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1968-10-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
-~. • . - ' ' • •• ew1 m IC ar .. Jach.ie~-Say •Thanh You to Cushing . ' I ' THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 24, 1968 • 10' VOL. t1, NO.. ... J t•CTIONI, JI l'AO•s. ' Irvine Calls Off Bacl{ Bay Land Swap Polic·e Seize UC From Wire Servfctt BERKELEY -Hundreds of' law eh~ forcement officen: marched onto the University of C8lilornia 'campus today and recaptUred a building which bad been , seized by a militant band o f demonstrators. The police arrested 76 of the protesters. Acting on a predetermined signal in the pre-Oawn darkness, the 500 riot-equipped officers surrounded the structure seized 12 hours earlier by the demolistrators, some of them non-students. The orticen were greeted by a hail of rocks and catcalls ~ •sympathizers outside Ute ~pt!.u'e .. But, most fled as the helmeted officers pushed througQ makeshift barricades to reach the building where the, heavily blockaded inaln entrance was le\ afire. The flames Were qulckly exttngulshed Md the tedlou~ task of arrest paperwork began as the siege ooded. Within two and a half hours, the demonstratora were Onassis' Thank Cardinal For Marriage Defense ATHENS (UPI) -Aristotle and Jac- queline Onassis have telephoned Boston's Cardinal Richard James Cushing, ap- parently to thank him for defending their marriage despite Vatican frowns. Onassis revealed the transaUantic call today. "Cardinal Cushing is Mrs. Onassis' best spiritual frie.nd. Yesterday we called him on the phone," said Onaaais who in- terrupted his four-day-old honeymoon. left his bride on his $3 million yacht and flew here this morning on big business. Onassis did not aar What was discussed in the telephone cill betWeen the yacht Christina and the Raman Catholic church Cardinal in Boston. tt was assumed they thanked Cushing for denouncing as "nonsense" religious criUcism of the wedding and defending the match be said he encouraged. Onassis, a 62--year-old multimlllionaire, told newsmen he and the 39-year-old bride, widow of the late President John F. Kennedy, were "very happy.'' At the ministry of coordination, Where Onassis came for talks on bis reported $360 million refinery and aluminum development project for bis native land, Minister Nickolas Makarezos shook the OLYMPICS: BLACK REPORTER'S VIEW DAILY l'ltll'r Sporu Editor GleHll White stepo aside in Mexico City todV to allow Fr e d Sturrup, a black reporter from the Bahamas, to comment on racial events which threate.n to overshadow sporting events at lhe 19th Olympiad. In addition to the guest colwnn on Page Jl today, White'• on-scene coverage tn- clodea: a rurxlown on the tough com- petiUon Corona do! Mar'• Madam But• terflY, Toni Hewitt, lieu tooigbl as the 17-ye·ar-old swtmmer goes for the gold in the 200-meter butterfly event. It'1 not going to be an eliy wln -lor anyone. brkfegroom~ hands and said, "you got the girl." Onassis smiled. "You were not much competition, you. married man," Onassis said jokingly. In Boston, Cushing Tuesday night said political and personal friends of'the Ken- nedy family had contacted him about trying to stop the 'wedding. The cardinal said that instead he aided Mrs. Kennedy in the match with Onassis. ID Vatican City, Roman Catholic church officials bad announced Mrs. Onassis wu being barred from church sacraments as a result or marrying a divorced man. Cushing said she could marry anyone she chose. He attacked a Vatican official's statement Mrs. Onassis had become a "public sinner." Answering the cardinal, a Vatican City spokesman said Wednesday, "l agree with the Cardinal's statement that only God knows who is a sinner but whoever contravenes the law of the church incurs her sanct.iOm." Onassis indicated on his arrival at Athens' airport that be was anxious to finish his busine!S in the c:apllal and get baclt to his bride m their yacht ofJ Greea!'s west coast. Viet War 'Drop· Out' Sentenced to 4 Years SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Pvt. Ktith A. Mather, 21. of San Bruno, one of nine aervicemen who chained ·themselves to clergymen July 16 and allJIOUllC<d they were "dropping out" or the Vietnam war, was convicted Tuesday by a court mattlal ol desertion and wilful di3obe- dfeRce of an Order, ' He"wU given a disbonorabte discharge -.nd-Rntencec1· 1o foor· Y'll" at bard lobcr. removed, from the lvy.<:OVered building and hauled to jail in bw!es, Of the 76 persons . mested, 211 were girls. AD were inside the building except four youths taken into custody 100 yards from the building when they refused to disperse from a bq~. ' A.s the ,demomtrators were herded lnto the buses, they· changed "Ban UC Racism" and "Pigs Off Campus." A group of about 50 students a hundred (See BERKELEY, Pa1e 2) CdM Girl Holds Olympic Record For 3 Minutes By GLENN WHITE O.lty Piiot s,...b l!flfS MEXICO CITY -Corona del Mar's Toni Hewitt had an Olympic record for roughly three minutes today as she easily qualified for torught's imW in the women's 200 meter butterfly. The 17-year-old American record holder rovered the distance in m o r n i n g semifinals with an easy 2:29.1, to reduce Olympic standards set earlier by team- mates Diane Giebe (2:31.0) and then El- lie Daniel (2 :29.4). However, Miss Hewitt had barely dried off when world record owner Ada Kok. from Holland, zipped the dlstance in 2:26.3 to become claimant to an even newer Olympic mark. That record doem't figure to last more than six or seven houri. however, with a bu..tering finals in prospect. Mila HewiH had things her own way, vying against the performers from Korea, East Germ·any, Uruguay, Sweden and West Germany. Sbe was in third place at 50 meten, closed to second at the hallway mart, then toot the lead at 12$ meten. She never tratled after that. All four team winners had it easy. There was only one major upset ln mornlna action as Australia'• Lynette McClementa wound up fourth In Mia Danitl'1 heat, fouling out ol compeUtion. She WU the gold medalist in Monday's 100 butterfly, bul had told the DAILY PILOT that the :QI wu not ber cup ot tea. So tonigl!t, it'• the lour favorites bat- tlhlg loc the medak -Mi,. Hewitt, Miss Kot, Miss l>inlel and Miss Giebel, :ne.th Suspeet MURDER SUSPECT Levester Coley Rancli President's utter . -. Asks En~ to All Dealln.gs . ' ~· • · .. ~~.L'w': ·l ' ; .,.. ', t., ~.· ,; : ;i, 'l'be Upper~fiil .. ,lfr .. ~pr!vate]y co~~ •fli • . df; . "' ' -. . ' >tlll!t"Off-Wiii -Ille C. Featberi,, chairman of the permanent shelving of ·the Upper Bay Orange. Cot!fl!y~ of.Superviws, to-plan. · ·• 1 day co~ to 'the DAILY PILOT tbat Mason's action oresumably ends the .the Irvine Company bas withdrawn from PoSSlbillty of a tracfe :whlclt wis ~ aug~ .the !pqg-disculsed .land trade proposal ill g..ted. Fea~ly today recalled, IOIJle .U~ ~ewport_Bay. 18 years ago. Featherly 881d he received news of. the ADVANTAGES Cll'ED, wthdrawal in a . letter de 1 i v e ~ e d The supervisors had pr evious 1 y personally bt Irvine Company president unanimously supported the ~pl,icated Wllllam Mason. While reluctant to discuss exChange of lands, publicly declar!ng that the issue, Featherly confinned that the Jt would be in the public interest and letter ,wu "a formal announcement of would result in a strpng adV&fltage to the Irvine s withdrawal-from any ~ county -bo~ financially ~ for ,P.art discuas1on of a land trade between us. developments m the Uppei' Bay. , The other four members of the Board The State Lan.de COmmissi.on approv· of Supervisors are attending a three-day ed the Iaiid' el:change in mid·1967; seminar at Idyllwlld. in Riverside County, But legal compllcatlQns set 'tq. And lhe and, Featherly .said he felt !~r Irvine Company -stalled in getting the discussion of tilt 18SUe should await their transaction pushed ·through ·":-made it return. clear that ·Jt was growing tired of. paYinJ a big tu: load ·an'd heavy development costs OlJ p<operty emntsbed f. iii • i'Jlil DISCUSS LE'ITERS 11There'1 not much that we can do about it," the veteran supervisor added. "But we should at least discuss Mr. Mason's letter among 01,H'Selves." Irvine Company 's wtlhdr.awal from the beleaguered Back Bay trade was later confirmed-by public rel&Uons director William Aldrich. "I can't reve8.I contents of the letter," Aldrich sa\d, "But I can say that n l!nds Irvine's interest in the deal" Supervisors took th e hotly debated issue "off calendar" Wednesday. They complicaUons. · But .. the Board o( · Supervisors said yesterday that it saw no way out of tht taxation ·bind. Members · sald :th~y couldn't go 6long with a J>rOpoSal that relief be granted durmg the period 'tl>OI the proposal was tied up in court. The trade would ~ave involved lrvinl taking 01,1er the deed$ for 16 pareets T- a bout . 157, acr~ -of . c~unty-owned .tidelands tp exc_hange for 450 .acres of Irvine terrain. The Switching 'of deeds would, propon!nta of ·the deal ' aald1 remove the· heavily taxed Irvine lan4 Injured Fullerton Man Held in Mesa Slaying • • from the tax role& ,until. a court decision is obtained on the. land swap proposal -believed to be as much as three more yeB.rs away. Proponents of the suggested deal bave pointed out ttiai the transfer w oji Id enable the county tp develop a regional park in the area. It would, J¥!~t.tbt Irvine Company, they argue, to use rebuilt tidelands for inilrtne type develop:. A murder complaint against a Fullerton man was sought today, after a random angle bl0559med into a major break Wednesday in the ambush slaying or a Costa Mesa coc;ktail waitress seven days ago. Levester A. Coley Jr., 29, was booked into ~ Mesa City Jail aboot. noon Wednesday on suspicion of shooting Mrs. Rose Marie Weidner to death after lying in wa!t for the victim. Detective Arnold Appleman was 'cbect· ing a list of 18 emergency hospitals in Orange County, where someone could be treated for a gUl'lshot wound, when Col- oy•s name !urned up Tuesday nighl A !rail of blood led •••I from the sp« where Mr1. Weldner-telf, fatally wQuD<f. eel, after apparently grappling wltb her attack.et at the AcapulCo Apartmenta, 740 E. 18th SI., in a fight apinlf death. Whoever killed her may have injured hlmaell in the act. Coley, au. s. P~Officeemptwe1 was arreMd at.bi.1 apartment, which ts rlaht around the comer from the Orangelalr rettaurant ir. i'ullertcii, Wbr.rt the victim had beeil employed onlY --· Ha bu ma~ ·m statement and t... ~' u1'9ri·amsl Ill! iii a call to Ol1fl of Orange Counl]l'I best. Imown»criminal delenae 1ttorncys1 Matthew Kurillcb Jr., of Fullerton. A Ught veil of teerecy llllTWnd& much of the evidence tO be used against Coley, who was in custody of Fullerton police for a time before being rele.,00. u an ac· cidental shooting victtm. Reconl8 showed Coley was treated at Martin Lother Hospital in Anaheim lut Tburaday mornjpg for . a gunabot .Wound· in the !ell hand and superviaors nolilled police, u required by law, . Coley .-his left cheek marred by a llngernatl·like ocrstch •ben -photograph- ed Wednesday -told invesllgaton II< had accidentally st\ot himselC-,1 • "Ria version WU that he WU dry.firing tn the beilaf.lt wu uD!oaded and it wert. olf," said C.pt. C. D. Davil;chlel'brtbe 1'ullerton police tnvesUgation bureau. • "I· don't hlye the actual repctt In Cronf of me;" said C.pt, Dtvls. "f really -dn1 toll you What time ii wu." Since the 11vage 1iayinc, widelpriad' publicity hu bOeii l!>'en to the trall-of· blood 'angle and theOriea of a w6unded' llay!r, but Fullerton police apparenllt never connected the twO incidenll. C.'pt. Davis and other spotesrilen con- tacted after 'Col,Y'I am.I by Deteetlve Appleman. and District At to r'n e y '1 lnv.,Ugator Eddie Banka dld ·not aeem • (See SUSPF£1', Pac• I) (See BACK BAY, Page I) . . Orange . «iHst . ~. -Weiitlter Old Sol breilkll through the fog Friday to warm the coast up with 8Cklegree U!m~at~. wliile in- land regions perspire near the 100 mark. INSl~B TODAY A ring so trto -you-cOtddn't-- diol G telephunl iutfh ii' Wiii ""'°ng the fe111ci. ~TS. <l,Jlou;,. ttteioed ftvm mr hasband otd it, wafn.•t el)ffl. the ch0ic11C piccs. Pa.g1 e, . ,l ., I OAILY PILOT • Kenn~dy Urges 'No' On Wallace " Tlwr1dly, OclOb<f 24, 191>1 • •. 11n miroaD. -(VPI} -..:. ldws<i 11. 11:..nodJ -led I e _lodoJ .. ~-...... ---lnlnol•led.i -not .. -'"' "ii-. c. wan-r.r J>rooldont '"' ""'· . ;,a.111-.. wan-"111n ...,.... with .. ... .,,, ,,. 1111" lllt S"llld111r-. ..... ...., .• .-...... Ibo_..._ Uoo --"' ... .,..,...,..n porty cl --aod bale" Oii Ille Am<rlcan poUUcol .,..e. · Ol>lenln& that polls indlcate "u many ~ l$ mlID<m AmerleaM" may be con-. 0 llderlnl voting for Ille thlril party can- • dldale. Kamody said ' "To tbme who lean towards (Wallace), 'aod "J>Oclllly .. lh<ioe IDIOll( them who '..ted fer Pr<lldent Kennedy _aod who aupporl"1 Roborl Kennedy, I "ant .. oay that nothinf coold be fur1ber from the !1'1ndpleo of lheoe men." • B•ildl'*fl• Needed • Proposition 3 Vital to. i-vt'-ne No campu1 anywhere In the slate hu a greater ootake In puuge ol the ootalewlde educ1Uon bond lwe, PropollUoo S, than UC Irvine • The young UCI campus stands to get nearly tl ln every tlO for construct.Ion of medical college faclUUes and ade.nce buildlng1. Of the l2IO millloo to be allocated statewide, UCI would g:et $20.S m!Woo. Tbe three-purpooe ootate bond -· ~11116 llOO mWlmlor bulJdlPi .,. Unhen!ll' of Calllarnla eampuoes, 111>0 m1lllon for building on State College cam- puses, and ISO million for restoring deteriorated public schools In urban ...... UCI Qtancrttor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. aaid the Irvine eampus needs the bond JnODe, to keep c:onstructkm on schedule for SJ'OWIPg enrollment.a and to traln needed ooclenllltl aod medical docton. top leaden In both pollll<al part! .. and el the ootalewlde Pl'A. Tbe chief aource of oppoallloo la .. pected to be u-•ho 'll'OO!d punllh thO unlveraity for such 11 !:Jdrld&e Cleaver~ appearanctl or the state colleae system for allowing auCh u the play "Tbe Beard." ·Students Told Negroes Left Out of History . Con~ Wallace lo hll late brothen. tlle M-etll .... tor com- mented: "Pr..idmt Kennedy upheld the Coolll1llllaa aod lhe law• of the United St.ates. George Wallice defied them. President Kennedy defended America against the e:rtremllla. George Wallace ls le league with them. •. BERKELEY DEMONSTRATORS TEAR DOWN ONE BARRICADE TO BUILD ANOTHER 1 •- Lumber from Construction Proloct Oon lo< Sit.In Should Propoolilon s P"'· the Inlne campus wtll 1et even more than the '20.5 million. Added lo It would be llU millloo In federal 1111Ichlng fUndJ aod 111.1 mllllon in atate pay-u -you-io money. Total building fund11 available to the cam· pus over the next two years would be "8.9 million. One reason f« the deep ractal cte1vac1 dividing 11\e United Stales today 11 that black hat been omitted from hllllory honks, Dr. Oley Scruggs aald Wedne1da7. at UC Irvine. · "Robert Kennedy liood for recon- clliation amona: the racea. George Wallace lllndl for division and IUP- pronloo. "So It 11 not eno<llb that Wallace'• 1n0vemeut be defeated. It must be r.podlaled -for the heallh of our coon- try arid our futm't: u 1 natton." ' Kennedy said that ID oelectlng retired ':Air Force Gen. CUrtia E. LeMay as his nlJllllng male, Wallace -lo put In the vice presidency a man who has "'shown himself to be completely m. sensiUve to the grave risks involved ln )be use of nuclear weapons." * * * Nixon Supported .By' Black Baptist Convention Group NEW YORK UPI) -The National Baptl&t Convention, an organization of aix million Negroes, has endorsed Richard M. NUon for president because he will ~·serve the naUon and the e&Ule of peace ., well." Dr. J. IL JacUoll, p<esldent of the n.- Uon'a largest Negro church group and a regi.stertd Democrat. aa.ld It WU the first time be bu endoned a Republican. "W• believe that·Mr. Richard M. NJ.am by ·---aod dedlcaUon not only will lead his party to higher and con- structive achlevementa but will also serve the naUon and the cause of peace u well," Jackson 1ald in a statement Wedneaday. In 1960, Jackson endorsed John F. Ken- nedy'• auccuaful presldenUal campaign over Nilon. The Negro leader also has atlrred controveny wlth h1a criUcl.sm of the late Dr. Marlin Lulh<r King Jr. 'Ibe Negro leader said Nl:1on'1 tough 'It.and on law and order 11 a key issue of the campaign, noUng that "without law and order there can be no democraUc society, no United States of America and no means of ei:ecuUna jU!llce and secur- 1n( -for all." * * * From Page 1 MURDER SUSPECT HELD • • • eager to talk. Cc:sta Mesa Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow refuses to say whether a gun was found in the apartment at 115 W. Orangetborpe Ave., which Coley shared with a roommate. The euct caliber . of the four aluga which killed Mrs. Weidner aJ she walked to the apartment she shared with Richard Surface, 28, ls also being withheld, pending prosecuUon. Surface was cleared almost· im- ~edia~ly as a suspect in the grisly kill· mg. with Mrs. Weidner's husband James, 28, of El Monte, eliminated only hours later by a polygraph test. IRJSBAND FAINTED The weeping husband said he. hadn't seen the petite, dark-haired murder vie· tim for a year and fainted upon being told of her dealh by Baldwin Park police. A prime point ln the unfolding case will be a motive for the murder. Police Initially theorlied Mn:. Weidner may have been killed by a man she broke off a relationship with since leaving her husband to take various waitress jobl in Orange County . It has not been revealed whether she may have known Coley, due to the prox- imity between her place of employment and his apartmenl A patrolman was cnJ!slna through the neighborhood where Mn1. Weidner wu killed about 3 a.m. when he htard a shot then screams and four more shota. ' Officer Randy Nutt roared around the area trying to find the source of the trou- ble, but the gunman escaped -ap- parently in a car heard by resident! -u he searched. VICTIM DEAD Nutt waa dispatched to the exact loca· tion after neighbors telephoned police, but Mrs. Weidner was apparently already dead, with two bullet! in the head and one in the stomach. She was also wounded in the hand. The victim's body was claimed by her parent! and flown to Lancaster, New York, where she was burled Tuesday, on- ly several boun: before Appleman stumbled onto tbe lead which may solve the case. Police aald he bad 1 list of 11 hoopltal& lo cheek aod Martin Lulher J!Dopltal ·WU only the fourth or fifth he vlalted when Coley's name fu:rneQ up.· Handcuffed and knotting hiJ jaw muscles nervously, Coley was led out o( the city jail booking irea Wedllesday to be!hotographed wllh Investigator Banks an Detective Jim StrickJand. The suspect can only be held 72 hours without a complaint and police hope to obtain one today, ~ter which Coley would be Jmmediately arraigned in Harbor District Judlclal Court. From POfJfl 1 BACK BAY ... ments. And it has been further argued that the deal would enable the county and Irvine to perform necessary dr<dglng In Upper Newport B a y under a aingle contract with a "poulble aavlng of II million lo each party." Opposition came to a headln recent days when' County Aueaaor An- drew J. llinshay condemned the deed ex- change aa 0 1egally hnproper" and based on "grnu misstatements of probable assessed values." Countian Killed, Three Tots Hurt In Beach Crash A Westminster man wu killed and three small chUdren lnjurea Wednesday when the family car collided with a coun- ty trub tramfer rig at Warner Avenue and Newland Str«t in Huntlngton Beach. :Humphrey in Southland Coroners depu.Ues sald Ke n n e t h Laneve, 27, &m Humboldt Ave ,. died It 11:21 p.m. at Huntington. Intercommunlty Hoopllal, 1boul four houra alter the ·~· cldent. ~Seeking Minority Vote , LOS ANGELES . (UPI) -Hubert 'Humplny'a week-long quest for votes . amq rellgioua and ethnic minorities !eok on new urgency in CallfornJa today DAILY PILOT .............. c..... ..... ~":%:. -..': = ~ ... ~I '°"'' JOUaLllHIHO COMPANY ReMrt N. Wtt4 ,,..,.... Miii hllllllllf Jttli: R. C"'l.y Viq ""'*"' t!lf 0-tl MIN"r Tiit111•• l(,, .. ;1 ..... n..,.,, A. M•,111111 oWMtlllt ..... Pt•I Ml11t• _. ... ...... -c.... ...... : ,. ... , .. ¥ ltrMf .....,_, littdl1 m1 w.t .. ...., ..,....,. ._...,. ttadl: m ..... ~ ""*6-··· 9Hdl1 -ail ....... • DAllV l'ILOT, wlll ...... 11 _.....,, ... ....... ,_ .......... ~ ._. --................ ~....,.. ,.....,. ...-. c.. MtM. .....r..cltsi ............... .,..,. ............ . .... l.i:O:-· .... 0--c-t ,,....,...._ .. .......................... .......... """" CtaM ..... :-;;'; I C7T4) '4Mut • Mic 11:1 I 6Q.U1t =-,.., OrW Cllllf ..... , • d ................... 111 $liliOW • ........ t --..... · = ------........... _., ~c..-:-r2r~ :.i:=.t-: =.·"" :.r.-ri .. --· ~I • where 40 electoral votes were al stake and where his presidential bid may stand or fall . Humphrey wu hopeful and en· couraged. He could CQUnt succes.!I in his first two outings here, one in the Negro ghetto of Watts and the other in an East Los Angeles area heavily populated by Mexican·Americans. Humphrey told a street c r o w d estimated at 2,500 in Watts that Richard NiJ:on ta1ked of law and order, but a· dif. ferent kind of law and order than the peo- ple wanted. "Every American, black or white, young or old, ts entitled to the run pro- tection of the law and to equal rights, to equal enforcement of the law, and to equal opportunity under the Jaw . "Now that's law and order," Humphrey 11houted, and the black crowd roared back Its lpproval. Humphrey also Ucked off a llJt ol pr<o- mlses be said hia admlnlstratlon would make to all the people, black and wblte and medical care, a better llfe. and medical care, a better Ulfe • "Yeah, but how long will w6 have to wait?" a voice from the darkne11 yelled. "Get me elected aod It will start rtiht away. I've beM wcrking for you for a quarter of a century," Humphrey yelled ba<k. I' wa1 the only lnterrupUon in a hllf • hour oratloo. He drew 7,5CIO Mu1can-American1 to a ahoppill( center rally. He promlled to leplbe fann unlona, blJ \uut ln thil qrtculture ootale wblch depondl beavi11 on caauaJ labor. lllnnphrey 0.W to Ca!Uornla Wed- nood17 night lnom Tuu when he wu cndltod wltlo • ''political mlrac>•" In polchlnc loplher • coalltloo of - Nrv&Uvt and liberal Dtmocratl. It wu ltlll a question whelher the polchwwk could product. moJor!IJ .. "" hlm that lllale'I 1$ elecl<raJ \OOI ... f On of Laneve'a children Jackie, 4, and a playmate Michael Marinez. S, of Garden Grove, were held overnight for ob&ervaUon. Robin Laneve, S, wu given emergency treatment and aent home. Pollet said drivtr of the rig, Rolando ~aplnosa, 28, of Santa Ana, escaped ln- Jury. Mother Skips Trial Date A Westminster woman accused of abandoning her 7·year~ld daughter at Orange County Airport falled to appear lot lrlal Wednesday In Santa Ana munk:ipal court. Judge Leonard H. McBride issued a $315 bench warrant for the arrest of Patt Nm Fisher, 20, of lUOS AJh Sl Mra. FJ.acbu, Ibo known by police u Eaau, Reiter, La Fluer, Bauldln, St. Cyr - all.,.. she allegedly hu u!ed since she came to Orange County from Michigan seven month.I a g o -ts tbarged w I t h felony chUd abandonment of Corrinne Esau. The child 11 now In the custody of ber father, Michael Reiter Jr. of Mound, Minn. Reiter, divorced from Mrs. Flscher, WU granted custody of hll daug)oter by Ip Orug. County court ordtr. Corrinne was comm1tted to the county'• Albert Sltion Rome af\er-lht had b • • n found ahandooed ln the alrport'1 lermlnl! building. Mn. Flocber aumnderod to lbertff'• olllcen nu.. dl)'l later with the stalfment: 0 1 didn't want to set my frteDd.I into I mesa.,. School Aid Okayed WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldenl .Iolonaon bu q!Md lo ralouc po mllllon In faders! oocbciol aid for uua with ler1e numhen of federal omploye1, oooun:u said today. i From Page 1 BERKELEY •.. yards away relorned the chanll. It '!II the third day of sit-In demoMlralklllll and ernm as mllilanl lludentl iQO&bt lo force the 211.-dent unlven!tf to atve college credit for a ledute serlel by Black Panther leader Eldrl<IC• Cleaver. Thwvted In an attempt to take over the admlnlstration building, Sproul ~ wher~ 121 were arTeSted Wednesday monung, the dissldenta seized nearby Moses Hall Wedne!lday afternoon. In ordering police onto the campus Chancellor Roger Heyns called irn; building seizure as a "wilfull and flagrant disruption that defied logic or i·urutica· lion." , Among the demonstrators was Peter Camejo, shrlll·volced former student described by police as a Trotskyite-Corn- munist profess ional agitator. Camejo had been in the forefront of almost every ma. jor Berkeley demonstration since commg lo the campua nearly three years ago from New York City. Jack Bloom, a graduate student who is head of the Independent Socialist Club was also arrestt.d. Bloom led a march on the Chancellor'a office Wednesday and subsequent seizure ot. Moaea Hall. Reentry Craft Fails on Flight EDWARDS AFB (UPI) -A wingless ~rlmental 1pace reentry craft failed ll! first rocket-powered test flight Wednesday after It was dropped from 8 Bs2 mother ahlp at 40,000 feet. The HL-10 "lifting body" was elpecled to attain a tpeed of 600 miles an hour when A1r Force Maj. Jerauld R. Gentry 33, ignited the a,000-pound thrust engine ' ~ut three of the four rocket cham~ failed to ignite as planned at 36 000 feet and Gentry glided to a 225, m. h. emergency landing on Rosamond pdry. lake near Lancaster. <?entry was unhurt and the lifting bod which has made 11 previoua gllde fli""ti• was undamaged. "'' • In addlUon to the medical school which would receive the largest share, 'money would be apenl on a oecond biological ~ences bulldlng, a aecond physlcil 8Clences building, a lclence libtary, a biomedical library, and a combined academic and adminlstraUon building. Other ftmda for Orange County would provide a ICbool of education building at Cal State Fullerton and restoratlon of pre-194.1 achoo! build.lnp tn Santa Ana Anaheim, Garden Grove and Fullerton.• The state dtiiens committee in favor of the bond Issue says that the average cost per person lM!J' year during the 25-- year life of the bonds would be about 50 cents. Proponents iµ-gue that construction costs are rising at a rate of five percent annually while bond money currently ls available at tin percent interMt, so delay would be cosUy. The opposition argument ls that the $6 billion bonded indebtedne11s of the state including $1.S billion In authorized bui UMOld bonds, has saturated the bond markf:t and new bonda could not be sold now. The: counter argUment ls that unsold bonds already have been committed but have not been sold yet because lt is state policy not to ICU bonds unW payment is due contractors for actual construction com. In other word!!, approval of another bond issue is needed to keep moving forward with education COOBtrucUon, even though the bond1 would not be .sold until later. - The bond medure was placed on the Nov. 5 ballot by the Legislature with Gov. Reagan 's consent. It hu endorsement of \Vorkers l\foving From Slum Areas WASHING TON (AP) -The Labor Department reports: 300,000 worken have moved out of the nation'• worst slums lo the Jut twelve montha. Tb• departmon~ ID releaaill( a report It said covered the worat slums In 100 clues, .said Wednesday the workers ap- parently moved into better urban nelgbborhooda between September 1167 and 1961. "One simply c&Mot comprehend the bitterness now splllin,g out of the ghetto without a sense of the tragic sameness ht the ghetto for generations," he lald. Scruggs, a Negro historian with a PhD from Harvard, spoke to a U. S. b1lf.ory claa and many outsiders on 11Wby Afro. American. History?" He aald the telling of U. S. h1af!>ry ha1 long needed a tragic dlmenaSOo. .. to ove.rabadow if not supplant a dlmemloa of optlmi.sm." He remarked that adding to hJstory the auffering of Afro-Americans humanizes the American past. "Maybe wt can begin questioning our belief in our omn!pot.eoce, clla.llenging the theme of lnelectable pro- gress," he said. He suggested that Afro-American pro- tests are becoming increasingly valng to the white middle class, and that the U.S. can expect to have clifflculUes with the increasing number of non-white nattona. The reason. he said, is because of "the blackout in our history, or put another way, the whitewash." lte said In prl)pel' perspective the black-white theme is one of the m06t seminal themes of American history. "The way our history ls divJded testifies to this/' he said. '"There was the era of slavery and the. era of reconstruc-- tlon. When modern history 11 written I believe something lite the ordeal of black and white will follow the era of the cold war." Scruggs aald that black history cur- renUy is popu)ar at uni versities and among hlstorta.ns. A few historians, he aald, have complained that U. S. history: 1' being llood on Ito head, that Mro- America.ns, once lnv1sible, are being made overly visible. "No fabrication is required," he said. "There is plenty in the put of which Afro-Amerlcam can be proud." He spoke of the slave Nep-oe1 prior to the Civil War. "They were not reduced to the level of Sambo," he said. "Brutallzed and emasculated though they may have been, they still were able to oppose their angle of vision to that of their op- pressor. '' He sald folk songs and folk stories showed the clear will of the race to en- dure with a degree of self respect. They adopted Br'er Rabblt, the m06t helplep of creatures, as their hero, and gave him the attribute of always being able to get the better of bigger and 1tron1er ani- mal!, he noted. .At .JJ.J. (Jarrett ' TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL OFFER ON THESE TOP QUALITY SOFAS YOUR CHOICE OF 4 SOFA STYLES Wide choice of fabrics • colon AT 72 to 100" "" !AWSON S FT. LOVE SEATS H.J.GAl\l\FfT fURNf{URE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR Df.S16NERS I • 1211 HARIOR ILVI>. COSTA MESA. CALIF. MMZ71 64Ml76 • s ] v ] ] , r l f r ( I I ( t I t I • j I I • I • • , D11n1ington _Beaeh · -~ DAILY PILOT ~ Your Hometown EDITIO~ Dally' Paper VOL. 61, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: THURSDAY, OCTE>BER--24, .1968 TEN CENTS Harbour Mothers End Not • Ill Sight To March No Peace Breaktlirough, Says LBJ A Huntington Rart>our "mothen' march for turf" loomed today in the con- tinuing dispute between the Ocean View School District and developers or the plush marina area on Huntington Beach's northwest side. A member of the Parent Teachers Organization (PTO) at Harbour View School said an uns~ilied number of mothen are threatening to picket Warner Avenue of(ices of the Huntington Harbour Corporation until something ls d_one ai:iout the school playground, c~ntral 1ss~e in a pending lawsuit filed against the firm by the Ocean View district. It was not clear when the threa~ened picketing was to begin. Ccimpany _officials were unavailable for comment this morn· ing. "th PTO member Mrs. Richard Snu , 16831 Harkness Circle, said mothers are upset about the grassless state or the play area at the school. "We don't want to cause them any trouble; we just want new fill dirt so we can grow grass in the yard,'' she said. Mrs. Harkness asserted that expert.!l had tested · the sail surrounding Harbou_r View School and had labeled 1t "completely unsuJtable" for growing grass because of its salinity. The development company Is being sued by the Ocean View School District. Trustees are asking $120,000 damages for "unsuitable fill" on the property sold to the school district. Countian Killed, Three · Tots Hurt In Beach Crash A Westminster man was tilled and 1hree small children injured Wednesday when the family car collided with a coun- ty trash transfer rig at Warner Avenue and Newland Street in Huntington Beach. Coroners deputies said Ke n n e t h Laneve 27, Gm Humboldt Ave ., died at 8:21 p.~. at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital, about four hours after the ac- cident. On of Laneve's children Jackie, 4, and a playmate Michael Marinez, 3, o{ Garden Grove, were held overnight for observation. Robin Laneve, 3, was given emergency treatment and se nt home. Police said driver of the rig, Rolando Espinosa, 2S, of Santa Ana. escaped in· jury. Re-entry Craft Fails on Flight EDWARDS AFB {UPI) -A wingless experimental space reentry craft failed ilS Urst rocket-powered test rtight Wednesday after it was dropped from a 852 mother ihlp at 40,000 feet. The ID.rlG "lifling body" was expected to attain a speed of 600 miles an hour v,rhen Air Force Maj. Jerauld R. Gentry, 33, ignited the 8,000-pound thrust engine. But three of the four rocket chambers failed to ignite as planned at 36,000 feet and Gentry glided lo a 22i m.p.h. emergency landing on Rosamond dry Jake near Lancaster. Gentry was unhurt and the lifting body, wh.il;h has made 11 previous glide fligbt.s, wiS undamaged. DAILY PILOT""'" .... ..llrnh M'NHll Jr. Halloween Their Bag John and Wendy Jo Brandt are ready for costwne contest which will be part of s'ix-day carnival sponsored by Huntington Beach Junior Chamber of Commerce. Oarnival featuring zoo, Halloween costume parade, rides, games and speeches begins Oct. 30 at Huntington. Center. :Teen Club Owner Guilty In Police Slander Case f\.frs. Jeanne Covell, co-owner of the Syndicate 3000, a ·Huntington Beach teen . night spot, Wednesday was found guilty of two counts of conspiracy by a Super· ior Court jury. The attractive 26-year-old blonde, who owns the teen night spot in downtown Huntington Beach with her husband Gilbert, was charged with conspiracy with intent to libel and slander a pollce officer and to obstruct justice. Both offenses are felonies. The jury of nine wom~n and three men Mother Skips Trial Date A Westminster woman accused of abandoning her 7-year-old daughter at Orange County Airport failed to appear for trial Wednesday in Santa Ana municipal court. Judge Leonard H. McBride issued a $315 bench warrant for the arrest of Patt Ann Fisher, 20, of 14102 Ash SL. Mrs. Fischer, also known by police as Esau, Reiter, La Fluer, Bauldin, St. Cyr - aliases she allegedly has used since she came to Orange County from Michigan seven months a g o -is charged w i th felony child abandonment of Corrinne Esau. The child is now In the custody of her father, Michael Reiter Jr. of Mound, MiM. Reiter, divorced from Mrs. Fischer, was granted custody of his daughter by an Orange County court order, deliberated ~!&'lY.,..,~iJl;ht hours Wr~nesday·~ reMerf1l&"lhe doubj• ~efdlct. A1rs. Covell is to appear for sentencing before Superior Judge Karl Lynn Davit: Nov. 13. J\.trs. Cobell sobbed in to a hanky all the jury read its verdict. The jur'y left the CQurtroom Wednesday at 9:26 a.m., climaxing nearly two days of testimony, featuring a police officer, two reporters. and a former friend of Mrs. Covell. Jurors returned at 4:22 p.m. with their verdicL · The former friend, Mrs. Jack Amador, who re'.cently laced court proceedings herself, told on the witness st.and Atonday how she and Mrs. Covell conspired to discredit the Huntington Beach Police Dcparbneht. Needing some "good publicity'' for the club, she said, they decided to claim of- ficer Jim Mahan, twice named Hunting- ton Beach policeman of the year. made a phone call to Mrs. Covell threatening the life of her husband. Mrs. Amador said under oath that she also instructed Mrs. Covell how to feign a nervous breakdown. The young Mrs. Amador, a 21-year-old from West Virginia who lived for a short lime at the Syndicate 3000, currently is under one year probation on a drug charge. r WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson said today there bas been no basic cbaoge and no breakthrough in · peace ·nep;oUations to end the Vietnam war during l'::i last eight days. He told a news conference that a White House statement to this effect issued Oct. 16 was still accurate. That statement - issued after a flui-ry of reports circulated about the possibility of a total bomblng bait by the United States -said there Principal Heckled lfter Talk Nieblas school pa.rents, apparently upset about a proposal to rearrange school schedules, ended up jeering Prin· cipal Don Hendrie~ Wednesday night at a parent information meeting at t h e Fountain Valley Elementary School. T h e 30-year-old educatod, in his first year as a principal, faced loud opposition r r o m a majority of the estimated 130 persons who 'filled a large meeting room. Following a dictum of the district's board of trustees Hendricks presented parents a plan which would allow teachers to meet two hours on Thursday afternoons in order to improve and to coordinate classroom instruction.· Using blackboards and chartl. Hen- dricks explained t h e proposal which would excuse students Thursday at 1 p.m. instead ol the nonnal 3 p.m.~ Despite the early dismissal, the total weekly lime seent Jn the classroom. would be e'Y!!I' ~Gt reii>ain lllt,.aiDI as it Is now. HOur long lunch 'periods would be sborlened. by 15 minuLes the ~1!111UllYJ an<l wOllld ~ on Tburida,ya aald H~ckt. ·. Pare'nts fears seemed to center on claims that teachers ·might simply g() home ear)y, that atudents would have a lax attitude ort the shortened day· and that elementary students would be unable to use effectively the tonger academic sesslom becau.se of their concentration limits. . Hendricks, · wbo ,raced the opposition calmly .;:.OO who did Bet some applause during tbe heated sesston, said' the prC>- gram had been successful last year at Bushard School where he served as assi.s- tant principal. The rearranged day bas b e e n adopled at five other Fountain Valley schools without incident, he said. No definite action will be taken until further study is completed, Hendricks told parents. Military Law Eased WA,SHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson signed into law today a revision of the tnilitary justice system. It allows bail for the .first lime for Gls facing military charges and removes legal of- ficers from possible pressure by their commanders. OCC Fetes Trustee Longmoor Gets Standing Ovati.on Walter 11. Loogmoor Io l his just desserts last night -• broken baseball bat, a hokey quartet singing some ter- rible doggerel and a standing ovaUoo for 2U years service lo Orange Coast Junior College District.. Longmoor retired at l h e end of the sununer after 20 years on the board of lnlstees. He was honored laat night by approximately IZS college and city ol· ficlal• and frimda. Il wu "' •venlng th4t IWJ<d heavily on the upt llld<. Longmoor for Ill Y•"" wu probably CXX::'1 greatest baseball rooter, ind decorations 1 n d en- tertainment reflected il Golden West Collqe gave hlm a broken bat, mounted on a walnut plaque., symbolk of his retlremenl Golden Wert students al8o pvt him 1 baseball warmup jacket and 1 litetlmt student body memberahlp. OCC studt11ll allO pvt him a student oody pass and 1 maroon blar.er with lhe ·ollege crest. lie rteelved • trophy 1¥ilh .he name1 of all the OCC baJCbalJ c1p- • .. ta.ins for the past 20 years, presented by former OCC player Ken Moats, of H~ t.ington Beach High. The doggerel was sung by OCC Presi- dent Robert Moore, Fred Owens, Golden West athleUc director, and Walter Gleckler and Paul Cox, of the·OCC Music llepartmenL At the end ol the .. aiing, Longmoor told the group, "I'm so overwhelmed l can't mate a speech. l've had JL" He then made a short speech. "A lot has been said about tM hard wort I did," Longmoor aald. "II hasn't been hard, lt'a been fun. For most peo- ple, It only takes two yean l.O graduate from OC:C. It took me 20.'' Dr. Nonnan E. Wat.son, dtJt.rict supertnttndent, presented Longmoor with a certificate of a.pprtel•tlon from the bolrd. "Wttller Is one nf the most dedicated Individuals we've ever had," Watann said. "Hit enthustum ne.ver waned. Tonight we are all Walter Longmoor fans." • \ • DA"-Y l'ILOT 1fltl ,..._ 'IT WAS FUN AND WORTH ALL THE EFFORT ' OCC'a Longmoor end Wife Peu1e Afttr Testimonial ,,.,. was 0 no basic change In lhe situation; no breakthroUih." At the same time, Johnson warned to- day against any "fal!e sense of security" because of lower war casualties and re- cent prisoner exchanges. On the other hand, Johnson said his ad~ ministralion ha s been "working very hard and very diligently" to open t.he way for peace and said that he felt his decision to open talks with the North MbltM!lt! 'itmi!CT Leva1ter Coley Mesa Police Seeli Murder Charge Against Suspect A murder complaint against a Fullerton man was sought today, after a random angle blossomed Into a major break Wednesday in the ambush slaying of a Costa Mesa cocktail waitress seven days ago. Levester A. Coley Jr., %9, was booked 1nlo Cos.ta Mesa City Jail about noon WedOesday on suspicion of shooting Mrs. Rose Marie Weidner to death after lying in wait for the victim. Detective Arnold Appleman was check· ing a list of 18 emergency hospitals in Orange, County, where someone could be treated for a gunshot wound, when Col· ey's name turned up Tuesday night. A trail of blood 'teci away frOm the spot where. Mrs. Weidner fell, fatally wound· ed, afte'r .apparently grappling with her attacker at the Acapulco Apartments, 740 E. 18th St., In a fight against death. Whoever killed her may have injured himself in the act. Coley, a U.S. Post OCfice employe, Wall arrested at his apartment, whicli is right around the corner from the Orange.fair restaurant in Fullerton, where the victim had been ~mployed only three weekll. He has made no ,statement and Im· mediately upon arrest put In a call to one of Orange County's best known criminal defense attorneys, Matthew Kurilich Jr., of Fullerton. A Ught veil of secrecy surrounds much of the evidence lo be used agaJrist Coley. who was in custody of Fullerton police for a time before being released as an ac· cldental sbooUng victim. Records showed Coley was treated al Martin lAlther Hospl_tal in Anaheim last Thurtday morning for t gunshot wound in the' left hand and supervlba notified IS.. SU8PECI', hp I) OLYMPICS: BLACK . REPORTER'S VIEW DAILY PILOT Sporll Editor Glenn White steps ulde In Mulco City todoy to allow F r e d Sturrup, 1 blaci reporter from the BaJwnu, to <O!lllntlll IO ndal eventa whtc:t> tbraten to ovenbldow sporting ~ento at Ille ltth Olympiad. In addlllon to the IUflll enlumn on Page 21 today, Wbtto•a on:-tcene coveraae In- cludes ·1, rundown on the tough com-- pcUUon Corona del Mar11 Madam But• t<rrly, Toni Hewitt, r .... tonight u th< 17·year-old swlmrrier toea for Ille ~old in the 200.mem-0bqttet!ly e'v¢ 11 o not going to be an Uly win -(ll" aeyone. Vielnamese in Paris was the right thing lo do. "I'm more pleased with it as Ume coes by," the Preskl.ent commented. Johnson refused lo dJvUlge anything specific on the recent diplomaUc efforts to end the Paris stalemate. He would not say whether there had been a reply from North Vietnam or even whether he bad made a new package peace proposal lo Hanoi. UCI Stake In Prop. 3 Said Great No campus anywhere in the state has a greater stake in passage of the statewide education bond issue, Proposition 3, than UC Irvine. The young UCT campus stands to gel nearly $1 in every $10 for construction of medical college facilities and science buildings. Of the $250 million to be allocated statewide, UCI would get $20.6 million. The three-purpose state bond ISBUe would provide $100 million for building on University of California campuse!, $100 million for building on Slate College cam• puses, and $50 million for restoring deteriorated public schools In urban areas. UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. said the Irvine campus need! the bond money to keep construction on scbednle for growing enrollments and to trail needed scientists and medlcal doctors. Should Proposltion 3 Pl". the IrVine campus will ,et evlh more than the PJ.J million. Added to It would be flU mllllon In federal makhlng funds and fll.I million in state pay·as-you-go money, Tot.al building funds available to the ca~ pus over the next two yean would be ,48.9 million. In addition to the medical school, which would receive the largest share, money would be spent on a second biological sciences bulllij,pg, a second physical sciences buildink1 a science library, a biomed.ical library, and a combined academic and administration building. Other funds for Orange County would provide a school or education building at Cal State Fullerton and restoration of pre· 1943 school buildings in Santa Ana. Anaheim, Garden Grove and Fullerton. The state citizens committee in favor of the bond issue says that the average cost per person per year during the 25- year life of the bonds would be about 50 cents. Proponents argue that construction costs are rising at a rate of five percent annually while bond money currently is available at 41,I,; percent interest, so delay would be cosUy. The opposition argument is that the '6 billion bonded indebtedness of the state, including '1.5 billion in authorized bui unsold bonds, has saturated the bond market and new bondll could not be sold now. The counter argumC11t is that unsold bonds already have been committed but have not been sold yet because tt is state policy not to sell bonds until payment is due contractors for actual construction costs. In other words, approval of another bond issue ill needed to keep moving forward with education construcUon, even though the bonds would ool be sold until later. The bond measure w11 placed on the Nov. 5 ballot by the Legislature wilh Gov. (S.. PROP. I, Pa1e I) Oratoge Coast Welltlllaer Old Sol breatl JhrouP the fog Friday lo warm tbe coast up with BO-degree temptratures, whlle in- land regions perspire near the 100 mark. INSIJ_)B TODAl' A ting 10 bfD '10U couldn't dial a itltphone wffh ft 100.S among &ht jewla Mr1. On4uil rcctfvtd jtom her htUbond ond it IOQ.S7\'t tPtTl the-thofc11t pfec.. Page s. c.11 .... 1 -• ·--U·• ·--.. ...... " Ol'ill" tlwltt • ·--" ,,. .. .......... • =:: =~-':' ,. -• .... l411t..l•I l'ltt ft :er ....... ~·· . ....,...._, JI .... ·-'"" .. T .......... " "''"' c.• • -• ......,._ .. -• ~··· " ·--" • W1rN ,.._ .. .. . . ----• . . • • • 1 • • .. .. . .. . .. . .. -. !! DA!lY PllOT Thursday, Oct.obtr 24, 1968 Nixon Raps ....,.,._,,hreYi ~Nonsense' . . B1 M!RRIJllAN SMmf ALLEN'i'OWN, Pa. ( U P I ) - Jltpubllcan Riehm! M. Nisqn, opened a One-daY automobile stump tour of central ~nd eutern Penn~lvania today by ac- e• _ Vice President Hubert ff. k0mphtty ol btlng a...,..,. 9'<1clltt on !"'Of'Omlc llluu. Tho GOP pruldenUal canclldate new ~ wly today ll'om Grand Rapids, Mich., and after eight houri of motoreade 'clunpalgnlng, planned to 10 Into hls New York City base of operations tonight. : "About the stalest. charge in American pOlitica la the quadrtnnial bleat that the Republican party stands for depresslom, misery for little people, and ls never hap- .pjer than when people are down and out," the GOP candjdate u1d in a statement Issued at Allentown. KNOWS BE'ITER '"nib nonsense is being peddled around tile country by Hubert l!wnphrey. 01 course, he tnow1 better, but apparenUy he hopu lo frighten some people Into vot!ng -not for him -but qalnst us." In a statement issued for 1J10ther st.op on the Pennsylvania motor lo u r • Pottsville, Nixon said Humphrey wa11 no friend of the working man by promising "to spend $50 billion in additional laxes if he wins this election." c"Mr. Hwnphrey ii such a good !Mend qi the American working man that he b going to speDd their money for them," he ·~ded. i;P.ly v 1 e w ls this : l intend to 11:dopt a policy that will leave a larger s4aJ'e of the worlter'1 income tn the worker's hands for him to spend and not ·for the government to ape.od." As Nixon started another day of speak· IDg, i\e and hls staff were unmoved by an offer from third party candidate George G. Wallace to rtlinquiah any right he had le appearing with Nixon and Humphrey RP a nailonal television debate, just as long L!I the networks gave him 30 minutes of free lime the day following such a dtbate. ,..,"It does not change a thing," said Ron Z·l e g I e r, press 1pokesman for the ~publican candidate. Ziegler allO ex· plained that Nixon'• poaiUon waa con- olliltent in that he would do nothing that would give Wallace national television ex· J!O!Ul"· ~DPOR CLOSED' ···.Ziegler said Congress "closed the door" On.~ debate acceptable to the camp of the Republican candidate by refWling to Ess a bill allowing free television debate e between the two major party can- ates . . W'lth Nixon 1Ucking by his resolve no&; to debate, there wu detectable a~ prebenaion ~thin hia campiagn organir.a· UOO .!oday ,!hat Humplv)!y and Johnaon ~traUon friends might be presw· lea; fgr a..rnajor VJetruul\. peace deveJo~ JP.enJ.:wltl'1J'.I the next (ew .days. • ReJ>U.blican campaign strategists were careful to except President Johruson, bimseU, from what they feared was maneuvering toward a smashing ·peace announcement designed to help Hum· phrey at the polls Nov. 5. . * * * Nixon Supported By Black Baptist Convention Group NEW YORK UPI) -The National Baptllt Convention, an organization of six million Negroes, hu endorsed Richard M. Nixon for pruideot because he will '11erve the nation and tbe caU!e of peace u well." Dr. J. H. Jackaon, president of the na· Uon'1 lugest Negro church group and a fegistettd Democrat, said it was the first !;ime he hu endorsed a Republican. ' "We believe that Mr. RJchard M. Nixon by experience and dedication not only will lead hi! party to higher and con· strucUve achievements but will alsc serve the nation and the cause of peace as well ," Jackson" aald in a statement Wednesday. OAllV Pl lOI OltANGI: COAST PUM.ltHING COMl'.tJt'1 lel.erf N. w,,, Prnldtftt Mill 1'111111 ....... J1ck l. C,.rlt y Vlc9 ,,......,. •NII 0-'4 ~"~ 1\1 11111 J(,, .. 11 .. * Tlle11u11 A. Mwr,hl111 MaNflftt f.tlttor AIMrt W. 11111 Wi/ti,.., 11,,J ..... ,... """''""'kloo 1-'1 IEllllw C!ly I.di!• ................ Offlc. JOt ltlio Str11f M1Tfi11f A44r1n1 1.0. lea 7,o, 916~& --.....,.. 9..a~ m1 w.t ..... ...,1t .. 1t4 c.fl MfNI al w.I ... , ltl'ftt ~~i mP-tA-.e ) Ul'ITttwMte BERKELEY DEMONSTRATORS T.EAR DOWN ONE BARRICADE TO BUILD ANOTHER Lumber from Con1tructlon ProjKI GoH lo< Sit-I n Police Recapture Cal 76 Protesters Arrested on Berkeley Campus From Wlra Senku BERKELEY -Hundreds ol law en· roreement officers mm:bed onto the Unlverill)'. · ol Calllomla campuJ lodsy and reoaf>lured a. lfulldlcg wblclt had be<!ll -"by.' .•• . nillltint band 0 f demonotralo,.. Tbe pollce amaled 71 of th _.......,__ . e,~ ... -.c;r. .. , Acting on a 1ft'1!detenniiied lllpa1 In the pre-dawn darkneu, -the 600 riot-equipped· officers surroonded the structure selzed. 12 houri earlier l?Y ·the demollltrators, some of them. llOll4tudenU, · The offlctn wJ!re ~ed 1ii• • hail o[ rocu and catcalls. fri>;n"~" lbliers outside the llructun" aui. g:r fled ... Humphrey in Southland Seeking Minority Vote LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hubert Humphrey's week-long quest for votes among religious and ethnic mlnor!Ues took on new ur1ency in CallfornJa today where 40 elecloral votes were 1t stake and wbere·hlJ prO:ldentill,bfid, may stand or fall . Humphrey was hopeful and en- -aged: HO' dfuid "t'oiiri~'iulleas In his first two outings here, one in the Negro ghetto of Watts and the other in an East Los Angeles area heavily populated by Mexican-Americans. Humphrey told a street c r o w d estimated at 2,500 in Watts that Richard Nixon talked of law and order, but a dif· ferent kind o! law and order than the pe<>- ple wanted. "Every American, black or white, young or old, Is enUtled to the full pro- tection of the law and to equal right.I, to equal enforcement of the Jaw, and to equal opportunity under the Jaw. "Now that's law and order," Humphrey st.outed , and the black crowd roared back its approval. Humphrey also Ucked off a list of pro. mises he said his admlnlstraUon would make to all the people, black and white and medical care, a better life. and medical care, a better tllfe. -"\".~. but bow long "Wlll we· have to wait?" a voice from the darkness yelled. "Gel me elected and it will start rlght aw'1. I've been -klng IOfya!/~ a quarter of a century," Hunipbrey yelled back. It was the only interrupUon in a half· hour oraUon. · He drew 7 ,500 Mexican-Americans to a shopping center rally. He promised to legalize farm unions, blg isstle in this agriculture state which dependJ heavily on casual labor. Hwnphrey fiew to Califoml& Wed- nesday night from Te1as where he waa cmllted with a "polltk:al miracle" ln patching together a coalition of con· servative and liberal Democrat&. It was still a question whether the patchwork could pnxluce a majority to give him that state'• 2.5 electoral votes. Irvine Co. Withdraws the helmeted ·omcers puabed~ tmough makeahlft barricades to reach the bu11dlng where the beavily bloctaded main entraue· WU .et afire. , . ·'!'ht llNnts • .. ;... ciut&ly~ and the taclloui t1sk ot arrest paperWprk be1an as the sieee end~. Within two .and a haU hours, the demonstraton were removed from the ivy~vered bulldlng and hauled to jail in buses! . . Of the 78 persons arrested, 29 were girls. All were inside the buUdlng except four youths taken into custody 100 yards from the building when they refused to disperse from a bonfire. As the demonstrators were lferded into the buses, they changed "Ban UC Racism" and ''.Pigs Off Campus." A group af about 60 students a hundred yards away relumed the chants. It was tbe third .day or sit-in demonstrations and arrests as militant students sought to force the 28,000-stu- dent university to give college credit for a lectllrf: ~lea by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleavfr. Thwarted in an attempt to take over the admi~Wa~oo bulJdinj, Sproul Hall, wheri: . 121 .we:re , arristed Wednesday morning, the dJssldent.s selied nearby Moses Hall Wednesday afternoon. In ordering police onto the campus, Chancellor Roger Heyns called the building seizure as a "willull and flagrant disruption that defied logic or justifica· Uon." Among the demonstrators was Peter Camejo, iibrlll-volced former student described by pallce as a Trotuylte-O>m- munlst professional agitator. Ca?µejo had been in the forefron\ of almost every ma- jor Berkeley demonstration since coming to the campus nearly three years ago from New York City. Jack Bloom, a graduate student who is head of the Independent Socialist Club \'las also arrested. Bloom led a march on the Chancellor'• office Wednesday and subsequent seizure ol Moses Hall. GOP Hi ts R e port • Hanna's Fiscal Plan Backfi.res ' Alt.mpts by Rep. Richard T. Hanna "(0.Westmlntter) lo be • financial ltralghtabooter in his current campaign for re-elecUon have eomewhat backf~. he adrillttod Wednuday. The jauitty, three-term con1ressman ii under fk< by RepubllCanJ for allegedly releutng an erroneous statement of peraonal flnancel lo hll constltuenta at From Page I MURDER police, as required by law. COiey -his left cheek marred by a flngernall·llke 11cratch when photograph· ed Wednesday -told invesUgators he bad accidentally shot himseU. "Ria version wu that he was dry-firing 1n the belief it was unloaded and It went off," 1ald Capt. C. ·n. Davts, chief of the Fullerton pallce lnvesUgaUon bureau. "I don't have the actual report in front of me," said Capt. Davia. "I reaUy couldn't tell you what Ume It wa1." Since 'the savage slaying, widespread publicity hu been given to the trail-of· blood an1Ie and theories of a woonded slayer, but Fullerton police apparently never connected the two incidents. Capt. Davis and other spokesmen con· tacted after Coley'1 arrest by Detective Appleman and Diltrict A t t o r n e y ' s Investigator Eddie Banks did not seem eager to taIJ:. Costa Mesa Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow refuses to say whether a gun was found in the apartment at 915 W. Orangethorpe Ave., wblcb Coley •hared with a roommate. From Page I PROP. 3 ••. Reagan's consent. It has endorsement of top leaders in both political parties and of the statewide PT A. The chief source of opposition is ex· peeled to be those who would puni!Jh the university for such as Eldridge Cleaver's app41arances or the state college system for allowing such as the play "The Beard." M1·. Noordman . . . Rite~. '?l1 .. ~1ida y Funeral services will be held 1'~riday for long-time Huntington Beach resident Herman Noordman who died 'Tuesday at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital. He was 74. Mr. Noordman had been a resident o[ the city for 21 years, many of those at his last home at 313 6th St. His well-kept garden has long been a compliment to the downtown area of the city. Survivors include his wile Zola, sons Marlin and Gerald, both of Bellflower, four daughters and many brothers and sisters and grandchildren. The Rev. Richard Miller of Mr. Noordman's church, the First Christian Church of Garden Grove, will officiate at the 10:30 a.m. services al the Peek Fami- ly Chapel. Interment will be 'it \Vestmin- ster Memorial Park. · government expenae. lianna, opposed by Garden Grove GOP cfuilienger 8lD J . Teaglie, a.<1mi~ at a news conference that hls we:ll·meant » tion may have been tinged Wilh elec- tioneering. He also said it was a bit erroneous, but charged that accounts in the pres.s cut it in a misleadinJ light. "I'm going through stresses and strains trying to be honest and it ju.st gets me in- to more I.rouble," groustd the stocky 1rishman. Hanna last week inserted his financial statement set at a net of $392,000 in the Congressional Record, urging that other public office holdera do llkewlse for COO• fidence of voters. Anaheim attorney David G. Sills, prtal· dent of the Republican Associates ol Orange County, dug into Hanna's background and attacked the financial statement as false. Hanna said he had 17,330 sharea of stock in Spectra Strip, a Garden Grove m!Wlfacturing firm, but Sills aaid u late as 1964 he only had 2,000 1hare5. The Uth District con1re11 m a n answered by saying the amount lncreued to its present 17,380 share. through simple appreciation of stock. Sills also criticized Hanna'• use of the post.al franking system to mall the finan- cial statement to 193,000 voters in bis district. Private Funeral For Mrs. Jones Private funeral rites have been 1et for Mrs. Hulda Adell Jones, a 17-year rest .. dent of Huntington Beach who collapsed afld died of a heart attack on a Newport Beach street Tuesday. Mrs. Jones wa.s 72. She is survived by a daughter Mrs. Irene King of Pico Rivera and son H. C. Hoffman of Bishop, a1so by four grandchildren and four great· grandchildren. The family has requested that in lieu of flowers, a donation be sent to the heart fund . Intennent will be ln Rose Hilla 1'.1emorial Park. Hanoi Opens Fire On U.S. Plane MOSCOW (UPI) -North Vietnamese antiaircraft guns opened fire today on an American plane lhat flew Over Hanoi, the Soviet news agency Tass reported from the North Vietnamese capital. Tass said the city underwent an air raid alert When Ule l011e plane appeared but did ncit say whether the American aircraft was shot down. It implied ihe aircraft was a reconnaissance plane. School Aid Okayed WASHINGTON {AP) -President Johnson has agreed ta release $90 million in federal school aid for areas with large numbers of federal employes, sources said today. Upper Bay Swap Plans _A.1 JJ.J. 9arrelt The Upper Newport Bay land swap is off. C. f\t. Fealherly, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisor•, to- day confirmed to the DAILY PILOT that the Irvine Company has withdrawn from the long-discussed land trade proposal ln Upper Newport Bay. exchange of lands, publicly declaring that it would be In the public interest and "''ouJd result in a strong advanlqt to the county -both financiillly and fOr park developments in the Upper B;iy, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL OFFER ON THESE TOP QUALITY SOFAS Featherly said he reOOved news of the w I t h d r a w a 1 of a Jetter dellvertd personally by I~ne Company preeldent William Mason. While reluctant to dlscuu the issue, Feather!)( confirmed that the letter was "a formal announCement of Irvine's withdrawal from any further discussion of a land trade between UI." • The other four members o( the Board ' of Supervtson are atteodlng a three-day seminar at Idyliwi.ld In Riverside County, ' and Featherly said he felt further di.scuuioo ot I.be tssue ~ await their return . DISCUSS LETl'ERS "There's not much that we can do about it," the veteran 1U~i110r added. "But we 1bould at lea.st. dillCUSS Mr . f\fason's letter among ouraelve1." Irvine Company'• withdrawal rrom the beleaguered Back Bay trade was later confirmed by public relaUoos director William Aldrich. "I can 't reveal content.s of-the letter," -Aklr1ch &aid. "But l can say that It ends Irvine'• lntertlt In the deal." Supervltora loot t h • hotly debated lsaue "oU calendar" Wedne:tday. They privatttv cooceded after t h e meeUng that "of[ calendar" might wtD mean tho pemwient wiving of the Upper B a y plan. Muon's action praumably ends Ute posslb!Uty of a trade which w11 flnt IUI· getted. Featherly today recalled, "some 18 yean aao." ADVANTAGE! CITED '!be supervison had p re v I o u I 11 1llllnilnoll"1 IUpported the complicated The State t.ands Commissi.ln approv· ed the land exchange ln ,mid-1961. But legal oompllcatloos let In. And the Irvine COmpany -llta1led In getting the tran.ucilon pushed througt -made it clear that It wu l"'winl Uttd of paying a big tu load an'd heavy development coela on property ell!Ileshed In legal compllcallona. Bui the lloord. ol Supervilors said yesterday that It ~ .no JN&:/ out of the tuaUon bind . Members , said they couJd4, fl'> alOllg "f'ltl! I proposal that reliel 'be l[l'antod dUrlDa' the period that ~posal ""' tli!d 'l<P In court. 1<.f!!•:,llll!ll<thaltt Involved li'vine ... var•ll>!I <IMdt for 11 parcels - , about 157 letei-.. .!... of county'(lwned tJdelanda In achanie for 4SO aCl'd of lrvlne terrain. The swtt.chlng of deeds would, ptoponanil of the deal aald, remove the heavily toed J.rvine land from the tu roles until a court decision ls obtained on the land swap proposal -believed to be u much as three more yean away. Proponenll of the auggeslod deal have pointed out that the transfer w o u 1 d enable the county to develop a rqiorlll part la--uio uu. It would permit the li'vine Company. the7 argue, lo 11811 rebuilt tidelands for marine: t1JJt develop- menta. And ft bu -ftlrtber argued that Iha deal would enable the county and ll"llne 10 perform ...._, dnd&ing In Upper Newport B a y under • 1lngle conlract with a "poalble uvlng of $1 mlltlon lo each party." Oppo1-lllon came to a bead In rtetnt day.a.. w b •a Coutll:J MW' An- drew J, llinahay condemned the deed,.. change a1 ,.legally improper" and based oo """" misstat<mentl of _probable auessed vatqea.. '' I YOUR CHOICE OF 4 SOFA STYLES Wide choice of fabrica &: colors AT '72 to 100" ,~ .. LAWSON SEATS ~49 H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNffURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS I ·' 2215 HARlOR llVD. • • COSTA MESA, CALIF. "4"-'1275 "46-027' ' • Lag11na ·lll ·-::i; VOL 61, NO. 2~, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES Bea~h ··· DAILY PILOT Today's Closlng EDITION N.Y. Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTO.BER 24, 1968 TEN CENTS Laguna District Spells Out New Narco Policy By JEAN COX ot "'• Olllly Pllilt lttft Laguna Beach Unified School District'• narcotics policy w a s l!pelled out in a preliminary draft or a new discipline code which was reviewed by three of the fi ve board members present for a meeting Tuesday night. The code .stated that studenls who use, sell, poesess or are under the influence of narcotics or dtugs will be subject to disciplinary action including suspension or expulsion. · &Core taking action, the school prin- cipal1will stage a hearing within three days alter the formal charge bas been made. Evidence of guilt might come in the fonn of a police communication that a pupil has been ar?'f;sted for a violation concerning illegal drugs. other permissible evidence might be supplied by a teacher or administrator who see! the student using, selling or possessing drugs or from the students themselves, if after investigation they ad· m1l lo possessing, using or pushing narcotics. Before the hearing, a case conference must take place at . whicn time a counselor, one of more teachers and possibly a nurse or psychologist would form a professional opinion as to whether the student's return to school would be "inimJcal to the welfare of other pupils." If the school principal, following the hearing, decides expulsion is in the best intertst of the school, he will recommend .tiucb acUon to Dr. William Ullom1 school rea Art Festival Sued Exhibitor A.sking Court ·1 or $6,000 A Laguna Beach artist who announced during this swnmer's Festival of Arts that he was filing suit against the exhibit finally did so this week. Charles Beauvais, owner of Beauvais Gallery, 1420 S. Coast Highway, filed a complaint in Superior Court Tuesday alleging FesUval officials '.'.arbitrarily'' assigned him a booth 'situated behind a tree and .. intentionally and maliciously'" left his picture out of the souvenir pro- gram. Beauvais, who bas exhibited In the summer Festival for 14 yeani. is asking the court for ~.000 declaratory rtlease ror alleged loss of income because or the incident He is also seeking a permanent In· Junction against the Festival'• Board of Directors and its grounds manager lo Laguna Chanilier Presses Quick Parking Relief Laguna Beach Chamber of Comme~cti directors Tuesday agreed to press for Im· mediate relief of parking shortage in· eluding a multi-deck structure on the Glenneyre municipal lol. Bernard Syfan. chairman of the park· Ing study group. told fellow board members a parking structure company is to make a proposal toward erecting a structure on the big municipal parking lot. Syfan real a resolution which the board Approved for forwarding to the city coun- cil. It asked assurance of additional downtown parking before July and urged that at least the first phase of a parking structure be in place by spring. Goals included development or parking for whate\'er is built on a Main Beach Park the city is acquiring. Syfan also suggested that a fi ve.story parking structure (with six tiers of park- ing) is more desirable in Laguna Be.ach than a lot . Mayer Glenn Vedder spoke o( parking likely available by summer "'here the old playhouse now stands and on a blackto~ ped Main Beach lot (45 spaces) the clly 1s acquiring. He said he has some reservations about a multi-level parking structure on the Glenneyre lot because the city has not solved downtown circulation problems. Vedder mentioned the po.uibility sug· gested by the State Division of Highways that a viaduct over the downtown begin at about the Glenneyre lot. keep them from assigning booths in a wrongful, discriminatory and arbitrary manner in violation of it's rules." The artist filed this petition on behalf of himseU and "all other members of the Festival of Arts of Laguna Beach similarly situated." According to his petition, Festival policy is to rotate the assignment of booths each year on a fair basis. The Board d. Directors·whlch ha:i; ap- pobrted txhltilfur Mogerui Abel groundi1 manager for nearly 10 years. has permit- ted him to assign bootM "without any ra· Uonal, reasonable or . equitable basis, knowing that booths are located in such a manner so that some booths are "more favorable and have a higher earning power," Beauvais alleges. He further charges lhat Abel assigns booths to himself and to his friends in a "preferential manner". Beauvais is out or town until Nov. 21 and una\'ailable for comment. However the long-time exhibitor 1aid aUer his July 31 threat to sue the Festival that he was not chosen to exhibit in the 1969 Festival. He wlll be forced to resubmit art work ror Nditi~ jurying along · wiUt new artirls tr he wants to exhibit in next year's show. According to Festival rulu, 1 ctrtaJn percentage of the past year's exhibitou are invited back the next year. The rest must resubmit their work to be juctged along with new artists for remaininc booth space. · City Aid for Boys. Club With Strings Attached A new Boys' Club or Laguna Beach will likely get a financial assist from the cily in develop1nenl of recreation facilities bul will probably be held accountable for im· proving Woodland Drive along its seven· acre site. This was the tenor of city council discussion Wednesday night at an in· fonnal study session with Dr. Edward Nell, board president of the club. City Planner Al Autry said the street improvements are needed to prevent con· gestion in the area. Joseph Sweany, director of public works, estin1aled they would amount to $7 ,500 for curbs, gulters, paving, sidewalks and lighting. !<fl Mentioning a parcel of property ap- praised at $14,500 and priced at $30,000, Nell suggested the street improvements be deferred until the additional property is acquired. "Such improvement to Woodland Dri \'e at this time is not eminent," he said. Nell mentioned old houses on the site for which the club has become landlord. "'The characler of these buildings is tenuous at best. If they're not torn down they will fall down," he said. The club is deriving rental from the properties cur· rently. Nell suggested a live year deferral of street improvements. He said he could see no benefit in immediate improvement of the street •· r see benefits," said f\.1ayor Glenn Vedder. "You will get a nice: curb and gutter. Think of the tremendOUJ im· provement of the property." Nell said, "I can see that light.ing might be a benefit. This is a hangout for hippies and other undesireables." Nell estimated that the club would bft ready for use in about a year. He said construction phases are: -Grading and compaction. -Concrete foundation for lhe entire complex. -Conslruclion of all buildings except U1e gymnasium. --Construction of the gymnasium. -Landscaping. --Construction of a swimming pool at some future date. He estimated that the old buildings and a trailer park would be removed from the property in a year. Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan said, "t feel \Voodland Drive should develope and I don't think the Boys' Oub or anyone else should be let completely off U-.e hook {on required improvements)." Vedder suggested city aid might amount to $10.000 over a two-year period. Nell attempted to nail down the offer but the mayor was elusive. Councilmen wW take up the matter (or act.ion Nov . 6. superinlendenl, who m u s t rea~h a decision within two days or the hearmg. The student and his parents have the right to a hearing by the board to review, the superintendent's decision. The code, coordinated by Owen Tait, iwistant district superintendent, is a col· lection of all policies and procedures regarding discipline in_ the district. "Basically its a rtmtement of previous policies and procedures. The on· Jy new thing in lhe code is the narcotics &:cUon."' be explained • .. ~ Jn other business Tuesday night , school trustees : -Approved an agreement with the University of California so advanced academically oriented students may at- tend uC1 part time during their senior year. TU.ition would be paid for by the students' parents. . -Employed Dr. Slanley WllliM11 and his aS30ci.ates to conduct an evaluation study of personnel, curriculum, finance and public relaUons . The survey, not to exceed a cost of $3,000, will update a 1961 GOOD PLOT -Mark Garrison, 8, and Virginia Creighton, 6, app.ar· ently absorbed, read two of the books to be ~ffered for sale dunng Aliso School's annual Book Fair and Art Festival Nov. 2. Puppeteers, Band .to Pull Crowds to Bool{, Ai1 Fair The annual Book Fair and Arl Festival for Aliso School in South Laguna Satur· da'y, Nov. 2, should be well syncopated. Not only wUl The Chiquita Puppeteers perfonn at 11 :30 a.m. and I p.m., Alex· anders Standby Band wlU be perfonning for the multitudes. The band includes Laguna Beach High School Dlxielanders Tracy Stice:, Ralf Reynolds. Johnny ReynolM, Gale Max· well and Greg Fosters. Books for children and high school studenti will be sold for home libraries or gifts. Authors Elizabelh B a I d w i n Hazelton and Ann A(wood will be at the Festival at 3:30 p.m. On the patio, graphic artist Mary Riker will be paintin& Cbrlstmu cards for sale. Lea Vasquet will demonstrate silk screen technique, Ann Barr printmaking and Mabel Speciale, monoprinting. Small children will be entertained by Nelly Allan's craft cla:i;s, story-telling and the puppeteers. 'There will be a C0>1tume parade before: noon, refreshments and a bal<e saliil> Marine Arrested As Intruder In Laguna Home Brother Arrested In Bar Assault Last of Fire Volunteers A dusty young Marine y;as &m!Sted on 11usplclon of attempted burglary this morning after a nurse assertedJy Iden· tlfled him as the man who entertd a second-:i;tory wondow or her Laguna Beach home. Laguna Beach police arrested a 1i1ar\ne who assertcdly beat hill brother in 1 tavern fracas Wed~sday nighl George Merrill CopelJ, 2J of Camp Pendleton was booked on auapic}on ol assault with intent to do great bodily h:irm. Police aa.id the brother, Jamea J>. Copell, 22 of Santa AN was taken to South Coast Community Rogpital for treatment ol cuts and brul9e! on the h<ad. Police U . Frank Schoptn said the brothtn had bttn playing pool In the Sea Horae. The older brother went to slee p1 ht: said, and when awake~ by hh1 sibl· Ing auaulted him. Schopen said young Copell was on t))to l{r()Und when police arrived, his older ~· ""1dln1 nurby. ~ Neiv District Bei11g Fornied for South Laguna Is the volunteer fireman a vanishing breed along the Orange Coast? He'1 apparently all but vanished in South Laguna lf you think in terms ot fires during normal bualneu hours. The problem, said Fire Chief Arthur L. Pollard, is that nearly everyone halt ind ~arty enough to man a hose has a job that I n t e r f e re 1 with daylight [ire fighting. "There's no problem at night." said PoUard but most ol. the volunteers 1tt nut of the area d11rtng the d11y, working. Pollard, himse:lt, works In Laguna Beach and has to drive south to answer tirt calls. ~ South Laguna Volunteer fire Oepartmenl, 30 years 11n institution, I~ .,.ell equipped. There are: t w o pumper;\ and a ~l ton rescue unit. When the fire .ilann rings, the doors of thf' non-staffed station unlock and open. But, there has to be someone there to hop aboard and drive to the fire. Recently uruts frOm the fire station at Lquna Niguel have been called lo res- pond .. Soulll Llguna firts. This ls why a new fire distrld. Is belng put together atretchlng from the souther· ly city limits ol. Laguna Beach lo Monarch Bay. The propo&ed district given prellminary authorization by County Supervlsors will come before the county's Local A~ency Formation Commilsion Nov. e for hear· Ing. Formtillon of the dlstrld -iC It Is ac- tivated by the New Ytar -woo.Jd likely Involve a lax levy or 24 or 2$ cents per $100 assessed valuation. This would pay for hiring £our fuU·time firemen, wllh two on duty at any given Ume. Jn the meanUme, Chier Pollard is look- ing for volunteers. One: 30-yeer-veteran volunteer l'lreman rtttnlly r t t I r e d , another died and another ls IO mire ncn yuir. Pollard said he haan 't nm into a!U' os>- pogition about lormlng the Ore dlslrlcl but 1aid ii he could ltCW'O enough able volunteer• it wouldn't be necessary to IC· tivate the new dl$lrtct. Ke can be react.. ed for an app!Jc1tlon blank (Iller$ p.m.) o\ 499-1912. ~ pays $1 per fltt . Eugene Ltvshakoff, ZZ of Camp Pendleton was arrested near 1670 Glen- ~eyre ~t., Lhe home of Gerde Chris- Uansen, )bout I :30 a.m. The woman told Sgt. Frank Dillon and Officer Wes Cloy1 that 1t 11uspect had climbed in an upstairs kitchen window and left by the front door,' Police said she ldenUfled Levshakoff w h o was covered with dust and leaves. Pollet were also looking Into the J>OSSlb!llty that the ouspect may have entered the home of a Wgwia Beach den. u.t ahorily oft.r mldnfghl. Lt. Fronk Scbopco Aid llr. Llorenca Stlfcrt, 26 o( 260 Pearl St. were awllentd by a nolae. Scilert discovcrod '" Jntrud<r In the ball and ulted what he wu doing there.. ''I thought a girl Uved here," the unldentlfled suspect was quoted. Schopen 1atd the Intruder left a1 Sellert'1 order. =~.,.. IO ...ic • compl1lnt tl1la . f"'"1 the dlllrict •lloroey. USC "Melbo Report" on the district. -Review an outline of anticipated and immediate budget needs lo improve physical facilities and education at the high school. Robert Reeves, pr.incipal, said $6,000 was: necessary for Immediate needs and gave a rough estimate of $83,000 for long range future needs. -Authorized schools to purchase up to $5,000 worth or books from the pro- fessional library service which is closing its Santa Ana facllity. LBJ Says No Progress In 8 Days WASHINGTON (UPl} -President Johnson said today there has been no basic change and no breakthrough in peace negotiations to end the Vietnam war during the last eight days. He told a news conference that a While House statement to this effect issued Oct. 16 was slill accurate. That statement - issued after a flurry ol report.$ circulated .about the posalbllity of a tot.al bambing halt by the United States -said there was "Do basic change in the situation; DO breakthrough." At the same t'ime , Johnson warned to- day against any "false sense of security" because of lower war casualties and re- cent prisoner exchanges. On the other hand, Johnson said his ad· ministration has been "working very hard and very diligently" to open the way for peace and said that he felt his decision to open talks with the North Vietnamese in Paris was the right thing lo do. "I'm more pleased with It as time goes by," the President commented. Johnson refused to divulge anything specific on Lhe rC'.:ent diplomaUc efforts to end Lhe Paris stalemate. He would not s<iy whether there had been a reply from North Vielnam or even wheUicr he had made a new package peace proposal to J·lanoL The President registered some ir· ritation al pcr:i;istent reports regarding the diplomatic activity on Vietnam and said. "we do not want to make news until there ls news. We realize maay times diplomacy can bt more effective in private than all your discussions, recom• mcndations and prophecies could in tht press." "We want peace in Vietnam very much. We have been doing all we could . .. to bring about a settlement of th e Southeast Asian problem,'' Johnson said. But he said "many times diplomacy can be more effecUve in private." As for the drop in the American com- bat deaths last week to 100 -lowest in 14 months for one week -he said: "We are very pleased that the casualties are no higher than they are." Stoek Marketa NEW YORK {AP) -The stock marke' continued lower in heavy trading late this afternoon amid disappointment over ap- pareo~ la ck of progress in Vietnam peace moves. (Set quotations, Pages 18-19). Oran:e Ji C~t Weather Old Sol brtakl through the fog Friday to warm the coast up wllh 8G-degree temperatures, while in- l~nd regions perspire near the 100 mark. INSIDE TODAY A ring 10 big 11ou couldn't dial a Ul<p'"""' wit/I it ..., among the jewels Mr1. onO.s.sis f'ttcfvcd from htr hiuband and it 10Cltl11 ewn tht chmctai p(ect. Pagt 6. I • J DAILY PILOT Thund'1, Oct-24, 1968 UCI Has .1Maj~r · .Sta:ke in Edn~ation BoJJds. By THOMAS POR'l'\JNE Un.'WrlllJ of Cllllonila --flllO or .. - -"'" Dl!llll!D,lor llulldlllg oo Slale Collop com- No -..,.,._lo tbi-11.u 1 I ·"""'"'•led llO miUl'!ll for reatartoc gruter lllak• In passqe ol lhe statewide deter1ariled publlc -lo - ·educ11ioo bond iMUt, ProposlUon 3, than .,_ • ·•·~~ . UC 1'vloe. 00! Cblncell« j'.lonlel G. """'°" Jr. , 'lbe Youn.& UCI campus st.nds to get said the lrvble campu1 nffds the bond nearly t11n every $10. for construction of money lo keep construcilon on ached We • medlcal college f1ciliUes and science for growing enrollments and to train -buildlngs. Of the $250 million to be needed sclenUsta and medical doctors. aDocaled statewide, UCJ wouJd get $20.5 Should Propoa!Uon 3 pass, the lrvlne mllllon. campus will get even mort than the $20.S The three-purpose state hood issue million. Added to It would be $17.2 million _would provide $100 million for building on in feder11l mat.chin& funds and Sll.l .. • Drug Ill s ' mllllm .. ---y 'fOlll W1141DI -.. ll!Mle to lhe ....J. tU -\hi ~-,_. 'r'1" be .... -. . la.,.._ 11~.,..i ..i..i, wbtali would __ ..,...,.,_ would be spent nn . .: RCOlld blOIOg!c.l sciences bulldmg, a ,.second pl\yslcal sciences building, a science library, a biomedical library, and a C1>m.blned academic and adminiltraUon bulldlng. Other funds for Orange County would provide a IChool of educaUon bulldin& at Cal State .Fullef't.9n and restoraUon of in-1111 ICbool 1"llld1np 1n s.m. Ana. 1""'*"· :Glnllll. --l'qJlertoo. ~--...... -... ,_ II 1111 boo4 laotle 1"YI that tho OVUIJe -... -per )'Cir dllrlng lhl .. JW llle ol the -. would be aboot IO centa. • Proponents' arpe tblt ~n """''•i:O r1a1n, ata rif#'oI 'fR>;~t annually while bond mOiley curren!l)I' ta avillablt at 4\1 p;,iWit mler..t, ·.o-aetay would be costly. The opposition ~gument II that lhe 16 bllllon bcad'4 ln<lebtednesl of. jhe otai.. • ln<ludlng IU billion in authorlud but --. 11.u •lllrllOd °" I!"'!" lllltlcol ud -~ DOt lio 1111111 now. I The counter or~t IJ that ...,Id bonds already lla.ve D6ia oomm!Ued but have not been tokt y~ liecause1t is1tatc policy not to sell boridai' Until paym'Cnl iB due contractors .fer act.ual conatrucUon costa. lnrPthu words, approval of another bond Luue II needed to keep moving Hospital Clue forward with educ.U.0 -· ·-°""lb llll ~ ......... 'IOld until lllor. • The ~Ulft WU olacod Oil lhe No" 5 ballOl llY lhe Leg!slalure wWt Gov. Reagara'• e<ment. It has endorsement of top leaders tn both pollt!cal parties and of the statewide PTA. The Chid ~ or oppoiltl.DD J9l ex· peeled to be lboM who would punish the unlvers.lty for such u Eklrl(!ge Clea"Vtr's appearances or the Jt.ite college lfltem ror allowing such u t~ r'"'v' "'The Beard.'