HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-11-21 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' \ .
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Marljillma lmciking imil~i>OP)>T .. 1111
1 regular JiB.l. bY al !Wt i~. ~
of students on the .. Huntington BOach .
High School campiis have re&thed
emergency proportions, s c b o o I ad-
ministrators have claimeil,
· Speakilis to a group of 300 concerned
pal'tnta in the 'main district · campus
cafeteria, ltaff leaders also said that
many i'bore are off-and-on users of drugs_
The undocumented estimat<f by Assi>-
tanl Princljlal Charles Weaver · would
seemingly apply lo ·Westminsler and
Fountain Valley high schools as well.
Marijuana ls generally smoked oU
campus, since it is easy to spot the
obvious method of taking the drug, but
pOpuiar . depressants" and tranquilizers
may be easily swallowed anywhere, lhey a.iid. . · 'Puenta .u.nding the narcotics educa·'
Uori meeting Tuesday night with Prin·
cipal Woodrow Smith and Asst. PrinciP"!.
Bill Rollins, ilong with Weaver were
9iven a few tips to combat drug use.
• Moral support to say no should b
given to the youngster who is \empte
(0 accept. ~trabarid medicati9JUI ar:
hallucinogens which clrcula.te freel imong the student body, they were told.
. Parents should aslo educate theinselvf' Iii recognlJ:e symptoms ?f drug_ use .,,
the appearance of various stimulant:
depressants and natural substances sue
aYI mari{. oana and hashish. Espec ·aiJy linf!OI'tant, the panel sai1'
l.s notification Of school officials whe·
a-youngster must take a prescribe•
t'edication.
f This will avo.id the embarrassing and
~ul possi~ility of a teptimate medical
"lient beging taken intO custody by
I autborJties .as a pOsslble narcotics
der. . The three school offlclala said experts
aU-e the ones to e4ucate parents about
drUg use -not teachers -and speakers
shbuld be obtained to discuss the matters
at group meetings. .
j)istrict officials said today that the
~ perc<nt figure for r.,gular drug .use
ii\ an estimate bY. Assistant Principal
W'eJtVet but is not documented ·through
iijest reports or iJty stalistical criteria.
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yueen M~y .Items .
G() Up for Auction,
LONG BEACH (UPI) -Painting>,
&CUlpture and olher furnishings . ol the ocWi liner Queen Mary wllf be aold
ti lllCllon Slturday' nilbt at Lon& l)each •
Auditorium.
Cltiu oflicials Aid all t.!00 aeata for
the auction have been sold -t ,000
f,.. bidders and the rest for the general
public. '
II<m• lo be a,;,\iooed will be oo public
di pla.y at \be audltorium Friday evening
and Saturday.
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.Uome
•. ··-t JHUR,SDA 'r AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 21' 'lt6B .
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·VOL. f1, MO. -I saCTtotfl. M PMIS •
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: ·High in DrugCris~s?
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$43,00Q 'Foun.,I
In Dead Man's
Seal Beach Home
By TOM BARLEY
OI 1119 o.ltJ Pltlf Stiff
Public AdMtn.lstrat.or · James Heim's
aida today were banking more than·
$43,000 in • billl, found in the home
of a Seal Beach 'lllaD killed in a Los
Angeles construction slte accident.
Hetm toc1a1 wd the discovery wu
a "record find" in Orange County.
"We've never found anything ap-
prqaching this amount Jn our previous
estate ·wort,~· he aald.
The dlJcovery waa made at the borne
of crane operator: Lyle James Shephard, '
318 13th SI. Sbepbard, 61, died Monday
at ·the Bothlebem Steel Corp. plant In
Los Angalea, wben. be was crushed by
falllng debris.
Hohn lald Sbepbanl lived alone. At·
tempts were be.ing made today to contact
his llltly la!own relaUves, a half brother
and 1 cousin, bolb ol whom Uved in
the eut.. ~
'ftle c.W.,• tolalling $43,0Z! WU made
up ol $211 blUa with the aception ol
three $1 billl. It wu stored In a stroog
box .al lhe lop of the WBW· beatu
croae~ 11e1m Aid. ..
"It WU all boxed.away neaUf in $1Jl(IO buadle.;" ,aaid. Heim. ';Every packlge
'IHI clearly Identified and lallled and
it WU atalhed 8way very much In the
""Y lhet l banker WOUid 00 the job/'
Wiim ~ -..,., .... ml¥lt 1141m'•
ofllcen called In a t\tllbbor, Orviµe
Peasel;f ol. _m 13th SI., and lberifl'1
5gt. Ben OUndabollre .. w!tnedes. Both
men veiliieci u.i find before ·the caah wu WtilD lot depooil in ·tho UDioo
Bibk. . . ~ . ' ~ Ul.Qll lillCI Ji. the Sbe~ home
WOUid ..... ....-P•aiJy Jn\'loUll1.
rteOldM ;...,117 ol •W1 ·111 1111:
jN1:fllc ada;h4sta•'I +,}, • i
A .-•1 """"-fliuod • '14ll19 ln llW'lAllao\o INlldi W.-1 ol. Mn; Ida
stGtm In·~. 1 ... ln .. -ln~alloii u.i.-~·111 ·>ictOll-~T. V-.
A 'wei •later' -'" dbr 13-)0il'oljl wldow11 .~ d.lnpJ11:rtd aloaa-.~
(l'ee CAI&, Pap S} i ' .
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Hope for Trapp~d M.iners . . I .
Dwindles ~. GQ,S, Sprl1at#
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MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UPI} -
Wlde!pread WldefP:l>.und . .fu:es. lollay
spread dangerous carbon monoxide
through inlles 'or tuMels ' bislde a soft
coal mine an!i above ground. The deadly
gas virtually eijminated an hope for
78 trapped miners and for<:ecNite evacua·
lion of some of their> famllles from
their homes; ,
The woraened condlUOM In the seVen
miles of tunnele 1n -the Mannington mine
put off indefinitely the start of reactle
ef!orta. . • •
Officiall of the Consolidation Coal Co.
is.sured families of the trapped men
at a "family briefing'' that the company
ha.d no intention of sealing the · mlne's
openings "at thia time."
Sealing the openings lo eningulali the
dangerous fires would mean a~
donme~t oh all hope any of the 71
men '{'ere alive. . 1 _
A COnsolldation spokesman iaid MVeral
familieo · of the .lfapped men were
evacuated .from their home& near the
Llewellyo and Mocl's tun porlaIB l>Ocause
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the thick, black .. ,iinot• ~ fWi!n
the mine oj>enings con1a(oid I an "G-!
ceSsiV~~· amount al. car ' nODdL. ;
"Our hopes are dimm C....W.11Jy
thJs morning," Wiiiiam ' ;, ft.
ecµUv~.'vlce !"esklenl c;0.solfdl!li<ja.
world'! largest ~t ,...clu<er,. told
newsmeo. ... 1 • •
PolllldstoPe' said ore;. in the seven
miles of tunnelB In lhe~· ' armllfgton· mine
"defJniteQ< •-d · · ng the nlgbl" !olle>Jin& ., .foUrth . e:splosi<ia
'Wednelday nighL t ' , , There' was no con .ct with the M
men since the first vlo t blast traPR'd
'tbein -mo feet ilnd"i~"ld 'before dap
-(See MINE B . T, Page Z)
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• 'z DAil Y l'ILOT •.
OC(: .Di~~i~~ ·May Call 27-c~nt Tax Incr~~e
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Holl, ol Midway City.
·~here la no question w~ got a aolid
will be rated delinquent in our duUes authority to ral1e the tu ...ieito motch puoe1, 15.S mlllloo would come from
a year or two hence." stata building aid ftmda gDel into elle<I state and federal ......,.. provldtn1 the
(A wlndla1l oll Im «bate du• in A~. II truateeo do 10 lllal route, d!Jlflel can put up IU ljllllloo ol Ila •liilii' -Pramll f Oft DMlftt1• ' , I
l!aJhig by the State Suprome Court on to, the lncttUe could be as much ss 11 ''!8' a Nie 1Wl\lll1I dealine that
ednesday, wW be in the amount of 27 cents over the present rate of. 51 f()r()ed ~ .W 1Dake a declaiOo
Cl,111, It was learned today. Tbat la centa, !or a tolal or 14 cenle per lJO!) W~~ ,:-
equivalent of about 1 ¥1 cenll on of 1aee.eed valua~ '\• 't ::---.. The g · ti6l'td of the ttate Junior
tax rate.) Twealy ... Vf!l ..._.ia ~Mbi>A"ltid' \ Cqllo1• o¥Oil or a stattmenl by Dec.
'l!'.".pos&Jbllltyotll!Other-llocllon . amoual,~·to ~ ...,t iiiUhi 14 11 lhl!l .the dllt9CI either bu ll!lflelenl.
"'"' AIJIUll WU lll'onily IQUtlled 'tunil lllii-Ullfliiiiltll•parjloi'°'"••JlailnlcV malcliJiic 11\0QO)' (which 'Orange Coul
board members as an alternative .$9.S .mllllon ~ p:nra;m,1 {or Jl¢ll ..doesn't) or ii willing to 1et it by a
th leas immediate impact on the tu ·•>'.ell~ ~ , ..... ~ " ', .. .. tax increase. 1'1le commitment is needed
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munlque aald. · ·•
"Then they wcul~ ~ our. saying we plpn lo pw 1 lliue," TrUllee
W11II1m K"lltler, al. Rllllllnllwa BelCh,
concluded reluctanll)'.
''There's no f!':• "1fbY ·we shouldn't at thls 1tage, on paper, tell the ltite
we're ~to Ille whole prollJ'am,"
~phr.,.:llld. ' ·' Wo lllD Would bl\11 ·ihe cpUon of
cuW,,. out~ al the Jll'OJl'&m at a
Int.er ilate, aald Smith hopefully. "ll!
your opinion as an attorney we would
not be irrevocably c o m m l t t I n I
CIUl'lelves?" be uked Humpbreys.
In. ·oc t11e.:$J.$.Jlilllldl ·,1or"~~·on so a reqlltll can be filed !or ln<lluslon
new law giving junior colleee boards -~-ot~~~~~·ftt e&m--in Gov; Reagan'• budget, the com-_____ -----'----~-----~,.... .... :----~----:;'::"''-~ .. ,.,· . .... "'-.··. ff ' • J ............. ,
MINR.BLAST •.
~ ' 'Wednesday.
· N'.evett&elesa, Poundstone said, t•Aa:
lq".'li 'ft 'r.J there l.f allll a chanoo '':U~am~,;:.
... 1 .,..Ji .. ,, ~-·~bu ·1a ·a.-intni,» hlii0•a·"
au....i, clllflooll to • 'bow -~·· ''!: . :iw. A. '.fl>nl" Boylo, preoldanl ol -the
.-i Miao Witten (IJMW), 'arrived
ben from Wub1J!atoo In vlllt with the
families of the trapped men.
"It looks very dark to me, but I
vron't give up hope," he said.
"I assure you everything will be done
. lo nveal to the pul>Uc -in facl, I'D
,.... on It belnl done -eucllJ 'llllat
mmed Udl diluter,.. Boyle aid. .. I
'lblre tbe srter: l'Dt ablbn. ..
Boyle lalcl CaoooDdlllan CO.I Co., ....... II--dlvllloai operated the ~ mlDo, .... ._.,Ille bellnr
"-"'llPl'I'-'"''"'"'• -Jtnc lo sat.IJ.'' He lalcl lie saw Ille Q>ine'• last saleb' nport
la August. and JIOUced. there wu no
unusual accumulaUt.111 o1· gas.
.. From Pqe l
CASH ••.
Ille dllef dePJ11 publlc administrator.
And v-i, 111ulrina a pretty cocl<lail
~ from AnaW>lm, wu later
arnolnd .. HawalL
V-la -..mo, I In 10 years in state prison.
In terms of property alone, there would
appear to be no challenger lO the '150,000
-left by -li!benntn 'J°"" ,Harmen of Newport Bead!, who died
.. QD Cllrlslmas daf, 1961.
· • The 7i>fear-old recluse left 22 plecea
ol pro~ In the Harbor Area, an
tllale thal 11111'-cla1ml from nine l111ssiam.
The IWlslan claims were subsequenUy
demeil by Superior Court Judge Bruce
SUnmer. Recent records lndlcale that
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UPI T9'WMf9
MINER HAUL£D TO SAFETY BY FELLOW WORKMEN
One of H1ndlul to E1copo Dl1asi.r
North Vietnamese Start
Crash Move Toward .. ·BMZ
· · N~'Qn Waiting ...ne-· 11s ~b:-.. 10 .. .. .:p..o ' y
Task . Force8·. '·: im:J~k.:l~~~·A.
aide 'to'Presl~ iu~~~"." Nli<on
announced today that 10 tuk forces
ha,. bten at .,....t.Jo '\pinpoint lalues
In each problem l1'U and point out
where the president will have immediate
power to act."
NeWs secretary lloQald L. Ziegler said
the la!k force studies were · directed
by Paul W. MoCi'acken, ~ economlcl
professor at Ille U.....,..ll' a!'an
and loQner IDl!lber, ol~ of
EcOMmlc AJvltiers' l'n • the"· ower
admlnistraUon. ·
Report. from -.ch. of tho 10 llJ'9UP8
. will be given ~· Pre~nt-elect, ~the
:Whi1n· llous0 mu; Nixon Is gatlierlng,
and "appropriate" cabinet member11 he
~ill name at varying times during the
n~ month, Ziegler aaid.
-Ziegler ~ that within the next two
weelts rei)orts will be made by two
task focces : manpower and labor
management relatiorui, headed by George
P. Shultz, dlreelor ol the Stanford
Unlvenllj< .center fir, adv.anced . lludlea
.In behavortal sci....,; and fiscal pol!cy,
beaded ~Y Herbert Stein, aenhr fellow
and dlrectpr of economic studies at the
Brookings Institute in Washington, D.C.
Other task forces and their chairmen
reporting to Nixon In early and mid-
December are : ·
-Tu legislation; ·Norman Tur e,
economics department, · P 1 a n n i n g
ResearcJ. Corp., Arlinlton, Va.
-Intergovemmeritaf. f1scal rel-.t.Jqns;
Richard Nathan, director, Research
Associates, govemmerltal st u d i e s
dlvllioo;Brooklnp IDllllUte.
· -Pilblln~~l!lcha;d Nathan. ··..:.-~'tiil;Jlilii'....,,_.
t_'!W.~Ce:~tJ;les~ Barber
Th~eaieii~d With Bombs . , . ,
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ll!'ABTllUll I\. VINSICll· .~: ·~~!'ti"~~lt.n , ·.~ .
A M •lliOia'barbershop which ltluh-
ed 1111 prices In fl.50 alter the Nie
minimum ~ price Wll& ntlecf UD-
cOri.itltution'if Wai threatened with 'terror
bombing Wednead•Y by an anonymooa
caller. , .
Fountain VaUey resident Lli Roy F.
Opter, 28, owner of Trim Rlte Barber
Shop, 177 E. 17Ut St., said the telephone
threat was Ute second he haa received
since his price cut, acci>rding to a report
he filed with C..ta llaa poll""° I
The surly mitnlwho'telep!lbn«! al l:!O
p.m. Wednesday a1lo menUoned a
weekend bombing ,lnclden\ at a BUFI"
Park Shop ' WhOi!' loWller ~ in
getting the state-wide law overturned.
"We blew up Ricky Starr's bar~p
and yours is.. Dut on our. &t;'' "apter
quoted the c·aner as saying. ·
Starr owns 28 shops in Orange County
and has given·halrctita ·for SI.75, during
a three-year legal battle against the
$1.91 mlnlmum price minimum which
was based on a ZS.year-old law.
Opter cut hls prices to $1.50 for both
adults and childten, for whom $1 .66 had
been the state-set.mlnbnum price..
The Costa JI""' barber>IJ<>p C!'f)!1!r lold
Police Officer Shirley Groves W~ay
that a first lnlephone threst on Monday
did not refer· specifically to what' might
happen.
The caller merely said if he did not
raiae hil pricea:, he would be taken
Care cif, Opter revealed.
Earlier, Opter and hls manager, Aaron
L. Shr1de, Save the· DAILY, PlLOT B
atattment ·in which· the' congratulalnd
Judge Ronald Crooksbank'a ruling oo
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the price-fill law. ,
''We feel and ~ope that we will be
able to make , .... profit for the owner
and a pod wage for: each employe,"
·ShrJde said, "we feel wl can pvo quality
service at a falr price.''
He alao· 1ald the Prlte cul .iiouJd
' be a boon ''to both barbers and ·the
public. · ,
"We have had many phone calls from
both the py,bllc and fellQw barbers,''
Shride continued, ~1aome abusive and
some threatening."
"I discount many of them .., the
work ol. barbers who are 1C81'ec:I, confUled
or uncertaln of the fatllre/' be aald.
• 0Tbere~ls 11pparenUy'·1 ppe.ral f~
among barbers that everything bu 4one
to hell," Shrlde · su'ggested, "... the
· ~er Jllight lie ln that tbClee ?'ho
want soniethlng for nothl.ng may IOOD
go hungry ·and those who wlll wort
will have their daily brelld as always."
Shride and his wiployer both challeng-
ed published n!marks by Leonard
Benowltz, pre~dent cif ijle Orange County
Chapter, Associated Master Barbers and
BeauUclans of America.
The union leader predicted following
Judge crooksQank's ruling a week ago
on unconsUtu11onallty ,of prlettnlnin:ium
JeglalaUon that sbop iervlce and eanlla·
Uon wlll rulfer. ,
"For those who may not know, barber
shops ln the state of California are
regulated and inspected periodically by
the state to assure ctttaln standards.''
Shrid~sald In rebuttal.
The · aileced weekend bombing of
Starr'• lhop bu. been . discount.eel by
Buena Park. police• as 8 minor incident
involving a cherry bomb or some similar
item.
• .rinal \l!sJ>!>sltlm of the 'cholct prooei!Y
Iitf bJ -rula willl Ille dlilliCt .. · :k ' ~ • . ' ·'·. . .... ,, ' ;. l.. • ; · P!!JIP'llm: hma..l.•0'1MIJ1-dlalr!Rin
of the board of Utnl"'ll· '!ldle abd Co., New Ycrt.----al.---
f',..... Pqe 1
FREEWAY .•.
in 19ff.
"A' that. time," &be said, "there were
no puble bearinp and the plannlng
concept wu simply to upgrade an u:-
lsUng -"""" lo freeway standards. Since thtn, Newport Boulevard has
developed tr:do a h!gh.eapaclty six·lane
divided arterial street which is now
the priocipal traffic lint between our
two citie:i."
She said preservaUoo d this major
local arterial "Is a matter of great
concern tll lhe entire Harbor Arta."
Mrs. Marshall noted that Newport
wwld prefer Utat the new alignment
be along &o>eri<r Avenue in Newport.
Costa Mesu has not yet taken a position
on a _precise routing.
Nixon Gives Reply
PARIS (UPI) -Presidenl~lect
Rlchanl M. Nllloo has usurod President
Charles de Gtiull~ tbat hlJ administration
will do "e.ve.rythlnc 1n lb power" so
that friendship bef:w;s;:u tbeJt two naUOllS
can oonlribule In -Id peace.
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SAIGON (IJPI) -Informed U. S.
eourca aald today North Vietnam has
launched a crash progrBm to repair
its bombed highways •nd move its
stockpile of war material south toward
the demllltarlud zone (DMZ).
The 11ources sald lhe stockpiles,
previously stored north of the 19th
Parallel, have been Jeapfrogged dOJ'D
the cout to new supply polnle. \1.S.
air attacks north ot the 19th Parallel
stopped March 31, seven montha btfOre·
all American bombardment of North
Vietnam was halted.
The highly-placed sources made Jt clear
that the southward movement of the
'Big 10' Nations
Near Agreement
On Money Crisis
BONN (UPI)-A crisis m .. lbg of the
world's 10 richest trading naUon.s neared
1greement tOlligh( an a package deal to
save the French franc and prevent chaOll
In the internaUonal monetary •fltem. It
would Include credits ol from II lO fl
billlon for France. :
The co!lference of finance minta:ters
and central bank governors of Ute ao-
called "Group of Ten" wu ·called
because a rush to sell French francs
and buy West German marb in be.lief
·lhe Franc would fall and the mark would
rise threatened the world monetary
system. · ·
C.Ollapse ot tl}e syalem would almost
certainly lead to devaluation of the Brlf-
lsh pound and possibly the American
dollar. The sltuatlo:i was so cr1tlc1l
most Europe.an Dioney markets were
closed t(I halt lhe panic buying and
oelllng.
Aa the Group ol Ten ctrtw toward a
cloee informed sourct!I said the package
deal ahaoed up like this, d -Weafihy nations lncludlng West er·
many and reportedly Japan will make
available special credits to nations with
aWng currencleii, especially Fraoce and
Britain. The eources put tlle credhl for Fra~ el between $1 and S2 billion.
Swill banking circlet lint reported thls
"1wapp~' arrllll(ement. -West · ~ rttusee to-revalue Uie
mark upward m lta CWTtnt value· of
25 cents but will slap a 4 perctnt tax on
'-" and give a 4 percent tax eumf.:
li«I In Imports. This will llOW Bonn I
sharply rt.slni: balance of JlllYIMDta, ooe
ol the l'WOlll !or the cr!all.
-In twin moves West GermlnY wtll
require lie approval lot moot foreign
mooey lrll\lfen Into thla country and
the federal bank will freeze all llhorl
tarm loreJcn colll depoclle oo 11 cannot
ba --loto Dlll'b. -cou!llrlol In trouble wtn taie llrln-Rtnl _, ......... lo help put the
liitemaUGllll monetaey system . In. mler i.am~ meBQfU'wert-.UU
belnl -rod.
-~} I
supplies does not necessarfly bid!cate
that th~ North VJeP1amese plB.D to lau_nch
fr'esh attacks across the DMZ. ·
"They have an alternate," QDe authori-
ty said. "But we don't know wbtt:h
they will choose. They can move the
stuff to the northern border of the DMZ
or they can shunt it lnto Laos."
The sources said photo reconnaissance
Olglll! . haJ• turned up hundreds of
laboret1 ullng oveey\hlng from shovels
lO bulldozei1 to clear ""'1 llJ'ad• Hllhway
l, tho main norlb ... utl) ~C!>~ route
rwuifng'betWeen'Hanol .;., ~ D~.
Tb9 U.S. Comm8nd said Ur Anierican3-
were· killed in acUon ·la.st ·week · and
1,931 wounded. Thia compared· with 1116
killed and 1,25S wounded the week before.
South VietDamese CliSUa~ were
listed '' l.ll llJ1led, l4t . ~!'<I and. 21 missing or captured, C<llnpared with
200 killed, 718 wounded and nine .missing
the Week before. .
Greek SJI)»'~~e
Court Rej~ts
Death Try..Plea
ATHENS (AP ) -Tbe Greek Supreme
Court today turned· down an appeal !or
a n e w lrial for Alexander Panagoulil
and hil on.hour grace period ended at
dawn, but the.re :Nu no incUcaUon .he
had been esecuted for plotllng agaJMI.
the military regime,
. Panagoulis' lawyer had applied. tor·
a retrial on the ground Lhat hia cllent11.
deposlUon read at bis trial' wu Invalid.
because Panagoulls had not signed ll
Tile Supreme Court said this WU "unaC·
ceptable."
'.l'here was apeculaUon that execution.
might have been delayed to give the
Suprome Court Ume t(I rule.
Panagoulls, 30, wu sentenced Sunday
night to die before a firing oquad !or
deserting the army and attemptlna to
overtbni\v the mll1tary regime.
Panagoul~' lawyer had applied for
t retrial on the ground that hla client's
deposlUon read at hla trial wu invalid
becaUle Panqoulfa had not 11gned It.
11le SUl)reme Court l&ld Urlt wu "unac-
ceptable. II _,. ~
-Envlroilmenl; Rualell Train, pnsl-
dent, COQ.m'vatlon F 0 u D d I t l 0 D • ..
WuhJncton. D.C. Juat II dayo llhorl of the 38th an-the plcture, which will be an1 hle1ortcal
-Ctrgaiilzatlon of EJ.ecuUve branch; nlvertll'7 o1 f.be attack on Pearl Harbor, account of the Japaneae attack on Pearl
Frank LJndll1, proslden~ lint Corp., H bo in S N U le Ith Bedford, Maas. Japoneao Zero fighlnn marked with the or r, us g \1. . avy p o w
-TranapottatJOil; Prof. ch a r I ea blood-red riling sun emblem .are again government cooperaUon.
Miller, chairman department ot civil sweeping over a U.S. mllltary base. The 20th Century Fox production will
engineering, Muaachusetta lnBUtute of In Orange County yet _ near Lel!ure be filmed on locaUon and chanca are
Teehnology, Clmbrldge, Mw. . W Id , ·~-· HJ"· h th good that aU persoonel al Pearl Harbor -Housing and 1D'ban renewal: James: or .._....... ""• w ere ere may will be repeatedly forewarned ol the
Gaynor, commlaaloner, New York state 'very well be reUreea who remember upcoming production.
dlvlaloo ol bouaini and urban renewal. Dec. 7, t!H.1."'~Ule they wore there Capl C. c. Walklrul, IJSN, said the
Nllloo appeared in the public View lllA!IJ\lni;~~ n on· e • I • le n I project will get under way with t..i
thlJ' momJnc far the flrll limo Je.'more defense~'''" 1--, • fllghtc and combat practice In the
·than lour daya. He po...! wllj>. bii ·llfrot lm«!.counWljlla week began ma!<· remodeled Zeroes, after which they will
t(lp'advllera !or pl>Qlograp)ul 1/1 1 villa ing, ~ !Oat oil-Zeroeo were be flown lo North bland Naval Air
at a Ke1 l!lkayne hotel. '' •· 'C>' zoomlnl into.-EI 'l'OrO. Marine Qqi'jlo Air SlaUoo, San Delgo.
a ~\"'. Ill Ille. Jr~~-· '· ~ .. · .1'j)l'ene StaUon ap,ttev~ 1mie~~·.'j,; .. "-~ Once there, they will be loaded aboard _.t blUI ""1!1111 Tbey'!f'Jli!;a· .-..;:bJjf,~cw>; the aircraft carrier \JSS Yorktown, to
•.113-.-·~'lill llld beeo .admit -.r ' " ~;~,. '; '. be ferried to the place where America
lllJ'l1lnC, MUAad '"'tbe .... conS-A .. lt.of~~,1'11.a:; ~"1 ,SNJ. becanW firmly commttted • to partlclpa·
mlllel . m ·the Poll ·~ 1111 Civil aircraft • "~·~· for, iest •uon hfllio oecond World War. Senlco and enuu.a;,·~·llld'SUJ> flllbli ' •. ·-•. '"1!J<>;llilg The'Yorldown .. well .. lie CarllO
JlO!llill l'alllllolll," Ibo:'""~ reDovailGG ;.t: ~ Bllcll~ !!»'. of vlnlqt=er alrpianu, will have
t0 Nliiai~·'. YI a'-"Aii~~ thelirrolttftu~" ~nf' " aipovloro lofaJa-alrcrafl on .U. , Nliil-' .... -.,..._ ~a •. :w•_.. ~. ....-' · carrter, · · to atudio 0Ulcial11, r-,, -iiiiPib~ ,. ' . .. . -. . ..
) ' .......
~··· '
' ;
·-. '. ' ' ' . . ~ '
a very spcici81 purchase frolJ\ ·a .: ·
· · ·' f amo~· quality ~ker of . ·
,GENUINE L:EATHER CBAlRS . '
A GIFT TO JREA••RE AllD OOOl roi .. YEARs
. '
'J'bera, was 1pe<iulaUon that .. ecuUO!i.
rni8ht bva been ~elayed to give the I Supereme CcMt tune to rule.
Panagouli&, 30, wu oentenced Sunday
nigh! to die befo" 1 lirlng oquod tor
dewllng the army and attemptln( lO
overthrow the military reclme ol
Premier Georp Papodopouloe. He had n boun to ~ tor clemoncy but
refuaed to alp I plea.
from $199 '
A reliable -aald PliPldoI>olous .. .. -.. moariben ol the mlUtaey
junla who want the micutlon WT!ed
out 11111 mat with nillltaf1 leadm
=~w ·-.Pt'ltt~bte · lrvm an uecutJoo.
~.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
..,..M-.~n....,M.""" .... ~~~-~_..~_,,.._,...._.,...._
2215 HA~IOR BL VD.
646-0275 -6'!6o0276.
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Du~i~gion .Beaeh Your Bometo1"D.
Dally Paper
VOL &f, NO. 280, 3 SECTIONS, 34· PAGES
'1 .. ·• ORANGE COUNTY, CA~lfORNl.A; ,
. .
'THURSD'liY~ NOVEMBER 21,. ·1 ~6t • . . ' . TEN· CENTS
Drug Use at Beach High Called ~Emergen'cy'
Marijuana anloking and pW-popping on many more are off-and-on uaers of drugs.
a regular basis by at lea~ l~ percent The undocumented esUmates by Asms-
of students on the Huntington Beach tant Principal Charles Weaver would
High School campus have reached seemingly apply to W~tminster and
erhergency pro~ons, sch o o 1 acJt. Fountain Valley high schools as well.
mlnistraton hate·clatmed. Marijuana is generally smoked off
Speaking to a group of 300 concerned campug, since it iB easy to spot the
parents in the main district campus obvious method of taking the drug, but
caieteria, irtaff leaden . al!lo said ~I . pop,uJar 4epr~ants and lrjlljl!i)izers
may be easily swallowed anywbt-,., Ibey
said.
Panints attending the narcotics educa-
Uon meeting Tuesday night with Prin·
cipal Woodrow Smith and Assl Principe!
Bill Rollins, along witb Weaver were
given a few tips to combat drug use.
Moral support to aay no should be . i:i~ea.. I!( t!i• f!lJ!lljAter who ts templed
to accept contraband medi:cationa and ls notification of scbool officials when
ha.Uµclnogens which clrcul8te · \freely a youngster must take a Prescribed
among the sludent body, they were told• medicaUon.
Parents should aslo educate tbemselves This will avoid the embarrassing and
to recognize symptoms ol drug use and painful poS3ibility of a leg!Umate medical
the appearance of var!Ous sthQulantS, patient beging taken into: custody by
depte&Sahts and· natural sub.stancea ~' school authorities as a possible narcotics
as marijuana and hashish. offender. ....,_
Especlally imperlant, 'tho-penel-ald,-· •• The•lhreO sSOof'olflclals sald 'itpOrls-
are the ones to educate ~~ about
drug use -not teadlero -and speaken
should be obtained to dlacuas the matlen
at group meelingll. .
District offlcfals said today thal the
n percent figurt for regular druC uae
1s an estljnate by Alalslant Prlncfw _..:
W1<1ver,,ht4 la_oot .~.JhtGus)I armt reports or, any stallstlaal crilerla.
• e oa ·OSIOll
'
Hope Dims for 78
Eitesreat ieibz Gas Through Mine
SMOKE MARKS SCENE OF MINE FIRE
Duin Down Below in W. Va.
$43,000 Found in Home
' . .,
Of Dea~ Seal Beac1llf an
By TOM BlRLEY
Of tlll Dally 'llN Sllft
Public AdmfniStrator :James' lfeim's
aides today were banking more than
$43,000 in $2U bllls, round in the home
of a Seal Beach man killed in a Los
Angeles construcUon site arcident.
way that a banker would do-Ole job."
When the discovery was made Helm's
officers caned in a neighbor, OrviUe
Peasely of 312 13th St., and sherifl'a
(See CASH, Pa .. 1)
'27 •eetat Increase
MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UPI) -
Widespread underground fi.rell today
spread dangerous carbon monoxide
through miles of tunnels inside a solt
coal mine and abave ground. The dead.Jy
. gas virtually eliminated all hope for
-:78 trapped miners and forced the evacua·
. tion of some of their families from
their homes.
• The wqrsene\f .cQnditions in fhe seven
miles of tunnel! 1n the Mann1ngiap mine
~..;ti .bid!f~!e)>'. lfle ~· . .,.... ..
· "Offi'Oli'1•~ CoosOli?Uo• co.1 c..-... ~ .1~ ·•r'.'jl\e ,~min ·
at i ''.lljlnlly: l\Hiling" that. the; compe}!y
!Jad ·no Jnlj!*f' ci(",o•llno )he' mine'I ~penings .. u8 ;tlM.;~ ' I •
Sealing the <i>entng,,' lo 'extl\igu!sh ti\• dangerous £iris ·.would meab 'af>an.
dow:ileDt of .arr h'ope 'anY /.of. the 18
men w'ere alive. ·
A ConSolid8tlon SJ»kesman said several
families o( the' ·trapped men were
evacuated from ~. hoiiles near. tl;le
Llewf!llyn aild Moci's nm portal!>. because
the thick, blaCk smoke· pouring fi'om
the mine openings contained ari "e'.J..
cessive" amount of carbon monoxide.
"Our hopes are dimrlled considerably
this morning," William Poundstone,, ex•
ecutive vice president of Cotl.S{)lidation,
world 's largest soft coal producer, told
newsmea.
Poundstone said fires in the seven
miles of tunnels in the Mannington mine
-' Mlrll l!l'fl~· Pllt19
PAIR' ESCAPE CRUISl!R Fl.RE OFF '.COAST '
Swimm•r.1 Scott (ltft), Romlinillo · ' . . . :·:
"definitely spread during the night''J.t.r ' ' '
following a. fourth major explosioD1~.E 1 E ; · • • . , s .. d :~:.!i'f;st c:~:t b~ :.~~ ~'. · ar y · · ngmeer1Jlg_ .. tµ ·. y
them 700 feet underground before dawn ' · ; . ·
::~~~I ~!~~i:tu·~d~~~= Of Orange Freew·ay· · Urged
w-~-the~~ . · .·· ·
will not give up hope," Poundstone said. ·
"The amount of carbon monoxide has
increased in the mine," be said, "and
it is extremely difficuli to judge how
far the fires have spread.''
W. A. "Tony" Boyle, president of the
United Mine WorUra (UMW), arrived
here from Washington to visit with the
(See MINE BLAST, Pqe 11
Thief Gets Stereo,
·And Attached 1Car
The theft of another car stereo WU
reported Wednesday lo Newport Beach
police.
Only' this time, the Volkswagen of
Bruce E. Herigstad, 19131 Woodward
Lane, Hu:iUngtoo Beach, was attached
to the stereo seklp.
The thief took the car, too.
An immediate · start !or engineering
studies on the Orange Freeway Ii-om
the San Diego Freeway south to the
adopted line for the Coast Freeway has
been urged by the Orange county Coast
A.!lsociatioh.
The Orange Freeway will run near
the Sanla Ana River through either Foun-
tain Valley or Costa Mesa. Although
sections of the freeway are under con-
struction in the northern part of the
county, DO' stlldies have been conducted
in the South, associatioa -president
William D. Martin of Laguna Beach,
pointed ool
The reaolul.ion c:a1ling: for studies to
begin "lorthwilh" pointed out that the
area· scMh Of the Smr f)lego ·Freeway
is rapidly developing and that the general
area where the freeway is to ,run must
be known SOOTI If the area is to fully
develop .
ln addition, Qlt ' rcsoJution says .the
cost of the free'\"a)' could be reduced
substantially if the roUte is ouWned
before construction l:legins on the line.
Undetehµlned a.s yet ls the possiDle
effect of adoption by the state Highway
COmmisSion of the route for th~ future
Huntington Beach ' Freeway a I o n g
NeWJand Street. The line is about a
mile and a ball (rom the general area
wh~re the · Orange Freeway is likely
to be routed.
NATO Warns Soviets
NAPLES, Italy (UPI) -NATO
inaugurated a-new air ~ today
ro seet out Soviet ships ind submarines
in the Mediterranean· arid warned that
"any criais kl the fifeditctril~n and
Middle East would bayf: World con.-
aequences.'11 •
Heim today said the discovery WM
a "re:cord find" in Or8'1ge County.
"We've never found ... anything ' ap-
proaching this amount in our previous
eBlal!' work," ~ .said.
The ~very was made at the home
of ~'Oper$r'Lyfe .iam,.. Shephard,
311 131h St ~;J!. .. dlecfMonday
al the Bethleilem u . ...,. JQj'p. plan! in
Loa Angeles, when be was . crushed by
Tax Hike
. . .
Seen ·for OCC : ,District
falling debris. ·
Helm lald Shephard lived alone . Al-
tempti were bein8 ~ today lo con tact
his only known relatives~ a half brnth<r
and a cousin, both of whom -lived · in
the east.
