
gatherinp ! Or, will you aadly look at your ward-
;
robe and hate younelf becauae 7ou've added a
few poundA gradually, and nothing !&em! to fit
any more? Now You can make a
quick change to a new YOU
durina Gloria Marshall'• Fall
Firure Festival. Enjoy a
lovely new figure in just
a' few .,;,.a with a C:S
llr&ftll!all: pr<>gram.
rtW t!M-
~ w
penoona)ilo.ct Gloria !" . . J 0 ~c,. Lose JO Inches
In 3Weeks!
·-
" I
'
I
'
From hips, thighs, waist,
tummy, midriff or am_is.
Now you can have a slender silhouette
for Fall with Gloria Marshall's high)y
successful ~ystem, that produce.s guai--
anteed rajlid results. You will trim
off excess pounds and inches effoit-
Jessly, ;while firming tissues and ton-
ing muscles. How? The Gloria Mar-
shall' system is based on the use of very
special machines designed ·to banish
every correctable figure fault ... we
achieve remarkable results for you
without pills, drugs, strenuous exer-
cise or starvation diet. For figure im-
provement, p o s tu re correction and
poise, our system can perform won-
ders. Why not make up your mind right ·now· to
wat.ch the pounds and inches "fall" away this Fall.
Call the salon nearest you for free figure analysis
and learn how we can guarantee results fo~ you!
\
~ttti!' /_,,~ //, Cor a complimentary trut~ent and flfUre .... !yola ••• we'll t.ell )'Oil
1 · . ~ euc_tty what your new meaaurementa will be, and GUARANTEE it in
wntill6. Y °" will alao know how many viatta your poroonalized proiRJll will requtt., at $2 a treatment.
SANTA ANA
1840 W. 17th Street
543.9457
•
>
I '
I
I
I
•,
J
l
JO DAILY PILOT Mond,v, Ottobtr 21, 1'68
, , 'S~•aple S•vior'
I
• • I •
•
' •
•
' • • • •
Pat Paulsen Adds
Humor to Politics
151 \11R.~ON scan'
HOU.. VWOOD (IJPI)
Whaltvtr me p1litica)
~ ••• IDdlTIWal
...... "'lllis --.. tnal-Mt ~·t.J CM1I a n Pet e1 tM
STAG por\)' t--for ~ 'l.ailc -G«\i 1 S}. na *-.. ,._.mo-_ .. ,.. __ , --·---" ~~6it•••ptW!
~--~was a ,-a ....... "' lk l.JU. ~--.all mft. --P'Ql&?td .. at----·$al«! ... ~. • .,. "' 4 ...., " poliba siDtt ... ~ 5 of the~~ \¥ '
much in demand as a publlt
speaker as the ~ ean.
didates. Althoo&b be rtr<l)'
mates as much stnte: as the
olben. bis lnltgrtly II bo)'<lOd
quesUon. u YQU can Re for
,......ii "' bis _., ""'11 ljltdol.
Far "'51_., Pauhoo, who
~ to fame <a the "Smolbus
Brolbtrs Sbow'', says: .. I'll
llhra)-. ... ...... " .., --·Iii• .... «Mtw l¥lll crdinary. s I m p I e
s::l'fior" Amtrica's destin.)'!"
~~comedian
.-• ~ trip lo
w~ o.c .. -. 1o ru.c • silnr dollar ....... Ibo
---~· -n.t father ol our country
DAILY PILOT Sleff Pllt .. Al Slnil!I. Aobi--Jolln r. ~-,.,_
Boooe•dt, -I.hula
and Tl!dd) -,..... ~"21.·-·
-· -(:.I Caolidp b<ooglJt a dry New &clood
~ lhrt"w a aihw dollar
X!'OS.'S lhis ri\'ef'," Paulsen
sUl bis loog. ..-lace fur.
.......i with Ibo burden " ttnrctrt "and since that time
e\""ft'y president has likewise
<'ontjan•d to throw money
my.
VIVA LA FEMMES -Barry Ashton, producer of Melodyland's "Femmes de
Paris" revue, obviously enjoys the company of his coterie of showgirls who
will display their cbanns for the next four weeks on the Anaheim st._age.
wit to bis C1V!tp'i.gn.
.. 11·s a shame :a dollar
doesn't go as far as it med
to:· Here Co1nes •Bride~ ~ othtrs a:s Millard
Fillmor'l'. WUliam Mc-"wly.
R-.n! R. e.,... and
O!ester A. -.. fumy only in ~"t and mm.
tenttonally.
(Editor 's note: And
George's half dollar didn't go
across tbt Potomac, Pat. It
..... the Rappahannock).
Paulsen kids the other can-
didates with satitt, drollery
and mime. He tackles issues
with mad abandon.
Melodyland Revue Act an Eye ~pener
For seven! months Pat
Paulsen W been almost »
New Drama
Group Slates
Auditions
Orange County's newest
community theater group, the
Fountain Valley Lit l le
Theater, will hold auditions for
its first production -Murray
Schisga1'1 comedy "Luv" -
on Wednesday, Oct. 20.
Mark Wood , Fountain Valley
High Sschool drama teacher
and founder of the group, will
direct the show. Tryouts will
be held at 8 p.m. in Room 132
of the high school.,
The cast calls for lwo men
and one woman. Production
dates are tentatively schedul-
ed for early in January, coin-
cldlng with lhe opening of the
new Fountain Valley Civic
Center.
Of the American Indians he
says: "I think we should
preserve our long-standing
heritage and tradition.
Declare war on them! They
still have some land that we
haven't taken yet."
Paulsen's speaking voice
would give chills to a con-
vention of morticians. His face
is in constant mourning.
He is today's political gadf·
Jy, much as was Will Rogers
in his time. Paulsen has taken
a stand against marijuana:
"It should be licensed to keep
it out of the hands of teen-
agers. It's too good for them."
In the event he should lose
the electJOn -and polls in-
dicate he will lose big -the
standard bearer of the STAG
party is prepared with a sour
grapes riposte.
After sending a telegram to
the winner, Pau\Aen will an-
nounce that he is disappointed,
adding: "If you've seen one
White House, you've seen 'em
all."
1000 BEAUTIFUL
STICK-ON LABELS
By TOM TITUS
Of n... D1ltr Plltt S11ff'
When Melodyland's "Bride
of Tomorrow" marches down
the aisle Tuesday night, it's
safe to say that all eyes in the
3,200-seat theater will be upon
her.
Her costume will consist of
a wedding veil -period -
and she'll carry a bouquet,
which she'll ~ away at the
close of her number.
This brief bit of business
will very likely be the most
talked about portion or the
new "Femmes de Paris"
revue, which opens a foor-
week run Tuesday at the
Anaheim arena theater.
The "Bride of Tomorrow"
nwnber is the brainchild of
producer Barry Ashton who
chose his star from a field of
fi ve showgirls last weekend.
Her name is the only thing
In Demand
HOLL YWOOO (UPI)
Since winning the Oscar, ac·
tor Walter Matthau has
hardly had a day off; his
next will be the male lead in
"Cactus Flower" for Colum-
bia Pictures.
$1.00 ........... Crossword P11zzle
Mey be used on envelopes as return address
lebels. Also very hendy es identificetion lebels
for marking personal items such a s books,
records, photos, etc. lebels slid< on gloss end
may be used for marking home canned food
items. ATI lebels ere printed with stylish
Vogue type on fine quelity white gummed
peper end pecked in reuseble magic
seal top container.
Mr&. Chrism. lto-
969 Po1t Ro•cl
Coit• M•w, c.rn. f.l626
' ACROSS 4Z Makt happf 44 Elegy 1 lorthless 45 Promlntnt barren l1nd 47 Inside
. 6 Detall of JnrormaUon
infon111t1011 48 Swrdlsh
10 BroMf-topped Island
hlll 49 kind of 9111e
14 Make qultl 50 Of 1 15 Proof of .constant
Indebtedness nature
16 Russian 54 Naval · soldier · architect's
17 Collect• drawings; resnve 2 words
supply 57 Communlea
11 A city 1tlons eol:.11
In Quebtc word 20 Gtnnan 58 From side· philo l09ilt to side
21 Youth 59 A119er
2Z Calend• 60 Ultrmate
entry aim of
23 Assist In endeavor
achltvt•ent 61 Noun suffix
25 Bridge 6Z Roman poet
pl1yt1's 63 S11ooth food
1111ntuver product
DOWN r - - --------- --Z7 Exempted
JO Stt l -I Across 31 Irritate l Stin9in9 insect I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Fill i11 tki1 c111po11, clip .,,d ll'l•il wl!h $1.00 let
'ilot Pri1'1!111g, Ll'otl Di~ .• lo• 1171.
N•wl"'rt l1•ch, C.lif. 92MJ
.. •-••--•••••-•••--•-a••••a•,.•·•••,._.••••••••••
a••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••a•a•••-•••••••--••• .. •••••••••••-••••••·••••••••
I• ...,,. t. u•• 'J•ur lip Co.lo
I JZ Hot e11ben.
JJ ltlllt
)& Thing J · dlffi euT\
to Wat J 17 Disney eh1n.cttf I 31 kind of TY ... , ...
I 39 Air Int stewardess'
ofltrin9 J 40 S111.1lltsl ·possib le
) 41 Co111pm
l 51~ing
J l!ng narrow
9roove
4 Thtun• WOt'ld In
gtnml
5 seruunr 6 Mass o metal
7 ConstrYI•
Uve plTlJ
lllltlllbtl" I Greek vowel
11-1-+-+-+-
I " ~---
, __ _
L_
PILOT PRINTING
17
,
-----------FREE BONUS
Wl1H EACH ORDER OF LABELS WE
WILL INCLUDE FIEE SET OF
PACKAGE MAILING LABELS • -
..... ,.. ......... ..
_1 1 1=-~f-+,.
"
..
10/.ll/61
'9 Human 37 Of llttlit
beings 1ccount • 10 Ont who 38 Fountain
walks with product:
dlfficulty z words
11 Secretary's 40 City in e.1rdin1I sin Yorkshlrt
lZ 1961 home 41 Envelop run cha111p entirety 13 Give extreme 43 Cruise ships
unction 44 kind of 19 Bering r~ord
and Borge 45 Sklllful 21 Piece of slaleSJnan
furniture 4!. Hot defunct
2~ Stt l Down •7 Alt 25 lltal 49 lndlan • 26 Small land Ocean island
body 51 Brings 10
27 Taint on sbte or
r1putatlon ••turity
28 Tret 5Z Edlble part
29 Engages ht of 1 nut
aquatlc sport 53 A Girdner 30 Immerse ~ On tht
JZ Setbolrd affirmative
34 Drying side
eh1111ber 56 1st century ·JS kind ol date: Ro11.1n
!ilflSS • 51 Spllt open
0 11 IJ
'
theater. The Melody land pro-
duction is the show's debut.
OPIN TODAT 6:41
Peter Sellers
in
"I LOVE YOU
ALICE B. TOKLAS"
IN COLOR
Burt Lancaster
in
"Tll SWIMMER"
IN COLOR
l'IJWP'OIT l lACM -ot n.. ..,....,_
M l•Ml.<n LW<0 lolo -01. J-ISS•
Jim Brown
Julle Harris
Diahann Carroll
ErMSt 8orgnlne
"THE
SPLIT"
"ELVIRA
MADIGAN"
Wlth "* D•t•JM1rl
.... ....._. .. C.f•
Italy Location Primitive
Kramer's 'Santa Vittorio'
Toughest Movie of Career
By BOB THOMAS
TIVOU, Italy (AP)
Stanley Kramer was
celebrating bb !6th birthday
and his 35th year ln the movie
bus1ness by completing "lhe
most dilllcult picture of my
career.''
On a hillside in th1s ancient
town outside Rome, the film
maker was finishing a se-
quence in a cave that dates to
R<>man times. Anthony Quinn,
as the wartime mayor of a
small Italian village, was ex-
ulting over disctlvery of the
caves as a place to hide a
million bottles of wine from
the Gerq:wis.
Although graying at the
temples, Kramer still has the
smoolh face and youthful zest
that made him a boy wonder
with such early productions as
"Champion," "Home of the
Brave" and "High Noon." He
admitted he was Ured after
3¥.i months of filming, almost
entirely on locations.
"There are several reasons
why this has been the toughest
picture I have ever made." he
remarked. "Nearly everything
has been shot outside, and we
ran into some miserable
weather. The life at the village
we selected, Anticoli Corrado,
was unbelievably primitive.
SOUND PROBLEM
e Hllorl••• c .... ,,.,.
nTiger Milk.out"
THE LUXURIOUS NEW
"tf,tited rt~tiJtJ
l ',W , ... '0"1T.14Nn
"~"'" .... ,l~ .~J 91Dl
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER
an-.ctom-•1 MC::MaU
JOSEPH E. LEVINE -,
MIKE NICHOLS
LAWRENCE TURMAN -
THE &RADUAlE
CXl.OR ...... -.~-
absolutely magnificent. Yet
the picture wu a total failure
at the. box office.
"Then you take a picture
like 'Guess Who's Coming to
Dinner.' t wasn't 81.lre if the
whole lh.ing would work. It
was tough to film, because
Spence could only work from
9:30 to noon: after that he had
no energy left. He was so sick
that 1 couldn't get Insurance
on him. .
"Well, we got knocked by •
tot of critics who clalmed that
the plot was an
oversimplification, which I in-
tended it to be. Maybe the
make any predictions. He critics didn't go for it, but the
slatted as a back.lot worker at audiences sure as hell did.
MGM in 1933, became a cut-Now the projected gross for it
ter, writer before turning pro-is $38 million."
ducer in 1947. He became a< ;:;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;~ director with ''Not as a,1 Stranger."
"I think 'Santa Vittoria' has
some fantastic scenes," the
director observed. "The actors
have been remarkable. I've
worked with some great
performers -Spencer Tracy,
the early Brando, Sidney
Poitier. I haven't found a bet-
ter actor than Tony Quinn.
What a worker he is! He'll
pl&y a scene at fu11 force 10
times, then ask lo do it again
because he wasn't satisfied
with it.
RARE PERSONALITY
"Anna 1.-tagnani ls a rare
personality. There ill no actor
or actress who can take an
epithet and hurl it like a
~ ol ~(()STA,....... -5f .. J\02 ""'...,_ .. ..,_.,,.,...,_oo ....... --.
TWO TOP HITS
ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER ...,._CT09--IKMCILll
JOSEPM E. lfvtN£ -...
MIKE H1CHOLS I
LAWRENCE TURMAN -
THE &RADUAlE .............. -.. ,..:-. ......... missile, the way she does. ,__...,..
"Their scenes have been
great, but I can't really tell
whether the picture will come
off or not. You never can.
Sometimes you put together
what you think is a series of
perfect vignettes and then it
doesn't pay off. 'Inherit the
Wind' was that 'way. Some of
the scenes between Spence
Tracy and Freddy March were ,
HRD OVER!
FINAL WEEK!
PENETRATION
N11rfy •••ryo"• ro14i 'ftlt
DAILY PILOT, h1J11otown 11••1·
p1p•r fet tla1 F1bulou1 Or1nt•
C.111.
-AND!IEWS ·-PUJMlif.l tti.wi 11.1.n~r·::::wr -
f.u:INOll PIJ!Kfl.:o . ::.--.:=:I iiiiin ... 1 WAID llOOCDI.
Giia...ll.uattl5T'llll 1 I i:i'iiUT l.DIWI
A tlAMA °' noru
The•
Swimmer
.. ~[fl
~---~-~-~-~~~-~~ ............. ;:,,_;::_~-~~;,;;;.::--...... ~ -· ·~""'"""""'"""""'"""",.__~;;.o----...;;-.. ............................ lliliiliililllillllllllllllliliilliiii .. llillliillmiliilll ................................................. ..
•
MOND AY
OCfOIUt Zl
I \' [ NI~ u
·---(C) (lO) sr..,. Wl!ooll!U Dou1 McClurt, EJt.
Mitt Jo. Jobn 8arbotlr.
D THE 6 O'CLOCK MOVIE * "THE COUNTERFEIT
TRAITOR" -Part I
Color! WILLIAM HOLDENI
f!GIPlta\ wltllollt t.ntoa hlr: S11111
Wlt ... llltit~C...
Ir> !'! "'· """ .... Iii .... 6ol'll ... Jlprdlq Mr •••
GI.., -(C) CllO)
..... -(IO)
en•"""' -
PEANUTS
DR. KILDARE
t°HIPPflt iwncER 15 HI~ IH A HQSP'fTAL. SU!•at.Sl!MfNT., ,TQ
8E Cloe 10 HIS AJUM& NQT'H!R ....
THIS ooat IS SUPPOS?P
10 "" LOCl<'fO.
--r -...,.. ------~-----......----..,.. ---- --r -r --
By Cbcnlea M. Schull
u .. .._ _ tc>.,..
tmt.t.n Tr.lw" f'llt. I <--
pe~) '62-Wlllllm HoldtA, Liii
P1l1111r.
WHY'! wtto'P WM(r "lb S\IWre
M'IAT'5" IN lttlS Rfffii!Otl ?' 1 ....... ~ ..... ~~.:....~;::;...
SPAIN-Eltcerpta from four. ol Ernest Hemingway's
novels an niad on "Hemingway's Spain: A Love
Affair," !<>night in color at-9 p.m. on Channel 7.
The special which was filmed in Spain revi~ts many
of Hemingway's favorite places in the country.
11J I "1 (C) (IO)
m-.. (C) (30)
e 'nit'• "~ "l"llt Loll """·" Ill ....... rt..
l:JO D INIC --(C) (15)
CD I LM LKJ (30) 1:11 e. cl>'"''" Affair. (C) (30)
ID v.,... tit 11111 .... tf .. A pretlJ lllbaltut• tucher (June kiri (C) (60). · l.odMl'tl hi• • ltninp lfftct on
. Jody, 1114 Und1 Biii Wi aire It Is
Ill) Tlllt, T-. Is AIMria 1 tcfloolbo7 ttulh.
GORDO
111 ...... " (C) Ill""" .. •-: (C) (30)
"l.tdy From .18m1lc1." Alldrry M1rl1 1--o-f-.: ctionr aunts.
7:flODll!l (J)CIS ""''" -(C) (lb) Walter CfonkitL
D"""' """'' (C) ~ Cultb Oilkes defends' his WlllneltM tltlt
111lnst R1111t.1n Ls CllR. ll'19 ttl•
e1st from Mew Orlhlll.
fll JIU Jlnlt: •.w.11 """r, As-
lin S'fJord." T11111 fllma ltUdJ' J•Ptn'a
Mtllilr fllllioM ... I Nt'ld of
emlrre Tlbttlns • lllllldl 11ldl
'"'""'' """'"' """ •~· JUDGE PARKER •batln ffep.11.
7:J08111lC1J•11-· IC) (lO) Wiitn Mltsbal -Dillon " ~ to kill a man to ttop-1 llloDn ·1nw1,
Illa m1n'1 Blb!,.quottni. lllOOllllllft.
lnr. rancher f1t111r •nd his faur
brothers IO runnin1 for Mitt. DUli
T1ytor ind Will Gttt aut:st.
fJ lkM: (CJ (30) Ttd M~111.
GI Jodi ..,.,. -tc> cob)
mn. """"'" s.: tc> c'~ •1frmur1 In Yucatln 0.ptha." • .... _ .. __ (C)
!W.i'fil:::::.~:. _,_.
trials; Crcllne:: hndem t11111, 4,000 ll:OOBBMI .--bplfl (CJ (30)
mete11 him p1111Ult flntl; Wal11 Pok.I: PGSliblt t.o\'lnlfe; Grmn1stles: 81" lltl How 1' ... (C) (30)
women's lndMdUal exerclsei.
QI Tnil.11 .,. toftttqllel!CIS: (C) (JO)
Jonattrln Hprrla. D1v1 Kltdlum 111d
Marilyn Driln runt.
m11n "',,. Lrt c., c60l
ll!l'-""""'
111--
l:OD D rton11 & llarh ll•·la: (C) {IQ) Flip Wlllon iulltl.
0 Mrtd Hltttadi: (30)
D Nm: (C) (30)' lkxtlt Ward.
··m D1111W D't.9nlOf: ~• <to) ltnd• ~ HtnninL Mike Minor, J11tf1
S11s.stllt, Hank Urtnt, Mu: Shul·
•n •nd BIUy Olllltll pat. . .. '
• n.t -(Cl (30) ·»o ·~· mi, Ind [di ltSh1n lllbcm
"'l'evlfl Pow."
S Eltll Noelle I lls Ollcl
MOON MUWNS
.111Vv11 t.•~• t.l •;,,.,
TUMBLEWEEDS
Di ll'JCilU 1111 lllAI...... . • Slil: (C) 130> Hlfhllfhll of the 11:1) 8 Mwit: (C) "'lh lld Ttllt" Metnoflal Dlt reoe. (M11P111st) '57--Mthony SteeL Don-
"TUMBLEWEEDS, MEET
HOGARTH HEMP!-HE JUST
BLEW INTO TOWN! •td Sinden. ~ m ,._ I w.1,, "rlio ,_
(fitma) '62-Mlchlll C.ll1n, Cliff D 0@1'111 Ttnlchl SIM (C)
Robertlon, Jlllltl MIKMhur.
. m HonU<l <30!
fi:l blnbow QM1t" Ptte Sttrw'a
aunt II Alu1nd1r Zllkin. e-·-
...... : "Orlllln l• 1111" (1111-~ 'SI -Eddl1 Albtrt, UH11n
Q ...
D ll!HJl Joor ,..., -tc> m-. .,_. c_,,,
'~OMmtlJ UM, Ralph Mora:1n.
·-J4(C) '''° n ra m ..,., '""' ctl C30l Kim dM"'JOps I auddtrl lntwllt Ill
houM/1old budllb Ind tMnp .. ,, .. ,...
mestlc. e1u11na Wey • • ...., -"· "'-~ Jllct (C)
llllrriafl pilllL
• -·-(Cl (IO) .,., 12:11 • -..._..,. (""''"' Sm1U TCIW!I Rlnlla." '!f-TOll ConwQ, Honor lltcbl•n.
D IHJ m -,,__ (C) (30) BtttJ Is hurt Whtlt "°' 11M1 lt::Jt • .,_.
T U ESD A Y
.
-· .. ..i..·-(dMo)-'41-
Cltn• Tllrllfy, DIN Alldrtn. 11:11m . .,.._., _ _.
( ... oll) ·~ ""' .. -OAmMt MOVIES -(~ '45--a .. oooto ....
';. ' Mt.
l:IODCC> __ _. <~ 1:111e-IK" <-,5 ->.., ~-... , -.._..... -lMn•a. .......... """"" ...,_
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
2211 West ... Jllol IMI. Newport llMch
.
Mun AND JEW
MISS PEACH
"'
!'I;:>, -'S MUCH
1"00 SWEliT '!'O SE ye.NQefUI.,,,.
..
...............
ly Gus Al'rlola
By Harold Le Don_
Iv Ferd Johnson
MAYB~
"THE"Tl!'AA\
JS
!101.Y·POLY.
ily Tom K. Ryan
GEE!-THATS :".::..'1:..
THE FIRST TIME
ANYBODY EVER
CALLED ME THAT!
Ir Al Smith
TELEVISION VIEWS
Jules Power:
Powerhouse
By TERRENCE O'FLAHERTY
When ABC arranged an irllerview with Jules
Power, the man who produced "How Life Begins,"
I wasn't quite sure what kind of a person he might
be. I'd never met a reproduction expert before.
Instead of a 90-year-old professor, Power turned
out to be a short, lively chap in his 40s with a ready
sense of hwnor who is up to his chin in projects
designed to entertain and educate. For the past
seven years he has been executive producer of "Dis-
covery" as well as ABC's director of children's pro-
gramming -although it may come as a surprise
to parents that there is such a job in TV anymore.
"TELEVISION HAS MAOE a disappointing
showing in the children's field /' he admitted. "The
networks can be blamed but the producers of 1;Jle
shows are also at fault for not being more enter-
taining when bandllnf edueational material. On the
'Discover)'' series remind myself constantly
there1s a cartoon on the opposite cbanilel that's full
of. action, animals and adventure. The youngsters
can flip the dial very easily."
About six million viewers don't flip the dial on
, 11Discovery'' every Sunday, according to the rat-
ings. Wben Power's nighttime family special "How
Life Begins," was first shown this year it was seen
on 37 percent of all sets in use.
"SUDDENL y I FOUND a show of mine rated
number seven in the Top Ten, up there wit'b Ed Sul·
livan and Lucille Ball! For a guy who produces edu-
cational yrograms, that was quite a thrill," said
Power. 0 feit like the editor of an obscure poetry
magazine who discovers he has passed Playboy in
circulation.''
Five years ago Power pn>ducf4 a half-hour
''Discovery" program oq reproduction titled "'Ibe
Day Life Begins. u The response was so great he
followed it wi111 a book. Last year the 3-M Company
came U> him with the sugg.Ostlon .he turn it into a
TV special and gave him a free hand to develop it.
"AT FIRST I wondered if it should be done at
all, and· then I wondered bow we11hould do·11:• ad• -
mibted Power. "There were no ground rules because
a TV documentary on birth and · reproduction bad
never been done."
Part of the success of the program was due to
the photographs made by Lenart Nilsson, a Swedish
r"l'Orter and photographer, t!lat showed the develop-
ment of a human baby from a 31klay embryo <o a
11-monlh-old fetus. A few of l!>e pb°""' had been pub-
lished in Life Magazine and others had been sold
to the NET network on a non.exclusive basis for
their program "The Beginning of We." At no time
was it suggested the subjects were alive but it wes
never told how the photos were taken. Power said:
"SIMILAR WORK has been dooe in other coun·
tries but none of it compares to Nilsson's. Each of
the phoblgraphs was of an aborted birth. Nilsson had
an arrangement with Stockholm hospitals who ad·
vised him in advance and all pictures were taken
seconds after the operation. I looked through bun·
dreds to select 'the ones we used. All Of them were
trimmed and reph<Jlographed against a background
suggesUng a moonleos, midnight sky with an oc·
casional ·star."'
"It tool< colinge on the part of ABC to do lhls
show," said Power. 111 knew what I was doing but
the network had to depend eutirely on my taste and
judgment.''
ABC 's confidence was well placed.
Dennis tlae Menace
~ 10~11
t
1
I i
J
~. '
~ I I
~
J% DAA.V PILOT M~. Octobrr 21, 1968
LOWEST
PRICES
OF THE
SEASON
wool sweaters for men
10.99 req. 17.00-22.50
Pullovers ana cardigans, assortea
cable knits. All wool. some machine
washable. In sizes S, M, L and XL.
may co men's sportswear 84
save on Sango china
37.70-152.95
reg. «.95-179.95
Service for 8. Only one ol 19 patterns
shown, all with gold or platinum
trim. Reg. 99.95 service for 12, 84.95
may co china 46
men's turtle sweaters
6.99 req. 8.99
High-rise lurtlenecks, easy -care
Orlon• acrylics in black or white.
Machine wash, dry -S, M, L, XI.:
budget store, men's furnishings 806
jewel boxes
5.99 req. 8.00
Gold-tone filigree finish lioxes have
see-through crystal tops in oval,
heart, or round shapes.
may co cosmetics 100
copper ware at savings
•
6.99 to 16.99 :-C.~2~aii0
Imported from Portugal. Deccrative
and practical ... lined with tin.
Shown: reg. 15.00 fondue dish, 11.99
may co housewares 29
no-iron twin sheets
3.19 re g. 3.79
Our own Calverts, white polyester/-
cott on percale, flat or fitted. Reg. 4.59
lu ll 3.89: reg. 2.79 pr. cases 2.39 pr.
budget store, domestics 803
famous maker jr. knits
19.99 were 28.00
Famous maker knits, skimmers, coat
dresses, wrap shapes and man)'.
more. Jrs. and petites 3-15.
mayco young signature dresses 94
electric makeup mirror
13.99 reg. 20.00
Gives shadowless lighting ana it's
ccmpletely portable, with a two-
s!ded mirror, one side magnified I
may co cosmetics 100
bulky knit sweaters
5 69 req. 6.99 •
Long sleevea, crew-neck bullies al
all acrylic, cable-stitched front
White and pretty pastels, sizes 36-40.
budget store, sportswear 800
VALUES IN
EVERY DEPABTMENT
SAVINGS IN AIJ.
'
MA'\'.' CO STORES
Italian knit suits
2 9. 9 9 were 4ll.OO to 43.00
Every woman loves knits. For their
versatility, wearability, season·
spanning ways. In so many styles.
may co town and trmel shop 49
no iron dress shirts
3.39 3 for 10.00 4.50 values
Gold, olive, blue or white. Short
sleeved style. Dacron• polyester and
cotton. Spread or snap tab. 14'/z-17.
may co men's furnishings 6
rain or shine coats
9.99 reg. 11.99 • 12.99
Four styles to choose from. '.Avril•
rayon and cotton tackle twill in
navy, oyster, ice blue and maize .
Just the righ~ light Calilqrn ia
weight. 8 to 18.
budget store downstairs, suits coats
828
' .,
may co south coast plaza, 3333 bristol st., costa mesa; 546-9321
shop ~onday through saturday, 10:00 a.m. t~. 9:30 p.m.
"'111" ............................. "" .............. ,. ..... ""' ................................................................................ "!"' .... ~~ .... ..,,,,,,, ...................... , .... ~ .... "" .... ..;c ... u~~v .... ~. ~ z ............. :-i .... ...,.:7'1 ............. ,.. .... ~
--~ - --=--~-
. '
""'""'' oc,..., ~1. '"' "' ,._ 1a
JODEAN HASTINGS
Eerie l.deas
Haunt House
. Eerie lighting, weird sounds and mysterious, ghostly appari·
lions appearing and vanishing will provide all the spine-chilling at·
mosphere of a haunted house between 11 a.m, and 7 p.m. Saturd,ay, Oct. 26.
As t?eir part in the first annual community HaJloween party,
the Fountain Valley Woman·s Club will be operating a spook l)ouse.
Members will guide children through the "house," a pitch·
black hallway of the city's high school, for 10 cents per child. The
ooncession will be in operation fullowin1! the opening parade.
In charge of haunting is Mrs. R. E. Lvddon. wavs and means
chairman. She is assisted by the Mmes. Orvie Highum. Wallace Short,
Charles Rohrbacher, Jack Runge, Gerald Wessler, Hugh MagiU , Rob-
ert Curley, James Lilly, LeRoy Smith, Nicholas Allfree, Allen Book·
out and Joseph Mortimore. ·
With members in e gho.stly mood, plans tor the club's annual
Halloween masquerade are being concocted.
Costumed guests will appear in the Plumber and Steamfitters'
Hall, Santa Ana, at 8:30 p.m. Saturaay, Nov. 2-
Following the theme of Transylvania '68, the room will be dee·
orated with black styrofoam spiders suspended from the ceiling and
an assortment of black cats, bats, orange and black streamers and a
shining harvest moon .
Prizes will be awarded for costumes in various categories, and
couples will d1ance to juke box music. A buffet supper will be served
at midnight.
BE-WITCHl'NG FOREC AST -Fountain Valley resi-
dents are promised a hauntingly good time in cele·
bration of Halloween. The woman's club will pBT·
tici pate in the community party on Saturday, Oct. 26 ,
and club members and guests will celebrate with
an!Qther party on Saturday, Nov. 2. Frightening
Gary Kowaleski, 3, and Deanna Smith, 6 (left to
right) is Mrs. LeRoy Smith, who is portraying the
witch.
Tickets tor the party are S6 per couple and reservations are
being accepted until Tuesday, Oct. 29, by Mrs. C. E. Stansfield, so-
ci-a-1 chairman, 962-5340. Assisting are the Mmes. Clarence Stewmon,
Robert Pecha, Will Romine, Gary Powley , Mortimore, Frank Am·atio,
Lilly, Barney McLaughlin,. Rohrbacher, Ray Hackerett llml William
Cunningham.
Services Mark
Club Birthdav •
Blowing out candles on their birthday cake
will be n1embers of Westminster Community
Hospital Guild.
Past presidents wil! be among .the guests
when the guild celebrates its seventh anniversary at
6:30 p.m. tomorrow.
To be honored are Joseph C. Kent. ad-
ministrator; Mrs. Leo Ri vard. director of nurses.
and Mrs. Lou Paez, assistant director. Past
presidents who will attend include the Mmes.
\Vi!liam Magill. Stan Richards. Frank ~cNely.
Hugh Salisbury, Bernard Meith and Harry S1geske.
Planning the celebration are Mrs. Paul Staf·
ford and Mrs. Albert Kleist. activity chairmen.
Begun in 1961. the guild was chartered in 196?
and its regular meeting place was transferred fro1TI
members' homes to the hospital dining room.
First official duties of the members includeri
selling baby pictures. deli vering mail and acting as
hostesses during monthly maternity teas.
Members also volunteered to help with
hospital" mending, and added the staffing of a
nourishment cart to their li st of services.
Dressed in cherry pink pinafores. whit •
blouses and shoes. guild members realized the ad ·
vantage of ha nd puppets for their small patients ir
pediatrics. and two members donated 36 hours mak
ing a supply of the toys.
Volunteers , hosted an open house for thr
maternity wing and the polio clinic when they opeT'-
ed, and have 1ogg!i!d mare than 20,218 hours o'
service for the 129-bed facility.
They will add to their hours when the ir
tensive care unit, now under construction. is corr
pleted.
Officers include the Mmes. Sigeske. pres·
dent ; Carey Baird, first vice president; Fletche
\Vookruff, second vice president: Dean McGowen .
recording secretary: Charles Keiter. correspondinJ,!
secretary; Elwood Haws, treasurer; Nick Ekovich.
historian and publicity, and William Ragan,
parliamentarian.
. ' ••• ~ ~'.!!\--.
SURPRISE PACKAGE D -Popping up t.o invite
past presidents to the seventh birthday party of the
Westminster Hospital Guild is Mrs . Paul Stafford,
chair1nan. while looking forward to the event are
(left 00 right) Mrs. Hugh Salisbury, Mrs. Stan Rich·
ards and Mrs. Bernard Melth. The guild performs
many volunteer services for the hospital including
!i:f~r'''J"" the ~ft shop and cart, nourishment cart,
and hosting maternity teas and terry tours.
Surf Sounds
San Francisco
Yacht Hailed '
BY JODEAN HASTINGS
IT WAS as dismal and grey
in San Francisco as the mood
of northern Californian
yachtsmen when Baruna sail·
ed out under the Golden Gate,
but the sun was shining when
.she arrived in Southern
California.
The sleek. 72·foot yawl, a
racing champion, was open for
inspection when her new
owners, John and Norma
Mcintire of Huntington
Harbour, hosted a cocktail
party in honor of her arrival
at the L<>ng,Beach Yacht Club.
Among the many guests who
stopped by to C-Ongratulate the
Mclntires and admire lhe new
vessel were Mr. and Mrs. H.
J. "Dutch" Krutzfeldt.
SAILING in the opposite
direction were members of
Bethel 321, Huctington Beach.
Led by, Nancy McFaul ,
honored queen . the g i r I s
gathered at Newport Harbor
for a mystery trip and board·
ed the IsJand Holiday for
Avalon Bay and a day of tour·
Ing.
P lflTING WORK aside for
a few hours were memben of
the Assistance League of Hun-
tington Beach who were joined
by guesta for bridge and
brunch in the chapt_er house.
Brunch WU served by Mn:.
Floyd (Diane) Hair, chairma.n.
with the assifltance of the
Mmes. T~ Bartlett, Richard
Crawford, Richard Crouch,
Fletcher Dart and Robert
Wilkin, who also acted as -......
Prizes for bridge scores
were awarded Mrs. Ronald
Wood, Mrs. Charles 'White and
Mrs. Crawford, and a speciaJ
prize, two tickets to the Music
Center produ ction of "Rosa'lift.:'
da," were claimed by Mrs.
William Ziething.
SUSAN CHARAMZA, at·
tractive daughter of Judge and
Mn. Waiter Charamza, pledf-
ed Gamma Phi Beta at the
University of Arizona, Tucson.
Susan is a graduate of Hunt·
lngton Beach High School and
attended Orange Cout College
prior to enrolling ln lhe desert
unJveraity.
Hubby Snores, Wi fe A dores Sawdust Piling on~. Her Floors
\
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am getting
sick and Ured of reading letters from
wives complaining atfout their husbands'
snoring. My husband snores -loud. long
and every night. So what? He is one of
the best human beings, Lhe good Lord
ever put on this e\'rth.
When the snoring starts and my sleep
is interrupted, I lie quietly and watch him
get his badly needed rest. When 1 read
that aome women Ue their husbands'
jaws shut with silk stockings and strap
bicycle horns to their heads, 1 get so mad
I couJd scream.
E;tery night r thank God lhat this
wonderful man is in OUR bed snoring.
\\re have been married 10 years and J
hope the good Lord gives us 10 more.
ANN · lANDE~So-'
CONTENDED
DEAR CON: What a lovely lttlf'r ! Bui
wblle you'rt uklng -ask for 411 more.
not 10, dummy! 1
DEAR ANN LANDE: ,,
r wrote for advice. Ye · .;.1:. "!':.~" a
p.yc ·. ist.'' l too;, yor .. ~ 1! :•:-1 it
was the most '1ifficult t:··., .. l've e··1>r
done in my life. But it w11s tilt sn1artcst
I can't understand why a person would •
be ashamed 1.o admit he has...a problem
he can 't handle. Does a patient have to be
dying before he goes to a doctor? Why
lh:m ~11ould he wail till he's re<.1dy for a
r.;-~ ~ :.ici:et before he s ees a
p: .... ·~tri~l?
. 'e.z :::, Ann. continue to urge your
rr1i.iers to stop wasting their lives,
especially the young. Psychiatry can
---·~ -----·-----· ---------------
open doors to peace of mind and con·
tentment. It can conquer fear and guilt
and self hate. It also can overcome
f ·:-A· l'Omplaints and fatigue and
depression.
.iin1 v?ry poor at expressing myself
but 1 wanted kl try . Thanks for reading
this. -NANCY
DEAR NANCY : I 1baU' conl.lnue to
arite' people to get professional help,
aU.hoegh I am well aware that not all pa·
tienta obLain the glowing re1ulta you
detcribe. And If you were able to achieve
Ute m;racle ,,Jlb your orlginal therapist
you are fortunate ..
Therapy can be magic fbr some and
NothlngtvWe for o1*en. I recnmmpd
prtfe"1i011al help ffW lndlvldual1 wbe are
•
depres~. destntcdve or In contlnul
conflict with tbem1tlve1 and o&bert.
Therapy that produce• even modtlt
re.sul111 beatl walking around frightened ,
guilty, mad at the world and plagued by
"undlagnMed" ~ches ud pains.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 1
homosexual who has had psychiatric help
and I'm as well adjusted as I will ever
be.
A few weeks ago 1 was turned down for
military service. I told the truth and
presented medical documentation.
Now people are beginning to ask why 1
have not been called up by my draft
board. J've been 11yil'IC, "I have 1 bad
back," but I'm a poor liar. It 1how1 on
••
my face. What should I say? -STUCK
FOR AN ANSWER
DEAR STUCK: Tell them lite k'at.11.
Nobody will believe It. U a ftw eltdt
per1i&t in pnutnc for an an1wer, say,
"Striously, I've tried but they don't w1nt
me.''
U you have trouble getting alonJ with
yoor parents • • . If yoo can't pt them to
let you llve your own life, send for Ann
Landen:' booklet, ''Bugged by Parenti!
How to Get More Freedom." Send 50
cents In coln with your f'eq'uelt and a
Ions. stamped;tell-~ envelope;
Ann Landers wUJ ti< &lid to help )'OOl
with your problems. Send them to her In
WI ol U., DAILY Pil.OrlliC'Jaoiol 1
lllamped, oelf-oddraaed .,ve1ope.
~I ,,
··-
I
\
•
' I •
' ' .
'
'
-.-21,1968
Peering
Around
Shedding New Light on Old Subject
Lampo will be among items from jewe1<1( b> furniture
which will brlgliten the rummage sole sponsored
jointly by the women of Sl Mlcttaels and All Angel!
Episcopal Church. Corona de1 Mar, and the women
of St. John the Divine Ep!ocopal Church, Costa Mesa.
The event will take place Friday and Slturday, Oct.
Horoscope
25 and 26 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at St. John's,
2043 Orange Ave. Profits from the sale Will be used
·to support gulld progr"!Jls. Seeing that the 1ale will
be a shining event are Oeft to 'fight) Mrs. Paul Col·
tins, the Rev. John Donaldson and Mrs. Robort
Johnson.
Leo: Avoid Deception
Ball Plans
Unmasked
At Dinner TUESDAY
OCTOBER 22
By SYDN_EY OMAllR
ARIES (March 21-Aprll !9):
Your powers _ of intuition are
enhanced . You are able to
perceive events of importance.
Follow through on hunch.
Heed inner voice. Spread in-
fluence and interest.
Write. n:ad-tlpand horizom.
TAURUS !April 2 0 ·May
20): Change In work con-
ditiom indicated. You are able
to suceessfu11y c o n v e y
lhooihll, Ideal. Greater IJ>
PreclaUon accorded your ef.
forts. Be strong within. Know
your own worth.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20);
change in work conditions in-
dicate.
CANCER (Jwre 21.July 221:
Good lunar aspect todly coio-
cJdu wltb Jove, Romance, o:-
citement of discovery. You
find that what Is cloae is real
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Con·
ditions at home demand at-
tention. Don't decei ve yOW"self
about costs, desires. Get to the
heart of matters. A v o i d
overextending yourself. Get
only what you can afford.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ):
Journey connected with past
reapon.slbllity cotild be on
agenda. Strive to arrive at
reuoNJ, Don't be satlafied
th.It aomethlng b a pp en ed .
UBRA (Sepl. ~I. 22),
, Accent on money, income
potential. You get rid of
restricting b u r d e n . Op.
portunltles appear. Recosnlze
them. Take initiative. You can
add to lii:i~cial security H
aware aftd willing. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. ~Nov . 21 ):
Lunar cycle high. Means you
gtt breaks -puzz1e pieces fall
into place. You tee clearly.
SAGmAlUUS (Nov. :i:z..
__.., 'Rtslx peuncmwt bea11tifies
'to-=rm•-dtied hair,
w1-30d!O 20~00
'Ills.is not ;.t a wontle!lul pe1manent
lilt i11llliec our 1.50 Ultra Ma(ic
1111•111. I .llelps br"'e new vibrant
hllltl! llld"beetll\' to yoor hair; yuur set
lllels ltJltir, AINI, ful stiape asRJrarice ,
• IMlllde • ~lized hair-cu t.
llllio\' Sllldio, Iii 9IDltS 111eept Mar iM
M I r 'I
Buffo~·
~ #f Feshton l1lend, N•wport leech
r.1.,i. ... w .2200
Dec. 21 ): Be di8Cl'tet. Secret
Is revealed. ULilizt Jenae: of
what is right. Don't reveal all
you know. Some trust you with
-valuables. Be honest wilbout
being foolish. Measage clear
by tonight.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Accent on friends. hopes,
wishes. Greater social activity
indicated. Contacts you make
work to your bendiL Be flei-
ible. ver.aat.ile. Gain mdicat«t
through rpecial study, report.
Damas de Caridad began ,
milking plan! for tht!ir elthth
annua l Bal Masque at a man-
nequin-florist dinner in the
Saddleback Inn.
The benefit haU, scheduled
for Feb. 8 will feature fresh
flower masques created by the
florists. Prizes are awarded to
wiMers at the blac1t tit dinner
dance staged for the benefit of
St. Jude Hospital. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2;0.Feb.
18): Prestige on rise. Standing
In community hs enhanced.
You solve puzzle which
enables you to overcome
roadblock. Be aware o f
delail!; regulations. Could be
smooth u.Jlina: U you utiliz.e
Mrs. Harold Mustoe, man·
nequin chairman, introdu ced
women who will model the
crtatlons. They art the Mmes.
Woods Barneson of Balboa,
and ~I O. Harvey, Jae·
quellne Knott, William C.
CUmmlnp, William Moore,
Walter J . Pr•y, ~les Cur-
rier, Jay L. Hoed, Rilph Har-
mon and Edwin Ettlnger. all
of Orange County.
Secretaries
knowledi•· .
P18CE8 (Feb. 19-March II):
Good lunar upect to<lay coin-
cides wllh favorable reply to
inquiry. Keep communicatJon
linei clear.
Orange County-Harbor Area
-Legal Secretaries AssoclaUon
meets the third Wednesday of
tht month in various places.
Further information may be
obtained by calling Miss
Sheron OreS!e:I', 5 4 O -0 9 5 0 .
Members gather at 7 p.m.
~--~
; ......................................... .. .
BARGAIN
BUNTERS!
TRADE-IN
sewing machines
STOP BY
SINGER
ROW!
Portables rR0Msg
95
Consoles FRoMS l 995
Zig-Zags FRoM$2995
IUINA PARI
ID! On TN IMll
TA t-1$.e
S-P•rt:~
cost• MUA
mo"'"""'•"'""· ICI '"1195 H'"8trC'.....,.
SINGER Sew & See Gu21r11ntee: with
every used sewing machine goes the
SINGER gua ra ntee of money back ii not
satisfied with purchase. or fu ll credit
toward the purchase of a new SINGER •
sewing machin9, within 90 days!
Walt h SINGtR presents ELVrS ...
Tuesday, December 3, NBC· TV
in color, 9to IOP.M., EOST.
SINGER
ANAHnw GAaDIN O•OYI
.SU N.l.M .. "" o....m ... SJS.11111 ,,...,,
ANMtm C~'-• Or..,.'-"" l"ltP
HUNTtH•TOH SANTA ANA llACH -Elll"Off If l..at lHW.'lllSI. .... ,,., ICI 1-Jtd
H\ln!W. .... IMCll C_,..,,.
COST A MISA
llrl11!1! a. 5Uf!f~r
"""" ~C..lll"llU
U. MIU.DA ''°'' $ ...... l"-IWor '-" .....
I.• MlrMe Ceni.r
---
Costa Mesa Rites
Vows, Rings Exchanged
'11 •
Join m for an excit;n9 skiin9 eve"'"9 for the ~ fatft.
i1y in M•y Co's Terr..,. Room .... touronl, Frida.,. Oct.
25th, starting 11 7:00 p.m. for 2.50. you'l onjoy:
• a social hour around The Glogg llowl
• a family ski fashion show
• a skier'> dinner preoared by Chris •-
formerly of Scandia
di"nef' lndud.
l•ntil '°"'P w ith 1UC*I frankfurters
saUffli:raut wit,, 1makMI per-\: W.
salt pr•tzelt
kaiYrschorm with llngonbeni•
After dinner you'H see an interertiftg color filM Mt stf.
ing and participate tn an informal di ta•...t witk Alt
Muehleogor, certiroed Auslrion P.S.l.A. one! A.S.l.A. il>-
structol'. s .. ieri door pri* wift also be given. Jt's ......
be • most enjoyable evtnilMJ so eel 546--9321 , eri. 204
and mate your reservatiON now. t.Yerieri M... eM ~
ported wines will be •va~abJ. for your pleasure.
may co south coast pl1i., san ~ieao fwy 11 bristol, cosfl mes1, 5'6-9321
shop monday through saturday, 10:00 1.m. to 9:30 p.m.
;
.. ,,.
... ,.
"'
'. ,.
... '"'
. '
..... ,,,
·~ .
·:·:.·
...
-~· -.
..
= • --:'
:, l ... : : •• •• " . -• 0
! -: ~ ---" : -•• : : . • .
:!
! s -• . = : i
' . : . -.. • , • • : : . ---. . . : • : : • : -• ' . -. • :
i!
! .
i . . ' :. ; • -• -: . • : -:
: . -. i . . : : -• : :. -. ..
• -i: : • : . -' ..
--. -' -. : -= . ' -' = --! -. ----:· • . --• -• • = -.
! --• . : . .
~
• • • • . . . ,~ ..... ,.."'.."'1.."• ,,. ... ~ ....... tr'.~.! It-'"' .... ,......... »·~ • -.-4-#! ........
Mondai, October 21, 1'168 DAILY PILOT J 5'
Y. oung-Northcott Vows
Said in Laguna Beach
Nuptial Ceremony Solemnized JOSEPHINE'S ·BEAUTY SALON
Sue AdlmlOll ind William and Mn. Lawrtnet Lou&beey A rocepUoo took pllce alter 690 W. 19th ST., COSTA MESA
Loughery ezchanged vowi and of Colla M.,., the c:oremony 11 the oame
rings in an a '1 t ern o on Given in niamaae by her place for 50 pest.I. A pink and 111 Appr•c:i•~;11:!"~=~ =~: An.111.,.,,,.,., white theme waa carried &ut ceremony in the home of the lather, tbe bride •ledt.d a in Gore! decoraUcm. JUDY and CAROL
bride's alJter 1nd brother-in-while llreet length sult with a The brldo Is a grad\lale of wUJ give a FREE HAIRCUT
)aw, Capt. Ind Mra. James J, while veil. Corona de! Mu llJlh School with each $3.50 Shampoo ond Sot.
Lq\lna Beach Is the home Stovall of Costa Mesa. Miss Pat Sanderaon of Costa Her husband la 1 graduate of OCTOBER 22 THROUGH NOV. 9
of Robin Hurla: Young and The Rev. Herbert Johnson Mesa was maid of boDOr, St. Bernard's School J n IA1t1..t.11..t.. 11 .t..¥11 .. blt F'W .,, lb~-fonner SusanledNo~Stlt solemniied the c-eremony for weal-in& a rose dress with a Scotland. M111io.w.., Pectic-, PKllll, e.yeGntw A.rdllne"
wuu were marr tn • the daughter of Mrs. Edna roee ve.11. Best man w.a.s After a honeymoon at Big w.1.1.ic . tH1 ••lcOM• -OP•H •v•HIN
Mary's Episcopal church, Adamson of eo.t.a Mesa and Lawrenr,e Lou.gbery Jr. of Bear and Lake Arrowhead, the CALL MJ·Uli POI APPOINTMINT
Laguna Beach c1utin& a dou-n . A. Adamson o1 s.1t eosta M ..... ·~·-of tbe-E~::=~~r=eslde==~==~~~~~~~~~·~·~~·~"~'"~-~·~~~~~~~~~ ble rln& ceremooy performed • ·• Ci•· and the ·• Mr brid w-~ newlyweds w , tlolla
by the Rev. Robert Come1·1---e_..:""-·------w __ ·....:="""°"'::::.;=:..· -----Mesa. .,
ison.
The bride is the dluihler
of Mr. l!ICI Mrs. John North-
cott of Irvine Cove, and her
husband is the 100 of Mr. and
Mn. D1vid Young of Emu·
old Bay.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wis dressed
in an empire full length gown
fuhlontd with a cathedral
length trlin of chantllly lace.
Her veil, tbret tiers of silk
organz.a, was elbow length
an d topped by a crown
formed of chanUlly lace and
seed pearl!. She carried a
bouquet of white roses and
stepbanotis.
Miss Jill Greenwlld of
Laguna Beach, the maid of
honor. W6"' I pale pink full
length chlffon dress and car-
ried fiowen tied by velvet
streamers .
Bridesmaids wore Identic-
ally styled gowns in dee~
shades. They wert the ·
Mary Ann Holmes of Arcadia,
Caro1 Heebner and Mary Lou
Croake of Newport Beach.
Miss Nancy Northcott, the
bride's sister, was the junior
bridesmaid.
Amy Cogan, the b r i d e-
groom's niece from Miami,
Ohio was flower girl.
Tndd Atwood of Laguna
Beach wu beat man while
Dick Cannon of Laguna Beach
seated the guests along with
the bride's groom's brothera
John, Jim and Skip North-
cott.
1
MRS. R. H. YOUNG
The Former Susan Northcott Following the ceremony, 535
guests gathered in the home
of the bride '.s parents where
a buffet dinner was enjoyed
and a band performed. Mrs.
Patrick Cogan, the bride-
groom's sister from Miami.
circulated the guestbook.
DAR Hears Program
On American Indians Special guests included the
bride's grandmothers, Mn.
M. W. Hickox of Beverly
Hills and Mrs. R. A. North-
cott of Los Angeles. The
bridegroom's grandfather,
Frederick Young, flew from
Memphis, TeM. for the cer-
emony.
,Memben of the Col. Will iam
Calttll chapter of th e
Daughters of the American
Revol~tion will hear a pro-
grain oh American IndiaJl! at
their Wednesday, Oct. 23
meetin1.
Mrs. Edward J. Steinke will
speak about the, Glacier Park,
Mont. region where t h e
Blackfoot Indiana are en-
deavoring to preserve their
culture, :dillis and handicrafts.
'lbe talk wili be given after
the business portion of the
meeting at 11:30 p.m. in Island
House, Fashion Island.
Mrs. Steinke has fonnerly
What's
lived and receritly revisited
Montana and will tell about
the preCivil War cabin which
the DAR assisted in restoring
after the flood dam.age. The
cabin represents the bi!:tory
and drama of early settlers
lives. Novelist, Ernest Seton
Thompson was thought to have
lived and written in the cabin
for a short period.
Mrs. Stanley D. Stalls,
hostess chairman, will be
assisted in serving dessert by
the Mmes. Gus Brelin, Donald
J . Andrews, A. L . Pinkley and
W. D. Rabbitt. Mrs. Selah M.
Reber, regent will conduct the
business meeting.
Doing
The newlywedl, high school
sweethearts, are graduates of
Laguna Beach High School.
She attended the University of
Nevada for two years, and he
was a student at the Univer-
sity of Miami, Ohlo. Curren-
ly, he ls studying art at Qr.
ange Coast College.
Grooming
Continued
MAR'\' DAY, 642-4321
South Coast Junior Woman's
Club of Fountain Valley is
conUnuing their good groom-
ing program for girls in
juvenile hall .
1'00.t.Y
Mvftfllllfell •-11 TfH'S
PlllCllwl -Alltn ScMGI. 1 p,m. ·-1'0!"1 N•l'llM' U.llhlrs -H•'"r
Sdlollf, C•I• Mftlo, 7::1111 p.m.
l'~ft .t.•• V•l1" Cllloliftr If
tWMI A .. M_ -MIHIO!! Vltlo Hloll
kl'leol, 7::1111 '·'"· S•~ t ... 11 1'01"1 Chil~ -S...!th
lllM'IO!!l•l'Y Sc'-1• Hunl!nwlOn lr•cll, ,,. '·'"· ~·_, __ .,.,,,.,_
khool, W•dn1huf'lr, I p.m.
N9'Wllta O.-, sw..t ..........
-c.rltM '•rk Scllo9I, ec.,. """"· •
'·'"· 1'UlllDAY
Ht,_. W-'1 C-•lt '•HWltrl.ii Chvrdl at t!M C-•111, c .. ,, Mftlo, t :Jt '""· ~ ~ ~ Cltls--Com-
'"""lf'I" lll'uH"MI C9111ef, OrtMI
c-h' F•lrwnlllftdl. n '·'"· s.twtt.w.t CIW llf ~ -..c~
-Fru1cotl l'fttt\11'.,.,, 11,H '·'"· Altnlu C ...... H_.t HI--
M4'M VtrW Countl'Y Club, •:XI p.m . Cw!• .... Art ~ -M11m1
ScMGI. 7:• '·'"·
XI '--Ml •-Qwtw, ""'' .. , .... '"' -"""'"°" 11 •¥•111blt by c1111ns Mn. DOii Woll'I. ,,,._.11S, a '·'"· ......,. ti• Cfll ...... ML °'*"" 4lf • ....,,. .,.,. -$Hftrl111 Mi1MIC
T..,,.., H-9 IMdl. I '·""' ........... f'tll, 1'19 1'M Dll•l'lr If
\,&"""' -..ai -Loc."-i •¥tlllbll
tw C1111M Mra. ICen Mortt11. lf4-IN.I, I
'·;: ..... '"'"''' ......... c..tldl -er.~.'"·""
Alums 'Usher' . .