.' . .. ... Decreas e LAGUNA TEEN CORNER l, C~u.ntian Held I n Mesa Murder In Laguna The drug problem ls diminishing at Laguna Beach High School campus in the .opinion of new principal Robert Reeves . "We know there arc kids trying rnari· juana but it is going downhill ln our opi- • nion " Reeves said today. Just how fast ~g' abuse ts declining ii difficult to know, he admitted. "Basically, it (drug experimentation) wu a fad sltuaUon, a 11tatus thing," Wd the principal. "Unless you tried it you were not one or the group. There was a lot of peer pressure." Reeves pegs hi! opinion on inlormalion gathered from both student groups and faculty. Drug abuse, he said, ill no longer "the in thing to do." Students have substituted involvement in positive diret· tions. Feeling ran high in the community lru;t school year when a news 11tory broke the • estimate of a veteran police offleer that r 80 percent of the high school youngsters By TOM GORMAN OKAY, SO LDHS has been painted. And lhe library ls being refurbished; the Vic· tory Bell has been po\L,hed: teachers have ~;~J desks and chairs; the football field ~a press box; and the student council rQOm and senior lounge have been completely redecorated. Things are rosy at LBHS? Not qWte. During lunch today potential jayvee and varsity tennis playen met to discuss the upcoming season. Coach Art Wahl was pleased; seven of last year's eight varsity men have returned to the courts. The ohter had graduated. And there is a good crop of jayvee men waiting to be harvested. BUT, DON'T E.XPECT the team to be especi.ally enthused about the upcoming season. Becauae they aren't. The players are good~ but how about the courts they play on? LBHS has only two coorts of it& own that come close to comparing to the courtl of other high 11ehoola the teams have played. Courts at Thurston In· termedlate face the sun and glare. The two courts on North Campus don't even deserve the name "tennis courts." During home matches, the teams have to use courts downtown, interrupteing the play of others. And still, there are not enough courta -out jayvee aquad has never flniahed a match when played a,t home with the varsity. Besides the tennis teama:, girls' p_ E. classes use (or attempt to use) the courts for practice. The status quo is for eight girls to cram on each court. Not exactly preferred playing conditions, are they? LBHS has the fewest courts in the league, with the exception of neW Mission Viejo High School. Jn short, something has to be done. And any action has to be taken through the school board. An eager bunch of tennis pl'ayers want to win, but someUmei find it phy11lcally impo.!lslble. ' ' l LAGUNA TEENS ARE IN for the ex· perience of a lifeUme a week from SaWr~ day. The Laguna Youth Council is plan· ning a weekend retreat to Crestline. Ap- proximately 40 teens will hear, talk, and see what open communication ii all about. It will cost the individual only $5; the Youth Council will pay the balance from income on street dances like the one being put on this Saturday at 8 p.m. on Forest Ave. It's a first come, first served situation for reservations. For further info, teens should aee Rob Kronman, La u r a Eagleton, Doug Smith, Jamie Barron, Pam OalloWay, or yours truly. To put it simply, the weekend should be interesting. And rewarding. Open communJcation and discussion is rare. Laguna's teen1 will attempt to ex· perience il Shouldn't some adults? A murder complaint agalrut a Fullert9n man was sought today. after a random angle blossomed into a major break Wednesday in !he ~bush slaying of a Cost.a Mesa cocktail waitress seven days ago. Lcvester A. Coley Jr., 29, was booked into Costa Mesa City Jail about noon Wedneaday on suspicion of shooting Mrs. Rose Marie Weidner Ul death after lying in wait for the victim. Detective Arnold Appleman was check- ing a list or 18 emergency hospitals in Orange County, where someone could be treated for a gunshot wound. when Col. ey's name turned up Tuesday night. A trail of blood led away from the spot where Mrs. \Veidner fell, fatally \l'OUnd· ed, after apparently grappling with her attacker at the Acapulco Apartments, 740 E. 18th St., in a fight against dea th. Whoever killed her may have injured himself in the act. of the evidence to be used against Coley, who was in custody of Fullerton police for a time before being released as an ac· cidental shooting victim. " Records showed Coley was treated at Martin Luther Hospital in Anahehn last Thursday morning for a gunshot wound in the left hand and supervisors notified police, as required by law. Coley -his left cheek marred by a fingernail-like scratch when photograph- ed Wednesday -told investigators he had accidentally shot himself. "His version was that he was dry·firing in the belief it was wiloaded and it went off," said Capt. C. D. Davis, chief of the Fullerton police investigation bureau. "I don't have the actual report in lront of me." said Capt. Davis. "I really couldn't tell you what time it was." Since the savage slaying, widespread publicity has been given to the trail-of· blood angle and theories of a wouoded stayer. but Fullerton police apparently never connected the two incidents. had at least tried marijuana. Sin«: then a volunteer drug cUnJc has been fonned with the cooperation of school authorities, doctors volunteering their time and financing from the Laguna Beach Assistance League. Reeves said it is helping rehabilitate about 10 youngsters involved with drugs. The goa1 now, he said, ts to find out why some youngsters felt a need to turn to drugs for "ldcks." Doctors Team To Give Youths Vision Tests Humphrey in Southland Seeking Mi nority Vote Co!ey, a U.S. Port Office employe, was arrested at his apartment, which Is right around the corner from the Orangefair restaurant in Fullerton, where the victim had been employed only thrie weeks. He has _ made no statement and im· mediately upon arrest put in a call to one of Orange County's best known criminal c!e£ense attorneys, Matthew Kurillch Jr., of Fullerton. A tight veil of secrecy surrounds much Capt. Davis and other spokesmen con· tacted alter Coley's arrest by Detective Appleman and District A t tor n e y ' s Investigator Eddie Banks did not seem eager to talk. Costa Mesa Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow refuses to say whether a gun was found in the apartment at 915 W. Orangethorpe Ave., which Coley shared with a roommate. · COmmenting on the narcotics portion of a new discipline policy recommended to the school board this week, the principal uld' "Our policy is taking a different posi· tlon than other school dlstricta in Orange County. We've been a little Jess tough. ~We'~ looting at the cause of the problem rather than only anti-social behavior." Requiem Mass Set For Patrick Shea Requiem mus will be recited at 10 a.m.. Friday at St. Catherine's Catholic Church for Patrick J. Shr.a, 79, a South Laguna resident for 12 years. Mr. Shea, who lived at 22671 Vista del Sol, died Tuesday. He had been in ill healt!l for eight years. A team of doctors from the Los Angeles County Optometric Society next month, will screen hundreds of Laguna elementary and secondary students for vision problem11. The screenings are sponsored by the PT A Unified Council and will be held at El Morro Elementary No'(. t and 5; at Top of the World Elementary Nov. 6 and 18; at Aliso Elementary Nov. 19 and at Thurston lntermedla' School Nov. 20 The fee ts one dollar and parenbl who wish their child to take the eum should have turned In pennisston sllpa and money by Friday, Oct. 18. DoctorJ will be ua1ng the "Orinda VWon StUdy." The battery ol le!! coming out of this study have proven to be the best available to men doing school screening, the callfornfa Optometric AssoclaUon states. "This Is the most thorough and ac· curate testing devised so far for screen· ing: other types often don 't pick up children r:ho really do have visual pro- blems," Mrs. Joanne McDonald, district nurse said . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hubert Humphrey's weei·long quest for votes among reltatous and ethnic minorities took on new urgency In California today where 40 electoral votea Wf:!e at stake and where hla presidential bid may stand « fall. Humphrey wu hopeful and· en· couraged. He could count BUccesa ln his first two outinp here, one in the Negro ghetto of Watt& and the other in an East Los Angeles area heavily populated by Mexican-Americans. Humphrey told a atreet c r o w d eaUmated at 2,500 in Watt& that Richard Ni.I.on talked cf law and order, but a dil· ferent kind of law and order than the peo- ple wanted. "Every American, black or white, young or old, Is enUlled to the lull pro- tectlon of lhe law and to equtl rights, to equal enforcement of the law, and t.o equal opportunity under the Jaw. "Now that's Jaw and order," Humphrey shouted, and the black crowd roared back its approval. Humphrey also ticked off a Iilit of pro- mises he said his administration would Interment will be in A s c e n s I o n Cemetery under the direction of Laguna Beach Funeral Home. The family has ~ 1uggested contributioll!!I to South Coast -Community Hospital in lieu of flowers. Mr. Shea ii survived by his wldow, .. Ellie; nleca:, Audrey Bowden of Burbank and Agnn Shea of Butte, Montana; and a nephew Walter Dezell of Utah. ·Irvine Co. Withdraws j Planes for Germany Upper Bay Swap Plans ' BONN (UPl)-West Germany decided \. today in the wake or the Czechoslovak crisis to add mU.9Cle to Its 11upersog,tc air force with tthe p.u-cha.se or ae American· made RF't Phantom aircraft. The Upper Newport Bay land swap Is off. C. ft.1. Fea.thfrly, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervlsor1, to- day confirmed to the DAILY PILOT thet the Irvine Company has withdrawn from i • l ' 1 ' l DAILY PILOT OIV.HGi tOASl ,.Ull.litil..0 COMl'AHY ••\.•r4 N. W1•4 '''-ldlM •l'IC P'llillU..,_. J1c• JI. C1rl.., vie. Pr•i...t •1141 Ofttf.t Mt"-"" 1'h11111t IC11•il .... lli•11111 A. M.,,,hi~t MlllMlftt E~1fw iic~••I P, Nell P1.,I Niue" l-~ AM•ll.int CllJ EflW Olr«lw a.,-.... °'"" 211 ...,.., ..... M11n111 M4reHi P.O. '" •••• 91612 --C.• ..,,..: Uf ._.., ..., .._. """'"'-<Ill rrll Wiit .. _ .... ~ ~ IMdl:,., Jltl ....... the long-discussed land trade propo11al 1n Upper Newport Bay. Fealherly said be received news of the w_ l th d T a w a 1 of a letter delivered personally by Jrvtne Company president William Mason. While reluctant to discuss the issue, Fealherly confirmed that the letter WilS "a fcrmal announcement of Irvine's withdrawal from any further discussion or a land trade between u,." The other four members of the Board of Supervisors are attending a three-day seminar at Idyllwlld In R1ver1'iide County, IJld Fealherly said he felt further discuaion of the ls.sue 1hould await their return . DISCUSS LETTERS "There's not. much that wt can do about It," the veteran 1upervl10t added. "But we should at least dllCUSI Mr. Ma90n'1 letter among ourselve1.'' lrvine Company'• wtthdr1wal from the belelgUered Back Bay lradfl was 1'ter conllnned by public ,..laUont dire!:t!>r WllUam Aldrich. "l can't revtal content.a of the letter," Aldrich said. "But 1 can DAtt.! •11.0T ..... "41lcll .. _,.. H aay thlt It e:nd1 Irvlne'1 lntertst tn the .......,., ........... *llY ..-._ deal.'' .......... ~-~a.di. __. ..... ~ --. ,...,...~..... Supervlaort took t h • hotly debated ...., -...... v .. 1w w ............ luut "off calendar" Wedoetday. ·They ~ ~ 1"=",:. .0:::-.. C.: prtv1tely concedtd after t h e meeting nn..., .. .,. Ir.ii~ """""' """' ..,. that "oU calendar" ml""t well mea.a tho -........ ltrwf. (Id.I MeM. &" Tel ;t ,, ·tn4J ,,..,.,..., permanent 1helvtnc of the. Upper Bay a. ...... Dtpt. '4J..ull plan. c.w• ,,.. ~ <Mii ,,....,.... Muon'• ac:t1on presumably aldl the =::· ... -... -. ..,"I: poalbUtty of a trade which wu first sua· _., ., i:::.:., ~•1=., ,.,. gealed, Ftathtrly today rttalled, "aome j ..... ., ~ ......... ll ytar1 ago.'' ............................... .,... ~ ~ c.11..,,., .. ~ *" -AOVANTAG&1 CITED l_:..,.:::.:"":=-j;::":'~"~·-:..:: ... =~.,.....-.l~• j The IUj)f:l"Vlson bad p r e~o u 1 I y .... _, 2 • •• •.n ...,,. unantmoulJy lllppcrted the 'llc&ted ~ exchange or land1, publicly declaring that It would be in lhe public Interest and would. result in a strong advantage to·the counly -both financially and for park development:i: ln the Upper Bay. '11le State Lands Commlsllon approv· ed the land exchange ln mld-1967. But legal complications set In. And the Irvine Company -&tailed in gettina the transacUon pushed tbroug~. -made It clear that lt was growing Ured of paying a big tax load ·amt heavy development cosls on property enmeshed In legal compllcaUons. But the. Board of Supervisors said yesterday that it saw no way out of the taxation bind. Memben aaid they couldn 't ao a1ona with a propoaal that relief be Btlllled durinl the perlod that tho propoul wu tied up in court. The trade would b"ve Involved Irvine taking over the deed,, for 16 paircels - about 157 acres -of county.(lwned llde11nd5 in uchange for 4l50 acr1:1 of lrvlne tm'aln. The switching or deed• would, proporllllla of the deol oald. remove the heavily taxed 1rvtne land from the tu: roles until a court decision ls obtained on the land i'lwap prooo.W -believed to be u mucb u {hret1 more years away. P~ent1 of the IU&ititi!d deal have pc)lnte(! out that th·e tramfer w o u t d enable the county to develop a reaion.t park In the area. It would pmnlt the Irvine Company, they argue, to uoe rebllltt Udelandl fer marine type de,.loi>-monta. . And It bu been lurlher argued U..1 lhe deal would mab~ the county and Jrvlne to pttfonn necwwy dredging In Upper Newport 8 a y 1ln(ftr a single contract with a "poeaibl1 11""11 of II mlWon to Heh party."' Oppo1ltlon came to a hci.dln RCtnt d&ya w b e n County Allnlor An- drew J. Jtmati.y condemned the deed e1· c~ u "legally Im-" and baled on • gross mlutatemenll ol probable ~vUues.'' 4.. make to all the people, black and white and medical care, a better life. and medical care, a better Uife. "Yeah, but how Jong will we have to wait?" a voice from the: darkness yelled. "Get me elected and It will start right away. I've been working for yoa for a quarter of a century," Humphrey yelled back. It was the only intemipt!on in a half· hour oration. He drew 7 ,500 Mexican-Americans to a shopping center rally. He promised to legalire fann unions, big issue in this agriculture state which depends heavily on casua1 labor. Humphrey flew to Ca1ifornia Wed- nesday night from Texas where he was credited with a "political miracle" in pat.ching together a coalition of con· servalive and liberal Democrats. It was still a quesUon whether the patchwork could product a majority to give tµm that state's :25 electoral votes. But if airport crowd enthusiasm was any barometer, and 'if state polls were reliable, Humphrey had reason for hope. Califonria presented a new 1et of pro- blems. But the Humphrey camapign organization thought the same solution might solve them -heavy electioneering amq Mexican-American• and black! •. .. Anyone for Judo? Club Hopes Art Will Take Hold Mike Hof£, executive director of the Boys' Club of Laguna Beach, blames the same fat e shall befall Judo, a milder off. jitsu on gunpowder. But, the club doesn't intend that the same fate shall befall Judo, amilder off. spring o( Jujitsu. Hoff is Inviting all boys between the ages of 6 and 18 to join the club Judo pro- gram held Monday and Tuesday evenings at the girls' gym of Laguna Beach High School. "In 1882 Master Jigoro Kano was a stu· dent of Jujitsu and it became an art he loved ," said Hoff. "With the invention of gun powder and explosive weapons, Jujitsu st a rte d withering away. Mr. Kano thought why not fonn a 11port with thls knowledge he had acquired through the years. "So he took all the harmful parts out of JujlU!u such as the kJcks and blows and be called this sport Judo. Now Judo ls practiced all over the wot Id." . The 7 p.m. classes are structured so that boys of varying ages and talents receive equal instruction, said Hoff. "Parents are often wary of Judo until they see the developmental influence it can h a v e on their children," he said. "Boys themselvea can become dlscourag· ed if they are not prepared for the men4 tal and physical discipline which the sport. demands." He said lb.at the obedient attitude and behavioral discipline so necessary to Judo is one or the prime factors in establishing Judo programs within the boy-guidance framework of Boys' Clubs throughout the country . It provides physical de velopment con· tributing to coordination, speed, agility, balsnce and endurance. Persons interested may call the Boys' Club, 494-2535. Only cost of the program is club membership which is $1.50 per year. At JJ.J. Qarrelf TAKE ADVANTAG E OF OUR SPECIAL OFFER ON THESE TOP QUALITY SO FAS YOUR LCHOICE OF '4 ~O FA STYLES Wide clMllCe of fabric.a & c0Jor1 AT $299 72 to 100" , ... LAWSON ~OV E SEATS $249 H.J.GAl\l\ElT fUR NITURE PROFESSIOML INTERIOR OESl~NUS o,.. "'"'' T1lws. ' l'<t. - 1215 HARIOR ILVO. COSTA "'ESA, CALIF • M._0271 M6.0276 Ul"I Ttt.floo~ BERKELEY DEMONSTRATORS TEAR DOWN ONE BARRICADE TO BU ILD ANOTHER Lumber from Construction Project Goes for Sit-in Police Recapture Cal 76 Protesters Arrested on Berkeley Campus From Witt Services BERKELEY -Hundreds of law en· forcement officers marched onto the University of California campus today and recaptured a building which had been seized by a militant band o f demonstrators. The police arrested 76 of the protesters. Nixon Accuses Humphrey Of 'Nonsense' on Economy By MERRIMAN SMITH ALLENTOWN, Pa. (UP I) Republican Richard M. Nixon, opened a one-day automobile stump tour of central and eastern Pennsylvania today by ac- cusing Vice President Hubert H . Humphrey of being a nonsense peddler on ecor.'.'~ic issues. The GOP presidential Candidate flew here early today from Grand Rapids, Mich., and after eight hours of motorcade campaigning, ,planned to go into his New York City base of o~ations tonight. "About the stalest charge in American JXllilics is the quadrennial bleat that the Republican party stands for depressions, misery for litUe people, and is never hap- pier than when people are down and out," the GOP candidate said in a statement issued at Allentown. KNOWS BETTER "This nonsense is being peddled around the country by Hubert Humphrey.~ Of course, he knows better, but apparently he hopes to frighten some people into voting -not for him -but against us." [n a statement issued for another stop on the Pennsylvania motor tour, Pottsville, Nixon said Humphrey was no friend of the working man by promising "to spend $50 billion in additional taxes if he wins this election." "Mr. Humphrey is such a good friend of the American working man that he is going to spend their money for them," he added. "My view is this: I intend to adopt a policy that will leave a larger share of the worker's income in the worker's hands for him to spend and not for the government to spend." As Nixon started another day of speak· ing, he and his staff were unmoved by an offer from third party candidate Ge<irge C. Wallace to relinquish any right he had to appearing with Nixon and Humphrey on ~ national television debate, just as long as the networks gave him 30 minutes ol [ree time the day following such a debate. "It does not change a thing," said Ron Zieg 1 er, press spokesman for the Republican carulidate. Ziegler also ex· plained that Nixon's position was con· sistent in that he would do nothing that would give Wallace national television ex- posure. 'DOOR CLOSED' Ziegler said Congress "closed the door" on any debate acceptable to the camp of the Republican candidate by refusing to pass a bill allowing free television debate time between the two major party can· didates. With Nixon sticking by his resolve not to debate, there was detectable ap- prehension within his campiagn organiza- tion today that Humphrey and Johnson administration friends might be pressur· ing for a major Vietnam peace develop- ment within the next few days. Republican campaign strategists were careful to except President Johnson, himself, from what they feared was maneuvering toward a smashing peace announcement designed to help Hum· phrey at the polls Nov. 5. Hanna Admits Mistake In Report on Finances Attempts by Rep. Richard T. Hanna (0-Westminster) to be a financial 1traigbtsbooter in his current campaign for re-election ha\'e somewhat backfired, he admitted Wednesday. The jaunty, three-term congressman is under fire by Republicaru: for allegedly reJeasing an erroneous statement of personal finances to biz constituents at government expense. Hanna, opposed by Garden Grove GOP challenger Bill J. Teague, admitted at a news con.(erence that his well·meant ac· lion may have been tinged With elee· tioneering. He also said it was a bit erroneous, but charged that acc<>untll in the press cast it in a mialeading tight. "I'm going through stresses and stz:ainl trying to be honest and it just gets me in- to more trouble," groused the stocky Irishman. HlllD.I. last week inserted his financial statement set at 1 net of '392,IXM> In the COO~onal -· urging that other public olllee boldm do likewise for ooo· fidllx:o ol •oien. Anaheim attM>ey David G. SiDs, p,..f. dent ol the Republican Aaoclalea ol Orange · County, dug h!lo Hanna'• ~ and attacked Ille financial statemeni as false. Hanna aald he had 17,3!0 sham ol "°"k In Specira Strip, a Garden Gro\'I manufecturtng firm, but Sills indd a11 lite .. 1164 he only bad 2,000 - answered by saying the amount increased to its present 17 ,380 shares through simple appreciation of stock. Sills also criticized Hanna's use of the Postal franking system to mail the finan- cial statement to 1931000 voters in his districl Agnew's Visit Closed to Public Gov. Spiro T. Agnew's visit to the Orange Coast area Saturday -his only appearance in the county -will be clo..'i· ed to the public and all members of the press. The Republican vice pre 1 id en t I a 1 nominee will arrive al Orange COunly Airport Saturday morning to attend an Jnvitalional luncheon with GOP leaders at the NewporUr Inn in Newport Beach. He will make no public appearances and will not give any lntervlell'I, ac- cordl11& lo Victor C. Andrews, l""ral chairman of the Oranae County cam- palin. "Gov. ""'"" facing the Lut hectic days or the campaign which will yet lake him lctosl the nJtion i hall-doien times, needa a chance to nrtu," Andrem ex· plained. Acting on a predetermined signal in the pre-dawn darkness, the 500 riot-equipped officers surrounded the structure seized 12 hours earlier by the demonstrators, some oI them non-students. The officers were greeted by a hail of rocks and catcalls from sympathizers outside the structure. But, most fled as the helmeted officers pushed through makeshift barricades to reach the building where the heavily blockaded main entrance was set afire. The flames were Quickly extinguished and the tedious task of arrest paperwork began as the siege ended. Within two and a hall hours, the demonstrators were removed from the ivy-covered building and hauled to jail in buses. Of the 76 persons arrested, 26 were girls. All were inside the building except four youths taken into custody 100 yards from the building when they refused to disperse from a bonfire. As the demonstrators were herded into the buses, they changed "Ban UC Racism" and "Pigs Off Campus." A group of about 50 students a hundred yards away returned the chants. It was the third day of sit·in demonstrations and arrests as militant students sought to force the 28,000-stu· dent university to give college credit for a lecture series by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver. Thwarted in an attempt to take over the administration building, Sproul Hall, where 121 were arrested Wed nesday morning, the d~sidents seized nearby Moses Hall Wednesday afternoon. In ordering police onto the campus, Chancellor Roger Heyns called the building seizure as a "wilfull and flagrant disruption that defied logic or justifica· tion." Among the demonstrators was Peter Camejo, shriJl.voiced former student described by police as a Trotskyite-Com· munist professional agitator. Camejo had been in the forefront of almost every ma· jor Berkeley demonstration since coming to the campus nearly three years ago from New York City. Jack Bloom, a graduate student who ls head of the Independent Socialist Club was also arrested. Bloom led a march on the Chancellor's office Wednesday and subsequent seizure of Moses Hall. Rafferty Visits Leisure W or Ids In Orange County Declaring he had come home to Orange County, Republican Senate candidate Dr. Max Rafferty Wednesday appealed to elderly conservatives and liberal col- legians to send him to Washington. The conservative opponent of poll· leading Democrat Alan Ct~ton was scheduled to visit Leisure World, Seal Beach, today after a visit to the Laguna Hills retirement community Wednesday. He also sought votes of aerospace workers and even the college and university students he has been sharply chiding in recent weeks for all manner of ains. Rafferty's senate campaign depends on a heavy percentage of the half million votes In Orange County, statewide bas- lion of conservative Republicanism. He told about 170 persons at a $100 per couple fund·raising cocktail party in Fullerton that Republicans are a minori- ty group now, just the same as Negroes and Mexican·Americaos. Workers Moving From Slum Areas WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Labor Department reports 300,000 workers have moved out of the nation's worst slums In tbe tut twelve months. Thursday, Oclobtr 24, 1968 DAILY PJLOT 3 Bacteria Bomh.Threaf UCI Professor Raises Prospect in Speech One bundred saboteurs renting private airplanes could wipe out 60 percent of the U.S. poi:;alatlon with bacteria bombs. Tba\ frightening prospect was raised in a talk by Dr. Calvin McLaughlin1 UC Irvine assi5tant p r o f e s s o r of biochemistry. He said that enemy nations such as Cuba which do not have nuclear weapons do have the know·bow for biological warfare. "It is a cheaper death delivery system anyway," he said. The cost of killing the 60 percent of U.S. residents who live in urban areas would be only $10,000 to rent Toni Hewitt Cracks Mark In Butterfly By GLENN WIUTE Diiiy flllOt 1-b •dflor MEXICO CITY -Corona del Mar 't Toni Hewitt had an Olympie record for roughly three minutes today as she easily qualified for tonight's finals in tht women's 200 meter butterfly. The 17·year-old American record holder covered the distance in m o r n I n g semifinals with a.n easy 2:29.l, to reduct Olympic standards set earlier by team· mates Diane Giebe (2:31.0) and then El- lie Daniel (2:29.4). However, Miss Hewitt had barely dried off when world record owner Ada Kok, from Holland, zipped the distance in 2:26.3 to bee-Orne claimant to an even newer Olympic mark. That record doesn't figure to last more than six or seven hours, however, with 1 blistering finals in prospect Miss Hewitt had things her own way, vying again~t the performers from Korea, East Germany, Uruguay, Sweden and West Germany. She waa In third place at 50 meters, closed to second at the halfway mark, then took the lead at 125 ,.1eters. She never trailed after th.at. All four team winners had it easy. There was only one major upset in morning action as Australia'a Lynette McClements wound up fourth in Miss Daniel's heat, fouling out of competition. She was the gold medalist in Monday's 100 butterfly, but had told the DAILY PILOT that the 200 was not her cup of lea. So tonight, it's the four favorites bat-- Uing for the medals -Miss Hewitt, Miss Kok, Miss Daniel and Miss Giebel. Sehool Aid Okayed WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -President Johnson has agreed to release $90 million in federal school aid for are8:s with large numbers of federal employes, sources said today. Jhe alrplanes and $4 ,!00 lo produce Jhe plague bacteria, he figures . "Tiiis ts the way it is with biological warfare -dirt cheap and anybody can do It," he said. He saJd each saboteur would need only ooe pound of bacteria to mix with an aerosol spray. "It would be roughly 100 percent elfecUve." McLaughlin told a seminar of graduate biology students be believes the popula- tion of man is going to be reduced drastically in one of three ways, which he called "megatragedies." They are, he said nuclear warfare, biological warfare For His Brothers and famine caU!Od bf world food shorlage. - "In all likelihood a certain number at people wUI live through it," he said. "Yoa all know what a k.llling curve loolu like," he told the students. (Such a curve t.Jpel'll oil u Jhe population gets smaller.) McLaughlin spoke .of the megatraged!es by wa)' ol Introductng bis speaking subject -cancer. "At some point, even if it Is after the population crash, we will have to come to grips witb the three major degenerative disea.s!!S we don't have a eutt for -h~ dilease. cancer and mental illness," be saUL. Kennedy 'Asks Voters To Ignore Wallace NEW BEDFORD, Mass. <UPI) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy appealed t n Americans toda,y in the names of his assassinated brothers not to vote for George C. Wallace for President on Nov. 5. He said Wallace "is in league" with e1:· lremists. The last of the Kennedy brothers said a heavy Wallace vote in the coming elec- tion could create "a pennanent plirty of division and bate" on the American political scene. Observing that polls Indicate "as many as 15 million Americans" may be con- sidering voUng for the third party can· did ate, Kennedy said: "To those who lean towards (Wallace), and especially to those among them who vol.eel for President Kennedy and who supported Robert Kennedy, I want to say that nothing could be further from the principles of these men ." Contrasting Wallace to his late brothers, the Massachusetts senator com· mented: "President Kennedy upheld the Constitution and the laws of the United States. George Wallace defied them. President Kennedy defended America against the extremists. George Wallace is in league with them .•• "Robert Kennedy stood for recon· ciliation among the races. George Wallace stands for division and sup. pression. "So it is not enough that Wallace's movement be defeated. It must be repudiated -for the health of our eoun· try and our future as a nation." Kennedy said that in selecting retired Air Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay as his Hanoi Opens Fire ':ro~~~:-~.~~.~ ... antiaircraft gunB opened fire today on an American plane that fl ew over Hanoi, the Soviet news agency Tass reported from the North Vietnamese capital. Tass said the city underwent an air raid alert when the lone plane appeared but did not say whether the American aircraft was shot down. It implied the aircraft was a reconnaissance plane. running mate, Wallace proposes to put tn the vice presidency a man who bas "shown himself to be completely in- sensitive to the grave risk! involved In the use of nuclear weapons." Students Told Negroes Left Out of History One reason for the deep rac1al cleavage dividing the United States today ls that black has been omitted from history books, Dr. Otey Scruggs said Wednesday at UC Irvine. "One simply cannot comprehend the bitterness now spilling out of the ghetto without a sense of the tragic sameness in the ghetto for generations," he 18id. Scruggs, a Negro historian with a PhD from Harvard, spoke to a U. S. history class and many outsiders on "Why Afro- American History?" He said the telling of U. S. history has long needed a tragic dimension "to overshadow if not supplant a dimension or optimism." He remarked that adding to history the . tuffering of Afro.Americans humaniml the American past. "Maybe we can begin questioning our belief in our omnJpotence, challenging the theme of inelectable pro- gress," he said. He suggested that Afro-American pro- tests are becoming increasingly vexing to Ule white middle class, and that the U.S. can expect to have difficulties with the increasing number of non·white nations. The reason, he said, is because of "the blackout in our history, or put another way, the whitewash: ... · He said in proper perspective the black-white theme iJ one of the most seminal themes of American history. "The way our history ls divided testifies to this," he said. "Tbere was the era of slavery and the era of reconstruc- tion. When modern history is written 1 believe something like the ordeal of black and white will follow the era of the cold war." Election Day 1968 NO VEMBER FIFTH Both. Great 'Flag Days' UNITED STATES FLAG State F;l19 lnclu<lecll '3'' Complete nas Set contatnt 3 bys foot flag &.toot ataff, h1Iyard, metal mountina brackel:4 and ICftWI ••• all ln a bet.vy cardboard Hlt•llml't cart<>n. . Fly a new flag, save money and help the Bo:Y>' Club of The Harbor .Area-a11 at the same time. Order this deluxe flag kit now and get a miniature state flag as a bonus. Home delivery in Coota Mesa and Newport Beach; kits will be mailed to other Orange County addre<ses. Order Now ·---------- • c ............... I (Ion' Club flf the Hll'bof' ,,,_, I C•11tf•I l fflnch Upp•r l •Y lr111c.h I ff4 C.i.r lll'wl 2111 T\Mtlf! A-• I ~~C.Uf. '-"~~I I Pl .. ,.'""•••••••• fl•t Mh 1t SI.ti p•r .it. I N•m• 1------. Str.•t •11d Ne. . II, I I lMtkt c:Nckfi Of' """"" .,_, "'"'* te Im' ttua .. ""' Mar'Olot AM) ... ---------~ TbejllHlll DiJtrlrt c 0 n I r • I 11" I • .~ Andrews erprtSllCd re~ that the governor'• advance men bad made such arranaements but indicated that be bad """' uneble to dlallj(e them. r The department, In reltaslng a report It said covered the worst shum in 100 cU1t!!, said Wednesday the workers ap- parenUy moved into better urban nelJil>borboods between September 1967. end'lfl!ll, l"!~ ............................... " ............... ...;•...;""';;.;"~"""'...;;;,;~...;~""';;.;.''~""';'~•~"'~"'~'~i_;j .......... ol Thunday, October 24, 1968 1 Mass Red-Prisoner Relea·se Due NY Strilies Bring_(;OP South Vietnam to Free 140 Ca p tives as Fighting Ease s Ouster Call- Wornn barely paused ro look as BenJ•mln A. Thoma•, a mecha· ni.c, and Phyllla J. Johnton were married Tuesday on th e Delav.1a re Memorial Bridge, \Vil1nington. The bridge is cunent.ly closed to traffic for ahera1Iions. ';I've Always liked that bridge," said. ThOl1l'llt explair>- ing why'be dlose ·the site. 1l've driven oVer it so many times." Lat. er llM! c:oople attended a reception In an auto body shop. • The unofficial Pat Paulsen for Pres-. iden .campaign headquarters 1IXl8 offt~· ciallJf'. opened alongside an Atlanta. highwatf Wednesday. The "outdoor John" ·design almost caused a few motofists to drive off the road laugh- ing. • Cerio Ponti, husband o! film star Sophi• Loren, has bought a $350,• 000 house on Geneva so t.hat bis, wife can be next door to her gyne-- cologist. Miss Loren, expecting her fl rst child between Christmas and t 1e ~ Year, has had three mis- c::trriages. She bas not left a suite i11 a ,Geneva hotel since July and h :· s been visited almost every day by her gynecologist, Prof. Hubert de wetteville. • ·Normally, I am not 1upeT.sti· tiou.6.'' aaid Jack Ellil in 1eek· ing permission Tuesday to ch.an· ge tht address of hi! homt"' m Huclinall. England from No. 13 to l 1·A. He said that since mov- ing 'into the home three year! ago, he and his wife have been flooded out twice, he broke an arm and came down with arthrf· tis. 10hile 11is wife seriously cut he-r 'hand, wrench.ed her neck and now has a slipped disc in hir back. Permission for the number change too! granted. • Patrons of the Doll's night club in Birmingham, England have a choice this week between 1'the belly or the telly." Those who don 't care to watch the exotic dance rs on stage can turn around and see· the Olympic Game~.on a television set against the back wall. SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese g<>vernment apokesmen said today they planned the largest release of Commwili.1 captives of the war. The announcement came as allied weekly battle deaths fell to the lowest point of the year, reflecting a lull in fighting . U.S. aircraft losses, however, rose sharply with the downing of 15even planes and helicopters in a 24-hour period, military spokesmen said. On the ground Wednesday, U.S. !i.tarines and South Vietnamese troops plunged into the demilitarized zone {Df\.1Z) and killed 122 North Vielnamese , ·Ray W 9rked In Chicago Mter Escape CHlCAGO (UPI) .;_ James Earl Ray, accused assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., worked as a dishwasher and waiter in a north suburban restaurant for two monlhll aftet e!caping from a Missouri prison, it has been learned. His job at the Indian Trail restaurant in lakeahore Winnetka -where hi.I former employers said he was alway• clean !haven, neatly dressed and. courteous -was learned Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Klingeman, the owners, were unaware that their onetime food server was Ray unUl approached last August by a magazine writer com· lhissioned by Ray to write his llie'story. The Klingemans, who said Ray was a highly satisfactory employe, notified Win~ netka police, who in turn notified the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The information is not considered c::rucial in the murder case, but is im- portant in helping investigators fill in a "missing lin~" in Ray's whereabouts between his esc_ape on April 3, 1967, and the assassination on April 4, 1968. The Klingemans said Ray used the name of John L. Rayns when he applied for a job as a dishwasher May 3, 1967. He used his own Social·Security number, the· ~ouple teamed later. Jackie Gleason Changes Mind About Divorce NEW YORK (UPI) -Jackie Gleason, the paunchy television and tavern clowti of "away-y-y we go" fame,.took ballerina Genevieve Halford as his bride when he was an $8-a-week comic Playing cheap clubs. · That was in 1936 when he was 20. They had two daughters then separated in 1951. Gleason, a Catholic, vowed never to divorce his wife or remarry. "The church does not recognize divorce.'' a thinner, poorer Gleason said 17 years ago. "We can't hope for an an· nulment because we have no solid grounds for one. In the eyes of the church I will always be married to Gen, and that means I will never remarry." "It's a tough situation, but those are the rules and there's nothing we can do to change them," he said. But after promising he would never do it, Gleason filed suit Wednesday in Supreme Court in New York to divorce hls wife of 32 years. The 52-year-old comic charged his wife in the suit wilh abandonment, the same grounds Mrs. Gleason won a legal separation in 1954, and custody of their two daughters, Geraldine, now 29, and Linda, :n. soldlert in a three--hour batUe. Government spokesmen said they plan· ncd to release 140 Communist capUvea. It was the third gesture of Its type since the lull in lighting began amid reports in world capitals that a full bombing halt over North Vietnam was imminent along with a breakthrough in the prellminary Paris peace · talks. An allied casualty report covering the weekJy period beginning Oct. 13 said U.S. combat deaths were 100, the lowest week· Jy toll since Aug. 12, 1967. The previous week 177 Americans died in Vietnam lighting. U.S. wounded last week totaled MYSTERY HIJACKER Williarri Truitt Ex-VP's Grandson Hijacks Plane, Flees to. Cuba KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) -The grandson of the late vice president Alben Barkley disappeared into Cuba today after hijacking a sm8U plane and leaving his wife and three children behind in a trailer camp tent. William Barkley Truitt's wife, his mother, the FBI and the Federal Avia- ti on Agency had no clues at all to why the 35--year·old free lance pbotographcr did it. "How ridiculous," his wife saith His mother, Mrs. Max O'Rell Truitt, said in Washington she could not believe her son and his family had Jived in tents for six weeks. "That just can't be true. It just can't be true,'' the late vice president's daughter said Wednesday, shortly after Truitt hijacked the single engine Cessna 177. Dressed in sandals with an ascot around his neck, Truitt chartered the plane for a picture-taking trip to the dry Tortugas Islands, 65 miles west of Key West . Truitt and the pilot, Charles Oliveros, 28, landed in Havana at 2:56 p.m., about two hours after takeoff from Key West International Airport. The pilot could not return until today because he wa~ not qualified for night flying, and stormy weather over the Florida straits prevented small craft flying. Truitt revealed the hijacking himself over the plaoe 's radio. The FAA tape recording was not immediately available. Pilot Oliveros made a cryptic an· nouncement after Truitt: "No gun , but something more detrimental being used." The FAA said it had no idea what that could be. Truitt lwgged aboard much photographic equip. ment before the plane took off from Key West. Foggy Front Frets Florida Nebraska Frozen by Frigid Great Plain Temperatures .t::•Hfornl• v.s. s ............ ~l!lv, cleer. 1utum11 wNlhtr "'''~ ~ O'<fr rncsl ol Ille ""''''" UnlfM S!tlel IOCllY Will! tl\OWtrt Ind - lltM ,,,_.,11 l'f'POf1t1I 111 "'-M ldwffl t na t!O<>D ti.. Gull C0011t, A large IPftWllllt ll!tll ,_,. • .,.. ~ do1011n1tr!d ""' ,,... trom "-P.- cltk Coest to "'' M1u1n1•1 VtlltY. Tllr .. ,...,.. t~u~.--. alone ,.,. Gull COilltt t rt'9I011• becom1"'1 l>N...., t • ltmK t ro.rnd n,. TUM ClOl&llll'll I nd MJUl~r11 Florlclt. TM ..,_,. Gr"! L.W. -riwnced lrttrlnv llg!!I ,..111 '"° lltfll lnowlt!I. A l!Mvv •tin cont1n!Hd to d~ Pt •I• ol tt'>e P•tlli' NOl"ll\~I •lltl moA '~•n two lt1tMt retllf'Cltd 111 -MC- 11-or W•lllln9t011. A 1>r..ssurw l tM llf'Ollflll -""" I r>d _, -..!Mr 1-. IM -~ ., l~nl!t St!eboe'11 '"'' 1rom _. ''" f:lo<IO• IO •~si.rn Vlrtlnle . fll'ff\pefl fwrfl ctllnb9f ll'lO "" M and IOI Ill 9l(tl d tllt l'llf ... ....... .. TeH1perat11re1 Hit• low Pr.c. Alllu11Uef'IU9 " " Andlo!'"•M .. " Afllllll " " 8•k•~ll>ld .. " l !tm1rtt; ... " ... N .. " (l!l~to " " ClnclnMll ., ~ CIM111'1d " " °"""' ~ " ...... _ .. " •• ....... "' ~ Evrell1 " .. l"ort WOl'll'I .. • ·-~ .. " ··-" " Honolulv " " ........ .. .. ... K1nt11 Cll"I' " " Ln v ... , .. " LOI Antotlft " .. Ml1ml " " Mllw1ut" " " Mln-l'dll • • New OrlM"* .. " N...,. Yatk " " OMl1M n " °"""' " • PIM It_.. • • Pllll .. 111>111• " n Pllo9o'll~ " • Pl~l'flt " " ...,,, ... .. ~ R1Pld crtv " ~ Red llufll " " ·-" " Seertfftt<'!ld .. " St. L1111lt " ~ 1•11~1 " " s..n L1t1 cnv .. " S111 Di.to .. " ... ,.,~,1:9 .. " $at11t lt!Wrt " " Snttle .. " ·-" ~ ""'"'" ,. :t Wnflll'ttfllfl ,. sat, the lowest Ocure aln<le the week ... ding last Doc. 30. South Vlttnamese battle deaths drop. ped to 132 last week, tbe loweat fiiur• this year. Military spokesmen were reluctant to attach algnll!canct to the fact the •lowdown in fljhUng corTe.Spondod to the bombing halt r<parll. A U.S. mllltaty briefer said, "It 11 our opinion that the enemy ii regrouping, resupplying and refitting u it wu followlng the Tet and May offensives." The South Vietnamese government described its plan to release the Com· munbt prtsonen u a "tolerant and ' humanltu1an getture." A spokeaman, asked if the nwv• had lny reiaUoa to reported peace propooala, said "delails will · be provided later." The spokesman uid the w.lsoners w<>uld be freed within a week, i)robably Oct. 30, wllh the release taip.ng pla~e 1n Saigon. He said th• men would bJ' frte to. remain m South Vietnam but be did not aMWer the queotioo of whelher they would be turned Ovt!r to Communist representaUves. 'Jbe p rt so n er 1 "presumably" include both North Viel· namese and Viet Cong, the SJ>Okesman said. Apoll~7 ·TJ.io CQnfer With Next Astronauts CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Amer· lea's Apollo 7 space herots, back from 11 days in orbit, met informally. h e .r e tod~y with three other astronauts who may Oy around the moon at Christmas-time. ' · · Apollo 7 piloll Walter M. Scbi>ra Jt,, Donn F. E1'ele aJid Walter CUnningbam then continued in-depth discussions with technical experts attempting to deter· mint! whether Apollo 8 should get the nod to rocket moonward or make another earth orbital voyage. National Aeronautics and Space Ad· t:nlnistration officials said the Apollo 7 crew and pilots of Apollo 8 -Air Force Col. Frank Borman, Navy Cap_t. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Maj. Will· ~am A. Anders -met infonnally in crew quarters, along with several other as- tronauts involved with Apollo 7 and up. coming flights. More formal meetings are sche<luled between lhe Apollo 7 and Apollo g crews next week at the · Manned Spacecraft Center in Houstorti Tex., when the as- tronauts disCu~ In detail how all space-- craft systems Qperate. Today's meetings with technical ex· perts primarily concentrated on the Oct. 11 launching of Apollo 7 aboard a Saturn lB rocket and rendezvous in earth orbit 3 day later between Apollo 7 and t h e upper stage of their booster. Meanwhile, the Apollo 7 spacecraft ar· 'ived at Norfolk, Va., today aboard its prime recovecy ship, the aircraft carri· er Essex, en route to the Downey, Calif., plant of North American Rockwell Corp., prin1e Apollo spaCecraft contractor, (or detailed study. ·-Navy CapL .Schin'a; Eisele, who was promoted to an Air Force lieu.tenant col- one! by P,resklent Johnson , and civilian astronaut C:Uru;lingharn y,·ere described in "generally· excellent'' health after completing a physical examination Wed- nesday. Bulgarians Join Czechoslovakia Troop Pullout PRAGUE (UPI) -Bulgarian forces to- day joined the pullout of Warsaw Pact troops from Czechoslovakia. Long trains loaded with Soviet tanks rumbled north through Prague, apparently toward the East German or Polish borders. The trains which also included cars containing Soviet soldiers came from the Western border areas of Czechoslovakia and passed through Prague's Smichov Railway Station, a major switching point for rail traffic in western Czechoslovakia. The Communist P"arty newspapi!r Rude Pravo said the Bulgarian units left the town of Ruzyne, a short distance northwest of Prague, and returned to Bulgaria. It said before the Bulgarians left their commanders received a letter expressing the gratitude of Gen. Ivan Yakubovsky, the Russian commander of the Warsaw Pact forces. Only a small number of Bulgarians participated in the Alig. 20-21 invasion, and most of them. were stationed near Ruzyne NEW YORK (UPI) -Pollet dlanjlng ••slue Power" · iod demaod.J.n& mqre money beca41<' they ·~aco death ~very. day" picketed tbelf p'n ·~ ~. otriklng ~ ~ OW!de loCkell tchooll Jil>l 'Qremeil rofllled, all ?but emergen~ IJfe calla in the' clty11 grlm :labor crlsia:. The second highest elacted Republican in the city of eight million persons demanded GOP Moyor ·John V. Lindsay be kJcked <>Ut of office for failing to aolve the teachers' strike, work slowdowns by pollce and firemen and a threatened '111alkout by garbage collectors. Robert T. COJlnor;borough president o[ Staten Island, urged Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, aJao a Republican, to remove Lindsay because the mayor "has manifestly demonstrated he ls incapable of resolving" the teachers' strike which has kept more than one million public school students out of class for most of the fall term. A Lindsay aide said Connor "is an ex- treme reactionary who consistently votes with the Democrats in the Board of Estimate, and it is no surprise that he wou ld indulge in such an anti-Llndsay: publicity gambit." Striking teachers were back on picket lines t.oday after chanting "no" to an of• fer from the local governing board of the prediminantly Negro and Puerto Rican Ocean Hill-Brownsville School District lo Brooklyn to accept back a group of white teachers Jt had tried to transfer. It was that power issue that has set off three strikes this fal l term by the 55,IXK). member United Federation of Teachers against the nalion 's largest school system. The union and its president, Albert Shanker, now demands ouster of the local governing board, its chief e'X· ecutive officer and its eight school prin- cipals. The board already has been suspended. STUNTMA N KILLED AS 50,000 WA TCH HOBART, Tasmania (UPI) -A Lat .. vian stuntman fell SO feet to his death to- day before a crowd of 50,000 when a gust of wind toppled him as he tried to stand on his motorcycle while riding a steel wire between two pylons. The stuntman, Adrian Labans, 44, stop- ped the motorcycle in the center of the high wire and tried to standup on the sad .. dle despite the strong wind. Lebans yell .. ed to the crowd at the Royal Hobart Show, "She'll be all right." Then he stood up, on1y to be toppled by the wind. The gentle nudger Even the be>!' oE maidenly sch.,,,.;.,.., fall a little be!rlnd schedule. If he's not chasing.quite as fast as you're running, it could be he's a bit insecure. Perhaps all he nteds is a gentle reminder that you are there ,., and care. To get your romance back on 1he proper time table, give him an "I AM LOVED" button. It's a very proper gift, Not too expensive (free, as a matter of fact). And it paclc.s quite a wallop! When you come in to pick it up, .have a look at the Wells "I AM· LOVED" jewelry for men •.• all very personal gifts of real silver~d gold ($5. to $25.) They say 81? that.you need to say .... and matt. Top the gift wrap with the but-tort,. then hand it to him with a wink and your prettiest smile. - 1£ you mention where you got it, he mig'ht, Just retort in kind with a companion "I AM LOVED" seJrction of WeJls jewelry for girls. After that, the rest Cf tht romanet is up to you. HUNTIH6TON CENTER e ... h .. ldlnttr Hu•llnglon llnch 192-15501 I AM LOVED -EXCLUSlVEl.Y IV "o/Jflirl INC. Now 2 Gttat stores To Serve You PAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE ~~II ~II. ~ Opon Mon, Thun. Fri. T111 9 p.m. • HARBOR SHOPPlll6 CBllR 2300 ................ Costa MIN 545-9485 ' . • • • > ' • ' ' ' • • • • ' • ' • ' • • ' . • • • . . I • • ' • • ' • --. ' ' ------------------------------------~-. -.. -. -... --. -. -·-------. - ·. l LB DAILY PILOT JJ Nov .. , 5 Could Mean GOP Takeover at Legislatrure, E1111..,.. Not11 w1111 '""' •• \tlitho c&fted icr. the GOil to 're\aln C1lltomle .. ,.... Lftl<Nrt (ltlj(d .. '"· -'~·A-bl b lllPUbOc.-. M 1M NoT. J Ml*'ll 11Ktl9!\. control of 1.1111;: ~' f Y T111t oMii "-" "' • ..... ....,.. « im in Ume to coottoJ the io. Ille ............. r#lldN ..leM #.. Ufwl.lfl. How .,.. ffl9 c.t1111111h1n ' c.,.. .. """' year reapportionment but the . By r••cv WOOD ' 19641 election put lhom 'lhud •M1-of schedule. SACRAMENTO CUPI) ~ There are 209 candidates Republican hoP«;S for wlnnlng seeking the 80 ~bly seats. control of the state leglslatur< The hopefuls include 15 frolJI for the llrit Ume tn a decade George Wallace's Ametjc&n are pinned to the coattails of Independen,t Party and 11 presldenUal nom1n<e Jllchard Peace and Freedom Party M. Nixon. coo~era. - A dramaUc sweep by the The JO senate seats up .for former vice president in bia electlon. have attracted. M cln- home alate could break-• 1).11) dldates lncludll!g 10 All' and 8 party deadlock, hi the Slate PF.party members. Senate and reverae the 42-38 Monagan estimated there Democratic majority in the are IO lo 15 Assembly seats A~lypoli. 'Ucal !ulure 01 now held by Democrats whlch Republicans have a d1ance of AsaembJ3 sAOBker • ~.... Iii· taklng . - Unruh could be lie4,JI~· l!OlOOI not expect GOP vlv· results. U R.publlcanl, win~' • l Iii all of lh fi lower house, they also win the tor es em -ve , speakership _ and Unrub't' would be enough to com· •out fortably reverse the Gov. Ronald ~an~ ap-Democratic. "!"ior)ty. pareotly preventett Int~ All ol ttie· iop 'eodera of bolh fight among ~bllcani for the Senate and Assembly the Assembly leadership bJ virtuallx ·1ai:e. assured of re. tapping A3semblyman Robert election. T. Monagari, (R-Tracy) for the Unruh, in a district with 67 past four years mtnorlf,y • pen:tts&: democratic registra· leader. ' tlon, is heavily favored to But the Senate picture ls · 'defeat1 Dr .. Gerald S. Veregge, muddled. Senate Leodor Hugh • bis ~b)eao opponeot. M. Burlli of Fresno, a Monagan'& district ls only 40 Democrat baa aMounced he percent Re~can, but he ls ·supports Republican Nixon for expected to win easify. He is presldent. It may save his post opposed by Steve Pereira, a as President Pro Tempore of Sockton history and English the Senate if Republcana win teacher. cantral. in that bou~ And Senate R e p u b 11 c a n In 1916, -Iteigan'I mlllloo Leader Dooald I. Grurusky of vote landallde over two-tenn Wat.smrille is nOt op~ for Democratic Gov. Edmund G. re-electl.oo. . . · Brown helped the GOP boost Haw~er,. °"· caucus its vote power in the Assembly chairnien ot bOth parties in from 31 to 38. GOP leaders the Assembly could have clou hope for a repeat performanc~ races. " · -:' ' that wUl ,gtve them the three Democrat Winfield seat.s ~ed. lO wln control. Shoetnaker of Lompoc is op. The Republlcana .cvOtroUed posed by Santa B a r b a r a the legislature for the last MayO{' po n MacGllllvray. time Jn 1956 but Jo.st t.he1r edge J\e&btratlon figures I i v e in the 1958 Brown ~Udf.l · ' Democtale .only two pereent A Republican ~'<»Plan'" edge !tf ~··~ct. .. - OCTOBER31 One free home delivery .. with this ad and.a $5minitnmn ' PHONE ORDERS 4~1500-497-1325 f1 RE$mR~ 0. 230 Fo)'est Ave. Laguna Beach "Artistry in Moving'' Republican caUCUI chairman -Re pu bllcu Aamtblymeal-------------------------------,------- Doo MuUord ol 1'iedmOl\t ts Kent Stacey ol Buenfldd, challenged by -Mudo, Ernes1 Mobley of S&ncer, an, OUland tswyer. In Iha! WWlllli t:ampbell ol Hacienda dlalric\. Democrats have • 5 ilelghtr-111ld MuUord . percent to a percent reg~ Three A 1 1 e m b I y me a • °'!.!"r.'.1;, of lhltd Stewart Ht n ck le y, (!\-"~ ~"'"""'° party Redlanda), Charle1 Meyerl, candidates may be felt mitwo (DSan FrancilCO), an dl$'1cts. Edward E. Elliott, ([).Lo( Aa..,.blyman Willie ll"own Angel.,), decided not lo 1eek Jr., fD-San P'rancllc:O) a re-clecUon. N-. fa opposed by PF can-Aoo<mb!Yman Lester' A =~·~!.~=~~v!'; 'J'!1; McMUJan. (D-Lol Adgetes) Eldridge Cleaver · w~s deleated ln the June lo • prtnlary election by Heney Mario Sav , a leader of the Waxman. The dl5trlc:t 11 1964 free QeeCh movement •l • . . 1 the UnfVentty of CalUomla at heavily DemOcraUc: •f . Berkeley, ls the PF candidate The tightest Sen ate opposing Sen. Nldlolu Petrfa, Democr,_ttc race. ore for lhe ( D. 0 •kl and ) . Petris' ... ts bdd by P.ell'fa..,U Sen. &publican opponent ts Robert George Danleboo ol Loa E. Hannon, a lawyer. Ang~ Dani....., fa ~ . Assembly Republicans gee by Republican 1 Ric.hard E. their best chancea lo pick up F<!;raro, a lldloot'teacber. seats Jn the dlstrcta now held .Republtcan Sens. M 11 t o n by Democrats F. James Bear Marks of ~ ·l'rane.ia and of San Dlego, Harvey Johnson How.ard Way. of. Exeter a of El Monte, Ken Cory of have stiff competition. Westminster, Walter Karablan Marks ii opposed by William or Monterey Park a n d A. Newson, a San Francisco Shoemaker. lawyer,. and.Way· ls challeriged They also see hope for win· by John Erreca, former direc- nlng the aeata of Democratic tor of public works under both Assemblymen Leroy Greene Brown and Reagan. aod Edwin L. Z'Berg ol · The only opponent ol Sen. Sacramento, John F, Foran of George Deutmejlan, (ft.Long San Francisco, David Negri of Beach'), l5 AIP candidate Doo· Granada Hills and Mike Cullen n,a 'Demoret. ol Long Beach. Aas b'-•• Leo R Democrats, lryll!g hard just em .,~ yan, lo hold lhelr majorliy, see (l).&ulh San Franclsco), bu their most likeJy gain ln the no opponent• and San Jose seat now held by As.semblyman Alan Pattee, r Republican Earl Crandall. (R.sailnu), fa challeqed onty But they retain a 11ender by AIP Candidate Vlrgtnla hope lo win seats held by Roo!b. Notre Dame Looking For Suitable 'Mate' ForaUmlled , time-tile ai-t ,48 oz. party t1lze only J,..htniii;;~l , 'MMlba.1.WI, Dl1q11lrl ' .Whi1 tey lollr • Matpr!.ta iSOUTH BE~ Ind. (UPI) a women's schOQI, tn com· -Wanted : A 'woman'• echool. binlng academl~ facilltie5. Object: coeds. . Such a move also would help i Hifvard :has Its· We:lttsley, the university.solve a problem Amherlt has Its Smith, but. brought to. it earlier th1a year Notre Dame ls still looking for by Negro students who com· 4 &kls' sch~I ready for an plained of a lack ot Negro academ!c wuc:n. girls for social dating. Heublein Evep one of the best college Notre Dame, an all-male foot6all teams .in tbe nation ADVENTU.ROUS COCKTAILS . • .. . • t • s: ;1 • ' .. -· .. •' •• ~man'C.lhollc school, has an doesn't look quite right In otMr &l11t1: 1ita1:ra1. lls~ kuulen. Gimlel , s11.,., Si.k Car. ow Piuhlonld.Vildlr.• especlaQy touchy problem. It without 'feiDale cheerleader! lour. T.._111i.1our,Aprkot a--, H·t•I Gin Mmilll, \IDdU. M.nlnl11b1r. DrJ or ll·D-1·1 bu a · enrollment of more• ~en~lh~e~a~ld~e~Hne~"-----======::::::z:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;· than-7 JOO ln a clty of only.~ ~ . JAOOI penons. • .,.BUI:;., Iba.. lkl'· Theodore Hoa5lr&ll, Notil' Dame pres!· dent; ll· looklng for a solution. 'rb& "call baa gone oul to Roman Cathollc women'• rol· leges, tnvlUng one to re.locate here and work 0 academieally" wllh the male school. The .only requlrerT!ent Father H.-gb baa ts lhat the women's scbool llUlllt have a varied eorollme~ Including 1 representative number of ltudenll from m 1 D o r I t 1 groupo. Father Hesburgh told a newa conference Wedneaday the . unive~tty is "open to dlicusslon" with any Roman Catholic women'• colle1e that · might want to toln Notre Dame , and nearby St. Mary's College, QUlt?K C1hh lllt l11l1kly •11 loc•I oYofttl. R11 t•"' ••JJ1it1d, 1•111itr1h1111i.,• 1111•••-•tit. ff•11 ef th1 DAILY PILOT. • for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 ., It can waali ito headllshto. It can apply liquldfiro chain lo its rear ,wheela. .. • It cop lllontly dofOJ or dotroot Ibo nar window. It can Ireep you cool or warm auto. malically .with Comtortron-tbo Mlf-ad· ju.&ting air-conditioning 1ystem. And opoe you've added .U II-won. dorful devicu lo a new Chnrole~ yOll Juat ~·t imagine wh7 anyone would pvt . -------'\ #a, • a IO<Ond thouaht lo a eecond·place cu • The headllg'ht wuhe"' and liquid fut chain for tnctlon on lliJ>Plf1 roade rn operat.d at tbe touch ot a button from tbe driver'• Mat. So 11 thl .U.nt DIW nar- wlndow dofroot.r. lnvWblo coramlc 1trlps on tbe 1u •t up to-bop tho window clear. . AJao aVJlilabla: Cbrnolot'• 'Usht Mon!· toring 8Y1tem !bat ltio you ,bow from lmldo if all ydur ouc.ido U1bl• aro wotkln1, • • •• full ~..wr .-. a amoolh 11.11JOOC1 TurbO Hrclr•·malic tra,_loalon. All In a car mado quiotc, mado '""'-• ~ mon comfortable. Now at your ci.noin · doalor'L We've uld It !!eCcrt, and we'll 1a7 It •Jain. Mt.lch llaif; you other '691[ .... Pllttfftl JOll tint, kMpa ~ lint, ' ' .. ... . • • )' ,. ., • .. .. .. " ~· ' ' .. .. •• •• " •• §: •• • • •• ' • ,. " ;I !1 fl " • ,, •• •• •I • • • . '• L ............... . . J2 OAJlY PILOT lllJAl!TY • SE1IVICE • DISCOUNT • INTEGRITY Smoottily sanded ~ard wood, ready to paint or stain. Paneled 1ront and recess.ed base. 2 shel· ws in back. Walnut grained vinyl top. Use as uack bar, room divider. CHARGE IT e IANIAMlllCAID a W}flfl MONT e MAmlCHAIGI CllOIT CAIDI • • • . . ' ' " • Personal si?e, Ideal for dorlTIS. den~, off ices • AU channel UHF/ VHF ·tuning • · Telescopic an· 1enna • Car ry handle • Up· 1ront conhol~ • ·•P1ctu1e me;,. 3ured d1agona111 oiiiii'ii'.' h'ri,.dufJ • .1 .. 1 c:Jnmls in roll· 1asy canister wilh toe ' switch mounted on lop. Model VC590S P. Runs Oii batlerie>. Plays ·2-llllt& tapes •nywhert, even hi car. Botb player and rad'W) iri one light· welaht unit. Earphone tact PIE·IECORDlD TAPlS • .I ' -.. PRICES WAY 811.0W NORMAL DISCOUM1S ' DAYS ONLY . 011 110 MOlllY oo:=m APP•0!.!9.J. UllllL 110 PAY ..... !~oa •••· 'A11• .. c14'"A .. D n•st APPLI 17 oz. high qua li ty hai r spray, with , .. t 16oz. creme -.C'1r t1ble with l~· $lat1n1 bed, wool cloth. live pm rub- bercushion:s_ancf Dan retum. 4 clltS, balls in<tuded. . 5 oz. aerosol - can of anti· per-;,~·:" I super holding power. Ouanl1· ties can't l;ist spirant I · · deodorant i ., , Jong iit this price. ! W.F. IE&. I 68c : • · ! Four double-edged ; •oMP ,.. 5 blades in pack-t • · "' Schick's newest ·•1 i-"--' l .l 5 COMPAREAT89c • • • • • ''WINTRY. SPIC£," 4 AL bott~ of s~1n bracer. COMPARE AT 1.25 BABY LOTION, 9 ... bottle of .. BabyMag;c" COMPARE AT 1.15 "BURNISHED LEATHER," 4 oz. SKIN BRACER, 6 oz. bottle bottle of ik1n bracer. "' after shave. . COMPAREAT 125 COMPAi!£ AT 1.10 YOUR 69.C CHOICE EA. PLUS WHITE TOOTHPASTE 3'' ·~lube of 39c el lect1vt dent!· lrice. COMP.19c: ~ Profe1Sional barbershop ~ sha¥e crea111 for a ~ fragrant "Russian Lea- ~ ther'' shave 20 oz. size. .l~~ COMPAREaac ""'"" Al $2 -~ .. RYBUTOLFLAVORED RYBUTOL RYIUTOL IROll PLUS VITAMIN C TABS 1RDAPEUTICS Or11ng1 flavored · Chewable tablels. Batlle ol 100. COMP. AT 1.49 69( ZEST ABS CHEWABLE YITAMINC . , Onin1e jlawi1t4 1or cluldren. Bottle ti 100250"'1" COflllPUE AT 1.11 69( ·WITH MIHERALSS.-"" 111111t:D1111,. 100 capsules. qulretnerd, 100 tJb- COMPAREAT6.9J i7DMPAllUTUI VASELINE FIRST AID PETROLEUM JEU Y 16 or. jar at real ectinomy price. COMPAIE Ar 98c 59c 148 I WHITE FRONT'S PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS 260 COSMnlC I . @~®llJL COTION BALLS I ""'"" Handy dis}M_nw of snow ll'hlte I .:::~~.:. puft5. COMl'AIE AT lie. ---' c=r:..~~ 3,.$1 : HAIRSPUY BySAYAIE Formulated for.men with clean, masculine scent. l<eeps hair neat. COMPARE sac Al $Z Uultip1t 1'bmi11 tablets, bottle of 100. COMPARE AT f.R 69( Alll'ACIDTA8Ul5 1101. liquid or 100 tablets. COMPAR£ 119 AT l.71 -----Millions of prescriptions have been filled at White front pha r· macies. Let us price your next prescription. No pharmacy at East Los Angeles store. ALPHA-KERI I GERITOL PHARMACY lOClTrD WUR STORE'S MAIM [Nl!WICE BATH OIL I rnrrant. 500111.ni 1111 bot!lt I t:OMPAW£ T l.10 168 TABLETS 801TlE OF 100 STELBER DELUXE CHARfER 0..rsile even has glan window. Sig 'adjustable elide· out broiler. CustQm ~ backguard h>s · electric clock, timer. Storage area· 1or pots, pans. ' •IKE Chrome spoit le .. ders, red line tires, . large rear r~flec· : 1 tor,· coppertonaJ l color, Boys #63L J.t '1irJs #632.. 1 Velvety-soft cotton chenille bedspreads in vibrant solids or blended multi-tones, 1enerouslysized, bor· dered in bullion frince. Ma chin e · w~sf\able. ,, :rf·. ;~:~~~~::AIR DEMI ~GS IN OUR WIG DEPARTMENT ,. '· . Fealurinr ·~ their great Capitol stereo l.P's. including: their late.s release ''Bobbie Gentry and Glen Campbell" UST Pl IC£ 4.71 STEREO CUT ANO STYLED So natural looking in a wide range of subtle colors! Very tasy ta manage be cause it is just the rm,ht length. lends itself to dozens of stylines. 3088 BRISTOL AVE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT AVE. STORE HOURS DAILT '11 TO t IATUIDAT It TO t IUHDAT 11 TO 1 • BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND BAKER ST, • I • I • . I I I • I I . ' --,,.._, ---- -:::r = :: --= :;, --= = ::. ,... = :::'. " --3 " - r . : . . : . . . . . . . • ' • " . . . . -. . . . . . . . :-. . . . . "" -'• ' . . . ' ' . . • ' : ' . • • • : : . • . • . • : -• ' ' :r , [ ,. ' rhursd.Jy, October 24, 1968 DAILY PILlll' -J 5 Bride Claimed In NB . Nuptials St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church wa.s the setting.for the evening nuptials linking in marrta,ge Melanie Atkinson and Air Force Lt. John La- pointe. The Rev . Dr. Charles Dierenfield performed t h' e ceremony for the daughter of Mr . .::.nd Mn . Gordon Atkinson o( lrvlne Cove and the son of Mrs. Bon Davies of South Pasadena. The bride, given in marriage by her father, selected a floor leflith 11own of silk: peau de soie with an embroidered front panel. Her silk illusion veil- lng w~ Caught to a crown of .i!ephanotis, and she held a bouquet of white d a i s y chrysanthemums and stephanotis. Matron of honor wa.s Mrs. emerald green gowns accented by lime green SJitln sashes. Daisies made up their head· pieces, and they carried bou· queta of y e 11 o w daisy chrysanthemums and baby'a bf ea th. • Best Qlan was Matheny while ushering guests to their seats were Craig Brewerton, Phillip Plank, Clark Canfield, Edmund Navaro and Howarth Atkinson, the bride'& :,rolher. A!hley Atkinson, the bride's niece, was flower girl al)d Matthew Carlton was the ring beJ!rer. The reception followed In " the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Theresa ·and Suzanne Matheny, nieces of t h e bridegroom, attended t h e guest book. The newlyweds left lhe club on an undisclosed honeymoon cruise aboard l'ler famil y's yacht Waist W etchers TOPS Waist Watehert assemble every 'I'hurlday at 7 p.01. in Cittle View licbool, Hunllngtoo Beach. Kenneth Alton while bridesmaids were Mrs. James Matheny, sister of the benedict;·· MM. W 111 i am Beckett. Mrs. Mark Moore, Miss Nancy Goodwin, and Miss Susan Coffin. The benedlct will be sta-MRS. LAPOl,NTE tioned in Texas until his . WES!Cllff; AT DO'iER NEWPORT IEAClf &42-3111 Plans Never Shelved by Associa tes They donned f I o or length permanent assignment aa a 1 -;;;;;;;;=L=•~g~u~na~Jl:,;r~ld:,;•~-=:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;~;;;;;;~ jet pilot instructor at Williams Ir Air Force Base, Phoenix. Women of alt faiths who are interested in partici- pating in activities of the Women Associates of the Hniversity Interfaith Foundation, UCI are invited to a membership team from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 29 in tile Galaxy Drive home of ctiancellor and M~. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr'. Serving as :tiom:esses with Mrs. Aldrich (right) are of!icers (left to right), the Mmes . Roy Giordano, president; Duane Black, membership chairman, and Jack M. Lyons, hospital- ity ch.airman. One of tile aims is providing a relig· iow; library at the InterfeitlJ Center. Horoscope Area Leads Resident Seminars NOW QPEN ... THt VERY FIRST IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ANTIQUE CWTHING GENUINE AUTHENTIC WOMEN FASHIONS Ir ACCESSOIUIS FOR THE HORSELESS CARll:IA6E &ROUP ALSO EXCLUSIVE ••• ONE-OF-A-K IND DRESSES e GOWNS e SPORTSWEAR Sisterhood Campaign Bene/ its Seminaries Scorpio: Check Details Before Changes Made - A prominent Orange County eludes the formation of the woman has been appointed to Orange Cout League o f head the community seminars Women Voters or which she program of the University of served as its first president. SU RANKA California Extension, Irvine, She ab1o'has organized several A combined campaign will be launched in behalf of two seminaries during a program phtMed by Temple Hillel SiJterhOod, Huntington Beach, at 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 28. Mrs. David Kuris, represen- tfng the · PaCific Southwest branch, Nationar Women'! League of the United Synagogue of America, will speak to members and guests assembled in the Community Methodist Church. The seminaries, training rabbis, cantors, r e I i g i o u s Residence Hall for Women . Planning the program is Mrs. Richard Bobrow, com- bined campaign chairman. Mrs. Edgar Beck, preSident, has extendeQ an invitation to all members and friends who would like to attend the prG- gram, The campaign will conclude wit.h a February luncheon tc which sisterhood contributors, in addition to contributors from aJI sisterhoods in the Pacific Southwest, will be in- vited. FRIDAY Added knowledge today spells OCTOBER 25 gain. Tonight there ls solid in- dication of advancement. By SYDNEY OMARR CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. "The wise man controls his 19): Personal contact, effort destiny ... Astrology points the wins over committee ap. way.'' proach. Accent individuality . according to Dr. Richard N. university extension programs 126'4' SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY, Baisden, extension director. for women and is currenUy LAGUNA BEACH . , • 497-154'0 Mrs. Rudolph Kuehn of working on her m a s t e r s ,,~ Nnt •• ••tterf Shop Corona del Mar, a leader in -~de~g~ree~in~h~ls~to~ry~at~u:c~1. _ _!,==================~ the League of Women Voters ' school teachers and Jewish---------- com1Tl,1Ullty leaders, a r e ARJF.s (March 21 • April Stress i nd e pend e nc e of 19): Recent efforts bring thought, action. Excellent for results. Honor could be due for beginning important project. family member. Be willing to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. invest in your own enterprise. 181: Best to work quietly Suceess indicated if steps are behind the scenes. Being ag- sure. definite. Don't display gressive today would be error. doubt. Key is to perceive trends, and former member of the Orange County Grand Jury will )ea'd the community iseminan made up of civiC leaders and concerned citizens. Participants meet in private homes to di.scuss the problems of education, pover- ~Y. law enforcement, youth .11.nd race relatiorui. The group also atte.nds a weekend con· ference for similar seminar groups from all over Southern California. located ln Los Angeles and New York. The 'Campaign also benefits the Mathilde Schecter Caldron Of Fu'n Brewing A time £or fun and frivolity has been designated by the Balboa Yacht Club for Satur- day, Oct. 26. This is the date selected for the annuaJ Halloween party -' i ~ i ' ~•t ' '·) ' TAURUS (April 20 • May moods. Get finger on pulse ol 20): Take it slow, easy. Those public. Associate needs cheer- you depend upon for details ing. Set fine example. could be careless. Check PISCES (Feb. Jg.. March 20): messages. appointments. You gain through creative Avoid wasting lime, effort. Be hobby -brings you together diplomatic, but get money's with exciting people. Fine worth. time for special social event. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be cooperative. Sh are Because of a grant from the Ford Foundation , the seminars will continue for another two years on all nine University of Califomla cam- puses. Mrs. Kuehn Iii organizing three new seminar groups to begin Saturday, Oct. 26. Her experience in organization in- Party Planned Check legal d 0 cum en ts, pleasure; let others know you agreements. There could be are alert, aware. misunderstanding where IF T O D A Y IS YOUR money ls concerned. Get facts BmTHDAY you tend to be in· on record. T h i s helps avoi'd trospective. Emotions: r u n b a c k·stepping, arguments. deep. When you do something. A Halloween party for mem- Associate may be in stubborn it is all the way. Nothing hers and husbands is being mood. halfway where your feelings p 1 an n e d by Lambda Zeta CANCER (June 21-Jul y 22): are concerned. Significant Chapter of Sigma Phi Garn· Pressure exists to complete a . change due where home, ma . project. Aid expected may fall residenc! is concerned. Mr. and Mrs . Don al d short of mark. Look beyond E~nedict will open their Hun- which will be~in al 6;;10.p.n;'. KATHLEEN ELLSWORTH with the serving of witch s E-a"'ed imm!diate circl! 0 f ac-GENERAL TENDENCIES : tington Beach home for the af. quainlances. Situation could Cycle high for CAPRICORN, fair which wiU begin at 8:30 AQUARIUS. Special word to p m Saturday Oct 26 Soc1·a1 brew." ... • represent blessing in disguise. · · • · · LEO: hidden resources come c'-11'111' an 11' Mrs Ra Ip h LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): IUI • Dancing to the Doctors' Dix- leland·Band will follow dinner, acording to Dr. an d Mn. Royal Tucker, chairmen. AssiaUng with arrangements are Mr. and Mn. Edward Lethen and Mrs. Irene Leitch. District Calls Buzz Session Eoordinatora, a I I II c I a l e coordinators, Junior presidenb and presidents of general membership in the Orange Distrttt will · gather tomorrow at 10 1.m. in the Garden Grovt Women'~ Civic Clubhouae for a bull se.ion. -. will be Mrs. January Wedding Planned to fore ; you gain objective. Schleif. Entertainment could prove --;:=:=:::::::::=::::=:=:=:=:=:=======:=::;-costly. Ho 1 d line on ex-, travagance. New contact in- dicated Is favorable . Practical matters come to attention tonight • could involve job left half.finished . VIRGO (Aug. 23-&pt. 22): Cycle on way up. Penistent annoyance ls about to vanish. Know thb ~ be encouraged . .A January wedding in San Truat intuiUon. Hunch pays Diego ii being planned by off. Follow through on plan Kathleen Ellsworth and Chris outlined by older individual. Alford, son of Dr. and Mrs. Stick to principles. Jack L. Alford of Newport UBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22): Beach. Accent on conditions at borne. News of the forthcoming Key is willingnesa to inile event bu been announced by concession. Yoo can do this the bri~ect's pa!Uts, Mr. and gain added harmony. At. and Mrs. Jamee B., E-tentlon required where ropaln of San Diego. are c:oocemed. Don't neglect . -Jlln• Mceana, jnlident or the 0ran&e'~ Cllifornia Federation GfiWomtn'I €Juba. Miss Ellsworth ii a eraduate euenttals. how thriltY are you when you borrow money . ; I ! of San Diego 111gb School llld seoRPIO (Oct. SS.Nov. 2(): now is •·seniol' '1Kf•a major in Check details before making zoology and art at San Diego changes. Read between the State College. Hoes -be aware of. fine print. Mrs. J8yeees Her fiance, a graduate of Best to be cm s<:ene ·ln person. ·-.• " Glendora High School, also ls Delegating responslbillty could Huntiflil,on Beach Mrs . a senior at SDSC where he Is be a mlstak!. Act accordingly. Jaycees meet the second Mon-majoring in ~cial de--SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22- day of the month at a p.m. sign and Is a m!mber ol. Alpha Dec. 21): App r e.c I ate ! Location information may be 1 Tau omega,. He also Is G1 the posseuiona, &SHts. S h a r e -~ived by calling Mr 1. Army Reserve transportaUon lmowJ!dge, exchangt ideas. I ~ M"""baeJ Brooks, 536-7022. unit. Make meaningful inquiries. 5 ,-------------------------------;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -.~ ::.: :::: = - - 'ALL WORK DONE PERSONNALLY Coron• del Mor l CONVENIENT SHOPS' -e l401. E. COAST HWY. Coron1,litl Mtr-•. 4'71~4640 e' l4ll VIA LIDO .., Newp,.trt Beech , • , 47J.8620 e 74 FASHION ISLAND Newport leech.~, 4'«·7651 / , CHOOSE ' FROM ALL THE LA TEST STYLES Restyle your old 1hoe1 +o th• new round loolt, lrln9 us your problem ·end we1ll 9lve your shoes e new loo'lt, Southern California Thrift & Loan $pecializes in persona l, business ind Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today and see how M can so:..,.e your imme. dlate money·problems from depend· able funds av11)1bl• right now, The Thrifty way can 11vo you money. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TH.Rl_FT & LOAN 170 Eut 17\11 St,ht1 Mtu ,,,,.f46·5045 1359 Wll&hlt1llv~&.ol AnJ1lt1, •• g534220 ft'f~ 3Zl.·/5'j6 /ffei/~~~wt-Sj ~IJl.$1/I/;» ' .. ··-· -----~-, I I I ' thur$day, Otlobtt 24, 19&8 ·.s~h ,ool · -Units· Are Busy, Busy ' eJf.~\'telt,~l="'•,:Z ~ a..u. flt,.,..fMCMr Clf'HA!d• "ft.It wt~I Ill tflt DAILY ~ILOT --_I nfwmtlll>JI Fft\111 M I ........ tllt t.c:ltofv ... t1fNjlt, W U1~1#f. ~~ ... 'im .. ~::: ,._..,_ IMCJI, 1W S ,,II'\. '"*'~ fW ... kltlM TllUnRY·) • •• ',dams PTA • Mn. cart Lelcl ;l Prellde!lt ., ilpioNG UP : Bom m .. tinl ;J91 t :• a.m. 'l'burlday, N~. · • tJ, In Ille mullipwpoo< ~ ii: t Jlalt1-1lttl111 will be ''lvlilable. llEPORTS: Motben of first grade ltudenta. h o s t e d association meeting a D d Bafk.U..Cbool Night . • • ·Adami Fun Day took place last Saturday • • · MrL i.wrence P o • t o " , mem· blnbJ,p cbalrm.an reported, •..,..Donald deM.arinl'• .:lblrd° srade clua won lhe : membenlllp Drive. Honon ~ ~-to . -Louck and 'Lymey H&tho>Ck ••• Mrs. Robert i.!cFarland, sa!•ty cbafrmln, reported I 0 • ttudentl were licensed in the bley_cJt..s.f•ty program • : • Mn. earl Leuk along wtth .Mr. ud 141'1. Cllfford ·Walton attended Fo u r t b ~bict conventionette. Balearic PTA Mn.ellarlt18ook Presldtnt COMING UP:. -1{_~ -trom 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 9. SmaD IP. plianC<ll, furniture, clolbing, -and other ltellll wm . be "'1d. Mn. DoV!d 'Eis<o> man, chairman, announced that phlcteda will ao·toward playgroond equipment. Crown Valley PTG Mn· QllrlO. e.uin. President COMING UP: Forum on !he Wataon Tu Inlll-will Ready, Aim • • • take place tonight at 1 ln the chairman, annountts Ulat c&fet.orlum. Speakers will be drive will end soon. Frank Mienellena, Southern REPORTS : Mrs. W. A. Pen· nington, room m o t h et rtpresentative, has selected au room mothers. CounUes campaign man1ger for Californians against pro- pos!Uon Nine and Joseph Cr:iato, prtsido,t of the - United 0r1an1zauoo ol Tax Keiser PT A Payen Inc., speaking for Ille proposition. ' El Morro PTA Mn. Brace Clart President COMING UP: Halloween carnlvaJ from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct.' 26, on the school ground!. Events scheduled are spook movies, pony rides, colored pictures in your costume, food con- ttMions, games and magic ahow by Tim Taylor. Harbor Vw. PFO Mrs. lllclwd -Pmld .. t COMING UP: Country Fair tomorrow from S to 9: 30 p.m., on the school .grounds. Menu will consist of ham· burgers, hot dogs, chile, spaghetti, cake, pie and beverage&. Attractions will Mn. Norman Ecll President COMING UP ' Spook-oljl dance from 7. to 9 toni&ht for eighth grade studenb and tomorrow night for aeventh gradt. Ad.mmlon, free witb ASB cards or 2S cents. Teachera and parents will c h aperooe. Refreshments will be served by the PT A. Lindbergh PTA Mn. Robel1 Vlrsclk Preaident COMING UP : Annual Family Dinner from ~ to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 2 9, in the multipurpose room. Ghost Roast menu will consist of assorted sa1ads, beans, roast beef, baked ham and desserts. Adults $1.ZS and children under 12. 50 cents. Mrs. Vernie Calvert ls chairman. Mesa Verde PTA Mrs. James Maagut President R1chard Siegal and Euaene Barlow, vice presidents; Richard Gibbs and William Payne, secretaries; s. A. A 1 c b e. nberg, treasuttr; Denis feton, auditor: Robert Noel, historlan, and Robert Moore, patqameJ>o tArian. Monte Viste PT A Mn. David GoGdleD President COMINC UP: Halloween co&o tume parade at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26. Film "Mr. Magoo -Man of Mystery" will be shoWn. Cookies, candy and puocb will be sold. Newport Ela. PTA Mn. John Scapple President COMING up , Board m .. tin& at 9:30 a.m. Wedne.aday • Oct .. 30, in .tM. cafeteria .•• Mrs. 1Ronald Smith, second vice presidenl, announced . that the membership drive ends tomorrow. Newport Hts. PT A Mrs. E. JL Armoar President COMING UP : Carnival Satur· day, Oct. 26, on 'the school grounds. Games, prizes and refre.Wnenta w J 11 be featu;red. ' Students BooSt (;host Roost Stirring up a delightful -treat, a Ghost Roast, is Lindbergh Elemeutary School_ \ITT"Cipal John Wei· ing. Assisting the chef are Lily KUmamoto and Tmy Frink (left In rip!). students are lool!:ing forward to the school'• annual family -next Tuesday from 5 to 7: 30 p.m . in the lllUW.ptmpo<t ,_,, · be fish pond, clowns, strong man, .fortune teller, gorilla, cake walk, old-fa.Shion pickle barrt1, wbtte elePhants, cot· ton candy and more. John Cut, pcincipal will sell Halloween pumpkins. Mrs. Warttn Waters is chairman and MrL Norman O'CoMor is in tjlarg~ of decorations. Proceedl will be used for .purchuiq library books. COMING UP: Hal'low·een carnival from 10 a.m. to 4. p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, on OlivewooCI PTA haunted house.. e o t t u m • parade, games, food and prizes for all. eou... fer lbt 1111 o1 · Christmas cards have been hosted hr the M m e 1·. Michael Butler, John Nolan, ' -parting lot • • .• Hallow,.. movie ..uI be shown Thuraday, Oct. 31. Mrs. John Opferman, ways and means chairman, ls in charge • • • Library drive starts Monday, Oct. 28. Books, games and records are requ~ted. , • YolunteeN n lllldl>to wort · with .1be new I~ organlatd Cub 8cool Pac~ 355. For fUrther informaUon calf Maj. Jim ~ at 812- 310L Mariners PFO Robert Anderson President COMING'UP: Coffee honoring parents ri students in flnrt grade at 9 a.m. to.morrow, at school. Mrs. Steve Asahfno, membership ·fire the school grounds. Lunch_ will be served at the Crypt Mn. lftll Prance Prultlent St. John Aux. Charles M•ckstroth, McConnhh. Hartl and Emil ol the Black. Cat cafe. Also featured will be jack-<r lantern carving c o n t e s t • haunted house , w I t c h e s ' powder pantry, bum pi bike rides, ai~e show and a giant four-foot pizza. REPORTS ; John Clarke, prin- cipal, introduced the officers . •t Back-to-school Night, the Mmet. Jamt& M1ngu1, president; 1'homaa Kuder, COMING UP: Annual Halloween Hcotenany carnival from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, on the school grounds. Costume parade al 10:30 a.m. at the Lake forest fountain area. Mn. Robel1 Reid Deyden, cbairman • • • President Hollday Around the ·world Wilson PT A COMING UP: Trading stamp table setting contest took and food coupon collection place today. Mrs. Robert Mn·.· Fred Sim~ day Friday, NOv. 8 . . . R~d presided at the tea Whittier PTA President · Board meeting Monday , Oct. ta le. COMING UP : Carnival ftom 28, in the home of Mrs. Mtt. Robert Wblte 10 a.m. to f p.m. Satutday, P Henry Bourget. Vidorio PTA President Oct. 26. Gene Brandt and omona PTA REPORTS : Paper drive will COMING UP : .Paper drive family will perform magi~ Mra. ·Romo Scke.klel continue into December. For Mrs. Fred Woodworth Crom S to· 7 p.m. Monday, cians act at 11 :30 a.in. and 1 further information call President Oct. 28. Paper may be p.m. Children'• costume Mn. Rebert Milltr M,rs. Robert McC.omilsh at COMING UP : Back-to-school delivered until 9 a.m. TueS-parade at 2 p.m. and adults' Ptts.idents 540-3778 .•. Mrs. J.ohn Hartl Night tonight . . . Paper day, Oct. 29. Ice cream bars costume parade at 3. Mrs. COMING UP : Film "Dog al at·546-2s72 mAy be..c11.li~ for drive frcm 9:30 to 11 a.m. will be awarded to the clas.. Arlene ·Loughborou&b i 1 Flander•" will 'bt shown Clu'i!tinls·e1.ndy crders .. , SAturrlay, Oct. Z6, on the bringlng·ln the most paper . chairman. from 1 to 3 p.m. saturday,1_....:.;.::.:....:..:...;.....:.:...;. ____ .;...=..::::.;....:..:.:....:::....:.....:.....:._~~~iiw....:.-:'.::---------- Oct. 26. Popcorn and punch I 17~ ~~:' ~~ .;: ; i.tr.LIJpv•d# Sweat shirt and T-lhirt sale ~ began uus week and will B e a u t y S a l o s con!inu< through Friday, ll Nov. 1. Chairmen are Mrs. Keith Keppler .and Miss L. L. Arnold . ·.REP 0 .ft TS : Immunization mots were: given to kin· dergarten, first. and fifth grade students from Pomona, Victoria and Christ Lutheran schools. Rea PTA Mn. Keith Kellogg President COMING UP: Board meetil'li at I a.m. Tuesday; Oct. 29, at school . , . Candy will be aold during November, pro- tteds will be given to the student body fund. REPORTS': Mrs. Gib Fernandez and Mrs. Donald Jackson 1ttended the Fourth District conventionette. Sonora PTA Mrs. Donald M,otHea President CAPTIVATING CURLS.,.CAPTIVATING COLOR .. .INSTANTLYI • ~L~~ SSE~~~PCJO ~25 Mond•y thru Thursd1y !Alter S p.m. , • , , • ,2.50) Fri., Sit., Sun .••• , , , $3.00 - • Cur la to caress your head ••• and instant color to eare!S :your curl! "''ith soft glowi ng beauty! It's our "Fanci-fu\J" color; in rich, natural Jookinr hues to cover gray or refresh dull hair., in soft pastels to tone lightened ~air. No peroxide, no after-rinse, no \v&iting: Fanci-f.uD worka while our stylist sets yOur hai.£!. Takin& aim at Ille clown bean bag tnss I• John Van Nortwick as (left lo ~ght.) Roxanne Riley and Debbie-Sue Hem~ea.d wait their tum. They are Just three of lht hundreds of &tudO!lls at Soo'ora School who are anticipating lhe Spook-In Cunival nut Saturday from 11 a.m. In 5 p.m. COMING UP' Spook In ls theme of carnival from 11 a.m. to S p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, on the school grounds. Attractiou are . . " • • • ' ;n blatk, taupe, grey or navy kid t21 NEWPORT, 21 FASHION ISLAND SANTA ANA , 17 FASHION SQUARf ~ -• t '·" ----------------------- ~. .. if' • ¥ fl . I : ; ltf~'l •;')'"°?.I, ): .. ,.,,.. J' c..-:... .. ..... kl: ., • ~--4 t > ""' f'~f ~ 'i;; I '· ·,' ~"'' .. ·1· . • ' ' -.•':'f. 1·;·¥ ~~~!;;,:<...;~ ........ '• ' • COITA MISA, CALIP • 117 , •• , 1m. '""' ... .w 0..Mr COIT A Ml_SA, CAI.If. 'llOO H1rtior 11111111,,.111 IC-Mtf't i-1111 COSTA MIU, CALfP. 7w. Wat lfttl llf• ·--OU.NM.CAL~ 1!24 Wtd Cf*tmllt ........ 22 • ..... ....., --NIWPOIT MACH. CALIP. POUNTAIM YAWT, C.AUP. SANTA ANA. CALIP. SANTA ANA. CALIP. POUNTAIN YALU1', CAU'4 311J,....,,.,.. hultv•'' 11bl Mttfl&llt I .. W..IMIMMr 12" Nal"l!I !'•Irv.. lOt7 ldlfltltf', et ludMI "'-kif ._. ...... V•I•• c...-T-Cwdw F.1rrv1-"""r V•lln' Cll!ltr ~ '1S.1•lt "'°"' ~ ~ ,...,.. ~ "31-lQll '°"°"' ss1.-. '. -------------------------.. - I • 1:00 ~ I " • DT *' I (• c I • ,, $ u I ~I I ,,..~ I I ! • • • 7:111 0 • • • ' t ' ' • D • • " • I • ! ' • • ' t • l 1 I I ! ' ' ' I I I l:OO I • • --< c • ' • ' t ' • I I • bi ' • ' c • ' ' I • b ' - • it:JOI t:all f • I -, ----------------~~----· -..--------·----~--------~--------------· ---- ... ...... """' ... _. (rornJntt} '12: -l klleft Morpn, Chf~u ao,.. ll ' ... ft) (fO) 1:=-t.l'O/_ .• __ lldl_ ..... flhr t• k:ldlolm t» tllt South s-. ..... Ml ,..,,., 'llKI -.. UMESGO •'--. 111-- ., DAYflMI @Iii :.: .... 11 ............ .., ~ ..... ··-· -·""" -" .. ,_ (--'""'"" ""' ....... ti ........ (tMf. ..... .. ..... ,, ..,,..,. .... _ .... __ 'lt-"-nllM .laft1, H\1111 Sllldllr. Complete Prlntlnt Service Top Qualty -Fast Service: -642-4321 2211 Wiii ..... 11..i.. • PEANUTS l/Ef. MISS I l(E§, M/JIAA ... I l<NClli W!lERE <1lllMA~1lllE HEUY'E5.l'U. MHIMllOlllE. STJ)OENT IN I FMOfME1 J' DR. KILDARE MO, KAP -CHIPPER ftASH'T RtH HEAR Hate. 1. 1HOLl9HT HE. WM WITH You. HOW'6 IRENEr ·GORDO JUDGE PARKER MOQ!I MUL~!IS . . TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JERI WS PEACH ' -IF H! IHOWS UP, TEU. HIM TO «T MCK HiRf, Hie MCmteR'CS .......,...,.,. H&M, AMO ltlAT'S NO WA'/ TO l"'AT A SCK . ......... ., \' -' HE Wl6 NJlffHS A MIGHT !O'r' ••• eur PROPPEO Oll'T Of: C"'1.E6E ......... WENT IA.a! ME •l+EVfR SEEMEI::> 1P ANP HIS. NICHE Jtf LI~! • • ly Charles M. Schull · SHE 5HOOlJ:N'T 116.VE ~ lll 111<1 AS 'THE FWlll·LOOKIN6 1(10 WITH THE Bi6 N05!' ly KN lald ' ly Gus Aniola By Harold Le Doux Iv F.!trd Johnson lly Tom K. Ryan ly Al Smith *""'!!*' ?+!•""'-" ly Mel ; Thursday, October 24, 1968 DA!LV PILOT· Jt WEL.CO.f'/\f;. GREAT MPklf\/ FAITH -Unus takes up bis annual vtgU In thei pumpkin patcli lo wait the arrt""1 of tit• G-t: Pumpkin OD "It'• the Grei>t Pulnptln. a.die: Brown;'' tonight in ""1or at 7:30 on Chellllfll ;. TM: cartoon wl>icll l.s based OD Charles Schultz' '~ _ nuts" comic strip,. carried each day In lite DAILY..: PILOT, ls fast becoming part of 1be Hall°'"""'> tradition. ' TELEVISION VIEWS TV Viewer Takes Trip By CYNTHIA LOWRY : NEW YORK (AP) -'nie televioim vi-who wants lo go,places and see thinp h&d an oppmtun. ity for a IOI of Yicarious travel Wednesday Digbt. By tuning in the first Natlona! GeoirroPbic Society special of the CBS season, he coold hive "bad e quick trip around a lot af mtional parlcs from Hawaii to the Virgin Islands, from Yellowstone to Ille Grand Canyon. A bit l,ater ce.me ABC's "Sophia," with some glimpses of the multimllllon doilllr Roman vjlla of the Italian !ilm &liar, Sophla Loren, plm llOl1le sig!Kli of Rome and Naples. And then there was a tour of a real Hollywood film studio which served as the backgrotmd for NBC 's special, ".The Bing. Crosby Show." .