The ·cash, totalling $43,023 WU made
up of $2IJ bills with the exception of
three fl billa. U was llor<d in 1 strong
bo1 at the· top of lhe Water be1t'er
cl<>RI, Helm aid. ,
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of "" DlllJ ,llM '™'
The tu ri te for resident& of Orange ' Coast Juft.lor COOege District may
abnjpUy be increased 27 centl next
August unless the district ......, !Oto
l(Jmei unaaUcipated moMy. ,,.
Tru5lee3 decided chai by manlll10Ull ·vote Wednesday night, although board
member John O'Hara Smith of €oron1
de) Mar, sa id he didn't want ru11 vote
to be conl!idemi bbidit1g. -
Lesli reluctant were ~steel! Robert
Humphreys, of Costa Mesa, and Donald
"'nitre b no quesilon we got a soUd·
majority vote last time," 1aid Hum·
phre)'I, rererrlng to lhe Sept. 17 bol!d
defeat lhat came ah eyelub abort 61
the lwc>thlrdl need•d. "Wllh lhla m..,
support from lhe people I'm DOI h"'ltanl
to vote tor a tax lncreue."
(A wi.n<!faD Q~ Jnipoonc! rchale due
l\ie '.iUJl\or' colleg~ dfalr\cl, l~IO)llllc a
ruUnc ';l>!' the Slate . Suprem' Court on
·.Wednesday/ will be in tho amoont it!
1143,111, II WU learned today. ni.1 la
'the ·equr.,1eni · of about ,l !O C81U' on
the tn rate.) · 1 • • ~
The poalliflllJ of another boo'1tl6cllon
belont Aqust WU ~-tuQUled
by board : meh\ben, u an altemaUte
wttb leil : lnunedlala lnlpocl GI the tu
rate! --· ---"ll-waaart·tioic'el!DaYl!Oiufln ,r,ooo
oondles," sald Rel?'· "Every package
was clearly ld<nlH1ed and tallied and
It waa r sbed away very much i~,)tbe Holl, ot Midway City. ft
Seid Holl: "I regard this whole peltem
()[ bond r e J e c t l o n as rtactlon to
somelhlng larau than the porflmnance of tlils board or df.4trl~ We rate near
the 1ofJ ill tfncltney of performance.
__,,,We'? Gbllgated to Cl> n t 1,, u t -with
our buddin& program. OthcrWU!t, we
will be roted d<Unquonl In our duUct
a year or two hence.''
• A ntW'laW giving Jub[or t<!lfet' bolrds
autbori17 to nlst.the tax tlta• to maWh ·~ tilitldln& aid fund• , ... Into el/et! ,.. ' \ J
---•--------
Man Blown
Overboard
I
Off Beach
By JAMES McNABB, Jr.
OI tM 0.llJ 'lllt Slaff
An evening pleasure cruise ended
early~ today in a · boat uplOsion wlllch
blew a crewman overboard and forced
the captain to jump inio Ule tea to
escape flames whfcb destroyed his cabin
cruiser two miles off HuntingtqD Beach.
Lileguardl reported Jellny ;. Scott,
24, of Long Beach; and !hi! vessel'• own-
er, Joaeph Romaneno, · ol Aaahelm,
swam through the 11-degree ocean to
'~"" wber• llie llfo irere ftund by the
lifeguard mobile Uni!.
~II BUfle<tcl 10COJld.de~:~ an
hfj Jell le1. Romanef1o,was not 'inJUl<d.
Romanello; nistlng today'" ~ l!om•.
said the engine of the 23-foot~ "Mayen"
,atalled ·u the, craft madO'. itlCMUra lo
port in Long Beach.
''I'm still a Uitle hazy about what
hapll""<f, but ' Jell was swilchlng the
gJts tanks when the whole thing went.
He ·was blown overboard then I Jumped
over with a life jacket," he said.
. Lileguards fOlponcjlng lo calla ·.lo po. .11~ from numerqus Sunset. Beach resi-
dents who witnessed the exp106ion said
rapldly spreading . fire engulled the
cruiser.
The bla:ze was extlngulsbed by the
ftre patrol boat which sped to the .strick·
·en boat from Sun.set Harbor. The char·
red hulk sank about l a.m. Loss was
estimated at '2,500.
Four on Outboard
' '
Dumped in Surf
Pounding' surf IOll<d four persons Into
the water Wednesday off Bolsa 'Chica
State Beach when their 18-foot· outboard
got too close to shore.
Trapped uoder the craft for 1everal
minutes until rescued by a pair of Hunt·
ington Beach city beach lifeguards was
John Grover Snider, 70, Long Beach, who
was held overnight at Huntington Inter·
community Hospital for observaUon and
released today.
Walking through the surf to shore were
?ifrs. Zula Morgan, to; Paut .Crum, 49,
ami Katherine Crum, ts, all of L o n g
Beach. All were treated and released
from the hospital. ·
Lileguardl · Bill· Richards and By Ger-
old said the .craft apparently was whlp-
'ped aroond by the surf and finally fill>'
ped as it was forced to shore about 5 p.m.
Orange Coast
Weaiftr
That Chamber , :ot · c.onUnerce
wealher will be back with ua FrJ..
day ' -Slllllll' .llkl~ With. tetnpet•·
turea ranging from 74 along the
shore lo Ill hnther Inland.
'
INSmJ: ~AY
There wt"> OU 0,c. HVJJMis
Pott anil ... 111,. at a pflli1'
ra11th m T-. Will Ill< ftnl
•summd WMll !low•" b<,olo a
l"'h · I.tr.ind off llidl!li Bca<ll:
Po11< JO. • '
'! D.llLY PlU!T
' Qr aeh
' Air Patrol Proposal StJ,ul,Uid by Council
'
....-lllll'lll!r ........ ..... 11..... •Flt,, .. .....
the ... •"*'II" .. - -Huntlngtoo lleod> coiild IWloi Ibo liol-
IDCe of ..,.._ ln Ibo cllY'• war .., aimo.
WUh two llllgbel 300 heil!'Optm, ltlrt·
!ind llld, police dJuld maintain 11 leut
llx bwn of 11r patrol per day 11 a coot
-ably les thin present_.,,..
for 11.ltVelllaDce by patrol car.
Coit " u. ~ program, be . Wt,
would be -Ii.SS per square mile of area patrolled compand to ' etlltlng
patrol car costs of tM.Z!I per squlln! mile.
City Admlnlstrahlr Doyle Miller, noting
the experience of oilier Soulhern cal!for·
Dia clttes llready ming helicopter patrol
unlll (Lakewood and Loo AngeI..), IUg·
gest<d the C08U might be oomewhat
bigh<r thin estimated by the llU&l>eo
fNorth . Jl~namese Start .CoP»ty Urged
~£' ·h 7'1' · T · d DMZ To Move on •• '--' ras 1r.1 ove owar ·
SAIGON (UPI) -Wonned U. S.
"""""' sold today North Vietnam ha! ·launched a crash program to repair
its bombed highways and move its
• stoctplle of war material south toward
.·,the demilitarized zone (DMZ).
The soorces uJd · the stoctplles,
previously stored north ol lhe 19th
Parallel, have been Iaplr<>gged down
the cout to new supply points. U.S.
air attacks north of the 19th Parallel
-.topped March 31, seven months before
· all American bombardment of North
Vietnam was halted.
The highly.placed sources made it clear
that the southward movement of the
"·suppliea: does not neceasartly 1ndic1te
-that the North VJetnamese plan to launch
fresh attacb aCl'°"3 the DMZ.
"They have an alternate," one authori·
ty said. "But we don't know which
they will ~. They can move the
<11tuH to the northern border of the DMZ
· ·or they can ahunt it into Ltull."
'' llle -said photo -·rup"' have turned up hundred& ol
labor<rl ..ing •v«}'lhing from shovels
to bulldazen to clear and ar•de Hl&hway
1, the ma1n north-south coastal route
runnlq between Hanoi and the DMZ.
llle U .s. Command uJd 117 Americans
were. killed 1n action 1ut week and
1,931 wouoded. Tbil compared wi1b 166
•
'Fro111 P .. e J
'e..tSH ••.
Sgl Bm Oralldaboure u wltn ...... Both
men veriAed the find belore the cub
waa l&lleo for deposit lo the Unlon
Bank.
The "3,1113 filld In tile Shephard home
would agpear to out.at.rip any previously
recorded dlscovery ol money by the
public admln1!trator's office.
A corooer'• deputy found 114,116 In
the Lquna Beach hom< of Mrs. Ida
storm In october, 1961. In "" ..Ute
lllvestlptloo the! WU handled by con-
victed em.beZller Louil T. Vanseourt.
A ...et Iatzr most of the 13-year-<>ld
widow's money dlsappeared .along with
the chief deputy public administrator.
And Vanac:ourt., aqulrlnj a pretty cocktail
waitreu from Ana.helm. wu later
arrested in Hawaii.
V anscourt Is now serving 1 to 1 O
years in state prison.
In terms of property alone, there wtlUld
-to be DO chall<nger to lhe '21Q,000 elfate left by bachelor fisherman John
Hmnen ol Newporl Beach, who dled
en Cllrlltlnaa doy, ~L
1be 75-year-old recluse left 2Z pieces
of properlf In lhe Harbor Atta, an
-lhat attracted claim! from nine Jb1..t1M. .....,
The Russ.Ian claims were aubsequenUy
denied by SUpetior Court J ud&e Bruce
Sunmer. Recent records indicate that
flnal dloposltlon ol Ille choice property
lell by llorman mu with lhe dilil'lct
court of appeals.
DhllY PllO I
RMrt H. W•tl ,,....,., ... ,. ......
Jatk L C.rl:r ..............................
Tit-•• k""" ·-..... A. u....w.. -·"" AlltNt w. ..... wim •• •••' ,,...,... twiotlNtoll .....
Edltlr Otr U11w ...... , ..........
'" ltli lttett M1IU., M4te11t P.O. ... 7'0. t2HI --.......... , ........ ........ """ ... , -...... """' L.-~ .. ,...~
•
killed and t,113 wounded tile week before.
South Vietnamese caaualUee . were
listed as 128 tmm., 64t wounded and
21 missing or caplunjd, compared with
200 killed, 79li wciunded and nine missing
the wee.k before.
In.South Vietnam, U.8. apokam<n uJd
today commimllt BUlll bombarded Hol
An 1n the coetllm lbelllng o1 a city
o1oce the bombing of lhe north stopped
on Nov. L A south VI_,.... pnerll
predicted a new Comm.unlit offenatve.
Two BUdden barrqe1 into Hot An Oil
Wednesday oiammed 1ntA> a boteJ, the
central marketplace and a street crowd-
ed with bomH>ound IChool cblldren. Of·
ficlals said two., persona died and 17
were wounded, 19 ol them youngsters.
At least a dozen 82mm mortar rouoda
bit Hol An Wednesday at 11:20 a.m.
and 5: 30 p.m., sending many of the
city's 44,000 residents fleeing, 1overn-
ment olflcllll llld.
Oen. Do Cao Tri, South Vlebwneae
eommander of the provtnces around
Saigon, uJd In Bleohoo today lhe C<lm-
mWlisll are ..., In biding, rell'lUPfnl
and r<fitting for I winter-spring of•
tensive.
"We are canfldtnt their unlll will
become acUve once again tbAfu!i' fitted
and regrouped," be said. troope
found two big anm cachel on Saq:on'a
dooratep Wedneaday, one of them with
1,000 grenadea.
:Rosary; Tonight
For Jesus Ortiz
A rosary !or longtime Huntington
Beach realdent Jesllll P. Ortiz wnf be
noclted at 7:30 p.m. tonight at Smllhl'
Mortuary Oiapel In llwltlngton Beach.
Requiem Mua la .. 1 !or 9 a.m. Friday
al Sia. Slmoo and Juda C.tbollc Cbureb.
Mr. Ortiz dled Wedne!day. He WU ea.
A 31-)'ear realdalJI of the city, be
la survived by bla wile, ctprlana, and
four daughters, Mn. Anlta Alvom and
Mrs. Sally Navarro of Huntington Beach,
Mrs. Amelia Goruales of Westminster
and Mn:. Patty Applegate of San Diego.
Survivors also include a brother Louie
OrUz of Huntlngton Buch, seven
grandchildren and two great
grandchildren. He will be interred at
the Good Shephard c.melcl')'.
From Pqe J
MINE BLAST ••
families of lhe trapped men.
"It looks very dark io me, but I
won't give up hope," he said.
"I assure you everything will be done
lo reveal to the public -in fact, l'Jl
insist on It belnj dooe -exactly what
cau.sed th1a disaster," Boyle llid. "I
share the grief; l 'm aha.ken."
Boyle sald CoosolidlUon Coal Co., w™-Mountaineer divia.lon operated the
Munlngton mine, waa "one of lhe better
companiea cooperating in aafety ." He
Aid he saw the mine'a 1ut &afety report
1n Augwit, and noUced there w11 oo
unU!Ual accumulation of gas.
Beach Buying
In a move to get action on the Orange
County Planning Department's proposed
sborellne facillty study, tile county plan-
ning conunl!Sloo Wedoesday urged the
Boan! ol SUpervtion to gtie the ·rtport
-CCllllderali<ll. The' coriipla llbldy waa unveiled last
-to IRJPl'l'Vllon. The board look
noadlon.
T b e report uuges acqulaiUoo ol beach
areas by the county u lndlcated in
the Mut.r Plan of Sbor<lloe Develbp-
meot a D d auggesll I b e pooslblllty of
constructloo of arllflclal peninsulas to
help meet the demand fOl' beach fron-
. !age.
The 11 recommendaUons in the report
are:
-Acquiro remliDlag beacl> areu ..,
lndlcated In the -plan. -Acquire upland ovemlPI camping
areal within view of the ocean.
. -,5tudy fwlblllty ol C01111ructlng
arUllclal penlnauJaa to help -lbe demand for beach frontage.
-Accelerate clty, county and private
action to carry through local agencies
role in scenic hl.gbway programs.
--.5 I u d y feulblllty o! protecllve zone·
Ing.
-Design l1llem ol biking tralla along
the cout. '
-Acq1llre areu for vts!a polnil and
,Wlfll\da rats. . __ ~-5llL ..:.coo.truct ayll<m of ....,..... .. 11gns.
-Comtru<I mulll-level p a r k I n g
faclliUes at lnl<necllons ol mojor
lllghways with the coaat blgbway.
-EncoUrage 1butUe bua syatem.
-Appoint 11fOUP to determine method
of funding and wblch Jlf'Oduets deserve
priority for lntemive study.
FreM P .. e J
TAX HIKE ••.
'' lllle and federal oources providing the
dlatrlct can put up IU mlll!m o! Ill
own money.
It was a st.ate funding dealine that
forced trustees to make a decision
Wedneaday night.
The gov<rnrna board of tbe state junlbr
colleges asked for a statement by Dec.
'1 tha1 the dlalrict elthet\ has sufllclellt inatchlnf money (wblcb Orqe · Coa.t
d..,.'t) or ls willing to pt 11 by a
tu In-. The commitment la needed
so a request can be filed for inclusion
ill Gov. Reagan's budget., .&be com-
munique Aid.
''Then they wouldrt't accept our aaylng
we plan to pass a bond issue, 11 Trustee
WWiam KetUer, of Huntington Beach,
concluded reluctanUy.
"There's no reaaon why we shouldn't
at um atqe, on paper, tell the aU.te
we're eomm1tt1ng to the whole program.''
Humpbrey1 sald.
"We stlll would have the option of
cuWng out part ol the program at a
later dlte," said Smith hope!wq. "In
your oplnlon as an attorney we would
not be irrevocably corn mitt I a g
ouraelvea?" he Wed Hum~.
"I'm not the county counsel," aa1d
Humphrey a.
Japan •invasion~·
Planes for Film Fly Over Comt
I
Just 11 days shorl of lhe 28th an-the picture, which will be an historical
niversary of the atlack on Pearl Harbor, account of the Japanese attack on Peart
Japanese Zero fighters marked w:lth the Harbor, uslng U.S. Navy pllotl with
'blood-red riling sun emblem are a&aln 1ovtrnment coowatlon.
•-Pini over a U.S. military btlO. The 2llth ~tui:J Fox proclucllon wlU ID n..... ,,., .. ~ t • ~... be Dlmed orl' locotlon and c1\al\Ctl .,. ~~.e "'l"'"" ye -near_,. gOOd that au pei;timel at Pearl Harbllr
World Lacuna llllh, •hen! lhera may will be riputedly forewarned of the
Vef"/ well be retirees who re.member upcoming production.
Dec. 7, !Kl, becaUIO they were lhera • C.pL c. C. -. UliN, oald the
IDlll1llng lbe virtually D o n • e • II It n I proj<ct wUl &el 1llldar way with lest
def-f)'lllm. lllahll and combal pncUce In the
Jll!'ld counllanl thla wttt began mat-,.modaled -· aftor wblcb theJ Will Inc Npor1a that JapaneH z.r... wtra be fJon lo Nar111 llland Naval Air
-.Ing Into El Toro Marine COrpl Air Slalklo, Saa Delao.
Slllloo and <Yen landing then. Ooca lhll'O, theJ wUl bl loodld abolnl
'l'hl1 ara In a 1en1e, -ollldalt I b e alrcrall carrier USS Yerl<town, to
odmlL lit feniecl to Iha plact -"-lea A aquadroll of 18 U.S. N1wy SNJ bec1me OnlllJ commlUtd to parUclpa-
alrcrift are being pnpared for !alt lion In the -Woricl War.
!llghla beginning Mooday, loliowl"I The Yorktown u wtll u Ill carp
IWICIVatlm 11 Lona Beach Airport for of -.!lllqe'Jl!OllOllet otrplanes,~win haft
their role In 1n Upaomllll movie. a movie role, that of a Jipan<M alrcrall
"Tora. Tora, Tora." ii the nama of carrier,~ lo -olf!clel1 "' ' ,.,
~eportsDue
•
From Nixon
TaSk .Force '
. .'~Ill« Bllli:A 'Yli&, . 0.. (UP~)~-An
""' to Pruldeoklect Richard M. Nlloo
llUlOUllCed today that 10 laal: fofces
haV. be<n at work to "plnpolnl .....,
Ill each , JllObl"!" area and pollll out "'*'" the inoldenl wlD -hnmadlate power to ed..,
Nen lllCl'tlary R<lllald L. Ziegler llld
lhe laal: fora! studles ..... dlftcted
bf Paul W. M~ u -le•
pro1....., Ill the UDlftrlily o( M1c1iitan
and form« member o( Ibo Council of
Ecoocmlc Advlaen In tho ElteDbower --RepoiU --eldi " the 11 ll'oaiis wlD be , ... Ilia ~ lhe
Whlte Houle st.ff NW. la 111ber!n(,
and "'aPIK'OPl"iate" cabinet members he
will name at varying Umes during the
next mooth1 Ziegler said.
Zie1ler llld thet within tho nm two
weeks n!porls will bt mad& by two
tut forcea : manpoWm-and labor
managemeotp L rtlatl<M\I, beaded by George
• Bbul .. , cllrilclor ol the Stanford
uru....ity center for advl\Dl)ed ~ea
hi behavorlal'tclellces; and llacal policy
li<aded by Herbert Sleln, aenlir 1.UO.:
and dJrecbr of economic ltudlea II the ~ lnslltule lnWlablngton, D.C.
Flip of a Spfirts Car 00.... 1111: -and ·--reporting to Niion In early and mld-
December are:
Sailors Frederick Key, 23, and hla companion, Paul Hien, 21, were
injurm Wednesday night _wllen Key 's sports car went out of control aJ\d llµned over on·Wamer.Avenue near Algonquin street in Hunt-
ington Beach. Key Wb reported In satisfactory coodllion llllday 'at
Huntington Beach Jtrten:ommunlty Hospital. lllch was ln!ated and
released.
-Tu legt.slaUon:· Ntwmin T Qr e, ~-department;' PI a DD l D g Corp.,,Arllngloo, VL ·
-inler(ovemme>tal llacal -.... -Richard Nathan, dlreciGr, . -.reb
Auoclates, pemmental I t u d l I I
dlvtslon, Bl1>0tlnga inBlllute.
-Public wel!are; Alao Rlchard Nathan.
-Federal lentlln,g and loan guarantee
Low Cost Mesa Barber
Threatened With Bombs
programs; James J. O'LearJ, cha:trman
ol tile board ol Lionel D; Edie Ind
Co., New Yori •
-Environment: llus!ell Train, lftSl·
dent, Conservalku F o u u d a t I o n ,
Waablngloo, D.C,
--OrganllaUon " -_, Frank Llndla1, lftlldlllll, llelc Corp.,
Bedfcrd, Mau .
1y ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot flll Dlllr P'li.t lltff
A Costa Meaa barber !hop whlch !lash-
ed Ill prices to $1.50 after the state
minimum haircut price was ruled un-
constitutiobal was threatened with terror
bombing Wednesdlf by ID anoeymous
c.Uer.
FOOMaln Vall•Y reSldanl Le Roy F. 1 Opter. 28, r owner of Trim Rite Barber
Silo!>, 177 ·E. l?U. SL, uld the teieplione ·
threat wu the leCODd be· bu received
since b11 price cut, according to a rtport
he filed with Costa Mesa POiice. -
The surly man who telephoned at 2:40
p.m. Wednesday also menlloned a
weekend bombing lncldenl at a Buena
Park shop whose owner succeeded 1n
getting the l!llate-wide law overturned .
"We blew up Ricky Starr's barber shop
and youn is next on our list," Opter
quoted the caller as saying.
Starr owns 28 llhopo In Orange County
and has given balrculs for 11.71, during
a three-year legal battle against the
11.91 mlnlmum price minimum which
WM based on a ZS.year-old law.
Opter cut hls prlces to II.SO for both
adults and children, for whom $1.M had ~n the atatHet minimum price. ·
The Costa Mesa barber shop owner told
· Police Officer Shirley Groftt Wednesday
lhllt a Orsi telophooe threat OD MOQcl1y
did nol .. 1er apeclllcally to 'what mlglit
happen. ·
. llle caller meroly Aid If be did not
ralaO Illa ptlcee, be wllald be l&llen can ii. Opter ravhled.· . .
Earlier, ()pier and bll .....,.r,· i\aron
L. Shlide, gavl!!: the DAILY: Pn.c:rr a
1tatenient In which 'ihoy ceilgllllulaled
Judge Ronald C..ObhinJ<'•. rilling on
the pr!~ law. -'lnmpirtatloa; Prd. Charita
"We feel and hope that we will be Miller, chalrmio department ol civil
able to m.ab a profit for the owner engizleering, M'mchulettl Imtltute of
and a good wage !or each emplD!'<," Teclmokigy, Cambr!dgo, Muo.
Shrlda 118ld, "wt feel we can glvo quality -HOUl!ng and urban .....,al; James aervtce at a fair price." Gaynor, commlplmer, New Y.k ltate
He also llld the prlca cut should dlvlsloool~andurban ...... at.
be a boon to both barbers and the Nlsoo ~ In the pubUc view
public. , this m'"'llna !Or Ibo !Int lime to moro
"We have had many ohone <alll from ; thin, looir ~~lb ~ three both the ~ and lellow barbers," · lop oclvlleri . .i>hl lo'~ ,Y!lla
Sbrtda. -"•lied, "aome abualve and ' at • 1'<1 · '
IOIDe ~.'' Durbil tile _.., wbO'wwe
"I dlacouDI mlll)' of them u lhe a llgbl blue '(ly IUI~ lhoril Deftinen
work of barbers who 8"' llCared, coolused • IQ.page boOlilit his advlletl had been
or wicertaln of the futuni," be uld. otudylng. Publlabed ' b)' Iba -C<Xn·
"Thero la apparenUy I! pneral feeling mlttee oo the Poll Office and Civil
amoog barbers the! everything has gone Service and entttted, "policy ml Sup.
to bell/' Shride BU&&eated, ", , • the portlag PoaiUOD8,'' the booklet, accord.lng
anawer might lie in that tboee who to Nlion, gave a 0 comple\e rundown
wut 1C11Dethlni fot nothlnc may aoon on all appointed poll.tlona."
go hungry and U-who will work
wlll have tbelr daily bread u alw171."
Sb:lde and bla empt.,... both challenc-
ed publlabed remara by Leooard
Benowlb, prealdeot of the Orange County
Chapter, Aaaoclated Mut.r B:irben and'
Beautlclanl ol America.
The Wiim leader predicted following
Judgt C..Oksbank'• ruling a ...et ago
on unoooslltullonallty ol price-minimum
leglaiaUon that llhop service and aanlta-
Uon wfil 11\lffer.
"For thole wbo may DDt tnow,, barber
~-iii! the -d · CallforDll ... .,,....... and lnlPectod Pll'loillcallY Irr
the ._1e -1o -.............. Sbrld9 9'!d ID -UOI; ' . .
~ &Ueied · w11lllend= ol stlrr'I .. ,ilal -' . . b7
-Park -p6Uca u a lllddlnl tnvolvlna a c1lfty bomb or-· limllar
Item.
Mother, Daughter
Services Friday
Funeral l<l'vlces for Mn. IJlllan Hell
and her daughter Al1<11 M. -will
be conducted at 10:111 a.m. Friday al
tile Paet Family Collllllal ""-al Ilcme,
Huntlolton Beach.
ifn. Hall and 4-,...id Alma died
'l\leldl1 In .. --In Uie -1odulllrlll Ccmplez.
She. ls ,llll'vlved by her -Rlzs-..u Hall ':'1 anqther ..... .,,..., Kath·
erlnt, I, '1lllo; live 11 the faml1J home,
: 10t Enaiand SL, Huntlngtoa Beach. .... ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,
JJ. Je ,
(}arreft P ,.:e6eni:S 1
l
a very special purchase from a ;.
famous quality maker of , / .
GENUINE LEATHER CHMRS
L
t '
A GIFT JO 1IWURE All> BUOY All YURS
,
• cu.tom quality tllrott&l>out •
LuxurloUI cushlonin( e Y1111r
cholco of -. ~ .. -..
altcllon ol finest leather I-
from $199
f
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··Lag·~na .GDeaeh2. -~
Today's Cl•hag
lDIII O N N.Y. ·-VOL 61', NO. 280, l SECTIONS, 3~ MGES ·ORANGE COUNTY, CAOf'ORNli': THURSDAY, NO~aµ 2r, 1968 TEN CENTS
Businessmen Near Victory oh Licenses
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of ,.. DlllJ' ........
The Laguna Beach busfneu establiah·
ment fought city ball down to tbe wire
Wednesday nlal>l. baWJng both a pro-
posed change in the metbdS o f
establishing license f.,. and their pro-
posed hike.
The brbnming council c b a m b e r 1
fhundered wltb applause u Gordon
Strachan, chairman ol the Downtown
Buainesa Association, told the COW)cll:
'"Ibis Is Just about. u 1111-Amer!can
a ttµng u 1~ people can consider."
• He rele\T<d to a proposed change
Uiat would allow fee adjustments to
be set by l'eSOlution rather than by ordinilnce. COuncilman Ray 'Hobn la\er
pointed out that· more comtraints could
be bullt into 1 resolution -such as
public bearings and~ notice to the
Obamber -than ·are cont.alned in the
ordinance method otaettlng lees.
., HoWever, the crowd was Jttootlng na
Held in Bur·glary
Hope for Trapp~d"Jf'iners
Dwindles as Gas Spreads
MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UPI) -
Widespread underground fires today
spread dangerous carbon monoxide
through miles or tunnel! inside a aoft
coal mine and above ground. The deadly
gas virtually eliminated all hope for
'78 trapped miners and forced the evacua-
tioo of tom• ol their families from
their bmtes.
The worsened conditions in tbt seven
miles of tunnela in the Mannington mine
put off indefinitely the start ol reacue
efforts.
Officials or the Consolidation Coa1 Co.
assured families of the trapped men
at a "family briefing" that the.. company
had no iotenUoa of sealing .the mine's
openings "at this time." , , .
Sealing tbe oj>enlnp to extlngu1ab the
da~erous firel would mean aban-
donment of all bopt any of tbt· 71
men were alive.
A Consolidation spokesman said several
families of the trapped · men were
evacuated from tbeir homes near the
Llewellyn and Mod'• run portals because '
Residents Asked •
To Give Marines . .
Jloliday Dinner
'Operation 'lbank!giving will ,.. a
cheery Wk fotce " Marines ...... into Orange Coast homes in a succulent
coop.
The temparary takecwer, however. will
·eect all the help lt can muster ln>m area
.. Wdents.
Commanded by thi tnt.rfMlh ~
:Jenter of San C1emmte, the pl Lt
bring 3,000 MarineJ to home, hoar1h and
lllrkty on America's tradlUonal d a T
ol giving thanb.
• Last year the -.r found 'l!lanbgiT·
161 bomes fll< about 1,500 stryicemen. nu. year the 1ogtstlcl are doubled.
Mn. William Plowden, .... " tbe ... ~men, said r..ldenll ha•• been •Rd
t<i take home a mlnbnum ol two bo)'I.
Some have a1rMd1 osbd I« m Du t ·
---u.-..i. IDU)'mo<'O-~ ln'ritatlona mt7 -be ezteDded by C!tJl..
the thick, black smoke pouring rrom
the ' mine openings contained an "et·
· cessive" amount 0£ carbon monoxide.
"Our hopes are dimmed considerably
~ lpOl'Ding," WillWn Poulldstone, ex·
ecuD.ve" vice . president ol Consolidation, 1wor~'a laf!gest soft coal . producer,. told
($ff.MINE BLAST, Pa1e Z)
. '
argument aocl H appeared that coun-
cilmen will 1Uck with the ordinance
method . ol establishing business license
rates which have not changed since 19S3.
Councilmen set an adjourned meeti:.g
ne:rt -Wednesday to take up the matter
again bu.t principally to consl.der in-
creases in the rates for buslnes.! licenses.
'I1tey presently range from $15 to ttOO.
The council will consider increasing the
rate atremes to $25.. and $750. It would
be based on a sliding scale on the
us
gross volume ol business wltli lhe mo
fee paid by a cooeer:n $1 mUUori or
more gross bualness annually,
,Th flOO Tijlllmum now applies to a
bus~ with $100,000 annual eross with
no increase foe greater grou..
Strachan told the council that the pro-
posed change from ordinance to resolu-
Uon fee setli.ng was ·"ill-advised, lll<On-
celved and just plain W." He WI It
took away the indlvidauls r1gbt ol dlant.
Strachan WI he had WlderatoOd there
"" lo liave been 1 meeting ol
buslnes.smen a n d cwncUmen and s al d
••suddenly this piece of 1egialation Ls
thrown into the hopper."
Howevtr, Harry Lawrence, Ciamber
of· Commerce president, apologiled for
the Chamber not having taken a posiUon
. sooner. The infonnafJ.on ~ been given
the Chamber in February or March.
Jllayor Glenn Vedder said, "If the
· Qwnber had come in three mooths ago,
•Invasion"· Police Nab
Men, Girl 'Japan
Planes for Film Fly Over Cocut
In H • t Just 16 days short or the. 28th an .. · e1s S nivor.iary Q! the attack on Pearl Harbor,
_ . .Japanese 'Zero fighters marked with the
• " · · : • · blood·red rldlll p C!ll\bll!ln are· ·~
Two J!l§!tAQ.~~ Vi'.e:~arre~. ~ 1weepln&overa.tJ.S..mlllt.trY...base.-.4 by Laguna . !$each police thiJ morning . In Or~e County yet -near tclsure
ln co~ectelon 'with a burglary wave after world Lii{ma Hills, where there may
one of the men allegedly exited the very well be reUreea who remember
window· rl a home carrying a gun. Dec. 7, 19fJ, !¥cause they were thf:re
Poli.;e , Officer Wesle.y Cloys arrested manning ~,virtually-a on -.~ x l s: t e n· t
Walter Grant Kyser, 19, on the stairway defense &y$lem. i •
to Cress Street beach. Kyser was car-Jarred.coontians Lhis w.eek began mak-. · bu di Ing re.port.I that J'apanese Zeroes were ry1ng ~ 9mm auto~atic pistol t d zooming into El Toro Ma ine Corn• Air not resist, poHce. said. . r ,.... Sgt. Vic Sagan said Kyser was picked Station and eyen landing there. . .
up after. a resident o( the atea saw They are · m a sense, base. officials
him come out ll:'window where a burglary ad.mil
had been'con;nh.itted. .A squadron ~f 38 ,U.S. Navy SNJ
After qu'eSUoning Kyser, officers quick· a~rcrart are. being prepared for test
Jy picke.d up Donald Byron Gingrich, flights beginning Monday, following
21, of Santa Barbara and a 14-year-old ren~vaU~ at Long ~ch Airport for
girl. They were arrested in the 1200 th~tr role 1n an upcofll!?~ movie.
block or South Coast Highway. Tora, Tora, Tora, ta the name of
the picture, which will be a hlstorlcal
acebunt of the Japanese attack on Pe.art
Harbor, llSinl U.S. Navy pilot< with
&OYetnment ..X.pera!loo.
The 20lb Century Fu prod\Jctton .. u1
be rume.d oh lOc:atil'.lh and ~ are
good that. ell perml at Purl Harbor
will be repealedly foreweroed of the
upcoming production.
Capt. c. c. ·w-.. USN, s8id !he
pro]ect wlll get under way with test
!Ugh~ and com&t practice. in the.
remodeled leroes, aftei" which the.Y Will
be · flown to North Island Naval Air
Slation, San Deigo.
Once there, they will be' loaded aboard
t be. aircraft can-ier USS Yorktown, to
be ferried to the. place where. America
became flnnly cortunlttecUo particlpa·
Uon in the seco~d er.ld.-'War. The Yorkto as well as its cargo
ol vintage p pellet ·airplanes, will have
a movie rol , that or a Japaiiese aircraft
carrier, according to studio officials.
Sagan said lhe three were living at
the Del Camino Hotel, 12.89 S. Coasl
Highway.
Police believe the arrests may solve
part or all of the more than 20 burglariet
reported in the past fe.w days. Tbe
(See BURGLARY, Page 2)
UC Regents to Hear Fund
Request of $341 Million
,,.,,,,....,.
•
University of California Regents Friday
will be asked to approve a $3~1 million UC
operations budget request including $2.l
million for the lrvlne campus.
The request presented by University
President Charles Hitch asks for a '50
million increase in state support for all
nine UC campuses and $6 million more
than this year's budget for UCl.
Tbe re.quested UCI ipcrease is better
than 25 percent.
lnclU'ded, says Uct Chancellor Roger
Russell, is a request for 72.5 new faculty
members. It is written 79.S professors,
but seven already are teaching on cam-
pus as ao advance against next year,
he aaid.
Laguna Plans
Hospitality
Night fo r Y ule
Jo. Laguna Beach beckons lo Its Chris~
mas rmery and twinkling light.I, '° will i'
!.e hospitable.
The annllal Laguna Beoch Hc.pltallty
Nigh~ sponaored lhi8 year by the Down-
town Bu!loess As.sciciaUon, wU1 be bdd
on Friday, Dec. 6. r
The downtown business dlatrlcl will be
open to the public until 9 p.m. wUh moet
, of the est.ahllahments aervfn& lefreab-
menll to gueN.
Ill lllppod ct the,'IF..Uvaf Of !Jpta"
!heaie !or home and .down'°"" decora-tion tbe Alaocl&lion wW award.a tnipli,
~ .-.. that belt deplc:ta the
&111-wW regliter gu!'ls for ctoor
prjzea 61at ... \o be lnnouoced by eacb ·~ buil .... _on Dec. q.
Action by rege.nts, meeting at UC San
Diego Friday may not carry much
weight.
On Tue.sday, the Reagan administra-
tion's finance director, Caspar Weinberg-
er. said UC and state. college budgets
will be increased from t h i s year's
amounts only to meet higher enrollments
-with no new progr11m9,
"The allocations to most of lhe agen-
cies will be less than the.y expecte.d,"
Weinberge.r said in Sacramento.
University and college olncials have
said their past two annual budgets were
so low that more money will be needed
in coming years to catch up.
"Last year," Russell •!lid In a recent
repart to the UCI Academic Senate, "the
1e.gislature worked very hard on the
budget ror three monlhl, then Reagan
reduced it to less than he hlmsell had
proposed earlier in the year.,,
A year ago UC Irvine requested. 100
new proleuors, aaw the request cut to
42 by the statewide UC administration,
lhen'reduced to nine by the governor. but
eventually go 17.