Guest to Meet
Oranp County Alumnae
AsaoclaUon of Scrippl Collep
will mtet In tho BllbOa B1y
Club neat 1Vednelday at 11:30
p.m. for I 10C1aJ. and 1unchem.
'A .. ~ofC1-
mont Unl..mty Center will
apuk .. hlaher education .
Further tnfonnaUon may be
oblllned by cllllng Mn.
CMrW M-II 4M-l50I.
This month's program will
feature hair grooming and
cart. Mias Sharon Gaugh,
,,_.._.., M¥ftl111 Cl'* "' c•t• manager of CaroU!el Hair
JMM -11.1boll a., club, 11 1.m. Fashions in Huntington Beach,
................... di TOP'S •IKfl ..... Ill . In the J . nd
-H11nf11111to11 •••ell Hlth khoel, 1 w JO uruors a '·"'· demonstrate a comb.out. She
TOl"t SM 11 .... ,. -1<11rvbfoo1te also will cut several girls' S0-1, Coil• MeH, 1 p.m.
L11 01ai Ton1m111 ..... c111~ .. Hu,... hair .
""''"' •Hell -s11rn1M c 111bllou11, Miss Gaugh wlll g I v e 1'!;:.~i.,.. ._, __ •••• sir.et pointers concerning hair care
St:11oo1. co.11 Mew. • •·'"· to approxlm'ately 30 girls in
T-•" 111M ... '• 11111rMM -attendance from i·uvenile ball. T-11 Sllli...i! Rlflll-ldtwl, C..111
Mew. 1 '·'"· Mrs. Carl Cleary, the club's
THURSDAY youth chairman, will be
c.t• MIN .. ....,..... •-HUR I led b M "' han! Doi w_.1 c._ _ l<!rrn • 1'" 1 ass s Y rs . .n.iC •
H1nlw11'1!. Catll Mew, t ::IO 1.m. forn.
TOPS 00'1 • "•"""' .. 9ffdl -The Juniors also conduct Com""'"41V Mtlfllld!1! Ctivrdl. •:• • al I d'~~ b 1.m. er t c asses u ~...,.,. y Mrs.
c.w. ......, u..,..,,. 11w1 Hwr -Cleary .
c .. 11 Mtu LIWl l"f, lG:lO 1.m.
TOPI --1111 M1m111*
Woodltnd ScJWlol, CMll MKll. 1 JI.In.
TOf'I W1!l1 "'""'°'" -C!rcle VJ"' ~. "'""".,.'°" l!leedl, 1 '·'"· Tr'IM-VM TfH'I CM .it Wnl'llllMlw
-Fl"ln ktlool, 1 '·"'-A~IR UotM1I A•lrl•l l"I' If L'""'
•Mdl -Utlon Hill. I '·'"· c:.11 ..,_.... J11lller w--. a. -
Ck""-11, I p,m,
l'RIOAY
"-'to!R Vlllf'r H... .. HlhlH T0"5 Clvtl -llrcl'lltllon c ... ier, Hun-
llntton ... (fl. 10 l .l'fl.
......... 1'11411f ~Clll•-no w. 8•¥ • .,,.., 81Jbot, noon.
Or-C.Un!Y 1111111 ._ -Dolt
""'*>I, G1rde11 Grov., I "·"'·
NB Auxiliary
The Ladiu' Auxiliary of
Newport Beach Fire Depart-
ment gathers the third
Wednesday of each month at 8
p.m. in various locations. In-
formation regarding location
may be obtained by telephon-
ing Mrs. T. C. Dailey, 548-98.15.
Expresso Club EXCESS HAIR ROBS YOUR CHARM
Do away with Uf"M'anted t':lalr"', w l th 1he '!iptM Club "-Nf:W• ~ Haibor will meet Thurs-ou,.. safe, gentle Kree Dermatron
U,, od 14, 11 IO:IO 1.m. In method. Come ln and consult with
tho N...,,.rt Belch borne of our technician; no obll""tlon of Mn. P'. It Mcllrl<n. New .-
l'TA ,...1doola will be lntn> course. Jn our Beaut;y Salon,
< dUced lftd piMI for I fub!Oll l
.i-w u...1ar pony 'Will L=:============'===:::!J bedllallie<l
~~ : .. ,,. ..... ..._ · .
>; ~ •
. -~~~'.: ;.r.:•tf,f'.'~~---
lf"'·"";;.>C.' ..... 'f;;""' ,:. f:t.·r ;x-:z· .• ~:t~;~-. . . if.,I:fi IT'S NOT TOO SOON TO THINK ABOUT HIS CHRISTMAS 1··-• 1:-;.~; &_ flhristmas seems a long' lime 'if'llir/ ln Ollober. ~ I he's ~s, ti mal<e !Ille ~ 8mve ai
, '! ' ·li' Mme, you should send them now. We have blr aifts, 811 pre'f18clted and ready ID &el!d. Algt 11!19 · · ;oi of them, along with your ehristmas letter, wHI let llim lllOw you eare. We'll tal<e eere of !he padlaairll,
" ~~' wrapping and lliailing I!> make :111111 yoor elf! ani\las lo your se1¥1ceman in Ille beet posaible eomliti4)11.
' Come to Buttoois' tomorrow ••• llis &ill win probablf lie lhe most important gift )11111 givlL lhe
last possible dates you tan send &ills IMllSlll$ are Novembe\' OOlh if it is going by Parcel Air Lill,
and November 23rd by SUlfaoe M&il.
Clla11111 t:llSIH "llllRkltls ti Y .. ' (lllt Is tilled
wit ~scuits, cheeses , je l~, l"'nu1s, tandy ood cocktoll
S111tlcs. Packed to arrive de~ciws_ I.•
CustCICllef service Desk
Cllrllltttll trto ,ack, 28·inch
e-eeri vinyl lree has l81old
anaments, IB feel cl iolden cac·
lind .. can be set up insian11y.
t:aierully pocked, 1.99
customer ~ice Desk
u
H11111111•s "Mtll Clll"
lru:ludes wale1s, poUt lours,
undies, pe!lllb, cocoa,
fem and macalO<lnS. All all
packed 1oarrive hesh
and delici111s, I.II
811st""" smb Desi(
P•111111c CHllttl Tift Recaffl blints wices ,, ..
hOll• lll hi•. Has Pop-Up casseilo, C.•P•ilft drive, AC ""'
111tte.y operation. D'jN~ic speakers, 1t111ole Pt11Cll llike, fllt
ftlrwlfd 11\d rewind. Use ti to exchan11e mtssate' all throudl
t ,e year, 49,95 QllSlomel Seli{CI Dm
'
.,
'
f
I •
Jf DAILY PILOT -· -21, 1"68
·tJ.nnual sale
LAST 11 DAYS!
' . -Hurry in now ... atJ.ve 56%
before the ChristmtJ.s rush/
CdM HIGH
J•ne Miiier
MISSION VllJO
Mo C•rr
ESTANCIA
Suaan M•ruy•"1•
NH HIOH
Marilyn Pock
Shelton Becomes
Bride of
Makin( tb<lr !Int home· in
Palo Alto lollowlne a wedding
trip lo northern Calllornla are
Franklin Everett Fon! ot Palo
Alto and hlJ bride, the fonntt
Janil KOY Sheilop.
'Mle coople were married in
the home of the bride'•
parents.
Tbe new Mrs. Ford is the
dauahter of Mr. and Mrs. S.
W. Shelton of Colla Mesa and
her btllbond ii tbe "'" ol Franklin Fon! ol Santa Rosa.
J'or tht aftunoon nuptial.I
the bride 1electtd a floor
lenlth eown of wblte c r e p e
atyfed with lone cuffed sleeves
and a hlP, collar accented
with flowered lace. H e r
shoulder len,th lllutlon veiling
wu held to a aatin bow en-
crusted with seed pearls, and
ahe carried a nosegay of
yellow daisy chryunthemums.
brown buttom pompons and
autumn leaves.
The bride'• tilter and maid
of honor, Miu Lynn Elizabeth
Shelton dOMed a moss green
velvet.floor 1enath cown styled
with long 1letve1 and high
neck. She held a natural straw
buktt of fall flowers irt-
terspened with autumn leaves
and green vel v et
1treamen.
Asked to stand u best man
wu John Maraha11 Miller of
San Luil Obltpo. Uahe:r du ties
were uaumed by D a v i d
Franklin Ford
I ••••••• a a •ia
• • picture:
peeks:
• ~f Merwy11 • • • • ••
Football ftna: should find a lot
of lnterut ln the fu.ture film at
tM Newport Udo. A former &tar
of SyraCUH UnJversity and Lhe
Cleveland Brown• plots Lo toss
the L.A. Ram• for I bi& logs,
financlal , not yardage. •
The name of this a:ame ls Tb•
lljllll. Jim Brown 1' tbe football·
player.ector who takes !ht p<rl
1n the movll: of a guy who pl.ans
• hetst at the Coliseum while
Ille !!amt are playlna an Im·
port.ant p.me which hu drawn a
bup sate.
CompllcaUons set In, following
the 1Uck-up. Murder rears Its
u,:ly bead and cop& and robbus atart looking for a hunk of
mJ1placed dough-re-me. Jim
Brown's team-mat.el Include
Julie Harril, DlabaJln Carroll
and Ernest Bor(J1lno. TIM Spilt
ahow1 ln Panavtalon a a d
Metrocolor'
FINE PORTRAITS OF
YOU OR YOUR CHILD Newport Store Council Dewees. tht bride's cousin -------
from Ontario and Gordon
Ford, the bridegr oom ' li
bf-other from Long Beach. SALE~ PRICE
any •lze,
any tlnl•h, any quantltii
Avoid the rush ,,. brin& your ftmily In now for
their Christmas· Poi:traita ind save. Prices 1r1
1l11hld In h1lf JI we wtnt to avoid. the ru$h, too!
NW Ill MT l '111 IWNS Of M '"'ISTIC 11111111<
Ont &x!O Stpll TIPNltJ '°'1r1Jt ,,,,,.r11.i 1z. • ..., •I
Thret Sr7 GrtYtn PettrlHs ..... ,,, .. rfC. t24, .. ..., •II
,S• ill' ilt!Jl!M -..,w..,_,-lfJ, .... •IO
Six Seniors Selected Gultari1t John Ch a r J e 1
Wainer of Berkeley composed
Si.I senlor1 attendln& area
hiah achool1 were •lna:Jed out
by the Broadway and named
memben ol thi: Hi-Deb and
Xey·Man councils. o f ! t c I t 1
1ovemJ.ni bodies for the
firm.'1 youth clubl.
Workshop
Summons
Nurses
Requilltu for memberahlp aeveral selectlon1 for the oc·
include high academic 1tan-culon.
ding, participation In achoo! Following the ceremony the
actlvitiea, leadership qualltiu reception took place in the
and personality. 1arden. Special guests were
Named to the councll at the Mr1. Laura Shelton O'rourke
Newport Fuhlon llland 1tore of San Francisco, the bride's
were the Misses Jane Miller of grandmother . and the
Corona del Mar HI1h School; benedlct'1 father. Circulating
Suaan Maruyama, Eatancla the g u e • t book w a s Liza
Hilb ; Mo Carr, Ml11lon Viejo Drake. the bride's cousin .
High, and Marilyn Peck, The bride, a graduate ol
Newport Harbor High. Newport Harbor High School,
Selected for the Key-Man received her degree i n
iroup weri Tom Krenek of 1ociology al the University of
Foothill Hlih School In Tustin california. Santa Barbara.
and Timothy Jones of Newport Her husband received his
Harbor Hip. de1ree In zoology at the same
Tola! membership In the university.
youth clubs exceedl 90.000. The benedicl will attend
Three outstanding members dental school in th~ fall and
will receive $MJO achola r11hip his bride is a newswoman at
An occupational hf. a 1 l !i awards to the college of thelr the Wall Street Journal in
1~s~
250 B. E•1+ 17th St.
NEW!
LINGERIE
FOUNDATIONS
MASTECTOMY
GRADUATE CORSET IER E:S
Sp•,i•Hting in D.1.00 Cup1
"S.. Comforl•bl• i11 Your Cupi"
O'Keef e & Merritt
30" SCULPTURA CONTEMPO
GAS RANGE
Elvira Mad.Jpn, liaid to be
"-the most beautiful movie in
history-" is lhe companlon
piet"e at Newport Lido. It b the
story of isolated love expressed
against the background o f
nature and f..1ozart's Piano
Concerto No. 21.
Poker is the game-of-the-week
at the Mesa. In a dual bill, in-
dicated for 1t1ature Audience
viewing , there is ' Card Stud
plus the ever-popular film The
Odd Couple. Deallns: of the
ducats plays a key role in each
of these movies, both showing in
Tec hniC<1lor.
nune worUhop w i I 1 takt choice next sprln1 . Pa.lo Alto.
p!ace Saturday, Oct. 26. •-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.II Professionalism Versus Spe-11
Dean Martin and Robert
Mitchum play the top roles in 5
Card Stud. The story begins with
a poker a:ame which ends in a
lyochin&, when one of the
participants 11 caught cheating.
Then a veneerut search for those
guys responsible for this death .
t\furder a:ter murder occurs and
the suspense really builds up.
HUNTINGTON llACH
7777 Eflh19•r Av•l'IU•
Pho" HZ-lll I
u!. ZU
The Great Orange Coast's
No .. 1 Paper!
clalilm w\11 be lhe topic
presented "j Jud Morris at
the th I r annual one-da_y
workshop from 9 a.m. to •
p.m. in tht Hacienda Intern•·
tlonal Hot.I In El ll<sundo.
Another speaker will be Ira
Trail who will dilcuJI N.,..
ha Care PlaM. "The event is sponsored by
the Occupational Health NurH
Area Council (Practice Com·
mlttee) of the Califom.ia
Nurat1' Association . Nurses
lnteruted in attending may
oblaln further information by
caIUna the new CNA office in
Loi Angeles at 3SS-6281 .
PARTY FOODS
boon .. elaee•• -+hr•• p•late-tic.~lin9
netur•I er••"' ch••11 frem Normendy -with q•r·
lie: end herbs, with ,.,,.,, 111cl •x+re frei1.
211 ... 7tc
Jaeolt'• •mall 1oldea paff~puff ,,..
try bi1cuift frelft l l'ltlll'ld. Split erid 11rve fll t.d
with ch••lt, lob1+•r, 1hrilftp, c:hick•n, or with fruit
•nd whipp•cl cr••m, or 1 l Y. 01. 4tc
11oaek ulam.i s dcks -5 ipicy 1el1mi
1tic:k1 iri • c.en . A popu.l•r c.oc.kteil •dclit ion -to
,,,..,. eleri• er wi.._ tiny ceckt1il 1P1ien1 er p(ckl•1.
Frelft l1l9ium. 4'/i 01. l.Ot
•Id fulllea eoekta.11 oraa•-••9"
cut fro"' fr••h er•nt•• 1n8 .,,liciou1 ly 1u91r cur•d.
A fu11 way to fl1vor • clr il'\kl 11 01. l .J:t
BrowAe our aisle. you'll dise<1ver foods from
29 countries to pique your appetite!
IND·OF·THI
MONTH
FALL SALE
LADIES FALL DRESSES
SELECT GROUI'
SAVE 1/3 to 1/2
* -*-* Ladies Fall Sportswear
Nationally AdvortlMCI lrond
SAVE 1/3
* * SPECIALS IN LINGERIE
SLEEPWEAR ETC.
* --*-* ALL TENNIS DRESSES
20% off
This Wnk Only
* * SALi STARTS OCT. 21st
* * Boys Wear-4lrl1 Wear
Ladies Sportswear
-,ROWS
3404 VIA LIDO -ONE OF THE LIDO SHOM
PARK lit lEAl
Wit h Th•s•
O ut•tandin 9
Fa•tur•1:
...
Model n ·6208
i'ft".Y SchillinC. Ill SPICES lfRACK
V1'IH IWI R!Hll!
PIJICHASL
-~~
Double Ove11
N.w R•movabl•
Color Blended
Grates .... ,
l ift·Off
oven Door
s29s
lcny Term1
Plan to Attend Th• 17th An nu1I
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
COOKING SCHOOL
S+•rtinq w.a .. Oct. 30th et
Th • MESA TH~ TRE-Co1te Me1a
~DAVIS BROWN
T•L•VISION •APl"LIANCIES
The Odd Couple is formed by
Jack Lemmon and Walter Mat-
thau, along with a group of
poker-pla ying buddies. The plot
deals wtth A pair of cast-off
divorced guys who live together
in an apartment in New York.
One is a real neat house-keeper,
the other is a sloppy houseo
wrecker. Mesa patrons Ct'.lnlinue
to roar with lallj'hter at the an-
tics of The Odd Couple,
Peler Sellers plays the part of
a llippie. and lives the groovy
lHe, in the forthcom ing film I
I Love You, Allee 8. Tnkla1.
Make your plaflfi now lo aljend
the showiog of G<>OI: With 'J'he
Wind, at Newport Lido on
!November 6.
ll!WOA 111
MESA MATINE!:S are
popular with the Harbor area
ladies who e.rtjoy a fine Him
feature in the afternoon. d\1ring
the middle of the week. Take
your break on Wednesdays
at 1 o'clock . The pro(ramt open
with free refreshments.
FREE PASSES lo the Mesa or
Newport Lido will be mailed to-
day to Mr1. E. R. freely, 3141J.a
Coral, Bilbo< Wand, G. C.
Atkinson, 231 Cedar, Nt:'V:r1
Beach, R. E. P1rt0ns, 573 lc--
toria. Costa .. Mesa ind Logan
Jackson, 200 Fernleaf, COrona
de! Mar.
411 East 17th Street Go out lo a movie, and en.loY
COSTA MESA LllLl 684 yourself, even 1f you 111 abort of
V"IV" that "'"·lovin& catll. Charge
DAILY t. t-SATUlDAY t . 4 adml11lon •t tbt M•sa or
Our 2·znd Year Newporl Lido wilh ~'"'Muter Chari• Card or )'Ollt Vrf gwn I tflo Harbor ArMI B&nl<americard. Seo you at tbt ----..... ---------~...,.,!111>~ul
DA.IL V 'JLaf
Nixon's Other Pat
Pushes for Happy Ending Weddin1:1s, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines By MARGUElllTE DA VIS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Pat lUtt, naUonal l»(:haifman
of the Nixon-Apew campaign,
is nown u "Dlck'1 other
Pat."
It's been that way 1ince
1946, when lhe tucked her aon,
2, Into a stroller and trundled
him along on a door-to-door
campaign tn support of
Richard M. Nixon's first bid
for political office. He won
election to the House that
year. Now Mn. Hitt is work·
ing for an equally happy en-
ding for her candidate ln the
1968 electlom.
''Some women are
motivated to enter politics by
issues which cancem them
deeply, but for me it was
tremendous respect and ad·
miration for someone 1 knew,"
she said.
Like Nixon, she grew up ln
Whlttler, and attended public
schools there , although five
years behlnd him. When he
returned after World War II lo
begin private law practice, her
father, John B. Reilly ,
persuaded him to run for
Congress.
Sinct then· Mn. Hitt ad-
vanced in the GOP from the
precinct worker to top posi-
tions in the 1tate and national
GOP. 8be moved here last
February to weft u naticinal
co-chairman of Ule Nixon for
Presidenl Committee, a n d
now, as a regular attendant of
fhe Wftkly strategy teSliont
in Nixon'• New York bead·
quarters, i• the only woman
with a voice in the campaign'•
policy.
Mrs. Hitt ls a slender,
smartly drtued ....,.. wtlb
coloring typical of her 1rllh
descent -blue eyes, dari hair
now fublocably frolted.1 and
fair complexion.
1'It's not so fair In
Califomla; there I mually
have a W1 from playlnc plI,"
she said. "But that'• me ot.
the t.hinp I pvt up when we
came here.''
Her hUlbond, Robert J. !Utt,
took~a year's Juve of able~
from· hil public relatiOOJ and
management consultant firm
ln Orange to aerve u ad-
ministrator cf the Nixon office
here, a satellite operation to
lhe New York headquarters.
"He aays he moved 3.000
miles to become a campaign
bachelor," his wife said.
She travels exleMively dur-
ing the week and spend! most
weekends at her desk, with lit-
tle time to be with her bu ..
band in ""' big.threwtory house they rented hen.
Mrs. Hitt doet not like to
Demos' Girl Friday
llncl• oUI -1al llr&el .....
for the Republlcao campalp.
But when pressed she l.o-
dlcated the hope that persons
at both ends of the •&• a:pec..
trum -the "aolden yean"
cltizeol and th• dltenchanted
young -will vote for a
change in administraUon. "Tbt Hitta have two children,
John, :14, married, a D d
Patrick, 20, a Mnlor at the
University of s OU tb er D
California.
"He Uvea In hlJ fraternity
house, 10 bla only adJu.tmenl
w11 to learn to uae the local
washaterta, IDstead of bo-
inging hll laundry home, II h1I
molheruld.
The adjustment WU COO-
liderably more for b I 1 ::'".;. ~~ ... n:= ~ South Pacific Vacation
tertainln,g they en}oyed at N home, and their plans to spend ewport resident& (left to right) Mr. aod Mn. John Jakosky Jr, and Mr. and
leisurely weekends exploring Mrs. Kenneth S. Roes sail to Honolulu for a vacaUon aboard tbe SS Lurline.
the surrounding Virginia and __ Th_e_four __ •o_m_e_left __ la_s_t_w_ee_k_. __________________ _
Maryland -countryside went
glimmering.
"We've been away together
just twice," she said.
They will return to Oran1e
after the elecUon.
"I plan to celebrate election
n1ght and 1leep all day Nov.
fl," 1be l&id. "We'll take a
vacation, then -home in time
for Chrlltnw."
Breakfast
Applauds
Executives P,....ting an opportunlly
for each Individual to bolltr
underlland our IOV-will be La Olal ToulmlJ. Ban Clemente Toaatmlltreu u.u C 1 u b ol 8 ....... ~-
To avoid disappolntmen~ proapecUvt
brides are reminded to ha.. their weddiliC
1torie1 Wi\11 black aod whllt 8)o<ly photo-
graph• .. to tlie D~ Y PILOT Socitly Dtport.
ment prfor to or within one week after the
wedding.
For engagement announcements it la
11uggested that the story, aho accompanied
by a .black and white glo,.y p I c tu re, bt
1uQm1tted early. u the betrothal announc•
ment and wedding date are six weeka or Jen
apart, odly the weddi!li .photo will be ...
cepted. .
To help ·fill requiremeo\I. on bOtb wfd.
dtn1 and eneacetnint storitr;-forms are· av~
able Ill all ot the DAILY· PltOT• ~
Furlbu queaUona will bt anawered Jjy I
Now alalf memben at "2421 or ~ .....
B.arbecue ·
Coals Heat
VISIT .US .. e~· ....
Stor\ ..
Vl•iti
Y~u
• • •
Supporter Shares Spot
Club bcWd olflcen ol other ~--
San Clemente women'• clubs Beach.
d .. ~.. --·" B aldsst EducaUon and Iba Conllllu· ........ an ~ .. w.ve re Uon wlli be dlaaJ.r..I w· •-lhls rooming In lbe Municipal -•= Goll Clubhouae. lbe group meell al !:ID p.m.
-In I d"" Wednesday, Ocl. 21, In Iba
F..Y-
c."',let.
l-f•t.rfllt>r w.N,..N et
, •••• 11.111 • ,,, .. , .... a1 · direct.lng women'• ac-
tivities, and her experience
prepares her to handle both
roles.
Volunteera for Stevenaon In
1956.
.aue program cu ~ 8 Surfatde Condominium Club-
repeat of a televWon panel house A"··1a ••••.. J ood dlacu.ssion featuring Mrs. ' wu1 •nu ow1W F I I Sto., Huntington Beach. R bl' CATHY'S tor:,n~~ess.rvE~sfuat~r: Mrs. Allan KeMedy wlll 9pU ICQnS
were the Mme1. Charles •peak on current event.a, and M W I L Doucel MATERNITY SHOP .,_ Calvin Olcott will be In HB Aux'1l"1ary n . 1 ter • to Swain, Edward H'Ard and uullt. Ill be h •-· to n.-,.,__,,_, '
;
By MAJ\GUERlTE DA VIS
W ASHl!iGTON (UPI) -
Geri Joseph, vice chairman Of
the DemocraUc National Com-
mittee. believes her party
mutt pay special attention to
1uburban voters, young peo-
ple, and the "core" city areai!.
Her belief is virtually cer-
tain lo be translated into ac-
tion. Mrs. Joseph has a voice
in 1ettin& J>&:lY policy, a.swell
She served as National Com-
mitteewoman in Minnesota for
the last eight years, after: a
two-year stint as S t a t e
Chairwoman of the
Demo c ratic-Farmer-Labor
Party and beading Women''
Mrs. Joseph brings good
lookll u well as brains to her
new assignment. Her dark
hair Is in dramatic contrast to
her blue eyes.
She wears her clothes with
the flair or a model, which she
was not , and chooses her
word s with the precision of a
prile-winnlng new lP aper
reporter, which 1he wu. She
ii forthright and artlcuJate,
whether dl•cu11lng: her
children, who range in 11e
from 11 to 21 years, or plant
for the presidential campaign.
J.~ John"'n. charge of table topl.CI con-Arn I :'t A Ill WM F d°'-t·• Rw~ b~l.~ M-c... . .:::i 11t 1. 17'11 It. .• , -· th Co utu•;~~ er can on ux ary esa e era = epu 1can c.... ..._ "'"llaa
The event is one of two ac· cerrung e rll wuu. of Htmu.n,ton . acb lllhlrl · Women'• Club op~ Oct. ~ at 1 ~~=::::'.~::=~~~:::~
tivities which the club staged VSlpel eches by Mrs. Wllllarri in the American Legion Hall 10 a.m. 1-
in commemoration of the e utini, Mrs. Gary Giles and at I :30 p.m. the first Thursday The meeting will include
organization of toastmistress Mrs. Paul Bronson also will of each month. On the third election of officers and a re-The o._ily Pi~t,
clubs 30 years ago. be concerned with phases of Thur&day member• may call port of c I u b accompliah·
The televlalon pa n e I &overnment. Mra. Arne Jenaen, 13&-:1'177, for menta. All m-•·-·-ur1~ C I
OCTOBER
BEAUTY SALON
SPECIALS
-~ 1n•~ •·· 1 h ••• ···=• -· ~ overs oatin' dlacu.»ion, which took place ... .,.,.uc..,. e •pe--=n location. to attend. ' last week, aaw Mn. Harry;-----"---'----"""'"-------....::.:=:::..------;_ _______ .;;.._
Mn. Joseph discussed ln
broad tenm the three fields in
whk!h -the believes her party
mu.It work hard.
"Otmocrata really haven 't
Sharita and . Mn. Barbara
Whitmore expWnlnc the func-
tion of the club and Mrs.
Chester Chapin rtl1t1n1 ac·
tlv!Ues of a toutmlltress
meeUna:.
CM Overeaters
done too well in stirring up in-Overeaten A n 0 n Y m 0 u s ~:.~. ,,amon1 ' u b u r b a n gather every Wednesday at 8 f , 1 p.m. in Bear Street School, .• r· '"· But project.I to correct this Costa Mesa.
deficiency will not •light the I.==========,! If companJon need for cam-
HUMAN HAIR
STRETCH WIGS
'100 Valua ....... .$65
A ~re•t Duy on
ln1t1nt leeuty.
CAREFREE
LAMP CUT
od9. '' ---$1.ID
Comfort 1pec:lal •••
no more pins, rolltrl
or dryers!
• PERMANENTS
BY DUART
s.1., ..... s10
Studio , • , • 14.50
loth with style and c:ut.
HUMAN HAIR
SPECIALS
wl9lot1 •••• I .II
c11cade1 •• 11.ft
fallt •••• , Jt,ff
frostie1 •••• 4.ff
A,p•h1h11•nh 11et •lw•yt n•c••••'Y•
fr•ll'I "'"'h•hn 'h•11• 111·1121
fr•'" N•w,•rt l'h•n• 644· 1212
fr•m Hr.111th11t.11 l••ch P'h•n• ltJ.JJJ I
l•••ty S•llfl, 601
~RC>.A:OWA.Y
palcnlnl among voter• who
l1ve in the decaylna central ci-
ty areu.
She bellevu her party must
plan a special welc_ome for the
21-to-30-year group, although
•he did not concede the validi·
ty of complalntl by some that
they are given no voice in the
campalp.
The ~ocraUc campaign
will rely heavily on women
volunteer•.
"We couldn't function
without them, allbou1h many
don't realize how ln-
dilpensable they are," Mrs.
Jogeph aald.
She ha1 been caring about
Hubert H. Humphrey'•
political rortuneS' alnce 1960,
when r;he traveled with the
family during his brief and
ul\liuccess!ul campaign for the
presidential nomlnat.ion. She
did so again this year, and
now she means to do all she
can to see that he wins the of·
li ce.
Oblerv•• have tpeeulated
that lf Humphrey doea wln,
Mra. J01eph might be con·
a.ldered for Secretary o I
Health, Education and
Welfare.
After her graduation magna
cum laude from the Unlverr;lty
of Minnesota ln 1946, she went
to work for the Mlnneapolll
Tribune. There, accordlnl to
her official biography, 1be
apeclallzed In health, educa·
lion and welfare reporting and
wu the only woman to win a
Sigma Delta Chi award.
Llke Muriel Humphrey, ahe ts keenly lntereated In mental
health, and la firll vice pre1l-
dent of the N1lional Auocla·
lion for Mental Health.
Sea Sirena
TOPI S.a Sirens meot In
KW)'broolc• Sdlool, c o 1 I a
M .. , SVtty WedlleldlJ at !
p.m.
T11ns-Selson1I fill SportswNr
Tops 1/3 11-Sldm OFF C.rit
~""rt"'" 1414-YIA tlDO -NIWPOIT llAC!l_
/I Dloneytantl ttet.I ·a UCI Town ~·'"
The
Town
Crier
Orange County
Calendar
Tlll1 1p1c:e h11
boon re11rved
for a
CAUNDAR
Of
COMMUNITY EVENTS
within
OU.NCH COUNTY.
Every Mondey
for the n1xt year
w1 will bo heppy
to publish
fro• of char9e
the deto and time
of worthy event1
i" our
Oren9• County
Commu"itie1.
If your church,
PTA, Girl Scouts,
Wom•n's Club, etc,
Is plannln9
an event,
WRITE OR CALL
Pe99y T1ylor ., ... _..,
Mortwr leddr111
and phone number
below I end wo
wlll 9lva you
• FREE NOTICE
In thl1 column.
BELL
BROADWAY
MORTUARY
11 O Jlroadwo,y Str~
Colla M,.., Calllomla
Tet 54g..343i
' '
;
i
l I
l
----------------~-------
:
ON OUR NEW J'CAROU$El!' CUT .•• . .
t.ppad with your CUSTOM-CRJEATl!D COLOR!
Thank.I to Ingenious Roux, our new pulh·button,
dispenaer le ta ua create a literal kaleidOllCOpe of
hair colon -l!O we achieve preclaely the ih&de your
want. And then keep it UJlchanged; retouch after
retouch I The perfect ftniah to our 1tyle artistry In
creatinc a softer looking, younaer looJP.niyou.
' -~ .
511 '
'
1
•,
' '
·-------·---........ • •
• • . "Seal Beach Brightening Up Downtown Area
• . ). . ! ,. ~-
,,.. " ~?:,-' 'fhere're Western, Spanish, Victorian
;.:,:.,.::; ... -':"::•,,;-., -,._ . ·"=
; ·-' ·-·'= . ·-I 7.:°
...
' ...
~ " . .
, . .. . .
"
, ..
. ;
:-.
. -.. ...
AWNING ADDITION HAS HELPED MAKE "KIKO'S" A SEAL BEACH DRAWING CARD
•
MRS. AUDREY PETERS EXAMINES SHOWCASE GRAMOPHONE IN HER SUCCESSFUL ANTIQUE STORE ,
.. ,
. '
..
• .
~-.. ,•
•
•
•:, .. ~ .
. . . "'. ....
. .
~· -· .. ~ . . , .. ........
.r-•.
:-tlf
"'" !>¥..)'
' J......,.l MAllKET T~IFIES THE "WESTERN" FRONt AND PORTICO FAVORED BY SOME
--; -~ MAIN STREET'tRS
•
I
I
Seal·Beodl doesn't jUBl hav.e a bot ·
d"i stand. It haa a "red bot reslau·
mnt" called Kilro's Gourmet.
Hlgh·fi!lootin' lhDugh it sounds,
the name and the appearance of
the stand are part of Seal Beach's
JJowntown l!tio<e-A-G<>Go, b-e g•u·n
seve1'al years agn by the Chamber
of Commerce.
Merchants al-Ong the <lowntown
streets of Seal Beach have ee.ch
spent about $3 ,000 to beautify the
ai:ea. Not jmt another ·!)~
Main Street, ·the <lowntown· .!II°"'
oughfares are)ined"'tD.ow wi~atofel
depicting We§tem, Spanl!b and
Victorian facades.
Rita Herron, pfesid.Mt· of~ the
chamber in 1960, got the ,pri>ject I
unde< way t!iat >""" with the ap-
proval of city coundl. .
UtUe city help waa asked -for, ex·
cept for variance ' permits to f.Uo\f
... overhangs from the s~ · tq Uw
streets to protect strollers -irom
rain and sun. . '
Mrs. Herron is the owner of· Her-
ron's Dress Shop, which she opened
in 1961. Through her ·own Down·
town Store-A-Go-Go plan, she de-
signed. her own store front, which
is higbllghted by late 19th Century·
style turnposts.
She pomted oot the geogr-.ph~
has been the prime reason foi' the
renewal effort. "People must .drive
through downtown to get to the
beach, unlil<e Huntington Beach,
where motorists can simply turn off
Ooast Highway into municipal park·
ing lots," she said.
Main Street, Seal Beach, haa also
been lined with 1hade trees 'kept
carefully pruned. ·
Parts of the downtown area are
still barren of design, but they too
are due for a face-lifting.
The Bank of AriJ.erica buiiding,
bwine.ss center for downtown for
the past nine· years, is goinc ,t.O get
a $130.000 face lift.
Bank officials say -bide·9J'e ·to bl
opeced soon on redesign of the ex·
terior to resemble a,N:eW r.itgland
fishing village. Construction b to
be complete by nen spring:
Mrs. Ivan E. Liggett Off SUmet
Beach says "there's no -pJrace ·)ike
Seal Beach to •bop . and I alway1
find a. place to park." ,
Another shoppe<, Mrs .. Donald
Bloeser of Rossmoor, says she pre--
PLANTER AND TURNPOST BACKDROP FOR (LEFT TO RIGHT) RITA fers shopping·ln the oma1le. ~ tailored to cater ·to Ibo· individual.
HERRON, MRS. DONALD BLOESER AND MRS. IVAN LIGGETT "I like the penonal altentlon;"
(HANDELIER AND BENTWOOD CHAIRS MAKE CREATIVE INTER·IORS, SAYS KATKY ·WEL·LS
RENEWAL IS PIECEMEAL ikuT BANK OF AMERICA HAS $130,000 l",ACELIFTING IN THE WoRKS
•
.. '
. '
'
.. ..
.• I ,.
I
..
•
•
•
'
;
"
'
•
--DAU. V PILOT 14"
CEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE MOTIC• TO caaltTO••
IUf!llUCNl COlll•T OP U• 1• Tltl lTATI Ofl U.Lll'Of:tUA NOTtCI 1'0 C•lc>ITOlll HI TMI C.OUHTY Of' ...... IUP'l•IOa COUil 0.. JM. kl .. I
lttl fTATI 0, CAL.IHfUUA llNMt °' ~11!0 IEUGf:NI VAN .. o. JMI COUNTY ., Oll.AQI NOOSIN, a• .. _ .. AL .. uo I .
.... ....... VAN MOOSl!N Mid A. I. VAN l't00$(N,
1!U11'9 of WIUAIO (.. IUCHIMN 11M ~.
k,_,. •• WIL.LAIO IUCHM.\N, 0.-HOTtCI IS HEllil"I' GIVEN • ...
.... cttdl"'11 .. 1M ..... MIMll 4ICeMrli
Business
In Brief
·.~ .
NOTICE II Hlltl!l'I' OIVIN " Wit !Ml •II~ MY'-dllim. .. 11MI TM utolllers fl lllt 1iloove ... ..,.. Melodltll Mlof ffe:Htnl 1r1 .-lfM to ti• "'*'1, ~I ell --Mwlne d1l1N -IMI H wttll fM _.....,.., ~ Ill llM lfflclll):::;::::===: .... ~ ar• '"...irid to f!le t11tm. or "" <tirtl " tM .-... ""lt'-' cwrt. • wlftl N .,.. .. rv ~ Ill llM «tkl to ~ IMm. wltM .,.. '*-"" of JM c.M~ ff 1M • ._. tfttttllicl cwrt. w 'lll\ldWt, ,. !flt--llftd«11tnM at <I• rf ~-
M ,re.1111 ""*"• with fM lllCNlrt' llLEIL LOEWI, 841tAHG!ft ANO Ame cans art drinking l.Jlll:'CI
VWll\tl'I. M 1'11 ll~lt'*ll fll ""' offldl MY!ll;S. hft Ollkl ... lHt. H...,,_, " 11tr A1tomW1 tliOXOM .,,,. tt.d!, C•l!fwr1hi ~ ""'1<11 11 tM , .. et at a record rate and per e11ox0tt, • c1-. 0r1 ..... sv1• ..o. °'....,.,_(If 1111 ~'titf!ld 111 '" ""'" !ta ~• 1 ,.._, t1tdl, c1111or-.1,, wllldl 11 ,,.. '*" i1wt1111111i .. 1111 ftl1ft • .. w -.. cap c6nsum.,...on s e.x·
111ct., ...,...,,.,., °'..,. lllidlnlt.,.. ~" 111 ~. wi111r11 •I• """lllt •""' ,... fl"' .u..-•...,. 10 r•ach 17,2 gallona mtttfr1 "'1111111W ft IN .. 11tl II r.1~ Mlh:.lfltll fl ll'lfl l!Otkl. ,,.,.,KIU d~t. w1111111 .... "'°"'"'•mt' lM ""'' 0•* ~ l L 1* thb year -a 3 percent ln-,u&11c11• OI .W\11 llOlld. JN11 A. \'111 ._.
o.t111 Ocfotitr 11. 1.,.. E-•twtrh• ... 1-Standard • litTHIA I. 1UCl1MAN ., ,,,.. wfll fl crfll.!le over '"''. °' ~·~,. "' 11La1.:"' t.":;.;-::1.:=:';' AMD Poor'• <'Mp. say1 a growing
, .,.. .aaw Mm" •tct1H111 MY••• --·'•ti lndlcalel b • e r •ftOXOft AMO aaoxoM ""' Offlct ... UM ....,,.._ on
AttftMri .. Law ._.,. ... ., Cllll•llll "*' volume wW rlM at an annual 4lft C...... Di1¥t. kltll ... T .. r.M: '**' . ,,...,,.,, ,._, C.lfWllll A,.,...... .., .._..... rate of 3 percent to 4 percent
T•h (tMI .,..,,. PllbHIMll orl'!lff c ... 1 Dtltr ••iot ..... •""~ fu•·-. 11 also nolel At"'"11 fW l lfll:llt,,• Oc~ 1(, t1. :If .... """"*' .C. .. , ii"" '"'" IVbl...i Orilltf C.0.11 0111¥ Pile!. IMI 1m... ' tl'iat the beer industry "ha! ~ 1"' '1• ,. """ "'°"""'m,.:: ___ LEGAL ____ N_O'll __ CE___ experienced upward trends
du$1 downturns in t h e
«!Of'IOlnY, aa ch amp a g n e
tuteJ faced up to tht reality
ol -pOckelboolc.s."
LEGAL NO'l1CE ...... CllTll•ICATI 111' IUllMUI
WOTICI 01' Tau1Te•1 IALa l'ICTIT~.':SM MAMI
I M.. fl MO I Tiie llftdenltl'IH .. iWrtW Cft"'1 tll.lt e,, Od9i« 2t. 1f61. II ll:OI A.M .. •I rhty .,~ C6tidlo<fllll I .,,,,........ lua!MH
-l!'Mllll fl'lfl'l!d .. ms Wffl ... II ltd,, I•• c.-utlllr'S, It 1 IMMrd\ ,.., ,11. .. Cllv et Atltlltlm, C1IW.111l1, lltlllbll LHlllll Nltuoil. (allfor11l1, ~ "It ~
1,,.....ll'nenl Ct!'...,.lllon. 11 Ttllllle vlllllr t1Tlll\I$ 11rm INllM 11 MONAllCH IAY
#It 1-.1 fll trvll !Ndl b'I" C1r t IC. COiton OftUGS 1ne ,.,..., t1kl fll'Tll 11 ~ Gt 11td fttifml"' Ctllofl. llu1llll'ld 6ftl wife lllt .. uow1111 --..._.. 111n111 111 fl.Ill
•i IOlnt ltfl,lllh 11111 recon!H A11tll I, 11111 1t1cn {If rtsldfl!O 1r• •• fOtlowi. te. 'lttl, lft leek llUI. PHI 'JIJ, fll Ottlclal wit: ltkofih Of 0•11111• Covnrv. C1llf6r11l1. PAUL LOMIAftOI, Lltuft.11 Nl1111f, 1!.,.,. ... wcvr. an ll'ldetllldllt:U Ill l1'111r C1Htort111,
ttl l!!OWll'll 11 ... t. Trv1lll lor ~rti G!ftALO HEFTEft , TIHllll, C1lltor111i ftelllnlOll Trvst b'I" ,..1111 et lM bread! Of MIJllftAY MOICOWITL Tu1tl1t. C1IJ. . c-rf1!11 ollil11tlOM 11evrtd llltrtbY, notlc1 1om11 ol wfl!dl Wh rkorMcl June 1'. 1'61, Ill JACJ( L. TUaLJN lrooll.IYll, NIW &Olk ... ,. l'lff '4. of Wld Oflltlll Yori! '
lotoo"'•· will ttll It IMJ'ollc lucllorl lo tilt 1tOl!1tT TU8LIN s-r..i Ntw Jlr• ttltht1t llidtllr tor c1t11. ,.yabl• hi ltw-MY ' '
f\/1 -v M Tiit Un!19111 St11t1 II Ille time 0:.llC! Oc!etM!r I "" Of ,. .. , Wltllout W•'1tll!'f 11 TO tilt. PAUL LOMIAIOI -lhllOn Of el'ICUl'l'lbrllltft, 1111 1nllrnl GEllALD HIE,Tlft co11vl)'tld lo 11111 lllM lllld b'I" llld Trut~ MUfliftAY MO:teOWtTZ under llld 09M of Trw,1, In 11\d to tlle JAC:IC L TUILIN follO'tlflnt dne•l~ lroPl•lv· ~It: JtOIERT TUILIN l.ol 1; Of Trtd No. 1'4S, •1 1'1r m11 STATE OF CAl.11'01lNIA. l
rtCt<'dtd 111 llok ff, "" ~t et COUN'N Of' 0JtANGf l 11 mllCIUl-..t l!'Mlll. 111 Thi offlU II tlll On Octokr l lfM. Oef«t .,,. I Nita"' clWl!ty ~ of Uld COU!lf¥ ' bl ' ' ' !Of 1tW IUrflOll al llYlllt a811ttllom U IC II Ind tor Uld Cou,,,_, IMI Si.It,
MC H tty 111d o-lll(ludl"' tetl lltnll'llllY •PIN•red PAUL LOMIAIOt, dl1~ .. 11111 t•-of th• Trvilff 1..d Gl!llALD Hl!FTl!!I 11'1111 MUftftAY
01 Siie MOSCOWITZ k-n to me 1'0 II-. IM
o.,ed, ~tembtr )I), 1u1. o•rwn1 ..,....... ~ art ..,bK<IOld to Rell1bi. lnv1>1lmtnl !!'It wltllln lflltrvmlnl, and ld:,_1!411~ cor-11101'. Trw!H to me 11111 fMY' utcll!M t~ lltM. By Anlonl1 c. PeH, Wllntu mv P11M •rid -I. Sf>crtlt'1' (OFFICIAL SEAL) JI'" D<i1111d 1"1rlltl
Publl1"9d Or•"lle Coetl O•llY PllGI.
fkl<>IM!r 7, u, 21. 1ta 1n1..ia
LEGAL NOTICE
Nott"' Pubhc.C1lltornl1 PrlllClPll Office 111 ()r1119t COl.llllv My CommlUIOl'O E>Qllrb $e>pttmlltr 11, 1171 $TATE OF NEW YOftl( l"UILIC NOTICI COUNTY OF KINGS 'T11 All Concernld: On Miit 7tll H y II 0ctoMr lffl Tri. lotrd Of O!fllCll)l's ttl tl'll Cotti 1Nrt.lllllty ••Pff•KI before mt JACJI'. L. """"' County Wllff Ol1trlct MrfftY •Ive TUIL1N 11'1d ~OllllT TUtl.IN II be .... tic• ""' m .... wlll, II 1:111) o'cloO: ,..M. klltl""' Ind ·-II hl"mt hi be the lndl-on Thtll'ldlY, Novem~r U, 1'61, 11 the "ldvtll dt,..;rlbed In .rid wno e•eculed Cortftrtnet Room al l!'lt Council 11\t ....-. on 11\t rtvtrM 1lt:lt "-<tof, Who • Ctt1mbtt1, n Ftlr Orlvt. Co,!1 Mtw. being bw me du!y IWOfn dlt:I 1cknowl-Or1n1t Cwnrv, CalUor11l1, rectlwe 1.,. ecllt tlle tM•:.•l!Ol'O ltlereof. VllAtlonl,,, 11'11 ,,.rflMfkr Gt1crllltd ... 1 (OFFICIAL SEAL) . ·. llr-rty CG<lllDllCf fll 1ppro~lm•tllY 2.lD Victor FuM;e ~ ·1cres, on Sl•tetntl> Slrtet Weil el No!•rt PuDnc ' Monrovl1 Avenut, C01l1 Mtll. 'TM oro-51•1• al Ntw Y$rll:
11ert 11 <11urlllfel 11 follD'<'n: No 2i.1Jn7l)I) A lt!l'tlorl of L•ot 101', NWWllOrf ~II oU:.Hlied In 1()1191 C011n1V 'Tr1cl •"1.ltttd In tri. Cl'lw ot Ca.II commlnlon E•lllnu Mt11, County of °'"'''· C1l1torn11. II M1rdl 311. Ifft .now~ °"' I Map llltrtof ltllCOrdlll In MILO MAICMIT'TI, J •. IOOk .S, Piii I al MIKtlllnlOlll M1111, Att......,. ftecord'I fll Ot1111e Coltntv, C1Ufo rnl1 1 Mlnlrc-••Y Pl.Iii, Sl#IH llJ .•., f116rt PlrtlCulltPv dlscrlbld 11 follows : '--111 Nit* Cllltlnlll fti7' • .• .., a·fGINNl~G If thl Sol/Thwtsllrlv Tll, (714 ) 4K-IJO$ 4ft.Htt ;prntr II ,.1rUI "A". II .,.,_ 1!11 I Pullll$lle<I oftlllft CGtll 0.llY l llol, '~ ~• lllfOl'd6d In I Dllk u. '"'" » el Ocffllbtt '"-21. ie • ...-MO¥fflll:ltr 4. 1f'8 ¥•"' ".f'lf'ut M1111. fttcerOI II 11ld Orlfltf lnw.I ;.._.,,~tyi ~ H61t1t .. ll'll'' Wffl'---===-~==---I • '1ione lM W..llri'f Mne ef Hid Pardi!' .... "'"A", I lflITTll« « 300.11::1 ttet la tftf LEGAL NOTICE ~,.Hortltwllllfty (Dl'flll' of' 111d l"arutJ-------------1 .• ._ "A"; ,...._ Horltt lt'2l'1J" l!ltf 1lolll l'IOTtca CU• TftUS'Tll'J IALI
tfll N«1'llt!1y llM fl Hld 1"1rcel "A''. I -""
• i
01!1!s.Mnce fl '°"·°' fMI la tnl ()fl Octobtr 2f, 1fr61. 11 11 :00 I '"'" • "Nllr,,,_1ttrlY · cerner of wlll Paru1 IEMl!,ICIAL SEftVICE CO .. 1 Cll!fon'lll
Sales gains are es:pected to
be. modest this year for the
nation's book publishers. Text-
book sales were off 1 percent
in 1967 as federal aid to educa-
tion spending slowed down and
total sales of books rose less
than g perctnt. With federal
spending getting even tighter
"the neceuitles created by
lengthenin1 period• of fonnal
educaUon may find o n I y
meager reflection in sales
gains of most publishers."
'[1)e shoe industry report,,
rtlllil 11.les are climbing and
probably wUl continue to do so
judging from the reorder rate
on fall styles. The industry
!laid rMail sales during the
first seven months this year
were 8.5 perctnt ahead of lbe
aamt 1181 period . The only
thing t.hiit may hurt improved
sales is possjble consumer
resistance to a proposed 3 to 4
perctnt prict increue.
"No matter who wins the
White House in November,"
Prentice-Hall, Inc., reports,
"business managers will have
to continue taking Into con·
sideration government actions
and policies." It adds th.at
''the next four year1 will pro-
bably see some major changes
in la.I law: labor relations law
and policies ; antitrust law:
enforcement of consumer pro-
tection laws ; new forms of
financial aids to business to
help rebuild cities, provide
boustn1, train w o r k e r s ,
allevilta pollut.ioo and ulllize
new technology."
• ; ~ ."l\"1 lfltnce SouWt O')fi'Jll" £111 •lonl -.11o11 .. llul'I' 1"'6f11tltl T ........ ,.,.. b11trtr 11111 of 11kl 1"1rc.a1 "A", • """'' 1N1 P11muint to DteG ot Trust A live-city survey of cliff, •"_,·'dlJ1•11Cf. ef lll.117 IHt to t 111 Nied Julv f, 1'11. lqc\11111 Dy fftl!Dll lC d u :f'Jo;N1111!11tte(W _.,..rd Pate.el "C" ... t:. IUTTON .,... lt:TTY l.. IUTTOH. weiien lndicates apartment
•• ,..,..._ on 11ld l'at'Oll MA!t1 ,.,._ husDrtnG Ind wlft lllld ,_. Joly t • h•llA"""• of the futurt will • " SOV!tl ft"n'n" Wiit llont !flt Ner11'!ef· 1M . 11 fM!r. NO. '1\fl1, f!I· llOet '190, ............... 'f" · · ... "' ""' « ·ukl 1'1rct11 "C" 1 dJJhi111;9 Of ,.., m. of Ot1k111 1t1c;Orm 111 #Ill ot11c• need a personality cia;tom·
, .. ""'7.oo !Mt 1o me Nottl!wtlte-rl'f corner ot ""' count'f 1ttc1t6k ,,, Ol'•nt• etull!J'. made •or Ille le II • el .. kl P1ru1 "C:"r fMMI Soutll C1Htern11, WILL St:LL AT PUILIC AUC. ,, nan . •• ·o-:w•w• E11t •11111 ,,.,. W•rlf•l'I' l!ow ot TION TO 111GHl!'ST llOOEI l"Oft CASH The survey Of Owens-Com-
• /~·Mid PlrC"tl "C", I0.00 lffl hi t/IOll 1111w1b1.t 11 tlll'M! ot r..11.t rn htwflll mO!ll'f I Fl b I
# •. ~ ~"'""""''"" otme• 111fir8efJ.' 1111nct ot lM unued s11in• 11 tM sout11 Fl"Ofll n1 e rg as Corp. covered
'.Nortll lt'2l'J7'' e11t 11Mt 11tt Sov11Mrtv ...ir111e1 10 t11e 0r11111e c o u 11 t v 1 lllO 1arden a p a r I m e n 1 • ' HM ot r.l ld ... c•t "C''. I d1i11,,a Of COl/rtl'IOU1•, arv of S.nt• AM. ,,.,. ef '
• ,... ''71.00 Ifft 11 1ri1 Northwttttrlv cor111r et c111rer1111, 111 rloht, 111i. 11111 1n11r111 COft. '1111idenU: In Atlanta, Detroit, ,,,..r t'1rcf1 "8", •• 111ow11 Oii l•lll 1"11«1 veyod 1o 1nd -Mk! w 11 u,., •• r.11d MinneapoliJ, San Francisco,
, Miii fl\lnct SouTh O'lf'JI" l'11t llol'tl DHd " Trl/$1 '" tllf "'"-'"' 911\lltlll I" •• 1111 WffHlrlw Hnt of ••IG 1'1rce1 ...... Nld Count)o arid Sltlf <ltu.rlbH .. , and Washington .
• lltlll IHI to tM 5oDlhwnlt1'1\0 corntr LOI 2'1 ,,, Tr1ct N&. '°'· II IM'W!I Oii A •of 111a P1rtt11 "I"; 1111nC1 SOOJll'I 1 Mao reairoed 1n look 21. ,,..,. "1o survey conclusion Wal
19•n·s1.. west 11ort1 1t11 Solltll•rPv :w. 1nc11111v~ or Mlu1111-1 M11>1. that "many rentf!rs consider ' 'bound•"' ll»e ttl 11111 P1rci!'I "A", • rec,,,.ds of Ort"lt• C..,.,lY, C1llfor11!1 ,..,,.d11t1nc1 a1 :m.oo ffft to ttw l"o!nt of SllG .ul• wlll be m11H. but w1111out apartment renting similar to • ,. -Bfflilrnll'IO of' lt\!1 dluri.>tlon. cCll'e"""' or w1rr1nrv, evrns or lrnp"fl<I, motel living. $ll1J!CT TO; All co~eNnt1, rl1h11, retarding lltll, ~Ion. or -·--~~-"-------r"Pl11,.0f...,..y tncl ffMml!tb of record.. wmbr111e.111, lo lllY fl'll remtlnl1111 11r1... LEG" NOTICE
II Is ""'ul:dld 11111 "'' offlrs to clffl ......, of tilt """ 1«11relf b'I" ulll n.u ,urcll1 .. lie In wrltlne. C01t1 Mis.I Coun. Oltd « Tn1st, 10-wll: ltll,14"1.1,, with 111-------,.,=-----.ry w.,., Dlllrlct '°""' of Ol•Klors i.r.11 '""' Al>•lt J, ltM, II tn 11\of l'l(lh! P4UM rewrvn lht rltlll to WllYt eny Jr. pro¥1dfd. 1o:IV1nc ... II lllY, 1,111Mr !hi ClllTll'ICATI! 01' IUSINIJI rttul1rllln , lo riled In~ INI Ill offers , ••rml of lllt:I De.of of T""s!, lees, ll'IC:TITIOUS NAMI:
Blllli lo llffOl'ltll wltlt told1Mt11 for 11>1: 11Ht clllr1t!I lrwf t~nftl fl JM r...,,, .. 1nll TM """""ltned do c~lfw tltlt\' lrt oHtr obf1ln.tllht ,ft IM Wiler Ol1lrlct. 01 tll• trusts crellelf tty Mkl OHd ef COllllucll"' 1 llu1lnew 11 P. o. l oit 2112, • • A fOOlt 1111" flymenl of IJ,000.00 ill'l<Mlld T...,ll, Cot!t Nilll, C.llforllll. uildtr 1111 lie· · .. ecG<llNmo tltt ell.,. 111 1t1t l11rm f1f n.. bl:Mliciiry undfr sslt:I Dffd of lflleus nrm n1me ef DUii.MAX • Colfftl., er Clrtl!llll chfc:t. NYt'llt II tl'tl Trvat b, re•-et I ltMdl or 1Mf1111t 111 INTl!ll"lllllS .,,,. lfl r Ill '' ' or6tr et ,.... COit• ~lol CetJn1Y W1h!• • • 11 rm 1 Olsll'let ll'ld wllldl w!tr bi! re!unitd Imo ltll ll>ll11t10n1 secured I h I r t 11 v • corn•oil!d ol 1111 lolllwlllll 1>1ra<1111 . ....._. • lflfd lllll'I' II ef'll• II "°' ICCWlff lllrtlef6rf Ol!Cvtl!d 11'111 tMl~rl!d "' tltf "'"* Ill full I,., l(ICH fll rHldft'ICI ... .. . • lt1y WllllCI . ......,.. .. n.,, I wrlttfll Olclltl!Jon et II followl: Sfull'llrt' OP!lult 11'1d Dfmar"' !Ir Sitt, 11\d wrlttlll JIM W1lh!r V1Llr<kt, lff41 t:.•1111'1' Colli Mlr.1 Count¥ 1111nc:t el llrl1c1t Ind fl tllctloll fe etutt L11'11, Huntl ntfoll l11ch. Cllll
.• ~ ... • Wetf• ori1r1et 111t vndtl'lltllfll io Mii 11td """"' lo ~ "ntl'IOllw stirr.n, l:i,1 1,,..,1 .• l ullltllld Or•r11• CO.ti 01llY l"llet, u tlllv SITd ollU01fl0111. •NI !Mre.iter,,,., SlrHI. C111t1 Mell, CIHI.