~ IF THIS WAS not enough action there was -Oii NBC's "Mu&c H'&il" an arrti.!eptiic simulation. of ·a freewheeling theatrical rite, a E°ri91'11' roa<t,\vitb a number of top comedians sitting at a banqu~ fab!-• wlth each given a turn insulting the guest of honor, Johnny Carson. · · ' In spite of the extm large dl>Se of special pro- grams, the evening W1\S actu-ally Mthe< qU!et. Th• National Geogriiphlc show covered a Jot of gro>!Pd but could only do· M>methlng quick .arid oll\'i~ 1n the few minute< d~ lo eoch naliooal park. 'l'be most exciting film consisted of some color. shot. ot a Hawat!an volcano as it erupted. THE MOST lntore.ting segment \vu aerial film over Yellowstone during p roundup of elk, herded into a corral by helicopters acting like airborne cow pooles. "Sopbi.a" was pretty much of a hodgepodp and never seemed able to decide whether to take a fan magazine back or an in-depth approec.hi. Th.era were pictures showing just about every step in Misl Loren's career including some dreadful still shots taken when she was buxom model and wane clil"I from some ol her old mo\.ieo. It wll/l saved by the frank and forthright ...,... mtion by ttte Star Who told, with lollclilDg caSual· !MOOS, of hor illegi1imete birth andollbe pove!l\Y.and hunger during the war years as well as the dltllcult days before she emerged •• a C011!m1poNry -symbol. THE COMBINATION of Bing Crosby and Boll Hope always results in some pleasant momenta and the two old battlers were busily insulting each ather _ during the Crosby special. In addition there were some interesting moments against the studio back· grounds. One came when Di·ana Ross and the SU. .;- premes s·ang a Western dirge on a Western main &treet set while stunt men tumbled in 111• dtut all around 11\em. . . Stella Stevens had a cute number in wbicll she eV<>ked memories qi ttte g~ days and tho lJil < stars of the 1Ucks )e!ore 80\ll\d. . : , '? AFTER THAT rich menu of special!, ·torqj;t ~ will seem like diet fare. There is but one speciel fa ' the lineup, but it bolds considerable ·entertainlnent promise: "Girl Friends and Nabors" on CBS -8-9 • PDT -wi1h Jim Nabors out of his Gomer Pyle !a11gues and in a dinner jacket. singing and J>lltyln( comedy skstehes with Carol Burne!Jt, Debbie Rey• nolds, Mary COotil. al\d Vikki Carr. - • ) .. .. _ ..... -.. ~ .... -~ 111 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Oct.obtt 24. 1968 Ll:1GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Ul"IT.._... Fl<!' FOR -A PRESIDENT -'!'his 21· foot custom-built 1969•Llnooln Continioilal with gl!wis,enclowre.over the pa¥enger com~ent is ;Ule newest presidential litiiousin~-A center_ section of the ,glass roof us hinged so<thant may be-opened. The rear bumper Cari be lowered like a tailgate and conVerted into a platform l<>r Secret Ser.vice agem.. A sliding glass parta'lion cliviaes tile front and rear compartments. • Nelson Takes New Limousine Goes New Times Post Etection of Robert D. Nelson To WhiteHouseFleet l"!lol. "" as vice president, newspapers, LEGAL NOTICE of The Times Mirror Co., has WASHINGTON (AP) of line. They gave no figure of ~·~1•u be ounced by Dr C:mnJete with the latest in their own. ClftTU•tC ATt OF IUSINISS en ann ' t' ~1cr1rrous MAME Franklin o . M u r p h y, bomb and bullet . proofing In any evertt. the cost-to the The undtn11ned do certlfv the¥ •r• fe rJ·orf", a· long, black, glass-t nd lh ta OTICE c<ll>!lvc!I""' • 11v11n1n 11 P.O. llcx :w1, chairman and chief executive govern.men a e xpayers LEGAL N a11tio. r111nd, c1111orn1a, under 111e 11e. roofed limousine was added to will be comparatiliely trivial. ------===:;---f1111oi.11 nrm ,..nw ol orcK SHAW officer of the publishing firm. the White Hovse motor fleet M kl 'd th Id MOTICI TO CllEOITOlll ENTEltPl!ISES. end fb1t 11111 firm IS ar ey sa1 e 0 er ,~A'°"' cM'lo0<ed.,, the f<>1tow1n11 "'"c"'. wtoo1e Nelson has been an ex-this week for the Presidenl's limousine was }eased to the :~:f:'g: J.~~:~.:r .. ~~= :!1,~kl~;u11 •NI ,1,ce• ot re11oenc1 ••• ecutive of tbe Los Angeles use in pa rad e 5 and governmenl for about $1 ,000 a THE couHTY 011 01awo1 RICH.UtO e. SHaw, 111 M111~r Ti·mes since 1960 and will con-ceremonies. year. He said the new leasing E•l•lt of AJoVIN 0. OUNN, D..ceesed. Drive, Corona dtl ~r, C1lllornl1, The Specially built Lincoln "°''~ 11 Mrtr.v ,1wn 1o cre011or1 h•v· RICHARD s. LOCHRIDGE, 1m c;ien ti·nue to serve as an executive a rrangement has not been 1"' t ltlrM 111•ln•I tnt uld dteedtnl to c1nvon DrlTe, A!ltoMn1, C111torn11. Continental was shown to worked out yet. 1111 ... 10 c1&Jm1 1n tM office ot The cier-011ed October 2, '"' vice nresident and as general President Johnson at the (lf1tle tfar11•lif Court. ar to pre .. nl ltlem RICHARD$, LOCHRID()f t' It has such useful gadgets 1o """ or>0tr1l1MC1 11 the ol!lct "' 1UCHAIO 11 SHAW ma_nager of the newsp aper. White House by Rodney W. JDhnteol. RobtrtJOn, ... o·su1,"..,v•n I_ .. $11111 of Ct!lfornlt. O .. n11e Covnh': 1 -~--'-----------Merkley Jr .. 9 Ford Motor Co. as: Lt•nbt•-· 1tt'n EV.. ' ' On OctoMr 1, "61, before me, 1 N'oltrv 6lllO w111h1,. lllYd., sulle tlL In th~ City Public tn el'ld tor 1tld $!1!e, person1nv LEGAL NOTICE vice president. -A public address system "' Liii Al\O&lff, Ctlltornlt. whlCll •lier ·-·•ed RICHARD SHAW •l'ld llCHARD ·r k h I ol the President can use to speak ottlc• 11 the pltc;e of bu•lnn1 o1 the LOCHllDGE known to m• to 1><e theoi·--~==--=c--:::-:7:=:0:---t ta e& t e pace another ul'ldersi9ned In 111 '""'"''" pert11n1"' to oerwn• w""i• names art Jubscrlbed to HOTIC I'. TO CRl!DITORS limousine which has been in to c rowds outside, and a sound uld "''"·· $11cll ctalmL with the ttie wtth111 1n1trvment 11'1d •tkn11w1roted SVfERIOI COURT OF THE system to bring m· ,,·de the neee1s.o,..,. vwc111-. .... u11 bl t!led '" tMv e~ecuted 111~ 11me. STATE 01' CALll'ORHIA 1101 use since 1961 and which will Pre~'""'° •• ,1ore5'111. w11~1n •11 months (OFF'ICI AL SEAL\ TH f COUNTY 011 ORANOI! remain available to ti.~ White reactions frQm crowds while titer !he flrtl 111.1bllu.tlon of ltils no!lo;11, V!rglnlt Kent Ho. A .. 1IH '"" lh · "-· l ed oated CktotHtr 15, 1'6&. Not•N Pub!lc·Ct llwn11 Es111e 01 GEORGE A. cox. Oece~1ed. House. e WlJ11.NWS remain COS . CROCKl!:llt-CITIZENl PrlnclFel Oltlct Ill NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN to tne Se h . d • N.t.TIONAL llANK Ortnoe countv crtdltcr1 "' the •bove r>1med iftca<lenl Reports from Detroit have -parate eating an air av: JDhn J. ltell••· Mv Comm1n1on Explrtt 11111 111 "'""' llow!no cltlmi •••Inst 111' put the cost of the new conditioning units for the front Tr""! Of11cer S~pl, &, lnil uld ~edf11l t rr required lo flit !Mm, d Executor ot tl\I will Pub!lillftt Ortnot co.st 01111 Pilot, with the nei:eu•rv voucher1. In tht ott1~1 limousine as high as $500,000. an rear compartments. of 111<:1 oe-ctO•n•. Odobtr 3. 10, 17, 2~, tHI 171°'41 o1 the clflrll" ol ttie •bove "'11""' coutt, or but S""kesmen for bolh the -Twm-two-way radio· and Jlfluen. Rebert-. O'SU1llv111 lo presenl lllem, wllh lht lltCUHrv t'u a. L ... nbtrtflr. LEGAL NOTICE \IOUcMrt. to 111e ul'ldir1l1nt0 •1 111• cttict Secret Service and Ford said t e I ephone communications lff'I E'wlnl l•Mt!Mfl, (II Ill Trust O&Nrtment, 101 North Mtln th f' . '* Wltslllrt: 81vC., 1111111 tit Street, Stnlt Ant, Ct!lltlr11l1, which I" !tie at lgure Ii completely OUt systems. Liii Al'lfOlu. C1Nf., _, P·J1St1 1 pl1ce of buslnns ol' tilt yn6ff$1f...O In tllf----;:_ ____ ...:_ _ _:c_ __ _:c_ ___________ , 1 .t.tttr11tn fer l•t<ulw Cl!ITIPICATI! 01' •UllHISI mal!trs 'Pertlln1flll to the Miiie o1 s1ld ' · Pr·l'2V. l'!cllllMrl l'lrm H11M OKldtnt wlltl!n 11• moroll1a 1tltr the llfll Publlillld Or•n1• Co11I OellV f'llot, T"' unOenllll\tld don lleretly certl+Y publlCtllor> of ltlls rlOllCI. OCtober 17 u 31 11'1d November J, tllll !It 11 eonduc1lnv • wnolfsthl food DI~ Odobe1" !I. 1961. 1tU ' ' ' ,,,.... Produt'1 bu1lnes1 I I Ill lnd!vlOut! ., 115'1 8AMK OF AMERICA LEGAL NOTICE ='-------------1w11therbv ROid, bY Los AltmllOS NATIONAL TltUST ANO C1lllornf1, yl'der !ht fictitious firm name SAVINGS ASSOCIATION of UNITEO FOOO SUPPLY COMPANY, llY: N. E. Jo~11tr Crossword P1izzle -------~,,-,,,-,-=o::::::;--f•nd tl\11 1110 llrm Is comPOMO ol th• Exe<utor &I tl\I WI!\ Cl!ITIPICATI 01' (OJll"ORAT IOlll lollowlnn .. ,_, Wl\OS. l\lmt In full 11'1d of the tboYt n1mfl! orced,111 OOIMG llU$1NES5 UMDll pl1ce cl residence 1r1 ts fo!l<lwt, lo-w!I: HUIWITZ.. HURWITZ: & ll!Ml!lt FICTITIOUS NAMI! EOwtrd O. Flntmen, 115'1 Wt1lherby Ut · JJ!td Stl'ltt • 'TME UHOERSIGNEO CORPORATION Ro1d, LOI Al1mllo1. C1l!lornl1. Ntw,.,.-t --~' C1itt.rnlt !\o)H ~rfbv certllY IF!ll II Is cOlldotllng t O•teO SH>l~be• 11, ltA. 'U·"1• ' II ol>ll• !lom•! p~rh •l'ld At· Ed'w&rd 0 . FlMm•" Anllf'lltfl .... l!•K•l•r ~.~.i.~ buline11 t! 1303 SooJ!~ Min. ST.I.TE: OF CAL IFORNIA. PubllsF!ttl Ort"9t Cc.Ill D1ltv Plkll, thetlfr Jivl!l\ue, Anthe!m, C11!forn!I, COUNTY OF LOS ANGEL£5, SI. Otl. 1•, 31 ll'ld Nov. 1, 14, lf61 11.41~ ul'ld•• Ille flcl!llous firm nem• o1 011 Se~romber 17, ltA, btlort me, t POHOERO$A MOlllLE HOME SALES Nol•N Publlt In trtd tor 11ld Count\< 81'1d fl'ld 111•1 tlle 119~ o11t10 corPO•t!lon ll'ld Sttle. l>frsonally IPl>ftrttl Edw1rd 0 . LEGAL NOTICE n1 Prlnclptl Pltc• of bu1lne11 ts 11 Flnom1n know'1 lo mt to be IM Ptn<>nl------cc,-,,c------1 !oll(lwl· whost n1me Is 1ubstrlbt<I lo !I'll wllllln ~ P-ll4't JOi.o.!CRA. INC,, 1065 C1tlme~1 lllvO .• ln1lru..,.11!, 11'1d l(knowledottl " "'" llltl Cl:ltTIFICATE OF lU51Nl!!51 c8nmnt, Calllornlt. M executed lht >11me. l'ICTITIOU5 NAME De!ed; OC'-lber 11. 1t61. Wllnen my htl'ld Ind 1111. 'TM undet1lgned do certlh 1111~ tte (CORP. SEAL\ (OFFICl.O.L SEA.L) t1111dutllng I bu1lnou a! ~! W, lllh JOMICR,t, INC !:vi Shecptrtl SIT'ffJt, Cosll Mtst. C&!llornl1, ul'ldtr the lly · Frttl 'M Html>~ Not1rv Pub!lc Ctllfom!1 lltllllous firm name <'lf HARBOR SOUND Pr~IOenl PrfnciPtl Olfk• In AND TltOPHtES and that Sllld 11rm Is STATE OF CALIFORNIA Los Angelff Count\< COlnllOSeO o1 !tit 11>11<7Wl"9 1>0:1rson1, whGN COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES l I.I My Cornm!HIM Explrtt 11tmt1 In lull t nd pJace1 (It rellden(t trt On !his !ls! dlV ol October, A.O. 1"8, Jutv ., 1'11 11 follows: belort me. 1 NotiN Public ln 11'1d tor SYDllllY J, DUNIT?, A!tJ, JAMES E. GARVEY, M! W. ltlll St., stld County 11'1d Sl11t, ~tllv •I'-ltl Sllltti ••wrl~ DrlVll Collt M.nt, Calltor111t. l>firld F'~ M. HamP'-ln known to,.,. lo ltwrly NUii, Ct~ffnllt Mtlt ()R.t.CE W. GJiJtVEY. 162 W. ltl~ SI,, be 1M P"'IOtnt (If 111e torPOr ll!on tl\1! 5116-0C: CO.It M .. , Ctlllol'nlt. ex~ted the within 111strument on bell.Ill l'ubll1hld Ortntl Co.11 Dt!IV Pllcl, Oiied Ottoeer I, lHf ot ttie corPO<tllotl ttiereln ntmed. t l'ld OC!ober 11, 1A, JI Ind liov•mber J, JAMES E, GARVEY tQ:rlOwledttd lo m1 thtl 1oxh aH'Pllr411on 1968 l7'7"'61 GRACE W. GARVEY ''"c11ted the um•. S!1h!. o1' C•Htornl•, Or1nge Countv : WTINESS mY hll'ld •nO 1e•I. LEGAL NOTICE On Odober 1, 1'61, before-· 1 Not1rv ((;W'FICIAL SE.O.ll Publlt In 11\d for 111d Sl•le, Fe"'3r>t!IV Vlnte<ll S!ntlr• NOTICI TO CltlDITO•s eppeert'd JAMES e. G.t.RVEV and Nclarv Publlc·C11+1ornl1 SUP'!lt!Olt COUil 0" THI' OltACE W. GARVEY .~11own lo me '° ~ Prl"clp~! Otllu In STATI' OJ" CALll'OINlA 1'01 IM l>fr!IOtlJ Wl\t»e r>tme"S ert •ubscrlbed Le' A"9fl<I Ct1t1nlv THI!! COUNTY OJ" OllANOI lo 1111 wltllln l111uumenl Al'ld ~ckl>O'Wled9· t\v Commi.,lon <:~l>lre. Mt. A ffOM ed lhtv fllfell!H tlle 3t""' 'i•tt."T>ber 79. 1'6@ E1111t O! MAMIE OeANO FRANKEL. lOFFlCIAl. SEAL) ,t,tft~ric •, ftl \"tllt & ll111tr1 O~ce••ed. llHnt•d M. Mun1tY A'l•r•,'n NOTICE 1$ MERE~Y GIVEN lo the Nolarp PUOllc·Clllhlrnl~ •~ klllh IPrlnt S!rttl treoc!llor! o1 tilt tbove nlmed cltcedfn! Prlnc11>1I Office ·In Lii A•t...., CtlllOmlt Mlt 11111 111 persons lltv!"9 CltJms 1111111.11 !tit. Or1l!OI COUlltv 120I OC st!d c!Kede11t trt ""ulred lo file !hem, Mv Commlnlan E~Pl•llt '"lbllillea Orin" (011! OllJV l'llo1, w1111 1fte ntctlHN VOl.Kheu, In "" ollke Jutv 16, ltn Oci. 14. :n 11'1d New. f, II, ltA 1Ml"'61 of !tit cler-of !Pit obow 11111tltd court, er PubHIJ'led Or•no• COtst DtUV Piie!, to Pruenr tl\tm, wit!\ !tie neceu1rv Odobolt ~. 10, 17, 21, lfiM 171...._ LEGAL NOTICE VO\IChtrs, '° !hf Ynifenloned ttl--------~--------1 -----~~,,-,c-----· I HURWITZ, HUltWITl & l!MEI, 00 LEGAL NOTICE hi 1111 l21'1d s""'· N-rt •Hell, Ctllfl>rnr1, ffOTICa TO CllOftOIS 01' '1663, Wiii~ h !tit Pit« of bu1lness of•i·-------------·I •VLK TRANtl"aa AMO IM ul'ldtnltnocl !11 Ill mttters l'l:ri.lnl"' NOT!C• ~ M.t.aSNAL'S U.LI IHT•lllTIOlll TO I XICUTI lo ttle et.tile of ltld d«ldl111, wl!fl111 1!~ R08£1t'T WHITELAW Pl1lntlft v1. t ltUalTY IHTalaST AOlll.llllNT mont111 tl'lor IM firs! llUbllullon of IF!l1 MAIVfiLLfl! MOOOY, De>!fndtnl, No, (~wa. '1t1'41t1 U.C.C.I nollct. m1 l!sc:N'W ""9. •s \llUl•I Dtftd October !6, ,..., 11V vlrtw ot 111 ••tcutlon 1 .. Ulld Oii J.ioll(lt !I "'r.trlo tlvtn to C<llltllof'I of Cherlt1 EOtor Frtnk~I. Jr, Au-I 21, Ifft 11'1' tilt M""lCIHI COi.ir!, ,~. Wl!F!!n ~ Plrtltt llltt • bulll E•ec.utor "' the Wiii 0t1n .. Cou11ly Hll"tor Judlcltl Dltlrlcl. '••ns1t• •l'ld 1111' t•eaitll>ol of • 1ecur11Y Nuiwi':• ":v',t;l~r"'a"ti::'r' Counl'I' of 0r1'""· S11 .. or c111kirrt1t, In"""' 11,.......,,t 1r• lbl>ul lo bt meOe. "" UllOl'I t l\ldt"'*ll 111ter~ fft ftYOI' ot °" Hr10flll arollf!"IY het'tlntfter llel(tlb-~'!....:.!!.11411 lll'lll• C '""" ..., ltoberl Wlllttltw II Judllmtllf <1'ftltllt ~ ..,.,..,, ff( I I Ind IOll ... I Mervtl'" /IMlfdV IS llllfomt!ll TM ,.,..,. ancl tiuslMS• llddrftl of the Allt,....,1 for IJtnlfltl' Olt!let. P.owlttt • 11tl bellonce or 11.$7'.40 lft!e.oed tr11111«or Ind lnlwndta ucvred Pllbtllhft Orintt Co+ul Otltv P'llol. •dll•ll'I' Ch.,. on llld l~I °" ffl4I 0111 Mrl'f Ii: M.AIUAH STAHl'OftD. .tOt Ot;t. U, ll -NOv. 7, 14• lffll llMl°"' o1 Iii. !uutnct of wl4 txKutlon, I l1tvt Emf'l'•ld II•~· L•-.. llcfl. Ctl!tornll. LEGAL NOTICE levied -tH the rltlll, !Ille ttw:I lllltrffl TM "'""" 1111:1 Ml-..,.._ Ill' ni. IJf 1tkl ludtmtnl debtor In tht pr-rrv of 1nt.m.d fl'•l\tfl!'" tncl I~ debtor p.n,,. the County ot °''""' 11•1• ol (:1111oml1, 11: Ll!"ONIDAS IOTllOl"OULOS, art CllTll'ICATI 01' •Ullllllll dtKtlllad •• loll6WI; ,,....,,,Co.It""'-• Cllll'ot"ll!t. fltc1"ITIOUt NAMI Lot lJ. Traci 1113 111 l!looll 10., fl19u TM !hf --· IH'-l'f l'lrllntnl -.. .. •nd ... (II MIJOlll-Meoi, Is dffr:rl!Md 1111 Mntrtl 11: m1Mrl1l1, "'"' U!llllrt~nt'CI Ooos ctrtltv I'll 11 con. ~ "' °''"" Covnh" " ,__, .w:ollt.s. mer<:MndlM, 9'U!Onw!W, ol lh•I OVtllnt • bllllM" ., ,010 SO..lt> Ill "'• Office. "' ""' °''"" tountv ccblfl IM.lf141'sJ t-M '"" ,_ Iott· l!tllwood, Stnlt An., C•t!lornl1, unOtr R.~ commonlv kMWf'I ••· m ftd •I KEr:,~!!'~ COFl'El SHOP, J050 Ille tlclltklu• firm 11•1nt of eARlt C1brlllo Avt .. Cosl1 Mewl, C.tlllor;,11 E. CMSI H ~ dtl Mar, C1lff. COMPANY Ind 11111 uld firm 11 <omiio11(t ~OTICE 1S HERE•Y GIVEN t"61 (Ill ('#' !. f1I lht ll>ik!'wl!tt O'frtlln. ""*" "lmt 111 F,10•¥. NOYotmlle< 15, I'll, •I 2:111 o'eloc• • ._, tllt ""°' .,.,. ,.... dtlO on or'"'' f\lll Ind .. Ke ol "'~' 11 II 11111-1 P,M, ,, Iron! of (011n "'°""' ,., .Wei t ,., ':fl 11'4 IMftl'll cltl<l'"IMd llvlk tr1nt~ lllAN I, •MUt, 1111' Mtr•Nlfl \Ith StrH!, (!l'f of COii• Mohl, CO\lflh' of • ' tJIW!loll of I ...:11rltt' llllt:ffll w ..... lfVIM. C1nfbrn11, Ottnoe. SI•"' of C•rltornlt, • wm tell " ..,,-...,. . .,. "' .,. ClllllY!M"lld, 1ro: D110c1 OC:letltr "· lNf .ub!Jc 111(,tlon to JM hl9htll blddftr, for I! 1t!W Oii fttr atttr ,._.,.,., 1t, 1N4 11 lltlAH •· •Artl tt"' 111 1twtlll ""'"'y of !lit U11fltd FIO&.lt.AL EK•OW· INC.. 7'20 Sl11t of Ctlltlmlt, Or.,,.. C.eufllv Sit,_., •ti the rl~t 11111 ltlltrt.i ol °'""f!IOlrM, ......,. f'lrt. C.llfemll Off Qdotw If. IN8. lltfort ""• 0 Mid !~ f~ 1"1t aboYI .. ~, 1'1*1"1 l'\illfJc Ill tnd for Mlf Sltlt, IUl!Md -.HJ, Ot 10 ~ ,.,..r_, .. . S. fllr .. It VloWll" Mid"""""' ..... -!JV ,.,..,.,, •ltAH a . &All "11Y bl,llflC:tlltN le Hll•f\' Mkl t •OCU· ~ ........ ltlllf ...,.,_ llol'lfttl ..... ~ " -..... ""' .. r .... Wftot;t llOfl, wllt> """"" ..,.,.., .,. co.ts .._ ._, .,-•Id .-i"r!a wtfl\!11 flle -,. llltrKt1"9cl to w.., wlltl!n lft-Dttod 11 C111t M ... , c1n-"'i1, Jlf'te ~ .,.. ""' .,.: •""'"'"' lfMI ~~ "' .. IQlfed OC:ltlbfr is, 1..., · •t _.., --tnt ....... t tllrll. ft'lf .. ,,.,.. FIAIK.IS l. OLA$1a • ., MM ....... ~ ......._ (QiJIJl(;IAL SEAL\ Mtrtt>t! 0......,. C04.1!'11'1' b.Md! .,..,., 11. 1M, J-h E. Dlvlt Htrt:ior MwllclHI Ciurt, .... If. Sit"""' NOl•IY Pllblk.C.IHottMt Jllfl(cltl D1tlrlcl L ....... ~ l'!'lnt1N1 OMu 111 '' l.. H. °"lfl, ON\IW .......... ..,_ -Of .... C-IT THIOOOll 0.. Lii, t:'1 ~ Mf Cet'M'lluleol ••1l•t1 JU I', & M. •lll'Wl"I! ...... ,.~ ~ J-tt. '"' LMt ...... glflflil• ,.11 C... .... 1111 .... llublltMil 0r1'9f! C:0.11 Dl!IY flllllst, P'ltlllflfl'I ArttorMJ -....,..., Orl!fWf CUit DW!l' .. 11111:, OcfDDlf U, 14. JI ,.._ HOYtn'IOlr 1, ~ Or._ Colli Dtl"' f'Jlnl, Cl'dt ,., ,,.. ,...,,. 1"9 11111..-., OC:t. k. n 1nd Now. 1, 1• ,,...... ,.) ACROSS 1 Make unhappy S Uptothe time that lC Young I benln9 14 AJgtrlan seaport 115 lnstr1111ent 16 Branches '17 Quebec's ·-Trem· blant Park: 18 long narrow shoals · 19 Not quite • clostd 120 Out---: · 2 •onfs· 122 For telr ht 24 8ring10 Stitt cif ripeness r 25 Strong Rb« 21 Arrived al 29 Character in Amtr. fiction; 2 words 32 Ca iiforr1 ia's 8 !11 -· 33 81>dy of w1\er 34 Ste ~1 Across 3' Oki DllYiat .... 40Sloow SGfPffR 42: le111tnt1t 44 Preval llng fashion 45 Kind of palm 47 Evil spirit • l 49 Numblf 50 Focaf. point 52 Junk mail addresser S.t Changed ctrtaln local regulations 58 Flood con- trol devices 59 Oil: Comb. form 60 Container's weight 62 Go--- 6S Term of en~eaiment ft7 Anti --ft9 Part above a downspout lO To N: Fttnch 11 Gd 10,ethet 1Z Mahntt ol ••B:"'9 73 Churchaln 7.t Man's name 7S Mate i tempo1ary abode DOWN l City on the Trvere 2 Meta l 3 Kind al painting 4 EftSA•• SMl-a Falls rtsf-tlent, fol' one '., ..... , 7 Caudal tin of a fish 8 Deposit In Ult earth 9 Deprivations JO Undtt- prmtnt: lnforNI Jl Hindu noble Jr lent.I picture 1' Ready for ,,, 21. Put Into setvlce 23 Not slack 26 Hrld de;u 28 Paek tight 29 Golf group: Abbr. 31) Closely .... ll Track:~ Pl'Uc1pant '15-oot ~-°"" nkk· 11a111e for New Yort: 2 'words lt Ancient god l• Se""°" sitbjeet Kl/24168 •l KIMI of repttlUon 43 Participant kl loan ~ee11tnt 46 Re!atlve 48 lf issllt '1 lnbad ,... Slang: 2 words 53 Loathe 54 lnvtstrd with certlin clothing 55 Inspire S6 Fout-foot~ anil'llal S1 Maler I ....... "~ ... 1.3 Cont-61fo Let ft M ....... , -.. -" Desfrr •a Nau~: Su ff he l ..... .r· -v • \r.J.1 Hit!! Lew tleM 0.. . -C-.... • A • s!:w::r.r .1. .i 11. m: n:: =·· --------~hlr'~tt 1• fl ~ Jll1\ ~ ~ f;, ;;:.")~ J " "'!:• ~~ . trtrw YOlltK •l• 'nlundlY't ~•itl• 'onwU ;t j ~; U.. .. "' NtW York 'tos~ lldl1n" ~lat~ Nit ""':1 !Jf 1 1 11! l~l ::·:: n:::> ~l•~ ,,_ C:'-c~1. nn~lr ,r;. 'f: -!!'- -4.-II ~ r.: • l260 -'I~ Housing Boom i~1~'"1· ii ~ I !m = ~ ~~1l~~f :!'·ff, ::;: A F ':I. I, J l5h ~ u: " \lo f'f: Pf ~ I 1 142'14 !j Coming ~~l:,'J!' I "~a~ im1~ ',~:;·~!!. £I'll I •!!.. ++1 ~~~~ , f ~ mi :·u .~~·1/;s' J im I~ t.~ Alt{~ f. ti: ~ £. . . . .. J: 1~ra 1 Ji fi ~ .l! ~ 1at''r• 13 U* 1 ID4 +·~ ...... 1 1 1.n " 61 ::i; By SYLVIA PORTER A!,,,<:.' ~ ~• ml l!ii lfu -~ •~ ~ '·" J Jt • .J:' ::l? we .,. on lhe lhre.llold or ~ r:~Z .1\i l!j ~ ~ ll-'i +-11 ~I~ t»~ f, lfu ;~ ~ ~ .~ one of the greatest -if not the A "'"" ..at 111 m\ 2ll'.t . . :.o~ ... ~10-.., 51 ~ n.. -it: A tnlnd I.• 1 '°"' 4M + \jo iueljp"" jl! :# • 1·· greatest -housing-real estate ~llj~hK/,l0 1 1060 1: li'v.~"lr l!! ri4t' lll'JlP ~ l a 'la' 'Ml •1 'i· ' • • A!tr'~ln «I J5 ~ lSMi ~ -~ I I 3;J(lt t5 jft J:t booms in our entire hu;tory. Afl~Mlll ).s » uv. • • -"' !!. '' Pf'l.lf 10 "' ~ • A Ii:; Pd .60 15' °" ...... ~ +tl'o ,...1 er. 1.20 11¥ m'i . ~ The pileup of forces behind ~l"'tg ~, .J ~* ff ~. t'~ o~·i~r .l}l 71J ~ ~ b'J =~ this prediction is so persuasive !ll!?cs,:i :i i! ~ = ~ 7 14 0 , 11A11i'9·.~ •r; = t' '°v. ....:;"' th h ll I Jiil'Pl1" Cem 10! ,...... ~· ~\\ +"'°'Ci> linll1d .10 12 ui;, ~"Mo St? +i* at t ere can be tt e doubt A111" .lG tt 1.sr. 16.1/i ~I\ + v. co1oto1J1 1.'° :w );\lo Shti 51 + 1'I h boo . , Alcoa i.to t0 14 n"" y. -.,. \:olo '°" p1 ' i l60 .sel'a ,.,,.. ""' t at the m IS 1n the mak-Am•ISuso 1.40 11 m.. »v. ""+ \'• t•i;;j Lt it a ,, 1.,~ ·iil:i }'-AMllAC ,60 ~ 60 st\4 5t"' -TV. 0 ncl plwf 11 'IY, ~ tl +\lo jng. Unforeseeaole adverse AmrcE1 1.11'.t 10 l6V. lS\lo 3P.~ -'Ill lo" 1ric1 .60t 105 o1.1 ~ ... 6211o + "' Amrf1 pf2.ol0 1 5'I st Sii -V. 85 •·-91 Ullo S.NI. ~ l't factors can post""-the Aft\er101 l •s 16-•,.. ~ imo tu• coJ~Gu 1.i:i 146 2'b ~ 211,. = .., Y'''"" AA!rFlltr .to 1~ :.ti "'"' :s ~ Col SoOli 1.61 !OJ 43 «1'4 () +~ boom'S timing bU( they cannot Am Alrlln ,Ml ""' )1~ )l'l't 314\ \It Coll Ind wl 2' ,1.w, " "'Ill -°" · Am lllktr l 50 l2"" l2Yo l2'lo -'.lo COrllbE11 2.«I S1 ~ 11:ri. .sm !'4 d-~ .-. boo l U Amfl.k NOi• 1 12 ltJ mo JO •. come p11.10 2 :.Vr 3t\'J 3'Vt -~1-1. uY IJK< m tse • Am8k Npt 3 »II 11\!i 5S SS ~ ComSo!v .10e n 21 2'\lr 2IM\ · • ~ TO BE SPECIFlr. !~~: t# ~fg tm = ~fl~ ~~dptJ:~ I~ ~ ~llll& =t = tf .,. A.C1n pt 1,,5 2' 31'4 Sl 31 -'4 comwou .ao 1.14 'ld'i' t,t 21 h+ v. - A tremendous backlog of :cl\t~:"\.ao ko.3 .:: ~~ ~ ±: t' ~:!*"k111i 1 1tl' m: tli. :~ + .,. basic demand for housing bas Amcon. 1.ost ' 1'"~ ""' 19"' +\It COl\f'tCCp "° ss zv. .so\ ~+·Iii . . ""1CrMll .l'O Ill 27',lo ll C + "' Con EO!s 1.IO 3G 31 ll\11, ~ been bulldmg up ~urtng our!~::: ,~ fi.,. ~ :m"'=l.Zl~:f: p11 12 ~10:2Yt1om::·~ recent periods of tight money A....0111 1,.co. s 31\'J ll\4 JI~ .. eone ~.u tMIO 73v, ~ ~Vr +·,4 " h ., ! ()ctobe ,.z,,, Am OU1!VeJt "9 1~ IJI.~ 11~ t V. C011Elec;:!lld l II l!Y, '1~ 3I _ ~ crone . n r, l:rw, AOu1r p1.u. x '''"' 1m 13"/o -v. eonFooo 1 .sa .u ff'!olr ""' "* .,. housing starts slumped to a 21· ~~~ LM ~ ~ it~ = = ~ ?o~~~,1~f51/ J 1rnl 1~ 1b~ t t! l · lh f f Am E~P Ind 2CM ~ 441.~ "9\~ +14' ConN.11G 110 20ll lOYt lO llMlo + \ year ow tn e ace o an AE~1nc1 otA4 r:IO(I '°"" "°"' toV. , eor.sPwr (90 113 •I~ 41 41-i.. + ~ ever-swelling ~pulation · as a AmHolst .1o " 11!'t 1"• 111'o t ~ Colll'w Pf(.~ m 7H• n\O n.,. -•~ .. ~ • A t-lomt l .lO 17t stV. 51411 58~ -'Iii ConPw of~ so i41D 1•i... ,, ,, ,,., resull of the 1966 money :~~~.:'.J J! ~lt ~"" ~ ... _-\\ con:,1nr 1:<10 20 46\1, 1.1 -4.fl4 = 1; squ .. •• en esti·mated 400 000 Am 1n11 1 Sole 13 ?nv. lt\'a 20'11 +1 ConiA!rL .so 304 11'.i ~ t<W•+ 'Ii ""'• ' Am1nvs1 i 10 n 14~ U\~ 2•0.:, ~•Cont Cen 2.20 ~2 'l!i tf\~ 6H• + ~ would-be-homebuyers had to ~~Fov, ,:'° 411 ~ 15 m.:. f~Coi:! 13~ ~ ~'" ~ ;g .! ;;: h l th . I ........ et c .fO 197 4,V, .U'h •SY, + ,,. Ct Cop pn l5 1'0 111'> 11\.\i 11~ '4 I e ve eir p ans. Am ~ "' 114;, u11o ui;, -"'cont c11 "" 131 ,,"' ""' .VI.\ -"" Ag"" earlier th1's year !::::N:J~ ,1 i~ ~:w. ~ :to +l:Z conic" oii.so ., '3 62 '2 =1 ...,, , ""'' . [IM1111n¥ .14 11 l5 lot lt + \0 bu ush~.. Am Pho! .069 20-I UV. ltto •h -'I• Cont Mot "° Hit 2'1\1. ll\lt ~ +1'1> many yers were p cu out AR"'rch .w. 39 1stv. ,,...,, 159 +1 cont 011 t.lo 111 1' 1l'h 1• +""' f the k t b the d"f' ii Am SN! ! 2t 11Yll 21"'1 tl'o + 'Ii Cont 011 on 10 "'" i3V. 5'111 + ~ 0 mar e y IJ JCU y Am Shlo .6Q 10 32\!o 31'9 31-',j; . '' . CDnl Sii I llO 1 mi J.t1.(, Sf'A !Vt of getting mortgage money. ~::4'.J la ~ rs ~ ±_J\; COfll Tel ·" Jll ~ _. 19 = .,. Dr t. -th 't U 1. Am Sid l 2fi2' .QI'> '3. 43141 +I Conlrvl Dtll 12:2. 1•1"-1»>4 14' 14 +.1 ama 1zmg e 111 ua on Q Amstd llf•.1.s 46 1204 11"" 11,,. _ _.. ~ pff.so dOo u ~ n .... the fact that the vacancy rate Arn s1er11 .• .fl 2tv. ~ -. -v. c_.. cott1·~ !! .. -• -., -• A Suglr 1 &O 36 :JI lD\'i ~ .-. ·""' "" ···-· ls averaging 5.6 percent for AS~l!fAi65 so""-~ llCIVt + ·.;.; ~•11 1.20 " •111 .cs ""4 ..._ "' • ,. pf .611 :n ll:W. 11 11 .•.•. OCIPlf TR I ,.. 2S'lio I ~ --. rental housing and 1 percent Am T T 2.«1 11s1 U4i ~ ~ ~ v. '*~.J"'i~ 1i m!' Zl: + ~ for owner-occupied houses, ~~wi.,<t, 1:tt '6! fm ~~ ~·+ ~ €::l\Tr ;S: J !II! J 1-• I st · th 1950s AWWJol l.2:11 l50 71M :Ii\: 21.IJ. -1 ~orln1118 3c. 66 ~ :.+,1,4· owe since e . AW prtt 1.'JS aoo IN 1t 1• +•.rr. om ,.,, '1111> 1tt .m't .. , . ON . AW ~!IOI 1 . .0 tlXI 2' 26 3r. + 1.lr. or(1N 2.51*1 41 2M Vt i.-· -TOP OF this pent-up Am z1n, q3 m1o 251'1 2SYt -v. COl'Mtl .4' 22 61 '°"' 1 + ~ b • f d d AIT'elek lt 1• O'h .0V. 47.'ifl -~ Corolllfl wl 1 )3ll4 ~ · uyrng, a new wave o eman AmtAt: inc t :. 11"" 1ov. 11v;. + "" 1owlts .50 " 1w. ; 15"'.:... ~• l's de"elo•1'ng 1"n res~nse (O AMK Corp 111 ~ 411 •'II -+~ O)dldGIJ ..50 S2 56* Vt m-·· • t' t'u AMP Int .ID St ~ :J3l'I loll't Vo •1nt1Co 1.60 11 ~ -"" the fact that World War Il's ~;:is~0 )0~g ~ ~tt ~ ~~ =1~ E~=li. ·1'g ~ jfg :: :; babies are now at -.arrying An1cnn11 2.so 2et:1 s211o 51 s1~ -+"" C•PWC:o1.i.i21 xl7'0 «1 "' +2\~ '" Anc~HG 1.olll :'I\' 1,v. n u 1 Crowe Pfl:r, 1 ,.5f .w .5f -1 age and setting un households Al!d c1fty 1.20 44 ~l'lh ~ 4Mlo -l'A cr-">•'" , v IN •t'MI Wl + • t' Anktn Ch•m '3 llt/1 •~ \Wt -Vo Crown 1 .(l'lio ~ _ '' of their own These young· APeo ou m $l 3SVt 14\1< ~ ...• Crown e i.20 1t 1 59'.4 +1'4 . AaYt CPI~ 1.45 " ~ '°"' +11/o Crn z Pl .. 20 Jl!ll 7~ 1 1.:W. +l~ marrieds don't usually buy Arct.Oen .!WI 'l' s.o.w ~ ~ -II• ~s '°"' AO 15 '"" "" 1 -•• ArlJ.PubSv' l 193 ~ U'lo l'Vf + * ofolly Co ! ; +' houses but they do rent Arra.nos .20 st 31'/o 37"' 3J7/o ··, "8Rr,:11 A! 111... ..., +"" Armco Sii J IS9 57 j6.l,i;; 56'4 -\'I _ _,, ·•• . ••--~ apartments. Ar"-r 1...i 160 srn S4'lli sw. +3 rnm1ns .to 20 414'1 " 41.,.. .•. • AITl'lr .,, 4.7! 1 ,., 11 .,. +2v. c~"'°""91 ·10 .2S· 30 WI zrv.. + •.11 Reflecting this construction """' o: 1 • .0. ,. 19\4 11•.rr. ,,"' -1* c~rl"w'', w ! ', n, • ""',--• ' ArmC• ofl.75 J120 .W... 66 45 . -1"" " 31 J ... of a partments is now around ArmR11b 1.411 11 57~ sr.v. l7h + ,,. ~,-1er H 11.20 in .av. 41'1! ... ,. -" Ar. CDf'I> .to l6 2t'1l 29 2Mio+\lo .t.) ,& ""~~'""-'Ill ~ to 45 perce~t of total hous 1 -~;::;~ d/;<'1.;, 2~ 1fA f" ~~ =llh v~"l.~ ,. l!i 1i« l'" +1~ mg starts against a share o Assdllr .IOI> 111 u,,. 1&11i 16411 + v. -D- about one-third in the mid..fll's. !:fsfrg 1:18 1~ fi ~ ~ ~ :z &:"ne ~~w j',f .J ~ u ,,_ ~ + " AudTren · olll 61 161J:i lfil 16'h + " gJ o;oC '60 -_.,. S.-:SM · · · -The growing resignation Ar.5ocl,.,.. 1'.o111 109 ~1~ ~ -..i 1~ pl' '52 ~ • ·• .a1o. lfJ · t'~ . Aldl!1on \,60 && ~ J:l'-+ Vo (, • "" ln't l2lli ~• ... of, hon:iebu~ers to a persistent ~~~l·er (~ r. ~ 10* 11 -:-: o.rP~,11 \~(W 1~ r~ ~ = -~ climb 1n prices y ear after year All ll'1C11 1.1a J56 1D.1 16r" l~ t •4 R!l,~.","' i~o ,1~ . J5'AI .u.. 36,. :... '" . . . AllReh oil.JS !'70 65'/> ~ U llo. -14 ...... ..,... r .... .... 35\.\ 31'11 w,. -,.., has reduced their resistance to All Rich Df 1 31 11,.,.. 1r.i•J. ltl\~ +,,. og::'"~WJ •. 60 20 J.tl'a n•h s:i'la + "'" hi h I Th Atle1 Ch .!ID lM 1• 23 ~-4' '"""• 1 J .Q '2 42' -2 ever-g er sa es tags. e ""'' corp 1•1 6 s"' SllO -v. t11tsr 1.ie. J2 """ .c"A ~,..,-Hi. feeling is "we'd better buy or AuroreP1 .» 1R nv. 2:1:\i 2'l'oli -,.., 8""RGr 1.10 1i. ?I'-" n1'11 t ~ _"' AYS!Hldl .60 1 17\ro ~ 311'1/• .. 0ertco PIA 1 61 61 61 -lVJ bul.ld now because ,·r we wa1·t ARA Inc ·*' 'i111...., 1~ov. H~"' ertc0 pl II. • ~ 61 a& -~• AutSi>ltlr .Ola al1 1l'h 22l'tlo lJIJ:i -~ 0.SO!ot~~ .IO 32 JS>Yo 15'.lo :UV, +1 ·I'll O I be O " A d bo Au!omln ll'ld f2 5.S'J. SAio .Sflto -!fo Ot!Ed!s 1.40 1'6 :t5'J'o 2Mti 25\i _ ~ l n Y w rse. n w-Avco c~ 1.20 s1• .v;. QI\ 4 . 0.1 Ea ll'IJ . .sa • 100\4 ti» IOO!J. _ ing to th.is feeling bas un-Avco i>tJ.20 11 et 11 " ·-. Det StlOI ..io u:r ~ nv. n\4 ...;;c,. AYltV Pd :l! ,, ., .fl!.\(o ........ -* Ontr .30 IO ,,.... J1v. a11o + "" questionably been the wiser Avlltl '"" . .., 2''1i ~ .._ -"'Dl1m111u 1.111 " "'5 a.o. _.,.. _,,.. Avntt Pn.50 ·1 ~.u 14' 1* -1 Oi1Sh1m 1 -10 16' ~ l2;ta 3PJo Vt policy during m ost of the post-Avan Pd 1.60 ,,1 1:ni•4 121"~ ~'2914 --2\1 OLISll p1 c2 , ...v. lfil "'°" =""' W Id W ti ·oc1 I d -B-01.1s pf 01.20 101 21 v. 22 -'" or ar per1 . n a · lltbd< w 136 31, ~ ~ lMlo --'P.9 011nestr .20 10 1~:w; 1~ -·- dition, resistance to steep 7 ta sakr011T :.., n ?l"" 11"" 21% -~ 81!:.o'fa'con .llib.. ~ : ~"" m,; -;:: 81!1 GE 1.61) lflll l2'AI 3:1 l2l'o -"'° DIG' •' to > t 7 lf.1 percent mortgage money 11e1Gp1.11 4.5o ?illO ,,.,, 1'V. 75\lo -1'141 0,~ o,...., · ,. m. •111 2"li h • • 8111 G pf C4 ~160 661'> o!eVt • l6'h + V. ouklfll pf,&8 1 31 31 31 +1 also has been dwuldling. Benol"~"' .60 ni 1114 .csv. "'~-""'011111111hm .:16 50 :16"' ~ 3fft-1 llanoP pf 1 5 !2'h s:!'h SIV. 00 1M'1'1CI .50b 6.S 5S'h S!'~ JMlo +~ 8e"9P Pll•.'l:d: 1 "'°"' 4"1• .,111 · ---o!:i""se30b n Jt'lti nv. mi. -1'4 -OVERAU prosperity ·by 3:~~R~.~ i = :fU ~i-~ DrP1>11r1111.~ 1i = ~ =±. ~ l•--u has •-·n a force 1'n ex· 11111c inc: .to " ZJ11o 21•J. D't. -""' ~rMM, '" ·80 36 .:iv. •1~ .:. + ,., ,,.,.; """' 8ttHMI .1Dlo 15 ~l'l<llJ~ ~~ -"""" 0 .la. tt l"-lflto 1~ -\!o pandin.g the demand for t:~ J:;o: ,, 13 ,~ 1'1~ 1f" ±~ i:~11~1v;.60 1t; =. = m:: .:.:: ~ houses and in increasing the 8nust11Lti .IO ~ ~ 67 '"" + v. OovtrCP 1.20 s 11'h 1n.1 1 141 -lo 8tX1rL1b .'18 1M ;'i 41""° 4149 + •t. Oowehm 2..lll 211 ti; 113 13* -IV. willin~ess of buyers to pay1 l:~r~ -~ ~ ~ ~s:w. ~ .... = ~ ~~ t2:. ~ i. ~ ~--it the prices asked. Because o Ill"''~.,. i.r.t n mi. 111 11 -Tv. Dre•r on.20 J:J .w1o .u,,.. Q'h-1 . • "\IF 11'12.l'O 1 90 90 90 +1"'° Dr5" pl 112 U ~ «l'k 40V! -14 propser1ty, young Americans 11Kt""'" .50 101 ~ "' • +iv. Dr9Vlu1 ·'° 2lll 33*-12 321,4 _"" are moving into homes or their 11:-:'r.. ·~s 'l" n,, Jtn "~ -" ~ lo.#J n ~ ~: ~ + ;z own at earlier ages than l~C::t:i' 11t 11~ ~ ~ ~ -v. = ~ 10 """ •'4 • .,., _ ,,. -i d th' f '"' r.rtW . ·'° 361 rp;. MV. ~·. -'2'4 :\:Po11t !i~t;a ~ 1W' 1~ 1~ =' ,,. previous y. An ts goes or a.11 111en:°" 1t 14"' i:w. 1• + "' duPon' pu'sn 1 61 •1v. 61 + .._ the single as well as the young ::::1!'fD 1.Jo'° 111 ~ ~ ~ ~ D0UQ LJ...~ 10 ~ 2"A jj\!-•• "ed Al bee f Bf1'1dl• pf l 1• 11\lo 7D'h JO'h 1~ Q ~,......,,.10 llOO ~ lS!i -1 marr1 s. so ause o 11~~IFln 1 60 :tt6 4,.._ ~ 4tV. + ,,.. 0o 4.1~.07 r140 ,..:w. 31 -1 Social Security and other g:,,,:~ ;~": 15' ~jt,"' W"' L"' _ . .,.. ~a~i1'=7·~ :~fl 31 #J: 1:"' +l -be f'ts Id le Ben~ !!:112 50 0:: J.1sp11.11 rio ~ :)(Rj, + '"' pension ne 1 • o er peop · 11320 ,,,,.. 37,.i, 371.i, Do :.10l>f'2.10 1100 36 . 36 • are remaining in homes of ~tr>O....i uu If 11 1• + i.. Ovmo Jn .st1 s.c i>111 1'2'" ~ -1• seno"'t '" 11 n 11 11 ovna A"' ·"° lll n•1t tt'll 2t'.\I -.., their own much longer than s1rt...,. l"ho lo93 ol6'olo tr' 45% -.,.. -E·F- e ver before. 1:;:;:.,,11 er~ ~ ~ 3'l g,.. = ~ 1·.,,'"."', !! •60 321,1. J\\J, :n-...... Vo 1111 Thr" 80 11 3N'w ~ 32"'" +v. fr -~ ?t1 2'11'0 21"-21~ -''-" I id 'ih ti ling l<ldl.Ok ltS t.j """ " J9il, +v. •tt G11 F 3! l97,'o " :!.,~ -..... ·• cou go on w1 a s 81111 L•ut · 1 41 34,.., l:! lolon +1v, ~111 s s11 .to :io mt 21~ WI of many Other forces but they 11111'1 8tll 1.50 ll S3 ~ 1' -1 f1~~~ l·:J I.I 11 ~ IO _,. II I d th Bobbit art.1 Mi :i'5'rlo ts 1111 -v. Ea11111Y1 i'olO ~ d\olo ~ .4tlli ' a wou d a d up to e same :1,"' ~.2<1 364 st\.':i n-Mo "'"' -1v. E•l!lrt "1..it 1 .011 .io1.t 111~-: ~ f t boo F . tan ol1C11 .?Jb 144 ~ "' = +nrv. lbtsco Ind 1 &3 J5¥o Sf!'. ~ ~ '• Jorech as : t m. our meds t"he' ro!.ctsees1~1.~ ~ ~\~ ~ 3 =i:z g:~i'. -~ 51 ~~ ~ .Q -~ ave no men on Rk Mntti n ' 1S"t. l!I :rs + 11. 01, 11,03 ·,, 73 sa"' 51.., D\li + 1 enormous impact of t h e::~~ .. '~~" 1~~" l'~ ~~ ~"'..!"~ 10&,.o,_.10•· 133 ~ •Vo ~" -~:1 l ti I -• h · l 9orm1nF' Ml 1x ~ :M"li 2:J ...., u1.~ . • ,u, ,.,, .,... ...,. '• revo u onary :roo ousmg aw eO!o E1111 2:°' 11 ,\..., •l"41 •Ui -~ lad ASS« ~ ~ ~ -+':! "th ••• I r 26 000 000 "Oii M9 l::p It mo 2N. 11 '"" llct$1> 1.011 !' lll'lt 2'l'l4 .... WI I~ goa 0 , , new !'lourns Inc «I ~ ~ ~ ~ Vt !otn W•!Cll ~~ 20 !Mio + 'J. housing units within 10 years. l;:"~~w ,_: ft Jrv': ~ ~ ~~ E~~'S~./D Ul :t = l:~ t'~ N h I · ed h llr1•1 Mv 11!1 4411 WV. 6111.o .W. +1 Emtt £1 1.A ~ 91'1' 9)·-"1h •.\I or ave mention t e llrll!MY ,,. 2 ,1 "v. "",(, :'4: .. E"V"EI p11.ao • " " " .. Impact of the powerful trend :W..C~'~.~ ~ ff.? ~l:: ~ .. -: 14 ~~;:.r1r.i.i0 .J. ~ ~ ~ +,: toward second houses About flwn Co .!6 " 2" 141'1 t6"o 1..,.._ + ~ j"'POl1! 1.60 1~ 3CR'o lll'i acw.t' • e.,.,,c .. pfl !ii'! 1" ,...., 2.1 ,.. m-PDr< .1s '111 3S"-is ~ '!It 1 700 000 households already Bw11 Sh1ni 1 _,. 11 M'.t. "'°' ...... ·I.\ rnfJof!nt -~ " 50 """ so ll'o ' ' . flwnShoe 1 «I l n •;, !l'h -'!Wt -1 "9t1M .60b 71 6S 62 ~ -41.-. have second homes and 300 000 Srun.w1ct · 11k1 20-14 11M 10!.4 + "' Eauir,.,. l''G 11 ~ lRto 3'M\ +•,i, ' llud<"Oh 11'0 )1 1"4 ~ ?'I~_ "' E59 Inc .20 so 31 11 27 -1 more expect to buy or build RucvEr 1.lo 120 ~v. "'" """' ~ v. ES(!ulre .:111 11 lO•J. """ ttVt -'lo By°" C~ .to IS :J3Vi 31 :b El'oe'!t W 1.20 SU 41'lt OV. A\.':i -3*lo second homes before 1970. Nor 11..od co iot 5 "'° 75\.<41 1S\AI '~"' -v. F1~v1 co .60 ''" 31/>h lSVt -»v. t ~ l'lu"° " l>f.4!1 1 Pio °""' •'llo e111r1 "12.«1 JO $:?'h 5:1 ~ * have 1 touched on the zooming 111ud•~· 1n " 61r 11"' '4'11 1"'" + "',"urofl'ld .:\')I 5lo 11>.; 1.v. 1.,.... + .,, -1 d l!.uJf Foro·· 1 n ,.,,,. :onv; 311 >' .. ·~ .urofd ln.:Mlt ! ,.,,., 1t.llt lf\'I , market for mob1 e homes an oriu1"v' IOb 61 ..,~ ·..., ,(Alo• ~ .,. F.v~n•P .60b 71 o111 <i "' + 111 the nnssible breakthrough this Run~ R8""" '-"' 11"' ·~ 1~ -t.i l:t'ti~·~.lG ,;? ~·• ~ ;i -:..i'! ,..~ Buo"lkll Pft.Jtt l• .»v. !'l'°'I 51·1'1 -~ Fielor" IOb ,, stv. s1 .... Jf'Ai -'\A9 coold bring i n the low-cost lluri ll'ld 1·411 1•1 "' ~ "' -'I F11rchc '»t 1l1 0'4 J:10Jt """'-'"" llurnOY .Ill •1 '»'"' lll.I :fl _ '4 F ! Hiii ·,, ,.1 1 l + " housing area. Nor have l sug-ju'""'"'s 1 1"" 1'(\'• 'u'• 11""" -1'4 F:1~1 .,s. l'• ;:v. :n': + ~ . . , v.t!Ul!Y ,20r 16 "' <11" " + 'ill Ftfrmnl pf l I n'h 23\IJ -v, gested the S1gnif1cance of at-utltfiSI! ·'° 3 "'' ,. ,. -~ F1111a11 . .o 111 ~t.l'I. 1tM ,~ + ,.. tractive innovations in housing -C-~~ ~.30 m 1Z ~~ :¥""' -~ hi~ Id •·-•-the ~!bot CP ·'° ll ~ «I «M _.., F1r·wtrt Pf,. n ~ ,..,.. ?Z.~ t ,,. W t;.1.1 WOU f'e-u"')'UO:: UJ>' ~I Fln•nl ~01 ),i~ ~ ~ ..... Ftrw.Mtt IO 4' ...... 1'l'n ~ ..... per-incomt buyer. c:!t":it't .:! ~ .n 3WJ nv. ;::v; ~= ;~. : r ~ ~=::: C1i,111 5eo.JP l 162 »ti> .i0'4 ~ + \lo S::ldf'te~IK U ~ r ... _., C.nSw lt v l o:i M 61)1'," 61 +11\> r=•c "" 3 E ~ + \~ WHAT DOES it mean to the ~on 11,_ ·"° " 111A1 ..., ioi. -v. P• e 1 6:S ~ _,, 011 ,.IC l -'O 1t1\ 1P'a , .. · S t f5 ltl '911 economy in general~ 011 Ptc tnJ ' Miio 6S1' 61'4 , .• F!ki" · 11w ,, 1~ l!* ?? -· C1ntl lt"l 1 20 UV. 2AI »'l ·· ro p I.to i i?: U.. ~ It means we're on our way ~:~'T'11·.,e11 ': /~ fl"' t!~ -·Vt i1t \1, 41 .:, "" _.4 -"" out of the below-nonnal an-~:~" .lo'° :: ~ ,J:", Wt +i"" Fl~"1J:.111 ~ iii. ~~ lt~ = nual totals of t 200 000 to c1ro c1.01< s im in 11 -1"" Flr.tne 1 . .so ,. u ""' ,,._ _" ' ' CaroPLI 1.:i. m Ml\ ~ " .. -11o ,i1Cf\n 1"' sn 35 ,.,,,.. Ji!" -t 300 000 nPivate non farm c1roT&T .11 •l »\'J lllVr » +"' 1111 t.t• S1r1 5' ~ ~ , ' : ,.. C•!'fll Sii IAO SI " " :JlV.-l't l'ltet\tldl ,.. I .U"4 ..... + houung starts back toward I.he c 1rr1tr C• 1 :n nv. n TN. -"' flst1trsc1 <" 1 ~ » _ • l I l nd he c •• r ""'·" 11oe ,."' ~ xv. . . "n1n11co1. "' J(llo') -'--1,&00,000-p us eve a l n C•rl'Gtfl ·'°' t 254' m.-v. F,~ olA•'-"i.u 1 ~ ~ ~ -"' to " 1"!91J0000toC•rtwrW• UfW.-1 "'1~,+.llo,,., . ., i...s _.., .... _._. on a norma , , c... Ji · m m 11..., ,, . "'' I! c ... , • ~ ,,,... w• _ •;, 2 000 000 • year record CIH pl Al.ti l' .... M\lt 2'Vt -\,\ ::: ~ ... » l!.~ '"-Im -'A , , · c1~ 1.10 114 ,.,.. 17\\ P\'J =1:t F11PwU 1:1: fl w,:; = ~i) ll means that ell other In· ,~~,,;:1 ~ L r :fa+ .... :111>w1.t '·" 9l ~\\ = """'_,"" dustries tied to housing, from ~r ,f1~t.t '1 lr" M !1 ::. ~ ~l;ol'r~;;• 1~ ;: 1. :"' +~ fW'tliture ~garden equipment, ;!~~ 1r: ~~ [ i: ! $ :~ 1rA.2sJ' '0,2 ~ rG S + ~ from appliances to carpeting, ;;:.. r;r~ .» 31 " s1 51" -"'°"''tr; ,90 122 Sh mi. ~ _ • will zoom. too. :;,;~1, .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ +'~ ~~ ~1Jirt• '' ~s 2J~ s, -,. d II of thi ol fl\ ~.;d 1,4 '° w.: "' 'J\'o -14 F-pl'l.dt ~ !• ~ t. An a s , course. ....1111L1 1.u c J"" i;, n.. ~::..,~ ~· 'fi Ji.,. ,,.. 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' .. • ... r · Sturdy Full 4-Ply Nylon ' ., •••• . .. ~n-: ~~ . • R~ar Trade-in Price '27.95 At 25% OFF You Pay Only ••. ALLSTAT E P ASSENGER TIRE GUARA NTEE TREAD LlFt:: CLAH1\i\Tt:E Gura•l<•d -~aain•I: JI II r.1huc1 of th• t1rc r<1•l11nc from ....,...,1 rood bourd1ar<1<-rora '" ......,.,.,1 ""01k........tnr-r..,. Hew Lo,.: t<n ti>< h!< ol 1br 0<1Jinal l«od 11·~ S.ot> •'Ill IM: 11.rpa" ""I P""''"'"' or 110 th"fC , 1o '"" <uc ftf h•!Ytr, •• r nh•t1,l< for •h• "'" •<1'10« 1L th"'''"" oolr '"° rr°"o"'"""' '"'""' ttplor ><lh"J rn: ~1.1:"~·~~1:.".~~·1~~·:i~~.~".'~d"~1~ ~:1.d ... 1;."J .. ,11 .,,,, •• ,1 ... 0 " "" .h .. ,. " 1 .. 1.,. "''"" """"" r,,.. '" -•h• If •h< "" J.,1, .,,., lh" r•,,od. 11 .. ,11 t.. rrpllfro'. u..,.,., otilr ..... f'<090<""" "' '"'""' .. ,~1 .. '<'ll1"J ''"' plu1 f.f,T. 1h1t t<ptu<ot> !t<od u><d TRE.\D U'E <\R-OUT Gt:.<\R.<\:\1'£1:: <...1roo1Cod "''''"''· Tt•od .,.,.,,,,., f•r ff•• Lo.,.:Th• oumbu of moo11'1 ope<ilwl. WJ.11 Soon ''itl 0.: lo ruh""'< f..,.,bc '""· ttpl-ii, dwii• do< """""' ..... i.r • .i~,,, '"" pl'11 f..dtta! . bcU. Tu lao U.C rou-;.,,. oll.,...na. •-i..o. ..... ..i. .. 1210!' ~T 10 l9 40 ~Jrot Gaud 4'11 ~1l•M r:o .,.., ~ofoM SIZE 6.50x l3 7.75xl4 8.25x14.. 6.50x 13 6.9S'i'.l.J. 7.J5xl4 i .i5x l4 8.25x l4 8.55x14 B.B5xl4 B.15xl5 B.45xl5 8.85x 'IS 9.0Ux \5 ll<1ular Tn<i•·I• 5.1.\& Pnoo ~· 6 .50xl3 Tubeless Blackwall Plus 1.81 F.E.T. and Old Tire SAL[ Trod•·•• Prk o t .L T. Tubeless Blackwall 27.95 25o/o 20.96 I.Bl 32.95 25o/o 24.71 2.19 35.95 2So/o 26.96 2.35 Tubeles1; Whitewalls 30.95 25o/e> 23.21 I.Bl 31.95 :!.'io/tJ :?3.96 1.95 JJ,IJ;) ::!S(l/o 25.46 2.06 :i j , 1)5 2:io/o 26.96 2.19 38.95 2SC/o 29.2 1 2.35 41.95 25o/o 31.46 2.56 44.95 25% 33.71 2.85 38.95 25% 29.21 2.36 41.95 25o/o 31.46 2.54 44.95 25o/o 33.7 1 2.76 4i.9.'i ::!.)l/f, 35.96 2.81 LONG· LIFE INCT .11Dt~ 1·R1:r. EXPERT I ~ST A LLATION Cto.1o1t ln for rRtF.l111tcry Tt tt 11 ~~In .•. No Obli.1tito11 • , • l>nn'1 Ri1k 1'1t1ery f'1HuN1 ! Batteries Fit 9()% of All 12-Volt Systems SAVE'5! Guaranteed 36 Months R-lar Trade-in Pri .. $Wl.99 99 · No,. 36-111· 63·21-3i With Trade·ln IAVE •6! Guaranteed 42 Months Ask For A FREE Muffler Safety Check 88 Eac h INSTALLE D Fit These Cars: '54-"64 Chevy ·64-"67 Chev. Jr, Chevelle "b().'66 Dodge. Dart, \'aliant '62.'65 Plymouth '60-'63 Falcon, Comet '60-"6..) Ford, Mft'O. · ~61-'M Pontiae 12 BI G REASO NS "1HY SEARS BRAK E R ELI NES ARE BETTER! Y' ln11pti:I i\11,,ter (.~li nd er Y' Bnnrlf'ri Linin,t:! ln~talled on 4 \\ herl~ Y' Rebuild All ~'heel trl· in dcr! >'.\re Grind Brake Shoe• 11' Rf'~urface All 4 Brake Orum~ Jill' Jro~r"t'l 8 r1tkf' Ho,t-s Y' I n~pecl and Adju~t P•rk• ing Brakl's Jill' lrupect Grease Se•l11 >' Bl eerl All Li ne11 and Add Fluirl >'Re pack l'ront ''heel 81'arin~ Jill' Road Tetil for Brake Re- liabili1,· Y' Fr"e A.dju11tmf':nl fm" Life nr l.ininu All 4 Wheel• Only 281!.~ . .* '"' Y-o._..enC.,. "Chrv1!i:"r produc11 h1~1ng (J •hM'I cylin<h~ i nd c1rs wirh dt...c bTUe, Jlit tuly ll 11llrr Any 11~c1$&1'y .&d irioNll ptm ind W,.,, 191ftftllt It !nn low. low prier : Santa Ana 1717 S. Main SL JO 7-3371 Briltol at SunJlowtt in South Cout Plua 54&-3353 Tustin at Meatt Orange County ' .,, • • • -Newport Harbor Today's · Closing DAILY PILOT _ EDITION N.Y. Stocks VOl. 6f, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA :THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, "1968 TEN CENTS • rv1ne End Not • Ill Sight No Peace Breakthrougli, Says LBJ \VASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson said today there has been no basic change and no breakthrough in peace negotiations to end the Vietnam war during the last eight days. He told a news conference that a White House statement to this effect issued Oct. 16 was still accurate. That statement - issued after a Ourry Of reports circulated about the possibility of a total bombing halt by the United States -said there The Onassises was "no basic change in the situation; no breakthrough." Al the same time. Johnson warned to- day against any "false sense of security" because of lower war casualties and re- cent prisoner exchanges. On the other hand, Johnson said his ad- ministration has been "w9rking very hard and very diligently" to open the way for peace and said that he felt his decision to open talb with the North Vietnamese in Paris was the right thing to do. "I'm more pleased with It as Ume goes by," the President commented. Johnson refused to divulge anything specific on the recent diplomatic efforts to end the Paris stalemate. He would not say whether there had been a reply from North Vietnam or even whether be had made a new package peace proposal to Hanoi. UCI Holds Great Stake Thank Cushing I p · · 3 B d n roposition on For Support ATHENS (UPI) -AristoUe and Jae· queline On3ssis have telephoned Boston's Cardinal Richard James CUshing, ap- parently to thank him for defending their marriage despite Vatican frowns . Onassis revealed the transaUantic call today. ·'Cardinal Cushing is ~1rs. Onassis' best spiritual friend . Yesterday we called him on the phone,'' said Onusi1 Viho in- terrupted his four-day-0ld honeymoon. left his bride on his $3 million yacht and flew here this morning on big business. ; Onassis did not say what was discussed in the telephone call between the yacht Christina and the Roman Catholic church Cardinal in Boston. It was assumed they thanked Cushing for denouncing as "nonsense" religious criticism of the wedding and defending the match he said he enCTJuraged . Onassis, a 62·year-0ld multimillionaire, told nev.'smen he and the 3g..year.ald bride, widow of the late President John F. Kennedy, were "very happy." At the ministry of coordination, where Onassis came for talks on his reported $360 million refinery and aluminum development project for his native land, fi.1lnister Nickolas Makarezos shook the bridegroom's hands and said, "you got the girl." Onassis smiled. "You were not much competition, you 1narried man," Onassis said jokingly. Jn Boston, Cushing Tuesday night said political and personal friends of the Ken· nedy family had co ntacted him about trying to stop the wedding. The cardinal said that instead he aided Mrs. Kennedy in the match with Onassis. Longmoor Given Ribbing -And Standing Ovation ... Waller ?..I. Loogmoor got his just desserts last night -a broken baseball bat, a hokey quartet singing aome ter· rible doggerel and a standing ovation for 20 years service to Orange Coast Junior College District. Longmoor retired at l h e end of the summer after 20 years on the board of truste~. He was honored last night by approximately US college and city of· ficials and friends. It was an evening that .leaned heavily on the light side. Longmoor for 20 years \11as probably OC:C's greatest baseball rooter, and decorations a n d err tertainmenl renected it. Golden West College gave him a broken bat, mounled on a walnut plaque, symbolic ol his retirement. Golden West students al8o gav.t him a baseball warmup jacket and a Wet.lme student body m<mbership. OCC students also gave hlm a student bo«{y pass and a maroon blaw with the college crest. He received a trophy with the names of all the OCC baseball cap- tains for !he past 20 years. pmcntcd l1y former OCC player Ken Moals, of lfun-. Unaton ll<ach Iii&~· The dogerel was sung by OCC Preli· dent Robert Moore, Frtd Owens, Golden West athletic director, aod Walter Gleckler and Paul Cox, of the OCC Mu&le Ii"" LONGMOOll, hJ• I) " t By THOMAS FORTUNE Of ftlt b11Jy Piiot Iliff No campus anywhere in the state has a greater stake in passage of the statewide education bond issue, Proposition 3, than UC Irvine. The young UCI campus stands to get nearly $1 in every $10 for construcUon of medica1 CTJllege facilities and acitnce buildings. Of the $250 million to be allocab!d -statewide, UCI WoUld cet $20.5 million. -~·~M~J>ond issue wOURrtitoviife $~ ·huilding on University of California campuses, $100 million for building on State College cam- puses.. and $50 million for restoring deteriorated public schools in urban areas. UCI Oiancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. said the Irvirie campus needs the bond money to keep construction on schedule for growing enrollments and lo train needed scientists Md medical' doctors. Shotild Proposition 3 pass, the Irvine OLY1l1PICS: BLACK REPORTER'S VIEW DAILY PILOT Sports Editor Glenn While steps as.ide in Mexico City today to allow F r e d Sb.Jrnip, a black reporter from the Bahamas, to comment on racial events which threaten to overshadow sporting events at the 19th Olympiad. In addition to the guest column on Page 21 today, White's on·scene coverage in- cludes a rundown on the tough com· petition Corona del Mar's Madam But· terfly, Toni Hewitt, races tonight as the 17·year.ald swimmer goes for the gold in the 20().meler butterfly event. It's not going to be an easy win -for anyone. campus will get even more than the $21).S million. Added lo it would be $17.2 million in federal matching funds and $11.1 million in state pay·as--you·go money. Total building funds available to the cam4 pus over the next two years would be $48.9 million: In addition to the medical school, which would rece.ive ·tbe largest share,~ would be !pent on a se.cond bio\Oi,icat sciences bull~, a second_ yb)'~ca1 ~--···~ .. ...., .. biomedJcal library, and a comblned academic and administration buUcling. Other fands for Orange County would provi,:le a school of education building at Cal State Fullerton and restori.tibn of pre·IM3 school buildings in Sallta Ana, Anaheim, Garden Grove an.d Fullerton. The state citizens committee in favor of the bond issue says that the average cost per person per year during the 2s- year life of· the bOnds would ~ about 50 cents. Proponents argue that construction costs are rising at a rate of five percent annually while bond money currenUy is available at 4'4 percent interest, so delay would be cosUy. The opposition argument is that lhe $6 billion bonded indebtedness of the state, including $1.5 billion in authorized but unsold bonds, bas saturated the bond market and new bonds could not be sold now. The counter argument is that unsold bonds already have been CTJmmitted buL have not been sold yet because it is state policy not to sell bonds until payment is due contractors for actual CTJnstruction costs. In other words, approval of another bond issue is needed to keep moving forward with education construction, (See PROP. 3, Page .Zl 'IT WAS FUN AND WORTH ALL THE EFFORT' OCC'1 Lonvmoor and Wf• P.u .. Aft1r Testlmoni•I ---~---------- MURDER SUSPECT Ltv11ter Cotty a wa Delivers .Mason Withdrawal ' Note The Upper Newport Bay land swap is off. C. M. Featherly, chairman or the Orange County Board of Supervisors, to- day confirmed lo the DAILY PILOT that the Irvine Company has withdrawn from the long-discussed land trade proposal in Upper Newport Bay. · Featherly said he received news of the w i t h d r a W a l of a letter delivered personally by Irvtne Company president \Villiam Mason. While reluctant to discuss the issue, Featherly confirmed that the letter was "a formal announcement of Irvine's withdrawal from any further discussion of a larid trade between us." The other four members of the Board of Supervisors are attending a three-day seminar at Jdyllwlld in Riverside County, and Featherly said he fell further discussion of the issue should await their return. "There's not much that we can do about it," the veteran supervisor added. "But we should at least discuss Mr. Mason's letter among ourselves." Irvine Company's withdrawal from the beleaguered Back Bay trade was later confirmed by public relations director William Aldrich. "I can't reveal contenta of the letter," Aldrich sa1d. "But I can say that it ends Irvine 's interest in the deal." Supervisors took t h e hotly debated issue "off calendar" Wednesday. They privately CTJnceded after t h e meeting that "off calendar" might well mean the permanent shelving of the Upper B a y plan. . ~1ason's action presumably ends: the possibility or a trade which was first sug· gested. Featherly today recalled, "some 18 years ago." The supervisors had p re v I o u s I y unanimously supported the complicated exchange of lands, publicly declaring that it would be in the ·public interest and would result in a strong advantage to the county -bolh financially and for park developments in the Upper Bay. The State Lands Commission approv· ed the land exchange in mld·1967. But legal complications set in. And the Irvine Company .:-. stalled in getting the (Stt BACK BAY, Page%) Mayor: 'It's a Shame'; * .. Cites ,Los.s of Par'ks Against Suspect A murder complaint against a Fullerton man was sought today, after a randorrl angle blO!SOmed into a major break Wednesday in the ambush ·slaying of a Costa Mesa cocktail waitress seven days ago. Levester A. Coley Jr., 29, was booked into Costa Mesa City Jail about noon Wednesday on suspicion of shooting Mrs. Rose Marie Weidner to death after !fing in wait for the victim. Detective Arnold Appleman was check· ing a list of 18 emergency hospitals in Orange County, where someone could be treated for a gunshot wound, when Col· ey 's name turned up Tuesday night. A trail o[ blood led away from the spot where M"s. Weidner fell, fatally wound- ed, after apparently grappling with her attacker at the Acapulco Apartments, 740 E. 18th St., in a fight against death. Whoever killed her may have injured himself in the act. Coley, a U.S. Post Office employe, was arrested at hi s apartment. whjch is right around the corner from the Orangefair restaurant in Fullerton, where the victim had been employed only three weeks. Cle has made no statement and im- mediately upon arrest put in a call to one of Oral)ge County's best known criminal defense attorneys, Matthew Kurillch Jr., of Fullerton. A Ught veil of secrecy 8UITOUnds much of the evidence to be used against Coley, who was In custody of Fullerton poµce for a time before being released as an ac· cidental shootlng victim. Recorda showed Coley was treated at Mart.in Luther Hospital in Anaheim last Thursday morning for a gunshot wound in the left hand and supervisors notified police, as required by law. Coley -hls left cheek marred by a flngemail·llke scratch when photograph- ed Wednesday -told investJgators be had accidentally shot himseU. "His verslor: <¥BS that he waa dry-firing in the be.lief It was unloaded and it went off," said Capt. C. D. Davis, chief of lhc Fullerton police investigation bureau. "I don't have the actual report in front or me," said Cept. Dnvis. "I really couldn't tell you what time it was.'' Since the savage ilayiog, widespread publicity has been 1t1ven to the trail.a!· (8« MURDER, Paae %) Keep the Money, But Return Clip Koep the money. Juot ctve him bact the monet clip. ThaL would doubtlta pie.,. Jtck L. Sm!Lh, U, of 315 WalnuL Place. Newport Beach. A lhlef entered his bedrool!I Wednesday nlghL and nabbed his money clip and 1$. • Th< e 11 p wu a gold C>lnhlll worth $160, Smith Loki J>Oll"". · He said he· h•d left the money clip on his bedroom' Labic alid lefL Lhe r<>om f.oi- 10 rrifnutes. W11en he ~me btc.k, t.h_e'clJp. wg five one-dollar bl~, was gont:. ' ,. By JEROME F. COLLINS Of tilt Dlllr l"llot Sl1fl "It is a great shame." Newport Beach Mayor D o r e e n ~larshall thus reacted to reports I day that the Irvine Company had given up ef· forts to exchange Upper Newport Bay tidelands property with Orange County. "This ls a loss to the public," she said, noting that the trade -five years in the legislative mill -included plans for "substantial park land." The city, the county and Irvine Officials had negotiated an agreement that was lO provide these public park sites : -A 16Q.acre county regional park at the northerly encl of the bay, to be. developed in conjunction with a marine stadium and rowing course. -A neighborhood park and marina on the west side of the bay at the foot of 23rd Street. -A neighborhood park and beach al the mouth of Big Canyon on the east 1ide of the bay. The city was to have control of the neighborhood park sites. · Mrs. Marshall s a I d the transadlOl'I, which called for the exchange of 157 acres of county-held tidelands for 450 acres of lrvlne-0wned tidelands and uplands, "would certainly have benefited the Irvine Company." "There is no doubt about that," she said. "But it would also have benefited the CTJunty, the city and the atate. What many people overlook i! that most of the Back Bay shoreline is privately held. The trade would have opened up public access (Su MAYOR, Page%) Irvine Decision Quashes • Many Long-held Dreams By THOMAS MURPHINE Of t11t billy Piiot lllff Irvine Company action today in withdrawing from the long.debated Upper Newport Bay tidelands exchange appears at present to have quashed the dreams of "Mr. Newport Har,l>or," ranch executives and many Orang~ County and Newport Beach planners. Plans for convertlng the boggy Back Bay into a multi·million dollar "second harbor" with recreational be.aches was ftr!l 'envisioned by former city engineer R. L. "Pat" Pattcraon more than two decade! ago. Palt.erson was Mown as "Mr. Newport Harbor" for his work in the 1930s in pass· ing 1 bond Issue and setting up develop- ment of the present Newp(frt Harbor. When William Mason first joined the Irvine Company as engineer in the early 1960s. he picked up from P11tterson's ear· Jy work and began to develop a land ex· change plan that would set the stage for • development. The basic problem that has stymlcd Upper Bay development all these years has beeo the spUt In ownership. Ttle public owns the tidelands. which means generally 111 the water area and lhe shoreline which Is washed by the ebb and now of bay Udal action. Elieept for the 1-.tyle Back Bay &ad cirel\111,lhc euLerljl edBe ol lhc boy below the blufl•. all the uplands beloni to lhe lrvlne .Comi><J11. . ' So do Lhree Lldal ill!ndo altualed U. the middle ol Upper ea,, llatbor tnglnttrlng ei<pCN have l"'I ltioLllled lhal Lbo Lhree NEW' YORK (AP) -Th< stock markcL l::MUnued lower In heavy trldlng l•t.e this aflernoon amid dl&appolnlmenl over ap- parent lack of ~ In Vietnam r." moves. (See quot1Uons1 Paies 1•1t • -• . . islands impede proper nushing action of Upper Bay. At the extremity of Bact Bay, there are the ne'ver·never parcels known as the patent lands. On tills property, both the CTJunty of Orange (in the name of lhe public) and the Irvine Company claim legal rights, Both claim they can legally use these properties for recreaUon.al purposes. As Mason, working with county harbor chief Kenneth Sampson, developed tb1 land swap proposal, the Irvine Compef would give up rights to certain of its tSee D:REAMS, P1ge .Z) Orange Coaac Weather Old Sol breaks through the fog Friday lo warm the coast 11p with 80-degree temperatures, while in· land regions perspire near the 100 mark. INSIDE '.l'ODAV A ring 10 b4g uoai couldn't dial a. U:llp~ with it uw among_., th• ;t111ell Mr1. 0"'1iri1 reccioitd tr.om h<r h"'bcmd cmd .It toolft't eotn the choi.ct1t pft:ce. Page 6. ' I I ' •• • : • • ' ' • ·J DAllY PllOT From Pqe l BACK BAY ... tr1111S1Clion pushed throult -made It c!Mr IMI lt wu.,.,.... Uted.al ~ a blr tu 1old a!lll he•YJ dtfttopmenl cos\S on property enmeshed in legal '<omplicallons . • Bui tht Boml of Supervillon &aid )'Httrday that It saw no wa:y oul of the tuaUon bllMI. Members said they ·eouldn't 10 alOll( wllb I proposal lhlt rdlef bt granttd during lbe period that :tbe proposal WU tied up in court. J The trade would have involved Irvine "laking over the deeds for 11 parcels - raboul 157 acres -of county--0wned "tidelln&: 1n exchlnie for 450 lcrtl of. Irvine teJTlin. Tbe swltchin& of deeds would, proponenta of the deal said, remove the heavily taxed Irvine lal'.ld from the tu roles until a cpurt decision ls obtained on the land swap proposa1 ,. believed t.o ~ ,as much II three more yean away. Propcnents of lbe suggested deal have pointed out that the transfer w o u I d enable the county to develop a regional park in the area. It would permit the Irvine Company, they argue._ to use. rebuilt Udelandl for marine type develop.a ments. • DAILY PILOT"'-" '°Y L" PIYM -.. . . •. 2nd Ca1npus Arrest Coast Student ·~-. Fac~s Drug Rap · "A 15-year-old Newport Harbor lllgh School student was arrested· Wednesday on dangeroua drug charges at lbe high school campus, 'Ille boy was reported in Juvenile Hall today. The Costa Mesa boy was: booked by Newport Beach police at 2:15 p.m. (or alleged violatJon of Section 11912 or the State Health and Safety Code prohibiting transport, sale or manufacture of restricted dangerous d r u gs by wiautborized persons. Police said the youth had been observ· ed under the influence ot Seconal on the campu.s by the stud~nts and school authorities. Police said the boy told them be had of- fered lo 8'll the barbitual< tsbiets lo hls classmatet. - n w1t lbe 6e<.-ohd dlu( .,...;t In the last two "lfeeka: on a Newport bigh ecbool ctmpus. · · ~ · - On <Jc!. II, pollce llTtsted I IS.year.old girl at Corona de! Mar Hlgb School. T!iey were called by echool authorities ·Who observed the student stagg!r1ng a1xlut the campus. The girl told police that sbe had taken Seconal tablets. ;officers charged her with beina: under the influence of the drug and t~ed her over to county juvenile authorities. Seconal lablets are commonly 'called ''Reds" by students. Officers say they in- duce a "floating nowbere" feelln&. . Corona del Mar Favors And it has been further argued that the -deal wouJd enable the county and Irvine to perform necemry dre<lglng In Upper Newport B 1 y under a single contract with a uposa1ble uvln& of tl million to each party." Oppo1itlon came to a head in recent days w h e n County Assessor An- drew J. Hlnlhay condemned the deed ex-~· u "legally Improper" and based on ' grou mlutatements of probable assessed valuei.11 CHICHI RODRIGUIZ DISPLAYS 'HAT TRICK' AFTER DROPPING PUTT Puerto Rican Pro One of Early Leaders In $120,000 H1lg Tournament Revised Parking Rules At the. urging of ex.City Councilman Dee COok, the Corona de! Mar Chamber of Commerce Is on record today favoring revJ11ion11 in a proposed commercial park- ing ordinance. have such requirements: The older business areas: of Newport, auch as Corona del Mar along the highway, would be affected by the proposal. From Pare l MAYOR ... to the bay and would have provided a meana for dredglni it as a harbor." She aald lbe City Council would In all likelihood dlscuu Irvine P r e s Id e n t William Mason.11 acUon Monday ... I'd like to eee if there la some way we can get this back on the right track. There must ,·be eome way we can urge supervlsora to Jook into waye and means to accompllsb -it." Ff'om Page l DREAMS ..• shoreline for public parka. In tum, the ranch company wou1a be given water access to the remainder of its holdings. Dredging of the water\l(_ay was seen ·as · 1 key to the development in order to assure a navigable waterway £or plea1ure boa Ung. over the years, however, the complex tidal exchange crept into the arena of · polltk1 and vocal opposition mounted. Today, the question of how the Upper • Bay will be developed seems u far away :u ever. From Page l MURDER blood angle and theories of a wounded -slayer, but Fullerton police apparently , never connected the two incidents. Capt. Davia and other spokesmen con- -tacted after Coley's arrest bf Detective ·;"'Appleman .and District Attorney 's : Investigator Eddie Banks did not seem eager to talk. Flag •Tabled~ Banner Used as Cloth Seized An American Flag tacked down as a tablecloth and topped with a serene im· age of the Asian god Buddha was con- flacated early Wednesday at a Costa Me- 1a apartment 1hared by two girlJ and three men. The banner -which had ashea of some sort scattered over it -was given to the Costa Mesa police investlgaUon bureau to determine whether a complaint would be sought. Defiling the Ameri can Flag is a viola- tion of the Military and Veterans Code and Harbor Area judges have been hand· ing down some stiff sentences upon several recent conviclions. Officer Dave Dye was 1ent to the 2400 block of Santa Ana Avenue shorUy after midnight in re1ponae to a dl11turbance report and contacted a 24--year-old man. He said the man apologized for nol1e he had app8renUy cauaed while routinely aetUng out hi.a trub carui for momlng pickup. Dye aaJd he wu invited lnslde the com- munal apartment to aee for hhnee1f that there was no disturbance gQlng on and it wu then that he 1wtted t}:le flag. The patrolman safd lbe Individual with whom he spoke denled knowledge of the apparent Military and Veterans Code violation. Two girls 19 and 21 and two other men, 18 and 19, live in the apartment and share the rent equally, the eldest householder told Officer Dye. ·Humphrey in Southland Seeking Minority Vote LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hubert Humphrt!y'a week·long quest for votes among religious and ethnic minorities took on new urgency In California today where 40 electoral votes were at stake and where his presidential bid may stand or fall. Humphrey was hopeful and en- couraged. He could count success in his first two outings here, one in the Negrc ghetto of Watts and the other in an East Los Angeles area heavily populated by Mex1can-Amerlcans. Callfonrla presented a new set of prD- blems. But the. Humphrey camapign organization thought the same solution might solve them -heavy electloneerlna: among Mexican-Americans and black1. Humphrey'a first act when he landed on California soil was to go to Watte. To- day he began his first full day of his cur- rent California swing with an appearance before 60 interfaith ministers at St. Paul's Episcopal Church. With California possessing some of the country's most militant and vocal doves, Humphrey pitched his appeal to "the preachers on the issue ol peace," he said .Jn prepared remarks: , "l have come to talk with you about the ·paramount concern of all our people- Beman Blisters 64, Leads First Round in Haig Dean Beman, a 30-year -old sharpshooter from Bethesda, Md., gave Mesa Verde's gold course a sound beating today by shooting a blistering 64 in the first round of the Haig National Tournament. At noon, it appeared he would be the first-day le11:der, although Chichi Rodri· guez was also six under par at the 13th hole. Ron Reil, tournament director and head pro at Costa Mesa Country Club, finished four under with a 87. Beman, In tying his all-time one-round record, putted just 19 Ume1. Dudley Wysong wa1 five under at the 15th hole and Auatriallan B r u c e Crampton was four down at No, 14. At three under were BW Collins, Laurie Hammer, Babe Hbkey, Howle Johnson and Rell. . · Wind cond\Uons were m 'I n I m a 1 ~µt 11!•,}llornlng ac~on. Tfie par·3, !OS=-Yard 'l~th'Jio!e Wa&'blu11. Ing the pros fits all mornlng. The threesome of Mark Schmldt 'of Santa Ana, John Ruedi and Jlm Walker all put their tee shots within seven feet of the pin, but all three tw~putted. Billy Casper waa not listed among the noon leader1, midway through hil l'OWld. Mortgage Rates Stop Climbing WASHING TON (AP) -Mortgage rates stopped climbing In September, the Federal Home Loan Board said today, after a year of almost nonstop increaaes. The average convenUonaJ mortgage loan on a new home during September was at 7 .09 percent interest, compared with 7.10 percent in August. Loans on ex- bUng homes were unchanged at 7.12 per· cent. Chamber dlrector11 at the Planning Commlulon's Nov. 7 meeting will fonnerly request that the law not be ap- plied to remodel structures or those rebuilt after a fire, explosion or other disaster. As written, t h e arctinance would re- quire builders to provide parking spaces in commerclaI dlstrlcta that do not now Coast Children Ring Doorbells To Aid UNICEF A horse raced in Ireland for UNICEF, students at Yale gave up a meal for UNICEF, a Utile .Norwegian girl stood on her head for UNICEF and Sunday more than zoo Harbor Area youngsters will begin lo give up their Halloween treats for UNICEF. Sponsored by the Coastline Chapter of the United·-Natlona Astoeiation, bays and girls averaging junior high school 8.ge will ring door bells throughout the area asking tor pennies, nickels and dimes to give aid to children all over the world. The youths will move through residen- tial areas Sunday and the following Th~day, Halloween day -proclaimed National UNICEF Day by President Johnson. In order to obtain the funds, the youngstets must carry information cards containing the name, purpose, need and activity of the organization in addition to the child 's signature. Licenses have been obtained from both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Donations from the "Trick or Treat for UNICEF" drive will be forwarded to the United Nations in New York where they will be distributed to needy children throughout the world. Last year, nearly $3 million was collected across the na- tion. U the Corona del Mar chamber request 11 approved, the law would only to new buildings. . Cook said if It ls also applied to re- modeled or rebullt structurea, It would discourage property Improvements. The chamber atso reaffirmed ii.I op- position lo an "in lieu" payment pr~ vision of the crdinance, which planners already have Indicated will be dropped. No New Airport If Prop. 9 OK'd, Mullan Predicts Passage of the Watson Amendment, Propoaitlon 9 on the Nov. 5 Qallot. could result in the further development and ex- pansion of Orange County Airport. Thia waa the predlcUon of Jack Mullan, chairman .of th Newport Beach Air Traf· lie Adriaory · Committee aod former president or the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Bo8:rd of Realtors. Calling the Watson Amendment a "tax trap," Mullan said that should it pas&, the Orange County Board of Supervilora would have no altemaUve but to lncrtue existing airport facilities rather than build new ones. "I base my opinion of the fact that there will be no alternative financing available through bonding activities to develop a new regional airport away from the Newport Beach area if Pro- position 9 pa.&8es," he said. "It is a poorly conceived and poorly written piece of legislation that would create havoc with the orderly develop-. ment of the state's economy and itl real estate business," Mullan said. M a former regional vice preident of the California Real Estate Association, Mullan urged his fellow reaJtors to take an aggressive stand against ProposJtlon 9. · Costa Mesa Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow refuses to uy whether a gun was found ln the apartment at 915 W. _ Orangelhorpe Ave., which Coley shared ~with a roommate. Humphrey told a street c r o w d estimated at 2,500 .In Watts that Richard Nixon talked of laW and order, but a dif· ferent kind Of law and order than the peo-. pie wanted. - "Every American, black or white, young or old, is entitled to the full pro- tection of the law and to equal rights, to equal enforcement nf the law, and to equal opportunity under the law. our llesire for peace." jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====================================-=;;., "We must end the war in Vietnam," he said. But he would go no further on that war than his previQus pronouncements on stopping the bombing. Instead, he turned to arms control . :: The exact caliber of the four 1lugs t which killed Mrs. Weidner as she walked ~ to the apartment she shared with .· Richard Surface,· 28, is also being , withheld, pending pr~tion . , Surface was cleared almost Im· • mediately as a suspect in the grisly kill· :· ing, with Mn. Weidner's hUJband James, · 28, of El Monte, ellmlnated only hours liter by 1 polygraph l<st. DAILY PILOT 04!:.ANO& COAIT f'UILllH1HO COMPAHY l•Mrt N. w,,, Pm*tlt tlld l"IAlllJNI' J1ci l. C..rlty Viet P'ttt1dMI Mii Otrltfet MINMr Thi""•' k11•il El!IW Th•Mll A. Mvrpt.i~• MtMt!l'lt EoJllor J'''"'' F. C.1111111 r1vl Ni11111 ~ ..... ~•i.r. Clrt ldllor Dl ... ~t ---2211 w ... l11lt•• 1.111 ••• ,4 M1lll111 M4r•Ht r.O. t1x IS71, t2&•l --C•M ~; la W.•t ..., lttttt L...-llldl1 m ,_. ..,_ ~ IMdl: at Mii llfffl ·- "Now that's law and order," Humphrey shouted, and the black crowd roared back its approval. Humphrey also ticked off a list of pro- rnises he said bls admln1stratlon would make to all the people, black and' white and medical CIU'i!, a better life. and med.teal care, a better Ulfe. "Yeah, but how long will we have to wait?" a voice from the darkness yelled. "Get me elected and It wUI lltart right away. I've been working for you for a quarter of a century," Humphrey yelled back. It was lhe only interruption in a half- hour oration. He dff:w 7 ,500 Mex1can-Amertcans to a shopping center rally. He promised to legaliie farm unions, big issue in this ag:rlcuJture state which depend11 heavily on casual labor. Humphrey • new lo California Wed- nesday night from Texas where he was credited with a "political miracle'' in patching together a coalition o( con· servaUve and liberal Democrats:. It was allll a que1tlon whether the patchwork could produce a majority to give hlm that stat.e'a 2$ electoraJ votes. But if airport crowd enthusiasm was any barometer, and if state polls were reliable, Humphrey had reason for hope. Ff'om Page 1 PROP. 3 ... ...,.,..., '"'"°'· ................... ::;•:::.,:..-:::'::' .:a'l'.:"'..!: even I.hough the bond11 would not be sold :.Ji.•,..= vC: ="'•= unill later. ...... • • ....-.. .,.,...., -.... c-tt The bond measure wu placed on the :r.= .=---.."":~,:.:.: Nov. S ballot by the Legisl&turc with Gov. • ..., ..,. ..,.., c-11 ..._ Reagan's consent. It has endorttm~nt of •:11;.P tn•t MMJJt top luden ln both political parties and of aAlll Al 1 tttsa 641-1611 the ttatewide PTA. ~ ,..., or.. <.MM ,........,,. The -"et ~. "' .... ...... 1.-..1nw. o,;u.1 source or oppo1IUon ls t X· -"' ..,. • llf••• ... •111• IW'lilll pected to be those who would ...... i.h the ..,. .. ... . ' ....... ..wt ,... .,... .... ~.,...,... _._ unJveratt) for such•• Eldrid1e Cleaver'• ..... .._~......,.... appu.rancea or the state colle~ system = .. c.. -....,. ..., ... •.:J.::i..: fer 1allowt.n, autb u the p y "The .... ----~ .......... " ..... ---o--'~·· - • "We must stop the deadly race in strategic arms before it halts humariUy, ·• Humphrey said. Ff'om Page 1 LONGMOOR. •• Department. At the end of the evening, Longmoor told the · group, "l'm so overwhelmed I can't make a speech. I've had it." He then made a short speech. "A lot has been said about the hard. work I did," Longrnoor said. "lt hasn't been hard, jt's been f u n. For most peo- ple, it only takes two years .~ .graduate trom .OOC. n took me 20.'~ • Dr. Norman )!). W•~ •. district superintendent, presented Longmoor with a cerilftcat.e .of appreciation from the board. "Wi ller is one or the most dedicated individuals we've ever had," Watson said. "His enthusiasm never waned. Tonight we art afl Walter Loilgnioor fans ." Tape Eqtiipm;ent Taken by Thieves Stereo tape equipment WU the target of two more car bur&lariea in Newport Beach Wednesday night More than 1 dozen such Ulefte bl ve occurred In Newport in the put two weeks . Duane Fair, 21, of 503 Fullerton SI., told police. aomeone cut the rear window of hl11 convertible and r~ tI70 In llereo equipment and tapes. He &aid lhe car wu parked in front of. his house. Bernand• t;erw>IJ, 31, lold olllcer• llO wwlh ol lllueo tapes were llolen from hll car. U wu parted In 1 well·l!ihted parklll( Joi. Tbe Ihle! 1111ubed lhr<t'&b the beet window. (. At JJ.J. (Jarrell .. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ON THESE TOP OUR SPECIAL OFFER QUALITY SOFAS YOUR CHOICE OF 4 SOFA STYLES Wlde choice of fabrics & colors AT 72 to 100" ,, .. LAWSON S PT. LOVE SEATS 249 H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNf111RE ,ROFESSIONA• INTERIOR Dffl&NllU I °'"" --• "'· ..... llll HARBOR llVO • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646'-0~71 64f>.OZ76 I ----·. ---· PP#FFPWP -•PP pp ... ,.... p .... -r -. DAllV PlLDT JI Nov. . ' . s ··Could ' . Mean GOP ·Take'6ver at Legislature Editor'• Notti Wllfl Olll't 1Utllt ~I;,., CtllfOl'llll't t1a11 l"lllll'u tt COUid to A-.t!llOln 11'1 ttlt How, $ ttntl'al flKtlan, The! CllUld !'MUii 11'1 f """' ..... k•r llf the AIMmbl'I' r#llCllll JIU M. Unruh. Hcrw ,,.. tr\f ctn(ldalff UmtMlltnlnl? seat• nteded to win control. The Republlcanl controlled. the Iea:lslature (or the tut time in 11156 but lost their Oda• 1n tbe, 1958 Brown landslide. ~However, the caucus to hold their majoriLy, see··------------------~'--------------------- cbalrmen of both P&rU-. In their mO<t likely &•In In the the Assembly could have cl""' San Jooe aeat MW held by By TRACY WOOD SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Ropubllcan hopes for winning control of the state leglllature for the first time ln a decade art1 pinned to the coattalla of preaidenUal nominee RiCbard M. Nixon. A ctrimatlc sweep by the former vice pmldent In b1a borne otate could break a 20-20 party deadlock In the State senate and reverse 1the C-38 Democratic majority in the Assembly. The pollUcal future o f Assembly Speike!"',,i.. M. Unruh could be t1'li ~ the results. U. Republicans win Pie lower house. they also win the speakersh!p -and Unruh'1 out. Gov. Ronald Reagan hu ap- parently prevented any all-out fight among Republlcana for the Assembly leadershlp by tapping Assemblyman Robert T. Monagan, (f\.Tracy) for the put four yean minority leader. But the Senate plctun ls muddled. Senate Leader Hugh M. Burns of Fresno, a Democrat, bu announced he supports Republican Nixon for president. It may save hi! post aa President Pro Tempore of the Senate ·11 l!opublcana win control In that houae In 1966, Reagan's million vote landallde over two-term Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown helped the GOP boost il.l!I vote power In the A.s~bly from 31 to 38. GOP leaders hope for a r<pe.1.~ that Will i!Ve them llie 'three A Republican "Cal-Plan'1 called for the GOP to regain C<llllrol of the Aalemb!y by 1970 In Ume to control the 10.. year reapportlorunent but the 1961 election put them ahead of achedule. There are 209 candidates aeeklng the 80 Aaaemb!y ... ta. The hopefuls Include 36 from Geora:e Wallace's American Independent Party and 16 Peace and Freedom Patty contenders. The 20 i;etiate aea11 up IOI' election have attracted M ~ dldaltl Including 10 AIP and I PF'~ members. Monagan estimated there are 10 to 15 Aastmbly seats now held by Democrats which Republicans have a chance of taking. He does not expect GOP viv· tories ln all of them -five would be enough to C<Jm· fortably reverse the Democratic majority. All of the top leaders of both the Senate and Assembly virtually are assured of re- el~tion. Unruh, in a district with 67 percent democratic regi!tra· tion, ls heavily favored to defeat Dr. Gerald S. Veregge, bi! ~publcan opponent. Monagan's district Is only 40 perctnt Republican, but he 11 upocled. to win eaal!y. He ls opposed bY Steve Pereira, a Sockton hlztory and Ellgllsb teacher. · ~~ And SenaW Jl.<e1> u• b 11 c a n Leader Donald I. Grunsky of Wataonville ii not opposed for re-election. racea. IWPu~Dean Earl Cl'andall. ·Democrat Wln(leld • Jlut they retain a a1qtr Shoemaker of Lompoc la op-bop6 to win ... la held by poaed by Santa B a r b a r a R e p u bllcan Aasemb1ym_. r,tayor D o n MacGUUvray. Kent Stacey of Bakersfield, Regiatration t1gures ;11 v e Ernest Mobley ol Sanger, Democrata oal7 two percent WUUam Campbell of Hacienda edge In, the district Hellbta· and MuUord. Republican caucaa chalnnan Three A s s em b I y me ft , Don Mulf0<d of Pledmool la SjOwart 'Ht n c kl e 1 ;· (f\. challenged by Kenneth Meade, Red!anda), CharlM Meyera, an Oakland lawyer. In that (D-San Franctaco), a ad dla1rlct, Democrals have 1 S ~dward E. Elllott, ([).Loi perce11t to 42 pen:ell) reglatra· Angeleal , decided ,(10! to seek Uon lead. -' re-election. The Influence of third party Assemblyman • Leal., . A , candldatea may be felt In two McMlllan, ([).Los Angelea) dl&trlcta. was defeated ln ·tht ~ J:!llie ,Asaemhlyman WUlle Brown prlinary elecUon by Hwy Jr., (D-San Francisco) a Waxman. Tht district is Negro, ii opposed by PF can· beavUy DemocraUc. dldate Kathleen Cleaver, wile ""nle tightest· Sen ate of Black Panther I e a d e r Democratic racea are for the Eldridge Cleaver. seats held by Petris and Sen. Mario Savio, a leader ol the George Danielson of Los 1914 free speech movement at Angeles. Danielson is opposed the University of California at by Republlcan Richard E. Berkeley, is the PF candidate Ferraro, a school teacher. oppos.ing Sen. Nicholas Petris, Republican Serui. M 11 to n ( D • O a k II n d ) • Petris' Marka of Sao Franclaco and Republican opponent ls Robert Howard Way of E1eter also E. Hannon, a lawyer. have stiff compett,tton. AMemb!y Republlcan3 eee ka la -·., b WUU their best cllances to pick up Mar o,.....,. Y am A. Newson, a San Francllco seats in the dJ.strcts now held lawyer, and Way la challenged by Democrats F. James Bear b hn E 1 dlr of San Diego, Harvey Johnson y Jo rreca, onner ec- of . El Monte, Ken Cory of tor of public worlr1 under both Westminster, Walter Karablan Brown and Reagan. of M •· p k d The only opponent of S... Shoem:~;~ey ar an George Oeukmejlan, (R-Long They also see hope tor win-Beach), is AIP candldate Don- ning the seats of Democratic na Demortt. Assemblymen Leroy Greene Assemblyman Leo Ryu, and Edwin L. Z'Berg of {D-South San Francisco), has Sacramento, JohnF. Foran of no opponents ~nd San Francisco, David Negri of -Asaemhlymari Alan. P&t\ff, . Gr~da Hills and Mike Culle.a · (R.Sallnas). is c~enged ohly of . LOng Beach. by AlP cantlidate Vlrgtnia Democrats, trying, hard just Roush. Reagan, V~ruh's Actions Tennis Sign Ups Being Taken . ' May '.B,e Preview of 1970 TennlJ ·c1usee:· are be1n& or- !ered at the Newport Beach Tenrus Club, free of char&e, to rriembers of the Boys Club o1 the Harbor Area. ForaUmlted jtlme-the ... at ,48 oz. party •lze only , 'llltta DI)' Martltil'. 'M•llMIWI • Dllq11lrl. .. ' . ~· ,. -; . ,. ByDEVANL ~AV -straw man'° set up and · te-r-eata whose basic upper Bay · Club -branch SACRAMENTO (UrJ.) -:-criticize. phllosophlea were miles apart director Dick Rojo la taking Gov. ~d Reag~ and Reagan drawa: h1a big~est but wbo beld Wgeth~r because signups tor the aesatons. which Assembf)" ~ake,r Jess. ~· ~_pplause at part1aan ~gs there was so~ profit in work-began two weeU ago and will Unruh ...... · .tlro' p,O 1 l t I ca I -aentrall:V fundralim for tng together.. icon~Un~ue~on~eac~h~Sa§turd~ay~ . .J====================;,;;:=:::::::'.:::==============f.=~ powerhoutes . 'ffom, . different co~ , or Je-~tlve .. Ull;l'Uh believes the Unltedl' partl.S.-ar,-.,~' ~ c~.;,;:!~;~l!l•n;,<,,~._sbould stop bombing , state .crtttl~ c· liiifiiii166r-tioQ1tJ.liffWP'Ml!lii~)jii~·V\'fetnmb ''now'' but -;,$ "' . ' Admlnlstratioir .rp;. • --, :~of'.lhe ...Sembly 1'ould· """1"1i .•• l!U!npllrey "the bes! reasons. 9.~ . · Uizi'uh. ~ll(achrevlng peace." l And they're aµ:BCklfi.g· 1:icb He tells crowds "Jess and · As to Reagan, Unruh say. other in what inay be a his henchmen want govern-the Governor'• administration preview of the 1970 race for ment back where it's their has been one of "masterful the governorship. own litUe hunllng preserve" mediocrity" and that Reagan Repu.bllcan Reagan wants then reminds his audience: is backed by "wealthy pup. the ®P .elected ''from the "Let me tell ·you ·oomethlng, peteera In hb k It c hen White Hou • e to the When we have a Republican cabinet." Statehouse,. -'" from preslden-majority in the AisembJy we He 1aid Reqan wanta to tial candidate Richard M. Nix-will have a new ~ oi µie win. control of both houses IO on to the 8lalo legislature. AalemblJ and w]len we 'ban a be can establlsb "Ofte.man ' Democrat Uliruh. who now new · apeUer of the Auembly·:. rule" over the Jeglslatare and dominates the A 1 e e m b 1 Y , we automaUcally have a new describes the governor · u a wants to stay ln charge. And member of the University of man who ''brooks no in· he's an hohorary state co-California Board ot Regents." terference." chairman for VJce President He attacks Unruh for lBsulng If 1968 is any indication, Hubert H;, Humphrey a1though statements critical of Black 1970'1 gubernatorial race could he says the title speaks for Panther Eldridge Cleaver well be a donnybrook of mam-~taelf" ~ bow active a role he then being absent when tiu; moth proportions. l9 playing. UC Regents voted on a motion Reagan and Unruh got in 3 to forbid him to letcure on the fight last week over the R • govemor'a statement th a\ Berkeley CaJDP,!IS. . ; emarnR,P'C ,. Democratic lqlal&Uve cam-The~ 111' puts the~ocal lil<t,'-. . "" ~ paigqs are belbg helped by a national races together. · Lee · Se "prtee tag" ]lilt on b11Js by the "Don't aend• Dick Nixon ~ · ture t Assembly Speaker. the White House all a1one, Unruh charged back with a Reagan 1ays. "He need.s a statement that Reagan should complete team all the way debate the · stibject on from the White House to the statewide television and "your· Statehouse." failure to do so will Inevitably Unruh, on the other hand, is lead to the conclusion that you running one of the strangest · are a coward as well as a Democratic Campaigns i n liar." history. Reagan refused and satd it Pressing for the election of wu obvious Unruh was Democratic legislators, Unruh "already running" for the parts company with the governorship. Johnslln Adininistratlon but But the Reagan-Unruh feud tries to stay close enough to i! having an Interesting side Humphrey to convince the effect : it'a focusing attention voten. to go along with the on state pollllca in a national Dem o.c r a t I c presidential po\l.Ucal year when th e nominee. presidential race would grab He says Jo h n 1 o n ' 1 all the headlines in the normal Admlnlstratlon was "the old course of events. politics of consensus -the Clearlf, Reagan and Unruh creaUon of an unbelievable are ualng eacli other u a alll""'"' aq>Oni, opeclal Jn. Charles SLalzenbacb, a counselor with the American · Institute of Family Relations in Lo! Angeles, will discuss . "Communication In Remar-· riage" Oct. 15 at tbe organiza- tional meeting of Remarried Partners at McFadden Junior , .. 1 High School tn Santa Ana. · The new organlzatil>n, for . divorced or widowed persom who have remarried, has been formed to establish a more stable family · life in remar- riages through social. educa- tional and cuJtural programs. Further information about the new organization may be obtained by Writing to Remar- ried Partners, P. 0. Boz 742, Santa Ano, or by calling 147· ~1. , "' -· .... '\. ~l ,,. i. • ,i! ' .. ,• 'i. {~ .. • i! ·r1UStsftfingtheFe,this'69 CheVrolet .can do ·~~ ~·four things competitive cars can't: • ' • . ' i • . • ,. .• lt ClD Woah ibl beadll1bm. & 11COnd tbougbt to a eeoond·plooa car. fUll"fOUMpeaker aw.a, a'~kpeod I ,/ It ClJ1 ·apply liquid lira chain to ita mu Tbe hu.dli1bt waabera one! liquid lire Turbo Hydra·matic lnlllmlooiOn. All JD a WbeoJa, ~ for lzoctiOD OD olfppery roam 119 OU ~di qufotor, !D&de """'-• .... It ClD ·.U.ntly defoa or defroet the Nar opiulAld at tbe touch of 1 button from the more c:om!ortabl.. Nb.. d your C.be1tolot window. drl•er'o aeot. So la the lilent now . rear-dealer'1. , It, COJt ~P you cool or wum aqto-l'\D,dow dofr<11tor.-Iavioiblo ceramic otripo · • We've aald It 'Jief~;1nd .110'll "'1 it 1. maitcally with Com!ortzon-tbe .it ... d. 1111 the gloss heat "f to Q&p the wllMlow a1ain. i ' iuatibi .,·-conditioning eyttom. ' clear. · •• · Match thia, you other '6981 .i 1' Ancf'~ you've ai;l.ded all, tl1e1;9 W~·. ~ l'._~ avall4ble: Chevrolet'& Lfdit ~ ~·r. pf ~ t clerful devicea to • ~w Cbnro!Of, 'you wrini S)l!l!anl lhat leb! you .know from ~ ,: j111t eii:t'.linagino w1>1 anyone would gin Lnalde if ill 10\lt outalde llabto.,. workillf, hltl•• JOU first, k..,. ~ tht." 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Machine · washable. 1111111!11, l.!I •. ~-.1111. ~--.. : Featurinf • an'l!lllr tl'eat Caeit•I stereo LP's, locludin1 thl1r fates release "'Bol:lbi• Gentry and Glen Campbell• UST PRICE 4.79 STE~EO - CUT AND STYLED ·So natural looking in 11 ·wide range of subtle colo.rs! Very easy ta ~ manage because it is '. jus t the right lengtti. ~ lends itself to dozens of stylings. 3088 BRISTOL AVJ. • JUST Off HEWPORT AV£. STORE HOURS DAILT 1J TO t UTUUAT 11 TO ,.t IU ND.