Also included in this year's UCI budg·
et reque!t.s are provisions for J,1S7 more
fulltlme students; moving the California
College of Medicine to Irvlhe: compu-·ten: library devel-ent one! extra
fund! for the campJJ' rapid lfO'Wth.
. 'Prank' Becomes
ArsOn in La gWia
A: Laguna Beach prankiter may have
overatepped h~lf, Wednqday lllpt
.. hen l>ls lr1cl< ~'1to . .,,..,.
me the center,'•t•ll:.Mn. e~ at
41t-ZID;· Mn. Kennoth Bloom, 486-6248; l\lft, Georse w-i, llM4111; or Mr s.
au1rles Pattenoo, •1147.
• .SMoKE MARI($ ScENIE Of MIN E FIRE
0..th Down Below In WHt Vlrt lnl• .,
t1
I l> m»rJty a( tbt,doWritown madiaJilit
.· "lllJ>t ·1 tor Chrlstm11 llloJ>ping_ tlll l"rlday n bu btlrlnnltlt Doc. c Md ;;m
be oPtl1 Ollday Olp~ bee. 23.
F1romon I I I d -a piper bag ol ercmneot 1il'l~ oo U,. rr..t pOrcb ct Mn, RmiW Roome; lllO Terrace
Way; .Ml the' Jtoo\ aoor oa !Ire. She via• awat at ll10 lilJll, . • •
· '1'lte ~lao loln1ed ~ the door
doinc .. eatlmated 'J'll damage. • . ,, ' ,, '. I " ·-.i . .
we could liave liad tb1a llr8fcblmed
out."
Bill Marriner, apeatlng for the
Downtown Buslneaa Auoclaljoo, spolle
or the need for attracting new bi1.t,,,..,
into the community to locruse aalea
lax revenue.
He aald the clJmate for buainea lw
suffered tremendow!ly with !bu ol· Pen-
ney's and Seara, the hfppy-narcotJc pro-
blem and unaolved traffic and p&rkini
.tSee LICENSE, Pqe 1). ,_1_
Shoreline •
. Acquisition
Supported .
In a move to get actfcm on the Orange
County Planning Department'• proposed
sborellne facWty study, the cowtly pJan.
nlng crimmlaaloo Wedneaclay ur(ed .the
Board of SuPervlaors to live the r<pert
serious conaJneraUon.
.The complex study was unveiled Jut
ino,ith to supervisors. The board took
no action.
T'h, e report usrgea acqulaiUon of beach
areas by the county as indicated in
the Master Piao of Shoreline Develop-
ment a n d suggests t h e poaslblllty of
construcUon of artificial peniJisulu io
help meet the demand for beach !ren-
t.age.
The 11 recommendaUODI In the report
are :
-Acquire remaining beach areu as
indicated in the mas~r plan.
-Acquire upland overnight camplnt
areas within view of the ocean.
-Study feasibility of construcUni;
artificial peninsulas to help mee' the
demand for beach frontage.
-Accelerate city, county and private
action to carry through local qencies
role In scenic highway program!.
-S I u d y leesibillty ol protective aone-
ing.
-Design aystem ol hiking trail! lliong
the coast.
-Acquire areaa for vista poiotl and
wayside rests.
-Construct system of recreation signs.
-Construct multi-level p.a r t in g
faclliUes at intersectlons of_ major
highways with the coast highway.
-Eocoilrage abilttle tiua system.
-Appoint group to determine method
of funding and which products deserve
priority for·lntensive study.
Stoelc Marleen
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
declined In heavy l.rading late this af-
ternoon. (See guotations, Pages 11-19),
Weather
That Chamber " Commen:o weather will be bad with us Fri-
day -sunny We. with tlmpera-
turea ranging.from 71 aloog tba
lhore to IO further Inland. t
INSU)E TODA. Y
T1~rt IDal one ab H~nil
Port and another oC a plwl&
. ro.nch ln. Tuai. WiU the M.tC
•s-ummcr WhiC. il.ouu" be on o
huh isf<mcl off lll4ml Brado7
Pag110, • ·-,.._. ,_
: .. , --1....W .... ·-'::..= .. .__ ..,_ -
. ..... ' . , ~--1! .. ~~ . . i " It , .......... J ,,..,. :: ., ....... ,.
l•tt ~ • . -" l4 ......... '
11 ·---•
II --.. '
..
·I
I
I
I
,. J DAILY PILOT Th~, N.,.m,_, 21.1968
Reports Due
From Nixon
TaskF.orce
KEY JllSCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -An
aide to Pmlden~ect lllclllnl M. Nl%0n
......-todO)' that 10 task forces
ha" -l>oeo st work to "pinpoint bsues
to ucb. ....,blc ..... and point out
-·Ille pruldonl wtll have Immediate
~to act." .
N!wa secretary RooaJd L. Ziegler said
t.be task force stucUes were · directed
by Paul W. McO'ack.en, an economics
prafiliar at the Onlfenttj <i Mlchi,.n
and rcrmer member of the Councll of it.oooinic AdV!8ols In tho E:benhower -1"'poN from -of tbe 10 ll'OOI" wlJI lie-~ lbe Precl-..iect, !he
Wblte Houae slall NJXoo IJ g1lherlng,
aDd 0a~priate• cablnet members he
will Mme 11 varying llmel .clurlng the
-mcmtb, Zleilor oald. :..., ~ 1uld that Wtth1n the nelt two
. ...W . ieportl ·.will . be madt by two
·.,task forces: manpower and labor .~meot relations, beaded by George :of~· _ Shultz. director of the Stanford
University center for advanced studie11
in bdiavorial sciences; and fi..scal policy,
headed by Herbert Stein, oenlor fellow
and dlredor ol «OllOIDlc B1udlu at the
Brookings Inalllute In Wubln-D.C.
Other Wk forcet and theJr ~n
reporting to Nlxoo In urly ud mid-
December are:
-"I'u: 1egislatloa; Norman Tur e,
economics department. P 1 a D n l n g
Researcl. Corp., Arllngton, Va.
-Intergovernmental fiscal relaUons;
Richard Nathan, dlrector, Raearch
Alloctates, governmental s t u d i e s
dlvtaloo, Brooldnp INtltute.
-Public wel/an; AJoo lllcbard Natlwl.
-Fedenl leD<IJot and loan guarantee
Jll'Oll"UDI: James Jl"..O'Lury, chairman
of the board of Lionel D. Edie and
Co., New York.
-Environment; Russell Train, presl·
dent, Conservation F o u n d a t i o n ,
Washington, D.C.
-Organiu.Uon of Executive branch;
Frank Lindsay, president, Itek Corp.,
Bedford, Mass.
-Transports.UOn; -Prof. C h a r J e 1
Miller, chairman department. of civil
.. engineering, Muaaehu..tts ln!tltute of
Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
-Housing and urban renewal; James
Gaynor, commlsslontr, New York itate
dlvilloa of bOUlill( ud urban'renewaL
From Page 1
·.:.BURGLARY. •• ..
J : loes bu run lolo lhousaods of dollarj.
·, Sagan sald police recovered from the ~ suspects' hotel room Mar!ne dress blue
un.Uorm, colna and other Items belleved
taken in recent burglaries.
The .U~ .,. being questioned at
police headquarters today. All wue book·
ed on suspicion of burglary, Sagan aald.
Before the arrests this morning, other
burglary reporlJ continued to roll in.
Reglnald R. Kae11ey and Michael T.
Wl&slead, both of 2937 Terry Road,
reported th e then of '450 ca!h Wed·
ne9day. Kaeaey alao found the TV moved
to the t1tchen floor and recordtl stacked
In. the kitchen !link lndlcaUng the burglars
had been interrupted.
Lyn Lee Gou1d , 1854 S. Coast Highway ,
told police Wednesday evening that a
$150 televlslon set had been stolen.
Mary Greive, 78, of 1828 Glenneyre,
told police 11be was awakened by a
burglar in her bedroom. She a11ked how
he. got in, police said, and he stopped
plundering he.r jewelry · box, pointed lo
the window and left by a rear door.
Katherine E. LaRoche, 2t1 San Joa.
quln, Lold police Wednesday that a golf
bag and ciubt worth 11911 had been
taken from the nar oI beauty shop
at 1295 Glenneyre.
Scott Clark, 658 Myi;Ucvlew Drive,
reported the theft from his home of
a guoline crtdit card and blank checks.
William Nichols, 1059 Gaviota, uid the
apartment had been ransacked and a
transistor radio taken.
DAILY PILOT
OllAHG! C04ST PUIF..ISH•MG COMPANY
lt•Mrt N. W1•i
,.,.... 11'1111 "'*'.,..
J•<• a. e.,1..,
vie. ,.,.._. 11'111 11trotr.i MaPllttr
lli111111t KH'fn ....
Tli•11t•• A. ""'"'~'·· #aM9lnl ElfHlw
ltlclrid P, Nill P1YI Ni11111 ~ .,_,. Jridwrtlol"' Cit)' I!..., • 01rt('9r --OI ... JJJ: krut A"•·
M11n111 AU,..11 P.O. lb •''· t265J --c.. ,_., .. Witt! ..., ltrMt ~ IMMll: ttll W.t .. lllN 9wlftlf!I ........ 1Mcf11 • llltt""'1
'
LAGUNA TEEN CORN£R
Ill JOM GORMAN
1
'l'l.\lllS TO ll'W In llGll( Koos, a
lot bl ,,. tF 1-ftlCh'Wll'I ~
to !hf jptll 1J111qa!rt ...... --
II waan\ a brainchild ol ~ • .,
. Maltel., any other famouo ~ llWIUI ...
lurer. • I
-dow1I, to M!anla _..,,iJy
thoU&bl ol ... and .~. ti " intd by the ~ of Ibo Na""'!'¥ Oaen1111mlcable D-o..ter. -lt'o . .0-ori1nary-tQulrt
gun, the l:ind I'd ftll with wal« and
play war with when l wu younger.
Thia gadget ii Olled with a hlihlY
purll1ed -And "''' ..... lo io:<ep mt, aJq with bundndl of -
-In Iba ..... llu1ett. Wt lqot. It work.I ,. oil _.... Tbe IUD
II plaQld ~ '1"lt . llllll .1114 tho doelar 111ueaeo Iba trlgv. Zap. A ...,.
. ...,--"' ·-enterl your body. No onl1nary oqulrl l\DI eyer . did
tbal te me. Tbln -no need!• lmOlved
-jlJll a lol ol ......,,. which d!ncll
Ille llream l!nllib Iba akin. Sort ol
l IUpel'-oq\IJrj.
No Comments
I
The beat part of tho ' cloaJ IJ lhal
it'• ire., wlolch ii a --medlcal 'loe. '
I did loee, lhouib. a Utile blood. Tbey'D
· get 10me more In t1llee -to Me u the uperlmcnl ...ru. oucb. When
l ~ tbe DWI wltb the needle,
I niat7 up!-·111at · I '"""' al Iba olllce. Ho -.... dlrV ,...., and
IOCl:ed 11 to mo. *' The docton -. readY for tho wont.
They bad tel up coll In cue anyone
fell falnL A Dllllll>er · ol llrb did lalnl,
I heard. I dldn\ tet ... tholtil>-M1
eya """' !!but Ulhl u I COUJlted to 10, I apened tbem u I AW M1 blood bolnl poured Into • Tiil. Ilopa ....,
doa'I 1-II. I want K hack.
LATDT ~ecfiop, There'1 a
landacape committee medt up ol
lludenll to nodellp Iba 11.... al the
corner ol Part and Shalt Streel. Tiie)'
plan lo bU)' --· tel up a
mirqula. and .. p1an1 the ...... It'• •
pd llep bJ Iba .admlrtlllr•tlan lo allow titudenll to p!\ysteaJly cllange tho ochooL
l&'aa fOOd. way to uwi maney, too.
lllftORY WAS MADE hut Monday
wl!en the local YMCA ln!Uated lhreo teenagm lo the Board of J:11n<tori
u ..unc moml>lt'I. The lhreo teens
..... llol> ......... Mark Joblllon and DIJlt}I. .
.11 ... ~ than who theJ -
WU the facl lhal -thll 11 the !Int YMCA
In the ....,tty to have teem u vallng
boanl members, according to lllr<ctor
Roger Corltr.
It'• a iood Idea, when people are
c:ompblnlna abcol the 1"'D1I" ,_..
Um ~ ctttdl a demn/' Teena are.
to fad, lnteretlod In Wbet ha-to
the-immlly.
Iro ""ardlna to oee lhal Iba Y
realiJea lhll and ii anxloul to allow
Iba -.... to llPetl< up. ' .and be
heard.
l1ecaule ""'" IOI tomelhinl worth bearloJ.
FNlll Pqe 1
LICENSE BATTLE . ~ .
She'• an Ambassador . ·
Disneyland AmbaiSador for 11168, Sally Shertin {left} 'hugs htir suc-
cessor, Shari Bes cos, 21, of Covma, after Miss Bescos was chosen for
job Wednesday from among prettiest girls working al famed amu.se-
ment park. A ticket sell~r at Disneyland for three years, Miss Bescos
will now reign as park'• 1969 ambassador to the world.
By Mexicans problem and ..., llloppl!!I centera. lhdr own work.I. He said tbal 15 percent
"Thlt II Iba Umt to ...,. wUh con1u1 o1 tho arllJll don' man a Dvtnr al
dellboratlm ID dtol1al wlUI a.., cban&a llMlr ...n: and con btrel1 P'1 1w.
la -.. _ poobn," be aid. malerWL
8tuartATllAldllwuqrMIDW11 Slracbln IUiletled =the
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL yean ... lhal the fee WU not a tu cnlnance po.Uqe. Ma,or 1ocm eddm\.
. ot ,,_ o.irY ,., ... '"'" rals1nc lltuatlaa. Vedder liked, "IQ tp9te of other coat blcnUtl. A
Mezlcan sources today literally did !IN!" Avb •••• PY-. In Ill!." pollctmln'1 aal1r7 II up t.0'1 -and the Wlloon Tw<H>tep or ottered llCIUl' -a flreman'I I.I tlnce 1151, be oald.
On Baja Plan
North Vietnamese Start
Crash Move Toward DMZ
Art Galley ow D • r IUchud OiaD.b1 _., .. '--1 47 H-he =n:.:11:!"'~ me:.=.~ ~ -ol molulloa 5o did Junlt :l°c1. r,atet w--up . ........
pn>ponl to bU)' Baja C.Womla. detler Qiarlel Ptdd1colG. He A1d loo City Mtnqer James D. Wbeatoo Aid
Reactl<>n to a ,.,.lutlon payed by DWl1 -le could 11P11111 II for ,f: lhal In lllMI the 1>ullnW u ......
tho City Council Monday and malled and 111op· ebewben uvlng !ti. ' .._led lix percent ol total,.,.._
to Washington Thunday night, Seeking :::, .. ~~ not mUial 11 'I' lhll at 14l,OOO: salet tu wu IU percent at
congressional consideration of the land Art1lt David Rolen oppoeed mU1na ·1to,OOO and Oproperty tuea were 11 per·
buy, wu rather limited among Mexican arUltl IUbjed io UNI fee for All tl ctnt at tllf,000. the bUllneM offlclalll. Cunutly, be aald,
SAIGON (UPI) -Informed U. S.
source& said today North Vietnam has
launched a craah prosram to repair
its bombed highways and move its
stockpile or war material south toward
the demllillrized zone (DMZ).
The 60Ufce5 said the stockpiles,
previously &lored north of the 19th
Parallel, have been leapfrogged down
the coul lo new supply point.. U.S.
air attacks north of the 19th Parallel
Laguna Scouts
Pl,an Car Wash
To Raise Funds
Need your car wallhed? The good
Scouts of Search and Rescue "Explore:r
Post 717 will be glad to wash It Saturday.
They've &taged a fund-raJslng car wuh
session from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for $1.
It's at Andrull Plumbing lD Laguna
Beach, 855 Glenneyre.
And the Explorers hope they clean
up. Proceeds will help sponsor thei r
annual SO-mile hike for Scouts and public,
both male and female. A &S-year-old
San Clemente executive rlnished the hike
last year.
There are generally also servicemen,
girls and of course Explorer Scouts.
Those who finl!h within the alloted
20 hours will receive an Amos Alonzo
Stagg medal. Registration will be on
the morning of the hike, Nov. 3Q, from
5 a.m. until 9.
Having registered at 8M Glenneyre,
hikers will start down Coast Highway
to Crown Valley Parkway to El Toro
Road to Laguna Canyoo Road.
Having completed the great circle
route, the hearty soul3 will repeat It.
The exp lorers will host a free lunch
for those who flnlsh in tlle alloted time.
A travel 11ent, however, predicted Ucen1e1 have dropped to J.T percent
' h lhs before that the RepUbllc ol Mnlco woo't be ot total revem10 al 111,000. The ulea
slopped Marc 31, seven mon -··· --· -~··-Fonner " -pll'· ant .... ~ .. be '".4 -1 at -.ooo and all American bombardment ot North eager to enter any 11~ n:1U -~Ml:! Jl.!j ....,. ""' .u ,.---......,
Vietnam' waa halted. deal and may never even allow a dqcent property taxa represent 2SIJ percent
The hl'""'y·placed source! made It clear road to be build down the peninsula. S ks D at '8'71.000. .. ..... ..
ts•.u Vice Mayor Robert M. Wllaori went pea to eID08 strachan uld anyone could J .... ... !hat jhe southward movement of the on Southland televlxlon Thunday nlght, •·-to make them. lhow what be supplies does not necessarily 'indicate vi ... 1 1...1. -·1 ..,.. ... -...... i.... 1"1-+oo of N~ that the North Vietnameoe plan to launch explaining to ""'' -•~ .,..,.,... Alllllr rrtu, .-i candldota f<r the wanted. He --~., •• ,.... fresh attacks across the DMZ. to try to negotiate a purchase is seriOUJ, 36th ~'-k· 1'\I.......,. will be pea Belch bu a flat bualn.eaa llceme rate &.incere and possible. "Y ..,.._ _, __..,,. ol tbt ot '2l "They have an allernate," one authori· speeker al tbe llaada;r ......,... • Avb uked wbel UctDM feeo bankt
1y said. "But we doo't know which Lqana -n.-attc Club. pay. Shelby Langford. city finance dtreo-
they will choole. They can inove the Arts Festi"val _Frlll, .. or~~!: ~to· •• Aid bankt and -c:ompul" ltuff to tho northern border of the DMZ ---.--a.. ...-... ... "" lllile law or they can ohunl It Into Laoo." Iba Domocnllc lUlloDll CamnUon. HIJ -..-., Boyd, ~ ~·t •-•·will be "The lln....t ol ~ Elecllca ()omclhnan Qiarllal --•~ The aourcu said photo reconnaiuance Th Gets ..,,,.... Callfamli. PoUtlcl. r.-· . mr _wseoq, Whelton ukl tbe tQmc1l
lllghll have turned up hundredJ of eater, . . , . , . "",,,. !lleel!nl II to begin at I p.m. In . to 1nena11111 aalarlt1 had Indicated
laborers µsing everything 1l'lffl!l lboveb the coriunurilly room of Laguna Federal revenue would be oought from lnct<ased
to bulldozers to clear and grade Htghwey Council Okay building llolpllll chairman Owen r:Ubbl.lh fees, tno:reued dog Uce.,.., In-t, the main north-IOI.Ith coastal route Mathew· will serve refreihmentl during creued fees for v~ces, planning ap-
ruruting between HanoJ and the DMZ. a IOCial hour 'I'be public ii welcome. pUcatlom and for buamess llcensea:.
The U.S. Command Aid 117 American& A proi>oseef ISO-Alt lllUltr oo the • Contractor John Jngram oald be had
were killed in action last week and P'estlva1 of Arte sround• received city lost a lot of jobs to outside contract.ors.
1,931 wounded. Thil compared with 166 council approval without a hltd! Wed· Frolll PG9e 1 "Tu the boys from the ouWda and
kHled and 1,2&3 WOWlded the week before. nesday nlghl leave Ill alone," be advised.
South Vietnamese casualtiu were "We feel it will be a areat thin& MINE BLAST Businessman Ned Blackmarr said lt listed as 128 killed, 644 wounded and for the Fedlval and we feel tt will 1 • one major car dealer should leave the
21 rnlssing or captured, compared with be mote than • put Wng for the clty it would represent more lost revenue
200 killed, 798 wounded aod nine mlsaing city of Laguna Beach." Aid Wllllam newsmen. than would be &ained by license let
the week before. D. Martin, Feat1val boanl praldeoL p-Aid flrel In the teven bll:ea
ln South Vietnam, U.S. spokeamen said Featlv1l dlrecton have a 11 o c a ·1 e d mllet of tunneb In the MaJUliagtoo mine Ho oald tho city oeedl to operate
today communlat IUll' bombarded Ho! 1110,000 for conatrucllon (119,IOI), oealx "definitely spread during the nlgbt" more elllcienUy and curtail unnecessary
An In the co.tllest ohelllng of a cily and carpeting. following a fourth major explosion expenditures.
sin .. the bombing of the north stopped The theater ii to allo houae the Wedneoday nlghL Carl !Om aaid, "U we 10 lo Colla
on Nov. t. A South Vietnamese general children'• art gallery, the children'• ~ ':l-.cre wu no cont.act with the 71 Mesa or Corona del triar we plJ a
predicted a new Communist offensive. "!rte-for-all", 1 Pageant cut patio, men alnce the~ violent blast trapped tu;; if they c6me here you don't seem
Two sudden barrages inLo Hoi An on restroomll, conce.ulon booths and storq:e ~m 700 feet underSJ'(Kmd before dlwn tG bother them. Pict up your moner.
Wedne!day slammed Into a hotel, the area. Wedlltlday. there."
central marketplace and a street crowd· FesUvaJ ofOclala have polnted out that Nevertbelea, Poundstone uk!, "M Langford uJd the city bu luued 2,071
ed with home-bound school children. Of· the theater would be aftllable for com-long u we' (eel there la ,aUll a chance bustneu llcensu:.
ficials said two persons died and 27 munlty use for 10 m<:dhl ot UNI yur, ·to· reduct. and eoatatn the lira, we In answer to dilcuasion, City Attorney
were wounded, 19 of them youngsters. Fertlval off•uon. will not alve•up hope." Poundltooe said, Jack J. Rimel Aid "There's no queatlon
At lea3t a dozen 8'bnm mortar rounds Mayor Glenn Vedder commended • "The amount of carJ>on monoxide has ·about the power of a city to license
hit Hol An Wedn.eatay at 11 :20 a.m. FesUvaJ officials "for a well thought tncrea.sed in the mine," be aaid. "and for revenue."
and 5:30 p.m., l!elldlng many of t1ie out project that will Ina'..,. the UNblll-II Is mremely dlll1cult to Judie ~ Councllmen held the mailer over for
clly's 44,000 residents fleeing, govern-li~17iaioli llrvlnti;ii~P;iari;ik~.'iii' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiPiiiiiiiiiiiiiiforii;;iilbaii;i-ii5;iihavtiii;i;i ... i;i'"'~•i;"iiiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiwiii~;i;;.!iiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij ment officials said.
Gen. Do Cao Tri, South Vietnamese 1------~--------•••...,.•--•--•------W• commander of the provincel ·around
Saigon, said In BJenhoa today the Com-~1 J.J. J ~ p, ' munists are now in biding, regrouping ~ • lt t ;;.::iv~~ttlng for a winter-spring Of· I 'I: • • . a,rre reden ~
' "We are confldent their units will
become active once again they are fitted
and regrouped," be Aid. Allied troops
found two big arms caches on Sa1100'1
doorstep Wedneaday, one of ~m with
1,000 greoadei.
Bea~h -High •nigh~ I
Sclwol Drug Use Called Emergency
a very special purchase from a
famous quality maker of
GENUINE l,EA TllER CHAIRS
Marijuana smoking end pill-popping on
a regular basis by at least l~ percent
of students on •the Huntington Beach
High School campus have reached
emergency proportions, s c h o o 1 ad·
mlnistrators have claimed.
Speaking to a group of :.Kl conctmed
parenl..1 in the main clliltrlc\ campus
cafeteria, st&f.f leaden also 11ald that
many more art off.and-on U3eJ"S of drua;s.
The undocumented estimates by Ass1s·
tant Principal Charles Weaver woold
seemingly apply to Weltminster and
Fountain Valley hlgb ochooil u ,..u.
Marijuana is generally smoked of(
campus, since it is euy to spot the
ObvlOUI method of taking the drug, but
popular ckpre..anll and tranqull!Iers :rl be eully swallowed anywhere., they
Pareob altendlng the narcotlcs educ•·
lloll meeting Tuelday nlgbt with Prin-
cipal Woodrow Smith ud A1S1. Principal BJl1 Rolllnl, along with Weaver wve liven a£.., UPI to Ctllllbat drug ua.
Mlll'al 111J>J1!!ri to 117 no should be llviilOUii jOqJlpler wbo ii tempted
L
to accept contrabMd medlc1UOD1 Md
hallucinogens which clrculate freely
among the student body, they were told.
Parents ahould ulo educate themlelves
to recognize ll)'mptoma of drug uae and
the appearance of VariQWI stimulants,
depressants and natural substances such
u marljullnll and huhlah.
Especlally Important, the panel 1akl,
Is noUOcaUon of ocbool olftclala whao
a youngster muat take a preacrlbed
medlcatlon. • · -
This will avoid the embamaalng and
· paJnf1ll poeslblllty of a legitimate medical
paUenl beg!ng lekm Into cualodJ bJ school author!Uea· u a poalble naroollcl
. offender.
The thre. .::oo1 ol!lcl.all uld ~
... the -to educlte ponnll abwl d"'IUIO-nolteacban-aod~
1hould be oblllned to dla:ull the matters
a\C\'d: u1c1 todOJ that the
II pertent llgln for roplar dnll -lo an tallm&te bf Aetotaot Prlndpa1
Weaver, but ii not clac:unta>ted tltrooJlb
amst reporll or 1Jl1 llalllllcal crltlda.
INTERlOll DESMlll9S °"'" .. _ -M. -
A &IT TO 'llWUll All> BUOY TOI YEARS
"
• c..tom quality tllrollglMJul •
Lltnrloal cwhlonlA1 • Your
~ ol colon flun .. utonolve
ltllCtlaD ot llnert luther lntul'el.
from $199 ·
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
646-027! 646-0276
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, .. '!QM BARLEY • s,Lllen O.aadobauN 11 wl-Ml ~ o1 i.. - -~ -wriflll!I Ibo llDd -... _ _ ~ Publl< Admlnl.tralor J~ lklm'e w11. tUeri for deeooll In, Ibo lllllou
aid,. today """ blnkln1 more lhan · Bank. • · • · < fQ,000 In llO bW... found In the '-Tllo '43,., flnl jn.lllo Shtpbenl ......
·: of I SW ~ 1111111 ~ In I Loo · -.Jd. app10r to -p "!ff pm!ouoly
' An&elea CO!lllnlcUOD lllle IOl;idenl. JOOOl'ded dilcowry t/l ·-y by Ibo
Heim today llld Uie dlJcovery l'U IJllbU. ~lntelfalor'I offJce. ~a "record find" in Orange County.. .~ cOmnet1••-deput)oi fouacl $lf,11S 1n
u "We've never found anylbjng aPo Ute .. Lqwa Bech home ol Mrs. IQ
: Pf08ching thla amount in our prevloul Storm in October, 1985. In an estate
<-estate work," be said. investigation. that was bandlid by a:io-~-'lbe discovery wu rude at the home vlded embealer Louis T. Vanacourt.
of crane operator Ly!< 'Jameo Shephard, A week -most of the IS-)'W'Old
• 318 13th SL Shephard, 61, died Monday wic!Q)r'1 mODeY disappeared lloag with
r. at the Bethlehem Stoel Corp. plant in the chief deputy public ldmlnlstrator.
; Loi Angele&, wben be WU crushed by And'V-, oqulring I pretty cocklai1 ~ falling debrlB. waitress ' from Anaheim, wu later
Heim aald Sbephanl lived alone. At·. ......... ln'ijawlii.
· > teml)U w .... bejng lilllle illdl,)' to ooatad <-V-ls -servfnl 'l -lo 10
.. biJ only known relaUvea, 1 ball brother years In lllte prilon.
•
· and a coualn, both of wbom lived in In terms of property llooe, there -.Jd
>-the east appear to be no challenger to the $250,00I
• The cash, totalling I'S.OD was made eslale lell by bachelor fllherman Jobn
~ up of $20 bills wiib the exception. of H«men of ~wpmt. Belch, who died
· three ll bills. It was stored In a strong on'Cbr!8tinas a.y, D6l.
· box at the top of lhe water beater The 75-year-Old recluse left~22-pleces
closet, Heim said. ot. property in the Harbor Area, an
ult waa all boxed away neaUy in $1,000 estate that attracted claims from nine
bundles," said Heim. "Every package Russians.
waa clearly identified and tallied and The Russian claims were subsequentJy
it was1 stashed away very much in the <lenied by Superior Court Judge Bruce
way that a banker would do the job." Sumner. Recent records Indicate that
When the discovery was made Heim'a final disJ)os.iUon ·of the choice property
officers called in a neiahbor, Orville 1eft by Horman rert.s with the district
Peas~y or 312 13th St., and sheriff'• court of appeals.
'..Saigon Boycott Halts
' ; Secret Talks in Paris ..
PARIS (UPI) -The secret talks which
": allowed President Johnson ·to arrange
.. graund rules for expanded talks on Viet--
" nam no longer an taking place because • ~ of Saigon'• boycott of the meeting, North
Vietnamese officials said today.
Hanoi olllclallJ. displayed growing Im-
"· patience w It h the delays and accused
Saigon of attempling to "torpedo" the • I
' Hospital Strike
' : Spreading in NYC
" NEW YORK (AP) - A four-day-old
auike over union jurisdiction spread to-
day from a state hospital in Queens
to state hospitals in Manbattan and the
Brom:, disrupting care for 11,000 mental
pallenl&.
•· .. ~State officials sent.home or . .ifanaferred
• more than half of the patients in the
; t11!'e< boopitals o! the .It-unit . system.
)l Emergency outpatient care wa.s set up
'.: for those moved out.'
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talks. But they said their stale mlnl.!ter,
Xuan Thuy, was ready "to meet Presi-
dent Johnson's delegates any time -
even tonight" to get the conference
started.
American diplomatic sources con-
firmed the Clll'rent loss of contacts with
the North Vietnamese.
Diplomatic quarters said they believed
the suspeoion of the contacts apparently
indicated that Hanoi and its South Viet-
namese allies, the Viet Cong, wanted
first of all a public conference where
t h e could expound t b e i r political
demands.
Filial Rites Set
VAN MJYS (AP) -Funeral services
were scheduled here today for Robert w. Barrett, husband of actress Jane
Russell.
Barrett, fl, dieCI ·of a'· h~ attack·
MOOdliY at. his home. He JOO Miss Russell
bad been married less than three montbs.
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·• l'i FASH1oM ISi.AND
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• DAILY PILOT lJ
Sq"• l!Cl Prof
·Jogging Stalls '
Heart -·Att.acks
By TO~ FqRTIJNE
Of ... Del" ...... "'"
·Deaths ol four Orange County Jo11er1
fn the la.ot ob mootha notwllhllandlng,
exercise II an effective way to foratall
heart attacta, believe. cardiolopt Dr.
Alan Bures, of the UCI ~I of
Medicine.
"I think there la eome truth that
a middle-aged man can die from auddeo.
exerUon, but it la uqgera&f.d," Dr.
Bw-e1 said "SWl thole four tt:ported
, d~atha may act to puob the pendul_um
away from ei:erclae."
He suggested that Jolgen wbo drop
dead probably are afDJded with aignifi-
cant narrowing of the cocmary artery
which carries 0'1£enated blood from
tPe lungs to the heart muscle.
What happens, he ~. la because
of the: eiertion there la an increaaed
demand for oxygen wbich c.IUUlOl pus
fast enough through the nart'OWed artery.
Not getting the oxygen . It netd!. part
of the heart dlt.S, be aald. ,
Jle remarked that in any heart attack
part of the heart dies from oxygen.
starvation. ..
SEEK SUPERVISlON
DEFl!'NDS JOGGING
Dr. AIM Bures
ela&slc altaclt or recurrent pain with
exertion.''
PAIR ESCAPE CRUISER FIRE OFF COAST
Swimmers Scott ' (left), Romanello
He advised that men planning to jog
first seek some supervision from a
cardiologist. "It won't cost very much
to see a doctor and get some idea
of wfiat you can tolerate," he said.
All that la required, he adviaed, la
a blood sample and a n eJec.
trocardiogram.
Arteries namnr, Dr. Bures explahwd,
becauae !al deposlta Irritate the lln1ng.
The -. cells multiply to -the
lat, nanwing the artery.
A similar eumple ol lat ln!tatfon,
be said, Ja acne.
FAT IN AllTEilml
Pair Flee Boat Explosion,
Swim Two Miles to Shore
ArteriOlclerosis, narrowing of the
arteries, typically baa Its onaet while
a man is in hia early 20'1 and becomes
more marked witil he la 40 or 45,
then levels off, Dr. Bures said.
He called 40 the age of sudden death
and said that la when symptoms of
chest pain usually first occur.
He said be prt:scrlbea exercise because
in our culture physical labor lln't com-
monplace. He la less concerned about
diet in rr1ost. cases:. "I'd prefer to keep
you lean and let you eat what you
like rather than llmlt your cholesterol,"
be said.
He remarlced thal ft Is not blown
whether regular exerclae re y·e r 1 e 1
depoelt of fat in the arteries. HI would
like to think that II may but I can't
pCove it," he said.
He said it is thought u:erclae
stimulates the development of additional
blood · vessels called collaterall to sup-
plement the restricted arteries.
By JAMF.S McNABB, Jr.
Of a. Del~ Pli.t S11tf
An evening pleasure cruise ended
eariy today in a boat explosion which
blew a crewman overboard and forced
the captain to jump inio the sea to
escape flames which destrOyed his cabin
cruiser two miles off Hunliiigton Beach.
Lifeguards reported Jeffrey J . Scott,
24., of Long Beach, and the vessel's own-·
er, Joseph Romanello, 'of A.'labelm,
swam through the 61-degree ocean to
shore where. the two were fotmd by the
lifeguild· mobile unit. ' t .... . .,
Scott suffered second«gree burns on
hi! left leg. Romanello was not injured.
Romanello, resting today at his home,
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' said the engine or the 23-foot ''Mayen"
stalled as the craft made its return to
port In Long Beach.
RARE IN ClllNA
He llld be alao 'BU!peCIK, althoug)i
again it is not proven, that exerclae
increases the efficiency of the myocardial
cell Wblcb n:guJates the rate at-which
the blood picks up oxygen' from the
lungs. Athletes seem to have thil ef.
liclency, be llld.
INCREASES EFFICIENCY
.. I'm still a llille hazy about what
happe~ed. but JeU was switching the
gas tanks when the whole thing went.
He wu blown overboard then I jumped
over with a life jacket," he said.
Lifeguards responding to calls to po-
lice from numerous Sunset Beach resi-
dents who witnessed the explosion said
rapidly spreading fire engulfed. the
cruiser.
He said heart attacks are rare in
China where there Is a gn:ater divUion
of physical labor.
Up until 10 years ago, be rded, reduc-
ed activity and rest were preacrlbed
as a life rouUne for heart attack victimll.
He said it worked to reduce chest pain
until the patient died of an acute attack.
A known' effect of· u:erciJe, be aaid,,
Is that it lncreaaee the elliclency of
the musclee of the limbe so Ibey can
do more wort with:>ut requlrlnc 10 much
'Ibe blaze was extinguished by the
fire J)4ltrol boat wbic.b sped to the strick-
en boal from Sunset Harboc. The char·
red hulk sank aboUt 1 a.m. Loss wa.s
estimated at '2,500.
He added, however, tbat in case of
chest pafn~'yo•ubould 10 lo the bolpllel
and not run around the block. Chest
pain Is the hallmar1' o! this heart
di.sease," he aald, "whether it be the
blood oxygen. .
Dr. Bures llld that heart lrlnljllanf.s,
because ol lhe Imbalance between supply
and demand, do not aolve the probh!m
ol heart iflaeaae ''The coot In 1tsell
ii fantuUc," be commented. "Certalnly,
aomebod,y is going to have to _.k
out eomething else."