• ~!Qlllr 11 Jl 23. IHI 1~ .lvM 11. 1t61, lfll ul'lll&l'l!ff\111 C11,1111d "Id Oatld OclOblr 11 Int ·~ • • • Mnct ef tll°eKPI •NI If 111ctlon to "' Johll wi111r v111r11<1 ·.·. .LEG"L NOTICE rtcordld In booll; WI, ••It J!S, at Mld Ltt Anllllnw s11rrtlf n. Olflclll Rl!'Ct!rdi, STATE Of' CAL IF'OINIA --c-==-~~==,--.,--1 0111: Se>ptemt>er 1•. 1'6t OftANG E. COUNTY· ' . , No'r!CI O"' TftUSTll'I SAU llNE.l'ICIAL SlltVICI CO. °" OctoDI!' 11, · , ... , btfore <rn!, 1 , Oii Mlndly, NllYtl'!llllr 11, U .... '' fll:I At 111~ Tr111'"' NOii"' PullllC In 111d for u ld $Ith:, ' flour fll t :lD A.M., 11 tllt office of 1¥ A. l. Tur""r, _,_lly IPl>llflll Jol'ln Witttr Vetirdo . •tno11t: &-HIG81£, m Mlrl111 Av1n.u1, Viet l"r1tl1Mnl 11td L• AnlhOllY S11rr11t ~-"to me 1o
•. , .. Ibo. 111111<1, City llf Newport &Mell. IPI 11Ni bt lM ,.,._ wflo.M names 11'1 .ullt(rl~
, <;Ololnty di Orlllll CAlt1. M lUCK Publllhl!d "'""""""' Harbor NNI l"r111 td It tllt wltllln lntlr11m1nl 1111f '. 8l.tll.DING co .•• • 111b11!tult TltUSTll!!, combl,..d wllh 0111\0 l'llot, ,._rt ICMMWlldtlll 1111'( l•Kultd lltt 1111'\e, l<(lll Mil II 11/t!lk IUCflon It "" llllllltl •••Cl'I. C&llk\•11!1. Oclobfr 7. 14, 71. tOl"FICIAL SEAL) bldd~r tor QJll, In l1wfuf mo,,.y Off 19" 170Mol T1m1rt Ak:orn
the U~lffd S!1t&1, •If PIWtble 1t tl>I: LEGAL NOTICE Nol•"' 1'11Dlle · C1t11,,,."11 l!mt ol NII, Ill 11111 ctrt1111 ... I ··-lrlnc;ll••! Otllc• In e,..,. 11!1111'-d In the Cllv et N•-r'f Orin•• Covn!w ee .. cPI, CetJnty o1 flr1119e, St>t!t et C..11· P·IUU Mw Commlulon E~l!t'fl lomlt. dfKrlbe<I •• lollews: Cl!ftTIJICA'TI OJ IU11Nl$S Julll "· lt70 \.61 fJ Ill TrtCI .. .,, 11 Pff MID l'ICTITIOUJ l'tl/11! NAMI l'u-TI111td Ort,,._. Coll! Otlly P!k!I,
l'ICOt'lk!I 111 Soot \ ... 1'11tl 22 to 2J 141 ttJt Oc:tobflr U, JI, ff, Ind N!Wfmler .C, lll(Jullvt tJll MllCIUI -MIPI Jtec. Tiie un&er11tftllll do Mrtlrr unify ""'' ,,.. ln!MI ' ' tlleY lrt COl'lllllctlN I ... ,,,., ~IY -------------· ol 11\of Counl'y, bl/SIMI• Its ~Jlir'fnlr•) 11 10P Ou1n LEGAL NO'l1CE TOGf!'THElt WITl't an 111\Glw!Otd Ave., LllU"' 8t1cll. Ctflfon\11, Uf\dtr 1111
l /fll!I l>lltrt11 In LOI "et TrKI ""2.. fk:llflOlll tlrm "'""' o1 IOPAGE --,-0-,-0Cc1-0-,-,-.. -,-,-,-1-,-,-,-,-1-· J TM 11i. Will bt midi wlthol/t Clf'I• lf!'AUTY SU "l'LY I NI 11111 $11d firm !I T lli'lllnt or w1rr111lv reunll,,. trite, _. "'"'llOHtl ol ltlt 1D1i.w11111 Ht'lon•. -,.,_ Ht, ,!.S 12f ,.. 1111I011 or enc;u"'llr•-ho r.1tl1ty flit """ Wtflnud•Y. .,..1o111r JO, 1 • .. 1191'1'tH In full 1..S tll('el of rnldtftct trt 11 ·• 4.M CAPITAL ALLIANCE a8llt1llff\ IM!CUrwl W, llld fll-1 te. II lellowl, fo-wll· . •• Ille -· ef ••If eonterntd In 11111 ctr-P111• l.lfrl~nll. Liii/iii NJtwl, COllPDRATlON II ... .., ""!llNd T ...... t11n dtt4 of lrvst 1x«U1M b'P' 111:uce Cifltornl•. let 11Nler •rid pur1111nt 11 Olfll of TtL.111
C. Gl lll 1,..S NANCY C. GIBIS. 11 Ger11f Metter. T1111in, C11!tornl1. !Hied Ftbrutry 7•. l'f.J. IJfCllleG IW T .... stor1, TITLF lNSUllANtE ""'o Murr•r MOICOW!ll, Tu1tln, Ctlllor"!I. LUTHER E. HAMl"T()N I nd Hl!Lll!:M F. TltUST COMPANY, 11 Trvsftl, IOf" tM Jtek L. Tllbll11, lrO<>tl\011, N,W Yerk HAMPTON llHI rtcorGl!d Ftt11>11ary 11,
bti!lfn nd 1tv • ftll!JAC COIP., ltebtM 'TubH", So!Mr1et, Ntw JtrllY. 1Nl, 11 !n1tr, No. '°"'• In llOOk '-1~7. 1 llCVr .,..,._ Dl!lll OC:te&tr 1 '"' NII fM, of Df11(111 flKwd1 In !hi flftiCI
I corpa11llon, II te Ml ul'llflvldld PAUL LOMiAJtOI fl 1111 Coulll'I ltKDrflr of 0.llllf: COl/f\lv, half lft11trnl, ..... ICILftOY SNOl"l"tNG GE ftALO MIFTE• (1lllot'lll1, WILL IELL A'T l"U8LIC AUC· Cl!NTEJtl. lNC,, I corporation, II re MUltllAY MO$COWITZ TtDN TO HIOMt:IT ltOOEft l'Olt CASH
I ll undlwklld --""11 Ill",_!, It I-JACJI'. L, TUILIN (HYtlllt II IJIM fll "" 111 llwflll m-. lfldtry, -""' Otc'.ilmtlllr U, 1"3. Incl ltOllEltT TUILIN of !hi Un!tlll lt1llll 1! 1111 llllln Ml,lll(e ~ Jlllllrt' S, 1"4, In lotlll "6t, STA'TI!; OF CALl .. OfliNIA ) '6 Mlrllllrt kwlf!fl 1nC LOln Allodttlon. .... 15', II Ofel/11'11111 HO. ,,,., Offlo COUNTY OF OIANOE I St 1JU WllltUH Or!vt, N~wport 8Ndl, e!11 lt1tDn11 In lht otlfott .M fl\I Cfl.Nll'Y On Octollfr 1. lttl, Dlfert .., •• t Nt!•Fl C1!ltw'lll1, 111 rl1M. l!tlt -t!d ll\'l.,111 Ctl.,.
lttcl!rdtr of on"" CCl'.lfl'IY, C1llfenll1. lf!lfllk lft ll'ld for ... 1c1 Cevmv '"" Sltll, .,..,H "' Ind -ri.tld "" II uildtr Hid Tht e.tnflfl<l:lll lllflnlt lll'ldfr """ d ... Nl'Mfttllv .,. .. r111 IAUL LOM9Aft0t. bl4ll ,,, Tn.t1! In , .... P•--r1Y 1lfll1Nd '"
fll tnttl 1M tlll 41111~ WCV!'*I Ol!ftALD Hll"Tl!lil, 111111 MUftiltAY .,_ cllY di C•ll Mtll. lft 11111 CIUl'llV IM
lfltrttty _.. 1,_ltllff PIJ CAftL M. MOSCOWIT? ~ ti 1YW ti lit 1111 fll!t fhcrlMf lo: IUCK IUILDlNG (;0,. 1 C11!t°""t. PlflOlli ...,._ "''"" irt 111111Kr'llllll It Lii I et Trtcl No, 1111, In IM County COt'llOnttlon b'I" M .. ..i.-m Miid .... wlt11l11 lnttrumenf .... -6111WteftM ., o,.,,.., lltl• Ill C1llfern11. II ....
...•• <. .. • ol __ -... ~...._. -.. 11'11 m..I rlCOl"fN lft llioo-. S), •~" JO 11 ~ lJ, '""'· I ,.....,_ lot ..... tri.t .. ..,,,,..., """ II ' Mlf(flle-MliH Lft tM oHIU 11 fM l•mbtr U. 1~ 111 Jodi: 1D4. I~ )ltllnM• mw fl•llll •11111 -•. C-'1' ltKOnkr f/#011ld counrv
llt, ~ NI. ,tttOF, ortkt.1 flito-COl'l'ICIAL llALl Salt:I Ille wit! 111 mtOt. Mil . wll!WI
,. onh Ill fllit Dlfkll Ill 1l'tt ,......, ltlt..,.... Oolltlf l"lrllll ~ I" w1rr1ftt,, ,.,, ... or lfNlllN. -".~. ulf CO\lf!IV. NlllH lu&llc-Cllltornllt rcNtftlll tttle. -11t1lorl, It -
"'•' ~~ M. II.IC« IUIL.DIHO CO, -• l"MnCINI Offkl Ill Orllllt CGYlll\' Wl'llDrMICft. " NY t1t1 rMllW.. 1~ •11111 IUMll'lu... • T,_,.. My C°"'"'IWloll I.QIN ctHI _, f1f -""'" tlWl'lll b'I" wfd ·.· ~ h ._. fl '""' IW 1 tUlllftttl,. S.llrftl:lt• 1', 1tn Olfd fl Tl'\llt. ro-wll: 111.otl.01, wlft! Ill-• • n.n <MNlll JloNll 21, !M, ,,., ,.._.... STAT! °' NEW YOltlC tttrefl 1,.,,, Al"ll II, 1MI, •• In u lcl 1Wtt
.·,..111111 21, l1llL 111 ... NA INt .ae, COUNfY °' Jl'.INOJ ,.....,..., Hw•l!Cfl. If '""· """'4!• n.e • It ~ N., t,.._ OMc:lll _...,... on 11111 711'1 .fir ,,, Od9lltr , ... ttrmt,,, t1N 011111 " trvit. ~. cl>I'"" · 'lfl• flll Offka fl 1ttt (eliN!ty' • ...., ..,.._11Y ......,.... ....... 1M JACK L. 6ftl -Ill lhl T""'IM '"" el lhl -,• W'.Wlll c.-ty_ -TUILIN 18111 llotlll....!llfLJN Jt _._ tnntl «Htlrf b'I" lllf Def'd fl TP'IJl.I, • ,. • IMl!t9 ,,, fl/IUJI _, ~ ti ..+I .._ -' kiliiftt .. ,.,. ft lit ffll JMl. -nit ""'1k'lf'Y .,..., Uhl tMilr"il
i:• ~ rtlf ~ ~ w. 1Wvllt OllC.....,. In 111111 wti1 ,..atlf ... Trwl, llr ,..._ fl r br•ldl • flllllll lfl •.v el trwt -,...... • ,_ 11 :f,'" "" r-• .,. ~ Wiit ttll ellllfl•l*ll tecvrlfif lhlrt•w. "'• -· .... •rw ....,,. .. ~ ,.......,. tl!fCVflil 1111 ffth'lf'lf M !flt • "' ....... ,... .,, • ... ., -ll'l'llHnilMif • wtltlltl Otcll,.11111 "
,,. ·--~ ""11, ~ ...,. " ..,. : .. ~=r'· °""" ... Df!Mlllll llr 1111, .,,,. -ltllft >': • VlcW 1'J19t9 ~ ,,, llllwcl'I .,.. 111.ct1111 ti -lflt -._• .. •. CAJtL. .V.. ~f»Mll CD. NlltltY.J"'9ft ~ Ill MH Mlf .,...,,., M
I ~ 1111" Of,.._. '1'9rl llftllY .. 111.itllNflilfL I/If "'-"""tr,'" -• ~ ••.: CM! ., "" ,..,,.,. .,,,. •• , ....... IMllBl9Mif ~ ....
~·-:==... =:.i:i·=,.c...ti< =:.:,:r=:::. -:...~ .. ·.: '-opt ...... ..,..._ , _ .. r · Mlrdl :M. lMf OMctlll Sit ' -c.:: ........ ~-' lil.1 ... tM.t.KQ"nl, JL Ot•: 119. lffl ~ ... mo ..,.. r I ' ,........., ' CAllJT .. L /.LLIAfr4:(a
............... -~ I I ..... ..,,...... Mitt ID • CORl>OltATION ... l ...... ,........ ............ ~""' .... w ,..,..... "; ~ltflold ffW'I q M..,...;~ No qittll ...... ...... tf C:llrt f . Tlllf ~ wt111 et. ~ ........,, ,~-.SW.. c;.tt o.11¥' ''"" . A,.wlllf '-""4"' ...... ._ ... ,~, Mj ,,,, '9t.,,,... 1~ rt.. • .................. 4, ~~· .. °"""• -CMfl 111" ., .... , •,_aj .. ;_,--• • l,,... ,.. I I "'... , 11 ,.... r ,,...
"
'
NEW MERCEDES -Briggs Cunnineham, (left) locel sportsman and owner
of Briggs Cunninghem Auto Musuem takes delivery of new Mercedes -8en1
3()0..SEL from dealer Jim Slemons. The car ls said to be t.be first ·of its kind
off the assembly line, the first to be delivered in the U.S. and the fastest regu-
lar production sedan in the world .
300 Boys Compete in Punt,
Pass, l(ick Football Contest
By CARL CARSTENSEN
Nearly 300 boys competed in
the recent Ford sponsored
Punt, Pass and K.jck football
contest with trophjes being
awardOO to winners at a -party
held at Theodore Robins Ford,
Costa Mesa .
show decoratini firms, Siem~
mons added.
He said 60,000 yards of
satins and other fabrics will
be used to form a colorful
backdrop ror exNblls which
will range from I u x u r y
limosines to economy compact
automobiles.
The 1how, sponsored for the
fifth consecutive year by the
Motor Car Dealers Assn. of
Orange County, will spoUighl
31 domestic and imported
makes of cars, according to
Harvey Hiers,sec re tar y-
manager of the MCDA and
production manager of the
show.
As in pasl years. the show
will open Nov. 6 with an invit-
ational premiere sponsored by
nine Orange County
Assistance League Chapter•
with proceeds going to charity.
The sh9w wlll be open to the
public from Thursday, Nov. 7
through Monday, Nov. 11 •
Winners compete a g a i n
Saturday, Nov. 19 at Orange
High School. Finals of the na-
tion-wide contest will be held
during the NFL playoff in
Miami on Jan. 5, and the 12
national finalists and their
parents will be awarded a two-
day trip to Washington D.C.
by the Ford Motor Company Your Money'• Worth
Jn local competition, the lop
three boys in each age group
were;
I YEAR OLDS : 1. Don
Bums, Newport Beach; 2.
Patrick Gallagher. C o s t a
Mesa; 3. Michael Neal, Costa
Mesa.
Are Bank Policies
Really 'Too Safe'?
t VEAR OLDS: l. Billy
Vivers, Newport ·'Beach ; 2 .
David Adams, Costa Mesa : 3.
Colin Warfield, N e w p o r l
Beach.
lt YEAR OLDS : 1. Bill
MacDonald, Corona de! Mar ;
2. John Pearson, Newport
ach : 3. Pa.ul Shook, Fountain
Valley.
11 YEAR OLDS : I. Joseph
W. Sabia, Costa Mesa: 2. Bill
Moss, Balboa Island; 3. Kurt
Clarke, Costa Mesa. u YEAR OLDS: I. Brad
McNamee, Corona del Mar; 2.
Scott Henry, Newport Beach;
3. Brett McCulloch, Newport
Beach.
lS YEAR OLDS: I. Bill
Morse, Costa Mesa: 2. Gerald
Kaiser. Costa Mesa ; 3 .
Richard Purpura, Costa Mesa .
• • •
DODGE MANAGERS
WIN VEGAS TRIP
C. P. King, Dodge regional
manager, announced that Bob
, Swick, general manager of
Habor Dodge was one of the 13
Dodge dealer aales managers
that had won the region's sales
contest, "Swing to L a s
egas." The contest, com
last week offered all-expens·
e pajd. three-day trip to Las
Vegas." The contest, complet·
and hi• wife. • • •
COUNTY AUTO SHOW
TO BE ELABORATE
Elaborate speclally-d!elgned
decorations will form the
setting for the new t969
automobiles at the Orange
County International A u t o
Show, Nov. 1-11 in Anaheim's
Convention Center, according
to Jllri Slemons, general
chairman.
Slemons aaid the 100,000
square-foot exhibit hall at the
ecen ter will be carpeted with
royal blue noor covering
which will be accented by
perimeter walls of white with
swag lightl and chandtiUers In
1bades of red and blue.
Decor to complemrnt the
new lines of foreign and
domestic cara will be by Show
Specialty, a division of Canvas
Specialty, one of Southern
eauramia'1 noted •how
By SYLVI,< PORTER
How can we clamp down on
the supply of money in order
to make It tousb tti get in-
nalionary loans and thus to
curb inflationary price in·
creases ... without unfairly
penalizing millions of you whO
want to build and buy houses ?
What level of joblessness
mual we accept to assure
relative prict it.ability and do
we really have to "trade off"
more unemployment for less
inflation~
IS IT "sound" for our banks
to have auch auperbly email
losses on their loans these
da ys or does this actually
mean our finan cial institutions
are not taking the riskis they
should on loans io today·a
society?
At this point, I wish I could
aubmit trustworthy answers to
these que1tlorui. But 1 canr/ot
and neither can anyone else
because we aimply do not have
the definitive answers to these
and hundreds of other pro-
found1y important problems.
Wt know enough to 1uake
guesse1, and perhaps our
guesses will turn out to be ac·
curate. We know enough to
start asking the right quea-
Uons and perhaps by ask.inf:
the right answers.
taken a giant atride toward
the irght answers.
8UT THE fact ia that in the:
world of banking and finance
we art geared oo anawering
the questions which dominat.ed
our economic aociety in the
1930's. rather than to an-
Uctpating the questions which
will dominate our e<"onomic
society in the 1970'a.
Moel· of our existing \aw11
and regulations are. in fact,
directed toward p r ob 1 e m s
which no longer exisl.
As juat one Illustration. con·
cl.er bank lending p0l!clet.
Since lhe creation of ba.nk
depo!lt Insurance In lht 1930'1,
the dan1er of bank failure. to
the nation hat bffn minimi!·
ed. But regulatlona governing
"risky" bank ~ and our
bankl' attitudes toward theae
loans continue even more n,ld
Walter Winchell .ayo:
'1>riwaNew1'6tC.r-.
lour Sptd1I Order 'tt Anivool"
If JM MW I~ car JIM.I want hu to lie
apeci1I ordered, F..l«uriw: alvn you Ill·
mhtt '69 10 drtva whiW. you wah! And be·
UUllt Execu1iM hi 11te brptt car a..vr.
COIMl*IY in ~Mm CaMrorw:a. k ...
pi1omy on ddiwctY of •JI MW '9'1! ....,...
c1H !l:ecul:ivc Jot1•1.
Kl 7-3011 •• &..-,.......
OL.._
EXECUTIVE c•• LZAeI G OOKP4NTfl 12 f r.-et,S11
than in the pre-insurance era.
IN VIEW OF tht problems
we are facing in rebuilding our
cl.tits and wipin1 out our ahet-
tos in the 1970's. is it not ap-
propriate ttl sugj!est that the
lending policies of our private
financial institution1 may bt
too-"!afe" for society's tood?
Is It not appropriate at Jeut to
ask a study of this entire
area?
Where will the answers
come from ? M01lly from our
universities. Ana one new vilal
center for thi1 esiential
research will be developed
wilh the creation of the
Marcus Nadler Chalr in Bank·
ing Finance at New York
University's Graduate School
flf Business Adminlatration in
the heart of Wall Street.
Well on Its way toward ill
endoment of $.500,000, tbe
Nadler chair is deaianed t.o at·
tract prec!Jely tht sort of pro-
f es sor ·r e searchers and
students who will dig inlfl auch
practical que11tions 11 the
above.
THIS WlU. be a very
apeci.al chair, named after one
of Wall Street's great and
beloved teachers, and its loca·
tion In the Wall Street are will
give it a unique student follow·
ing.
At NYU's Graduate School,
lhe ratio of night t.o day
students iJI five to ont: the
atudents work in Job• In the
financial dlstrict during the
day, take their courHJ durln1
the night. This is the way it
was when . l was studying at
the Graduate Sehool : th!• is
the v.·ay It sllll Is. I know of
no flther comparable job-study
graduate school student body.
The need for new research
i! growing by the da y and we
have no time to w11te. Our
flnanciat-banlting statistics are
the best of any n1Uon in the
world but they 1lill art
dangerou1ly IN1dequ1t.e . Our
fl1Um on lilt supply of
mooey, for instance, are
prlmltlve ; our mei11urements
of . the flows of funds amon1
nations are embarr111ln&lY
ttude.
VET, WE MAKE pollcloo
based on these fiiurea and
mtUUttm<nll wbldl directly
affect the lives ol teDI «
millions of us. It ls em-
phasizi n& the obvlOUI to say
that any Improvements o{
thett arw wbk:b come from
unlvtrstty ~arch w 111
btneltt all ol UJ,
OVr -ol llnanclal :ft'-to lllbl lnflatloao delliUon is .blp than • ..,
bot k 11111 b.pa!n/1111, llckln(,
We lnuJt odd to the !aJallon.
speridlnf'Ct'dll --,.. have; "' muat f.tncl w111 to brblJ ...... aM price Polidlo
more In tune wllll Ille -·· ..... ,pd.
-
..,.,..,. F'*i
Btulne11 Problem
Colleges Grapple
With Money Need
NEW YORK (UPI)
Pressed by a trOWln& need for
money, many college ftnanclal
•dmlni!tratort are grappling ·
with a fam111ar blillneu· pro-
blem -' ahoold they dip Into
c1pltal to P"Y operallnc u-
penaes?
If It were a matter ol dlp-
Pilll into endowment capital
made up largely of bonds, the
anawer of course, would be a
horrified "no! "
But universiliel and colleaei
today have from 40 ttl M per-
ctnt of their endowroent funds
In common atockt ao the
growth of the American
ecommy baa produced capital
Rains which. In tht case ol
universilie.s are not tu1ble.
Up to now, the campU8
f i n a n c I a I admi.niat.ratora
generally have all capital
gains pile up as additiOM to
endowment.
Now, however, the argument
la bfllnj; advanced that, just as
c o m m e r c i a I corporations
aomtUmes uae capitil galna ttl
finance non-capital operatic"''
M ditltrlbute them as · extra
profits to 1bareholder1, so the
university Is justified in using
some of iLs capital gains on
11tCUritles to meeting preasint
expenses.
Yale has done so on a small
scale. But somt or the in-
stitutions that have the biggest
capital gains (such as the
University of Rochester with
it!! Xero1 Corp. holdings) have
oppneed the whole idea.
Perhap.11 the mO!lt striking
feature of university financial
operations today is that tht
college authorltie! are actively
seeking capital gains even to
the extent of turning their en·
dowment management over to
private enterpri.!t managers.
John W. Bristol & Co. of
New York i1 now managing
lht endowment funda of
Princeton. Amherst, Colorado
College, Howard University
and a hall dozen others. Yale
enga&ed a Boston firm. The
Ford Foundation hu ur&td
unive.rsltiea to reinvut en·
dowment funds lo reap more
capital &a.in.I fronl the ttO'llth
of American lndwlry.
The Univtttity of Cl\icago,
whJch .aomt yean ago IOld off
the Encyclopfldla Brttannlca
to William Benton affer gtt-
ting it u a gift from Sears
Roebuck, reaped $2 million in
retained royalties frOm the
BritaMica in 1967 u a result
of Benton's aggreaaivt
marketina pellctes.
The endowmertt f~a of
American unlvu1itits a r a
huge but, because of coo-
aervattve policies, their com·
bined annual earninga a.re
estimated at less thfn $$00
million a year and the yield
varies from 3 to 5.2 petttnl On
the average.
However, lhe COit of educ&·
tion has &ont: ~ s o
dramatically that endOwment
income now barely coven: $
· percent of operaUns UJ*Sell.
'l'ht private colleaes deptnt &n
tuition and fees, a portion of
which come ulUmat•l~ from
las 1upp0rted 1tudeftt aid
funds, and public granta..
The public lnstituUoM, ftf
courie, live directly olf tha
taxpayers.
Some universiUes' areatesi
wealth 11 land, held inviolate
for generatlona:. Columbia ii
the secood hlagest landhOJder
in New York City after Trinity
Pariah. Stanford'• San Fran-
ci8co area land h61dllta• are
fabulous in value.
lndepe~nt Phone
Firms Ring Vp Profit
CHICAGO ~UPI) -Leaders
of Independent telephone com·
panJea say the industry's size
anrl profit! ar~ g r o w I n g
phenomenally -faster than
the BeJJ System or the gr038
national product.
Spokeamen for the U. S.
Independent Te I e phone
Auoclation told M I d w e a t
editor• and security analyN
Wednesday that the industry
would set records this year in
the number of telephones in
aervice. revenuei and plant In-
vestment.
The unparalleled growth and
proaperlty, they said, wu due
to a ahlft In pOpulaiion from
central citle1 to suburbs and
amaller towna and deceo-
tralliatlon of Industry to areu
1ervictd by independent.!.
Huah R. Wilbourn, pruident
of Allied Telephone Co., LiWe
Rock , Ark., said the small
company la Interested in ~II·
Ing a ContmunlcaUon packlJe,
not jurt tel ont .etvlce. 'file
main pro lem. h~ added, ls
raising e capital required for
impr vementl and
IOphiJ ted mvkes like the
data p sainf, CATV and
inobilt te1ephonel. •
In the future, he N.idt eo to
7 o independent Can\p&niel
may offer securities for: publle
aale, compared to 31 toclay.
tnduatry spokesmen'. said
that in the Midwest 1JI& In-
vestment of indepe~ will
l'<llCh 1372,!I0,000 to. bflnr
total plant lnveatmut' *' a
record $2,t.11,S*>JM. ::
By lht end of lhe y ... they
said, the 906 mldweatMjl com-
panies will be strvint e,100,000
lelephone1, 3U p<l'<tlil el the
natlon1l lndependent total, a~
their revtnuU 1'lll ruch
SS70.525.000, a 7.3 perotrtt in-
crease over 1987.
Misuse of Cars Annoys
Auto Rental Agencies
Plarued by the misust of their
cart for everythinJ from
gypay taxk:abbing to murder,
automoblle rental agencies are
trying a new way to screen
pto!pectlve renters. And It's
working.
"It'• really a matter of tt'le
glrll at t h e counter bein&
tralned t.o ae?l the phonl.es and
crob." 1a1d John Savaae,
head of HCUrity (or Avts .
"There's alway1 aomethlna
wrong about the credentials of
the phony renting a car for a
ertme if the ctrl can Just. spot
ll," ht aald. "After two or our
car• were Ulfld ln murders In
tht put two yeara, we
determlntd to do JOmtthing
sbolll It."
Both murdon ln which Avis
can f.laurtd were solved,
Savqe Aki. 'Police tt.opped
one 11 • l\lll)&clout ear and
r,.nc1 a body In Ill• trunk. ,,,.
other Cat actually WU return-
ed to an Avll pragt with the
body 11111 In lhl trunll.
"l'ollc:o ldentllled the """' wbo bad pvm UI pllOr\1 Jdeo.
WJcatlcm from finierprlnll •
the car," Sava1e said .
llnp'• -ol trmile COlllller slrb to ipot p11oo1 .. 11
to -hb .... oecurity """' armod with p b o n y kl•
UftcoUM lo try to rt& WI
Inn Avis-"U I Jlill
!alb fdr the !al" l<Unlilltatido
and renia: a car, fhe feta a
reprimand. Bui ll lllO stan.
my man and calll the cops lht
aets a S50 bonus," Savap
said.
"lt Js ao eflectJve aotnttimfa
my man ts h1ultd off to t.1\1
police station and Mid unU1
they call me in New York aM
verify hJ1 ldeftUfy," Sava.gt
.. Id.
Bank ro6ben arc -1all:r
fond ol uoln& rtntod Cll'I, and
W1 ~ really rouP "' Ille cars.
"If they aren't nitntd In the
gelaway ttt,y're prte.bldly sl1shtd up by 111• · and
the FBI IGOklnafarc uet," aald
)'red Gor11eb, a KlnDOy u·
ecuUve in New York.
Kinney •!Jo bad Ille lllWH
uperlence "' bavllle •lfpul two doMl't of U1 can rtftttllll 'It
I barpln ?It. el $Dh ll!OOlil
and then med fll...nJ II
JYP11 cabl In Ntw '"Vol-11: -
w!lll u-mucll u H.1111 -
put .on • ur in a 8*ltll.
81• ... lllo! AYIS ,.,,,,. -
tiol bl&b ,..,_ "'"'
can blc:aaM ~ • ... , . ..,. ....... ~ .... -u..i..nce..
"-M-O'I -,_ al llbrtnl .n. lllJ ,... rlDlld lrGm us by ._,,.llo
did""' -.. -....., .. lllllr lolaaUMil," llill ·IMlt-
\
•' . .... . .., ~ ~ -.., . .. -.. , --• • ... ..... ... ...... .. ... .. . . .._. " '
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Startling Possibilities
Witit the presidential election only 15 days away,
some startling possibilities are coming to the surface
as the intricacies of the antiquated electoral college
system come under closer scrutiny. For example:
-George Wal'la.ce conceivably could become Presi·
dent even if he wins only a handful o! electoral votes,
provided neither Richard Nixon nor Hubert Humphrey
wins a 270. vote majority. Under the Constitution, an
elector has the right to vote for any man o;r woman he
chooses for President and Vice President.
-If any one of the three candidates receivefi less
than 43 electoral votes. Nelson Rockefeller or Ronald
Reagan could become President. If one of_ them coul.d
persuade his state's electors to vote fo.r hun, then hts
name would go before the House of Representatives,
replacing the third highest man in the election.
·-The nation could find itself with Spiro Agnew , Ed-
mund Muskie or Gen . Curtis LeMay as President. if
the House deadlocks and the decision goes to the Sen·
ate. The Senate can select only from the two highest
candidates for Vice P resident.
Thus, this election could work enormous mischief.
A first order of 1969 business should be to overhaul the
electoral college system.
Bridges of Friendship
' With little fanfare or concern tor personal recogni-
lion, the men of the California Partners of the . .\Jliance
for Progress have thrown up bridges of friendship the
past two years in several of the western states of
Mexico.
In cooperation with Mexican counterparts, the
Instilling
Enipathy in
Tite Police
At a meeting of police officers in
r-.: ... ago last month, Chief Fred Ferguson
'(.the small California town of Covina .
t-:~d his colleagues about putting intn
practice the "empathy approach'' I have
b~en recommending to police offieials for
more than two decade.s.
tn training his #-man police depart~
ment. Chief Ferguson has them booked in
j1.1l as suspects. walking picket lines and
Jiving on Skid Row -in order to get a
f"eling of the way the dispossessed and
the dissenters are treated by the Jaw.
IN ONE CASE, he reported, two
'"··inns'' walking along the Los Angele.s
!'~·id Row tu rned into a parking lot and
sli?rcd a drink from a bottle one had
ppl]ed from his pocket. Two uniformed
t -\. cops appeared, spread-eagled the
v.·i 11os against a wa ll and searched them.
One of them. panicking and afraid of
th" treatment he might receive, blurted
orl his true identity -a policeman from
Sl!\Jttrban Covina, assigned as part of his
tr~•nin!.l !.o play the role of a wino.
1 can't imagine a more important
a ·'!~t of modern police training.
~-··"!Ciallv in the increasingly urbanized
a:·eas or the nation. The need for police to
"em nathize" with the poor, the foreign·
sr~aking. the uneducated. lhe minorilv
11:rouos of all kinds, has never been morl-
pressing.
IT IS E.\S\' TO blame the notice or the
~1 11m d\\'ellers. or both . for the civil war
that rages sporadically in s u cb
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus:
If our tax-supported universities
continue to teach the ';Cleaver
Method," our children will soon
be holding four-lelter-word spelling
bees al the dinner table and dis-
cussing how to overthrow our sick
but wonderful country for the
Commies.
-A. S.
T~ls t11ture nl!eci,, •unn' v11w1 "'" ~t«J,..•llJ ltlou ~I Ille n1w~11•11••· Stn~ your Pit PPl~I II Gloomy Gu1, DlllJ ~Ho!.
neighborhoods. But the fact remains tha1
both are the victims of something bigger
than themselves ~ the technology Iha!
has eliminated foot-to-foot and fa ce-to-
face contact between the police and thr
inhabitants of such areas.
Policemen used to walk through lhc
worst slum sections of New York and
Boston and other cities without fear of al·
tack or even taunting. They knew
everyone on their few blocks. and could
easily separate the sheep from the goaLo;;.
NGWADAYS, THEY confront just ;i
faceless mass, staring back at them
balefully, suspiciously and con-
temptuously -because slum-dwellers
know they are all considered an equal
threat and menace to the police. who
have neither the time nor the facilities to
distinguish among them.
If it is too late -and I suspect it is -
to bring back the cop on the beat. Covina
is doing the next best thing. in giving its
policemen first-hand experience at being
on lhe other side of the sh ield, the stick
and the gun. Strangeness begets fear. and
fear begets force . When the police begin
to comprehend the needs. the feelings
and the responses of the "enemy."' they
might find they have more friends lhan
foes in lhat no-man's.land they now
patrol so warily.
Art Hoppe's New Book
The cast of characters is fam ili;ir
·111c·r T. Pettibone; Sir H on a I rl
llol~·rood: the Kindly Old Philosopher·
tTiyl hical President who visits ::i
\ylhical Allianc<> for Progress republir
f'mewhere soulh of Texas. There·s
-eneral Hoo Dal Don Dar, benevolent
'ader of an unlikely nation called Wesl
11nng (a n d another general, •loos on
hirsl ). These and other imps .
"'.>bgoblins and elfinfolk are the creations
r; Arthur Hoppe, an American .Jonathan
wUL They have become familiar to a
, ·r:;e public, and as endearing, as th~'
1".::-nizens of Charles M. Sc h u 11. '~
··;·•ccinuts.''
They turn up In what a rC'Ckl<":).•
re1•iewer (and colleagueJ might call !his
generation's "Gulliver's Travels," a win
11owing of the best, or most pertincnl, or
1• 1ttlest, or mo s t representative Hoppe
t·on1ments frorn some 1500 he has
delivered over the past fivt> yea rs. Tht
book·s perfect title. "The Perff'cl
Solution To Absolutely E\'erything."
TH&E PlECES hold up wonderfully
well between hard covers. I should think
that at least the thousands of Hoppe fans
who read his doily newspape r C(llumn
alone would want to nwn his book .
~For his-report on the Leai;::ue rnr Tnt:il
Birlh Control. for example, which wlll nol . . ---Tbs ~ llllllitfl ft ...... lvt•lv l!•frp!f!l~f. I•
~rtflW ...,_ 1"'71'11 rw w1111..., c • .....,.,.,, Oe11b11-*'11 Ml ,.., M.tt. -------only solve oor problems, but will solve.
tbeln fn a single generation. But everyone ,m have. his favorite Hoppe sequence -
... Ban the ltlom piece, maybe when the
fiCal .Bfrtb Control people hold lhcir fin·
.. Mother's Oay protest marob and ef· a-bo1rnfn1. Or opin. that Brotherhood !Mt down In Weot VhlrulB wh<n • Chris· f1mJ1f ,... .. lnlo •n AJJ.Buddhlst
~I \
The Boolu._an
11c1ghborhood and two Buddhist boys al·
lend a Christian school without being spaL
upon. Or when victory in that mythical
ungle war is JUSl around the corner.
.gain.
llOPPE KNOWS Iha! all those en1·
>l'rors are naked as jaybirds. and snys ~n
11•1th v.•it t1nd intelligence. These are ;ill
unportanl entries in his very own
"llistory of the World, 1950-1999." And thl'
eurious thing i:o; that they can be inl·
port.ant notes lo any real history of thl.'
f)Crlod which on~ day might be wr1ttell .
F'nr lloppe's b l i the spirit registers ;i
c1vilb.ed dissent of today·s widely ac·
ceptcd Establishment mores. polltical
~nd military moonshine 11nd other
ah:<SurdHics whi ch mark this particul~r
Lilliput we have come to Inhabit.
Snme J)C()ple, thank G<ld, have not come
tn inhabit it willingly, In IK>me measure
lloppe is l.n be thanllcd for that. ln SJ)eflk-
ini;: 0111 against some or the wors1 of·
frnses committed in a grotesque fo"an-
1asyli1_nd. he makes nne l:iu.;:11. think and
onct 1n a white dare to hope. lie Is I.hf!
original KJndly Philosopher who would
not m11ke the worst President of
Absolutely Everything, Just think -no
more problems with sex education, stu-
dent sit-ini. Zr.bombs, Leaders of the
Week in our only Asian bastion, no more
missiles. booic. national political con·
ven\ion~. rutabaga. His book makes ideal
campaign literature.
William Hog.u
• '
Partners are establishint: workable lines of economic
and social sell·belp. Their projects are providing per-
sonal, face-to-face relationships between men and
women of both countries.
Their a~tivities reflect a concept of inter-American
relations which alleviates the impersonality and remote-
ness of ~overnment-to-government foreign aid. The
Partners efforts are undertaken to supplement govern·
ment programs, without .spending government funds.
The Partnership ot the Alliance -active betwCen
&I.her U. S. states and Latin American countries as well
-means many things in tenns Of sped.fie accomplish-
ments.
For the Californians, it is Newport Beach water
safety experts showing the people of a Mexican city
near the ocean how to set up a lifeguard program. It: is
Costa Mesa .&remen locating equipment for a Mexican
vol unteer fire department, then trainin, the vol unteers.
l 1t: is these same firemen of both countries traveling
together back to Mexico, none speaking the other's
language but content in fille knowledge of being. with
friends as they travel 1,000 miles in a vocabulary of ges-
tures and smiles.
It is a Corona de! Mar businessman writing a check
for a crucially needed and expensive ceramics machine
at a crafts center in La Paz where uneducated teen-
agers are learn'ing skills to J;ft themselves into the
economy as viable wage earners.
The reward for the California Partners has been
a lively and lasting relationship with their Partners to
the South. It was expressed like this recently in a letter
from one Mexican to a Newport Beach man: "Receive
this hearty embrace from a friend a nd carry in your
heart the knowledge that it is people such as you who
place your courrtry's name in high esteem."
"
"'
Ca1ididates Lack Ike's Appeal
Trust and Aff ectio11 Are Missing
WAS HI NG TO N -General
Eisenhower's recent illness, from 1vhich
he has gratifyingly reeoveretl, caused a
great deal of introspection on just what it
is about him that has caused the
American pe-0ple generally Lo lake him
into their hearts.
Many thousands of words evaluatin~
his contributions lo American life and
history, written during his recent illness
for ne\vspapers, rnaga;.;nes and radio-'!'\".
remain mercifully unpublished and un·
hroadcast and have been set aside for
what is hoped to be a much later day .
The central point or these evaluation!';
1nust necessarily be that Eisenhower is
~rusted. A great majority of the people
have been willing to place faith in hin1.
even though they may have disagreed
with or deplored what he did or fa iled tn
do. The heart forgave him if the mind
did nol.
EISENHOWER WILL nol be rated by
the historians. at least for some time to
come. as among the ··great" presidents.
but if these historians have any percep-
tion at all, they will have to ra!e him tlH'
1
rnost universally liked president so far 1n
Lhis century.
This is apropos toclay because the
Arncric:~n political syste1n has not pro-
duced anyone on the current scene with
a1niable qualities which arouse trusl and
Jove. Strangely enough, Gene McCarthy
caine. as close to it as anyo:1c this year in
his image as a "good" and "clean ·· man
so unlikE; the conniving masters of the old
politics who are now vying for the
presidency. Many who were attracted to
clean Gene merely set aside their
reservations on his qualificalions to lead
a great nation as secon dary to the purity
of his h'.:!art and o;:rpose. So1Tie were not
even interested in the validi ty of his
vie\VS on the Victncim \Var, blll reco;?niz·
ed in McCarthy a philosopher with a
poetic soul ~ho might restore to public
life qualities of decency. con1passioo and
urbanity which have been entirely lost in
t ~ , ic ·u;; e~nll'O\"el'sics and vu lgarity Qf
life in our day .
lfUEERT H. l-1 Ufl1PlfREY knows what
is m:~_,. -; in i .1.; ;.-:";;~ical ca1npa ign but
he cannot for the life of him arouse his
pt ::·'-:-to r.:oti>r him in rain1ents o[ trust
and affection. He can only arouse a com·
l.';.'.;·; • .:.-i • b~~··1een Nixon. \'/allace and
himse.lf on this score , "·hich he is now
assiduously trying to do.
"I'll tell you wh<:tt I think the issue is in
th is campaign," Humphrey said in a
recently published interview (U.S. News
and V!orld Report). "I think the issue is
this : WQom Ci!l you trust? I thlnk that 's
what !t"s all about. And I think the·voters
are looking over these candidates -r ~,,,., 1~,~;ing ove r myself, Mr. Nixon,
Mr. Wallace. They know there are
t, ..:11 b~-.::::. . h.:y knew \Ve live in a
dangerous world. They've had it brought
home very clearly to them again in the
Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. Thcv
know th'.:!re are riots and troubles -even
though there haven't been as many a!l
pred icted. And the question they 're ask-
ing is: Whom can you trust?"
THE TROUBLE is that there is no
overwhelming inclination on the part of
voters to trust anybody. And the question
is who is to be :east distrusted. This is an
age when promises cannot be fu lfilled
fast enough nor completely enough to re-
ma ke America in any span of time which
hcis current political meaning. All the im·
po.·Lant basic readjustments which are
discus:;ed \\'Ould await decades for
realization. Even those who are chan,11:ing
their views on the Vietnam War, li.ke
(prmer presidential ad viser McGeorge
frundy, accept the physical presence of a
large, if reduced. American armed force
in Vietnam and Southeast Asia for as fa r
ahead as man can see. So. for all we can
tell, did McCarthy and now Nixon and
Hun1phrey, with all their e1nphasis on
shifting mili tary responsibility to the
South Vietnamese. Even the most ardent
of the publicl.v recognized opponents of
the Vietnam War would have removed
Atnerican force no farther away than an
Australian base.
'Obscenity Remains an Ohsce11ity'
Tn the Editor·
What is UCI Chancellor Daniel G.
Ald rich trying to prove with his stair·
rnent. defending the militant Blank
Panther Eldridge Cleaver and his
obscenities of Sept. 26~
According to press releases. Aldrich
was quoted thusly ~
"I am a111arc of the obsccnilles In
Cleaver's talk. .But, what we consider
obscene, arising out of our J udeo-Chris-
tian heritage and its concern aboul
references to the bocly and sporting in lht>
bedroom. stud 's don't cons id er
obscene."
Simply because someone has not been
1'1ught wha l obscenities are does nol
·hange the facl thal an obscenity re-
1alns an obi-ccnity.
Son1cone should tell these young pcoµle
i1at profanitv is a tool used by the "'eak ~{ mind lo e":.:press one's self efteclively
and forc efull v.
Those who.are not weak of mind don'l
need it. JERRY MYRE
Proposition 9
In rep I y lo the DAI~'( PILOT's
editorial relative lo Propos1t1on l·A, w_e
have decided to offer a homeQwne~ s
p<>int of view W h i C h has n?l been I~·
f\ucnc~d from the fear of an .1ncreas~ in
state incorne ta xes which will possibly
occur if Proposition 9 becomes \aw .
The editorial purported tn support
Proposition 1-A, a R_eagan·Un~uh con1·
promise. on its merits. IL said. and I
11uote "Proposition 9 is as bad for the •cUa~c of the average citizen as Propos1~
;ion \-A is good ." The editorial furt1_1cr
s<alcd that "Proposition 9 is a rieceptJV(·
i.l\X lr11p."
Governor Reagan promised in his elec-
B11 6enrgf!
()ear George :
Your adv ice 1n Sri7.e Opportunity
and Live Life Now wa~ In·
spiraUona1 to me. I canl un·
derstand whv I work~1 at thHt bank
so long -it·s nice here in Acapulco
and I ha ven"l even opened the big
suitcase full of bills : still using the
valise. llsving wonderful time, wish
you were here.
INSPIRED
Dear Inspired :
Sotnetimes I'm tempted lo get
NJI of the inspirational racket
Letters •'<!m ~aM•S are weicc~. Nc•m&llf wrl!Pro
!hovlO convey !hel• meisate Jn .1iKI words or le ...
T~~ r<l!M to condenw. lflle'9 IO lit space or ellm!na!f
fl~I Is •eserv~. "II lf!lers mus! i<1Ctudf s!g,,..,ture
•f>d m'i!inti &Odress. but name1 will bl! wl!tlh•ld on re<11J15!.
lion campaign to lo\ver real property lax~
es in California, for he too has vigorously
complained of having to pay a $10,000
annual property tax and is aware of the
strain 1hal government has placed upon
the property owner. Has Proposition 9
gone too far for ~1r. Reagan ? No, we do
not believe i1 has.
BUT H(JW CAN a high p11bhc official
su pport a proposition that will ultimately
throw the burden of new legislation into
an arena where Republicans and
Democrats can only compromise and
con1e up with a bill like Proposition l·A.
As a compromise nieasure, Proposition 1-
A does not offer tax relief. it has offered
a bribe lo the voter. a $70 pa yment if he
will support the measu re.
Ii "Proposition 9 a de c. e pt i v e lax
trap?" Proposition 9 was iniliated by Mr.
Philip E. Wat.son. Los Angeles County
tax assessor J.,et's ask ourselves why a
tax assessor would propose tax reform ?
He is in a position as ta x assessor. of a
very large county, that brings him into
d;i.ily confrontation with the taxpayer. He
is a111arc tha! there is · no ceiling nr
limiting of taxes under th e present 1ci·1·s.
THAT TAX ES \\'ILL increase with
government spending increases and Lhat
the only way to lin1it, not abolish pro-
perty taxes, is to have the people, not the
compromising \eg;slalttre, amend the
California Constitution. Does Proposition
l·A lin1it taxes to a specific and final
amount't No, it does not! If taxpayers get
a $70 rebate throug h proposition l·A , this
amount will just about pay for any pro-
perly lax increase over last year·s bill,
according to Mr. Watson. What about
next year's bill? If Proposition I-A passca
we will all get another $70 rebate the
following year. But what about another
tax override or another increase in
governlnent spending? Won't these in·
creases nullify the Proposition l·A trap?
Let the voter be info rmed! Let him
reform California 's tax structure and
mzkc it "'hat iL should be. Lets all vot.e
yes nn Proposition 9. no on Proposition I·
A,
PETE AND ANN FENTON
Proposition 9 Merely a Tax Trap
Your Nov. 5 hallo! wi ll list two property
lax relief n1easures. 1'hey are Prop. l·A
and Prop. 9. Which one. however, i~ thr
rea l lax relief znca sure, the "real
McCoy~··
Prop. 9, lts supporters claim. will gi ve'
you a 50 per cent cut in your property tax-
es within five years. Unfortunatel y, you
;u·e being told only half of the story . Thi~
i~ where Prop. 9 fails as genuine t~x
relief and becomes merely a "tax trap.''
F'or example, Prop. 9 removes fro1n lhe
property tax $2.1 billion for the support of
schools. However, il makes no pro vision
for replacing these funds. II leaves, lhis
problem up to the state.
ALSO LEFT UP to the state is the pro-
blen1 of replfl~ing other funds com-
~ munitici-; will ldlt that they now receive
fron1 the propcrcy la~ lor wclrare,
libraries. r«-rrc:-tiQn. ;ind so forth. The
tow! los:: is estimated at S4.2 billion a
yf'ar.
Of course, the state does not have to
replace these funds, but it will. For U It
docs not , our schools, our welfare pro-
gr&ms, and many of our other servic_es
literally will fall apart.. California, ID-
stead of being a state that attracis
business, industry and professional peo.
pit, would be<:omc a place of cbaos due tn
lnildequate education, t'f!Cn!aUon and
~ .
Gnesi Er!i toci:.ru "'
other services.
Fiscal experts say I.hat I.he only
realistic way the state can replace these
lost funds is to raise the sales tax to 12
percent, or the income tax by 300 per·
ce nt. or a combination of tax increases.
You . of course, will pay tbese, which
makes Prop. 9 oot a tax relief measure
but merely R tax shift propotat
PROPOSITTON l·A. on the other hand .
while it hs not the ultimate answer to
much -needed ta;l reform In caurornta.
does provide genuine tax relief.
The tem\6 of Prop. 1-A provide each
homeowner with a $70 cish rebate of this
year's property taxes. Aft.er thi.! year.
each homeowner will receive a $750 ex-
emption on the aMCASed value qi his
home, which amonts to about the samt
amount M' money.
Rtntm also benefit U Prop, l·A
passes. They can double their ltl.ndard
deduction for state lnc:orne laxes.
Everyone will bendlt ln another vray
becaUH properly IUe& Oil hoo>ehold
furnishings will be. e 1 i m i n a t e d .
Busi nessmen will benefit because ot a IS
pel'cenl reduction in inventory taxes.
These are actual cuts. lhe "real
McCoy." They make Prop, l·A genuine
tax reHertf you want the "real McCoy,"
vote "Yes" on l·A. and ''No'" on Prop. 9,
tht "tax trap."
Education New1 Service
Monday, <klobcr 21 , 1968
Tl1t tditonot Jl(.!Qt: o/ tilt Oai.111
P1Jo1 Jc:tlu· «> inf arm and stir.:.
ula:tt Ttader1 bu prtacntinQ thiJ
nnoapoptr'• opiniom and com-
t'Mnt.of'&I on topica: of inttrt'sl
and lignificance, b11 providing a
fof'Vm for the fll:J)Ttuion of
otw rtadera' opiniom, and by
J>fC!!IAting the dfv«Tle uftw-
point.r of lnfOT'tntd ob1trotrt
and apoketmfn cm topict of tM daw.
Robert N, Weed. Publisher
' '
-~----~-------------·--·---
-!l'l' .......... ~ .. 11"'11!"'"'""""""'"""'"""""'"'.,"11""'"''"..,,..,""' ... l!"'"""_...,,. _____ ...,,...,., __ ..,,......,. __ .,..,...,,....~,T 1-~J,1'-J,"" t*'ft ·i~.;~f7,;~-:-i,r;
•
Hewitt
Ill' GLENN WlllTll
Of .. Dllb PIW II*"
MEXICO CITY -Tool Hewitt race.
seven other great WO{ld stars tonlght in
the lloall al the Olympic 100 meter but.
terny for women.
TM Corona de! Mar !Dgh School senior
ll)ade the ebowdown struggle by surviv-
ing SUl)day'a rooming prellmlliarles and
evening aemUinals.
There was no problem getUng by the
morning rounds but things got rough in
the aernia when she misjudged the tum at
50 meters and dragged in fttth in I :O? .9.
Fartunately she was ln the swiftest of
the two beala with CllJ1 'three girls from
Swims ·
•
the -..... ••tnc !ul.......,, to ..... a lj>Ol ln toolgbt'• duel.
Abo S\locllly, American·'l'lallhen and
dlvers cleaned bouae, Wlmllng 10 of 12
medals and cap<urln( .U four gold
medals.
Bernie Wrigblton, wbo ~ port ol
the summer at Newport, J1tacb and train.
ed. at Costa Miu.is Meaa Verde Country
Club, won the S.meten tpring board dJy ..
Ing UUe with 17o.t• point.a.
Claudia Kolb smashed her Olymptc
re<O!'d ol 2:2'.I 1n the 200 lndlvldual
medley, breezing the distanct· In 2:2U to
lead a U.S. IWeep.
Cbarlie Hickcm< pacod the Yann'
aweep 1D the men'• 200 lndo, cloctlq;
DAILY PILllT ZJ
100 Fly Medal Tonight
2:U.O to reduce Jolm Fml!' Olympic
llandard by 2.6 l!OCOl\Cll. Fml! finished
thJrd then collapsed twice after the race.
Sacramento'1 Debbie Mayer had the
golden -11 1n the .00 freeltyle IH1nfl
honors 1n 4:31.& clipping U seconds off
her day-old Olympic standard.
Mias Hewitt geta her first match of
talents against the Amazon-like world
record bolder from The Net.betlands, Ada
Kok. '11le race will be televised on Chan-
nel 7 at 4:30 p.m.
Th&y 1'111 a1ao aquare all to Tlwnday'1
toO fly and are co-favorites for the gold
medJI ln that event
However, Mlsa Kok looms u the one to
beat 1n lbe shorter distance looJiht. Her
1lobal best La l : 04.5 and she cruised to •
1 :06.1 in Sunday's semis.