&Y 11 TO 7 • BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND BAKER ST. I , I I I I c fl ~ c • h E f d b r 2( c " " a ri "' w " ,, ( 1 ~ al fr •• '1 21 cl P' ,, l7 th I' ' Costa Mesa . DAILY PILOT . .Today's Closing •• EDITION N.Y. Stocks VOL 61, NO. 256, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, '1968 TEN CENTS Murder Suspect Waits Charge Expectea as Mf!sa Police. Go Over Car By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI' ttt. D1llJ flllll Slaff A three-year-old compact car and a slight. wavy-haired 29-year-old man both sit waiting today for a move by the Districl Attorney 's office to tie them to a Costa Mesa murder seven days ago. Lev ester A. Coley, maintaining silence, Is waiting for an almost certain com .. plaint charging him with the slaying of 1.1rs. Rose Marie Weidner, 24, last Thurs- day. The 1965 auto he owns ls waiting In a storage yard, for a search warrant allow· ing police to minutely check it over for links to the brutal murder. "As I said before, we have a lot of work left to do in this case," said Dcte<:- tive Capt. Ed Glasgow, whose men have not yet requested a complaint naming Coley as the suspect. Detective Arnold Appleman was check· ing a list of 18 emergency hospitals in Orange Cotµity, where someone could be treated ror a gunshot wound, when Col· ey's name turned-up Tuesday night. A trail o[ blood led away from t.be spot where Mrs. Weidner fell, fatally wound- ed, after apparently grappling with her attacker at the Acapulco Apartments, 74U E. 18th St., in a fight against death. Whoever killed her may have injured himseU in the act. Coley, a U.S. Post Office employe, Was arrested at his apartment, which is right around the corner from the Orangefair ' OA!L Y l'ILOT l'lwtt ~r LM ,..,"' CHICHI RODRIGUEZ DISPLAYS 'HAT TRICK' AFTER DROPPING PUTT Puerto Ric:.an Pro One of Early Leader• in $120,000 Haig Tournament Mesa Pro • Ill Contention Reif Shoots 67, Ties for Second By EARL GUSTKEV Of t1tt1 O•ll'I '°llet S11ff Costa Mesa's Roo Reif was in solid contention early this afternoon after he fired a 67 on the first round at the Haig National Golf Tournament at Mesa Verde Country Club. Rcif's four-under round deadlocked him with Chichi Rodriguez as the number two leader as early 18-hole scores trickled in. Deane Beman, 30·ycar old pro from Bethesda, Md., shot a 64 and broke a PGA record by putting only 19 times. Rodriguez, winner ol lasl week's Sahara Open, hit a poor tee shot at the 18th par-three hole and needed two pulls for a three. Beman appeared lo have the rirst round lead wrapped up. Dudley Wysong was five under at the 15th hole and Austrialian Bru c e Crampton was four down at No. 14. At three under were Bill Collins, Laurie Hammer , Babe Hiskey, Howie J ohnson and Reif. Wind conditions were m i n i m a I throughout the morning action. OCC Fetes Trustee Longmoor Gets Standing Ovation Walter M. Loogmoor got his just desserts last night -a broken baseball bal, a hokey quartet singing some ter· rible doggerel and a standing ovation for 20 years service to Orange Coast Junior College District. Longmoor retired at t h e end of the summer after 20 ytar1 on the board of trustees. He was honored tut night by approximately 12.5 college and city of· ficlals and friends. It was an evening that lea ned heavily on the light side. Lo:ngrnoor for 20 years "''as probably OCC's greatest baseball rooter, and decorations a n d en- tertainment reneded it. OLYMPICS: BLACK REPORTER'S VIEW' DAILY PlLOI' Sports Edllor Glenn White steps aside In Mexico City today to allow F r e d SlUJT\Jp, • black reporter frotb the Bahamas, to comment on racial events which threaten to overshadow 'J)Orting events at the Jtth Olympiad. .. Golden West College gave him a broken bat. f!lounted on a walnut plaque, symbolic of his reUrement. Golden West students also gave him a baseball warmup jacket and a lifetime student body membership. OCC students also gave hlm a student body pass and a maroon blazer with the college crest. He received a trophy with the names of all the OCC baseball cap- tains for the past 20 years, presented by former OCC player Ken Moats, or Hun- tington Beach High. The doggerel was sung by OCC Pre»- dent Robert Moor!!:. Fred Owens, Golden West athletic: director, and Walter Gleckler and Paul Col', of, the OCC Music Departmenl At the end ol the eveolnc, Longmoor told the group, "I'm so ovenrhelmed 1 can't make 1 speech. l'vt bad it." He then made a lhort tpttJcll. "A lot bu been said about the hard wort I dld," Longmoor said. 0 It huri't been hard, it's been fun. For most peo- ple, it only takes two years to graduate from OCC. It took me 20. rt Dr. Norman E. Watson, district . wperlnttndent, presented Longmoor with • certilicate of appreciaUon from the board. • in Haig Open The par-3, ~yard 18th hole was caus- ing the pros lits all morning. The threesome of Mark Schmidt or Santa Ana, John Ruedi and Jim Walker all put their tee sh<>ts within seven feet CJ[ the pin. but all three twG-putted. Jn the threesome that preceded Rodri- guez', Crampton brought several hundred spectators around the 18th green to their feet when his seven-iron tee shot sailed right to the pin and stopped six inches from lhe cup. restaurant In Fullerton, where the victim had been employed only three weeks. He has made no statement and Im· mediately upon arrest put in a call to one of Orange County's best known criminal defense attorneys, Matthew Kurilicb Jr., Qf Fullerton. A tight veil of secrecy surrounds much or the evidence to be used against Cclley, who was in custody of Fullerton police for a time befCJre being released as an ac- (See MURDER, Page I) Irvine Co. Withdraws Bay Swap Proposal The Upper Newport Bay land swap is off. C. M. Featherly, chairman or the Orange County Board of Supervisors, to- day confirmed to the DAILY PILOT that the Irvine Company has withdrawn from the long-discussed land trade propCJSa1 in Upper Newport Bay. Featherly said he reeeived news of the w i l h d r a w a 1 of a letter delivered personally by Irvtne CCJmpany president William MaS<Jn. While reluctant to discuss the issue, Featherly confirmed that the Jetter was "a formal announcement of Irviqe's withdrawal from any further discussion of a land trade between ua. ,.. The other four members Ot the Board CJ! SuperviSCJrs are. attend~ ~-~e~~ay semilllf at ldyllwild tn·Rtvenide County, and Featherly said he felt further discussion of the issue should await their return. "There's not much that we can do about it," the veteran supervisor added. "But we should at least discuss Mr. Mason's letter among ourselves." Irvine Company's withdrawal from the beleaguered Back Bay trade was later confinni;d by public relations director Y.'illiam Aldrich. "I can't reveal contents CJ( the letter," Aldrich said.· "But I can say that it ends Irvine's interest In the deal." SuperviSCJrs took t h e hotly debated issue "off calendar" Wednesday . They privately conceded alter t h e meeting that "off calendar" might well mean the permanent shelving of the Upper B a y plan. Mason's action presumably ends the J>QSSibility of a trade which was first sug- gested. Featherly today recalled, "some 18 years ago." The supervisors had p r e v i o u s I y · unanimously supported the complicated exchange Qf lands, publicly declaring that it would be in the public interest and would result in a strong advantage to lhe county -both financially and for park developmenll in the Upper Bay. The State Lands Commission approv- ed the land exchange in mid·1967. But legal complications set in. And ihe Irvine Company -stalled in getting the (See BACK BAY, Page J) ln addition to the guest cohunn on Page 21 today, Whtte'1 on-scene coverage ln- cludeJ a rundown on· th@ tough com- petition Corona del Mar'1 Madam But- tcrny, TonJ Hewitt, faces tonight as the 17-year-old swbnmer Goe• ror the gold In the zoo..«ettt bultt!rOy event. Jt111not going to tit an euy wlo -for anyon~ "Walter is one or the moirt dedlcat~ Individuals wt've ever had.'' Wit.ton aald. "His enlhuslum nevt:r waned. Tonight 1' we art all Walter Lon1moor fans ." j DAILY I'll.OT..-,_.. 'IT WAS FUN AND WORT~ll THE 'EFFORT' OCC'• Longmoor and Wife Pauu After TetflmonJal ----- MESA MURDER SUSPECT ESCORTED TO JAIL Investigators Banks (left), Strickland Flank Prisoner UCI Holds Great Stake lnPr~ition 3 Bond - By THOMAS FORTUNE Of lllt Dalfli' l'lltl Se.ff No cal)lpus anywhere in the state has a greater stake in passage of the statewide education OOnd issue, Propo.siUon 3, than UC Irvine. The young UCJ campus stands to get nearly $1 in every $10 for 'cCJnstruction of medical college facilities and science bulldlrigs. Of the $250 million W be allocated statewide, UCl would get $20.5 million. The three-purpose state bond i.ssue would provide $100 million for building on University of Callfornia campuses, $100 million for building on State College cam· puses, and $50 million for restoring deteriorated public schools in urban areas. UCI Chancellor Daniel G. AJdrich Jr. No Breakthrough In Vietnam Peace Talks, Says LBJ WASHINGTON (UPI) -President ,Johnson said today there has been no basic change and no breakthrough in peace negotiations to end the Vietnam war during the last eight days. He told a news conference that a White llouse statement to this effett issued OcL 15 was still accurate. That statement - Issued after a flurry of reports circulated about the ·possibllity of a total tximbing halt by the United States -said there wu "no ba&lc change in the situaUon; no breakthrough." At the ume tirnt:, Johnson warned tG- day against any "false sense CJf security" because of lower war casualUes and re- cent prilQner. exchan'ges. On the other hand, Johnson said hi! ad- ministration W , been "working very hard and Vefy diligently" to open the way tar peace and sald that he felt his decl&lon to open talks with the North Vletnami:se in Parts was the right thing to do. "I'm more pleased with it as Ume goes by," the President commented, Johnson re!Uifd. to divuJge anything specific on the r~ent diplom11Uc efforts to end the Paris stalemate. He would not say whether there had been <a replf from North Vietnam or even whetbtr he had made a new package peace proposal to Hanoi. The Pruident rqlsltted ...,. ir. riLatioo al persistent reporta naardina the diplom.aUc oclMty on Vletoam and said, "we do oot want to mate newa UD1ll ttwe ls new1. We realia many tlmel, dlplomaey can be more llfftctlve in private than all yout d1scuaslona, recorn-. mendaUona and propliecl<I c:oulcl In the prea." NEW YORK (AP)~ The stock market conUnued lower In heavy trading late this af~ap1.ld disappointment over 1p- .,aret1l . ol progress In Vietnam peace moves,: q-llooa, Pl(es ll-llf. . . said the Irvine campus needs the bond money to keep construction on schedule for growing enrollments and to train needed scientists and medical doctors. Should Proposition 3 pass, the Irvine campus will get even more than the $20.5 million. Added to it wo·uld be S17.2 million in federal matching funds and Sll.l million in state pay-as-you-go money. Tota! bu.ilding funds available to the cam- pus over the nut two years would be $48.9 million. ln addition to the medical school, whlch would receive the largest share, money would be spent on a second biological sc!e nces building, a second physical sciences building, a science library, a biomedical library, and a combined academic and administration building. Other funds [or Orange County would provide a school of education building at Cal State Fullerton and restoration ol pre-1943 school buildings in Santa Ana, Anaheim, Garden Grove and Fullerton. The state citizens C1>mmittee in favor of the b<>nd issue says that the average cost per person per year during the 26- year tile of the bonds would be about l!I) cents. PrCJponents argue that construction costs are rising at a rate o[ flve percent annually while bond mCJney currently is available at 4lk percent interest, so delay would be costly. . "ryte opposition argument is UJat thfi Sf b1llion lxlnded indebtedness of !he state including $1.5 billion in authorized oot unSCJ!d bonds, has saturated the bond market and. new bonds could not be sold ll<>W. The counter argument is that unwld bonds already have been committed but have oot been sold yet becauae it ls state policy not to sell bcmd.1 tmW payment ts due . contractors for actual construction costs. In other words, approval of another bcind issue is needed to keep movina forward with education construction;. (See PROP. 3, Page Z) ' Orange Coast Weather Old Sol breaks through the log Friday tO warm the coast up wiLh 80-degree temperatures, while in- land re&fons perspirt near the 100 mark. INSIDE TODAY A rill{I •• big WoU c:o1'1d~'I dfal • l<l•p"""' taith . ii .... cmlong the Jt10tli Mn. Ol14Uil rtcttv~d from hrr hu,bond and fl wo.rn't evtn the choicc1t pftcc. Page ~. c.ll1Ml!l1 , -.. " Cll$1HIM 21~1 .. ,.... ...... ... ,_ ... " °r"" C-IY • '~-" PA " DNltl ..... tel • •• ..,,. c:t" " .._ • ,ltclel 1 .... lfltwW .. _ :: ==..t:'"" ... ~· .... ).,. " :"' Ctl .. • fl:: " " • " " -. • .. 2 DAllV PlLOT Thursd11, Octobtt 24, 1968 • Defends lflot't'ioge .. ~ Jackie,_ Husband Thank Cushing' A THENS (UPI) -Aristotle and J ac- quellne Onuall have ldepboned BoolOo'• CardbW 1Ucllard James Cuahlnc. ap- pattJltly to thank him !or defending their mom.,. despite Vatican lrown1. Onua!s .....i.ci Ibo tranaatlanllc call today. "Canllnal CUlb!ng II Mn. Onuall' bat &plrltual friend. Yeatenlay we called him CD the phone," llkl OnasslJ Who in· terTUptod his !our-dty-<ld hoaeymoon, 1e!t 1111 !:ride on bll '3 milllcm yacht and flew bero tbll momlni on big bustoesa. Onuaia did not say what waa dlscusaed in the telephone call between the yacht Olrlstlna and Ibo Roman Catholic church Cardinal in Boiton. It was assumed they thanked Cushing !or denouncing u "nooseoae" relidous crlUclBm of the wedding and de!eodlng the match he aald be e11""'ra1ed. Onuaia, 1 C.year-<>ld mulUmlllionaire, told new1men he and the 39-year-old bride, widow or the lite PrWdent Jobn F. Kennedy, were "very happy." At the mlnlltry ol coordination, wbero On.u'1s came for talka on bla reported $llO million ..tlnery and aluminum development project !or his naUve land, M1n1ster Nickolas MU:arezos shook the bridegroom'• bands and said, "you got the girl." Onuall milled. "You were not much compelitlon, you married man," Onuall aald jokingly. · 1n Bolton. 01sblng 'I'Ue8day night said political and penooal friends o! the Ken- nedy family had cootacted blm about trylna to stop the wedding. The cardinal aald that lllllead be aided Mn. Kennedy to the match with Onassis. In Vatlcao City, Roman Catholic church oHJctall had announced Mr•. ()nua1J WU beJng barr<d from church ftcramenls u 1 result of marrying a cDvorced mao. CUlhtog said she could marry anyone abe chose. He attacked a Vatican oWclal'a statement Mrs. Onassis bad become a "public sinner." Answering the cardinal, a Vatican City spokesman said Wednesday, "I agree with the Cardinal'• statement that on1y Gbd knows who is a sinner but whoever ct>ntravenes the law of the church incurs ber sanctions." Ona1si1 indicated on his arrival at Athens' airport that he was anxious to finish 1111 bus1neN lo the capltal and aet back lO his bride on their yacht o!! Greece'• west coast. Police Check Yields 5 Mesa Drug Arrests Five persons -two seeming so in· coherent that police sent them to a hospital -were arrested on narct>tlcs charges at a' Costa Mesa communal home Wednesday night, when officers checked the spot for runaway juveniles. Three of the 1UBpects were freed today en a legal technicality, because police searched their room without permission. Suspects in the chance narcotics rou~ dup and the charges on whlch they are booked Include: Christopher E. Reimer, 19, of 2422 Margaret Drive, Newport B e a c h • poaseulon of marijuana and possession cf instruments for ad min later Ing narcotics. Dennis E. Rogers, 18, of ZZ4S Orange Ave., site of the arrests, possession of marijuana and possession cf dangerous drugs. A 22-year-old man and 24-year-old woman who arrived horn during the in- cident were initially booked on charges involving possession and intended aaJe of drugs and heroin. They were later freed. Police said they arrived at the apart. ment and were admitted by another 2f.. year-old woman, inµnediately smelling a strong odor of burning marljuana . Reimer and Rogers were passed out In the living room, according to Officer Dave Dye and each had what appeared to be fresh needle marks on Uteir arms. From Page l MURDER SUSPECT WAITS ••• eidental shooting victim. Records showed Coley was treated al Martin Luther Hospital 1n Anaheim last Thursday morning for a gunshot wound ln the left hand and supervisors notified police, as required by law. Coley -his left cheek marred by a flngemail·like scratch when photograph· tel Wednesday -told investigators he bad accldenlally shot himself. "His version wa.s that be was dry-firing hi t.he belief it was unloaded and it went Oft," aaid Capt. C. D. Davl.!, chief of the Fullerton police investigation bureau. "I don't have the actual report in front oJ me," said Capt. Davis. "I really cooldn't tell you what Ume it Was." Since the savage slaying, widespread publicity has been given tc> the ·trail-of· blood angle and theories of a wounded slayer, but Fullerton police apparently never connected the two incidents. . Capt. Davis and other spokesmen ain- tl:cted after Coley's arrest by Detective Appleman and Dmrict Attorney 's Jnveiligator Eddie Banks did not seem eager to talk. Coat.a Meu Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow refuses to say whether a gun was found In the apartment at 915 W. Orangetborpe Ave., which Coley shared .. ith a roommate. ~ The nact caliber of the four slugs Ehich killed Mn. Weidner as she walked the apartment she shared with chard Surface, 28, is also be1ng .... ithheld, pending proseeuUon. · Surface was cleared almost Im· mwte1Y u a suspect in the grisly kill· JM:, with Mra. Wtidner's hUJband James, 18, cf El Monte, eliminated only hours later by a polygraph test. The weeping husband said he hadn't DAILY PILOT DllAllGE Ctv.ST PUKIUf!JrtG COM,Nt't l•"-rt N. w •• ~ .... 1'1to!! ... l'llllllWI' seen the petite. dark-haired murder vie· tim for a year and fainted upon being told of her death by: BaldWin-Park police. A prime point in the unfolding case will be a motive for the murder. Police initially lheoriz.ed Mrs. Weidner may have been killed by a man she broke off a relationship with since leaving her husband to take various waitress jobs in Orange County. It has not been revealed whether she may have known Coley, due to the prox- imity between her place of employment' and his apartment. A patrolman was cruising through the neighborhood where Mrs. Weidner was killed about 3 a.m. when he heard a shot, then screams and four more shots. Officer Randy Nutt roared around the area trying to find the source of the trou· ble, but the gunman escaped -ap- parently in a car heard by residents -as he searched. Nutt was dispatched to the exact loca· tion after neighbors telephoned police, but Mrs. Weidner WB;li apparenUy already dead, with two bulleb in the head and vne in the stomach. She was also wounded in the hand. The victim's body was claimed by her parents and flown to Lancaster, New York, where she was buried Tuesday, on- ly several hours before Appleman stumbled onto t.he lead which may solve the case. Police said he had a list of 18 hospitals to check and MarUn Luther Hospital was only the fourth or fifth he visited when Coley's name turned up. Handcuffed and knotting his jaw muscles nervously, Coley was led out of the city jail booking area Wednesday to be photographed with Investigator Banks and Detective Jim Strickland. The suspect can only be held 72 hours witbout a ct>mplaint and police hope to obtain one today, after which Coley would be immediately arraigned in Harbor District Jucticlal CourL • • HASA "'"-" Vlo U,.I Mode in H11ntington Beach This is Saturn !VB rocket, second stage of rocket that boosted Apollo 7 into orbit, as photographed by Apollo 7 crew. Saturn was built et McDonnell-Douglas facility In Huntinglon Beach. (See story page 4). Irvine Decision Quashes Many Long-held Dreams By TllOJ\fAS J\fURPIUNE Of tt.e 0•11'1' ,.lie! Stiff Irvine Company action today in withdrawing from the long-debated Upper Newport Bay tidelands exchange appears at present to have quashed the dreams cf "Mr. Newport Harbor," ranch executives and many Orange County and Newport Beech planners. Plans for converting the boggy Back Bay into a multi-million dollar "second harbor" with recreational beaches was first envisioned by former city engineer R. L. "Pat" Patterson more than two decades ago. Patterson was known as "Mr. Newport Harbor" for his work in the 1930s in pass- ing a bond Jssue and setting up develop- From Pnge l BACK BAY:: .. ·:· transaction pushed lhroug'. -made it clear Utat it was growing tired of paying a big tax load and heavy development costs on property enmeshed in legal ct>mplications. But the Board of Supervisors said yesterday that it saw no way out of the taxation bind. Members said they ct>uldn't go a.tong with a proposal that relief be granted during the period that the proposal was tied up in court. The trade would have involved Irvine taking over the deeds for 16 parcels - about 157 acres -of county-<1wned tidelands in exchange for 450 acres of Irvine terrain. The switching of deeds would, proponents of the deal said, i::emove the heavily taxed Irvine land from the tax roles until a court dttision is obtained on the land swap propo.sal -believed lo be as much as three more yean away. ment of the present Newport Harbor. When Wllllam Mason first joined the Irvine Company as engineer in the early 1960s, he picked up from Patterson's ear4 ly work and began to develop a land ex4 change plan that would set the stage for development. The basic problem that has stymied Upper Bay development all these years has been the split in ownership. The public owns the tidelands, which means generally all the water area and the shoreline which Is washed by the ebb and flow of bay tidal action. Except for the 1920s·style Back Bay Road cirtling the easterly edge of the bay below the bluffs, all the uplands belong to the Irvine Company. So do three tidal islands situated in the middle of Upper Bay. Harbor engineering eq>erts have long testified that the thrtt i~lands impede proper flU!hlng action of Upper Bay. At the extremity of Back ·Bay, there are the never-never parcels known as tile patent lands. On this property, both the county of Orange (In the name of the public) and the Irvine Company claim legal rights. Both claim they can legally use these properties for recreational purpose!. As Mason, working w1th county harbor chief Kenneth Sampson, developed the land swap proposal, the Irvine Company would give up rights to certain of Its shoreline for public parks. In turn, the ranch company would be given water access to the remainder of its holdings. Dredging of the waterway was seen as a key to the development in order to assure a navigable waterway for pleasure boating . Over the years, however, the complex tldal exchange crept into the arena of politics and vocal opposition mounted. Today, the question of how the Upper Bay will be developed seems as far away 1 ~s ever. 1 I~, .. " 1•J ~~.,. •'• I'''• ' I .2tad Cotnpus Arrest Mesa-Student • • • I ' •• Faces Drug Rap A 15·year-old Newport Harbor High School student wu arreated Wednesday on dangerous drug charges at the hlgh ecbool campwi. 'nle boy was reported in Juvenile Hall today. The Costa Mes:a boy was booked by Newpor\ Beach police at 2: IS p.m. f01' alleged violation of Section Jl912:of the Stile Health and Safet1 Code prohibiting tramport, sale or-manufacture of restricted dangerous d r u g a by unauthorized persora. Police said the youth had been observ- ed under the influence of Seconal on the campus by the s:tudenb and school authorities. Police said lhe boy told them he had of- fered to sell the barbituate tablet,, to his classmates. Il was the second drug arrest in the last two weeks on a Newport hlgh school campus. On Oct. 11, police arrested a !~year-old girl at Corona del Mar High School. They were called by school authoriti~ who observed t.tie student staggering about the campus. The girl told police that she had taken Seconal tablets. Officers charged her with being under the influence of the drug and turned her over to county juvenile Fro1n Page 1 PROP. 3 ... even though the bonds would not be sold unUI later. The bond measure was placed on the Nov. s ballot by the Legislature with Gov. Reagan's ainsent. It has endorsement of top leaders in both pol!Ucal parties and of the statewide PTA. The chiel source or oppos!Uon is ex· pect.ed to be those who would punish the university for such as Eldridge Cleaver's appearances or the state college system for allowing such as the play "The Beard." authorities. Seconal l~letl are commollly called "Reda" by students. Ott1cm ., they in duce a ••noatinl·nowhert1t teell.ng. Coast C1iildren Ring Doorbells To Aid UNICEF A horse raced in Ireland for UNICEF, students at Yale gave up a meal for UNICEF' a litUe Norwegian girl 1tood OD her head for UNICEF and Sunday more than 200 Harbor Area youngsters wm begin t.o give up their Halloween treats for UNICEF. Sponsored by the Coastline Chapter o[ the United Nations Association, boy• and girls averaging junior high school age will ring door bells throughout the area asking for pennies, nickels and dimes to give aid t.o children all over the world. The youths will move through res.lden- tlal area.s Sunday and the. following Thursday, Halloween day -proclabned National UNICEF Day by Pre!ident Johnson. ln order le> obtain the funds, the youngsters must carry informaUon cards containing the name, purpose, need and activity of the organization In addJUon to the child's signature. Licenses have been obtained from both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Donations from the "Trick or Treat for UNICEF" drive will be forwarded to the United Nations in New York where they will be dlstribu1'd to needy children throughout the world. Last year, nearlY: $3 mllllon was collected acrosa the na- tion. Each child or group of children wll1 be accompanied by one adult or youth leader. On the average, one adult will be provided for every four children. Hippies Defended Mesan Raps Proposed Crowd Law A Costa Mesa woman advocating peace, love and anti-provincialism is the first to respond to invited commentary on a crowd control law being considered by the city. An unexpectedly large turnout of youths and adulb protested the ordinance Monday and councilmen delayed action en the measure, inviting further written comments. "Like the police chief in Laguna Beach, I believe hippies are people," wrote· Mrs. Alvin H. Kauffman, 1541 Ponderosa St., in a letter to Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson . ''ls the Council anti·people?" she ask- ed. "Newport Beach has so many 'No-No' and •Anti-' signs that I make it a point not to spend any time or money there," she continued. Newport Beach and Laguna Beach councilmen passed ordinances on which the Costa Mesa law is modelled, but a portion of the Laguna Beach legislaUon was ruled unconstitutional. During Monday's spirited discussion In Costa '-iesa, John Wakula Sr., 648 Beach St., criticized the crowd ct>ntrol measure as not needed. Mrs. Kauffman says also in her letter, received by City Clerk C. K. "Charlie" Priest, that Costa Mesa has more press-- ing problems, such as traffic, ugly ad· vertising signs and needed beautification. "Above all, let's try to be less pro- vincial," she concluded . The crowd control law was iniUated after the Newport Pop Festival at Orange County Fairgrounds in early August drew 100.000 young people. Most of its individual sections on drink- ing rowdiness and sanitation are already cov1ered by state law and the existing municipal code. City officials have stoutly denied It is an anti·hippie type of law and will be •P- plied to all people equally. Proponents of the suggested deal have pointed out that the transfer w o u 1 d enable the county to develop a regional park in the area. It would permit the Irvine Company , they argue, to use rebuilt tidelands [or marine type develop- ments. .A-1 .JJ.J. (}arrell' And it has been further argued that the deal would enable the county and Irvine to perform necessary dredging in Upper Newport B a y under a single contract with a "possible saving of. SI million to each party." Oppo1itlon came to a head in recent days w b en County Assessor An· drew J. Ftinahay condemned the deed ex· change as "legally improper" and based on "gross misstatements of probable aasessed values." * * * TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ON THESE TOP YOUR CHOICE ·OF '4 SOFA STYLES Wide choice of fabrics &c colon AT OUR SPECIAL OFFER QUALITY SOFAS ' . J•d: •. c • ..1.,. YIU"~ 9"" o_ .. ~r '"''"''' 1C •• ,i! .. .., Mayor: 'It's a Shame'; T1rio1111• A. Myrplliftt ~Efllw '••' Hh .. 11 ... ,,_,..., Dtrod ... ----JJO Wttt ltY Str•1t M•llltt M4rHt: P.O. I•• Ilia, •1'2' --........... m1w.1 .. 1tto1 .... 1rtotlf .._.-D.M01i m,....... •-ll•o""""" ...,.; • "" s~ .. 1 Cites Loss of Parks By JEROME F. COLLINS Of "'-O•ltr Pli.t tl1ff "It 11 a great shame." Newport Beach Mayor D o r e e n Marshall thU! reacted to report! :.-"..day that the Irvine Company had given up ef. fort.I to exchange Upper Newport B11 tidelands property with Orange County. "This II a loss to tbe pub Uc," she said, notil!I that the trade -five years in the Jegis.latlve mill -Included plans for "subllanUll park land.·• The city, the county and Irvine olllclals had negotiated an •&reemtnt that wu t.o provide thete public park cites: -A leG-acre county regional park at the northerly end of the bay, to be dtvelcped in conjunction w\th • marine st.ad.lwn and rowing course. -A nel&hborhood park and man.n. on the west aide or the bly at the root or Zlrd Strttl. ~ -A neljibborhnnd park and ch at the moolb nl Bli Canyon on the st 1'1de . ol tho...,_ The city was to ha ve control of the neiahborbood park lilel. Mn. Manihell s a I d tbt transaction. which called for the ucha0&e of 157 acrts of county-held Udelandl for .SO acrt1 of Irvine-owned Udeland.s and uplands, .. would certaJ.nly have benefited the Irvine Company." ''There 11 no doubt •bout &hit," she said. "But It would alao have benellted the C01111ty, the city and the state. What maey people ovtrlook II that moel or Ibo Back llaJ lborallne II Jl<)vatelJ' held. 'l1'e trada would have opened up pO.bllc access to Ibo bay and would have piovkled a f1IWll for dred&ina It 11 a harbor:'' She said the City Cooncll would In an likelihood d19CUll lrvlne Pre 1 l de ni William l\'rason'1 acUon Monday. "I'd llke to tee lf there ii 10me way n can set th~ bacl: on the right tnck. There ml" be aomt way we can urle supervlao~~ look Into w171 and means to ~pl;"'> It." 72 to 100" .... LAWSON SEATS H.J.GAl\r\ETf fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESl6NERS '• 0,.. MM, non, I M. '-1215 HARIOR{j:.'O. COSTA l>IESA, IF, 646-0211 64 _.v• • ' ~I Qctobfr z,t, 1968 DAllY PO.Ill' f BY WILLIAM REED Hnnting·ton~s ··uo1ne~ 10 100~000 Reeds ••• In the Wind A note from Jim Bentson, who is opposing Assemblyman Robert H. Burke CR-Huntington Beach) for the 70tb assembly district seat. has contributed to Burke's campaign expenses it seems. Jim says he received a letter from Burke asking for donations to help in raising $7,000 to send political literature to all homes in the district. Attorney Bentson, who is not without his own campaign finan- cing problems , said he sent ba.ck Burlre's contribution envelope with bis contribution to his opponent's war chest -two trading stamps. * Bob Baersch, manager of the Sheraton-Beach Inn, is leaving his post to take a position with the Sheraton Corp. in Boston, Mass ., he told the Chamber of Commerce board of directors in announcing his resignation from the board. P aul Phillips who is a former director of the chamber is leaving for Burbank where his bank. Security P acific, has transferred him. Tuesday was the 8 5 t h an· niversary of the S o u t h e r n California First National Bank and cake was cut at the two local branches. As usual. the bank did not pass out samples, not even on its birthday. * Glen Dysinger and his crew at Marina High School gave trustees of the di strict a showing of closed circuit television Tuesday night and the results were very good. More important than the showing of closed circuit television was the demonstration of knowledge by stu· dent Larry Pomatto who operated the television camera and told the trustees how it worked. Many of the audience found themselves, as did I, very im· pressed by the senior w h o demonstrated a confidence in his knowledge and training which reflects very favorably on the school. * Dysinger pointed out that Larry is working on a project which will result in music automatically for students moving from one class to another.. Here is a talented lad who will find a world of opportunity spread before him after high school days. By WILLIAM REED ot t11t DllU}t Pllilt lteff More than 100,000 penons call Htm- tingtoo 'Beach Mme today. Ten. years qo slightly more lhan one. tenth of that number wu the population ngw., Ten years from now the figure well may have doubled , with 200,000 people living in the city, The attracUons mainly are the com· munity's beaches, cool climate and acres upon acres of space. The space is rapidly being used for sprawling single family residential tracts in the northern, central and now the southeastern sections of the city's 26 square miles. ON THE BEACH With this influx of people, together with the millions who use the beaches from outside the city limits, It is no wonder that the first line of rebuilding yesterday for tomorrow begins where it all began at the turn of the century -at the beach. The Huntington Beach City Council has Beach To Host Continuance School Parley • Wintersburg High School, the Hun· tington Beach Union High S ch o o l /Districl's continuation school, will host the fall conference of the California Coo· ti.huation Education Association, District VII, Saturday. Conferees will be teachers, counselon. and principals from continuation school!J in Los Angeles and Orange counties, which comprise District VIL The primary purpose of the conference will be to increase professional growth and effectiveness through the exchange of ideas and views. Wintersburg Hlgh School s t a f f members who will lead workshop sessions in their fields are Roy Miller, principal; John Pisano, industrial arts; Betty Pohnka, science; Ho w ard Jacobson, business education; Mary Curtis, homemakinj:; Wayne Wilson, art; John Copeland, social studies; Ruth Mahlman, math; Teel Gregroy, reading ; Lucille Hardcastle, English; and Helen Robinson, counseling. Area representaUves of v a r I o u s publishing firms will display the latest in audio-visual equipment and supplies on the Wintersbrug H.igh School patio. Beach's Braves Seek Wampum Modern 'day teepees cost considerably more than yesteryear's variety. The young braves or Huntington Beach Y-ln· dian Guides are doing their part to help raise the funds. Guiders and their dads raised $1,109 from the sale of fireworks for a YMCA office in Huntington Beach. That's the start of a fund that must total at least $2,500 for office equipment and supplies alone. Fiesta? Ole! Mexican Party at Tamura Scliool The tuneful guitars and maracas of the mariachis mingled with the aroma of enchiladas and refried beans and coffee. Pinatas dangled from the ceilinr serapes were Oraped along the walls an sombreros rested on ledges around tht room last Wednesday. A fiesta in an old Mexican village? No -a Mexican feast in a relatively new J a p a nese. titled school. Hisamatsu Tamura. The occasion was an authentic Mexican luncheon prepared by the ladies or Foun· tain Valley's Mexican Colony. According to Tamura 's p r i n c i p a 1 Wendell Edwards, the luncheon was a fund-raising project to finance field trips for children from different culturaJ ba ckgrounds in an effort to help them learn about their acquired American heritage. The parents of the colony donated the food for the lunoheon, prepared it and served it to the teachers who, in turn contributed money for the children's field :rips. The food preparation waa coordinated by Mrs. Juanita Solorzano. Coffee and punch and eating utensils were provided by the Parent-Teacher Organization. Children throughout the school decided to decorate the room in true fiesta fashion. The upper level made paper flowers for the tables. The middle levels made colorful vases to hold the flowers , and the primary children made bright finger painting11 for the walls. Sam Rodriquez, Tamura's language development t e a c h e r reports that "working together for a common cause parents and teachers developed a real esprit de corps supporting children with language problems." OAIL Y' ll'ILOf IJlfl ,,...,_ PREPARING FOR MEXICAN FIESTA Teacher Sam Rodrlgw'* Mrs. David Soloruno ~ adopltd what ll calls I "Mid·Beach Development Polley" and has appointed a committee to implement that palley:. Right now the strip of Jand from Beach Boulevard northward on the Inland 5;ide ol the coasl.al highway is no recom- mendation for the city, But at the same time U is along bis strip that millions of dollars are eilher being spent now, have been spent recently or will be spent in the very ne~ future. The city is building a huge parking lot on the ocean side. The Huntington Pacific Corp. has built a $2 million apartment project and there are signs of beautifica· lion projects everywhere. WHAT'S NEW The city has, along with private en· terprise, rebuilt the old Pavalon Building and a restaurant is now in operation. The seeds of a magnificent waterfront are there ii one only avoids looking to the inland side. Yet, downtown is stirring, too, straining against the straps of blight which have lhttatened to strangle Jt com~ pletely during rece.nt years. Some ol lhe old blighted bulldinp ..,. being lorn oul Some are being r<mOdel· ed. Most art just sltting there awailing some acUon by the city. The action has begun. Tbe Mid-Beacti CommlU"t has discussed pier lm· provementa and combined private en- terprise -public effort is expected. to develop the pier and pe rhaps a large pOr- Uon of downtown for its maximwn use as a recreation-commercial pier. BIO SWAP Plans arc under study for a gigantic land swa~ which coold see Pacific Coast Hlghway moved inland a block or two and three miles of beach traded to the peop:€ by private ownerg in exchange for part of the highway property and some inland holdings. Complete redevelopment of an area blighted with old buildings and scarred with outmoded metboda of oil ertraction is possible for an area from downtown out to Golden West Street. 1n this area could come the multiple family housing needed In the ·~ ol lhe populallon and die houalng. c<>m- mm:e and pe.rklng lols needed for full use ol the clty'a great.est asset -the beach. It all ls beginning to shape up mucb like the late William H. "Bill" Galllenne said it would durl.n& his 30-year tenure u manager of the Chamber of Commerce. 'MIAMI OF WEST' Gallienne predicted that "HunUngton Beach one day will be the Miami of the West." " Many leaders of the community are working hard today to improve on the dream held by the chamber manager before hiJ deaUf. Not all of lhc planners are public employes. West of Golden West Street stands the Huntington Seacllff Country Club and Golf Course. The first of the homes which eventually will house as many as 20,000 persons in that area are being built. DAILY l'ILDT Iliff l'tlelll Plllll by tho Jlunlln&1Ga. 9eadl Co. ... elwle buDdredl ol -~ tho l(Oll coone aod evenluall)' apartment town overlooking the SeaeJill cleveiopmenl. To the oorth"esl II the 900-acro Rllft< lJn&ton Harbour developmeot, now -in& about 1,000 famlllu wUh p1alll lo ~uae yet another 2,000. FUTURE MAJllNA? In between tbe waterway• of Jim. tlngton Harbour and the 10U coune ol Hunt.lngton Beach Co. are lbe 2,000-..cre parcel of land and water belonging to the Bolsa Corpora tiooa. He~ is the promise of a marina development with a huge harbor and an opening to the sea. For most of !ta µistencc the put h:al been the key factor in the development oC Huntington Beach -the ancient undl cast up along ila mile!: of beach and tbl fossil fuels beneath iii surface. Tomorrow Ls the raw material of todat. Planning and building for thal futur< la just DOW beginllin& in earnest. . Bonds, Oeaver Tied Together :At UCI Bureau Want to learn about the state educe- tion bond issue, PropoaiUon 3? How about appearancea of Eldridge Cleaver? UC Irvine bu organlzed a 1peakcn:' bureau to provide persons to speak about Proposition 3, and in the process Eld· ridge Cleaver since public atutudea to- ward the unlvenll)', will be Important to passage of the bonds. Dr. J ames McGaugh, dean of the uct School of Biological Sci~. spoke. r. cenUy to the Anaheim Host Lions Club. He saJd he had to "pay the price" of discussing Eldridge Cleaver Jn order to talk about the bonds. He said he was in favor of Cleaver'• appearance on campus. NEW HUNTINGTON DEVELOPMENT CREEPS UP ON OLD OIL WELL Population Explosion of 1960'1 Brings Different kind of Boom to Oil City "We all would like to sweep thlnp unde r the carpet .::.. the ugly, rotten, dirty and diseased things Jn llfe. But we can. not ignore anything as serious as black militancy a n d ghetto problems," aald McGaugh. "It ls a basic assumption that •· unl· versity is a plai;e where ideas arc ex~ amined. The university is not a factory that turns out carbon copiea of Ideas,'' he added. Work Experience Pays Off The public may retaliate by voting down the bonds, McGaugh said, and that would reduce the quality of the unlver- 1ity. It would not change the content of the institution. Students, Employers Give Program High Marks "In other words," be said, "defeat of the bond issue would have no dJrect effect on the target of their wrath. Re- taliation v.ould only cut down the number of medical school facilities and reduce the number of scientists and engineera." By SANDI MAJOR Df ~ [Molly Piiot Sl1ff If the sa~ing ''The proof of th! pudding Js in the tasting" is valid, the Huntington Beach Union High School District's fiedgling Work Experience Programs pleased the palates of those taking the first sample. Of the students taking the Elementary Teachers Education Work Experience , 95.5 percent said it helped them decide if teaching was to be their profession. Of the employers who took on students tn the Regular Work Experience Program -those wanting to sample dif· ferent professions before choosing a career -100 percent said they would ac· cept another trainee. There was a 103.8 percent increase in the number of students enrolling in the General Work Experience Program for credit and pay from last fall to the begin· ning of the spring semester. And two scholarships were started for students as a direct result of the pro- grams. In a 40-page evaluation of the first year of the programs, Robert C. Martin, coordinator of work experience programs for the high school district, cites results of surveys conducted on the students and the employers participating in the pro- gram. A few recommendations for im· provement were made by boLh, but overwhelming evidence showed no reason for not continuing the program, he said. The Fountain Valley EI em en tar y Teachers Association established the Naomi Jon k man Award, a $100 scholarship, for students in the Elemen- tary Teachers part of the program. Shari Silver, 1968 Fountain Valley Hlgh graduate, was the first recipient Merchants of Huntington Center set up another scholarship available now to students who work part time for money and credit at jobs unrelated to their later professions. Bruce Saunders of Westminster High School was presented a plaque and $500 scholarship as first winner of the annuaJ award. In the General Work Experience Program (for credit and pay), 71.7 per· cent of the .students enroll answered questionnaires on the year' work . Alme.st 40.4 percent It had been their first job experience. Of those answering the survey , 4' percent enrolled in the program because of financial need. "More than 14 percent of the students enrolled indicated they would have been forced to drop out of school to take employment. had they not been able to take advantage of the training and employment opportunities we made avaflable ... Martin aaid. Some 43 percent of the students said their grad6 in llCbool improved after enrolling in the course, while 52 percent noted no change. And Mart.in added, 71.8 percent of the students said they were either enrolled in college or planned to attend college. Of the 117 employers In the program, 81.2 percent said they would hire the IU· dent referred to them from the 8Chool after gradual.Ion. More than 92 percent aald they would accept another part.time 1tudenl this year. 1n Ult Elementary Teachen Work Ei· perience Program, 84 percent of the studenta participating said they wanted to follow careers in teaching. Most cooperating teachers -96.2 percent - Editor's Note: Formal work experi· ence programs began last year for studentS" in the Huntington Beach Union High School District. This is the last of three stories dealing with the programs. said they would take another trainee into their classrooms next year. Because of the success of the initial program, Martin is putting together a third phase of Work Experience -Voca· tional Work Experience Education. September 1969 will be the earliest date it can be started, he said. Much like Regu lar Exploratory Work Experience, the vocational phase will "require special curriculum and certified personnel with speclallied backgrounds," he explained. The programs opera te now simply under his guidance. Students in the vocational progra m will work part-time in jobs they would like to hold after graduaUon and, during their school hours, they will take courses preparing them for those occupations. Another recommendaUon Martin is considering is the addition of assistant coordinators to work with him in evaluating the student! on their jobs. The state recommended load !or each coordinator is 100 students. He will be coordinating jobs and school for ne.arly 500 students this year. Harbor Commiss~on Calls Park Meeting A special meeting of the Orange Coun- ty Harbor Commiss.ion has been called for 10:30 .a.m. Oct. 29 for the purpoae of discussing the economic study on the. Sunset Aquatic Regional Park by the firm Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mco- denhaU. The commJssion will meet joinUy with the Board of Supervisors in the board hearing room, county administraUon building, 515 N. Sycamore St., Santa Ana. YOU·R COMMUNITY • From its unique cover Photo of the only around-the-clock surfing spot in the world- Hunt ington Beach 's night-lig hted pier - righ t on throug h 40 pa ges of facts, figures, phone numbe rs and photos, here is Your Community .•. Huntington Beach and Founlo in Volley pockoged ond gilt-wropped in a publicatio n you 'll want to lceep handy ell year long for reference. You can get ttx• tra copies, too (25 cents over 'the counter, 35 eents by moil to onywhere in tho United Stetos), ,. ) 'Gift.:. Wrapped' By The I DAILY PILOT I --------------Cllp Mt -4 -n t.: Or1nge C0111t Dally Pilot Jot ...... ........ • HMl11ft9J1 ..... c.tff. t 2646 ,,._ tlllM •· ••••• c.,... .f tM lt61 ...,._el YOUI COMMUN JTT ...-1• .t JI ..-.. ..._ I ..._ ......................... ' I I I I (Fill h1 w.11., 1a1 ... witli f•llr ...... 11•111• .!Id .,.i,... I •r th1I •f 1Mt1•11 t• whe111 Y•• w611I t:opiot 111•11-4.1 I I I I :;..-._: __ ' . .::J -~~--... ~·~·~· - - - --_I ------------------=-----------------------------------------' .. ' Thur1dq, October 24, 19611 " Mass ·Red Prisoner Relea·se Due NY Strik~s South Vietnam to Free 140 Captives as Fighting Eases Bring. GOP w.,n.,,.. berely pauaed to look as Benjamin A. Thotfl••~ a media. Die, -Phy1ll1 J, Johnson were married Tuesday on the Delaware ~·l,lii<lge, \Vi).gll.ngtori.·'rl>O. brtdge •euh:Olllly·ci-i(I I!> traffic f<lr·~ "I'"" ar~ liked -·bri<lge," iaid Thomas exp1a1n: ing 'Why he chose the site. "I've d.rivttl over it so many times.11 Lat· er ll>e couple atiended a reception In ... lllD body shop. • ~ unofficial Pat Paul.!en for Prea• idt~ pampaign head.quarte.r1 ioa.s offi· ~, opened alongsicU an Atlanta highway Wedne!day. The "outdoor John'.1.. cU!'ign almo1t caused a few m.otoriata: to driVf! off the Toad laugh· mg. • C•rlo Ponti, husband of film star Sophi• Loren, has bought a $350,· 000 'house on Geneva so that bis wife can be nert door to her gyne- col98;ist. Miss Loren, expecting her fits'f.::_child between Christmas and th{;tfew Year, bas had three ~s caniages. She has not left a swte in" :i' Geneva hotel since July and has been visited almost every day by Mr gynecologist, Prof. Hubert de WBtleville. • Normally, J am not !Uperstt- ·tiOUI," 1aid Jack Ellis in ·1e1Jo.· ing permission Tuesday to chan- ~ the addre11 pf his home itt HucknaU, England from No. 13 tu ll·A. He said that since mov- "' ing into the home three 11ear& ago, he and his wife have been :;ro·oded out twice, he broke an arm and came down with orthri· tis, while his wife seriously cut her hand, wre-n.ched het' neck end now ha! a slipped di!e in her back. Pennission for the number change was granted. • Patrons of the Doll's night club in Birmingham, England have a choice this week between '"the belly or the telly." Those who don't care to watch the exotic dancers on stage can turn around and see the Olympic Games on a television set against tbe back wall. SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnam ... government IJlOkesm<n said today they planned the largest release of Communist ca~ves ol. the war. 1be announcement canie as allied weekly battle deaths fell to the Jowe!t poiril of the .year, refiectJng a lull In fighting. U.S. aircraft losses, however, rose sharply with the downing of seven planes and hellcoptm Jn a u.bour period; military spokesmen said. On the ground Wednelday, U.S. Marines and South Vietnamese troopl plungtd into the demilitarized sone (DMZ) and killed l2ll North Vielnam"° . . . RayWorkM In Chicago After Escape ClllCAG-0 (UPO ~James Earl Ray, accused •••a•sin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., worked u • dishwasher and waiter in a ~ suburban restaurant for two monthl after acaplng from • Mlmurl prboo, It lw beon Jwned. Hla job al Jhe Indian Trail restataanl In lakeahore Winnetka -when hll fonner employen aid he wu alway1 clean shaven, neaUy draaed and . coorleowl -.,... Jeamed Wedn<lday. Mr. and Mn. Harvey Kllngeman, the owners, were unaware thl.t their onetime food server was Ray unW approached last August by a magarJn11 writer com- nllssioned by Ray to wrlto hll life story, The Kliqem&!ll, Who said Ray WU a highly satllfapory employe, notilled Win- netka police, who in tum .notified the FederaJ Bureau of Investigation. The lnfonnaUon la not considered crucial in the murder case, but ls Im- portant in helping investigaton fill in a "missing link" in Ray 's whereabouts between his escape on April 3,"1967, and the assassination on April 4, 1968. The Klingemans said Ray used the name of John~L. Rayns when he applied (or a job u a dishwasher.May 3, 1961. He used his own Social Security number, the couple learned later. Jackie Gle,ason Changes Mind About Divorce NEW YORK (UPI) -Jackie Gleason, the·paunchy television and tavern clown of 11away-y-y we go" fame, took ballerina Cenevleve HaUord ~ his bride when he "was an $3-•·"eek comic playing cheap clubs. That was in 1936 when he was 2tl. They had two daughters then separated in 1951. Gleason, a Catholic, vowed never to divoree his wife or remarry. "The church does not recognize divorce, 11 a thinner, poorer Gleason said 17 years ago. "We can't hope for an an- nulment because we have no solid grounds for one. In the eyes of the church T will always be married to Gen, and that means I will never remarry." "It's a tough situation, but those are the rules and there's nothing we can do to change them," he said. But after promising he would never do it, Gleason filed suit Wednesday in Supreme Court in New York to divorce his wife of 32 years. The 52-year-old comic charged hl1 wife in the suit with abandonment, the same grounds Mrs. Gleason won a legal separation in 1954, and custody or their two daugh.ters, Geraldine, now 29, and Linda, 27. &<>Idlers in I thrt&bour baWe. Government 1pokemnen aaid they plan- ned to release ICC Communist captives. Jt waa the third gesture of it.I type since the lull Jn fighting began llJ!l!d reporta Jn world capitals that a full bombing halt over North Vietnam was lmmlnenl aJong with a breakthrough in the prelimtn1ry PW peace talka. An allied cast18lty report covering the w,.kly period l>eglnnJn& Oct. 13 said U.S. combat deaths were 100, &he lowest week4 ly toll since Aug. 12, 1987. The ~ous week 17'1 Americam died in Vietnam lighling. U.S. wounded last week totaled .. . MYSTERY HIJACKER Wiiiiam Truitt Ex-VP'sGrandson Hijacks Plane, Flees to Cuba KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) -The grandson of the late vfCe president Alben Barkley dJaapPeared inW> Cuba today after hijac;klng a small pl~e and leaving his wife and three children behind in a trailer camp tent. William Barkley Truitt's wife, his mother, the FBI and the Federal Avia- tion Agency hsd no clues at an to why the JS.year-old free lance photographer dJd it. "How ri9Jculous," his wlfe said. HJs mother, Mrs. Max QtRe.U Truitt.; said in Washington she could not believe her son and hi.a family had lived in tents for siJ: weeks. "Thal jwt can't be true. It just can't be true," the late vice president's daughter aaid Wednesday, shortly after Truitt hljacked the single engine Cessna 177. Dressed in sandals with an ascot around his neck, .Truitt chartered the plane for a pTcture-taldng trip to the dry Tortugas Islands, 6S miles west of Key West. Truitt 1nd the pilot, Charles Oliveros, 28, landed in Havana at 2:58 p.m., about two hours after takeoff from Key West International Airport. The pilot could not ret'urn until today because he was not qualified for night flying, and stormy weather over the Florida straits prevented small craft flying. Truitt revealed the hijacking himself over the plane's radio. The FAA tape recording was not immediately available. Pilot Oliveros madt! a cryptic an- nouncement after Truitt: "No gun, but something m o r e detrimental being used.'' The FAA said it had no idea what that could be. Truitt lugged aboard much photographic equip- ment before the plane took off from Key West. Foggy Front Frets Florida ' Nebras'ka Frozen by Frigid Great Plain Temperatures California c ...... E•llV onomm. <lovcl1 i nd '°' <!f9r, 111'1 lO ~ "'Ollh' -bl' 1ltt1> nclOll IOdlY Wlncl1 '°"'lllwt1lerl1, 6 10 l• m~ll T-Y't 111111. 1? 10 1', """"'""'""' -.rwa r1rittlll '""' I 111911 Of 71 19 I low (If J.f. !,,_. '-"" 1-.111"" ~-wt1 M 10 51. The ......... NmJ1t<1tur1 Wb 6-l.f Of. ·- V.S. 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Eu,.1 Fort Wortll ·~~ """" Honolull -· ... ~ ... :-... ~~"" Loa A_.. Ml1ml Mllwtubl MIMQPOll• ·-...... Ntw YOl'll ...... ...... l"iM 11.obltl '°"'!!tH!..iil1 P"-!• -l'or11eNll 11.•ld City "" Bll.IW , ·--·-St. LOt.!ll .,,_ Slit LM.e Cftor ... l'I 0'"'9 s.11 Pl'IMfM'* • -·---·~ """"'' -- Hltll LIW l'r'K. " " u :/ • ~ " " " " " " " ., • ¥ .. " ,. .. " •• " » g .. ,. • ~ ~ • " " n .. " ••• " 4 .. .. n .. " " " .. • .. • " n " " .. .. " .. • " .. " " " " .. .. .. • " • n " .. .. " .. " • ., " .. .. • .. . . " • .. • .. .. •• " " •, 'I 589, the lowut fiiure alnct the week m- dlng last Dec. so. South Vietnamese battle deaths drop.. ped Jo Ila Jut week, the lowest flgurt thi:I year. -• Mllltary spokesmen were rtluctut to attach significance to the fact the alowdown 1n fighting corresponded to the bombing halt reporla. A U.S. military briefer said, "It la our opinion that the enemy I.a regrouping, resupplying and refitting u it was following the Tel and May offensives." The South 'lietnamese government • described Ila plan to release Jhe COm- ~ ' • M . ' . . .. \ - mu.nist prlsoners u a ••tolerant a1)d humanitarian gesture." A 1pok:qman1 uked .if lbe move bad any relaUoo io reported peace proposall, aaid "detalll will be provided later.i. The 1poi:eaman said the prilonrn would be freed within a week, probab\J Oct. 30,. wilb the relea&e ta.king place in Saigon. He said the men would -be free to remain in South Vietnam but he did not answer the quesUon of whether they would be turned over to Communist representatives. The p r I s on e r s "presumably" include both North Viet- namese and Viet Cong, the spokesman said. .Apollo 7 Trio Confer ·with Next Astronauts CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Amer- ica's Apollo 7 space heroes, back fmn 11 d.,a: in orbit. met informally h e r e today with three other astronauta who may fly around the moon at Cbrinmu.- tlmL Apollo 7 ptlota Walter M. Schlrra Jr., Doon F. ElleJe and Walter Cunningham then ""'tlm&ed ilHleplh ~ with technical aper1a attempting to deter- mlna whether Apollo I should get Jhe nod to rocket moonward or make another -orbital ..,.. .. Natlmal -and Space Ad-. mlnlatratlon "11cl•ls nid tbe Apcllo 7 crew and pllota ol Apollo a -Air Jl'orco Col. Franlt Bomum, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Maj. Will- iam A. Anders -met Informally In crew qua.rten, along with severaJ other as- tronauts lnYUlved with Apollo 7 and up- coming flighla. More formal meetings are sche:ctuled between the Apollo 7 and Apollo 8 crews next week at the Manned Spacecraft Center In Houston, Tex., when the as- tronauts discuss in detail how all space- craft systems operate. . Today'• meetings with technical ex- perts primarily concentrated on the Oct. 11 launching of Apollo 7 aboard a Saturn IB rock«:t and rendezvous in earth orbit a day later between Apollo 7 and th e upper stage of their booster. Mean?.'.hile~ the Apollo 7 spacecraft ar- rived at Norfolk, Va., today aboard its prime recovery ship, the aircraft carri- er Essex, en route to the Downey, Calif., plant of North American Rockwell Corp., prime Apollo apacecrati contractor, for detailed study. Navy Capt. Schlrra; Eisele, who was • promoted to an Air Force lieutenant col· onel by President Johnson, and civilian astronaut CUnniDgb:am we.re described in "generally excellent" health after compl,ettng a physical examination Wed· nesday. Bulgarians Join Czech~l~vakia Troop .:Pullout PRAGUE (UPI) -Bulgarian forces to- day joined the PUiiouL of Warsaw Pact troops from Czechallovakia. Long trains loaded with Soviej Wlk.s rumbled north through Priague, ·apparently toward the East Gennan or' ~ollsh bordera. The trains whfcll also included cars containing Soviet soldiers came from the western border are.a,, of Czechoslovakia and passed througll Prague's Smichov Railway Station, A·nlajor switching point for rail traffic in western Czechoslovakia. The Communist Party newspaper Rude Pravo said the Bqlgarian unitS left the town of Ruzyne, a short distance northwest of Prague, and returned to Bulgaria. It said -before the Bulgarians left thei r commanders received a letter expressing the gratitude of Gen. Ivan Yakubovsky, the Russian commander of the Warsaw Pact forces. Only a small npmber of Bulgarians participated in ~j\.ug. 20-21 invasion, and most of the,m, were stationed near Ruzyne il S Ouster Call • NEW YORK (UPI) -Poli<e oh'!'lll1fl "Blue Powtr" and demUdluc more money becawie· they "face doatb e./uy day" plcketed their own •la~tionl toda,1, striking teacher• marched outside locked tchool& and firemen refused all but · emergency fire caJIJ in the city's pim labor crisil. The second hlgbest ekcted Republican Jn the city of eight million penons demanded GOP Mayor John V. Lindlay • be kicked out of office for failing to solve the teachers' strike, work slowdowns by police and firemen and a threateoed. walkout by garbage collectors. Robert T. CoMOr, borough president of Staten LsJand, urged Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, also a Republican, to remove Lindsay because the mayor "has manifestly demonstrated be ls incapable of resolving" the teachers' strike which has kept more than one mllllon public school students out of class ·ror most of the fall term. A Lindsay aide said Connor "is an ex. treme reactionary who conaiatenUy votes with the Democrats in the Board of Estimate, and it la no .surprise that he would indulge in such an anLi-Lindsay publicity a:ambil" Striking teachers were back on picket Jines today alter chanting "no" to an «- fer from the local a:oventlfli board ti the prediminanUy Negro and Puerto Rican Oce.an Hill-Brownsville School DiJtrlct in Brooklyn to accept back a group of while teachers it had tried to transfer. It was that power i£sue that has set off three strike! this fall term by the 55,000. member United FederaUon of Teacben against the nation's largest school system. The union and its president, Albert Shanker, now demands ouster of the local governing board, Its chief o:· ecutive officer and its eight 1ehool prin- cipals. The board already bas been suspended. STUNTMAN KILLED AS 50,000 WATCH HOBART, Tasmania (UPI) - A Lat- vian stuntman fell 50 feet to bis death to- day before a crowd of 50,000 when a gust of wind toppled him as he tried to stand on his motorcycle while riding a steel wire between two pylons. The stunbnan, Adrian Labans, 44, stop- ped the motorcycle in the center of the high wire and tried to standup on the sad· die despite the strong wind. Lebans yell~ ed to the crowd at the Royal Hobart Show, "She'll be all right." Then ho stood up, onJy to be toppled by the wind. The gentle nudger Evm the best ol m,Udenly ochemes can faD a little behind ochedule. If he's not cliasing.quite ••fast u you're nmning, it could be he'• a bit iru«:urt. l'ethll'f all he needs i1 a gentle reminder th'at you are there ••• and care. To get your romance back on the proper time table,, give him an '1 AM LOVED" button. It's a very proper gift. Not too expensive (fm, u a rnatter of fact). And it packs quitt a wallop! Whm you come in to pick it up, have a look at the Wells "I AM LOVED" jewtlry for mm •.. all vrry penonal gifts of real silver and gold (SS, to $25.) They NY all lhlt you 11eecl to say ••• and more. Top the gift wr1p with the button, then hand It to him with a wink and your pttttiest miile. U you mention where you got it, he a'dght just retort in kind with a companion. "I AM LOVED" Hlec:tlort of Wells jewelry f-ct girls. After that.. the.rest Of the romanct is up .. ,.... HUNTlllGTOll CRfllR 1aac11 a Edt,,... H .... 11......, ._., ff2.,SSOI I AM l.OVID-DCWllVUY IY~~ ltc. Now 2 Gftat sto .... To Serve Yru fAST DEPINDAILI SERVICE ~~II ~II. ~ f , ' I ' ' ' I ! • • lhi;rsdly, October 24, 1968 DAILY PfLOf 5 QUEENIE By Phil lnterlancll .Are Presidential Whistlestops Old Hat?, "Cheer up, Mr. Harrington-ma.ybe someday money WILL be everything ••• " Stateto End Border Agricultural Checks SACRAMENTO (AP) California plans lo end its traditional -since 1920 - border check system againsl incoming agricultural pests and plant diseases. Richard Lyng, 1 t a t e agriculture d i re c t o r , con· firmed plarui Tuesday to close two of the .18 inspection sUl- tlons within two weeks and phase out tbe others over the nelt five years. The tentative timetable for cl011lng the stations depends on getting additional funds from the legislature for a more modern program of pest con· trot, Lyng said. In the near future, more travelers will be flying into caurornia than driving, he aaid. "So we feel in a sense the border stations will come to the point where they will be about as effective as the Maginot Line when the blitz came a1ong," he told a reporter. OPPOSED PLAN Several county agricuJtural officials quickly and angrily opposed the plan to close the stations -six on the Oregon border, eight on the Nevada line and four fronting on · Arizona. ' Pests infest forests and parks and gardens. There are more new pests in home gardens than anywhere else," be said. ASKS QUESTIONS At present, guards ask the motorist where he has come from. If it's from an area -usually east of the Continental Divide -where potentially dangerous pesta live, his auto is checked for any fruit or plants that might contain pests, or be a potential carrier. If any are found, thty are confiscated. This often angers surprised motorists, but one inspector at Truckee, in the Sierras east of Sacramento, said, "We don't run into too much trouble." In past years, pest damage to California crops ha s amounted to hundreds of millions of dollars. The pink bollworm got a loehold on the state's No. 1 cash crop, cotton, last year, but now is being brought under control. Other p e s t s particuJarly sought out by the inspectors 3re apple maggot, fruit fly, citrus white fly, and citrus pest. BRING PESTS • 'Ill' ~RIMAN SMITll - .~ :Aboard Nixon 'l)'ain in Ohio (Ur'JJ -Ttme wu when pol!Ud1D1 tbouiht the only fay in CllDpatgn for ~ 'fa'by train. Richard M. Nix· 06 tried 1t for Z47 miles Tuet- <IO)' llld tbe trip ..... elf ... g!bwing tribute to tbe jet plane IDd television. "'Ni ooe who wbiltl .. IOpped QIOre than 100,000 miles with Pnsfdeotl Truman a D d Ellenhower and their O(>- pents, it seemed to thia reporter !hat tbe Nixon trip. across Ohio was little more tban a rough-riding suggestion of: what rallroad campalgnin& Uled to be. Tb!J (J peraooal tattmooy that romantic -.Jg(J clroa lMI and 1968 reality are poles apart. For one thin.a, et1ulp. menl used by Truman in bis famous .. Clve •em Heti" nil toun from coast to coast WU vastly more comfortable and pror..,;ooany eflJcient tha4 tbt 15 cars put together to haul Nlxm ond bis party of nearly 300 persons jolting llld bouncing acrtm 1% Ohio coo. grusiooal districts. The Republican staff called the train the "Nlxoo Victory Speclal," perhaps w Ith out recalllng t hat Repuhllcon Thomas E. Dewey callt!<l his 1948 train "The Dewey Victory Special." 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546-7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5:30 SUNDAY 10 to 5:00 • GRAVITY GATE LATCH Ralph W. Lichty, the Los Angeles County agricultural commissioner, said the closure "will be a major blow to California agriculture." He forecast a ten fold in- crease in pests. But Lyng said his depart- ment is working out a long- range plan for deteclion of pests quickly so they can be eradicated before ~ey can cause great economic loss. The California stations were establishtd in 1920, when then· m o d e r n transportation In· creased the chance th a t , travelers could unknowingly be bringing in harmful pests. A uitt firt ctlth t Ytry time 9•+. l1tch of 9tl"•"i1td 1tttl. PrtdtiU1d for '''Y mounlin'jl. "We hope to have a fairly substantial public relations program, pointing out the im· portance of pest detection to everyone. We 're not just trying to protect agriculture. The first two stations to be closed will be on U.S. 395 - between Topaz and Carson Ci· ty. Nev., and between Swan· ville and Reno. The Topaz sta- tion normally is closed for the winter, but won't be reopened in the spring. Lyng said. The Reno-Susanville station i Ii being closed now because it handles little traffic. Home Of The HailJ National Open And The Maurie Luxford Tournament Of Stars Co rdially Invites You To Inspect Its Club House and Golf Shop FRI., OCT. 25 Thru SUN., OCT. 27 • GOLF SHOP SALE 25% off HAPPY HOUR 5:30-7:00 DAILY TICKET SALES HAIG NATIONAL OPEN MESA VERDE COUNTRY CLUB ::·· $~ TUU. £--WID. $300 THUi. •••• !:!· $400 SUN, • • 1701 Goll Cou rse Dr., Costa Mesa Tel ephone No. 540-7200 \ • APPLIANCE ROLLERS A tlf of fht11 will ttk1 •.lot of tht b1ck1ch1 out of 1ornt of !ht ht•vi•r cl11"in9 iob1. IJu1I our w1y of 11yin9 "Gtt buty;• fo!k1.I 111 : Plastic ELECTRICAL TAPE Tl.ii is on• ef tht m•n•9•1't tptdtl1, buf l.1 k1tp1 ltllin9 u1 th •t it do1tn't com• 1n • c1rd, just • ti119l1 roll of ftp•, but wt ct n'f kttp tl.1 •rfi1f 1wt k1 lo"t 1nough to do • ntw drtwing. 19' 'lh" Jt 150" Continental CLOTHESLINE ~· . Th i1 5 lin1 clothetli"' utt!il 11 bt c•ll1d • Oistpp1•ri111 Cloih11li"'• but our Hou11w1111 911 r11d • tr1v1I book, 10 now .... , got Co"tin1nl1I Cloth11Un1 "o 1111. II groov11 •nywty. 1711 FLIP LOCK Good 1tftty f••t11r1 for th• lod!ill1r1, pyt ii 11p hi9h, eM thty u11·1 r••tll ii lo l•k• off i" lti• middl1 of tht 11l9ht. Flipt te oplft, flipi to tloM. 69' II the Nixon opedal l<l'Ved any unusual purJQt, it wu to empbasize 20 yw:s of. travel prosresa. Perhaps more aadl.Y, Lb.la cm&<lay venture aloog tuSt)' rails showed the decay of pusenger rail terVict all over the country. plus the deacy of town and city centers which once boomed Jl'Olllld the railroad station. The Nb:on train, creating near sacrolllac condiUons by the mile u tt bumped over in- credibly rocky road beds through arem where passenger trains art seldom seen these days, ran from Cfn. cinnati to Toledo with nine scheduled stops. To t h • pusenem 11 oeeme.i only Ilk• llJllO miles and 900 slope. The GOP candidate may have seen 200,000 per800ll dur- ing the course of his trip. While the .eWng may have been quaint for television newsreela, o n e state-wide televtslon appearance from a studio tor 15 minutes would have brou,ght him in contact wltb Ohloaoa by the mllllona. Nixon found himself speak· Ing from the rear platform ot a comfortable railroad ex· ecutive's car, but staring at long·abaondoned railroad sta- tions with boarded up windows and plastered with "Keep Out" )igns. Even at such a large city u Colwnbol, the llate capital, I.be railroad station was a sad· ly decbning &boot community of silent ral.b and tmpty of. fices. When. whlaUe-stopphlg was In vogue 20 years ago, cam- paign trains were ae.lf~ tained cities with relatively IUIW'ious living quartera for 150 to 200 persons who lived aboard for weeks at a time. Work space was organized for use over a period of several months, not one day. The telegraph company was in much better shape to handle the press traffic in those days than today when the telephone is a more frequent instrument or press conununlcallon. Ml to be 18dly frank lbo<lt,,M: • tbert were few railroad facilltlet today in proper cifo. dition ror handling cllDpa~ operations. , , Tbere were lO « 11 ~ aboard tile Nixon opoC\a) T\lWay wbo were veteran1·tf the whistle-stop tours of . the! . : . " 19401S and 195011. They Wer'e' the ones who watched drtaniJ.' , ly from the jolting, streaktd windows of the train. The1 were not reliving Ule past, *' gazing longingly at occas1anal jet transports as they climbed' smoothly several milea over head. HERE COMES DE BUBBLER SENTINEL LIGHT CONTROL Prtvt 11t t i;cid1nh, lnirt lt ry, 111d 'l't ndtli1rn (rno.,•l. jutt t H•ck thi1 1ilt11t p•tmtr to •llY ltmp cord 111d plug into wt ll totk1t. lf1 tht ont th•t turnt th• liglof o" t i dutk, off t t .ltw". !It'll drivt th• n1i9hbor1 cra1y.I 211 SHELF BRACKETS rn Grt y 1hot l, t ntm1t1d, ctn takt • trtm1ndou1 lotd. !Not •• muck 11 my couti" Tipple, I bt t.1 4·111" lk ... )( 10" 40¢ , .. )( , .. 18c 10" )( 12" 59c . 6" 11: , .. 30c 12" .. 14" 79c SPRAY PAINT AYt il1blt i" t nilmtl, prim1r1, cltt r, and p111tic. Vari•ty of colors, no fun, no mt11, no bnnh. {So ,11ty no •t•I point in doing it at 111.1 S•.,•• lirn• tn!il t n•rrt. 49' c •• GARAGE DOOR SPRINGS ' '/ R,1pl•c• tft1 rutfyi btfort H!1y ltt you dowft. t ftcl tht !iloor r11pond1 wlt+t t benk 111 th• h11 d. Ch11p l"lllfl llCI I I 11ptcit l!y If you u11 your J gt r•9• mor• in the r1lny Wltfhlt. 7x21 199 LIQUID PLUMR Tlii1 i1 ffl1 ltllff tlo.tt'll ""clot it q11icHy '"d 111lty. T,., it btfor• Y•• c1ll tho pl11m~tr 1111 f1cl, try •nythlnt befere c1111nf .h1 plwll'lblt, it'!il prob.~ly ~. ch1ep1r It 111of1.I 79' Qt, FAUCET FOUNTAIN Pretty cute 91d9•t for s1vin9 Mommy ar1d Oeddy the pouring of umpteen glasses of w1ter. Now the sm ell fry ce n have their very own drinking fountain with thi s simpl e ettechment. Just 1crew onto reguler faucet end then push botto m for clrinking fou ntain, release for regular flow. (Now, when comes chempe9ne ettechm ent11 I WATER HEATER 10 YEAR GUARANTEE Rapi!il rt c1p, '"ti COl"fld•n r.d, ••l•m•fic 1lt11t tff, t1mp1rttv•• ca"ffol, rn1jor Amt ric•" br1nd. 61111 li111d for t1f1ty. 30 Gal. 40 Gil. 44'5 49~5 PLASTIC DIVIDER PANEU Choice of 2 or l dimtn1iontl 1rnbo111d or form1d P'"'I' i" 1mbtr blwt or 9r1•11 mi1t. Ju1t b11wtifu1 ••room divid•t1 o• 1ect "t pi1c11. 2' x 4' •············· 24' 1' I 6' --···-·-4 2 ' GLIDDEN ENDURANCE HOUSE PAINT Tht pttft cl co••r 11p ftr wt tthtrtd p•i"t fi"itht1 or new prim1d siding, Hi hiding, 9rttf co.,ertgt end ••••of bru1hi"9 rnt k•• ffli1 • winNr. 111 whit• end wid1 r•ngt of colors. 769 Go!. GLIDDEN SPRED HOUSE PAINT Goes on H1ily •nd quic~ly over wood siding, shingles, end m11on1ry. Gives le1tin9 beeuty ind protection with its sup•riot 1dhe1ion e nd h1rd, dureble finish. Dries in lO minute• du1t ind bu9 fretL l_H 'mmm this sounds like 1 commercial.I ·6'' Gal. ' ' 'I j l i I • OAILY PILOT ThurM111, Oct.obfr 2•, 19&8 La•imark Tower H11:ghes Will Buy 6th Strip Hotel LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Boward HU&t>es a.,.ed to buy 1lle LaJ!dmlrt Tower Wed· .-ay, llvinl him a llx1h boCel<alm»._tbeuoa Ilda gambllnc ce11ter'1 Iii~ Urine lllr!p. 'l'hll lime, ap- ponat17, the U.S. JUJtice l>epartment will have no an- Utrust objeclloos. 'nle ~ Landmark, -by • bankrupt .... poratlol1, baa been Vacanl alnce completion last spring. At 11 1toriel, it it the hi&hut buildiog in thia stlte where gmblln1 II a~ bullnea. Carol OomlnlctlOn Co. and rtpr?s?ntltfvel ti. R\Jlhel, a bllllonalre who hun't bee 11 eeen ID public for more than a decade, qreed on a 117.3 mlllloo price. Hughes, 62, already holds, at a co s t estimated at $150 mllllon. tbe Saoch, De..rt Inn, Prootler, Castaways and Silver Slipper. He faller to c 1 o s e earlier hit year -at the nquest ol the Justice Department -a state-approved deal for the Stardua:t Hotel and Casi.no . The department said the pro- posed purchase r a i 1 e d monopoly questloos. Asked about tbe Landmark, U.S. Atty, Jooeph Ward did not rule out another antitrust inveatlgaUoa but aald "thue la no reuoo to expect lb.at any reaction will be fortbcornlng." Sheldoo Sandler, attorney lor Caroll, aald the Stardust iJ a lhrlvlng hotel-easino while the Landmlrk never opened. Muches now ranks third behind Wlillam Harrah of Reno and Del Webb as owners cf Nevada gambling establishments. The Stardust deal, if It bad gooe through, wou1d have made him No. l. While the state of Nevada must approve the Landmark: deal, it so fa bu supported every Hups purchase, in- cluding the StardWIL Doctors Develop New :Type Heart Surgery LOS ANGfil& (UPI) -An alternative to heart tnnaplani. capoble bl aaTiJJg up to 90 percent al all patt- wfth severe aronary artery dlaeue, baJ been developed by a surglacl team bere. The procedure, known as partial left ventricular mec- tlao, wu flnt performed nvo New Terror Forestalled By Arrests NEW YORK (AP) -The arreat of -anll-Outn> C.barul baa -plalll t.o assassinate the Cuban am- buaador to the United NaUoos and t.o raid a Nationa1 Guard armory, says Chief Asst. Disl Atty. Alfred J. Scold. The nine wen: 1 e I 1: e d Wednesday in predawn raids and charged wJtb a serlea or bombings here of offices of nations that trade with Cuba. The second stage of the revolutionary plan. Scotti said, IJ>tclflcally included killing Cuba's U. N. Ambauador Dr. Ricardo Alarcon de Quesada and theft of munitions Crom tbe 106tb Infantry Arroocy in Brooklyn. The third phase, Scotti said, was the bombing and destruc- Uon of foreign ships used in Cuban trade. Arresting officers reportedly unrovered a cache ol guns - some equipped with ,ailencers -as well as loaded pllltols and Army uniforms. The nine men have been in- dicted by a Manhattan grand jury on charges of arson, r e c k I e 11 endangerment, criminal mischief and the il- lqal possession of weapons and exploaives. monlhl ago and hu since been performed on 11 paUenta at Ciolmty·USC Medical Center and SL Vinctnt'1 Hospital bere .. Eight of the patients -all of whom had been diagnosed 11 lltely transplant reclpienUI -are living and much im- proved after the ruecUons. Dr. Jerome Harold Kay, chief of thoracic surgery at the medical center, &aid the f1rlt resection waa performed after X-ray moUon pictures in· dlcated there WU llWe hope for a patient whose blood sup- ply was seriously diminished by diseased coronary arteries. Only one-ball ol the left lower chamber of the be.art wu cootracting. Surgeon 1 removed tbe d)aeued portion of tbe muscle and Implanted two internal mammary arter- on all 11 patient3. "In all instances, the re- maining healthy portion of the heart was able to take over the task of pumping blood with greatly increased efficlency,11 Dr. Kay said. "Tbert are thousand! of penorui throughout the wortd who are candidates for heart transplants but who could be saved by such a cardiac resec- tion," be aaid. ''However, in about 10 to 15 percent ol people with poorly tuncUooJag h e a r t s , a transplant will be necessary because in this group of pa- tlenta the entlre ventficle is not functioning." Kay s a i d advantages of resection over transplantaUon lncluded the elimination of a need for a human donor, for anU-rejecUon drugs, and !or isolation rooms to guard against ln!ection. The surgeon was assisted in t h e resection operations by Ors. Harold K. Tsuji, John V. Redington, Adollo Mendez, Oscar Madison, B e r n a r d Krohn, and Edward Dunne. Tension Mounting In Mideast .. -.¥ .... Hoff er Mad at Protesters Lynda Roh)) Expecting ' WASl!!NGTON (UPI) -Al "Thty'e bavlnl the time of WASlllNG'l'Orl (UPI) _ usual, 1ong1 ho rem an· their lives. They're having • Lynda Blrd Robb, happy and phllooopher Eric Holler had no ball. You expect educated peo-healthy, Is npectmc ht1' first hesltancy about speaking hll pie .to behave in a civiliued chlld any day. mind ·. "I'm 1llllng lis'·nlng to Jost d th beba Ilk ..... we,y. ta , ey ve e Jn lhe interim, the Pru!.dent all' lhl& stuff bere and 1 jUJt hoodlums." and --~ ol the flr•t can't swallow U." .. ._.,1,111;1, A short tlme liter, he walk· At anotbtr point, Hoffer family art st.a11nl c1oee to the ed.. out of Wednesday's bearing growled at Maytt: "I have White HOUM: to keep her com- by the P r e 1 l d e n t ' s Com-always 1&1d It ls harder to pe..ny 1n the abltnce of her mission on the Causes and write a good par1gr1pb than husband, Marine Cap t • Prevention of Violence -tbe to ltart a rtVoluUoo." Qwles s. Robb, statlooed Jn first session he has attended since President Johnson nam-BoUtt Htumed for the com-Vietnam. ed him a member last IWn-mlaalon.'1 aftunoon session. Aaked when her baby is due, mer. and enaaged In a sharp tx· Lynda, 21, 1aya 1all¥: "I wt$h The panel, currently looking change with Sam Brown, • it wu yesterday." into demonstrations and pro-fonner Harvard divinity stu· -=========:::::; tests involving violence, con-dent w b o coordlnated t b e .. tinued hearings today with the youth movement on behalf of !lcheduled witnesses Gordon Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy's Misner, associate professor of a b o r t l v e bid for the the school of criminology at D e mo c r at i ·c presidential the University of California at nomination. UP'IT ........ WATCH FOR Berkeley; two Pennsylvania pngT&ITS l'ROTPS'fED Lon h phU "My impression is that you By United Press laternaUonal ti ffi 1 1 d Da Id " " -ngs orem1111 <>-do not believe in t h e po ·ce 0 ca s, an v sopher Eric Hoffer stormed out of a heartng ot the Israeli and Syrian troops ex-Ginsburg, executive director Democratic proces1," Holler changed gunfire across their of the President's Commission President's Commission on Violence Wednesday said after Brown complained cease-fire line today and on Civil Disorders. after charging that today's college students were that Vice President Hilbert H. ff h Id If behaving like hoodlums. Shown testily\ng era (left) H hr th min ti troops on all Arab-Israeli Ho er, I e 66-year-o se · ump ey won e no a on ht h f S F Tom Hayden, founder of Students for a Democratic r · 1 "Y ·11 1 t fronts were reported triaaer taug aut or rom an ran· st d I d f un arr y. ou w1 no accep ee cisco. blew up Wednesday Society, and Henry Mayer, a u ent ea er o defeat. You were beat fair and tense. In the past 24 hours following testimony by Henry demonstrations that rocked UC, Berkeley in 1966. squ1tt." there have been c I a s h e s Mayer, a stude nt who helped Brown I n s I a t e d that between Israeli and Jordanian lead student demonstrations McCarthy supporters from movement, they should in-Hoffer, w e a r 1 n g his h h troops and an air battle on the Berkeley campus in states w ere he won t e W !'ff Pl between Israeli and Egyptian 1966. terrogate thoae responsible for customary open-necked shirt popular votes in primary elec-estc I aza Mayer told c o m m i s s o n "that arrogant exercise in aus-and sports jacket, shouted 1n lions were denied represen- jet fighters. members that irultead or in-tained otflcial violence -the r e f e re n c e to Ca.mJW talion at the Democratic Na-SOON Fkeswept TelAriv'sLydda ·v~es~t~lg~a~tl~n!g~th~e~s~tu:d~en~t~pr~o~te:s:•_.::w~ar~ln'.'....'.V~le~tn~am.~-"~~~~~d:em:::o~ns:tr~ati:on'..'.:.:~~~~~__.:tlon:=:::•:I~Con~v:en:t~ln~n:·~~~~.!,,""""""""""""""""~:! Airport early today, closing - the field for two hours to all international traffic. The fire was described a11 apparently accidental but it increased nervousness in Middle East capitals. Amit I tar y communique broadcast from the Syrian capital of Dama11cus charged that Israeli soldiers opened machinegun flre on Syrian frontline positions in the Ruhiya sector this morning and that Syrian troops return· ed the fire. The communique s a I d Syrian forces suffered no losses but that an Israeli am· bulance was seen driving away an unknown nwnber of casualties after a 25-minute duel. Israel earlier today reported a rising tide of Arab attacks on its borders a1ong the Jordan River and In the Gaza StrlP and a spokesman said they appeared "more con- centrated than at any time in recent months." The Israelis Imposed curfews in partB of occupied Jordan to cope with Arab student unrest. The official explanation of the fire at Lydda Airport was that an underground electric cable short circuit probably started the blaze. There were no immediate reports of in· juries or deaths. Black Panther Youth AITested LONG BEACH (UPI) -A 15-year-old youth was arrested Wednesday night and charged with firing rile shots at a motel and a service station from the Long Beach head- quarters of the Black Panther Organization . "'I'm a Black Panther," said Donald Oscar Peterson when police seized him in the bead· quarters of militant black power organization. "We don't say nolhln&." TOYS-HOlllES-STA llONERS ~((@~ . EVERYTHING • HALLOWEEN! _________ ..er ___ _ Horror Suppll" H .. .., H•• ~ !'en. 47c -lye , .... ~. iJc-C: .. ....tt• H•INr, 17c-G-'9.t, tt. ... -e.i.t Cleon, nc. Haltowun Costumes .... _ .... ""'"· w.. ,._ ....... ........... s. .. .-all, OM4l••· 1 ·• 2·" ·-· ,,._ .. Wl9s Ale • ....., -~· "' Holi.•-· ~.::=:.... 99c .. 3·" Hattoween Lamp l'leltk ,_.,i,1 ..... U.l .• , __ .... c .. 11 H41 "°""'· IH•ld.. 1 "' ... 1. ...... O.t., Hipple S11pplies r I I L r- -----, M~;cH~~u.;o~.~-'s;:u I 6l)INT!INATl0t+AL ... -.............. FRIEi GU.ND PRIX ..,._.,........... I UNIT ONI tTIM '" CUlrOMD ~~H~;s1;r.;::. ~ "'c'"24"' 9-7 COUl'OM YA.LID OCT. J4.J1 _J •Ide•·" fleg. $15.00 Vlh>e • LIMIT 0-;; Intl ;. CUSTOMh = -I ANT 1'1.ASTIC MODll I I L r- 1 I - "" -" ,..._. """ FREE' ,., .... ., ".......... . LIMIT ONI COUPON Pll CUSTOVU I I COUPON •MID OCT. 24-JI ----------------LIMIT ONI ltlM PU CUSTOMll KIDDLES JEWELIY _J --, I I Home Raceway .:~.,. Grand Prix 1/24 aoale hom• raceway complete, re-ady to run with la pc~nt•r, cllr., fencing, track. 29 87 Reg. $50.00 v1lu1 • MICROSCOPE by Tueo 7~ power complete ~th wood ca•e llnd acce..orle1. 16 99 t 20.00 v1lue. • "THE SHIFTEll" by Ty .. '""'• c-. 1 ... 1 ...................... •:sular'X SJo.90 ""'"· 19.99 --:-?~ .. , ~· ,..;:._.,. .. :-r:/..a".~f 1,~ ••.. ' ,,,,,,., ..... ~·~~ ._..,, 'i'>' ., ' ...... .. - ··-·~iijj ,, ~, ' . ~ . TASCO 4YTE UTllOID IEFRACTOR ~o -· ,_. ,... ..-.i-lfflii.. .... ,... ..,. _., ,,. .. llll ..... 1297 • ... 114.n NIM. o Electric lullcl-lt Set ""''""~· ... ........ '""-n, ....... ,... ...... _ •. ~ 11 99 ,..,, r..1-..i. o"" . Kenoody Airport .. ,_ YM•..........,,CWlll~ .. nilt.e e-..11.4 ,..._.. _. ~:..--.... 10.87 Faschlatloa A1 9'ttlrlc - -M .. . ... ''""'· c... ii.. ,..., .... .. ••-.. by I ~. ""1 Mle i.i,i. -·· ,1., ••• dn .. _..... 487 ... elll ow, • Jewels for Ja~kie . ,, I - • I ' 'j I I ' ' -• • I ' I~'.. ~ • MATTEL TIPPY TOES 'Ille J11r'1 lllO$t ~I« doll! She rides tier pin-°"'1 tic bllt •b 1 rear JOmt· sllSI'. Blttlf)' operlted. 11 94 ltoot.d hair. • Onassis Gifts Bride With Genis Galore WASHINGTON (AP) '•You couldn't dial a telephone wearing it!" eiclaimed an onlook er in describing the heart-shaped Cabochon un- faceted ruby on Jacqueline Onassis' left hand al the post- nuptial cat.bering aboard AriltoUe Onassis' yacht. Maxine Cheshire, writing from At.hens in Thursday's Wuhington Post, described Onusis' wedding present ol a piceless set of heart-ahiped rubles sur ro u nded by dlamonds to his bride. ''The spectacle which C&U&- ed every person of every age in the room to gasp· wu the Onaais' jewels, which even Mta-Onaasil' mother found it b a r d to believe were real,'' lht wrote. 'Ibe "Almost too large to llft" ltoDe in the ring Wll IW'• rounded by dozens o t dlamondl, she aaid. "From IMr earlobes were IOlpOl!ded ldanllcal heart .. haped rubit$, i Ike and quality ll>at m!iht com e from a m1baranee11 ~ and llllmlllrlC!ed .., _ They him("""' C8or.bon rubiet &hit were • ll1lmlllDded b1 All Baba 'OplD Seoam<' llnds of Ml.mooda." • wniu: thlt Paris 2psMJllper lllfCUlated t h e ,..,... wwld be ~ around u .auon dollan. .... -...... llllm!. ll -............ c.nlill who ran forward and spoke for them all," the story said. " 'Mummy, mwnmy, mum· my!' she cried. 'They're so pretty ... you're so pretty.' "Laughing at Caroline's pleasure in the jewels, Jac- queline Onassis took off htr ring and gav' it to her daughter to try on her own hands and to play with like a bauble. 11Carolloe kept tossing it In the air IO her cousins cou Id watch the flaabes of light whJch tumbled like imprisoned firtOies. "The children themselves were aoon treated to presents of Uieir own which took their mlndl oll lhe rlni·" So that no one wenl home empty-handed, lhe story said, OnU&ia had Athen s jeweler Zo!atov aend a sample oC 1valuable trinkets Y>'hich Uie guest.I could select u memen- toes. readiness, and expecting the bride herself to come through the door. she stepped into their midst. She wore a floor· le ngth white skirt, gold shoes, a bl~ck blouse and the be· jewelled caftan belt which the King of Morocco gave her while she was the first lady." An emotional wedding sup- per followed, It continued. with Mrs. Onassis weeping as toasts were made. " 'But I have never seen anyone c r y the w a y Jackie cried.' said one person there. 'Her eyes shone like stars but one tear rolled down each c h e e k and s h e controlled herself and later one more 10litary tear Conned again from each eye.' " After the feast lhert was music and dancing but the Onaul.a' did not dance, the ltory continued. "They sat togMhcr holding hands. They never kissed, but Jacqueline Onas.111i9 looked so radiant that one person afterwards said : ·~re was adoration In her eye1 ... She turned her heltd lJke a swan to look aL htm ... Anyone Jr_ America who Utlnlt! Me doff not love him ill • fool!' " Jn de.scribing the scene leading up to Mn. On:tssis' entranct, the story related that two Kenntdy alsten, Jean Smith Ind Pit Llwford, both in party pajamas, entered the room first. It wu almost, said one aource., 11 If the two women were comln1 into that -----------1 roout u Jacqueline 's br1de.sm.aidl: -even if they were wurb1g wlth·lt jet s ' t paJ1ma1 instead or brtdemt1ldl coa:tumea . "l'bm, wllh .,..,..,. In Kids Uke lo Ask Andy ' ....... ,._,.,~. wlNI ""• ........... 11 .. . 4-TIANSISTOl-SET Of Z WALKIE TALKll "ange up to 2l mlle1. Qutllty lmP,Orttd 1t a low prlof:. ••ttery fully 9 99 -guarantetd. Reg. 20.00 v1 lue • COX MUSTANG P·51 Complete with all acc:eNOr• le•, fuel and batter-8 76 lei. Aeg. t12.00 v•lue • with e111llt. Embllrk on tho adven- tu,.. .,, butldlng Rev•fl'e cl1•1lo ,..pllc• of HOid Iron-12.97 •Ide• ... Reg. •1&.00 v1lu. """" Road n~e ..... ,.. 8y Eldort-"Ov'' •n under" Kt with over 40 plee:" Incl. cars ind rh101tat hand eontrol•. Rtg. 9 99 f15.00 viilut. • Rudy TM Robot He ............. .. ......_. MH M .... lilt. • _.. ... •WT9eft ......... -· ,,_, .................. 111, :i:"~~ CH~ 11.94 ALWAYS YEAR ROUND PARTY SUPPLIES fro111 HOUSE OF PAPER in Our PARTY SUPPLIES DEPT. Newpcr! Beach _West_cliest_er--i ' Los Angeles ---·-·-----..... a..l,kM1tW &m•. w sr. ... w1 • OPEN SUNDAYS • h ' Kenner's "Rex" s fett tons. s tttt tan. Mtli• l'OUI' ...., lllOllSt.t. FUD fot '" llfts $10.00 Y.tM ""'' • llETAL IAS ITATIOI ,. """ fl f9111 ...... ... ,.,..,__.... ...... .... ... " ......... t--;,~.. .97 TIPPY TUMBLES "' 11MC0 " ' I .. lftl -l'tak ... ""' 0oa • trom ,.., • ·•aw. .. ...,. "'°" ~ rMI _.,, .... 120.00 1188 v.i.. °"" • I Police, FBI Sear e h - 2 Escapees Hunted WE.Sr COVINA (AP) - Pollet and FBI agents sealed oU two square miles of tract homes today in their search for two escaped life-term con- victs who held a woman hostage in her home. · The unldenUfied woman was released u oha rm ed Wed- nesday night after l % hours, police said and the two men disappeared into the area dot- ted with vacant lots. The search, involving more than 80 policemen and 2C FBI agents aided by a sheriff's helicopter, was directed from a command post set up in a supermarket parking lot near the woman's borne. The convicts, Lewis Donald Fritz, 36, and George Harp, 34, were identified from photographs Wednesday by a man who gave his name ·as Ross White. He said they kid- naped him at gunpoint from bis Visalia motel room Tues- RTD President Says 'No Improper Action' LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The president of the Southern California Rapid Tr a n s i t Di!trict knows (If no "im- proper actions" in th e sale of 107 trackless trolley buses. Don C. Mt!Aillan to Id newsmen Wednesday "no fac- tual information s u s t a i n s charges of Jmproper action." He said RTD directors had "thoroughly gone into''· the transaction in which the trolleys were sold to a business associate of RTD officials. They subsequently w er e resold at a higher prlce to a Mexican firm. McMillan said the vehicles -once valued at $250,000 -were sold by the district for $37,~. Sears SAVE $30 to $50! Sears Hearing Aids All·in·the-Ear Aid Regular $249 '199 Fits entirely in the ear witl_l no need for an ear~ mold. Continuous volume control: No cumber- some wires or cords. $249 Trimlite Lm~------$199 $199 Tru-Ear VII $169 NO MONEY DOWN oft Sean Easy Payment Plu Jlearing Aids Available at the Following Stores: Buy le Jn1Iewood Torrance Loni BelMlb Compton Cotta Meta Pal!ladena V"1ley Co-Pomona Glendale El Mont.e Santa Fe Sprlnp Pko Buen.a Park C&aop Park .I" ......................... ~ l~~~-~~~~:-~:~~~.:..~.~ SIAJl.!, JlOEBVCX. AND CO. .<;;OUTHERN CALIFORNIA STORES day night and forced him to drive them to Los Angeles where they released him. The pair escaped from Tulare County Jail in Visalia early TUesday when they forc- ed officers to surrender their weapons at the point of a dummy gun made from a soap bar and a razor handle. The convicts were awaiting trial on charges stemming from a previous escape near Merced. AulhoriUes there say the two overpowered an of - ficer and drove his car to Los Angeles where tbey were cap- tured a few days later. At the time of the Merced incident they were en route from Folsom Prison where they were serving life sen- tences for armed robbery to Los Angeles \o testify in federal court. Airport Hit On Safety By Council LOS ANGELES (AP) -The death of an 11-year~ld boy has prompted the City Council prtsldent to assail the Depart- ment of Airports for "violating the rules of safety" ·at its recenily acquired Playa del Rey property. Brian Bennett was crushed to death Monday when a re- taining wall collapsed as he played in. one of about 300 Iota acquired by the airp:irt for uae as a clear zone for a new north runWay. Another 388 properties in east Westchester have been acquired for the same purpose. Council President L. E. Timber l ake demanded Wednesday th at the council order the Building and Safety Department to aurvey the areas immediately and en· force all building regulaUoru:. He also urged requiring the airport to fence all exiJtlng and future haiards and asked the counc:il's Building and Safety Committee t o in- vesUgate the airport's maintenance of acquisitions. "I want the airports depart- ment to abide by the rules the same as anyone e l se,'' Timberlake demanded~ "We enforce rules against private Individuals yet the airport, which shoutd be the leader, is violating tbe rules of safety." Law Suit Names Cat as 'Mouse' SANTA MONICA (AP) -A Superior Court suit accU!ea a cat named Mouse of bullying a cat named Angel. · The suit, filed WeClnesday by MJ. and Mrs. RJchard D. Agay, asks an injunction against Mouse's "viclous and d a n g e r o u s propensities," $39.20 to pay veterinarian's bills and $15,000 in damages for, among other things, "mental anguish." CARPET· FURNITURE WAREHOUSE OUTLET NOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 6 DAYS A WEEK - MONDAY THRU SATURDAY a SOFA Tufttd Bick. Avoc. '289 Ft. Gr-V1lvet. Rig. $360 J. I. KNICKERBOCKER CO. ' 4001 llRCH ST., NEWPORT BEACH 545-8409 A.,_ ..... O.C. At.pert Mtwe• PtllJ.4ft & MatAM•r - • ., ..._ .... Thursday, October 24, 1968 DAILY PILOT 1 Possible Murder 2-year·old Boy $1,500-for. Cleaver Talk? Mamed by Lion LONG BEACH (UPI) -nie .newsmen at bia'l!an rranei- student Senate at Long Beach home, old he WIS llL Shi LOS ANGELES (VPJ) -A State College Wednerday declined to elaborate. Halt,s Operation I-year-old Gardena boy wu allocateil $1,500 as a lecture A lelt wing opeaktr wbo M· attacked by the pet mountain fee for Black Pa n the r ed I f Cl a ··'d ••· lion of a ftlend Wednesday n or ' vu ... ""' h __ , In th Eldridge Cleaver 1n the event Black Panther nWmttr of when e wand~~ to e he 1peab there. educailon had been frightened sTANFORD (UPI) -A -Sien.._ uld Carter, a anlmal'a cage. away by th-a•·. _.-.-... Robert Ct.whom was cut The actlon was taken after ... "" slble heart lrantplant opera-frlmd of BUib, was the only eeverety on hla bead and doc· Cleaver cancelled a scheduled But a Black p ant b tr Uon at Stanford Untventty witnul to the Sunday sbootlng ton at Cedars of Lebanon noon hour address -a move spokesman at the scbool Medical Center wu called on that led to Bush's.death. The Hospital said he would require for which confllctln1 e:r-denied this and aald Clea"Vtt rectnUy when lt wu learned lbootlnC occurred in Bush's plasUc sura:ery . after he planaUona we.re offered. didn't come becauae he badft't the prospecUve donor ml)'"::bo:me::;:'================""°==v=er.d==.==============CI==ea=v=er=''=w=U='=·con==t=ac=led==b=y==boe==n=of=f=er<d==='nou==g=h=lft0Jle1=====.' have been murdered. ~ Iii Stanford olllclals dlaclooed Wednesday that prellmlnary tesb aimed at a tranaplanl were begun following the death of Ronald Bwh. 11, Oroville. Buah died Tlleoday of a gunshot wound that wu believed to have been self·in- flicted. Late Tuesday nf&ht the Stanford docton wen notified by the Santa Clara County Coroner that Butte County of· ficials had begun an in- vestigation· into the pogiblllty that Bush had been murdered. The transplant teats were lm· mediately halted and Bush's body was turned over to the coroner for a f\lll autopsy. Butte County Sherlff1s Capt. Richa:d Stenberg llld Calvin Carter, 11, Oroville, WIS being questioned about Bush's death. Carter was charaed Wed· nesday with the murder of Howard R. Stanley, 12, also of Oroville, whose body wu discovered Jn a railroad yard July 23. Carter told lnveJtlpton that be fired a .Jk:aliber rifle from hla home tut summer and nw sometblng ~ near the railroad tracb. ite told them be found Stanley's bodJI but WU afraid to report.IL Bomb Suspect Pleads Guilty LONG BEACH (AP) -Roy Emory Hargraves, 28, pleaded guilty Wednesday to malicious mischief charges stemming from the Tueaday morning bombing of the Long Beach of· flee of Students for a Democratic Society. AN INVIT AT/ON FOR YOU from ••. Second Church of Christ Scientist, Newport Beach . . 3100 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar, California Thi m•mber1 of S1cond Church of Christ, Sci•ntist, Newport Beach, e ra hippy to announce that th1 n•w church and Sunday School we hive 'b1en bulldin 9 for th• Corona d•I Mar community ls now complet1. You are welcome to attend our op•ning strvices on Sunday, October 27th at 10:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M. and to our r19ul1r W1dn•1d1y •v•nin; tel'Vic•s et 8:00 P.M. Stud•nt1 up t o th• •g• of twenty will find a fresh approach to Christi•nity at our Sunday School which conv•n•s at 10:00 A.M. Childr•n und•r Sunday Schoof age will b• cared for in our child care room and. play i1rd, both at Sunday Servic•s and Wadnasd1y evenings. ...... Come see the caiswitht'hl? oome-doser look. Visit the Olds Exhibit at the Auto Show. - You won't have any trouble spotting the Olil• ExhlblL Just look for a big crowd. And bend an •r for thOH oohs and aaahal It'• Inevita- ble when you.come up with looka Ilk• th-. Thi new Delta 88 Royale, above, for Instance, Ila all new from sweeping hood to larger tNnk. It f•turea ii vinyl roof, cualom plnatrlplng, Meet Mf11 America for1989 . at the Olde display -. ' '·· front fender IOllYtlrt, cuatom apOrl front~.· 455 Rocket V-8, and new GM 11ftty equl~ , ment-all standard. And that's )Ult one of, thirty Ninety-Eight, Toronado, 88, Cutia~ 4-4-2, and Vl•ta-cn.11-moclela! So, come, -the Olds Exhibit and then -your Old11, 1 ~ dealer the flrat chance you get., Escape from the ordinary at '6th Soulhern C1llfoml1 International Auto Show ' Sunday, November 3 Pan Paclllc-Audllorlum October 2' • floyllllhr 1 , I I I I -•----------~ ----~------·---------------------------------' ; f! DAIL V NLOT !fltndlJ, Ck~ M. 1968 Drea1os of Duhloons Sunken Ve~sel of Armada Found DUBLJN (AP) -The ,._ maim ~ the Slnla Marta de la Rosa, a ship o( the Spanish Armada sunk In 1588, have been found, but hopea of recovering her r e p u t e d treasure must. wait unUl next summer. When U . Cmdr. John Grat- tan, 33, of Britain'• Royal Navy, surfaced in the middle of Blaaket Sound with the cry, ~·we've found her!" it ended a j our·month serach In which 15 divers covere<i 3,000 acres, The Santa Maria de la Rosa was one or 24 shipa of the Armada which sank off the 'Jrish coast in September 1581 after Philip of Spain's abortive :attempt to invade Elizabethan England. inhabited Islands. It's no place for amaleur skin-divers. Everybody mew the Santa Maria lay in the sound. Fishermen who speak onJy the ancient Gaelic language knew it because their fathers told them -a legend banded down through the generation•. In Spain there are documents describing e.xactly how the ship aank. In London are ac. counts or how she sank with only a single survivor of the 233 soldiers and 64. sailots on board. Tbe exact location was • mystery until last July. Tbe wreck lies in the form of a long heap of ballast stones po i n t i n g approximately northwest. Cannon shot of three sizes and terra cotta pottery have been hauled lo the surface. blstorical Interest and al per- cent of all coin OT other treasure, the Spanish govern ment rtlaining the remaining ZO percent." SET IN SUMMER The treasure hunt will st.art next summer, w Ith un- derwater m e ta 1 detect.on, dlver·to-diver and diver-to-ship telephones, water jets and suction pumps.It is estimated that survey and salvage will last up to rive seasons. But dream! ol treasure are not shared by everybody. Tom P. Kilfeatber, author of the boot ''Spanish Graveyard," said '4Tbey are wasiting tbetr time. The Sant.a Maria de la Rosa was not even a galleon. She was a cooverted merchantman or freighter, anned with a few cannon and sent off with the Armada. - '. . • Sidney Wignall, 45-year-old \\'elsh businessmen and chief sponsor of the search, said : "You'll get some idea of the difficulty if I say that we were 'like 15 Batman nying over a town of f0,000 population peer- ing into everybody's backyard to find a toy boat." The divers are silent about any discovery of treasure. Documents in London, dated 1588, say the galleon carried 50,000 gold ducats and . 50,000 silver coins. Today .that would be worth around $2 million. "Wby should such a slllp carry a fortune in gold and t ' • SEA POUNDS Blasket SoWld, at the tip of the Dingle Peninsula, i a pounded by Atlantic combers. Powerful currents s t r e a m between three barTen, in- Newporter In VISTA J. Eugene Gaudio, the son of ~fr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Gaudio of Newport Beach, has · graduated from the Volunteer in Service to America (VISTA) training program in San Francisco. ' As a me1nber of the volunteer organization Gaudio will spend one year working with the Honolulu Council of Social Agencies in Honolulu, Hawaii . His wor;i will include activities in adult and youth education., ho u s i n g and n e ighborbood improvement programs, family and child counseling, job placement and adult and youth recreation programs. Gaudio, llS Via Jucar, received his BA degree at Whittier College. P r e v i o u s volWlteer work has included tutoring with the Fred C. Nelles S t a t ~ Correctional Institution in Whittier. GRAFATI John 'p. King, Dublin lawyer who acts for the diving team said, "We have been granted a license by the Spanish govern- ment to salvage Armada wrecks. We deposited bond of $3,000 in return ·for which we may retain ' all objects of silver? Nobody goes to war with holds stuffed w i't h treasure. There ls m reason why any ship of the Annada should have carried a huge amount of gold and silver coins -all the sailors were paid before they left Spain." KH£eather thinks the .sole survivor of the wreck invented the treasure in an attempt to save bis life. He waa executed, however. • nter That Cooks by CORNING No burners or coi ls. Instead, a glearNng white, easy-to-<:lean panel with four sunburst designs that mark"the thermostatically controlled cooking areas. Turned on for cooking, the sunbursts glow yel· low. Turned off, the entire surface Is usable counter space. The Counter . That Cooks comes with special corning Cookmates-they go from freezer to oven to tabletop. Come see . this remarkabl e cooking inven- tion from Corning. COAST ELECTRIC APPLIANCES 312 NORTH NEWPORT -NEWPORT BEACH 646-2486 ••• designed to cause hearts lo fiutler;. dazzling diamood heart 325.00; post diamond urrlllgs !or pierced ean 1,000.00. From our wllle and ~-. }(OVENS rfo<ve/eN . 3333 Bris tol Slreel, COSTA MESA ,hon.54&-4510 SOIJ Tlf COAST PLAZA' 4 ' I l< NEWPORT ~. Courh ef F11h le11 e N•wperl l•ec;h l•l•phone 6'14·121 2 Shop Mo11d1y thr11 Friday I 0:00 •.m. I• 9;)0 p.111.-S.twrd•v 10:00 •·"'· lo 6:00 p.m. ' " _,... ___ __ ------ ' FANTASY PRINTS PLUS PANTS It's the new 9low-show produc ed Alex Colma n fo r the at-home party people, co-starring acetate tunics ...,......., end flared, polyester twill pa nts, 8-16. Right: aqu11 /9reen, black/ a qua, 17.00. Left: O ra nge, pink , 14.00. Pe nts, aqua, green, pink, white, 20.00. Misses' Sportswear, 78. HUNTINGTON BEACH 7777 Ed;119•r A¥•. e H1111tl11tl•11 ... c;h Ttl•phon• 192.)J)t Sllop Mon d1y thr11 S1!11rd1y I 0.00 •.m. lo 9:)0 p.m. • ANAHEIM 444 N. E ... clld • A111h.r111 An•heim Shopping C•11t•r-rh•11• lll-1121 SI.op Mond•y thr11 S1!11rtl11 10:00 •.m. to 9:)0 p.111. I I -~-~-------~----------------------------·- Thursdq, OclOOtr 241 J.968 DAILY ,ILOT 9 QUEENIE lly Phil lnteriandl Planning Report Reveals • For the Record Population Booms as County Shrinks Divorces DIVORC•I fl'IL•D ll!M I!. lurnrTMB .... DoNlll lll'J ·--Dl11!9 I!. Vin (leYI YI. OllllllY M. \1111 , ... GtM Crvwell. Jr ..... Arin lflllfl ~II SUMn Uorr1JM L .... 1, VI ~ Stwen "." VcncN Lou Hobton YI P.ul ll•nnotllll -J1.,,... ~ PlNltr VI J~llM MWll Pinder Clleo'1 M&rl1 H1rni>'°" VI 911111 Joi H1mp!l)n ~ C-VI Robtrl ~r Edw1rd a . Grvti. .,. Slllrlw I . Gn.iN Vlr11lnl1 E. Eutlenb .,. C1rl Ln EuD.11b FIV D. Jonn n LlllO'll G. Jonn U..rllll Alln1 Mc:Clur. VI Wlff11m E!llOH ~Clure Paule I(. N .... COl'llb YI M1r1h1!1 0. N-tctnb Ch1rle1 J. Hunt vs Prancn M . HU11t Sha...., K. H1velts. YI Jcl!n Gtl'lrP Haftll!I Rosl l C1br1! YI Manuel D. C1br1I Join L. R111>Ptrt VI R1Vmond J. Rup. ~-Pt1111Y Ann Sortnnn vt S.V.rln Lund So~Mtn, Jr, t1nc11 C1rol Audet vs l!<rw1nl llov ..... Elfn1 Marl• Aaill111 .,. J1mu Anlllonr Auo!IM C1rnllne M. l'llchtf' YI G_., Edwt rd Pltdler Ri ll>h Jar Sl1111ei YI Hti.ti AMI St10'" Lindi M. 8ordr.off YI Welt..-H. '""'°" PMrldMn IM.Kltl'Mll .... Virgil Lnl$ MclCffMll JUClll!I L. $ktlnlk vs It-Id J1me. $k1ln\k P1frl(ll D. k1'1tmen VI .... ,, H. Kllll· m" Paul• J. 5.kluPIH 'n JI""" T, Sk1utsl1d Ron•kl Guy H"'l>V ¥1 Vlr1lnl1 Anne , .... Marllll'n B. Wllll1m1 .... ~111 L. Wllll1ms C1rln1 Powtr v1 Anthony Power INTERLOCUTORY OEC•EIS C•tllftrlM GledYI Ptrrv ... J.U Wiida '~~ Alm• IC. l l'CIWTltll vs Emmett N. Brownllll Lindi A. R1dwlck w Fniclerldl: J. Radwick Dl1nt V. Riley 111 Roblrt K11!11 Rllrf P1!rlcl1 E. Jol\6, YI c~ .... R. Jones Htctor Ramlre1, w \llctorl1 L• A1m!rtt Ann.etf Mlrll An1kln vs l urflln E ... mund An1k!n ,t,mell1 H, M1g1ll1n• YI Rldl1rd M. Magallan.es Eugene L. AmundMl!I VS BettY Allfl Amu11cbon S,,f\dr1 Dorll Sew1r1 VI J1mn AllM Sawe" B1rbar1 E6otr vs Paul Mitchell Edllar J.,11 H. Butterllrkl YI Jol'ln L Bul- ter11tkl 0~1h Mercy McGrew YI lawrl'llCt Hllll1rd McGraw CP<;llll A. V1lentl YI MIWtl F. \11Jenn Es!~ L. Sw1rtJ VI WUILtm C. SWl tt! Sh!rley AM llfuo 'ti L1wrwnc. IMtvfn BfHCI VtUM H. \'111!1'1 VI fl1ymond E. V1Ul1r1 Georve J. O'Brien vs 0.llH"ft Mn O'Brlftl Ctrrnt'n A. Wl1lw VI DougLt1 0 . Wfsler 81and>e RU'lll Mcleod n Sherwood HVH McLeod N1n .. 1e w. loeh "'' Nonn1" ll\IUl!I\ Loi~ Jin c. Sn1vrlY n H1rokl Wl'l'M S111vtl'I' Mar111m G. BrllW" Yl RO'I' D. BrOW!I 1.1...S. R11 Mrln«d n Lfrry Eutrne Mainord J1>1e1>MIW! Ann Sdl1umbtl'9er Yl Wiiiiam R~rt S<:l .. umbtr1tr Mal'91r1t Vr1c1 Kt!,., v1 J1me-s H1rrt Ktltv" DEATH NOTICES NOORDMAN llfdl 0. kvlrd VI 0.vkl (. Bwtrd SUt.111 G. ~ w Ot'lld E. ~ J..,., L Tumer vs SMtrlll A. Tu""" JI/Mt Hlfll"/ MC0.11111 VI ~,.... .... •-Mc:O..iltl J-11.llO!o, Jr, VI Mil't l.tiulM ltwtlkl '"°""""' s. Mlklr"' Marcie ,..,.,Of' Ir-Helfin l1"1'1nf VI 11.J)bef1 IEltl Bry1r11 G1vle Brewtr VI Dot\tkl Cl'l'41 l ..wtr Mlutll JNn HI_,. w Clltfl\Y H. H1nMr J1rnn H. Tl~l/\11 VI Gweftdol~ Tl~ "m Joftfl l.IOllll'd P""""" W ._IV S.ndltn PIWlllV PallltM JNne!M c.,,., ... Horita J1rnN C1rt• J1nlc1 P. PrlllCI vs AMl'"fW l'rt11a1 AllHl!ne M. l11lk1 ... HflWY IC. ..... PINAL D•Citl•l S'l'lvll Orlin ¥1 EdWln:I Otwlll Orllll JD Ann Hi..>ers "' IEdwatd Hl111otrl 9clnnito A. lrvlM VI P1UI D. lrYllll Enallfth A. 1(11l9ht VI Ecrwrrd A, Knleht Ruth Maril Pll"M VI EOW.n:I M<hew P1rda J111lce Elll"" CINW "' ~ l , """ Dot>lld T. Rldfonl vs Dcllclre1 C. Rid< ..... SANTA ANA -A rapidly deollninJ· acreage and a mushrooming population - thal'I lbe llory of unle- corPort~ Orange County in a glOIS)', 40-page p I an n t n g departmentbrochdrespanning the period April 1, 19$0 to April I, 1968. In that Ume, Senior Planner Alfred Bell explained to coun~ ty supervisors Tuesday, coun- ty territory shrank from 564 to 490 aquare mllee. But the population spiralled to 15',17~ from the 1960 tally of i8,SIO - an almort u . percent hike. grade (oges live lllrougll II). And couoly terrllor)I 11 tile home of 9,381 jwtlor high school lludenll (qea IJ.14) and 8,114 senior high school students (ages 15-17), Ute co unty planner told super.1.sors. Creation of three new cities slnce 1960 bu been responsi- ble for the loss of 17.t square miles of county territory, Bell aald. 'nley were: --5an Juan Capiltrano, 1,.. corporated Apcil It, 1911 with Pi'IYllf1 It. """""' " Edwllo C. ftnton M.wle E. K1klonl vs BtrMrd B. Krldc>nl 1..:::::'.:'.'.~:'.:::::::::!:::!;.!!~::t...:::.:::::l:::=:::::~::.::~J 81rb&r1 Slocks VI Cllrf'llCI Sloclts Pr u! C. Obler v1 Fr1nels F. Obi.I' That same eleht·year period aaw the number of bomea in county ttrrito.ry increase from 29,lil> to 47,\18, Bell added. And the inprewd population b.iked the dens1ty per square mile figure from 174.9 persons Allen Gets County Post SANTA ANA -Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen of LagWll Beach was the unanimous cbolce of bJs fellow board members Tues- day as the board's replace-- ment for reUtlng Supervisor C. M, Featherly on the Orange County Employees' Board of Retirement. F•~ T. w11so11 vs 1.11e111e a. w1i-i "Take & memo to myaelf-'I will not worry &bout H~~"-""'-vs cir• R•r the polls. I will not worry &bout the polls' • • • " to. 312.i. Dor!I Jun VINOll VI Buford Edwrtf .,_ -----------------------La,te11t labor force analyses, Bell revea1ed, 1 h ow that 32,258 men and 1S,5M women are currenUy employed In unincorporated Orange Coun- ty. Unemployment statistics Prlr!c!• J. Dvmai VI J1me. II. Dumat !llffrl Rldlll8t VI Wllll1m Cr1lt Rld!1>111 llo'ld Crrlton K~t1 VI Shl!'fJle Lff ,~, R1vrnond A, Gird~ VI O.rlltnne O. Gard11tr Roberie B. Gumm vs Nell F, Gumrn D1vld ~ .,. Bent JNn Collen Line Elle<! Beer""'" YI Bert Olen:lolt Beard~ Barberi LN Grrdr YI 1..,.,.1111 0.oftr Grad'V Roger c. Wlbtf't VI Arlt!• s. Wlba<1 BMl>9" J, A..,,,._ vs HtnfY W. A~ dr~ . J oseph L'f1'1 Dobbs VI . Alm1 l!.tele """" Cttllffll\I L BllUl'IH YI Rldl.rd C. BIUJ1111s Doroflly V, Wede YI Chrrie. F. W6" LOf"t'\!1 M1y ICllOWH°" VI Robtrt l uclln IC.-llDll !Miia LVM !ll('e!lldll VI Hrrold l.l!Ull B1rftldll Ar111ur 0. Pltttt VI B1rtleno Jo Plercr EUll"" E. TlltlW VI B1rtiif.r1 I(. Tuttle R~ry E. .klllnM!fl vs L11lle E. ,,_ K1lllltftl 6-lt Mirle l.Ol/l\ltll;ry YI R-111 W1rrfd; LOUNbuf'V °""""' OllJ'll P1h1d: YI Hu.ti SllwM P1trldt Helen lcu11e L-.1 vs v-rr.tt Cl111t lto111nl Betty F1tt Asl!btoolc Y1' Victor Lee """""" Be...,m Je1n WllllamMll'I v1 Gerrld F'nonci. Wl!!l•mson Betty MlllCI Martin VI l!OW.rd J. ..... Juanl"' Bet.. Kellv Y• John C11tr1n KrllY JUDGMENTS P1trlc11 All" Crrne VJ ErMst 11.. C•-rw Linda lM Mott VI Dlvld John Melt Fir~ Calls ...... , .. ..,. J:!°lld';.'i',;. ~ • .,, e.r fl,.., 2ut ''°' '·"'" rftCVt, 14116 llonde1u St. 1<11111111111 \1111eT 5:3' p.m. Wedtlftd,.,, rneue, 1'40.1 ~rwa lftl"ll"""' -..cs. ,,30 1.rn. W~'I'. t:lf"Ylr llf'll. 1222 FDld'llU Drtve 11:5' P.tl'L., hill l!rt, 1'404 Gofhlrd "-2:50 P-"'·• rnedk.fl 11d, 711 OcH11 A.,., .. , .,, 10:'1 p.m~ rnedktl 11d, 7'01 Clay Av~. 6::a:I 1.m. Tllvnd1y, Rlectrkll 11,., Pllcllm Line end Klmuel1 °'1"* C•ll~ 10:06 .e.rn, W9d"'9Cl1y, fllM l llnn. Mete V....se Elsf Mid Altlrrll 10:51 .:l'ft;1 ,._,., 16Af E. Drd St. 11 :4 1.m.., f1L11 11l1rm, Wlltotl 11111 F1IN1ew Roed S::Jl p.m., e.r fl~, 2090 Monrovl1 ':07 P.m .. l1!te 1l1rm, lDCll El <• mlno Drive 4:2' P.m., tnio» 11re, m Pl1n>Dlnt OrlYI ,:21 p.m,. 111'9 1llrm, 0nnM I nd OM Mir IY- '!lt "·'"·· l•lle lllmt, Or.rift •!Id Oil Mlr111- HIWPOl't l•dl 1:11 1.m. Wed~'I'. 1trvlo. c1ll, 211 40th $t, Judge Unsympathetic SA Attorney Needs Lawyer for Defense · indicate that fl men and 325 women are without jobs in that area. Looking more closelr at population analyses, Bel told the board there are · 'r1 ,118 males and ~.260 females in the age 17 and under category; 30,173 males and 30,344 fmnale1 ln the 21 and under bracket and 39,243 males and 41,591 females listed ln 2Z and over tabulat- Allen will take over from featherly -who has served as board o f supervisors' nominee on the retirement board for the last 13 years - on Jan. I, 1969. He bu been appointed for a four-year term. SANTA ANA-A Santa Ana aUorney'a proteBtl that he was having trouble hiring a .. lawyer didn't win him the delay be apparently was seek- ing Wednesday in Superior Court. David Cadwell made the plea before Judge Wllliam Speirs during the jurist's ·at- temps to end haggling be-- tween Cadwell and the dis- trict attorney on the setting or a finn trial date. Cadwell is ADW Pl~ Entered By Marine SANTA ANA - A Garden Grove Marine accused of at- tem~ murder and assault wltb a deadly weapon after he empUed bla: rifle at a car oc- Cupled by three youLhs plead- ed guilty to the lesser charge Wednesday in Superior Court. Judge William S p e l r s ordered Eugene Martin, 18, to return to court for sentencing Nov. 14. A jury trial had been scheduled for Wednesday. accus~ of misappropriating an estimated $35,000 from Dis- abled American Veterans funds administered under bis trusteeship. "You mean to stand there and tell me that you can 't hire a lawyer from the 40 or 50 we have in this county!" the surprised Judge Speirs asked. Cadweil's muttered reply was inaudible. "Well, I want a finn trial date," rapped Judge Speirs. "Any reason why you can't appear for trial on Dec. 23?" "Well ••• er ••• no," replied Cadwell. ions. In allied action, supervisors authorized County C 1 e r k William St John to bold an election among c o u n t y employees I«" the replace- ment of general boa rd member :Edward · L. Jones. The retiring Jones' term of of. flee expires Dec. 31. At the ten.lor citizen. level, Bell said, lhere an 5,757 males and i ,455 females in the 85 and over ca tegory with the 85 and over bracket tallying 13 males and 3173 females. ;:;;:=========~! Analyzing I u I u r e · ciliun LOCAL calculaUons Bel1 told the board that there are currenUy No other 11•w1p1p•r t1ll1 Y•• 12,4!M: pre-IChool children (up · mor1, 1Y1ry day, tb11ut what'• to Ule ages of four years) and going 111n In th1 9r11t•r 22,735 voungsters in th e Or•n9• Cetst th•" th• DAILY " PILOT. kindergarten through sixth .NOW! • FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX! for Marcury Savers m1lnt1lnln1 minimum b1l1nce of $2,000. Mercury Savln11 now offers home lplprovemenl lun1 up to ss,ooo·ln\l eight years al low rat•• and small monthly pay· menh. Inquire 1t Mercury SaY11111 Md Loan AHocl1llon. • Men:ury Savinp' Eff.ft!tl• pollcy asauru you tM hli tat lepl nt. of lntllmtfot lnsur9d 1avlnp. • Funds tam Int•~ from date of r.ctlpt Funds rec.fwd by tha t:.nth of the month ••m lnttrnt from th• first. Interest compounded d1ily- bonu1 accounts .vallable, MERCURY SAVINGS •rtd "1M .. t10C/1tlon. •• Offlcti •14 Knatt Aw. lklt111 Park \ H""1'Mln II:. Ncaifrn1n. l13 Jth st., Huntlntlon B"ch. Survived by wire, 201•1 IOlll, M1rltn ind Glf•ld: d1u;hter1. AM • Vrn Wouclent>eni. pf•-t 1'foi"*-o C1r<>llne Cniwlord 111C1 Ilene NllDr"ll· Mf' • a ....,.-O Martin, staUoned at the Marine Corps Air Faclllty in Santa Ana, was arrested after he put six bullets into a car occupied by three youth! - one of them James Cooke, 19, of Fountain Valley. Buena Park Office: ., 827-2320 . • Huntington Beach Office: On Knott, n.•r Llneoln lttcltlll Offlctr min. AllO tu"'IY«I' bY brnllltn, sls- l!n, 1nd 1n11r.dd!Hdren. Servlc.n. Fri. d1y, !O::JO AM. Pttll: F1mlly Coklnl1J Funer1I Home. SELLON JONES BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR s.t45I Colla Men Ml 1-!iU BELL BROADWAY MORTUAJ\'f· UI BrNdwa11 Colta Men LI~ DILDAY BROTHERS Hanllnsto• Valley Morlulr1 lilll Beactri Blvd. Huntington Beach W-77'11 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ceb1etery e Mtr111arJ Chapel l50I llacllle View Drm Newport Beach, Callfonla "'4'1• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME "'1-...... w .. tm.111n.r uwm SllDTH'I llORTllABY 117-Molo St. Buda .... Budl -LE.- tn:S'l'Cl.JFIP l!OIITOAllY m E. 171li $1., c.ta Mua .· ..... TOii~ 1re ciondltcled Moiidtvs Ind Frldavs for .U.001 ell-" fllttl 1rldt llYfl Ind rbclw • ollllr «· 11nlzatlonJ #II 1t '"'t ltllt '" ...,. 11. Interested ,,_ .,,., au Mr, Dudlev llktl. "2-021, Erl. Jn, 40 STORES TO SERVE YOU Z,300 HARBOit IU/D. ,.,T WILSON Atlas Chrysler PlymoUltl Connel Cllemllet Dean Lewis lmpom Hamor Dodge , 540-4050 7112 Edlnpr Aw,. Huntrntton B11ch Across from The Broldwl)' Shappln1 Centtr 1969 THURS.-FRl.-SAT ., OCT. 24 • 25 • 26 PARTICIPATING DEALERS Hollday Ranibler Safes Jot.-& Son Uncoln Mercwry ROy Ccner Pontloc Th11ib9 llobbiM Fonl Unlnnity otchmoble Zllllmll'lllClll DCll'IUll Pool llllclc Newpottl ...... HARBOR SHOPPING , CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA ----------------- a population of 1,%87 and an area ~ 11.30 1quare miles. Bell set the present popula- tion at 2,850. -Yorbk1Jnda1 incorporated Oct. :io. 1"7 with a population of 9,800 and an area of 4.48 square miles. Population 81 of April I, 1968 ls oet at 9,I04. AMlltlCA'S LAAeUT -Vllla Park, Incorporated JllJ. It, l9a wttb a populatoln of 1311 and .. .,.. of 108 square miles. Bell tap the current" poppulallon at 1,m. Supervllon oulhorfud uJo of the planning department consu1 brochure to the -al public al $2 per copy. lttMYe Wa,., DltMWI e FL.AMI PIOOPINe llXCLUSIVI GUAIANTllD DlAPUY CWNING '" . &au Dtaptty c1 .... 1,.. Pwftct ............... :r, .. your drapWy, • 1IO :4 ,... 11la<ement if clMnai.le. eNeWllhll....,_ • Ne lhrlnka• e Perfect lven HMlt ~ W•tw ltatn l......el • Perfect PIMt Foldlnt e Prof•NleMI lr\ltallati.. OUR IXCLUllVI lllVICI DRAPE A • Prof ... IOMI Removal . Y e T••m• Moy I• .......... CLEANEiiR~s:!._• =..''::" :,;"''~'m:.•"':::_ • ''" Lo.111 Dra,.. Off ....... & .a..., 20% 540-1366 642-0270 17b2 NEWPORT Bl.YD., COSTA MESA llG ••• the most revolutionary advancement of all in -FM-Radio reception! M1aterplece Mediterninean atytlng-FMSS ..W 391S has lar'ge recot'd ·storage area: cOl'IC88fed _... casters for tasy movlng, Also available II .-onil'.- Aqean Cteuic end F~ll Pt'°"'inciat klDlllR 1111 *New Magnavox Freqnency ·ModUlated Signal Sentry ... QIVU YOU: Vastty Improved Stereo plus~ FM performance-without the f!lecessity of •dernal antennas. f•r ar••t•r station sefectivity-eveo k'I ....... intedar9nc1· m111op0Utan areas You'll receive lnOI'• FM 'atations-than ever before possible; enjoy 11nany ..... progran'il-twA trom .. difficult" stations. FMSS gwda 1gain1t interferenee-by automatically rejecting botb-. bf' stronger at1tlon signal• , •• ind 1dj1cent channel ....._ FMSS permit• utisfactory reception of 1n•ll"( ,._ -gnals-ttPtCially in' muhi·station local i1in. FMSS ii much ••ler to tune-because it rem oves the ~ MGOndtlry mponses 1hst are audibte tit convetltkJllll FM 1u1Mng aysterna.. Stereo FMtur11: Slereo end Mc 1 • FM/AM Redio, 100-Watts undiltOl1lld mmic ..,_,..a &uptJ-Sonic 16' Baa Woofefl Witt! 40 oz.1P8Q1111 a .. J111 """° 1 ,000 cycle Exponenti8' Trebfe HOfns. fabWoul..,.. motlc l'li'w th'1 ---""""'and Dia wi Stylus we.--ptua mM11 more U\at IWP•.!!. Qltm• I' · """"in the ... creetlon of sounctl KERM RIMA MAGNAVOX • Oro.,. County'• Fl-' F-, Direct Deolar 2'66 Harbor 11.16'55 W11tmlnm.r 112116 S. lrtdlat Coata Masa WNtmln•ter Gorcltn o,... 546-1691 194-2350 5»4360 ... ,. . ----• JO DAILY PILOT Thursd11, Oc:tobtr 24, 1968 ----Mil.MUM Taxpayers' Dream· Ballot? Famous Building Worth Only $25 Tax Relief Battle Gets Most Attention (j.D -fA)"\O~tD SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Dur· Ing the 1915 Panama·Pacific Exposition Balboa P a r k ' s Spanish Colonial Palace was hailed as an architectural triumph. Judge James L. Focht dismissed lhe suit on grounds it had not been shown lhe crumbling: building was worth more than the $25. He pointed. out that the Municipal Code permits sale of items worth less than Sl,000 without bids. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The list of propo&tions on the 1968 ballot features 1 taxpayer's dream -a battle between two competing tax relief plans, with only one possible winner. The harsh conflict between Prop. J-A would: Give each most attention during the campaign. However, two other major proposals were on the ballot, <Jne to revise part <Jf the State Constitution, the other a $250 million bond issue to pay for construction at the state university and colleges, and in urban school districts. Prop. l·A and Prop. 9 captured ballot by tbe legislature with Gov. Reagan's strong backing. It intends to provide $261 lnillion in property tax cuts for homeowners, renters and businessmen. The lawmakers cannot force local government to cut Wes, but during hearings on the legislation lop official! of the County Supervisors Associa- tion pledged to carry out the reductions -noting they fear the wrath of voters il they don't. Prop. l·A was put on the homeowner a $70 cash pay- ment in the current fiscal year as a tax cut ; give homeowners in each succeeding year a $750 exemption from property tax· es; double the standard in· come tax exemption of renters from $500 to Sl,000 to trim their taxes; eliminate the tax now levied in some counties on personal possessiorui such as television sets; and cut the tax paid by businessmen on their inventories by 15 percent. However, it is assumed that local governments would react to eUmination of the tax on possessions by raising local taxes enough to make up for the lost revenue. The rest of the relier would be paid for D\lCI800 SALES -SERVICE DEPEND ON DAVIS-BROWN, WHERE SERVICE IS A SPECIALTY NOT A SIDELINE! OUR 22nd YEAR IN THE HARBOR AREA ©DAVIS -BROWN 411 E. 171h St. Costa Mesa Daily 9·9 -Saturday 9-6 (Closed Sunday) (Salft) 646-1684 - (5ervice) 548-3437 Introducing dichondra weed'nfeed new super dichondra weed'nfeed from funds set aside by one- half cent of the sales ta.1 raise which was part of Gov. Reagan's $1 billion ta.I boost of 1967. Prop. 9 often is called the "Watson Initiative" because it qualified for the ballot in a pelilion·signing campaign led by Los Angeles C o u n t y Assessor Philip E. Wat.son. Starting next July I, it would limit the amount of money from local property taxes which could be used for • 'property-related" services such as sewage treatment to one percent or a given land parcel's market value. It also would totally forbid the use of any property tax revenue for "people-related" services starting July I, 1973. The tax, now the keystone of support for local education and welfare, would be cut by 20 percent annually unti l it disappeared for such purposes. Prop. 9 does not propose a way of making up the money local governments would lose by virtual elimination of the property tax. The other propositions on the ballot: . boundaries. It set.a up I <;::===1 GUI"" ~c E 1o,mula lo' laxlng such land, n (l{ILO VI\ gen«ally based .. the .,,... '-------i <UMll£S of property throughout the ,) YYL. state, and its annual average f increase in value. I Prop. 3 -Allows issuing $200 million in bonds for new construction at the University of California and state col- leges, and $50 miWon to renovate or replace rundown elementary and high schoo!J in big cities built before 1943. Prop. 4 -Permits the legislature to conform state personal income tax laws to federal laws if so desired, with l...:LJl-_."'1 the aim of simplifying reporting of state taxes. A similar proposal, Prop. 14 in Qj 1966, lost by 168,000 votes out of five million cast. ~~~~~,%~~4~~====;;~~~~~~~~==::::J[__ Prop. 5 -Permits the state to insure or guarantee pay- ment of loans made to non- profit corporations and public agencies to build hospitals, or im prove them. It w o u I d replace the current system, whicb Gov. Reagan wants to end, of direct state cash grants to hospitals, which amounts to SI& million this year. Voice Back for Salazar LISBON' (AP) -f'ormer It also said that while Premier Antonio de Oliveira Salazar remains in a comatose Salazar has regained the state called "coma vigil", he faculty of speech to a limited can move his right arm when extent, his doctors announced. ordered to do so. Salazar, 79, who suffered a Despite the improvement in crippling stroke Sept. 16 that Salazar's state o f con- cost him his office and nearly sciousness, the statement said, his life, sometimes responds to "the prognosis c o n t i n u e s Now the building is worth 125. That's the price the city received from a wrecking C<Jmpany, which also had to remove the building from the park. Three other demolition com· panies and two unions went to court to block the sale, claim- ing the price was too low. The suit asked that the city be re- quired to call for bids. However, Superior Court "The city would have been less susceptible to criticism if it had asked for bids," he ad· ded. When new the Palace ai> peared carved out of stone, but It Wa.5 built of plaster over a wooden frame . It was renovated for the 1935-36 San Diego Exposition and renamed the Food and Beve r age Building. .--JOSEF'S-----. FOR SUNDAY BRUNCH Servin9 from 11 a.m. Late Supper Served Every Night 11 p.m. ta 1 a.m. o.-, lft 5-•• , WI ftll'* f(Ml'll lik• ftl1 "NIW LMk" LUNCHEON • DINNER • U .Tt" SUl'f''l:R 2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY AT THI! JAMAICA IN N Prop. 1 -The second por· lion or a three-stage streamlining and modernation of California's bulky con- stitution. The first revision was approved by vote rs in 1966. This part deals with education, local government, public utilities regulation and state civil service. The most controversial part is a prcr vision allowing the legislature to make the job or state superintendent of public in· struction an appointive one by a two-thirds vote. It now is elective. Prop. 6 -Allows the legislature to exempt from taxation insurance company revenues f r o m retirement plans for employes o f CaWornia's private colleges and universities. Similar plans verbal commands ' · with reserved.·• articulation of is o 1 ate d !~.=::.:.:;;. ______ -"-""":;•~~--~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ words," a med i cal com·j munique said Tuesday. for employes at the state =========== Prop. 2 -Seeks to settle a long controversy over taxing of land and water rights own· ed by pub licly -owned governmental agency -sucl!_ as San Francisco's Hctch- Helchy water system -but located outside that agency's university and c o 11 e g e s already are exempt from tax- ation. Prop. 7 -Specifically allows the legislature to authorize the use of state funds by local governments for strictly local purposes. At present, such money must be used only for purposes con- sidered to have statewide value, such as roads. Prop. 8 -Permits th e legislature to authorize cities and counties to agree on split- ting tax revenues between them. The specific reason behind the proposal is to en· courage large s h o p p I n g centers to locate on or near boundaries between cities or counties. At present, because such agreements are pro- hibited, location of s u c h centers can provoke bitter arguments between 1 o c 8 I governments and hold up such projects, thus cutting tax revenues tha t might be com· ing in. An example is an area between the cities of Rich- mond and Pinole, although other simi lar situations exiSt around the state. BLUE LILY OF-THE NILE POINSETTIAS Beautiful spikes af blue clus- ters flowen. Ezcellent land.., cape perennial. REG . 1.40· .................... 79c BEDDING PLANT SPECIAL IC ELAND POPPIES All winter bloom. Plant wltfl bulbs or os a border. lecurtl· hi planh. Rf9. 79c por pkg. 3 Pk9s. 1.19 Hardy, double vorlety. Dffp velvety red. Giant sl1e flow· .... HAllOWEEN PARTY CENTfR PIECES ~ Recl1 Pumpkins fllled with Fall flowen. Dell9ht your 9unhl from ..• 7.50 GENERAL TIRE b you this great 4-ply ny on cord General ·Jet whitewall tire. c Traction xtion dual tread dnigit-tltt Oltly ift its price fieW c Rqged Dwa1ea•rvbbf!rrolls a,lon1,saf111M11e c Fin 4-pty Ayloit cord resists hut. protects 1pi111t WowOlts ,.hn $7.19, 12.21 fedet1I l•tl•• 111•, Sl1e• 7.7S•l4, 7.75ll5 lubtln• !11r ford, C~e.,y, Plrmoul~. a1mbler. Mus\1n1. Plus U.lS, $2.311 ftdt•ll E•che Tu". Solel l .25>1•, l.1~•15 tubeless for l!ul,k, Olds, Pont\1c, Ch.,11u. llodr1. ~UI $2.!16 f&dtlli £1ci1e T••'. Slie 1.S~•U tubele•s ror Olds, Chry11er, Dodte, Plymouth, Mere~.,. Use General's TDUll P'llltl4.UI -Tll.T ,_11100 AUTO·CHARGE PLAN $55 S5 MYSTtRY GARDENIA fOR fALL Arrangements EVERGREEN PEAR TREE SUN AZALEAS No mooey down. $150 $10 easy monthly payrntn1S. $200 $13 GENERAL TIRE SPORTS CENTE'R~ Very effective for frag· ra nee, beauty & land scape value. Large, thrifty dark green pl•nts. 1 GAL. ga~ SIZE lefJ. $1.60 • Dried flowers, s e e d pods, leaves for Hallo- ween flower arranging . FROM 29~ For qu;ck shode . Most popula r coastal shade tree. Beautiful show· ings of white fl owers every spring. REG. 6.95 SPECIAL 398 \ Wonderful Ion d s c •po shrub. Plant in sun or shode. Hundreds of plants to choose from. REG . 1.75 HOURS: MO N. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M .. SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THROU GH SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 ·NURSE!\~ ;FLORI . . 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CALL 546-5525 Iii • -----·- The sport tire GTRf for the hot cars • G•,,.,.•l's s•f•H. high m ll••ll•· high pfHfOTmllltC9 hi11hw•'I t1'• • •• I . with 3 Ted Tings I I Built with the deepes1 tread, the only duill t1action tiead design. !n ill field . Plus lour lull plies of ' Nygen• General Tire's prGCessed nylon cord and long weiring Duragen• n1bber. Grabs on curves, st11ightaways, when Oie lighl turns red -or rreen! Get your GTR'S oow! Ent11nc1 HM be1uty al yovr c1rt FAMOUS (tii;(·fi!;lf SUPER SPORT MAG WHEELS • All mirror PG'lshed chrome • Rueged lu!ly I chromed stffl riftlt • Precision cast 11luminum center • Thelt·proof chromed hub c:ao • V11riely of StJ'IH 1vaJ11b!e . BIG VALUE! Oet Precision Front End Introductory Oller 1 GEllDAL'S llPEIT ~· WHEEL ALIGNMENT JATO SUPER·IDD SDlf BAW HAKE IEUNIH ' ·-·---• ~,...1i1 ..... 1oi.-~ ··--.. ··-$2495 • 1"-' .. ..,... -""" ••• ....... _,- COAST GENERAL COSTA MESA 5B5 W. 19th ST. Ph. 646°5033 540-5710 .... --. AVERY GENERAL TIRE SERVICE 16941 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH Phane 847-5850 ----------- 113 Thu~!d:y, c ::~b~r z.i, 1i:·s DAIL V" PILOT J J Nov. 5 Could Mean GOP Takeover at Legislature_ Edi_.. H•: Wlltl ~ lllfht lllllH .. C1llktn'lle'l •1t11 .... lotll\lf't COi/ie ff ll;tp..,t;llUll 111 fht NOY. S ttner11 tlii;tltn. Tlltl ., ... f'tlkllt Ill • ....., Nllllttr "' IM ,\JMt'nblY -~ J .. M. Ul'l'llh. HOw ,,. "" ~~tt• amHllnlnel &eeldng the IO Assembly ·seats. The hopefula Include !5 from George Wallace's American il\dependenl Party and 11 Peace and Freedom Party contenders. Dtmocrall an!y two perotnl qo In the dlltrlct. But they retain 1 al~nder·--~------------------------------------- By TRACY WOOD SACRAMENro (UPI) . - Republican hopes for winning control of the state legislature for the first time ln a decade are pinned to the coattails of pr..idenUal nomineo Ricbllrd M. Ntxon. A dramatic sweep by the former vice president in, hia home state could break a 20-20 party deadlock In the Stain Senate and reverse the C-38 DemocraUc majorlly In Ibo Asaembly. 'Ml.e political future o f Assembly Speaker Jeu M. Unruh could be tied to the results. If Republlcana wln the lower house, they also win the speakmhip -and Unruh's out. Gov. Ronald Reagan .has •t>- parently prevented any all-out flgbt among Republicans for the A&!embly lead~p by tapping A&!embl)'man Robert T. Monagan, (R-Tracy) for the past four years minority leader. But the Senate picture is muddled; Senate Leader Hugh M. Burns of Flesno, a Democrat, bas announced be sttpports Republican Ni:J:on for president. It may save h1s post as President Pro Tempore (I( the Senate lf J\epublcans win control in that house In 1966, Reagan'• million vote landslide over two-term Democratic Gov. F.drnund G. Brown h<!ped the GOP booot its vote power in the Assembly from 31 to 38. GOP leaders hope for a repeat performance that will give them the three seats needed to win control. The Republicans controlled the legislature for the last time In 1956 but ~ th~ edge in the 1958 Brown labdatide: A Republican ."Cil·Plan'~ called for the GOP to ··rtgal!l control of the ~bly by 1970 in Ume to control tne 10. year reapportionment but'the 1966 elecUon put' them ahead of schedule. There are 209 candldales The 20 senate seats up for election have attracted 54 Cl& dldates 1ncludlng 10 A1P and I PF party members. Monagan esUmated there are 10 to 15 Assembly seat.I now held by Democrats wbk:b Republlcw have a chance "- taking.' ·He dou not expect GOP viv· tortes in all of them -five would be enough to com· fortably reverse the DemocraUc maj'ority. All of the top eadera of both the Senate and ~,~ ..... i..1., virtually are assured of re' elecUon. Unruh, ln a ~let with 87 peree:nt democratic regbtra~ tion, is beavlly favored to defeat Dr. Gerald S. Veregge, his Republcan opponent. Monagan's district is only 40 percent Rep.ibllcan, but he is expected to" win easily. He is oppOsed by Steve Pereira, a Sockton history and EngJtsh teacher. And SenateR e pub 11 can Leader Donald I. Grun1ky of · Watsonville ii not opposed for re.t:lectlon. However, the ca u cu 1 chairmen of both parties In -the As.sembly .could have clOle races. Democrat Winfield Shoemaker of Lompoc 1J op- posed by Santa Barbara Mayor Don MacGillivray. Registration fliurea g I v • RepubllUn caucus chairman Don Mulford of Piedmont II cballtoge!I by Kenneth Meade, an Olkllnd lawy!r. In thll district, Democrats have a t perctllt to 12 percent regtstra. UOO) lead. • TM lnOuenct cl thlt<I party candidates -be felt In two dlJtricll. Asaemblyman Wlllle Brown Jr., ([>San Francilco) a Negro, Is oppoeed by PF can· dldatt Kathleen Cleaver, wife of Black· Panther l t a d e r Eldrld1e Cleaver. Marlo Savio, a leader of the 1984 free 1peech movement at the Unlvertlty ol Calllomla al Berkeley, lo the PF candldaln opposlni Sen. Nlcbclu Petri•, ( D-Oakland). Petri!' Republican opponent la Robert E. Hannon, a lawyer. As:!lembly Republicans see their best chances to pick up seats In lhe d!strcts now held by Democrats F. James Bear of San Diego, Harvey Jolmson of El Monte, Ken Cory ol Westmin!ter, Walter Karablan of Monterey Park a n d Shoemaker. They alto see hope for wfn. nlnr the aeata of DemocraUc Asaemblymen Leroy Greene and Edwin L. Z'B~r of Sacramento, John F. Foran of San Francllco, David Negri of Granada Hiilt and Mlke Cullen of Loo( Beach. Democrats, trying hard ju.t to bold their majorJty, see their most likely gain in the San Jose seat now held by Rtpubllcan Earl Crandlli. hope to win ... ts beid by R e f u blican Alaemblymen Ken Stacey of Bakcr&tield, Ernest Mobley of Saoaer, WUlllm Campbell of llaclendl Heights end MUiford. ThrH A11emblymen, Stewll'I Hinckley , (JI. Radlaodl), Charlea Meyen, (~n Francilco), an4 Edwlrd E. Elliott, ID-Loi Alllel .. ), decided DOI to oeek rMlectlon. Assemblyman Lester A. McMillan,. ID-Loi Angeles) was. defeated ln the June primary election by Henry Waxman. The di!trtct ts heavily Dem;ocraUc. The tlghteat , Sen ate Democratic race1 art for the aeats held by Petris and Sen. Georre Danlelaon of Loi Angeles. Danldson ii opposed by RepubllUn Ricbanl E. Ferraro, a-school teacher. Republican Sena. M I I to n Marks of San Francisco and Howard Way of Exeter also have stiff competltion. Marks ls OJ>ROSed by Willlam A. Newson, a San Francisco lawyer, and Way I! challenged by John ·Erreca, former direc- tor of public work• muter both Brown and Reagan. The onJy opponent of Sen. George ,Deulanejlan, (R·Long Beach), lo AIP candldlte Don- na Demoret. Assemblyman Leo Ryan, (D-South San Franclaco), has no opponents and Assemblyman Alan Pattee, (R&linas), Is challenged qnly by AIP candidate Virgtnla Roush. 1·6-¥ear-Old Girl Genius Teaches, Studies at MSU EAST LANSING, MI ch . MSU o:ffe red her a graduate a genius. But In tenns of (AP):-Walk lnto Ed!th Stem'a alslslantship.to help pay costa. cr~~~Jit~~!d!on."!i:~:·;;ction tri&l'.!~riletey . c 1 a s a for Her ·lither 11 Uoable to, work in her spare time and ahe en- fi-eshtnen. at Michigan State becitise of lllneu, aniJ her joys one televlJlon series in University; you would swear other 15 a sales clerk ln a parUcular: "We 'Star Tr:ek' the te8clier iln1t a day over 17. bakery. lovers are an underground ." There are two other young She likes music f rd m ForaUmlted tlme-tbe giant , 48 oz. party •lze only E~tn Dry Mlrtln.I M•nhai\fln •Daiquiri WhbktJ Sour • Muprlta , Deuhlelu ADVENTUROUS COCKTAiLS In othtr Si~tl' Mll·Tl.I, Black Ru.Hbin, Glmle1, Stln1tr, Side C•r, Old 1a1hloMd,Vodka iwr, Trqulla Sollr, Aprko• Sour, ll·to-1 Ciln Martini, Vildka Mtr1inl1: Utra Or)' or ll·to-1' PAULIN£'$ ·DANCE .SlUDIO, She lsntt. She's only l6. geni~ at M I c h i g a n claaslcal to pop. She has dated Edith ii a mathematics - phenomenon from Florida who State. Michael Grost, 14, aon of _ _:an~d~a~dmi~ta~to~a~crus~~h~or~t~w~o:_. !::======================================= was exposed to M-hour·a-day a Lansing couple, Is com· clasaical music ahortly .after pletlng bla senior year this . i95I Since • FREE TkANSrQRTATION TO :._MO FkOM ,'. ITuDIO ' • TAP BAL~ET ACROBATIC MODERN JA'ZZ lfJ-1111 ding. • ..... ....,, semater and will join Edith In bitth; wu-rea -~r· the MSU .,..&dua'te college stu-rowlng 'books from the public "' library-al 21'; bu an. IQ of dying mathematics. lit to 201; depending on the l!onnac Plantnik, 11, a test: and worries aboUt her gr~t.e 1tu.dent ln zoology, ls weight. · , ~ · • ., teac~. 1genera1 biology to , , · Ske's lost 20 pounds since , aophoifiom,_,He 11 a graduate •.~ starting her graduate work at of concord 'College in Athen1 .,_ Michigan state, but would Uke W. Va. to lose more, "so I can find in· 'l1ie classical music as an expensive dresses that aren't infant waa the beginning of so old-looking. years of dilclpllned work for "I alway1r waa a lat little Edith guided by her lather, thing," ahe 84ded. · Aaron, who 1ald he wanted to Edith decided to come to create a genlua ln h l s MSU after gra~uaUon from daughter. IN POUNT.t.IN VALLIY Florida AtlanUc Unlveralty Public schoolofflclal5 fought -1"11 MAGNOLIA -he I ...... the --·-1 becauae.i 'e-• .,... au ...... _ her father's planl to take , IN W•ITMINtTU had an excellent reputatiori'ln Edith from the ninth -acte in· am W•STMJNIT•1t AYI. th u nd b ~ 1~:!:!!!!!!!:1!!!:!1!:!:!!:!:!!:!:!!=~~ma:::;:::;:•;:m:;:a;:cs~a;;;;_;,;.e~c~a:;u:;•;;•~, to Miami-Dade Junior College. :::. They lost in court. Frff Cra~ Demonstrations A#ernoons & Evenings Edith accepts -w J t h reservaUons -her father'a opinion that she la a genius. "I believe it is questlonable that I waa born a 1enius," she stated. "It must be the ex· perlm. In terma of IQ I am '69 Impala Cuatom CouP. " .. " " • " $5. Holda any Bike 'Ill Dec. 24th, 300 llKIS TO CHOOSI PROM LB Students . Will Teach '" !-1,.. o~ 17071 MC11J!IOlla at WCll'MI' 94z.3m 541.0377 WARHU MON •• ····~·· I DAILY '"' . "'"' ,,.. x " Newp ort-Me1a school truatee1 have agreed t o employ up to 92 atudent teachera from Cal State Long Beach thlo school year. The ICbocI · dlotrict will be paid up to $3,110 per ltudent teacher per quarter. · Slmllar agreementl have been signed with SOUthem Clllfom.ia 1COllege In Costa Mw, Cbapmlll COUege and cat Stain Fullerton. Ju$t sitting there,this'69 Chevtolet Can· do' four things competitive _cars can't:' It can waah it. headlight.. It can apply liquid tire chain to its rear .. ~. It ca.o ail1otly defog or defrost the rear window. • · It can keep you cool or warm auto. maiically with Comfort.on-the Mlf·ad· jU1tin1 air-conditioning 11y11tem. And once you've added ll11 theee won~ derful devicet1 to a new Chevrolet, you juat-can'I imagine wey aD)!one would siYI ---- . -,, a second thought to a eecond-plloe car. The headlight waabers and liquid tire chain for traction on slippery roads are' operated at the touch of a button from the dri'f81''1 eeat. So ia the 1ilent new rear .. window defroe*'· loviAible coramic stripe on the gW. heat up to keep the window clear. Alao available: Chevrolet'• Light Moni· toring Syatem that let. you know ·!rom iDlide il all your outalde !J&hll ani worldni, ' . full four-speab• at.roo, a omooth" s-d Turbo Hydra-matfc fJ'ansmiMion. All in a car made 1quieter, made 1tlonger, made more comfortable. Now at yoi.ir Chevrolet dealer'•· · We've llld It Wore, and we'll IQ' II age.in. Match thil, you o~ '~91! •p1jllif1ep . ' . ' I • -l'uttlne JOU flm, kl.,. II fht. • • - J% DAILY PILOT TNlrsday, October 24, 1961 I I ,. I ; l ' .. l I ! ' ' . WHITE ' FRONT OUAll1Y • SERVICE • DI SCOUNT • INTEGRITY • .. D ,D r."' - PHILCO 12" PORTABLE TY fi~;:;~·-;-~~~~:::j(!;i!i ;·-·-.--· . ,. -. . ' 11 ; • WKITE fRONl'S ,! • 3 YEAR 1 ' pJ(1URE TUBE · },, . WAllRAllTY 'I w "' '' -: ~l HO EXlRA cosl t!· • ..; • Personal size, ideal for dorms. dens, offices • All channel UHF/ VHF 1uning • Jeles ccpic an- 1enn a • Carry handle • Up· lront controls • .. Picture mea· ~ured diagonally ~ ~ t<"~~~~·_-'--:::'°:. · .. I ..,~:j . BEST '~ ....... DOWN BUY i ON APPROVED CREDm i t I I I .. ' ' Smoothly sanded hard- wood, ready to paint or stain. Paneled front and recessed base. 2 shel-- \les in back. Walnut grained vinyl top. Use as snack bar, room divider. SUNBEAM CANISTER VACUUM POWERFUL sumo11 . _.....,_ · Durnble, ~eavy.dufy • steel chassis in roll-- .. easy tallister with t_oe l: switch mounted CIQ top. Mode! VCS90SP, .. .:JAPE PLAYER and RADIO Runs on batteries. Plays L j\ . 2·track tapes anywhere, ~~;-;:;;;;~~~ .. ~ even ill car. Both player ~) • and radio in one light· CHARGE IT e IANIWll'llCAfl e WH,,...PIONf • MASfllCHAIH c•rDrT CAUS • • • ,, y weight unrt. Earphone jack. l'IE·lECORDED TAPES 1.29 IA. "'J.'fl' .-~·r-·=~~-·-···--•~•-.1· .. ----· -.,, ... ' ........ .. ' • • • PRICES WAY BELOW NORMAL DISCOUM1S ' DAYS ONLY l'ID011f110N 110 ':::YID CRIDITI :: PAYMlllTS u-r~~ FIB· 1911•:14:11~TV1SI APP LIA . ' > ' 31 /. or. tubt of 3 9 C effective denti- frice. COMP. 89c .. • MINNESOTA FAYS" 4'x8' table with 11A'" S\atene bed, wool cloth, live gum rub· bet aishions ind ball return. 4 c.ues, balls included. ,.....,...... ,· "WIN1JlY. SPltE," 4 O!. battle ol skin bracer. · COMPARE Ir! 1.25 "BURNISHED LEATHER," 4 a< bottle of skin bracer . COMPARE IJ 1.25 POOL IABLE . Four double•edged 1·1: blades in pack·;. ~ S<:hick's newest ' COMPARE AT 89c . BABY LOTION, 9 oz. battle of "Baby Magic" COMPAU IT 1.15 SKIN BRACER, 6 or. bottle titer 3have. .. CIJ1llPARE lT 1.10 ., ' I I l---~~__.,..-.L.-,.-----1 • t RYBUTOL FLAVORED RYBUTOL RYBUTOL RYBUTOt · · VITAMIN C TABS THERAPEUTICS IRON PLUS DAILY MU&:TIPLES Oran ge flavo1ed · I I:-:: Chewable 1ablels. Bollie al JOO. •. COMP. AT 1.49 ·-69c ZEST ABS CHEWABLE VITAMINC · WITH MINERALS J 00 capsules. 'WITH JRON. Dail1 ll quirement, JOO tab. ''"· COMPAREAT6.97 • COllPAlf IT 2.9 199 VASELINE FIRST AID PORDLEUM JEll Y l~ oz. jar at real , economy price. COMPARE AT 98c 148 WHITE FRONT'S PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS ' --.......__ -......___ Multio!t vitamin tablels, bolt lt ol 100. 'OMPA11£ l.T 1.91 69c ' . _.1 .. ..._ ... _ ....... _ (aisT\ ~ SIELIER DELUXE CHARGER . ' ~-• ... f ' ' ,. BIKE Chrome sport fen· ders. red line tires, large rear rellec- to r, coppertoos color, Boys #63L l'iirls #63Z. ' .. ' MAGIC CHEF 36" DELUXE GASRAltGE Oversize oven has glass window. Big· adjustable glide· out broiJer. Custom back guard has · elect ric cl ock, timer. Storage area · for pots, pans. CHENILLE BEDSPREADS • Sohd state ampfifier • 40 watt • peak power •·4-speed changer • Diamond stylu! • 6 speakers, 2 exens.ion speaker Y..ings • • • '< ' featuring • an• t!tetr . ll!at · Capitol stereo ll"s, llleluding their lates release ''Bobbie Genlry and Glen Campbell." LIST PRICE 4.79 STIRED Velvety-soft cotton chenille beds preads in vibrant solids or blended multi-tones, generously sized, bor· dered in bull io n fringe. Machine washable. 3088 BRISTOL AVL • JUST OFF NEWPORT AVE. STORE HOURS DAILT 11 TO t IATUUAJ 11 TO t IUNDAT 11 TO 7 • ' :\ . ' . -· --- BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND BAKER ST. '\ ...,,_ .. ...... . . I, ' - • LIGHT ON THE SUBJECT· -The annual Oandle Tee, hooted by Orange Coast Kappa Alpha Theta Al umnae Club, will tbrow con- sidera ble light on tlhe sometimes difficult subject of holiday enter· • taining decorations. Lighting candles for tbe event in .the Corona ... .. '\; '.ff: .. ~tl .... ,..,, ,., .. • .,"f."•'t• 1 ' .... ' ' } " .~ ' ~ . . ' l ,. . .. .. • 1 • del Mar home olf Mrs . William Holstein are (·left to right) the Mmes. Vernon .Edler, Chairman; Don' Smartt, committee member and M. E. Schinkel. . . ~. :::..· .. . Jo..,;;·1~·,,. .. ". ~ '.It .. • .... .(/ .. ..; •• ~.I..~ ... ., ...... . . ~ . . -. Pros Glow For Show 0ra·nge Coast Kappa Alpha Theta Alumnae Club members and their guests will view holiday decorations by experts during the annual benefit. Candle Tea hosted by Mrs. William Holstein of Corona del Mar Wednesday, Nov. 6. During the 2 to 4 p.m. event women will wander through the Holstein home Where tables will be decor- ated in wrious themes .for holiday entertaining. Arrangements for Christmas will be created by Plummer's of Fashion !stand, The Skillet of Lido, Pace Setter of South Coast Plaia and B. D. Howes.Jewel· ry of Lido. • Rogers of Califo!'inia, Newport Beach, will decorate the Hofst.ein patio fot. a New Year's Dar barbecue and . the main tea table, arr.anged by Richards Flower Shop, will follow a Thanksgiving theme. In addition, fruit cakes, walnuts, pecans, candles and candle accessories w:i1I be sold during the arternoon. Mrs. Vernon Ed.fer ohairman of the event, is being assisted by Mrs. Willi.ain Reimers. Committee members include the Mmes . .Richard Cramm, Merle Amundson, Robert Hodges, Edward Nicholsen, HOward Martin and Don Smartt. Proceed! from the party will benefit &lppa=ha ThelJa's scholarShip fund and the Institute of Log ics in Wichlta1 Kan. The inotitut~1 the large<! reoi ential speech aoo hearing clinic in me worfd, 'has been the aororil>y's major philanthropy.,.;nce 1945. Promoti ng Glea·ming .Gr.ins Association Fills Fa shion Show Prescription It has beCoitie"traditional for Women's Auxiliary members ~f the Orange Courlty Dental Society to offer dental health kits and sugarless gum to costumed cher· ubs on Halloween. While Susan Fort~ (tenter) and Tress Gardarian (right) are happy to accept the gifts from Mrs. John Forte, bunny Jonatha For!A! seems to be thinking, "ls this a trick,OI' a treat?" A stylish afternoon is prescribed by the Women 's Auxiliary, Or- ange County Pharmaceutical Association for the annual Autumn Leaves of fashion in the Santa Ana Elks Club Thursday, NoV . 7. Arranging decorations for the event which will begin with an 11 a.m. social hour are (Wt to right) the Mmeo. John Edi..,.. of: Costa Mesa; Dean Reavie of New.port Beach and J. N. McClellan of. Costa Mesa . • 'With So.n ·at C.ollege Pad Wonders If He'll Gain Know.ledge ; DEAR l<NN !:ANDERS: My SOI\ l<R for college 1 few weeks ago. I would like IA> send t.be college president 1 letter but. rby wife won't let me , not even anonymous]y. Ptrh;'ps if you print it he wiJI see it. Thanb. Just sign me --roNCERNED DAD. DEAR COLLEGE PRESIDENTo I am sending my boy to colltte becaul! it is better. than &ending him to Vietnam. He II a good boy but J'm worried because tiom what I hear ind re&d, c0Uege1 ohn•t what Ibey Ul<d to be. For U · ample, our IOrl s.ys cars wete not allow - ed on xour campus but the kids decided ~Y wanted cars and they told the ad· l'ftinigtraUon t.o go Julnp In the lake. Your reply. Mr. Co~ge Pre!kfenl, was: "We I - ANN LANDERS Q would prefer that student.I not bring car1 but if they bring them the old rules will not be enforced." I hope you have aome faculty members of fine character wtio can inspire young people: From what , l hear. several ol your teacben line up with lhe student& and make life hell for the administration. l also hear your dorms are 1'coe'J" till al l houri and the 8\udents h1.eghi'l°JIY call the campus a bordello subsidized by the tax· pa~rs. .. • . Above all, 1 hope you will keep In mind lhal t can't suppart this kid for the rest of hJs life. Please give him 90me vpca. ti onal training. ~NCERNED PAO DEAR DAD: Hert11 your Jetter but I mbt that yoo will be 1wamped ""tlflth .:pllt1 from college pfu:ldentl. WUI you etlle for • stude11t7 U so, I'll print the ·est rtSpDft!\t. DEAR ANN ' I love my ... 1r. but I don't know what to do about her lying. I give her my paycheck and take a few dollars for myself. She is supposed to pay all the bills. I'm a peraon who likes to keep U1)I credit clean. My wife dribbles away money and hides lhe unpaid bills and dunning notices. When J call her on it she :::rles and 51.ys she "forgot." . What should I do? I hate to Insult her ·Y takinl over my1eU. ' -RICK D~R.!_.RICK: Y. w90't lnnlt lier, .you'll re:lle~e her. She 11 eitaf1y bi ... compeLent for dtli job "Ud you're • boob to let IM!r wreck yOur erfdll Glv6 be.r Ill 1Uowuce ud pay tM1bllll yourself. " DEAR ANN LANDERS o Our da~g)\tu is being married this f•ll and hae decided· she does not want children at her wed- ding or reception. Sue uy1 too man)' weddings have been ruined b)' noUy kids and 11ht ls not goin& to aJlow anything to tnar lhe beauty of her day. She. 111 em- phatic on the point that there will be no one undu high achool aae. • I agr .. wlth,.Jlll\ ~auallter·o poin\ or view but. woilder how io tell people 11ctj.Ully when Ibey uk If their youna chlldfen art tncludtd • -V. E. M. DEAR V.1:. M.: P. oltule d• IOI tr; to brtll& cbUdren llllleu '1ie Invitation " ..__ ---~----------------------· ------·---------~~----'-·----·-·~'·"-''----·~-~~=~ 1peclfk;aUy aay1 "And Famtly" OI .thi e11velope. u someone uU1 limply ..,, "Sorry ,_Jue does not want anyone ucltt ll.P tcHol •ge and we are ""~ lier wilbti alnce &Ms 11 HER daJ~" ' Drinking may be "in'' to the kids ~ run with -but It an put you "out" far keepo. Yoo can cool It IDd slay P>Puior. Read "Booze and Yoo.-ForT ...... OQ!y." Send 3$ c:onls In coin .llld • ioilC. sel!-<iddre~, stamped ~velope ~ your request. ~ • Ann Landen wtU•bt glad to help• :itM with your problems. Send them to holl'!n care of tbe DAILY P~. ~ a sell·addreaed, stamped envelopl. ' ' I I J I ' .· ' -J f bAIL V PIL.OT • • NOW THAT'S LUXURY -What l!!eepy-head - wouldn't want breakfast served lo her by an atten- tive huSband? Kay Stegner of Fountain Valley view> a coif.., roll offered by Dennis Connor of Santa Ana. Lake Ta hoe Honeymoon Follows Wedding Rites Honeymooning at L a k e Tahoe before making their home in La Habra are Mr. and Mrs. Mlke CoMer who ex- changed their wedding vows in ·the F1rst Methodist Church of Huntington Beach. The Rev. G. Russell Shaw conducted the dooble ring ceremony £or the former Opal Haling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Haling of Hun- tington Beach and lhe son of Mr. and Mrs. John Conner of Whlttier. Given In marriage by her father, the bride selected a aatin gown trimmed with lace aod pearl&. Her train Wai beJd by a peau de 10ie bow, and holdlng her lhoulder length veil wu a crown of pearls. She carried a bouquet of but. tmly orchids. Mr1. Dennis Pirtle was matron of honor and Miss June Davia and Miu Marlene Furgerson were l)ridesmaids. Cheryl Crou8e, niece of the bride, served 1s j u n Io r bridesmaid and Connie Crouse was flower girl. The bride'• attendanta wore gowna de&lgned with emerald grttn velvet bodlcts and MRS. CONNER fc:nst green skirts. They car· ried noseg1ys of green carna-Dou011 ltl"tl ltl~n Uorui fastened with emerald ----------velvet ribbon. The bridegroom asked Dave Shiebel to serve as best man and uahtts were Dan and PauJ Conner, his brothers, and Bob Leonheart. Niles Dohrn, the bride's nephew, carried the wedding rings. Miss Jackie Abare clmllated the guest book dur· tng the rectpUon in lhe home of the bride'• parent.. Slides Shown By Rivie'}' ns .. The Dani6h ring is one of the featured recipet; in the first Orange Coast College Cooking School ses- sion next Wednesday. Theme will be Foods From Breakfast to Brunch. OCC Sponsors Cooking School You would think that in 16 years the women of the Harbor Area would have learned all they wanted about cooking -but not S-O. The 17th annual Orange Coast College Cooking School will get under way next Wednesday at the M e s a 'Mteater in Costa Mesa. The school, co-sponsored by Alpha Beta Markets, Southern CounUea Gu, Davis-Brown, O'Keefe and Merritt. Mesa Tbeat.e.r and OCC, runs for four successive Wednesdays from 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. Instructor! Miss G e r r y Gerken of Southel'tl Counties Gu and Miss Pat 'Mogan of the OCC home economies department prepare new and invlting diehea on stage. In addition, prizes are of· tered and all of the dlshee prepared by the duo are given away. Oct. 30 is the date featuring Foods From Breakfast to Brunch. It will include easy to prepare recipes. such as melon balls in orange sauce, applesauce pancakes, &00thern sausage and egg casserole, tuna turnovers. cranberry cof- fee cake and fruit pizza. There is no admission charge and students may register at the door. During the final session a new gas range ·will be given to a lucky ticket holder. • Mu Upsilon Children Clown During Parade Children drtsaed in clown Ticket! for the meal, including costumes will fill a car en-barbecued beef, beana, cole tered by Mu Upsilon chapter, slaw, coffee or juiee, will be Beta Sigma Phi, during Foun-$1.50, for adults and 75 cent.I lain Valley's first citywide for juniors. There is no charte Halloween celebration Satur· for children under 5 years. Among the prius which wUI day, Oct. 28· be awarded during the day- The group wlll participate in long event in the Fountain the opening parade beginning Valley High Schoof bowl are at II a.m. and also will tripg to San Francisco, Las operate a balloon dart throw-Vegas and Palm Springa. inc booth. The Firemen's As8oclation Barbecue dinner will be is sponsoring the event. served from 4 to 7 p.m. - Toastmistresses Painting Becqmes ·cat's Meow ly P.uun.& llALLSN .. .. ...... """ .,... How do you make a portrait the "at'• meow''! AtU.st Ann Bennett dilcovered the answer. nearly 12 ye111 110 ••• by a<eidenl Having compltted a pc><lralt ol her favorite pot, P.al(y.cat ohe decided to ·-off her creallon to her l'of11an friend. But Instead ol purrlnc with pleuure, Patty.Cat bl.aed and growled·at the portrait Mn.. Beonetl dedded If the pc><lralt WU that llfe--J.lke, lhe WU in the wrong buaJneu. So ahe nrttched. "I had been painting California sceoery," said Mn. Beonetl, -spends October and part of the summer on Balboa laland and the. real of tbe time in Palm Sprinp Ind Ha wall. "( WU esi>ectally fond ol the desert and had become known tor my deaertacapes. But after the episode with Patty-Cat l decided to go Into animal portraits." Mn. Bennett, who has im- mortalized counUeaa Harbor Area pell, uses pa.tels for her animals, uslnt oils and pure . piament whlch has been dried and pressed Into stlckl. "They lend themaelves to gorgeous fur t.uturea," said Ann. She fiM makea a detaJled sketch of her subject, filling in fur tones and background later. She is very carefuJ to get llnee correct so that breeders can't criticize. "Animals are a terrific challenge," said the artist. "Dogs are very dlfiicult unless they're obedienc-,: trained but 90me cats are hard, too. ex· BARKING UP THE RIGHT TREE -Mn. Ann 8"rulett cllocoV~ t~at animal painting ii her forte about 12 yNrS ago with the belp Of Paw1-Cal a feline lriend. Since then •he baa painted many animal!, including the poodles be· longing to Alice Faye. wall ao much that the owner finally took the dog to the n- hibit to see it. "Animal! are llke people,"· said Ann. "'Ibey have their own personaliUes." She found Wilbur. a poodle owned by Alice Faye and Phil Harri1, to be very shy, while mom cocker spaniels an full of life and nonsense and m o s t afghans are hams. "Ive had reluctant ones. too," sa.id Ann, "but I've • never had • m J sh 1 p .·----------- Naturally, when they want out·l---------- 1 let them out," slie laughed. VaOLLYWOOD Mrs. Bennett, who always ~ uses Uve subjects, even during · demonstration.s, has found her lucrative profession to have one drawback. "Sometimes t fall in love with them and it's such a wrench to !~ave them. But I know I 'll stay ill th!J business. I adore animal!I ... I could never give them up." peclally if they don't want you • .,. .. ,,.. ___ ..,_,...,••••••••""'"""""' to .st.are at them." Mrs. Bennett h a s en· countered several problems. But she has managed to solve The Tee Tattler them a 11 with patience and ••-••~•••••,...,,..,.,,. ......... ,,. guile. ., "I use every trick fn the 1~111tor1 Nole: A f.&llllTI" of wom. book to keep their attention. t en'• toP -.:i11 .cor" w1u ·~••r .,di try to keep their favorite lid-"""' "' "'' OAtL v P1LoT. To reti'Or1 •coret tor Ille weell, PINN mell 11\em bits on hand : I use squeaky "' l".o. So~ is.so, cm11 M.,,,. Tiiey toys. I meow like a cat . . """'' be rece1vtoc1 tt... Mond1Y. 1 anything to keep them still but 111:v1HE COAST alert." Lelli••' 01y, •-•U--<l•u A. One dog, a $10.000 English Mi11 o..e o.. w11n. end Mr•. c11rt Sorritr1, 361.,; ll>e Mmes. Conrr kun•e bulldog called K j p p a X ""' Devld Bell•nllne, ll: Clel• 11, Ille Feamaught, wu induced to MIMI. Corinne Frellklln. llr Ell IUCldle, J7""; 1-fuldt 01v1et 11111 Jtr>e pose by means of , cheese. eow1e1, :11: c11" c. tt.. Mme1. LPl- .. When I wanted him to come, 11e T1 rr, »Vr. H. 11. Ch•P,..."· 11; 0... Le<lk tlld H. J. Lortt11. 11 .... : I'd use his call name, Jocko, cieu o. 1t1t Mmes. "'""'" Sh9w•rd. and he would lumber out of his :MVi: 11 .... H••-1"-.,· 1111o: J. K, corner and I'd hold the cheese Hi;:r.,•'t,:,· ~~·~~ ~ G~t in one hand and frantically citu A. 111e Mma. llettv wn,111. u. Paint wi' .. "·e o'"er."' IGW 1rot11 P1u1 Hell. Joi\". l"rlce, ei. Lll UI Ul a.ill Gftsdllttf'. 1', tlrll NII H-erd She had to chase one cat all Oed:tr, Joi\" Lowe. Jem11 sutton. d '" h · 11, steond 11111 G11t1! Cl111 I, Ille aroun uze ouse trymg to get Mmtt. Jeck 11''°"· n, 1ow tr°'" him to sit sUll. Afterwards. he Hem-W1rd. H. first <ttfi M1ltolm saL "I could have throttled Yeuk1>r. 11. H<ond ne1 1 Joi\" Hoot•"· Ernlt> t1111cl\efl, LIW!s MM!ll"ltli, him," she laughed. BtttY Mercie<'. to. ttil•d M11 Mem- A .d h e)f " ti k btrs' Cl1t1 A. ll'le Mma. Htllle Ltfur, nn prl es ers on s C -1.1, low iron: w11ker sm1111. 1~. first ing with a job" until an animal ""'' Jtr1e Alchey, Nencv New1end. is 1·ust right Th h h 75. wcor111 ""' N•I Gtrey, 111c:111n1 · US, S e as s11"'°"· 11. 1our111 ne1 1 MMlbers' found her vocation to be very c1111 11, 1111 Mmes 111c:11erd 1"11- rewarding. Although animals "'· '6. 1-1rot11 J1me1 Tev1,,,.. 110\' Hellbe'll, 1!1, first ntt: 5tm H-cannot verbally express their e"'· ''·· •econd ...i: ,.,,,1 11111, n, pleaaure, several have used 1111r11 "l"I • Membt"' citss c. '"' other means to let her know. ~:::'.1· 1~.~: :;::; .=·~ .... ,!~,';'. "I onct was commissioned 11rs1 """ c E. 011.-. •. 1l, ••cllfld I lltl; Jtrt llllt!Y. Wllllem eurll11th1m. to pant a Oandie Dinmont 11. "'1"' .wi1: G111 sm1tfl. n. 1our111 Terrier," she said. "The dog's net. Ht!, fllll MmH;, Jfllln Mlnki.v. 7•1 l"trno Cltrt;, Kenntth lHiurt. 7tJ Mlch11f A1-..t. IG. CIUMI 01y, IHI 1•11 fJf l"tr1-S I -Grou, Ille Mmes. Frink 1"1ddoc.k, G~ Fniffti"9, 15: W. A. 01......,,., le" H!net, 111. e. McDcnritH, Al Slllnn. t:I; Ht!, the Mmts. He rold Pek,,..,..,. II. I!'. MC'l"tvre. 62; Car1 II~ lllot>en Wetters, Aocert Ewing. Phv~ 111 Ounl1p, U ; JOI'" Ad1m1, Tl'lomel MlcCrodan, 61 ; ll:lch.lrd Swe11. J1,,,... VtW'll. Frtrtt. ,...,, Fr.role HertM!\, Peul llottlmon, O.le McClt ln. M•rvln Al~rl. C~a•~• Mciver, Mlcheet Wei· co, D1vlcl Milter. Hltheles Holl, t....,11 Turner, 61: o.:1m1r H1mre, Lt1lle K1Me"'• Wlll!tm Fr1dl. E. II. Feoon, It. E . .>otwlon, J. W. Coornbol. G•rltnll Grelt. Hellw M_y, K-111 Nllrilrf, Ann CIP11"1, "' Jet.111 L-. WIUlllm Hll•rHoff, Edwerd Ck:oun!I, MloltlW!w Mlti,r; !l•r...,. 11111111.,.en, John lll0111n, 11. •AHCHO SAN JNQUIN low Nlt-Fltlll! 1, Mts. Ted H1m-broi:il<, r.Ji Flllhl t. Mra. ltoll•r1 KllCl!Mr, IOI 7"111111 l, llllt M"'". Dori11c1 T1lm11•. n1 Clr1 k l•rx"· 11; f"l+fhl '• fl'le MrTllS. Jlrftll 11:-. HJ Gl!Ml't Htfltr, n. Harbor TOPS Harper School in Costa Mesa is the location where member! of TOPS Harbor Light~rs gather each evening at 7:30. Underwirea anti Lightly · Contoured Beauty Bra Naturelly fl•tt•rina 11ylon I.ca br11 with 50fUy quitted Dacron• polyester flb 1rflll lin lnf. Patented new 1l11t Wla:erd Wtr.. under cops 1lve1 youthful upllft and sep1r1Uon. !lack of sp1ndax POWlt·net: mov•s with you. Style 4325 ln111hlon colors. 8, c 32·38. .... Co 32·3!, $7 .00) mate happened to be in the MESA VlflUIE room when the painting was Ott A"u'"''-11 l"•rtntrs-<leis ..._ PENETRA TtoN J7J7 I. CHtt H"f. uncovefed. When she saw it, Low Gru1, Mra. 0on11d Oout1111. ••1 C•r•" .,. M•r Low Net, !he ~-JtMeo Sutton, N111rty •v•ryori• •••d1 the ,..._ 67J·1f50 She whined and muttJed the 1111 E,,.,."' Ck:ourel, Mldlael W11<0, DAILY ,llOT, hem1tow11 "I WI· painting as if ahe knew who it o.!mir Htmn. n: Cllu II. Low p1p1r fer th1 ~1&uleu1 Or•rtt• ... 11kA!Mrlco'4 was.,, GrMS, M". DI:•" 01-. 1e11 l-Coiit. e M..rw c11ci....-Ht1. !he M..,.., Herry llulCI!, 71, On another occasion, an' -~'~"":"~'~"~-~'~"·~u~'~'~"="~'~· ~,~ .. ~=============~'~':'~-~~,,~s.~ ... ~~"'~'~""~"~ owner had allowed the artist-;-Gl'"CIH, M,,. "'''1 lllllk. nw1 l'"" to take his painting and ex- hibit It. The dog w h i n e d around the empty space on the '!be new Mr1. Conner 15 a graduate of Huntington Beach Hleh: School and currently h attending a bu.sinesl college. Her husband is a graduate ol. Sierra High School and al· tended Rio Honda JuniOr An amichair cruise around the world aw&ib members of Riviera Club'• Creative Liv· ing Se ction when they meet in the Laguna Beach home of Mn. Roger Llljes- trom at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 30. Members are bringing their favorite color slides to be screened with commentary, and prints mounted in albums will be passed around. Surf.tie Clubhouse in Hun· Ungton Beach ia the meeting place for members of Las Olu Toastml!tress Club of Huntington Beach on the se- cond and fourth Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. .~~~· Colle1e. Rebekah Lod9e Triple Link Club of Mega Rebekah Lodge hu meetings the fourth Mooday at 8 p.m. in varioua locatJons. M r s . Douglas Morgan at 548-1938 may be ca\led for additional information. Highlights of Switzerland, I Norway and India already are ,,...,,. promised for the gathering. Reservation1 are neceuary as 11eating ii limited and may I be obtained from Mrs. Byron Williams. 644-0872 or Mrs. Betty Rowan, 548-59111. -.cl1MOMAS MEXICO CHlllSTMAS NIW YIAl'S <'111Alllc:l11151 he. l9 .. -.. Acompllteulectfon of/"-i-.;o..,.,:i;; ll'lllc'*I tfK Gold WeddlnO Bandt tfi ·-_., ... NEWPoRT CENTER 11 f•1hton l11an4 Opon Mon. t FTi. f:lO C....1111111 ,.,..,. ZAI.ES" l•W•Laae -SANTA ANA fOJ W11t '4th Street Open Mon .• Thurs .• Fri. 9:)0 ,. ' -·----··---· .. ~-. .-....... ~" • i •• • 9LAMOl.OVS ~UlO CA~EJll.EI DAYS fi...t Ri.f Cl111 Maisie _,...I Ch1 r. .............. c • .., -111 ••Hes le~. ···-.. wifM) -· ··-= • .,C....._ -... IC. I!'..-·""" '"'' U pc --""'· Pp '14 ltrt1•ft• ----.=:w· ... ., .-. -·-.. ,...,,,... -_.__ ---.... nr..Jt1i BY FLORSHEIM '1. DREAM OF STYLISH COMFORT n~.l'O AAA to C 1831 Newport Blvd • THE OUT\A~ II • Famout M1ktr S.t lndud11~ 2 111111lt1cf Jpr11d1 -2 kl1t1r1 -2 IHI• 1prlng1 -2 m1nn1s11 - 1 m1r re1l1t1nt corner t1bl1. Reg. $219 $189 (IAV1$100) • KING SIZE SLEEP SET Mattress with 2 Box Springs Deluxe 7' long 1n4 6' Whit ltrpln "°'cM $9900 Queen Size Set Reg. or Twln Set HIDE-A-BED SOFA ly SIMMONS Choose from .5 decorator co~rt toilored in tw•ed fobrk-<1v1rsi· bit cv1hion1. lili.Jf'0$199 $51) • ---.... .-...... 200/o OFF OUll llGllUI PllCIS ON All lUSTOM OlDlllD CONYIRTJIU $0FAS ANO COlNQ HDIM .; . . Plans Never Shelved by Associates Women of aU faiths who are interested in partici- pating in activities_ of the Wo~en Associates. of. the University Interfiaith Foundation, UCI are mv1ted to a membership team from 2 to 4 p.m . Tuesday. Oct. 29, in the Galaxy Drive borne of Chancellor and Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. Serving as hostesses Sisterhood Campaign Bene/ its Seminaries Residence Hall for Women. with Mrs. Aldrich (right) are oflicers (left to right), the Mmes. Roy Giordano, president; Duane Black, membership chairman, and Jack M. Lyons, hospital· ity chairman. One of the aims is providing a relig· ious library at the Interfaith C<!nter. Horoscope Scorpio: Check Details ·Before Changes Made FRIDAY Added knowledge today spells Bride Claimed In NB Nuptials St. Andrew'• Prabytutan Church wu lhe settln& for the evening nuptlah llnklnJ in marriage Melanie Atkinson a n d Air Force Lt. John La· pointe. The Rev. Dr. Charles DierenfieJd performed t b e ceremony for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Alldnson of Irvine Cove and the son of Mra. Bon Davies of South Pasadena. The bride, given ln marriage by her father, selected a floor Ientfh gown of silk peau de soie with an embroidered front panel. Her sllk illusion veil- ing was caught to a crown of stephanotis, and she held • bouquet of white d a i s y chrysanthemums and il.ephanolis. Matron of honor wu Mrs. emerald green aowns accented by time .,.... Win -.., Daisies made up their bea<J. ple<e1, and Ibey curled - quets of y e I 1 I o w dally cheysanlhemtun1 ond boby'1 breath. Best man WU Matheny while uahering guests to their seats were Craig· Bl'flwe.rton, Phillip Plank, Clark Confleld, Edmund Navaro and Howarth Alklnaon, the brlde'1 brother. Ashley Atkinson, the bride's niece, was flower girl and Matthew Carlton was the ring bearer. The reception followed In lhe Newport Harbor Yacht ., Club. Theresa and Suzanne Matheny, nieces of the bridegroom, attended th e l!Uesl book. The newlyweds left the club on an undisclosed honeymoon cruise aboard her family 's yacht. ' The benedict will be sta-MRS. LAPOINTE ' • Weist Wetchers TOPS Wailt Watcher• wemble every 'l'hurtdlY 11 7 p.m. In Circle View School, Huntlogtoo Beacb. at WESTClllf AT DCrlD NEWPORT lt\CH 642-3111 Kenneth Alton while bridesmaids were Mrs. James Matheny, sister of the benedlct; Mrs. W 111 i a m Beckett, Mm. Mark Moore. Miss Nancy Goodwin, and Miss Susan Coffin. tioned in Texas until his:!;;:::;;;:;;~~~~~~;;;:;;~~~~~~~~~~~ permanent assignment as a Laguna Bride jet pilot bwtructor at Williams They donned f I o or length Air Fore. B .... Phoenix. NOW OPEN ••• Area Resident Leads Seminars THE YERY FIRST IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNl·A ANTIQUE CWTHING GENUINE AUTHENTIC WOMEN FASHIONS l ACtlSSO•lfS FOR THE HORSELESS -cARAIAGE GROUP ALSO EXCLUSIVE , •• ONE.OF-A-KIND DRESSES e GOWNS e SPORT5WIAR A prominent Orange County cludes U»e formatiop of the woman bu bet.n appointed to Orange Coast League o f head the community seminars Women Voters of which she p;;igram of lhe University of served as its first president. ·, SURANKA California Extemion, Irvine, She also has organized several according to Dr. Richard N. university extension programs 1264 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY, Baisden,exteMiondirector. for women and ls currenUy LAGUNA BEACH •.. 497-15~0 Mrs. Rudolph Kuehn o( working on her m at t er s Nert ,. ,......., a., Corona del Mar, a leader in ~d~·~-~~in~hb~tory~'...a~t:_:U~CI'::_· _.!,,,,==================~ the League of Women Votersl· i ' ,. A combined campaign will be. launched 1n behalf of two seminaries during a program planned by Temple Hillel Sisterhood, Huntington Beach, at 8 p.m. Monday. Oct. 28. Planning the program Is Mrs. Richard Bobrow, com- bined campaign chairman. Mrs. Edgar Beck, president, has extended an invitation to all members and friends who would like to attend the pro- gram . OCTOBER 25 gain. Tonight there is solid in- dication of advancement. and former member of lhe Orange County GraRd Jury will lead the community seminars made up of civic leaders and concerned citizens. Participants meet in private homes to discuss the problems of education. pover· ty, law enforcement, youlh and ra~ relations. The group also attend! a weekend con· ference for similar seminar groups from all over Southern . . . . . -" • . Mrs. David Kuris, represen- ting the Pacific Southwest branch, National Women's League of the United ' Synagogue of America, will speak to members and guests assembled in the Community Methodist Church. The seminaries, training rabbis, cantors, r e 1 i g i o u s The campaign will conclude with a February luncheon to which sisterhood contributors, in addition to contributors from all sisterhoods in the Pacific Southwest, will be in- vited. By SYDNEY ,OMARR CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. "The wise man controls his 19): Personal contact, effort destiny ... Astrology points the wins over committee ap- way." proach. Aca:nt individuaJity. school teachers and Jewish---------- community leaders, a r e ARJES (March 21 _ April Stress ind e pend enc e of 19): Recent efforts bring thought , action. Excellent for results. Honor could be due for beginning important project. family member. Be willing to AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. invest in your own enterprise. 