·'
FIRST AT BUFFUMS'
CULTURED PEARLS
6.99to49·.oo
Just washed ashole ••• lustrous cllffuNd Jl8lllt •II
gleaming l4K gold. lllese Iridescent pearls drop fronl .
chains. Or, nestle in intricaJe.settlnllS1 some wtth
·diamonds. All are so mooestly prlc~. See OU1 lretll-
as·a•sea·breeze collectiool Costume Jewally, all ala1L
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111 ,, , .... -'!__~_........ ked
Dal...._ 9111 Klr'Minn9r u
JU ~. "Do you Intend to lJnU: ·n.,y-tnm me!" Mike Rey·
....., ~. arrested on a bad check .
<!harp in K1J1m•WJO, Mich., re-
plltcl, "No. You caught me fair and
l 1!Cli't try to get away." Taking
Raynalda at his wi>nl Kinchner
didn't put lwldc:utfa on tile youth.
Pd!ee .... lllll Jootfng for Rey-"'*"'· who brol<e A'f!BY from the dttdve at tbe'lroot door bf the
COUlllf bufldhlg. I
• • •
A "'4tl-c...,.1ot a 1riinl·11drttd lap
WOI the: GMWer "'° Taist grade•. of den-
tal studcntl at the Un'iver.ritv of At-
b<Ttq Dmta! Clinic, Montreal. Th<
ittm brlno1 rnnorkablt impr~
in 1tudf?it dodor•' powers of ~~na
!ration, • • A Duffy cal named Pumpkin bas
re!>al<l a debt. Eigbt yean ago, Mrs.
clirtllllno c11y1on te!cued the
frightned cat from a busy freeway
near l1all ·Lake City, \Ila!>.. and b~ ~to ber· Baa l&e btinle,
near pm. Thi! week Mrs. Clay·
ton wit.awakened by~~
found'J ·broken gas Hn< bad set fire
to the. back pon:h ot tile heme. ... •
'nirmoU °" eol'6g1 c:ampwa
tod4J'b ·u.. h1<1>1tabl< chanio-
tmllic of o ropldl~ chml¢"11
world," 1a111 tht prcddmt of tM
California /nstttut< •I Tech,.
nolqog, Paaadena.. "An educa-
tional. 111stem. not in turmoil, n
Dr.Let A. Dubridgt 1aid "would
be atu that is surely dtad. •• The
unWerritiea' aucoess -not fail-
ure -~ brought cm di&ru~
U..., DubridQ• said, adding thot
"de!:lpitt it. faul.U, our tduea-
timW 111rtem. give• more and
b~ opportunitit's to voun.g
~opf.t than any oth~ in t'xi#t·
tnet -or m the hiltOfl! of
civilimticm. ..
In Chester-Le-Street, England
official< of the Durham group of
hoepiUllJ complained that so much
money wu spent on "such things
as wigs and special boots" for pati·
ents that they would bave to depend
on clulrtty to buy vital equipment
fM tllelr heart unit. They said $55,·
200 wu spent this year for wigs and
similar needs while only $12,000 was
allowed. for new equipment.
New Girl 1o Wed
• Autlwr Engaged A-fur Sex Change
NEW YORK (.IP -Dawo LlaCle1
Hill, --Gordon LlllP1 nan. ldoplod 100 or Brllllh ..U.. ~ Mupnt
Jlutherf«d;· ,.,. her IUnuoe with a
~ Neiro m.chlnlt.fll._ OOrollna
. ~ whllt N 1'!!1'-..~ IOI•
change trtatmeot 4.
"Re said tt WU the quickest ........
he ever did hear &ell ;of," llld' the
new Cbarieltoa bello .al bor --pectlvo ~•sbaDd. 2:2-)'UM)ld Jobn Paul Simm-.
But, ..,. Dawo, ahe WU lull "ralliet
amused" when ahe flnt aaw the ,.auna
man stare 1t her after• he cune to
l1u SOclely ~ -,In ~ to Join !1ef coot, oa •.do!ll>le dato.
At that time ft WU back In
Charlellon during a break lo ao ll<noolh
treatmtot at Johns Hopklm Roapttal In
Baltimore, trutment whlcb Included
llllJ'gery, psychiatry and~~-.....
And when the JOlp>C ~wu..; lil ..
saw her, she WI. me , ,..."torntni
out the Hopktnl doctln' .onieta·to ~ .rid· bl!bate DU a woman. · ,
She ttcaila !bat at tbelr llrll ll*dntr
he wu wearing ''hlib -· plOI palU and a . yellow IWtlter, and looted V1rJ. mod " I JM ibe tbougbt 'ftO .more about tt.
Ibo ll)'I, tmtil "tbal· nlllit hi. -
.. try Into the -clfM\IOd' Ill dirty old O't'eraDI, wUh hll mecNntc•1 cap
over his eyes. and hll arm1 full of
flowers. H~ bad boqbt evfr! flower
he couJd 'ftnd. ·He_ wu a very brave .
young man. He told me: ·1·u nevet
lea .. ·e you again.' "
The doctors interviewed Sinunona and
approved the relattOOlhlp, she ID!, 1d-
dlng: "He bad to ut :io falherl fer
my band."
MW Hall, .mo plans to marry Slm-
m<ms euly nut year In England -
her adopted parents, IJeme Mupnt
and her bmband, actor Stringer Davil,
upect to attend -lpiOl'ted an ornate
seven-diamond engagement rlnc dur1nt a shopping and busineas trip hero.
"He (Simmons) worked for three
weeks as a longshoreman to get it,"
she Slid,
After the Wedding, lhe U)'ll, deapll<
threats and the disapproval of the
Charleston IOCiely which once accepted
her as a male Brltllh author, she and
S1tnmoOJ plan to live in Char1eaton.
"! fed that Gordon bas died. l lived
a life, crippled though 1 waa, to the
CHANGE OF SEX
D1wn Pepita Hall
best of my ability. Before I
I had written 10 books.
"Now this la a new life."
'SF, State Head Urges
More Students Return
SAN FRANCISCO IA!') -The pres! •
dent' or s a n Fraiicloco Stat. College,
Jlo""'1 Spiltb, urpc1_;..... •tud"1ll to
return to the cluvoonu loday Inst.ad
of taking part in a convocaUon: at the
l!ChoOl whlcli reopened Wednesday aflet
being closed for four day1 because ol
violence.
Moet of the 18,000 <students and 1,300
faculty members returne;d to the campus
without trouble a 1 plalnclothesmen
patrolled the area and other policemen
were oo a standby basis.
Many lludenll took part In the con-
vocation. concerning demands by the
Black StudenU Union, I n c I u d I n I
reimtatement of George Murray, (be
Black Panthers party member suspended
from part-time teaching dutiel!J.
Newsmen on campus estimated th.It
95 percent of science and businesJ clasaee
ran normally, as dJd 50 percent of thole
in the humanities -the college's two
main divisions.
Snlllh agreed to let lhe convocation
continue today.
The convocation diBcuasion by the ad·
ministration and several h u n d r e d
students and faculty members al!o touch-
ed on Black Student Union demand!
for more Negro teachen and adnUsslon
of Negro students regardl•N of t~elr
quallflcattons. ·
The convocation wu piped by closed
clrcuil t<levilion to all parb or lhe
campus and brought Smith into contact
with rpolesmen for Neiroes ........
Smith wu uked whether~ crur
vocatloo sati!fied an order. Monday by
the state CoDege Board di, Trustees that
the ICbooJ ht reopened.
Pope Would Like
.To Visit Hanoi
VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Paul VI
told Ncrth Vietnamese Roman Catholics
loday be would have liked to vial! their
country and aban In lbelr onleal "il
clrcum1tance1 bad been more
favorable."
The Po<>Ufl made the remork In a
letter to Ardlbllhop Jooeph-Marie Trtn-
Nbu·Khue or lllllol. 'Ille ........ marked
a rellcloua occulao, the centenory ol
the coneecratlon ol Mary ol what wu
then the apootolJc vi<:arala ol .w..i Tonkin.
"U clmunatlncel had b • e n more
favorable, relt UIUl'ed that we certalnl)r
would have comt penoaoll,y ._ you
moet wWJn1ly, to encourap "'1 In your
bani trlalt and to make Y)>U feel h 0 " deeply we lhare 1n them," the pope
wrote.
Cold Wave Dogs · Dixie
Sub-freezing Temperatures Plague Limestone, Maine
Callfo,.,da ·--" " AIL1nt1 .. ..
811C....,,.ld .. ..
'""""" • M
OoM " .. ..... .. M
(hie-• ..
C!llC'IMltr .. n c ........ .. • ..._ .. • ... ...._ • » ...... • • ·-· ff .. "'°" w""""' .. .. ·-" .. --..... • --.. ..
1<41-c"' .. • Lat V... · " .. L• ~_..,. .. .. --., .. Ml-" ... .. _ .. " _..._ " .. =:..:.--.. .. .. " -., • ~-"' ..... .. • "'""9'-f'll .. • -·· • " ,,_ .. • ........ .. " ·-°"' .. .. ·-u .. ... .._ • • St, Lault • " ...... " .. ... _ N " 1111 i-r-.lldteo .. ..
S...te .. 11Nr1 .. ff ..... • " S!Nk9~ l ' ,. " " ~,. ,., . lJ , II ·
I •
•
NOW IN COSTA MESA
TOWN & COUNTRY PATIO SHOP
1706 NEWPORT BlVD. IN COSTA MES A
(~El~Y, 'LOCATED At. 17th ,. MAIN IN SANTA: ~I , . . ~· p
unu . ~-.. The Fiest .hiliti RA tr AN '.
' . ,
CHiii 6 PllCI ~TTAN GROUP lnclutles:
• lPltco lectlOllll • Clt9 a..lr •'CMMr J.wl • COckllll Table
. .. • !
Reg. '21500 s1 ·93so SAVI '
SiYE 51~ · . 300/o
\41'.1'! ........... ""'. ,.,_,.,. IMl1IMI . ....,_
·ti-ti· .... ,,
. SAVI '$20:00
'.'.·•39.95
. '
..
. • . .. . .
terr1ce !'r pet!~·
VICTORIAN
SWEmtllUTS
O.r owti tM,ortl frofll H111t.. ""!' Hl1lt•1t tfWIHty Ill•
tvr1 t1t+111,
DILUll' .,..
CHAii •••••••••••, ·
•
BAR STOOL .__ -~ ,.. ..... ,...
Mill\. .,...,..
,,_ ""'""• Wltlhl .,..,.
....
11.tl
'13H
YOUR llAU'RA,IL FIREl'LACE
DESERVES THE FINIST
Bl.ACK
&
BRASS
HIGHLY
POLISH ID
c ........ 1 ....
'r s•I• ......
l!"all
c~1
In ind -ourcom,iele-$24• Hlacflon of .tandlng a leldlng
flrncreens.
Cusfoin ·PJreplaco k,_. ·~.le '!riw
•
~ ... , ~·~1ftic•w•~~"'.1\ :{~~~~~Wt~.rTihl~t ,41~~tJii1 ;··
· '!'ft •~1l9'lo.fo,.~,~·~t1I t~bi. "'"'·~·. • 1 · ;,~ -~~irfifl· • .-11:1di• " ,f L .. L WoM~r~·,$~H. , .
• -lM·<f .. lttdi-+1~ +.,,-t"--m.1101 to '~rem t.
e¢co111od1t•'·1i~ t, tifht gwffh: co!lffort•b,ty.
T1lll1 t•p 1h'ow11 i1 diltr1111cl n1tvr1t 1'tTk'w1l11ut 111d , r.,.;..,,J l1111ill.1t1d top i11 ·• c~oic• ,, 111•fte·-'hiho "111.d ....
litht 'or d1rlt w.11!111t to111i. '
A.f10 tv1i11bl• witti fl''' t1bl1 top.
..
...
..
DAISY .BOUt,UfT ' .. , • . . . i t '
42r tln,.,...lta~le glHO lop· table s19 8 •rill 4 ·S;kle.'ch-~lra., , . , . ltetl: *2'41.do· .. . .. . .... ,. . . .
01tolit'J~aw .fOR· HOLIO>\Y OELIVERYI
· s·PICIAU~·. -..... . .
' GAS , '
: .. LOGS
' tAS~l
l40S CUIJOM IUINll
M" llt•l.M ..,,.., ... U.000 ITU. •1 .. 1115 .... $39.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...."Jf'
14•-.-ttc ...... Dtluxes.M._. $
.... $69\95 .... ,. .... ,, ,, 39,95
'IO" IMaualtt C011to1 Dol•<e llM l11n11r. $ '; :
. .... $7f..95,, ,, ...... ,, .. 49.95
~
L 1
•
r
,,
.,
"
..
•• • '
' • • . '
' •
.. -""' -= ... --~ ... --""' = --.. ----""' ---= ,.. .. .. ---... .... .. ... ... -.. -"" ... : ,.. ... : :: :: = .. ~
.\
l hursday, Novtmbtr 21, 1968 • DAILY, PILOT ilJ
Senate IJherals. Attaek Filihas1tr
• ' '" I 1 ' • .... '
Prospect for Success Seem Dim Deapite -~ction
Looking for a .Yr of Distinction?
WASlilNGTON (UPI) -
Senato llherall, their rub
tblnned bJtho N.....iiorete<>
ilon, are p1o..,,,. ~..,.
tilWbuljer lilllo llcbt wboo
the 91't CmiCrtM con....,. ID
JllJUW'Y.
Pr~--ed dinl. bat tho Vole could
give strma cluea to tho abape
of the Senate for t11o nm
two yean. •
Sen. William ~ (0.
requiring a lhree-flftlll 'l'Qlo,
n!W lban ~ lt'ahut oil-.
' , .
much dllfertnee in JllWUY'• vote, A net losa of .qpe or
two votes for cloture ls ex.
pee~. That would llill leave
a majority on record favoril?e
cbanae, althougll It would he
14 or 15 votea obort of the
tw<>thlrds requlremeol to stop
debale.
GOP POSlTION
What ls worrying IOD19
liberals more than the new
members ia the poslUon ol
Republican modetatea who
took psrt In last ·year's
filibuster against the nomlna•
llQll ol Abe l'orlU as chief
ltrtbrand ID argulnf against
the (Iii~.
·11111·Praan1rt ..:;: he ...
no ,_, ...,...,. lbould feel
lncanslat.nt' ID Ollng the
flllbu!W becouoe Ibey op.
pooed " on t><lnclple.
"ll'a llkt football.'' lie llld.
"Juat beeawie yau want to
aboUsh lbe forward -is
00 """"' not lo ... It if ll'i Jepl: In fact; the llllbualer
lllS,l' be I tociJ liberals
themeelves will have to ~
oo with Increasing lreq11<11<y
over the nut two yean."
COALITION STiioNG
• ' assau!ta qalnsl ao c I a I ,
welfare, ed/*ilOO .... civil
rlaldl --over the losl dgM,.....
Approprlattoni fCI' a u1c h
mileatoae bills as model clttas,
rentl au~ill, "tho war
... PoYllV 11111 -aid toe Qle non. iDl!llllOI poor
(loledlcald!,~ !>a•• -Ed by I .... -Clo, Dejay
tactlct maY )le aece .. q oext year to atop _.uvea
fn>m undobil lbe -! IOCI .. IJ. l.lberila haft aha!l1 bad
. I :J
I '
~ ~ . ·~
' r •
..
Wis.), 11"11 • blpu1lun COl!l-
tion wblcb bu ·~ !cir
a rulea ~ ID pul JUll
has yet to map lllnlOIJ r.r
the I_. blltlt. But he la
certalri a rMOlutlon could be
offered to make II easier to
invoke oloture.
~ o1 '-. llke Sens.
·Rober! GrlllJn, (&-Mich), and
lllnml'oal, ( R-H aw all) mlibl feel uncomfortoble op.
""'11111 tho ~ that .... Ell
1hem, panjc1111r!J if liberals
tried lo .... -.. the
'lbe November e 1 tc tio n
""'led to streaathon the old
coo 1 e rvaUve Bepubllcan-
SOutbern Democratic coaliUon
in tbe 8eoa'8, ed !!berals
may be hardiftlSOCI ID th•
8lsl Congre8s ·to fend off
to resort to .... 11U-. Sen.
Jacob Javtti, .C R0 N. Y. ) ,
engineered whal' . ~ -• Porten called ''m"'PNlttr' to '.__...,.. _______ ....._ ______________ _,
block a mwe that WOUki;ba.ve . • ,
:!i~=..:v;ai...= 1.981 Model A De f,w:e, Roadster The best the Uberala could
hope for, according to Pros:·
mlre, wu a new cloture. rule bid! the llledleald -am
this yw. (Completely Reawred) $2,500
•
Less · Than Dreani C:.me . Trae ·
'Instant Rehab' Apartment Project Goes Bust
NEW YORK (AP) -An wer. moved Into a hole1 for Tbe city's Housing ·and poA1b1y 100 _. bJ the !Int mab 1be buDdiq oore ll&bter,
"inslant rehabllitaUoo" pr.. 13 hours in April, 1967, wblle ·'·DeYe!oPment Aclminlstralion, of lhe JUI". she said. ·
l·ec1 designed to tramform the core of the bulldlng was which cooperated in t be On 107th Street, different The project also wl11 DOI
removed and prefabr1catetf dev.elopmen&; of the propect mater1ala wW be u a e d , be 11tnstant.11 WI time, lhe ~~~~ r 1 :~~ dr~ wtits lowered thrwgh the roof. iloq wl'h a private f~ upectaUy to comet the iJoor said. It will tab lbout al
• .
Fortv uears ago the Model "A" was introduced 111 the
"'New Ford;'~· MiUiona were built, .but there arc ontv a ft1D "'""
oillinQ D1 L-Roodaler1 l<I~ N01D ii JI01lr chanc• to liaw Gild
driN the co' .0144J.Cmtt1d to gtt tMN odmlratio7' and cOmmmts
than any new modtl offered todq.
'r1W claulc ..., reslored lo its Off¢nal Dtarbol)o 1pOci/i-
oo#otU cmd i. lr!llv a bl01'1t1. 1i i. """"""icoUv P<'fact and
needs a MW owner who wants to drive it and mjoV jt. ·
. Comc ·•nd ... ii in I/If DAl/.Y PILOT emptovc• porl<ing
lot at 830 W"t Bav Sir"~ Colla Alen For ...,.. i•fonnalion
Olk /OF llr. Curlev m IM newapop<r office, °' call 64HS2l,
Ezt. JfO.
' apartmenta almost overnigbt DISILLUSIONED datton and lhe·lederal govern-del<rionllon probl.u. 111.· the worlllng days , lo ..,.. lbe
bas proved to ba less than . . men~ says that offlclals were, .!pmloua:.:.:::::::..::"°"='tru=ctio=· ="':..and=:._lo:_.::hro::.:b=uil=· dln=~BS~·~---~============================ .Mrs. Davilla said olic la · pi"emll\lre In immedlalel71•
a dream come true. d1Slllusloned with the small calling the project a ''resow>
Nineteen months after the rooms, the .woro floors, leaks ding succeas" .
initial project - a five-story betw~ the units and roaches "It ;u;· ~ding suc-
building on Manhattan's East craw~g between unita. cess in· that they did what
Fifth Street -was completed While _the tenants ~p~ to they said they were going to
in 48 hours, the venture has be unammous in thelr dismay do within 48 hours," said
not been repeated and the over the worn floors, m~ -Fl'anou X.vemon,.tbe bouaini
tenants are complaining that still prefer the new quarters agency's d l r e c t or of
some of the irutant changes to the old, and a spokesman Demonstration Projects. have deteriorated too fast. for. the building's managing
"I'm looking for an apart~ agents, Walter and Samuels, TIME S'ruDIES
ment to move to from here,'' Inc., maintains the 7:!-year.:Old An lnltlal federaJ grant of .
said Percenia Davilla, whose building has worn "reasonably almost $1 milllon said Miss
family, was one of 11 that well." Levenson, was spent primarily
--'-----------------• on time studies, ex-
I See by Today's
Want Ads:
•Give DU a breakt Ha~!
the yird -.... light hl.nllns done by a
dependable man in the
business.
• Ramble over &: see this
'66, an extras, Rambler
Qafl[lc Wagqn. Terrific
aecoad ~C8l'-. .
e A famlly · tooklhg '°' a ~ to rent with 4 or s
bedroom.I may find one to-
day in our re11tal sec-
tion. ••
• Ownlrr of "Pete", Eng-
Ulh Pointer, lost at Warn-er 'A Edwards, are still
longing for his return.
• Mary Poppins! Y Ou are
needed again tor 80me
children in Costa Mesa,
llondaY thru Frld.,,.
perimentation with materials
and praCticing tbt "instant"
~ontwo~adjacent apirtment bulldlngs.
· -'•After analyzing the results
,,.. cjolclded·that it·sholilcl·~ ~·
;'j\lft:1haa 4tbouri. •;~: C: ~.· 11r•11 .ltoo ·abort a ... ~ of , ~ ·~'1!::._.. \ . . ,....." .. 1 ' _•.I
-LllD" becimse·~ 'Oii.et • ·a • • q~ of the space workers
.' ba'Ye to work in and, two,
,• jc),;omlt the avertime that has to be,pald.11
"There is also the question
of ..... ~ am 01 a n·c1e :._. ~.:.-the ~
·neiglibOi"bood," she said. "We
did this one building, but
multiply it by 100 and .it can
be pretty difficult."
SAME WAY .
"You don't expect your first
experiment to prove
everything has to be dorie in
the exact same way," she
said. "It's one step in a por-
ceas."
She said . HOA plans to
nhabllitata lwo buildings on ._ _________________ ,.~ 107th Street next month, and
"ArtiStry in Mo~g" for th•
BEST MOVE
of
:YOUR LIFE
Ceil : ... •
494-1:025 ' '
-TOY· HOUSE.-
100/o OFF. S~LE!
FRIDAY & SATURDAY·· NOV. 22 & 23
'
THI
10% . OFF ON ANY PURCHASE
IN THE STORE
LAY•AWAY ·
Tho ... CHRISTMAS
"TOYS NOWI i"' "
223 ·E. 17th St. 3442 Via . Lido
C:.-M--141-1414 N..,... ..... _67MHO
t
Get 80¢. olf th~ regular party-size prlce, an~ pt your
ball rollipg in a big way. Just pout ovU. Ice to aiscover
a delicious adwnture.
Forallmlted ' .
tbne..-t•e.glallt
48 oz. pu:ty size . ·
only
'llbii.llV~ ~tt.n. Dal~rt 1
W-.Soor·-ta
'HealJietn
ADVENTU·Rous· COCKTAILS
In' other SISHi Mal-Tll, Bl.cit l\ual1an. Olmkl, $1Tnicr. Side ear. Old ra.t.lioned..Vod.U Sou~ TeqUlla Sour, ~,prk-01 Sour; ll·IO:I GIJ\·~lnl. YoctU MatUClh:Eatra'Ory ..,, .......
'
'
• •
"
I
'
j(f.14.
z~~
~,,t
!·'
"" !'l~ .,
< '. .;~
tfi1 ·-:-.
. ,.,,
Ir.If
"I·'' ' 1•;' '
1 l:.&!i.
P,">"\ ., \Sl~ .. 1
c~~
"" -• r.tf~
"IY j.,,i.t
I
-
-·---~-.... ._ .............
11 Jt ·Takes ~ . • ~ .
~Many ML MUM
• • '
For Survey n-r-,.._
•
lfT'S Bf FRIENDLY-
1t )'oi'i have new ndgbborl
~r know of anyone moving :to our area. pleaM tell WI
So that we may extend a
Jriendb' welcome and help
them to become acquainted
in their new surroundings.
Huntington Beach
Visitor
536-9626
· Costa Mesa Visitor
6"42-6014
So. Coast Visitor
49~579
Harbor Visitor
675-3433
oof,;:;to. ~~·~·tt· PHARMACY DEPT. ll WHITE . lfT us PRICE
~ FRONT YOUll·NEXT ...... ~· ·-PRESCRIPTION!
. r , . ·~ t(i'""~
Water Pill
Oral Hygiene Appliance
&onomy Modll 39
Futurl~g conwni9nt
new hold et" for j« tips
i:~~R~~;.:,:~,~---a-a-J
I LIMIT 111£ TO I CUST&lil[I 21 58 16 500D 11 ~llA lllAtJ IJllY! SAVE.4 70 WITll llPlltUltOV.n.19'1 · tnurtllf ·---------------Newest mod8l lrom 4111 ongon.rl nm~. Revolu!•on1Hv, I
"''""'way to clNn teeth It hon11. R1coinm11nded by i~ns
olJhouun<k ol dtnlists tci sup~~'"11' 1 iegul1r ~·u•h«Jo<I. I
Qe.r>s trapped (ood Plf1iclt'$ 1r,.f h1rd·I0·111ch plai..r1 w1:•1
a rrinislling. pulsating j~t slrf'am of w111r and assists in I
dunin, 0tthodomic tcipllsntt5, li~ed tnjdgewo1k, t nd
,.nial deflhlfr.:, TIM W•tei Pik i' sm~ll. light. •tt•1tti11e.
Comee with fo ur jtt lips.<:onw:11ent $I or age holder,
411111t11t....,. eoirt1cl ~d ~ blttton Ol'l·aff IWitch,
UClUSIVt -'CTIOM :
Wlltlpflfltt kl bt • stradV terum of w1t1trd tctu11tv
20 lliplrlfl W!llftl Pd'I Slllr4Ad ..,. tntk• tht
ff Ct is W• Pikvniq!JWrtfftc1ivt.
WHITE FRONT PHARMACY
COSTA .MESA
3088 lnltol Aff.
Just off !Mwpott An. botwoen
~n °'9 Frwy. •nd Baker St. ·
•
EJivo,y's W•dow Say s -
• 0
' Ex-Nazi Threw
Sel~· to Leopards
lllCATUI! Oil.DAY
For three generation• our family has
served the community at time of need.
KOVENS
~
3333 Brislol Street, COSTA MESA
Phon& 546-4510 SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Unique, out,of-th~~
ordinatfy, differext, &
conversation rlllg,
handcrafted In 141< gold,
with seven scintillating
diamonds, 275.DO.
Where can a travel agent fly you
that an airline can't?
' I
Chica'go. New York. Hawaii. You name it.
What's the difference? A Travel Agent can get you
there from ·orange County Airport. No freeway
.drive to Los Angeles. No parking problem .
Any travel agent can arrange it on one ticket. And
one phone coll. And it doesn't cost you one penny
extra for the convenience. !Travel agents are paid
by the airlines, not the public.I
Why are we telling you 'all this?.We're the travel agent's
secret: Golden West Airlines. We fly new 19-passenger T-jets
between Orange County Airport and Los Angeles International
Airport. Thirty-five minutes each way. $7.95 plus tax,
each way.
face it: The easiest way to get to an airport is in an airplane.
In Irvine, may we suggesle
Tron& Globe Travel
In Newport Beach, may we suggesl:
\
4201 Campus Dr., Suite M
833-045-4
In Costa Mesa, may we suggest:
May Co. World 1'.rowl &urKU
3333~~2~'·
Trans Globe Trov9l 8'.l~u
1880 N..,,... Blvd.
646-5006 545-0421
MIHO Travel A;ency
2788 Horbor Blvd.
546-8181
Coato Meta Travel Agency
230 E. 17rh St.
646-4848 549-2246
N•wport9r Travel & Toun
1107 Jamboree Rd.
6'4-0360
N&wport Noflonal Bonk
Wtstcliff ot Dov•
6>12-31.11
Morinen Travel &. Tow
1617Wtttdlff Or.
6'6-0203 5-15-7105
Rubaiyat Tour & Travel
201 Morine Ave.
6754UO
lido Travel S.rvlc.
3416Vlo lido
673-3310 549-.11.u
Ask Mc. foster Travel s.Mce
Robinson's Newport C9nter
6.u-1661
' Weatcliff TJ'OV'tl s.m,.
1129Wottdlff °'· 642-3020
Golden \\WI Air Ines
~10
&
•
••
DAILY l'ILOT
Orange Coun ty Symph ony
-~ -..__ -Holiday Bazaar Ready
Seventh se·ason Opened
Li brary Hou r
Colla Mesa Library 11 the
Doon ol Mlcbatl'o. Inn, G~le, otaie -vice ocene ol a library 11.rKy bout
Fulletton will nr1n1 open al president. every Thunday al 10:30 a.m. io a.m. next Saturday for a·;==============;;:;;====; B~ Boutlqu• Buur andfi
The formal opeflin& concerl
of the teventh stason launched
by the Symphony Orchestra
of Orange County will be
Saturday, Nov. 2.1 at 1:30 p.m.
In the newly refurbWled
auditorium of C h a p m a n
College, Orange.
A second ldentlcal concert
will be perlonnod the nen
day at 3 p.m.. in the aame
loc.ation
The orchestra, cooducted by
Daniel Lewis, will offer the
Symphony P•atoralc by
Gina.stera and, Co acer to
G......, No. I by Bloch. Adrian
Ruiz, pianist, will p I a y
Rachmaninoff Plano Concerto
No. I with the orclieftrL
A naUve ot 14 Anitlea,
the pianist .-ivod hia early
training al the CuJt1a -ot Music under Rudolph
Sertdn. He abo 1w llUdied
with Amparo lturb~ Jacob
Gimpel and IJlllan Steuber.
He attended the University
of Southern California where
he .-ivod liis bacbelon
delft" cum laude and hia
muter'• degree. He received
a graduate fello~ at use
and was sent bf ~ .~te
of International Education to
Italy to participate In the
Buaool lnlematiooal Plano
competition. for which he
Sizes 18-20
_ch-,_
.... "''11• ._.,
tho•
hanl~o-llnd
..... 11-2~
at Haff-Size
Shop.
"°"' $15.00
SIZES
18-20
12~·26 \l
: Did you knOw that Haff,Slze Shop
'
.
•
ha• SPORTSWEAR TO SIZE 46?
1105 """-' ltftl .. C"'9 .....
"'la w.a ,...,. .,. 1 ltli StrHt"
.... rs: t :JD te l :JO
frfMy f9't:ft
AIM JM Or••J•ftlll Mell, .. ,. .....
' ... \ t .<
There's a pretty
new kid in town.
Taa'nl 8!ring to '"" a lot
of thl> lovely lddsldn
Pll"'i' bJ w._ ~
Bl•c~. Blue an<!
Brown Kid $15
WESTCLIFF PLAZA-17th & IRVINE
recel.\led a special award. He
ii currenUy umtant pro-
1....,. ol muaic al San
PIANIST
Ad rian Ru1z
Fernando Valley St ate
College.
The aol.oist has received
several awarm and has ap.
peared with numerous
orchemras.
Adult and atudent tickets
are on sale and available at
the Symphony Office, Town
and Country Suite 124, Orange,
or by calling S46-6165.
I~ aponaore~ by
Orengewoo(! Natlonal Cooncll,
Epsilon SJcma Alplla.
Jjollday -llono dollgn-ed by Mrs. Earl Walker, Alpha
XI cbopter, and booths with
displays arr a-n c e d by
parllcl~ chapters will be
feat:Jred at the event ¥.".blcb
will be bol!tecl by memben
al Alpha XI chapter, Garden
Grove and Eta Alpha chapter,
Santa Ana.
Items In the spotllgbt will
lnclude a Blue Chip Stamp
tree, calendan and key
chains, books and book marks,
nub, date ban, floral ar·
rangement.s, fancy b o w s ,
Chrlslmu -and .«IUJllry store merchandise.
Mrs. Otis Bry, state presi-
dent, will come from Torrance
for the event. other honored
guests will Include M r a .
Angelo Isqulerdo, junior past
president for the state and
1 n tern at I on a I workshop
chairman and Mn. Everetl.
TOPS View
Diet Menus
Nuts to Nibbles chapter of
TOPS will · greet a guest
speaker at th<:!ir meeUng to-
morrow at 10 a.m. in the
Huntington Beach Recreation
Center.
A speaker from the Heart
Association will discuss boll·
day menu planning with ems
phasis on low calorie foods,
a diet for the 11ake of your
heart.
The public is invited to the
event. Members of other
TOPS groups are especially
l
by
SUSTER
BROWN.
ti.
Tho Antiqued l:ook
For Young Ladies
Now 2 Stores to lefter Serve You
~@§§.
ENTIRE STOCK
Regardless Of Loss
Terrific: Savings -Jewelry; Watches,
Gifts, Rings, Christmas INnls, Dlamotlcl
Rings, Offlc:e Supplles, Hundreds of
other fine Items.
ALL
RUTllWSt~
PRICE ·51.QHID ' . .
FOR QUICI( . '. LIQUIDATION
Dealers al)d DeCoralo'1 W•lcome
....
BOB'S BARGAIN
CENTER · . '
181'2 Newport ... v ....
CostaMtla
'
The Symphony reflects the
support of hundreds o f
volunteers who have given
thousand! of hours of service
for the development and
sustenance of the association.
The objectives of the Sym-
phony Association have been
to expand the enthusiastic
participation of all organiza-
tioM, businesses, young people
and adults in all walks of ----------In · W e~tcliff Plau
life. Give the United Way Newport-a-.· h
welcome. · 30 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
Free hrtdng In . R-
In the past six years ap-~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii proxlmafely 400 t a I e n t e d
young musicians have been
auditioned in piano, voice and
instrumental by a panel of
well-known artists and mmi-
cians. Through the Young
Artists Auditions, 18 first
place winners have received
scholarships and cash awards
and perfonned with t h e
orchestra.
Duffem Helsing, president,
and Miss Mlm\lina Arroues,
es:ecutlve vice president, in-
vite organizations and in-
. dividuals to call Mrs. Harold
B,ienna, at the symphony, of-
fice for information on special
courtesies .
The Tee
Tattler
(!dltor'• Hott: A cok.lmn al --.ien't T~ 901f KOl'ft wtlt •PPMr e1ch
...... In ,.,_ D•lly Piiat. To r-1
llCOl'l!!I for h wet'k, PINM mall
then! to P.O. hie 1560. COii• Mftt. Tiwr mutl bl rKllYlid trf Mond:&w.l
llANCffO SAN JOAQUIN
AC• TOUllNAM•NT, LOW N•T -
Wlnner1. tht Mmes. Witter Tl'lom91,
1a1 Jot W•lltlloll, Flltht I ; l-1wne
Tl'lorrwl&. Fll•hl 2; Phll!p Johnston,
Fllohl )/ J{)hn Sd'lw&ll11, Orrln Wrloht,
Fr1nlt AtklfllOn, lv•n Stul'l!ll Incl
W•"9r Wine, •II JS. Flll'ht •; lleed
Shelley, II-Turner, 7,, Fllwtlt $1
E. F. l"--11, 11, l"lllllhl •1 Gllbtrt
Ide, llobtrt Uvl._.ttn, J • m I I ~ 1', l'llttlt 71 111""' Trout·
_.., W•""" Wfllt., l"hlllit Cernwen,
Tr."'* FOl"l9\I. 'If, Fhollt I. LOW wrr -Win.en, IM Nlm9t.
I'. W. P~ 1', l"lloht 11 H•l'l'Y
Cothm, Ph!llp JoflMton, IO, 1"11111'11
21 Atvln H•I•· AIYln u 11rn1, M. Fllllhl • •L N .. UR COUNTRY CLU• lADt•S DAY TINWMl lTL•
TOUll NAM•NT -Fllltlt A, tile Mma. Rtlb9rf Mal'Yifl, '21 Rlcti.rd AIJ9MU.
5'J Htrold COW9rd, $21 FNtM ti,
1M Mina. H•rTY L-, •1 Colvin Whrt1119h:ln, .t71 Albllrt Coi. • .(11 FlltM
c. lt1'I Mmes. llOC1er Llllntrom. 111
Irwin KM •nd llldlenl tfaiwell, .fl;
Fll-'1t D, 1M Minn. Ed Holk!M.
"2; Wiibur LM •nd HuOil And1r1011, ..
-~··.u: MEXICO
«*SIMAS --·'S •t11ca111St
le&.l9 .......
~ ·--Pllll "l~D. O'tW Dii\'n .....,..,..c1 • .;.
•cl:ala "111t Olt.,.. --c... fta 101 '"" P' e•r •• I I -t&J 31 1
ovER -~1 ,.00,000 ·
'
•
f'or thl homeowner with. dlaCrlmiri.tlr11 taste •.,cl In •)'t. for ll.IPtrb worM11n1hlp, ~er• ere 3 com~te room"'I ·of sp.nlth dullMCS fumlWfll It unsu~SMd values!