Alao tough are Ellie Daniel and Suzie
ShieldJ of America with the.ir 1:04:.8.s:
Mlss Hewit al l :OS.O; Australia's LyneUe
McClemnet.s who looked impre.Wve with
her heat limes of t :06.1. Composing the
remainder of the field are Helke Hustede
of West Germany, Andrea Gyarmatl of
Hungary and Helga Lindner Crom East
Genna.ny.
Nooe ol lbal laller trio figures to be 1n
medal .... -.
But the other five. could Conn a blanket
ftnlJh, barTing mishap like what M i 1 1
Hewitt suffered Sunday.
She uJd later she had reached too high
when approaching the turn. "1 didn't have
the momentwn to come down on the
wall," was her explanation.
Then she had to sweat out the second
semi heat, hoping not more than three
awlmmers from lhat section would better
her time.
Her hope was realized when Russia's
Patyana Devyatova placed fourth in
1:08.4. "I sure never thought l'd make
tbe finab with a 1:07.9," the Corona del
fdar ICe lold the DAILY PILOT.
Mill Hewitt &&Id llhe dldni feel
particularly abarp 1n either of Sunday•1
awlms, painting out that ln the morning
she didn't feel fast and in the evening abe
sjmply dld not feel s\WJ>.
But then her aplrtta plclr:ed up con-
aiderably when 1be recalled that UCl
coach Ed Newland wu to be with her too
day.
Newland tw coached her slnce she
began age group competition eight years
ago. "Having Newland here will be a big
help," abe stated.
And regarding lbe 100 finals, llhe pro-
jects that a 1 :05.0 will be required to win
a medal.
U.S. Coach Tells How Toomey Won
l{eino Tops
Ryun; Relay
Marks Fall
MEXICO CITY -Kenya's Kipchoge
Keino easily whipped Jim Ryun in the
Olympic 1500-meter run Sunday, but U.S.
track and field forces came back strong
with world record victories in three relay
races plus a one-two finish by Dick
Fosbury and Ed Caruthers (Santa Ana)
In the high jump.
Keino's victory in the 1,500, the third
gold medal for Kenya in distance running,
smashed Ryun's hopes of bringing the
United States its first 1,500 gold since Mel
Sheppard won the race in 1908.
Keino won in Olymic record time of
3:34.9, finishing about 15 meters ahead of
Ryun, who was clocked in 3:37.8. Bodo
Tummler of West Germany was third.
But while the Americans pondered
Ryun's defeat, previous gold medal win·
nffliWBio=~~
Evans anchored three re yed teams -
the men 's 400-meter, the women's 400-
meter and the m.en's_ 1,600-meter to vie-
tories.
Then Fosbury, a senior from Oregon
State, exhibited his unorthOOox "FOsbury
Flop'' for 80,000 astonished fans and won
the high ,jump with a leap of 7 feet, 41/4
inches, giving the U.S. ils first gold
medal in that event since 1956. Caruthers
finished second at 7-3'h.
Fosbury, who dives over the bar
backward, tried for a world record at
7-6V4 but failed .
Olympic track and field competition
wound up with East Germany's Margitta
Gummel breaking the world record in
winning the women's shot put with a
heave of 64 feet, 4 inches and Mamo
Wolde of Ethiopia winning the marathon,
the race his countryman, Abe.be Bikila,
had hoped to win for a third consecutive
time.
Like Bikila, Ryun was disappointed in
his defeat. He said he was stunned by
Keino's early pace.
"I knew if Keino went very fast I would
have to stay off the pace so that's what I
did," he said. "I tried to pick it up with
two laps to go, but I couldn't make it."
BenJamin Jipcho of Kenya set a fast
early pace and when Keino took the lead
with 2'h laps to go, Ryun was still well
behind. Ninth at the 800-meter mark,
Ryun moved up to fourth on the third lap,
but Keino had opened up too much of a
lead even for Ryun and his famous
finishing kick.
Keino 's time of 3:34.9 broke Herb
Elliott's Games record of 3:35.6 sel four
years ago and is the second best time
ever for the l,500. Only Ryun 's 3:33.1 ls
better.
Minutes later, Hines sprinted the
United States back into the track
spotlight. He trailed Cuba's Enrique
Fuguerola by two meters, when he got
the baton.
But sheer power carried Hines, the 100-
meter gold medalist, past the Cuban with
about 50 meters lo go, and he steadily in·
ched ahead as he neared the finish line.
The time for Hines, Charlie Greene,
Mel Pender and Ronnie Ray Smith was a
world record 38.2 seconds, breaking the
mark of 38.3 Jamaica set in the aemi·
finals Saturdaf. The men's 1600 meter
te am ran aw&)' from all compet.ition in
j :56.I.
The U.S. girls also set a world record,
winning their relay in 42.8.
V FOR VICTORY -Laguna Beach's Bill Toomey
.~eariJy flashes the victory sign as he crosses finish
:.ine in 1500 meters, final event in the grueling de--
rathlon. Toomey held oU challenges of two German
UPI Te..,._..
athletes, ineluding world-record holder Kurt Bend-
lin, to win gold medal and establish Olympic rec-
ord. Winner of decathlon is considered to be world's
greatest athlete.
Long Preparation
Did it for Toomey
By GLENN WIDTE
OI llM O.M' Plltl Slltf
MEXICO CITY -What made Laguna
Beach's Bill Toomey t h e 11168 Olympic
decathlon champion and record holder?
United States track team coach Pay-
ton Jordan sums It up this way ror t be
DAILY PILOT:
"Tremendous preparaUon and months
of planning so he would be peaked at just
the right time ," Jordan sai~ moments
after the magnificent all-round Laguna
athlete had conquered the world's best
for the gold' medal.
"When Bill was in altitude training at
South Lake Tahoe I observed him work-
ing many times after dark with (Ron)
Whitney on some of his weaknesses,"
Jordan adds.
And reV!ewlng Toomey's 8,193 point
performance Friday a n d Saturday at
Olympic Stadium. Jordan said there were
two key events for his 29-year-old star.
One was Friday's final event -the 400
meters. Toomey ripped off a 45.4 ... a
lifeilme best by eight tenths of a second
•.. for 1,021 points. Tt was his highest
single scoring effort of the 10 event en-
durance and ability contest.
'Mle second was the last test on Satur-
i3ay'1 program -the 1,500 meter run.
"Bill's ability to put the 1,500 picture
clearly In his mind was very important.
He knew what he had to do to win and he
went out there and did the job," Jordan
&aid.
Toomey said he was especially nervous
about the 1,500 because West German
world record holder Kurt Bendlin t o I d
him right before the race he was going to
give him a battle.
Bendlin would have had to rµn 8.5 sec-
onds faster than the Lagunan to make up
the 61 points by which he trailed Toomey.
But it tumed out to be the perfect race
for the new champion. He got away with
running a 67.7 first lap.
And a! Jordan said, "It was stow and
made to order for a guy like Bill who has
a great finish. Ir someone had ~one out
and run a 84 second first lap it might
have upset the whole applecart."
Toomey led for 1,000 meters . If he could
finish first, or within eight seconds of
Bendlln, the gold piece would be his.
He was paased by Russia's Nickolay
~vllov and later by Hans Joachim Walde
of West Germany.
But with 350 meters to go, Toomey cut
lOC'Se with a tremendous spurt and pass.
ed both of them. Hts sprint continued to
the tape and he waved two fingers on
each hand, the symbol fOT peace, as he
broke the string at the end of the race.
"I kept lhJnking that all of a rudden
they would ~tep on the gas," he told the
DAILY PILOT. Toomey's final 400 met.-
era was a respectable 66.0.
He alto told former Russian national
track coach Gavrll Korobkov afterward
that be would take a one or two monthl
break for a rest and to look for a job.
Toomey is a ~acher.
He aaid he was lucky to win and added
that he was not tired.
The only t.hing that bothered him was
when he was husUed away from the track
for several minutes to be given his sec-
ond dope-stimulant test in as many days.
But that all seemed like small potatoes
a short time later when his parents, the
Cornelius "Dick" Toomeys of Laguna,
were able to break through lhe crowd to
congratulate their son.
Mrs. Toomey threw her arms around
him and said in a broken voice, "Oh baby,
did 1 pray for you!"
The mother and son agreed that they
were glad it was over.
"I enjoy the decathlon," Toomey said.
"But this one was rough because there
was so much pressure. 1 was very nerv·
ous both days .
"The· rain Friday bothered me In th e
high jwnp. I strained a leg slighUy and
it bt>thered me a little In the hurdles.
"And I was lfoini;t: lousy in the po I e
vault -I waa really lucky to clear tl-
9\ii. However, after I did, everything
seemed to fall Into place for me. I f e 1 t
great after that."
Jordau was not surprised at Toomey's
great 400 time Friday.
"Frankly, I thought he might go under
4S.O," he stated. "This youn~ man Is a
great runner. I could probably use him
on our 1.600 meter relay team, In fact.
"And U I asked him to run, I know he'd
say yes, even after having competed in
10 event! in two day!.
"He's that kind of man."
Toomey said he was not thlnkln,it about
Bendlin's world record total of 8.319 at
any time during the competition. "My on-
ly concern was taking that big step on the
(victory) stand."
There were many great eventa for the
Lagunan. Besides the 400, he long jum.J>-
ed ZS..i%, high jumped M%, ran JOO me-
ters in 10.4, ran 110 meter hurdles ln
14.9, pole valuted 13-9\ii, threw the jave-
lin 206<l\; and lbe dJsc:ua 1'3-1\;.
IDs shot put o:;rn> and 1,!00 (4111.ll
were the only sub par performances:, it
you dare call them that.
He needed a 4:35.8 In lbe l,!00 to break
the world mark, Incidentally.
Walde picked up the silver medal wl.th
an 8,111 score.
Bendlln faded badly In the 1,500, acor-
ing 303 points wlth his 5:02.$ clocking.
He collapsed on the track at the fln!11h
and had to be helped up by Toomey.
Hi5 total was 8,064 as all three medal~
t.sts erased Rafer Johnson's Olympic
mark of 8,0(11 Rt eight years ago In
&me.
Toomey said any thought of working
for the 1972 Games Jn Munich IJ the far-
thest 'thing from his mind, at least until
he gets back to Laguna f~ relau.Uon
and time to think clearlf.
•
Golfs Greats Arriving Y k p l . • · an Water o oISts
Haig Week Opens 1n Mesa Ar . High N ,
"Haig Week" arrived today for Costa Verde Country Club, where the $120,000 On hand to lake their best ahols at that
Mesa. tournament starts Thursday and lasts $22,000 are swingers like leading money
By this time tomorrow the greatest through Sunday. wlnner Bllly C&sper, former PGA champ
names in goU wlll be quartered in the The tourney'• pro-am will be played AI Gelberger, Dave Stockton, Bob
Harbor area and all of them will be Wednesday. McCalllstcr, Charles Slffora, Pete Brown,
playing their practice round,s al Mesa J--~-G·~·-
rive at oon
dle poelUon tbft afternoon when It tool: •
h a r d fought 4-1 victory Salurday bef..-.
5,000 fans.
Tht first event on the week's agenda is Johnny and Tommy al.."VloM, ... wn;r
.------------------------.. the dedication of Mesa Verde'• banquet Dickinson. Trevino aud most of the otb-
MEXICO CITY -lt't Amerlc.t't tall
1hot at a chance for an Olympic water
polo medal u the Yl!W were to batUe
Ruasla UWi afternoon at tbe Unlvenlty of
Mealco pool 1n the lul to nezt to lul
duel for Group A team1.
Olympi~ TV
room as the "Tony Lema Champagne er bla: namea.
Room" Tuesday evening at 7:SI p.m. Arnold Palmer, °'1D'fld. as an entry a
U.S. Open champion Lee Trevino will week 1go, will apparently skip the Haig.
preside at the ~remonies honoring the Relf Ill but ntled him. out when AmJe
The Yankl of coach Art Lambert mull
llop the Soviet.a lo llnilh beb1nd defen-
ding Olympic champion HUllP'1 1n lbe
final llandlnp of lbe grnup.
The top two teams tbm &Mance to the
semllinalt of lbe Olympict Friday nl.lhl,
!lclng lbe first two finlahm al Group II.
nu.. blocked penalty goal att.mpt.a
did 1n the U.S. u Cole and Fullertoo't
Rua Webb were unable to taalt 1n on tho
normally euy grills point lllet. Colo
m1Ned. one and Webb two.
Earlier, tbarpthoollng Gary Sheerer
waa loll with a dlalocal«I thoulder and ls
Clllt for the tournament. ,.,,.,.,
l·Z p.m.
EQUESTRIAN -Posalble
coverage 3-day event, ium·
ping.
BASKETBA!L -P...t·
hie coverage, semlftnals.
SWIMMING -Men's 400
freertyie, womtn'• IO O
freestyle.
4:1&4 (Re-rva l-l:IO)
GYMNASTICS -Men't
Individual and team com·
putsory exercleeti, live.
BASKETBALL -Po.,1·
ble semilinale: coverage.
BOXING -Po11ibla
quarter finals coverage.
SOCCER -Po111ble
semlfiDals coverage.
1:2f.7 (Re-rn 1:2f.ll p.m.)
SWIMMING -Men'1 and
women'& 10 0 bacRtroke
finala:, live ; women's 200
fr .. rtyle final, live.
golfer who died three yean ago In an didn't abow up for the Sahara. Jack
Ohio plane cr'hh. He won his f t r • t Nk:klaus played Lbe Sahara but wu
k>umament at M e 1 a Verde and earned tcheduled to leave tor ID Australian tour
the name "Champagne Tony" for bring· afterwlrd.
ing in champagne for lbe Pf"' follow· Although lbe tournam<nt Will be played
ing the victory. 1t Mesa V e rd e, the bolt club is the
The public ls lnvll..i to atl<nd lbe munldpallJ operal<d ~ Mesa Goll
festivities. and Country Club. Tbe Ortclnal Idea WU
Tournlm<nt dJnc1« Ron Rell repo!U lo play the .....,., then but PGA ol·
a landallde ti.ct.et Ille for the towna-flclal1 TIJled th t new courM'• grass
meut. the richelt ever held in e.llher wqn 't mature enough • n d IO the rltld
Orange or Loo Angelea Counly. wtll p I 1 y at Mesa Ven!e lo< the !Int
Tbe winner's pur>e, 122,000. II 12,000 year.
more than Chi Oil Rodrique won at the Costa Mesa bu a flv.,.year comract lor
Sliwa blvllallortal 1n Las Vept S1111day. lbe Hal&.
I
Today's 1ehedule II a replay of a b(t-
t<rlf IOIJllht pre-Olymplct combat which
the Soviets took, W.
Th&y alao left lbe Amerlcant tometh1n(
to nmembe:r N ooe Rualaa ripped Staa
Col•'• lace with an albow, blood1ng hit
MM and pull1nc a pah under hit lefl
eye.
Tbe tatlA!r ttqU!rtd lour -to clote, but Cole wu ready to roll th1I
afttrnoon and wu lootlna forward to a
rematdt with hit Russian orethmi.
Hutll117 put tho Unlled -ID do<Jr.
He WU America 'I ludinl ICOl'er and
top threat from the penalty lino.
Sheerer bad led hit male> ofl to 1 l•
0 lead 1'15 inlo the pme with a period
lob that lnlo the comer al Hunpry't
goal.
Two penally (OOla P"' the de!endlnl
dwnplOD a 2-1 Jeod at hal!llme. TMy acJ:
ded another ~ point 1n the Utlrd
period befora eoonectlool for their only
..,,,.. from the taok In the fourth.
Tile blown penaJ11 Jho\I for, the lalerw
were U..wn weatly and well of! Ibo
wal<r, dlrte!IY al lhll goaUe -tlOlll1nl
dllflcult lo oj<>p.
------.---~------·------~------__;_---~---~~--'--'---"'-~=;,:;:~
•
""'Z OA.ll V 'llOT MOl'da)', Ottobtr 21, 1968
Pirates Rebound,
Down Mesa, 26-8
By JOEL SCHWARZ °' '"" Dll J l"li.t St•tt
SAN DIEGO -Orange Coast College's
venion of operation bounce-back is over
and head coach Dick Tucker for one is
happy the Pirates' game with San Diego
Mesa College II behind him.
The Pirates proved two things in their
26-1 victory over San Diego Mesa Satur-
day night in the border city before a
apane aalhering of less than 1,000 fa~.
Flnt. Orange C.:oast proved it is lor
real; the Pirates' three opening game
victories weren't simply the result of a
fast start.
Second, but more Important, Orange
Coas~ ll)owed il could bowlce back alter
w
Ful ......... • ·~-• Sallt1 N-. • Or•-Coell ' Go!Wn W•f ' Mt. SAG • ··-• 1M DI-,,,_ •
S. ...... Y'sk.-
Ful-a. Golcl., W•t a
' • • • ' ' ' • •
Orin" C.0.14 16, "'°' oi.eo M"51 I
''"'' ,.,.. H, ltlo Hcndo lt Sen Dltm Jl, Ml. SAC 6
fl.u.r1 G11M
Ml, U.C 11 Oraneit C-1
"'""'*"'' ....... IMlll AM 11 GcMdtn W•t Fulltl"'l'en 11 Rio -.io
"" DI.-.. Mell
.. " '~ " M " " p
" ~
" " " ~ n 'm " N
suffering a demoralizing 20-17 loss to
Fullerton. lt was the kind of defeat that
could have crushed a lesser team for the
remainder of the year.
Tucker, who predicted the Pirates
would have a rough time ln the Mesa
game almost two weeks ago, said ''we're
glad to have this game behind us.
"I'm satisfied with our performance.
Tbe kids looked like they shook off the eJ-
fecta of the Fullerton game.
"We got a lot of breaks that helped
us," Tucker said, but he refused to say
anything about the oHlciaUng which was
questionable, to say the least, on several
occasions.
The officlah called 18 penalties in the
game, 11 of them on Orange Coul -and
seven of those were major 15-yard on~.
However, the offidah, who hit the
Pirates particularly bard with clipping
lnfract.iOM apparenUy blew several calls,
when they neglected to drop red cloths on
M..a.
On one play, Mesa taJlback Tyrone
Young rambled 15 yardJ with the help of
two very obvious clips -as obvious as an
eclipse of the sun. However, the officials
right on top of the play, let the two viola-
tions go without a penalty.
Later In the game, the Pirates had a
fourth a n d one deep in Mesa territory,
when an Olympian Uneman started call-
ing offensive signals lbat drew the entire
OCC line offside. There was no penalty
against Mesa on that play either.
T h e breaks Tucker wu talking aboot
were three interceptions and five San
Diego fumbleJ, three of which the Pira~
recovered.
Those three interceptions set up two
Pirate touchdowns and a field goal.
The first interception wu picked ofi by
tackle Brian McCabe after a Glenn
Callan pass wu deflected midway
lhroogh tho opening period.
That gave the Pirates the ball at the
Mesa 20 ~d they scored on the next play
when Lemoine hit Robert Castillo with a
perfect ~yard pau. Ltmoine's 'lick for
the extra point wu good.
The PirateJ extended their lead to 10-0
in the second quarter when they started a
march from the.ir own 12. In nine plays,
the Pirates moved lo the MMa 20 where
Lemoine. was forced to attempt a field
goal.
His boot from the 28-yard line, a 38-
yarder, was good.
Less than three minutes later Bruce
Rogge picked off another Callan pau at
the Mesa 40 and returned it lo the Olym-
pi&n two. Bruce Hicks took a pitchout and
carried the ball over for the score. Le-
moine's PAT made it 17-0.
Moments later, the Pirates drove down
i n lo scoring territory again, but Mesa
held and. then moved for its o nl y
touchdown.
A roughing the kicker penalty against
the .Pirates kept a short Mesa drive alive,
and the Olympians cashed in that break
when Rogge tried to intercept another
pass, but missed the ball and allowed
Robert West to scamper 62-yards on a
short pass.
Callan passed to Tom Havens for Ute
two-point conversion.
Orange Coast scored once in each of
the final two periods. ln the third
quarter, the Pirates marched 75 yards in
13 plays, most of It on the running of
Wayne Tinlin. The payoff play was an
e.ight-yard TD pasa from Lemoine to
Craig Allen. Lemoine's kick was wide.
The third interception by OCC, this one
by Mike Balley, gave the Bucs the ball at
the Mesa 30 in the fourth period. Lemoine
ended the scoring by blasting a 30-yard
field goal.
TEAM ST.tTllTIC:I
Flr1l *""°n1 rU1~ln• F ir&! down1 1NHln1
FlrJt dowm peona!lles T011I first d0wn1
Y1re11 91lnfd nn.hln1
Ylrdl fl1Mlf PllSlll'tl
Y...:11 loJt
~tf ~·rd• 91lllld P,fJMI ltf9ml>ll'd ,_........,
P1un Met . lr#erowttd Numbtr ol P<.1nl1 ... ,,.,." d'l••na ,_It_
Y1rc11 -Uxl'd
l"l'mbln
l"vrnbl-. loll
,..., "' o.m... Ori-C:O.tl I 10 San Ollto Mui D I
OCC IOM ' . ' . . ' ,. 10
194 154 1!11 1~
" u lJ1 26J
!1 31
11 10
' ' ' . •1.0 u.s " ' " . ' ' ' '
' l -:Hi e e -1
INOIVIOUAL ITATISTtC:S
llUl"INQ Orin• C.UI
""" "' YO " Avt .
Tlnlln ~ '" • ••• ,,.,_ • " • ••• """'~ • " ' u
"'"' ' ' • ·1.1
V1ndllrtlurw ' ' • ... ....... ' • • • •• J ....... ' • ' •1.0 ._ ' " • ••• Kllbtlk1 ' • • LO
Tau II • "' ,. ...
...,. 01191 MeM .... ,.., '" YO " Av•· v~~ • "' • •• Ca111n ' 0 " •11.J ,,,,_ • " • ... '•"'" ' ' • ,_,
""" ' • " ·10.0
Tol1l1 " "' • '·' 'AS SINO or .... c-•
P11'1'tf .. " ... YO ... lemalM " " ' "' ....
Jal! 0 1191 ,IMw ··-.. " .. , YO ••• C1llen " " ' '# .m
'
WRIGHT OF WAY -Golden West's Neil Wright (42) looks for a hole
behind a phalanx of blockers against Fullerton Saturday night at Ana·
heim Stadium. Leading the play are Kurt Kruger (61), Dan Cunning-
Fullerton Dumps
Golden West, 42-0
By EARL GUSTKEY
01 tM 0.llf 'llot fllff
Feelings between Golden West and San·
ta Ana junior colleges being what they
are, GWC football coach Ray Shackleford
is rightfully concerned over the prospect
of playing the unbeaten Dons next Satur-
day nighl
OLYMPIC KAYAK
AC1'1UN TO OPEN
MEXICO CITY -four Orange Coast
area kayak canoe paddlers make their
Olympic Games debut Tuesday morning
at Cuemanco Canal, near the tourist at·
traction of Xochimilco 's floating gardens.
John Glair of Newport B.,i:ach is slated
to compete th singles (K·l) while Bill
Jewell of Newport and Les CuUer from
Costa Mesa are scheduled for duty in the
four man (K-4) •
Pete Weigand of Newport Is to team
with Paul Beachamp in the two man (K·
2).
Others competing on the K-4 unit are
Merv Larson and John Pickett, barring
possible last minute shifts of personnel
by coach Gert Grigo\elt.
Repechage is due Wednesday with semi
finals Thursday and finals Friday.
There Is a falr chance that Glalr in the
K-4 outfit will make the finals.
OAIL Y ,ILOT '""' '1 rtldlanl ........
"If Santa An a could score 100 points
against us they'd do it,·• Shackleford said.
This was moments after Fullerton had
handed Golden West its worst-ever
beating, 42-0, before some 10,000 at
Anaheim Stadium Saturday night.
It was predictable. Fullerton -now
unbeaten over Its last 45 trips to the post
-· has linemen who are masters of the
art of pass protection. The Hornets ran
against GWC onJy to break up the
monotony.
Starter Jim Fassell and reliever Bill
Audino threw 34 times and completed 19
of them for 262 yards and three
touchdowns.
"They just had too much ti.me to pass,"
mused Shackleford.
"We knew they'd have to pass well to
beat us. We can stop anybody's ground
game but there's not much you can do
with a team that gives its quarterback
that much Ume to throw."
"We got ·behlnd early and had to play
catch-up. We could have controlled out
offense more and lost by, say 21Hi, but we
tried to win it and they murdered us."
The defeat reduced Golden West 's
record to 2-3 going into the Santa A n a
game next weekend. 'l'he Rustlers are 2-0
against the Dons.
Fullerton took charge on Its first op-
portunity. They marched 64 yards after
the kickoff In eight plays, capped by
· Marv Owens' TD from the two and his
PAT.
Golden West then drove to Fullerton'•
12 before l~g the ball on down5 . But
that's as far as the Rustlers could go all
nigllt.
It became 13-0 when Bob Terrio scored
on his second try from the two with 14:21
left in the second quarter.
'Golden West was able to move the ball
on the ground against Fullerton in the
first half but after that tried to throw to
catch up. It didn't work. The Rustlers
first punt came early in the third period
and they wound up punting five more
timM.
Fassell made It 20-0 with 11 minutes
left in the third quarter when he hit Jerry
McCoy on a 14-yarrler. When a bad
Golden West snap on a punt play sailed
Into the end zone a minute later, It was
22-0.
Wes Morgan's 13-yard sweep made it
29-0 and runs of 23 and 10 yards by Terrio
put Fullerton deep in GWC territory and
Audino hit McCoy for another score, 36-0.
The final touchdown was a 24-yard pass
from Auctino to Jeff Baker right over the
middle.
The Hornets had little difficulty with
Randy Vataha, GWC 's prime threat. He
caught six passes for 66 yards but none of
the plays could i&nite the Rustlers Into
anything more. ·
TIA/II ST ... TISTIU ow • Flr1! -r~Mnt • ' Fl"tl Clllwnl PIHll'lll ' " Finl ctawow. ,.._,.ttlft ' . ' To!1! llrtl ~ " " Y1rd1 11IMll rulfllnt 'm m
Y1oifl 111!....0 Pnllnt "' "' Y•rd1 !II&! • »
Nd ylrdJ ••lned '" ..
PIHH •11'eomrltl'd " • P1111'1 complfled " " P11-lwld tnttrCllOH'll ' • Numtllr ol _,, • ' """' .. dl1ffnc:• ••• •• P.,,1ltie's • " Y1rd'I _..HM " Q
Fumbl"I ' ' ~umbln 11111 • • iceno 'Y OIHll'ft" Golden Wes! 0 • • . -.
l"ullfl'ton ' • ' ·-· INOIVIOUAL ITATISTICS
rtUIHINO ....... w .. ··-"' YO " Av1.
w ... " ~ ' u ....... ' " • '·' ,,_., " " " •• ..... ' ' ' • P1r1UNfl ' • ' ...
Grlfl'MI ' • ' .u
To1111 • 1m • u ··-"'"' "' ~· .-r; ·~ ...... " " TlfT!e " • • •• ..... • " ' ... --' " • " '"••• ' • ' ·l.t
Auel•,,. • ' " ... .,,. • ,. • .. ·-• " • " ........ ' • • u ·-' " • ...
111•1• " "' • •• l'ASSIM$ °'...,. w'"' .,._ .. " .. , YO '"· '"''11'111'1 " " ' "' .... Orltrllt! ' • • • • TO'l1i. " " ' "' .• ,
ONI! HI MllsaD -Full-Junior College re-
eolver J,/ny McCoY (80) didn't catch this one Sa·
tw'llay night aealmt Golden Weot. Breaking up the
play wen Rustlers Dan McKeoo ( 44 ) and Andy
llooegan (23). Fullerton routed the Rustlers, 42-0.
,,,,...
'":;:' • M
··-.. ,..
a " " • ••• YO • •• • '" ... • "' ·"' ,, ..• ,. " • "' ....
•
DAILY ,ILOT .,,_.. _, lllcMN ~
ham (70) and Mike Simooe (33). Handing the ball off h quarter-
back John lnglehsrt. The Rustlers play Santa Aile Satunlay night.
'
Olympi~
s~orehoard
MEXICO CITY -M e d a l stand-
ings in the Olympic Games after Sun-
day's competition :
GoMI Sih' .. ll'Olltt Tolll
Unllff 111m " " Ru11l1 " " Fr1nc:e ' ' E•sl Germ1nv • • J1p1n • ' Hun,.rv ' • AUl!rllll ' ' ·-· ' • Rom1nl1 ' ,
POI Ind ' • W8'1 Gwmll'tf ' • Ne!l'lerl•nd1 ' ,
GrNI l rll1lrt • ' 1r1n ' ' CIKhaslOVlkll ' • '""'w ' • ltllY ' ' ,_, ' ' l"lnl1nd ' ' Ell'l'"ll ' ' N-Ze1llrtd ' • Tulll1l1 ' • YUIQIJIV!i ' • 811111..t. • ' ...,~~ ' ' '"'' • ' """"'" • ' ....... • ,
Auslrll • ' l!lr1zll • ' ...,,_ • ' J1melca • ' Jwlh•l•ncl • • T•l-n • • ArHr1t1,.. • •
Blgla Jump
I. Old! l"llbul'l:, Unlltil 111'91
(NIW Ol~mPlc rKDrd)
:t. Id C1nrtllen, U11Ut4 Sflttl l. vii.nun G1vr11ov, 111111!1
•· V•ltry llcvorl'lov, Russia I . lllfl!lllle .,.Wll, UnHN Siii ..
.. GIKOmo CniN, lt1lv
1,500
1. Klotno.t Kelm, K"'r'
CNIW Olfmllic rK«d)
:t. Jin\ ll\'11111, Ullllf S11M1
l. 8eClo Tummi.r. Wtst G<ffl'Nllf
4. H1r1ld Nonialh, Wnl Gto"ITlll'IJ
.5. J alwl Wltlllarl, llrU1!n
6. J-lloJlbwVl'r, Franee
400 Relay
" " ' ' ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' • • ' ' • ' ' • • • ' • • • ' ' '
• ll • " ' " " • ' '" " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • , • ' ' ' ' ' ,
' I
....
7•J\'I ,.,,. ,., •·• •·•
J:U.t
J:'1.I
3:3'.0 l :dJ J;Cl.t
J;4.f
1. Ulllllf Sl1tti M.I
(N--Id I ncl OIYll'1PIC ,_.Cl)
:t. Cub1 :Jt.J
l. Ft8'1CI 31.4
.&. .t.m1lc1 •.• .5. Elll G«rl'llllY 3t,,
f , Wnl Germln~ 3t.t
Women'• 400 Rf!la11
\, Unlllf S11tn tt.t
{NfW -Id Incl OIY,,..,.c •--.!)
:t. Cut>t a .J
3. llunl1 <1.t
4, Halllnd <1.t
5. Au1tr1U1 <1.t
" Wnl G1rm1nr 4.•
1,600 Relay
1. Unl!H Sllln J;M.l
I New WQl'ld 1nd Olvmplc ""ard) 1. Kenra J:st,,
J:00.5
J:GO.J !:01.J
3:04.!I
l. Wist Germ1nr
t, Poland J. lrlllln
'-Trlnlcll'd Ind TeDt"
Women'• Shotput
I M1r11rll1 Gumrntl. Ettl Germo.,., INtw WQl'lcl .,... OIYmPk reclll'!'Cll
2. Marlt1 L-. E11t c;.r,,...,.., 11·7\~ .... .... ,.,. l. Nl'd-• CNv..bl. R~tll
'-Judi! Lllfldlv1I, Mll"91rv
5. "-hi llll'f', Ell! Citn">lnr
'· lv1n1<.1 C~r1•""'· l ulHrl1
Jtlarathon
1. Mll'l'WI w-. Elfllalll
2. ICenl! KJmlN••· J1p1n
3. Mike RY .... Ntw lttllnd
• •1m•ll Akt1y. Tu•k••
!. Wllllem A~l!,I, 8rll•ln
'· Mer1wl Glbru. Er~lop11
Decathlo11
1. 1111 T-.w, \llltlf Sl1tn
«Ntw 01..-1c l"9COl"d) I. H•,. W11,,,.. Wtll l)efmanv
J. Klll't kndlln. W.-t G1rm1nr
5'-1'•
J::JO:M.4
1:13:11.C J:JJ·!J.O
1•,5:11.1
1:2S:l3.0 1:11:1' .•
.,ft
1.111 ....
CHI CHI AIMING
FUR HAIG CHECK
Juan "Chi Chi" Rodrigues, after pick-
ing up a $20,000 check for winning the
Sahara Invitational golf tournament al
Las Veges Sunday , now aimJ for the
$22.000 prize at the Haig National Open in
Costa Mesa this week .
The S-7 and l~pounder was back in
the pack for the first three rounds but
came on with • rush on the final round
SUnday and be•t Dale Douglass on the
first hole of • sudden death playoff.
Douglass mlased a two-foot putt to blow
It.
Rodriguez shot a 1i&zlin11 64 over the
flnal 11.
4 .Nlc.ol1~ Avllov, rtu .. 11
S. Ja1chlm Kl,.!, E11l c;.r,,....ny
6. Tiii! Wl'dcltll, Unl!N Stllb
....
1,1n
'·"'
Wo1nen'• 200 Jtledley
1, Ci.u.111 Kolt, UnltH Jl1!ol1 2114.7
!N-Olym11lc •KDFd) t. 5.,. Pl'cltn1n, UnllN 111111 2111.t
I, Jin H1nn1, Unlltill 511111 2:11.4
•. s~bl ..... S .. rtblch, Ewt Gtrml..... J:Jl.4
5. Yoshlmt Nl1hlg1w1, J...,,.n 1:!:l.7
6. Mll•lenrt1 ~Cler, Ee11 Gerl'NnY 2::1.).1
3-naeter Dlvlng
1, llPnlt Wrtehl ... , UnlfM Slit.I 11'.11
2. Kii~ Dibl11I,. 1!1ly Ut.14
:t. J1m11 Hllfll'Y, Unl!H S11ln 151."
4. Lui Nim 01 Rlvttl. Ml!~Cla lU,71
!. Frence CeerKrtto. ll1lv 1.SS.1'11
.. Kllll'I lllllMll. Unlle.rl llllH 111.n
200 Medlefl Rela11
2:11.I
2:11.1
l :IU
2:11.7
2:15.•
J:1'.I
Wo1nen'a 400 l'reeatyle
I. Detb19 /llllylf", Uftlllf Sl9'•
(N-OIY'""lc recare11
I. Lin,. Ousl1vun, Unltl'CI 119'•
3. K•rcn Mar11, A111!,.tf1
4. P1m Krllft, Unlltd S11te1
S. G1brlele Wtttlco. Et1t G1rm1...,.
.. Tertt1 R1m1 ... r. MllCICO
WOMEN'S 100 FLY
1:n .1
t :J5.I
4:Jl.O ,,,,,,
4:40,2
•:G.2
"REL1MINAll:IE5 fjflt hit!) -1. Ht1;1 ll,.j.
r>er IE. G~rmeny ), 1:11!1.0, 1. THI Hl'ftln (UnltH
S11tnJ, l :N.I (Qllflllfll'dl
SEMIS (hi hell! -1. Adi Kc* {Holl1...t).
1:C6.J, I. Shltl* (Urtlled llltM), 1111.J. 1 GYlr·
m&IJ !Hun .. ry), 1:06.6. .C. Kirin HUI~ IW. G«-ma,,Y). l :07.0. J. Tlfll Hft'lff fUlllMll Sllfll), ,..,,, (qwlUltd kif 11 ... u.
BASKETBALL
Gr.u• A
United S~1t1'1 11, P"""° lllcl M
Pa"8m• t~. Sene11l 7t lt•IY ti. 5Nln 86
vuoas11v11 If, Pllllllppl"" "
Gl"ll\lp a
Cube It, Marocco 53
8ul;1rl1 '4. Soullt Kore• jll
Mexico '8, Pll!-6'
Ruuil 16, l!lr11H "5
FIELD HOCKEY -· NfW z...i1nd 1, 8tl•fum 1 (tltl lndll S, J1p1n O
Wiii Gtrm1n'( :L 5P&ln O
ltrtu1 I l(eny1 J, Brlhl!n O
Au1k1ll1 3. Arfff!llnl 1
P1kl1!111 .&. M1l1nl1 I
SOCCER
Qu1rhlr·lln1l1
Huno•ry 1, GU11fton\ll1 O Mexico :t SD1ln 0
JIHn J, Fr .. •C:I l
llult1rlt \, l1rlet I. ov"'1,..,
tht toll ol I celn au1t1r!1 -1
WATER POLO
o-• E11! 6-nr 1, IMdco I
Holl1nd f , Un11ed Arab it~k l
Cubl 7, Wrs! ~"" f Hun119ry 6, 11.llUll S
Orwt a
Hallend 1. F!°lflClt 0
E••' ~nr t. J-1' 0 MllCke 11, GrftCt I
ll11r s. v..._1•vl1 •
MEN'S VOLLEYBALL
1:111111 l , 1!:111 ~nv 1
J1otn J. 8tlflum t
l"ollnd J. Ul"ll~ Jt1fll t 811l,.rl1 ). lr11ll I
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
ll ..... ll•ll'-
Cachallloval<le l. Plrv t
J101n l. Pal•nd 1
HA.JG GOLF TRlA.LS
UNDERWAY TODA.¥
Touring golf pros who were required te
<fualify to compete in this week's Hale
National Open 1t Mesa Venle County
Club did 10 today at Irvine Coast CounU,
Club and at El Niguel In Laguna Beach.
QualHicationa scheduled for r.o.rta
Mesa Country Club were cancelled .
In another fanna\ change, tournament
director Ron Reif announced that
Wednesday's pro-am will be playtd at
Mesa Verde only. Previoualy, a spfit field
WU ICheduJed, with the other holf
playing at Cost.I Mesa.
1'be first tee off Wednesday 11 .et tor
7:15 a.m .
,...,__.,...,..,...,_.,..,...,...,.,..,...,""'""""'"""'""'" .. """""']'O'l"',....,..,..., ... _..,..,..,.,.,..,.....,...,...,,...~~~..-... ,71 • .,.,,...,.,......,,...,...,~~.; · ,-,7 .-.,c 1•~ t, ~-,,-0-T -.-• • .......... l> ,, '"Yr• .. ~ 1> •'.!•-•; I""-""'"'• -
Monday, October 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT 23
Newp ort Defense St ops
West ern ·for 20-0 Win
By ROGER CARl.80N l Of .. Dlltr l'Uel fllff r Coach Wade Watt .. Newport
I Harbor Hl&b lootbali team has ! a lot rtdln& on Its scheduled
encounter Saturday afternoon
at Santa Ana Stadium when
the Tars meet twice-beaten
Santa Ana.
First of an. the Bluejackets'
'61 ouUit has a five-game win
atreak on the line and is cur-
renUy in a tie wlth
Westminster for the Sunset
League UUe race and a shot at
a berth in the ClF AAAA
playoffs.
Secondly, It was against
Santa Ana last year that
Watts and his Sailors were
bumbled, 48-0.
The S a 11 o r s • meanwhile,
were busy scoring In every
quarter with two touchdowns
and two perfect field goals by
their classy kicker, Ron
'.':nDerAa.
VanDerAa'1 final eUort with
U seconds left in the gaine
was a booming 42-yard
bullseye. It cleared the bar
with plenty to spare. The CIF
record is 43 yards, set by Bud·
dy Abourtzk of Western in
1966.
Dave Schoonover of Foun·
lain Valley also has a 42·
yarder to his credit lhls
season.
VanDerAa's first perfecto
was in the third quarter on a
15-yard try. That had made it
17-0 and Newport's chances of
losing with 5:35 left in the
period looked rather remote.
completed the PAT.
Key play of me drive was
quarterback Gill Shedd's 2Q..
yard scamper up the middle on
a keeper play to the Western
30.
Lee Moore added a t~yard
sprint to the 15 to keep the
drive alive.
Moore, the defensive· star of
the game, with 40 tilterception
and countlesa: tackles, scored
the Tars' second touchdown on
his aerial theft in the second
quarter.
The sp~edy middle ·
linebacker pilfered
quarterback Bob Miller's short
toss on the Western 27 and
raced into the end zone with
1: 15 left In the half.
VanDerAa made lt 14.() and
with the Sailor defense stom·
ping around like. it was, there
wasn't much hope for the in·
vaders from Anaheim.
Newport played tts usual
game, runnln& over the guard
a n d tackle spots a n d a few
pitchouts.
T•AM ITATltTICS •• w
Flr1t d0wn1 l'\Mfl\9 11 '
ll'!nt d_,. ••H"'9 I I
Fl'll dOWN -lllN 1 f
Tol1I lll'lt dOIOllll lt f
Y11'111 N lllld Ntllll\9 23:1: 12'
Y•rd• "!!ltd Nlllnt , 11 to
Y11'111 lat 1t ll
Nat YI,,_ fflllld t l• IK
P•-1!ttf'Nl!td I 22
PltHI cornPll'ttll I f
...... "'" lnt.n:911led 1 ' Numtter d pUnts ' •
Av1r1111 d!1t1...:. 111.S 11.S
Ptn1l!lel I '
YI""' PtnAl!Ud 20 D Fumblll o o
Fumblet IOll t t
Score .,. QIMrtln
Ne--1 1 1 l >--2'
Wes~rn t o o 0-I
INDIVIOUAL STATISTICS
RUSHIN•
W1ll1c•
(urrY ....
"'"' Aldr1dl
Troy1no
Toll If
.......
TCI YO 'l'L ""'· 11 U I 4.CI
12402.6
15 11 , J.6
' " 11 6.0 1 4 I t.O
<I 6 11 ·LI
M m 21 4.1
CHARGE -Newport Harbor's left halfback Al Wal·
lace (27) takes handoff from quarterback Bill Shedd
(14) and readies himself for charge into Western's
defensive line. Wallace scoml first touchdown of the
game on a three-yard burst in first quarter and Sail·
ors went on to easy 20-0 Sunset League football win.
1 The Tara made It five in a
~ row Saturday night when the
patented brutal defen.se of
Newport thrashed Western of
Anaheim, 20-0, in another con-
vincing victory before a full
house at Dav:idson Field.
'There wasn't a great deal of
excitement in the game, as
Newport simply refused to
give the Pioneers any hope at
all.
Offensively, the Tars didn't
run wild, but they did manage
to get a scoring drive in gear
on the first series or the game.
Watts' eleven moved 61
yards in 10 plays for the open-
ing tally.
Defensively, along w i t h
Moore's heroics, the front line
of Stu Aldrich, Winston Jones,
Mike Rogers, Grant Gelker
and Bill Durkin was im-
pressive to say the least.
w .. ..m
TCa 'l'O YL Avti.
Mll!lll° 1 14 13 0.1
Wiiie>" I tt 0 j ,7
S11'(c1&r 12 n o •·' Sdl!ller 1 10 e 10.0
Close T il Last Period Western couldn't even make
a first down until 5:18 was left
in the second quarter.
Al Wallace ripped three
yards over his right side for
the touchdown with 5:35 to go
in the first stanza. VanDerAa
Most of Weslem's yardage
in the game came on· trap
plays with long yardage._
Toltls 2* lllf II 4.1
Mllltr
INDIVIDUAL .. .t.SSING ·-PA PC PHI YO Pct.
Sllll.6<0
WffllP'fl
PA PC .. Ml YO Pd.
tt ' J .....
Oilers Whip Marina, 28-7. AD Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through $atarday
AUTO CENTER By STEVE EKOVICH
Of th• D•llY ~llot S!lff
Huntington Beach a n d
Marina High Schools meet
once a year in a cross-town
football battle which can
usually be counted on to
generate a lot of excitement.
This year's contest was no
exception as Huntington Beach
won the honor of hoarding the
traditional victory trophy with
a 28-7 triumph over its cross-
city comrades Saturday night
at Huntington 's Sheue Field.
Actually the game was
much closer than the score in-
dicates -it took Huntington
* * * TEAM .STATISTIC!
"' Fl,..! Clown ru•Mng 18
F+rsl down• peu!!lll 2
Fl,.,,! dCIWl's Pl!'fllllles 1
Tot1l flru dawns 71
Y1r•h talllt'd ru)hlnto m
Y .. ..:1s 111ln1<1 Pfl.Slllll 51
Yarll• l°'t 11
Nei yarll1 tained 333
Paues attll!mP!ed t
Passeo.. cornpl~ed .s
Pa....,. had lnl~led 0
Number of PUnt1 2
Avaraga lll•l<lflce 26.0
Penal!let J
Yard• ~nallzecl 3.S
FumblH 2
Fumbles loot 1 sc .... 1or o...-rten
M
' " • " "' '" " "" " " ' ' "·' ' ti
' 1
Hunllllllton BNdl 0 7 7 14--28 Marina o 1 o ~,
INDIVIDUAL STATISTIC$
RUSHING
Bonwt!'ll
Smlth
PM!OIMI
JackKJn
Pe<lt....,,,
l loYd
Neal
Priddy
To!als
Hunfln•l«I a .. dl
TCI YG YL Avt-
U 18 ' .S.U :20 105 7 ....
7 ll II '·' '120l.0
2 8 0 (.0 1 1.s o 1.s.o
1 1 0 1.0
I J2 0 J?.O
S2 m 11 s.,
Marina
TCll YG YL Av•.
Hf!lflrv .S 11 21 1.2
Wltllck 2 15 o 7.J
Vana~en t 59 0 1,.7
DCW1al!hon 6 is O 4.2 Bart<.ar 1 o o o.o
Tot1l1 11 112 21 S.1
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
H11nllnt"ton 111dl PA PC PHI YO PC!, •son.m ... nM
l"A PC PHI YI) Pel.
2' 13 ' 1111 .Sol2 20 00 .000
2' ll I 1" .soo
Rams Grab
27-14Win,
First Place
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los
Ange les can't play give.away
at Baltimore this week the
way they did with AUanta and
hope to stay on top of the Na-
tional Football L e a g u e ' 1
Coastal Divlison.
The two hi:vorites for the
di visional crown head for their
first showdown with t h e
Rams, riding a siI·game win--
ning string. one game ahead.
While the Colts w e r e
surprised by Cleveland 30-20,
Los Angeles came from a 14-
poi.nt deficit Sunday to beat
the P'alcons, 27-14. •
· 'Tb.ey were trying to give UI
the -g a m e, but we wouldn't
take it," commented Atlanta's
new coach, the ex · Ram
quarterback Norm . V a n
Brocklln.
AUanta shocked the Rams
twice. First when Ken Reaves
intercepted a Roman Gabrlel
pass.. and ran 90 unmolested
yards for I.he first touchdown.
1'htn Willie EIHson fumbled
aod Jimmy Bunat picked up
the free baU and ran 43 to the
Rams' 18. On U.. play tho
Rams also drew a penalty so
the baO wound up Oii tho-.
Allor lool"8 10 yanla 111 two
plays. Allanta had Ill KCOl1d
,.,.... on a Bob Berry lo Bob
Loog pass c:overlni It.
until the last seven minutes of
play to ice the outcome by
scoring back-to-back touch·
downs.
Marina touched the ball for
only nine offensive plays in the
decisive fourth quart.er, and
most of the yardage gained in
those was wiped out by an il-
legal receiver d ow n f i e l d
penalty.
The turning point of the
game occurred after Marina
punted only 28 yards on the
first play of the fourth
quarter.
Huntington, ahead 1 4 -7 ,
marched the ball from its own
48 to the Viking two in five
plays.
Mike Priddy, carrying the
ball for the only time during
the fracas, accounted for 32 of
the yards on a run that broke
no less than five tackles and
turned an apparent loss on the
play to the big &ainer lhe
Oilers needed.
The tenacious Vikings kept
the Oilers out of the end zone
for three plays and it ap-
peared they might stage a
goal;line stand that wou1d give
them possession of the ball
and more than sis: minutes to
tie the score.
But on fourth down from the
o n e, Oiler quarterback Tony
Bonwell rifled a shot to
wingback Karl Pederson in the
end zone for the back-breaking
score.
Bob Ryder added one of his
four PAT'S and Huntington
was ahead to stay, 21-7.
Alter Marina toted the ball
down to the Oiler 33 and turn-
ed the ball over on downs,
Huntington consumed the re-
maining 67 yards and the re-
maining time left on the clock
for an after-the-damage-is-
done touchdown.
David Smith sprinted the
ball over from the seventeen
w i t h only twenty seconds
separating Huntington from
the trophy.
Marina crossed the goal line
first in the contest with a 40-
yard pass play f r o m
quarterback Greg Henry to
end Dave Lacy. Pablo Navar·
ro booted the PAT and the
Vikings led, 7-0, with 1:25 left
before the half.
On the ensuing kickoff, Hun-
tington's Priddy returned the
ball 50 yards to the Marina
IO. Two plays later Bonwell
scrambled down to tlle four
and snuck the ball over with
36 seconds showing on the
clock.
Huntington recorded its se-
cond touchdown the first lime
it got the ball in the third
quarter. A 55-yard drive
culminated with Bon w e 11
squeezing the ball over from
the one.
10 Fumbles, . Suspensions
Hit Gauchos in 4 0-12 Rout
By JIM CARNETT Hartman said, "but they've On the bright side of the °' 1h1 D•11r Piiot Stitt got to learn to respect the ledger, taddleback halfback
Question: Is it possible for a rules." .Tim Butler looked fantastic.
football team to win a game without 8 quarterback, and 12 Saddleback, playing before a He lugged the pigskin 18 limes
players suspended from the small, wind-chilled gathering, for 215 yards, scored an elec-
roster? committed too many costly trifying 57-yard touchdown,
Answer: About as likely as mistakes to stay in the con-and thrilled the crowd with test. The Gauchos fumbled the
Ralph Williams winning a Mr. ball ten times, turning the ball runs of 47, 25, 24 and 20 yards.
Personality contest. over to the opposition on five The Gauchos were the first
S a d d I e b a c k College occasions, and threw three in-discovered t h e answer f o r to hit pay dirt, scoring on
itseU Saturday night on the tercepted passes. Butler's 57-yarder midway
Mission Viejo High School Big r'ight end Mare Hardy through the first quarter to
gridiron. called the signals for the take a S-0 lead.
A 6-4, 200 pound end started Gauchos. Redlands scored moments
at quarterback for the "He made a few mistakes," later on a 14-yard run by
Gauchos and only 25 players Hartman commented, "but he halfback Ron Stickel and ad-
suited up, as the hosts were played a darn good game. ded the two-point conversion
smothered 40-12 by the He's an end not a to take an 8-& margin into the
Redlands University JV squad. _q_u_art_•_rb_a_c_k._" _______ 1_oc_k_er_roo_m_a_1 _th_e_ha_1_1._
Gaucho head coach George
Hartman, put 12 players, in-
cluding all three quarterbacks
on a two-week suspension for
disciplinary reasons following
last week's 19-8 loss to Napa.
"We could have used those
boys tonight," a solemn
* * * TIAM tT).llSllCS .. • F!tJI ~ ru.,,I.,. " " "'"' d-.>1 .... Into ' • Finl clowfl1 -111'1 1 • T""•I 11 ... t _, .. " Y1rds ••lnecl Nt~1 ... "' "' v.,,,, ,,r,,.., ,.. .. 1,,. .. "' Y11'111 lotl " " Nl't Y•nls fll!IM "' ·~ P .. us.~ ,, " ··-CCllT!PI"'" 1 " , •• ., Mod 11'111tf"C111Pf911 • • Nu...-d PUnr. ' • AVWIM dllltlnot '"' .... '"-"'" ' ' Y1"'9 Pt'Mftnd " " . .-.. " ' Fvmbltol test • 1 _,,_
ltlldl.-d• • t14 l ...... --••• ~11
INDIVIDUAL tlATl"ICI
RUSMlltG
........... 0:
TCI 'I'• YL A .... ·-11 ~' ' 11.7 ·-.. .. " u
c~ 1 # • '" a1act<m1t11 ' • • ... ....... ' • ' "' """ ' • • ...
Tot•ll ~ "' • u .......
Tell 'I'• YL ·~· Slldltf ,, '" ' ...
Alt••l'ldtr 1J 141 • 11.1 ..... ' • ' ... ... _ • " • ... . -1 ' • '" ..... .. ... .. ...
l\nne111
AUTO CllMTSlt
9aa
&11 ACTID•·RITI o• l•DOG•
'pRQVllH GRDUllftl'
D.UICta.Y TILL Y'llU TMI
EXACT ca•ama•
GP YD'"' CAR
tRR!"S WHAT W! CHECK ••• 1,-... ...i--.s. ....... ......_L_ -..-..... ~ ...... --,...-. .. ___ .......,,,, ...... --7 . -..-...... -......... -""---.... --......... _ .. __
HERE'S WHAT YOU FIND OUT •••
·----...._·~-··-·---·-.--..----..-....
HERE'S HOW rT WORK.$ ••• __.. __ .__ __ _ _.....,__ --___ ..__,.. ... _ ..... _ ... ...,_.._.. ___ .... _ ... __ _ .. ____ .. __ ,.,. __ _ __ .__,, .. ___ ...,._ ... ............... _ _..........,_.... _ ....... ~ .. -------INDIVIDUAL l'AStntO .......... _ ....... ._. ___ ..
3 DAYS ONLY!
•
••
•
•
.·· ~~:t-;~·~.w.:~·:O:·~·~.:~-.:. • ,f .:;::~:·.~~-:::::.:-:::1i~;~·~@··~~'¢:s:~~~.·>:1:<:·-:.{'~ ~..-f}""'~v.-:.x : .. ·:.~ .. ::. :.; ~··'1f~'.!'..~:i.-{~%Z:::$.:~·:-::~::::: o , ·~:::~f~:t:\r~:;;;; :: r~R~:~~~~?i:;=;w
• :·:~":···: ":Y.;· ·?·:·: {:-: 5l~~Y::~ ··~.:::~:=$~.: ··~ :~·~ > . ·: . ~··.· ;·· (~:$' {•,{ .. ':::;:.:-:::;'"·}:; :: • ·: '•, .• :-:-:· ,;-:-:-i::-: •'.$.",.-:-; .... ;.··· "' • =~:::::.x.:,:.::.?i:::;:::::::: :::~~-:;:.:~~· "-. l.:.:·:: ~ ~
Y.~·:·;~····::t,:.•.; ... _..,. ..
'tll11/tzy{11,h, :1 · AiM.'t.1 ·:,-:ffi?tJ::(tz·»,t&.~*~~ ·:::!ljtt~f§f~f;@~f!~ ... ,'.,ti~t~tigWK~'.ftf¥.:. ~~1~l~®.t.$W.}·~·
MON.TUES: WED.
)
Professional tune-up
with all parts and labor
New points, plags, rotor, condenser t3.88 a11d dlstrl1111tor cap
Expert adjustment of cam-dwell,
Volkswagen
15.88 t im ing nd CCl1'baretor
~ , ..