18): Best Lo work quietly Success indicated if steps are behind the S<:i!nes. Being ag· sure, definite. Don't display gressive today would be error. doubt. Key is to perceive trends, California. located in Los Angeles and New York. The campaign also benefits the Mathilde Schecter Caldron Of Fun Brewing A time for fun and frivolity .. has been designated by the " Balboa Yacht Club for Satur- day, Oct. 26. This is the date selected for the annual Halloween party , ' • • TAURUS (April 20 . Ma y moods. Get finger on pulse ol 20): Take it slow, easy. Those public. Associate needs cheer- you depend upon far details ing. Set fine example. could be careless. Check PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): messages, appointments. You gain through creative Avoid wasting time, effort. Be hobby -brings you together di plomatic, but get money's with exciting people. Fine worth. time for special social event. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Be cooperative. Sh are Check legal d 0 cum en ts, pleasure; let others know you agreements. There could be are alert, aware. Because of a grant from the Ford Foundation, the seminars will continue for another two years on all nine University of California cam- puses. Mrs. Kuehn Is organizing three new seminar groups to begin Saturday, Oct. 28. Her experience in organization in· misunderstanding where IF TO D A Y IS YOUR I d money~ concerned . Get facts BIRTHDAY you tend lo he in· Party p anne on record. Th i 1 helps avoi'd trospective. Emotians run b a c k-stepping, argumeots. deep. When you do something, A Halloween party for mem· Associate may be in stubborn it is all the way. Nothing ber1 and husbandJ ls being mood. hallway where your feelings p I a n n e d by Lambda Zeta CANEER (June 21-July 22): are concerned. Significant Chapter of Sigma Phi Garn. Pressure exists lo complete a change due where home, m~r. and Mrt. 00 na 1 d project. Aid expected may fall residence is concerned. I k k Benedict will open their Hun· short o mar · Loo beyond GENERAL TENDENCIES: tington Beach home for the af. immediate circle of ac-Cycle high for CAPRICORN, fair which will begin at 8:00 quaintances. Situation could AQUARIUS. Special wo'd to Sat d Ocl ~ •--·a1 I bl . . .1:. . p.m. ur ay, ..... .3U1.:I which will begin at 6:30 p.m. KATHLEEN ELLSWORTH with the serving of "witch's Engiged . -.. "" . .. --. brew." Dancing to the Doctors' Dix- leland Band will follow dinner• acording to Dr. a n d Mrs . Royal Tucker,c hairmen. Assisting with arrangements are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lethen and Mrs. [rene Leitch . District Calls Buzz Session ::;-Coordinators, a s s o c I a t e ::.. coordinators, Junior =· presidents and ~presidents of :;_ general membei"ship in lhe ~ Orange District wftl gather ~ tomorrow at 10 a.m. in the -Garden Grove Women's Civic "" -Clubhouse for a bu%Z session. "" :.:.:: Presiding will be Mrs . ..... James McCalla, pre&ident of == --·-::;;; &: -:::: the Orange District, California :-'ederaUoo of Womtn's Clubs. Mn. Jeyc:ee1 represen essmg m ~guise. LEO: hidden resources come chairman is Mn. Ra Ip b LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): to fore ; you gain objective. Schiel!. January Wedding Planned Entertainment could prove --;::=================;--cosily. Ho Id line on e:1- b:avagance. New contact in- dicated is favorable. Practical matters come to attention tonight • could involve job left hall·flnlshed . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Cycle on way up. Persistent annoyance is about to vanish. Know this -be encouraged. A January wedding in San Trust intuition. Hunch pays Diego is being planned by off. Follow through on plan Kathleen Ellsworth and Chris outlined by older individual. Alford, son of Or. and Mrs. Stick to prlnciples. Jack L. Allord of Newport LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Beach. Accent on condlliom at home. News of the fortbcomint Key Ii willingness to make event has been announced by concession. You can do this the bridHlect's parents, Mr. and gain added harmony. At. and Mrs. James B. EUsworth 'entlon required where repairs of San Diego. are concerned. Don't neglect Miss Ellsworth is a graduale t!Slentials. of San Diego High School and SCORPIO (Oct. :U.Nov. 21): now is a senior and a major in Check details befare making zoology and art at San Diego changes. Read between the State College. lines -be aware of fine print. Jier fiance, a graduate of Best to be on scene in person. how thriltY are you . when you borrow money Glendora High .School, also is Delegating responslbillty could Huntlnp>n Beach M r s . a senior at SDSC where he is be a mistake. Act accordingly. :i! Jaycees meet the second Mon. majoring in commercial de-SAGnTAIUUS (Nov. 22- ;: day o( lbe month at a p.m. signandisa memberorAlpha Dec. 21): Appreciate ;:;=--· ~tvioned lnfbyonncaatllli~ngn maMyrhes. Tau Omega. He also IJ in the possessions, assets. S b a re ;;"l 1 cu:i Army Reserve transportation knowledge, exchange ideas. ~ '''"hael Brooks, 53&-7022. unit. Make meanln...t"ul Inquiries. "'r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;iw;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;; -· a: :-.: ·--· "" -:::: SI!.. Service ALL WORK DONE PERSONNALL Y Coron1 del Mar 3 CONVENIENT SHOPS e l40 I E. COAST HWY. Corona clel Mer ... 47l--4MO e lOl VIA LIDO Newport Beac.h . , ... 73-8620 e 74 FASHION ISLAND 'NewpOrl leech ••. 64-4-7551 1 CHOOSE FROM ALL THE LA TEST STYLES R•styl• your olcl sho•s to th• new rouncl loo5t:. Bring u1 your probl•m end w•'ll 9l¥t your shots • new look. • .. •• Southern California Thrift & Loan specializes in personal, business and Trust Deed loans .•. Stop in today and see how we cen solve your imme. diate money problems from depend. able funds available right now. The Thrifty way can save you money. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT & LOA"' 170 E1st 17th SI., Cost1 Mtu ..... 646-5045 6359 Wllsl!lr1 ~lvd., Los An11r1a ..• s~.;.-•no , . ' ' .. (\ --~ --... '-""---.. _.__ ...._ ........... ....._ .... --....______ ---..:..~ ------------------~--~-~--------~--------~-------------~----------.;,,;;-""- .. .. J8 DAILY PILOT T~ursdlJ. Otlobff 24, 19'8 I • H.B. t • ·School Units Are Busy, Busy ,.....,...'""" .. _ .......... ~ V•""• H\11111;::;. ~cl ~·~1 tllolrid ..... '"'°"" -.m.11eM ""'" •-~ II> IM OAl\..Y l'IL~ ~M.~""'..:,111!: ft.....MJ,. ... 1rtU:Ci..-~ <\ii!in"\o, t 11.m. Friff'f' W lllUllllQMl'I niu,..;.1 Allen PTA -Ollllpor Pmldent COlllllG UP: Overhead jn-joctlon tqtl!pmenl will be ~ated at unit 111ff11n1 Friday, Nov. It, In i lamlUariJ< pa....u wilh the vllol rolt ii playa in their dtlldren'• educational pro- gram. ... Christmas Baiaar, featuring a Pet Show, TUes· dly, Dec. 3. RibboM and plaqua will be awanled. llEPORTS: Proceeds from apqbetU dinner amounted ta $1Dl • • • Children were em.tamed with a movie ftlle parenll cmlemd with -. al Back.to«hool Nllbl- Arev elos PTO Mn. a. J, Works Pmldent C0141NG UP: MOii orl&inal, mOtt beautiful and opooldelt are the caiqorlca in the Halloween parade at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31, from . Whlclt three wiMer1 from each clamoom will be choaen. Jud&• win then chooR one winner from each ca,.gory ·and opoclal awanb.wtll be Oven ••• Bill Martin will be caller !OI' the Square D a n c e Saturday 1 · Nov. t. from I to II p.m. in Lomb School Admlalon IJ PTO met11benbJp c a r d • Clko and cdlet will be IOl'Ved. REPOllTS: A 111 I 111 certlficatl wru be ,ivea cl......,.. wltll thr111gbesl -la&• "' ~berahlp. Second pltci Will rective a 15 ·1ift -- Cook PTA Mn. wuu.m Gamboa Pmldenl COMING UP: Halloween eo&- tumt parad& lftd cfrtoonJ tomorTOw at 2:11 and J:I& p.m. Candy, ice cream and cr•b bigs will be sold. Priz.es will be aWuded to the ftve best costumes at each .teSSion . • • Annual canned food drive, Monday, Oct. '28, throulh Thurtday, Oct. Jl. to restock the welfare pantry. Crest View PFO Mn.--President COMING UP : Board meeting al 9 a.m. tomorrow , .. Unit meeting ia postponed until Tueeday, Nov. J2. Dr . Clarence H a 11 • superin-tendent or Ocean View School Di.atriet "ill speak. Eastwood PTA Mn. Robert Fn:1tnla1 -I COMING UP: Ha 11 owe en parade a:t 4 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31, will be followed by dinner .• REPORTS: Barucll Kaelw, mtmber of the WeBtmlnster and Callfornla Teachers' AssoclatJon aod the NaUonal E d u e a; t o n Allloci1lion, "30ke on PropoeiUon I at unit meetinr. Finley PTA Mr1. WUUam P'reatch President COMING UP : Ha I low e en CanUval at 3: 15 p.m. tomor· row . CMtume parade will begin 1t 4 .,.m .... PTA will sponaor a popcorn booth l:)e&inning al 1 p.m. Thurs· dliy, Oct. 31, in Siegler Park . FV PTO Mn. William DuM President COMING UP: School Iden· lifieation bracelets and llgs. recammended by the Department of C i v i I Deferwe, will be aold Mon- day, Oct. 28, through Friday. Nov. 8, for 1afety and welfare of parents and children. Proceeds from the sale will go to the school mu.sic department, reporlS Mr11. Walter Tale, health and safety chairman . • • lfome-school communication meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 30, sponsored by PTO. Waldo Price, building educational lead@r, uslsted by teachers and staff, will present a new flexible and structured guide &o student homework. Mrs. Andrew Edwards wiU host the refrtshment.a. Fulton PTO . Mn. Gerald HiI President COMING UP: Back-to-achoo! Nl.r;ht tonight in t h • mUltimedla room w I 11 feature a bake sale ... Stu- dent. council officer• Mike Pierson, pfeaident; S u e , Holato, vice pruident: Cin- dy Holato, secretary, and Debbie Roberts, treasurer, will ride in a decorated truck in the Fountain Valley Halloween Barbe c u• Celebration on Saturday, Oct. 2i. PTO will sponsor a booth where a pail of water will be dumped on some- one's head. REPORTS : Upper level first place classroom winner in the membership dMve ii Misa Joy Fitsgerald's fifth grade. and. ¥ts . R. T. Hamey's sl.Xth grade was seeood. Mrs. John Sauer'• third grade •on first place in the lower level and Miss Yvonne Cogonno's first-sec· ond grade was second . Pril.· es will be awarded at unit meeting tonight. Newland PTA A-trs. Vern Dart Pre.a.ident COMING UP; Hallowet11 pa- rade and carnival from 3:30 to 6:30 p. m. Thursday, Oct. 31, in the patio area. Com dop, amall pl.zza.ol, ice cream, punch and coffee will be solcf. Game booths and a cake walk will be featured. Nieblas PTO Mn. Ricllard Wilhelm President° COMING. UP: PTO will eerve Mmmm, Mmmm .Goacl Serving dinner for Fountain Valley Da)'I! Barbecue from 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, will be members of the Nieblas PTO. Sampling the sauce is Robert Jon... while presiding as c!lefs •~ (!ell to rtght) MT!. Wallace Short and Mrs. KO!lllflth Martz: the Barbecue Dinner at the Fountain Valley Halloween Celebration, Saturday, Oct. 26 ... Book Fair from 8 a.m. to noon, Thursday and Friday, Nov. 7 and 8. in Curriculum Materials Cen- ter . . . Halloween class· room parties Thursday, Oct. 31. Springdale P.TA Mn. Gary Wilson President COMING UP: Carnival Time from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. to- morrow on the playground, starting with a costume pa· rade at 10 a.rn. Cakewalk, bean bag throw and milk can thro\v, white elephant booth and spook house will be featured. Spring Vw. PTO lngs l1te llCCOlld Tuesday .•• A prolil of,... was realized from the 1t"Ptanuttlt" sale and will be.UMXI In purcbue additional iostructional ma· torials .•. PTO board vote<! to support the park and li· brary bond issue proposi· lions. Hn: Ven..i Day. Tamura PTO President Mn. Lowell Brink COMING' UP: PTO will par-President • ticipate in t,pe Huntington COMING UP: PTO will spon- Beach Exchange Club Hal· sor a sno-cone booth at the loween Carnival tomorrow _ _._ Fountain Va1ley Halloween at Murdy Park. Proce=-.c; Barbecue Celebration, Sat· will be used to purchase REPORTS: Helping eye l..t 314 student& were tbe Mmes. WIJllam McAdoo, James Patrick, Jorn.. Veil, WU· liam Harden, LeRoy Kee- ley, Jam.es Gushon and Donald Beckstead • , • The Mmet. Fred Pleiller, John Waterman and Cbarles Dirllsmire helped with tile hearing le.ola. HB Auxiliary Safety Puppet Shows Begin Fourth Year equipment for the park . . . urday, Oct. 2S. Sex education film will be W di PTG shown under the directio'n ar OW of Mrs. Charles Zarnitt .!It Mn. George Meehan unit meeting Tuesday, Nov. President 12. COMING UP: Halloween REPORTS : Board meetingi1 classroom parties Thursday. will be the last Tuesda y of Oct. 31 ... Student eye re· Becoming safety-conscious Nov. 28. the month and unit meet-testing Wednesday, Oct. 30. are children attending &ehools,1------------....::.:::........::.....::.....::.:::....=::.._....:. __ ~~~7',~~;.::::~~~~~;;~~ in the Huntington Beach and I f ~ AJtJ, ~ Ocean View school distrlc1'. ._.•Uf} p#r" •"'(i;, Once again the Huntington '7 Twice a month the Ladles' Auxiliary to Huntington Beach Veterans cf Forelgn Wars, Post 7368 meet at I p.m. The- flrst Friday o! the month they gather in Odd Fellows Hall for a business meeting and the thir.d Friday they socialize In various locations. Further in4 formation may be received by telephoning Mrs. LeRoy Hermann at 53fi.-3560. Beach. Junior Woman·• Club is sponsoring ill aafety puppet show starring Lulu, Dennis, Morgan and the Dragon and Mr. Accldent. The show stresses safety rules for all children to follow on their way to and from school. Beauty Salons CAPTIVATING CURLS ... CAPTIVATING COLOR ... INSTANTLY! H·· The puppet shows, presenled during the past four years, were viewed last year by more than 5500 children between kindergarten a n d ' • • Haunting Ha/lowee.n Young spook& will be out en masse for the costwne parade which highlights Meadow View PTA's Hl!loween Haunt! Festival Saturday, Oct. 26. The affair will be f'9ffi 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with Ille l"!'•d• scheduled at I p.m. Vy· ing for prizes are (teft to right) Rebecca Smith and Diane Cox . Food and games booths will entice the entire family. third grade. Cooperating with the Juniors Is the HuntingtCK'I Beach Police Department which w o r k s hand-in-hand with the club. Following the show "Officer Friendly" speaks to t h e children. convicing them to steer clear of Mr. Acciden t and join the Safety Club. The K"hools teach I h e children the "Do's and Don'll Safety Song." The puppet .show will continue through Beach Babes Every Wt<lne.sday at 1 p.m. members of TOPS Beach Babeiii convent It Huntington Beach High School for pro- grAms. THAl'S RK;HTI fT'S l'ttOTEGE in black, taupe, grey or navy kid $21 ( ' , COSTA MUA. CALI,. PLUS SHAMPOO $22& AND SET . . ~oncley thru Thursd1y (Af+•r 5 p.m.,,.,. $2.501 Fri., Sit., Sun, •••••. $1.00 ' COSTA MISA, CALIJ. Curls to careS! your head ... and instant color ta .... __ s your curls \Vi th soft glowing beaut y l It's our "Fanci·full" color; in rich, natural looking hues to cover gray or refresh dull h&i r, in soft pastels to tone lightened h11.ir. No peroxide, no after·rinsc, no waiting : Fanci-full works while our stylist sets your hair I, T ; '· i • COSTA MllA. CALIP. 1'1 E•1t Into Sl<MI HOil H•rbor l(IO.lleYI,.. lN W~lt lflll $1rllllt INyflllf Ctflltr IC41totrt ~YD """"' ..0·.D OIANal, CALIP. tfU W.1 Olol-11 ~lwlnt .Qt.Jt4 ,_,,, -....CJ ,,__ M&.'915 NIWPOIT llACM, CALIP. POUNTAIN YALLIY, CALI,, SANTA ANA, CALIP. SANTA ANA, CALIJ. .OUNTAIN YAU.IY, CAuJ. NfW~RT, 21 FASHION ISLAND SANTA ANA , 17 FASHION SQUARE I' , ' jl 11 N-.iiort lhu!IYll"ll MIO'l!lt l•.it .. s-r1 ,....,,. ,,.,"8 lJtJI Mt;i...,n• vnltM C:•~~· ,,...,.._ '6l'-lltll I ' • '""" WMl"'lftlltl' Town ( .. II• ''*-J31·1Jl9 ~ Nerth F11...,jjw l'1!rv1tw c;..,,..,. ~ IJl.lOll Jc21 E•I~ ..... 9' lvc:llil V•llitlo Ctftltf ,i.i-.u1.-.i ' ' ' .. . ' ..... ' ..... -.... ·-. . . . .. ... .. . .. . .... ... ....... ., -_...~ __,,..,..,.,,.....,.._,,........~-.. ~ ... -... ~~~,-.~, .. ~ .... ~.,.~-~.~ ...... ,_, ........ ,..~ ............... ~-~ .. ~· ... -... . -.. 9 THE 6 O'CLOCK MOVIE * 'MAXIME'-Chatlu 10111 L-001J ~ (I) mmID liilflfrit1d1 IM lt1bon: lCf{60) Jim Ntbors w.lcomet fOUf of Ills fwori11 ladi11 --Otbbi9 Rlt'l!Oltb. Vikki C.rr. llltlJ' Cost• tnd C.1111 B11rn.u-to lli1 \'lritty tpld1I. TM lhow pmenh Ntborl and his tfllflOfDIJI p 1s In 1 'nritty of tunw, rtnlln1 from operttlc Irias to ftrct 1nd btlltds to danee n11mblrL D IHl I}) -""'' CCl C'"l ll:JO B -CC) ·~ Mlipto< •-·-:ri111 Conv&nt Is CondMnn.,." C.1-hllf' (comtdY'J 55-0ltnt Dort. lot detldes to JllO\'t Ills e19lno from DU@ Tiit TMlrfil ... (C) Sin Ttnm blcauM Sldtr Btrtrlllt 8 MIN: .. -. tt IMIM llp" i1 1lw1ys mttfftfin1 with his ltle.1 (wuttrn) '57-Vtlt R1lston. m .... m <"> , a IHl oo -. '""" -CCl m Plqtfta tlM Clltlr. ''G11it11 Mt\·: m MW: .., .. " """"" .. t1L" Two Los Anttltl lnsttum1nl (~) '5'--0NI Dtfort, m1ken "!ullrtlt 1ht ptlnst.1kin1 9> ....... 3' (C) t1ths ln h1Jlldl111 t fl111 iuftlr. GI Fdldt!M! (C) ~ .. 0@ iil "''""" IC) (Oil) ...... 11:30 Ill""" ~ ,.,.te E111:111.1nnr." The de•th af 1n eldtrly hermit !n t r1mot1 Hlah 1:001J MIV!r. "lltlllbtr ti Ille Wt6- Sl1rr1 ttbln l)fompts hit lrltnd, dtn(' (dram•) '58 -Julit HuTll, Ctlllf lronlidt, to seek tflt klllert Ettltl Wltm, B11rtdon dtW!ldt. &l the rlP: of Ills OW1I lift. Gent e Mt•lr. "Mtn--Madt Mtllltt,. ~&pnond. Torn Slll'ICOll Ind Ron (hamr) '41-lOll Cttt1117 Jr. Hayes fUtll, II Coll11V11lty lllllttl11 lotri 0 ltli11,: (C) (~ Dltk Enbtfl a lllWI (C) 1nd Mickey Dtvin u n the tctiOll bettJt9n liwmit BID tnd Robtrto t~mn.. lhl _.. 0111 (C) Al'rttC 111 I 10-rautld btntl"""'lhf .. ktit1 T1lllh: "$uilly 11'fall~ maldL tr." 0 ~ {J) IHittkd: (C) 130) ·1r1SoN1te To Hm 1 Spouse t:OD mAn-1111•1 SllN: "G1nt11men 'round tti• House." Sam e1n1 tTtny Brunettei." "Battle of Broad- ">trMI In: '6 autilltlhrtl n tloult-wrJ," "Colonel Sl'lfltll1111'1 Raid:" DAYTIME MOVIES .............. _ .... (dmk) 'SG--J. fll'l'W, 12:0018 .... -.... ,_ (OO!Mdy) 'M-Jlp Grt11lt!L .,,. AA:atwn If .. c.,.t1"' (ldfftt. 1111'1) '-47~ Rlfftrty. l,.;l fJ "D...,ltt 1t1n11• (fftlM} '13 t9 ....... I.Ml W" (""""1) ~al'd Kie!. JtM ClrM", 'SZ~M Wl1t, Kut11 Sllldtlr. 1:00 D .,._ """" L.,..; Ttllf' <•r1-4:tl 8 ~ '\Ill lMft" (lllflll11e1) 1111) '-M -Ptlttlp Donl. Cttt1 '$J-...UN fltm tt. llbrdio MonW- M1d.IOd. .... Complete Printing Service Top Quality -Fast Service .,,,,,,,.,, 642-4321 22l1 WHI l1lboo llvd. Newport Such • PEANUTS DR. KILDARE · NO,tW'··C:HIPPfR HASWT Bf!~ H EA~ HER!. I. ~tff HE. WA.5 WITH YOU. HOW'5 IREHf ~ GORDO JUDGE PARKER , ly Charles M. !c:hull fM ~ fl/Ol1'/. I OO(T 91.AME IWF«<llfM <ffaaP.. tr Ken lald Ir h Mlola . By Har~d Le Doux Pl•!! :!:!S31"'"-lll:l PllE~W='6-:-7""':'::::'.•VS:::-:.v::-=::C:-:':":::'.::-~!;i'_:::':::==:"f~::'::':::~fC''::HE~NE::VEt~:'.EX=Pl:;"•;:1:::NEO;::':TO~M::V:-<:1 I'VE tcNOWM HlM KHOW GRIF? F'<" YEAR'S, S.t.M ! I KNEW HIM l.S A &OV: H15 FATHER MIP I HAVE f.EQI ClO!iE ~IENPS! MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS MUn AND JEff' Nl6KT llOf ••• &al" 5l.TI5FACTIOM MOW HE C.w.E PROPPED orr OF m nkE OMT lMAT RFTV 1HOl- COU£6E A»Cl' NE\9. SA.•D POlW NSllRMKE ft:\IC'( -W6NT &AC.JC! ME ON MEf LIFE·•· "PWO MONTHS MEVER SEEMEP lD ~E 1HE A"IPENT! FINP HIS NIUIE· IN UFE ! ly Ferd Johnson 8y Tom K. Ryu I DANGLE AMEAN EFFIGY FOR HALF PRICE] ly Al Smith MA··· OOES!>OP ·DRINK? CICERO!WAAT AQUESTCON! OF COURSE NOT! ~ISS PEACH ., Mell • ' -----~-----~--------------------·------- Thwidly, o.tobtr 24, 1969 DAIJ.Y Pn.OT ' l • I _, --. ._ . • FAITH -Linlll take&I up bi1 annual 10Mi1 in Ille: pwnpltin patcll lo wait the arrival ot Uie Great: Pumpkin on "It'• tie Great Pumpkin, Charllo ' Brown," tonight in calor at 7:30 on cbanDei 1. 'nl•~ cartoon which ii based on Charles Schultz' "P .. : nuts" comic strip, cetrled each day In the DAILY PILOT, ii faet becoming part ol lb& 1!91lowtodr trad!llon. • TELEVISION l'IEWS TV Viewer • Takes Trip • ' By YNTHIA LOWRY -·.~ NEW YORK ( ) -The tete-view"' 1!11o -lo io and oee things llad on opportw>-ity for a lot ol vi . travel w-..y oight. By tuning in the first NaUonal Geographic Society special of Oie CBS ''"''°n, he could beve had a quick trip aroobd a lot af naUonal parks from Hawaii to ilie Vii;gin Islands, from Yell<>Wstone lo the Grand Canyoo. . . A bit later al.me ABC's 0 Soptma," with some gtimpseo of ttle multitmlllon dollar Roman villa of !he Italian film ar, Sophia Lon!Sl, plus some siglm of Rmne and N~es. And then there was a tour of. a reol Hollywood film studio which served u th&. background for NBC's special, "The Bing Crosby Show." ~ IF THIS -S not enough action tile"' was on NBC's "Muolc ll!all" an andseptic limulation o! a freewheeling tffatrical rite, a Fri~' roe.st, with a number ol top oomedians sitlling at a banquet table 'Wi'th each given a turn insulUng the guest of bonor1 Johnny Carson.. 'In spite of :!he extra largo doee of special pro-, gram1, Ute evening was actually rather quiet. Th• National Geo~pbic <bow covered a Jot of groun<r but could only cfo something quick and obvious.Jn. the few rrtnUle< devoted to eed! na1!onal part. The most exciting ;film consisted of some color shot& ot a Haw1!lian Wlcano as It erupted. THE MOST Interesting segment was aerial film over YellOW<lj>ne during a roundup of elk, ~ into a corralJ by helicopters aoti.ng like airborne cow ponies. "Sophia" waa pn!tiy much of a bodgepodp and never seemed able 1lo decide whether to tat.e a Ian maga2ine lack or an in-depth approech. --nm. were pictur~bowing just about every sCl!p In Mill Loren's C8"'"1' Including some dreadful silll lhot& taken wben olile was blU<>!II moclel and wane cl!pi · - !ram some ot her old movt... _ It was saved by tile frank and forlluiabt llfl'o; · ration by 1111' Olar w!lo told, Wl'ill touching' casUILI', ne.,, other tlleg!timate birt:ll and of1hepovertyand hunger d~ the war yeiars as well M the difl'cult days betorei liie emerged as a conlempiftcy • symbol. • THE COMBINATION of Bing Crosby and M Hope alwa)is results in some pJea..ut mommt. and !he two old ba!llers were bu.Uy insulting •ch oilier during the Crooby special In adclttiGll bft w.r9 some inleqresting moments apinst the studio beck· grounds. One clme when Diana Ross and the au..~ premes &ang a Western dirge on a WM'tem ·main . street set while stunt men tumbled In ttio dUlt all around them. . Stella Steveno had a cute number In which sh evoked mlmiories ol the grei>t days and Ille bit :. &tars of the flicks belore sound. .: ' AFTER THAT rich menu ol .,,ec!ll1, ~ will seem' like diet fare. There is but one ~iJI the lineup, but ii holds considerable entortalnmenl ' promiso:1 "Girt Friends and Nabors" on CBS -8-9 . PDT -'wllll Jim Nabors Olit of hit G<>mer Pyle ta111gues and in a dinner jacket, singing and r.bl}'inf comedy 1 sketcl!es with Carol Burnett, Debb e Rf7· nolds, Mary Cost.i and Villd Carr. . ' " . I • :· ... -------· --·-·~·-... --.. .... . . -.. . --·· . . . . --...... . . . . . -.• . J 8 DAILY PILOT I •A• "" LEGAL NO'l1CE ~Ul'••.O. COU•T CW TH• TAT• CW CALll'OtlHIA l'Olt TH• COUNTY Of' Ol:AHO• Ul'I T-"--A'"" c••T••KAT• 0, •usu•••• HOT~• o" He.:C::O o, l'•T1 T10Jt l'IT FOR A PRESIDENT -This 21-foot custom-built 1969 llncoln Cootinema1 l'ICTITIOVS NAM• ~IOIAT l 01' WILL AHO Nllt with glass enclO!ure over the paSsenger compartment is the newest presidential Ttie IH'MMf•lwl*I ~"°~ ,':, ~.r=: En •as T•sTAMINTA•Y limousine. A center.section. of the glass roof is hinged ·so that h may be ........... lll>Cfl .. I Ml-1 fk· f.11111 ' at ltl _., It. C1rhart, Deu1Mlll. ~ c.r. Mn•. c11i::1:..:r::..u~ _, HOT :ie 1 s HE•EaY G1vieH TM1 The rear bumper can be lowered like a tailgate ·and converted. into a platform. 11111\11 fl<in "'""' or -t.UeW-Franca H. C.rfllrt 1111 fllM ...,9111 • j Secret Se-~ -~-A ~'ding gla ft•""" di ·~-~ -d Mt u ld firm h --r' tun .iMI l'llU Hflfl11111 tor Prai..• rtl wlll 111d fW la-Or l V!\;e ag~w. -MJ . SS pc.u ....... OD: VI~ __, 8D ?.ar lit ,er-. ....... "'"" ft --of ...,.,. •11 ...... 11ry "' ,,,. rtments ... trlcil ·: CIRl-ll. tor turt !If pertltu11rt. UICI 1'1111 ,.,,. ti"" LIM. CDlll JI, 'iffl. •rid , 1 91" ""''"' ,.,,. Sime 1111 -n D•teollaOC: a ..,.rtllD Qt for 10¥. I. lffl, 11 t:3D A.M., In lht- ~ ~ 11 .••to•~ ,.,, veliiic. ...tt1~' ,, r1te•lflCI 10 """''c11 "' ,,,..1 _com_~P_• _____ . ____ _ ., Si-1e o4 c!:motnll: Or•"" Counl'f: COWh" n of 0..1rlmtnl No. 1 "' uld Nelson Tak· es • Jan Ociober 16, IN&. blfot• ,.,., I court. • 11111 N, &f'Gl.ltw1y. Ill "" CltT "' . Mio!•"' PubHt '" ""' tor Slid Sllle, S.11!1 A1•· C.lltomla. ll'r ,..,..red a..t•lc• •· aarratto D1tod Oct. 21, !Kl . .tnonll ID bl "" 1191.on wllclU '. E. ST JOHN. Cou111'r Cf<lrk T p New Linwusine Goes ·~" ID ""bM: !~ "° "" wlll'l!l'I In-ltldl•"' '· Ntw•ll New un" es osl. ~ ',' WM a:-newled9..i •IM 1-ta!ltd ilU •. NII Hlt ltWI J "'·rvmtll I c.r.t •I Mir, C111f. fliU 1M nme. Tah 1114) 415-:Un '(OFl'ICIAL SEAL) AH-y Hof' P1tlll-r ,_ E. D1wl1 ' • ._ C , D '" '''" Not1..,. Publlc<1t1for"\1 u 11111 .,.11191 N~ •" , Election of Robert 0. Nelson as vice president, newspapers, To WhiteHouseFl.eet l"r1nc1Ptt Otllet! 111 Oct. 2J, l 30, lHI 1'3Wtl .-· ... or1n1• counlY GAL NOTICE MY Coml'llllloll E~1t1'*' Jun1 21. 1'1'0 of The Times Mirror Co., has WASHINGTON (AP) of Une. They gave no figure or P"-11.w been announced by D r . Complete with the latest in their own. -l"u4111tllld Or1111t CON! Otllf :· .-~. 24. ll 11\d Nfl'<I. 7. U, lffl 1"11111, c••tl"tc.t.Tt ol' •l"11H1.11 00 b ·-• b II · llJ9 l'1CT1T1ovs NAM• Fraiiklin D. Murphy , m OJl\l u et proofing In any event, the cost to the n. 1m4•r1ltn..i do <••111Y fMY ,,.. fealures. a long. black, ~lass- LEGAL NOTICE conc1vc11ne , bu11ntu ,, P.O. aox w . chairman and chief executive government and the taxpayers ... a11tioe 111~r111, C1lifor1111. ullllf• ~ 1k-roofed limousine was added to will be comparatively trivial. ..:..-~="°'::-:;;;;;;;;;;;:;---l1111w, "' , "'me ~ DICK sHAw officer of the publishing firm. the White House motor fleet M kl ·d th 1 d • MGTte• TG c•1:01TO•s IENTIEll:Pl't ;Es, 11\d 11111 ,,.., t1rm 11 N 1 h •--th;• eek f th p .d 1, ar ey 58..1 e o er ... A ..,.. com.....i 11\t. ico1iowln1 ""'-· w11-e son as u=n an ex-.., w or e res1 en s limousine was leased to the .. u .. ••10• cou11:T o, THIE ... mn 1~ ·1 11"111 •l•eas "' r11!ffllal ••• ecutive of the Los Angeles use in p a r a d e s and to 00 JTAT• ol' c.t.\.t,OllHIA PD• ,1 tone ... : government r a ut $1 ,000 a -TM• couNn' °" etltAHO• 1t1CHA1tlD 1. SHAW. nt ...... 11111r T. · 1960 _, ·11 ceremonies. yea' He sai·d ••-I · g E1l11'1"' ALVIN D. DUNN. DKt•...:I. DnYt cert ..... d•I ,..,.r. C•lllo•nl• 1mes since 8111.1 WI con-'"-~ . II b . UM::" new eas1n Holk• "' hffetw ,,.,.., ID crtdltort h•:; 11:1c'HA1t~1 s. LOCHll:IDGE, 2•Ji Gi.n tinue to serve as an executive • •n:-specia Y uilt Lincoln arrangement has not been 1119 dll,... ... 11111 "";:w ~e~'i.nt c ... _. or "· At11de,,., c1111orn11. Continental was shown to worked out yet. 11i. 11111 t111m1 1n .,,. '' """' 011..i Def xr 2. lffl vice president and as general President Johnson al the °' "" 1fott11id Courl. Df to "'":.1 al RlCHl•llD s. LOCHltlDGI!: It has such useful gadgets "° "" unaen11ntd 11 '!" ;• ., 1t 1CH~·•D •·SHAW manager of the newspaper. White House by Rodne y W. J.,,,_, R""'"~dw ~ su~:,r1-. s1111 o4 c111""1111· 0••111• CDU111Y: Markley Jc .. a Ford Moto• Co. as: Lldlnbtr....-, 111'11 tr 1 Dll DcfDber lt. IN&, lwhlrt me. 1 Nol•,,. • ueo w111111r1 1t...i., w111 tit. In "j ~TY l"ubnc 111 1~ Jot 11!d s1111, .,.,_1iv LEGAL NOTICE vice president. -A public address system ~~· 1:":,-;11~11':11~11:0~ of''~ ~~~;:;io~kc4•1:,,: .. stt,:w rn'.1111 i!'~..,~~.l---==~====,...---1 It takes the place of another the President can use to speak undenl1ned lft 11J ""'"'" """'1"1"' tti"° 11tn0111 ~ 111mn •r• wblcrlbld to , •• •,•,',','•'• T~0~,·~0~~o~~1: limousine which has been In to crowds outside, and a sound n ld nt1•. Suell ci.1m1, wt.,, ~ ti. wfl'tlln l11!4'rVrn1"1 111d 1cklmwltOl..i " _..111..,. _,,.,. • ...u11 bl nled ~ 11\t.y eucvie.:1 "" 1,,.,., ITATI. GP tA\.tF01tN1A 'o"' use since 1961 and which will system to bring inside the 1~ 04 lltll 11 ..-1~1 TH• COUNTY 0' OltANOIE . l'l'n.tn!l'd 1s 11or ....... w " s (OFFICIAL sa\L) "ema,·n a••ai·lable to the Whi.te reactions from crowds while 0t1ed oe11:1111r u. 1m. ND11ry ub11t.C.111tot"r' 1E11111 01 GEORGE A. cox. DKe•~. House. the windows remain closed. CltOCICIER~tT1Zl!N$ Pr!ncl I Offlca In NOTICE IS HERE9Y GIVEN to ll'H! •tlll' IM flf"ll "1bllcll1111'1 ol 11'111 llOIJtl, Vlrt1ln~Ktnl N•. A-f,111' • • NATIONAL 9ANK Df•"" ou""' trtd11Dr1 "' lht 1bov• n1med c1ecei:ten1 Reports from Detroit have -Separate heating and air •·• • R , .. , 11111 111 PlrlD'll ll•vlng cl•lms 8g1ln,1 l'he 1 h · av: .....,., 4 • • .. • MY c m1u1on E.x111•11 pu t e cost of the new conditioning units for the front Truil Officer SltPI 4,, !'70 11id clectdolll are ,.,.ulrPd lo 111• lhtm, E•Klllor DI th• will l'ullllllhtd · or4 .,,, coa11 D1lty l'llol, wlltl 1~1 n•ctn•l'Y wouc~ers, 111 1~e Dff lte limousine as high as $500,000, and rear compartments. of Slid clKl!Mnl. Octebll l 10 ll. 2, lffl l1le.41 ol 111• clerk ol l'he 1bcve tii!llled tourl, or b t k f ....,._ .....,_, o>s11111w1" • · ' -'· ' to 11rn1111 ni1m. win. nie ~ctt11rv U spo esmen or both the -Twin two-way radio and 1 L,,,..;......,, LEG" NOTICE vDUdleri. '°!he u»<1tr1lgned " !tie Dfllce Secret Service and Ford said t e I ephone commun1·catio"" •It'• .... ,., 11111r1-. ...... o4 ltl Trv1t o ..... 1m ... 1. IOI Norlll MAlll ,_, oae Wlllllf"' 1M1., wit• ttt SlrHI. S•nt• ""'· c1111orn11, wllfdl 11 t~t that figure is CQmpletely out systems. LM AMI ... C111f., ..... tP'..lUn Pllcl DI busllltll ol ltlt Undtr.J1nld Ill 1111 --------------"-----------Att_,, fir 1.J.tcuftf c•1tTll'IC.lf1'1" 01' I UllHl.SI m1Mer1 IHl!rl1lnl"' ID ""' flll~ o4 'Miid ,.,..Jft\'i l'lctl'""' l'lr111 N11M dt<:edtnt, w!ltlln 1lx ..-11'11 1tt.r Ifie llrtl l"ut>lltlllcl °''"'' CN1t DlllY l'llol, Tht ullCHl'll= okll1 Mrabr c1r11tv pullllc.11.., DI 11111 nollct. Oc~r 17 2•, ll, 111d Hovemblr ?. llllt lie 11 1.., 1 wllellPSlll fDod D111d Oc;!Dbtr II. IHI. IW ' 11'6-41 ProdlKll blnl 11 111 !""lvldUll 11 11511 BANK OF AMER ICA ::::._----------·IWHll'ltrllY lt01d, &¥ LM A I 1mIto1 NATIONAi.. TRUST ANO C1!l1Dr"li;"°U"""°~"" llcltl1Dlll llnn lllrne U.VINGS ASSOCIATION of IJNITIED F D SUPl'LV COMPANY, 9¥! N. IL Joyner LEGAL N0'11CE Crossword Puzzle ----~~~==:=:-::::::---l•nd 11111 wld 11 m II totnPOlld' of !tit E•KVTor DI""' win Cl:ltTll'ICATt: 01' COltf'OIATION follow1rie Mf"IOll, -""'"' lllmt In lull Ind "°' Ille lbovo Mrntd decl!dtiil ACROSS OC»HG •UllttlSI UHDIR Pia" al rnlcllnc., ... II Toi,.,.,.., lo-wU: HUltWITL HURWITZ I IEM•lt l'ICTIT10US HAM• Edw1nl o. '31tmll'I, 11521 W11!Mr11Y Ut. nu 11r..i 1 lake THE UNOIE R51GNED COlfl:PDltATION ltOMI, LDI All ilol, (1Htor11l1. """" ·-~. c ....... 1. unhappy dDll lltrm t•rllty ""'' II I• tond\ldl"' • 01ted SIP1""61 17, lffl. •n."2f s Up to the ret II mDbtll 11omn p1rtl 11111 It· IEdWltd D., Flnem1n A"'""" fir ••1elllw . ..._ cn'wi.. bul!ritu 11' 1JGl Soul'h ......... STATE OF CALl~1RNIA. Publlllled Or111111 ee.11 0•1"' Pllel, time u1ilt chi:\'-< ""Yfnllt, Antlllflm, C1Hlo"'l1. COUNTY OF LOS~ANGE LES. u. Od. 24. ll •""Nev. 7, U, 1'61 110-41 10 Young ollder ''" lldlllou• !\rm Mme o1 D11 *"'"blr ~" IKI, bttor1 ""' I herring l"ONOIEROSA MOllLI! HOME SALES Not•l'Y Public In '1.ci 1Dr Slid County '"" LEGAL NOTICE · 14 Algerian -1'1111 lht "'"''al nld a.rp0r1llon Ind 5!11f!, """.,...llY •-••Id fdw1rd D. 111 prl11Cl1til pllco ol bu1Fneu 11 •• Flnert'\111 known lo me to bl tllt P•rson1------c-,,,,,.------I seaport fotloWI· whole n•m• 11 1u• l<l"fbld le !IM w11111n l'·t1• : 15 lnstrumtnt JOMICRA. INt .. 1065 Ctlllnnl 91~d .. lrulrurntnt, •nd •cli\r>OWltdotd to "" llllt C•ltTtl'ICATI! 01' austNl:SS 16 Branches .Cillrr>t'M. C11Uornl1. l'lt executed 11'1 I&""°'. PICTITIOUS MA.Ml 17 Quebe • Dited: Octobfr 21, 1'61. Wlmnt mv htlld •lld 1111. Thi ltlld1ralened do c1n11v l'lltY ,._ : C S !CORP, SEAL) (OFl'ICIAL SEA!.) Conc!UC:llng • Minns ,, 161 w. ltlll I ~-Trem-JOMICRA. INC. EV1! 5"ePPl~I StrH!. COlll Mt11. C1\llornla, !Miier t~ blant Park ev. Frl!d M. H1mploll Nol1rv Publli.: C1lllorn\1 Ut~llou1 lfr"' """' o1 HARIOR SOUND 18 Long nan'OW P•eiidtnl Prlnclp1I Olf\t• '" ANO TRD~HIES arid 1'111! 11ld firm !1 h I ST ... TE 0, C,t.LIFORHI"" Les Aneti.t :ou111Y com-ed o1 Illa followlnt "r-.1, w11ote S 01 $ COUNTY OF LOS ANGELE! ) II Mv C<>rn,.,1n~>n E~Plr•• n•mt• I" lull •nd P1101!1 of re1ldent1 ,,, · 19 Not Qutte o" 11'111 1111 d•v er Octobt•, A.O. 1'!ol, Julv •, nn 11 1o11ow1: tlostd bttort me. 1 Nol1rv Public 1" •M lot SYDN•Y J. DUNtT:r, Atty. JAMES I!. OAltVEY, t.O W. ltlll St., 20 Out --: 1110 Cnunh end Stete, Dff1')11111Y ,.,. 111 s ... ltl '""'"' D'1v• C05t1 Mt11. Ctlllornl1. 2 words Offtl!d Fred M "11mplon --"lo me la h vtrlJ Hllh. Ctllh ... ·11 "212 GRACI! W. GAltVIEY. 16, W. lllh Sf., bt Ille Pre•ld•"t ol !ht "'"'"'"""" tti11 llN-OC ce1t1 Ma11, Ctl!IDrnlt. 22 For ftar that t•ttu1td ,,,. wllhln ln11rumtflt Of' tiel'llll l"ubl!'lllld Or8net Coa1t D1llY l'lklt. 0111d O<:tobtr 1, 196& 2.f Bring to ct lht cD!'POrlllon !Mrtl" n1111td, Ar.d Oclobtr 17, U, 31 Ind Nevtmblr 7. JAMES I!, GARVEY Stalt Of 1dlr>0Wledtod lo me l'htl 1ucll corp0r•+lon IHI 11'7-f,,f GRACE W, GARVEY I uacuftd 11>1 "'"''· Stohr fJf C11ltor11f1, Or11111 CDUllTY! r PMfSS WTIHESS mv h•rlll 11111 1111. LEGAL J\'OTICE On Odoblr I, lffl. btfvrt ""'• 1 Nellry ZS Strong flbtf !OA=tCIAL 5f""Ll Publk In 111d fDI' 111d St1hr, Ptrsontltv 27 Artl\ltd al Vlncenl 111111.. NOTIC• TG c1:•01TORS ·-•red J.t.MES E. GAlfl:VEY •"" 29 Character ifl Noll"' Publk.C1\llor"ll IU,ElllOll COUI T 0, THI. GRACIE W GAR VEY ~-to ..,. to bl • f' I PrlntlNI Cttll« In STATE 01' CALli!IORNtA 'Olt 1"9 "'IDN w"°" ... "'" ••• wlllcrlbed .. mft'. IC! on; Loa AllO•IH COUl'llV THE CGUNTY Oils MAMQI. lo 11\t within l"'lnl"""t '""' Hknowlede-2 wotds My eorn ... 1111111'1 IE••I•• ,.., A ~'H IOI ,,,.., ••ecutei:t 111e umt. 32 Cil.lifom la's D«emblr it. 1'611 IE1t1t1 of MAMIE 06AMO FRANKEL. IOFPICIAL SEAL I Big -""l'llWkll. ... VIiiot • llUI"' Dfttaltd. le<Mrd H. MUMeY A~ NOTICE IS HERIE•'I" GIVEN lo '"" HDlllY Publlc<lllfWn!• )3 Body of •Jt "'1111 lllillt SltHI crtdlttts of "" ebovt "'"""' eecl'Otnl l'rlnclNI Office In wat~r lei A ....... C.llfto....t• .. u !Ml 11! ~ 111v1111 d'11,.,, .... 11111 Ille O""'' Counf't )4 Ste 47 S11:1 OC 11Jd llectdenl 1•1 reeul•ed lo nit 11\tm, M' CDmnll»IDI! £x1lrn A Pullltlllld 0r1,,.e CNll D•I"' l'ltel. with the llKftSlr"I' -.idf~ri. !ft 1111 office Jul'r la, 19n cross ""•t H, JI 1r111 ND¥. 1, u. 1'41 1141.a or 1111eltrtl:et11>11bovt -.itt11ed court...... Publ!ltlld O..Me c1111t o111r l'llot. 36 Old play in. LEGAL NOTICE ID 1truent niem, win. nit nect111ry October ,,, '" 17, 2~. 1HI 111Mol Catd -.c111n. 1o llMI u• ""'"''"" • 1 .fO Show ------------1Hu11:wrrz, 1t1J1tw1TZ 1, nEMIElt. oi LEGAL NOTICE surprise •Alt 1112 """ SIT'fft, If-' •••<;II, Cl l1hlm11. NOTICI. TO ClllOITOltl 0' "'63. wllldl 1' Ille 1tl1ce ol bu1lneu oli-------------1 42 MtllffllO auuc TRANS,•• AMO It'll undtfllllled In •II'"""'"' .... 111111111 NGTIC• o~ MAltlKAL'S SALi: 44 Prn1lli11~ lttTlNTION TO •JI.KUTI. lo Ille etllf'I! ol Sl!d dec:f'dtnl, Wllflln 11• RGIEltT WHITELAW Pltllllltt YI fashion 11.CUltlTY INT•1t•ST AIJRl.IMINT 1"Dfllh1 •fhrr IM lino! 1tutille1tlon ol 11111 MARV,LLl!:l MOODY, D~fl'ICl111!, Ne'. 45 Kind of (S.L '"'"'I" U.C.C.) nolltt. sm. •-Ml. as w 1.1 Oatl!d Oc!Dber 1,. 1'61. av virtue or '" ·~acutlon '"""' on palm Noll« 1• "'1"1br 1lwn lo cr..ir1o11 a1 C~••lel Ellv•• Fr~1kt!, J• A1111r11 71, lffl lrl' "'' Mun!el1>1I CDllrt, .f7 Evil .spirit "" W(lfllll ... rntd 1>1rlln ,,,., • bu~ Executor "' IM Wiit Ort .... CounlY" Hart>or JI/did•' Dl1h"ICI. 1r1""'' •l'MI Ille ••-cutlon al 1 111;U•llY al !Ill tboYt "•"'Pd ftc.Pde~• C01mtv of Or'"''' Sllte o1 C•lllotnla, !111wftl 11rNm«nl 1r1 1lloul '"bl IT\fM HUltWITL HUltW!Tt & ltl'Mll ""°" t IU!IOMlll'll «nt.rM In l•vw of .., -I .,.._,..,,. lltrlf111tllt" dtserlll-QI • U... JI,.... llobltl Yl"lllhr1-w 11 lud9mtnl cfl<tltor fd, N......, •-II. C1..._..1 M NJ Ind '"ln1t M1ry1ltft ~ u lild'omtlll Tlll ,.,.,,,. •nd bull""" 1cldrn1 ol ""' An.....,, "" •~ debtor, P.owt111 1 lltf blllnt1 o1 t 1.m.., Ill~.,.... h"1111ttror 1nd lnltlldtd 11CU•..i l'Ulllllhtd Or1119t CO.~I~ 01llr Pitel, l tluellY M 1111 111d ludllrMnl on the ditti ll9tl'I' It; Al.AJllAN STANl'OllO, GI Oct. 2'. ll •nd MDV. 7, u. ~'41 1143-4& al ltla 1t1111nc1 o1 111d ••tcvtloto, 1 haw «""•Id llT, L•-&eld'I, C1111on>11. LEGAL NO;nt;;E -1"1td -111 the rhllll. lllle l"CI 1111,,...11 tllt MrM •1111 111111111>1 '""'"' Cl! ""' 1 'I'--DI nkl h•-· -•o• 1ft .... Pn»frlY ol ~ tr...,,..." 11111 l11lffldold dMilw P'·Utn llM ClllftlY-ol Dr1111t. SI•~ o4 C1tllorn!1, 111 t.«Of'llOAJ IOTlltMDIJLOi. &SO c•1tTl,ICATI. 0, •lt'IUllll ch!Krlbld •• lollewl: ""'""' Colhr "'-1, C1lllor!111, l'ICTITIOUI N:t\• Let U, T ... ct llfl I" !took lot. "tgtl 'The N --1 .,.....,.,. Htlt.,..,1 T '* 111d "' o4 MIKtlle"~ Mflll, II •.crlbld In -11 n : mtlll'l•I•. Ill ""'"""'"" eon c TY ht 11 CIDfl. .._d1 Of Oran" Cll'.lnlY, 11 •ICCll'Otd ~ ~lllllM, _,""'""' 11 "'-I d<K;fl"' I bullntu at lttlO Seulll In fM OHie• al 1'111 Or1,,.1 CounlY" • 7 • _..... -.,_ "-'* Ind -IDcl· E11IW00111, &iftfl A111, (1lf D!'nl1, U"°"' Jtt<:OtOtr. COll"lmDnlY k_., 11. m _. If K•NNl!Y'li CDf'l'l!IE JHOP, lllltO ltlt tldlllou1 flnll "'"" d IAltlt C1llrlllo Aw .. Coil• M111, Ct!llornli l;;-"t-t-°"'n l ". c-t H ...... y, c ....... oft! "°¥. CIJll· COMl'ANY ~ ti.1 n ld llmll 11 CfltnlllQld "IOT!Ct tS HEltt9¥ GIVEN 11111 on lJ ..... II Ille lollcrwl ... "f'IDft. wM I• .,.,.,. hi Fri ... ¥, /rtavtnlbtr U. 1'611, 11 1·DO O'tloel ,,... ... , .... -... It .. or ""' ""ti 11111 NCI "' ... r.s.ne. i, •• IDl1owo: P.M ,, ''""' or CDUM Houu. ;W7 Wnl .tiklil '"" lllt'lt!I dl!KrlllMI bvlt. tl'IMlll' lltlAN It. •Al.It , 1111' MIVlfflt lllll SlrNI, Cll'r of COll1 Mf-11 C°""""" al '"' ""°"""' 9' I -ltf' l"ttrftl W1r, ltY\na, C..lltotMI. °''""• Sllll al C1itftorN1, t :....11 1111 11 H1•1•1T -ti 111 '*"""""""*'· ltt: Dtltd Oclobet 16-1NI ~1( 1uctloto to 1M llltfiflt Dlddff fOr .. ll1• M'I _, tftW .........., 11. INt 1t aR IAN It. &Alltlt Cllll 11'1 locwtul -¥ of .... U~I,.. J'l:Ollt.AL &SCROW, llK., 7 t 2 I litatf et C1Htwnla. °''"" QMttT t.11•1. 111 11111 rltlll, !Jiii lflll lnhrlftl ot Or.,...,...,., ._ ... ,,,. C•llflnll• on OCtetllt 11. Jttl. bliiin ..... 11kl IUCl!Nfftm! dillltoo" In '"' ·~ dOo ..... N..,_..,. l'utlllf'-111 Ind ft< Mkl Sltll. Krllltd -'""• or "° ~ lllt ... 1J .. ,., .. II --"° ""' Nrl'lft. "" .. .._u, -·-tltlAN n .... 11111: ..... llf "l(ftMrv lo J.llltf'r Mid ·--.., ........ .-ttllMI Ml-...._ Ind t-lo mt to bt '°" _,.,, _.,.. tlln. wllll .CCtvN ll!"re1! 11111 cotb. ..,...._ Wiii 11¥ MN ""'* W'lllllfl "" lllml k o.ulloc;rlllld le lllt wlltllll 111· 01'" 11 C0\11 Meta, C1lltornl1, ...... _. ""' ..., _, *'""""'' 11111 ldllowlt!tled lilt IXK\llH ~ !), !HI .,. ltN ........ .,..,.,.,.: llfl'I· IN lll'llt. llR,t.NCll L 0.LAll!ll O~f11111111•• ......... : -. !OlllllCtAL JlAL ) M1r,rw,1 Or-111H c-tv 0 IL ..... • -JDMfl/'I l . O•vl• H1rt11r Munia.tt c-1. • ......... ~ Notik l'ubli....c1!11Wtt11 Judl~tl Ot1lrlcl • .....,.,..,.. l"rl11<JNI Oll'lat In 11~ L. H. O.Wi.. 0-VIY llOW' ... or.,. '-f't fNIOOOlt• •· L••· MY c .. ,... .. 1on t-.1,... •s •. & M. Mlll111 ~ J-'1, 1m IMll •a.ct1, C1'"""""1 fllU M ..,..., '""""""' ~-co-.i 01•"' "1"'1 .. lllftttl'l"I .. ,,..."" 1 00..... c..:I Dil/lt' J'tllt, Oc'*' I,, H. II Ind l'l""ilmbe• : f"utlllll'Mld °''"" Coit1t D1ll'r l'>jlllf, r & JW ~ ,,. • 11111 .... .:lcl. ,., II '"" N.w 7, IHI lUMll { • .. 9 --------------------- .f9 N11111b• 50 Focal point 52 Junk mail addrl!sset 54 Ch»•of c Mil In k1c a I r'91ll1tlons 5e Flood con-trol dtYIC tS 59 Oil: Comb. 'fonn 60 Contaln«'s weight 62 Go--65 Tttm of t:ndtltlllf'nl 67 Anti - 69 Part above: a downspout 70 To bt: Frmch 71 Get together 72 ll1nner of Willklng 73 Chvrch111an 7.f Ian's n1111e 7S Make a tem porary ..... DOH l City on ltll' Tevert 2 Mell.I J Kind of p11!nlln9 ~ En111are 5 Nl1gar1 Fills r~s1- denl, for on1 6 Piquancy 1 C1.11dal ffn of a nsh 8 Deposit In th f earth 9 DeprlvatloM lO Undff· garment: lnfol'!llal H Hindu noble l2 lmtal plctutt tl Ready for ••• 21 Put In to s'rrlct 23 Not sl1.ct 26 Held dear 28 Pact tight 2' Golf 9roup: A!iir. 30 Closely ak in ll Tnick •et! p1rllclp111lt 15 -... J1 Ont nlct:-namt for Ntw Yoti": 2 words 38 Ancient god 19 Strt110ft subject J0.12(.168 "1 KllMI of repetition .fl Participant in loan ilgrtement .fft Rtlatlwe 48 l lsslll' 51 In bild ftpr. Sling: 2 words SJ Loil.the 54 Invested with certam clothirtg 55 Inspire 56 four·f.oo1!Tf •nlt1at 57 Make a IMl.tzing ... "" 6t Slaitt dlttCtlCl'I 61 Continuous 6.f Let 11 bt repeated: PrtScrlptlons 66 Desire 68 Natlwt: Suffix " ' " ~·~ ---..... -.,. ... -.. .. . -· .............. -. .. . .. . ~·-- IJ;ousing Boom Coming By ~VJ,\ J'ORTER We are on the tbreaho]d of -me of the gre•l.e6t -if not the arutest -housing-real ei.tate booma in our enUre history. The pileup ol forceJ behind this prediction ia 10 persuasive that there can be little doubt that the boom la in the mak- ing. Unforeseeable adverse Jactors can postpone the boom'a timing but they cannot destroy the b;oom itself. TO BE SPECIFIC, ' -A tremendou.s baclt1og of baaic demand for housing has -------------------- been building up during ~ recent periods of tight money "crunch." In October. 1966, housing starts slumped to a 2!· year low in the face of an ever-swelling population; as a r esult of> the 1966 money squeeze, an estimated 400,000 would-be homebuyers had to shelve their plans. Again earlier this year, many·buyers were pushed out of the market by the difficulty of getting mortgage money. Dramatizing the situation i1 the: fact that the vacancy rak is averaging 5.6 percent for rental housing and 1 percent for owner-occupied houses, lowest since the 1950s. -ON TOP OF this pent-up buying, a new wave of demand is developing in response to the fact that World War Jl's babies are now at marrying age and setting up households of their own. These young marrieds don't usually buy houses but they do rent apartmenls. Reflecting th.is, construction of apartments is now around 40 to 45 percent or total hous- ing starts against a share of about one-third in the mid-60's. -The growing resignation ol homebuyers to a persistent climb in prices year after year has reduced their resistance to ever-higher sales tags. The feeling is "we'd better bu y or build now because if we wait it'll only be worse.'' And bow· ing to Ulis feeling has un- questionably been the wiser policy during most of the post- World War Il period. In ad· dition, resistance to steep 7 to 71,2 percent mortgage money also has been dwindling. -OVERALL prosperity by i~lf has been a force in ex· panding the demand r 0 r houses and in increasing the willingness of buyers to pay the prices asked. Because of propserity, young Americans are moving into homes of their ' own at earlit.r ages than previously. And this goes for the single as well as the young marrieds. Also because of Social Security and other pension benefits, older people are remaining in homes of their own much longer than ever before. 1 could go on with a listing of many other forces but they all would add up to the same forecast; boom. For instance, I have not mentioned the enormous impact of t h e revolutionary 1968 housing law with its goal of 26,000,000 new housing units within 10 years. Nor have I mentioned the impact of the powerful trend toward second hou ses. About 1,700,000 households already have second homes and 300,000 more expect to buy or build second homes before 1970. Nor have I touched on the zooming market for mobile homes and the possible breakthrough this could bring In the low-cost housing a.rea . Nor have I sug. gested the significance of at- tracUve innovations In housing which would re-inspire the: up- per-income buyer. WHAT DOES It mean to the economy in general? lt means we're oo our way out of the below·normal an- nu&I totals of 1.200.000 to 1,300,000 private non farm housing starUi back toward the 1.600,000-p\us level and then onto a "normal'' 1,900,000 to 2.000.000 a year record. II means that all other In- dustries tied to housing, from furniture to garden equipment, from applianees to carpeting, will zoom, too. And aU of this. al course, adds up to " gigantic anti- slump weapon for the U.S. In case we need it when the Viet· Dim war ends.. AS FOR YOU, t h e homebuyer ln parllcul&r, It means that you should go ahe1d lmn1ed.latcly and ar- range your dtal to buy or build. Even 111umJng mortgage r•tes go down V• to 1"' percent, that won't be enough to ofr!ltt the prtlbablt price rlst. I, • Cutting Jobs Way To End Inflation? By JOHN CUNNIFF NEW YORK (AP) -I! the lou of one or two million job8 an acceptable price to pay for getting thiii: inflated economy back in balance? Some economists, most of them pe.rhaf>-1 with a bU!iness bent, fee) that a million jobs might indeed be the price for keeping inflaUon from e:r- ploding into a recession. There is an unfortunate relationship between jobs and inflation. When unemployment drops below 4 percent, i n· f I a t i on generally develops. Competition for help pushes up wages. Marginal help pushes up costs. Soon prices rise also. The unemployment rate now ls well under 4 percent. At about 3.6 percent it is, in fact, one of t h e lowest in many years. A ni d., coinciding with this, inflation is running at a rate of 4 or 5 peret!nl a year. Some businessmen, as in- dicated by statements made at a meeting of the Business Council, feel the overheated economy must be slowed substantially, even if It means the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs. Meeting during the weekend at Hot Springs, Va., these cor· poration heads warned that the economy must be restrain- ed for the next year or so. The tax surcharge must be extended; government spen- ding must be cut, they said . The result of such a policy would be to brake t h e economy, to restrain growth to a degree that could be main- tained without inflation. A consequence of such a slowdown would be layoffs. This places the Johnson ad- ministration and the Federal Reserve, which give t h e orders to the economy. in the midst of a whirlpool of dilem- mas. If economic pru dence demands a slowdown. what does morality dictate: And politics? And who is to decide when the slowdown has gone far enough. when sufficient jobs ha ve been lost? And is thiS the way to handle racial tensions? Based on the present civilian labor force, which ii about 78.7 million workers, lncrtases in the unemployment rate would have t b e s e e<1n· aequences: Al 4 percent, l ,t,8,000 wilhotlt jobs, or an increase of 34i,ooo. At 5 percent, 3,935,ooo jobless, or well over a million , more unemployed than at the present time. A five percent rate Ls a very real possibility, ln 1964, for ex- ample, the rate for the entire year was 5.2 percent. And in November 1963, with the economy booming, the rate reached 5.9 percent. Jf 5.9 percent of the present work force was without jobs, the total would be well over 4.6 million workers, or about 1.8 million more men and women out of work than at present. By any reckoning that's a mighty big price to pay for anything. The only thing that could justify it is danger of an even larger loss to the nation by pennitting inflation to run wild, probably provoking such a reaction that recession would result. Despite these potentially grave consequenecs, the ques- tion still persists as to wbethe:r the country can afford to permit so many to be without jobs. Welfare roles already are a problem. They'd grow even more. Racial tension might be in- flamed by layoffs. Although many AmericaM an unaware of it, the Negro unemployment rate is double that for whites. Many working Negroes have only the lowest skills: their grip on jobs is weak. They'd be among the fint to go in a cutback. About all that fiscal and monetary manage.rs can do is balance the evils. The net result of these agonizing judgments may be a compromise -an increase in unemployment but not to the extent that inflation is eliminated; a reduction in In· flation bu t not to the extent thlt two million jobs are lost. Fed Urges Toug her Truth-in-I.ending Act "Yours for only S20 a month." coaxed the hucksters. "Define your terms," snap- ped the Federal Rese.rvi Board. The Board proposed regula· tions Tuesday fleshing out the new Truth-in-Lending A c l which takes effect next July I. In writing the law, Congress said con11umers need more in- formation than they've been getting when they make time- payment purchases. The proposed regulations would require the seller to spell out to the -purchaser all the important detail! of their transactioo -details often left unspoken at present. For instance, the advertiser who says on the air or in print hl.s product can be bought for just a few dollars 1 month. won'l be pemUUed to stop at that point. If he quotes: 1 dollars-per-month figul"e, the regulations wlll Insist that be also tell: -How many months . -How hiA: a down payment . -What lhe finance charge L~ when exptt&!ltd u an an- nual percentage rate. -What Ult mcrchandi8t would cost If bought outright for the seller's disclosure to payments. -How much greater this ' 'cost will be with the addition of the finance charge. T h e regulations literally outlaw "fine print" when It comes to the usentiala of finance charges. Ten-point boldface type larger and darker than molt newspaper type -la specified f<M1h a seller'• dilclorure to the buyer of the rate of the rlnance charges, the amount of each payment, frequency of payment.I and other credit details. Even larger type -12 pol'*, ail in capitals -Is required for a ootic~ telling the con-- ~mer that II ht has pledged hL'J home al'I collatttal in cer- tain types of installmt:nt con. tracts he may change hlJ mind and back out without penalty at any time in tM ~ days followillll the sign. ltlll· Congress insisted oo thl!: consumer escape hatch afler learning many homeowners in Wa shington's poorer sections entered In to ho m (' Im- provement contracts peddltlcf bf h18:h-pre!llure ~lesmen fell behlod on their payments •nd only then discovr.rl'!d that undtt lhe documenL'I they hed :dgntd they could lose lheir horn ... • ' - ' ea :a :w .... _ ; au cp e uµ es a we w v••W # •+ '*' p :; = lf'• ••>t™f"'*!'' .~_,.....,..........,.:qi "lf">:f'"l'"r"'~~--!'10'11"7.':IP-'""'""'""'"" __ .., __ l!!"'""' ___ IM~,.., ......... ~~.,Mllli ...... .., ..... O{ol ... "1!'.'..l t All 1,000 of Us Had a / Busy Day Today· ' ~· A ~ .. • We created and delivered another fresh ~dition of The DAILY PILOT-·.:~ · I ·•• r .. ~ • •'f . I ' , "' TEAMWORK produces each day'a all-new DAILY PIIm. Often special- ists like 'Ibomaa F;ortune (left), whose beat is educaUon, work with a staff pbotogapber like· Patrick O'Donnell !<>'get the otory botb in words and pictures.' The ataff shot 70,lm pictul'es last year to illustrate the varied story of ofangi" Coast life. Nobody knows bow many local llories we wrote. Not even us. CREATIVITY helps advert.i.sen: tell their stories and sell their goods in the affluent market served by the DAILY Pll.oT. Gardon Crawford {left) of the display advertising depar~t watches staff artist Les McCray put final touches on an ad which will be ready to appear in the newspaper only hours after the artwork is finished and approved by the advertiser, a loca1 retail merchant. QUI€K HANDS place lines of type, ad1 and cuts (the metal plates used to reproduce pictures) into page fonns as the day's product begins to take &hape. Compooilot Arden Malsbury Is only one ol. a platoon of printers who "bw1d" the news pages under pressure of deadline.s, work- ing against the clock to bring readers the latest available information in each edition during the day. DELIVERY of the newsaper is a speed event, too. Conveyor bells carry the papers through the mailroom where they are automatically tied In bundles of 50 and tossed to waiting circulalion district manag@n (like Blaine Roberts, shown here, right) who speed them via a 46-vehicle fleet to caniers for delivery. Mailroom foreman George Araui (lert) ~nd h1a crew can mov1 20,000 neWIPIPf.l'I an hour. VOhUME·ll the word at the Copy Desk. DAILY PJU11' Copy Desk Cl)Jel Normeo· Anderson (tjght) alded by Tom Titus (background) llld other. copyread~ every day alftl, checks IDd edits more wire reports from worldwide f1tW1 ~ than tbe av.eraa:e weekly news mapzine pub- lishes. 'Edllors ""'"' ~ telepbotoo to wallpaper a living room .-y 24 hours. SpiOOd, born of uperlmct, bolpo them nep tt aH fnob, loO. THE WORDS are ready. Marjorie J acUon feeds them lnto a '25,000 computer, a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which uses a logic system to hyphenate words u it read.I characters at the rate ol. l ,000 a second and punches a new tape which wUI t.clivate another machine for automatically setting type at hlgh speed. The machines can set ty1)e at the rate of 6,000 lines per houn MACHINES hasten the processes of prepar.ing plates for printing the pages of the newspaper. Here, Charles Haubrick (foreground.) and F..d- ward Quinn operate a casting machine which molds curved plates to flt onto high speed presses. The DAILY PILOT keeps in etock more than 40 toM of type met.al which is used, melted down and u&ed again In the continuous job of printing 100,000 words a day. MODERN equipment helps the accounting department keep up with lhe "today" pace at the DAILY Pnm. Even 11 the day's newspaper Is being sped to ii.! readers, Bonnie Cheuvtn bqj.ns fieding fJgures into a computron.11! bookkooping machine that htlPI keep track ot_ billiop for 11d11 and subscripUons.. The machine, forerunner of a brace of computers 10011 to be added, handlts $,000 account.I a month. ' · RAPID communication Is the name of the game. Supervhor Juanit& ~ and her crew of "ad-visors" ~ncile 1,000 transactions a Weet by Phatie, mnilting In publication of 5,000 clas.sl.fied ads -words •hJch help ~le buy, sell, rent or 1 ease .•. @venlfind 108t dogs. Many of the DAI:i.Y PILOT'S 150 phone lines are plugged. in here, the clasmfied adYertisla&,de- partment, borne of "Want Ads" and Dlme-A-Llnes. "-" PICTURES, too, get the benefit of skilled, efficient handling by ·master craftsmen who re-pbotograpll them and then transfer: the imagu to . a sensitized met.al plates whl.ch are used to reproduce the photos u -~ en will see them In the new1paper. Here, ·Chuck Ryan t.akea •-really cloge look at a negative which will be used to e~ the image ~-.Utt melal plate. , ··--~ FINISHED PJIODUCT gell quiok sceo 'by Wayna Dullol.le, pressroom foreman, while hla giant presse! continue to roar turning a rlbbon.-.of newsprint paper into neWspapers. The DAILY PILOT uaes 4,000 t®iOf newsprint each year. That means we print each year tht equlVllent of.•a lirlgle roll of paper one page "Jde and 110,000· mlle1 Ion(. Preaes prliat. fold, cut and count new•paper1 ln one operation. ., ALMOST before ~ Ink 11 dry, the product <II our holy d1y II ~ deftly on )'our lawn or porch by one ol our 700 newspaperi)oyr ~ ... m Important links In the chain ot people It likes to bring you today'• new1 and features todsy In the DAILY PILOT. And u our YOUDI ~ merchants, like John Melton hert, make their deliveries, we're ~ UiJ for another blllf day -all 1,000 <II 111. .c ~· . -:: . ,-··· .. ,; The •Now' Newspaper for All The Co111111.unitieM .. ..~• ' qt The G .. •wing . Orang~ Coast • ' ,\ ' I -----~ ---~ --------------. ---~----· -~------------------------ ff DAILY PILOT Sears Fru rcpl1cc:mt111 wirtNn 90 d1" of pur· thut "b.tt..,. pttwf:' ddftri<rc. Afrcr 90 c1.,., wt repl.cc Mic h.nuy, if dde-c:tivc and rit11qe )'OU only ftl' rhe pniod ol awn. cnftip, hued Oii ~ rc91Ji1t prier ),,, u.lde-ift I f 1hc tilrll!: of ~ .... pw-r.lff o...r -mbtt ft[ -hi of .. - • • -. LONG-LIFE 11'0.1 n1:s FRl:f. 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Main St. KI 7-3371 -. -... . . . . --.... -----------!"""--··----· ................................... ~ .. ·~· ........ ,,,--~...--·1'T"""""l'I'--__,..., ________ .. _...,...~~..._.~--....... -· oAJLY •nor ZJ Hewitt, Dutch Amazon, 6 Others Swim for Go ld . By GLENN WHITE Of .. ~ll'i' ...... $!Ml MEJOCO CITY-Tonlgnt eight of the world 's greatest women butterfly swim- mers will dip into the waters of thiJ city'a plush Olympic swlm pool in quest of gold, silver and bronze. And exptected to be among that select group ls Corona del Mar High School senior Toni Hewitt, who figured to breeze through this morning's semifinals for tonlgh1'1 showdown tn the 200 meter but- terfly. II should be • -ballie. The 1avm1er World record bolder Ada Kot al . Holland. And, Miu Hew!U, the 11·)·..,.. aid bw-er of tbo United StalOI' lllandanL Tbtdark bonos! Ellie Daniel, runnerup to Mia Hewitt In the U.S. team trlalJ, and with a beat W.. of"l:l2.t . Ailo Dianne Giebel, tblrd place linlaher in the Amerlcan trfalJ at 2:11.1. ' , And ,then there's Australia'• 1:-ynetto McCltml!nta, the r.1m blcwl. wbo that.- • -tbo f""" 14oncloJ by wlnnln( tbo gold ~ for tbo ~oo Qy, outltgglna oucb l:nowu quanUU4o aa 11111 Kok, Mlaa Hewitt and Miu Denlel. I JIQwever, Mla McC!emente uy1 the B ii not a strong event for her, pointinl out her bell Umo·ll 2:28.3. Illa Kot' a. If or Iii 1nark· Jl'2:11.0,.aet a yeor .,.. And ohe came elOle to equallng ll hrO mcmtbs q:o wben lhe turned lo a 2>11.1. • • Mlaa Htwlt1'1 USA .....-<! U 2:12.0, aet th1J summer-. The hull• . i>bl'llcal apeclmen from Rolland lites to go out swUUy, then come In the lut 100 mtl<r& with w\14lever ahe tw left. She la l>2 and welgha 190, dwarllnj moot other alrlJ in the tVtnL Tool la ii and welgha 118. Her font la ber fal>uloul slrengtb and good speed. She UJUl1ly llO'• out In around !:DI ror the flr&t 100 metua, a couple ol .-ods , behind Mila Kok. But she calls on her power to puU ahead In thole lut 100 meter&. In tbo tJ .S. triall ahe seemed bopele11ly behind with 100 to go. But then the accelerated, u lhe did when she won her aecond straight Nationals crown, atld passed the three girls who were leadlnc to wn • photo !lnlsh victory. She says ahe won't change her style toolghl in the long-awalted-meeling wllh Mia Kok. The co-IavoMl<I In the 200 !aded badlJ In Monday nlght'a 100 finaJe with Mill Kot -silver medalist in lt&t -fotD"lh while Miu Hewtu wu seventh. Mila Daniel picked up the lllver medal In second, tralllng the .. wly found AWll!e sensaUon by tbm tenU. or a oecond. MiM Kot toia the DAILY PILOT that a 1:23 would protiably be aood eooup for victory tonlgJil. The Corona deI Mar ac1 opines that• S:22 will be nect¥1'7· In a few boun u·u be hlatory. Douglass Enters Tourney With Pro-am 65 PRO.AM WINNERS -This amateur threesome emerged as the winners of the Haig National Open'1 pro--am championship Wednesday. From left..: Evan DAILY PILOT '°""':"' "1 P• D'o..-11 Jonson, Marshall Stamper and Johnny Williams. Teamed with pro Dudley Wysong, they shot a 54 round. Open play sl;lrled tOOay at Mesa Verife. Bahamian Speaks Negro Sportswriter Gi ves Protest Views My name ts Fred Sturrup, I am a reporter from the Bahamas. And I am a Negro. Although the Bahamas is British te rritory, we are vastly Ametican in· fluenced because of our main industry •. . tourism. As a Bahamian, and so very near to the United States, I have become quite acquainted with the racial problems that have infested this powerful nation. I am currently in Mexico City, covering the Olympic Games for my paper, and recently two black power militantl ... namely Tommie Smith and John Carlos • .. were expelled from this classical event because of their part in a demonstration which occurred while they were receiving U lll lllllllllJJ WHITE WA.SH ttllll l lll llllh medals for first and third place in the 200 meter finals. pondered over the situation I resptet their opinion. But to those who have not looked deeply into the matter and have juSt on the spur of the moment and have formed some type of anim osity agaimt Smith and Carlos, It would be great if they would do some thinking, then come up with a valid opinion. It is indeed a pity that these men had to choose the Olympic Games to demonstrate on this matter. But I truly respect what they have done. * * * Both of tbeae athletes b1ve been to col· lege and unlversltle1 and they are not stupid, to because of this what elae can I do but respect them. Of course It wa1 a sign of_cll1re1pect to the Star Spangled Banner. I'll never dispute that. But Smith and Carlos might ask why respect the 01g wben tbe cowr.- try does not respect me. No one can deny that Neiroes In Wt country have gone: throuch Bell ud all by JU.IC trying to be n11tural and live like wblte men. Of cou.ne muy of tbe raclal barrier have been broken dowa, bvt the hurt stiU remains. Yugoslavia Hoop Coach Praises Yanks MEXICOCITY -C o a c h R.anko Zeravica of the Yugoslavia basketball team that meets the United St.ates Friday nJght for the Olympic championship says he's looking at things realistically. "The USA i! a little b e t t e r psychologically but we 're not strong enough to play another game like the one with Russia," he declared today. In other words, he fears his players think they have won aboot all they might want when they edged the Soviets 83-.Q Tuesday nJght. But he also fears that the U.S. fs better even if he got his boys up for the big bat- tle. "When we started preparing for the Olympics we decided that there was no use getUng ready for the USA at that time because that team has !IO many variations and makes so many changes to meet the occasion. "We had to make speeial preparaUorui for Ru.ssia , a team we played many times and b e a t on1y twice. So we aimed at Russia." He smiled to make the silent observa- tion that the plan had paid off. Seravica slyfy noted one thing -"the USA Is in better pla) Ing condition but it has only one center. That should be to our advantage because we have four and play them all.'' Ro.driguez Logs 66 Round.; Hebert,: Barber Post 67's By EARL GUSTKEY Of tll9 Dl<ll1 Pllft lltff Dale Douglass, a 32-year-old pro from Colerado, was the man the pros were keeping a wary eye OD today as the Haig NaUooal Open field teed off at Mesa .Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa. Douglass went on a putUng spree in Wednesday's pro-am. finishing the 7 ,000- yard course with a aix-under-par 65, the lowest KOre of the day. It WP DO fluke. Douglas.1: is the unlucky gtzy who blew the two-foot putt on • sud· den death hole to Jose last week's Las Vegu Sahara Invitational champioiiship to Chichi Rodrlgu.., who posted a 16 Wednesday. The others who found Mesa Verde to thf>lr liking were Jay Hebert and Miller Barber at 8'1, ud Dave Stockton, Rocky Thompson, Laurie Hammer and Bob Murphy al 69. Douglass' putter had radar. He sank a 15-footer on 12, a 12-footer at 13 and JG-foot.en at 14: and 15. "I made a lot of pUlta today and that's the name of the game," ~e said af- terward. Douglass figures be'• long overdue for a big payday. "The last tournament I won was the lT.S.·Pr~Am at Cincinnati last year. I won $4:,000." Czech Lass Wins Diving; U.S. Shines MEXICO CITY - A daring IS-year-old Czech mW:, scoring her nation 's• first Olympic victory ever Jn swimming and diving, shared the spotlight today with the medal-rich United States' aquaUc aces. While the Yankees swept all four of the swimminJ finals Wednesday night to boost their gold medals In !wlmmlng and d I v I n g to a record -tying 16, Milena Duchkova, a petite blonde, won the hearts of the 10,000 specta:ton In the Olympic pool. She gambled on two final, high-point dives and won while the other contenders played it safe with less difficult dives. For the United States theu wUI be more victories to come. Of the 11 titles stil at stake in the final three days,-the U.S.A. figures to win at least eight. The Yanks should take three of the four finah: tonight and possibly all four. Sharon Wichmsn, a HS-year-old high school junior from Fort Wayne, Ind., became the first American woman ever to win an Olympic breast.stroke gold when she spurted in the last 25 meters to win by two meters over Yugoslavia's Djurdjica Bjedov, the 100 meter-winner, in Olympic record time of 2:4:4.4. Kaye Hall , a 17-year-old flash friim Taco'tla, Wash.. broke South Alrican Karen Muir's world record by tw~tenths of a second in winning the women's 100- meter backstroke by a half meter over Canada's favored Elalne Tanner in 1 :06.2.2 Charles Rlckcox, the world record holder from Phoenix, Ariz., took the 400 meter l11dlvldual medley as erpeded, jll!l touching out 11-yearold Gary Hall of Garden Grove. Calli. Billy Coper, the game's current leading money wbmer, carded an easy 69. His short iron game was superb, but hi.!I putts were missing by scant inches. Early morning fog delayed the pro-am field by an hour and a-half Wednesday morning. Most of the pros Wednesday sgreed the always.present wind conditions would prove to be the deciding factor. "The guy wbo can best harxlle the wind should win it," Dougla.sll said. "lt'a the dominaUng factor ." Douglass is one of the tour's hard~ workers. He played In a remarkable 31 tournaments in 1967, finishing 28 of them. He's won $40,000 this year by far hls best of six years on the tour. He won $18,625 last year. Asked to name a tourney favorite, be tabbed his conqueror at Las VegN. "Rodriguez would be a cood bet. He's really been playing well" Open Olympics Seen; Investigation Continues MEXICO CITY -A former Olympic gold medallst said today the Olympic Games some day probably will be the open Olympics, without differentiation between amateur and professional .. "lt appears t'l be the most realistic solution to the present problem," said Harold Connolly, 240-pouncl hammer thrower from Culver City, who won bis &pec.ialty at Melbourne: lJl 195&. "Olympic officlaJs now are showing great concern ovet. reports that aome athletes hive received financial in-i ducements to use certain equipment made by big companies. "There is nothing shocking about Uris. Such practices have been going on for years. It 15 common knowledge among the athletes themselves. "I understand the International Olym- pic Committee has set up a commission to study the amateur-professional ques- tion and a report ls expected at the Warsaw meeting in 1969. Out of thls may come a new and more realistic definition of what constitute! an Olympic athlete." Connolly, an articulate English pro. fessor, indicated that he wouldn 't be surprised if the Olympics adopted the new open tennis lm:age. Thus a discus thrower would be a discus thrower and a 4:0G-meter runner a runner, with no questions of where hi! money comes from . The fading 1968 Olympics were stunned anew this week with wild rumors that athletes, lncludlng some medal winners, were in danger of being declared pro- fessionals because they accepted money ~from manufacturers. Everett "Eppy" Barnes, acting ex- ecutive director of the U. S. Olympie Commltlae, admitted that his commltteo has been investigating such reports, but in a formal statement Wednesday night said : "At th I s tlrne we have nothing to substantiate the rumors with respect io athletes subject ta our jurisdiction." However, white-haired D a n Ferrla, secretary emeritus of the U. S. Amateur Athletic Union and member of the C>uJ\. cil of the International Amateur Athletic Federation, said almost every co:·nt:y In the world had been touched with s'Jch violaUons with payments r u n n i n c between $50 and $6,000. "The practice is deplorable," said Fer- ris. u1 plan to suggest to both the IOC aod the IAAF that all markings -not just names but stripes -be erased from every bit of equipment. "U equipment was such that no ont could te ll what company made Jt, perhaps these abuses would stop." Most athletes questioned on the probe scoffed at It. They predicted no one ever would be called on the carpet, no medall confiscated. U.S. VOLLEYBALL CLUB LOSES, 3-1 MEXICO CITY -A dlamal n>Wtd of Olympic competition for the UnJted States women's volleyball team ended Wednesday night u tbo Yllllks loot again to Peru, 3 games to 1. The U.S. girls went Into the Ganiel with high hopes ol wlnnlng • brona medal, but fell far short of that &oe.I, Jot. lng all of their matches. - Olympi~ TV TODAY , 4:30-5 (Re·run 7·7:30) GYMNASTICS -Men's Individual and team free ex ercises. BOXING -Semillnala. SOCx:EJR -Semiflnala. 10:30-11 p.m. SWIMMING ~ Fln1l1 men'1 200 butterfly, . 200 freestyle; finals women'• 800 lreeatyle. 200 butterfly. GYMNASTICS -Men's indlvldual and team rr.. u- ercises. BOXING -Semlllnala. Friday, Odober IJ l·J p.m. SWllllMING · - H a at ·1 men's and women's 200 baokstrokt. WRESTLING -Greco- llooan. Glenn While has asked me to present my views concerning the demonstration and I will proceed to deal solely with this matter. Since this unfortunate incident both Smith and Carlos have been under con- stant ridicule by people who have resented and di.sliked their actions. .. It 11 not ea1y fM them to lorcet tb•t there was 1 dme not too lone ago when tbey could not eat la tbe same re1taarut, when they could not use the same rest rooms, wbtn their cbllclren conld not attend tilt tame schol. After all these people are only inlm1n and It barf.I. And for muy It 1UU hart.. Glair Survives, Enters Semifinals If these people have sat down and' A.WA.RDS FOVLUP ~1.4.RS CEREMONY MEXICO CITY -The ll10ll atr1ous foulup at the Olympic Games ao far virtually went wmoUced during awards presentaUons for the "omen'• pentathlon. When the -place finisher from Austria looked toward the flq pole where banners repr:e.senUng the natit:ns from which the three medals winntra are from, she aaw an Australian Dag rather than an Austrian flq: wavtna: over Olym- pic SUtidJum. However, the snafu went senerally Uft. not.Iced among the populact of the stadium. · Therefore you've 1ot to be lenleat. or eoune a lot of people Nve fora:onen about this rubbage. But no man 11 the 1ame. Some people almply can'! forpt. Smith and Carlos mlP.t 1teftr llave been die object ol any racial Incident but I'm 1are they know tots el people (fellow Negrott:), who •ave beea 1•b)eded to Wa 1j>pe of mlatrutment * * * Ukt I aid be/ore, many of the barrlera have gooe and pretty IOCll ther• might be no barriers al all. But untll then America might jusl 11 well learn to espect thete incidents becauae I pn!dlcL that u a rtllllt of tho SmU.b IDd Carlos incidents, more and more 1tmllar demoosttal.lona are 1olna to occur. I hope: I have not cruted any animosi- ty with you readers f« wflat I have said above, but th.la ii-the way I fetl. I have been asked to ex:preu my views "° the1Jlallar and bert lt ll In wrltlna- By GLENN WHITE Of IM O.lty" Plltt lt.tf MEXICO CITY -John Glab' al Newport Beach survived Wednead.,-'1 repechage for Olympic Games kayak canoe competition and wu to vie in today's semifinal5 u the only American left in kayak acUon. Meanwhile, competitcn conilnued to lash U.S. c:ooch Gen Grtgolell all<r the twCHDan and fOUMDaD bOlt& ftnlahed out of the money Wedneodty. Glalr ~ made It In a lac:Ucal race · u each ol the rour. pertlclpBJ1ta aeemed lb be trying to flnlll!i thlnl IO tboy Would be advanced In tbo lllOll dtsirable • ol three ..... race&. No one wanted the lead '° tt became an u:nU1Ually tlow race ror the Juder. Meanwhile, Mexico'• Fidel Santander was able to 1lice the &•P considerably and narrowly mls9ed nlpplna Glalr for the lut qualllylng 1pot. Glalr'a lluie wu 4::iu. rar oil hll bell ' of 4:07. He projedl that It wm take a 4:04: or 4:05 to get through today's semis and lntc Friday's paddle for medals. Newport'• Pete Weigand and mala John Beachem~ being in Friday's two-man showdown by 1.1 seconds while the four-man aaft, whlch Included Costa Mesa's T_.ce CUtJer, placed lut In repechage. And the blut agaln&t Gr\aolelt c:m- Unued. Said Weigand : John (Glab') and I could have made It k» the finals. Bucbem and I jllll haven't had enough lime together. I lalkod atrategy with him belort the race and told him I thought we ought to star! our •print at 750 meters (the races are 11000 met.en). But he thought that WU loo ooon. "So we atarted aptlntlng lalar and that .. why we loll.'' The boat lost ou t for third place by a hat! boat length and wu hacklnc the deficit with each stroke the last 60 mett.n. Conu.u..t Weigand: "I doa't lmow what hi• (Grlgolelt) rea&o111 art for switching our boat persoonel IO much but I'll lall you he'• way off J>aao· As far u J 'm concerned he hasn't made a loeic.aJ. decldon &!nee we'Ve been here. "ll the tell!ll would have lieoa made up properly l lhlnk our tw~IN.D m:I four-- man boats would have made the fina1a." Weigand and Glalr won tbo U.S. team trialt in doubles, but wu split up whtn Glab' &ald he wanted to paddle ainaJu, alao. Gr!golell would aot allow aayooe to double up on events. Oboervera In tho atanda aald Beld1tm looked dead In tho boaL Weigand &aid tbo boaJ got In troubl1 wbea It picked up Sweden'• wake .00 bad a ditfkult time 1etllng over the tllllling burnpl. 'lbefr Ume WU 4:90.4 -15 llCODdl •lower than tho Gla!r·Welond combo pull<d In a Monday night wotbal. It wu a almJlar alory with the four- man entry. Culler pointed out that lhll ll ooly tho I e co D d Umo Grl.rolall'I .. revamped crew baa paddled fOJ1t1ber a a un11 boca1111 a1 the ccmatao1 ™"*'"' 'If penonnel "I tboupt tbe boat rocked loo much." Culler aid. "Maybe Wt wn &lralnbli tot mtida. • .maybe "' wen of1 1 -e. I don, mow. But for~ por1, tho boat went much mon amoothl7 -·(Bill) JeweD wu ln IL" Jtwtll, a Newport Beach mklaol alao. .... )'Wed oil the team Ibo llnl da,y cl ellmlnaUoo on one al GrlloleII'• mrwJcal cbaln whlmt. But .. cutler ..,., ''Wbat -,... .. wbonibal'• the~~· .. arpobod and be'• the ._, So, Weigand will 10 back to llulldlnl ftbor cJw boall In Newport Jewall returns to. c1u11 ,1n tbo !ilVJ, eun .. m back to coacblnC al Ellancli, Hiib Scboi>I and Glalr lakea a sbol al mUlns IM llnala. r , . I • --------------·--------------... --·--~ -·------... ---------------'----~--~~-........ -------~-------------- ', • ., ft IW•Y I'll.OT -.-N,1068 _r.'Cunninghain. Lost . For GWC-Don Tilt By !WU. GIJllTUY .,. ............. Tllo -.., Slnla Alla beatln& Gold<n 'weat llalurdO)' nilht ~ I bit •• .....,, -RulLlat ...... Ray Sllaeklel<nl revukd h11 belt tackle, Dn Cunni~m, hu hit hand 1n a cul lie _, play qalnst the Dool and adlbl not )Uy qain thia year. "Din -· the hand In Iha l'ulltrton pmo and didn't know I~" Sbacklllonl aald. "He showed up at practice. Monday cocnplalning about a JOtt hand and we 18Dt him to the doctor. He lhowed up ~ with his hand In I WI." Tiie .... ol CUnnlnCl>am la onb' another ... -" .-ty euuo!U. hr tho Rustlen. First it wu 1pUt receiver Jerry Gienger, who was Jost for the 11UJOD threeweeklqo_wlthabad- Then fUDback D a n Boers cunt down with a avere dwltY horse lD tbt IM Joss t.o San Diego ctty College and atlll S..'t ready lo play. Defensivt back Leo Bandel 1praioed an onld• aaalml Jl'uUerlon and probobly -·· play aplMt the Dooa. And defenalft aid Bob Bemfll; la allo ... the oldel-. Sbacklelonl 1111 tho repl.-.nl pro- -ftr his 1.U.. warrkn ,....,.bleo • Chinese firedrfll. "I'm not 11n 1'I who ,..'II npl..., CunninllWn "1th. Bui wo'll pul Miiie SJmcmo at dt-.. end and Tom • w..ipt. w111 ao 1o !Ullbact tn hit place. "I guess we'll move Vie Ecklund from defense to offense to take Cunningham'• . place and move Mike Rlct from linebacker lo .ddeDlive lacldt to.. Ilk• Eck!urid'• place. "The ooly pd news In oll thia la that ~Bob Little will be able to play. He started : earlier In -the teCOOdary for us befcn set.- .. ting h~" . S-onl Aid thia -rub ol ln- 1 juries blt'·the Rustlers wllh a jolt. t "I thought we , were healthy after the ~Fullerlol! 1ame and all ol a IUddei> - ; 1UY1 obaw up )!Ollday "1th oil -ol • hurt&. sG.ne al Ibo -I'll" who II& : baiiged up WtJJ be obi< lo ploy bul ~ ; al -.,. prellJ --·----------.. • ' • • • Top JC Players "Wt can't have 1 lol ol cont.Id In prac-- tiict." It couldn't have happened at a mor• 1.nopportuot Umt for Golden West. lf lt'a one game owe wanta to win durinl the yur, Jt'1 the Santa Ana match. The RwiLlato ... u "1th Iha Dool ovu th< put two Rasons, 32~ and 13-3. Sailors Drill On Stopping Curtis Again Wade Watts, the Newport Harbor High foothill coach sees no reason for people to ,., faint-hearted. o~r the prospect. of tu. Toro hav!Jll lo bolllt up llonlt Al>o'1 Jauc Curtla 8aturd1y .-. Curtis, the prep All-American tailback, hu been the talk of California prep drcleo. H•'• probobly tho most 10U1h• ollm-hllh 1ehooler In the lltte hy colltp --Bui Wotlt quite clurly rocalh his Su- lt Al>o 1omt lut yeor. Although the 8atnla IOcUd tt In Iha Salion, IU, the .... lhlnl they dJd do right In tho ..... wu put the clamps on Curtit. In -CUTI .. , ht cained only 18 yards. Watts 11 emc:emed over the fleet back, bul not ponicked. "We know we have to stop him like we dJd Jut YOJf lo beat Sonia Ana," be 1ay1. "We're fully awen of Ids great abWty hut we know what our kids can do, too. Weotern llOpptd him and HunUngton Beach dJ<I, too." watts ... :workini bia def~ive perlOTl- nel overtl.JM all th1I week. The Sailors have been ~ on oziJy three Umes In posting a &.o·mark so far. "Our defeme lw been a major factor in putUna U11't*'t: we are now and we're mltlnly not aolni lo let up on It now. Wt're allo lr1!ni ~ 111,'ta ball CX111trol of· 1-. Tllat't a very Important part of lht ,..,. -upedolly tt you get ahead." Watts Ill" thl Sailors ore phyllcaUy and menially IOUlld for the game. "Our tld1 have confJdenct t n them>elvN and thot'1 why they're going ao well. They1w been winners before, you tnow. They were winners in the Pop Warner program and u Ceea and Bet!. "'lbey've found out that hard work can pay ott. And now that they've 1c- oomplilhed what they have, they fee.I an ohliptlco lo do well "I tldnk we'll W Gp for Seta Ana." Intra•mural Find KE lLY GREEN -COiia Mesa's Claude Kelly (17) gets set to pass the Green 8"d White out o! clinger last week in tluilJl!lg .. 21·20 w1n over cross-town rival Estancia u E~Jles' Grant Van· n. Walker (44) clolel In. Meoeno tangle with Mal!DO!la tonight at La Palma Stadium in battle for l'irst place in Irvine League. a.me time Is 7: 30. _t •• 4 Reilly's Leg Not Broken Mustangs Battle Doctors at a military institution took one look at Jerry Reilly 's leg and pro- nounced it broken la.st weelr:. The same Costa Men guard has been IWl running near lup speed in the Mustangs' practice sessions in prepara- tioo11 for their ahowdown with Magnolia Hlgh. The lrvlbe League tootball cont.eat 11 sef for tonight at La Palma Stadium. Game time is 7:30. And Reilly, pronounced out for the TIMI .. ..,, Wtt1 M M "" •Ir Ml"" -K•IY (11'f) 1l1r1lnt1 11 71:11. Magnolia _ Peek hopes to have Forsdick back to the following week. Steve Van Valken- berg takea his place. Van Valkenberg filled in admirably last week, runnlni for some key gains when Mesa needed him. Top Backs May Miss ·sec Game By JOEL SCllW AllZ Of .... Dllllr ...... l'Wo al Iha htttar runnlni .bacb In the South Coast Confef'!:nce are Orange Cout College'• Ramon Ricardo and ML San Antonio College'• Brian Shaw, but chancel are fam won't have the op- J!l<IUllity lo ,.. either one al them perform lomorrow alibi when the two «booll 1quare off at I o'clock in LeBard ltadlwn. Shaw, who ~erect a coDCUSSion two weeks ago agalnM Golden West ii definitely out of the gome and Ricardo lo ltU1 a queaUon mark. The Ptraltl' talented lfx·loot. llD-pouo- do< J$nd u lllkle whlJa calchtnfl a 1<- yircl lourth<!uner pau a 1 a In 11 "1llerlon lwo -... and bun1 .,... aound llnc:e. He m1aed lut week'• game with San lllego and hu .,... bobbled aaatn thia .k. "You havt to uy be'1 doubtful for our pme wltli Ml SAC," reported beod eoach Dick Tucker. . OraDge Cout•a all-conference tackle Kevin Grady came out of the Meta &amt with O bad c:horllt boroe, but ohould be a full llrength ftr the Jl'riday nigbl run•. And defensive end Rick White, another c:uua!Jty from the Fullerloa olfatr hu fully recovered from knee problema. With the Pirates at nearly full strenath. they should be In o good polition lo bait o three-ytar losing trend qalnat Ml CAC, Last Ume Orqe Coast whipped the MounUes wu back in 1964, to the tune of 2'1·18. Since then, Mt. SAC bu reeled oU M-14, 17-14 and 2S-o victories. Those three wins have given ML SAC an 11..g..1 edge over the Pi.rate.' ln tbt two ICboolJ' series agalnlt each other. That ~ victory Jut yur ... bled Ml SAC to t a k e second place in the o I d East.em Conference ahead of the Pirate.!!. However, this year the Mounties have had a rough Urne, posting a 1-S.1 record, while occ 11 <-1. One reaaon, aside from the diaparity In the two teams' season records, why the Pirates are favored Friday nJght ii the lmpreutve rtaU!Ucs they've recorded IO liwln 1988. Quorl<rhact Poul Lemolnl already ha broken the OCC eeuon reeord for .,....,. Ing yardage. In five games, the talented QB hu pwtd for 125 yord& H• needs only two compleUons agalnlt Mt. SAC to break his record of 11 eet'fut.year. Season statisUcs: OC(: Of"P' 4 ~ ,, " ri J llAJ 70 "' ... "' ,.., ,,,. 11n Ill '11 " .. , • I " ' ' . T1I ,.. "AT TP' 1 l 1: !l 1 (I 0 i1 Watts Gets His Kicks season just days ago, will be there with his mates. · The broken leg turned out to be a serious"lnuscle strain. Loss of Reilly had been considered close lo di.sasteroua for coach Nell Peek and hiJ Green and White. And, Kevin Manix will be suited up, but Is not expected to see any action . Manl:r was also declared out for the season last week. He's suffering from a neck Injury. For Mesa, this one will tell them quite t0nvinclngly whether they are ready to assume the role of title challenger or nol Both clubs are l--0 in league action ltmo!M ltlc1rdo Tinlin C1llfl11> Jen~I"• ~~ .-.111n , .. ........ 2 ' • 11 2 0 0 11 I O 0 6 I I I 6 1 ' • ' • • 0 ,.. ... WAYNE TINLIN, OCC Ttllbock DAV! GRAVEN, GWC Delentlvo Beck • From Foreign Student Thi remark1ble field a:oal efforts that prevaJled on the Newport Harbor High ~. campus lut Saturday night were too much to be included fully ln a game lllory. The ticker In point 11 a young man rwned Ron VanDuAo of Newport'• undefe1led football team. He ticked two field goals, one measur- ing a yards • n d another 25-yarder. The G-yud blut aailed over with plenty to opon and the 25-yord effort appeared jull .. good. It'a pouibly old bit to call thi1 "The ........... , •... ,,,,, ROGER CARLSON ·····;pp· "PIPll"Y''P year (If the ..• " etc., but you have to wand~ if thll isn't coach Wade Walts' lucky er1. Imagine: plctlng up 10meone like lhat out of your gym. class. VanDerAa, a foreip ucbance student from the Netherlanda, was seen doing some classy kk:kinc ln an lntr1-muraJ football game in the 'IS'.ln& and wu immediately recru.tttd for the vars.it)'. IHI record 11 nm1rltable: Eight·for- elght PATa ln the first three games. four~ for·all aglinst Santa Ana Valley and then the field goal barraae and two more PATI aaalntt w ......... Says Watts ol his ~hole: ''He'1 UMi but kicker I'wt ever hid." Ht allO klcb off with his 10CCer style hoomera. Hold1nl the ball for V anDer Aa ts quarle<back BW Shedd, and the two mate u rood a tandem u you ·u find ln OJ' circlet. * * * Can you lmqlne • three-year~ld series any cloter than the one that ha• been pot on by crou-town rtval1 Costa Meu and Eltanda HlP'• football te1m1! Eltanclt won tht flnt ont in 19111 with a 1+11 m.,.tn. thtn there waa tM «Ml tit WI yeor. And now tn ltel It'• 1J·XI ln f1vor ol M-Etch ttom hu ........ 141><>inll and tht -111·1"1. Coocl! Non Patt ha1 on udttna crew at M-111ty'rt qulclt ond t .. p tht a'OWd contanlly OD Ille edge of Ila ... 111. Estancia'• boss, John Lowry, however, Is still smoldering over a clipping penalty that killed what looked Uke a touchdown drive in I.he fourth quarter. The Eaglu were leading 26-14 and were moving the ball deep Into Mell territory for what looked like a clinching touchdown. Estancia's fullback, however, wu nick· ed for a clipping penalty, and the drive failed. Mesa loolt ...r and promptly blib::ed down the field for the winning touchdown. "My fullback told me he didn't clip him, and after viewing our ftlrna, 11.ln! enough-he's right," said Lowry. "An offici1l "u right on top of the play and didn't call It, but another came run- ning up from a distance, and threw the flag," he said. When it was pointed out lbal it waa, nevertheless, an exclUng game from start to finish, Lowry shot back: "A dull 2-0 win would have been fiot with me." • Orange Coast Regains 5th In Grid Poll SNA MATEO -Orange Colst College has leap-froged back int.o the No. 5 spot In the rankinp of California'• large jun- ior college football teams In th.ii week'• poll by the Junior Coll11e Athletic 8"" reau. The Pirates had dipped to eighth last week after their loss to Fullerton, but were the only team with a lo!! to make the lop 10. In regaining the spot they held before the Fulle game, the Ptutea iwnptd ahead s.n Dl•go City CoUece. SanLI Monica East Loa Angeles. 