The llvin1 roOm enMmb)s Is w1rm1Y KC9n~ •1th h1(ld cerwd .wood trtrn·.on tti.
tcf• end lo\19 ... t tf1at. l!J11y tompfimept their suml)tuous velvet f1lnb. A lowly
t.rn ttt•, w•~· plafqut ~d larl\Pt fill the room with lkt;1nt w1rmt~ •nd eherm •
'WIJI( Into \tie titdroom 1nd you'JI lmm1dl1t1fy fill In kw• with this 1rK1ot11 fuml· tur.. fh1t c1rrle1 throua:h .th• m1st1rful Mnd dula:n 111d .u~1b construction. lnlpeet this 1roup•
Ing c1refully ••• from.th• m1jestic mirror Ind trlpte dresar •• , to.the ~n1Uit-l\tldbffrd and
\" fuU \ii-41 nilf; si.~s ~. , ·11f da~ Jn dfbtT 8lld C10f!ttruetmd ffir, • llfttlm1: A. ft\IJ' pit~ dlnlh1 room '
set cOmpletes ll'l1• 1pr1~ 'tdl!l)inf wlttMntrleitlt.eeNfl;\ritrk 0!9.flottrU~ Ptdts•I •nd ch~ ' Inserts, enh1,ncad by ptllih vinyl Mats. our prol11Ji9nel' decot'1tors ,,.., It rour eervlct. tis~
hrrns;, of.e6Urte.
SPANISH & MEDITERRANE:' ' . ' STYLES TO CHOO.SE F.AOM ·
' '
Eac:h Pllc:e -lte p1~~-11plntlly .......... • 7 7 ,., ~
..... c.i-~ ...... ~~~~~..,--:-~~.,-~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;._~ ..... ~~~~~~~~~~---' .. -..... ....... 2 I• --Cloy. Pt: )'•I I I -.-·-.~=::... ---............ -Dr,.a-... 0 I ....... ,._.., ___
UMIN Miil -~"' -~ti
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' • e ·OPEH SUNDAY Tll.L 6
F,0R YOUR CONY~.IN~E
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EASY. TERMS e WE C~RllY
OUR OWN ACCOUNTS
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~I f(Nl9ltllr 21, 1961
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Knudson Co.
Sets Record
In Earnings
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Bankers Reassigned
Paul H. Friu.ell bu been
appointed vice president and
manager of Security Pacific
National Bank's Huntington
Beach branch. He oucceedl
Paul V. Phillips, who bu been
reusigned as vice pre.sident
and manager of the bank's
Burbank branch.
Frizze, Frizzell, former as-
sistant vice president, has been
responsible foc regional ad.min-
i!trativt duUes at the bank's
SaQta Ana Office Ii.Dee JN6,
From 1953 to 1968 he managed
the Costa Mesa branch. fie
began bi! career aa a book·
keeper in 111<7.
Phillips, a FOWltain Valliey
resident, had managed the
Huntington Beach b r a n c h
since Ul63. · First named a
branch manager nearly lZ
years ago, be jpined SewritY
m a clerk tn 1135.
Financial Genius
Now at Standstill
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK (AP) -Eleven
years ago Leonard Ross'
knowledge of stock! earned
hlm 1164,000. Since then,
deiplte one of the biggest bull
marketl ever, Ross' fortune
has not ·qaJn reached that
figure.
Nol Iha\ be has done that
poorly inve.sting. He hasn'l
In fact, his tbeories brought
him substantial gains for a
while. That is, until be began
speculat}n& ~i.l!I y~.
Some people ml1ht
remember Ross, now a JS.
year-old doctoral candidate at
\'ale, aa lhe, youngster who
amazed televbion audltnct1
by aa:urately answering stock
'market questions on "The
164,1JOO Qµestlon " OJ1d "Tile·
lUg Sprprise."
T4xet: soon redl.Jced the
stake to between $60,000 ~
$'10,(JOI). 'lbe money theo went
into a trust fund, tied up in
red tape that made It •!mos!
lml'Q"ible for the young
wlianl tq put 1; jnlo elther
blue ch!P or glarritlll' stock.
In the ensuing ;-years, the
market took off'on a prolODJed
rise, somettmep interrupted,
during whltb hot Issues tripled
in months and even blue chips
doubled in a year. It wu
a time. to be in stocb, bul
R068 wasn't
Jn.stead, mMt of the money
weot into ·saving• and loan
associations, which pe.id an
assured interest rate but
nothing like the return ~t
might have been provided by
a aimllar investment in their
shares.
Wm Rosa frustrated? "No,"
be saJd in an interview.
"My interest Japoed and I
eventually resigned myself to
not being able to Invest. J
could have done so, but only
with red tape, and then It
would have been hard to 1et
The cars on .&JM! nation '•
streets and bl1hway1
--llS.7 billion In """" sumer debt, the Federal
Reserve says. Divided ~ually
among the population, thll
represents about tlM owed
by every man, woman and
child.
out too."
He uplaioed, "Jt wa.i too
risky to commll money to
a rigidly controlled approach
to investments. So I jU!t sat
it ou1."
During the Slt'®t period
young Ross was graduated
from Verdugo llJlb High
School in the Tujunga section
ol Loo Angeles. He entered
Reed College In Portland,
Ore., ind then received his
degree from the University
of California.
Yale Law School was next,
and be became editor·iD-chief
of tht Yale Law Journal
before graduating. He is now
a· graduate student i n
economics, and hopes to
receive a doctorate in 1970.
After that comes teaching or
government aervice.
-,..... .,, Ross ·turned
21 and came into pouesion
of bis f-a largo part
ol which be prompUy infts1ed
In alocks.
"I did well the fl.rat year,"
be said, "doing primarily "ha!
my father bad done: ittv..t
in !locl<a with sound <amittl]ll
histories and low prlce-earn-
inga raUos; the classical
eyclica1 i.ndu!triel; industries
In which the dowmide risk
ii limited."
With this conaervaUve at-
lllude Rou made In tbe first
year about 3.1 perctnl on hb
investmenta, a aolld return for
rather minimal rtsl<a.
"Tbt! year I didn't do as
well," he said, "attributable
I thlnk io a different strategy.
J simply 1ot Into speculative
situations on the basis of
friends' guesae.a. I think I've
balled myaelf oul Now I'm
. &ofnl back to tbe Ont ap-
proach. with a little more care."
Ross' sirategy will be to
choose ttocU 0 1ntlrely on fun-
damentals -on aood earnings
histories, avoldlnJ gueaea aa
to market trends and avoiding
tips allo."
He bopea alJo to overcome
what be feeb 1t another in-
...ttng ... .-•• dllflc:ulty
with the timing of hb sales.
"l have a tendency to get
out too soon," he Wd.
With hll vut bowledfll' of
tbe nwbt, and hll training
In finlllce and -'"'· Ross hopes to beJlln wort ....,
wltll IOll1t friends on a bask
book on invtl1meotl..
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New Tips ·A-
Losses
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IM • l::r.: 1a 111191'· '"''' 1~'111 lflfH tl'ltHc Im I "'" , ...
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Tflll'ldl1, N~w 21, 196f
Tliursday-,~Closing !, Prices -Wmplete · New YO..k .Stock Exchange List
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j1 DAILY PJl.OT 1-, No<oo ... 21. 1961
Pirates, Rustlers B8.g 5 All-Cdnf erence Berths
'
Five Others
Selected
...
To 2nd Team · ....
Randy Vataha, Golden West College'•
JiO&.catching phonom, and Paul Lo-
irtO\ne, Orange Coast College'• all-time
passing leader, head a contingent of
10 coast-area playen on the AD-South
Coast Conference team selected by the
di'Cult sports writers.
Jbinln& Vataha and Lemoine on the ri'r!t offensive team were a pair ol Orange
Cd.1st linemen. tackle Kevin Grady and
center Randy Bass.
·0n1y coast area player to make the
first defesive team was Orange Coast
bal!k Bill Jmkins. ,.
1'le two area colleges bagged half of
the backfield positions oo the second
offensive squad with John Inglebart of
~Iden West selected u quarterback 8!'!l Wayne Tinlin ol Orange Cout picked aS1a running back.
''Other offensive choices were OCC's
Cr8.Jg Allen at end and GWC's Dan
Cunnir.gham al tackle. ne w r i t e r s selected San Diego
City College backfield star Stan Murphy
as'i the offensive player of the year,
sf;ita Ana tackle Leon Van Gorkwn
a! defensive player of the year and
8an Diego's Harry West u coach of
the)'ear. ~ First Team Offeue Jt-McCoy, Fullertoo 10> So.
~ V•taha, Golden West 175 So. tf-Grady, Orange Cout !SS So.
1\-Ward , San Diego 225-So.
~ Roop, Fullerton 220 So. ~ Campbell, San Di.ego 217 So.
C---Bau, Orange Coat Z05 So.
QB.-Lemoine, ~e Cout.175 So.
II'-Murphy, San biegc 110 So.
If-steward, Santa Ana 11& So.
II'-Terrio, Fullerton 200 So.
' Fint Team Defeme ~ Davis, San Diego 180
,e,-Grieb, Santa Ana 200
t-VanGorkum, Santa Ana .230 ~ Blash, San Dlego %1.&
MG--ZUnlga, Fullerton 200 la-Stahr, Santa Ana 20S
U!-Slough, San D!egc 220
IB-Rasmussen. Santa Ana 205
..._ JeU:ins, Orange Coast ltl
l!c-Cbue, San Diego 1111 If-Deckert, Santa Ana 181
Fr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
, Pattenon, Rio Hondo 112 So. t Second Team Offense
Allen, Orange Coast 111 • So.
. Worley, Fullerton 215 ·So.
Cuiilqbm, Golden Wett!ll So.
' McFarlan, San Diego 209 So.
, 4 Sawyer, Seta AJti1 115 So.
00:. llendren. Fullertm 210 So.
laglellut, Golden Wetl.171 So.
,... 'l'hlH:a, Orange eout !00 So.
M°'llan. Funertoo 10> So.
Andenoo, Santa Ana 110 So.
' _; Seeand Tum Defense
Huton, Santa Ana 175 Fr.
Claycamp, Fullerton 175 So.
_,Corcoran, Fullerton 200 So.
.... ~Bron, Ml SAC 210 So.
, oaes, Golden Welt llli Fr.
~ Youngs, Mesa 210 So.
• Lanooa, Fullerton 215 So.
·~ Valdivia, Santa Ana 195 So.
;,:. Sweet, Fullerton 215 So.
• McMahon, Fullerton 10> So.
'< Coatello, Santa Ana 185 So.
. ~~able mention : Barsuk and Oliver, ~e Coast; Simooe and Parkman, ~J4in West. 1 ~
RANDY VATAHA
GWC Offensive End
2 Suspended
Eagle Stars
Reactivated,
PHILADELPH1A (AP) -Star pass
receivers Mike Ditka and Gary Ballman
have been returned to active status by
Joe Kuharlch, the Philadelphia Eagles'
general manager and coach, and being
suspended TueMay as "troublemakers.''
Kuharich,. who announced the reac-
tivation at an altemoob practice session
in which both players participated, said
the "temporary ltlBpensions of Mike
Ditka and Gary Ballman were 'lifted
this Wednesday morning after an ex·
tensive discus!lion with both players."
Both Ditka and Ballman, in personal
appearanes and Interviews Monday with
sports writ.en iD New York, had criticiz..
ed the offense of the Eagle!, winless
this rieason in 10 NaUonal Football
League eames.
Kuharich said, "There waa no need
fqi: action of any type alter a harmonious
coDversaUO, ' retauve to r e c e n t
newspaper commentary."
Be 'charged that "the entire situation
was magnified completely out of prG-
portlon. ''
Ditta, an eight-year veteran tight end,
was quoted u saying be wanted to
return to Philadelphia ne:rt season but
would not play for Kuharicb.
1be four-time All-Pro, acquired two
seasons ago from the Chicago Bears,
iru;isted that what be said was : Kuharich
didn't want him and that he didn't
want to play for anyone who didn 't
want him.
The 28-year-old Ballman, w h o m the
Eagles also picked up two yean ago
in a trade with the Pittsburgh Steele.rs,
said Philadelphia had a stereotyped ooe-
two run and kick oflerue which disdained
the long pass and failed to keep the
offense honest.
Th e suspensions had even brought ac-tion from Philadelphia city officials.
ftr •Creating Interest . a: i ~hapman, the World's
f Biggest Littw Colwge
•• . -!BY self-proclamation, Reno, Nev., is tSe \iggert litUe city in the world. ~ deed, Chapman College in nearby
~e may be the biggest Utue college bf )the world • . • at least u far 1 pseba11 ill concerned.
Deese, the 29-year-old baseball
of the Panthers, hu made a
y boring collegiate sport l!xciUng
who have followed Chapman f«tanea since ht began working miracles
~inl9". rr lw IU[ded bia ...... to a '""Ii
f-1 l HITE
~ W .4.SH t H'HU'etttt1,,1
l
an April lournameot which will feature
!he University ol Wyoming, Grambling
College, University of New Mexico, UC
Santa Barbara, Cal Stat. (Fullerton)
and Chapman.
The Panther tutor won't say his
charges should be favored for the title
because he believes New Mexico may
be the strongest entry in the tourney
and one ol the top major colleges in
the nation.
However, when you pump Deese for
facts on bia own outfit and find he
hu aiJ: of eight starters returning and
Iii: of . seven pitchers back, you get
the feelinc that he may not immediately
offer a forfell to the gents from New
Mem.
Or anyone else, for th.at matter.
Deese will tune up his team and spec-
tator enthusiasm for the tournament with
a nifty pair of home games the weekend
before festivities begin in the April
clauiC. That la, he'll host USC and
UCLA on succeulve J\iihtl.
Shortly prior to that he h a s
engagements with Cal, Stanford. Oregon
State and Arlaona Stale. The only foe
he'1 been unable to get on the menu
ia' la Angeles -Dodgers, that is.
And it'• a falr bet that auch an Idea
hu at least Cl'08Std hla mind once
or twice.
Deete'1 reputation I! widespread and
obviously Jt'1 1 IOUd one. Lut week
be accepted an orrtr to co.m an
Ancllcnge, Aluka collegjalt team 11111
IWIUDtl' at I bandlome Hl&ry.
lie will recrull top talenl from around
!he """'try, tab !he pllyen to Oil'
00! stat.. !hen win 1ames ( llCCOl'CIJD(
to Ille cootractJ.
When U comes to promallon ol coU.,t
lwebaU, Paul De'8e Is always In !here
pltdlfni. And 11'1 nol likely he'll _,
-ool. ~
PAUL LEMOINE
DCC Ouartarback
KEVIN GRADY
OCC Offensive T•ckle
•
RANDY BASS
OCC CMhlr
BILL JENKINS
DCC Dofantlve Back
Olympic Hero Becoming a Legend
DETROIT (AP) -It's almost brand
new and completely untested, but built
around Olympic!' hero Spencer Haywood,
the Univeralty of Detroit basketball team
is becoming a legend among fans.
The arrival on Haywood, a 6-foot-8Y.t
sophomore, h a s conjured up image1 of
post season tournaments. And it's more
than a w e e k before th e Titans open
up their 11eason.
"We wanl to go to, I.he NCAA,'' admits
the usually-modest Haywood, w h o
skyrocketed at 19 yean of age from
Weather Last
Roadbl~k
. Fof. Peg~ Ann
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -The
pos.c1lbillty of inclement weather can4
celing the program ·seemed to he the
only h!nderance to Penny Ann Early's
scheduled debut today as the first woman
to rlde in a professional thoroughbred
r&ee in the United States.
Miss Early was slated to ms "1tuess
in the Churchill Downs fourth~ race, a
claimJng event Over six furlongs for
2-year-olds.
A t r a c k official warned Wednesday
of possible program cancellation if the
track failed to thaw out by the afternoon.
MJss Early's chances looked bright
despite the pessimistic tone qr the of-
ficial. ("· ..
Wayne Moran, one of '1bt •.horse's
owners, promised, "If the bOrse ct1mes
out of that gage, Penny · Ann Early
wiJJ be OD it."
"This one looks good," said the 25-year·
oid Miss Early, who bu twice been
denied .the chance of riding since she
wu granted a temporary jockey's license
last week.
Last Saturday her mount was scrat-
clted. Op Monday a male jockey was
substituted.
Miss Early commented that the trainer
took her off because he did not want
the male jockeys to strike.
Talk of a "conspiracy" to prevent
her from riding has brought in aft offer
of outlJde help from the Loul!ville and
Jefferson County Human RelaUOlll Com-
mJssion.
Dr. Martin Perley, exec\jtive direc\or
Of the Human Relations Commission,
said the girl jockey could appeal her
case to hill commission.
obscurity to national fame when he led
the United States basketball tealli to
a gold medal at the Olympics last month.
It's caused a stir on the campus or
the coeducational Jesuit achoo!. Students
make detours so they can glimpse a
bit of practice.
The Rev. Malcolm Carron, university
president, formally announced plans
Tuesday to make Detroit a top basketball
power in the country.
"We have the potential to be the
outstanding team ln the history of the
Sports In Brief
University of Detroit." says Bob Calihan,
whG is in bis 21st year u bastetba.11
coach.
"But, we at.ill have to prove it," he
adds.
And of Haywood, he says "He's got
the best potential of anyone we've ever
bad."
A native ol Silver City, Miss., Haywood
played hia freshman year at Trinidad
Junior College in Q>lbrado and then
woo a place on the Olympic basketball
team.
Nevada Bolts WBA;
Angels May Get Stuart
LAS VEGAS -Nevada has unan·
imously voted to bolt the WGrld Boxing
Association because that body refused
t"o give a Las Vegas boxer a share of
the world junior middleweight title.
'!he Nevada Athletic Commission
agreed 4--0 Wednesday to join four
other states oUUide the WB"A. The· ether
states are New York, Calilornia, Massa-
chusetts and Texu.
The vote followed a WBA decision
upholding the result of a bout in Rome
last Oct. 25 between Italy's Sandro
Mauinhi and Ne~ada's Freddie Little.
Ma.ui'lghi failed to answer the bell
for the ninth round in the bout and
referee Herbert Tomser declared Maz-
zlnghi still champion. He called the bout
"no contest."
ANAHEIM -One of die ~at long
ball bltttn In recent baJeball history Is
hoping to become a member of the Cali-
fornia Angels.
The club announced Wednesday that
Dick S&nart, wtui ha1 hem playing in
the Japanese professional league for
the last two sr:aaons, will come to traiD-
ing camp nu:t 1jirtug aa a free agent.
The 36-year~d rtghthanded fint base-
man hat seen pn:vloa1 duty with the
Pittsburgh Plralel, New York Metl and
Loi Angeles Dodgen ht the Nadonal
League .and wtl!I the Bollaa Red llo• In
the Amertcaia League.
During tb.at apan be hit ZZ7 homen.
' ' ' SAN FRANCISCO -Don Coryell, head
football coach at San Diego State, was
confirmed. Wednesday as one of the West
coaches in the Shrine East-West game
Dec. 28.
Cdryell, who hu a ~1 record tn
three seasons at San Diego State,
replaces Gene Stallings of Texas A&M,
who withdrew.
Cory~ joins Dee Andros ol Oregon
St.ate and Nebraska's Bob Devaney on
lhe Wesl stall.
The East coaches are Duffy Dougherty
of Michigan State, assisted by John Pont
of Indiana and Tom Cahill or Ar1J!Y.
' ' ' Powerful S a n Dieto State and North
Dakota State remained one-lwo, but
Chattanooga and Indiana, Pa., galntd
ground today in The Associated Pren•
weekly small CGllege football ptll.
Tbt Aste«, klle tut weekend, drew
13 of the It flnt-pla« votes c1st by
a regional panel of sports Witten and
1portscasten for Slf polntl.
' ' ' DALLAS -Federal grand jurors in·
dicted a Dallas man and woman Wed·
nesday on charges of converting about
$72,000 in U.S. Olympic Committee funds
to their own use.
They are Joyce Ann Dodson Tate,
previously indicted on state charges of
felony theft and embezilemenl in the
case, and Joe William Tate, who had
not been charged earlier.
The government a 11 e g e 1 the Tate
tricked public spirited persons into
permitting use of their names ill
soliciting donations.
Steam Car in Indy's 500
Mrs. Tate was office manager for
a firm in charge of Southwest collectiom
for the fund, belng raised al the time
to meet expenses ot U.S. athletes ln
the Olympic Games.
Charges of mail fraud, wire fraud
and conspiracy are included in the 21·
count indictment.
RF,:NO (UPI) - A steam-powered
racer will be entered in next year's
Indianapolis 500 by Lear Molors Corp.,
accordlng to industrialist William P.
Lear.
"We not only expect to be In the
race, we expect to become a winner,"
said Lear, who added that he was willing
to spend $500,000 on a steam-driven en-
try .
The industrialist, who made a fortune
with the private jet I.bat bean b1s name,
announced earlier this year he was
gambling $10 million on development
of steam-powered cars.
He said the racer, being designed by
Ken Wallace, woukl use the same steam
engine being put in a test car for the
Callforni1 Hi&hway Commiuion. Both
engines will be finished 1boot mid-
Febru1ry.
Dodger'~
FULLERTON (AP) -L. Fmco
Thompaon. vice president and genera!
m.anqer of the Los A n g e I e 1 Dodlen
and a 4&-year veteran ol prof~
bueball, died Wl!dne&day ntttit at II.
Ile died at Sl Juda Hoopltal a1W
a loi>i 111-. repotledly ln•olvlna a
liver a!lm<nl
·. Al lheo and <II Ille !Ml'butbell -
'lltompaon entered lhe hoopltal. Ht ••
plactd on lhe crllkal llat Nov. 1 all«
a lhlrd operatJoa.
"We'll have a tremendous advantage
in that a steam car can develop mlll·
imum torque at zero speeds," he said.
"We'll have a tremendous torque coming
out of lhe turns."
The racer will have a rear-mounted
steam tngine, 18 inches in diameter,
with the boiler mounted beside the
driver. It will bum white kerosene, and
have a capacity of 450 horseP.')wer. It
will have 40 percent front wbtel drive
and 60 percent rear wheel, with a
planetary gear system dividing the tor·
que.
No driver has been found, but Lear
said his people "a.re working with
Firestone. We hope to have one of their
drivers.''
U !he car doesn't wlrt, Lear said,
ht. at lealt upedl It b) demonstrate
the reliability of steam automobiles.
' ' ' BOSTON -The LOI Angelea Kings
brin1 thelr quest for their first National
Hockey League road vtct.ory of the ae1ao11
te BollOll '°'11gbt whea tltey en1a1e
the Eastern Dll'ialoa Bruins.
·T'he Klllg1 Wedusday lllpt appeared
10 have thetr Latu.I vfdory away from
home at they led the nagged New York
Ran1en 1-1 ,Olnl Into tlte float period.
But tbe leape lead.Inc Ran1en ex-
ploded for Uiree talliOI bl Ille final
frame for • U win. ...
PASADENA -West Texu State,
featurtne the running of E u g e n e
"Mercury" Morris, la the: prime CID·
• dldate to pla:y in tbe Dee. 7 Puadena
Bowl.
Thompson Dies
Thompson, """ ol lhe briabteSI apeaken on lhe "-ball wtnte c:&cu!~
broke lnto baleball u an tnfltlder. at
lhe ap ol U I« Grand !ILml; Nev.,
In 1133.
In nlnt yta.. In the maJor 1-
-at Brooklyn, New Yott. Plilladelpbla
and Pitlaburgb -be batted .211 Ill·
ID ba bit .a11or Iha Pbllllel.
After eervin1 u mMICW, aoout, field
111pervtaor and dlroc!Gt at minor IMgue
operallona for lhe Dodpn, Tbompooo
became pnenl -and -ins!· dent lut Juoe 4.
He spent IO 7"1'n 'lrilb the Dodgon.
H11 widow Marprel, a daucJ>ter, a
Utu and brother and four sraod<hlJdreo
IU?Ylve.
Rotary wJD be r<dt.d Frld11 111
P'ul1.non, where Thompoon Uved. Re-
quiem hlch mau wW be Saturday mom-
'"' In St. Jullana11 Catbollc Church with
burial In Queen ol lbe Hu"° Ctmetery
• In La Puente.
Haywood, however, wanted to return
to hiJ tMlmetown. He was tnteruted
in the university 's curriculum in radio
and television.
He has excellent speed for a man
hUl site. He has great jumping ability
and agility," exudes Caliban .. "He hu
all the attrlbule!!I of what you find In
a smaller type man."
Haywood will play the pivot pogition,
and bia role will be playm.aker rather
than gunner.
Davis Cup
Play at BBC
Postponed
Injuries to Artllur Ashe and
Clark Graebner of the United
States Davis Cup team have
c a u s e d postponement, per-
haps even cancellation, of the
squad's scheduled appear-
ance. at Balboa Bay Club, the
DAILY PILOT learned today.
Bay Club officials said that
the American Lawn Tennis
Association called off the De-
cember exhibition because
Ashe's physician recommend-
ed that he abstain from
competition prior to the U.S.-
Australia s h o w d o w n next
month for the coveted tennis
prize.
However, BBC sources also
stated that there is a good
chance the event will be re-
scheduled. in January, which
means the area could toast
the team favored to bag the
cup from the Aussies.
Purchasers of tickets for
the December show can hold
on to their ducats until con-
firmation of the January
appearance. Or, they can
sea.rre a refund, Bay Club
officials said.
Coaches Agree
That Barry Is
Much Improved
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two
Americn Basketball A s s o c i a t i o n
coaches, each of whom coached superstar
Rick Barry while he was in the rival
National Basetball AMociation, agree he
ls a much improved ballplayer.
Alex Hannum, who had Barry when
he was rookie of the year at San Fran-
cisco, said; "I'm requiring him to be
more of an all around player than before,t
and Rick enjoys the challenge."
Hannum had just watched the Oakland
Oaks slip by the Loa Angeles Stars,
1..29-lZS, in their first appearMCe of tbe
year at the Sports Arena .
Barry, the ABA 's leading scorer hit
for 3'1 polnta, hauled in six re~
and made 1even assists .
"He'• takini tt on blmsell to give
them whatever they need -shooting
ball handling or rebounding,'' said Stan;
mer_itor Bill Sharman, who COIChed Bany
dunng hi! aoPhomOre le&30ll in San
f'ranclaco, when he led the NBA In
ICOring. "Barry Is playing more of an
all-around game than when he was with the Waniors."
Crawford Honored
UCI'a pmnaslum, formerly called
Campus Hall, bu been renamed Wayne
H. Crawford Hall In honor ol !he lrrina
Campwi' late 1thletic director.
11le name change w a 1 by action of
the faculty Academic: Senate.
Crawford, flrat chairman of the
Physlcal Educttlon Department and
director ol athleUca at Irvine died May
29 UUs year of tuni cancer. ' .
' I
I.
l
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-
Newport Harbor ~ Today's Clos.Ing
A. N.Y. Stocks •
VOL 61, NO. 280, l SECTIONS, 34·,A6ES . -~-
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21\ 1961 TiN CENTS
occ DisfriCt. May Call 27 -cent Tax Increase
By moMAS FORl'IJNE
Ot n. O.llr PllM Stiff
The tu rate for res.ldents of OraQ&e
coast JUnior College District' my
abrupily be incr<Ued 71 c<nta nut
August unl<sl tbe district comel into
some Wllntlcipated money.
Truatees cledded mat by ~""" vote Wedne!day night. allbo\igb board
member John O'Hara Smith ol Corona
del Mar, said he didn't want bil vote
to be considered bindin&-
HopeFa~g
For Miners;
Fires Spread
• MANNINGTON. W. V1. (UPI)' -
Widespread underground fires today
spread daogerOus carbon monoxide
through miles of tunnels Inside a soft
coal mine and above ground. The deadly
gas virtually olimlnated all hope fer
78 trapped miners and forced the evacua-
tion of some of their families from
their homes.
The worsened condlUona In the seven
miles of tWU1els In the Mannington mine
put oU indeilnitely the start of rescue
efforts.
Officials of the ConsolidaUon Coal Co.
assured families of the trapped men
at a "family briefing" that the coinpany
had no intention of sealing the mine's
openings "at thiJ Ume."
Sealing the openings to extinguish the
dangerous fires wou1d mean aban·
donment or all hope any of tbt 71
men were alive. .
A Con.solidation apokeam"an said several
families of the trapped men were
evacuated from their homes near the
Llewellyn and Mo4's run portals because
the thick, black 9mo~e pouring from
the mine openlngs cootamed ,.an "ex-
cessive" amount oC carbon monoxkl~
"Our hopes are dimmed consideratily.
thls morning," William Poundstone, ex·
ecutlve vice president of Consolidation,
wocld's largest soft coal producer, told
newsmen.
Poundstone said fires In the seven
miles of tunnel.! in the Mannington mine
"definitely spread during the night"
follow:ing a fourth major ei:ploslon
Wednesday night
There was no contact wlth the '11
men since the first violent blast trapped
them 700 feet underground be.Jou dawn
Wednesday.
County Planners
Push Artificial
Peninsula Study
In a move to get action on the Orange
County Planning Department's proposed
shoreline facility study, the county plan·
ning commission Wednesday urged the
Board of Supervisors to give the report
serious consideration.
The complex study was unveiled last
month to supervisors. The board took
no act.loo.
The report urges acquisition of beach
areas by the county .u Indicated in
the Master Plan of Shoreline Develop-
ment a n d suggests t b e possibility of
construct.ion of artificial peninsulas lo
help meet the demand for beach froo-
laie.
The 11 recommendaUoos In the ~por1
are: '
-Acquire remalnlng beach are.as u
indicated in the master plan.
-Acquire upland overnight campin&
areas wiUUn view or the ocean.
-Study reuibillty oC constructing
ar1.lficla1 peninsulas to help mee\ the
demand for beach frontage. -Acce~erate city, cowity and private
action lo Cln'J through local agencies
role in scenic highway programa.
-S l u d y feaslblllty ol. protecUve zone.
Ing.
-Deslp IY*lem ol. hikll!l ll'aill l1ons tbe coast.
-~cquin! .,... for '1111 points IDd
wayside ruta.
-ConstnJct l)'llcm ol. rec:reatloo sign-.
~ mum.level partlnc
leclllUes et ~-ol. m.ior
hl&Jnray1 with the -highway.
-Eocourag• llwW• bul syll<Jn.
-Appoint group to detennlne method
ol funding llld wblcll producll d"""•
priority for lnten.ive otudy.
Stodc llf•rfceta
NEW YORK I APl -Th• stock mll'ket
declined In Mavy trading late this af-
ternoon. (See quot.ltlon!, I'll" IS.II).
( ' '
\ .
i-~ ..... -Robert H~ oE Colla M ... , llld Donald
Holl, ol Mld1Jay City. -
"1l>cn lll 'llO ..-'we g.. a IO!id
mojarlty VCllAl•lul time," 111d Hum·
phreys, re!errlni lo the Sept. 17 bond
defeat tbat came an eyelash short of
the two-Ollrdl noedld. .•With lhla mus
support !nm Ille people l'in1Jol lfeslllnt
lo vat.eJor • tu increase."' Said Bolf: "I regard lhla whole pattern
of bond'reJec·tton u : nact1on to ..
unelhlng ~ than tbe performance
ol thta board or district. We rate near
ure top in elllclency oi performance.
"We're obligated to c o n. t l n u e with
our bulld1ng program. Otberwiae, we
will be rated delinquent in our duUes
a year or two beoce."
CA · windfall oil Impound nbai. due
tbe junior college dlllricl.' follow!ng •
ruling by tbe State Supreme Court on
Wednelday, will · be·.Jn the amount ol
IH3,lll, it waa teamed loday. That is
the equivalent of about 11.'2 cents Oil
the tax rate.)
The po&ibillty ol another bon<I election
before August WU strongly suggested
by boa.rd members as an alternative
with less immediate impact on the tax
rate.
A new law &lvin« junior e<>Ueae ~
authority to rat.. the tax rote lo match
state bulldfng al~ funds goes into effect
in August. If trustees do go that route,
as they now apparently have promised
t.o, the lncrease could be as much 11
27 cents over the present rate of 57
cents, foe a total of M ct:Dta per $100
of uaewd valuaUon.
Twenty-seven centa is the estimated
amount needed to raise $2.4 million to
fund the unfunded porUon of a planned
lU mllUou bu114iJ111 progam for.-yw.
Of the '9.5 million for building on
the Orange Coast and Golden West cam·
puses, $5.3 milllon would come from
state and federal ....... providing the
district ""1 put up fU mlllioo ol. U.
own money,
It was a atate rundlng dea.trne that
forced . trustees • to make a decisloa
Wednesday night.
The governing board or the state junior
eoll-uked !tr a 'llalement by Dec.
I that tbe district either 1181 llllfflclent
matching money (wliidl Orange Coast
doesn't) or is wllllng to .get It by a
(SOe TAX BIKE, P11e I)
Route Up Air
New Look at Newport Freeway OK'd
SMOKE MARKS SCENE OF MINE FIRE
Dffth DoWn Below In w .. 1 Vlrgln]e
UC Regents to. Hear Fund
Request of $341 Million
University of California.Regents Friday
will be asked to approve a $341 million UC
operations budget request Including 123
nllllion for the IrVine campa.s.
The reqtiest presented by University
President Otarles Hitch asks for a $50
million increase in state supPort for all
nine UC campu.!les and · $6 million more
than this year's budget far UCI.
The requested UCI Increase is better
than 25 percent.
Included, says UCI Chancellor Roger
RllMell, is a request for 72.5 new faculty
members. It is written 71.5 professors,
but seven already are teaching on cam-
pus as an adv1µ1ce against neJ.t year,
be said.
Action by rtg~ta, meeting at UC San
Diego Friday may not CUT)' much
weight. •
so low lhat more money will be needed
in coming years to catch up.
"Last year," Russell said In a reeent
report to the UCI Academic Senate, "the
legislature worked very hard on the
budget for three months , then Reagan
reduced it to less than be himself bad
proposed earlier in the year."
A year ago UC Irvine requested 100
new professors, saw the request cut to
42 by the statewi~ ·UC administration,
then reduced lo nine by the governor, but
eventually go 17.·
Also included in this year's UCI budg-
et requests are provisions for 1,137 more
!uUlime students; mOving the California
College ol Mellldne to lrvlne : compu·
ters : _ library development and extra
funds for <he campus' rapid i)'<JWlli.
By JEROME F. COLIJNS
Of IM DllW '*' Sl•ff
SANTA MARIA· -For the fli'sl time
in 2-t years, the adopted route of the
Newport Freeway as it cuts its way
through the ltarboJ' Area toward the
sea is oow uncertaln.
The California Highway Commission,
meeting in thla "neutral" mijlstate com·
mtll'Jty, today unanimously ordered
reopening of the route question.
Dates for public hearings will be an-
Calm Waters
Await Race
To Mazatlan
By AIMON LOCKABEY
---11olit1nT~ -
A ya"1tlor marine parkin( lot w rt h
air u flat u milk on a platter ewaited
the 49 boats in the l,~mlle Loi Angeles
to Maz.aUan yacht race Wednesdly n.ight.
"The honeymoon is ·over" was the
cliche that spreatl over tht ·martne
airways during the day Wednesday aa
2 to 4 knot breezes barely kept tbe
race fieet moving. ·
Hurt ltte worst were the front~rs
who were nearer cabo Falso at the
Up of Baja California. The lighter Aini
allowed the class D entrles, who still
bad wind astern, to move up into haJt.
dk:ap contention.
But despite the deteriorating. weather,
Don Haskell 's 67-foot yawl Cbubasco
from Newport Harbor Yacht Club, and
George William O'Brien's 19-foot ketch
Mir from Royal Vancouver Yacht Club
continued their bitter boal-for·boal battle
at the head of the fleet.
CllUBASCO LEADS
Chubasco wu enjoying a four-mile
lead over Mir for the first tirhe in
two days. Her pos!Uon at U degrees
and 40 minuleJI north laUtude placed
90me 200 mUea from the cape, Mir 's
latitude was U:'4.. Both yachts were
sailing on the rtRlmbline off Magdalena
Bay.
The rest of the O~t wu concentrated
of! Cape San Lazaro some 20-40 miles
astern. Many reported sa.illng in aigbt
of each other throughout the day;·
The prospects for improved weather
were not encouraging. For Ulose who
got around the cape -if any -the
forecasts ror today were for N·NW wind.1
from ; to 4 knots. I
The Class D boats coming up from
astern Wednesday lltlll had enough wind
to move tM:m Into the handicap lead.