Resalt ••• mo ... pep, better mileage 6 cylirider
More enjoyable drivi ng! 7.88
8 cylinder -T DCIAVI
Not iust a reline •.•• complete
Reliant brake qverhaul
• Jmtan new bonded nnlngs
• Rebuild all wheel cylinden
• Resurface brake drums
• Bleed and reflll brake systems
• ~epack frC?"f wheel bearings
• Install now front grease teals
o FREE brake odju•tment for Jae of nning
29.88*
~Mott fords, Chovro19ts, Amwic.ln
comJMcb
Pay at Tlttla os $5 per month ••• USE
PENNEY'$ TIME PAYMENT PIAN
l'.t. PC 1'"1 'l'O l'ct.,I'" _________________________ ,
~ ' , ~ ,21111 II"----------------------------------------------~ ,j,,J ~ :. ::. ... :':"":'-':":."-... = .. "-:::f:!:.!:' ':.':'~ NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH
P.t. fl'( 1'1'1 YO M . ..._IZMt•' ,,._.,..._ .....__.,,, .._ .... it
'I 'I : ": .::'!'------------------' Fashion Island (Huntington Center) • ,, • JM MIJ------------------------'IL_ ___________________________ .:_ ___ _: ______ :.._ ______ J
I '
'I'
I
·-----·-·-····---·· -· --.-· ......... -·---·-----· -·-~---·-~-------------"------""---------""------------='--'----=-=-=='--' ........
--~ .... ~ •• r
2<f DAIL V '1LDT Mond«Y, Octobet' 21, 1%8
Tars Have Longest Meet Prep Gridders.
•
County Win Streak
By ROGEi\ CARLSON
OI .. Dt!IJ PMll ,,..,
Newport Harbor H l g b
SchooJ'1 foolball tquad, with
the longest unbeaten skein in
Orange c:ounty, will travel to
Santa Ana stadium Saturday
afternoon lo baUle tile ...,..
proud Santa Ana Safnll In the
featured game ol the week.
The Sunset League
showdown will start at 2:JO.
'!be Sallon of Newport own
an Wlbeaten string of eight in
a row dating back to the
Anaheim 1ame la 1ut year's
_campaign. From there, they
knocked off Westminster and
Huntington Beach along with a
tie with Marina.
Coach W a d e Watts' crew
will be seeking tc avenge a 48-
0 blasting from Santa Ana la.st
yea·r, The Saints, have been a
disappointment in 196&, with a
6-1 loss to Anaheim and a 14-7
Football
Standings
..
" n
" " ~
" . t1~ " .
upset 1o8I to Western knocldng
the Santa Ana club into the ~
cond division of the Sunset
clrcuit with a 1·2 record.
Newpon must win, if *'-is to
stay in contention w i t h
Westminster arui Anaheim for
the league UUe. ·
Other Sunset League action
has Marina and Santa Ana
Valley ·at the same site in a
night 1m:ne at 8 o'clock Satur·
day.
Huntington Beach travels to
Anaheim and Western plays
host to Westmlmter on Friday
nlgbt.
Costa Mesa and Magnolia
resume Irvine League action
Thursday night at La Palma
Stadiwn (7:30) in a battle
for fint place while Plus X in-
vades Santa Ana Slldium for
the Mater Del fracas at I.
Loera and Eltanda go at lt
Friday nll!hl ' at Davidson
Field while Fountain Valley
and Corona de:t Mar complete
Irvine action Saturday night at
Davidson Field.
Laguna Beach will be trying
to make It six in a row wt.th its
scheduled encounter with up-
and-down Tustin Friday nlght.
Tustin (1-1·1) entertains at
lt.s home field. El Modena
visits Mission Viejo also Fri-
day night while San Clemente
ls scheduled to nieet. Orange
under the lights "Saturday
night at El Mod~na Stadium.
The Arlillt. of Laguna Beach
now find themselves in a posi-
tion where they can afford a
loss in one or their remaining
games and still get 110 worse
than a tie for the Crestview
League tiUe after Tu!tin was
stunned by El Modena, 19--14,
Saturday afternoon.
Costa Mesa's Mustangs will
be meeting their moment of
truth Thursday night when
they meet the Sentinels of
Magnolia.
The Sentinels routed Foun-
tain Valley ln their league
opener, 25-0. Both clubs are 1-0
in league competition.
Triton Runners
Win AA Crown
Botu. Grande, San
Clemente, and El Madena
High Schools · coppid lop
honors ln the second annual
Orange County lnvitaUonal
Cross Country Champlnnshtpe
held Saturday morning at
B cl 1 a 'Grande earned the
championJhlp In the AAA
division, San Clemente took
first in the AA, and El Modena
grabbed first In the A bracket.
~ .. l. f'Klflc ..... l• Qulnll 11 Also VJ;!~' C01t1 Mne. "'8otllMI, Mh:tlon
°'1=-:DUAL fi1ifl•ll11tS v1r;,,"" .
1. Kiefer, fAk •:" 2.P0/1 ... f!IG}, t :" l. Limb ( Gl. 10: 4 • .McQuown {MIU, 10:02 $. Form1n !Sil), 10:16 6.
Noorwn CL), jo.:M· 1. Whlll'll!,ler lllG), 10 :'1 •rt Mlrt MZ (Hiil, 10:13 9. !lori· ~ l'V'I!), to:25 10, IMMt (VPJ,
l. D•Vll fGG),""t:J.4 !. Joll'llOll
ft.ow1!1\, lf:06 3. L!nebtck (SC), 10:09
4. W.0.r I'), 10:·'5 '· WllllClll {SC), 10:16 6. O..n ICM), 10:17 7. Pallenon
ll"oof!lllO 10;1_1__1, N-111 \CMI, 10::z:J
'
Morton (..-..1), 10:!1 0. Sltrlfl!I C CJ, 10:2' • I. 'Mll11 fCM),~· 7. Woolw fCMI, !'-'°' S. ~fllMI lebtd:) lO:ot t. fo~ 1g 11 _,~. ':6 Mel<-IMO), i\'.-,~,';~,1,~""E~~.~~7;·11=
-fV , 'IO: ~ {2Ml, lO:»
I. ~ {0!, H:U !, !:...,.., fAl, "'Je,·H~~HfV'I, "!'·\22 ~· 911d<t u .. us. ~ 10 . 1'1.2S
.~ ltcibln'I jFoott.UI), 14:02 t. Ann L.&Qi. ll:CD . llrffhlr ISC), ll:IM 4. 'i'c;.IT,~~10 (FlllllhlllJ, 1n:OJ s. Smit!! • I. H•rdl"ll (CM !. 11:01 7. R1rtr..,. CMVJ, ll:IM S. AslchJk1 IEMl. 11·07 4
Solll (Stddietllc:llJ, 11 :22 S. Pult js.i
d~Cll), 11:17
····••••>O•NO ...
1. DorlcN1n fHe .• 10:5" 2. U Ros.
fTl"O'I'), 11:10 I. Otvl1 {TrO'Y), l l:U 4.
hlra' (0), 11 :U J. M1xwell (0), ll:lt ..
1. It-fCdMl, 10:'1 I. GrlV
(l-11), 10:!0 1 Alwtnf fNH ) 10:J7 •.
Hlth!n .fCdM ), 11:11 5. Cotnlolfy
(loweUJ, 11:02 • 1. HO'l't fl!), 10:27 I. Htun !fl, 10:'4
J. 8•rton IE), 10:47 4. DIYldlOll IE) 10:" J. OllOn (I!;), IO:Jl ' ..... ...
1. kllltll"f IGG), 11:0f, 2. Mllc:ltell
fCdM) 11 :1111 3. CemPbel1 ICdMl 11:15
4. A,,.,......,,, ((dMI, 11 :21 J. Clerti; CCdMl, 11 :24 ..
1. Wt•l>over IP ). 11:16 1. 1..,..ro&e1
15a11or1), 11:11 I. Jolly tlQ), 11 :25 •·
Mani,... fEM), 11:27 $. ~II (RAJ, 11 :7'
AU...CDUl'ITY TllAMS .......
D•vll IGGJ, Polll\9 {Giii, Jatlfl'IOll
1Lowe11l. Ll1>1kl ISeddlebtd:l, Wftol'r
!FOOlhll1J, Mcl(eo.. (M1!1r 0.1)
St• CllmMt. aack
TONY PLOWDl'H
Wlltlllllllfllr Ulltmell
lllCHAltD MOKTGOM'lltY llAHDY JOHNSON
Olt1...,.m (ED), '°'""11 (SAi '
Juni.r. • ........................................................................ ...
Whit. IEMJ, Wltlrl fEMJ, lam• ':.i
{8GI. MtO-!H8), llntbadl !SC), .................................
Los Alamitos Entries
,. .. M..Ur, Oct. ti, 1•
'Int ._, 1 P.M.
fllttlT uc•-..oo .,..m. 1
old m11d"'1. Cl.llmlnv. ,...,,,.
c11lml11t price u.t.
Don ltt•r ! R AIWl!r)
T""\"1 SP9tdbeU (1 H Pell')
BDlllly 0. LUM (W 51r1..,..)
Old S~U11 ID c...-1)
Lud<y ll1r RM (J WllMl!l
'l1"1lv Hwletoi CJ K1nl1! Moen.,,.._ II•• lP c..-.,.1 Sutlll .. IT liPl\em!
LHP P1rr !l COllln1)
l'Ot'Wlnl a."'" (0 Morml AIM a11.i1119
v..,turout l'l'I' !il A.r1lu )
Ll"I M1n!y ll•r 17 H Pl"I
Rill Oecll (It l'leverml
C""nle'1 V1nlty !J ltk111rd1l
'l'ter
S\700.
'~ '~ ·~ '~ "' "' ·~ "' "' "' "' '" '~ "' Sl!:COJtD ltAC•....-xt 'l'lrds.. I -r
old• 1nll 1191 In Gnde a PM. 1"11,.,.
11500.
Teer ar., ltld U ~I
"'•"-" l l Colli .. , Mr. H19~ Olo {I D C.'*'ul
SOOf'l(lt Sankl)
~. Fi.t Olldl fT L...._"')
GvslWr t fJ llktol,.,,..I
Ou1! To .,...., /J M•l1vdl!
51111"' P•11um CJ Willen)
1111""Y°I W1rrlor IL Wl1tl'll)
A1T0111flf Sir {11 llrlnllle'I')
...... •1+,11111
S....:a Ditd<1 Cl D C•'11o:11l
llrtll LI"" (J 1(1n11l
CMC1rD'1 111 11tr {It F l-)
l"rkl•'I' Trudlle (It ild91r)
"' "' "' '" '" "' "' '" "' "' "' "' "' "' THlltO llAC• -lllO 'l'tl"lll. t .,....r
old1. Clt lm! .... Plll"W lllOO. Ci.lml ...
, .. ~ tuoll.
Gold a11 Pttt IJ ltldwi .. I
M1rti Mt Dow!\ (R a1t1111l
Tiii'* llldl (W Mtl"""""°'I
Altbl llo
II,.,. 811 CC Smlllll
Sodl ""' Btr fD C.'9orl!
II lot Ml>kM' cw ''''"") Olub'• 11..,..1 rw s.a-1 ~o..c..n 11.W.lrl
Tll,... Ctlll fH Cnll!FI ............
Jtffel"e fJ lit ,,..,, 11.....,.,. er.. (I c.lllflll
,.. ,_,., (J ........ ,
"' '" '" "' '" "' "' "' "' '" >n
"' '"
"' "' •• '" '" •• '" "' 111 "' "' '" "' "' ll'l"N •AC8 --.,...,., I Wiii' Didi. ci.1m1111. ,_ tl• C&llmlllt
Nf Prvltlo IT Lllthlm)
~-MMl1in. (H Pttt)
• To. Alemo Cl II lrtnklft'l
Crtrr Sli:y 11 R AoHlrl
Mr. Minx CR FltverOI)
Hot Guilty !C Srnllll!
M!ll W•m11Um (H Htwkt111on)
RIWll Jttlie'r (I) Ctnloul
Formll iltf1lr (W &lrtUH )
Arnbl>r 0.111
AIM •HtlW.
Oon(Utll B""l!ect {l a ao1nltli-V )
lttflCY A11lft (t It Ad4ilr)
llltr1 It-I {It a..-.)
Thn!t Alatm11 CJ MallR.Ml•I
"' "' ,.
'~ ·~ "' "' ·~ "' "' ·~ "' "' ·~
SIXTH llACI -J5t ¥•rd1. l 'l'ttr
okll tnd I/fl I" Grld9 AA MlllUI.
Purw 11llOO.
llldi..,..1 TO!llo (J IC111l1l l l'fl
Llthlnlno ltebel co Morrl1) tu
ltodl:91 Llttle (J Wt"°"') • 111
Dr. tt.nb 11 C Srnltlll 111
Mr ... f'Nn (J Wl"-'l ll'fl
911_.1 ... , 111 Adtlrl 1211
H11ty lt09111 IH ,._, no
Ql.lldtl!'tt IH C......,J HI
Ctmll'-Glt1 CIC Mdtrrnokltl 114 TIPfot Sar 110
Alff .......
Mr. Oto Tot11 12 C l"'lflll
Ptrr Ltmb 11t 'I-rot) "' '"
llVIHTH llACa-.tlll w•rdl. 2 -· okl1. Cle1ml"9. Pur11 11100. Ct11mr.,. ..........
Pt-.itm Stw {W lltHl
C1t'1 Ofl o.<:11 ID Morrill•
Yo Oultro (W Str1usO
KlfllY'• '•!ICY fll e111kl} ... _., Llrlt {It Ad•lrl
8rucl Doo:llt (( Smll!I!
•Ddl.et J11u1r
lull E"l'I {il Art l11J
lff'I' Gritty IT Li.J!.,,.l
Moollll Miit fl Wrlellt)
AIM a1111•1e
~ O' Tl"OUble IH P ... ! l<lftt Of TM Ill: .. ......,..,
Clllfl:imlll a,_ fJ lt•nll"I
"' "' '" "' "' "' "' •n
'" '" '" "' >n
al•HTH llilCl-.1~ nrdt. 3 '"r
oldl 1nll Ill lft G....,_ AA Plw. ffllrM .., ...
VaM'r 1:1 .... fil Artl1tl
~ ....... (JW1hanl
G1-" T• fll AS.Ir\
Jet Strow fJ WllMwl> ,.,_11¥t rr l......,ml
"'-Ctlld>« (C Smlllll
St,..., ll1r flt" Mr:ltttflOkltl
Jifl'lm4 Lllll 10 C.r'lkJl1!
0.. IH1"f IJ lllcll1,.,,..l
Denk h G«>d !H C'lllln>I
NINTH ltACl-«t Yl .,,I. 3
okl1 tnd 1111 !ft Gr1Gt A Pkll -".....,.,.,.... 10 C.nlot1l Oldfw Out Tlftw (It Adelr) 0. W1t0! f( Smllhl
El GIY!Wt Ill l11'11t1l '*""-1a arlntl;lt¥)
1t11 ... ll {N P1ttlf)
M~ MOM ff' Cl'9Nft'J
9llMY hf" 1.M ft T L'91\tml ........,.,, $11ftr !H (rtioby1
llN Mim.,. (I( Mcllt'l'nold•l ..............
"' "' '" "' '" '" ·~ "' ·~ "'
'" "' "' "' "' '~ '" '" "' "'
Ed.,.. IEMJ, Wlnlotl !SCI
'°'""""" HO'l't !El. """' (CdM1, Larg, IVP! 11aun IE), Grl9<11 (EDJ, Grttnwooci
ILoar1), 8t rll:HI fE)
·~·
Weekend Collegiate Grid Results
J. ObWl"f (CM), .McLHll fCM), T
Ollw1119 ICM), D1vtdsor1 !El. O...,,;
!E ), Shltll119 (GG). Mltcl'>l!ll fCdM)
Mulll111 (Hll) '
COUNTY ToP Tait
l . El MOOtn1. Jl:lJ 7. !ial•e Gr1"""
J!:.U 3. Sen Clemenle. J':l :Oo! •. C-..t~
MHa, J?:Jt J. Footr.m. J2 :$2 6. Gel'den
Grovt & Loa.-.. J'2:5f I. Santa Ane, ~;~, '' 5addletNlek, 53 :1' 10: LG~ll,
Pro Grid
Standings
JUMIOll COLLl!GI llDCl(Y MOUMTillH il\r florq 31, Caitorldo Sr. I $iinla ilna 21, ltl<I HonOo If Woori ~ Ktmtl $11!1 11
Cyptn& 10, Gl'o11monl • omlng ...., Uleh t
Ch1ftn' 21, SPuttwrn tern 7 d1tio Sl1lt 2l. Mont1n1 •I
venture 19. Karbcr l• 101/TMW.IT
Gl111d1te 21, Compton XI s.MU :n. ltlct M
COLLEGI! 6:~~c!:':. ~· i;~ ~ flAll WEST Nonh TtXll $1a!t 70, TUIM "
'
• W , > ' j•••• 1'. ArklnHI 21' US I • 11.,tl>!ll on t Xll Tech ri, Mlst. SI. 21 C1llfor11l1 :Jll, UCLA U Ttx11 5ovll11m 35, Alc»rn illoM 71
St1nlotd 21, Wt1hlntfon St1ho 11 SOUTH
Or"Ofl 23, ldeho I Nortr. C•ronne 22, l"l«ld• 1 Orqon Stile 21, AtllOlll Stilt' Loul1llP\I S!1!1 13. ICtllludly j
Sin Jotl St•ho "· N9'W Me•ICO 0 Mll"'V!ancl :>1, Scu!h C1rolln1 1
ArllOOI 1•. 8t lthtm Voung 3 Clem1or1 :JJ, Dulr.• tt
'
--V '" '' >> ' Florlde SL 20, Mwmh!t St. 10 Sin er111,, .. .., l l,.y · • · Wtl! Vlrvtnl<I 2'Q, Wllllem" MIN 0
ilrllOfll 70 MIHIH!llPI ]], s . Mlul11I~ 13
UC·lt!vtrildt! 35, ltedlancts 7' Gecrt lt 32, Velldert>llt 6
Sin Dll'llO SI. 31, Loo Ano1le1 S!&le Gtorole 'ftcll 2'1, Autlllm 20 14 f poineue. 10. Al1bl<na t
St>um.rn 0.-O 0 TICtl 21 Tul•111 :!II, Ro,!on CGlll'llt 1' Porll~"" St it, E. W1~~rn;ion St .• U Mldw•I
LOI Anl!litl St1!1 36 Loral• 6 ' ' -' o Frn<VI Slll1 17. 11 liolr (SLO) O OWi 4 • n •KOOI "
AMlltlCt.• '••O"I <llltG St. 24. Ctl Po••• Poman1 U M!Cfll!l!I '7. lndltnt ZI " v ~lo t1te .u. Nor"l!lwl'I~ ft l•1tlf"11 Dl'l'lllOll UC.S1nt1 81rtN1r1 G, L-l!llfld'o SI. ~rd1>1 11, w1-e ,,,...,, 2l
New Vorto. • 7 0 M l 151 1d JI PKlll( 11. Ut.11 Miii 1 ..... ~ ........... ~, ........ • ,si.r. 1a
BOllOll J J O .~ I~ 1Mhpi0iii0iiiOOiiiiii0ii0iiii,;;iii0iiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiO;~~··;;ii~;;;;"i;iii;;;i;;;ii;;; .... ;;;; Ml.lml I J 1 .AOO " 1112 H0111ton I J 0 .26t 111 l:W
aufft 1G I $ 1 .167 100 1U
W•llnl DIYlllell
IC11\1t1 Clty 6 l 0 .IJ7 112 U
Sin DleM J I I .1U 1• "
0.-llnct ' I I M1 It.I f9
Den¥9r t 4 I .J)l 115 12:1
Clnclnnell t f t .211• 11) uo a."*" 11 .... 111
llMIClll :U, lluffllo '
S•n Di.to JS, Denver 21
Ml1ml 14, Clnclftntll 2'
1Can111 Clty 24, O.li:!1nd 10
New Yoril 10. Hoo.>1ton U
NATIONAL L••ou• ,,,,..., c .. PvMt•
Ct•fltl Dlvl1l011
W L T Pct. Ptt. OP
Dtll•• ' • 0 1.000 ,,, "
,._Yori!; 4 t 0 .U 1 1fS 1:17
W1•hllllllofl ) J 0 .xi Ul 111
P~U11te!llfll1 D I O .000 ts 1"
Ctlltwl"r Df¥111eo! Mew Oriti.. J , • .JOO ,,, 12'
C\fYtle"" S I 0 .SDO llt III
II, Loul1 ) S O .JOO 11' 1•1
Pttnb\1<911 O ' a .1311 N i• W..ltnl (...._
CMltfl 01¥11 .... loo A.ftl'elel • o I 1.llOO uo '1'
11111....,... s 1 • .an 1"' •
Sin F .-.ncl-J J O .500 UJ 1?1
•t11n11 1 J O .111 1$ 1" .......
''"""'""' G'"""' 111'1' '"""
Ctf\fl'"1t Clwltltfl
l 2 1 .... U0 12'
J , • ..900 ,,. t1
2 ) I .CIO JM lot
1 40 .ll3101 16t
......,..lt_lh
G'"" ••~ u. Oorll'Olt 1•. 1i..
Ch1ct90 7', Phl11~llfllt '' iln ~rtflCIKO 1', ~ Yort; 10
Mew Orleel\I 11. Pltt1burth 12
Dtll11 70, Mlnnt10l1 1
C'-11"" 30, 111n!m«Y 10
SI. l Ollll 41, W11hl"'9I011 14
Lot il!W91• 17, All_. 11
lvlllller'1 01,,,..
All1nl1 ti Cltwlfll'MI
lot AnHIH t i ••1tl-
M111riet0!1 t i Clllato
Good students
make good drivers
and s1nart parents
save with SAFECO.
See us and cut
auto Insurance
as much as 2 5 °/o
• • •
Bob Paley
ind Auoc:lates
INSURANCE
474 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
642·6500
Announcing SAFECO'$
Good Student Polley
If yo11' h19h 1chool or colle9• L.., h !rt
th1 11pp1r 20 'l of hit clatt , •• or I'll••••
01111'1 litt .. , or htt 1 "I" 1wor191
• •• $££ US. Yo11 c t n tt'l't 011 yo11r in.
9'1tlf'IC:t. Wh1t'1 ,.,or.-wtn If hl1 9ratl11
trtn't that 9ood, you ttfll qv•llfy for otll•
ot yn1t9 Jri.,.1r 11•ln91. It p1y1 to fl114
out 1bo11t ft, Call 111 Mclay.
~
•AFECD
IN BURAN CE
Mlnour1 1•, Wlbr1llc1 14 IClrtSIS 41/, Okllhtma Sltle II Oltllhoma I/, 1-1 Srti\9 1 aowun1 GrtM fA~mf s11r1 1
Coltale l'-Prll\Ulon J Navy 17, Pllt 16
P11m 3', Ltl11an o ~1rva ro 101 CorMll O
O!"lhllTI ' , F•\r!lold I 111 2'. Columb • 1 Armv 2•, ltulnn O
I COSTA MESA
1741 ....,..,, ....... , ...
~~!· ... !".~. . ......... IOfOI
-J\t-.. CJv i<•'.\¥C0 '. :_,;
. •'\i '.,1r~~o, ...... -Tf'Vd:lfll 0.1 fl 'f l~llll '*''""-'J W.'-1 "' "'
New °"""' 1t S• i.oui. Ntw YDrli 1! W11hl11tlon
""!!~lo •t Pl~1'911
''"-~at °'4'l'l'ltt • J
Anteater Poloists
Win u<;. Tourney I
UC lnloe'1 water polo Included UCLA, Cal, UC!, UC I~ bow>ced book frqo> Rlveralde, UC San' Dlogo, UC
· lliOlr D:il del .. t Friday lo win Santa ltart>era 'and UC Doril.
'Pl ol !he sport'• mos! Irvlll• dl"'*'""'9 with UCSB
'pl'eitjgltul events Saturday -easUy. The Allteaten t..s by
the .µ.untveroity Ii 'calJlorn!a _..of 1-<1, 5.1 ~· ~t a.t ikrl:eley. In tile Utlo glm", It WU a
Coach t:d N"'land'a team .,,. qi UCLA bavlnf lo play
biked Its rec.td jo &-I fM the catch.., lhrougbou!" 1be ,..
)'Oil with ao IH win over UC cond hall. The Antelllen bad a
Santa Bari>lra.111111 a 7-6 win ~i;wm• lead but~ a , over QCLA la the cham-· ty sbot by .. er d y
pinlllbil) 1moe. ' Massimino )'Ith 11 -left .. _ in" the game lo nail ft~ In
It WU -. llrat Ume UC! the aecOOd overttme"J)Or1o(
had ewr beaten the !IJ'ulnl In UC! had loll lo San $.,. W11leriJOlo. l'oaf ~·were IC!-.... State at DeAma lu"}Or
c:arQld .-i h...,.'. College Friday,.,..,.,_,~
Ferdy >tl•ssimfno ·and Pat l
llcClellln made Ibo first team -0 WT•
111111 Milie Maiuii and aw Br• shorne " ~· Jrtlio·-· ' ' ' '
; UCl's -amiinmeot Is at TUI.SA, Okla.~) -A 11B1i,, Diego state, :ri>O!daf Sand Springs, , drag
· aftemooo. Ira Cat S ta t e racer, .Bernie .Sunday
'.(Fullerton) Setunlaj momiq IOOl'ed bis R<OOd Wtirld drag
jln'llie ~ i>oql. • < r,acing champlonshld", In the
UC! drew a bye In the first fllt,ooo world f.W. at Iha
· rouDd 'of 'the UC ,event, 'Which Tulia tnternat!Onal Jaceway. . '
••
•
SIZES ILA.CKWA.LL WHITIWA.LL
T•beltu T11beleu
1 1.60· I I 12.95 14.95
7,75.14 13.95 1'5,95 7.75-15
1.25-14 14.95 16.95 I .I 5-15
VALUABLE COUPON
SHOCK ABSORBERS
Full Sftt·Orifintl E-quipment
2 ... $CJ98
INSTA.LU.TION ilVAIU.aLll
WITH THIS COUPON
BUKE RELINE ---U-.••"'"' ::.:~·-s1s· 95 ·. : ~' ForlNll . "!"fltt........ (M LIMITID !Ml O'F'll
MIAYT OLJTY LllClllM • OOMlfTX .t.ND "'1Jltl fM.t
WITH THIS COUfON
• TIN
"' ""' '" F1lcm Sulek
Ford
Cl'levtoltl
"'"'~ ""'"' C1m1ro
Musl1111 .....
F11rl1tw
Rivie"
PClllllK vw .
v•~
-••
'
TRUCK "14'~1 lr.'-""111·• 18'~'
TIRES ,".\ ....,, .. .. ....,. 11•1~ --194! .. 24',~·~ ........... IW'll" ...... "" .... ... -... ,
NO MONEY DOWN e USE OUR OWN CHOICE CHARGE e BANKAMERICARD e MASTER CHARGE
ltore Hours: I a.m. to f """ MorMl•Y thrv P"rW1y
Sat\lll"lllJ I &Jft. t. I ,.,,.,
Phone 540-4343 • 646-4421
c c .
B
•Y
• 1y .. • • !t
In .. ,,
•
A
1g
•Y 1g
ne
ho
.y.
Sears
The SlleMtil• ... H••···
15%~Tread
14% Wider Tread
15o/o Hea...W Construction
and is 44% ~r
_ ... , ..... _,,, CJ !0 41)1'fE•l 1'0!~•; 1 "f+
ALLSTATE PASSENGER TffiE GUARANTEE
GuruW:d "••lull T re11d wear-out.
Mond11, Octobtr 21, 1%8 OAILV PILOT ZS
40 .. Month Guarantee
Full
4Ply
Nylon Silent
Guard
Regular Trade-In Price $27.95 at 25o/0 OFF, Y 011 Pay only •••
SIZE 1--.. 1 ...... I .. u I FLT. n;:.:;.1a u-. T;::;1a
Tubeless Blackwall
6.50x13
Tubeless Blackwall
Plus 1.81
Fed. Exe. Tax
and Old Tire
SIZE ·I 1*!t!. I -:.~ \ ~ .. I !'.E.T.
Tubeless Whitewalls
TREAD LIFE GUARllTEE
G11•r-1«d An.lust< AU failure. or th~
tiru rNultlnK lrom nonna.I road huard• or defectM In materl.J or 1l'orkman1hlp.
For a.w LoA•: For ttie lire ol the orlc-
lnal u.4.
f'or ffo"' Loar : Tho number or 1no11lh1
1peelfled. ll.O<lx13 I 21.95
'7.1s114 I S2.9ti
I 2r;7, 1 20.96 1
I "3 I u..11 !
tll 6.SOxlS I 30.95 I 253 I is.!1 I 1.81
!.18 6.9tixl.f I Sl.95 25"/u \ S.96 ' 1.95
Wllot loo" Wiii Do: Repair nail punc-tures at no clar&"e. In cue or follatt, In uehonce for the I.I.re. niploc.-. It charg-ing only the proportJon ol current regu-lar mellln&" prlel'! plu.. Federal E1elee Tu:
th•t rep.--ntli tread ~·
wiu.1 S.W. WI.II n., In ucbonra for U't1
Ura replace It, chorrlnc the current regu-
lar .aU!nc price pltu Federal Tu: lea• the
lollo.Jns olowance.
s.2Bx1t I SIJ.95 I !r;z. ! 2&.96 I !.S5
NO MONEY DOWN
'J.S5xl4
'J.'J5x14
8.215114.
I SS.95 25% !5:'-6 ....
35.95 3 26.98 UJI
88. 5 253 29.Jl ...
•Tllo llUent Gnord S..l:tfi ... the Sile-I Goard will be r.-.J>l&ee<t •t no charge U faUur.-. OOCUTW clurlnK !Ir-Al 20 DlODtho. If the tire fall• &flu thl• period, lt wlll be nplaoed, ehllf'8\ng only th11 p~ortion or current ?flll"ulu 19lllng prlee ~tu F.E.T.
that repre1<".l'lt1 tread \19ed.
Kffth• Gauu'fe<I
11 w 14
11 te Jt
'0 Siient t.luerd
40 lillenl (lu1rd Seoloa.I
8.Mxlt '1.95 3
8.86x14 4.4.95 "3 ••
on Anything You Buy 8.15xl5 s .95 •3 ~· .45xl5 '1..95 "3 ...
at Sears on Credit 8.86x15 tt.95 25% 2.'18
9.00x.15 .f'J.96 2.81
All Road, All-Weather Driving Safety!
Double Jamill·
ated, Chloro·
Available at Sears
Steel Cord Radial Tires
Mk AAJ 8eu'1 ~ TlN 8&1Mm&D About Them!
Patented &Aft·
ty ahoulders
give sure
steering and
cornerWtg con-
trol for aa.fer
driving on all
roe.di.
~ (.
• ~
Patented 11·
Jencer button•
virtually ellm·
lnate comer•
lng aquea.l, and
keep groove•
open tor posi·
tiv• tracllion.
Sears Allst.ate
LONG-LIFE
(',emii • tor a nn 11..&terJ ,,_t at 8Mrl ••• No Obi!·
ptfoll ••. Doll'' BWr Bflt ..., .......
Batteries
Fits 90o/o of All
12-volt System Cars
SAVE $5!
36·month Guarantee
Regular Trade·in price $18.99
SAVEf8!
99
With Tra.de-ln
Noll. S8, 81, ta,
Sl, 11
42-~fontb Guarantee
Regular
Trade-Jn
Price $21.99 15 99
Wllll Tr1d1·lt.
XCM1o II. •• "' K, U , H
24-Month or 24,000-Mile Guarantee
Searl Bemanufaetllred Engine•
Over 950 Makes and Models Available
More New Part• tn Every Remanulacturl!ld Compltif.e :Dlgtne
•All N•w Waler T1be1 •All :New Jtod &11ria1t •All New lnl1Q v.a-
•All New Roeller llhalt1
• All Ne"' Tlml111 Chala1
•All Naw Tlmlar Ge•"
• All :New H ydnGU•
Lllte"
•AIL New 81•111011
• AU New Seal Go1Jtel1
• All l'fe• EJ.ha111t V-.1101
e AU New Val•• 1!~.U.11
• All New l'I•'""'
•All New Cllr.-~ •••••
ALLSTATE Car and Truck Engines -Exchange!! a.vail·
able for over 950 makes and models Remanufactured t.o
more exacting standards than are in new engines.
Compare ALLSTATE Remanufactured Engine Quality.
Block! and Heads -Resurfaced Magnaflux inspected
and pressure tested. Crankshaft. Camshaft, Connecting
Rods -Rerround complete and polished. Oil Pump, Oil
Pan, Ft·ont Cover and Rocker Covers installed on all
OHV engine8.
, ............... • • ,-CLIP THIS COUPON'"; , ••• cli p This Coupon·-·
' M h •• ,....,_ ' '' : : 24• i':!!a~:ir:duCX:Ooo"__, : : THIS COUPON :
: Enrtne GUARANTEE : This Coupon Worth : : WORTH :
, Jf allJ Ila.rt f&lk d•I W ddMtl , 5 0 , . '25 . ' I• ••Wrlll or w•rll.lftaQILlp •• -' $ • • • , dGrlq-tl"I ff 4&71 01 ,,tff , I , ,
, mlln, whld1e11r -•" tint, •• ' ' ' ,
' will repi.lr or repl-po'l'la tJ'M ' ' ' '
' of ehot.._ pro¥141.sr ,.111•ln4 ' ' ' ' ' ""'ee kotl bee• pert1nned ... , ' ' ' '
•• 11•rdl•I' .......... Mio eertlllcote. , -. •• : ,._ ~ or ..... ', Atie1 M d.-11 •• •.tot •llet , On ---•--of •·• 8 M' I-,._ ......, I and •P w 24 moalll• er 14,fft 1 I ,.. ... .,..._ ....,, ' ' Kemanufaetured '
1 mil~•. wldelle.u _.,, fl"'' , ' Oyllnder OOmplflte &emanufac-' ' Auiomatto '
•, part• .... 1•!:91 tbr•• ... 1u IM ', Ex-rt •, •, : •, 1r1n.k4 IMlo4 •09• I~ ptf• r~ tured Enpat DLltalJed. 'l'ralunllaa}oa
' ee•t•r• 11 •••n•~ •••tll• ' Inetallatlon ' ' ' ' I •• m.11•1• wli.ltlle1u 11 ,,..,w,, I . I Ooa °""" otte1 &K•lrM ' 1 OUu Zsfire<1 I : "'"rew.-.., -.. reoel.-ed. ' Available : J'er Cla•W•., 'he~ Od. tt, J.., : : o .. T~iiP.'!".M.,1b!:."-'•
Poriolk .errke It PIMlll~ tt I I ' : lreeo r••,....U. ft. etfed, : 1 aax : 1 UX ~ .............................................. _..... ... .. .._ __ ... __ ................... , ...................................... -"'""
'
Buena Park
La Palma at s-
5214530
Santa Ana
1717 S. Main St.
C.OSta Mesa
Briotol at Swdlower
In Sonth Coa.i Pina
540-3888
Kl7-3371
I
Tuotin at Mea11
Orange Coanty
..
I
I
I
!f DAILY PILOT M"""1, °'"""' 21, 1908
North, Frlederlcks ..
Two Gold Medals
For V.S. Skippers
ACAPULCO-Today was to
have been the moment of
truth for skippers and crews
of rive yachting classes here
seeking gold, silver and bronze
medals signifying t he i r
aupremacy In mUlng a
sailboat co fut through the
w11ter.
But when the computaUons
were all in after Sunday'•
~ rice it was evident that
taday'a finale would be an-
ticlimactic.
United States skippers have
cinched two gold medals.
Lowell North of San Diego
gave himself and hundreds ol
Southland boosters the scare
of their lives when he finished
in 12th place. u"
S.S Mt!ters
Mishap
Wrecks
Boats
ACAPULCO-Near calami-
ty -the 0\ympin u
meter n..t early SUnday ......
a Mu:Ican Navy landing cnlt
.... 1 out ol control in the
--.. ..... and ~eel
-boall, -_,_
Grtatat damage -.:u to the
Auatrallan boat llurenjoey
which had a larp !lei. IJloft
in her port side -Utt bow andftvebroUA~ ~
Tiie acddenl '""1u:nel al I
a.m. and Mexle1p ~II
had the b •• t IQflldeillly
repaired to .an by ._,
time at 1 p.m. 'l1:&e .Auaies
flnlabed 12th iD the fleet of.:lt.
But when the slide rule
artists got' busy it became ap-
parent that North could finish
last or even not sailed today's
race .and sUU win the gold
medal by lb, tenths of a poinL
North's worst threat then
was FrancO cavallo of-Italy
who finiabed fourth for a total
penalty acore of 33 in the best
five out of six races.
GOLD MEDALIST NORTH STAR IN STAR CLASS Tiie other two boait, the
English and the Mu:Ican: en· tries wen lea. "'l'louily
domaged and ,..,. able to
start the .nee.
North's 12\h place was at-
tributed to a broken halyard
before the racf. He and
crewman Peter Barrett had to
unstep the mast in tnld«ean
to make repairs a few minutes
before the start.
ELVSTROM WINS
North's arch rival Paul
, E;lvstrom of Denmark won
S'unday's race but the effort
was too late. It gave the
"great Dane" 4-0.4 points for
third place, just three tenths
ol a point ahead ol Peder Lun-
de of. Norway.
U Italy shonld win Wday, he
will still have 33 points,
whereas North would have 32.4
even if he did not sail - a
likelihood that is not even
being considered here.
The other cinched gold
medal for the U. S. is Bdudy
Frieclericks of New Orleans in
the Dragon Class. He sailed a
b r i lllant corne-from·behind
race Sunday to retain the en-
viable low score of six penalty
points. He aJso could fouJ out
today and still win the gold as
second place Paul Bowoski of
Ealt Germany is not within
striking distanct.
STilL MUST IAfL
Despite his sixth straight
win Sunday, England's Rodney
PattJsaon still must sail the
final race to win the Flying
Dutchman, but all he needs to
do Is finish 24th or better. One
of his victories was nullified
by a DSQ which he ill using as
a throwout.
The U. S. has no chance for
a medal in the. Flyinj Dut-
chman clau despite a third
place finish by Bob Ames in
Sunday's sixth race -his best
petfonnance of the series.
U. S. hopes for a medal in
the Finn class went by the
CUSTOM DRAPERIES--
"Ca// NOW for 1n Your Home' Service"
Call now for our "Home Service". Choose from many, many textures and
1 OO's of colors. Ask about our free color coordinating service. All custom
installations include EVERYTHING! Installation, fully tailored, heavy duty
rods, weighted, double hem, double header, blind stitching, weights in
every corner and seam, custom hanging and custom fullness.
.
We Are As Close As Your Phone!
INTERNATIONAL
' boards when Cal van Duyne
failed to place better than
14th. The certain winner in
this class will be V alentln
Mankin of Soviet Ruasla.
Sweden ls another clear cut
winner in the 5.5 meter class.
Skipper Ull Sundelln IJnlshed
first again Sunday to retain a
low score of eight penalty
polnta, out. of reach of his nearest competitor.
NORTH SECOND
In Saturday'• Star race
North placed second to Italy
who had never won a race but
has been consistently hJgh to
remain in secood place in the
standings.
Trio Escape
In Boat Blast
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
'Mtree persona e 11 c a p e d
unhurt after a $20,000 cabin cnd!er wu destroyed by an
explOl!loo and fire Sunday
night in the Marini\ Del Rey
Channel.
County -said th• boat was owned by the Major
Engineering Co. <I Burbank. A
llJlall atlff allo wu destroyed.
One of Our
FINEST SELECTIONS
OF
FABRICS
Hurry in first thing tomorrow and see one
of the most exciting displays of drapery
material you have ever seen. These are
all fine quality fabrics brought to you
NOW for a very limited time at greatly
reduced prices. Choose from ••• ,
* SHEERS * BOUCLES
*SATINS * conoN BLENDS
Values to S.f.98 yd.
Priced
As
low
As
c
YD.
*********
CUSTOM
MADE DRAPES
for Your Sliding Glass Door
Th• llidin g 511011 door SPECIAL iMludes ALL our cus.
tom feature1 such os heavy duty hardwore, c:ustont
lobor, complete installation and many mare custom
features.
6 ft. Sliding Door i:1';:0 ...... 539. 95
8 ft. Sliding Door v:l';:" ... ~--559.95
10 ft . Sliding Door ~:1:';00 ...•. s79.95
Materials from "Across the
Na~on and Around the World"
• BANKAMIRICARD • MASTER CHARG£
•OUR OWN 100% FINANCING
Optn Dolly--10:001.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Thundoys & Fricltys 'ttll 9 p.m.
Closod Sund1ys
2750 HARBOR BLVD.
lat Admm & Hartlorl
COSTA MESA-PH. 546-0155
t
. ....... ., "-' .._._.
MELEE FROM NHYC WINS "CREAM OF CROP"
Melee Takes 'Cream'
Race Off Long Beach
Donald Ayres' Cal to lloop
Melee from Newport Harbor
Yacbl Club captured Sunday'•
inaugural '"Crum of the
Crop!' sudden death.race over
a II \lo mile course oil Lon&
Beach.
The event, aponl<red by the
Long Beach Yacht Club, WU
entered by 21 boatl. Winners
in the five major Oct.an Rac-
ing Serles, Balboa Yacht
Club's ·Iii Series, NHYC'a
Allon..,.. series, LAYC'•
Whllzley Serie, LB YC's
Catalina Serle11 and California
Yacht C2ub'1 Overton Serles.
Although Jt wu a winner-
tate-all event, plaques were
presented to all entrants.
Taking lecood on correcled
lime wu the Columbia 50
Cygnwi, Ernie Ch Ip man.
LBYC; while Volante U, Mike
Hirsch ol BYC ,.., third.
Seal Beach Fireman
Invitational Winner
A Los Angeles County
fireman from Seal Beach and
ll:leln 1Df(YCl1 1.71 1 ll!Jllll, J. Vtrbe' <SCCYC\· u.~ en -1'-~ Loe. J. ~ CIYCJ, s.1, 1. um The Cllffit ti, Hen11rt.oowrrtn1 ISl:'YCJ, !fl 1 Se
8 member of Ol1e of Southern f~9;,T~~ J.'Y.CWfil1f~· T=
Call!ornla'1 and Long Beach's ~:':: W~..J,r,vclk~~c2) 'lt'r,bl1
Mir-It, Al,~ S. Htr-Otr /.UYC), 1t. pioneer families wen Winnen eM Jl#llor •> -P'lnaw, N!arY C. tl'I C\.AYCl, 1 OK Olffinl"._ If) -1. of the most fiercely-contested 1. ll!d KlnilllH 111 IA vt:i. t .11 t. No nenw. lirwllf1'f C1,1rry YC). U.71 trophieJ Sunday Jn the three-1 F"""· o.nn~ (1111> IS.I B~dl YCJ.
"'" • -· Beach Harbor m..-v'tl~ ,~>Tc.!· ~':n;91. t=~ t"&LO • MUU6 (A!YC) U.f. ll!""'"'rlM Cll -I.
I · · I w.1,,,.i96.1. """ Gf'J1'11PO!d IABvtJ, 11.11 nvitationa Regatta. 2. Llebcl>en, wit111m WJl\klw 1awci.
F. NI • Co ·-U.7. Flyl119 DIJ!d'11•i.r1 (4) -Ctf!MI, 1reman ca n-won John Orjk• 1w1now1n1 vc1, o .. rn1111e ··-c Ill . A bly ~-14) -•ndv Andy, Andi Uttteldln .... ri:: a orrua ssem ....... ., cave>. o. c1111om11 ~ c .... nw for the second time in three La....-ot c11n -LlhW!IYn Brxtl'r 11/
ailing his •'L-IABYCJ. years by S ~IRtllWlll Jllfllor R I-. i.t111t 1leg1ll• 111 to first ... 1 ...... in th.t _r .. 1 20·· ~•lllltt. a..,. 1Leew1y s.rn,. Club, 45
.,._,.. ff" •}.-a En;): !.el11M S.bOf It -1. 1111 clau of tht Ocean Clusea ll•t 1n llCHYCl. 4\lii POln11: 2. Jeff
regatta staged by Long Beach r.cs:s~hL--;*s!.,. 5:]11~~ c1wi1• "'' Yacht Club Contos of Seal fL-SCt, '' s. ~onn ~r•nke ~sc~ • • 5.nlor S.tiot !I -!. John Holm Beach YC bested Alamitos 1L1vc1, ~v..; t.'S1..-. Levi ... <LScJ, 101
B Ye' N' d l. Jin !uriallky (LSC). 15/ 4. Jan Crvllo ay 8 e Dwnas and 13 ilotl CAIYCJ, Jt; J, HOltf ~rt (L.$(), other skippers for the trophy. ite~~t'.• ~ 2~ s,.t;. •im ... i:.~
The CaUiornia Senate Cup 1.1.11..X,crtt 1~i.!.ruri.J:e)1~5/Lf1a~U
went to Llewellyn (81%) Bl.J:by ~~5fi.lh~l1.Meror'• Tn:11>hY -
IV for his trlwnph over 10 Ocnn c1111es R• .. tt• 'ou1,101t L011t lttd'I HtrbOr: PCC 15) -GoUlp G.
Baldwin of King Harbor YC f.: fn'=}'f~ c~ l11<~kil (Redondo Beach) won Senior 2. M11w, Jrm Galk>w•.,. IA&YCJ. A class honors GIMl•""' cu -; 1. M•tal v11, or. P1111 • Smlttt ILl'f'C\· 7. s. s. Leo! W. G. 11:1111 1s1.avc . Ca1umt111 22 11 -1. In an event completed $twolr F11 .. , Rici< ,_....,., 1se'tC11 2.
S turd J th . W.. ltlt"n, !:Mun Mc:IMa.ll Jr, a ay u part..... e Inv1ta-jMvci. S1nh11•11 c,1 -1. i"Ol:O, w.
Uonal and """ ol ... F II . o1'°"' !$8YC>1 t. "'' , •11• 81 ,...... Wft: a Htlntz !LIYCJ. Cll • n r. -. lnvltauonal 0-I of ~._~ NtHnlt'lt, Nh:t Contos CJ Cl; 2. .x:I" es W-::: Wicked Wllllnl, Neod OU<TMI Al!Y();
••
Sabots
Captured
By Burns
Salllnr .-ld<ol weather
-loao and clear blu ..
lldes. -loO youngsters COlllpeted in the FUlh annual
Sall <I the Sa~Saturday, wb1cb wu ""'I' Bob Bum.t
d Santa MonlCll 'y Heel
The even~ 1 by the
Pacllk: Y acbt and Balloon
Club, drew 125 ,.tries, ol
wbJcb 115 tln1abed the race.
aaUed in tbe Lido Nord cban.
nel llartlng and flnlJhing at tbeSea~ Following · a c e and
tropby , the .,,,,,_
petiton wen { treated I o relralune:ls.
Resulta:: ~
1. Burns :r. ~ 01a<11, eve
S. John MeCI<!!•~: NHYC 4.
Ken O'Rlelly, ll'B)'C 5. King
HumannWc a. Nina Nlel.!en, • Charlie
Thom_., I. Mary
Ann Siegler, til(c 1. Carey
O'Rielly, ~· 10. Dave
WaDace, WI~.
First girl • Nleftlen; first boy
• Duma; yllUJllii!t girl • Glgf
deMOCUonyi, de; youngest
boy .. Dave 111.RUff, unaf ..
flliated; first ~ yacht
club-Olson; ~PYBCen~
• JW Connelly; iOldest Sabot ~
Jane Barneaon;>,-IOIYC; first
Sabot assoclattciil'~member ..
McClure; first local yacht club'
• O'Rlelly; first ,lbland yacht
club ~ Diane Hilyard .
Riverside SaiJ.hw Club· ·first
unaffiliated • Wallace; first
two.manned boat • Linda
Hester and fin! Sea Scout •
Bob McGoe.
Douglas Cuv.
Slated for
Long Beach
LONG BEACH -Stanford
U n i v e rslty's traditionally,
strong team and an ad•
venturel!ome all-girl t e a m:
from, Boston University today,
joined the field for the third
annual Dou,glas Cu p
lnlercollegialt SIJllng Regat-
ta.
The event. an a n n u a 1
hlghlight ol the national col•
legiate Ailing calendar, will
be sailed outside Long Beacli
Harbor on Nov. l, J and 3.
Stanford and the feminine
contingent from the East
replace two previowily an-
nounced teams,.tbt U.S. Naval
Academy and Tu I an e
Uni•ersity, whlch·were forced
to withdraw fr«n the event
because of cOnruct w it b
qua rter ly final exam
schedules.
Vivacious,
Aloha Wm
California International Sea l. s.1koo. 11 ... .., N~ 11.11YCJ; -· Kltt!wakt, A. If:. GfllfrY !LITCJ. Eleven boats competed In Festival at Long Beach, Don 0cnn R1c1n1 1121 -Tie for 11r11 the South Shore Sailing Club's Ayres Jr. Of Newport Harbor bltweff! Cf\erl11T>1, Ctlrl1 cl~" IA8YC\ 9f!d 1111c1ut111. Johll ic: nc.old champion11hip invitational Sun-yc Won COrrected tun. e honor• C8YC ' Ctl 40 !Sl -Jlllo,er 111. lab L11lle [LllYC l. c.ilfotl'I(• Aslen'lblY day. • with his f\-telee in the first an· c,,~,.17,, L•rwffl ci ... -Nldl C""9 '... Winners ln the Santana !1 nOcual SouRathernin Ca Ii for n i a et.~~"'c.•= °'r:. I\.~ (five entries) were 1, Aloha U, ean c g Championship H1rtiw 111.k1111 C'GllTM1 Lot11 iMC1t G}e Reed SSSC 2 Anita
on a 21.5-mile course outside ~~tut>. 1-g: ~1m1. "li:'i"'"~Ycl: nn ' ; ' '
' • Davlcl And•-LIYC; 3, Long "·ach Harbor E E S:1G:l71 2. """" • . n -......., UC • ' • ILIYCI, S:J3:CMI J. ,,,....., Don ,..,..... White Cap, c. A:,_,Titch!ord and
Chipman oftLBed YUmC was ~th ohi~ 'tri~-=:' •~= illi./Yc~:.~\;~n~ Skip Crane, BCXC. on correc e w1 s s. c...,..,...,, em 1>ooy 1L11vc1. .. · Columbit: 50 Cygnus, with s:.s:111 '· l'lr"" 11..i Mtrrttt Adfm-Taking the ;Cal 25 fleet (CYCJ, S:4!:2:S. \;citrtcttri:I Tim• •"n-i:•·•"p lli<•en' lri'es) I first.to-finish honors going to LNOtn·-1. Mt!M, ci... ,..,,.. Jr. ""'1UU UWN.11 '~'· • •
Jack Baillie of Balboa YC and t~~~ c'(li~{. ~ •. ,.~ J.1.J. Vtvac Bill ""°' KlelnSmld, his famed Newsboy. 11. MldlHl Hl""1 Ji .vc1. •=J1:211 t. NHYC; 2, .Dillareo, Dale
Mlltr'llQHor. 1. "'"" lft.l'!Y..£1• tn'~' Rob 1 n son. SSSC; and 3, The weekend's reaults: t»':V111~ ~=zi;'iml •:o~~ fellow Snipe aallera in the ..;.:"::.":.:'"'-"'':::»:::'n;;.· _______ Callen __ i._,_Lmy_.;...H_e11er_.;.•_sssc. __
regatta for lntematlonal one--
design claases hosted by
Alamitol Bay YC. Second was
Jerry 'lbompson., Ute Bf:zby
an ABYC member, who,
ironically, had loaned Bizby a
sail for the event.
Third major compeUUon
over tbe weekend wa1 for
sailera under 19 ye.an of _age,
hosted by Leew.Y Sailing Club
in Alamitoa Bay. Leeway 11
the clty..gponsored club for
youngsters 7 to 18, teachlnc
seamanship and salllng tecbnl-
qu.,. and spedalltlng in the
Long Beath-developed eight.-
foot prams known u Naplm
Sabota.
'•
'·
The Mayors' Trophy tor vie-·
tory In the largest clau of thil
event was won by Steve Holm ot LonJ Beach YC.
' ' l'ltfrnlltloMI Ci.. 11: .. t~llkM:fl HHbor: SAW It Ill •l -I, ,\....,q, 1.ltwtllY'll I UY IV
(AltmllN a.; YCI, • ~~ I, Ne =•iJ'l:'1111':'r8c ~~-..£~~ Gold. ~ w.e.r-IA T<:JJ s. Nto Nmt. . I . c.n.e.ttl I eYCI. Sn!M-
11 111-1. ~"· Hit "'"""' '°" 111,.., YCJ, ._ J. ~ ~. _..,.
Golden Gate
Tolls Changed
SAN FRANCt.900 (UPI) -
Ono-way tolll are l<Mduled
to begin oo tllo ·Golden G a ta
BrlqeSa~.
Under the new -· northbound motorlltl wtll o o t
pay • toll, bat -travelers will be ~arged $0
ceoll, twice U. _, inlL
-..,._
ltldglng at Aea~ {I
W. D. 'Bill' Schock ol. Udo Isle, tdtown ~ hlll
BeU!m, II currently In Acepulco, Mex!c:O: u one ol.
Ill• jl>Clgeo at tile yachting Olympics w1~ up to-
day. Schock is ooe ol. tile naUoo'a best knowit build·
era ol. fiberglaH aallboeu. ·
..
ti
... ,.. -.
her .... .....
lull
lay, ...
lhe
oon
o! •ce, ,.,,.
at
ll1ld ,,..
to
:vc ..
Jng
'ina
rlie
ary
rey
ave
boy
Ji gt
:est
laf· cht
1try, ,, -
irat
r •
1ub
.chi
d ;
irst
irsl
""' ~ .
P.:
Ii
ord
illy
ad ..
Uri
iay,
.ird
up
:at•
a I
:ol·
rill
!ch
lne ...
an-
val
ne
:ed
ent
th
un
In
b's
un-
%1
ll,
ta,
a.
~d
"' I,
Id,
lie
3,
" -
' ' ••
I.I .
• '
• M~, Octobtf 21, 1968
Everyone Hu
Something Th.t
Someone Else Want.-l'llB ar.a:r SINQIJI IUJtDTPIAC:E OIV l'BB •a.tlWR fJOAS'l'-PBOIVB Dim UZ-5871 .
You C.n Sol It,
Find It, T racle It
Wrth • Wam Ad
HOU5E5FORSALE HOUSES POii IALI HOUllS POii Lt.LI HOUSIS .l'Oll SALi HOUSE$ POlt SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSIS POR SALE RENTAU RENTAL$ .•~
1 ~Go;;n;;w;;';;';;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;to='°';O;Got;-;'"'=-.l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t;O~lllO;IO::::::''~r=~~::;:;::-=-1G=~~• OoMnl
r• BUILDERS CLOSE OUT Mksloil
100C1c ;c::ott;:;;•.;M~io~•~•;s-;;;;;1~111;.;; l;;";C;°';"';';";dol;;Ma;r ;;;;1;2SO;;;ll:Fou;;"';:;'';";;V~•~l=loy:--;;-;;14;.:-;10 -Unfvrnl.,... Hou-Un!um...,.
COLLEGE PAllK WESrMONT Home, s BR. 2 Gonerol 3000 h-fllond :J!! ,
11)10tm.r-IBB. 1amrm,2 413 Acacia .. + -. room. Sole D.EGANT 2 BR. J bath, LOVELY...,. 3 BR~
ONLY 5 NEW HOMES AVAILABLI lmpoulble .