1 l"ut""'" J(. ..................... ':":r. .. ., .. , ls.tl I. El CtmlM ,.,. .............. , ........ , ... ., IWI t . ._tnfl9 ....... , .......................... , IMl ~. S.nt. ~-·'.l"""'····•· .. ·········"""" tMl J. o.-.__. .............................. 1•11 •. "" 0"9t cc ................... ········· ... 1141 1. IE•1t I.of AMtl• ......................... 1"41 •. (ltfVI , ............................ , ... ) t , Oltblo Vtllrt ........• , . .. . ... .......... !•11 It YMtul'S ......................... ,., .. ,,, .. IM-11 He is due to play some offerWve iuant and at defensive linebacker tonight. Out of the game iJ wingback Greg Forsdick, one of Peet's top backs. Forsdlck was injured ln the Estancia vic- tory last week In the second quarter with a badly bruised back -possibly kidney complicaUons. SA Favored By I Point Over Newport Santa Ana High School's football team. once the CJF's No. I-rated team. this 1eason, is on1y a stiruty one-point favorite to beat 1urglng Newport Harbor Saturday afternoon. A consenau1 of predictions by DAILY PILOT ,ports staffers alto tabs Anaheim to beat HunUnaton Beach by seven polnta and Laguno -like Newport, unbeaten - to be1t Tustin by 10. Santa Ana JC is a 12-polnt choke over Colden West and Orange Coast l.f tabbed by 20 over Ml SAC. tn major college action, Stanford hi f1vored by lhree points over stumbling UCLA. The big pro game of the week features Los Angeles at Baltimore and the Rams are tabbed t.o win their aeventh straight game by sis point.a. Tiit Pll.O'J' WU 1~ on its pick1 ]a.st week and hu a teuonal percenLlge of 14-21 for a . m mark. The odds: Toalpt•a Games Ma&noli• 7 over Men Mater Dei 10 over Pius X Frtday'a Gama Loara 11 over Estancia Anaheim 7 over HunUnatco Westminster 23 over Watem El Modena 7 over Mislion Viejo Laguna 10 over Tustin OCC 10 over ML SAC Satarda.y'a GIUD8 CdM 10 over Fountain Valley Slnlo Alla I OVOI' Newport Marina I over SA V Orqe 7 over $.a Clemente Osy JV 10 over Saddlebact Stanlord S over UCLA Sanday'a G- Raml I over Ba!Umort ., along with the Suons of Loara. Last year the Sentinels made off with a 1&-7 verdict. :n ·~ •• "' ·lU "' •• Ill Jl lc1rOo Tf.-ln """'~ Jrillll W1i.hko o ... , S~ln~r "•""'rllll•• OllW!'" ·-· "m Hkt.1 ''I:" 01111 , .... ~ ""' Ta!•ll ltUSMINO TCI ~ .. " ' ' " ' , • ' , I H• l"Att~'1Cl l"C • • • , .I •n YI YL AV• "' " '·' "' ' :.f "' n ~ ' u " • l~ • , ,. • .. , ' '"' " • 11.1 ~ ' ,_, I ' ., • ·'-• • 4 na •• • '"' TO Pd ' "' .... ' • . ... ' "' .., ~lyn1pi~ s~orehoard MEXTOO CITY -Medal standJngs in the Olympic games alter Wednes'day 's ., ccmpelitlon: ""'" Unlt.d St11Wt ltuMll H.,....rv Wtll ~..., It•! O«rNn~ A1111!'11Lt .... .._ G ... I lrlttlft ~find ·-· ·-· ....... C1'tdlolloYMlt It-""· ... , ... .M ·-11u1 ... 111 ,,.,.,...,,, Swttnrllulll Mtdco ...... !N 1Wlll Au•fTle , .... lltlllfilt l'lf'tltnd Yllllfl<vlt Tllflltlll "'"" ,, .. .. _ lretn ,_ .. -· Tt._,.n ·- .... lllVw ,...,.. Tttal JS n 2• 11 1$111'., • • ' lt l J J 17 s • s " • ' • 1• 1 • • ,, J I ' 12 4 ' ) II 4 I t 11 J ' I I • 1 1 1 • • ' J 4 I 1 ' I J 0 I t I I I 2 I J ! t I 1 a I I I • • l J • . , ,, . 1 ' ' l , • 1 J ' 1 l l J D 0 1 1 I I t I 1 O t ' 1 ' 1 , • 1 1 • t ' 1 • J ' 1 • , 1 t ' l ' t f I f I • 1 ' ' • ' 1 1 e I 1 I 400 f',...e ,, .... 4:11.) •;11.J •:11,t ·~''"' 4111,1 ., .... 41•1 .,.,_ .. .flflA 4! •. 1 •:,, .. 1, II!:.,. Mtll. UoW* tt•fet (lffw -" rtcer'I) I. 1 .. IM T__., C.IMde ..... wo ....... •s 200 Bre .. trolu , •. , ' .... 1 "·' lit.I t :•.• 2:41.0 t:a .1 ,, .... ,, .. , Wo-•s Platfonn Dlvlntr CANOEING , •.• 1'5.14 111.11 ..... .... "·" - - • ... • ... ------· ... •••••• •• '' ·r ...... ._.,.,.."' • • • .. ....,......,....._. ............ .....,. ..,.. . ._._ ..,..-~·-~ .... ....., ---..... --",.....,.... -?'~...-----~-~ 'r -~~----------. -•·-~ ••··r• •~~..--····~ Sea Kings Work on Defense Corona del Mar will be see);; .. tng to avenge a 12--0 upset to Fountain Valley tast year when the Sea Kings entertain the Barons Saturday night at Davidson Field. The loss to Fountain Valley capped a dismal 1·7-1 record in 1967. Fountain Valley ended up one notch better with a 2-7 mark. Thia time around, both clubs have won twice during the season and both lost last week in opening Irvine League ac- tion to Anaheim teams. Corona del Mar'i coach Dave Holland .was pleased with his team's offensive ef- forts in the Sea Kings' 31·20 loss to Loara, but confessed that his defense simply could not stop the Loara attack. He said, however, that Loara had something to do with that. The Saxons are the number one rated team in the AAA CIF. Holland considers the Foun- tain Valley rushing game the big threat. "They run a lot of blast blocking and double teaming on you, a lot of single wing type blocking. We'll have to stop their straight s t u f f through the line if we're to contain them," he added. • As for his anxieties about his own squad, Holland noted that his chief worry in the past had been his offense. That problem has been working out, though, with the performance of quarterback Dave Terry improving each week. Terry ls the Orange Coast area passing leader with SSl yards and a .453 percentage in five games. His top receivers have been Brian Stern and B r i a D Dethier. Doug Hilliard takes over the starting center position after Jim North suffered a shoulder separation. Vikes Shift Offensive Startingll There's no place to go but up for Marina High School's football team. The Vikes have been a · disappointment so far with an 0-S season record. Twice the Vikes lost by a point, and then the bottom fell out with three straight defeats in the rugged Sunset League. With that in mind, coach Jim Coon has made some ma· jor changes in his starting of- fensive lineup in an attempt to get the Vikes' offeQse into high gear. They play Santa Ana Valley Saturday night at Santa Ana Stadium. There are no less than seven changes in the starting 11 from last week for one reason or another. Curt Sutliss returns at center after illness. Others cracking the starting lineup are Bob Lancaster (185) at left tackle, Mark Dewhirst (175) at left guard, Mike Corcoran (180) at right guard and Steve Ohara (185) at fullback. Keith Donaldson is under the handicap of a knee injury and will go at defensive comer. And, a brothers act will take place in the backfield. Sophomore Joe Ventimiglia takes the vacancy at left halfback left by Mike Wittick's shoulder separation. His brother, Tony, a senior, ls stationed at right halfback. As for Santa Ana Valley, Coon fears the sheer speed the Falcons possess. "They've got a 9.8 sprinter and anoU:ier 10-flat guy. They beat Western which proves they are capable of playing good ball. They can really ex· plode on you." he said. DRAGGING EXTRA"BAGGAGE-Mater Dei's junior hallback, Mark Dunn, shows his wares in .last week's 28-21 Angelus League victory over Servite. Har· vey Surprenant (67) looks fur enemy in background. Dunn gained 184 yards in 20 carries last week and will be cavorting in Mooarchs' backfield tonight when !hey play hoot to Pius X at SanlJa Ana Stadium. Game liime is 8. 5 Down, 4 to Go Artists Lose Backer By ROGER CARLSON Of HM DllllJ' ,llqt Sl1ff Five down and four to go. Now the problem for Laguna Beach and its undefeated Artist football team is staying out of the upset column. The Artists have proved they are the team to beat and then some in the Crestview League. But Tustin a n d Orange are the m a j o r obstacles standing in U:ie way of an undefeated season. Tustin comes first as coach Hal Akins' eleven is set to in- vade the Tillers' field Friday night. Kickoff is set for 8 p.m. An injury popped up on the Crestview League leader's campus when Dean Shostrom was hurt in practice. A knee injury is expeeted to keep him out of the game with Tustin. Ronald McElhaney (160) takes Sbostrom' s place at defensive linebacker. Gene Molway has assumed the starting right halfback position. ·The Artists have been work· Ing on their pass defense game during practice for their encounter with Tustin. Coach Hal Akins lamented that his club had executed very poorly on pass coverage in the win against Foothill It was the first time in five tries that an opponent had passed over 100 yards on the Laguna club. Foothill picked up 1os: It completed onJy three passes all night, but each one put the Knights on the scoreboard. Tustin is known for a tremendous passing g a m e with Dave Aydelotte at the Eagles Can Beat Loara-Lowry "If you have to play one of the big ones, I'd just as soon it be number one.'' Coach John Lowry of Estan- cia is the man making that statement, figuring if his troops are going to put one good game together, they might just as well do it against the best. His club meets Loara High School Friday night a t Davidson Field. Game time is eight o'clock. "They (Loara) can be had . It's obvious how good they are but ii we can put a complete game together I'm confident that we can win," he added. Lowry considers his squad a better team than last year and they failed by a single touchdown that time against the league champion Saxons. Estancia had a touchdown called back on a pass play in the final quarter that might have tied the score up. This time around it's· a new quarterback for the Loara club. But opponents say Utat the new one (Mark Walker) is doing much the same as his predecessor (Harvey Winn). Devastating roll outs with options to pass have been the Saxons chief weapon. Says Lowry of what his eleven needs to do to gain an upset victory: "We have to keep that quarterback from g e t t i n g outside on us. "Offensively, we must get the short pass game going. We pass well enough at times, but not consistently." Estancia does not figure to burn Loara on the long pass like it did with Costa Mesa in the 20-21 loss last week . The Saxons seldom are stung by the Jong one, prefer· ring to give it up short with deep defensive backs. No injuries in the Estancia camp, but Mike Newton is a doubtful starter. He has been home with the flu. Mike Sady (>9, 150) or Lee Friedersclorf (5-9, 160) is ex· pected to replace U:ie left end. Bob Comuke has ta ken over the 1tarting role at flanker. controls and Laguna can ex- pect more of the same from the Black and White. Laguna's Big Three - quarterback Steve Wiezbowski, halfback J i m Kuhn and fullback Brian Bagley r are set to go under full steam. Between the three, they have accounted for nearly .all of Artists' yardage and scor- ing. Diablo QB May Miss Tilt Friday Still reeling from the tem- porary loss of their number one quarterback, Mission Vie· jo High School's Diablos will attempt to get back on the win column Friday night when they play host to El Modena in a Crestview League football test. The Diablos were without their top quarterback, Jerry Gloster, last week and fell apart, trailing Orange by 28 at the half. They pulled together ln the second half defensively, but couldn't make a dent in the 28- point deficit. Gloster suffered a slight concussion in the Foothill game a week prior and it's hoped he'll be ready for the El Modena fracas. If not, however, Ed Gray will take over the controls. The rest of the backfield re- mains intact. with R i c k Boehmer, Don Wilson and 1Uck Chaves doing the ma- jority of the ball carryinJl. Coach Ray Dodge noted that his forces would be unable to key on any one particular phase of the El Modena at· tack. - "They've a balanced attack, good paging and running with some fine receivers," noted Dodge. Rams Perfect Squib Kick LOS ANGELES -George Allen, the Los Angeles Ram coach who is tnown for his in- novations, ill having his club p¢ect another weapon to Cl¥Jfound his National Football Leatue opponenta. •U.'1 known as the squib kick· off and it ls becoming more and more important in Ram plans. Bruce Gos.wtt, Its Jble practitioner, disclosed I t 1 origin and technique, •• the RaJN prepared to invade Baltimore for their alJ.tm. portanl ballie with the COlll Sueday oftemooo. "We bied II fa< Iba fin! Ume oplnsl Chlcaao lut season, Coach Allen wanted sofnething to stop those kick· off nmbacks by Gale Sayers and he thought of the ,quib. !t worked. I kicked three and the best Sayers did was one lG- yard return. "We didn't try It any more, but t.hls year we started dur· ing the preseason games and are using it pretty regularly now. Every kick-off a 1 a J n 11 t Green Bay WIS • squib. We didn't want Travis Williams to get another l~yard rQDback againrt UI as he did iii 1967. The best he did this time WU 11 yard!." Then Gossett erplained the technique of squib kicking. "I set up the ball the same way u tor a normal kick-off. AA I start my approach I look at the guy Who is keyed on me. "Whicliever s:lde he veers to , I kick to the other side. My toe hlts th~ ball a bit higher than normal and to one side, giving II a spin. I try to kick II about to the 15 or 20-yard line on a low line drive, having Jt hit the ground first In lroul of the wedge. If I'm lucky, It'll start to bounce and it may take aome crazy bouDcts." 11iat'1 what happened against Atlanta at t h e Coliseum last Sunday as t h e Rama won, 27-lt. Gossett's squib kick-offs bad th e Falcons visibly upset as the ball skittered among them and once bounced completely over the head of the receiver. That ls Its greatest value, said Gossett. "It'• retdll tough to field, especially If It cornea to a lineman who r. not used to bandling the ball. He may tense up and fumble lt altogether. He's afraid to pick It up, bot he bates to let it go past. It nearly al w • y 1 present. a tone nmback." • Thursday, Octobtr 24, 1968 Monarchs I-lope to Even Record Against Pius X If Mai<r Del High School can wln its second Angelus League test tonight over Plus X it wlQ complete a flip-flop for the Monarcba:. Mlter Del opened up the aea.son wltti three straight losses, but has won its: last two outings and ls favored to do the same again tonight . JOckoff is set for a p.m. at Santa Ana Sladium. Key to the Monarchs' com~ back traU has been the of- fensive m!gbNn the backfield. A new quarterback has ig- nited it and balfbacb Tom Gehris and Mark Dunn, along with Ron Gardea, have taken the cue. Sophomore Bob Haupert started it off with bis spec- tacular p<'Jformanee against Long Beach Wilson in the Monarchs' first win of the ·year (32-25). Last week's 28-%1 decision over Servile was gained mosUy on U:ie ground, because of the losers' porous defemive line. So Haupert'• ann wasn't us- ed that much. Instead, Mari: Dunn came into his own with some fine running, gaining 184 yards in 20 carries. Haupert threw only three times. Coach Bob Woods expressed his pleasure with his four backs. "We're really balan- cing our attack out," he said. Woods refuses to take Pius X llgbUy. despite a rather Injuries Plague Pioneers Western High coach Nick Uglesieh isn't so much con- <'el'lled about beat l n g Westminster Friday night as be is 5e1ding a team. The Pioneers are hurting. "We have three starters out with injuries now and eight other players who W1>n't play a g a I nst Westminster," Uglesich reports. "We haven't ·been at full strength all year and I doubt if we ever will. It's just one of lhosefyears, I guess." Uglesich is properly im- pressed with what he's seen of Westminster in the films. "They've got big backs and big linemen. And that strong running game of theirs can really wear you down." Western, 14, goes into the game on the heels of a 20-0 loss to. Newport last week. Westminster has m o r e momentum, having clobbered Santa Ana Valley, SIMI. The Lions are i-1 and the C!F's No. 3 team. Western was cheered somewhat this . week with the return of flanker Ralph Ringo, a 175-pound flanker who's been out for two games. Quarterback Bob Miller now has two prime recei vers to throw at, Ringo and. BUI Leisy. • Dilcontinuad Designs • Odds S. Ends • New Car Chtngtovers • IJlld Tns • Whlttwlls S. Blldtwllls • Tubelm or Tuft.type ·····- d~mal 1-3-1 record. ''"!'bey run bot .illd cold: We silll have to improve out ~ss defense. l'qt really concei:ned with it. And they've got 'two quarterbacks wlfo can pass welf," be aald. The aerial defense gave up 237 yards to Servlte ,l45t w_ee.1' after. allowing 73 yards per game in ita first four outio'gs. Tickets on Sale Orange Coast area fight'fa~ can now purch!$e tictets. for Olympic Auditorium bouts at Bill Martini's cocktail ]<JIUlge, 130 East.17th St., <;ostti.M~. ONLY 8 IN STOCKI ONLY 18 IN STOCKI ANY SID ~~D TIRI SI• nJ 11 1J bwu ......... 11-. m • 14. TVM•• 11..atw•ll. llfdt "'fl • Wlllt. Wfl, TfttftM • Fllt Forot Tr1ctlan AW Nylon +Ph• Fib Ford,, Twlllt T'YM. Cll ..... , Ph•. s29ts '519'5 s900 -!It 1121 ••· TN , .. II,.., ''• U,1, ""· l•d .. T••· La'" ~tdiofl Ne T ... I" NMftd Ne T .... 11 NMdetl Ne TN• 111 NH4ff ONLY 21 LEFTI ONLY 37 LEFT! "'m"" Oodn9r 11119 Str-.. 611 • 11 l'ulllleM ll1dl Clllltllfl ,_ A1sor1ec1 s11.n. ns • 14 N•w Ccr Chant ... O.en ·-· s39ts llldl·wt1lll 1 Wllttf W•llt. sfj9s Ml,,., 11-"' llodl to tit lukk.._. , ....... -P1ymourl11. +· U.19 ,._,, l•cllf ffX, ""• 11.n "" r .... . Ne TNM h1 NH4ed Ne T .... 111 N...tff NeT,_. I" N~ ONLY 38 LEFT IN STOCK VOLKSWAGEN TIRES ,_ cl>llllen "'""'· Wllllw-W11tt. ... • If. lllCll T'*"lll1. (WtMft ... $11• W • 1._Flts Ford<CllsY-Ptrm. "91'CUltrt"", ON[Y 153 LEFTI OIKOn!lllUltd C-lructlon s34to s21's M•ftJ ll-,,... a IMI. lh4 Itri-• Wtlll1 11rl-. Jo-S!rlpl Wlllttl. All ill'ked fW ~-'° "'" It. .. 1"111. Tiii ''"' H.Q l'MI 11c1 ... Ply NYlonl • "°'Yftlln • lt•l'Ofll, Ne Tntde 11 N..nd N1 T,_. I• N .... Ne , .... 11 NIM4td BUY NOW SAVE-EASY TERMS-FREE MOUNTIN.GI SERVING ALL: SOUTHERN · "CALI FORNI~ YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. YOUNG & LANE TIRE . CO. THEODORE ROBINS FORD • ' 1596 NEWPORT Phone 541-9313 412 OCEAN AVI. Phono 494-U66 2060 HAUOR ILVD. Phono642.0010 , COSTA .. MES ' I ' ~ , ·~ COSTA MES' \' • ..:. __ ..._ --....... ~--____ .....:..--._ ------.... --.. ------------· -.. ----•• -a a a --•• 0 et. ft ••• -· = = -n ---··••1=-=·· • - :ti DAil Y P!l.DT Van Calls Huntington Tough Foe Clan v--· t11e celebraled Anaheim H l g b School football eo1ch. II never one to nm down an opposing team and he'• up to hls <1ld tricb with hla f.. tbls ..-. Hunlin(too Beldl. Van ts maldog the Oilen out lo be the Q,... Bay Packers. "Huntington ts awfully toogh -it's unbelievable what bad luck they've had. Why, -they've play«! two of the beot team.t in the county -Westminster and Santa Anl -to • atandstill and lost both of 1JJooe games In the final minutes." "I think Kemy (Oller coich Ken Moats) lw an awfully good football team." Referring back to Hun- Ungton's 26-20 loss to We.st.mmner, • team the Colonisb lost to by a 14-2 score, Van said: "Heck, they scored 20 points against that outfit . and we were lucky to ICOA: two." Van recalls another year when Anaheim stumbled against the Oil City eleven. 'lbe year WU ltsa. but let Van tell it: "We went down there nlne feel tall and Huntington beat ua. So that meant we bad to beat Santa Ana the following week lo win Ibo league clwn- plolllblp and that'• what '"' did. .. But rm convinced to thll d.ly that we wouldn't have McLaren Cars Eye Repeat at Riverside W«ld champion Den 11 Hulme and defeadlng clwn- plon Brilce McLaren atf the men to catch u q1.1allfJini opens Friday for Ibo 1101,Dl Timm Grand Prix Sunday (Oct. 17) 1t Riverside lnteroa· Uonal Raceway. The 200-mlle claaalc ts the fi.ftb and nert·to-lut race in the P,000 Canadian~ ~American Clallen.ge C u p eries for Group 7 sports rac-- ing cars. Prep Polo Results '" ""'"' '• I I 1-" Y1tleY -• M9t1111: 1"1rhurli:r111 S. D....,_ i, ICln 11, W•I J. Wnlml11tlll' Vl "jltf 1 1 ,_. W111'1rn 1 I 1 6-3 WnlmlM!tr: IC1n 011..,. S. Jim M1llllOlll '! Chrh Cl!lr1 I, 1«r WHIMl'Y • MVll. • I ,_, Weslffll > O 1 , -S Wl!Slmln1tw: D~Lh.. 1, ltrt!Ml 1, ICtnwortlrf 1. ' Hulme ts tbe GaJ>.Am leade< with M polnll, f<>llow<d by Mark Donohue with 17 and McLaren with U. displacement in the McLaten- Chevy powerplanb which so far hive proved S\> successful in the Can-Am series. Also stepping up to a 427 ls M-bacher, the Gmnan- born mechanlc from Beverly Hills. Nut LI John C&Mon, w.!nner ol the Mootorey Grand Prix, wllb nine, JUI! ahead ol Jim Hall and Lothar Motacben- bacher with dpt apiece. 1;;;;=======;; Donohue, who alr<Jdy haa clinched the U.S. Road Racing and Trans.American Sedan championslllps th1s yur, ·js hlddina: to become the first Amerlc:.an lo win the Can-Am tiUe. ED1laDd'a John Su.rtees won the flrst aeries In t~. while the New Zealand team of McLaren and Hulme went one-- two laat year. Leading the American ch al le n ge, a1ong with Donohue, will be M a r i o Andrew and Dan Gurney, both of whose cara will be equipped with new 427 cubic· lncb Ford engines f r o m Hdlman and Moody. These engines match the WATCH FOR Weslcliff Plaza SOON save$2~~ REAL ~IPPIN'WUIMY ~ beaten Santa Ana If It hadil't -------------------------------------'" Wnlm!l'llllr 1 1 t 1-4 IN J'2 OAUON~ been fe< Hunlln&ton beating us. The Oilers put our feet back on tbe ground.• The Anahelm coach sees the OUen u a unique ouUit, not cut from the mold of previOW1 HuntLncton teams. ""lh.ls ls a relatively small lfunttngton team but they're quicbr and more aggressive tllan they've been In the put." Informed that HWlllnglon'I ~ wingback, Car I ~ersen, ls out of the game With cracked ribs, Van atUJ couldn't make hllmelf feel any better. '"Well, they'll put in one of tl!ose quick llfO.pounden and ~~I~~ even tougher for us to ~e calll HB quarterback ~y Bonwell "the most d'118UOUI quarterback we've played. He doesn't throw bet· ter than some but he's a much better runner, especially on tbe booUeg." Play to End ForGridders Newport-M ... Boys football wraps up the regu]ar .ea.son Satunlay at Costa Mesa l!lgh when the two undefeated midget teams, the Corsairs and Caballos will attempt to cap a perfect regular season. Win or lost. both are headed ror the Orange County finals the following week. Their games Saturday follow the Commmc:hes and Coronas at Mesa Hlgh. Stiff Test For Tritons In Orange After winning their first game of the seaaoa lut week, coach Tom Eads' S a n Clemente Triton! are schedul- ed to come down ou t of the clouds and travel ta Mission Viejo Saturday night for a showdown with Orange High in a Crestview League game. Game time is 8 and site of the game la still aet for the Orange Unilied D I a t r I ct Stadlwn on the campus of El Modena High. U it goes off as scheduled , It wm be the night inauguration of the stadium after several delays with lighting problem.s. San Clemente, with eight aenlor1 on the squad, ex· perienced lb: fITTt wln of the year last week with a 7-6 declsion over Villa Park. Key to the last-ditch drive wu quarterback, M a r k Heumann. He passed for a 30- yard galn to Rick Gedde.s and later ·carried over t h e touchdown himself on a keeper play. Eads &aYI his team Is jelling with the offensive punch that has been lacking ao far this year coming into ill own. San Clemente, however, ls In dtep water agAln. Los Alamitos Entries .... ""'~'· Oct. 24 l"•I T""°' 1 I" .M. 1,,. Dr1cl' IUOO. ff_.I Lidy {J 1C1~ll) JMfu·~ ti R Allllrl "' lM Ml Prot.lo IT LIPtllm) Nnl Mtf>le 11 MetSU<11l Gold 81r Pef* IJ lllCfl•rdll PIUT •ACll-aO Y•nh. t YM• Did ..... ._. (lllmlnt. l"vtM 11700, Clltmlnt ••k9 UXlll. 117 C"" Chu ad> 1 cw Slr1u10 "' •M '" '" •M Ll'I "°"MY llr (I H 1"19S! Ul'ld9 EdNr lold lontto II D Mon'llJ TJI ..... ~ .... 11 Wlhon) lobbY Da Lu• (D C1rda11l Dr. Mlll.r fl WrlfloO MIH MoOl1ll tu~ IT LiP!11m) W•ldi lto l'o<ly (J ll1Ch1rd1l C.1'111 Cllv Cllu (W Sl•1uM) Mt. S-.. llu" (II Ad1lrl A ... •111111 .. IN. 111 ll1r fl 0 MorTl1) n.. 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IW Strwul "' '" "' "' ·~ '" "' "' "' ,,. "' ,,. MtMTM It.I.Cl -«tO l'lntl. > w1r _.,. t llCI 11P !ft 0..-A Mlrwl. P11rM '" '" "' 1·11 "' ,,. '" ""'· Moel ... l*"" IH Ht•-) euottwt trowfl CJ Wttwil Jtldllw (J Wlhloll) l'IWltrlllllil v-co iliWl'lt) &elnflMll'l'I lllt.r fl H (.....,, "' "' "' "' "' ~ ~ (C lmllfll 111 ftlf Tl'tCt; If ColllMI 120 114 Tiit ,.,,,,,, IJ...,_ ('I I 11\rW.lf'Yl H' 111 Sftml T-CH ,_1 111 lff • ClllW'I AW! ti lltld'Wt"tl 111 "' ....... _. .. l• .... fl • '"'*""' TN ... Mall (t H CroMwl .. °""' (D C...._.,I I "' "' "' -________ .. ~ -- WHl11'n l 0 > 2-·1 W!llmln11H: Htldlf'I' 2. lord 2. Olympic Roundup Cooke Ends Y11'11tf E1!111C1I J 1 1 2 -I Sorior1 o 2 1 1-l Esl1nc:lt: Ont A.,.,.h:>ttl !, 0•,,_ tleGt•IM 5, Ill" l"nilllPll 1. Czech Gymnast Opposition To Racing '" E1ta..cl1 1 1 2 > -t $DnOrl 1 0 0 0-0 E111nc11: '-u!lder1 1, Weblter l, FOiler 2. Wtllll' 3, Hlltlftn. Es11ncl1 ,'"1 6 1-1• Blasts Russinns Sol'lor1 D I I :I.-3 EJt•ncl" J. AYOl!loth: 6. ICl'lll'•C. 2, lul11 J. IC.r\lft 1. Littell :t. Y1r.lff LIVU"' ll11cll ] J l ._11 MEXICO CITY -Vera Caslavska of Czechoslovakia, the repeating all·around champion, today hinted the Russian invasion cost her country the Olympic team ti- tle. And s h e announced her reUrement from w o m e n ' 1 gymnas.itcs to get married and raise a family. After the beauteous, 2S.year- old blonde Czech won her se- cond all-events gold medal Wednesday night and Russia shaded Czechoslovak.la for the team tiile, 382.85 to 382.20, Miss Caslavska quietly related how "our nerves suffered" from the Russian invasion in la\e August. "Circumstances make It Im· possible for o u r Olympic athletes to t r a i n for twD weeks," said the poised Vera, who still will battle malnly Rus.!ila.Q opposition for four in· dividual titles Friday night. ''We were not psychologically ready for the Olympics generally and, of course, our nerves suffered from it (the invasion)." In a sporting gesture, Vera a~pted the congratulatory handshakes offered from two Russian runners-up in the all· around competition during the medal awarding ceremony. The youthful U.S. team scored a moral victory by ad· vancing two girls to the six- women final of the balance beam Friday night. Cracking a 20 -yea r American famine by either men or women in any gym· nasties final were 15-year-old Cathy Rigby of Los Alamitos, Calif., and Linda Metheny of Tuscola. Ill., at 2l the oldest U.S. feminine contender. The two girls paced the United States to a sixth-place finish in the team standings with 389.80. .,, .,, .,, Charles Hlcltoox of Phoenix, Ariz., winner of the 400 indivl· dua1 medley, believes there Is a theory behind the great med· al success of the U.S. team. The 6-foot-3, 175--pounder aaid, "We train a lot harder and have more major meets. We are a l.itUe more used lo the pressure." H!ckcor said he does plan to be in competitive swimming In four years when the next Olympic Games are held. "I don 't think I'll be there." he said. "But rm sure Gary (Hall) will be there and will be t.he toughest in the world." .,, .,, .,, INGLEWOOD, Calil. (AP) -Jack Kent Cooke withdrew El Oorldo 1 1 O 1-• L•111Jn1 : Jim C•uwr t. Tam Holm J, lob GardrlH 5. his opposition to night harness '" racing at Hollywood Park L11un1 llHch s ' ' El D<11'1do 1 1 0 1 -3 Wednesday after signing of an L1ullfl1: W•r-J, s1aw1o1r.~ *· lrilletd agreement dealing with park· a, or1ow1k1 1, Brown 1, c. ••• . Pretty Lesley Bush, who ing for lhe race track and hi8 L•uun• 1e1ch )" i , blew her Olympic platform Forum. El 0or100 2 ' ' 2-1• d• • LlfUM; Gull9dll.e, l..t A. Win 4 ICldG 1vrng crown by flubbing a Under the pact, Hollywood t, t.1cc11"'h1 111. Mn.•rter 1. dive IO-year.olds make every Park agreed to open its park··-'--"'-~----~~==== day, said today. "It was just ing Jot tc. Forum customers one of those crazy things." and Western Harness Racing "I ~on't know how, in the agreed to seek earlier racing world 1t happened -Its never dates in an effort to avoid con- happened to me before, not flict with the basketball and even in practice," added the . hockey sea!JOns. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY! pe~t. 2~-year..old Ind I a~ a Cooke, Jn turn, acknowledg· University coed from Pr1n· ed his backing of 8 lawsuit ce.~n, N.J. . aimed at halting night harness My legs seemed to get stiff racing and agreed to its on the board and. I stuck. withdrawal . When I went up, I crimped my Cooke said itudies by his knees and couldn't straighten traffic consultants and the Ci· them out. It ~as terrible." . ty of Inglewood convinced him The Olympic platform div. "my earlier fears that' con· Ing queen hit the pool with a current evenb at Hollywood heavy splash and water went Park and the Forum would ~verywhere. The shock~ d result in serious traffic pro. 1udges scored her 3.8 Jn a dive blems are unfounded." she normally makes In 9.5. Meanwhile Hollywood Park The mishap .. eliminated her and Wesl~rn Harness pro- fr?ITI compelit10~. . mised to take legal action It was n:iY first dive. and against an injunction barring one of the s1mp~c~ -'!,'th a harness racing at the track at 2.~ d~fee of d1ff1culty, ~he least until Dec. 24. Superior wd. It was a f~rward dive Court Judge William H. Lovit Jayou~, a swan. ~~ve. Almost granted the preliminary any kid can do 1t. junction Monday. Around Area Gree ns Clair, Smith Win Walter Glair and Bob Smith teamed up to win the better ball of partners event In men's club action last Wednesday with a 61 at Irvine Coast Country Club. Smith·s other male, Jay Gould, teamed up for second with a 65. Saturday's edition' of the same event was won by Dr . Maurice Rice and Or. Bill Cowan with thelr 86. Second went to Ed RlddJe and Charles Andres with 67, A mi.led better ball of partner! event wu tied for _ first with Pat ind VI Oliver sharing honors with Paul and t.iargaret Rife. They scored Sl!. November 2 Is the semifinal matchplay date for the men·a club championship with the following da,y, Sunday, scheduled for the cham· pionships. Sant a Ana Bill and Arlene Macauley defeated Harry and AM Ward In the thlrd annual Guys and Dolls championships with a <>ne-up victory on the l!tth hole Sunday. The Pinehurst consolation round w a.s won by Bud and Phyllis Talmage with a SI . Rancho S.J Bill PaioletU scored a 66 to take low net honors bi Ilien·S club action on Sunday with Bill Alll!on, Norbert Meyers and Herb Martin second at 68. Norm Pallcki finished thin! with 1 69. Qual i fying for the Pre5ident'1 Cup tourney 1tarta Nov. 2. CLOSE OUT DISCONTINUED TIRES • REG. 15.00 650• 1 l TUBELESS BLACK SIZES REGULAR SALE 775-14-775-15 17.00 10.88 825-14-815 -15 18.00 12.88 855-14-845 -15 19.00 14.88 PLUS F.E. TAX OF 1.57 to 2.S6 ANO OLD TIRE WHITEWAUS ONLY 3.00 MORE EACH 4-PLY NYLON REPLACEMEN T TIRES ANY SIZE, ONE LOW PRICE 15.99 900-15 845-15 m-15 855-14 n5-14 115·15 115-15 735-15 125-U 650-1 3 PLUS F.E. TAX OF 1.81 to 2.11 AND OLD Tll\li, WHITEWALLS ONL'I' J.00 MORE EACH NO MONEY DOWN, USE YOUR BROADWAY CHARGE CARD INSTALLED WHILE YOU WAIT OR SHOP AT NO EXTRA COST ~ROAD-WAY Her e's Haig Pro-run Re sults TIRE C!NT'ER OPEN DAILY AT 1130 A.M.-4vening1 until 9:30 p.m. Monday thrv Friday, Soturdayi until 6 p.m, Set the dlrtctry for yow toll.fr .. nuinber of The Broadway n1arut you • ANAHEIM 444 N . f.111114 e 111·1111 Mo11 . fftt11 Sat. 10 '·"'• .. t iJO I'·"'• • HUNTINGTON BEACH 1111 ldi11911 AY1. e lt2·lJJI M111. thru Sat. 10 a.111. lo t il O ,.111. • • ., ..... ..,.,."""l"l'"'"'"'"'.,""~"""'"1111111"'''"""'"'"•""'-ll"!!'!'"l!"l'""~;..,,....,•,ro'<"••·'-·""""11""'""'~'"""""""'""''"' .. .,...,""1,c-'--c;o. ... """"""'"'""'.,...,,.,.,, • .,. .......... -u,r"°"t'"··-,~---·•-··-~·-··-··--··---. .. -.··-,.---·-------~-~ Thursday, O<:tobff 24, 1968 DAILY PILOT 25 Meet Prep Gridders Casper Says 27 4 Will Win Haig 1 KRN .. lEICI' C:tf-HI Mat •1<:11 111111 GARY ROCNEU:AU Fovn!1li. V1.Utr Llnem1• ao• ASCHER M1rl111 L1ntm1a aoa Ll!AVV NIWPOrt Llntm•n • LARRY MIU. H.illlfttl'Oll Lll'IMllll Mlltr Del Llllltmn TONY CAll!V Siii ClrmMlll LI-In Lo s Alan1itos Results w.cineu11v. Oc•-2J, 1'« Clur & "'" J°ll~T IACE. lSO verd•. 3 Y~at e>lds & u<> In Gtlde A Mlnvs bt"'° In Calli Purse SJllOO. McCov'• llabe ILiPkaml 1.80 J.llO l .00 ~aw~h llonl!o !Adalrl S.00 •.10 llro Brummel (MeRevno4d1) •-•O T!me-18 •110 A!MI Ran-P1ril~r BY,. Toni Ann. Mr. E••'"'" ll<>Y, S111r ll1r Tom, Mln- nte Mat. ll11dl Court. No 1cr1tcl>e$. SECOND RACE . .IOI) van:!•. l w11r ~d• & "P In Gr•de A P1u1. Purse ~l~. Busher rw11s.on) ~l.10 :fl 00 10.!'0 011 Prlnce.s (Ad~ln 7.00 • . .io Trucklln Gel !Llllh•ml S.00 Tlme-10 1110. .llsa R.,, -Ftllcl!v. RHlm Pl11v. Pool.., Rocio;~. LudlN Star~t. Liilie Obie. Dutter Bar llov, Lino Ml1t sc..,,1~-0o w11e11. Hstt.er M..,.v, Miu Moon Prln!, SIOP TM Music. OAILV OOUl~M<C0"1"•1 11~ I 1.a1v au111.,-. P11t1 t2'1.M. THIRD IACE~1rd1 ' y"r old mll!d.-.1. Cla!ml11a. Punt 11100. F1ncv Wiiiow (MCRNnold•l Sun Gllm! (Parllll) L~•P Patr 4Co411Ml 11.IO 6.olO 1.0 10.70 6 olO '~ r;..,.._70 9110 • AllO R•n _ Moon1'11ne llar, .larn • .# llld TCflv's SPf'!'dt>llL Ludo;Y Supreme. Sur~ 'N 11~arr1, W1!cll Me T,..ve!. Connie'• V1nl!Y. Scritchfd--Nffnf!'e'• Ladv, Old $1\u~, llC!blw ~ LUXf, Or. Mll~r. FOUATH .... ~ r1r<k. 3 Y••• llld! & ua tn Cir""' A Ml"1/I. Purse ""' I'&•! 0."" (llrL,,i,lev) 6.00 l.olQ JOO Thanlt1 Doc rOrHe•I •.oo l IO T"'!ld• llta• TllO cc1mo11\ J 60 T,....-11 S 10 , Alw Rfn-VllKl'vs Roan. M1r!ln • o~~. Y-11 LvlP. JIY M 8.tr • Clld'I 0Kk, MIH ECMellt. No licratcl'le'I. "IFTM IACE. l!oll v1rd1 ! Yur flldt & UI> c111m1 ... PU•~ SlllOO. S.llar't Cfl•l""l't 1M1twd1! 1.40 •.1111 l .O tuma!1w tSm/1111 soa 1oa Cod!Y Kid (Mclffll!llCll) ... Time-II. .li3o Rin-CIM !>Kt.. Llaklni"' llO!lt, Merli II Now No 11:r1ld'IH. StXTM RACE."° Ylllll. ' Yfl• elds c111m1111 1'ur1e SltDO. Led• 11-~t f!tmlthl 1.10 1.&o l .llO Oonlutn 8onllt~ (!lrtnltlnl t .&Q 6 IO Oobllr M,,..goen tStra1111l 3.60 Tl..,.._..,, !/10. Ai.o RIA-Go F'11$Slt Go. Wot Gulllv, Double Bree!<". King <JI Te". SwN! Cll1rlot, Wiid Rel>I!!. Scrt1Chl!d-.lmbfr DeP!h, Miss W8m· PUm. Altbl Ila. Big Sw!nge,, Ml Pro- lelo. SEVENTH RACE . .ilO ~•rd•. 3 ve1t Old• & 11a In Gra<ff AA Plu1. Pune 11100. Noor1ell1 (Brlnkl~vl Tiit-Churl fMarrl•! Tlett Roelle/ !P CtOSbvl Tlme-10 5110. '·IO •.llO 2 . ..C • ,jQ 2.'ll >.• Al.o Rtn-At11"t1 Jel. !lob 8trdoeo!, OlrKI SPol. No scr11Chff. I IOMTH RACI.. «ID v1rd1. J veer old1 & up In Gr1de M Ml11111. Puri.e ..... FIYlng Co• fFklUi!t<»l A119lf"'s Re<1ut1! ISh1>el P•!leo II•• Time tCo411"•1 t 1...-:xi !110 1960t60 •IO II JO 6.0Q '·" A!10 1111>-WUlow Gold. Mlrt"1 M1rlt. Litt A Rocio;e!. 2tt'1 P1rr. RWll Riol, No sc ... ti:t>es. Nll<tTH I ACE. 5<19 v1roh l Yt'8• o4d• & UP. A11-ncl!S. Pur~ $1600 F01<Y Ner-tc {Lll>h•ml 6.00 l .IO •.M llob'I A•stu1 (IC1nl•I 7.IO '·"° Lurtv V..,lure CH Cr11$bvl 1.70 T!me-11 J/ID. .llto A1n-Sclf<1 Ded<t , AO¥ J1rw. Re<iue.t J1ne, c11,rop1 Hl'fro, Mr . L-~. llr1st L111<1. Na sc ... tdlet. Jayvee Grid Summaries c,,.1.-oo•i>-1 E1t1ncl1 0 0 1J 9-2J TGllChdow!ll {El !lob Kiiter, !Curt Tl>orlll1, Mille $1\11111h""'1v P.lT1 (E! Mllt.t SfllUthl"IKIY 121 °Crl l9 No- mur1, S..tety (El c ... 1. M•.,. <1111.,. toerbfd< !Killed In fNI 1- Fount1111 Vllle'I' O I 6 1~'7 Ml,......la 0006-1 '°<111nl1ln V1llf:I< Tou<:...,.._; loll l'revlelta 121, l1vmorid, H1'11ln. l'AT-....ttdffflln S..nla ,..., V1ltn-11 I I 1-21 Wntm!n1!er-I 0 I 0-1 Prep Kicks 120 PA Ts ATLANTA. Ga. -Kim Braswell. a 17·year-old. f~ ball plaver al Avondale High School. 'kic~s extrB points one after lhe other. he has kicked 120 conseuctive extra points. ED f:AMPBELL MIDIWI Viii• Un1m1n - Wntmln111r Ll1111T11n l West Hurt; LA Drops Third Tilt DETROIT (AP) -The Detroit Pistons, plagued wilh talk of unhappiness toward Coach Dennis Butcher before the game, roared back in the second half Wednesday night to beat the Los Angeles Lakers 117·110. It wa.!! the Piston's first vie· tory in four National Basket· ball Association starts and matches the record of the La kers, picked unanimously to run away with honors in the Western Division th is season. Dave Bing, the league's lea ding scorer, rined in 18 of his 39 points in the third period as the Pistons struck from a 59-55 halftime deficit to stay in (ront for keeps. Early in the final period with Detroit leading by only two points, rookie center Otto Moore nipped in a pair of baskets to spark a Detroit surge that shot the Pistons ahead by 10 points and they never were seriously threaten· ed the rest of the way. The Lakers played most of the second half without their all-etar guard Jerry WC3l who suffered a recurrence of a groin 1nJury in the third quarter after scoring 19 points during the first two quarten. Elgin Baylor had 31 points and Will Chamberlain h11d 29 poin&.11 plua: 21 rt:bounds for the Lakers. F.ddie Mil es, who started hit first game In his six·yesr pro- fessional career u a forward, nipped i.n u points r o r lhfl By EARL GUSTKEY Of ""' o.ur Piiot "•tt Billy Casper, cur re n l I y goll's most successful swing- er, said Wednesday that a %74 score wW win the Haig National Open golf tournament this week at Mesa Verde Country Club. "l think a 274 score should win the tournament," Caspe.r said, moments after finishing bis pro.am round with a 69. He posted I 68 in a Tuesday warmup round. ''Don't ask me who's going to win it, though," he added. Asked what type of golfer Mesa Verde's rolling layout will favor, he tabbed the con- trol hitters. "It 'll take a guy who can keep the ball in the fairway to hit it. It's a tough course, the fairways are fairly narrow." The game's leading money winner said the course is in good shape. "If the grass was just a bit shorter on the fairways it'd be a super course. The first, third and twelfth greens are a little bumpy, but outside of that it's a good course." Casper's only real concern are the effects of smog, an ail· ment that disturbs most of the pros who play in tournaments close to the Los Angeles haze. "It makes your eyes water and affects your breathing. I TOP MONEY WINNER Billy Casper hope it eases up." He was ;isked which hole is Mesa Verde's most deman· ding. "Well, a lot of people told n1e the 13th wa s, but I haven 't found it so (he's parred it twice). I'd say two three-pars · are the toughest, seven and 18. "That 18th is a tough one. You ge t that wind in your face and there's \Valer there. If you come to that tee needing a three to win the tournament it could get pretty scary. "For the 13th, l need a driver, th re e·wood and a wedge." This is a very special tournament for Billy Casper, a resident of Bonita, Cal.if. A win here would give him $201,446 in earnings Otis year, the first pro to ever top $200,000 on the pro tour. Billy's earnings have climb- ed as quickly as his waistline has shrunk. Going back four years his earnings have risen at the following rate; $90,653, 199,931, 1121,944 and 1129,123 last year. He says he's playing the best golf of his We right..now,_ "I didn 't play well in Great Britain and I was mediocre at Oklahoma City. But I had a great back nine at the CBS tournament in Akron a month ago and I've been playing my best golf ever since." Asked to name which of the young pros would be reet1gniz. eel as the game's greatest two or three players 10 years from now. be ratUed orf Bob Murphy, Ron Cerrudo and Bob Lund. "But it takes a lot of hard work and dedicatioo to make it to tbe top. And when you get a little prosperous, you have a difficult time keeping your edge." How does Casper, the wealthiest of them all, do it? "Well, I try to get as mucti rest as I can between tournaments. If I don't, 1 get mentally fatigued." Better Officiating Needed MEXICO CITY -Coach llank Iba of the U.S. Olympic basketball team said Wed· nesday he thinks improvement is still needed in international officiating. "Officiating has improved ~nee Tokyo," the veteran Oklahoma State coach whose team defeated Brazil, 75-63. Tuesday night to gai n the final round, said . "But there is still need for more consistency. "It is wrong when a man can bump another man and send him all the way across the floor. There is no con· sistency in the lhree·second rule and too often the dribbler is allowed to take an extra step. "But we must remember these officials come from all parts of the world. In our own counlry, there are differences in the various sections." One of the U.S. players, Spencer Haywood of Detroit, was sent spinning by a burly Brazilian. Haywood left the game b u t was not seriously hurt. Iba was asked if the several Negro pla yers on his squad might emulate the black power display which got U.S. sprinters Tomm ie Smith and John Carlos expelled from the American team . "The Negroes on our team are outstanding people," he replied. "No, I don 't think they will foUow those examples." Iba, hoarse and suffering from a cold, seemed to become miffed when a Euro- pean reporter asked him what sort of financial reward would be given his players if they won the gold medal. They play Yugoslavia in the final game on Friday. "We are amateurs and all they will get is the gold medal;" he said. Then he added quickly: ' . "Lf they win it." PRICE BREAK!!! PHONE 540-4343 646-4421 $9.95 WHEEL e TIRE MOUNTING ALIGNMENT e BRAKE TIRE ROTATION ADJUSTMENT EVERY 5,000 MIL ES With Any Tlru PMrchewcl HE:l~~T~~TY BRAKES ltl¥ETED & RELINl!D 1¥ FACTORY EXPERTS $1 l 9!10Mrcn• SfT Of • THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY-MONDAY ON PREMIUM 4 PLY POLYESTER SILVERTOWN 770 OR ORIGINAL E9UIPMENT 660 AND 4 PLY LONG MILER NYLON JONES TIRE SERVICE 2049 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA tjiitl&Qr NEW LONG MILER SIZES --colll> 11.1. w1i1,.wo11 , ...... • 12.95 14.95 IXCH. IXCH. IXCHANGI ILACKWALL WHITEWALL ADD SZ.00 7.75-15 7.75-14 13.95 15.95 EXCH. IXCH, FALCD'f-IUICK l'ORD CMEVIOLl"T MERCUIY CDRVnTI" 8./5-15 8.25-14 14.95 16.95 IXCH. EXCH. CAMAID-MUJTAH DOD Gia ""'ALA.He llVll!RA-i-ONTIAC VW • VOLVO 855-/4 845-/5 16.95 18.95 llCH. 1xc11. -GU.l"AHT•E. everi new 1. "· Goocro"ld'I P11i,enoer car 11r• nat br"1nded "uc- ond" II au•r•nfffd for Ille Hit al ttlt «lelnll !rt.cl, ,..._rd!nt (If •w ar mile"", 1g•I""! dl!fecl1 In !nllltrlll Ind --m1n1hl1, •nd !11 ncwm11 "°"" commerellt 1>1uimaer Cir 1ervlct , l'ltllMI lllhtl'IS c1111Hd by l"Ofd l'lerard1 ~not !ncllldlna ~1111t1bte puntT11rt1). If wdl tire 11111 llndtr this -•lnl" 11\d Is "" dtlf\IOH beyond '°"''''· tM owner wilt r1nlv1 tull 11tow1nc1 tor rl!m1lnl~1 lrefd 1ow1nl 1111 11Ul"Cfl9• of • MW llfl of our m1nul1ctur1 .t Ille curnnf r-1111 .. trttdl-111" ltrlct. 498~~~ PRICE In three and one-Oall years, > Braswell took over kicking chores when he was a freshman ln l~. and hasn't missed li>IC<. • Pistons. >. 11."""""""""""""""""""""""""":,:"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" .. """"""""""""r"""""""•' - ---________ ...._ ____ ... i • %6 DAILY PILOT 12th Hllori..,1 WHkl ACADEMY AWARD WINNER HST -CT'Olt--1 NIQIOU JOSEPH E. lEVfNE --• MIKE NICHOLS. LAWRENCE T\JRMAN -- THE &RADUATE Cll.QR-1-..•l'C'<AI""- Top Foreign Cltssic P'IA DIGllMAllC & THOMMY lllGGlEN IN Tllursday, Cktobfr 24, 1968 Manliattan Ballet Performs at VCI • • I *" l " ~ MtRTAINMENT lfT'S BE FRIENDLY If you have new neighbors or know of anyone moving to our area. please tell us 10 that \\'e may extend a friend1y welcome and ljelp them to become s.cqualnled in their new surroundings. Huntington Beach Visitor 536-9626 Costa Mesa Visitor 642-6014 So. Coast Visitor 49-MIS79 Harbor Visitor 675-3433 Aristocrat of SPANISH FOOD Delectable Steaks & Lobster Lunch· Dinner Open 10 a.m .~ 2 p.m .. Two Locations 19922 N1wport •t P1 li1•d11 M1n.f r1di1 Duo at Pi1no Bir 545.5579 2530 W11t Co1if Hwy, N1wport ll11ch C11if. P1ncho Lop•• Duo 1t Pi1110 81r LI 8-11 77 ............ -.MZ-41» Comtdt' 11 WI ant SI~ Portier, ~ncfr TrKV "GUUS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER" lleODlll_... for Adultt CIWMdJ, L.,,1ht, Acli911 Pftrr So!!"'" "I LOVE "YOU ALICE I , TOXLAS" Cc•n Mun~. J•-· S•IW:irt "IANDOLERO" • The Manhattan Festlval Bal- let, a chamber group o( nine young professional dancers will perform al UC lrvlne in Campus Hall Sunday at 8:30 p.m. The group is distinguished by a range of styles: classi· cal and modem. Their direc- tor is Ron Sequoio who is a former leading performer with Ballet Theater and Me~ politan Opera Ballet of New York. Included on the program is The Rose Adagio from Sleep- ing Beauty by Tschaikowsky, Rondo with mmic by St. Saens, Dance for Three Peo- ple, music by Poulenc a n d Coruscare with music by Pierrie. The leading female dancer is Katharyn Horne of l h e Melropolitan Opera Ballet. James OeBolt, formerly -of the New York City Ballet and Stra-ge Bedfellows Thomas Enckell of the Fin-•• nish National Ballet are lead-Randy Keene (left) and Marilyn Albertsen are caught in an embarrassing pre- ing male dancers. dicament by her boyfriend, Ralph Quick, who thinks he's her brother, in this General admission is $3.50, d · N y k " h. b fi k d F ·d t lJCI staff $2.50, students $1.SO. scene from "Sun ay in ew or , w ic opens a ve-wee en run n ay a Tickets may be purchased at _th_e_H_un_u_·n_gt_on_B_ea_c_h_P_Ia_y!J_o_u_s_e_. ------------------ the Fine Arts box office or at Lhe door. Forum XI Opens New Play Friday OCC's Updated 'Lysistrata' Blunted Satire Against War By TOM TITUS Forum XI Theater's third What O r a n g e Coast production of the season, Christopher Fry's "'fhe Lady 's College's students have done Not for Burning," opens Fri· to "Lysistrata" would make day for four weekends through Aristophanes churn in his urn, Nov. 16. but he might also force a "The Lady's Not for Burn-"LYsisTllATA" Ing" is a witty comedy revolv· A modern ~trslon of Arl1!0Ph1ntt' ,11y, ing around the efforts of a olr01:te<1 bY oennl1 H1nr1h1n, 11r1nn1e<1 by ll'>e dram1 deoartmenl of Or-11 young woman proves she is coast cor1~e 111nrght through Salurd1Y not a witch and the demands at 1:15 p.m. ~~-.'~.,~c au<111orlum. of a young man to be hung for Ly1l11rat1 .................. Lynn H1rr11 murders which he did not K11on1ke .................. Mlch1111 camion Myrrhln1 ......• ,,. ••••..... Angela Collln1 COmmil. l•mPllD ..... , . \• •••, ••. , .. Sl'llrll!Y llorrUI ff led b K J h Comml'51oner ................ Glrn Mortin 1rec Y erry o nson, Kinr111 .. .............. Ken w 11,_ lhe play features Steven Irish Leldtr 01 Ml'll ........... Oenn11 Perrin lt.Otr of Wome11 ......... 81rb1r1 Smlm of Costa Mesa, a founder of Si>artan Mr•ld .. .. ... stevtn 1o:1t1 the Forum XI group Other 1P1rt1n 1mba1Hdor .... w11rer c-••n . Drvtoll .................. _ . Don W~I,_ major roles are taken by Dick tentri.1 . . • . . ...•. G•l'Y £dm1,1..,, Johnson Sharon Rodriguez Larry 801...,.11, Miiie DIDoMto. P1111 Gu- , ' oowltr Dan Houston and Ann-'----------,- Leverett. smile at this updated version Also in the cast are Douglas of his a~tiwar classi~. McEwan, Philip Richards, Conce1v~. rewritten and Jeannette Kaufman, Bi 11 staged entirely by the col· Sullivan and Allan Jones. lege's new student repertory The theater Is located on the company, it is occasionally fifth floor of Morgan Hall at amusing, but in the . main a 835 Locust Avenue in Long blunted thrust ag~1nst t~e Beach. CUrtaln is at 8:30 p.m. po~ers that be. Me~cilully it is and reservations may be made brief, only an hour 1n length. by calling (213) 432-9229. Borrowing from the ancient BALBOA I 673-4048 o,.. 6:45 70f I. l1IH. l1lkl P..nlnavi. Nf#POU HACN -•I .... '"''"" .. : lo I.HI-ll<lo h lo -Ol. J·IJSt 1 Greeks, OCC's "Lysistrata" depicts rather outlandishly a united front of American womanhood locking t h e bedroom doors until the war (in this case Vietnam) is end· ed. Driven to distraction, the THE LUXURIOUS NEW U,rlted A1tlJt.i ·~-:., W 11•~ \tl NIA llHA HOUlll tlU17A. ~~l-07111 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER FIRST RUN Wllll DAYS 6:41 P.M. C•11tfft•a•• S1111ffy 2 P.M. FREE . PARKING He uses his badge like a bludgeon ... She uses her body: like a lurel KIRK DOUGLAS SYWA KDSCIRR Ell WALLACH glV UIRVTDDIE 1 ........ __ TECHN/COtOll AND men eventually capitulate. There is, however, not enough material to sustain a degree of interest in the pro- ducUon, laced though it is with "now" dialogue. A more im- aginative approach is needed, along with greater character development, no matter how ludicrous the situation. Of the student actors, Lynn Harris gives lhe strongest performance in the title role -shortened to "Lisa" for the OCC version. Michaele Cannon as her second in command adds a lovely decorative touch. The runniest scene or the night is between A n g e I a Collins and her soldier hus- band (Ken Wilson) as he at- tempts to make peace, so to speak, a g a i n s t frustrating odds. Glen Martin shows pl'Omise as the Pentagon bureaucrat, as does Dennis Perrin as the hob- bling leader of the men's con- tingent. Shirley Barrus as a Texan gal and Steven Scott as a hippie brighten the mo~e mundane moments. The direction, by student Dennis Hanrahan, could be sharpened in the crowd scenes during which the college's huge stage is not utilized to its fullest potential. Although the play is short, pace i s Open Today 6,45 Peter Sellers IN "I Love You" "Alice B. Toklas" IN COLOR -----------·---Berry Evans Judy Gffs.on "Here We Go 'Round The Mulberry Bush" IN COLOll ., ; .. ··-. nevertheless lacking and coUld be vastly improved. "Lysistrata" is, however. a good project on which the newly organized OCC repertory group can cut its teeth. Its lessons may be car· ried into the company's next production, due in December. The show opens officially tonight and continues through Saturday at 8: 15 p.m. in the college auditorium. Orchestra At Irvine The Los Ange l es Philharmonic Orchestra, with Zubin Mehta conducting, will perform Saturday night at UC Irvine. Admission to the performan· ce at 8:30 p.m. in Campus Hall will be $4 for adu lts and $1. 75 for students. Tickets are available from Orange County Philharmonic Society, 201 W. Coas t Highway, Newport Beach (646- 6411) or the fine arts box of- fice on campus (833-6617), UNIV!~s..t.l. l'fl(SfNTS i.. TlCl«'-llCOlOl• "MADIGAN" RICHARD HENRY WIDMARK FONDA INGER STEVENS Walt Disney's Best Week Days, 7 P.M. Cont. Sat, & Sun. Fr .. Parking Gre •t Comedy TIE illll4_1l11WIOl1-.. Alen Arkin .. Inspector Clouse1u ' . . . . . . . . .. -. ~ . . . . DARY PILOT WANT ADS HOUSE$ FOii SAL! YOURS fGR THE BUYING 1000 U )'OU woWd Uke to manage yozr inv@fltmeflt + a lllJb. · good mes on • b1g AatE le HALF dol9e to d<wmtown Oort& Mesa that will IOOw you an excdlent mum on youf'·tn~ent + a sub- stantial equity gain. These tmit.s have just been reduced & owner is ready to 9e'l1 at Sl52,cm -with excel.lent terms. 143 Broadw1y 645-0181 Evenings 646-4579 john mac.nab VIEW HOME SPECTACULAR On the finest view location in Dover~. 4,00l IQ. ft 4 Bedroom :family room dining room, 4 baths. Built to sell at $159,500. Lendeni absolute sacrifice. MUsr BE OOID, 195,IKXI. C,.U for appointment. (714) 642.8235 881 Do\.<tt Drive, SUite 101 Maooo Real':;' Co. Bldg. Newport Beach B/B Attractive Duplex Near Ocean 3 bedmom. 2 bath each unlt. Builtiru. Fireplaces. sundeck .00. petio. Price reduced to 549,500. 673-9200 Evu. 642-3287 Bav & Beach R11lty, Inc. 2025 W. Balboe. Blvd., NB Walk lo Harbor Hi We're excited over '"thls love- ly 4 BR & family ruorn home near Wesktilf Shop- ping Centl"r". 2%, bath!, all electric built • in kitchen, disilwuher, CNtt :nJ0 sq ft, paliOfl, huge master BR with Grecian bath, Ju.sh w/w car- pets & drapes. $37,500. - EZ '"'""-~-1003 Baker, C.l\.1, 5-!6-5440 VACANT LOT Clloice Baycrest area vacant Jot on land you OWN! Large lt'vel lot amidst 50 lo $8),000 homes. FUll piioe only $21,900 with excellent terms available. J.,oy.'E'St priced lot in th.is beautiful area. Better ""'-· 2043 WESl'CLIFF DRIVE 646-7711 Open Eves. Newport Beach $20,700 $2500 DO\\'N • 3 Bedrooms, bath, 2 car garage on large k>t in NC'llo-porl Heights. ACT FAST! ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 HORSES!! e NO DOWN G.I. e LOW DOWN FHA ~ acre pl.us 2 bedroom home in exeellcn t growth area. Jte. dlJC'ed S2llX> to $29.500. 546-2313 646-7171 THE~EAL ESTATERS NEAR BACK IA~ 1/3 RD ACRE CUS'I'O)f HO~tE • pj-,9ii0 PrHtiJe Back Bay arttl Spadoul bedrooC:M, 2 bathL R8.r UV1n1 room ovmoon rbe gor&eous iJ'l)l.tDds. 2 ftre- places • one in a d!Highttul den. Fonnal dining room. Room for pool !>tO-lTll T AIU!E\t= m; Hart>or OPEN DAILY 219 Jasmine, CdM Prime hMch loc. No new ~ nandng nect$51Lt'Y. 3 BR 2 baths + fam.UY, bit·tna. tirl!- pl111."e, 3 car gar. Q.W.C. 2Dd TD or tnlde tor l.ncome. IUtr. 646-lrlS Eve. &4+.2Eli9 *LACHENMYER HOUSES FOR SALE O.n1r.tl 1000 HORJfS ANYOHEI We've foond a. ~ for you to kttP them. LARGE 56' X )17' LOT with fencing and HORSE OOR.R.AL. Oxnfor.. table two Bedroom home " Detadled double garage. AU.. nus FOR 0 N L lt' $20,0CO. Call Today?! * • * .. SOI.ID IHCDME Be financi.U, lnd-t with SIX A'ITRACTJVE PROFIT MAKERS priced at only SfiT,500! Three separate """"" wtlh prlvat. ,..,..,. PLUS fumlSled trlpl.ex. En- joy th1a K'!Ml'OWI ~ of one-hall aCM d. land. Live in en home a n d collect aood ~t (Ir keep propertY es an investment. Buy now for ~r t.tture end earn high grogs annual income. Gentlemen, Walch Your Wife Her eyes will spaitde 'tVben she BttB thla spotless 3 bed· room llhake roof charmer. Everything lhe wU1 want on the eutside. Quiet cul de aac street, b&utiful yard, cover-- ed lanai, all electric kitch- en. tastefully decorated, A5" sume 5'4 % loan wllb. total pa;)ment ol U68.00 p e t' month or will tlike new loan with onl,y 10% doYffl, $27,~ and hurry. Colesworthy & Co. 642-7777 1904 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Open Eves. BeautHul Home COMP'ANY REALTORS 673-4400 B/B Ocean Front Ready For Relaxation R-3 IUll'.e triplex lot with old- er 3 bedroom livable home. Best >ocation near Neo.1o-port pier. Our least expensive ocee.nfront offered for $4T ,500 ,,·ith O\\'Tu?r f'inancinc:. 673.9200 Eves. 673-8086 Bay & leach R11lty, Inc:. 2!m W. Balboa Blvd., NB Harbor Highlands TERRIFIC FAf,ffi.Y H0..'1E -Spaclcwi modern 4 bdrm. 21h baths, encl. lan- ai oUers extn room over- 1ooking beautiful grounds. fam. rm. cpts. drapes, blt· in's, many addtd featurt• .. $56.000. "C" THOMAS REAL10R 224 \V, Co.st Hwy 54M62'T Newport Beach Eve. 6'5-6643 MESA VERDE 4 BR -$24,000 Rent-Like P•ym1nt1 Lovely nC!'atly malntaincd landscaping, mature plants. tre<>s 8t shrubs. 2 kiths, fam- ily room. Try no down GI or low down tb non-vet.s. 5l<l-17'1l TAR.BELL, 20Cr6 Harber You're Kidding $13,500 In Costa Mesa NO, Btrr YOU WU.L BE KIDDING YOURSELF H Y'OU miss aeetng thll 2 bedroom fixer upper ih NE\\'PORT I IEIGlfJ'S. e LAND and COMMEROA.L n.JNDS av&ll&ble. Ccntact Mr. Rokos. MARINERS SaYinas and loin 642-4000 SOCK IT TO 'EM! I •• -·-· -· -· •--r: .., • ...., ·'<f .... -· ~~} ... ... ' ,. . ~ . HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi •• RliNTAt.• RENTALFI l·'od IH~O!!!U~S!,!E!,!S!_!F:!O~R!_;S~A~L~E~:.!iH~O~U~SE~S!_!F~O!!R_:S~A~L~ll=l2::'.7..:.:::::.:::::.:::;:;;;;;;li~;::;;,~:-"liiiii I Hou ... Unfumlthod Aph. urn ~ 11 ·~o.;n;•;ro~l~~~~1~ooo~o.~n§e~ro~l~~;=;;;;1;ooo;;l;°"7,"";r:•~l;;;~~:1000¥fN~e~wpo~~rt~HgCct~1.;;C<1~21~0 Hun tington Beoch 1400 I ·GeM-="',."'i ::...;;.;..;=~3-000""".' I ~Ge~n~er-,7'1 ----;4000;;;:;, I; Lorge 2 BR Duplex 2 Sty. Cape Cod OWnu Trwdomd! I BR 2 bOlhl, w I w R~NT BUILDERS CLOSE OUT HA r c1aat 2"" .-00 b.., n.pnt s BR ' """' ......--extra F 1•· IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Try F 1rm1 oomer.3Jc.bedrml·Oen ablo!ut!lyimmaculatt,nev •karp. lmmcdlat t S Rooms urn,.,,.. ONLY 5 NEW HOMES AVAILABLI! $2',SOO + famllYl'Oom.lmmoculAl• -,,. • --JDH .. lon l'Tf ... .,. .. m; $25 Month JUST COMPLETED RANCHO LA CUESTA, in Hunting1D~ Beach, has,.,_ R<tlt> 612-tm • lleody to.,,,,. IA._... .,.. .... ,.,_, 1uor•. -111-Ast. MMl<I rou. OPnON TO BUY e ONE BEDROOM e 2 BEDROOMS Ulebestvalueslll . a3BR,2BAhomemth, eentire 1791"'-A .. .,C.!lf. -••-· ale •-· Pricodw><IMl11As....,..i Nd ~1 FRO" $135 "ONTH for lmm~e • •-t $33 500. A "MUST SEE" JUS ; 2 BR. GJplex. Ftl'JQed o e_, o.a.c. M M area. ll kl h b llt onl.Y $38,0.:0. ~ a~i&tt. )'d., Pl'llt: wtw, drapea, H.F.R.C. NISHED The quallty CO!l$lTUcUon lndudes a tc en u · Costa Muo I 100 • "lllNC" Po<Wc Sito,.. Roslt> nodecor. Bier. -Furniture Renfoil UNFURNISHED -FUR ins fireplace fully carpeted. shake roof, concrete _. • PR NG 536-S894 EVN 536-98615 $1.M; 2 BR., tt:OCed yd. Stove, 51T w. 19th, C.t.-1. MS-3481 AOULl'S-Mo PETS 1 • dri~eway, Wge lots. Walking distance lo Public Duplex $21 ,000 1 •-:~ • S I · -.. ......_ porch. 1568 w. Loci"· Anhm ,, .. 2800 c ''"' • 0 ,., 11 ---. RE•• 'TY R •-•· 534 ~· yd • • • PR1v•11 •~r10 Beach. 2 I>aMy wtlta In N--~· 9. ~ l B =~er ~ 116'; 2 BR.,''"""" .. gar., • POOL " " B h d) tlcights dlltrlct. 'Partly fur"-~-"ANYTIME'' $18$; S BR., 11'. be.., frpt. frplc. Children O.K. Pool. e RECREATION AREA e HOTPOINT APPLIANCES ,. (Located al Hamillon & us ar •1,.,,.. Could be"""""'"' Condominium W/w: dr .. es, oout-in.. a,..., OM...eo HUNTINGTON SEVILLE $25,050 to 4 Bedroom, 2 bath b:1me 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. VACANT. Owner ISfl, Oilldren OK. Bkr. 53~ 1-=========::I B h FHA . VA · Conventlon1I ' l.nd a.dd another unll. 13 CU.Ft~ Haven R-2 Income. 3 '"Milke any dee.I.'' $19,300 $UO; 2 BR., fenced yd .. ga.. Cott• M .. • 4100 16112 Sh•t L.tne 847·7461 Huntln9ton e•c C•ll f.61-Zttf •'*' MtwM. 10 I 646-7171 546-23 Br. 2 ba. hse 2 Br. Ocean includes carpeta, d.re.pet, tt-rage; stove, available now! 2220 ELDEN I 1st Si 9 n.tl West of B•ech off Edinger: Vu Apt. $51,750. MS-1249 frigera1or. wuh@r, ~ &: B:oker SM-6980 •cross from Broadw.ty Cent.tr I _ VA/FHA Unlv<irtlty Pork 1237 ="."" & owlmmlnl prtv. °"c'°'oo"'t1;:M;:101;;;;1===::31;:00:;: I New 1 ~~~~'' 001' ~R-~E-N~-T~-A!'!-L~S-~~-~-~-:i,-;;!-~-.,;~-~-~-~-!!i-:;:-~~-~-~-~-~-~-~S~l~OO-~E OPEN . THE Q !!:AL I E .S TATERS 1 RI ••7 --trl Cost• Muo \ Rex IL. Hodges ty "" • ....., All Elec c Apts. Furnllhed ~ EXlro ""'1> ME SA TOWN HOUSES SOL VISTA EXt:Lusr\tE Ea.st>I..,, Split-Occupancy Nov. l•t VERDE bargain. l BR 1 • l BR-Den, sharp, on m"d Townhouse. 2 Bdrms. $.150 ntonth -Rent Huntln11ton 8Nch 4400 BOR 2 tt.ths ttreplace eu&-PRIDE A JOY flnt _:i• ~ lftDl Jot, Lg llv room 4 BR, 2 baths, c:pt.I/~ l"" bath&. Hee.red pool. Rec. • HAR Thun. & Sun. 1-5 BROADMOOR HARBOR VIEW Tri-Level Model Executive 4 Bedroom Truly • 3300 sq. ft. tom =i>ettng dotad..t '"""· °"""' " "' 123 ooo ._ firs, AM/FM thnloul room. Prl•&l• Patio. No $22.50 Wk. Up e NEW e LUXURlOUS • •-·~, ~ w 1 t b North mus.t sell. Big ' BR, • i BR.Atrium Xtra lg, cem Owner transt'ttr'fl' _take OY• m 1. t n t e nan c e . Doi.tile e Studio 6 Bacb 1.pta. RESOR.T LIVING GREENS ..........., family room with new d t...md 1225 mo GARDENS DARK « ld>b)t ,_.....i., l drapes, heavy patio. Fast poss. $27,950 er thil good nIA loan at c ~. · e tncl UW. 6 Pbcme .en. 4 NATIVE room aooe1511 for BOAT ;;ke .... root &: VI a l king e 4 BR 2* BA 2 FP Lots of $184/mo. Adulbl only. Avail Nov 1st. e MaJ4 &!me. • TV avall. g PCX>Ls-SAUNAS-JACUZZI or TRAILER storage. diattnce to acboob &: abopi:, Xtras. Fast poss. $28.~ BRASHEAR REAL TY &t2-U56 • Nn Cat.t 6 Bv HUNTINGTON Colilornia Villa 2500 W1vecre1t Drive Coron• del M.r !BROKERS WELCOME) DAVE GAMBILL 644·0020 Large fuontry stylo PICTURE PEBF>rr In-DOUG JOY, AGENT 847.f6ll Ev ... "1-2442 LOVELY 1 Br. Pl"' don 2376 N,..,,... Blvd. 548-9'1?i11 kl.tcben with ea~ side, ahal1) shape outside. 833.0504 2 BEDROOM &. Duplex Retrig. Stove. Drpa, FURN Bachelor apt. Full GARDENS area. PLUS FORMAL Move in with low down :rnA -PANELED DEN l'\lgs. Lrg yard.;;,atern4& bath, crpl!, drps, util. pd, DINING ROOM. Full or no down G.I. CALL~ 50 Alreactf VA ippr'l.ised for 1ardmtt pd. · ~ Free laundry rm. P.lature prict! onlY $23,'l'iO. OUT 1lSl (open eves} Heritage· Corona del Mar 12 $23,:!50. No down to Vets. 548-0354 or 213: DU adulta only, $90 Mo. Eaat ExdUl:lve! Real Estate Cornrr lot • ideal tor boflt/ for appt. Side C.M. LI Ut69 After 6 • COATS 4 Beclrm., $21 ,000 Want The Best? trnll" oMl« • .....,. on this ',.':;' .:;., ~. :,r., .,_;i"H"'A'T°"E"'A°'U"L°'•'"PO""IN"°T'"E l & 2 Br. O.iuxo "'"Pool & EZ terms • Price slaahtd. We Proudly Present •. · ooe! mooth + $50. deaning d~ ~ ~ 0 FJM. $135-$165. 219 15th St TFJmlS.ENTERTAJN¥Efln' BOLSA.CHICA & HEIL ADULTS 847-8414 B.ACHELDR • UNnJRN, from $100 incl. util. 1.2&:3 BDRM. FURN. Ii UNFURN. Hented Pool&, OU1d Oare 1 Center, Adj. to Shopp!Jl& -; No pets allowed ; 2100 Pctemm Way, at H_.. ~ bor & Adams, Costa Mesa. 1 WALLACE Wa.lk to SL Johns Sdlool. $0 Corona de! Mar's loveliest Rex 'L. Hodges Rlt:y 847.2525 po.!lit. Reftrenees required, ...... vely furn. l SR apts. U· Apt 1. J.f.B. REALTORS DownGlorlowdowntoaU .. 3 BR home + Income Apt. a.dulta only, 646-5637 street parking, carports. 1 -===~====:= 3 PLUS POOL Htd. pool. Adults, no pets h 4705 54(,.4141-"RING" ld<'OI f..,.tlon, """' the 2 BR rm, n•w canpet, dl1>" 1941 POMCNA AVE .. C.M. l1gun1 Beec BERMUDA VILLAGE (Open _I..., •..,••-,SPRING be174".~. 00 ~-lge lo!, HM li...-., F /A ""'" bll·lna. ,_.,,,bl, odult> 0 •1 Y. DELUXE 2 bdrm apto. FUrn 3 BR 21> BA, !ill el« buUt· Spac-2 & 3 &. Aplo. ... $39.50 to vets or low down Small bllby ok. No pets. 2515 4c unf\im. crpt, pool &: ins. PanoramJc view over-crpu:, drps, bl.Una. Close 1o I, ,.....,. . ATTENTION aM RE.ALTY Shown hy Appt. toanyooe. Unbelievabl.e only A Santa Ana Ave. $130. caq>ort. J dl.ild OK. $1JO. &: lookinr Allao Beach. Mature d!.p'e &: &ebls. Oil1drtn OK. , Bu'1lderS/Develop'rS New Custom Listing ••• "AN'iTIHE'' Deloney Roal Es~ "'·""'· -'M!i"";f"'+833--03U;;;;;:2t;:;;;:"";;;;t;, 1..::"';·~cau::.;6'6-0496~~-.;.,--I odw1' "'"'"'" child"'n. $220 suo up. Fabulous big home near ~ E. Coast lli.'Y., LISTER anytime 84UQ3 3 BR + elm. 2 be.th, cti>ts, Furn SI 499-3755 2214 Col.leg• Ave. Apl 2, Mii'. Go to NorthYlest. comer F air· view Road & sunnower U ~ acre ~ (152' Fairview Road &: &;e' Sunflower). Cl\i> vd CM biJ..3110 drps, Lrg fenced yrd. Patio. 1 BR apt., 05. Mesa. Vente Coorltl'Y 2629 Harbor Bl ., . King·Siztcl Yard &side. Avail Nov. 15th. $200 Furn studio, m. Elden szoo MONTH, from Nov. 1st with pool, CABANA, BBQ&: FOUR. BEDROOMS. Priced P&noramic View Broadmoor ,, • ., ""'"' 548-8571 East Apt ., 2131 Elden to Feb. lst; ~etely & BAR • just great I." "'"" 10 sell _Out ot town o~mr. 4 B•. fam ..:.. $61,Noft Room tor boe.t, trailers or rno. ~. Ave., Costa. MHa ..,_ u ba H • '"" UJI/ ~ ..... 1.· 3 BR" 1...th horn bl Ina •-;;:-,;-;=;--::=~==;-;; I beaut tum. 2 °'" 17,1 ; tain.ing d~ or ev~ . u Excellent condltloo, ?M!ar 2515 l...igh1hruse, CdM ... .., ... mg. •..,.. e, • l BDRM 2 bath t· • • 2 BDR, ctptd &: draped. ~ O'looklng Emerald S.y. the deepest pile carpetmg new carpets, tr e 11 b I Y BY OWNER • 644--lOOO mrpeta l <k'apn,, a.It large $165 mo. l55e, Aaenl:. cti1ldrm welccane, no peta. ,..._,, .._ .. _ " ba'"--m• ~-~ ~-· tn -·-•~. ~ .u & pm References. 494-53l:> YoU ever saw .... iui wr uc-p&inted, built·iill, • u~, ,...., ''"" '-' ""'T """" ~ ... ~. Sf8....97l.O. 3)(3 Wallace I,;=====<=:--:::;- tails! wide street Ii: clO&C to Lido Isle 1351 today a.t only $21,rioo. GI or E-Skte 2 Br.,~. beam cell; St., OM CHEAP.Em' view &ch. apt., -~-'" •· ·-SUbmlt; !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;; FHA b!nns. .L-1 yd., ...... • .... No 1,..~;-;-;;o-:;-;:-::;-:-: has e"V"f:T')'ihing~ Will rent 5C6·58!0 -~"" . """"" ~ ,,...._ LARGE 1 BR duple x "''"'"""" (ntaircinemlth!:atre) on doWn payment · monthly Paul Jon" Re1lty pta. $138 Yrly 673--7629 this wffic. 494-4811; .,...,.,,.,..., LLEGE REALTY p&yment $1!li including tax· Bayfront Duplex 847·1266 Eve1. 536-mt ~V'r'n A 1 .... .-i..i-x; 2 Br. privacy, garage, $UO. 168 CHARMING 1 BR. private l!iOOAdmftl•tHlltlor,cM. el. 10% down. CALL MR. 3 BR 2 Ba Upper 2 BR 1 Ba 3 UNITS w·..:'lhl. Ha;·i;ery!hing! Ea.st Wllaon, C.M. 54~2m balcony, ocean &: mountain BLAO< S40-ll51 l o P e n ~ 2 -c-•c fencei bay· Ht wat-pd. 1!7S. S45-81.52 Nasaa.u Palms 1 & 2 BR.. view $165 mo, 494-5918 ) Herltaa;e Real Estate · •· •tn ' ~· Pool, $130 to Sl.50 eves tront patio -room to e!I· 2 nn 2 ea. 2 car ........ Lr'( 17 E 22nd St 642 .,.,,.., RENTAL~ HARBOR VIEW IMMAC -l.Jke new 3 ~R, 2 large. SUbmit offtt, $115,((() Net better tha.n 12% retuon on.. .. -1 . . -...,.,.. '"'""'""::~"";C"'i:"'""'!!! I born ready to ba in beautiful Monticello Walker Realty sai,750. Better buny! May fnd yrd. Baek Bay a.ref.. No $85. 1 BDRM partly tum. _Ac;;.pt...;s;... u_nl_u_rn_l_•_hod-:::::: [l Corltemporary e . coodo on Falrview Rd. Lots ~ trade. pets. S'lli YM. 548-0)2.1 2526 Elden, Apt E. Inquire General 5000 What A tnOYe into. Tw~ king &z.e or extras. Will aell tum or1,3.,336'!!:'V~!a~Ll'!!d~o~~~·~!!!!. I SLATES REALTY 3 BR 2 bath, cpt.a/drpt, 26(1 Elden, Apt B Lak ? BR, 2 be, dressinl nn. unfurn I' 847..1>19 Eves. 962-7369 lbuU.t-inl. Avail Nov. l Private e 138,900 -'l>y 10% dowo. Amaous"""""' THIS IS UNUSUAL 1!9S/mo. 1 ,...,, 64&-0844 VERY Le•. 2 Br., 2 Bo., IN CORBIN-MARTIN OWNElt _ S-"'LEll :,"';,:, ~~~0!.": Fountain V•lloy 1410 3200 ~\~~1"'~~:· ;:~· •• $1.00 sq. ~. Call Immediately! Vic~orl• Newport 646.8811 VEN DOME 1 8c: 2 BR., elec l'Bllle ii : oven, new qia. Nice art• ' nr. O.C.C. $125 and $1C5. 546-0019 SflARP 2 Br. 1 ~ Ba.. Studio. Like new! Crpts &: mp.. Nr OCC & South Coa.st Plaza. $145. ~ll25 e DLX 2 br dplx. Cptl/~ bit-in !!lv. pd. paUo, td\llta. $145. 2244 "A" State Ava. CM'. 642-7472 MONTICELLO Towrbe •pt Adi l!, 2 bdr, W/W crpta, dzp, 54G-<1129 aft 5 Newport Beach REAL TORS ct.an """"""' 3 Br. pl"' 45 Ft. Pool & G""'t "°""' WESTMONT Home, 3 BR, 2 ~N'o_wpo,,rt_.Be_oc_h~----YEP! WITH 213 ACRE Im 3036 E. Coast H~, CdM tam. 1%. ba. Nr -=hls. Good 00 l:I', fEi0,00:> dear -submit ha. + boma room. Sale 10 boot. TREMENDOUS 675-1662 Anytime tnc'g avail. 5'8-1331. R. c. GREER, Realty $26,l'.X> or rent $215fmo. VIEW of lake from back pa--BY Owner . forced to Sell 3 3.fJ.fi Via Lido rn.9Dl 839---400 AVAIL Nov. 10th. 2 Br. Patio, fenced yard. $120 mo. C.all 833-1252 aft S:3G pm. 3 BR, new carpets, drps. Make reser.iatlorui NOW palnt, gar, lndry tacill,, no Newport Beach 4200 Newly Redecorated pell!, Sl.45 mo. 545-0262 tio of this 4 bedroom, 2~i w• BR -2 be.. Llke new Low bath outstarding famil y Budget IH equity. Good location Huntington Beach 1400 L1guna Beach · 1705 home. SPEro> WEEKF.NOO Nice Ea.st Magnolia St. loct.· $25,500. 54().3315 ON THE ISLAND. tioo. WeH·blt older home on NEW Duplex, 2 br., bltns, BEACH HOUSE B~~"'!i~ \e::.. 2 vT~ wide lot. l Bdrms · &: ~ etc. Ga races. Orange Ave. This is a special house for dining rm, only $18,<m. Be at Knox, C.M. OWNER people who love the sea and ~~ta~:~·~?- an early bird· call now. 543-8572 like to take long v.-alks in OR.Af'\IGE COUNTY'S Graham Realty C'OZY East Side, FHA.CI, 3 the amd or sit quietly it the Laguna Beach 1705 LARGEST Nefll' N.B. POiit Ole. 646-241'4 br, 2 ba, fmy nn, frpl.., bit· ocean's edge to "'·a~ch the 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 IM crpts drps huge bck sun come up or slip mto the Handym.tn 5P"i•lt LA-RGE FAMILY? 4 BEDROOM-$23,750 yd.' play 'hie. I 2 6, 5 o O. "" •t """' tido. Yoo'U !""' Income Units ''PRIVATE ORCHARD" 646-0033 this v.'onderlul b~~ new Loe. OI) Oceanside of Hwy, 150 Here'a room to grow In the f:rui trees. Park like yard 4 bedroom, 2 h11th House yds from Beadl. 4 lie Apt popular Republic Homes o! t . · l -1 BR Houses & 5 garages, and Home" ?>.fagazine award 'I.mils. needs pa.int & good area of M~ Verde. 5 Bed· 2.bat:hs. Every room an tn· room for 1 more unit. East wtnn r Its channlng and IE.'OE:'I'lil cleenup. POTENT. rooms 3 baths. -Nice sir.eel vUatlon to space and com· Side C.M. By owner. $20,SOO e . walk t the beech 1AL INCOME EXCEEDING family room. All """"aintecl tort. Formal dining roorn. 546-8224 you can o , ~n 241.4 Vista Del Oro Nowpnrt a-b l Bdrn!I, 2tAI baths, split-level home on. quiet cul de aac. The moiit far prlv.aoy pl.us all the Buffa hnrurles inside &: out. Newly l'edeoorated with "That certain enviabie tcuch". Available Immedi- ately Bt $350 per mo. Ph. 644-1133 .... ,. Carpeted luxury ex b-Qm here. TheTe s an .... $10,<0l ANNUALLY. Price &: redecorated. • 16x32 pool tms 540-i.:any · VALUABLE R-2 prop. s2 ~ gla.ss kitchen with GE built-$69,$0. completely fene«l. -Large · HartJor w/fli>lc, lge 1ncd lot. in ap~ cozy fireplace MISSION REALTY 494-0731 NEWPORT Island duplex: concrete patio -I.ow main· TARBELL. 2955 NOW $17,flOO. 962.593S to enjoy wint~ evening• and 985 So. Coast. LetW\8 uwer 2 Br., fl.Indeck; prlv. tona""' laod<capmg. • 142.000 e $18,900 • Mesa Doi Mor 1105 wall to wall carpoti,,., fenc-1 :R"'E"'N°"T'A"L"S;-----1 beach ~ pot!<: no pell °" ~ la aod chlldren; mature oouple. PV'WI below market for 2 bed,. ed rear yt1.1u, fn:xlt wn H F I hod ~ M•s 646-7171 546-2313 "~in eXDellent b:attoo., $27,250 ~ 3 BR. Iondscaplng. A real beach ousei urns $145 Mo., yearly, "'.,.....," =====Oiiiiiii walking distance to ~ This excltlngl)r created borne buy at just S25,735. No down Generil 2000 8AYSIDE Village No. 81 THE ~JEAL ESTATERS ping, Ccwf:f'!d patio, !bad fee.tures lush tropical· gar. to Vet.a, or FHA Md Coo· $150. 2 tr, 2 be.. poof, club trees. $llll per month includ· dens, surrauoded by 5J)e'clal ventional terms. n4-~275J * ON WATER * hse. slip. Ownr. 213: 291·5261 es everythlng. patio d~k1ng. Home nl'Ylly Bkr. Furnished 6 BR HOUS E CfllICE Newpoct Isian:i Joe. I ~~~~~~~~~1~Del~t·~"""i::,~"""~=te~""'4l~~41 p&Inted, w/xlnt carpeting, $500 Is Your& ln c .d.M. <n4) 673-0ln 3 Br. Pit patio. $185 yrzy, I' kltdl. bitns., trplc. can be u you're interested in buying 673-7500 IF YOU ·Close to Shopping, Park 2 BR, gntn 11.pt. fpt cpl..I drPI e Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba Bllnl, l& wvt patio, pool HAVE an unrented Beach e Swim Pool, Put/green Adult.. no pets $145. 546-6163 Unit and need help • CAIL e f'rtil, Indlv/lndry fac'la 2 BEDROOM I: POOL US. 1845 An1heim Ave. Le film or unturn wlblt· BU~R WHITE, Reellor icoi!sri!!!!A!!MES!![!!A!!!J!!!!!!! .... !!!!""!!!1 1 '"" cpUdii>. 149 E. Boy St 2901. Newport Blvd., N.B. 00C • 675"4630 •vea. 642-2253 LARGE I "'· ..., • RENT """"' c.ut P!aaa. c,,a. drps, 1harp • $125· 549-1225 TRAILER I. Cabana, 2 bath 3 Roomt Furniture btt·tn bunks. p • n •", d. $25 Month carpeted. $85/mo. See at FULL OPI'JON TO BUY 2 BR. dlx. lOli Coolidre· Drpe, q:its, bltnl; ldu.lta $145. 54g...()433; 546-4ll2'1 eves Sandy's Trailer Pk. 291% w. No deposit o.a.c. °""' Hwy. Spc. 9 H.F.R.C. N . rt Beech 5200 BAYClJFF Motel -winter Furniture Rental• I ;;ew;;;;po;;;~::;;;;;;;;;;I rates effective; $27.50 UP. 517 w. 19th. C.M. 548-348111 Maid .. rvice. 1V. ""°'· 15'8 w. 1.ncln. Anbm 77~2800 B/B 1 ~456~N:;,· ;N~owpo~~"~· ~NB~-~~!"==;;_=====;;::;: I .. 5100 3 BEDROOM, 2 both, "' • 6'110 OCEANFRONT • Cost1 Mew pooL $250. 3 Car praae. 3 BR., 2 Ba. 2nd Stmy I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;:;;; Adultl only. l3'0 Mo. Call; 213, "6-1709 E>eollont. puk • W.. ..,. Bay & Beach NEAR new 1 Br. tor single, raundinas for adults requizl. eqil~ed adult, SUS Mo., lng peace a: quiet Raalty, lnc.vd NB .~ ... No ··~-. ·--T .... 2025 w. Balboa m .• z•v -~~ ,..,..,..uu Dlscrlmlnative ena.n... 673-3663 Ewa. l, 2 &: 3 BDRM. APrs. POOL. NO CHILDREN DELUXE Baytronl, boot s1 MARTINICj)UE avatl. Pool. 2 Br.% BL GARDEN APTS. l3'0. """'"' 675-:>m Wnklllf 4230 "'WESTCLIFF RIVIERA 2 BR HOME Beach Lovers Jl{rdlaeed G. I. or will take this lov~y 3 bedroom dream Rentala to Share 2005 ~SP=ARJ<LIN~·""=a"""'3,-br::-::-2 -..,.,,.-,on= Wood floors, patio, double BAY VTE\V &: PATIO TOO. borne In trade. Dorado De-house in a fine neighbor· DrvORCEE wishes to share quiet st. Bit-Ins, crpU. garage. Right ln tcr.\11. 3 BR 2~ baths, den, wet bar, velopment li42-M!6 hood. 2 luxurioo:s baths, home w/sarne in exchange drps, rard. $235. &a8-<l360 ========= $16,850 fireplace + BBQ. On the Meu Verde 1110 ankle deep C1U1>etin&:! Dual for evenizl& di.lid sitting • Corona del Mir 4250 DUPLEX Penmaula. 915 W. Boy. log burning flreplaoe! F0<e-boy 10. 50>-0030 Bot. 3-4 Newport Heights 3210 DUPLEK _ 1 Block to ocun. I BR, l'\l.m, polio, cupetl, drapu, adulta. Heated Pool 1800 Weftcllff Dr., NB 642-3618 18th & Santa Ana, C.M. ean Mn. Henderson fl46.5M2 1771 5anta Ana, Apt W, C.M. NOW'S THE HARBOR · TIME FOR :: BR ee.ch side, hardwood !loors, double garage, good Eastslde location. $25,00J ~rith term~. Wtll1-McC1rdl1, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548-1129 Eves. 644-0084 Pel B "eH Riiy 3 BR, !an<!acapod, all now ed o i r beat! Hardwood e a I ldtdlen cab!!, blt·ln.s &: floor Floors! Dining Room! Cov-WORKlNG Glr1 to abare s BR .• 1;, N.. cvp. & WW conaidflr fUmithlna. . covering, New upgraded ___. Patio! F--' Yard furn. Unlvm1lty Part!: Home drapts; blml, feneed Jd. * 67J..20'.ll * lSlli Westcliff Dr. 642-6lOO carpet In form. ll't' nn &: ~~ lots o.t ~~-.;:u FHA or wllh same. 546-0928 or eves. Qoee to achoola. $295, :======:::;;; POOL muter bedrm, panel led VA Terms! You CM't beat 83.l-1531 Gcrdenertncl. M8-w.!6eve1 Bilbo• 4300 2 STORY + d.,, child'• ""' comp! it s.t 121,.,.. Nowport BHch 2200 W11tclllf 3230 "--------./ 5 BR. 3 baths, frplc, din-papered. Vacant. Cu:h to w lk & L CLEAN Bachelor Apts. lng room fam. nn. loan, xlnt FHA. 3 2 9 fi a er ee 3 BR. 2~ bl;, tpl., htd. pool: 3 BR, 2 BA + Fam. rm., new All utll incl $75 up , PLUS G~est hoiJR with Arizona La. 96Z-869'Z -.1 do ,__ •KA 315 E.' Balboa Blvd. .. uu . gar.; con ., ...,q, are1. crpt.s, fenced yard. -mo, BALBOA 67' ~" /p I H tcitdlefl, bath & liv nn l200 Bn-8811 days; 646-7002 or 1 Yr lease. 642-8839 ~ Lease oo om. ./ East51de, CM _ M5,<00 Newport Beach 768Z Edinger I-========:==;;: 1 or ~ BR apt 1 , walk to 1tiop. CHOICE MESOOOA V ~ R Dsii Lton Vibert, RNltor s.t244.'D ()pep Eves. 540.6140 ;;21;;3;;;';,434-3964:;-;c=,-Ev-;--o;;;s·.,._= "Balboa Island i355 Pirc. Reuon~e re nt. NEIGHBORH . y ·-·""'-Bin F1mlly Home BUY of ~-W"EK OCEAN View, 4 Br., dpix. -"""'-'~------:-Older adult1. 548-31M ~~!~,~!~E QUICK CASH • 2 DR., suo to $1.J) •Heated pool -Adults onl! THROUGH A e No rs · Ad.l to !!hopping _Q r:.~IL;~o~~ DAILY PILOT • water pe.ld. rll.91·8 Pllcentta Av•. • $105 mon.t .. '" far neat large • &: ...... -~~~~~~·~""'':'::~I • /ri!nl..... ,,.. .., Wlnter or yrly. leue; pu--3 BR • btdl 1=======::; ·~ ........ ;xi 5 BR, fam rm, 11eP .,.., I BR S2G<".IVI lull Mee. W/w ·a.11.. LOVELY new ~ tamllyroomwi i......,.equ 3 BEDROOM OE-LUXE rm lge pool Ille lot. Nr. ,-"Nd 1•·', .. li . ti "'or comp, furn. duplex rlecrtlc bu l l t~tn ped pool. Vacant· qukk '"'--tor' eatbou church $39 ~ carpets, rapes, ove.., vmg 213: 431-2406 Ewt. kitchen, dni>eritt &: fully Huntington 8e1ch 4400 1 BR, newly rede(:., pr.; aeti..'lkln, a: owner wU1 give Condominium. LIO;.'l."Ul• s Owner c . {;' oU~ • room with trick fireplace, I=====::::::::=:= I carpeted. Steps to 9lutb heated pool. No children. m:J-B "''""" ... • SllO WANT AD e 63M120 e option to buy. Asking $29,500. d.rf:'am. PARK UDO. l.nXKlUS covered patio with UO' deep Bay1hores 2225 a. .... front. s;m .. -.. ...iy leue. F'1RN. 2 BR. apt., downtown No pets. 6'2.-8042 $29,995 try JO% doY.TI. lot completely tented. Bullt-~ r:-• Hunt. Bch., acro1s from -.,,,,-.,.-"'====:::-- 5'6-5880 Call for details. OrangeO>e..st Properly in range&: oven dishwaaher 4 BR 2 beth. AVB.ll now thru I-=====~=:'=:':':: I LI.brat)'. No children or Need• GarbenataoaleT ~UG~R~'.:'L~ Penm Rlt~. 00-1m 332 Marruertte, CdM 67J."8$0 • alao washer A dr)"er in-J~e 15. Pvt belldl, l!IM.Il ;:H~u~n~tl~n!gt~o~n~Be~o~c~h=l4~00~ 11-~~""1;~Ma~tn.~..,.~~-~:;;~~Flnd:?.~'~1 ;; ·~ttb;;,;•wut~~od~t~~=.;.====~~~I ISOOMamsittultlor,._ 1197 Omnge Ave., C.M. BY OWNER eluded. WW pay points to 1eu boat slip. S2?5. &tZ-3863 2861 : l~C!!!n~e~~l~====3;;000;G;;•;;n~e:ro~1=~;:;;:;;::;~3:000::Ge:::n:e:r:~::l=';""-.;.._1 GI with no dotr.n ~t or Bayehore Dr., NB 3 BR 1 ~ bath, elect. blt-lnt, DAVIDSON Realty v-lla~~ '!:.r 1!::. / ml"imum down FHA. I-=='======= cpts/dii>. 1170/mo. ''""· • LOTS OF ROOM Fomlly PIHsure w;,~.,;-.;,..-. 38';._ Coronade1Mar 2250 ~;:,~· 117-1531 C1/ill'O ,S"i,..( _ f)-C ~Q.9 4 Bdnns. l Bathl -Family can be )"'4Xh in thil beautiful rz bot.th, family nn + huge 5 BDRM HOUie, 1 blk to =======::::=~I \:J\b 1-'"U ~ J.. <ft JJ f.I" i:1 &4!-5678 Room· Fonnal Dln1"g Room 3 BR. lazae bm. + dining. 1111>• room o<t l6x35 tt pool. 9624471 c ) 5'&>103 °"""'· Good for lrf. fomJIY Leguna Beach 3705 SolNaSbnpleS<nlllllilocl WOfd.Pualefot'&CTluckle ~ Bonu.s Room, Large yard $31,500 W/W CIJQ:, All bltn.I. $40,500 open eves er ifOOP of student&. Can be "--"--:'-:-:-:-"'."::-::"'.'I withroomforpoo{MdOO.t Rltr. 2700RarborlB,CM ZH>Tu1tinAve. FAM.tLY GROWING'!' See divided into 2 apt1 MONARCH BAY AREA stora&e. Prked under roar· ~ ~e. 5'1&4147 3 BR B.tck Bay home 2418 thi.t 4 Bdnn, 3 Bath, pl* w I acpQta.te klkheu, LOV£t.Y OCEAN Vl!'W. S ket. Eastside. TRY OFFER Slerra Vlata, priced to sell room home In Prest1rc &reQ, ;;-;;:;,..,,..,.,_;:-<:::~;:::::;-;: BR Ii de!!, 2 JlA, cpll, ~. JEAN SMITH, 3 BR Beach """" nr. Bay at 1.12.000. cau Paul Non!in F""Uy room, ''"'"l dining CLEAN 1 &. hUg• closet • frpl, pool. l300 mo. Also R Spacious la'e 1Jv1n1 rm, fire-882-5841 or 382-5'93 tor ap. room, electronic O'Vttl lbelrl'!'I •toraae. Separate y a rd • •va.11. 2 BR. 2 bt.. $250 mo. REAL TO place, Lge lot. "9;~. pointment to lee a cake tn 3 mlnutes). l car Adults. $135. M 0 n t b . adultt: aua bttw »6 pm MSJ2.Yi 81lbo1 Reil Estate Co. THE BWFSS. l Bdrm. l~ ~~u:~=·= ~in-=l_9S3=s.tt,.,er=5.-.::---,-MOD~, c:bannini, com· Dov•r Shores' Newest 700 E. Balboa B!Vd., Balboo. B.tth. Condomlolum. Ne&r pletety fenced lot on ~-de: l BR., ~I .. CJU. d~s., -ste. fortahl.t: 2 &., 9'mdeck. Archl"d gateway, flOOI Qlll.rt ORiolc 341«> adloola, sbop'r 1: parka. AC. Owner mo•.i.. ... WW lot; garAp, PlO Mo. tt dlb. Pf .• brick frpl.. 980 yard. _Com~k':b' new de-Pool. No )'Vd ,, 0 r k. ~ f $49~• June l51h,. ~ner Ind. BltKlrlrd Oltn:)lml Dr. $17$ '""· • BR 3 bath. VIEW l DUPLEXES 0..UdfUt. S2S,500. '''""' OPE N SUN l2'4 ...... 1. -· 21.1, -""· yeu\y. - homo by l""' w.ns. WW be Eutsido Nim 3 BR. OondomJn!um. The Oct 27th Bolboa 2300 r.,.i '707 comp!•ted Im nrlJ """'11-$57,500 BlufJa. Nur CdM HJ od>ool. REEVES 11£ALTY --------1.::L;oag:.;un=•-N=-""'.':-:- ""'· Oill lnr --L PTf PolfO. IZ,900. """"11 ~ 962-l925 DUPU:X, "°""' ,..,.... .... % 4-11D11M I bath with --Roy J . Ward Co. &16-1550 Pm"CJD ~. 1797 ~ eves. SJ3..l611 m: itt7 driutl. or ewt.. BR, lbeolutcly clf'AI'!. Ad-Carpeted, lrplc tic. $225. Aw., C.M. &o-1m : BR. d .. , 1.._ uv. nn. A REl'OS.VAC:ANT oh.. no pell. 873-'IUl &"'31, m.aIC1 Eastsid•, C.M. d!o ...... !pl .. tlec. kitch. Only 16116 totoJ clown -.. w. .... f AL' REkl'ALS N"' 0tW'Cb6. a Bed.-.. SJM•e.i: e.1uu cu build """""' .., .. • mi.. "' ...., -· Ho-Unfvml""" Apt.. ""'"""" 1 \I bttba, 121.500 VIUIU'IO VII vi; S21.500. OW-6424441 """'· "-ii• WWi1mom>, RI.,, $20 MONTH fll..X. Pari< Lkln oooclo., pco[ HAFFDAL REAL TY Generol 3000 General 4400 ,,,.,.... ~---EYK. 6iJ.l5l64 11.ew; ....,,, 2 Br. 2 BL $2500 ••ffomet1 to Match Income" 1 ;,"ii1il~~~ll!\!!i!!~!l9I -AVAlt.ABL!: !mmod!ate1': l«lUDAY PlAZA I" ft N-Newport Bl\od., NB Do. 177.000 . .,.._ 87<0 Warner 8C.4ICll Bod< .... .__ s Br. :Ill DELI00!:.'9poclool I.Mm. $21,SOO • NO DN GI ,_ lfoec "°"''"') BEST Vl"' fll h Bluffll !U:DUCED, by.....,.,, l 9'., a.. 1""'. Adulll, -"' ...... apL 1135 Pllll uUl. 3 bedrootn1, 2 bethl. ..,.atl! RHltar M5Ml50 Overkmtna kJ, l br, a ha. Vt a .the r I d r ye r : ...,,. J.& or okf.-. &a-0300 s..ted ,,oot. Ampl.t pvklnt dlnhv room, -tflod A 145,000 Own. """711 ~-; ....,_ p at to ltOI· S Bii % bl .. Pia No "1ktre>io .... pon<!ld lt!tch<n. "AJ>ple pf•" BUSIEST -m.JT 0-'ILY Pl1DI' DIJQ).A-w/~ pit l'lOC!> Down Bil~• wtW, ...,1: _.: IJl5 -· CM - ntdeJ1. 5rl0-1TJJ ton. Tbt PAD..T LJNEI. Yea aa ._ &bmn 1ncL Ill cloaing ~0 1t•·1 ~O>f~klrtn~~OK~-~Bkr~.~$1~f!G9!0~-I :~~::;::;:;-;;~:;; TAlUIEU., ""6 .,._ Ou~!Jecl-T'!;.., r::: tor lull -e daJ, Dfal Aaumo bo1. ol IU,900. f. OWICK rri Wht1t -Ill 1>imK4N ......,, 1<2«11 ,.541MJOi16~:::::::...~~~~~-~-'---~~~ nowlll • • • 0 -.. ......... "' ... ,.-, faur ICPll!MIM ..,,.-be. low ta bro four almpl.t WOI'._ IMl.ITOD I .1]1'11. • \ • ,~~-~-~-~-~-~·~--··-~-~-...;-~-~-~-~·--· ... ·=--• ... s•·~s ....................................... ~ ..... ~ ......................... ..; ............................... 111 -~-~-~-~-~, ........... ~-~-.... ------- --------··- I l /• . I • " za 1WL'I PILOT KEAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE General Gen•ral * _;:c.:=;.::;_ ___ I 0 '. .. ..:a'il 1AL::io Apts. Unfurnlahed * * * * N.wport BHch 5200 Guat Homes 5998 Citrus Groves I~-'-~~~~-~~~~~- 6175 ' BR. ••• 1-1 J>RIVATE QM'!erlul I JU.n"Y 2 a •1-·· '"""' calll-d:rnpc"$. be9,m c e 111 n gs. room tor &.M>ulatory lad)'. Block 10 b.•ch· SJS9 & up. Nloe surroundings & lovil1; ADULTS ONLY. 673-1909 ~. !K!l°"Ta.l 3 BR Bullt•lns, br-amed ceil-RM & Boa.rd for elderly in~. firetl.la~. l bl.tbs. 1 man. Good ~ & k>od' block to beach. P<"nsioner or welfare OK. Gocd11.·in Co. (TI 4l m-9150 I ="';:="o::'"='=5='=842-=5:=7\!0:0"'==== Income Property 6000 PRE·PAID INTEREST cau now for complete in-. formation on va.rb.is prop. ertietl from ape.rtmenU lo dtn.11; for exi.mpte, )'OOng 5 acre na vei rrove In com- ing aret; cnly $24.500 full price. OR. 5.34 AcrN Avo- • • ND\' soundproof 2 Br. 2 88.. Aeross from Coco's. 1665 Irvine $185 to $100. 642--0239 LARGE Un!. 'l BR. 2 BA. APT. N1·W drps, cpts. Years tse. Si67.51). 494-950'2 ~"'"· cadoa, 0rl&ng'e County, Wh.ld STEAL ITU $23,500 too.otro. Ripe tor 11.Jbdlvision-d'y1 Want? Wh.lddya Got? Yes. w~ metlll ju.st lhatt Ntce cootact K. w. Small with SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR 1 BR duplex + room for 1tn· Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS al.her + 4 gamges. Ne&r 1818 W. Chapman Ave. Sptclal R•t• N(>WJX>f't &. E. 19th SI. TT)' Oran~. Ca.1.1.f. 5 llnff -s tlmtl -5 bucks •• 1 BR. stovl!, relrit;, yrly $ll0 mo plus c.le<""trlcity ti73-74W $3000 dn. Sell 5UP11Qt1ing +. 541-2621. E.'vea-wlmda 538-san RULi& -"° MUl1 IHClUOI. ' "-+ l ~~, 1-Wtoilt f'IU ...... to It.... t-Wt>flt pu ....., In IT.._ appreciauvu lX ,...,. tt -t-YOU• .,.,.,. end/Ir ...,_ ........ ~ llnei ot -•tll1Jnt. Ea1t Bluff 5242 l JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLDYMENl Help W•nted. Men 7200 Help Wont .. , Men 7200 DELIVER TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES Men or women over It with car, station WAfo on or light trucks. Pl .. aant outdoor work. Your 1vaJl1b le day. light hours. Apply Tuud•y, Oct. 29th thru ~rlday, Nov. lit, 1961 Apply 8:30 A.M. °' 11 :30 A.M. 15144 Golden West Circle, Westminster ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICES SERVICE DIRECTORY Child C•re 6610 640S tneo1ne $29)/mo. ean quick! Need Tax Sheller'. J..-f4011-11Ho '°" .... l1 _ , ...... oEs OHLY• Lockhart Rlt,y 646-2301 Evea. PHONE 642-5671 PRESTIGE Town Homes StZ-0267 ...,. A• ~-· G Pri To Pl•ce Your Trader's P•radlse Ad "COAST SINGLES" ' ·o, lease, 2 br & dl!n l 3 br ,, ________ ,_ ""' ... "''""''6' rove. me CANYON L E v EW R-..,tl f -• Ad I • comer property in River-. A K . I San Clementi! Lncome -2 "'"" Y orm.,.,. group u t DUTCH Lady, Uc d•Y care my home. Good mNls S4. dtcy. 1918 Rosemary, C.M. 646-5219 \Ooith 2 or 2~ bliths. Gold 2 HOMES & APT. side. Strong appreciation po-LOT wKh lakl! prlv_ilegea stores -2 lots 2 offices 2 single people. Meeting each t.lcdallion all l!il!Ctric. POOL Eastsire CM, 3 BR, 2 BR, & tential. Asking $1Z,OOO Ac. $8,!M. TRADE for pick-up Apf3 -Will take TDs or Wednelday evening 4:-car gar. Rall starts at Bach. Apt. Live in one rent Will acceot prep&id interest. or what have you. 646-06Rl. smaller pl"Opf'rty. Make of· ORANGE COAST YMCA, S150 mo. two, U1,(0J THE FOX COMPANY HAVE MESA DEL MAR 4 fer cash not neceNIU'Y. 2300 University Dr., 837-871. Amigos Way, N.B. Graham R-lty REAL:l'ORS Br. 2 Ba., ram rm. $6,000 _c_aJ_l _•"-_3262 ______ , Newport &a.ch at 7:30 PM. ·~ Sponsoring Social G e t. ILIC'ENSED HOME Loving care for the han. dic8'1Ptd child. 549--4<m 6620 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Htlp W1ntod, Men 7200Help Wanted, Men 7200 ROUTE SALESMEN GOOD PAY! GOOD BENEFITS! GOOD FUTURE! Yes, we of.fer vou a ~uaranteed salary-plus a percentage of your profits. Our present m~n average well over $140 weekly. You will work a 5-day week and be suJlplled with everything you need to succeed. A modern lightweight truck---e.11 merchandise-all ex· penses to operate your route-and complete training with pay. You end your family will be protected by Blue Cross and major medical insurance and your income will continue if you're sick or hurt, even ii it occurs when you're not work· ing, Paid vacations or up to 3 weeks the first year. Profit-sharing retirement of $100,000 in only 20 years. Much more. YouT' future is unlimited. We'll advance you as fast as you can stand it. Good pay! Good benefits! Good future! Interested. Orange County area openings. Apply JEWEL TEA CO. Coron• del Mar 5250 Near N.B. Post Ofc. 646--2414 2863 E. Coe.st Hwy CdM eq. TRADE part equity for Bay Vu, CUstom Condo bm. together• fur JIWlJOSe of l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I "'!!'