Tied for first were Herbert Afltm'a K-tl
(Seo MAZATLAN, Pqe ll Oo 'l\Jilday, the Reac111 adininlstr•
lion's finance director, ca.par Weinberg-
er, said UC. llld lllte. college budgeta
will be lnc:ttaa<d · fram I h I I yell''I ._ms onl:/-19 D)eel-enrollmenta
-wi~.ng ~~· · Japan •Invasion~· ~The ~ lo~ ol tbe •gen-
d .. will· be·l<i<l ·thaft·ttieT· .. -ted,"
Weinberger said In 5acramento.
UnlV!rsity and .coilege offlclal1 have
said their past/two annual budgets were PUines for Film Fly Over .Co(Ut
CdM Woma_n Dies
Mter Car Crash •
A CQrooo • cit! Mir 'IJOllllD Who WU
fomid ~ in her car In tho
Upper N....,.rt 11'1 ll'il lut Friday
died Wednetdly et tho Orange County
Medical Ceater.
Mlt. BellT B. Wlmina, e, of 410
~Ave., did not ,npln ...,.
~ during h e r fivediy 1117 11 themtedlcal..,tar. t
She• WIO cliOco..nocf ll<1ne In her Cir
by poHee 1t £.itbiuff and B 1 c k Illy
drives. O!flctn aald tbe "'' had e<>llldt!d with 1 tttt. It was J)ll'ked at the aide
ol the road.
A cwoner's autopsy Wednelday revtal·
ed that Mn. Wlmpr<a had ,111!fered
• !trolre. oe.!11 -!ram pnllWMllio.
JUI! II day1 lbort ol tbe 28th an-• . nlyerwy GI the 1tlack on Pearl Barbo(,
Ja-Zero ltgbtm marked with tho • blood-n>tl rlllng IW1 emblem art •lain
n•g over 1 U.S. military base.
In Oranii• County yet -near l<iSW"e
World Laguna Hilll, wber< there may
Wll"J Wen lit Mlre<ta who ....,...ber
Doc. 7, !ti!, because they w.... there
mannln& the virtually n o n · e x l N e n t
defenae systom: ·
Jmed eounlia!IJ thla "'"' bqan mat· bl( nportl that J1paneoe Zeroea wore -""'I into El Toro Marine Corpl Afr
Sl.ltioe and even flndin& thn. ·
Tiiey are in • ....., bue olllcWI
ldmlL
A aquldron ol. 31 U.S. Navy SNJ
aircraft .,. beln1 pre)>ar<d !or teal
l!Jghta be(llnnlni Moodoy, followlni
rtnoVaUi>n at 'Loni Beach Airport for
their role in an upcomina movie.
"Tora, Tara, Tora,'' Is the name of
•
the picture, which will be a historical
accowit of the Japanete attack on Pearl
Harl'lr, t18ln1 U.S. Novy pllota with
aovemment cooperaUon.
The llOth Centw'J' Fox production will
be filmed on locaUon llld chapcet are
1ood that all pirlOllMl at Pearl Harbor
wUi be ,.peotedly forew&rl\Od ol. ;i,.
upconq prod ... lon. •• •
• C.pl. C. C. Waiklnl, USN, , llld Uil
project Will let under WI)' wlth !ell
fili!llta llld combat practice In tho
r<modeied f.erM, alter wblch Ille)' "'11
be flown to North llllnd Naval Afr
Slatlon, Sin Delp, once there, thoy will be looded lbOenl
t h e ll(crtoll curler USS Y O(klown, to
be (~ to tbe .place w)le(e America
-llnnlY committed to parlldpe,. tioe in the oecond Vlorld Wll'.
Tho YorltlOwn u \<ell u . Ill caqo
of ~toil• ...-Iler· .UW-, wUI hove
a movie roie, ihat ol a J lp&MM l1rtnlt
carrier, ICCIJfdin& to ltudio o!Ddala.
nounctd later by the Divis.ion of
Highways.
Delegations from Newport Beach and
Coate Mesa asked for reconsideration
of the adopt.eel route, now superimposed
over Newport Boulevard from Cotta
Mesa's Bay Avenue to the Arches
overpaas in Newport.
They said they wanted it fart.her west.
Highway cornmissioners acted after
hearing no more than 10 minutes of
tesUmony, none of it from staff engineers
Wilson on TV
and all of it favoring new hearings.
Alexander Pope, commissioner frum
Los Angeles, said be wu "impressed
with the unanimity" of Harbw' Area
repreaentatives on the ialu.e.
Newport Mayor Doreen Marshall
teallfied for her city. Sbe pointed out
that Newport and Costa Mesa recently
adopted resoluUooa favi.oring new atudlea
on the alignment, whiCn wa1 established
(See FREEWAY, P11e I)
Mexico Won't Comment
On Buy Baja Proposal
---,..-~-
By Al/Diii& L VlN.ll£L
Of .... o.ttJ ,. "'" Mei:ican sources today literally did
the Wilton 1 Two-Step or offered sour
No-Cominenta when contacted about the
,,Cosl¥ ,Meaia. (Vice mayor's monumental
prvpo1tD1<fbiJ1'Baja Calilorn!a.
ReaeUon to a resoJuUon passed by
Ille ' City COUncll Monday and malled
to Was~ TbursdaY night, seeking
congressiona] .conalderatlon of the land
.buy, was ratber. llmJted among Mexican
offlc11Ja. .
A, travel &gent, however, predicted.
thit the Republic of Mexico won't be
eager to enter any auch real eatate
deal and may never even allow a decent
road to be build down the peninsula.
Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson went
on Southland television Thur!day night,
explaining to viewers that his proposal
to try to Mgotiate a purehase ii serlOU!,
&int:ere and possible.
Not many Mexicans agree, eltfier from
the emoUonaJ and conati.tuUonal stand-
point.
Mexit:an Consul Genera)· R a o u 1
Gonzales Gallana could not be reached
for cmrutmlt at biJ Los Ana:eles office,
&ince be wu in a meeting.
"He is a very busy man, Senor,"
said a secretary.
Rolando E. Torres, director of the
Los Angeles office, MexiCan Government
Tourism Department, refused to com-
ment, but his chuckle was dlsUnctly
unencouraging.
0 No, J did not beard of lt, Senor,"
giggled a recepUonisl when the Wllaon
proposal was outllned.
TALK TO WIFE
"You'll have to talk to my wile,"
commented Jack Loftin, whose wife,
Gra~ Lo!Un, edit& and publlabea Mex-
ico'• Well Coul Magazine In Los
~,:1':.;;d Mri LolUn ta In Muico
today.
"God DO," declared Al Zapanta, own-
er of the Mexican Big Game Flshlng
Toon, "It would be Iiil:e ielllilg I 110 I'd
mine.''
,.That's virgin territory with endle.ss
fishing and hunllilg poulbllltleat'' l'le e.x·
plained, aayil)I the M•~n aovenunent
!Ikea Baja's lncoml"i to.all!· dollars loo
well. ·
"I don'I think they're evor aoln& lo ••ll
~ .. -r -.,
i1 if I know my countrymen,'' be aakL
Zapanta even hinted lhat thi Mes.lean
government may never accontplilb -
purposely -the engineering le•t ol 1'111>-
ning a modern highway doWn 'tne Lmrer
CallfMnta peninsula to opei,· U f0r wy
toorlsm. .
Years of effort have produced a .fS.
mile freeway from Tijuana lo Ensenada,
with a 35-mlle slrip of roadway from La
Paz north, but now abandoned and dot-
ted with rusUng constn\Cllon equlpmerit,
Zapanta pointed QUt.
Reaction on this side of the borda" 1s a
bit better, with a postcard todaf frbm an
Anaheim resident who gave hil name
only aS ,.Ir. Daugherty, and enthusiasm
from a television newsman Wednesday.
"Good for you, Baja bll.! been a plpe-
dream of mine ever since l came to CaJ.
ilomia in 19'l0," Daugherty •wrote 'On a
postcard, iWng 2s and 4s for tbe terms
to and four.
Wilson said -following hlS tele..islon
Interview with ColSta Mesa Civic Center
as a backdrop -that a tel1viskln news-
tna11-even suggested a paclaige purcb&le
(See BA.IA BUY, P11e I)
Tustin Man Held
For Grand· Theft
A Tustin man wu arrested early tbls
rooming al his bome by Newport Beach
police in eonnectl<tn with 1 131111 thelt
from tbe Balboa Illy Clll'b.
Gary Lee Breshean, 20, of 15110
Pasadena St., was booked on cbar&ea
of grand the!~ police aaJd.
The Bay mob employee wu arrested
following a repcrt from th• yacht club
ol 1tbellat11:15 P·Dlt Wedneldly.
weat11~
Thal Chamber of Commerce
weather will be bact with us Fri-
day -ounny ll;la with temper•·
lures l'IJlllnt' from JC aiOlll tho
lllore' to IO IUrther inland. ,
INSIDE TODAX
There. "!Ill °"' at HiSuf~ ·
Porl rid -.. • pl.,h nm<h m Tnm. WUI lllc _.
•5.,,..,.,. l\')lltt H-k °" o
t...h lsl4nd off llfoml _,.1
Pogt 10,, . = .J g::..,. : --. ..............
.... ,fill• •• " ...... ..,
''"' c. ,
--1• ··"" u... ,, ... -. --'
-.~ --.. --' ... .. !!!!!! -,,. -~:: =--·= -. --. ........
•
.l -
I
'
. I DAI\. y Pll.DT T1!uftdlr, -n , 1'161
Street Work
Holds U
Cabe TV
A city atmt repaving proJecl ad
state red tape hlYfl clUltd « two-month
.. tback In the acbedule of Newport Beach
Clblevlaion Inc.
Compan' ofilclalll now aay that the
earllest the cable televlaion l)'ltem may
start operations II Dec. 5. tt will aerve
aubeo:lbers In the Newport Height.I area
at first.
The fl.Z million iroJ'4:t wW eventually
provide 20 channels of clear black and
white or color receptlcm to Newport
Beach IUbacribera everywhere but on
1n'lne Company lealed lands .
• f~ tho~,,-'8JO ·-and a fl& lnatliffa\IOii charge.
•
'
Jaek~in~Box 'Boxed Vp l'rolll Pqe l
FREEWAY •..
Originally the !inn bad predicted
eecvlce would begin Nov. 1 fir Bayaboru customers.
'Ibey are now awaiting permlalon
from the Sacramento office of the Stall
Department of hlghw1ys to nm a parallel
coo.du1t down W. Coast Hlgh:wq to
Bayshore. ~By City for ·2 Weeks "At that time," she aald, 1'lbert weri
no PQbllc bearings and the planning
concept was aµnply to upgrade an ex~
!st!Jis ' llate routt to freeWQ' standards.
Slri<o 'the!i. . Newpilrl Boulevltd bas
developed Into a blglteapoclty lll<-lane
dlVlded · ari.oo· -· wblcll la novr
the prlnclpal traffic linl: between oor
two cities."
The state only recently gave the com-
pany approval to c:ross N e w po r t
Boulevard with their coaxial cables. :
'!be lid baa been clooed on a proposed
Jewpart Beach Jack-ln-the-Bos: for at
J.east two more weeb.
'!be Item, acheduled fer public bearing
and octlon at looiibl'• a p.m. meeting of
the city P1amdng Commission waa re-
moved from the agenda at the applicant'•
~ Plamllng Director Daren Groth
noted the applicant, Foodmaker, Inc., re-
quested the delay until Dec. 5 to revl8e
and complete plans for the "drive-thru"
eatery.
Hard of Hearing
Students . Getting
' More Attention
Parents of hard of bearing studalll
w h o protested last year when children
were put on doable sessions are thankful
now for the attention the children are
getting. .
Mn. llan>ld 1.akln, preoldeot </
Newport-Meaa Hard of Hearing Pormll
Gullet. aald the school program thls year
aulta the parents fine.
Twenty-nine bard of bearing studenla,
wbo c:omo not only from Newport 'Beach
and OOltl. Mesa, but allo from Hun-
' tlJiglm Beach. La«m>a Beach, Santi Ana,
, FO<llltaln Valley and Tustin. ore tsugbt
at WU-School In -111-. Tllll WI tlley are llugbl by five
-. .. -of two, and three full-lime, paid teacher aldea In four
classrooms, one more than Iast year.
'J..'wo of the classrootn!I have been
carpeted, Important to bard of bearing
yOWlgllenl who bear only the loodeat
ooiae, Mn. Lakin aald. A cba1r squeaking
or a foot miming can drowD out the
leacber'• voice, Ille remarked.
Lut yeor on apec1a1 educattoa c1wea
fer plzyllcally and m<11tollJ bandietpped
students In the Nowpcrt l\fea Dtalrlct
..... put Oil --. ball-day -··· to get double uae from the claunloms.
'!be Hard of Hearing Parents Guild
objected and apeciaJ tutoring was ar-
ranged by the achool diatrict which gave
the students with bearing difflcu1Ue1 ex-
tra teacher attention part of the aborten·
cd acbool day.
Thief Gets Stereo,
.And Attached Car
The theft of another car stereo was
r<pOried Wednesday lo Newport Beach police.
Only this Ume, the Volkswqen of
Bruce E. Herigstad, 19131 Woodward
Lane, HUDUngton Beach, was attached
lo the steno let"'JI.
The Ihle! took the car, too.
DAILY PILOT
OIUHGI COAST PUILISHINO COM,.Ntt
l•Mrl N. W1H ,,..... .... ,....,.
J1d: "· C.,.ty
';'kl,.,....... .. 0..11 ~
n ••• , i...se ·-n •••• A. .... ,..i.. -·""' J.,..,... F. c.lli111 Pnl Nl11•1t .......,, .... Mvlnlt'"'
CIWlllMlr Dini• ---2lll w ......... l11!1Y•r•
M•il'-t ~P.O. a.. 1171. tl&•l --c..... ... t -""" .., lll'1itt ..._...., • ...,_A_
............. i --"""'
.. =-~ ... ~ ... ,; =.=-..t---.::. --·-----~ .... ~ ._. Cilltt -. IMIMlw ..... _._ v.-... 'lllal ...... ......... ,....... ....... °"""' QM ,.,,, .... ~.,.... .... -.. ...................... ...., .. ............. o.u ....
.::;'; ... ·~:~ ~ ..,. I
C..:s• -OrW a..t ~ .. -...... ,= ...W _. • •••1'1Ka•b _,. , ................ ,,.. ...... • 4llll"fllit .... . ....,, c• ........ •I ,,,.....,. ... we:...-...~•..,.••"' --.... ......,, .. Miii ......... , ~ J ...... JS ..... .
The request waa to build one of the
restaurants at 2000 W. Balboa Blvd.
Four otbec lleml were olao dropped
from the commllllon'• 10.ltan ogenda.
John Martiii Shea, Inc., aod the 1n'lne
Company have delayed until Dec. 5 their
requeata to build a car wash In Newport
C..ter.
Fotomat Corp., bas delayed until Dtc.
5 their request to build a drive-through
film aales and procesalng busln.., at
4601 E. Coast Hl&bway.
A request by Dr. James Rieb lo build
a small anlma1 boepflal eoalh of San
Miguel! on the weal -of Avocado In
Newport C..ter bas been continued fer
so day1.
'!be plannen, however, will still grap-
ple with a pro~ parl:lng amendmenL
Continued opposition to teetiCIUI of it
from the Corona de! Mac Chamber of ·
Commerct and f<n11er Councllman Dee
Coot Ill eipected.
The law would require that one parting
space for every 250 square feet of Door
space or every three tables be proflded
by men:bants who mnodel tbelr bulJd.
lngs lo more thao 10 pereent of tbelt
marlttt value.
Rom and Coll, Inc., wm appear before
the commislon for the third time with a
request to build a three-story apartment
building at Lafayette aod IJdo Park
Drive oo Udo Peninsula.
Puking rpace woes have beset the or4
ganluUon plannlng the 4<I studio and one-
b:edroom unJt apartment and 11 alip ma4
I Rna. •!! JI •t;l 1o1,; '"'· lffl
E'rom Page 1
MAZATLAN. ••
Nepenthe from Del Rey Yacht Club,
and Hugh Rogers cahlOI, Wb1maey n,
Loi Angeles Yacht Club. Don Barl>er's
L-40 Damante, LAYC, was tbirdi W.
W. Sulllvan'1 K-4<1 l\laurlce J, LAYC;
and Sid Rookow'1 cahl6 Slgame Dl\YC
were tied for foufth and Rolfe Crocker's
~ Ano Nuevo, Marin YC, wu mtb.o
BOATS IN ERROR
She aald pmervalioo or thls 11111Jor
local arterial "ls 1· matter of great
c:oncem to the eotlre Harbor Area."
Mrs. Marshall noted that Newport
would prefer that the new alignment
be along Superior . Avenue 1n Newport.
Costa Mesa tw not yet taken a position
on a ~ routing.
Mn. l\lanball u!ed acme population ·atau.uc. to undencore the need for a
fT'Olh loolc at lhe adopted routing of tile
freeway'• aoutbern term.lnua. She said
in 19« the area had about %.0,000 real-
dents. Today there are 120,000. The 1985
projection )a 300,000.
"il we are to acoommodate the r~
sulthu!: traffic demands it wW be neces-
aary Io develop a total street plamlng
concept'.," she said. "We're convinced
that both a ~south freeway and
Newport Boulevard will be required." :
ll<pre1enllng Costa Meaa wu City
Attorney Roy June. All be aald "'-' tllat
bi8 city did not object to new bearings.
Downtown Coll:& Mesa businessman
Robert wn111mson was more voauble-
a~ enthuJutic-about a new freeway <oute.
Saying be spoke for the Costa Mesa
Tomorrow ~P•. he strongly recom-
mended maintalning Newport· Boulevard
as a local arterial roadwa:.i"lt is the only major one that goes Costa
Mma in a ncrtb-touth dir on " he aald. '
""-ay routing shoofcl"il!filoresenl-day Deeds," Wll11imlon said: 1'A new
llignm<0t would provide gruter user
benellla aod less dlllruptlon to the city ol Costa Mesa."
Fr«! Jennings, commissioner from
Riverside, moved i•to approve the rec-
ommendaUon for reopen1flg" route hear-
ings. It carried wilbou~ lurthec dlscus-•lnn. 7 lo 0.
Costa Meaa city councilman WllUam
St. Clair then thaoked the colmnl&slon for Ila nillog.
DlJneyland Ambassador .tor 1968, Sally Sberbln {left) hugs her suc-
ces90r, Shari Bescos, 21, of Covina, after Miss Bescos was chosen for
job Wednesday from among prettiest girls working at famed amuse-
ment park .. A ticket seller at Disneyland for three years, Miss Bescos
will now reign "" park's 1969 ambassador to the wqrl.d. ;
190 High School Grads
Get Jump on '69 Class
Pennlsslon to graduate a semester
early was given 190 Harbor Area high
acbool studenla Tueaday night by tile
Newport-Mesa scbonl board.
From Page 1
BAJA BUY ...
• The approved January graduates have
attendei:l summer sessions ao tbey will
complete blgb ocbool graduallon requlre-
menta in three and one-ball years.
All but about 30· of the 180 are plan-
ning to continue ln acbool. Molt will go
to college and the others to vocaUonal
schools. such as beauty college.
Reasons given by the rest of the stu·
dents for wanting· to graduate early tn-glving Arizona a aeaport. 1 , Much local aupport bas beeo generated c ude to wnit;io get morrled, to go Into
for W'Jlson'• ~11' .. m"IW,llfJt~ :1a~ ...-vice, arid to move to another
fomia the Slat state Md"devel0jfl£ with ·
American capU.al, although there ls some "Tbe 190 this year is the most we•ve
dissent. ·had," 18..id Dale Woolley, in charge o!
"I wish I ~Id come up with ideas like high school student services.
that, but I have to have men around me He explained, "There Ls a trend toward
to help," said a banking official, proml· .giving students more freedom in plan-nent 1n community affairs. Perennial City Council ca.'ldidate Ted nfng their program and more courses c. Bologh, however, suggested Costa now are offered in the summer. It waSll't
Mesa has more pressing problems to too many years ago Jt just wasn't poss.i.
be band.led than t'aking a hand in foreign hie for students to graduate early."
policy. It takes three swnmu ses,,IOM to equal
"My supporters and I hope that, with a semester's work, WooUey said.
this, the Mexicans will get city char· A greater number of the prospective
ten:," said Bologh, who is a strong early graduates are from Costa Me.sa-
bellever 1n charterlsm rather than gen-68 r r o m Costa Mesa High and 56 from
eral law for municipalities. Estancia High, only S4 from Corona def
Frank Herman, manager of Newport
CableVislon, noted that another delay
occurred when c"ble-laying" crews had
to be tali:en from their planned areaa
of wort to lay clble in certain places
befc::re Newport llreeta we.re resurfaced.
"Understandably, they don't want us
digging up a newly paved street, •t
Jferman said. .
Cable crews are presenUy Working
in Dover3 Shores tract.
"Right now they're working on Anllgua
411d Santiago," he said.
He explained that it takes only 48
·hours to lay the cable in any one JocatiOJL
One day lo dig the trench. lay the
line, and fill It with dirt. '!be next
day, the trench ls paved over.
Herman noted that crew1 will be laying
about 2,000 feet 1 day rar some time
in an area bounded by Newport
Boulevard, Coast Highway, the bay, and
Palisades RQad.
Cablevision has now moved in its new
studio at 2624 W. Coast lilgbway.
Residents Asked
To Give Marines
Holiday Dinner
Operation Thanbglvlng will aee a
~eery task force of Marines moving
into Orange Coast homes in a succulent
coup. · ·
Tbe temporary takeover, however, will
need all the help It can muster from: area
residents. J
Commanded by the IntttfaiUr Service
Center of San Clemente, the goal ill
bring 3,000 Marines to home, hearth and
turkey on America's tradiUonal d a Y.
of giving thanks.
Last year the center found Thanksgiv-
ing homes for about 1,500 aervlcemtn.
'Ibis year the logistica are doubled.
Mrs. William Plowden, one of the Of4
ganizers, said residents have been asked
to take home a minimum of two boys.
Some have already tlllked for sil b u t
more hosts are needed., many more.
Dlvillon of lllg!twa71' Dlstrlct 7 en-
glnoen In Loi Angele1 Ile upected lo
set date1 for public hearlngs--llien! 11111y
be one, there may be more-very short·
ly, a state aide aald.
It wu evident from reported sightin~ The aession1 wlll be held somewhere
that several or the boats were •lla:h to the Harbor Area, with Newport Har-
in error on their navigaUon. Her bor ~ Sc.hool'• auditorium the best
"If Mr. Wilson will just do some nice Mar High and 32 from Newport Harbor thi~s for Costa Mesa like helping get High.
sidewalks over on the ea1t side,"· Bolo$h· , To' graduate lg Jan.uary the students
continued, "we will be happy for him to will have to Khleve .... -i .... '"adeJ!I in
Invitations mty be extended by call-
ing the center, 492-1814; Mrs. Plowden at
499-2128; Mrs. Kenneth Bloom, 495-5248;
Mrs. George Wenzel, 499-1460; or Mrs.
Charles Patterson, 499-1547. Jobnaob's Columbia-SO Vector, for In-l>eL Tbi8 ls becluse the acboo1 .ervea
stance reported ~ aloaplde John ' both Newport and Costa Maa Ind Ill become territorial governor,., Y-'""''S e•
Noble'• ColwnbiHO s-, the .C!aas right on the commoo city border. "II be does tllese lhiogs for Costa r:equlred subj«ts being taken 'this fall.
M I'll 1 ..i ..... f ,.,.nina him In another action, Newport-Mesa board N" G' R I esa, even apo o•-°' -:--. mem'-dee'·-'-' lour adul'· ~adua'-IXOD ives ep Y B le.Ider. for mo.l of the day. Slmoon'1
poaltioa report placed bee 1J miles abad
of Vectoc. Veclo< aald Robon IIl, Novi&
de! Mar, Caprldoul and Cyglllll .._
all within sight. •
Here are the clasl standlnp with
mileq:es C01Tected to the rbumbllne:
CLASS A -(I) Cbubaaco, 638; (I)
1Wcal, Bill Wlllon, SBYC, W; (3)
Westward, Willard Bell, LAYC, 612.
CLASS B -(I) Slmoon, 139; (I)
Roboo ill, Robert Grant, NHYC, 634;
(3) Ue between Intermezzo, John HID,
NHYC, and Flare. Aroold Feuenteln,
DRYC, 13%.
CLASS C -(I) Vivan~ Mort Hasall,
ABYC, 139 (2) Tangent, Sam Holland,
CBYC, 638 (3) Typee, IJewellyn Baby
Jr., LA YC, rm.
CLASS D -(I) Tie bet ..... Nepenthe
aod Wblmaey, 658; (2) Damante, Doaald
Barber, LAYC, 658; (4) tie betw-
Maurice J and Slgame, 1152.
2nd . Death · Plot
.a .RJ'lma dolma. befon!t.'" .Bologb. said. 1,,1'1;;11!1 uua.i .., e-~ '!be· tmftorlal govemorsblp be men-of tile llC!iool district tbrouih the adult PARIS (UPI)· -rr..tdent-<lect
t1oned grew· out of. a .JOte wbJch back· educa.Uon program at Onnge C6ut CoJ.. Richard M. Ni:J:on has assured President
1Jrod·-.a g•g ,...;foUon by attorney lege, Charf'e. de Gaulle that bta admin!llraUnn
.Sellm IL F<anklln pn>poefng Wilson ., Thay are WIDlam . Groen, ·Devon Lee will do "everything in Ito power" oo Suspect Released ~a cblel of !late got krtO circ\ilalion Hart, Mn .. Jou Robuck 111<1 l\llchad J. tllst lriendahlp between their two naUons Monday. . Slevenaon. · can ci>nttjbtite to world peace.
! NEW YORK (QPI) _ A $25,000 bond '1jp-iiii;i,.i;o;,.;;;;; .... iiii""ii;;iil;,..iii,,.;<:""."'"-jjijii[,..jijjij.,.ijii,,.iijijj.,.ij,.iiii,..;oii,..;o:.,.iiiii,.iiji.,.ii:•iiiiii•iiii•i111;iii;•iiii•iiiiMii.,.;;;~ ... iii--~ii;iii;~ ... iii ... i...,~ ... ~-Oiiiiiiiiii11
wu pooled In B<noklyn Supreme Court
today securing the release from Rlkers 'lll,i JI. J Qc p, ~ Ialand Ptlllon of lf.)'Hl'-ola Abdo Ahman I ~ ~ ' ~ • N;:r;...,, man. bis f1tller and older -.: • • Ul'l'ell -rejenl:f . • ~.
brother a11 · have been IJ)dided for coo--.
llPlrin& to asn,ulnate ' President-elect ••
Richard M. Nixon.
The bond first WM posted 'Wednesday,
but the 'diatrlct attorney's offlce e1er-.
ctaed Ila right lo delay flllng of the bond
pending an IJ\ve1tlgatlon of thooe who
offered the leCUrity or collateral to t h e
bonding compaoy.
.
a very special purchase from a
famous quality maker of ·
FreM Pagel GENUINE LEATHER CHAIRS
TAX HIKE ••.
tu lncreaae. '!be -lll i-'ed
00 I request CID be flled for lnclulJoo
In Gov. Reagan'• budget, the com-
munique aald.
"'Jben theJ woulitt't accept our .. ying
we plan to pus a bond issue," Truitee
William Kettler, of Huntingloll Beach.
coocluded ft!uctantly.
"There'• DO reUJD wbf we lbauldn't
at this stage, on ptpec, WI llio stale
we're commlUlnc to the whole program.''
Humphreys aid. .
"We 11111 '""'1d have the option of
cultlng out pot\ of the ~ at • llilr' date,.. uJd Sm11b bOpefUUJ. "In
JOlllf opllllGn u an allornq ,.. '""'1d
--bl lrnt•OCiibl:J comm I t t I 1 I ounelvaT" be ulle<l ll\rmplnJL
'Tm not the """"1 COlllllOI,. aald ..... ., ..
00C lluperioteident Ncrman Wat.I
uld: "I tlilnk NllJ pntlemeo, In all
.me.lb'. you are committing
,.....i ..... ba aald. "In the event ,..
daa'l llnd the -you .,. promlalng
to loc:reue the tu."
Holl Aid be WOllld llke the board
to "tab note of the state colle&es closing
tbelr doora 111<1 kJckln& students ouc
way, wblcll 111 not In our planning."
.. We ltll1 can float a bood luue,"
aald Smltb. "We did not have lhll tu
W:reue blactmaD before, lf you want
to calJ tt th&"~
JI WU o0t ~ Whether the
board wfD llVl""'461 • dlOlce between
a bond lllue wflh a amal1 tu Increase IJlfeid ovtr mllO' ,ara and 1 IUdden,
one-year ta hlD'
Wataoo aald alla' the .-Ing 1l Ill
no1 llkal1 lhe bwd wm dllcua another
-electJoa uaW iltar Iba Newport-
Meaa --Feb. IL Be alao aald proopocla are prd\l' hl&h
that flew•""' ~'a admlnlatratlon
wfD -aal pot\ of the ~ building projects, u.r.111 roduclnC the
dlltrlct'1 IU i-' for matd11n( ....., •
Acreed Hwnl'in71. "The lllall may
mal<a a Joi of prtorUy d-for .....
'
A 6lfT JO 'llWURf AllD ENJOY FOR . YURS
• Custom quallty lbrough-oot e
Luxurlou:s cushioning • Your
choice of colon from an exta.dve
solecilon ol flneot leather texture..
~··from $199
PROFES~~~.GARRflT fURNflll~~M~. CALIF .
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 2216 HARBOR Bl VD.
-...... -.... ""': 6-46-0275 646-0276 -
I
•
DAIL y PILOT I J
Senate Liberal* Aitaek Filihnsier
' Prospect fQr Success Seem Dim Despite Ekction ·
W.\SIUNGTON (UPI) -
Senate Ubenll, lhdr ranks
thinned by the NovOIDMr eJeo.
tioo, are planning -.,.. tifillboJter rulol fla\d when
tbe 91'1 CoocroA -In January. .
Pros~ for """""' ....,_
ed dim, but the -..le Clllld
give strong cluel lo lbe abrpe
of tbe Senate for tbe nm
two yeaft.
Sen. WllllaJo Promllre (I).
The belt tbe Ubanll could
hope for, ......uni lo Jmil· min, waa a ..., dolln rule
nqulrlnl a --volt, • ntber thin i-llllrdl, lo tbut
"" debale. But tvm that Nemed out
of ~. batrlnC ..,._ted --'1116 Jul . -lllilUNaW ballle. In lte'T,. pr ..
duce<! a SHI voi. In favor ot ~~ debate .. tbe
rulol i:banp -IS lhorl of
tbe two-thirdl -lo slop
opponentl -llllbUllerinC tbe antifl!lb<t~ ~· 'JlriuCh relhm<nll. clealhl
and -deleall, 14 al tbe II oenaton 'w!to ,,..
1', -•n volad lo change 1)11! jllltlce. tendad lo ~ the ol<J
nilel and Mvtn voted acalnat Somt ol thole, Ute Sena. c o n 1 e rvatlve ~Rep&bllcan-
1!. . Rol>ert-OrUlln, (~and Soulllent ---'ll>elr .....,_., llberall Hiram tq. ( R-H a w a I I ) In Iha s.nate, aad ltberall f
balltve, wtll not mate that ml&bt feel uncomlcnable op. may be hard-preued In !be ·
much dllferenca In Jamwy'• ~ tbe rulOI that aerved 91'1 eao.,... lo lead off ,
vote. A net losa of ooe or · them, parlicularly II Uberall aaoaulte !18alnll I o c la f , ' 1 ·
two votes for cloture II es:. triei1 to I.Lie Fortu 11 the welfare, :.:.lucatloo. and civil \
peeled._ TbALwould allU leave flreb\'and II> ar&Wn& qalnst rlghle·Pl'11fama enacted .-
a majority on record levoring tbe filibuster. the lul el,iht yom.
c:hange, although It would be But Prmntre aa1d be saw ApiH:uprJaUD for 1 u c b
tt or 15 votee abort. of the no ruScn aQYOne sboWd feel mUestont bUlJ 11 model cltlel1 two-thirds requirement to stop lncomlltent in uaina the -rents supplement.a, the war
debate. fllibusl<r becaUM tbey OJ> on poverty and medlcal aid
What is worrying some r-t U on prlnclple. • for tll" ooo lndllent -
r
Looking for a Car . 9£ Distmction?
,, " ••
•
Wis.), saya a bipartisan coall·
tloo which bu preaed for
a rules change In ,,..i yun
has yet to DllP strategy for ·
tbe 1969 battle. But ba ls
certain • ..-lulloo could be
offered to make lt easier lo
invoke cJ,oture.
around for tbe 111'1 ~ llclll
will not ba ill ta ll! Iha
liberils more than the new "It's like football,'' be &aid. (Medlcald) alwa11 have paa-
memberl Is the pos!Uon of "Just because you ,.11111 to ed by a thin margin. llelay
Repol>Uc•n moderates who abollsh the forward pus ls taclica may be ....,..ry DOii
toot part in last year's no reaaon not to use 1t if year l.u Ill.op conaervatJva
fl!-er aplnot tbe oomina· H's legal In fact. from Ulldolng the -t oocte-''-------------------------' tloo ot Abe Fortas as chief The November election 17, . .
Less Than Dream (A,me ·Trae
'Instant Rehab' Apartment:Project. Goes Bust
NEW YORK . (AP) -An tenement dwelllnP ln\o ·w proved to be 1 ... than. be ~ dlfflallt." On !07th Slree~ dlllerent
"instilnt rehabilitation" pro-pref a.b r 1 cat e cf dream ~~come true. ''You don't expect your first maten.11 Will be u 1 e d,
ject designed to transfonn apartments abnolt overnight 1 mneteen mpntba: after the exp er J m en t to prove especlally to correct ·the fioor
I See by Today's
Wanl Ads:
-ioo. ----~------·--------.. -.i lnltlal project - a nv .. otory everylhlng hals lo he dooe in delerioraUon problem In the l' .~ lluilding on Manhattan's Ea,,t f!ie e~ .. sBnl,e • way,'~ fbe previoua construcUcm, and to ;_·fi(th street -\Vas complet;ed ,.;oWd:. "lt'a one 1tep· in a ppr-make the bulldlng core ligbter,
'lite· .tioun, the v81lture bu ceas." she aald.
• !IC!t been repeated and tbe She aid llllA' p1an1 . lo 'Ille project alJo will not
1 ~ are ~plaining that ntb•bRttate ·two buwlnp on be "lmtant" WI time, abe 1 """" ot tbe Instant changes t07tb street next month, 8nd said. It wllf lib about IO
have cletarloreted loo fasL ]lOUtbly 100 m<l~ ~1 f!iolllrat worllng days to ....., the
1931 Model A De Luxe Roa.dater '
(Completely ~e~tor:._ed) , $2,500
Fort11 JltGTI ago tht! Model "A .. 1DCI introduced GI U&t
"'New FOTd." Millions were built, but tkne art only a fno aur-
oiving De Lw:e Roodrkn !<fl. Now Ir vaur cllmlce to"""' and
.drtoe· the· car Q114tanked to grl more~admfration and commentl
than any nttD model offered today.
This cla"fc wor reltored to lte 01jglTlal Dearborn spedfl·
cation.I and\U '"'111 ' 11. beau.tw. ~it ·U mtchanicoU11 perfect and
needs a mto owner who wants to drive it and en;av ·it.
c.,,,. and "" lt in IM DAILY PILOT emplofltt parking
lot at 330 Weat Bav Street, Corta Jfeaa. For more ifJformah
a.tk for Jlr. Ourlt11 in the 11e1DIJl'OPCf office, or c:aU Ga-4SJt,
E:r:t. 240. • Give Dad a break? Rave the,..,,. -..... light ha~ done by a
dependable man in the b-
!1I'm looking for an apart· ~ the year, -· two buildings. meni '°')DOY• ta 1rom be;e, .. 1...::~:.!:::.:._~---~:'.'.:'.'.'.:~:_ ___ ....!!==========================
• Ramble over & eee th1a
'Ei6, all extras, Rambler
Classic Wagon. Terrific
seeond fam.Uy car.
e A familY lookilC for a
hoUse to rent with 4 or 5
bedrooms may find one to-
day in our rental sec-
tion .••
e Owners of "Pet!", Eng·
liah Pointer, lost at Warn-
er k Edwards. are •till
l011gi.nl for hia return.
e Mary Poppjnal You AN'
needed agaln for .....
children in . O:lltt Mesa.
Monday thru Friday.