RANCHO LA CUESTA, in BunUngto .. Beach baa Find •· bott" S ..._.
the best values in a new home in the enUre i.rea. F.ut&ide home tbat ii u
I & 2 story, S & 4 bdrms, ~ batbl, quality construe-::::':'. deoora~, :=:
tinn including all kitchen built-ins, fireplace, fully !l>al<e root ':n -ldtd>
carpeted, shake roof, concrete driveway> large eo. covered pUlo. and~
Ba, ti, fplc, Lido Model, A rvib'I ad tuibloned qual· 1)6,XIO or rent #15/mo. lrvine Tertace borne, )Ovely duplp •lecrftc b U:r$Tn
IBA tinanclng may be .. tty encl Nlt1c dl&tm coel· 83t--4llD. &uden, ,.uo, dllilil& rm, kitchn, chperim •-8y
MBA VfRDE
awntd, ext cond. 1Cl 5-370~ bb!d 1n till me of a klDd • $395 mo.. Yrly I e a 1 t • carpeted. 9tfPS to-
co ................... ,.., • home. 1 td'nl _ 2 baths _ S1nt1 An1 1620 Cbe&hlre Ret.l E, tat e &y trort. $115 )'t:ul.)' zy .E< ~ ... ~.. --"• br,2 bll,fDl.)'nn,frpL,blt· ~room-oceanview·ay0wner";completel1 615--~~ ··-"•·
Im, '"""· ~ q. lbdc: pU ane at the tuleWt »:a. b.amWled 3 Br. 2 Beth. Hu 3 BR 2 b&tbs, w I vt H tfngton leach.,_
2 STORY
lots. Walking dl!tance to Public Beach. tlNl1y ...,.._, .n tor
S BR, d1nlng room I: 3 bathl
with ...... --yard.
Near an llChools, • park ' aolf eoune. VETS NO
DOWN • FHA OK.
$31,500
yd, play hie. IU,500. """In C...... del l!W. ,.er)'thioa lncl"41na poo1 -"'-um un ,.=
646--0333 $48,:':00. Asaum• ~ % ~ pymt • h a r p • t m m e d I a t e e s BDRM, 2 Nllh, klme
EASTSID;,-'="-""=E-.~---,~Br-.1 0.Lancy Real E1t1te $16l mo. Ind taxt1 I J.b.. .JIOIHUlon. Prime 1rea. $225 PaciDc Sandt H.B. $llllllijO. (Localed at Hamilton & Bushard) fll,950. Your mlakm,......,.
$2.S.050 to $27,700 = ~..:: ',:" ,! ':; pb&a Jamll.r nn.. l1' bMb, 2828 E. eo..t Hwy., 0SM aurance. S.W. S.:Ota ADJ mm.th. Ast. 54Mltl Refs. (213) 351-();161
FHA· VA -Convonllon~I 1 .....,. nlµe.
C.11 ffl.2ftt anyjtiy IMil•llM 1t & 7
H.Wport Brick frplc. WIWl:~~~.,.,,,.~~=~~1~$28~,S!Q0.~""'31115~~·=:!~~1 $100; l Bdrm., tmuauaJb'l•ro=Rc-re=nt"'p..,"""""'"·'"'SOilaft=,.,..,.llOj,I it carpet1n1. JUlt 1 t • t ed. ~ !ivtne: nn. &: bedroom. rm ~ '*· eovered -Ao. A FHA t.nno. •-t ...._ An1hefm 16$0 Out>«a ..... .,. ......., "'°'
All ~ bedroom, l 'il BA'IH
UNITS wilb Built.ID Kitch-
ens, Caqlet.I, Dnpes and
separate euclo&ed pi,tlol.
Convenient:J.y loc ate d to
everything. EXCEl...LFNr
RllITS -k1w Vacancy Fac-
tor. 9'Jrnit oo Down • Sec-
ondary lloanch>& ·-• Call Todaiy ! ! !
* * * * SIX UNITS
Own two s b a r p triplex.es,
Eaatside Q:Jst.a Mesa. Two ........ __ _
ment.s with 1% baths, bu:ilt-
in ran£l! and oven and b"C-
ed air beat Located near
East 11th street Sboppmg,
lDN VACANCT l'AC'IUR.
Sl.btantial return on your
investment Priced to all
CALL TODAY.
lllKHI I
Are you ''PINCHED''
for room? See how yoo
can not only ''STRETCH
YOUR OOI..t...AR" bu t
''SfREI'CE Y 0 UR
.Am.ts" in this Big 5
BR 2 bath ''GOLIA'm'',
AU the extras A:: only
S1200 OOiYN TO AIL.
'Most anyone am qua,l..
Uy.
Aliiai.. co:TS
~WALLACE REALTOllS
~141-
(0pon Ennlnp)
2 Bt fourplex
s years old. $43.500 • 15%
down. Owner will consider
aales contract 6%. % interest.
Newport ,,
Vldorl1
64~811
Vldorl1 --lido lalo 1351 l~~fii;f.'f;;~:'f.~il~...,..~~ta.~II~lll.~89<51~~02~:i;:::I 646-1111 Mou y...... 1110 Completely Furnflhod i 111': •BR.,' -'°"""' lflrllor View Hills 642°7777 _.,. $23,500 )'Ud. W/W; trplc. 0-.. Lotuno llMch 17115
' 190l u.ibo< Blvd., CM. ~~~~~~~~I' BR, Iandoc:aeod· .n -layflollt Dllflln ••BR. 111 .... + dlnl>c o.K. Brok" -M --'o""NAR_CH __ BA_Y_A_J1""""11-A1
Colesworlhy & Co.
Modern. Vkw J::1tae . Open E\lei. = ·.tttmen aD., blf.lzaa.A fJoar S BR, 2,86 QPPer', 1 BR. ·1 Ba • Beamed ceilingl LOVELY OCEAN V"ID!fi 3 ,':.:c':'."":: BAYCltEST AREA $24,950 =-'i"'.;. :::. ~ =· ;.~ ::-., ~ :i:.'::~ --:::~I ;COlt;;•;";;''~";;;;;;;;;;;;i;1;00; I : A::.-2:; ..... ~
2 _,.te,.,... • """""""' 3 -""""' ·4 ledl'OOlll5 :':."":·pane~ """"·w""E" olfoo. e KENNEDY Li"° fenced y1nl avail. 2 BR. 2 bl. ';sb mo.
landacapllw' i*OVidta bome built for a cb:rlmlnat-'MESA VERI>E. N~ pajnt· • • rm ....._.. •l-r RM tty I;======= I 3 BR, 2 be.Ula, modeni home adults 496-rn.1 bttw JN JDl
complete priV8Q' tng executtve and h1I * ·ec1-Prtvllte llvlna: morn , for. ~ xiJ~ ~ 9~ ms V1a Lido ~ Leguna INch 1705 CO\teftd J19do, 1tue at $D>
owner bas b:;aubt 11!n1nK famJbt, DelJChtfu1 mal ent!'J'w11Y, electric bailt-Arlztm. La. m.am mo. Duplo:ft Unfurn. ms
-home deco<. Wilo --. tn """"""'"" 1>m11y room I========== Da Pol t BURR WHITE, Rooltor needa:acHonNOW! b.lgef:am1!yroom,2:ftrtplao-and2fWlba.tb&. College P1rk 1115 Huntington8u.ch1400 na n t 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. LARGE2BR.,ling{e 'aw.:
1<1.<m es..,. wet 1>or. l.oali.d "' IEACH HOUSE • u.tts ~ • a11 ..., • 675-4630 ,, ... 642-2253 ..,...._ Adulla .,,eL,·.ll"
can Joe Fera'\*lll meet at ~e born.ta. * * * * ed. a iood fixer upper. Al· _ Mo. CM a.rea. 548-6086'"
Evos. ~ 11,.. am,,... tho IOO,M COLLEGE PAltK This ts , opecial houM lor ., • IOO<I ln.....,.t. Pr!c-LOV!LY 1 Br. P!us den RENT•Ls tfAlll80R Pdce ~. you'd better . · people wbo love tbe aea and eel JU&htl To .ee C.U: Dupl.Elt Refrlg. StDYe. Drp&, "'
Mi tb1a todl,y. &bnlt )'OIJI' ORANGE COUNTY'S •Open 1bm! like to take klCll walkl in &3666 nip. Ll'I yard. Water & Aph. FumJt'*I ...
smaller heme ·en our guam. LARGEST • B)' Owner the and or sit qi.DeQy at the prdena pd. $ISO. n4:
'" -p1an. 293 E. 17th St, 646-4494 233 c.rn.n o.., CM oceon'• .i,. to wat<h d>e Blue Lagoon 5411"3M or :n:i: DU ,..,., Gonorol 4800
--·---
on e.ppr'OX. 11i9 &a'el In down-•oh · b
town Coota M... clooe to I n mac:na
-&Banko1Am""8. °""" ..,.., "SELL NOW." CAMEO HIGHLANDS
I: hu jost reductd the price Special otter c.c View Home
to $152,00J. due to 1qc u rm by ~
Low down, uoellent Crlanc-am come op ar llljp Into the 1 BR. 3 1-tba, wft bar elec/ for &Jlllt. RENT
Ing • ~ .:~~tho, -11 .... lido. You'll -kit. 2 poola, guard .;,.,.,_ 2 BR ~· now .,.,..1, ~.
nicer ™ new. r.....,. Ct.I'-this WOhdttful bndld new Private Bncb. WW lea~/ !'E!llpOnmble tdults 0 QI)'. 3 Room• FurnltUN
°"11emponJy h<lme rffd> to pei.d, drapoi. All eloctrlc 4 bedroom, 2 .. th "Houae -"'...., To..,. Call· Small baby ok. No pets. 251> $25 Month'
mave Into. Two king siJe kltcllen, many extna. Im· and Home" Mapz1ne award e.zm . . A Santa Ana ATe. $130. FULL OPTI<Xi TO BUI
BR, 2 bl., dressing nn. ::ate IJCC\ClllDC)" U de-wt-..ner. Its charm.Ing and BOND Rulty Month 838--0012 No ~t o.a.o. .• ,
C""o·""Ra-1Nn,.M1.,,,AR-.nN· * ...:w * .... ,411 )'Oil ~--to the ....,, 37125 ... Cout Hwy., ' Ba. ' s.. ' """'· laland H.F.R.c. •
• b'Om -· 'lben!" en all So. Liam>• kitchen, he<i.d pool. $300. Furnitu,. Ront11'
REAL TORS ~lass ldtcben with G~ tiuilt-Mo on leue. SlT w. 19th, c.M. ~
3036 E Cout Hwy CclM Niwport llMch 1200 "' """""""· ""Y .....,..., 540-!1492 1568 w lncln, Anhm _,.....,
675-•l 662 A vth' to enjoy winter eYen1np and WEED IT AND REAP BDRM --=·==,-.,_,,•,,..,-.-_ nyt rne CUSTOM SPAN1SH wan to wan ce.rpet!:nc, 1ene-Bu!lt on 2 Iota. Wll.Ulual ~~ mo ~.ii:.th bl.t-in1 OOLIDAY PLAZA
· UPPER BAY edrear.yard,frontla1n1aod 2-tevel ~ecture. unique ~ .ftspm Ait:nt-DEl.tJXS Spadowi 1..adrm· ---·--·-·
er/mntn.ctrw~ 4 BR. tam nn. ·
C:U,..ts, ........ and land-........
OPEN HOUSE mo J't. under mlllloD l1le landlcoptnr. A ...i ....,, 2 BR o\ ""' _. plan. 2 &; Furn. opt. 1135 Plur-atll.
'l'Uel., W«i, 'I'h1rs. 1 ·' root 5 , h bdrm 30' bey at ~ $Z,235. No dmrn wtw erpis. bbg'e Ll9 mi, E.skle 2 Bo., tpl, bnm cell; Heated pool. Ample putdi:w 469 E 18 h ' _e. 1" to V ts dr rnA lod Qin. mod/kilt.it, $77,950 Minion fncd yd., patio. Adi.ts, No No chllcftn.No pdll--
.. t instr. suite w/trpl Formal vt11t1~ tenna. "'n~ Rlty (Tit) f1M..013J. 11ta. $138 YrJy 6'13-7629 l.965 Pomona, CM GU-9158 Eut Cotta Miu din. mi . .t lovely liv. nn. w/ Bkr. 3 BDltM, ctpts, 1 bath, fcod I i-=.-:;-..'=:-::=="I
143 BrOldwoy 645-0111
Evonl119s 642-1453
SELDOM SEEN
Prbd to leD at PJ,900
Call fer appotntment
(714) 642ol235
881 Dover ~. &lit~ 101
Maoco Realty 0>. Bldg.
N..,,.,.Beacb
2 Bdnns. •Pool· Boat .Yan!:· frpl. Paneled fam!J:y nn. w/ BY OWNER. f BR 3 BA, ~ &: pr. $150 MB-6'150 $127.50; 2 .Bdrnw., wtw, idc:. eov ..... Pltln • -..,. ..,., trpl., wot bar. Spon!oh $15,500 I 11'1 Got 11 tuae deck. be<ut. ""' ell. 5 ty fumbhed. A-JO!!li'·
qe. Well built. Good grice, tile ftoon. cu.rt. carp. • Forced 1lr Heiting I ocean I: C.tallna. $35,~ Bl"oktt 534-8> ·
JEAN SMITH, ......... ,.. _<Al •.. tlo. -All -Kltch<n! Only 3 :ms """" Woy. -•.;::; :; ;:;. =:..: "Cotti M-. ~
REALTOR fen. lnchcP:t S c.r.ganp. )'elU'I old: 2 car P{'llel ...-..U
Evm ,.,,.., !1'>,500 s,.lnklm! 1.ove1y .,..,,... RENTALS 543-'945 2200 ELDEN ' 646-3:li5 BY' OWNER ~1846 &'nrcp.! Autom.adc wae. HoUSM Fumlahed 3 BR 2 bath, cptl/drps, ·~ tiullt·ins. Avail Nov. L Comer Vfrlinla
........ quall\Y home -HARBOR ILVD. . OCEAN FRONT ::. ~~Ev~ ei:, Go-·· 2000 $190/mo. , ..... -New l Bit Furn. Adol~-
3 BRs + -room, 2 COST A MESA 5 UNITS Sorry 'bout That for 115,500. * ON WATER * AD Eloctrlc • """'
-------
~: ::-""' ..=. i:;: sALE oR LEAsE $47,500 ~:s: A~: ...... ""'"~: Walker & Lee 1;:,""'~.::. ~n~ =~ :.".~: .. ni·A~, N~111.~ ~"'':""R..'r:
liko yan1 with blod< wall NEAR 1"1'11 t<r. • 1900 oq. FUllNISHED OWER UNITS ban°""""" lot, I Unit ID Imm~, B 2•~ . •• • .$22.50 .Wk. .U:.0'
fencing. bu patio. Will sell ft. cormnercial l:AUJdinc, om in aood condltkn Best Wy rmt, bride wall. pa.ved and R.ent1l1 to Share 2005 mo:~ 84I~'7Q()l~-$250 .... ""'t to e stuiUc 6 BllCb .. ~ at no down VA or otben EZ divide into 2 • 3 t:tDres er on Balboa Pmln•1la, S3 yr. a;rvered lana.t, and a wide 1682 Edlnpr ..... --.
terms -asking $3),$0. otftoe spaces. ~cm AT old owner SAYS SEU. Vlrw of the Ba.)'. It'1 alM> ~Open :tve., 51Q.6lf0 SINGLE Adult temale to see. e had UtUI. Pbcm9&
I' \I l •I\ I II I l
~I \II\ \II\\
k I \ I I \ i "
ONLY $40,Dl, $7300 DOWN. TRY~~ 'vn nnwN. cl06e to a slip Alft, AND LISTING oft•· WEEK aba.r-e S b4 rm home on s.J. N •• MaldN ~ ";,.°!!· '.z ' y~t """"°""''·:;. • 1 Bd-· ~ i.. w/2 tomalot. Call atior IWporl BNch 3200 " ~ • -: l!~ rms, Askini" .... b ,slo. 4 Bit $;6,500 full price. W/w s 673-M2l --·· •• 2376 N•wpart mvd. ....
BURR WHIT,E, RNltor :"..:..":""~ ~ D;,,ORCEE wJJhoa 1o ohatt CHATEAU Lo ~i
1093 s.k.,., c .M. ..._ OKANGE COUNTY'S ORAN.'.':R~~~TNTY'S 6~-:::'ti:~. c""""1 patlo w!th 1111'....,; home w/umi ln oxchanao ~ ~' ~...!: =
LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 :::=:=:i:=:ii::z=:::i ::' =~~ ::, :;.-::-~.~~ . c:_( '1!:1#' Hot. pool. AdQlts, "!'""'
BROADMOOR 291 E. 17th St. 646-4494 • l!lo ....... sfiAi\E2 bedroom .~ In ~ !!Ml POMONA AVE., (:.ir.
2 BR HOME Bachelor cblCled.wll!..,:,=.::;; HJ! ....... Muot ... ;;I. to ""· • llEDROOM,X
, HARIOR VIEW co~~O:::sA Wood tloon, patio, -.. GI with 00 -........ "' pnMdo ...,,.,.,.,.. """' ,... real~ -......... .. . . .
Tn .• • -v.i ........ _, ..,..... Righi 1n """'· or B1ehelor Gels m1n1m ... """' FHA. quest ..... =. ro• v .... Del 0ro i:ui: l6BT ~.J..~·
.. ..._., C BEDROOMS • 0 lill ...... 116,850 YOONG men to "-2 BR. Newpcot Beocl> • °'i
Executive 4 Bedroom =::"'.!":.":: DUPLEX 1TV~.t~.=:'".!:; ::-..':'·~~·'=,:; ~SE-UNFURN i,:-.=.1!.....,..=i
Truly a 3300 sq. ft. qe. WILL TRY G.l. or FHA. 2 BR each llicie, hardwood charm, Tennl.8, Swhnmlllc 96S-H'n. {optD eve1.) 546-8103 GIRL student needs room 3 B~mome. 2 baths, ~ ~o ~ ~ if ~ ""
C.ll.forn°11 V'1lla tloon, doublo """''' IOO<I pool. Ti,. $21"1 down PmL -·~ 3 BR pt In N-·-Bad< Boy. S..Wtiful ... . "' Eaatside location. 125,M 0 ,...,..,, a ·• ""rv•• BduWul View. Will conQd.. u:rnar.u ~ ""'° Cool! Proporty B-1t!O 613-171>! "~· "~-2500 Wavecrest Drive wttb terms. 332 MIJ"llJ9"ite, CdM 673-8550 ' • er ddldren, $331 mo. ttru 1 BR. film. uti. pd. :Jh:l.
Corona dol Mor WollloMc:C1nllo, Rltro, Well locai.d 1BR with e=I· N-rt BHch 2200 Joly 7, 1969. pool. AdWll 646·.JUf,
!BROKERS WEUXlMEl ORANGE COUNTY'S !BIO Newport Blvd., C.M. NEAR OCEAN lent...,..~ dnperleo de-644-1133 E-: 644-1541 968-17<0 ...JI i. DA YE GAMBILL LARGEST '"3-mo Ev<• 64+0684 lmrt>acula>• 0up1,,.. 2 lldnno llred blMna, """"' .;.,.,. 3 BR. 211.., tpl., htd. pool: · BEAUT ........ 2 W111
HURTING 644•0020 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 """· Patlo/....i<d<, .,..,. nets, mubtel"llmon.t.PB"' dbl. pr.; condo., tam.""'· BAYC!Wrr CU. , BR. ..... Stud1o. -""91.
PROUDL y Dovor Shons' NoWftt alzed ..,..,, ,_...,,. ""'"' IH<0 """""" -mall'" thts &n.s811 doyo; 646-7002 or • "'"' 113'1 ·.•IJ• Owner has bought another Arch@d gat~, pool court $40,tm partly bnlllhe:I VA Cl' FHA pun:buii a real 213: 434-3$4 Eves. 4 ba, t.n rm, lonnal 2310 Santa Ana ·--
honle and muat sell their WE NEED We o&r tbia ~ l Bed-:yvd. ~ new d& R. C. GREER, Realty value at p; $0 din/rm, HIF pool:, )Tl Aeue. • ,
beaut. 4 BR. 3 ea. home; a room. 1% ha.th on krae dll'1 sign. 4 BR 3 bath. .VIEW 34:16 Via Lido 6i3«IOO PKlfic ~ Reelt)' Corona dtl Mir 2250 Inell~ a: pool m.mt. 1 • 2 BR .. redecof;-;~.
acp. lam. & util. rm. are YOUR HOME ner lot wtth room tt boat home by Ivan Weill WW be -841..fil& EV'el 96U36l5 "C" 'Ibomas. ReaJt« paid. No dilldrm ol':llit.I oru.v a few of the features. 6 S or treJler •• New~. ~ted 1n early· Dec S BR Bade &, home :H18 • CJIARMING 2 Br. home. 224 W. Cout Hwy. 548--5627 Area falf'l!'OUl'J(fs. 54&ilM
Profes11. lrocbcpd. w/comp. ALES All 1hLI pll• 12'a6 worlalbop. ber em-Slen'I Vl.ata, priced to tell Private patio. V•ultfd cell· NEWPORT la1lnd d\Jplcil:· C .... ___ ~
sprinkler systdn. New pa.int IN _Just $21,00J. SUOO dawn Roy.J Ward Cb. M&-UlJO at $32,500. Call Paul Nonttn 4 BEOROOMS me. Nl!W' abaa crpt•1 . tQler 2 Br .. tundeck: prt.,'. osta ,._ ,
inside & out. Carl>i., drapes 2 DAYS FHA. · . 88U8il or 382-5493 for ap-1900 S "Ht OJetom drpt. Com pl beach A park; no pets or
31 VACANT LOT polntm t to ~UIN r rt>-done. New bltn1. Brkftt cblldren; mature m•,...le. LARGE 1 BR 4. es and many decorat.or items, Call for 9flpn.189.l ~ -646--7171 546-2 3 en lee V1c1nt-Onfy t21,950 bar, Good furniture. W.Jk to 1145 Mo.,~·~··. _ ... ~~ prt.vscy, P1'81e, $JJO. us makesthisanexdtlngbome Callthoo--wlth•..-. Beecbsid&ofbigb~inSM 3 BR. ,...,,.._•miniwn, ~-5~M •-· GI ....._ __ , 1~...,.·>1 •u~ ..,. __ ""'·-~.-~-~· 0 ,. .,._,, ._ .. _ .....,,.....,. .,.., ,..70 ~ or no uuwu. e·-........... .,K on .,.al'h· NI~ __ 3 br -, den, 2 ...... t .... ~. C.M • .._.....,, ... value. Talk to us about m-ence _ CaD tbe bJSy office. emm · .:Jt:a1 er ... _ for Blufta. Near CcfM HJ achool. Sharp , ._,,. ..... ,. ....., 1~ v ........, auw. ....
ing your home in tn.de. CofJta Mesa home. Prl patio. $25,900. 6"--0lm HAFmAL REAL TY JNff, 613-6513 ba. Pool, termla: clb. No $85. 1 BDRM partJ,y ..Jl:lra:. °""" """•""'"'"'' 642-04!ti DAVIDSON Realty """· 833-ISU oxt 2'1T ..,._ '140 w..,,... -Coron• dol Mir 2250 -6'r.N433. ......,... =:::.,;A": BE.~
e LAND and COMMERC1AL 2750 HarborSB, Costa Mesa 2 BR. den, lge, llv. rm. I: BAYSIDE Vlllqe No. 11 ""°'-~~~;..,...~~·
FUNDS available. Contact OftANGE COUNTY'S 546.6460 EVt1. 549-Jaill din. nn., fpt, elec. kikh. HORSES HORSE$ 3 BR. nr. Albe:rtaoo'• Mkt. $175. 2 br, 2 be, pool, dub Nula~P= i~ld 11&
"'· RokO<. LARGEST p•tw UDO . ~ ~ ""~-~-""'" """·· .,.,,,. 6 clnpe>I. l20Q .... ollp. Owner LA 291-6261 lTI E.;.,,,., St. . 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 AKI\ C•tl Mita 1100 .,._,..., . ..,..., __ ~ 3 BR 2 bath, hllge 1'UqlUI Mo. lo June 15th: ••ail. = :
--~-ol the ~ deluxo Iii FURN. 11111. he<ch -· room, born. bu&• lot. Sell now. N-rt ShorOI 3220 .._... •---• ...._ llirbor Hi.,.lands 1.;., .,,.,..,;;;;;;;,... ,,, ..; 4 lednn., $21,000 a.,....,. Park, Ind ,,. ioo .. 1ra.i.. Call 211: -·--..-• -... -I'' N.B. dev9opn:W!1t teaturtac EZ terms • Price llluhed. MO. $lli00 FP. &M-2189 Slatet llte1lty DAILY Pn.Or DIME-A· 2 BR, w/w c.vpreta, elee bit. MOBIL HOME, 2Br,'1 Ba, Savings and Loan TERJUF!C FAMILY HOME 3 BR, .... bullt·to bar. A Walk .. St. Jotm School. lO BWFFS ... ., 3 Bit. ' U'l-3519 Evo. 5.16-1840 LINES. You can ... them In• 83T ~ve., N.B. """ llvlnr. b v' I.~,.'
--mod•' n • d«orat«'• dell&f1t. Down GI or low-,, to all. Ba,..: condo., next to pool GLEN MAR ~ pennleo • "'1· Dlal ==;==:====I washor!dry..-, u'Jlf ....
-... 211 t.tho, ""'· Jon. 11y """"' $C1 900 -Corori1 dol Mar 3250 eluded, 11'15. Adnlt
642 •ooo a1 offon um t'OOm ov"" ,., "RING" ' ' . PIXElt-UPPEll DON'T ~-a aw-, ... cmly, no chlldrat. ~ SPRING BE:m' View 1n 'nll! B.uttal 4 la 6Jt.s 1'4 betha: a·~· --l;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim I •-bautlflll """""'• .. Ov..-'-ng Bay. 1 b•, 3 .., ...., • • ""' """" -lnr • wttll 1 3 BR bomf, 3 -· 2 lrplc, after T PM. or ei.-
vl·ow Lot fBm. nn. -. ......... bit· •• --, ~.ANYTDOC'• T ""', "' -~ ••• -peW"'-· NI<:< ......., lot Dall> Pil,. Wllll Adi pallo, pool, $300 mo. Far ~"· Pilot w..t""2
In' a.u..1 ~J. .L .....,,uw vwn. ~1 10 G.I. or J'HA. RUSH! .. -.~ Rltr. ~-o ~Dial .. ~ .. -"'~
On. Of M ... V_..._,, most I, JDU1Y __... let.lures • POO -wv10 Uhr"ll'~ ~•o ~..... $55(Q) L 1or Osrlatmu: .Qi. 2 BRASHEAR REALTY 1 1,,;;;;:~;;;;;~~~===~~~~::=~=~~~F=;r.~1 outMandmg v1ow ,... ...... ,·,c·" THO S * 642°1 771 Anytlmo * Br. 2 s.. -...,,. l3500 MT-85.11 Eves. Ml-"42 ,~
looking Mesa Verde OMstry MA 2&29 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Dn. Imm. Poll. f75..28CI Owner Transferred w..... 1: .. 1
a..,, ....., -" ltEAlmlR 219.Jasmine,Cd~ ----·-· ~ STAR G_ AZER..,._ -. greens. About 1'8" ol ~ 2M W. QJUt BW7 !548.fD21' Prime bHcb loc. No rww fi. muat sell. 3 BR Eubiide Ntwport Hgh.. 1210 Mutt lell larp a BR, ~ '1'
qe on the~· $Z,fXD N~Baeb E\1t'.566M,1 nancln&: neceuary. 3 BR 2 home an IOl'leo\11 treelined atedlnJng room, almost l'le"l't' ~=:t> J/-:.~~ JI. -·':'°m
+ n 1i.e<t. Excellont c-•· 2 Sty. Cana Cod ""• ...,,... "" • '"" "°" .J _, -~ &5•&·5110 b&tbl famll)', blt·ina, re. -""--r-lot ~·· -950 -. Accohl1,...,,.,,....,, od.:111 •i:Jn&lnltbllh'I) LHM/Pool Home place, 3 car pr. o.w.c. 2Dd bullt-ln1, aeparate detached Giant 2 tty manmn on~ ner • "'UJ -· To dewlop m.soge for TtMSdO'f• t.. J.lNI
GE REALTY CHOICE MF.BA V E RDE TD • trade fm-tncome. pnee Ir J>AYIDeflU of only corner. 3 Jg. bedrm. • .Dtb ·-~!~I Jon~9!~ ..... ~ rtllldwonka:w1•p911dtr.atol'llTtlm -•ltllbo\Cll NEIGHBORllOOD. o,q ms Rltr. 646-39'l8 Eve. 6f2.0l85 $171.00 lncludln( taxec. Sub-+ famll,y room. -......,. :;"::..'·::-=... _ _:~::.:.:-:.:-=:•=-of,...; z..lloc blttll11go; • , 1-'C~l::ll IS:='I ,~--.~!..~ *' •cHENMYER m1t .. ®-CAU.S«>-1151
-Reedy to ..... 1n. Prlcoi Rm!JCD), "'""""" 3.Br. ·-"[ .,,,.. 1• ... ....,.,......... ..._,,. ... ...__.. ~ (open eves) Herltqe Real for immediate mle. Now w•1ber/drryer: cup. 2o,..tlt Ro A~
8...l•et. Wile ped-Vaemt.qulck.... TRY OFPElt .....,. oolyl38,M. -: ftac-patio .~:::....,. ii :l~
•-. -· 6 ...,_ will IOv< S Bil --ft'. Sq IM.MAC· LID ...,, 3 BR. 2 W/BBQ pit. l2tllO °""" ~Jt" flt... :f'& Nlce F.ut-l&st.--opb.,bcy,A>b1(129.SOO. -•lJvl"lnn.ftre, ha ln btlutllul MOhtlcollo •• , ""JUNG" Ind. all -coll•· 7' l!Gool ""
"""· Woll-l>lt --.., ~1 51111 -. I<:• lot !30.SOO. condo on""'"""' Rd. LotJ 1~... SPRING -'-IMI. ol 111.toO· •X: .-.,..,.
""",.., 3 ll&-.t. ----.-11u1 lllllo Ce. nt .-., wm ""1 -or « • RE•'""' 1,.:;-0,,.:.:",-~--~-1 lif: ~~ 1~ !"""-~ ~ "!::': Be REALTY 1lltl E. --· -unN:n. ANXIOUS·--•• -~ l·BR. a..to.. """'"' .. '" I'"" .,;;.;.-"' ¥-•ttlltlir,Ql OIUolt J..U• . ~ teft't«,., W/9/ ept., bltm, Jh 40f ~
Grahaiw It~ 11 ~~Bi~'""" ---.. CM. .::::.-::1111.111 !i~ !~ ~= Neor N.B. -Ole. ' SPECIAL -'21.500t EiolhlM, C.M. ""'· rm., & ,!'tt:,,ld,~ <IDT lflwn IW -· s .. Lo -nlA. Prtactpla """ "'ii':! "1l'!!......
SUIMIT NO DOWN N.., Oudwl. S BedJ'ooms. kttdlfn 6 d!Dttte. cc.. co Br. J ba. 1* 2 Br. <kt'MI Gill)'. 53&-Jll5l ~=~ #~ IO::--
P1mfly ,.,_ 0r ..,._ -., .....,, 111 .. tbo. 121.!00 lchoo! • ""-· 1.ove17l~Vtt~A!lt-~~S5l~.::m!..!54f.!:]H~.,;1·1~=~~~==:5I ,._ ,._. "'
4 OR • 2 botho, ...... """ Nloo locatlcll -°""""'" a_. w-. -· yan). Co.-lot. -PLANlilllG to_, r ... ·u Pounlllft Volley· 1410 21'~:. -D...
1'&1l"lled -,_ with en! to eYWJ-· 3 bed-mm> -rrs.l!iM NEW llop1'lr. J ho bltns llnd ID allt-tllllllW pl tF I!~
-bddt a...._ -._ • ma.. ...,... . · o1c. Garoc"-o...1e ,_· ..,._ "' ....,., O•lllllld COltNElt LOT _ -_e.. 1111~
tttuf ,...S with SJ" pool .._ ....., aWlltflls -<rA1m11: PARK mim, 11 x-_ c.11, OWNJJi Ada. 011c1c --· lot' boll. -w lnll« "· ,i:;i..
IM.500 bnl""1 ,,_ 1-&d S --"'°"' lift"'!" ~ DAIL! Pllm ODIS.too -J11.\JO[ --£:::i\., ,_ IOI!!_ Pelt 1111'111 Dllw ""' """""' -. c.m. --..rib • ..... • -1 BR -• 5-um:s. Yoa -... -OK ._ ""',.., ... Wiii £~ · II-· =~ .... ,. -·-·'*"' -.... ---llll ......, tor 1-. """--.., ,... -. ..,,. Dial lo -.... IChoull.-1 '°' '°' ,...; ~ ..
Utli w-Dr. -out. No _,, G.T. lfO.l'r.!O Wl2J Sldl c.M. Qy ........ --Bl\ ""' -~.----!~==~==121=°'""=='&1= ... ='·=="=-=·=====-..; TAllllLL 2955 Ho,._ ~,....,..Id-· ,-OLWiE m Ra L. Hodell Rlq, 117-
MARINW
---.-. -
--
. ..,: •
'
--. --------------·----~--------------------------'----""°--
I
,.
. ' ---....... \ ... i.....t x: .... ......-;"'!·;:::;--..
Mo~, OcLOLtr ~J.. lt;Od
SERvlCE DIRECTORY RfNTALS --ltl!NTALS -RENTALS -~ RENTALS RENTALS -* * * * ,. .. v.~·· DIRE ORY
· . Fumlshld Aoto. Vnfurnl"""' Apto. Unfurnllllell Apto. V~furnl-Ae!*:. Unlurnlahed • • Accwnllftl 65001 _c:.;o;;.n::.;t•c:•.ctol::.;;.":.;c--...:66=20, 1 Mt• Meaol 4100 Co1t1 MHl 5100 Ea1t lluff $242 Huntington IMch 5400Huntlngton Beach 5400 • CX>MPLtrE .tuclcliG SerT e ROOMS ADDITlONS e
STI E T H ..-. .-------------_. tbru P/L I: bat sbeet •• all L. T. Construe~ ~·-new 1 BR. for 1ln1l,, PRE Ci awn °"* ~------Fed A &.le qrtrb' ~ Family roonu, kitchen er ~~ odul~ 1135 Mo., HARBOR ':~~.;..2i'{,"i!:.."~ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Fed/Stal> lnconle tax uni~. S!Jlgle story or 2: l.l~'~·,:N;•:.,:-~~e.~613';;;,,1'06:=:-:-I Medallton ell deetric. POOL JUST COMPLETED rtbama. &te bf hr or mo. plana cUJtom de1!gned.. For
1 ~. ':':"~ • GREENS >-cu aor. ""'1 l\lrla at • ONE BEDROOM • 2 BEDROOMS l==-;;,:====:=:0-1 eetJm.t:' :,~~~phone
... Mo. Olll• :tlS: """1'°' BACHELOR . UNFURN. ~~:..-Woy, N.B. FROM $135 MONTH BabWsJttlng 6550 Addltlono * Romod•tlng If lltdilf 4230 from $100 . UNFURNISHED-ADULTS -NO PETS YOUNG ...-...-. boby. "'d H. c..,.,;ck, L;c.
incl. util. Col'Of\a .. Mer 5250 • CARrns • DRAPE$ ; tit ~ wk• days Jot work:in; 87J.6041 * 54$-2110
"' WESTCLIFF
RIVIERA 1 . 2 • l BDRM. • root • PRIVATE PATIO couple w/l chUd. wm oeed c I Cl In 6625 • HOTPOINT APPLIANCES tnnap. ClU bet. 8 p.m. arpe .. " g Jo-URN. A UNnJRN. .,, e RlaEATION AREA e Whadtlya Want? .WhMltyl Gett , 646-6958 ,
BR. """--'°""q,
....... -· H'°'tod Pool l8IXl Westdift Dr., NB -H'"'"' Pools, Oilld CU. ~~,. HUNTINGTON SEVILLE SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR .;;CHI.=;;,,W~;:=:.,CARE=.-, °""tor-=moth=o=-1' ~~~;~: .... ~ ~··:~t
Center, Adj, to Sboppl.a& -!\,. 16112 Sherlene 847-74hl Huntin9ton Beach · NATURA1..IORH SWAPPEllS who have to work and do work, call Sterlin& fOi"
No pets allowed ff Ed' Special a.te not want to 18.ve their brlghtn~s! M2-8S20 7100 ~tenon w~. at Hiil' ON TEN ACRES I ltt Signal Wett of Beach o 1ng•r 5 llna _ 5 tlmM _ 5 ltudcs chldttn just a 0 y w be r ·e, ;;~~;;,,;;;,;:===I
4250 bor A Adams, Costa Mesa. 1 A 2 BR. Fum A Untum. •ttOlS from l ro1dway Center) 11.ULU-AO •un INCLUOli ';-:;·;;;;~· =~--,..--Gardening 6680 1
d•I Mir I~ Ftplcs I Pri I Patiol /~~ ::='.~ ... 91'1411'•"=--. ~ ~-=-.:.= 18ABYSITI'ING my home,
studio llPL rtfrt&, no I~ Pools. TeMla • Contnt'l Bk· REAL ESTATE ,__,.OTHtN<a FOii IALI -TIIAOU ONLYt day or hour: Victoria/ •JAPANESE GARDENING
looking. Pvt. pe.tla. nr bch. Excdlent. perk • like sur-fat. 9 hole ?utt/Green. Gener.I General PHONE 642--5671 Pl&eentia C.M. are a, Service Cleanup, Landscap.
L.I.? 673-3189 eves. rouodinP 1or adults nqut.r. 900 See. Lane, OdM 6"-2611 R t 1 W ~• 59901---------To Place Yeur Trader'• ParHIM Ad 642:-1075 .. '... ______ 1 7ln;;•;:·;."'~';,·':.:°":;:,,alt=;::,,-'c:'::·'":;:·::::
Ing pe&O!l .l qulel (MacArthur nr •. Co.st Hwy) en 11 •niwu Industrial Rental 6090 ~ ~700. equity ~· 100 acres nee.r Cblna Lake, CHILD-care my h 0 me MOW"ING, Edging vacalawn.
•lbo9 4300 Diacrlmlnative Tenants I-• DELUXE in CM prt borne head 2 aty modem llicel.Y clear. WANT clear or near Be.I.bot. laland weekly, 4 or s Gen'\ clean~. Hauling. 11;;;;;;;~c:-'.:mJ;;~d~..,...~ 1. 2 I 3 BDRM. APl'S. Lido Isle 5351 Man only, must haw car. M·1 CORNER furn cabin, walk to lake, clear House, Unita w Cbm· Yttr old as pla,)alate tor Odd Jobs. * ~955 ~ew, QCt"Ufront 3 BR I POOL. NO QDLDREN $15. wk. 546-{ll89 vlllage, Ba Sffi mo. for boot, m'l. Call Art Gtovinettl mine. 6T3-Tl25 CLEANwUp, tree a er v, ~. beautifully tum., bit· MARTINIQUE GROUND ti.oar 2 Br. 2 Batta MESA Vude; nice rm. to 16th &. Pomona. WW build to house or ? evea. 53MSIS Bkr. 673-7.W 673-9187 LI'PE Hauling-Trlrmping rototil, grading, sprinklers, ~. include dish'wuher. B-waterfront apt. New drapes abare Twin beda. suit on all ar part of 35,000 Have Laguna Beach view 3 BR 1%. 00, Monticello Tre.ah, Gan11:e Qeanups lawns, haul'g spray. 64&5848 ~. dwnb waiter, washer, GARDEN APTS. &: carpet. Unturn • leue • lS86 W. Baker, CM 546-3229 sq. 1t. I lot near l"l!nter of town. Coo.do, cpt.s/drpa,-bit-ins, :,i Name 'it-R.ea.aonable ~· . ...,., •124 11th & Santa Alla, C.M. $.1511 mo. I='========= I Leon Vibert, Re11 tor -.. ud •••• w 1 pool "''lMl'I __ ,..., "'-"' BIG JOHN 642-flm .... ~ n1,ouv. lncl esp.......... an s ............ '<"{~ ........... e
A.GNITTCEN'I' view on Call Mra. Hendenon fi46.55C2 ~Rl;:";.,,=====m.3585=;::=~1Gunt Homes 5998 548-(X)88 anytime 4 Br. home in Costa Mesa. tor 3 or 4 BR home, car, * UTE HAUU!NG * 1-aY.lbr,gar,util.pd.~[= Huntington ... ch 5400 PRIVA·-TE=Cbe=::..,...-,-&-,-..,-y lot1 6100 4~1561 l'Os,or?Ownr/Agt54&5.51K) Clean up,~* est.
e. $150 mo. Last or June. l ---.i mom for ambulatory "1.ady. ="'--------1 F;-ee &; ~ leased medi· M-21.one SCOJ' Blda:, Lot 170 * ~
NEWLY Constcl, 2 bt. apt Nici! surroundi.oga &: lovi.11!: $6,500. Laguna Beach ocee.n cal bldg. $125,<XXl. Want im· x170' 8601 E:liaon, HS tor CHILD CA.RE. MY HOME.
O.EAN Bachelor Apts. HARBOR from nis. Jmt fln, suit, care. 548-4753 view lot for l'etiremMI, proved Commercial or In-M-1 Bldg or lot in CM. Inc. Monday-Friday. 2525 Elden,
: AU util incl $75 up a&ilts, nr everythin&! 13231-==========: I leverage investment or 2d. dwtrial. Roy J . Ward Co. $ill) mo. Don't bother ten-1.,::CM::;,. ~"".c';,.C~=~=~-I 315
E. Balboa Blvd. TOWN HOUSE l~H'..-~· ~on~A~v~'_c··~°"~::.Br_•~•-hJ'Mi":"sc.:::R~e~n~t~1l~•::::::5::9":;--99 home. $1,<XXI. dn. $00. mo. 646-0228 ants! 646-612'l, 549-00'12, 548--• BABYSITTING, MY home A 673-!IMS I Ada.ms, Mgr. Apt A. (TI4) 49'J.3844 Palm Desert. 3 bdrm l%. 0'268 on Wallace, Costa Meea. ~Yearly. fi1>lc· ~:;; 2217 Harbor near Wilson 1 8:'· dplx. cpts, ~s, bltna STORAGE GARAGE 6150 ba. Fum. $34,500. F.quity Wantinoomerproperty, have Reliable. 548-1001
OO :ti7~6 ~3 O 6 ; e 2 BR. SUO to Sill Priv. fncd yd, patio. Gar· R1nch.. $700). Can add! Want: bse, six 5 Acre tracts near Palm BABYSITrING My borne.
!n..u78 • Heeted pxl). • Adults onlJ Adlts. $135 Mo. 842-1612 $20 MONTH apt, land, ??? Myers, Springs. Value $60,0CO will Infants pref. Nr Hart:lOt &
• N. -·--.. ,. --~·-· ELBOW ROOM 6'1M156 trad• ail"' -• ...um.. :,Adams, C.M. ,.,,...,,. ~~ '" -~"' $1nt1 Ano 5620 400 North N ........ ljlvd., NB ,..;.ll3! Untl·ngton 11-1ch 4400 H ···!) 2" A f·-" r h-~· 3 HAVE 3 BR. house, R-3 lot 9· k gw (near Hoeg osp1i.a ,.. cres, anwY o c wu, JD wu·•-Wilm~-. ~••d ric , Mllsonry, ltc. NEWLY DECORATED SANTA ANA TOWERS """ '"'"'-" IL-, ... _ & 3 I: Balboe Blvd. commercial; la ~"'""' "' UTILITIES PAID ~,.Ilg,. Adult u·.1-~ Realtor ~ BR., 3 ,,..u.., car garage: & •··tt..-. ~~•t ..,...,.,.,. ...... 6560 2 BR. w/garagt" -bltns -di&-.-.-•">& country home, 8 min. from equity $100,<XXI; trade for uu ~.... J~ ~ Um. Bach. l 2 BR. fum. posal -water paid. 1500 Sq. ft.: 2 Br. 2 Ba. Cen-Income Property 6000 freeway, with space for fam-waterfront home, Balboa-change. Eager to deal! BRICK, Concrete. Carpentry
Gardening Service
Experienced. Free Estimate
Call 847-Mra
EXPER. Gard!'!ner Comm. &:
Rea. Free est. Fall spec.
$16. mo. 6'ti-l-497 aft 5 PM
OJt & Edge Lawn
Maintenance. Llcensed
548-48(Wt/6-45-2310 att -4
LOW COSl' MAINTENANCE
MOW-EIX:E-SPRA Y
FERTil,..IZE 962-7349
European Landscaper
"Ibe Finest at Reasonable
Price -496-3383 Even~
Japanese Gardening
Professiona.l Maint. Land·
scaping. Cleanup. 646-6ffi.3 lrffi unfum. Hid. pool. 2116-F Placentia Ave .• $115 tral heat, elevator, subter.1 ;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;; I ily pets; for more inlorma· Newport. Agt. 213: 795-9EM Owner I agent. ~2629 or CUstom cabinets. s ma 11 b2 Kno:rcville, Apt. D, H.B. ...,""-B r..--tia Ave .. nN::. gar $250 Mo. incl. util. · pl ll GI il Z13434-SQ38 jobtl OK Free Est. 96U94S General Services 6682 ~2914 e ~ ~---.. "" 1323 No. Spurgeon 547-781M 2 HOMES & APT. tion, ease ca en n Want 19 to 26' travel 1ra· -e l5TI..B Orange Ave -$110 BR Thompson er, twin becb. Mwit be '62 3 Bel. rm, 11,!i ba, $34,500.
BR Mobile Horne. Beach • 636-4120 • OS Orange Ave, CM, 3 BR, 2 ' Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. or newer. Have '62 Lincoln, Cor. lot. l.ea$E!d. Newport
ik.-ation. -Cbildren OK. $130 -G-,-.-.-"--.=A.:d_u-lt-'L-1-.-L1guna Beach 57 & Bach. ~t.l)))Live in one 18.18 W. Chapman Ave. 4 cir, turq. all pwr, Xlnt Hgts. Equity, $12,%i0. Want: "'--·ic., "Yes" Unlimited •, utU. ~ c1-s v1ng -.-rent two """ ,..__ """' _ _, r::•o wvw. A ,_ I--"' ,.,, M ='
11\J 2 BR 1•1 bath I ts 100 CLIFF DRIVE ' ___:__ ""'"'15e. ............ .. ......... J'IO"<IUll• p .... , ........ · · · yers. Buainess men -do you need ·~"•l0Apt,2Bratbe·~. '~ ,wwcarpe' -"-•1-Ev•·Wlmd•"'°"-1 ~'-"'-'-'-'-"-~-~~ o~~
,.,.,..,..... dUl ........., -'-• staJ LUXURY FURN/UNFURN TRIPLEX .JO .,..,,,~, "' "'"°""'"' Coin op Mlundrornat, fluff, -=·~......,·~==~==='I someone to do your Typing? th •... available also. 219 ...... vi~. ..,.,....... rcase I~~~~~~~~~: I "THI SP CE "' and pool Yearly Lease. 1 &: 2 &Irma. EASI'SlDE, C.M. 2 BR each fold, dry clean, best SA loc.. S A RESERVED Bookeeping? a Secretarial
th St. H:B. No. T MeS:. East Apt. Yearly Lease. l bedroom plus vacant land for expan. Citrus Groves 6175 equip dear. $150 rent, Wl-FOR YOUR ' AD. PHONE Substitute? Dial 71-4: 842-7341
'·•uni •··ch 4705 145 E. 18th '642-:Jl74 steps to ~ Ir Shops lioo $48,500. limited potential. $SM dn 642-5678, ~DAY. or 847-5026. "YES" is our
I llaal -Oc:eanview from every Apt. --Need Tax Sheller•. trade bat for 'l''l' 545-9007 San Oemente Income -2 middle name. 24 Hour serv. BERMUDA VILLAGE ~-fl~ mo ·~ lease "'''' • 2 Jo•-2 of"••• 2 300 Services Offered BR 2~ BA, all elec built· u.V1U......, ~r· 4 PLEX Corona del Mar. 3 bdrm+ "' .__.,_
· vi er-Spacious Z &: 3 Br. Aptl. 494-2449 East o ... St CM 2 tw Apts -Will take TDs or s. Panoranuc ~ CN ..,.., ., • • -o 20 Ac. Orange Grove. Prime 2 bdrm apt. Leased. Equity smaller property. Make of· Cerpentering ioldng Aliso Beach. Mature ~p•g' ~~•Rbl. tinChil' ~·.,a,°"n OKlo. Z BR with gar., near Boat BR's, 2 -one BR's 8 yrs old corner property in River-$12,000. Want: Hse, land, re-f ··w -1.. .... ..... _ _, SI.I "" ........., Can be ~ & •A ~~ -....t •~ $41500 er cas h not nece5S1Lry. A-l 01 ta.......,. no a1lw .. n :D. ,,_., yon, a .... -, wwn. •~ -&"""" ......... me • · side. Strong apprt"Cialion po. sort,??? Meyen Call -494-32&2 ·
Buslneu Service 6562
6590
PROFESS. Window, walls &
th·. cleaning: busint!SS,
resid., &: construction
Crystal Window Cleaning
Free Estimates 5-48-8737
HAUI.JNG, Yard clllUp, odd
jobs etc. FREE gar & attic
clnup tor salvagable items.
Jim. 548--5.125
e 1 DAY M!rvice. Home &
e.pt. cleaning. Crpts, walls,
windows, painting. 642-8520.
Sterling for brightness?
bi:l..3'f!ii SllO up. mo 1se. -494-7/JSl Graham Realty tential. Asking $12,000 Ac. 6m1S6 · Carpentefuii::. Any size job 2214 College Ave. Apt. 2, Mgr. 'd 1 Bay Vu, Custom Condo hrn. Phone GorOOn 847-67-45 Haulo"ng 6730 llnl MONTH, from Nov. ht REAL ESTATE N•ar N.B. p-~ . .,. ""< Will accept prepa.1 lnteres. 316 ~ • :;::::;:.:.:.!!c_ ___ ...::;c::.:i ~ I & .,.., """" ~~ THE FOX COMPANY acres . ........,. per acre. 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2·000' • 2 sty, REPAIRS * "~ •TICJNS • Feb. 1st; ....... ..,.ete Y 2 BR, Mesa Verde Area. _G~a!!n•!;r~a~l-----liii!!;';"'i'~";;:::;"'::i;::"~;' I All or part. Want: houses w/all luxury features,. $10,· CABlNETS, ~Any''7ze .w.. CLEAN Lots, garages, etc. eaut. furn, 2 Br., 1% ba; $110 PER MONTH ..... 990 SELL M-2 zone 8000' bldg. 2863 E. Coe.st Hwy, CdM apartments, or what have 000 eq. tor Jot, ms, car
25
~ Tree removal, dump, skip
'l'looking Emerald Bay. Milts only, qWet! 646-S&U Rentals Wanted 5 Lot 1'10 x 170! 8001 Edison, 673-9495 or 642-0969 you? Myers, ??? 645-1111 yrs. exper. backhoe, fill, grade.
-.,. <M-S330 3 ~·~ l" ~·•-*********** HS, $-41,00 or trade for M-1 673-6156 962-8745 ~no...., -n Dtlu"" Bl~ or lot in CM. Income Acreage 6200 Magnificent Exec. Mansion! Cement Concrete 6600 .::=,::_=~-~~~~
!'EW FunDmed 2 BR 2 BA From $130, See Manager RENTAL WANTED $410 mo. Don"t bother CANYON LAKE VIEJW Superl) archit. masterpce,1-;.._-..:'---'---LITE Movin!l: & hauling.
11 elec built-iris . 116'2W.Center,Apt.l,C.M. 1 ~• .._~22 ~•""""" R.E.S1lesmenWanted LOT with lake privileges tine.st const, 4150 sq. tt.OONCRETEwot'k,pooldecks Yard-garage cleanup.
anonmlc view"overlookina: LARGE 1 Br. near OCC &: Less than $90, utils included. ~ .,...,.....,~ ' J't""""'""• Established Real Estate firm, S8,!:60. TR.ADE tor pick·up $175,00. (eq $100 M) Trd, speds.Jity! Patios -Block ==~*~"':;'·="="'=*"===-I iliso Beach. Mature adults South Coast Plaza. Crpts, Responsible, worklngcrillegel========= specializing exclusively in or what have you. 646-0681 carry 2nd. Bkr. 54T-6-469 work. 642-1'197, 5el32-4 :::
""'·no cbldm $185. $3755 .-... s'-e-..,""' c•n '"""' student (ex-G.J., over 21) B • p 6050 , ....... ,, __ _, -• f undevelnn Housecleaning 6735
""'YD• '"""'" -•.u.i· .,...,..!M£J trying to get to and thru law _us1n~1s roperty l ...... .,. .., .... -..e 0 vr · * * * * B~T in concrete. Walks, ·~ Sbdo $85 2 BR. dlx. D)5 Coolidge. hool & riri wil ( -ed acreage for residential !'!!!!!'!!!!!!!*!!!l!~!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!l!!'~!'!!!!\!1!!~!!!!'!'!~*~!!!!!!I pool. decks, Doors, patios. JACK'S hskp'g, Fir buffing, o utl pd. Cook'a: OK. Nr I>rps, q>ts, bltm; adults !C wo ng e . no LARGE rornmercial lot, pav-development, needs coosci· 642-8514 crpt clean'g. Windows, etc.
hnn'I· 492-1845 $145. 549--0433: 5-46-4021 eves ~~ now -or ever4 ~-~ ~ ed, w/bullding & restrooms, entious, honest, 1ull time BUSINESS and ANNOUNCEMENTS 1.;;;;~====== Comp hse clean'g. 548-7243
unsics-• ,........,., · suitable for do-it·yourseU salesmen, Experlenced and FINANCIAL and NOTICES Child Care 6610 IENTALS 2 BR&: garage w/f~ yd, or mostly tw'n. old house, carwasb drive-in dairy pr· R.E. license required. c.om-_;...._;.:.;c.;.;.;;.. ___ 1--".c..;.--.:..:.----l·::;;;c::...=;;.:. ___ .;;c..:.; Ironing 6755
A-... Unfurnished $125 rno. l?S E. Wilson, gar. apt. or private apt. Any age, etc'.. at 891 Broadway, mission basis. Bus. Opportunities 6300 Found (frff Ads) 6400 DUTCH Lady, LlC day care
!t ,..,. C.M. No pets! 642-0>30 kind of references yoo want. Laguna Beacfl. Asking $500 DfKE AND COMPANY, INC. -• . my home. GOO:! meals $4. ffiONmG IN MY HOME
ner•f 5000 LARGE 2 BR. & 1 BR. Lea.se OK. Leave message mo. Chester Salisbury, rutr. Phone 646-963l for appt. Going Into Bualneu? FLUFFY Olarcoal grey cat day. 1978 Rosemary, c .M. $]..25 per 'hour l~~~~~~~~~jj l~(~lurng)~:~cp~ts~, ~drp<z:~· ~blln~·~
1
at 542-5291. 67J.69<XI Golden opportunity ill beach found vicinity of Mariners 646-5219 545-6239 r 988 Missioo Apt. 1 549-~ ~·~*'"*~·~·~·~*t*~*t*~*t..J;:==:===:==:=;===;:;: 18 ACRES magnificent OCEM area. Phillips 66 Service l~P~Ark~. ~5<~18~4~971~:-==:=:~I~~~:::::==~~ =========-1 I: VEN DOME NEW Duplex; 2 Br., carp., ./ FAMILY returning trom Buslneu Rent ii 6060 ~:;, :.·new~~~!~ Stations for lease. UOl Contr11ctor1 6620 Janitorial 6790
dtpl, bltrui., gar. OUld OK. Europe in Dee desire year . , __ & th Bayside & Marine Dr., 1_L_ ..... 1 ______ ::.640.:.:.l:l•;;;;.;;;;.;;;;.;:;c;_~-.:..:.::.o r ••
1
M . I . t
$100 Mlonth 543-8572 lease on unfurnished 34 br WAREHOUSE 2-400 sq. h. + tonetica puuit 0 er con.st. Newport Beach; 321 Main & Licensed Contractor LOW """" am ·· pain · ~MakereterVatiolllNOW !fl •-ft Jn~ hdtp fl.7(00 per acre Consider Or H 1 •-• '"" s VIC. Newport Blvd. & 18th, Residential -O:>mrnerclal <:leen.Res-comc'l, indust. 24 ~ d d house, EmeraJd Bay or view o ce; ............ sq '-"' . ' · · ange, un, • .c><.·u; .u.TO • _,. 1 ., .... wly Re ecorate Newport Betch 5200 location. Availa'bl.e Oct 16-24 yard. 1855 Laguna Cnyn Rd. part trade {n4) -499-384-4 Brisl'OI & Wilshire, Santa AU beag e type <k>g, White W· Maint & Repairs. Free F.st Hr. serv. Lie. 6-4>2833
"' Sh I P k to discuss. J . A. Ca;nn.. -494-8066 or see broker SACRITTCE! 160 ac top Ana. Contact: C huck /blk & brn marking. Red 673-2129 ...,OMtO oppng, 11r PO Bo 50~5-farmland Tu'·-~-•· Cr d collar.OCl!censeNo.18495. •R J ~~••» e • Spe.clous 3 Br's. 2 &. B/B ~~..?.· n..:.~ X ' Offlc1 R1ntal 6070 ' ...... ., .....,.......,. ow er Could ~bly be hurt ,,.,,. · · ovr"' "uu" ~Swim Pool, PuVgreen .._u.. uau..,, Oleap water. 2 h s e s . TI-4: 772-7110 71-4: '71-4-100 4043 ....,.,... · ........,.. Room Add. Kit. Bath cabs. iiFrpl, Indivllndtyfac'b 'BEDROOM. 2 batb, .,.., FREE SERVICE TO LAGUNA BEACH l: ..... =""==Ow="=·====IRENT """"'""' .....,. LOST old'"''""'·""'"" 613M59 • 548-lml
845 An1Mlm Ave. Adpoou!l.•· ~: •• 3 car garage. OWNER-MANAGER Air Conditioned M-·nt. & Datart 6210 shop, $45 wk. Util. pd. 2 Contents only va1uable to
STA MESA 642-2824 la"""' ON FORES·i' AVENUE -chair. 646-2544 o R-·-~ •••7u9 Bay & Beach BROKER Desk spaces available In ~-;;;;;:;:;;;;;;,;;;::;;;·.·;.-I========= wner. .,.... ... ..,, ,,.._'" HOLIDAY PLAZA You select your own tenant newest office building a: LOST 3 months ago. Cream
Ir ~a~~~ 6~~~~:~~ ACTl~:..!:a~TALS ~~ 1oc:e':~.1n !~~. WHAT IS? ~:I :st: ~"::4: ~~"°~=f.='=m""~"-,l'.r-'"_ . .:~.,.'-~311::1d::.1;...,_ .. _.