!!'!!~'!!'!!'!!'!!'!!~ J 67J..M$ or '642-6969 3 or 4 Bd rm Monticello 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2,00J', 2 sty, meeting each other and :: -· bome. 545-5481 w/all luxury features. SlO,-sharing ideas and e"· • ROOMS ADDITIONS • 1000 E. Ball Road Anaheim ... ; ~ss Property 6050 Acreage 6200 El Toro; 4 BR., air-cmd., 000 eq. for lot, TD's, Car periences. f\ltu~ of Group ??? 645-llll fl,. LARGE oommercial lot, pav-18 ACRES magnificent oceeJI newer home; bltns.; will determined by your 10Cial b,.t• ed. w/building & restroom!!. view So. Laguna hilltop trade lor home <>r duplex Ocean View · Nr. Npt. pier. needs and ideas. Party each suitable for do-it.yourself land, nr. new Rockwell Au-Coeta Mesa, N'pt Bch area. 4 unils tum. Best rental Sunday afternoon. For in· ON TEN ACRES R .. d . 1,.,..,,tlcs plant< ot""• -·t. Agt. 646--1615: 645-256!1 ev~ area.. $58,500 -take sm hse formalion call ORANGE l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn carwa~. nve-in dairy, gar. .....~ '""' ,_..,..., in trade. Owner. ~lf.i COAST YMCA 642-9990 Frplcs / Pri / Patios / age, etc., at 891 Broodway, $17,000 per. acr@. Consider 9 Unit Loi Desert Hot Court Ave. 673-6521 e 8 TO 9 SPECIALS e Pools. Tennis _ Contnt'I Bk-I...aguna Beach. Asking $500 part trade (TI4) 499-3844 Springs + 2 lots, $89 M. fst. 9 hole Putt/Grc-en. mo. Olester S&lisbury, Rltr. SACRIFICE! l60 ac top WANT other desert Hou!lr HOUSE /CAR $2300 equity FOR SINGLES 900 &!fl Cd &44-613-6900 farmland, Tulare County. or Income. Madge Devis Bus parUy COf\Verted. Trade FRIDAYS Lane, M 2fill -========== °'"P w•t•·· 2 h 1 ,, Realtor. 642-TIXXI f()I' pickup Or car of equal Ladies Free 8 to 9 L.T. Construction I ~_,..- Family rooms, kitchen or]~ '' units. Single story or 2: SERVICE: DIRECTORY Help W•nted M•n 7200 plans custom designed. Jo'"or ' 1!5timates & layout. phone Plasterinn. R:rr~•-,,<;'>Pl) SALES • "'-1511 • ARROWHEAD Pal's Plastering -all types. Licen!led Contractor Free est. """d•nllal " Oommon:lal 54~82S PURITA'S WATERS Maint &: Repairs. Free EAi. 613-2129 Plumbing 66~0 (~!acArthur nr. Coast Hwyl Off' R 6070 • value. C ....... kt.a,·1 Hou• 8 to 9 - __ •c~e....:.~•~n~t~•~I __ .:,::.:.;: 646-79!M Own. Will trade double bed with "" ' e R. J . HUFFMAN e Call alter 6. 642-r.i28 Entt>rlainment 8 to 9 Roo Add K't Ba ··•-Pl b' 24 "" W k LAGUN mattress, box spring and m . 1 . th ,_.,.., um mg , ... serv. or Is growing rapidly fl.lid needs men for mule sa\csmt>n. s:tm. p€"r month while train· ing and prior Lo route as- signmait. Average monthly earnings over $150. after route assignrne111. A • C A BEACH Mount. & Oe .. rt 6210 trame for a sola-t>ed of VAN, walk-in, Olds 88 eng . Snacks & dips 8 to 10 673-4459 e 548-4780 jruat. Lie., insur.; remodel, tr onditioned -·----comparable value. dinene stove ict> box sink DANCTNG 9TO1 '1-,-dd~i!lo-. -.,--.-'-~a.c:...mod:c::~,tln-.-.-I repair, rooter serv. 531-7566 ON FORES'l AVENUE WHAT IS". 545-5446 2 close~s. vaiue $850,.trad~ DANCERS CORNER Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. Balboa Island 535S DLX. 2 BR.. unf., water- !ron1, on Grand Canal: yrly only: no pets or children. $?)() Mo. Brand new. spic &: span, beaut. cptd. & drap. ed; all bltns .. frp!. 673-0207 '! BR Utilities pd. Yearly. Adults. References. 673-3764 12~ PM Desk spaces available in t Motor Jiome, l'.l>S FuJlerton 1438~ N. Main at Edinger 673-6041 * 549-2110 new~ office building a: 4 BR, 3 bath, !am rm, 2 Ave., C.M. 64.2-J10l SANTA ANA 542-9306 Huntington Beach 5400 2 BDRM· 2 BATH HEATED POOL • Kids OK nz;. mo • cpts/drps, bit-ins, patio. S50 depo6it required.. Ot>l{'\lo·are Studio Apia. 612-2211 anytime 5.16-1Bl6 NE\VLY Constd. 2 br. apt from $125. Just tin, suit, adults, nr everything? 1323 lluntington Ave., off Beach & Adams, ti.1gr. Apt A. 2 OR 3 BR. apts., fully cptd., & draiped: bltns., 3 blks to beach; new. AcM11$, 42l·A 12tb St., H .B. Santa An• S620 SANT A ANA TOWERS Prestige, A.dull Uving l:.00 Sq. ft.; 2 Br. 2 Ba. Cen· tral heat. elevator, 8llt>ter. gar S2SO Mo. Incl. util. 1323 No. Spurgeon 547-7804 S70S prime location in downtown F'rplcs, Lake Arrowhead Laguna Beach. Air coodi· SCARCE is tho word l8M equity pl.us o!her. TRADE equicy in townhouse *L--L Y ~ tioned, c• ...... ted, beautilul w ,._ ~ Co Comm at San Juan Capistrano·, 3 '1VA OUnCJer >< -... ~ for many thin&• but even ~~1 ""angl! · 'L paneled partitioning. Two more SCARCE is RECREA· ~adge Davis, Rltr. 642-TIXXI Br., 1~ ba. Spanish style Turn Grey Hair entrances: Frontage on Casitas, ror lot in Laguna Back To Forest Ave., relll' leada to TIONAL LAND ln Calllor· 25 Good quality oil paint-Area. Owner 493-4341 Natural Color Muncl al nia! How would you like to ings, European artists, all P parking lots. $50 OWN YOUR OWN LAKE ! framed, up lo 24X48 in size. 100 Acres clear. SS0,000 equ-Not a dye -tint· or rinR' per month for space. Desk A ..,,,.... ity. WANT clear 0 , 0,a~ Satisfaction Guaranteed and chairs available for $5. • pprox. -"' value. For .. b ~ You find desert, w•t" and car, or ? 644-290'2' clear House, Units or Com-or your money a,_.,.. BW!ineU hours antWeriru• W 't p O Bo 1~ -~ ta' · N-·~-· Lo m'l. Call Art Giovin•I" "'-. n e · . x '""" service available for .$10. moun ms Ul occwvo::.1oir tus XI wild sports ra«r "' 00\.! c S · ~'" 118 • S7l-7420 673-9187. osta Mesa 92626 All utilities paid except pnngs,......., · Miles East blue streak, alfa engine. telept.one. of Barstow). UNIQUE? Extra engine, trans, etc. Magnificent Exec. Man-* s· I DAILY PILOT Want: Family car, value sion! 4650 sq. ft. S175,000 1ng e Adults * 2Zl FOREST AVENUE Freeway alJ the way! 2 Hour n?SO. 595-5387. equity $100,000. Trd: Land You can meet from 2 to LAGUNA BEACH drive from this srea. 5 Ac-income or ?? Bio-. 547-6469 10 new people this month 494-9466 res, 10 Acres, 20 Acres, 80 nIIS SPACE RESERVED LAl{E H Av A s u CITY. and every month for the • Office Space • Acres avail.able, from $900/ Prime dntvro. Cl lot. $8,Wl next 5 years ... Pre.select- scre to $1200/acre. Terms FOR YOUR AD. PHONE E;quil)'. for dn. pe.yl. on ed to please you. For inter. Available Call OWNER 847-6640 eves., 642-5678, TODAY. Mme or duplex in CdM or esting recorded message, after 6 P.M. ask for Lee N'pt. Bch. 644·2902 =·=''='=""~~~'=°'=·~----Mariners Savings and Loan Building, Now· port Beach. 2nd floor. 42c oq. ft. 1500 oq. ft. available. Contact Mr. Redding. MARINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN 642-4000 (Anytime weekends) * * + GENTLEMEN In active fj()'s * * * desires companionship o f DUPLEX. Eact. aide 2j ~"l!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~!!!!!!!!!!I attractivl! petite lady in 50's bedroom. Air conditioned ::; ;;,:; for vijoyment of mutual in· Bricked patio, 6 foot fenced BUSINESS and BUS'.NESS •nd terests. Box M 459 Daily rear yard, double carport, Pilot. tiled showerz. new paint FINANCIAL 1...:"'i7.-~~~--- job. Located in El Centro FINANCIAL Attr•ctive Expert $18,300 _ each unit return~ Bus. Opportunities 6300 Money Wanted 6350 Young Woman $100 rent monthly. Owner, DO YOU HAVE AN __ _:_______ dancer will teach you all Laguna Beach 494-9822 alter OR.ANGE COUNTY OFF· WANT STS 000 lst TD latest step6. CaU Ardell 5 p,m. SALE LIC'ElllSE? CHAIN building fo; 2 AAA tenants'. 21J: 591.-4538 l·lO PM SANDPrPER Apt., Palm De-PLANS TO MOVE THEIR 120,000 total value. Mr. ALCOHOLlCS Anonymous sert; 3 Br. 3 Ba., comp. LlCEJNSE FR o M EX· Jones 847-1266 Ev, s. Phone 542-7117 or write to fum., real be.rpin? Owner IS TIN G S HO pp JN G 675-5839 P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. 61>-0741 CENTER L 0 CA 1' l ON ANNOUNCEMENTS 100 CLIFF DRIVE $150,000 ANNUAL SA~ i~•!!!n~d~N~O~T_!IC~E~S~--FA~n::;n::;•;;u:::n::ce~m::::en::;l::-•-::-_:6:;4::::10 LUXURY FURN/UNFURN Exch1n91s, R. E. 6230 LAST YEAR -$13,000 PER y,,,.ty Lo•••. l • 2 o•--. BEAUTIFUL office s,ace in MONTH. FOR ruRTHER F d IF Ad I 6400 Insurance, Life & Casualty MODERN OFF1CE SUITE $175 per month. Single ottices from $65. Sect service, Zerox, cari>ets. air cone!., cleaning serv:ice. parking. Orange County Bank Bldg. 230 E. 17th si .• Co6ta Mesa. R. Nattress Rltr. 642·1485 Laguna Beach ~ .uui .. ...,. Glendale Federal Bldg., TRADE B oun roe 1 a"enls, let my id•• pay fo• Yearly Lease. l bedroom : Y owner 4 Br. 3 INFORMATTONCALL ., • i;teps 10 Sho~ k Shops CdM S45 Mo. up. 675-3793 Bath, family room with pool GIESEN A'I' (TI4) 523-1732 "'1-IITE Poodle (small). fluffy your mailing. TI4: 842--20'/'6 2 ROOM Otfice near CM City \Vest Anaheim. WANT: 4 COURTESY TO BROKERS injured by hit & run driv· 6625 CARPET It. Fum. cleaning; for 1 day str\l'ice &: quallty work, call Sterlin& for brightness! 642-8520 Gardening 6680 ANTHONY'S Garden Service 646-1941 LANDSCAPING MONTHLY MAINTENANCE Exp horticulturist. Complete Oeanup. Reas. e JAPANESE GARDENING Service Oeanup, Landscap. ing. 531.7034 aft 7 J>.m. MOWING, Edging vacalawn. G<"n'l cleanup. llauling." Odd Jobs. * 548-6955 CLEAN-Up, tree s t r v • rototil, grading, 111rlnklers. lawns, haul'g spray. 646-58411 Gardening Service Experienced. Free Estimate Call 847-ID78 CUI le. Edge le.wn Maintenance. Licensed S48-480@/645-2310 aft 4 LCNI COST MAINTENANCE MOW-EDGE-SPRAY FERTILlZE 962-7349 European Landscaper The Finest at Reuonahle Price 496-3383 Evening Japanese Ga.rdening Professional Maint. Land- !K!apinf;:. Cleanup. 646-6553 Sewing 6960 • Dressmaking-Alterations Professional &. fast Reasonable. 646-6446 FINE Dressmaking &. altera· lions; fast service. Re8.l!()nable prices 675-1735 Alterations-642-5845 Neat, accurate, ~ yrs. exp. TILE, Ceramic 6974 * Verne, the Tiie Man * Cust. work. Install & repairs. No job too •maJI. Plaster patch. Leaking !i ho \Ve r repair. 847-1951/846--0:zl)j Upholstery 6990 CZYKOSKl'S Custom Uphol- stery. European Cra!tsman- stllp. 100% Financing. Furn. boats le. auto's. 642-1'54. 1831 Newport Blvd .• C.M. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job Wanted, Man 7000 BARTENDER, Exp, age 40, desires early shift or part time wock, willing to do bar & lounge cleaning combined with early bart:ending shift. Can mix all drinks. Ref. 536-81"8 Ocr!anview from every Apt. Halt, Carpets & drapes, .$80 Br. without pool. Good area. E er at 2454 Sanla Ana Ave.,:l;;F;;u;;n;;•;;••;;l;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:64;;;:12 from ~94-~~~· lease util. inc. 642-6560 Fixer-Uwer OK. Will split YINV n~:R _WANTED C.M. Given to ltle poundl. °""""~~.;..---13 roMMERCJAL. 1 indust.; ;ppsc~~ ~.~~II ~l"n'"'• n::ied • ~pu~~= truck at 1.0:25 p.m. October WESTMINSTER Job W•ntod, Lady 7020 CARPET Cleaning, windows, floor str.ipping & waxed, walls washed, 531-0567 HOUSEKEEPER-Day worker. Very reliable. Very experienced. 540-nI General Servlcea 66&2d="======== Domestic Help 7035 REAL ESTATfo ofilce with living qtrs. ~o"""' o....-v product ~"~· ;.'""~·::""::2_:-36~72:..,..-=-I PROFESS. Window, walls & ;;..;.;;;....:.:.;::..;.;.=;_-.;..:..:,: General Costa Mesa. 646-2130 BUSINESS and . on~ m~rket. With-FUUND. nr. Kaiser Elem. MEMORIAL PARK FINANCIAL ~n one y~ar, 1t will be earn- Rent1ls WantK 5990 I d t , I p 6080 1ng you m excess of $20,000 Sch~·· Cost1a Mesa; Young: Mortuary & Cemetery 1----_::.;c.;::__.:,:_:: n us r1a rop. from w 1te ma' C9t w/blsck Comr,lete funer•ls tlt·. cleaning: bus i r1 es s. rcsid., It. con1truction Crystal Window Oeaning Frtt Estimates 548-8737 FREE SERVICE To Bus. Opportunitl• 6300 per year now on. 1 9J>Oll-f1ufty tail; Silver rom $2'S M·l. 5 ""°""' $650 mo. havo "'"' 100,"'1 custom.,., ti /b 11 uo ~ • ~-CAR w · th ;...1..-. co ar w ' · .rtO"'VO.lJ Ce-tery lo~ H A U L I NG CI OWNER-MANAGER lncome, can be increased. """' ASH: Maker puts in ' u .... ...,~.r waiting to "'"' •• • ea nu P, DOMESTIC HELP BROKER $70,(0). Will trade part cash on yoor lot. Customers do order. Check this one out. ~D: Black male dog from $130 garaj!es, odd jobs etc. Free Y1>u Sf'lrct your own tenant ~+="""==0='="'='·="""=="=21=='= own washing. You service Call after 10 A.M. for de. w~anng harness & leash. Include& Endowment Care estimates. Anytime Jim ACTIVE: RENTALS -for few minutes daily and tails <TI4! 527-T.55 Vic. Coast Hwy:, Coro~ del Everything in one beauWul I "54&-5325""~~,---~~,---~ Live in or live out 534 -6 982 Commerci•I 6085 forget ii! Low utility co11, Mar. Call & 1d'nt 1 f Y • place means less cost. • 1 DAY service. Home & Houukoepers .::;:.::;c;.::;..::;c;;. ___ _::_:: goodw return on Investment. * EMPLOYMENT * 675-4817 or 613-5748 No traffic problems. apt. cleanlr!g. Crpb, walls, Excelsior Agency \\'ANTED 1 BR untum Apt. COri.tMEROAL BLDG. -app. rite Jiffy-Wash c/o John nnJ... grown white tame 14801 B ch W stmf st windows, pa\nting. 642-8520. 4l'.l So Broadw LA \XX113 CM., Ne'>'lpOrl, Corona del 15IXI sq. ft. in top kicatlon on Taylor, 3131 Bern Drive, La. to ~~.••0_"!~hN -". female C' ab rb i l. Vi~ 531-1725 ta ' e ~~21 Sterling for brightness! (213) s&:u.!47 ~3) 63>-1735 Mar or I a~•na, To SJOO mo. "1xl50 I t with .... ~""-guna Beach ~-"'-IA<UI\.: vu Brookhurst & Elli6 F.V 1,...,..,,,,. ................... 1======="'===1 ~" 0 pav.,.,. 11.... ... e 494-8992 e ice. Muat be congenial, neat 968-340:i I' ~ LIVE rNs Gar or camort neeessary. ing. • Owner "''ill accept ~-.,..:.~=::,,::_ ___ I appearanct" &: have the abil-SERVICE: DIRECTORY Hauling 6730 Employer pays fees 642-C0'!6 alter 5 p.m. In.1st deeds, Janel. houses, Getting Into Business? ity to get alcrig with others. FOUND, ~ck & while cal. ;,,;.c.:;:;.::,,_ ____ .:,:.:;:: I George Byland Agency GARAGE "''anted in vicinity etc. • Submit. Golden CJppertunll;y in beach $500) req. Start at .$250 pe.r part Per an. White collar. Babysitting 6550 LITE Haullng-Trinuning 100 B E. lSth S.A. 547-0395 ol Richards Mkt &. Lido 'JlHE REAL ESTATERS erea. Ailllips 66 Service week plus !!hare-of profits ~~ de.ma & Shantar. ATTENTION MOTHERS: Tr:~e Gi1~~~:1~ps Chinese live-ins. Cheerful Isle. 675-4TIG. ca.JI between &'6-TI71 516-2313 Station tor IN.11e; 1101 Bay. that should acrede $25.000 ~~~-~----~I Reliable child care full/ BIG JOHN 642-4030 Permanent. Experienced. l•'~&;.;6,,;:;:-,,--,=---1167'x273" C2 percel in Foun-side & Marine Dr., Ne"NpOrt per year. (714) 547-5298 Ext. FOUND -Grey poodle, 22 part time. Paularino area. * * Far East Agency 642-8703 SEMl-?rivalf'. W/W cpts. lain Valley shopping Cmter. Beach. Contact: l=4!='========= lbs., young male, vicinity Call no\v. 546-0949 LITE H.Atn..f.NG Refrig. 114 wk. 646-8359. 135 Sacrifice for 86c per sq ft. CHUO< OW'WDER Edinger It. Springdale, H.B. e BABYSITTING MY ho Cle!n ~~*est. Albert Pt. CM tD4) 894-4321 714: m-mo n4: 774-1043 lnv..tment Oppor. 6310 ,""~~'~''°=-~'~''~'-='"~"~'...::5c..:P~.M:::;.1 on Wallace, chita Me~a~ ===---'----- BUSIN-0 FOUND Lad · · I I CLEAN. Lots, ga~es, etc. ~ pportunity N-~'·"LE 1 ... n .. ~..... : ys wr11 Reliabe. 548-7801 ·-e W t·• On -• CA.nJ~....-.:u "' ._,.,,, 1~ •-t vi 19th •'========== Tree removal, dump, skip . an eu. sa.1e liquor Chu,~ Bond• lONo ~--wa '-~•. ~ ., c. 'I I -• 0 "" . 1• u""' Pla ti Call & 'd " backhoe, liil, a rad e, NEAR New house. Man $6,500. Lagi.ma Beach OC"N.n =;. wantcu, ran' e count, 6% int. Owner. cen a. 1 entuy. Brick, M1sonry, etc.. 962-8745 share kitchen & bath with l · 673 7349 G42-lS44 6560 Room1 for Rent 5995 Lota 6100 ="'-----= VM"W lot for retiremtflt, Fa:r West Services -FOUND ·. 1•-• bl•~ •ol • other man. SSS. Avail Nov. I · -.. UI. .. U\. 646-9740 ever-age mvestment or 2(i. Mr. Gamble Money to Loan l.t320 with whlte markings . BRICK, Conc;ete. Carpentry home. $1 ,COJ. do. $60. mo. -;;;==,.-'~''"c,....1565~-~--I·--.;...-------1.1ission Vil!jo Area. 837-9795 Custom Cabmets. Small R()(».15 $15 wk. & up. Bach. (714) 4!J9.3844 ,.........., io' h• OK ~-Est 96' •0 « -....vn.ONA del Mar Beauty $12,000 SM. Fem. dog, mixed breed, r '""' · ......,'"" studio apll S22.50 wk. up . 2316 R-2 U>t. Near n-DANA s.J 4 •·t!y ood 2nd Newport Blv., C.M. 548-9755 PT. HARBOR. "-on 1ta. •u equlpt. Avail. for g 1st or TD sht. hair w/ flea collar. So. Busineu Service 6562 Ample prkg. 64fr3523 loan. 1·3 yr. term. Call Coat Plaza, pkg lot., 546-0314 ~~;;c;,;.;::::....;:.;:.:.:.:;:::;_...:::.:.:: MESA Verde, nic. room, * 496-9723 * RENT Ad B'-~ =~ -twin beds. Ga.rage. -:=o--=-~----1 established barber Mr. ams, "'• ~ FOUND: Silver Poodle, maJe Services "Yes" Unlimited LITE Movin,; &: hauling, Yard • gs.rage clean up. * 842-3490 * Housecleaninq 6735 JACK'S hskp'r . Flr butting, crpt clea.n'g. Windows. etc. Comp hie clean·g. 54&-7243 15!16 w. Bak~r. C.M. 5t&-82'!) Dally Pilot Want ada!I shop, $45 wk. Utll. pd. 2 in vicinity Victoria & Bus1ness men -do you ne@d l.,:.:;~~~~~~f.~~~A~t~w~.,..~~·~G<>Go~~!==~"'~'~~· ~-~2541~~==== i R11I Est•t• Loins 6340 ConUnental. 642-0322 .!Omtone to do your Typing? LEI" us help you BUY A etrrE. Loveable ma\ e BocMleep~g?. a Secrttarial .L_•_n_d_•~·-•~p_ln_g,,_ ___ 6~1_1_0, 1 . n ~T' ... R G /&"WE"D"~~"""'I HOME, retinance existing orange kitten. Vic Mesa Substitute. Q1al TI4: 842-7341 GARDEN ARTS '11\ .L"1 .1:11.J A'-r-lOM or obtain .a 2nd TD loan. North. CM . 546-lJOS ~r 347·5026· "YES" is our P1annin$1: before Plantq'. .._ -, aATL =c;.cc;,,.~:.:..:.:.:..::::.. __ middle name. :U Hour serv. i;. . 'FREE APPRAISAL & FOUND Girls watch vicinity 300 Services Otfered 1===;*;642-;:,;7;657=*=== I ~2'1 '-Daiilit'~Qiii. lot ~---I ·PROMPT SERVICE of FMther Street &-Sants'===o====== _, .._ ........ ~ .,.. ·"rh I I• p h I ~ 6-11,-.. To ~mc-.ge for Fri"'-. »liWA\ Sattler Mortgq-e Co., Inc. Ana Ave. 548-0140 Ciblnetmaking 6510 aper 1ng ng ''~ mxfwa&O:a-dil ......,, l!~~!-361 336 E. 17th St., Costa Mess Painting 6150 afycwZccb:t:::'-'"!''°0 ••t.rs ._,,_70 642-2ln 545-0611. Lost '401 CUSTOM Kit. cabinets, ""I ... .., Eves. 673-7865 &U-115'1 bathroom/pullmans, tonnl· Painting & paper ha.ng\nc 2~ ~"-MWJI oc:r.~• LOST: Male Wh~I fUkcl:;:';';'~op~•~~=';'°"'~;•:''=':":':·:98.'12;; residential-commerc1al 3~ :n:;:r 6263_NDll .. o M TD ,.,5 min. Greyhound): IL brown JlceMl!d. lnl\l1'ed ....,.. :WN.d ..cw. 21 ortg•t"• . .'s _., I 5lt.Jd 3SEimci:m ~-::. 4-ls.:J6$ w bile face: do NOT use C•rpenterlng 6590 Free esUmattt1 6CW. 361'.W ·~ Mtlo $6.~. 1st TD • $3:;. mo. any kind of collar or in-·I C.::.-<:..:.-"--"-----546-1921 • 646-7639 7YWI' :VAllold 61~ ....,._ \nd. 8% 3 yn. 1...a""""" aectidde on doa:· Reward! CARPENTRY .._.,. »a... ... ..,,_____ o-· TRIM only -.and'a, -'-'g Halp Wanted, Men 7200 MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS Experienced in iwanbly of precision mechanical com- ponents with abilil)' lo read blueprints. 46 hr min wor1c week Steru:ly employment Profit !haring J. C. Carter Co. 671 W . 17th St. Costa Me.al 548.3421 Lloyd's Nursery BENEFITS INCLUDE Bonded profit sharing retire- ment plan, compaey ipaid medical and hospitalization insurance, paid vaolition, sick leave, etc. Applicants must lbe High School &raduates, minimum height 5 ft 8 ill., 155 tbs. Minimum age ZI years. Must havf' good driving rec- ord Md be in top physical condition. Sales .ability de- sired. Bring drivers license and military service records. INTERVIEWS Saturday, October 26th, 8:30 am to 11:30 am Monday, October 28th, 8tollandlto3 619 N. Main St., Orange, Cal. Arrowhead Puritas Wafers MACHINE SHOP DISPATCHER J\.1ust be familiar w i l h machine shop practices, and ability to read blue- prints. 45 Hr M.in Work \Veek Prolit Sharing J. C. CARTER CO. 671 W . 17th St. Costa M&sa 549.3421 An equal opportunicy employer O range Coast Jr. College District NEr.:o~ Bookatore Clerk Onler supp!if.'S. ct\ecks, !lhipments, docs pricing, proc:esse invo\C("S etc. Sal· ary .\458.-$.'i.'iG. Night Custodian& Hours JO pm to 6 am. Mon. thru Thurs., 3-midnight Fri. &: Sat. $4t7-S543. A.PPLY ORANGE COAST JR. COLLEGE DIST. f\.. , 2701 Fl'lirview Road I ...._.,Costa M~. 83·1-57~ e MEN WANTED e Houri 11 to 2 $1.'r.i per hr, plus meels. plm vacation. Part time only. McDonald's 3141 Harbor Blvd, Costa r.1"3 DISHWASHERS Over 18. Apply aftf'r 3 p.m. FIVE CROWNS RESTAURANT 3801 E. Coo$l H11.•y. C-orona de! r.far e EXPERIENCED e BOAT CARPENTERS ,g.s.-3'Y-·ii"',.;;--J+«:w.)8 .},_.. OCt6ll view lot. t.ow dn. 642~142 Until !'> PM.; MINOR REPAIRS No Job l pa.inl'g. Do It t>tf .. Uie '* Ntne-ry lalesmen wanted ~ _::~-,.. ~~-rie::: 22 M1 10; di«. (n4) 499-3844 5'tS-Ei022 Attt'J' 5 PM. Too Small. Cabinet in gar-ratM come. CaD Jlm * ~enced. fi,-::;: -~1"37.Qitjf LOST: Bladt Toy poodle An-t.I" & o t be r cabinets-642-4669 * Landscaped iMtaller TOP '''AGE}; s.... ~":=:::z-~ Money W1nted 6350 swtrs to name Peaches. Vi-S6-8175 Evet. 646-Z."m Dtu'I operienced. 168'l P1•~tt11.. Costa t.,esa AtOr 1• ' -----'-" . . --ll O ._ .. _ PAINTtNG. i:xt, lnte.r\Of Uc. ...._., •--150. .(§'Nllllf 75<1ain ~:-. -CLnllY or r nu1clscan Foun-. · NJUt:non. Ina. 17 yn e,,.. f"'r'ff est. ......,. ror fl.t')'V"',tm.tnt LOT MAN ~ -.. • M•:tAI 1!iH u.a.-!':::;,..'. ~ WANTS250,00J·~yr.tsiTD. tlin HB R ---'I~ N ~ .... ,.., ~ ....... a<--,-...i\I' • · · ewlU"IJ llJV· 0 REPAIRS •ALTERATIO'JS AcousticaJ ~II. 5a-63'JSl.,,,=-,,,,.,.C::;:c.:.:co:..-,--·l....,.f"'<''lenct'd pre ferre d mtn ':1 ----~ ""tip 100 lllttfacular 1.41\JM (lUNtionl uked' 3424101 MEN .,er 1 •• 7 :;.y;:s llWW. · --Beach octtn view lots, 11e-· CABINE:T'S. Any size job. rNTERJOR A: EXTERJOR WMttd lor cmiy a.m. empktye benefits, p a i d :RQf I s......_ =~ tivd,y toelli $1 (OJ LOST • Male cat, ~llow &: 25 yn. eX]X'!r, $48-67U Paintlna. 30 Day 9'Jedal deUvtr')' ol n~paper1 1n vacation rl<'. Johnson & &w, ~ , :::. !:,t=-,_. lO I: !O OK"« 7l O, f!fll, -white. Very affectionate, Lie. A:. lnl. Chucll: 646-ttlO!I homn. Approx 3 hrs. per Llneoln Mercury. 600 \\' m....,, Gt« il#t . .21 • l 4) 400-3844 house c11.t . Vic. N,wtond & Cement, Concrete 6600 day. Hntg Bhc/ F'ntn Valley Coast Hwy, Na . .sfGocid' 84~ "9.'"' You cwi earn 10% «more Talbert, F.V. M2-2241 INT, Ext 1 bdr apti, labor & aree. only. 847-2300 J-~ .... _ .... .., .. e~..:...a with prep&ld bonua. ,..., .......... AL Bt•~ ~oy n..... CONCRETE W'Ork, p:>Ol deck1 material $69.SO. Com c '1 MALE S SERVICE srA. ATTN D -J·"· Sml '-"ll'U\A..V '-"' •· ""'" ·-•tt,y' p ti Btodt Ntts &Tail. 642-~ .. tylllrt ..., a ti I 'd • Minimum C"'fl, day:ot, Sre • '51Yo.-111 !Qr i ~ th Co. 1323 North die. Ans to "Cuey" 7 yn spec1... . a os -'°'=::="-c.:.~..,;.""'===· I w/loeal following pref.; JI r Li d ~r., =~ ·=~ ,_ , Bf'Oll(fwsy, S.A. 'M~ okJ. Vlc W1l10n 8:: C.nyon work. 00-1791, 54&-1324 INTra Or Qt. PAINTING. new salon, C.M. 642-~ p:i~lld:a ~Rd~ ::~:~· ~; 30~ dOs.,:.tir. to~ ~=~ LOCAL M.O. wa.ntl '55·(0) CM. Rew11rd! !143-1763 BEST In COOCl'c.!le. Walb, IMMED. SERVJC& l.«a.I JOIN tM ~ 111 tbe J-1~. No phone cA.l!:ot~ ''°"'Good ~~ a'\=.-,._ ___ 7~ prlv loM. Well 91!<'., ht T.D. LOST old aulteaae, (l'etl\. pool decks, floors. paUa1. I ~"'::.'::·~FREE.;;:;;;.;:"';;.; .... ""'!£27""'_,.,,"" DAl'LY PD..Or WAJ>n' ADS! HAND y ~tnn.-0..rpentM", \g,J W ..., __., ..,.:2 Multi-pl.Ul»C)9ll: 'b&dl, CdM Contrnts only valu1.ble to 1...:612-<15:::.~1;.'===cc==--DAll.Y Pll.oT WANT ADS 6'2·56TI old!"r 1inglt1 m•n. own to..ila, ~Of 6'BJ.186 QWTier. Reward! 548-T&CS SOCK IT TO 'EM! AlwQS a ~I SOCK JT TO 'E:o\I ! Prt. Sdl.I 673-8610 :: . l::! -,., -:r~ ,, • -----..... -....... ~ .. -...... -· .. _,.. ~ .,,..., •••• --... --.... --... -... -.. ._ .... _'11"'."" __ ._,... __ .....,_..,.,....~....,-~_,....~..-.r...-.... .-......... ~.-..~~.-..~ ..... ----...,..~-~~--· ,.. ---· -.,,. -· -... -• --·, .... -... -.. .... ..-..-. -. • DEUVER TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES Men or Women owr 11 with ur, 1tatlon w.,on. or tNck. Plwunt outdoor work. Your available d1yllght hour1. Apply Wodnesd1y, Oct. 30lh thru Mondoy N••. 4th 1t tho limo r. loutlon ll1t.cl below. 9 AM & I PM 88 Fair Drlv•, Cott•·Mna (Orange County Fair Grounds Junior Ex· hibit Building.) 9 AM r. 1 PM. 1118 Nor•h M1ln St., S1nt1 An.I. 1 PM. 3655 Weat McFadden. Santa An• Help Wanted Men 7200 rtelp W1nNd, Min 7200 ENGINE LATHE MACHINISTS EVE SHIM DRILL PRESS OPERATORS DAY SHIFT 45 hr min work week, Steady employment Profit sharing J. C. Carter Co. 671 W. 17th St. Costa M•s• 548-3421 PLAYBOYSll Drlving a new Clldlllac or Lincoln? F.aming at least SHQl. monthly? It not. th!ll ~ would like a ~r posi- tion that can make thete thlnp possible • look no fur... ther. No experience requir- ed, complete training, we will guanlJltee you UP TO $650. MONTIIL Y If you meet our requirements. 63J..6:f,4 Mt. Samon!. BOAT MANUFACTURERS PER..'MNENT EMPILOYMENT, . TOP PAY PLUMBERS GELCOAT TOUCHUP CARPEN'J'ERS MACHINISTS CHOPPEm OPERATORS F1BERGLAS ROLJ...ERS Columbia Yachts 27'5 McCormick: Ave,., C.J\.t -~. ' . ' INSPECTOR Good knowied~ of bench and noor impectloo required 1n preciAion mec:hanicel com· pooents with cutlng layout experience pre1erTed.. 45 hr min work week, Steady employment Profit sharina: J. C. Carter Co. 671 W. 17th St. Costa Meu 548-3421 ITT JABSCO DRAFTSMAN, MECHANICAL High school graduate plus ad. ditional mechanical courses. Mechanical dratting, detail· ing & c:heddng. Prefe!' 90me ma.chine shop experience. EQUAL OPPOR'I'1NITY EMPLOYER 1485 Dall!'Ne.y, Costa f.!esa !TI4 J 545-8251 BUSBOYS AH Shifts Apply In persoo Wu Ben's 333 Bayside Drive Newport B11ch Demonstrators Well Knqwn Product Ttmpor&ry Uligruntnta FNTN V WEf. OOBTA MESA, WESTMJNSTER • A1J... AREAS OF ORANGE COUNTY! Involves ~L lf )'OU Uke to meet peapll!, lift neat appe&rin&'. A: coo:1d use the extnl a.utmas mooey $$, see. Office ·Aide, 13287 Harbor Blvd Garden Grove 530·3031 SECRETARY for Fullerlon l!'M.. Position to lut 4. mos to 1 yeer. Leo pl o)l' corporate bl.ck· """""'· Tup oidl1' & .,....,_. ing. One of the leadlng oompaniet in <>ranee eoun. ty. Sale.ry I.I $51Xl. t!) $5Zi. Fee paid. Aho ~ job!. MISS EXEC AGENCY ' 4lil W. CoMt H-wy. NB Call Betty Bruce, 6M>-lm See Betty Bruce at Agency for Career Girls UO W. Cbut Hwy., N. B. By appoint. 646-3939 7400 Gill & Mall Wrapper P~t 40 boUt week 9 am to 6 pm. Sund.ly &. weekday off. G<;OO rtte1, benefits & · worldng condl- tionl. Min. 3 yn. sales · eltt wrapping eX()el'lence requlr- ol. Richard's Lido Center 3433 Via Lido Ne'NJ)Ol't Beach m.6.3!iO Secntary to ~ !GM oft· leer. Dictation required. Pn- fer savings and loan experi- ""'· CONTACT MR. MASCHMEYER PART TIME D£MONSTRATOR °"""""" ... ....n ol<C1ri'"1 a~Uance: dtmonJtrators tq major department stor.a lo- cated In Newport • Hunting-'°" Beach areas. Good a.al· ary plua cornmlMk>D. Exper- lf!nce preferred but not nei;;· eSS8J')' u we give oomplete t:ralnlna:. For lntcrvlew call ot Write W. F. Ullla, % liOOVe"r OJ., 270 Coral Circle, El -· Calli. 213; 322-7'1.2 D.M.V. CLERK A11!t11T1•tl¥1 ••P•rl111c1 0 11 ly. Sko11ld be ••perl111ced 111 OMV Oookk1•pl11t . for lerg1t Or· 11191 Co11nty 111!• d•el1r1hlp 5 dey week, co1T1p111y 01111fih , C1ll BILL BARRY PONTIAC 2000 E. I 1t St., S.A. 541-2681 Escrow Offlc.r Sa.vtnp Ir Loan experi- ence necessary. Pre.fer tome aales escrow exper, CONTACT MRS. RAIN10 MARIN~RS S1vings end Loan 642-4000 Fashion lt,1•~ Newport Beech NEEDS Christmos~ Sain People Jiouacwlvet ard Mathen. Can yoo ~ .. tew' hOUn e a c h day tU'd ·add to the family tnco ..... at the same time? &:he- dules are aftemoona, e"Ye- ninp or a combination ol both. Work w1der t b e finest coodlUont and top aupm.'isioo. Apply in P«6011 9:~ am to 9:30 pm Monday tlw FrideJ' J. C. Penney Co'. 24 F11hlon l1l1nd J.n equal opportun.i~ miploytt WAITRESSES Comblnetlon Food & Cockt1ll ApPl;y after 3 p.m. SEA SHANTY 6.10 Lido P&ril: Dr. Ne"YJpOt't Beach * . Saleslady for 1tore at Fashion Ialand needed full time salemrly, UnU1U&I career oppcrtmlty «J b our wM Monday UNION BANK """""h """"'"· ,,..,... OOD· needa experienced tact MR. BENDER, 644-0081 NE)V .w;:ourrr . Karls Tays INTERVIEW>;R 50 F11hlon l1l1nd tor new 1ottioe'1h Newport ----'--'--'="-- Bead!.. Pleat appl:y In ~ IOn, Union Bank, Maln at 4 Veta, 0ranfl'!. ____ ..... ______ .. Old World . Mediterranean Spaniah Furniture BB Reconditioned Grand Pian<>I U.t look and aound Uke new! Save now on thla fab- ulous new ~ect1or1 ot tine Grands ••• all with our tam- OUll warran~. Select now """' Steinway, Knabe, Meton & Hemlln, Chickering, Klmbill, S"'1mor & Mlny o'ther1I • No Payment 'TU January • Bank Terms • Free Delivery • Trade-ins Two Locetlont To Serve You: Furniture YOU'D NEVm GUESS mEY' ARE US!t>! THE M061' PERFECf WE'VE HAD· EVER.I NEW PIANO GtWV.NTllEll mm: BENCHES, DELIVERY A 'l'\JNlNO ~ Mon & Fri eves 'tn t ~lto5 Gould Mu1lc c....,..ny :J:M5 N. Main, S.A. MT.oM:l OUR Mth YEAR BABY GRAND $400 615-1 ll!i, 615-1866 RENT or Buy New Color TV $9 PER MO. l\ENTAL CAN APPLY TO PURCHASE ORDER BY PHONE Newporter TV WeirttnghouM Hdqtn. CM. 548-8511 9AMtolPM TD&ya OLYMPIC Colar TV-Steno combination. Modern wamut cabinet. $3()0 or o1lez. 64.4.-1£i06 83:W1'13 RENT TV $10 No Deposit • Free dellwq Option to bu;y. T'1U110 SILVErt Tone T.V. 21'1 Xlnt Cond. S'15. or ~ ofl.et .. 6~. aft.-6 pm MC1I'()R(LA TV 23'' 8-* A wblte ti.bi• model wttb fm!Otll cootrol ~ 6'lWl84 .. I •11 ' " I . ' . ·'1 •I ' I ' ., • • . , . I " . li . ·' I '. ' 'I • ., 1 I " " I t • ' L ,M~RCHANDISE FOR MERCHAHblsE FOR 1111!1\CHANOISE FOR SALi AND TRAOI SALE AND TRAOI SALE AND TRADE TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION tRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1~~~~~-:--t-'-'--'--.;..;....~---SpMd~kl Bo1h 9030 Trucks 9500 lmportod Autos 9600 Imported Aulot 9600 tmportld Al~OS 9600 TRANSPORTATION Autos W1ntad 9700 1963 arEVY n. i Or. Sdn. t cyl, 3 ..... In -coodlUoo. Private party. 9&1'-7579 _F...;u:;rn"1=t=ur.:e;,;;.;o;;_.;.;.""1:..oooo...-F-u-r-n-ltu-r-1----:IOOO::::-: Ml1c1ll1neous ~~;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 8600 -FL YING V REFlUCERATED Van 1961 KARMANN GHIA TRIUMPH --~t_,,_ MEDITERRANEAN SPANISH :J-urniluNI 5ie6la-Of.• New Sho-m Samples Wiii Soll Any Ploc1 lndlvidu1lly 8' carved arm divan, lg matching chair with beautiful fabrics· 5 pc hexagon dark oak din· tng set with blad: or avocado framed chairs & vinyl cushions: 5 pc bedroom set, Mr Mr & Mn dreoser With lg framed mirror, 2 lg commodes & matching headboard. , &RDS OF PARADIS!: -'1 Ciuopor, ll' 120 ho M.,. 0.."l' ""°""""'· Cood cond. ------~-1--------- 2 BEA\/l'lntt.j'LANTS IN ............... d traller. =oo. Lo ...... C&ll 642-1831 '63 KARMANN NICEST CARS A • CAI. CAN ONLY l'.00 M>6l33 ... "'"' •. .,. ruEVY Plclrup, 6 cyl GHIA IN ORANGE COUNTY 8'tet 5 P.).l and all cll1 ditluxe c:ab, f1eet Dies spd. 'S6 'MUUMPH 1200 <:CriV. sat. I S\in. Ul2 So. Roll St., Mlrine Equip. 9035 n.a. $415. 546.33'15 MetalDe blue paint with aold Flash.in& red with black top, .!::~".:.1 ••• _.._u_,_, J'IBERGLAS boats '68 CHEVY" ton turbo pinllrtp~.interiordetwce. 11e1t.1 ftve ln comfort. 35 --·---~ ~,. (nmallouttJ lllldw>n hydro -•· :m V-8, low See Ibis °""$12 .... 99' m.p.1 . .,..,, to drt••, °"" Elec overdrive Tonnel.u I: Mercury Pro;. (50 to 125 mileqe. U«IO. 961-1861 , lo own. Only toft tape. $500 caah. 1961 HP) 'T1"bn. Gla11tna: ELMORE $ll85 model t31Xl. Early American m I t e _r I a 1 . In oat d -•-•_,I" _______ _ Wurlitzer electric Organ. t b J 9510 ' ELMORE $1250 96S-l314 tn.rwniaalon. C 0 n 1ro 11 ' '62 INTERNATIONAL SCout. SPORT CAR · cables, windshields, see.ts, MOTORS FIREWOOD. Euealpytua and (IWi'f'el) and fisbtng bolta, Fout wheel drive • travel WORLD Or an g e • 'J 1-I I .f S. nuts, SCT"l'WI, 1 t e e r l n i Ull>. new tire1 $995 cull wW Phone 8!)t.J322 TOYOTA DELIVERED. uaernbUe1. Wiil Sell to accept trade, 642--0291 )5300 Be8d1 Blvd., Wstmnstr Pb. B!H-3320 Highest Bidder tor the DJ.• '64 INT'L. ~ WhJ. drive, new MERCEDE. S BENZ 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmrutr Misc. W1ntecl 1610 TIRE LOT. 54~ tires: heater; aac. 6'1>-3623; 166 TR 4A W A N T E D DIESEL Engines, 36 bp, 646-4319 eves. '68 MERCEDES 250 S Red roadster; one of cu bet· WE ~ quality (Do Junk pleaae) • Furniture, color TV"a. atereo.. appllancu. tools I: office equipment. TOP CASH IN Jl Minllttt b-esh water cooled, W/R!-1967 Intematlonal Scout . transmiss1on ter Trlumpha of 18 to choose duet:ion. 6Tl-9321, eve1. loaded. Sl.950. AutomatiC: 'pow· from . Book of $214S. 546-0637 5J6.8664 ... brak'5, .....,. ......... $2099 ;:>iSliiPrn;;:;;t;i>;;;--:;;;: I ========='I electric amroot. $56$. 2·215 HP Direct drive in-''""'"°' ,_,,_ Buin C1mpers 9520 T & M MOTORJ ELMOR£ Mwine Inc. 673-0360, ~2586 aft s pm. VOLKSWAGEN NICEST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY '68 VW Sport Statkm Wap 8-ttbacl<, -""' blue with contrasttna blaclc lnterlor. Save a ltf'OOP of mmey on this one. Sbow- room fresh. Only 1234' ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Ph. 894-3320 l5Dl ~ch Blvd., Wstmnstr Uud C1n 0900 NEED A CAR? CAN'T BE 1'1NANCD)'T e Banknlpt? e R.-pcm .... T eBad Credit! a DIVOl'Cfld'f e MWtar)' e N.w ta ~T Make Payday P~ McCARTHY MOTORS lQl So-l.laJn • Edina• (2 blocks N. ol Seen) Sant.a. Ana Pb 542.3501' WE PAY CASH FUR '68 VW AMIFM radio. wl Tr1n1port1tlon C1rs lide w a I Is. Cocoa mata we Carry Our Own Contracts bumper guards. $ l 9 5 0 . 5th Anniversary Servin&: ~10 after 4:30 The Community! loos vot.KSW•GEN, good Newparter Motors condiUon. $1250. 89'l-0876. 2036 Harbor Blvd l58U Bluebird Lane, Hun. ~ ~ tlnrton Beach ONLY $429.95 ($895 Value) ot TERMS•• town $3 W•k 531·1212 * 893-«65 • WANTED • Boot Slip Moo•lng 9036 WANT slip for 35' Sall. Suitable for Uveahoard. Treasure1 of Ali Baba, 3419 Via Oporto, N.B. Ph , 53&-6185 Gvdeo GroYe Blvd at Beach (1) 892-fffil or s.34-2284 ... vw. R/H. N"" pa;nt, CADILLAC Phone 89-t..J32'l ba.ttery a: clutch. X1nt 1----------I SPORT CAR WORLD No down -UM our •tore ch1rge pl1n 15.nl Bead! Blvd., Wstmnstr trenspcrrtation car. Rnson· '68 CADILLAC able! Call att 6 p.m. 549-a!SO ELDORADO A d Furn .llUre Furnltu,.._Appll1n ... pprove color TVo-Pl•nos 65 TJt..4 Triumph: Hdtop- aafttup; clean. Wire whetls. '58 VW. Good condition. Full and compld.e power, kl- 548-2402 $495 * 642-8506 cl-tactocy au-condition· Id ) ETC. (No Foney F•ont-BUT Qu11ity VolUM Int 1 Cash In l!J Hour 1--.;-.~~~>iiruo·l 0'=========1 1ng. Only 2100 actual miles! '64 TRIUMPH VOLVO (.moo ... old. Will'"""'~' 2159 H1rbor Blvd,. Co1t1 Motl 548-9660 541 _..531 Open 9.9 Dolly -Sund1y 11 -5 Bo1t Stor1ge 9Q.48 SPITFIRE '°' $7495. Will ...,..,,., lln- 12 Yelr1 11me IOC1tlon -••m• owners * WANTED * 1 I Good Used A Antique tum. BOAT STORAGE . % bl. to Bay, fenced lot, Reesonable. F. Walker. Rltr. 646-7414 220 S, low ml, l'herry red pUlt. Economy AM/FM radio, auto, ltht, plui a.t VOLVO anctng. Coll Sol" M"· BILL BARRY PONTIAC •. ~ '-' mway u"" """'"""· 1401 '-~ -' Westminster, WKtmlnster ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! • """683 • z l600 Ml1c.ll1nHUI 8600 WANT; Small dinette .et, PARDO ENTERPRISES A lrcr1ft :M;i;;•<1;;;;ll;;•;n;;10;U;•:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; white, antique or wrought MOONEY SALES REP. • TWIN bed, inner eprlng mat· ·Iron. Abo &ood gu .W,e. FLIGHT TRAINING * AUCTIOfl * tress &: box aprinp. $25 6t&.fi9M Orana:e County Airport each. Vf!rY g'OOd. oond1tion. ---------·I Sfi-Dl& or st&-1610 M..,,.wx TV • ..rt 11>. PETS 1nd LIVESTOCK ====~~=~ Nearly new tnmlc $15. 4 CHrnOKEE 1404, 340 1T, 2 FRIDAY-OCT. 2S drawers.. no chest SU>. Pth, Gener1I 1800 MK~l2, VOA-5, lJD..2, 3- 7:30 P.M. 646-8'l!i4 ----Lit" ..._,.... "'5.IXXI mNSICNM!m' KltlTTBl FABRICS SCR·AM-LETS Mobile HotMt 9200 NEW FURNITURE --"'FOR SALE ANSWERS , •Skyline '69 $4299 .t; P.fodem. Bd'oom sets, Rmman•• samples A Mill New 12' wide, 1 bedroom, xtnt ""'1. _.Bil fl<{;). $1399 _,MG ELMORE SPORT CAR WORLD ----------MG ,, ••• ,. 8'l.J322 Salu, Service, P1rts 15300 Beech Blvd., Watmnatr Dun1 BugglH 9525 Compl"• ~ ... MC mv.nk>ey VOLKSWAGEN --"-~~----I See the new Austin America1 ________ _ DUNE Buggy, 11bergla1 Here Now! '65 vw Kombt Bus, xint b(,dy, new trans.. rebJt. cond. Many extrb. AakiJI&: tiJi., $1,IXX>. 548-4461 $1500 OT best ofl'er. 548-6TI7 MEYERS Manx w/4-0 HP, . alter 5:':ll PM good running cond. $1,150 '66 vw m.JS, rEtl!:t. en&., new 673-2050 days; 646-3410 eve. clutcb &: abocU . ... Demot.e -~ -Beier -center kitchen Palm SpriJ:o Dining nx:cn RU, divans, ends Sat Onl,y 8 a.m. to 2 AVOYml -GO for a WiAa..K custom, fully fum1shed in· lmportMI Autos 9600 3100 W. Coast Hwy. chairs, butfeta.. C\ri:i ~ p.m. 929 Baker, O>sta Mesa. Tee:n-e.ger'i advice: "Dane-chtd1ng all kitch. appliances, -~-------1 Newport Beach 640-4237 '63 VW-Xlnt condition. nets, credl!llZ8JI, ~. ~~ ~ 20.w. -'-·-e Spot Cash for Im;xirts 642-9405 540-1764 cocktail tab1. ottomans FREE TO YOU ing ii good exerctae ............ ..,. carpebl, U1·.,,J>e$. -,., ......,.. .. , G Deal es, ' or lattt yoUr partner will aak cash, trade or equity. $59 We pay mcri :lor any import Authorized M er New tires. $925. Phone 613-7909 lamps, chain hamps, mat· I----------00 f WALK.. per month O.A.C. regardless of year, make 165 MGB '65 VW deluxe sedan, 24,IXXI tresses, dinettes:, off l c e ORGANIC Fertllb:er, aged you to or 11 • Rick Bildino'I or condition. Try w before . mi, ~ cond. near new desks, TV's, Stereoe:, retrig· horse ItWlUtt combined ocx; Problerru Corrected at Mobile World you lell. ELMO RE Hardtop and aott ~·Radio tires $1295. 673-1953 eves:. craton, atovM, wa.!lben Ir. with wood shavinp. Good your home. Barking, refus.. MOl'ORS, 15300 Beach Blvd. and a beautifuJ car at '65 vw sharp Nue bug, Must dryl'f'S • MUCH MORE! mulch. 83.1-6332 between 8 &: ine to come, fenc~ jumping, 19432 Beach Bl., H.B. 962-13'77 Westminster. 89f-3322. $1999 sell -best offer! Call 5 or 546-4931 after 5 lOln chasing. Pvt. trainer, John, 436 S. Harbor Bl., SA 531..aTIO WINDY'S AUC1ION 2015% Newport Blvd. Behind Tooy'1 Bldg. Mat'l.a. Costa Mem * 6£8686 OPDl DAILY 9 to 4 SlAllISE Cats, m'llle &: f~ 492-1491 19JAi x 45 ft. Double Wide '67 DATSUN WAGON ELMOR•E 846-~ alt 6 ma.le, Strictly tndoora. l=:::::::::::::::::::::::::ol Roadlintt set Up in adult A'l.ltomatlc, R.IH. Red walli. 1965 Volkswagen. fro9t. claws removed. Af. Oog1 1825 park. Ready to move in. Low miles. Very clean. Sl700 SPORT CAR Good condition $950. fedloriate, &13-6330 after 5, Includes refri&ented air Chmer 962-359'7 eves. WORLD 644-738:9 83H465 ask for Jane. GREAT Dane pupa. AKC, 10 e 0 n ditionin&, disbwuber I~=========! Phcl'le 8!»-3322 '65 VW. Good cond. RIH- 10125 wks. Blk, champion stock. landscaping, carport, patio ALFA ROMEO 15300 Bead!. Blvd., Wstmnstr Stereo & 2 speakera. Priv ----~---~ M Ir. F . Ree.aonable CZ13) ........... $ll00 S4S-""1 LOVELY 10 wk Orange male 6Sl--Olll awning:s , skirting, n e w R '66 BLUE MGB, hardtop & ...,......,.. · """'a.EANINC""'! ... ""'!"'ooi:'!""'!"THE""'!!""'I kitten. Owner moved" left carpet, lined drapes. Serial 167 Alpha omeo soft t(ll, wire wheel.s, lug· '65 vw Y!1riarrt, 1500 s, GARAGE! me. Won't 90meone (kind LABRADOR Male, 5 mo, No. S-6713. Full price $8500. "21DY' model. A very beQ.uti-gage rack, wood rim ateer-top condition. By owner. like me} give mt a good AKC. all shot.1. Sin! xlnt Call Dual Wide Sales o! tu1 auto. ing wheel. Best oUer over ~$1550. * calJ s.J).7233 Campi.~ let of c::ha.. aB heme. 546-ZDI 10/26 field dog. 491-1S83 (.'hapman Mobile I 11. c . $3699 $Z!OO. Immac. con d . BUSIEST marketplace to ~ ~ d.eepm:::: LITn...E Old Lady cat free e Toy Poodle Pups, AKC 531-SSn. 675-S438 betwe('fl 6-8 P.M. town, 11M DAILY Pil.D'r llCTftl'I dom', WU Oliy up .. Pasa. l her unuiral kitten. Sacrlfiel' JS6. each Cl.II ========='I ELMOR r MGB ~y! .. "ed--. ':!;_ s ~ ~~ Mother torti-point Siamese; i..:64&-.;;;_;3523=~--~--MOTOR HOMES 9215 f; ....,.. ............. ~ Jew months. apple ~big <":--n.-'"-'-'--'-'-------I kitten is .......... es~gvnuese. AKC J"edstered - evmlng £OWll size 10, books 5t6-J684 10/26 TOY POODLES $75 garnH, cameft • Polaroid QijAf.rry Kini &iJ:e bed 5«1-2168 lldter 5 PM ~ = 5l6-Ml1 '*'beau~ quilted mat· I -7MALE,.'-,~~S!LKY~=-TERRIER===,- tre:a1, 1Pllt fDundation, bltn 10 moe. old. Paper1 frame. Never used $98. $150. 842-5746 r.fOTORS Mwl!I 1967 RED MGB, wire wheels, 1=0.:-:--.,.~--0---:0--TOYOTA radio. Low mileage . IT'S Beach bOUM ttme. Bia:· Ph. 894-3320 sn-7642 gest selection e•tr? See the 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr ---------· OAil..Y PlLOT Clu&tflfld PORSCHE -·· NOW< See And Drive T odayl BIG SAVINGS ON '681 eM Luoi4 IMPORTS TOYOTA·YOLYO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 9700 WE PAY ••• CASH h ued can 4 trudm just call ua tor he estimate. GROTH CHEVROlET An: tor Sales Manapr l82ll Beach m., Huntington Beacb KI>= WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR BLUE CHIP AUTO SALES 2145 Harbor' Blvd. Cost.9. Mesa 642-9700 Will Buy Your Volkswagen or Porsc:M I pay top dollara. Paid Jor or noL Call Ralph 673-1190 IMPORTS W ANTID Onulge Counties TOP S BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. Pb. 847-85.55 :!COO E. 1st St., S.A. 541-2681 Over 15 • ''1968" Previously owned * cadillacs * All colors, models, fUl1 pwr, air condltionln&:. Save up to $1500! ALLEN (){dsmoblle-Cadillae USO So. Coast Hiway Laguna Beach 4M-1Mf 1967 COUPE de Ville, vinyl top, air CQ'ldition.lng, stereo radio, full leather, 6 way seat, lleW tius. ~ll53 da,ys, 642-3258 eves. '57 CAD Ope De V'llle driven less than 6000 miles ~ year. Air cond. fUU power, a beauty. Private party. Dick Wovel 613-3996 '66 CAD COl'N, all black, stereo tape deck. Xlnt cond. $4,000. 4M-9358, Mr. Wood. CA MARO NICEST CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY '67 Camero · Sunburlt gold with contrasting black inter- ior. Automatic trtn1., VB, power steering, loaded v.rltb extras. Positively beautifUl Only $7195 ELMORE MCYrORS TOYOTA Ph. 1194-3320 lS'.lXI Beech Blvd., Wstrnnstr Christmas Gifls7 For thole friends and rel•· tives '° hard to pleue TRY a gilt from Worth $250 842-«J36 I -=c'=ERMAN==-;;,.,,-,:::phenl=:o...,.=. NEEi> Gd. tun./lencd yd Call 847-1M6 after 6 PM far lovable gold/blk. fem. anytime week·enda. G. .sheii. 6 mot:, loves e TOY POODLE PUPS AKC DATSUN '00 '69 '69 NE.'\V '69 '69 '69 '69 DATSUN Loak!!! PORSCHE 911 S 1_1pm~poii;;;i•t~odii;;iAiiu~Tot~;;;iii9~600ii;i;iliim~p~oriit~odi;;;i;A~uiilotii;;;iiii9ii600;;;;;-.' miiooiiii•iil•iidiiAiiuiitiio•iiiiii9ii6iiiOO 2 to choose from II $00'35. * 100 miles TREASURES 01' All BABA 3419 Via Oporto, N.B. "--lncl ......... ll am-5: 30 pm, Cl<*!d Mon. chi"-6.37-1033 l01:.i5 -male: 8 wk!. $Qi. AIXltt.wLE Kittens, 10 Sacrifice! Call 646-~ weeks old. Male &: female. Ea.stblut.t, N.B. &H-1<116 UNUSUAL blue a: black Gr. 10125 01111e pups. Cbampion line. T & M MOTORS 50,000 mi. guar. Garden Grove Blvd. at Beach ==~~-.,.-,---.,,, Term•. B97-llifl6 after 6 p.m. 1 ========== FREE To iOOd boow wilh 1 : SWIMMING POOL fe»ced yard. g mo. old Horlff 1830 Mini Bikes IS Ft Pool, Filter, Surfact fem ate Cock a po o, ==-'--------9275 $186.86 Down $53.86 for 36 mo. (1) 89'1-6651 or 534-2284 '61 ROADSTER, recond., everything new. $ 2 4 O O. 642-9434 and work 548-n67 ask for Al. Skim.mer, Mainmiance Kit. oo.-wrn 10/24 HorHI for Christm11 5 HP B &: s engine. New FREE Ground P8d. aJNNING ~es. 3 b&dt -% • Thoro • ApP)' • Horses nywhttl &: clutch. Bonanza OAC + Tax & I.Jc. TOYOTA $149.11 & 2 white w/black dots, 7 • 43 Head • from $1'15. a'.1286 frame with jack shaft &: Barwick flayden Imports SECARD POOL boadlit• 1140. Xlnt '°"'· NICEST CARS 323 S. Main, n.-. .. -wlal, to good ho m e . Laguna Can)Q'I, Laguna Owner. 546-TI« or 546-814-4 998 So. Coast Hwy., LB. E COUNTY ..... _. 494-2457 10124 Beach. 4M·9773 ~ IN ORANG 532-1992 "-=~=o-°"7-::c: .. :;ks::--;h:::al!" l==~-----,.ddl,,.-9300 1.,,.., ....... !!!!~!!!!!~"" 1'66 TOYOTA SPORT SEDAN. ~ ...... ""!'!"'!!!!!!!!~~ .-... .-.-....,,.., w , CUsrGM western aa e. Motorcycles I' Pii1 yotnelt In our Place Hungarian !beeop, ha If Best otter. Call anytime: ==;;.,..;.;_______ •6 7 DATSUN OCI h.p. plus :ll mile per gal· 10'.. .. lish Sheep. Gentle, ln-837-~~ HONDA "JU)" '67 street cy· Ion economy. Room for the Harbor mvd O..I Theatn: ... 'b .,.._. ROADS"'"'R telligent. r.46-3704 Evel. 10/24 cle: 275 Mi .. 'Pf'alically new, I~ entire family. This ill the 3700 McFadden, S.A. TRANSPORTATION s"""ial red pa.int. wind· Blade with red interior, one winner everyone's tallring SWAP MEET CALICO Kitten, 6 mo, Jem., ..,..~ N llhots: to loving fam. w/ BOits & Yichts 9000 shield, elec. start. $795 ew, owner, low mileage, hard· about. Choice o( !'Our. From lg. be.ck yd. Call eve. price $495, cash. 842--3231 top and soft top. Sl3!6 Evtry Sat. & SUn. 531·1272 aft 7 SPANlSH aota and loveseat. Also gold co1ottd llOfa, oc- ca1ion&l chain, onl nc refrigerator, clarinet Man; olhe!' items including tire1 & Geiiz.er «Uiter. 2546 GreenbrieT Lane {College Perll) CM.~ FOi\ Sale: Uke MW deluxe all electric -hospital ~ by Simmons, includes Inner IJITlng rnattreu £:-side rails. Call eves mmi 5:30 p.m. 9 p.m. 673-4707 CHERRY M11gD&.vox Stereo TV Combo. Beu & Howell movie projector. Revere II DBL. BedstNd, nicht stand, chest ot drawt"n; 14 lb. bowling bal!; foiding rliain· man's bicycll". All pnced right! 6'rr>-5123 MAGN AVOXCon1ole AM/FM radio combination. Bal l137.00 or 11 m a 11 P8J'ITl.enta. Cttdlt Dept. KE > 721ll, Anaheim :.roo. blk .. 4 i: ~~~~~. ~: ~~: ·~PPH~~ ~~~~~1~ EL$M20099R,E ELMORE ol.d, lernale, lovable can-I ~g~ood~~can=v~"-'-$173-75_. ~'2L1~l ho~'..:""~'~'jo~U~'~' ;i5"8-;'-1Ximintdirt I MOTORS '()&Ilion for-older person.1. 3lJ.4Cli4 '62 TRIUMPH, xlnt dirt TOYOTA 61'5-ll381, ~ p.m. 10125 18' GLASSPAR s ea fa i r bike, $400. SPOR_TR CAR Ph. 894-3320 ALMOST All white, gentle Sportsman: Volvo 1/0, & 642-9506 WO LO 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnrtr ,.,,~ m,.J, oat, """'"'· """· "'" Xlnt ""'1. I 18 9 5, 1965 HONDA "'° Phono 894.J322 Bill MAXEY ed. home. 54&-9174 PYe. 545-78'll SCRAMBLER. $350. Top 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr 10/25 '68 DONZI, 18' 2+3, 50 mph, condition. 673-4593 '67 Sta Wag. 96 hp, must I MALE Labrador Retriever, roogh wattt boat, Mint con· .61 YAMAHA 180 cc, runs sell! Take top offer over ITIQ~Y~I TIA nda. gd. home w/fne'd yd. dition. ~. firm incl good. •·•~. or bell otfer. $1400. 637-8863 A.fter 6. Shots. very friend 1 y. trailer. 64!>-~ aJter 6 PM 673-Ulsi~ ========='J E•1y to •Rn~·':,:chG•rfi1td ~238) 10126 17' Boston Whaler. 1966. 1968 YAMAHA 100 Trail FERRARI 18881 Beich Blvd. EXPECTING Pieadilly Eng. lOO Cllrysler engine. $2885 Master. LeM than 400 miles. Huntington Belch Springer Span .. family pet, Mesa t.1arine. 642-5800 '67 FERRARI • ll> GT 2+2, 644-1162 • 673-()173 10/3) l!!Ri 28' Trojan, m Gray woo. 673-6763 silver, red leather lnt, wire Ph. 847'8555 -"-TT ·~ HONDA Trail Bike, like wh--•-. AM·F'M. lmnw::. I .,. N th f ' ·1· C ••I CUTE Black female p..ippies, Marine eng, l"" ,,... . . ui et!La ""'· or o •t• ic o cocker J lenier I poodle. 9 $8900, Xlnl! 673-TI25 ne-.v. 67 mi, $250. 6754576 --=='="""='='"'-=206='==:i--"-;"";;;-;';;;':;';;';;'i":;;';;;'c;'•0°_· _ wks. 842-Tm 10/26 22' CENTURY R.aven-188 hp, days, 494-S390, eve. • TOYOTA Ft.UFFY.Strlped 6 mo old compl E<Juipped tor fishing. HONDA 90 Scrambler. m> FIAT male kltty. Very lovable .1=:::$440=50:::.=":::''=83U832==== ml.I) Like new. $250. J07l ----------1S And Drl Tod yl Rsbrkn. 646-7096 e"Ves. l0!2S Platte Dr, C.M. 546-6528 1967 FIATS " ve I 12 CATS & kltt~na need S1llbo1t1 9010 '66 SUZUKI, expansion 12) 850 Coupes to d'ioo9e If L • -" "·· 2 ~ko•-d;... from. 1500 Roadster, S 111111 Aini I special homes. All sizes. 19' SLOOP Cruise diagonal ""'8 m""'' ...,...... ""• "' ~I. UUIO ~· ~·· >Jor• 4 PM 10124 or street. lf6. 61J.0004 speed. AlJL LIKE NE"N! ......,...,J..O.)""" trail . DaCT011s, full cover, -~~-BAYSIDE MOTORS I VERY p\aytu], long hairtd cockpit cushion•, F.W. 1967 Bult1co Lobito 1200 W. (bast tlighway MPORTS calico kittffl I weeks Qld. systems, ljpts, head, 2 $200. fr15.Tll6 Newport Beach * MXi<1i6 TOYOTA·YOLYO 847-0)91 10126 berths. Very clean. Must sell ========= Directly aCl'O&!I the Street 1906 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 2 ·BEAtrl'. k:i1tms, l white, 1 11ell at on~! Asking Auto Tools & Equip 9410 from the Bal>oe. Bay Oti> TOYOTA brn/wtrlte: 7 wka, ~-3851 ~$1500'o"'"'-,'-6T.l--""30'o7<l""-=-~~ HEAVY duty Victor gas '67 FIAT, 850 Coupe KIRBY Vacuum aeantt &: before 6:00 pm. 10/26 STAR Ne. 4003 Eichenlaub. welding set; misc. tools & 16,000 mi. Oean. $1650. attadunenta. Take oYef' $8. EIGHT Youne bunnies abo New mut A fUtlnes. 2 rulta auto pe.rt.g. $42-9187 After 6 548-lS'Zl aft 6 PM HEADQUARTERS c:r.~or :4ts~1c;-s:o D"OWn nbbits, 89'l""4200 ~er.mail~Oll cond-PM Wk(iays, all d•Y Sat. & •gr FIAT 850 Fa.st Back. Lo ELMORE -~--~----'°-'-"' --===~===-SUnd&)i. mt. radio. 673-0311, or oalce "~"""-""''--.-,~---.---.,-1 LOV.A:BLE «>I.lie '-abeeop l«JURLY RllJTAU 642-3952 15300 Beach mvd., Wstmmtr ......,..~......, MUMnd'"' uuw doc mixed, 1 wU, beaut. * Rhodes 19'1 * Tr1iler, Tr1vel 9425 Phooe 894-3322 ~;;.... ~ k i':~ coloring. 64&-ro98 10124 Fun Zone Boat co. Balb09i TDn' Trailer. used 5 ti mes; JAGUAR NICEST CARS ardln mw". Stl-'56G BEAl.M". Blue loo&-h&ired OOLUMBcond MIAI OS 01!'et!~..:..!!': aleeps 5, mattresses incl.; ,62 XKE IN ORANGE COUNTY Persian ftmalt, 5 mos. Had · us Bf: • ....... .,...... like new: $250. 961--1155 '66 TOYOTA PICK UP. The UPHa.Sl'EIUNG -$79.50. 2 1bcQ. ~2f70 10/24 792.-4J4l or iZl3l ~ ..__. to·~ 00 h.p. ~ mUH pc. (!laopMa cnltsmmJli~;;,,;::,c::::::,--,,.3:;:1:======== 1967 14' ~vn. 'n"aller, Be&utitul condition, only ~ """ Dee -. dtl, J*icup, 215 MOMMA Si..ne., 2 betlles Power CrulHrs 9020 ale$ 6, uM!d 1 times. $700. 56.000 mUes. Phone 673-9273 per pJlon mod-et Ab!ol~~ U.~ 118 •<n-.,tt "'--"'--"""£. I_ ~. C.ls I kitfefll. -""-alttt 5. ~ in .......... -.....,._..., ...--.. -J.oW JAG '53 XK 120 Roedltcr. 11.nOtber Only &U-0077 1012-4 A8SOLUTEL Y PERF For 1111.le: or trade tor good Oln't ftnd $l3'15 . ' •• 1967 22 ft Ou'ys., &latl tw\n Trvcb 9500 transportll.tion car. 60-3492 ELMORE Volvo, tn .l out. Many ao. -':a-0.V,--n.d--wl-lh-'-!A ;:_ ~~ ~~ .....,. """' aooc1 ""· KARMANN GHIA ·~· $4SS6 dtft' 12 DOQl'I, IYllV~V<""' :.i' STEIL Hull Otry Set V. '$7 GHIA, R&H, Fair 'OOndl· TOYOTA Xlnt Ccnd. SSlX) or tn1de F« DlU7 PU6t Wet ML tion. KOOt'I u Dune lklliu-Pb. ~ R.£. fir c:ar! 12UJ FA J.:illfi6 _ _;D:;lal:::.."""6'11=='---~"'°=·...;m.&Ol==-----l ·IS:°':m:..;c......B<o_ch_B_l"1_.~· _w ___ _ l • . ,.. ... ZIMMERMAN DATSUN NEW 1969 PRICES START AT ••• + TIX & Lie. + D & H e A TIENTION DISC~EET BUYERS e NEAR W·HOLESALE TO YOU ! ! ,. ... ...,_, 19U Cite¥'. M•ll· b1 HR Tip c,.. ow. .. Ntt1tt Arctk. WWto, JJ7 YI, PS, ••t•. m.1., •Ir c•ltdlt. 1"1 • Mt .t Hi. .-,11lflw11t, -pprMCtt. obll, Mkhl" ''I" lfflcl ffl'". AbMl1N Mt.fy tt.- .,. .. .i ....... .-fhor9e ...,. ttMs h • ptl9 A cs. That'1 MOlfll •fOf IM. flnt C""'9, Ant..,,... Steck N•, 1112. $2195 Here h .... .t ttlelr prtH • Jllys -........ 1966 l'ty1M1ttl hnwc111le H•lll T11p. All ..._ -4 M Mltl It tt.l't lt'1 e llAL NICI CAL I•• t'-'r .... kl m. "" .... .... IMflY ~llln....,. I ...... .. .., ,..... .. ........ StMl HI, lllJ GHr91 IMrl ill Ills l't'f-•ttl Dl'fbllfll, 1f W. tllNlt 1'"1 C. 1~11, ttrih •M If • klMI, • ateril119 i..o.t1t.I rt.,-.tti s.,., F.ry 2 •. Har4top. It lho1ltl b9 •11 tM .. ow roo111 flow. ChlN'p wn.90l111J to tho. tH c• N Ills wtt. to •t.., IJ1t fM 111111--11 Clllt- plolllH, 11 I tMU lt'1 for 1111. "" f'Ktory ~11lppltl, •IMI ••l'f I 0,000 "'"" -H-.t. -Stock N•. 111.f $1995 Hllt9 h 1 1H1tky, potwt, 9ohl9 place If l't'lpt • 1 t61 a... eo-.... toe· t•l"f •• ,,,... YI HthM, r.1 ........ fNn.. • etc. nbb,....ly11M.t .... ... l'ffll ...... ....,,.,. ... 11-.. totlay. c.. .. -tttts ........ -4 ... _.. to lwtitt .,.., U.ck ~ Sl'Kk N1. 1169. How •Hit 11 I ..,.4 ,,.... Mo4 CCllll l lltwr ..... ft t.r .,....,. -Her. ... -- ly -1961 Doh•• 2000 Sperb COi' tNt tMt 111111 Stodl N•. 11601. $2695 H-11 I p.rfact n.ctl 1966 plclu1p. C1111 Arctk whlto, wltll M1tchl11t 1 ....... ler, 4 s..-.f full IY"•·h'9n.. rod\1 a. ir..ot.r, • w...W ef wo..,.. A.II CONDrT. ....,... ...,. "'" pkbp h lliltt9' ,.. ... "" ,_ .. ,..,.._, ..,......,_ .. _ • .,..., tthlillflaol cetttllt. • .... tty w.mt "" M8111'f -Steck N .. 1112 $1~95 $2195 $1395 THll¢VI IS JUST A SAMPLE OF THE HUc;I SRECTION AT GEORGE ZIMMERMAN DATSUN SAL~S 2854 Harbar BIYd. AND SERVICE • Costa Mesa Phane 540-641 O ~ ....... ""' ___ .,. ... ..,_.., __ ~ ............. ______ ......... _._ ___ ....,~~--~· ........................ ~.-· ...... -~ .. ~.~·-·~------------·~----· -----~ -. --·--~~ --- --~ -----~-~~. I ,. ~· " .. < • • I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION · 1 .:r• Y' .... u u• Cira 9900 UHCICa,. 99oo Uood Caro 9900 Uttd Cart 9900 CHEVROLET ~HEVROLIT CHEVROLET CORYAIR MUSTANG idat "'" Q!EVY. -NICEST CAltS .,...i. -..it 1100. 'M MON~ lteej ntcel Muot NICIST CAR$ ..n -belt "'"· c.JI IN ORANGE COUNTY IN OltANH COUNTY llln-6~ '62 aa:Y.1.llPALA SUPER I-:======== --.,.,;;';:;:alter"""~C;;--;==--l '!T M-Sport Oxlv..U. taDte .. , I" 19115 <X>ltVAIR M~ bte, fPU'kUnl powder lllut vr. Silver me ~"' CHRYSLER outatudlnc -. ""' wtth ...., ""''' ""'· • ""· wltb o>ntrutina· ltlterior. or Be.t Offer. &l6-(D58 automatk, loaded wttb ex· t.o-dad wttb ~tra.a. Ab» '63 CHRYSLER Newport-Xlnt =-===.,;::::,;.::.~.,-I tru. Pll'fect tor tbt pJ lultly Dnmaculate. '61 CORVAIR Bui. Auto. ....ii-......__. t'ki .. noos cmd. Hi&:h mllM&e. SM to ~Y a..EAN! ..gH to ~ -· uuu:"'-vwy apprtdate. Make oU@f. preciate. $d. ~1'15 alt I -E~MORE "''" -COJlYlTTI ELMORE '56 a...; N™AI>. m r .r. Ti<ro!ii _EONTI_t<:IEM.TA~-+ "fL v-ME-TO Ti<ro!ii ''"-· ' opd., UI an. Ph. 89l-3320 + GET A DOOR MAN . THE M00N'1 Ph. *33:111 """""' U30011Kch Blw., Wotmnm 'SALUTi FOR $11951 . Abool~ .. ,,. -"STINO U300 a...;,.Blw., Wltmnatr 'ST NOMAD 28.l, C brt., JIG, Pre-owned l96l CONTINEN· RAY 1966 OOR.n"ITE s:;o;. Muet ..ti. a.ea."""' *WAGON BUYERS TALlwNly5'don.Sporldlng HARDTOP GS tbrtWnc·l--------1 zood. ........ OPPORTUNITY! ..mine -with .... tllul -· .....,, -• OLDSMOBILE '61 <JIEVROLET rood Johrwon &: Soos Llnc. Me~. Tahitian turqoiJt natural spt'eCl trans., AM·nl radk>, transportatim CU', 2 dr Din. uaecl car dept at 11K1 leatbe interior l'actocy AIR etc. ~ origtna). ltrl.to 1!18S F-15 CUU... deluxe, Biscayne $350. 645-tm Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ~mom::D of coune. A blue metallic wttb Imm.cu-RIH, auto trua. ae111. 1 '59 CHEVY Convertible. la Uquldatlrw their stock ol. b'emiendcll• intrinlic value late bQ, v\nyt interior. J'or owner .• ISS-1".1 Power ilide-Good ttrea. MWlll!ll eholce popular nk tor thole' who meek' quality the western be--man Wh:) de-Mtmr Sell! Sl Oldl O:Wlvmot. $235 at best otler. 6a.SI01 TIOO WACONS this week at .... car lot on Hubor mvd mama tbe' best! ~-tbroua'baut. 1st $300. '54 CHEVY, traN or worti car. LooU bad, nn &l'fttl $65. 00-5396 C!Vel. • "MUST GO'' wintert1mti .... ~ . $2900. M64S5T Or 1Tli5 Monrovia .,.-ta th< -''· (Pay JOHNSON &: SON ht oar lot .., Hari>or "'""· '16 Ow.. F"'5, 4 Dr. full ,,.. '" ,._,..,,, 1 612-""" ~.!!':::. JOHNSON & SON ,...., ........,. •new tnn•. '56 CHEV. Van; ftiblt. q. Gd. tirff, de«n. Alk $250. In service must aeU 536-8748 '63 Novi .Super Sport ~ 1 Llrieom-Mereury Prtv. pMi;y, 11 ... m-tollO Excell.ftlt condition! 6 Cyt, OO Harbor Blvd. 6'12·Ttli0 Cotta Mea B~ 'M OlJ>S $150. 5 iood tires, dlr, auto. power 1tettlns. '61 C'ONVERTIBLE1 21,000 1MJ. Harbii:;r Blvd.. JM2-1ai0 119~ m,, auto, ne'#' bnk•, :':., =iao°'~ ~': ~. ~°':"o...:i ..... '66 CORYETTI ""· .-""""· ~ NOW"S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT u • .,., ..,..,,. .. $29.16 mo. .., LIN(DU< , door. """ ''421'' • b8uti1uL ...i. PLYMOUTH """"' "' ~ oaid! "'" power. WOO. $3599 ' .. 1965 CHEV El Camino. Auto Coll.,.._ ELMORE trans. R/H. Orr owner. ~ ... ~CDN'l'INUIT===~AL.~~2~Dr~., ' SU95.. M2-:D48 or ttl-6356 'tinyl top, All power. Sl.000 1967 VIP Plymouth WANT AD '55 CHEVROLEJ' Bel Air 1port coupe. ftadiD> hnter, mint condition. ~T764 Pr! """· 615-21"' '64 C'ONTINENTAL. very ni~ '1680. 433-G90, ffe!!n• tnp ill&-1'86 SPORT CAii WORLD Ph:ine 894-332'J l5D> Be9d1. BlVd., Wltmnltr ' c1oor .edan • ..., metal wttb blAck interior, power lteftl- lnl:. power brakes. alr cmdi- 11ooin&:. automatic tramm.if. Idem, radio, hHtn-: Uc. no. _l~po~!~. Autos_~ Imported A"'" 96001mportod . A-9600 COUGAR TRX "'· ""°"' mL Kdl.Y 1.;;;..;.:.;.;.;.;.;,;;.._.;;;;.;;;..;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, ---------1 Blue Book Retail $2956. 1967 COUGAR XR 1 Whol ... le, $2225. Excellent ARE GOING TO MAKE THE GREAT- EST SAVINGS EVER ON A NEW CAR WHEN THEY PURCHASE ONE bf 4 REMAINING BRAND NEW .1968 BUfCKS THIS WEEKEND AT POOLE BUICK! 1969 BUICKS Lal'1)e Selectloq of new 1969 BUICKS-IN STOCK-ON DISPLAY ._-••• ·~ T •' 1ov. DOWN 'LUS TAX AND LICINSI DILIVlll ANY USED CAlt ON APPllOVID CltlDIT DESCRIPTION I KILL v ILUI I IOOK PltlCI NEW LOCATION IALI PltlCI "61 MIRCURY MONTCLAIR I 2 door h•rdtop. Dlu; ltreli•1, l1ctery •ir co111Utloni11t. 11,00'G 1ct.ol 111!101,· "'7 IUICK IUCTRA . I Con•trtiblo, F11U pow.,, f1ctery •ir c.e~1'1° tloning, AM·FM r1llo. ll,000 tctu1I '"ilo1. '66 IUICK LI SAHE I Cu1to'" 2 llloo( hardtop. l'owor d 11rl.rig, powor br1lio1, focfory 1lr. 21,000 ochlol 111ilo1. '63 BUICK RIVl!RA I Full powor encl f11;tory oir conditio11i119. '63 IUICK INYICTA WA60N .. I •, Powor 1h1rlii1, ,owef ltr1lto1, foctory olr, tilt wh ool, 49,000 1cht1I ..,;101, 'H CHRYSW 300 HARDTOP 2 door. flill power •""!! faot.ry olr, $3620 I .$2895 $4195 , . $3895 $3415 I $3395 $2635 $2295 $1850 I $1695 '$1265 1-$1195 $2390 I $1895 '67 JAGUAR 420 • oooa -·--......... $4495 =~,~~ R1dl1, ... 1for, powor 1t..rf111, oir co11ditio11 ln9. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS '62 FORD Falcon ·-·-·-·-··--$695 =~,~~ Fvt11r1 2 door. 6 cyllndor, outo1111tlo, '59 OPEL 2 DOOR ··-.. ·--·--... _. ____ $295 ~~~t. k1dio, htt+.r, 4 l!l'ttG. ---'--'-------------'62 BUICK Le Sabre......... .... $695 :,::~~ 4 401r 114111, l141t, 1111+.r, 0111+.mtfic., powor ttoorlllf, !l'OW•r "'•If••• "SEllVICE II OUR MAii\. COllClllN" BUICK THE HARBOR W'S OllE STOP AUTO COOER 234 E.17th St. ITHI IUICIC CORNIU Costa Mesa 548-7765 Soles = Senlce • Rentals LeasllNJ 0,.. ••••• ., .................. , ... ............... ,,... .....,. ........ , ... t Beautiful dark m e t a 111 c condition, our price $2495! ! JreeA with black vinyl top May be 9Hn at DAILY Pf· and black interior. Powtt u:rr parldng lot, 9 am to 5 1teeriJla:, power .cti.9c brakes, pm. JJQ W. Bay St., Costa auto. trana., AM radio, MHI, or call 642..flZl, ext 'heater. lS,000 ' ml. Prb 2'1, t"\m. to s pm. Ewninzs moo. Phone "2--5145 after·& call &44-1742. DODGE 1957 PLY'MOlml 2 dr. -,-61~Doc!--go-:C:-ho_r_go_r_ brdtp. Fa.ct. air, good tires. ··-v., "-,_Runc==""""=·"'l2>l=·='!J62.-0="''"'=I Imm1.e, uu·, , 1.utornau.r.;,1., radio ' ""'"· "'""""' Ex· PONTIAC cellent condition. Frencb1 ________ 1 pearl ....,, blod< landau NICEST CARS i.atber "'°· 12115 Caoh doll, IN ORANGE COUNTY ~enb:. 49f.9T73 or '96 PONT1AC GTO H&rdtop ==--,---=--,,,,-I Cpe. Silver lf'9IO with black Dodp st& waa:~ 9 pus, '511. J.udau top, t on the ftoor. Nu pa.Int, fac m, very tood Immaculate and ~ cond. Make otter 642-1272 frellh. FALCON '61 FALCON, 6 eyl. 1.uto. ele111. $300. 6'73-f.493 after I "" FORD 12295 ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Ph. 891-ml 153ll Bea.ch B'ITd., Wstmnatr * WAGON BUYERS ROY CARVER OPPORTUNITY! PONTIAC Jcivwoa A Sona Unc. Mm:. -Hartq BL c.ta Ne!!t. Din. """ "" dept. •• 1911 Kl'6 4444 Harbor Blvd., a.ta MeM ,___ .-.-.. -la llquldadns their ltodt of .... _. ...........,. I leYtl'I ddoe popular sr Ji,. Dealer .. kolll • ftoJi:e 111111 TION WA.Ga-IS th!& week at ~Bm::;:;tll';;..,~~~~--· "MUST GO" ~ '67 Pontiac Sprint prices to ttle pubtic. (Pay LOADEIJ! Uke new thn.i-o¢. you to Jnvestipte!) 6'2-7000 Th1l car ba1 bad LOVmY e '68 COUNTRY SQUIRE CARE. $150 C1ah deli, dli' LID 10 pua., full power, or take alder trade. Take alt cond, Mimelin x tlret, law paymenbl. After 1l; Mcnrue lhock:I, tape deck 49W'T73 or 564!34 etc! Sett 1tr equity in leue EXTRA Sba!1) 1967 1ted Pon- m...zirgo tiac GTO, 4 ~ with aJr. 1965 FORD Cony. Galuy Imm&cul1te cond, 1ntkle I 500. Power S&B. J1ct. alr, out. 18,000 m.llel. Sacrifl.cel 30,000 mlle1. Xlnt eondt Call $2425. ~ fi42..(IM3, niter. A: 962-91M wkend 96Z-e4 '58 FORD Wagon, lnten:eptor '64 PON'nAC Le Mana. Auto, engine, tellabk!. 1245. Call PIS, PIW, bkt. at~' 675-4257 Console, R/H, vibrason1c. =='=~-~~-1 li'i& owner. $1Z«i. $75.30U 162 FORD Gt.luy, all pwr., STATION 9 IJr.cond., xlot cbnd., aood . ' w a ion ' ', tires. $400 ~1'624 . Pauena:er, 62 Poat I & c ' Catai!n&, def.n, powered. '64 FqRD Cu.atom 500. Air Call 5t6-3'160 &It t PM n.ller hltdl. rood ccmdltkJn, 196& Pa-m.AC Convert. v.a sm. 56"6t55 inm or11 ma bf *b' .w. __ M_ER_C_U_RY __ 1 ;; =· -een<11t1on * WAGON BUYERS $S25 ""BHt °"" OPPORTUNITY! e .... ,., e Jofmal • Sm& Unc. Mere. RAMBLER Din. ....... d..,. •• 1911 ------- -Blod., ao... M-NICEST CARS 11 ._ttnc -"'°'* " IN ORANGI COUNTY MYm d"*'8 popular STA· , TION WA~ ltlla wMc' at 6l RAMBLER ' DR. STA· "MUST GO" wlrltfl"time TYON WAGON. Thia little prtom: to the Jd'>Hc. (Pay feller ii in abdutely l&ntu. >'Oii to lnV'tStiptel) &G-7'll0 tic condltkln. Auto., pwr. . atr., atr ccnl., lt111. Nek, lJ67 MDlC Colony Parll: Sta heed rat. tt'• loaded ud w.,. AJr ..... rad1l1 -tt ....., .. : Only pwr atrs, pwr dJlc brU-. 1895 ::'·~u:. ~-:: ELMORE or after-I wkdQ9. Pri owner. Mt-2Bt& '86 MERCURY Porldane. 2 Dr. HT. Full pwr, llr. ""· T0 llRD landieu top. 312,Cbt ml. Xlnt1 --------1 ..... ...... Nlll """"""' ...... MUST SELLI Co. '*'· Pri prf;y. ~ 'GT.SW. 1'111 power. Steno '11 MERCURY ' door Sta. tape ett-up. $625 • olbtr. Wp. -m: 11-, -8"-ISll&, lm4113 • """" "'""" l4IO. -1111 •M T ·--~... -att. I 1 --.nu. "'ow power, Air °"""---MUSTANG --...:.....:..;...;...:.. __ I., T.enu>, -2nd eu: 'IT MIETANO'OT 390 VI, 4 -w>d<r low book. bemil, 4 -wide_,,, -Mitt 4,11 PM ..... duldl, ""· -· 411-ISU .., .. i ,.. TORONADO -Mlln'ANG H~ , · s automatic IT TORNADO. Lo mllel, air S11a5 • -.s4l2 cond. 1\111 power. A beeut)tl '11 Htr v.. full - 1311111 • - Dill: ..... IG-1111, \llOllO 'IS VAUA!IT SI.,,.. v.100 -... -Ill -... hnl tap .,._, oub . 11/H, lllt• .. llM ~ :?"' ...... -· - rhi.ndor, Ocloblf 2>4, 1'68 ~AJLY PILOT 31 TRA_NS!'ORTAT,10~, TRA~SPORTATION TIWISPOITATION TIOINSPORTATIOH UMd Cars 9900Uttd Cars 9900 Uttd Cars ~ 9900 Uttd Cars . 9900 -·--- j'I ., .. .. . ' 196 CLOSE-OUTS FANTASTIC SAVINGS Stlll 1 Fine S.lectlon of lrand New '61'a In Most Model1 &. Colors IMPERIAL IMPERIAL CROWN 4 DOOR HARDTOP 4 DOOR SIDAN ~ $728770 .. :. .. ::·:~"''' se99330 hie Prloo -$5150.70 Sole Price -$5'21.30 $AYE $1437 $AV£. $1365 ~~ffi~ t youacAR we wan in trade Buy from a .new car dealer. You know he will be here tomorrow to back up the sale he makes today. '65 RAMBLER "770" Automatic, power 1teerin9, pow•r br1~e1 , _power window1, rad- ., 10.. hHt1r. I NGS488 I ··=·'.1""$1295 '64 PONTIAC St•rchlef VI, 1uto,....lc1 radio, heat- er, power steering, f•ctory air con- ditionin9. s1095 '67 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury. Equipped with eutoma- tic, power st1.erin9. end eir condi- tioning. ITGN 2631 s2395 . '67 CHRYSLER Town & Country wagon. Automatic, power st1.erin9, power br•k11, radio, h•1t1rL.alr conditioning. IXSP.2711 s3495 '64 CHRYSLER "JOO " Autometic, power 1ta1.rin9, power brakes, radio, heater, air con- ditioning. I PUX27f I s1495 '65 DODGE Coronet 500 2 Door Hardtop. Auto. metic, power 1teerin9, radio, h1.1tar, air condltionin9. [PAJ I Ill I $1695 '65 DODGE Polar• s • d a n. Automatic:, pow1r 1t1erin9, air concUtionln9, radio, heater. IRTTl6.6) $1695 '68 PONTIAC LeMan1 Coupe. Radio, h•atar, 1uto- m1tlc, power 1t1•rlng. IWBA019l $2695 '66 PLYMOUTH Autometlc tr1n1mi1slon , pow• r steeri"9· radio .& h1.1t1r~ ISYS8441 $1695 '66 Continental 2 door hardtop. Full power with air c:onditionin9 and all the •rlr11 •. 6or .. 9eo11s Ice Blue finish. ISLK 496) s2995 '66 CHRYSLER Newport 2 Door hardtop. Auto- matic, power 1taerin9, power brks .. R&H, a;, oond. IRSNOH I s2295 UtiOQSEAL ·Sf>EctAL •1a.95 All "10lt lhlt Ilk lllf lk9!1M. l"rlew ..... llllllK ..... llllfll 1e 1,lft., OFFER ENos ocroa1.11 u. ........ ~ . ' - .. -~ -~ -~· ---~~ ......... --~~~~----..._ .............. ~~ ................................................... :.. ............................................................ ..; ............. .. l - DAD.Y'PILOT E DR'OBMir PAGE In SeH Interest: YES The ,. • ..,.,, of Cellfomla harasud by a braun and rude naM!lOb .. .an obscen!ty1)l0uting black bigot &lwn ''lnltnlctor'' statua. , .11 rertes of arropnt student demendsforleoderelilp tlleybaven't earned. .. P'!Y"U"Y"U·i'> money, giving UC! a total capllal outlay budget ot fjB.9 mil.llon for the two llscal years ending .1nm1. Some c.lllomla wt.en may, untortunately, nmem- ber only images iudl aa these when they vote Novem- ber 5 on Proi>oolUoo 3, a $250 mUHon bond lssue.earmar· keel chiefly lot coostTllc1ion on University of California and state colleee campuses. If tills Is all tlley remember, the &late and eacb of Ms dtizene will suffer -and suff.,. for yoan to come. And, if tl!ls issue falll, It will be an especially back· 1Mtd and penalizing ii<!' for Orange County. Uotortuna<e!y, the temptatioo for a punlllve "no'' vote Is tempting to many voten. It seems ~ to jump to the cooclusion that rejecli<>n of the hoods will some- how "lbow" the kooks, tile bearded anarchists, that Oeliforma's tolerance for free expression on tile publlc'1 campuses has been ltretchod too IM. But perspective must be shown. And adults mu.rt reuon and vote with the maturity that some of the stir dellt dlnidents so glaringly lack. First, UC 's long and disllnl(U\sbed record as a foUJ>- ctatioo tl>r California's devefopmellt and pri>spertty must be remembered -and continued. Also to be re- m«nbered is that the band of trouble-makers is smalL Mod ct all, California cannot afford to deprive it· 1elf of the future leaders in science, business, civic af. fairs 11Dd industry that UC will produce -just because of our current unhappiness wit!h the misbehavior of a relative few. Proposition 3 wou1d authori,ze a state bond issue .of $200 million for the University of California and state colleges, and f50 million for rebuilding and replacem011t of urt>an school buildings more than 25 years old. 'This is Ille meaning of the bonds for UC, Irvine: -Of the $100 million for con$t.ruCtion on the nine UC campuses, UCI's share would be more than on~fitth -$20.5 million. This \vould be supplemented by $17.2 mil· lion In federal matching funds and $11.1 million &tale -UCl will receive ttle lion's sham onr the eight other oampiues largely because of plans to bu!ld a med- ical octences.unit to hoose the Califumia College of Med- icine. Other key buildings are included. PutUng aside the highly important factors of intel· lectual enrlctunont and scientific and medic.a! advan- tages for our area that UC! can provide, simple econo- mic sell-interest should dictate an emphaUc YES vote oo Propooillon 3. To perm.it emotionalism over a handful of miscr&- ant:s to blind us to the huge benefits to all of a healthy and growing UC! woUld be tragedy indeed. Even UC critics such as Governor Reagan and Max Rafferty underS'land·thls and have endorsed Proposltioo 3. Remember, the average cost per person per YEAR durlnf the ~year life of the bonds will be about 50 cents . Proposllioo 3 deserves an overwhelming YES vote. Upstaged at High Noon The Old West ain't what it used to be. Not even what it p~ed to be on the late night shows. At a recent basket social for some of his GOP Ranch hands, Boss Reagan accused Boss Unruh, of ttJe DEM Ranch, of being a badman who held legislation for ransom. Boss Unrub prompUy called Bois Reagan words th.at sounded like "liar" and "coward" and challenged Reagan to a shoot-OU! with loaded mouths the very next time the two men crossed pattis. But "1len High Nooo approached the other day at Santa Cruz, both men were upstaged. by a bunch of young extras throwing a mass temper tantrum. Somebody get th06e lazy script writers out of the bunk (oops!) house and let's get a finish to tliis pot- boiler. Nixon P r ojects Activist GO.P Role Mayor Dale y W ould Blame Ne ws Me d ia Party Is Well Organized EN ROUTE W1Tll NIXON -The overwhelming Impression of the Nixon campaign In Ill closing two week> Is that ht has.It made ln the presldenUal elec- tion, or does not have it made, and 11othlng he does or says will change the probable outcome. People generally are not listening much. But of primary Importance Is that the Republican organiz.aUon i! listening and working and has been marshaled with a preclllon and competence not often aee:n in recent years. Thia can, and probably will, m0e all the difference In lbe-.clonoloctiandividedthne .. ,.. llLmn WU nominated by th e Republican organization. m. eledton 'loul!! be 1be trlumP!> of the R<publlcan orPNAttcxi, unlttecl tn thil year u rar&- 11 belGre. The NII<n organbaUllll can br1JJ1 out rapectable crowd& In sucll labor dominated ...... u Jobmtown, PelJlS)'lvania. It can drum up slzable rallies In clUes ltl<e Rocbel1'r, N.Y., big- ger than Thomu E. Dewey'• when he wu governor of New York and running f o r president. It c a n do the same in Knonille, Tenn., u well u Chicago and New Yark. MODERN POLITICS bu been brought to a hlgh art. Call it machine-made, artificial, the Madison Avenue technique, or whatever, 1till this organh.aUon is a marvel to watch and brings with it IOber· lng reflections. Nixon's elecUon w o u I d bring l n to Wl!blnct<>n the first poliUcally Integrated Republican organir.ation since the 1920s when it appeared that ~ GOP would rule forever. There are no splinter mavemenll, no left-wing heresy, na ram· bunctloua and unru]y personalities and no personality, either, more dominant than Nb:on'1. His stamp b on everything. A Slrom Tbw:mond who might think he could Intimidate President NW.. milbt have to learn 10me early lessons. Nel!On Rockefeller is reported by his associates to recognize this early that l_ie could not be secretary af state in a Nixon admlnl5traUon with a president • so determined to nm foreign affairs himaell. Rockefellu'1 choice ii between accepting appointment as aecretary of dtlense, run-- nlng for 1 fourth term u gOYernor of New York, or retiring from active poUtlcs. Formu Gov. Wlllfam Scranton of Pennsylvania 11 more the kind of an operating secretary of state Nl.J:oo would wanL IN AU. REALITY, Eisenhower in· eluded, we have not had a real Republican president for 36 years and even Herbert Hoover when eelcted in 1928 was a suspect Republican. So, in tenns of organization poliUcs, Nixon woold take us back to the Harding.COOi· idge era. • No invidious comparlsom are intended, Harding and Coolidge would have been aghast, i1 they even could have com- prehended the activist Republican role whicb Nixon projects. In merely a couple of speechey on e:idlng the draft and con· servation of resources Nixon has pro- jected increases in federal expenditures which would have covered the whole federal budget in Han:ijng's day. There are those who say Nixon is not saying anything. Well, he is not saying what Hubert Humphrey wishes him to aay, but in speeches and papers too dull and too explicit to get much attention on TV and Page One, Nixoo has been outlining the new organization Republlcanism in great detail so that if he is eleCted he will have a mandate to carry oat the new Republican activism, even if the organization Republicans who are working so hard for hi! electiaa have no idea what it ts all aboul IF NIXON CAN CARRY Into the presidency the system and organization whlch won him the nominaUon, and would be responsible for his election, he could conceivably end for a long time the only slightly interrupted DemocraUe rule so far in this century. It ts a fair judg· ment that if elected he will try to rebuild the Republican Party into the great powerhouse it once was. He has plenty to build with -attractive governors and senators, dedicated and buttoned-down young e11:perts and activists and a pool of talented people to draw from . Israelis Get Run-around WASlllNGTON -Ambas ... dor Rabin ls still waiting to be notified by the State Department on a definite date to begin hegotiatlons on the sale of the &O Phan. tom supersonic fighter-bambera long sought by Israel, More than a week ha.I elapsed :tlnce President Johnson's widely fanfared an. oouncemenl that discuss.ions on 1uch a pureha:Je would be initiated. Thls state- ment was prompted primarily by a bipartisan provision in the for,lgn aid· authoriUUon bill 1trongly urging lale of the Phantoms to Israel. This recommendation was approved overwbelmingly by both the Hoose and the Senate. But notwithstanding the "President's booplahed pronouncement that negotiJ· tions would be undertaken, Ambassador Rabin has yet to hear anything from either the Stole Department « White House on when they would begin. After mor!i than a week, the former Iaraeli chief of staff iii stUI waiting a call. PRESIDENT JOIINSON'S statement Indicated. the IO-Called negotialionl would he between Socretary Rusk and Rabin. But sevtral days qo a State Department spokesawi. In respoDM lo pra1 in- Dear Gloomy Gm: • Alll!r opendJq hundttdt ol """'"' 11111 ~ dollail for Secret Service ..-Jaa for Jocklo lrAnoed¥ -loci<-··~! . -c. r. II. • quirles, stated. Rusk was too busy "conferring with fare.lgn ministers al· tending the UN G e n e r a l Assembly meeting.'' That particular day, Rusk's sole con. cem was the foreign minister of the miniscule African state of Sierra Leane. Similar inquiries at the White House drew an even more enigmatic response, as follows, "Don't call w , we'll call you." From these obvious s t a 11 i n g man,uvers, It's apparent that Amba 55ador Rabin is likely to be waiting quite a while before Secretary Rusk getl around to aet a date and Ume to discuss what to negotiate about on the purchase of the Phantom supersonic fighter- bombers. AS PREVIOUSLY pointed out lhert Is actually nothing to "negaUate," for the foUowing reasons: 'Ibe U.S. government doea not manufacture the Phantom. It 11 made by 1 private company. The prl~ of the plane ii $4 million. Israel Is willing and rwly lo pay thal. The c:<>mj)lll)' is Willina Quotes OCa.11, F1Ll Star·B111ner : "While •conomfata debate the prOI and CODI of President Jolutson'1 tax hike the mm In the ltreet looks on the proposal u • tou.&h pill to swallow. , . Meanwhile, taxp1yen rem•ln hard to convlnce they'?"$ not H'tad)' aendlnc """''21 ol 111eir mone1 to Wublnston. Abtle11e, K.ua.,.~clo: 11Le&bllt1on can improve cood.JUana. But Mb' to a polnl Just how fai can the allto lfllalate moralllt, in· temsence, motlvatJon and npect for the rliltll ot a(bera)" • and ready to sell the planes to Israel The. only obstacle to the consummation of the transaction is the governmenrs granting of an export license for the jets. That decision is solely up to President Johnson. He can grant the license at any time. The anly reason be hasn·t dane so Is because he, and Secretary Rusk, have long balked at approvin6 the sa], or 50 Phantoms to Israel. That's the sole reason for the year·long delay In Israel's obtaining of these urgently needed aircraft. IT IS NOW very evident that Johnson's aMouncement of negoUaUoos on the sale of these planes was largely window dressing Induced by the overwhelming congressional recommendation that this be done. Also, with the election less than a month off, poliUc1 had a lot to do with the President's gesture. All three presidential candidates have strongly advocated sale ol Lhe Phantoms to Israel. But whether the Johnson Administration will ever approve that. sUll remains to be seen. By Robert S. Allea and John A. GoldJDllU. --~-- Thursday, October 24, 1988 'l'Ac sdftorlal -of tM Dallr Pflot 1aeb to fA/orm and ttlm- vlctt rtadtn ll" prtien«no thtl mw.rpcptf'1 optnlON and com.- tMn£4'1f cm topks of intne1c a!ld dgnlflarn<e, bf providing a torum tor IA< •"l'fts-ot owr rta<Url" opiniom, and bsi prutnt:ino the dtotr1• t.tfaw- poilltl o/ btf01'1ned ob1erwr1 and IJ)Olc<nMn O!I lopjCI Of tM ""~· Robert. N. 'fVeed, PubU.ber High in the current nonsense depart- ment is Mayor Daley's effort to stigmatize the news media as In some kind of conspiracy to mak' him look bad in the Chiacgo pouce.·melee. The thought is provoked by a news story that Richard Salant, president of Columbia Broadcasting System, is pro- testing a plan of the Federal Com· munications Commission to conduct an "inquiry" into the network's coverage of convenUon violence. FCC BASa ITS proposal on .. _ of complaints" received by the Co~ missio n on CBS caverage. Tltis is a laughable excuse for an lnvestlgatian, tvan U YoU grant It la wlthln ~ pawer al FCC to investigate, whlcb iii extremely doubllul . What are "hundreds" of complaints, among millions of letters passed about during and after the Chicago a!lair? Mayor Daley by a word can procure "compl.aints" from thousands of his cops, directed to FCC. The police along with the mayor are in a defensive tizzy over their disgraceful exhibition. They can't stop yapping thei r defense, and naturally welcome an apparilion of federal vin· di cation. BUT IT WilJ. TAKE mare than FCC to efface the spectacle viewed by a hundred million Ameri~ana. 8Dd. half the foreign world. The mayor's original apologia wu a master piece of distortion, iMuendo and weaseling. The reality is not ao com- plicated. The police were directed to do a hatchet job on a rew thousand misguided youths who thought taunts could collapse the conventian. They lost their heads. As their Michigan bclulevard sorties unfolded they perceived. the cameras weren't lying, and they took after the operators, and reporters whose graphic descriptions were getting Into print. IT WAS EASY, because the news peo- ple were stationed behlnd the poUce to escape busted cameras and busted head&. So they got both from the police. But the police didn't suppress the reality, a1 they and the mayor franUcally hoped. They only added to the mood of lhuggery, It backlashed on them, and the mayar was Jell wlth his lament to out-Job Job. Sure, there wu some subjective writing and picture·taking. U a covey of cops see your news insignia and clobber you, you aren't going to ulute them for doin& their police duty. TmS SUBJECl'IVITY ls Inevitable in angry and rlatous cluhtl of split.,econd t)'pe. But it isn't COMpiratorlal. 1be new• media are directed and oper1ted by ruponsible people; they're not kidl tome cop chases up an allt!y. Mr. Salant calb the FCC Inquiry "Im- mensely dangerous," and It 11. 1"t a con- vention of his afflllatelJ be asked : "Anl news judgmtnta to be made f1na11¥ by an q:ency of the 40vernmenL" The armver 11 no, not whUe the news medJa have the guts to try for the truth, no matter how many political bushwhackers stand ill deadly fear of the truth about their abuae ot the cltistnry which buys their groctrlea. Who m FCC ractotuma to ten the who~ people the truth about what they 11w with thelr own eyes, Cl" read about tn aome emotional, but allo IOD\e ex· c:eedingly aober, accounta In their news~apen? U:ave that tti the Ruamans ln Prague. n.., can pt •1'11' with I~ all rill>~ l>lt tbey DOid - I - ~~ ,.SOC!<. IT TO ME ~ ·BOY~~ 'Heavy Traffic · Not Permitted~ When I plead, as I often do, !Of'-greater precision in our use of wards, perhaps it is because I am so prone to confusion. J. remember as a little boy reading the signs on some highways and bridges: "Heavy Traffic Not Permitted.-" It puzzled me for a long time how the individual motorist was going ta decide whether the traffic was too heavy for hlm to continue on the road or over the bridge. It was a year or more bef9re I realized that the sign meant: ''Heavy Vehkles Not PermiUed." And I may have been more stupid than most, but when I h'an:I in fourth.. grade that a special cl~ was being formed for "backward readers," I silently wondered bow many of.JI,)'_ classmatea po11selsetl that marvelous sift of being sble to read backward. A FRIEND RECENTLY told me of an incident in a veterans halpltal. 'The physician in charge of the mental ward had a sign on his door : "J)Qctor's Office. Please Knock." He w.:.s driven to di!l.rae- tion by an obedient patient who carefully knocked 'very time he passed the door. Youngsters, and people out of thetr right minds, a re likely to take word! more literally than they are meant. Unless we say exactly what we mean, youngsters will read another meaning in- to it. EVEN IDIOM A TIC phrases are not without their danger to the growing mind. James Thurber confesses, ill one of his delighUul books cf reminiscences, that whenever bis mother woold uy at din- ner, "Dad U tied up at the office," bl bad a mental picture of the old man stn&a- gling lo free himsell from the booda lbll were lashing him to bia chair. .Another ol my own cblldhood pe1111mr. kies was the aign: ''In case of fire, bred glass." I couldn't fJgvno out -lnaalDI the glaSs. wu going to help put out· U. fire, and it's a good thin& t Wll neYlt c:all6cniiilia to torn 1n .. alarm. I AM NOT suaestlng !bat everytll!ns should be spelled out In H>< fubiao. thua reducing WI all to the coodfUon of children or savages. But words abould i. accurate and u:plldL Except for poetry, they should say no more and no less thin they actually mean. As Mart Twain remarked: "1be dlf. ference between the right word and the almost right word is the dllferwnce between lightning and the lightning f>ua." A lovely example I ran acroa in California last summer was a aign lo a pubilc park: "People without dogs an a leash not permitted." I wander if the good councilmen realize that this banned every non dog owner from entering the park? As you see, I haven't cbaQled much since the fourth grade. Meaning of Olympic Flag Mankind's dream of a united world is graphically captured by the five rings of the Ol)'mplc flag. The five interlocked rings are a one-world symbci! of the fivt major continents -an image of the world's peoples marching &nn·in·arm. The colors of the rings (blu,, yellow, black, green and red an a white field) are the colors found In the flags of most na- tiom. In the Olytnpic banner, the blue iJ nearest the staff, the yellow link& th' blue and the black, Che green links tht black and lhe red. Baron Pierre de Coubertin, a .sporta- mloded Frenchman, cruted the n., In 1113, wtdch was 2,689 years after the first , Olympic race was run. 1be Ancient Games, begun in 176 B.C., continued for almost 1,200 years until 393 A.D., when the Roman emperor Theodosius abolish- ed them. They were resumed tn their present venJon in 111981 malnly becaUM of the dedicalloo of n.ton Coubertln, who 1lmost single-handedly persuaded an in- 1.ernaUonal congrt91 of amateur rpor11 ,.pmenlaUves that the 0'1mptc games should be ...i- TllE IWION BECAME the IOlo dlreo- tor of the camea. He wrote the Olympi~ charter and prolll<QI and compoend the athlete'a oath. When he aot the Idea for the 0.g, he hid the Bon Marcbe deport· men! store In PFI& make It Iii> to hil spcclllcaUom (I meters Jona by 2 metera wide, with the emblem of r1nga mU&Ur-ln& 2.06.,...... by • centimeters). The nq made lis o!Uclal debut In Jtll In Paris DD the eiahteenth IMIV""'1 ol the reopenin11 of !lie Ol1mplc 1¥1"· It Is now tept-tn Lausanne, under 1.he a:1Jous protectfon of the Cccnlte lntom11llonal 01Jlllj)lque. At llleldco Cltt. beoeaJb the -i;:-~r.--~ ~~Ji(lft five hooked rings is the Olympic slopn: 0 Citus·AIUa1·Fortius" -encouraam& tht competing athletes to efforts \bat IJ't "swifter, higher, stronger." Chaqta1 ..._ .----By Geot"IJe ---. Dear George: I wrote to you for a decoraUna tip on how to make my living room look larger. You said, "Use thinner wallpaper." What kind of 1 col- umnist are you, anyboW? FAHJ Dear Fah ! I'm a loveloni. columnist who lits next to the home decoratlnc co\. umnlst and gets a lot of her mall. But, It evens out -if you think you're confused just thlnt ol tbl gal who wrote the decorating colo umnlst asking how to spot an go. faithful huoband and Wll loJd lo put fJowtt arrangemtnta c.1 her eod tab1 ... Dear Gearge: My husbond bu alway• -steady, fafthful and never looked It another woman. He ahrayt worked from 1J lo IS hours 1 day, pinclltni pennies and a.vlnl to become 1 ~. Now, at 45, hill business ii booming and now he has started taking one of hl1 silly blond• secretarloa lo lunch. At 16, Is he le Ille dangerous qe! . Our Bee: BE& Poasibiy. On the other band, maybe this 11 just the nm time be tVtt he •t11 lunch money. i -~< • ,, -. , . -.... ------.._ •' • • • t • I • I • / ., • • .;'" • J> • ,-., ,--• -~ -,-o "'" • • ' ' • '' •• _,,. #' , o-o ~ ·· +·• -J·•<•I• . .........,.~,~~·=-~+=~·~----·~oe-·~·~·-·=·-·•·-·~·~·--~-~~·=-~·~·==~~-=-~=·~1: ... ·=·~~·_.,_. .•.• -~, . ...,._ . ..., ...... ~•·=·~·M'W·..., •. ._ •• .._.., •• , . ..,. ...... ..,._..,_.,..,..,..,..,..,. ...... .,..