Tune in the
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
CountY
Musi.cl
f!ADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
From Fashion Island.
Newport Beach
said Percente Da9illo.
lemlly, .... 01iio ol 11 'that
were nxwed· loto a hotel for a· how's In April, 11167, wblle
thB ·core ot the building was
• l'emQVed mid prefabricated
·-unit> i-r.d tbroogh the NOi.
DISILLUSIONED
Mrs. Davllla said she is
dlsillusloned with the mutll
rooms, £lie worn floors, leaks
between the Ultits and roaches
crawling between units.
While the tenants appear to
be unantmou.s In tbelr dlomay
over th« warn Doors, most ··
allU prefer the. new qoutm
to the old; and a ttpOl:eomar
fer the building's managing
agents, Wal~ and Slp>uel•, ·
IDe;;1j>aJntablr. tbe 113-year-a.i
. building bis _,, "rWm/d>ly .
.:well.'... . ... :. -~· . ' . . • '
, .
7 The ~~y's Hous~g ~ _ ~~ ;. .
, Deyelopnient Admlnistration, t , /• '~:-.. i .-r,
. wtUCh cooperated in t he 1· i ji :_,. ,.,_* 1:;~
development· o[ the propect -_ .;_tt ~ ~ ' -~ ~ '--·
along wi'h a private foun-f ... --_.._ _ ":&'~· =~~f~~t~ "le~'!\<~'"'
premature In Immediately 't ¢ . ,. • ~~ln!,~ject a "resoun-.·.. ;, ., ~
"It was a ·resounding sue· ~·-
cess in that they did what '
they said they were going to
do within 48 hour~," said
Frances Levenson. tlie housing
agency's director of
Demonstration Projects.
TIME l!Tllllml
An Initial federal grent of
almoot 11 mlllloo said Miss
. U!venson, .... ;pent primarily
on time 1tudie1, ex·
perimentation with materiala
and practicing tbe "Instant"
procedure on two empty ad·
jacent apartmem buik\inaa.
"After analyzing the multi
we decided that lt llbould tale
more than ta hours,'' &be aald. i\) : "ft'• loo .!ltort a . p!!rldd·
~ time . because, one,· there'• • .
questio;n of the 1·11*1 ~en :.
have . to w.or ... 1,n . ..,&lld, ,. ·
. -•lo omft-Jlll cwedidl&-111111'. ..
lol*~d." . . .
"'ib<ft lo ,a]oo. the queitloi! I · ·
of a.ii n,o.Y an c e kt .... the .
nelghlior!lood." !he·,aald..•We ,
did · tllll' one . bu1141n&. , hilt
multiply tt hy 100· •'nd w can · .
' . ..
-TOY HOU.SE ·;..
IO°!o ·OFF SALE!
FRIDAY & SATURDAY·· NOV. 22 & 23
THE
. .
10% OFF ON ANY PURCHASE
IN THE~STORE
C$1.00 Mi11lm1111l •
. .
LAY·AWAY
ThOH CHRIST.I·
TOYS NOWL.:i
223 E. 17th St. 3442 Via Lido
C-M-·-541.1414 N..,.., '-It -67MHO
/\
Get 80¢.off the regul~r party·size,price, l!P!J ptyour
ball rolling in a big way. Just pour over ice to 'cliscover
a delicious adventure. • . ·
For. a ll•lted.
dme-tbe giant
48 o~~ty ~tze·
only_
JIUtnD!y-
~. Dilqnlrt'l' ~ ...... ...._. . .
De•hlelu
ADVENTU'ROUS COCKTAILS
ln. otht'r Siini Mal·Tal. Black ~u11l1n, Clmkl, Sllnpr, Skk Car, Old PaUtklMd, Vodb
$our, Tequila SOur, N>r!tot Sour, ll·IO;I Gin Martini, VodU Martlnl1~t.1ra Dry or''''°'':
'
'" ' . ~ ..
I'•
.. • ..{11
\•
'1 •
•
•
-
1
I
•
• .. J DAILY PILOT
~It Takes · • •
'fbllrs4u, Novtnlbtt 21, 1968
............... • MR.MUM
· E~·priest, Ex-nun
••
•
' 1' ,
H I
Reinstated by Church
GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) is tbal ii "£eels good lo be
-A foiiner Catholic pir<st in good standing in the
who 'nlarried 1 fonner nun, Calbollc community." ·
and late was a c c o r d e d He aid they bad applied for dispensation in August and recogniUon by the Vatican, the request wa.s acted upon
hoper the church will act in September.
without delay in similar cases "Helping us is very minor
1n the future. . in view of the kinds of
Envoy's Widow Says
Ex-Nazi Threw
Self to Leopards
COJ'ENHAGEN; Denmark ' ' . (,IP) -The widoW 'ol a Fin-
nish diplomat told today or
meeting a former Nair leader
and contrivil)& to help him
commit suicide by throwing
himself tp leopards in the
Himalayas.
"I gave my word' of honor
that I would never discl~
his identity,~ Birglttt Valvan-
ne says . .....Jtr a book. of travel
sketclies she describes .• brief encounter with a masked, dirt.-
Covered and gaunt man at
a remote monastery.
"He 'tore o(f the mask,"
she writes. '1 aaw a lace
tanned and pa«:hed by the
sun. I looked 1nto a pair of · ey~ biurnlng with ' pain and
fear. 1 t.bOught l recognized
that face. A chill ran down
my spine. 1le ' had · killed
thousands in ~ntration
camps."
During a tense coriversatibn
-' that followed, she relates, the
Gennan aald.be was traVellng
In the Himalayan foothllls on
horseback, waiting for death
to·come. He told Mrs. Valvan-
no be had already tried to
throw himself to the -wild
animals In the area, but even
the leeparda were afraid of
humans.
"I advised him, matte.r-<>f-
factly, to wrap Jtlinlell in the
pelt of a 'dog becallse then
the leopards would attack
him,'' Mri. V-a1vanne recalls.
"Remember, be had killed
thousands. J'erhaps the dead
possessed me."
The booi: says be walked
away, and ~ morning a
torn do&'• ptlt and some bones
were found near t h e
monastery. The. lamas gave
Mrs. Valvanne_ a note in
German saying: "ThrQugh
you, my own kin sentenced
me. 1baDk yoo: The sentence
has now been carried out."
·DILDAY BROTHERS
HUNTINGTON VALLEY
·MORTUARY DlCAfUlt DILDAY
For three generations our family :bas
served the community at tjroe of need
llJ~ll DILDAY
q
KOVENS
~
, r
3333 Bristol Slreet, COSTA MESA
Phone 548-451CI SOUTH COAST PLAZA
· Unique, oUt-of-the·
ordlnat'.!', <1ifiereS, a
conversation ring,
handcrafted.in 14k gold,
with seven scintillating
diamonds, 275.00.
"1 would like to interj>ret di.spemation thai are needed,"' 17911 JJeacb Boulevard,
the lp<ed and gra~,.JMn~.~Fre~in~sai~·d~·:':'My~:bo~~~.l!:~~~~~:=::::=~H~unti~'bn~~o~n~B~ca~ch~:=::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ JS that manf., many people (714) g.t?-""771 of the• dispensation as an In-will be reached. ~,
dicatlon that Rome iJ willing
•
to move 111"1 more hute In
simlllr WJ8," said Gec:r8'
·;lfl'S BE:FRIBIDl.Y · Frein. He added tbal be refer·
ied to . ..... lnVolvlng both
laymen and prielta. ' · .. }I you have new oelibhoni
icr know ot anyone m'ovin& ~ our area. please tell ui
.., that we may extend •
friendly welcome aftd help
them to become acqu&inted
F their new 1unoundlnp. •
Blabop . Leo .F. Dworacbat
ol the ,Far10, lj.~.. cllocese
announCed that the Firens'
marriage bad been formalized
before a priest, after special
permission was obtained from
the Vatican. He aaid the mat·
rlnge • ..., Is recognized by
the church and the Frelns ~ ~ Huntington Bead! ~ Visitor
are 1n full sacramenal com-
Dllllllon with the ch=h.
't SU.9626
A former priest In the
arcbdiocese of St I.ools, Mo., : Frein WB! married in a civil
jCosta ~:!1 !isilor
'
ceremony In M>ryland lut
June to Jean Bordeau. who
once had been a nun. Frein
now teaches Jn the University ,
of North Dakota's department
of reJigioo here and Mn.
Frein is an instructor ln the
UND school for behavioral
studies in education.
1 So. Com Visilor
49~579
·1 Harbor Visitor
Frein said one reaafui he
Is happy to have the cburcb'1
recognition of his marriage
. • 67S-3433
' o0• .. •09o ,...,,,.~,·,...,,. PHUMACY DEPT.
WHITE LET us r11cr
YOUR NEXT ~:l!.~N.~.,.. PRESCRIPTION!
Water
Om/ Hygiene Appliance
Economy Mo.NI 31
F•turlng co""9Plent
l'l•wholder forj9t tlp1
·---------------] I
I WATER PIK ®•"'"" "'· 88 UflllT OMl TO TOMEr 21 51 J tool 111rM•l.Hl,011lY' SAVE·• 7016 "'" UPI ES,.lr.2j, 1961 · tllU~ON ·---------------' Htwtst nlOdel j1orn Ille' 01101n1I mal.er. flevoluhontiv. I
1\IW Wrf 10 clean tM!h ti honw. Reco'flmended by :ens
~ tflouuod1of dtntlfb; IG s11ppler,,1n! 1e9ulw bru~h,ng,
(IMns •IPPICI food Plftic'" .nd h1•d·IO -teac'1 p\1tt$ With
• Tl'frfthlnf, Jl,dJltif'lg flt lt!nlTl of Wl let Ind US1S!$ in
alNnlnt orthodontic 1ppli11\Ces. li~ed bridgewcrl!;, and
""111 ~ TI11 W.r.w Pit i' 1t!11H, 19hf. 111tactivl'.
C:... wilh four j~ lips. OOltwlniffd: ltorige /'!Older,
...... ~ cantral Ind p.11 bucton •off #Wilch.
IXCLUSIVtACT10Nc
.......... ..,., ... af_. • ....,
................ htlhll:• ..
flClil _ ,~ ......,.""'",.,
WMIE FRONT PHARMACY
COSTA MESA
JOll lristol Ave.
Jlllf olf .... ,..,.An. botwMn
S... Diop l'rwy. ond Bokor Sf • •
-------------
I
Where ·can a travel agent fly you
that an airline can't?
••
Chicago. New York. Hawaii. You name it.
What's the difference? A Travel Agent can gel you
there from Orange County Airport. No freewoy
drive to Los Angeles. No parking problem.
Any lravel agent can arrange it on one ticket. And
ol)e phone call. And it doesn't cost you one penny
extra for the convenience. (Travel agents are paid
by the airlines, not the public.)
Wffy are we telling you all this? We're, the travel agent's
secret: Golden West Airlines. We fly new 19-passetlger T-jets
between Orange County Airport and Los Angeles International
Airport. Thirty-five minutes each way. $7. 95 plus tax,
each way.
Face it: The easiest way to get to on airport is in an airplane.
In Irvine, may we suggest=
Trans Globe Travel
4201 Campus Dr.,· Suitt M
833~
In Newport Beach, may we soggesl:
Nowpomr Trovt1 & Tourt
1107 Joma..... Rd.
6U~
In Costa Mesa, may we suggesl:
Mowpon~l lonl.
-Willttllh111lo•··-~------
6'20:1111 '
' \
MQy Co. World Trav•l lureou
3333 Bristol St.
5'6-9321
Tron1 Globe Trove! Bureau
1880 Newport Blvd.
6'6·5006 5"'5·0421
Meta Travel Agency
2788 Harbor Blvd.
5.46-8181
Costa M11a Travel Agency
230 E. 17th St.
6'6-'8'8 5'9·22'6
•• • •
Morlnen Travel & Tour
16l7We1tcllff Dr.
646-0203 545-7105
R:ubalyat Tour & Travel
201 Marine Ave.
675-4140
Lido Travel Service
,. 3416 Via Udo
673-3310 5'9 .. 14'
.A.tic Mr. foster Trovel Servtc.
lto!Mnaon '1 Newport Ctiiter
6'4-1661
WtstdlffT....!.S...; ..
1829 Wuldlfl 0. .
6G-3020
Golden Ylest Ait ii•
540-7010
•
• ' \
•
•
Mesa .
Today's Closing
•
• VOL'. 61, NO. 280, 3 SECTIONS, .3~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' THURSDAY, NOVEMBE.R 2f, .1968 TEN CENTS
.• J •
OCC District May · Call 27-cent Tax Increase
By 'l'BOMAS FORTUNE
Of ... Ds.llY """ ..... '----'nl• tu rate for residents of or
Coast Junior College Diltrict m
abrupUy be increased rT cents ne
August unlesa the district comes ·
some unanticipated money.
Trustees decided that by unanimous
vote Wednesday night, although board
member John O'Hara Smith of Corona
del Mar, said he didn't want hi5 vote
to be considered blndlng.
Le reluctant were trustees Robert
Humphreys,' of COsia Mesa, and Donald
llDf!. of MidWay ctti'· ..
"Theft ii no questifin we eot • &Olid
majority vote last time," aald Hum-
phreys, referring to the Sept. 17 bond
defeaL that came -.n eyelash short of
the two-thirds neecled· "With 1hb mass suppot1 from the jleople· I'm not hesitant
to vota for a tu increase."
Said Hoff: "I regard UW. whole pattern
ol. bond. r e j e c t 1 o n as reacUon to
something larger than the performance
of this board or district. We rate near
the top in eU!ciency of performance.
"We're obligated to c o n t I nu e wlth
our building program. Qtberwlse, we
will be rated delinquent in our dutiu
a year or two hence."
(A windfall oil impou,rid rebate due
the junior college district, following a
ruling by the State Supreme Court on
Wednesday, will be in the amount of
'143,181, it was learned todaj. That ill
the eq~valent of about. 1112 cents on
the tu rate.)·
The poaslbWty·ol another bond election
before AugusL was strongly suggested
by board members as an alternative
with less immediate impact oo the tax
rate.
A new law living junior college boards
aulhorlty to raise the tax rate to match
state building aid Cund!i goes into effect
in Aug-Jst. If trustees do go that route,
as they now apparently have promised
to, the increase could be 11 much as
21 centa over the present rate of 57
cents, for a total ol. 84 cents per •100
of asse5Sed valuation.
Twenty-seven centa Is the estimated
amount needed to raise $2.t million to
fund the unfunded portion of a . planned
$9.S million building program for nel1
year.
Of the $9.5 million for building on
the Orange Coast and Golden West cam·
puses, $6.3 million would come from
stat. and looeral 10Ut01S provldlllf the
dlmlct can put up IU mlllilla al !ta
own money.
II WU a stat. funding duUne lbal
forced trustees to make a docl41!>o
Wednesday night.
'!'be governing board al the ..... junior
colleges aHed for a at.atement by Dec.
l Iba! the district alther bu IUllldenl
matching money (whlcb Orange Coan
doem't) or is wtlllng to gel ti bJ a
(See TAX BIKE, Pago I)
Hope Fa.ding
For Miners;
Fires Spread
Route Up • Ill Air
..
MANNINGTON, W. Va . (UPI). -
Widespread underground fires today
spread dangerowi carbon monoDde
through miles of tunnels inJide a soft
coal mine and above ground. The deadly
gas virtually eliminated all hope for
78 trapped miners and forced the evacua-
tion of some of their families from
their homes.
The worsened conditions in the seven
miles of tunnels in the Mannington mine
put off indefinitely the start of rescue
effort!.
•
New Look at Newport Freeway OK'd -'
By JEROME F. COu.INS
Of nie O.llr 'JMf S!•tf
SANTA MAR1A -For the fll'st time
in 2f years, the a.dopted route or the
Newport Freeway as it cuts its way
through the Harbor Area toward the
~a la now uncertain.
The California Highway Commission,
meeting in this "neutral" midstate com-
munity, today unanfmously ordered
reopening of the route question.
Dates for public bearings wlll be an-
nounced later by the Division of
Highways. ·
Delegatloru11 from Newport Beach and
Costa Mua ·asked tor reconsideration
of the adopted route, now superlmpo.sed
over Newport Boulevard from Costa
Mesa's Bay Avenue to the Arches
overpass in Newport.
They aaid they wanted it farther west. 1 lligbway commissioners acted after
hearing no more than 10 minutes of
testimony, oone of it from staU engineers
and all of it lavoring new bearinp.
Alexander Pope, commisalooer livm
Los Angeles, said be ... "lmpreued
with the unanimity'"· of Harbor Area
representatives on the is.rue.
Newport Mayor Doreen Marshall
lo!stil!oo ror her city. She pointoo out
~nat Newport and Costa Mesa recenUy
adopted resolutioM favoring new studies
on the alignment, wbtch was establlsbed
(See FREEWAY, Page I)
OffM!ials of the Consolidation Coal Co.
assured families of the trapped men
at a "family briefing" that the company
had no intentioo of sealing the mine's
openinp "at this time."
It's a Mexi~an Standoff
Sealing the openings to extinguish the
dangerOUI fires Would mf3n aban·
donment or all hope any of the 78
men were alive.
Buy Baja Plan Draws 'No Comments' South of Border
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
Of the 0.111' ''* lhltf A Consolidation spokesman said several
families of the traP.Pt<f ·pnen were
evacuated from tbeir bOJnes _near U>e
Llewellyn and Mod's· run~~~~
the lhl~t. l>lact 111DO\e pounni tro1ii'
tbe mine oPenings contained an "ex·
cessive" amount of carboJLrilotlDXide •.
. Mexican BOUtees today literally did
the Wilson 'l!wo-Step'"°" oa.ted ' soUr N~eni, when contacW i,,;,,, At
..... ~ Mesa ~l~~mayor'a hlODilmental
p._.1 ~ buy Baja CllUarnia.
Reaction. to a resolution passed by
the City Council Monday and mailed
to Washineton Thursday >night, seeking
congressional cansideraUon or the land
buy, wa11 rather limJted among Mex.Jean
officials.
j'Our hopes are dlmmid considerably
this morning," William Poundstone, !x·
ecutive vice president of Consolidation,
world's largest ~t coal producer, told
newsmen.
Poundstone said fires In the ·.even
mile! of tunnels in the Mannington mine
"delinitely spread during the nigbt"
following a fourth major explosion
Wednesday night. .
There was no cont.ad with the 71
men since the first violent blast trapped
them 700 feet undereround before dawn
Wednesday.
Nevertheless, Poundstooe aid, "As
Jong as we feel there ii at1IJ a chance
to reduce and contain the fires, we
will not glve up hope," Poundstone said.
"The amount of carbon monoxide has
Increased in the mine," he said, "and
it ii extremely difficult to judge how
far the fires have spread."
Huntington Higll
Officials Cite
Drug .Use P eril
Marijuana mnOking and pill-papping on
a regular basia by at least 15 percent
of students on the Huntington Beach
High School campus have reached
emergency proportions, s c b o o J ad-
ministrators have claimed.
--5pealdng-to-a-group-of-M· conCtti:led
parents in the main district campus
cafeteria, slat! leaders also said that
many more are of£-and-on U9el's or drugs.
The undocumented estimates by Assis-
tant Principal Cbarlea Weaver would
seemingly apply to Westminster and
Fountain Valley hJgh scbool11 as welt
Marijuana is &enerally smoked off
campus, aince IL la euy to spot lhe
obvious melhod of taking the drug, but
Popular deJ,>reSSants and tranqulU:r.era
may be easl l,y awallowed anywhert, they
said. ,.
Parents a,ttendlng the narcotics educa-
Uo6 meetina Tuesday n11bt with Prirt-
cipa] Woodrow Smith and Asst. Principal
Bill Rollins, alon1 with Weaver were
given a few tips to combat drug UH.
Moral support to 1111 no should be Jlveo to the JWbplot wbo Ill ..,.pied
to accept contraband .med.lcatioos and
hallucinogens whida cirallate freely
among the stud'"! body, they were told.
Parenl..!l lhou.I~ ulo educate thermelve111
to recognize l)'lllploml of drug me and
the appearance of Yarious stimulants,
depressanta and natural rubstancel IUCb a marljuana and buhlah.
Especially lmportan~ the panel uld,
Ill nolllicaUon or IChool ofOclala -
a youngster muot take a ~bed
!nedh:at.lon.'
Tb1a will avoid the embarrUlbli and
painruJ poulbllltyof o leg!Uma~ m<dlcal
paUent beilnl taken Into aJllddy by
achoo! author1Ue11: u a poaalble narcotics
~ ( ... DRUG IJ8E, Pap I)
•
SMOKE MAAKS SCE"IE OF MINE FIRE
Deeth Dewn. Below in W.e1t Virginie
Low Cost , Mesa Barber
.
Threaten'ed With Bombs
lly All'l'BUR R. VINSEL
Of .. Cl•ltr '"" '''" • • A Cosla Mesa barber shop which slash -
ed lts prices to $1.50 after""the: state
· minimum haircut price was~ ruled un..
coostitutional was threatened ·with terror
bombing Wednesday by an .¢MQDytnous
caller.
Fountain Valley resident 1.e Roy F.
~ter, 28, owner of Trim lttte Barber
Sl19P, 177 E. 17th St., said the telephone ~t was tbe aecond he 1w ~ived
since bi.I ~ice cut, according to a report
he filed ·with Coeta Mesa police.
The surly man who telephoned at 2:40
p.m. Wednesday also mentioned a
weektnd ·bombing incident at a Buena Part'~ w.hoae owoer,. succeeded in
gettinl. the .state..w.ideJa.w.i.overturned.. , ·
"We ~lew up Ricky Starr's barber shop
'
and yours Is next on our list,'' Opter
quoted the caller as saying.
Starr owns 28 shops in Orange County
and has given haircuts for $1. 75, during
a three-year legal battle against the
$1.91 minimum price minimum which
was based on a 28-year-old law.
Opter cut his prices to $1.50 for both
adults and children, for whom $1.66 had
been the slate-set minimum price.
The Costa Mesa barber shop owner told
Police Offictr Shirle,Y Groves Wednesday
that a first telephone threat on Monday
did not refer specifically to what might
happen.
The caller merely said it he did not
raise his prices, be would be taken
care of, Opter reve3led.
E!rlier, Opter and bla manager, Aaron
L. Shride, gave tbe DAILY PILOT 1
(See BARBEi\, Page Z)
A travel agent, however, predicted
that the Republic or Mento won't be
eager to enter any such real estate
dea l and may never even allow a decent
road to be build down the peninsula.
Vice Mayor &bert M. Wilson went
on Southland television Thursday nlaht,
explaining to viewers that hill proposal
to try to negotiate a Purchase i3 aerious,
sincere and possible.
SITES CHANGED
FOR WATER POLO
Improper pool facilities have caused
a switch in site11 for Friday CIF water
polo game1 involving Corona del Mar
and Costa Mesa High School.
Costa Mesa will meet Downey at
Orange Coast College with batUe begin-
ning at 3:'30 in the second round of
the eliminations.
Corona de! Mar will move• to UCl'1
waters for its 3: 15 match with Bolu.
Crande. The two Coast area schools
were designated home teams earlief in
the week.
However, thei:r: pool11 do not come up
to CIF alie specilicaUorui.
Residents {\sked Japan •Jn'1'asion!! To Give Marines -..
Holi~IJY Dinner Planes for Film Fly Ove r Coas t
Operation Tbank4;\ving -will see 1 Juat 11 d_,11 short of the 28th an-the picture, wh1ch will be a historical
cheery task force l)f Marines roorina nlveraary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, accowlt ot the Japanese attack on Pearl
ilJto 0r'Olle co.at holl!'t to a ...,.lent •-llgble k th Harbor. UJ1~• U.S. N•~ pllotl with coup. . • "' J.,._ ~v rt mar ..i wl the ,.,. .,
'!be tempamy ..-. """"'"" wll ~ r!llng IUl1 emblem art •lain govefMl<lll ""'l>Ofll-will n .. d all tile help tt cu ..-, ~ area neeiQc -• u s m111•·-•---Thi 20tb century Fox production · "~' .,_ · · _, -· be 111rnea "' Joealloll and ~ an r=..i by 1'.t-ln1elf.itl. s.r.i:. Ill Or-. flounty 1" -near teUurt lood Iba! iftl petaomel tl Peat! !!arbor
Cealer of San Clam'°te, the goal b Worlll t.quna llilll, whm there m.Y wtll be Apeatedly lortwamecl al the
brlag i.aoo llarineo lo !lmla, beorth and ·..,, well bO retlroea who remember iJpcomiit )ll'odudlon. ·
iurkey on America•• tradilJonal day 'oaO. f, IM!, because they .,.,. there Clpl. C. C. Walk!N, USN, •Id the
a1 Jiving thanD. nWmlnc the vlrlually n on • 1111 t en I project will, 1e1 under ••r with t..i
Last year the ceoter found 'l'hanbgh· de!-sylltJu. niChb and~! prlClice In the
inf homos for ~ !,IOll wv<ctmcn. Jami! C011J1Uin.'lblr wcelc btian m•k· -ea· , all« wlllcb they will
lbll Year the~ .,. doubled. • in& rtpor!Ylbal Jap.._ 7Mceo Wife be !!own !Jland Naval Alr !in. Wll1lam Plow""1, one al the or--ntns tnlo El Toro Morine CorPI Alr Slattoo, San • · · ~ taid t!1dileml ~· ~ ubd • 8tallon •nd .-landln( Uior.. Onoo there, U,,,. will be loaded aboard
to lab bo<ne· a m~ ol two boy.. I ,l'!ley In In a -, -olllclala 111 o lln:ral\ earrllr Ulla Yortlott;n, ~
Some have alreicly ~ for-abr'b ut adm!L bt lllTled to the pllOt wllilh. Amerlcl
more lloata m notd<tl. 'inally more. A aquadron of lll U.S . Navy SNJ ~· flrml1. t;Olllmlttoo to ~
Invitations mil' be m.ndod by cal~ . -on be1J1C . P1111>1red for tut tioii JD tha ....... WOJld w~-
lng the C!llller. ftl.!llt; Mra. Plowden ot 'tlJc!ttl . beg!nnlnc , MO!lilay, !ollowlni ~ Y°""""' oa ...n 111 Ill t;ar111
m.21J1 ; ""'· 5enneth Bl-. _, """''Uoo at Lone S.ach Airport l1JI' or "nlilf -u.r P!llanes. will -hlv•
Mrs. George W""'1. 4t19-14tll; or M 'Ji· thelr role In an upcoming movie. , •movie lo!., Uiil al' a Ja-oin:roll
Oharles PotlerM, •1w, , (J "Toro, Taro,'Tora/' to the name of(J'"rrier.OCC<JnllnaJolt•11!oollldall:
Not niany Mexicans agree, either from
lhe emotional and const.ltuUonal stand-
point. .
Mexican Consul 'Geheral· Ra o u l
GcmaJu Ga!Jarza ce.id not be reaci>ed
for commen& at hill Loa Ange~s office,
-since he wu tn a meeting.
"He ia a very buay man, Senor,"
said a secretary.
· .ROiando <E."· TOrres, director of the
.Los Angelts·offlct,·Mulcao Government
Xourtsm ' DePattment, refused to conr
m~t, but 'h.1111 chuckJe wu dJsUnctly
unencouraging.
"No, C did not heard of it. Se11or,"
giggled a receptionist when the Wilson
proposal wiu OuWned.
"You'll have to talk to my wile,"
commented Jack L<>rtln, whose wife,
Grace Loftin, ecl.lta 'and publishe!I Mu-
ico's West Coast Mqaiine in Loe
Angeles.
Ile II.id Mn. Loftin 111 in Mexico
today.
"God no," declared Al Zopanta, ...,,.
er of the !J,.lcan Bl& Garn< , Flahbii
Toors. "II would be lib Rll!rJi • ' • 1 d mfiMtrl "* ! .. ~
"That's virgin· territory with endless
· fishing and hunting possibWtle!I," he t:s:-
)>lained, saying the Mexican government
likes Baja's incoming tourist d•llan loo
well.
"l don't think they're ever going to aell
it if I know my countrymen," he said.
Zapanta even hinted that the Mexican
government may never accomplish -
purposely -the engineering feat of run-
ning a modem hia:hway down the Lower
Ca!Uornia peninsula to open II for easy
tourism.
Yearl of effort have produced a 46-·
mile freeway from Tijuana to Ensenada,
with a 35--mile strip of roadway from La
Paz north, but 1now atiaodooed and dot-
(See BAJA BUY, P age I)
UC Regents to Hear Fund
Request of $341 MilliQn
University of Callfornia &gents Friday
will be asked to approve a $341 million UC
operatiorui budget request including '23
million for the Irvine campus.
The request presen\ed by University
Pre.sident Charles Hitch aats for a PG
million increase In stale support for all
nihe UC campuses and $8 nlillion more
than this year's budget for UCJ.
The requested UCI increase ls better
than 25 percent.
Included, saya UCl O!.anceUor Roger
Russell, is a requut for 72.5 new faculty
members.· It I& written 79.5 professon.
but seven alreadf are. teaching on cam-
J>UI u an advance against next year1
he aaid.
Action by regenll, m.eeting at IJC San.
l)lego Friday may not '~any much
weljjht. • ·
On Tuesday, the Reagan admlnblra;
, lion's Cln:moa director, CUpar Wel(lberg-
er. aaid UC and. stata ci>llef• budgell
wW be Increased lr9111 t.h • y..,-1 amouni. only to meat higher enrollmenll
-with no new prograim.
'"The >llocatloiis to Jl10ll of the ., ...
cia "!ill be leoa.. than they . expecjed,"
· W~er.pL} lo Soeramonto.
Ulllvenlty and callage olf/<;lals bava
"lid their put two Olll\u.al blldgeto wen
td low that fllOl'!t '"""'y Wlll be'needed 1n comln( yean to catch up. ,
.. Last Year," RUJlt]I 1114 ta a recent
report lo the UC! ~ s.nai.. '"tbe
le(islaturt worked very bard on the
• • • NEW YORK (AP) -Tha ma marW
jlotl1ned to 11oavr trodllli· '4ta lhll .,. *-· (S,0..........., p-11-11).
' ' nit Dow ~-Jndultrial ...... WU ~ 111<1'• Ulu ftvt pc>intil ancl '-Oubiumbertd PJnio bJ _.. lhu IOO
-m the Naw York Stlicl; Excboos<-
budget for Uir~ monlhs, then Reagan
reduced it to lea than be. blrmelf hid
proposed earlier in· U\e1 year."
A yet1r ago UC Irvine requeated 100
new professon, aaw the request C'llt to
42 by the stateWide UC administration,
then re<IUeoo to nine by lhe governor, but
eventually 10 17: '
Also !ilc1'1ded in thll year•1 UC! budg·
et requests are pro-visioN for 1,lfl more
lu!ltime studenll; ·mo•irlg the Ca!Holnia
College of Matlcine to Irvine; compu-
ters; library development and extra
funds lo< the campus' rapid growth.
Oro,.
• '.e-,, W~doer ·
-Thal Chamber or Commemi
weather wW bt b9ct with UI Jl'ri-
dllf ~ sunny uies With tempera-
•lures nnlinl from 74 oloo>i the
• shore tq !O ~ 1niand,
INSmB TODAY
Then .,., otll at 11...,.!lll
Port cm<I ""°'"" ot a l'i"'~ nmch Ill Tc,.,_ WlU Ille -
"Summtr W~ite llO'U,-k °" o i..~ iri<1'd o/I , 111/ml . Br><~' Pago JO •• ' .· ·~. . -. ~ ..:·~-w =.:-\ • f;;:-"""'.... .,: =..,-.::... '; = = ,.; ..... e:: -~a'"'"""'"'u'"oiitur • .._ .. .,. f.!:o: ·~ ' =-. = ._, li =-~ -. -
•
•
'
J 'OAllY 1'11.DT Ttonlor, Nwww1• ft, 1'1•
Station Study,
the Ill•• • " ·~ """ • ~and ob .. lhll 1p.
pears to lie," wrote Jooeph A.· Slramky, a WOGA necuttve. ·
"Wt wlab to commepd YOU and the
slaU f o r an el:ctlltDt ind objective re-
j)Oli,. Stransky added. . Slrlll!tr aJao ..acted with lllleral to
a claule meo&loned in the report;, coo-
Cllllln« lqol ~ which may l>t
taken qlillll dooed llaU-
Tbe city atlomoy'1 olllce lw drafted
a propoul which cooJd u!Umately r<quire
closed aervJce staUons to be torn down
al the.._ al the owner cc developer.
Costa Meu hu a ratio ol. one .-vice
lllllcn to """1 1141 raideull, wlbi llz
Mesa Car Wash Owner
~Wins Gas, Pump Permits ..
•. ·Joseh Irani, Mesa Cir Wash operator, ell:
.lnally ,... ~ from the Colla ....Approved a c:ond!Uonal use permll
.... k inllall f<r Howard Canion, ol IJlll Berk!hlro M,.. City Cooncll -wee to Line, Newport Beach, to develop a n.
two guolloo -al bla facllllJ al unit mobile home park on Wbl!Uer
176 E. 17th St, to enable him to compete Avenbe between west 17th and 18th
with newer car wash systems. streets. .
· · The Costa r,fesa businessman ulil'be -Gl'lillted the 1111JDe type ol permit
: p1a111 to Inv,.. !70,000 In the flrsl car to Mr. and Mra. Harvey A. Terbuab
walill to cane to the city, In onler to 1'1111 a lawmnower r<palr shop al
to bring 11 up to cumnl opcalladal lbelr bome al 111 Victoria SL, In ~
standards. malnlng monthl, unW tt ii told.
"We are not g o l n c to concelve an -Approved a conditional UBe permit
ill-advised, haphazard delign just to for Robert Redd to operato a United
make a capital gain," be aa1d. Rent AD shop al no w. Illth SI., featuring
The -ol credit cards pl11S sickroom, gardening, exercise and homo
deereued labor doe to automation re-improvement supplies.
quln him to illrelmllne the business -Grlnled a coodtUonal ll8e permit
and provide a guo1lne and rr.e wash for Roy Bale!, of 121 8. Townaend SI.,
.. deal for those who want It, Irani con-Santa Au. to operate an automobile
• tlnude. delall shop at jjll E. 17th St., In con-
Tbe Planning Cammlsslon aplll s to junclion with a car wash.
2, &eQding tbe condlttonal use permit -Dented a variance wblch would allow ,
to the City Councl1 without recom-Lyo C. Geronlml to bulld two 1dd1Uonal
mendatlon. but a I to o vote gave units alOog wiUt a third, old bouae at
Irani bll gNhead f<r Improvement. 193& Westminster Ave., and 219 Walnut
In otber actloo Mooda7, the City Colin-Ave., on a corner lot.
Fnm Pflfle I
BAJA BUY .•.
led with llllllng -equlJlmenl, ~pant• pointed out.
-Cll lhll llde of the bonlar .. a
bl(ollellor, -• pootcanl today Imm ..
A,,._ -wbo pve b1a name
· .,. 11 Mr. DmiatwlJ, ue . ...n..m ..... .. ' liJ>!lla telerilloa -Wtdneadl;f.
-., '."Good .... ,..., Baja hu -a pipe-
--ol mhie -lllnce I came to C&l-Uorala Ja Ulli" tM1flhet11 wrote cm I pootcard. ualng II and'4!i for the lenJll
to and four.
WU-aald -lollowlng bll televilioo
Interview with Colla Men Civic Center
as I backdrop -that I telev1alon _qew5-
m&D even augplled a padla&e purcbaae
&lvlng -.... port. Much local IUpporl baa been generated
for Wllaoo'1 propol&1 to make Baja Call-
fornla the 1111 llata and develop II with
Amer1can capital, althou&h there ts ,.... -l "I wiab I could cane up with ldeu like
that, but I have to have men around me
to help," said a banking officlal, promi-
nent in community affairs.
Perennial City Council caodidale Ted
C. Bologh, however, ouggeeted Coeta
Meaa baa mora prealns probiema to
be bandied than laking a Land in foreign
pollcy.
"My supporten and I bope that, with
this, the Iii-will gel dly char-ters,.. Aid Bololbi wbo ii • ttrooc
beliner Ill cbar1erlsm rather !ban gen-
eral law for munlclpalitles.
"U Mr. WUaon will jUst do some nlct
lhlop for Colla loleaa like hel~lns pt
aldeWllb over on the eut 1kle,' BolOih
cooUnued, "we will be happy for him lo
become terrlto!lal governor."
"U be doel -lhlnp for Cocta Mesa, I'll even apolo&IR l<r ca11inr him
a prbna daonl before," Bologh aald.