1 !td. pool. Ample parking WANTED 1 BR un!urn Apt, tioned, carpeted, beautiful HOME, refinance exlsttng SIAMESE Male Cat lost Fri.
No children .. no peta 3 BR. 2 Ba. Steps to oct!an. C.M., Newport, Corona del paneled partitioning. Two SCARCE is the word loanorobtaina2nd1'Dk:lan. El Camino Dr. C.M. area.
g.. Pomona, ad 642-5lli8 Nt>. shops. $:.!(Kl Mo. yearly. Mar or Laguna. To $100 mo. eFntrances: Fron~!"'_,_ on for many things but even FREE APPRAJSAL & Reward. 54(),.(Bi8.
I 3 ~ l'L .......... No ~J,. uo -OR Gar or ..... --neceMary. orest Ave., rear ..,a ..... to PROMPT SERVICE ......,,,.,, n .,... ... .,,, ·..-.,,......,.,.,.,, .._.,,....., M 'pal king lob $50 moreSCARCEi.sRECREA·
ed. patio; w/w, blt-ins. 673-6'169 EVtt; & weekends. 642-08> alter 5 p.m. unci par · TIONAL LAND in Califor· Sattler Mort.gage Co., Inc.
f\ildren OK. Brok er RETIRING per month for space. Desk 336 E. 17th St .. Costa Mesa. 2 & 3 BR. apts., Irpl, C&Il>. Marine Sergeant and chairs available for $5. nia! How wou1d JOO like to 6-42-Zln 545-06ll. ''COAST SINGLES11
drapes, bee.m celling s. needs 3 BR home. CM·FV-Buslnesa boura answering OWN YOUR OWN LAKE? Eves. 673-786S 642.1157 Recently formed group Adult
$ · 2 Bdrm. garage apt. B1ock to beach. S159 & up. "HB"'==""'::.'·;:5<().8:=='="====I service available for $10. single people. Meeting each
I lrtially fumlatlt!d. ADULTS ONLY. 673-1909 -5995 All utWtles paid except You find desert, water and w e-d n es day evening
Personals 6405
Read
DAILY
PILOT
Broker 53'-6980 3 BR Built-ins, beamed ceil-Rooms for Rent telephone. mountains In N~rry ~ort91ge1, T.D.'1 6345 OR.ANGE COAST YMCA,
C sta Meu 5100 ings, tireplace, 2 baths. 1 BAYCLIFF Motel _ winter DAILY PILOT Springs, CalU'. 118 Miles East $3,SOO. lst TD . $35. mo. 2300 University Dr., c
block to beach. rates effective: S27.50 up. 222 FORES'I' AVENUE of Bantow). UNIQUE? ind. S% 3 yra. Lag\.Sla Newport Beach at 7:30 PM.
2 ~. pUn apL ~ q>ts lkpg Goody,in Co. (714) 772-9150 Maid service, TV. pool. LAGUNA BEACH ocean view lot. Low dn. Sponsoring Social Get-
, -: tns, Jg pvt. patio, pool NEW soundproof 2 Br, 2 Ba: 455 N. Ne-NpOrt, NB 646-3265 494-9466 ·Freeway all the way! 2 Hoor lO; disc. {n4) -499-3S44 togethers fur purpose of
c · 1 • Offi S • drive from this area. 5 Ac· meeting ea.di other and nwts, oo pets S 2 D. Across from Coco's. 11i65 LOVELY Home near ocx;, Ce pace sharing ldE"l.s and ,,.
· ; k..."-163 Irvin• 11~ to $200 "'" ~39 res, 1D Acres, 2'D Acres, 80 M W nt·• 6350 L °" · \l'OVV" tia_s nice room for rent Kit Available Acres a\1"8.Uable, frnm r,m/ oney a _ .u:c:__..c:.:.o.o 1 pcriencea. Future of Group
is AlU 2 Br. 1~ Ba. Studio, BAYFRONT, fa:bulous view; priv. prefer woman. $60Call Ma 1 S In 1 d acre to S1200/acre. Tunns. OOMPETITION n 0 w ex-determined by you?-soical
I ' ~new! Opts & drp8. Nr boat dock, pool. dlx. 2 Br. 21..,:"'c:>-092lc,.=:.="c:'":....:'c.....--~I r ner1 av gs n Call OWNER 8-47-6640 eV"eS., =nding; Thi5 proves their needs and ideu. Party each ~'-& South Coast Plaza, Ba. $275 Up. 675-2805 Bkr GIRL, single or wltb 1 child. Loan Buildl2ng, New· after 6 P.M. ask for Lee. ~am a success? Plus SW1day afternoon. For in· """;:::,·· ""'"~.;.==~---~I MANY \"VONDERFUL OP· $60 month 2335 Elden Ave., port Beach. nd floor. (Anytime weekelds) they passed St.COO.cm. net formation call OR.ANGE
1 k 2 BR., elec. mnge & PORTUNIT.ID: have bffri Costa Mesa 42c sq. ft. 1500 sq. ~. ~~~~~~~~~~ 1 · 1 than 3 yrs going' I COA51' YMCA 642-99!'Kt A
o n, new qJts. Nice area discovered ln Cla.al.fied Ads. ROOMS $15 wk . & up. Bach. 1v1ilable. Contact Mr. .;:; ~v!ss same Prott'ram ~nd l-*~-=s"·,--.1,-"'A'"d..,...~lts--.,..1
1 o .c.c. $125 and $1«>. Tum bade tD ''Bu.llne81 o~ i>tuc:ho apts SZ!.50 wk. up. 2376 Redding. Mount. & Desert 6210 need $4000. to st•rt rolUng, rng e U
oortunities" NOW! Nl!'WpOrt Blv., C.M. 548-9155 MARINERS working assistant prefen-ed. YlouO can meelt ... th'~ 2 tloh SAVINGS AND LOAN DUPLEX. Each side 2 Call me at (TI4} 529-3602 new peope Ja mon 1lboa 430081lbo11 4300 Btlboa 4300 bedroom. Air conditioned. and every month fur the 5 -f::.:;"--;;;:;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;:;:;;;;:;.:;;;;;;;;::;;--_:~~ / 642-4000 Bricked patio, 6 foot fenced after 1:30 PM.
WANT 115.1))) lst T D , riext 5 yean ... Pre-aelect-MODERN OFFICE SUITE rear yard, double carport, ed. to please you. f'or lnter-~/iQ"I) i..,._1 _ D-Cfi'Q.9 Sl'i5permonth.Slngleoltlces tiled showers, new pa.Int building tor 2 AAA tenants. esting recorded me-ssase, p~ ~ }YJ.. ~ Jj W from ~. Se<!t service, job. Located in El Centro. 12Q,COO total value. M.r. dial S36-6200.
I ~ ' f
f.
Zerox. carpets, air cond., $18,300 -each unit returns Jones 847-1266 Eves·
Bo&ee.SimpleS'cnnnbledWordPuzzleforaChuckle cleaning service, parking. SIOO re'lt monthly. Owner, STh-5839 Attr. Expert . 5
Orange County Bank Bldg. Laguna Beach 494-9822 after WANT $250,cm-2 yr. l!Jl TD. Young Woman ....... _._t.~ d the ' -_ 230 E. 17th St., Coste. Mesa. 5 p.m. 100 spectacular Leguna dancer will tee.ch )'Ot.I all
'-ltftl-oaads b. fl. R. Nattress Rltr. 6-42-t-485 le~u"'s°"iN=E=s=s-,-.-d,..----Beach ocean view lots, ac-latest steps. Call Ardell ""''""-1•--\.C£NS.QR£Q,\, '.:·"'1: 2 ROOM O!llre neor CM City FINANCIAL tiv.cy ..rn,. no.OOJ '"· -213• 58H5311 l ·IO PM !ITIW(O-i ~· ('I I Hall, Carpets &: drapes, $801-.:..C...c..;;.;..;;.;;..;.;;..___ 10 &: 10 OK. (714) 499-3844 ALCOHOLICS Anoo1mout I
!, I I r r r (.) ~ 8::.... utll. inc. 642-6560 Bus. Opportunitl .. 6300 You can eam 10% «' mon! Phone 542-Tn.7 ·Of' write to
• _ _ _ _ 3 COMMERClAL, I indU:9t.; 1----------1 with prepaid bonWI• P.O. Box 1223 Costa Meu.
l '. oflf~ with living qtrs. CANDY Jack Smith Co. 1323 North ~ucn I · ti 1 °"'" M ........ "'"' suPPLY ROUTE -... s.A. ><"'381 :..F;;•n;•;;";1';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;64;;1;;2/ F --I BEAUTlTIJL office apace in (Part or Full T1mel • r I I I .:... . ~ Gl"""''' F"'"" Bldg .• Exe.II"'! Income fodow hn. ANNOUNCEMENTS WESTMINSTER - - - -r. . J CdM S4S Mo. up, 615-3793 weekly work. fDaY!I or tnd NOTICES I~· r I "' ~, . Ev .. l .ftolilll""""" Collo<t· Found CFrao Ad•) 6400 MEMORIAL PARK OPLI -Industrial Prap. 6080 ing Money from Coin ()pel--1 :..:::::::..::..:~...:.;;::.:..::..= Mortv1ry & Cemetery I
I'
. I r I Wofter , io chef: ~ait un--ated D~ in Coat• BLACK " white male dog, Complete funer11l1
, - - - - -fil)'OUNorwhotthey-your· M-1. 5 Rmtala $(f'i(I mo. Mesa and 5UITOlD'ld1na: tong lhaa:IY tall. Cltlico f,...,. $245
-.• 1• -•• ,' 11"10""1)))m"wc1'"11 ...... ~-~~~ areaa. !Handles Nabisco~ mlll'ittnr over eyes I: t!fll"a. Cemetery lots . •USCI• -4"-' ·+-~ atta7a-M'....,... ducts and Nationally Adver-VJc, Oleta Me111 Park, frwn $130
• ~ the dwdfe _.... tlsed Candy). f1.:f(I tl>tal Center St. 548-6001 Includes n.dowmtnt Care E ' ' I r I ... flil"1 .. tho ... _ -Commen:l•I 6015 """ ............ For -.i 1,.:;;::;;..:;c.,:::c:=.:,,,,."7.'.".'.'.'" I .;'IL•;<:~-:;rr:;Nt-.n;;~:;;::!:~~~..,;!~' -=;~~~°'>:,:. 3~~ Interview: Send t'll.me, fld• BEAtrr Bl.k cat. Vic Hun-Everyth:lnc tn ooe beauWUl II_;; .',_ °"9lcc> aflp No. bctlorr. \67'x:271' C2 parcel in f'oun· dtt111 and phone number to: tlngton Ctnter 1 hop' C pll_oe me&111 lesa COit.
f IN I' r , r r r 'r l' l tAln Valley-Ing Cent.,.. "ROU1'E DEPARTMENT" ~.:.. ton&. No ...ollar. N~~~-
Landscaping 6810
GARDEN ARTS
Planning before Planting * 642-7657 •
Paperh1nging
Painting 6850
Painting & paper hanging
residential • commercial
licensed -insured
Free estimates
546--1921 -646-1639
TRIM only -sand'g, prim'g
& painl'g. Do it bcf the
rains come. Call Jim *
642-4669
TR.li.'lf onl!)' . sand'g, prim'g
& paint'g. Do it ~I th e
rains! JIM 6424669.
PAINTING, Ext, interior Lie.
Ins. 17 yrs exp. Free est.
Acoustical ceil. 5-48-5325
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR
Painting. 30 Day Special
Lie. & lns. Chuck 645-()&)9
PAINTING. A-1 "'Ork, in·
terior exterior. Rea.s, State
license. 839-1900
INTER Or Ext. PAINTING,
IMMED. SERVICE. Local
ref. FREE est 5-4&-1627
Pat's Plastering -alt
Free est.
540-6825
Plumbing 6890
Plumbing 24 hr. serv. Work
Jruar. Uc., Insur.; rt' model,
• Tep.air. rooter serv. 531-7556
Sowing 6960
• Dressmaking· Alterations
Professional & Fast
Reuonable. 646-6-440
FINE Dressm«kl:ng & altera-
tiOQS.; fut 5el'Vice.
Reunrt.bf.e prices 675-173.5
Alteratlono-642-5845
Neat. ~t~. ~ yrs. exp.
TILE. Caramlc 6974
* Vf't'ne, the Tiie Man *
CUit. work. Install & repaira .
No Job too small. Plaster
pA.tch. Leaking ti how er
reo-ir. MT-1957/8-46-0'100
Upholstery 6990
I I I I I (714) 8M-4l2'1 Anllhetm, Calll. 9'l803 rotJND -Pvt Weimerimer ;i.;u. CZY'KOOKl 'S Cu~lom Upb()!. : ....... I I I I j YOlll vk: Vldova -• Lend-rP.s A :tt!'VELATION ... ~.,., .. ,,,...,,..,, Cn\ftsmar ..
1 Sactiflce '~ 86c pa' sq ft, P.O. Box 31M6, -..1125 m 2m D
_ • _ _ • VACANT bklp., O:N!:ta Meea P'R.&School. lie., well est., Pl C.M -·-I ~• 100~ F'l In 6 S&zlta. An.a. Williams, 0wntr let.vlng •tat~. priced er " • _...,.,..,, maJU' bllra& mi Jl"I ftnd In "'"P· ,,, nine g. F\Jm.
................ RJtr. right. Gl.ad:r'I Williams. tutr. TH!: QUICKER roo CAL4 Oaaifie!d Ac:b. Oleck them boats I aut11'1. &42-145-C. 1831
SCRAM-LITS ANEWERS IN CLASS 8800 __ ==---'-== .. =···~· .::53&-<=166::___:-:::..:;:;::;.;"""=··· THE QUICKER YOO &ELL ;:-=· -----------_;~N::: .. ~""='.::BI::.:vd:::.··.::C·:::M·:___
•
•
... . . ·-------------------------~----. --------------~-----------------~--______ ..
•
. ... ... ,, .i
Daily Pilot Cle11lfied
CLASSIFIED INDEX
lloodtJ, O.tobfl 21, !'In , DAILY I'll.OT
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS a !lilPLOYMINT.------------==-iir;;;====-=--="'"'...,.._
~~-.-7000 HelpW1nled,-7200
.. : ' ~1 ~~valld REXAIR INC.
H R I • ..,. ''' " • -,if· 1""'1 NOW HllllNct ours-egu ehon1-Deau11ntl' , , ;orlb "!"',~. "' ' 60 MEN Tl' .., \ r • -• \ • lft,.Ofl!:lt Adv•rtlMN Jftould Ohec.k tho1r ack oan, •111111 ,.,_rt"", ..... Ntt ~ 't-..Q,,, • ... ., ·
or ml10lualf1MtlonL T.HI DAIL.V PILOT._.,.. Ill'}" ~HI>:~,._, W~ 1"'201 •TRAINEES '
VI• axttnt of publlshln11 th• advtrt ... ---m.nt otrNCJUr one.._. r-• ' 2' l.evn • trade 1a bydro-dy.
Dl!ADLINI 'o" COPY AND KIL.Lai 1;$0 , ... : ... day ...,. ... ,~· ....... pt '''t ::... ~~ ~ ~~ ~ :nT N~
Wtokond ldltlon and Monday teotleN wti.,. el•lne tkM la 1.-fJlll. 'rldoy.' 56-3690 ence necnary, We .traliL
YOU MUIT HAV1 KILL NUMll•1 Who .. lllllhi1 ....... btoiUM., •ulok ,..ulta. CARPEl' Qerenbc, windows, Aaes 19 to 35, SoOd wcnen
ti. 11&1,.. to mako a NOOl"d et U.. 11111 numMr 1Mn y111 i.y ,...,,. ad· b;k~r fl. flQOf atr~ •, wax@d, only.
vorlfloatlon of,..,..,. ulL w~ Wf:lh!J· 5((~
Ivory eft.rt lo l'Mft i. kill., ootreet a new Ml that hu Mtft ottlorM, but w. .. ,.. • PAY'WORK WANT!D
not auanntet to do ao untll the acll hu •HMrtd 119 Uto ,.,.,. ~~~between 9 A: 5
DIMll'"•A·LINIE Adi aN .utctly •th In Uvanoe •r rMfl ~; .t any •n• ef 1ur •fftoel. DAYr \9ork w ... '..ted. 9 '" ·--
NO phon• orde,._ · · -· til ~ 'if.7-867'-_.. ,_.
Tho DAILY PILOT ,....,,... ttt. right to ol .. tfy, Mlt, ~-r ., rtfUM ony 1dv•,..
t!Mmtnt. lllld to ol'l1ng1 lta rattl Jlnd ,..gUfltl•na Wlthowt erler ROI.kl&.
Allvartl•rt may plaoe their adt It)' tel9phon.. ·
DIAL DIRECT M2-5678
WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220
Huntington Beocll $40.1220 L11un1 ~ch 494-9466
Phones Are Open 8:.00 a.m, -5:30 p.m.
9 to Noon Saturday-Clo11d Sunday
CLASSIFIED COUNTERI 8N 1ooattd 11.• t•ilew11
U11W....._ ....... ..,_., ...... 111 Wd.., ...._, C.... W-. Jot
ffftll Sttwt, H1ett.grM IMdl. W ,_... A"911-. ...... ...._ No-l:lt .... hf, l S-.
Mall Addrt•: lox 1171, Nawport haeh., Calif.
HOUSES FOR SALE ,...,..., •uao
l•N•U.L 1• NmwPOaT MSl•tfTt -.... MMOlrTIOll Mii
cotTA MIU. 11• NIW?O•T IMl'••I WUTCUl"Jll -... DllAl'TINe llltYICI Mn
lllCT1UCA&.' ....
IOUIJllMaNT •IJrtAU UM
' Dom .. tlC H1lp 7035
DOMESTIC
HELP
Llve ln or live out
Houstkffptr1
ExcelsJor Agency
ill So. Broftdway, I.A !ro13
(21.1) &&-m47· (71S) 620-1135
LIVE INS
Em.player pays feel
Geora;e Byi.nd Agency
100 B & 16th S.A. 547--0395
Oiinese li•~ina.. C,eerlul
Permanent Experler:w::ed.
Far Elst A&ericy 64.2-8703
MaSA DIL MA• llM UMIVllUITY Jll.t.a• MUA V•ttDe Ult COl.llOe P.U:lt 1111 Lt.CIC IAY --li'OIKIHe MM 1----------.,._, ....
NIWPO•T •IN:M UN IAST llUPfl
NIWl"OAT MllGHTt 1'11 COii.ONA Oil MA.a
M.UOA COVIS 1111 •AUOA
NIWPO•T IHOlll 1Dt IAY ISL.ANDI
IAYCll.IUT 1111 ~~~~~~IUND
IAYIMO•ll lnl HUNTJNe\'Otll llAl:M DOVlll IHOaD 1D1 JllOUMTAH9 YALLSY Wt:ITCllJllJll mt SU&,. HACH
-------... -
l'U•NACI •1,AIU. IN, '611
IM'DlfllN• ....
••H•RAL 1111.VICll UH
•IADINO. DllCINe ...
•LAii "" Oa••N TNUMI Qtl
OUM IHOP "'" Hl!ALTit Cl.Ull f.711 ........ ...
Help W•nted, Mtn 7200
• DRIVER •
SALES
Scee ~ or d1rect sal·
es experienoa ~. Up
to $IUO. per JDQl11h.
MANAGEMENT
Mnst be experlenced in pro.
ductioo or sale1 manqe-
'menL Up to $83), per month.
,,,........
APPLICATION S
ENGINEERS
Minimum 5 yee.n expm·
ence preferably In dee.
tri~ """'" ..a Jl&ti!lnr dlspi.,y,. Mu>t be founllJaf
with pacb.atng and ln-
ll:allaticm ol mnall CCJID..
p:meata. etc. ~ ol
""""'"""' -and rustcmer irpedftca-
tion reviews. Will provide
technical data tor aale1
depe.rtmenL
STACO, INC,
ll.IJ Baker St. O:ltta Mea
549.3041 KA••oa Hl•HLANDt uu LOHD IUCN ~.~7 .. 18UITY JllAlk ~: DllAHDI COUlfTY
IACK ••Y ,.,.. GA•D•N oaova
t:ASTILUl"P 1M1 WllTMIHSTla
--"" ....
MOUSla.liMllM OJI
INTllllOI: DllCOUTINe Im l~MI TAX '141 O...er 21 yean: at qe, Callfor-An ~P~
niallceNe.1:30p.m. tolO:l> ---'===-----11
IRVIN• TllllACI 1141 MIDWAY CnY
CORONA Oii. MAit 1tSt IAMT.t ANA
IAl.IOA PININSUl.A 1• IAMTA ANA HlllMTI ll!ACON UY 1• TUSTIN
1.tY ISL.ANDI lut CoAn .....
LIDO ISLI! IUl l.AOUNA leAClt
8ALIOA ISLAND 1J:U LAGUNA MIOUIL
HUNTINGTON 81ACH ,... SAN CLIMIHTI HUNTINOTOH K.talOUJt ,.., 04'1A POllfT
FOUNTAIN VALLIY 1411 TalPLIX. 91c.
SEAi. l•ACM , .. CONDOMINIUM
SUNS•T llACH 1415 R·NTALS GARDIN OltOVI U11 'I:
.... ... --"" ...
"" mo
~-...
LoNo 11AcH 1,.. Apta. Unfuml1hed
l.AKROOO 1Ut DIHlllAL ...
OltANOI COUNTY 16" COSTA Mt:IA J1tt
OUT OP COUHn ,.. M•U v••DI 1111
DIST 01' STATI UM fll.WPOltT llU.CH a.If
STANTOH 1611 Nl'WPOltT Nll..rr1 IJH
Wl!STMINITlll 1•U Nl!WPO•T SHO•IS mt MIDWAY CITY 1'1• WISTCl.IPP rut
SANTA ANA t•H UNIV.ltSITY JllAIUI IDJ
SAHTA AIU H•TI. Mil IACIC IA'r n•
OltANOI 1£U IAST 81.Ul"P 1M1
JUSTIN 1~1 COllONA OIL MAit ftll HORTH TUITIH 1'8 IALIOA ...
A.NAHllM lut IA'r Ill.ANDI ..
llLVl!U.00 CMYotl 16'1 1.100 ISL.a ml
1.AOU..A MllU 17'1 HUHTIN•TOM ISACll ._
LAGUNA lllACM 11al l'OUHTAIN VALLIY 141t
LAGUNA NIG U•L 17'1 U410A 111.AMD QQ:
SAN Cl.IMINTI 1nl ll!AL llACM Mii
1AM JUAM CAPISTaANO 1111 LONe l•ACH ....
CAPISTRANO lllACM 1721 OltANOll COUNTY ...
DANA POINT lnl OA•DIN ettOYI: N11
t .\ltLllAD 11• W1!STMINST•1t 102
lllOM. OrilMIUll ... hi. f1H
IRON/Ne '111 INllll.ATIH •1M
INSUllAMCe ,,.,.
INVUTtO'ATIN .. Otfldl.,. ,,..
JAH ITOltlAL •Jtt
JIWalltY •• ,AIR. ltc. -
LANDICAPlflle •alt
LOCKSMITH '*II MAIONltY, 1111('1: Hit
MOYIMO a ITOUDI 6l4f
J!AUfTINt,Jll_..1.... UH
PAINTIN.. ..... lltsl
l'ATIOI "41
PNOTOOllAJllH'f "11
PLAITIAIMO. , .. ct. Jt.,p ....
Pl.UMllNe '*
l'OOOLI OrtOOMINe .,.. JllOOL llllVICt Mii
JllOWI• IW•ll,IMe •t11
PUMP SllVICI •t21 rtOOl"lll• ..
UDIO, • .,..In. lltc. '"' lt•MOOILINe a Jtll'Allt tHI
•IMDD•LIN•, JttTC'lllNI ffU
lduon 1111""" ''" s•WIN• ,,,.
llWIN• MACHlflll ltll'Al•I '"2
lll"TtC TNtU. ...... II&. Hll
TAll.OltlNO '"' T•ltMJTI COHT•Of. ff7I
TILL C-k #74 Tl'2, U.... & lrMrtm ffJJ T••• s1avtt1 '"' TILllVll ..............
UPHQUT•ttY ffM
W•LOINe ffts
JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT OCIANllDI lJSe MtOWAY CITY IU1•
SAN Dl•ff Im IMTA AIU ... IOI. Yl'Alll'DJ ,._
ltlVlllllDR COUNTY ·t• SANTA AIU N•llNfn IOI IOI W»lf1Do).WM1111 --HOUSIS TO II MOVID 1• T\llTIH ..... JOI WMTIO,
CONDOMINIUM ltff COASTAL '1tl Mlll 6 WOMIN ,_ DUPLl!X•S l"O• IALI ff1J LAGUNA llAC'll 1711 OOMalTIC H•LP 1tll
AJIARTMlfllT1 l'OJt SAL.a ,,.. LAOUIU NleU•I. Im AellNClll, ,,_ nM
RENTALS IAH Cl.IMllNTI ffll MILJll WAHTID, Me~ net
SAN JUAN CAPllTIAllO S1lf AOEK:llL W-1>11
HouHS Fuml1hecl oAHA l"OINT 11• ""LP wANTID. w-, ...
Gl!Nl!ltAL -REAL ESTATE, JOls--.lrll#I .. ·-1Ht ~:s"r~A';:,i: IHA•• ::! Gentr•I :::=i)8;, "::ST~:cri~" ;::
Ml!!SA OIL MA• t1H TlllJllLIX. 9fc. ... Joa ,. •• ,AAATIOlll ,..
MIU Vlll;DI · 1114 CONDOMINIUM ~ -"" THIAP:f(AL Ml
COLLIOI PARK 1ltl ll•NTAU WAHTID "" .MERCHANDISE FOR
NEWl"OllT llACH nit ROOMS l"O• ltlll'T '"1 SAL£ AND TRADE Nl!WPOltT MOTi. tt11 ltOOM 6 IOAAD ""'
Nl!WJllOAT IHOJlll 1121 MOTIU. TltAll..llt COUltT'I '"1 l"U.flllTUlta -
llAYSHOltlS Htt GUllT HOM.SI "" Ofll"ICI ,lll:NrTVltl 1111
DOYl!ll IMO••• m7 MISC. ltlHTALS "" 01",tC• IOUl,M•Mr •11
'#'ISTCLIP, IDt INCOMI l'ltOPlllT'r ... noaa •ou•M•lfT "11 UNIYl!ltlrTY •A•K nn IUllNl!SS JllltOPlllT'r .. CA, .. llllTAUltAHT •H
lltVINI! 1U11 Tlt.tJl.lllt ,AltlCI -IA• IOUN"MIHT 1111 aACX IAY !141 IUllHl!SS alHTAL ... HOUt:INOLO eoCIDI lllt
IAIT 11.U,Jll 1241 OJllPICll: ltlHTAL _,. •AU.II UU tm
IRVIHI T1•1tACI hU tNDUSTltlAL JllaOJlllt.fY ... "UllHrTUlll AUCTtON 1121
COii.ONA OIL MA• ml COMMlll.CIAL ,_ APJllLIANCal llN
IAl.IOA -INDUSTalAl. JtllfTAL "" .t.HTIGUU lllt IAY ISL.ANDI SHI LOTI •1• HWlflle MAC'flllMll 11•
LIDO Illa 1111 11.AHCHU , •I• MUSICAL nitlTl:UM•fl1 IUS
IALIOA ISU.NO , .... emus •!JO"'• ~·n JlllAMOI & Oll•AN• •n•
MUHTIHOTOfll llACM Mii AClteA.e.... ·, -11.ADIO ...
l'OUHTAIN VALLaY Mii LMCI t:L.flMO•W , -TILft'llMHI IHll ll!AL l•ACH 144 ltllOltT l'llOJl.l.llTT .;" ·• ... tlM'I & ITllllO 1!11
I.ONO IEACH HOG OltANel CO. Ji'IOl'lllT' titt Ta.>• ·•lcottD••I mt
OllAN•I COUHTI' Mo01 GUT 0, STAft JllltOJll, a. CAMlllAI a IQUIJllM•Nl not l~TA ANA 1'11 MOUNTAIN & DlllllT G11 MOllY' IUJll,1.1111 Mii
Wl!STMlfllSTlll 1'11 IU8DIVlll'OM I.AMP att IJllOl:TIMe IOOOI -MIDWAY cm ,.,, RIAi. lllTAT•·....-.CI' ·~ 011' llNOCUl.AQ, ICOJllU wt
SANTA AMA Hll•NTI KJt •• I . •XCNANll ' -MllCIUNflOUI ...
COASTAL mt 111 ... WASTl8 I• ' iM, MISC. WAlfTllO Nlt
LAGUNA IUCN '* BUSINESS .etd MACMINlltY. '"" 1711 ~=u~t.:~oNu~L :: FINANCIAL ~:_::, =
S.t#I JUAN CAPllTltAfllO t7U IUllHllll OJlll"OltTUNITlll a. 8UILD1Ne MATllllAU rM
CAl'ISTRANO llACH 1nl IUSINIU WANTID ,_ IWAPI l1't
DANA 'DINT 11-• INY•STMlfll'T O(lllalw'"" ~,., PETS •nd 1.IVESTOCK ltlVlltltOI COUfllTT INYllTM•N'T WAICTCO -• VACATION lllNTAU .,,.. MONl!V TO LONI ' aR JlllTS. •INIUI, ...
CotlDOMINIUM ,,.. ,IAIONAL LOAMI Ulll CATI mt
OUPL•XIS l"U•tc. W71 JEWILltY LOANS Ull DOft 9ltl
COL.L.AT•ltAI. LOA.Ill ... HORS•I -RENTALS ••AL llTAft LOMt ""' LIY•ITOCK ..
Hou ... Unfumf1hed MO•T•.ta•s. """' °"" 6Mli CALIFORNIA Ll"ING
MONIY WAfllTID .. •••U•<IO ... ~::T~u,!,.... = ANNOUNCEMINfl sw1MM1Ne l'OOU .,. :::! ::~0':"• ~= ind NOTICES ,... ::,ii:.. ::
COl.L'l:GI l'Attlt Slll POUND (l'rM AN .... V..cATtoHI fftl
NIWPOltT ••ACM ... LOIT '4f1 TRANSPORTATION •• w-., ·-a11 JlllltlONAU .. .. ... -AHHOUNCIMIWTI •n• IOATt a YACMTI ... :~1':0 .. '1:"°11111 .,,,am :tr::i.u :i ~':"r.v••ltl ::
DOVlll IHOllD PAID GllTUAt~ •411 SPllD-IK• IDATI MM ~:~~~i;., JllAQ --Ill'/ =~===~ DI• ' :: =~ =~~':.'AMCI = lltYtN• -CAltD OP T1IAllQ ..,, IOAT LAUltCHtflle ttl4
IACX UY IN MIMOJtlAM 6117 MNllMI lctUIJll. ... IMT 11.UJllJll Dft CIMIT•llY LO'n tonl IGAT ILll', M00111Me "M
t•VLNI Tl•JIACa ,,._ CllMllTlltY Clt'r'JllTJ ., IM1t .-.. ,· ....... , ... , .. S ..., ~:~: Oil MU -ClllMATOltl•S 'J '4lt IDAT CHAJtTllll =
IAV Ill.ANDI ... ::c,.~l JllA•KI -= l'lllflf .. 'IOA'n ""'
LIDO llLI = AVIATION t•ttVtcll Mn IOAT MOVIN• fMll IALIOA m.Nr0 ... TMVSL '411 toAT ITOllJ.t• ....
Nl'Wl"O•T WllT -Allt TmMSJllOllTAT=-. 6oNI IOATI WANTID tlll !''NTINtn'Ofll ll!ACW AUTO nAMIJllOltTA ..... AlltcU.n ,,.
HUlfTINelVN NA•IOUI ... Mii LlaAL ltOTICft ,....._ ... JllLTlflle l..•ltotft nM
-.TAIN v•LL•v -O•llMAll .. fUTOll; ... ,~ ... MOllLa MOflllll .,.. JSAL lllACM '&llW'A MOTOI: HOMU t:lll
oA•o•M ••Oft am SERVICE Dlll_,,..,RY iteYCLIJ .,.
LOfllO llACM -ACCOUHTl"e .. ILIKT•IC UAI nM
Ott»l•I COUNTY' -ANIWlltlMO n11vice &Ml MIMI lllCll '"' SANTA ANA ant AJllJlll.lN'IC'• ••PAIU. ,.,. .,.. MOTOitCTCLU ""
W•STMINITn Im A"IAlllM• .r #ti MOTOlttcODTaltl ntl ... IDWAY cm ... ASJllKAl.T, Oii ,\. .,. AUTO JU'lftl • •A•TI ,.
SANTA AllA NlleWTI 1111 40TO ••JllAlltl __ ;\..L -AUTO TOOLI & .. UIJll. "11
CO...,.Al -AUTO. ......... f .. iSM. ... TIAILl:I. Tll.AYIL NII
IJ.DUNA llAC'W 1* IAIY'ltTTlff ... TrtA.lll•S. U., MM
p.m. shift.
e ENGINEERING e
RECORDS CLERK
Some knov.tledge of XeroX,
Brmin&, Blue Line delir-
abl•"
e PRODUCTION e
COORDIHATQR
e SCHEDULER e
e EXPEDl'llR e
I•!,, . . . '' ' .... •\'\
Prete!' @I~ m.dumy
IM.nufacturine exptt:I~.
Must be: H.S. grad., IOl1le
colleJe preferred.
e mETYPE e
OPERATOR
.Must be ~ teletype
operatnr. ~ connected
exiperienoe desirable. Should
be 1vailable any thlft.
Apply Pit Folsom
133~. 1xt. 2229
COLLINS
RADIO CO.
19700 J1mborH Rood
N•wport BHch
All applictntJ: ~ed.
on merit with no bl&.a ~
ward Race, O:llor', Cre!d
or Sex.
CITY Ot'
NEWPORT BEACH
Sr. F.oe· AldHlnltanen
1667."'8ll.
a.,.-.....
1611>.fllll
Ebl· Aide-i-r.tnc Td..
1576 .. flQl,
~-....,..,.,.
Jtietl now a\'lllllable In mgi.
-· utillte9 ""' lnttlc dtVisioo oi busy, provreulve
public worb depsrtment. in. --cball-· """' with dC'dJmt ~ts.
LA•UIU N!eUll llW llOAT MAllllT'ltl.NIC8 .. CAMPll• .....
JAN CLIMINTI Int •K:llt. MAIOllaY, -... "'VCll:J ,.. .... •·• d ••~ ~-~ CAJllfSTllMIO -IUllNlll •1tY1CU l• tlG '''" . . "'' r· .... , e--. OOl'h.-:1 ..-a.-
CAl'llT!t#IO llACll -•UH.Dias ..,,. ou~· '""''" tm IDMel Offtceo, Qt;p Hall, 33(11 DANA l'CUNT ... CATl•I•• ~ 11111 IMJllOl:TIP ...,_, ,_ Newport BM!. N
COMOOMUUUM .. CAllNITMAJtlM• f'..--IJllOll.T CMtt Nit • ewpgrt
OUPLIXU UN..U.&. .,. CA•••lfTlllH• .. ~ ci,.t.nlCI NII Beech, c.t.if. ENTALS CCMllWT. c--. ... •Acm un. • .,.,. .... mC33 or m.2110 ·~ fu-•-L~..I CMIUt CAIL u...1 ..,. AUTO IYIMTI MU • ..;,_;;,;c:__""---===
A ' •• .....-C'OlfTUCTOU • ... •llTos WAWTD "" w REHO .... llAl .. CMJllP CUAMIM • t ...... CAU .. A USE con'A ..... .. c.ldlJlllT I.AT .... a ..... .... ,..,,. LIAIMI Wit
MIU. n:•Dll tl .. eaM'llll:I .. .,. .. (Mtl ...
HAYE YOU LQOKED FOR
• THE HIDDEN 'DOLLARS
IN YOUR HOME LATlLY?
Exctllmt _.,..,,.,NI
time lhlpptnc clerk WMted.
Mon-F'tt. Experienoe neice•
M1"7· 612 T""'*'-1 Way, ea.ta M:Na, or call HJ.11'3
GDIUU.L prodacllon
wartrs 1!117 E'taorfttla A.WI., o.u--
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY!
Join tod1ys fastest growing
prolession-Mutual FUnd W ea " No experl~ neeeuary.
We train -full or put time
Mutual Fund Advlsort,
Inc.
Npt B. 1003 We1tcllft 6USa1
S.A. l2ll N. Broadway
54T.833l
MESSE>IG!llt
FOR
DISPATCH DEP?.
Prefer young man MlO haa
complet@d Ilia m 111 ta ·r y
obligation. Must have valid
driver's lkenle. Oppartwilly
for a~t Company
benefits. See Mr. Rieb. 3-4
PM . Mood1y
Dolly Piiot
330 W. Bay St. C.O.ta Mma
FUii time
Experienced-•. ,•
M1lnten1nce Min
Good company bend.its. can for appolntmmt
54{).5(M, ext. ~
Joseph Mognln
An equal opportunity ......,...
e BOAT ASSEMBLDtS e PAINTERS e EXP. CARPFNI'ERS e MOLDERS
Stmy work, rood bebeflb
Jen11n Mlrlne Corp.
235 Fischer. <hlta Mesa
*ASSEMBLY*
CARPENTERS
1 year expert~
Columbla Yachts
115 McCormld< Ave., CM.
NEW A Uted cu lot man.
Pre.fer experienced. Penn.
""'" Top ..W,.. Apply ""5 Harbor Blvd., CJ4. See Mr.
Hinman.
llHST
Rll\'SI
The
ORANGE '
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
for
Automobiies
A're You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers?
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
1. Stov•
2. Gult1r
3. Biby Crib
4. Eloctrtc Sow
.1. C.mtra·
6. Wuher
7. Outboord Motor
I. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Clorlnll
11. Refrigerator
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing M1ehln1
14. Surfboord
15. Mlchln• Tools
16. Dl1hw11her
17. Puppy
11. C1bln CrulMr
19. Goll Cort
20. laromtt•r
21. Stomp Colllcllon
22. Dinette Sot
23. Ploy Pon
24. Bowling Biii
25. W1tor Skl1
26. fr .... r
27. SultCIM
21. Cloctc
Will Sell Fast!
29. llcycl•
30. Typowrltor
31. Bir Stool1
32. Encyclopodl1
33. Vacuum Cl11ntr
34. Troplcol Fish
35. Hot Rod Equlpm'
36. Fiie Cabinet
37. Goll Clubs
31. Sterling Sliver
39. Vlctorl1n Mirror
40~ Btdroom Set
41 . Slldt Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool T1bl1
44, Tlr11
45. Pl1no
46. Fur Coat
47. Dr1po1
48. Linens
49. Hor11
50. Alrpl1n1
51 . Org1n
52. Exercycla
53. lloro looks
54. Ski Boote
S5. High Choir
56. Coins
57. ll1ctrtc Troln
51. Kilton
59, Cl•11lc Auto
<'II. CoffM T1bl1
61. Motorcycl•
62. Accordion
63. Ski•
64. TV s.t
65. Workbench
66. Dl1mond Wilch
67. G .. K1rt
61. Ironer
69. Comping Trollor
70. Antlqu• Furniture
71 . T•pt Recorder
72. S1llltoot
73. Sport1 Cor
74. M1ttroH, !!ft SPio
75. lnbo1rd Spoodboot
76, Shotgun
"· S.ddl1 78. Dirt G1mt
79, Punching Bii
80. Biby Cll'!'llt"
81 . Drurnt
12. Rltle
83. D11k
14. SCUBA 0..r
111-or any other extra things around the house may
be tumed Into cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so • • •
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678 ·
(YOUR CREDIT IS . GOOD)
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS -
WILL WORK .FOR YOU!
Get In On Th~ ~ction _ l odg!
.. , .. ~;
' ;;
...
' .•
"' ·.)J,
' .
' .,
'
•J
<
i'
' '
'
"' . ...
• " • ' I • I
I '
l
I' I'
i " I
I
I.
I
------··-·-~-~--------·•-----·-------··---1~1-••=-••"M•--=----=-••~----••·•--·~---·~1·-··~-~2·'~0M'~•~•••••1•-~·~·~·t~··w~e·•~····~·•••s•'~2~•t62•M~·~·~o•d~--rl•b~•tt-•-•tt~•oeoJI
I
• • 3j D.W.V P!UJT M°""q, Oc ..... 21, 1968
~ & l!MP.LOYMENT JOISS & E/IWLv""''" IJOBS I EMPLOYMENT
Wonted . Mon 7200Help Wanted, Mon 7200 Holp W1ntod, Mtn 7200
JDllS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMI N1
~
JOIS & IMPLOYMEllT JOIS I EMJll.OYMENT MERCHANOISE FOR MERCHANOISE FOR
A91nclu, Women 7300 Help WanteCI
Women 7400
Help Wonted
Women
Agoncl1t, Mon & SALE ANO TRADE SALE AND TRADE
j: 1HUUUN6 ABOUT OPPORltlllTYI Parking Lot
Security Man
r IC Bkkpr • • • • • •• • to S600
SectY'•, m.any •••• to $600
Medlctl Sec .. , ... , . •• $464.
Med. Gen Of1 ••• •• ••• $400
7400 ;;;;W~,;..,,...:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;7;S;50~l'.F~u~m~l~tu~re;;:::::::IOOO::::Fu:r:n:l"'~,..::;;;ii;'~8000:;;i
Loon S.cl'lltry Old world
I~ lHIMK ·ABOUl
: VONS GROCERY CO.
lto10am&Uto2pru.,
4.i.,.s.sz.1>our. Cla1Dl$ ~ • • • • • • • • S350
Typists, many ••••• -• ·$346
Trnt. ~Y ~ •• SS46
Tnit. Girl Friday .••• S325
,.....,Addrtcqnlph .. IJU
Trrlt. f'ilt O.erk • •• • • • S310
INDUSTRIAL
NURSE ~~i: Check Here Mediterranean
1• Rlch1rd'1 Lido Center
3'33 ViA Lido
NtwP(lrt Beach ( rn.6360
::,:vq, an<1 ,... -· • Spaniah Furniture With tho Job Kings!
VPNS b openlna: more stom tn thci next 15 montla than ~ other clWn in the Southland.
• IMMIDIATE. OPI NINGS FOil ,.. e GROCERY CHICKIRS e e OROCIRY STOCKMIN e e LIQUOR CLERKS e e MAINTI NANCI MAN e
e MEAT CUTTERS (l.xp. Only) 8 e MI AT WRAl"P'IRS e e PRODUC I CLERKS e ..
' ffAkTING IALAIY $2.12 • $3.95 per hr. depend·
i.Q.R: on eXl)erience. Experience desirable but will
!:ln cat'ffr--minded people.
able industry • su~l\ll • expanding company •
p benefits. • Apply In P•r.on. ! '= VONS new 1t0N i;. HUNT INGTON l l ACH
' 210l2 INc.h llt'd. J;i. WI D., Oct. 2Jrcl -t :30..11 :JO A.Mo ~.· VONS P•rtonnel Office
DISHWASHERS
Over 18. Apply after 3 p.m.
FIVE CROWNS
RESTAURANT
3801 E. Coast I-fwy.
Corona del Mar
e EXPERJENCED e
BOAT CARPENTERS
TOP WAGES
1682 Placentia, C.OSta Mesa '.. l ::I0-11 :lO A.M.·Mon. thru Thurs. 1 10150 low•r Al:ut.11 Rd., II Monte SERVICE Sta.Hoo Attendant&
I~ 1 Part time evenings
l ~~""l lFull time dayshilt
H 7 ,._ ' 7200 Experienced, over 21. 409 E. . tlp Wanteci, Men 200 Help Went.t, m.n 17th St., Costa Mesa
• . . , * MACHlll *
Tmt. Recpt. • ••• , .. • • • $300
Au.SET AGENCY
&3T W. 19t.b, C.M. 642-6752
Help Wanted
Women 7400
PART llME
DEMOllSlRA lOR °"""""' .... small o!octrlcal ,_pplia.nce demmstratx:n in
major departme.!lt stores lo-
cated ln Newport & Hunting-
ttll'I Beach ar9!. Good sal·
ary plus oommlYion. Exper.
tence preferred but not nee·
essary a.s we give complete
training. For interview call
or write W. F. Mills, %
Hoover<» .• Z10 Coral Circle,
ll .....,do, Calll. 213,
:m.~12
iteslstered nurse wtt:b recml
induatrial exP«!rltnoe, work·
mana com., Doctor's refer-
ral, in-pl.ant inj..-iea and ex.
tended letlve.
MA6NE11C TAPE
TYPEWRllER OPfR.
Prefer ~ on MTST
or wlll train a rood typist.
PBX OPERATOR
Must be avall:abll! tor after·
noon/evening lhilt Recent
experience multipal board
plus typing and/ or teletype
experience.
CONTACI'
IM. MASCllMEYEll
MARINERS
Savings and Loan
642"4000
WOMEN
AtVacUve women to demon-
1tra.te new product, Trim
Twist in major Dept. stores
in local area. Must be
above average personality,
poise and dMmn. No exper
necessary. Excellent aaJacy.
Call for appt. (Zl.3) 315-6648.
e SEAMSTRESS e
Mwt be top notch, experl•
encOO and active. Part time
to start. RTW, oustom &: fit·
t.inp. Apply
THE GOWN SHOP
rnti Ea.st Coast, DIM
BUNNY TYPE GIRl
Do yoo want to make $800.
a month it you meet our ~
quirementa1 Call me. Mr.
Samons. 633-6354
FEMALE
SECRETARIES:
Executive F.ngr, •• to '$600
Sales M&rketinc • • to $500
Advertiaing • • • • from $475
GIRL FRIDAYS:
Purcb &: Penonoel • • $375
Maoofacturin& .... ton,o
RECEPTIONISTS'
PBX/~ •.•.•••• to $400
Bookkeeping •• kl $3.50 hr .
GENERAL OFFICE:
Clerk Type fillng to $85 wk.
Received c:•n~ll•tlon of $22.,000.00
Sp1nl1h ind Medlterrannn Furnlturt
Aft N .. l op 911ellty hllll N•IMI
A DKeNter'1 DrMll!ll Ho-It 0. DhJhry
Items as follows: Gorgeous 8 ft. custom quilted
sofa with separate loose pillows with heavy oak
trim decor and matching chair, 3 matching oak
occa!ional tables, (2) 58" tall decoralor lamps,
hanging chain swag lamps in wrought iron, an
S.piece king size master bedroom suite in pecan
panelled Mediterranean style with top quality
15 yr. warranty king size mattress & box springs.
Spanish decor dining se~ etc.
Wllokl ltoQtfid wu Nt•I• Sl 121.00
~~:1;,~;~·~·:·'--··-··--··$698.,00
Any Piece Can Be Purchesed Individually
Terms Available -Newcomers to Cellfornl1
Cred it Approved Immediately
At Harbor Blvd.
BB Furniture
:; OPERATOR
HEW PLANNED
FACTORY
MEN wanted for early a.m.
deliver')' or newispa.pen to
homes. Approx 3 hrs. per
day. Hntg Bhc/ Fntn Valley
area only, 847-2300
SAV-MOR gas station needs EXPANSION IN attendant, preferably older
SECRETARIES CLERK TYPIST Jobs-Mon, Wom. 7500 a.rl<. AJ>IAA .... to 1450 184~ NewportlJYd. Costa Mesa (only) ..
;; (Produclion) ORANGE COUNTY man. $32S to start. ~9192 M1jor reel estate firm
nMds part time Sec·
retery, 25 to 30 hours
per we•k. Typing &
shortihend required.
$2.00 per hour. Hours
flexible. Call Valerie
Simpson for appoint·
ment Tuesday, Oct.
22nd only.
Travel Clerk, Intl ..• to $500 l""'Y 11IPt 'tll f -WeL, ht. I s. .. 'tll 6
ProvldH a.sk for "Shortle" ----J.C. PEtfHEY CO. • •' '
Dept. Openings Man, steady, part time job.
Mm ARE NOW BEING Xlnl LA Times Route open.
Type 40 w.p.m. mM electric
worll: with figures, adding
tnachine It.lid calcu.lator ~
"""'1•· Fashion lsl1nd
Newport l111ch
ACCOUNTING: Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000
AP/AR. Payroll ••.. to $425 li~~~.~~~~,•ri•;.;;;;;;;;~iiiii\fl•s••iiiiJ~ siiiBn precisfoo. &Wit.ch com· JN11ERVIEWED, HIRED Jn Corona del Mar area. p.mts. Setup and operate
X.netY of machines includ. ihi' turret lathe, wrtica1
il:tllls; short runs, small
.9tiop. Excellent wuridng con·
dltloos, "° bout woe!<. Appcy
AND TRAJNED TO FILL 1,.,,,;'°"""='..;M:;co::. . .,+:..:·:..:962-4633:=.:;,='-,-
GOOD ?OsmONS WITH MAINT. Man for motel work.
TOP STARTING PAY. $400 mo. includes apt. 2376 KEYPUNCH OPER. NEEDS
Christmas
FIC -...... to 1600 S • h pants
Mecliterraneon $512. mo. & up N•wpor• st• .. cM •
If qualitied and accepted go Agencln, Women 7300 714-833..0300
Minimum Me year induafr·
ia1 ~. IBM key·
p.mch. Swing er ll'averyard
""1L
Sales People
Studes:it.11, Housewives and
Mothers. Can you gpare
a few hours each day and
edd to the llllmily incmne
at the same time? Sche-
dules are afternoons, eve-
nings or a combination
CJf both. Work Wider t he
finest conditions and top
a;pervisioo.
FACTORY: Bought Man~f1cturer"s Showroom Sampl11 •• . :• , .. ST ACO, INC.
:' 1139 Beker St. :~· Costa Me11
1, 549-3041
on the payroll um week.
Both skilled and unskilled
sMold apply as experience
isn't necessary, and ~ are
an equa1 opportunity em-
?I<»"'· MINIMUM
newport .
personnei
. agency
1. An equal opportunity QUALIFICATIONS "PBX RECPI' .......... ~
: employa' e A!J" 20 or over A very apectal company m ·"· e H1 tchool grad or the El Toro area will train I-+',.--------· I equivalent a vecy special, sharp, at·
: 1 ncuNEY '0 • Orang• County tractive gal w/ a good ed-
D.M.V. CLERK
A11tomoti... •1p1ri•nc• only.
Should b• ••p•ri•nced in OMV
bookkHpin g. for lerger Or·
•n9• County ewto cl•1lt11hip
5 d1y w••k, comp1ny benefih.
Cell
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC
2000 E. lit St., S.A.
541-2681
STBIO'S & SECY'S
Shorthand, typing, pl'aleos
and general oftice. Know-
led~ of electronic terms
holpful.
:~· C, ri;n " o rHJdlnl ""'"""· (Llght typtng :~Newport Beach • =~•jc•lly =)~~~$133 Escrow Officer COLLINS
·~ Has opening& b: e Able to start work A top com~ that ~
ApPly in persoo
9:30 am to 9:30 pm
Monday thru Friday
J, C. Penney Co.
24 Fashion Island
An equal opportunity
ompl°"" • Jonitorial now v""' '"""""'""' ben.ita Savmg, & Loan ,.,.,,.
l'i Maintenance MO=~~AY ~~e:!ea~ ::e~e:::W:!:. RADIO CO. ART DIRECTOR
:" & Buffers NEWPORT llEACH '"""·Company,,.,. 1"· Growing """"""°' """" ''" '.11. t succe&Stul experl-Hill SECREl'ARY ....... ••• SSOO CONTACT MRS. RAINIO reer minded per300, 30 YTS ~ Ask for Mr. . • Can yoo compose a letter or ol.der, capable of manag. ited~ ~pe':J:vS: ~:. Pers:innel Department that will "sell"? N.B. com-MARINERS 19700 Jamboree Road ing all ·phe.ses of a oompos-
;QUbtanding benefits in-1-------~=~I pan:y may pay even more Savings and Loan Newport Beech iJ¥ department Must know
Trainees •••••• to $2.00 hr,
MALE
COMMERCIAL:
Cost Acrt, dea;, exp to 13K
Dralt=an
1 '!fr exp •••••• to $3.SO hr
Acct. BA,
strong cost • • from $800
Mgr-. Trnee •.•. from $400
Sales, sport equip •. $90 wk.
TECHNICAL:
Serv Sta.
Att., grvyd ., trom,$2. hr.
At Terrific Savings!
8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's chair;
beaut. fabrics. 5 Pc hexaR;on dark oak din.
set, w /black or avocado ffamed chairs; 5 Pc
BR set. 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror,
2 commodes, decorative headboard in Span·
isb oak or avocado design.
Items Sold Individually
Shop Around-before you buy see US!
VALUE $895-FULl PRICE $429.95
or terms as low 11 $3.00 wnk
No Down-Use Our Store Charge Plan
No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Values Inside
APPROVED FURNITURE
21S9 HARBOR, COSTA MESA
12 Years same location-same owners h_' s~n~~ ~·t5 1,. _.ii ~' 548-9660 ~
JOBS & EMPlOYf"ENT JOBS & EMPLOYMEN1
• Orange Coast -for top skill.a + background 642-4000 how to do the following:
:S!'.uding profit sharing. Jr, College District which includes eicper. in All appllcaticms reviewed Rough. proposals, mark-up, 'J ( PEltltf.Y (Q NEEDS promotion / advertising. Unwrual career opportunity on merit with no bias to-sketches, h an d lettering,
Test Tedi 'tronic Schools-Instruction 7600 Schools-Instruction 7600 f.rom$3.hr. 1.;.;;.;.c.;__;,_.;_ _ _:.;.;_~1 ----------
: '
1
' Bookstore Clerk Company pays ;s fee. UNION BANK we.rd Race, Color, Creed paste-up, proof reading, pag-:~24 F1shion Island Order supplies, cbeck!, ACCTG a.ERK ...... $400 needs experienced or Sex. Ing, up-dating cut books and
:!*An equal opportunity shipments, does pricing, Will train a sharp girl with NE\V AOCOUNT filingknow' · system
1
s, have working
•I! employer proceue invoices etc, Sal· good math aptitude. Com· INTERVIEWER l----------I ledge o camera dept.,
;, ary $458.-$566. pany pays fee. tor new ot!ice in Newport be able to work out schedul·
Night Custodians GEN'L OFFICE ····•· $375 Beach. Please appiy in·per· G'ft & M 'I es and adhere to them. Must
BUSBOYS
: DISHWASHERS
:;. Full Time
, ,, Evening Shift
" :-Apply in petlOft
9·5 p.m.
i; RBIBEN E. LEE . . •• 1~1 E. Co11t Hl9hw1y
: Newport Beach ,• . • •, PLAYBDYSll
dfMng a new C.adillac or
Uncoln? F.arning at leut
$li600. moothly? Ii not, then
fllttl would like a career posi. t$n that can make these
il11ngs possible • look no fur.
Oter. No exPErience requir-t'. complete training, we
ff1.1 guarantee you
~!JP TO $650. MONTIILY
t4You meet our requirements, 'Ja.635t Mr. Samons.
Hours 10 pm to 6 am, Mon. Another interesting N.B. son, Union Bank, Main at I a1 be familiar with headliner,
thro 'lburs., 3--•.i .. • .. bt Frl. company with a variety of La Veta, Orange. craft type, IBM typewriters, .. ......,ue. m,.1 Friday duties. Will 1--....0...:..:.....:c::.. ___ I W Xerox tcleropier. Must have ~ s.t i44i.s.>u. -rapper train a &OOd tw~t w/ light ADVERTISING knowlodge of manag•m"'t
APPLY work exper. Applicant pays AGENCY Permanent 40 hour week 9 and be able to instruct, di·
ORANGE COAST fee. NEWPORT BEACH am to 6 pm. StaW:ay & rect and cootrol. Mwrt have
JR. COLLEGE DIST. ~ SECTY .... to $550 Secretary with ability to or-weekday off. Good rates, portfolio ana references.
2'7ll1 Fairview Road S&L or Bank exper •must! ganir.e, follow thru, lD1®r' 30. tiene!it! & worlci:ng condi-H. C. Van Ausdaln Inc.
Also sh + aocurate typing Shorthand a must. 642-3910 tions. Also Christmu .........,, DBA PENNY&\ VER
Cmta Mesa. 834-07M need ...... Beautltul ol!i"'' & -·-· 1545 N Blvd. ,.. ..... -""" n~'"Y••'tt•r, Liv~!n -? '-availabt• OWl'Ort ~~ ,...,... • • '· •· · • •· •• exceptional opportunity, Ap. 7 :::-' .. -"" "'"" · Costa Mesa GUARDS pli-··t ~-~-. :,,., to 5:30, s dllY! a week ~· ~ 0 •= + som• Sat'•· SlOO m-th. Richard's L'do C t Tel. for e.ppt. 64W8ll Securlty work in OJSt8. Mesa STAT. TYPIST ...... $.llll.33 ...... ., • .,., v,·.I ., , .. _ •n er AMERICAN POUCE An opportunity for good stat Vic. Har,>er School. Call att ~ .........., No Experience
PATROL typist who has a desire to -6c.'.;........,cc.;;.:.:...,~---· I Newport Beach 673-6360 N
Z!.31 294-8294 or 294-8400 learn accounting. ¥.i fee Medical Assistants ecessary! DESIGN paid by employer. f2) Back office, front office. MOTEL Maids for new 50 Must have clean California
Exp prefeITed, but will train. unit motel, opening in Costa driving record. Apply
DRAFTSMAN 833 Dovtr Or., N.B. Mission Viejo aree.. 837-7520 Mesa. Start work October YELJ-w:,O't 1~:B CO.
SMALL ~ DEVIGrn 642·3870 549-2743 SHARP BAR MAIDS & GO 28th. Interviews to be held C.OS~ Me:-·
Minimum 5 yeen expert. GO DANCERS. Top wages. ~x. Oct. 23rd . Apply in I ~==,..:.;=.==---
ence preferably in design $2.S0..$3.50 to start. Call for writing stating name, ad· NURS~ -Rns, Lvns, a.ides,
of """" cl""'° meclw>-MISS EXE{ AGENCY int•rvi•w· 545-9983 SASSY """· t•lephon•. ag•, •x-onl•rli•" Clpportunlti'" ,,,,.
isnul:. Must have working LASSY 2901 Harbor. C.M. perienc:e, to Box M--456, supervisory & staff posi·
know'ledge of materials, FH P•id KIND Motherly person to Daily Pilot lions. All l'hift:s, attractive
finishes, tolerances asap-Escrow Ofiicer .•.... to ~ take over in my home week FOOD & Cocktail Waitresses new hospital. Xlnt salary &
plied to small manufact-Salt>S Secty ..•• , , •••... $475 days while r w 0 r k . for new restaW'ant & dinner bene!its. O!apman General
uring industry; Must be Sales/Gen. Ofc • , ••.••• $47S Bushard-Hamilton area $40. house opening in Laguna Hospital, Orange. 633--00ll
Loan •-.. 1 w k =02054 Beach area app. October 12, capabl.e of genera" ...... teit """"..,, ··· • • ····. to 425 ee · JUCr' JOB Openings at Costa Mesa -~ ~-· Li MUSI' BE A TI'RACTIVE. requirement and evaluat· •J"Ylllt fsp ·u .......... $368 BABYSITI'ER My horn• 5 Ph &...... Goll & Countcy Oub, must A 1· p one wr appt, Mr. Moss, blg results. pp 1c1nt 1ys Fee days wk 9-12, 10 mo baby. 4~2271. bet 2 & 5 pm only be over Zl . Ph<rie Mr.
Exec See (neg.) • ., • to $550 Own trans, refs. $12. wk. Parsoos 9 AM to 12 PM sr ACO INC "'"'' s.c <0 .. .1 .... '° ssoo ""'· Layton 54s-9451 Phone-File Clerk Daity -1200
Truck Driver n tic "'°"' SIOOwtc.
Roofer, exp •.•••••• to S6lXl
Ma.int Machinist to $4.50hr.
Set-Up {Davenport)
to $.5. hr.
Oe.venport ()per to $4. ht.
Lube, Front end to $150 wk.
Welder, om iron
from $2.7Shr,
Machinist "A" from $3. hr.
Woodtw-ner , , from $3. hf.
Millman .•.••• from $3. hr.
Marine 0upt
trom $2.80 hr.
Otc Equip,
repair •• from ms wk.
Toolmaker •• from $3. hr.
Upholster, exp to $3.75 hi".
Finish Carpt • , st. $2.20 hr.
0!16'1 ()per
AB Dick ••.• from $3, hr.
Foreman
inj. mold .. from $2.85 hr.
UNSKILLED'
Fact 'I'rnees,
many • •• •• • to $2.50 hr.
S't'ocKCLERK -DRIVER
$fl0 per month to start. No
'l!:J>E'rience necessary. Write
jlJalificalions, ?.'E!ight and
Ag-ht to P . 0 . Box 145,
(Ji!lsta Mesa, Calif. 92621
ll39 Bak S
' C • Girt Friday .......... to S400 HOUSEKEEPER : Live m· 0,V -~E~l=EtU~N-AA~Y~A-,,,-,---,-,-,·.'
er t. Ost.a Mesa Accts ,..., _ _.. 138 Util l-549--304l ~" .......... 9 out. 3 school age children. Full time tns & wknds, Prefer Hl·shl · •• st. $2.br.
~VICE sr'A. ATTN D
Minimum exp, ~· See
~!:111· Palisades Shell, 1512
falisades Rd, Santa Ana tftts. No phooe calls!
An Equ-• ~ ..... , Teletype ()per ••• •••• ••• s.375 Need references. 540-7036 call MRS. LEE or college student. 'JI'/71 Har-J--• ..... '"'l't"'r .... uty T•ll-., Al ..,utan; •••• to $2.50 hr. · ............... ,. to ...,70 ter 4 PM 646-9331 bot Blvd . C.M.
Employer NCR ()per ••• ·•·· ••• to ~ 'H"o"°us""'EKEEP""'""'°'ER""°-&~"'Ch~ild HEAD Ca&hier -PBX ex-HAIR Stylist wanted to wock Welder hlpr •••• to $2.SO hr. e MEN WANTED e Adv/Ga Ole ·····•···· $346 Care, pvt. rm & bath, TV. -_.., in S\vin ..... ~ ~i..--..
Hours I I lo 2 PBX ~ •?<:l'I 5,, Da penence pref1:n~. 25 to 30. 11o .. '6 "'>VY Deliv. men , ••• trom $2. hr.
• ..... .,.,-. •••••••••••• ~ 111 Y wk. Perm job, pd 6 da)'B a wetk. See Mr. 642-7800
$1.75 per hr. plu1 meals,
plus vacation. Part time
only.
Receptionist ............ $350 vac, ref's. $200. mo. 540-9212 Hansen. Wallidle Music a. =a~E~A~UTY=,...;._.::.c=,0-,-w-a_ot_ed Parts Man .. from $100. wit
RELIEFA
1 1
Shilt RN or LvN: ty, 3400 Bristol, Costa Mesa. immediately to take OTer Lot Maa. exp. •... to $4())
PP Y n person, LAGUNA LIVE-IN housekeeper for cltentele. 675-3701
COOk! needed, relief
ift & dinner sh!lt, part
l;lfne available. Hyatt Coffee
Sls>p. 144 S. Tustin, Orange
McDonald's
3141 Harbor B.lvd.
COO. Mosa
410 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach 646-3939
Executive Secret1rl1l
Openings Top
Man99ement Levels
N;t;.IRSERYMAN & mngn, ---------Sec'y lo Pl'es., fee neg. to $575 ~t oppty wf lNd'g dis.-Sec'y to V.P .. fee neg. to S:fJO
CJOQnt nursery chain. Reply * COO K * Sec'y to Mgr., fee pe,id to $475
i;:4lly Pilot Box M-30). Sec'y & der. ust., app. r~
A lJ T 0 MD:'HANJCS, --EXPERIENCED , to S500
Ptrienced, with own ~~. Full Time Sec Y & cler. a&SI., app. fee
Save plenty of \\uk, 1747 APPLY lN PEROON to $464
.4Mheim Av. Cost.a Me11a Office Mgr., See., fee neg
SALESMEN: C 3 ), Bob1s Big Boy . to $4.50
bllity of management 1S4 E. 17th St. l\fedical fypiat, App. lee l,~~#>mi;~;~,~~l!:_M~r._Ph~'-""._"'_•_J>_i--c,Coota<ilmM'.i'.,.'.i'i;;--RetaU Ouk, apP. fee to:: JiMifiOIUAL H•tpor, S..tu<-SALESMAN . 1 Sunday mornlnp. WANTED H•berg•r
&a-,t!Ol after ll AM Under ~. E:irp PT'efcm!d, but Pcl'50nntl Agency not nCCt'SllllJ')'. We wW train 002 W. 15th St. ~;i Mtllll,
YS l'olttdtd. Jfyatt )'OU. APPb' In PM"Son, aak for Calif, ~ ~ 1'4 South Tom. Granl'i &zrplu.a. l750 lc::::-::=--,-.---r Oratlce-Newport Blvd., C.M. For pen onal & I
N mu tor dell'm7 A LOr MAN confidentl1I pl1ctment
wort.llO!ll6th$t. ~ prs (trred
M-.,,...,,.. .,.,,. • .._ ••Id • llnfque •
CEStaAttenlan t VKRtton etc. John90n & Son Pl1cement Ag1ncy1 t!!ll<n OU Dir, w.....,. 6 U...... Mm:ury. !fl! W. 542 W. 19th St., C.M. ~ "'" Vallq °""'Hwy, N.B. 646.1831 1· awtGE m Dial ""'678 for RESULTS OIARGE m
' I ,
BEACH NURSING HOME. non-worldng mother. 25 to ==========I Yardman .••• st. $2.25br.
450 Glennyre, Lag. Sch. 35 years oM, 4 School age
FULL Time Maid. Ocean children. Spanish speekin1
tront motel Laguna Beach. OK. 548-1544
Agencies, Men &
Women 7SSO
Over 30. 6 Day Wk. incl.
Sat. & Sun. ea.11 494-8521 EXP Tellers or Note Tellers ARGUS EMPLOYMENT Part time. Apply
WAITRESS. Thperienced tu!J Security Pacific Nafl Bank General'l'ypeOflle!nd .. .:,;,··· $326
time. Call for appt 2280 Harbor Blvd CM. t11 54S-986l Equal Oppty Employer Girl Friday • , , ... , , . , $300 ~~~.hsobl<P'pvt.1 chld nohape-~; Babysitter, Uv~ln or? Med.~·~:.:. $465
......,J' J • rm, • ...... 7:30 to 5:30, 5 days a W'eek Transcripfn bkond·
open. 642-5674 _ + !IOl11e Sat's. $100 month. Steno . •••• .. •. . . .•. . . ~
HOUSEKEEPER Vic Harper School Call aft 80 sh., twe 55 •lec .
Experie~d; 6. 54.S-OK)9, Typist • • • • . •• .. . . •• • • • $325
Uve • in61~7 optn, WOMEN'S Hair Styl111t1. Lo-50 on •leetric
cal following Pf'l!f. Beautiful Keypunch ~· .... to $410
COUNTER. GIRL. Dry clean-al N 2 yn. e;oq> 026 Ir: 056 ing experience. Call 541-9550 ntw Non. . Cbsta Mesa, to Fact. Trnce ..•.. $1.85 hr.
before noon open ov ls1. 540-2247. Jon Or&ft exempt, dayg
De ntal Assistant HOOSEXEEPER I BABY· Mechnnlc .••.•.•. $3 .50 hr. srrrm 2 tWr daya wX or ~-Own tool!l
0e&Jc. 673-0XXI 1 full dfly, Own h"MI., refs. Cook Tnltt. • • • • • • • · • · $400
WANT'ED: Woman to do nee. &16-6286 Over 21
telephone 90liciting tn °'C~L"'E=-=R"'K~--,~,-.~1-,-,-. -(.,-,.· IBaker Trainee •••• $1.65 hr.
bomf':. 642-5876 madl.lne), tUlnJ, Jcnowl~p Sharp ' alert per'IOl'l
SNAO< bar wattreq, fulJ of PB.."< helpful. ~ or OYtr, Janittr .. · ·•••• · ... · • $«JO
l1m ri aeen. alert & •tron1 e, no expe ence ntc. 6 day wttk. inclulina Sat. A: s -~-
Pref. ,mature llldy. f00-11.5.1 Sun. Call ~ 1
Ul;N'lll· Wotbr •• SJ..~ .bl'· 01.i.r....,.
BUSI.EST mtu'k~ lb WANTED; For widowed
.,_ 1"o DAILY PILOT t..dy middl• '"' boo,. ARGUS EMPLOYMENT a...utf!d Metlm. S.¥t k~ wlre-fe!'ences, live-OONSULTANT AGENCY'
money, Ul'Q4 6 ctfort. Look In. Room I. board f!OO. 543-2043 WertdlU, N.B. 54"9&
-""""'-t~!~t ------l-3937--------'"1~624;,;..:E::.·~17~~:..::Sl.~,~5.A.::.:,~M~T~C6!36::;
•
•
WORK NEAR HOME!
fee & FH Paid
Potltions
APEX
Employment Agoncy
* Tho 1ny way
(Uk UI Wby)
1173 Horbor 81¥<1.
(\I btk. s. " 19th)
Coot1 Mos.
548-3426
**** VOTE
FDR A
Computer
AGE
CAREER
COMPUTER
PROGRAMMING
20Week1
Tot1I Concept course in
computer programming.
A new, up-to-date prep•·
r1tion for• Bright Fu·
ture CarHr.
LIFETIME gUt, typewriting.
Children grandchildren, or
youn;elf ! Individually tu-
tored. Oillcorat 10 lesson typ-
ing school. 173 Del Mar, CM
548-2859
EXPER. prof lady piano
teacher. Interesting method.
Nr.· So. Coast P l az a .
540-5727
CZYKOSKI'S Custom
Upholstery School. Cootinu-
ou.s Classes. Day & Eve. 1831
r-(ewport Blvd., C.M. 642-1454
CHILDRENS ART CLASSE.5 Now enrolling.
HARBOR ARTS 642-9500
YARN ART O&SES
by Oiarles. Tapestry. wall
hangings, rugs. 673-9138
Furniture 8000
Quality King-Siz.e Bed,
COMPUTER-AGE beautiful quilted matll'ess,
DRAFTING split foundation, bit·in
24-to.36 wHk1 Modern trame. Never used. $98.
trairilng Includes ad· Worth $250. 842-6536
vanced concepts In OOUBLE Bed with bookcase
drafting and technical headboard, Includes mat-
desi9n to meet the new tress & box sprinp $50.
requirements of today's 1 ~G=ood~. -"'~--=-----I
new-idea jobs. WllL Trade Blue Clip
AUTOMATION stamp books tor Green. Will buy Green Stamp books for
ELECTRONICS $2.25. 644-2320 e\'es.
36 weeks CUSTOM MADE 8~ ft. Sofa. Prepar11 you for jobs In: Xlnt C()fld. $250.
Computers Call 543-9591
Communications
FCC Licensing
Industry
PHONE:
547-9471
MOVING To Iowa, few misc
items !ell, xlnt con d .
Reasonable prices. 642-7350
DTNING room set, oval, $165
-Cost $339, like new. ~ol.
custom chair $65. 644-2028
BEAlITIFUL 7· coco •
Brocade so!a. Xlnt con-
ditkm. Make otter! 64&-113? ACADEMY OP
COMPUTER TICHNOLOGY , di~t,ion of Office Equipment 8011
Unl\'eflfty Co""utb19 Ce.
S11lr. '407, Nomi Tower
Unlo• lank Sq1..e.
ADDRESSOGRAPHS. Hand
or electric. Record. Service
& Supplies. 774-5200 Orcrnp, C.llf. t2611 SAFE, Home or office. Small
p • • • • • • • • I Victor, fireproof. C.OSt $270,
Plitt• ''"d m• fr10 in· sell $125. 646-51'11
I form1llo11 011: OC,. '1==========1 I D COMPUTER·A•E I Garage Sal• 8022 t DRAFTING --':.;_...;;.:.:_ __ ~=I
0 COMPUTER I 0RG Oils from $35 -$150. Ri·
• PROGRAMM ING I ne w I !ICOJ)e noo. Bed-
• 0 AUTOMATION I Couch ~ More haehoid
1 ELECTRONICS fum'g. 21.G E. 20tti St. CM.
N1m1 • • • • • • • •• • A9• • • I 645--0618 a9k for AM
t Add,1u , .. , Pho111 • ,, • •I ===~==~;====I
• Clty ...•••••... ' •...•• I Appll1ncH 8100
St1I• •• , ,, ••• ZIP • • • • • • -"'---:-----...:.CC:..:I
I • • • • • • • • IRONRJTE Ironer llkl': 11ew newport ;:',:'-Sao. mo. Phone
school of "business NOW'S THE TIME FOR
833 0:m,~{3" N.I . QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
' •••.• , ••• , • .,.~ •• , . l~"··i!.:l--~-4 • -·--·~----·--'-''"""'"' ... '-·---_____ :.._.___,_. --__ _,.. :.·,;;,-..;-:.-...;;..=-"'.::-::.:· ______ .... ----~-"'-· ~ ··~· .__
M".RCHANDISE FOR
•
SALE AND TRADE
Antlq-1110
V An stock Amer • fo~ur tum & clocks. L a r t y
!fora: an An.Uque1, 2 f. 2 8
Newport mvd., CM.
llBI STEAMER TRUNK
Excellent ori1. cond. $3)0,
6'2-5!96
* Cf-LINF.SE ANTIQUES
Lce what·DOt cabinet etc.
1n() 671-01n
Two Locations
To S.rva You:
COAST MUSIC
1139 Newport Blvd., CM
646-0271
114 5. El Camino Real
San Clemente
492-4642
ORGAN Kimbell Playe.r.
Walnut. LI k e new! Beaut.
Ch.rtstmas gift. Will
u.crU\ce! 84.7-7064
FREE TO YOU
MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR TRAN~POR;TATION
SALE ANO l"RADE SALE AND TRADE I S.llboots 9010
Pianos & Ors1n1 1130 Mlsc:t1ll•neous l600
OVER STOCKED
167
PIANOS & ORGANS
TRANSPORTATION -· --
I
Mond&J, Octol>tr i1, 1968
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO RT
• I I
----· --·-~--------------------~-'--""-'----~--~---------------------..;.--..... ~~
f
~
I
I
'
---------•
3% • llAll.Y !'!LOT Mandoy, OcUlbt< 21, 19611
'
Readers -of this newspaper: Special INTRODUCTORY OFFER bri.ngs you as much as
'
I I I • I I
. " .
it Pays up to $10,000.00 tax free cash for each hospital stay it Pays all cash direct to you (not to doctor or hospital)
it No age llmlt-no medical examination required it Pays In addltlo" to all other coverage you have-Including Medicare
it Pays you cash benefits that lncrea!e each year ... to a maximum of $130.00 ·A· WEEK ... at no extra cost to you I * Pays $100.00·A·WEEK cash each time you go to the hospital ••• even up to 100 week! *No salesman will call
SPEBIAL LOW RATES! EXAM~E POUCY IN YOUR OWN .HOME-MONEY BACK IF NOT 100% SATISEIED!'
ACT NOW-YOUR ENROLLMENT FOAM MUST BE MAILED BY MID,.IGHT SAT., OCT. 26, OR IT CANNOT BE ACCEPTED
One out of twQ famllle1 will han someone tn the h01pital th ta
ye&rl It could be you -or some beloved member of 7our family
tomorrow ••• nut week ••. nut month. Sad to 11ay, very few
familWI lla•e a.y:whue near enoUjfh COTerage to meet t.oday'a
aoarinie ho'P.ltal coata. Thue coate have tripled in ju.st a few ebori
yean. They are upected to double ltA'ain in the few yun ahead.
Stop for a moment. Think how much a Jone stay in th• hotpltal
will eNt you or a loved one. How would you ever pay for eoetly,
but neceaaary, X·rars. doctor blll1, drugs and medit;lnea! What
would you do It rour pay cbtck stopped, but living expenaey•
kept rainr on the aame u ever! The aame nnt, phon•, food. aU the day-to.day expen1e1 that never stop. ·
What la the avera~ breadwinner to do!·We believe wa hav•
tbe anawer In th• famous Presidential Extra Cash Plan that
••• l'ay• you $ r oo.oo a w••• fax·frff
"''" wflen you go to tit• flospl~t.
·Now, Presidential'• economy plan enableayou touj07thi1 pro-
t.ec\ion. Mail tht Enrollment Form. We will send )'OU the actual
policy to look over at home. No rush. No arent will call or phone
JOU. Take -16 daya \0 decide. Show the poliey to a frlend, a familJ'
advi1e~ fir11t. You Joae nothing if[ou don't want the policy. Bull lf you do want It. you're entitle to Pre1identla1'1 special low
rat.ea deacrib..t below. So low, you'll find you get protection at•
prim that'• 1,u•t a traction of what you'd expect to pay.
Your codl f.tenefltt lncracrM each year-
at no extra coif to you I
Your cub beneftb automatically riM year after year. Yaa get
peace of mind so you don't have to worry about rising casts. Your
protection automatie&ll7 lnc:~ $8.00 a week each year. The lr,t faar you ret $100.00 a week. You ret"$10S.OO a week In t)M
aecond :rear. $108.00 a wffk in the third year. Sl09.00 a week in
the fourth year. BJ the eleventh year, your .POlkJ will be worth a t~ 1110.00 cs wc.k in beneftt paymenta ••• at Do incnue In
cod t.o :you! Thill rmeroot euh tuerYe protection will be.lonr t.o
JOU for u Ionr u rou keep tbe: pollq. You mn see that )'Ollr
lnt\UUel will i. woJtb nuuh...,.. than. the pruut "tace nlue"
of tM polb. Cat.ainl7, oar iDcr-..ed paJ1deuta t.o JOA will JWp
Ulp --risina: ---and -al .n ... ••• The,_.....,,,..,,__,,,. come to you at no extra cod.
, .. ""' ,., .... _..... ·-,,..,d .. tlol ,.,. .......
What other Plan protect.I )'OQ like thlt toda1! What other Plan
bept P1"0t.etlnr JOU •p.inat rl1lnr lfvinr east. in the rean
abtad Wftliout fncnuinc ,our pmnlumtf And that'a not .U.
I'h1a Qedal PraldenttaJ Extra CUh Plan.(#BP lSL-1087) •••
• • • ffoys ,... $I 00.00 • w••k CASH
for• Nsfderetl nurN ., hme.
Yes, in addition to the $100.00 weekly cheelc:1 we send you dutin1
vour hospital stay, we pay you an extra $100.00 a week If the
doctor aaya you need a tull-timt rqi1t.trtd nurae to take care.
of you at home.
BA~ u, to $10,000.00 CASH lor -occldtnt CC' rftl i:J '"""" ltlrtiqtheveryfl~dlylnttMholpltal.
ftAVS $100.00 A WW< CASH-ff,,.. nHd I fuU· rft I· tim• retlsttred nutM when )"O\I comt hOrne
1 from ttt. hospitll -up to 50 weeks. PAYS Sl.000.00 EXTRA CASH for occldontol -.
DAVI u, to $2.000.00 CASH for 1ccldental -ol rft I , limbs or .yesia:ht. PAY $100.00 A WEEK CASH for each Pfean•~IY· • when you ao to the hospital, usumina: both
husband Ind wife hive been enrolled In the
Famll)' Plan Witll Matemlty.
ftAVS Up to $5,000.00 1t the rttt of $50.00 A WEEK rn1' When. chikt goes to the hospibl foreny acci-
dent or Illness when you •n enrolled in the
F1mll)' Plain.
ftAVS you cnh beneflb that lnctUM •ch ,.., ••• rft I · to • m•xlmum of $130.00-A·WUK ••• at no
extnl cost to )'OU
ftAVS you eath benefrt1 '°' ho1pltaQlltlon for •ftY r'I'\ I [accident lmmodi•tety. Any licknea1 It cownd
bqinning 30 dl)'l after Effective Oete of potlcy. No •I• Umtt-no medlCll eumlnltlon required
---111tnm1n wlll c.ell.
IP YOU All 65 01·ovER
YOU WILL COLUCJ' $70.00-A·WEIK
IN ADDmON TO MEDICARI
Why aJ't smart folk1 over SS now hastening to protect
themselve1 with th. Pre1idential Extra Cash Plan In
additio11 to what Medicare wlll do for them!
Even though Medicare ill a a-reat boon to folks ever
65, it will not, c! course, pay o.ll t}le hilll that quickly
plle up u a result of illneu or accidenL
Re9ardl••• of yOur age, you 11111 need
oddltlo11ol llealth protection.
We have duiped this plan u the importcs11t additiml.
t.o what )'OU receiY• frotn Medicare -or anr other
health in1uranet1 you may ha•e. Re.member, al checks
will be Hnt dinctl7 to you (not to the doctor or hoa-
pital), to a-ive you that "arlra" help just when you
need it most. Uee the tu-free cash any way you aee flt.
And you will be glad to know the ehecke will be big
011ee/ In adcUtion to what ycu rtteive from Medicare,
Pre1ldenU1I pays you $70.00 a week ••• EVEN FOR
100 WEEKS if necea1aryl You c1111 reeflve iu muc.\ IH
11,000.00 for •cacl& illn. .. or m;u1"JI tul&•n 1&01pit.Gliz11d/
Bow eomfortins It ii to kilow that -aft.tr your atay In the ho1-
pltal, lf ycu'va been there three days or more, you can retum
ilome to recuperate and yet not be a burden to your loved cneL
Yu, it your doctor 1ay1 ycu need • registered nurae full time
within 6 days after you come home, we'll send you checka for
'100.00 • tueek -for aa lonr u you need the nurH -even up t.o
10 toae.U. lt'a lllr.e having a reserve of ,5,000.00 cub to draw on
when you need It. These benefits aUo Hl.crf11Ue each year by ,3.00 a
week. Anet.her exceptional feature you hava with Preaidential, ,,
••• Pays you $100.00 a wHJc cash maternity hnefJtt
-up to 100 Wffkt for eoch hospital stayl
Ordinary hoapltal insurance may take ~are of part of your ex·.
pt.IUU when you JG to the hospital to have a baby, But what
policy can ycu think cf that ri•e• you cash to buy all the thlna:1
JOU nud for the new baby? Now, if both ht11band and wife an
lilaund !.n t.M .w0'1derful Fam«r Pl#" Wit.\ Ma.tsn&itr for the enUn period cf the pregnancy, you get extn. cash to UM an7
WaT you want. If a pngnancy, childbirth or even miacarriage
J*ta you In the.hospital for one day, five daya, 10 daya-iu long
., tteoe1IC1'11' -you get Jl00.00 a week tor every day of your
COftftnement, a:p to 100 week&.
All th••• flClded ca•h benefltJ.
Ttt, In addition to •100.00 a week for hoapitalizaticn or
Jl00.00 a week maternity benefit& and '100.00 a Wf:ek for a rer~
1stered nu rte at home ••• you ~tall this:
Ad4ed cub beotflfl: fl.000.00 cub to your family if death occurs
within 90 da11 from any accidental injury. Think of how handy
I.he cub can be In t.lme of lou. It can take care of burial upentes
wit.bout burdenlna your loved oneL
Addt4 Hiii ..._.h Up to f2,000.00.caah for aecldental lo11of limbs·
or e,..lrht. when the Jou occun anytime within go days of the
accident. 'lht louot a Umb or eyeaigbt I• a terrible thing. Noth-
ing can nplaai tha Jou, but.a check fer fl,000.00 or $2,000.00
will brlnr i('l'eater peace of mind durinr the period of adjustment.
A.,.. caU buelb Choote aitbr Family Plan ..• and ycur
children will be covered too I Pruidential pa11 uptc $5,000.00 &nJ
tlme your rounpter coa• to the hospital ••• for ton1lla, appen-
dlcitia, cr •"W otMrtllneu or lnjufJ'I Yu, you will receive flj0.00
ea.ah, week after w.t-for u man7 a1100 tC1e11ka, if neceuary.
We pay your premiums when you are 1tof obi•
AA a 1peclel con1l~ration. t.o you -it you are bo1pitalized just S
weeka or more, all pnmiuma that com1 due while 1ou are atill in
the hotpltal aft.er this period will be paid by Pre1ldential. And
:rour protection CiXltinuea u If you were payinr the premiums
ycunelf! Then If you leave the hotpital and must return for the
aame condition befOre you haYe reaumed full normal activitie•
for 90 days, Presidential will apin PAY ANY PREMIUMS
WHILE YOU ARE JN THE HOSPITAL-TO A. M.tXIMUM
OF 100 WEEKS per C01lftneme11.t! Thia mean• J'OU P•J no p~
mh:im1, :ret your fall protection nmaln• in force -you. collect up
Co '10,()QO.OO for •aeA OOM.jiumRtl
1HIS UMITIO IN11011MINT Offllt INDS SOON
Amadnf. 1ew bte1 -Money.a.ck Ouorartfff
Yo• can. now haw your 6nt month'• protect.ion ai \Ga special
LICENSED BY THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
•
..-= THE PRESIDENTIAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA
llo.:E' 11401 ROOSEVELT BLVD, PHILADELPHIA, PA.19154.
Ari!>ll<1tlon Ilk The Presidential Lifo Insurance Company of Amerlco, CillcllO, Ill., for Tilt Pmidenlial Hos~IJl·Nurse Pl•~
1.577.9.49
NAME (l'ltul Print) ·~ ~~~---~,...~--~-~--~.~,.,~1.~11JtL1~~,-----~-a~ft,_----
atrMtorltO•
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__.,An:~~~~~~DP~~~~-
~~~~~~~~~~~-"GE~~~~~SEX
M9lllfl 0.,. y-
.. ·BIRTH """"'"-..,_ RnATIONIHtP SEX ""'" Veer AGt
1
2
3
4
·~ . .
~ ~';:;r' Ot-Jt.-.blMGqifllllln an-r.....,Ptenw:itftt111Ctmttr1 anr_,•DyPIMWtthlM..._..,
Do.,_ C111Y allW lliuwe wltll t111s ComjrooJ! Of "l'n" ploao 111 "°"'1 oWllbors.,..) ---------
Tt tllt Mt of.., _I' llld 11trrt1 lllilhtr I, nor"" -llstld "'°"· his be in rel\Jsod •llJ lilllll\ hosJ>llJl or llfo lnslr·
-• 1-lllnd 111114 llld flfl ponon ll111d-, llll bt cowered "1dorthl1 l'ollc:Jlor!IJ7 lnluiyonlcMm I !Mlhld bf.
farl tllt llllctlol Diii al tllt Pollc:J but IOI until tt his btoo ii lora ton ....... ptltodOl'blol2)JW1; llllltlllt thl1 l'ollq.
.. IOI bt la """ lllltil 1111 £lflctiV1 Dito -II tllt Pl>licJ. Sc:bld~L
~ . ' '
j
low nte1 Usttd. below! But JOU must act immftfiot1fJ;". Your~
qUNt tor thl• wonderful Income Protection Plan must be malled
on theecnvenientform below NOT LATER THAN MIDNIGHT
of the date in the Enrollment Form.
This midni.i;ht u:piration hour c:aKMt be •:i::tntded. It rour ezi.rollment form h mailed later, it ca11.1&0t be a.cceptcd.
TlleM are tlte ON1Y exdusJonsf
Your Presidential policy'coven everr conceivable. kind of 1ick-
neu or accident except ecndition1 cauaed by war or any act of
war: where Cllre ia in a Government hotpital; mental disorder•:
fntoxlcanta and narcotie1; ~regnancy except u provided under
the maternity bene.ftt provl&ion; and expensu reaultlng from
any elckneBe or injury you bad befcre the Effective Date o!. your policy ••• during the 6rst 2 yeani only.
Thia Jut item 11 a real help if you a.lr1a.dJ1 have a health rrob-
lem. lf you are sick b1f0f'1 you take out this policy, you wil •till
be ccvered for that condition after the policy bu been In effect
for 2 year•. Of coune, meanwhile every uw condition la imm.e-
dUJ.te fr ~Y\l!~Jl. _ . _ , .. .•.. ·-· _
How can th•H bargain low rates buy so much?' ·
You can buy ordinary insurance at an7 time and pay the regular
rates, if you wish. But Pretidential can now provide you and
your entire family with $100.00 a week tax-free Income Protec-
tion at 1peclal low rates only because we enroll a large number
of people et one time -dir•ct bu ma.ill This highly efficiont
"Ma11 Enrollment" method cut.a cost.a to ihe bone -a.nd the 111v-
ixg1 are JMU&ed o'lt to uoul
Mok• your dec,sion car•fulfy
Think how co1tly a hospital confinement will be. Imagine paying
fer those indispensable x-raya, doctor bills, medicines and drugs
that are not covered by your present insurance.
Wculd yoo be able to afford the quiet and privacy of a private room and a private none, should ycu ao desire? Or a telephone
to k.ee.p in touch with loYed one1? Or ihe rental of a TV &et to help
paas the lonely houn! Who wculd pay your bills that keep on
coming in at home! Many folka have lcet their life 1avinp, their
cara, even tht.ir homea trying t.o meet auch upenaea. And no oa.e
knowa whcM torn it will bti next.
Why you must act Wor. 'flte-deadflne dote dHnm flt
the enrollment form -julf o few days from today
Why 1n1111t you ad befom. the deadfuat.f Because. ff' ~tioned
aboye, we mutt rt.eei'IJI lfOl'r Enrollment Form tM•Ww t1M. IH
aU tk. oU...-. in order to pau on to 'JOO the aavinp that coma
trom pn• Nnr """"V poliei• at ou cm..
Medical Costs Skyrocketing!
(SollCI, U.S. Dtpt. al Hultil, £dutltlDI l Wllfm)
200 1957·'89= 100
1801-------------,~-i
·14ll AH Me!.,ctl --::;;;;;:::~ ...... -----
120 t:;:::::::;:::::;-:;-::;::5-~-~-~-~-~:::=--i ------... Physicians' Fees
100 1'"'7•7.= .. ~.~.7 •• ~.~.~ •• ~.~.~.7 •• ~.~.¥-c:: .. ~.~.~.7.= •• ~.~.7 •• ~.~.7.~ .. ~.~.= .. ~."1.
Prescriptions •nd Drugs ID'-;-;;;;~-;-;:~~-:;;';.,-..._,~~-;-;:;,;-..._,~ 1962 196.J 1964 1965 1966 1961
• Kii II 111
Govt. ftgura reveal rcur pruent health protection •.•
'"411 no long•r proUct VOK ciga.inat toda.v'• riling
Midic:al co1t1/ Dcn't leave your loved one11 defena.-
leul Act. at on~ to add up to $10,000.00 to your
health protection.
We mail you the policy a1 IOOD u we recei't'e the Enrollment
P'orm. When the'policy arrive1, examine it in the privacy of your
cwn home. Take all the time 'JCU need. It's a very a ho rt document,
and you'll be pleuantly surprised t.o discover there i1 NO FINE
PRINT. Then -•how it., if yo" wilh, to aomeone yov trust. Per·
hap1 your lawyer, accountant, or banker, Better 1till -•how it
to your own inauro."°' man ••• ""' thou.git. It.a mo.11 wry weU be
working for cinot/l.n inauranCf compa.nr! If he i1 a personal
friend he hu rour beat intareata: in mind. So you can believe
him wben he te\11 you there ia no better bargain av1.il1ble &1\7·
-whert-at any price!
·Money Hck guarantff-ln COM you chcrnge your mind
Even after ycu mall your Enrollment Form be.low ••• even after
J'OU txamine the policy in your own home and talk it over with
anyone you wi.h ••• uen after all this you are •till free to return th• policy wit.bin lli days csftd nnw pacny VOK pa.id will be ,....,
fK'ftd.«l ae o~ Tbe:r. will be no obliption whatever.
Meanwhile, all dari111 t.ht 16 days ycu are makin,r up your
ml.nd-JOQ'll be protected by Sl00.00-A.·WEEK extra cub ban ..
ftt.a just a1 if you had already said "yes. H That's ria:ht, you will be
fully covered all this time f~r any accident which puts you ln the
ho~pit.al, even it you t\nally decide to return the policy.
However, after 1ou've seen the policy for youreelf you will
n.relr arree that thi1 is a tremendous value and you•h want to
continue this fl00.00..A-WEEK utra c .. h protection under the
Plant.hat'• beat for you.
l'IJIN 1-INOIVtOUM(SJ ONLY PLAN1
If 7<111 want to itmir you.nelf -or 7oureeU' and cne or more
adult dependents (including your spouse) -then this i1 the
Plan for 700. Each person must be 18 or over, and shall pay (per
person) the rata applicable to "hia er her are. NOTE: Where
thert are no dependenta, PLAN l la the moat economic.al to
cbooat for a hu1i>lllld or wife (or both).
THESE W TIIUI LOW IATIS
...... ftNt MOftth'•
,. 1 tom ....,.Ing to ... ...tr,. ..........
Ap et l1.r0Umlll'lt Monthty '"-'"""
18-39 •••••••• on!)' Sl.95
40-49 •• , ••••• only $435
!I0-59 •••••••• only $5.95
to.74 .••••••• Ol'i'/ $6.911
7S Ind 1Mf • • , on!Y $1.95
8AVEl'JVEN HOU (...,.8!nJ by-atquarierbo, Ult
JU.r or 79ar)J ~ta; .ent wl~ policti-
l'UN 11 -PAMIU' PLAN WITH MAfPNITI'
Thb pi.n ii for U. famil:J t.Utla atill l'f'Owlns. "I:•.the tot.al o!
The Praslllatlat•
Extra l111mt Pia•
'JJ.01· -. ·' ,..
'nle PNlldlntllt Ufl l119Ul"ll'IGI COm'*'1 of AfNffcli (HOfM Offlm:
OllUCO. IKlnola) c.rrtn Ml lap! n...... tor tl'I pioteetlOll Of 1U poliQl1l-• .... I~ IY THI .. Of CAUfOMltl
-~~----~· ---••M•MA~·-·---·~··· .... ·~--------·••M••·~-~···-··-----------,,_.., --. -· -----
THl!SE 22 QUESTIONS AND ANSWIU,
Tell yCMt ltow Preslrlentlol'1 COST 01 UVIHQ IHCOMl U.
PLA(lMIHT HEALTH AHO ACCIDENT PLA.H 9Wu JN t ..
proledio" you need -at amorlntlr low cost(
1. How mudt win my pollc:J pay 1M """" I .. io Hit Mlpltart' · TIM f11JI •mo11ntl Yo11 ar• pald $100.~WE(K casl'I W9r)' al!llfl
W••k. And It starts Iha..,....,. first ll.11 )'OU .,.. In tM ho$jitt1I. (If
)'Oii •r• o .... r 65. Yo11 ,,.. Pl'ld $70.00 a w1U. In addition to an1 M•dle1r• botn1flb YoU ~llv•.)
2. Wiii I be paid If I am hospltalltad for Ina thin a tun WMllf
Yo11 c1..Ult1t1 wlll .•. NC•rdl1u cl w"-th•r Yoll .,.. In tt'le ~
,ital for 11 short a tlm• 11 .,,.,. d•Y ·,.or 11 lon1 • llm• •• • wHk, motith, 1••r or moN.
3. Don Ulla Ptan pay rM from tha first day of hospltallutlon?
Yul You r.e.lv• t1111 c1sh btn•fit1 ol Sl00.00 • w••k •l•rtlq the Y•ry flf'll d•)' )'Oii enter th• ho1plt1L Th• cov1r•11 1Msln1 ""'"~• rec:1lv• yo11r first p•1mium -thlt Is lh• d•)' Yoll lr8 c:ov•r for •"1 .ccld•nts. Slckn•1s c:OY•r•11 1Mtln1 JO da,11
•fter 1 •ff•'"11"9 d•l• ol lh• policy.
4. How ch do I rac:elv9 far• Rlllstared Nurse •t Homer
$100. A·WEEK for up to $5,000.00 •ft•r you h1v1 be1n ho9' plt•llz d for 3 d•1s or more, •nd your doctor h•• you amploy a
full·tr • r•el•t•,..d nun• within !i d•)'I •ft•r you l••Y• th• hos-
plt11. •n 1e•r1 from now It wm h1v• lner1•Hil to $130.00 e w••k b•n•llt1 ., ..at no •lltr• c:o1t to )'Oul
B. An any accldtntal death banefltl?
Yu. ,000.00 c.1h I• ptld to your ••late whit! ll•ath oec:urt
•n)' ti • wtthltl 90 dl)'I of In •c:dd•til, ·
15. Will I pskl extra ff I loM •limit or eynl(ht1 Y••· 1ld•ntlal pays $1,000.00 for compltt• •«ld.,,t1I lof;1 of
Ol'I• h nd or on• foot or sl&ht ol on• •YI: $2.000.00 fOf' lo1s of both ncb or both f1~! or 1!1ht of both 1~1 ... wh•n di~
btorm t oec:u,. •nytlm• wlttllt1 90 dl)'I of tfl• •ecld41tit.
7. How do -racelwi tor prtpancln?
If you hav• ttl• f1mlty Pl1n With M•t•mlt1, """' rau"'-. SI00.00.A·WEEK for uch pr11n•ncy, c:hUlftllrth IN' mllClrrlal• tti.t r•1ults In holPJtal cortfl'"'tneont ""en both h~nd and wile
.,.. .nn.11..S 11ndtor thl1 pl•n for th• anti,.. parlod of Pf'QMnCJ'.
I. Suppole I ..., peid banlftts for~~ _. 8Cddent. Whet
... ~ If I mi ._.n ~ tor th9 11me condtuonl Dotl"t 1orry. You still colleet $1 .00.A·WEEX for • total of 100
•••k AM If you haVll •lrudy ruumed full·~I •ctl'lltl•• for
l111t d•ys, It's m •skhrltd I n•w conlln•m"t· •nol )'OU c.11n col--l.c:t 1n addltlon•I 100 w .. k .. Of course, •II)' -con1:Utlorl la COV• d lmmltdl.tttl)' tor e full 100 -•Ila.
I . How 1MJ I UM theu benaftt Pl~
Vou ""' 1111 th•ll'I lti •n)' w•y you wlsh -tor hufl/llol •" dDctor
bm., ~1, food. hOllHho'd ·~ or 9fl1lhlnc ale&. Thi• M 1nu,..1 llP to )'OU,
10. May I pflb' If I em ovrar l!J?
Y•I. yo11 m•1. f'olt1 any ••• at'I welcome to appl)'-ttltr• 11 N
•s• tlmlll M•mtMrs 6!i M.r•r ,,.. P11ld $70,00 e •••II plw 111 M•dlcar• beo•fltl.
11. ean 1 correct from f'rffld .1.,..... If 1carryott.'1n ....... ..r
01 c:ourM. Thl1 pl•n wm pay you In •ddltlOfl to whtl .... •• you m•)' ,..c:•lv• from •n1 olh•r po1Jci•1, lneludtn1 Medic:•,. fOI' folU
ov•r 65.
12. Why do I need tfll1 p,..Jdlfttltl "'1n In tdclltlon to my tCtlel' tio.plt11 •nd ha•lth ln1ur1nu?
White ho1plt•I co1t1 h1v• lrlpl1d In •K•nl Yl•tS, v•ry taw 1M9pla
h•Vll trlpl•d th•lr lns11r•nc:•. Th• ch•netl •N ona in .. ,.,n ~·t 11111 will nHd moti•)' to l•k• c•r1 of •ti Your Oth•• •JP11nsff •• w•ll •• yo11r ho1p!t•I blll s. Your Pr111dtntlral checks ,,.. I'll~
to )'OU b1 •Ir m1il ta 11s1 •• )'Oii u• lit.
13. What ben.nts do my •llclblt, d.,and•nt chlktren pt1
It )'OU choos• • F1mlty Type Pl•n. your d1ptnd1nt all1lbla dlJI.
drll'I. •111lmonths II11nd•r 19 ,.,,... woutd rtc•lv• $()" ol aM
thl i;:tsl'I bton•flU of thl Plan (ucl11dln1 Wal.,..r of Premium),
14. May I add Mura dapandent children to my policy •ftw tt la· kl fORai?
Yts. lnd .. d. ii )'Oii h11t1 th• FAMILY PLAN WITH MAT("NITY, J 111t notify u1 wll•n lh•y •1"11 l months old •nd th•)' wlll tM ~
1t11d without ..nd•nc• of lns11r1billt)I •nd without Ill)' 16dltlotial ch1rsc.
15. Wltl my piobCUon M t1ncallldbeuusal tit .... too mtnydllrnd
No, d•llnll•l)' n11t! Pruid1ntl1I a11e .. nt1•s n• .... r to cancel/':"' prt1t1ctlon bec.•1111 yo11 h11.1 too m•n1 cl1fm1 or bee•,_.• o ad+
v•nc.-d •I•· W1 •I~ 1u1r•ntH n1¥1r ID r•l11s• to Nn-)'Ollr policy unltt1 th• p,..mlum 11 not Pl'ld btolo,.. th• ind 11f thl ll• d1y fr•e• perlOd. or unl•tt r•n•w•I Is d.c:lln1d on •II pollc:lff of th11 t)'Pt In your •ntf•• 1t•I•. (Of c:o11ru. It d•c.ptlOl'I 11 uMll It! ml.kll\I •Poncatfon, th• poUc1 m1y bto lntffKtW..)
115. win my r1tn. M rliMCI 11 I lfOW Ofcfw or If I hlva toe m1"' cl1lm1t
No m1tter how m1ny cl1llT'I• you h1w. or re1•rd!11s or._ 9oft1
1011 ll•IP your pollcy, Yollr rai. wlll r8m•ln the .. m• •• It waa f11r your .. , when r;:u •ppll1d. Pr•1ld•ntl•I 111•r11ntHI n.v•r to
adlult 11111 nt• un ••• 11'1• r•t•• •re •dJ1i1stad on au potlc:la1 of thf1 tS"Pt In your •ntl,.. 1t•te.
17. What It not C1Mrld bythl1 pollCJ?
Th• oril)' cond!tlon1 not c..,..rld ,,.. tho•• uul•d by: 1r1•nt1I dlf. ord•rs: lt1toslc•nt1 and t11rcotlc:1; •~o•ns•s r1s11lt!n1 lrom en)' 1lc~n111 or Injury you hid b1fort th• pol!c1 Ef1"11V• D•I• (d11,.
Inc th• first 2 ya•rs only); •cl of w1r: wh•re c:1r• 11 in• Qov1rno mint i1111plt•I, EVERYTHING ELSE IS COVERED-intludlnl ~
n1nty wh1n both hu1b1nd 1n-d wlr• h1Y1 be•n •nro!led In '"-
FAMILY f'UN WITH MATERNITY for ltl• •ntl,.. p.rtod of~ nancy.
lL Wh.lt 1119 tha ~ultlmlnt1 to erirotl In one of thna PNtldentill P'lans?
You m~o.fst !\ct ti • .,.. bl•n f"lfustd 1ny h•tlth, ho1oltll w 1119 lris11r1nc•: •nd, 10 ciu•llty for 1nrollm1nt. Yoll m111t m•H Yoltl'
frll 1•1mln1Uon form belo... mldnlcht ol Iha d•i. In the '°""'
lf, Why ii tflis of'fw nod for I llmitad time onl)'J
Blca1111, by •nroTlinc • l•rs• numtMr at PIOPI• •t tna N!fta ti'"'
undlrwrltlns. processl"I' and policy ltsu.ne• co1t1 un ~ lwllt
•l 1 mlnlmum-•nd wa un Pll•• ltl•H 91V!np on to yo11.
20. lnldel the NYtnp. .,. there otJW tdvlntaps to )otnffW
Prll.ldll'ltill e:ur1rc this enrollment pariodl
Y•1. th•,. Clrtalnly , .... ~ ..,...; ll"POrtent 011• 11 that )IOU do llOt
nMd tD tompleta • recu!M" 1pp(lcltloli" -just )'Gllf brltf tonn In th• 1-•r l•f~ hand eo.,..r at this Piii:•· Also, durlt11 thl1 111rol._ m1rit Ptrlod the,. .,.. tlO oth1r raqulremfft. for •ll1lblllt)'-
enol no ''W•lv•os'• ..,. '"trldlve lffl•orunM11U un bto put on
)'OUr PDllcyl
21. C•ri other members of "'1 t.mllr take lldvantap of th11 speclll
ottw? .
Yes, 11 lont•• ttl•1 can mHt th•'"' r911ult'lfl'llllll 1111111 \lmht Q11•sllon 1
22. How do I pt the policy for exemln1t1on with money.Md:
1W1raritea?
J111t fl!1 out Your bl1•f 1nrt1l1m•nt fom'! 1nd m•ll It with yiour fll"t't
month'• premium to Tlte Prasi.stnt11I Uf• lr111K1nC1 Compant ol America. 11401 RooM''•lt 8M:I,. Phll•dtlphl., f"•. 11154.
emon ypre um or •au ,
This entltlee JOU to all maternity bmeftt.I. I\ also ccvtn all JOU'
unmarried, dependent children. between the ages of I mont.h•
and under 19 7ean who live at homL Future dependent chlldrm
will be covered when th.,-reach 8 montha of ap and wtt.bout aq
additional charp:.
PIAN 111-PAMILY' Pl.AN WtrHOUf MAflltNITI'
Thb plan ll for the family that lt·no lonrer rrowtnr. To th• .totaJ ot the mcmtlll7:Premiwn f<1't &he ~t.a tQDe insured, jo•t
'ad( f3. With tn1Ptfon ot dilld.rtll 1et to be borii, PI.AN IU
eoven aJ.J J1)Dr WlfllartHd, ~t ctiUdru. bet-nen .ibt qe1 •t 1 molitli.a and under 19 ,....,. w!lo lln at home.
Norn 1lia f'IClll•r Mttlthly """"'lum lhow11 hlife (for :rour .,. at Um. flll
•nroliinwll) 11 ti!• •-• io.. J••mlum )'Iii w411 C011tlnu1 11 p•y, fl wtM ... autom•tlully Inc:,. ..... ~ llHlU "'--..,. Wfftilt t. u.. "'"-o-you h-•11t01l•d1 Yo"' l'IPll U1I """""M ChlftlM 1Mca11 .. ot ,_ muctl w how~ ,.OU ~llct from UI -or blallM Of •dvllncN ... -INt only If
.,,,. 11 • ...... r.r Nfll llilljllltment, up or """-on .ti polld " of lhll t1Pll ... ,.. .mi;.,, ....
Act 11ow-"later'' may .. too lcrt•f
TIN.B 18 PJlB.CIOtJSI Actquldd:rl (No aalesmu. will call) Get
10ur4n.rollqi,ellt fcnn int.a tht maO t.odaw with your flr1t m0nt.h't
prun11l'D'l actordlns to the plan ;you ehOOle. Remernbltr, you mm
be complet.&a AtiaAed. or 1our mone:r wlll be rafundfd. But JOii
mv1t-ad rir\t how, lfeMel\l,ber, onC41 you 1ulf1r an aceidan~ ot
ekkneu, It's. TOO LATE to buy protectlOn at 1111r eo1\. That'• t:,:. urn )'OU to act. todq -•at .... antthlns •nu:plldll&
l
'