DAii Y PllDI
ClltMN CGQT PVl&.llNIMO COMP#ff
w..tH.W"4 ---Jed I. CM.,
vu~ ... ._""""~' n.... ... ...,.. .....
n..... A. ... .,,.,.. ----. "' f'&Ohdlt ___ ... _..,_,
W..Ui.t AMI-PA ... 1160. 91'26 --__ ., __ _ ---·-·-llJlatu ... , ........
The tmltorial governonhlp be men-
tioned grew out ol a joke which back-
flred -a &'I .....wuon by attoniey 8eBm 11. Frailkl1n m>1Xi11na Wllaoo u ~a chlel of iRale "sol lotO clrculallon
lofDDClo1. The city councl1 re0oluUon grew ool of
a COllOePI by Corolla Mayor Tony Bol-
lero to cloee the Malco border to Amer-
Jcan minorB unaccompanied by 1 re-
apooslhle adult Ill order to curtJ narcoUcs
traffic.
Newport Beach <o1111cllmen a1tcned
with Corooa -olllcla1a on the lll'OllOl&l. which is 111JJl)Ol1ed by the Calllomta
Leque ol Cllfea, which Includes Vice
Mayor WU.On among Ila dlrocton. ·
Costa Mela councilmen voted two
weeb ago to merely receive and file
the communtcaUoo. bul It 1<t Wllsoa to
thinking abool the U.S. annenllon ...,.
.. rcqublllon " the 1 ..... .-of
w1>a1 ii 1eosrapblcal11 Ca1lfomla ii oo1
a new idu.
Strong support came from all cooncJ1
members ezcepl George A. Tuclie,
who voted agaimt the nsotuUon on the
basis that be felt It might be lwly and
somewhat ill conceived.
He wanted to lable It l<r two weeb to
allow fllrtber 1!1111Y, .befoni 1~ ti to
President-<iect RiehArd M. Nlxoo and
Congress, where it ts beading today.
Hard of Heiuing
Students Getting
Mo1·e Attention
Parenti of hard of bearing lludenla w ho pn>lated lut year when cblldr<n
were put oo double sesaiOOI are thankful
now for the attenUon the chlldreo are
getUng.
Mra. Harold Likio, )ll'elld<nt of
Newport.Mesa Hard of Hearing Pmnla
Guild, said tho ochool program th1I year
lulls the parent& One.
Twenty-nine hard of hearing 11udenla,
who come oot only from Newport Beach
and Colla Meu, but aiao from Hun-
Ungton Beach, Laguna Beach, Santa Ana,
Fountain Valley and Tu.sun, are taua:ht
II Wliaon School In Co'1o Mesa.
Tbll fall they are taught by fiv1
teachers, an addition of two, and three
full-time, paid tucher aides in four
da.urooma, one more than last year .
ho of the clamoomJ have been
carpeted, Important to hard ol hearing
""'"8Jltrs who bear only the loudell
nolae, Mn. Lltln uld. A chlir 1q11eaktng « a foot llbuffUng can drown out the
teaeber'• voice, lbe remarked.
Lui ,... all apectlhducailon cla11e1
for llbYllcallY and ...,tally handicapped llucfenil Ill -the Newport.Meaa llillrlct
ftr'I put Cll. lbortentd, ball-day te11l1f 11
to at! double ... from the claalrooim.
The Hard ol Hearing Parents Guild
objacted and apecla1 tutoring WU II'
rapd by tho llillool diltrtct wblcb pve
!lit -II wltb bearlni dUDcultla U·
Ira -a-pa1 ol the -ed ICbool .,.
Heart Transplant
STANFORD (AP) -.\ii altlinl pflol.
'"""" Ill --of ......., ....,. --bocomt ...,.,.. ==·• elPlb heart
raised
.................. ., .. _
veJ mta aambor'el-. claisllltd u
. J>OO< In appeai--~ 11 lllatlona !ell Into the ver/ Poe!
COlldllWI ~ojqo[y .llid_IDW .olk1 were
!Isled 11 having minor lolractlona of city
law, IUch u more ali»> lban lbe number
dn~. • '
CUrrtally, li)ilahlng -are being
put .. -.:n~ propoeed ordinance.-~ .. _..t. drafla ire-.
pared both l>y City Alt<rniy ROy JuM .
and the Planning Department.
June is due to loot over the flnal pm.
pout within the nut week; prier to lnl-
Uatlon ol actloo bj' the . Planning Coon-
mlatoo and ctly Couoc11 to make 111a;..
l'romP .. el
FREEWAY •••
In !Mt.
•1At that Ume," lhe &aid, "there ·Were
no public hearings and the planning
concept was simply to upgrade an ex·
lsttns stale route to freeway llahdarda,
Since then, Newport Boulevani lw
developed tnlo ·a hll!><apacity Biz-lane
divided arterial -t which ts now
the prlnCipal traffic link lielween ·our
two cities."
· She aa1d preservaUon of th1I major
local arterial "IJ a matter of great
coocern to the entire Harbor Area."
Mrl. Maraba11 nOled that Newport
wCllld prefer 'that the new alignment
be along Superior Avenue 1n Newport.
Costa Mesa hu not 1et taken a poslUon
on a precise routing.
Mra. Marsball ll8ed aome populaUon
atalLIUcs to underacore the need for a
fmh look at the adopted rouUns of the
freeway'! southern termlnua. She Aki
In 1944 the area bad about 20,000 ml·
dents. Today there are 120,000. The 1985
projection ts :100,000.
"H wt are to ac®mmodate the re-
sulting traffic demands it will be neces-
sary to develop a total street pJaming
concept, >I she said. 0 We're convinced
that both a north-south freeway and
Newport Boolevard wU1 be r<quired."
Representing Costa Mesa was City
Attorney Roy June. All be uld was that
bll city did nol object to new beartnp.
Downtown Costa Mesa businessman
Robert WUl!amSOD wu m<n voluble-
Md entbuluUo-about a new treewar.
route.
s.,lns be spoke !or the Colla Me!4
Tomorrow group, be lllrongly recom-
mended malntatnlng Newport BouleY&rd
u a local arter1aJ roadway. "It la the
aaly major one lbal goes. through Colla
Mesa Jn a nortlHouth direction " he uld. •
"Freeway rouling ahould 111lt nre!ent-
day needs," Williamson said. '"IA new
aligmn«1t would provide greater user
beneflta and less disrupUon to the city
of Costa Meaa."
Fred Jennln&s, commiuloner from
Rlveralde, moved "'° a~ve the rec-~ ommendaUon for reopentng" route bear·
lnp. II carried without fllrtber dlJcu&-
·sicin,' 7 to 0.
Colla Mesa city coanci1man WIWam
Sl Cllir then lbaoked the commts.ion
for J\I ruling.
Divilllon ol Hi11hnys' Olstrtet 7 en-
gtoeera In Los Angeles are ezpecled to
set dale! lot public·hearing.>-lhere may
be one, there may be more-very ahorl-
Jy, a 1tate aJde said.
The leS3iona wlll be held somewhere
In the ffMtJor Area, with Newport liar-
bor lliJlh School's audltoriUm the best
bet. Th1s is because the school 1erves
1lolh NIWJ)Orl and Costa · M ... and is rilhl ... the ......,. ciQ' border.
--··-
Council OKs
Drainage
·study Deal
· Colla Meea dly ollldall have been or-
dere4 to ~ with a flt,ooil deal for
a muter otuqy ol dralnqe probi.m. wttbln ·c111 1lmlla, to bt handled by a Saata Ana llnn.
11le declston ..... lollowlr>g a late-
"1t)lt penoone1 ~ Mooday "" why
an oukif-town eampeny wu eholen for
the lmporlanl job when eo..ta Mesa has
local civil engineering films.
Public Worb Director. Georp E. Mad-
..., told the dly CGUllcl1 during a prior
discualon m: meeling that R. D. .Woodalde c-ng Engineer l Allocl-
ates ii best IUited for the job.
He aa1d -by olhel'
Ogenclel brought !he -ol -live eoifneer1n& Dnm down to four and
each wu queried abool Uma on the job,
g,:;:.~ eaperlence, procedura and me-
City Attomey Roy E. June told tbe
city cooncll that In the area ol lllch !ll'C>
fe&Slonal services, negotiation Ls a prop-
er proCedure to determine wbo can do
the best work for the city .
Miiiey ia contahwl In the ~ budg-
et for the wart. with a mulmum coll of
flt,000 set for 1t.
Fr-P.,,e I
TAX HIKE ••• She's an Anabusador
Disneyland Ambusador for ·l.968, Sally Sberbln (ltft) hugs lier auc-
cessor, Shari lleseol, 21, of Covina, after MIJs llelcoo wu c:holen for
job Wednesday !rom among prettiest gtrls working at famed amua.,.
ment park. A Ucket seller ai Dl.meyland for three years, Mias Bescoe
will now reign u park's 11169 ambassador to the world.
tax ln<:rease. The C<lllllll)lment 11 ~
10 I request can be filed for inctuOm
In Gov. Reagan's budget, the com-
munique said.
"Then they wooldn'l accept our saying we plan to pa51 a bond laue," TrUlltee
190 High School Grat;ls
:William Ke!Uer, of Huntington Beach,
concluded reluctanUy.
"Tllere'• no reuon wbJ we lhouldn't
at this stage, on paper, jell the llate
we're committing to the whole progrun.''
Humphreys 1alil.
Get ]ump on '69 Class "We !till would hive the option of
culling out part ol the program at a
later dale," uld Smith hopefully. "In
your opinion as an attorney we would •
Perml.ssfon to graduate a semester
early wu given 190 Harbor Area hlglt
achoo! students Tu'8day Dighl by the
Mesa Burglary
Haul Worth $300
Costa Mesa women reported bouleboJd ttema and jewelry w<rlh nearly ISOO
iilofen Jn aeparato ·burglarieJ Ill Whle>I\ the .
Intruder pulled off a ......, and allpPed
through an llJllocked window.
Mra. !Jnda S. lngarrioll of :1029 Pomona
Ave., foal 11111 In loOl locludlng a camera
and earrtnga and her wedding ring, police
uld.
Roommates Carol Ann Marques and
Carol Ann crlll, 1171' E. 23rd St., !oat a
clock rad.Jo, a separate clock and another
radio, a painting and assorted bedding.
Police 18..ld the gtrll were jult moving
In when the •tn lrorth of loot was stolen.
From Page 1
not be Irrevocably c o m m It 11 o g
Newpmt..Meu tcbooJ board. ourselves?" be asked Humphrey&.
The approved January greduales have "I'm not the county COOllle1," uld
attended liUllllller aeaslonl ao Ibey will Humpbreya.
1e1e· """ achool -• !loo OCC Superintendent N<rman Walson comp ....,. .. -ua require-aa1d: "I thlnlt really genllemen, In all
menb in three and one-half yeara. • ~incerity, you are comm 1 t t l n g
All but aboot 30 of. the lto are plan· · yourselves," be aaid. "In the event you
nlng to conlim>a In ilCbooL Moat will go don't find the money you are promising
1o collega and !!It Othen 14 vocatlooal to 1ncr .... the tu."
achools IUCh u beauty co11ep. Hoff aald be would like the board
Reuona given by the r..i of tho s1u-to ''take note of the state collegeo cloalng
• dents for wanling to graduate wi, tn-1be1r doors and ldcktog --our
elude to Wort, to aet marrtea to,,,. Into way, wbicb 11not1n our plannln1." 1 .... •. , "We ltl.ll can float a bond !SIUe, '' mllitary se:rvtce, and to move to another said Smith. ••we did not ha•e thla tax
area. tncrease bllckmail before, U you want
"The 190 thl.s year ta the .mast we've to call it that."
had," &IJd Dale Woolley, In clwp of It wu not determined whether the
bigb achoo! lludenl services. board wll1 give voten a choice between
He explained, "There ii a trend toward a bond issue with a amall tax increue
giving atudentl more freedom In plan-apread over many yean and a sudden,
ning their program and more courses on~year tax hike
now are offered in the summer. It wasn 't Wataon said after the meeting It ls
too many year1 ago It just wasn't possi· not likely tbe board will d18cusa another
ble .for studenb to graduate early." bood election until after tbe Newport.
It take11 three 1UJDmer sesstOM to equal Mesa bond vote Feb. 11
a semester's work, Woolley said. He abo said proa~ are pretty high
A greater number of the prospective that Governor Reagan's admh'llltraUon
early graduatea are from Coata Mesa-will throw out part of the requested
68 f r om Coela Mesa High and lll lrom building projecla, thereby reducing the
DRUG USE Estancia High, onJy S4 from Corona del district's tu need for matching money
• • • ~arb. lliJh and 32 lrom Newport Harbor Agreed Humphreya, ''The llate ..;,y
offender. ¥0 gi'aduate in January lhe •tudent.9 ~e a lot of priority decislooa for
The Ulro:...: •. · .ool officials aa1d experts will ba19 to achieve pusing grada in
are the ones to educate parents about required subject& belng taken thil!I fall.
drug ll8e -not teachers -and •peakers In another acUon, Newport-Mesa board 1\l' G• R J should be obtAlned to discusli the matters memberJ declared four adul\I gradual" + dXOil Ives ep y
al group meeUng1. of the ·~ diltrtct through 1.'le adult PARIS (UPI) -PresldenJ.<lect
District offlc!all uid today that tbe educatio' program at Orana:e Coast Col-Richard M. Nixon has assured President
15 percent figure for regular drug ll8e Iese. 1 Charlea de Gaulle Iha! bll admlnistraUon
ls an lltlmata by Asliltant Prindpal They are WllUam: Green, Devon Lee wlll Go "everyUUng in u. power" 80 Weavet,'bul 11 not documented through Harl, Mn. Joan Robuok and Michael J. lbal frlencbhlp belweeo lbelr two naliol!I arrest reporta or any ataUstical crlterJa. Stevenaoi can Contribute to world peace. Frot1t Pflfle I
BARBER ...
1tatemenl In which they concratulated
Judlo llllnl1d Croolrabank'1 ruling on
,---------~-----, .. --~~ JI J. (/arreff P,.eoenb the prlce-llx In.
"WI feel and hope that we will be
able to make a pr•lll for the owner
and a good wage for each employe,"
Shrtde lllld, "we Itel we can atve quality
feM'tce at a fair price." I He a1ao uld the price cul ahould
be a boon to both barbers and the
public.
'1We have tt,ad many ohone calls from I
both the public and fellow barbers,"
Shr1de CGOlinued, "aome abllliva and
some thrlatenlnl·" "I dlacount many ol them as the
work ol barbers who are scared, confused
or uncertain ol. the future.'' be said.
"'l'llero ii apparonll7 a pneral leel1ng
among barbers that evetjothlng hu IOI'•
to hell... SbrkSt auae*ld· ". . . the amwer~Ue Ill lbal U-who
want for nothing may -
go b..,,,,. -wbo will work WU! h ... their dallJ tnad D ahr.,a."
Shrlda llld bll .. ptoyar bolh challeng-
ed publllbed naiarb 117 Leonard
-II, prealdeul of tbe Orange County
Chap!«, .-Salltd -lbr-and
BeauUclml of. AiXMil1cL "
1'ha union -lftillc1ed following
Judp ~· tu1inl a -aao .. .,_llJlullooalilJ " ~
loatalalloe lbal itbop ....x.. and -!loo will-. "For thole who D>aJ' not know, bll'ber
ahopt In tho llotl of Calllomla are
nauialed and ~ l)Ododteall.J by
tho llata to ..... cvta1o atandanil,"
Shrida Aid .. nbollaL
·The all~ ·-bombbitr " Starr'• lhoO tw. -.U-tacl by 8IMna Part pol1ct M a IDlDlr lncldeol
!oveMq a cti1rT7 bami> or ..... , ttm.
'.>
a very special purchase from a
famous quality maker of
GENUINE LEATHER CHAIRS
A GIFJ TO 1llWURf AND BIJOY fOR YEARS
• , Cusrorn qualllJ lbroual>cul •
~ r:whloning • Your
ctiolct of colon from an otlnllvo
.. Iii-fJI llMll leather texi.11.
from $199
\ CY
WIUIAM
REED
..........
In the Wind •
-Councilmen: in HU:.,~n Beach
Monday approved s g $17,771
for a new patrol boat to l>e used ofisbo~ by the Harbor• and
Beaches Department
The new craft will be similar
to the one now plyinC the waters
just beyond the surf and watching
out for errant bathers or surfers.
One of the conncilmen asked if
the boat wa• io ;be used ofisbote
exclusively and a wag in "the au-.
dience replied with, .. did >:OU e'Yer
see a boat being used for lifesavmg
on the shore?"
* WeU, in •P,ite of . my campaign WIT ......
r::ho8en Your Christmas Tree-Yet?
l hu~, Novtmbtr 21, l~ DAil Y PILOT ~
S.11• VCI Prof
Jogging Stalls
Heart , Attacks
By TOM FOR'nJNB
Of lfll O.ltf Pl9't lltff
Deaths ol four Orange Cowlty joggers
In the last ab montht notwlthatanding,
uerdae is an effective way to forestall
heart attacks, believes cardJologist Dr.
Alan Bum, of the UCI SCl1ool of
Medicine.
"I think there is 10me truth that
a middle-aged man can die from audden
eiertion. but it is eiaggerated," Dr.
Bures said. "Still those four reported
deaths may ad to puah .the pendulum
away from exercl.le."
He sugge.ted that joggers who drop
dead probably are afflleted with· lllgnifi.o
Cant narrowlng of the coronary artery
wbJch carries oxygeruited blood from
tM lungs to the heart muacle.
What happeru1, he explained, is because
of the exertion there ii an tncreued aemand: f9"' oxygen which cannot pass
fut enouglt through the namnVed artery.
Not getting the oxygen it needs, part Ot the heart dies, be aald, '
DEFENDS JDGGINO '.
-
to stave ·it Off, Christmas 1s com-
ing. I'm being carried kjcking and
screaming info tjle best season of
the year too darned soon.
The YMCA Is doing the carrying
today with ·a .suggestion. that for
a change people give gifts which
really mean something and keep
on giving after Christmas is gone.
This US.year-old Engelmann spruce has been select-
ed.as 1968 NatiQIUll Cllristmas tree. It was loaded at
Uinla National F.Otost, Utab;. for shipment to Wash-·
ington, D.C. The 7f-foot tree was wrapped in protec-
tive coating of ··burla~ .Jl1!d plactd abOard ~all1oad
flatcar for joilmey. ·-·~ , ·
· He retnarked that in any heart attack
part ot the heart dies [rom: oiygeu
itarvaUon. · Dr. Al•n lures
. ', ~' < ' SEEK SUPEJ\VJSION ctaasic attack or recurrent plln wUh
exertion."
It's such a good idea that I'm
sure the YMCA will 1e'.t anyone
participate. The idea is that in-
stead of the ustial odds and ends
and such ,. ~ivers give a gift to
the YMCA m the name of those
friends with whom be shares at
Christmas time.
Council To Hear
Coast Renewal
Pleas at Mreting
* You choose a phase of YMCA
,Coastline improvements Including con-
struction of two new openings to the
program which you wo~a. like to sea will be discussed at a speclal meeting
sponsor and sponsor away lf1 areas Monday of the Huntington Beach City
such as camp, world, service, Hi-Y Couocil.
Club Indian Guides, I n d i a n The atudy session begtm at 7 p.m
Maldens and all the Y M C A at aty H.sll, 5th Street and Pecan Pro~s you can find about by Avenue.
calling 893-ll511.
Those to whom you give will Councilmen will take a clo6e look at
receive a letter thanking you as the report of Koebig and Koebig
recipient of the gift and e;q>laining engineers who made ·a study of the
the program where it will lie used. Huntlng1oe Beach and Seal Beach
Actually, the idea is eicellent coastlioe at the request of the county, and as more and more people in our affluent society· d!Bcover that Seal Beach, Jlllntington Beach and the
they are shopping at Christmas private · Bolsa CorporaUcins and lllln-
for those who. "have everything" tingtCm Harbour COrp.
the gift to others such as the YMCA In addiUQD, the council has scheduled or the many groups serving the . . . troubled or le~ fo{'tllQiJte becomes. con:~uderation of changes to the _oil
the only pr~ 14-·do all~·~ and.,-to ,the cod~ governing ·
certainly the most rewar'ding fbr • "'nstrucfidn In other.lhsn llng! .. famlly
both the giver and the recipient. residential zones.
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•AllllW-Ol19'1'T. Cl!JC'Ta • •
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Women May Not"'Yield'
But Men Pass on Curves·
. He ldvloed that m<n planelng to jog
first seek som' superviaion· from a
cardJologist. "It won 't cost Vuy much
to see a doctor and· get , ·IOI!le idea
of. what )'OU can tolerate," be aaid.
All that IJ reqllired, he advised, Is
a blood sample and · an· elec·
trocardiogram..
Arteriose:lerosla, narrowinl of the
arteriea, typically hu ita omet while
a man i.a·in his early 20'1 anti 'becomes
rttore. marted until be . Je , 4D or, "5,
then levels off, Dr~•Bures 1aid. ·. c • 1
Arterlea narmw, Dr. Burea explaiaod,
hecsuae fat depooiu lrrltata the llnb>C·
The lining cells Jftulttply to ...,.. the
fat, narrowing the artery. .
A slmller ·example ol fat lrrltalloo,, he said, IJ acne. 1
FAT IN , ARTEIUl!S
He remarked that ~ IJ oot lalown
whether regl.l1'r exercise r e v e r 1 e 1
depoelt of fat "In the artorleL "I 1'0U)d
like to thlnk that it may bol I can't
prove it," he aaid. SACRAMENTO (U~l) -U you're a
traffic staUsUcs buff, the california
Highway Patrol bright up your alley.
To begin, the patrol notes of all llcena-
ed drivers in the: state, 42 percent of
them are women.
"l'he CKP said, however, in a survey
of. injary or death acddenl!:, It found
that both sexea bad· peculiariUes unto
themselves.
For example, %3.06 percent of the men,
who committed violations in accidents
leading to injury or death, had been
drinking, but only 9.61 percent of the
women involved had imbibed.
Now take that dangerowi game of
Soviets. Loft Cosmos
MOSCOW •(AP) -The Soviet Union
launched another unmanned earth satel-
lite in it Coitno series tod~. -S.rte.f -et ¥id th4l Cofo1C>1 2$4 will
can:y ~t 1pace studies but did not give
its specific. -mlasloni
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pesshig ... ,;a . .;.,., •. Tho': patror said
only 15 of tlie 101 lnjury..i.at1t.aceid"1ts
in . thiJ ~ate1ory were Comni.ttted by
women. · ·
But, in injury-death misha1>5 wl;len!!
Speed was ra factor, one-third of the
men bad been drlvln&' too fast, but
only one-tourtli·af.the women.
On tbO othOt hand, lU percent of
the women failed to yield the right
of way and wound up in an accident.
but only· 19.S percent of the men com-
mitted the offense.
.Turnlna to pedestrlsei, the patrol loond
of the 18,1~ walken killed or injured
last year, 10,038 of them -or ~
than 60 percent -1V~ mep..
And, among bicyclists, males suffered
the most with S,20S injured and 34 i,llled
in 1967, while only 662 lady cycliats
were hurt and 11 were killed.
wbt dbe',i lhe .palrol .. mske of ail .lllla':nalmlnt or tm. ieiel? "II'• ml!Si. conclude there ia a difference in male
and female," It Aid.
, He aal,led 40, the Q• Of audd!ll. death
and said that . ls wheft sj'mptom,. of
chest pain UIUally first occur. .
He. said. be preseribea enrclae because
In our. culture physical· labor Isn't com·
moqplact!. He is leas , cmcerne'd about
:diet in most ~ "I'd prefer to teep
yw lean and let you eat ·what you
like rather than limit your cholesterol,"
he said. . .
RARE IN CHINA
He said heart attacks are rare in
China where there ia a great.er division
of pbyaical labor.
Up until 10 years ago, be noted, reduc-
ed actlvlty ail! re&t were Pre&l'ilbed
as a'life rauUne for heart attact viCUms.
He said it worked to reduce chest pain
unW tilt! patient died ol an acute attack ..
He added, however, that In case of
chest pain "foit 'shoplij go le .~
and Dot ru.11: IJ'OUlldt tlie · bloct. Chest
pain Is the hallmark of this heart
disease," he ·said, "whether It be the
He said It Is thooght .. erc1se
stimulates the deV1!lopment of addiUonal
blood vesselJ called collalera!a to "IP"
plement the restricted. arteries. · '
He said he also suspect!:, although
again tt ·is not proven, that ezerctse
Increases the e!flcieicy ol the myocardial
cell which regulates the rate at which
the blood. picks '<IP oxygen from. the
lungl!I. Athletes seem to . have lhll ef-
ficiency, he aaid. .
INCREASES EFFICIENCY
A fknown eflect of exercise, be Aid.
Is thal lt lncreaaea . the dlideney 'ol
the muscles of the liplbs IO they cM
do more work·witbout requiring so much
blood o~gen.
Dr. Bures said that heart transplaiill,
becatise of the lmba).ance between supp)J
and demand, do not solve the problem
· <1f ' heart dl.seue. "The cool In' lloeff
I! tap&Uttc,''"fle ·cofiunented. i•eertamJ;y,
.~ehody · Is gOing to· have to -out l!JO.metbirw else ...
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FIRST AT 'BUFFUM$'
CULTURED PEARLS
• ..,_
6.99to49.0Q
Just washed ashore • , • fm1rotis clllhllld '*"' 11tai
aleaming l4K aolcf. ~ lfldHcent P8111• dlOp floln .
chains. Qr, nestfe it! Intricate tellines, SOllt Will·
diall!Dflds. All·Jre so ro!estly prictd. W oar fretll.
as-a,sea-tneze colleclilll! Cosllnne Jewelty,11 ._
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llDNDAY, 'IHURSOAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 • Ol11ER DAYS 10:00 TIU.-
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DAILY l'llOf
New Girl lo Wed
·Author Engaged After .Sex Change
NEW YORK (AP -Dlwn IAlll!oy
114 .... -"""""1 Hall , odopled ... of Brililb ~ DllDI lbrsaltl
lllltliedan, •7'· ----with • N<cnlmrl .!i'--Corollna ··=~--.............. _,.-. ' I
"He said.It WU !lie qulclc..C romance
be ever "dld · l)eiio WI bf," uid the
""'! CllarloNcl belle ol·ller pnllpOCllve
lllllbud, ~ Jobp Paul Slum-
But. 1l71 Dl"11. Ibo WU 11111 "ra-
.,.....i" when Ibo llnl saw tho ,....
,... ...... at bet llller be ..... ..
be< Sj!clell' --In Cbarltltoo to.Join bet eoolcun double..U.te.
;I;( that time" she 'wu -In .
Qwltoloo Nin( a break In an lklonth
_...... at J-~ lbplla1 In
Baltimore. lreatlDeDt wblda. fnc)wled ... ..,.. Jll1Cb!a1rJ .... -.
uAad t.n. lhl .,_.,!-=t' 'e Int "
.... her, lbe 161; .• ,. ... JUI,,_
ou>,lbe ~.""'*"' jlrllen·to. 4r.-. aod-.O·llb•.-· ··.··
Sbe ....... !hot at their flnl moetiJlc
be ... wMrinc "blcb -plaid ,....
Olllj. t yellow --· .... looked VOt1, JDOd. -::~ t 7 ~ J'
B!il· obe ~.;rq ---·-II., • ...._,-. until "lhtl .. ~ be'~·
~ .• ,... Ibo """" ~ In dlrl1. o1il ·owralll, wltb hia .machanlc'• eap
over b1s eya, ud hil anm full ol °""""'· He bad bouPt .. .,, . -M eouJd•Jlnd.: He WU • Ver/ 1braWI
young man. He t61d me: 'I'll never
leave you again.' " ·
ni. d<>cton inlorvtewed llinun<m and'
approl'ed tbe rel•timddp, • Mid, Mo
ding: "He bad to uk • falh<n for
my band."
Miss Hall, who plans to marry Slm-mcm e.rly nm year m EqllM -
. her 'idapled -·.Dime -·-.... her i...-. •ctor Stringer Divis,
espect. to attend -ip(i'ted an om.1i.
~ enpge.-ring during
• shopping .... -trip bete. "He (~) ftrked for tbree '""° u • loophonman .. ... It,.
A _,,_1,or' a~fi.4.lap'· .jm Aid. . . . ,., ~--... •• • ,, •-,-~ Ibo .,eddinl, Ille iap, detplte ...,·111<.~,-, .... .,.•o,~r -.is and Ibo illDPl"""al GI tho
tol •ltl4cftls Gi.11*, U~ of .A~ Cbarltllon society-·-1ccepted
6erta' '.Dlmtol Clinic, lloiitreal, ·T/I< ber. ·u a male British•-; she and
ltnn b~nll• remarlcflbll lmprotJ.,,,..., llmmMs plan to liYI In OWi-.
In 1~1 doctori' J>OID<!'I of "!"'"!>: , • "I feel that Gordan bu, died. I lived
trCllion:.. a: Ille, crippled 111ouP I wu, to II\"· . . ~· . . ,.
µplT..._...
CHANGE OF SEX
D11wn Pepita H111l
, A ftulfy cit named Pumplrlll has
repai4'll debt. ~;:yean ago, Mro.
!=h'rl1tlno Clayton rescueil ·tti.
frightened cat from • bu&)' fr-ay
near &ll:'WU Cily.,'r~~· .and brou1111'1t *'llii':Ba. . • -..
near 'Pftmo. Tllla week Mn. Clay·
ton wil awakened'by Pumpldn and,' founi{~ broken , .. line bail •et ftU
SE St.ate Hetid Urges . . ' .. . . . ··\·~· .. ~ .• .. ' ,... ',.
More stude.niS Return ,
to 11\f;IF po~!>f tb• home. . . S¥1· f!W'~ 11.l'l ,. The prtl!-
1-tit"'"'-llli""!"•-"!"'""1~"~· ....i GI S,t n, J':I~ ~to Collqe,
il)rmoil .,. collCoc .,,,,.11,u • ., ~ liiiltll. ~~· , 11uc1on1s· to
toi!!!lf! .. •i.u ifteoitllbk c-·fll!lli<n '9itboi ' • ' lnltead cdllic: of • nipldlr cllanQing of 'lattnf put. • Uon at tho "'°l1'lo • ICIYI t/I< pruid<1't of tlll .cbOol w&lch reiipei)ed Woojne.d•y after
clrcult television to all parts of tho
<:ampUI .and brought Snplh 11!1Q contsct
• wUb a9okesmtn for NegttU,J:Q_..
. ~tt" Smhb WU •,°thetbet: COD-
vocatt"1 · 1atlsfl:i"'1 . ~ .. y by
· tho atalo Collqe Boml of Trustees that
tho llCbool be reopened-. ~ lnatittlk of T~cJi. being cloHd (orJ our day; becal18e of ':J'!!1 POl(l(fc&a. ''An tduca. Ylofeftce;-• : · ,.-' ·.-·, . ii;:i,:~.~~:~~ M.1£!0r·11ie ']:fl:lit'tl!Ud.,.. and 1,i;e. · P-i>pe W 6rild Like
bt •OJN that ii ,,.rely dtad!"Tlll faculty meriibon returned to tho campu1 ·
::.'!'!.•::; =~;~,""~ =ed ~ ~ ·==::: To. Visit Hanoi t'iofti, DubridQe J'aid, adding that. Wert OD a Nndby buis. ~
"d<lpil< Iii faulll, our <dllQJo Many -ojs.took part In tho COii" VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Paul VI
t'-·' •-• --• and vocation concerning demands by tho told Nortli vi~---n--'-Catholics W1Ml6 l\fl<C"ln gll1U .,_., Black student& Union, l n c I U d I ft I. c......ui-...nw«cm
betttr apportuflitit& to VOU"ll -.tatement of Gtorgt Munay, UiO todOJ' be wnuld have' llli!.t 'l<>Villl their
ptople t1Km an11 otMr in ~mi-Blaci:PanthenpartymemberSUJpendtd· country.and ahare in ~'"liaeiJ "if ~~~-..:~ ... m tM hi.storv of from part.time teaching duties. c J r <; u m 1 t a n c e I bad~ more
... ~wn Newsmen on campus estimated that favorable." •
95 percent of science and butlneu cluooo The ponUff made. the r<mark In a
ran normally, u did 50 peroent of U-Jetter to Arcl!bilhop Joi!eph-MarlO Trln-
In .chester-Le-Street, England
official> of the Durha"1 group of
hospitals complained that ao much
money wu spent on ''such things
as wigs &1111 special boots" for paii,
ents tlutt they woold have lo depend
on c:iw;ty lo buy vital equipment
for tlJelr heart unit. They said $55,-
200 Wal spent this year for wigs and
similar needs while only $12,000 was
allowed for new equipment.
in the humanities -the college's two Nl»Xhue of Hulai. The lriemtf* marked
main dlvi&m. • . '"' ~· occuJi>a,. the c:eiJtbiuy of
Cold
Smltb agreed to let the convocation" ~ .. · atim ol. -~· lif._watat was
cootJnue today. ·theft . apostollc :·\4cirltt "of West
'l1le convocatJon diSCtUISiop by the ad· ~~ ,~ .... • •• . ... , ..• .' ~ , ,
mltlistralfon and ieveral ' hundred "U ~·had bien more
atudentl and faculty members alJO touch-favora~, rut lllured that we certainly
ed. on Black Student Uajan demands would Uvt Ctm1 ~ MM'IM' ytl!ll..
for more Negro teachen and admission mo.l'Wlllln1iy~IOenw.,..~yatir
of Nerro lbldents r_,ordless of their hm 1rfoW. and to make yau feel h o"
qualllicatloos. ' \ " deepJY we share In them," tho pope 11?t convocation w111 piped by closed wrote.
Wave
·~ M rtf -· 1-clHr .... ...,,,.,,__ ~. WIMt; .........
~. 11 .. 1J .......... fJlll .,,.,. __
T°"9'f'I ....... 1S le•.
Yl'ltlf'd9)"1 ~Ill .... r • 11 I t•
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.. 1111 ~•tun> ..._ _, 11 to Sol.
T1-11'9t9r ..,,_...111111 .. , '1.1 Mo ·-s • .., llf-, l'hlu
THURSDAY
s....i ... ·········· .. J:"•-11'1.1,J
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tlncinntlll " n c-"' " x
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IFQAAl8(Y, lOCARD At 17tli & MJ.IH IH SANT.( ANAJ , • -. '
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The Fi~st Qualiw ~n AN
'6 l'IKl'RAnAN GlfOUP fnclulles: ,
• 3 l'ltca Stc!lonol •Club Cl!llr • ComtrTJblt • Codtalf Tftlt
' SAVI Reg. '!85°' . $19850· . SAVE 17°° 300/o
.. ,..,
YICJQR1'4:N SWJ.f.h1m~.
Owr Ow11 llflperh fre1rl Hont
K•"'I· Hl1h•1t q111lity, 111-
*¥••1 •• tt~r· . " .. • '·
DILrift'-l. •·.•· t1. ¥
CHAIR ...... ~ ""' , .... , ,
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rwlN 11311 HIADIOAID , •• , , . .
LI ml IN 9,..;,,11y
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·BAR STOOL
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C-In._. -our -pl~ $24~,, ' ~ .. $6tl9S ....... '" .. .. 39.9 I .,.,.. ,_.. ••• ..-·lllltaolta ca""' D""" '!ind'""'"· 549 t•
solectlon itl1ttandlnt .. foldl"' ~· .... _ ... s .. 1 .. ' .. ~'"."'-· .. :_·_·_·_· -· _. _ .. · .. ·-:·,..·_·_ ..... ,_._.,~ firescrffns. · / ~ ....
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· tate ·:. ·studie·s
I w -• (' • '
Puzzle of ·Mountain
•
' ". ~ (t\P);.,... ·~JU-.. Pltrol\el·
1 .. i.,.u,...--.... ~n..r. ....,~"io1 11Jid out
the ~ "' 'a s.eoo.mll< ,.lr!p ,.,w. .. ~.die 11ro ~ ~ don 1111 • .,..s. """''·' ---·-· w1~·-·-'1ee1 ooltor Pass in w~~ ww-
utern CalUomia. o1 each other.
ti. liru.s fM/. °'° ll'llck One theory combines three cbuhil down ti\• ~ • .,.!& factors: Drivers ineJ.~ ~~ arade unUI It careens in mountain driving, improper off t, road and al&na lnto we o1 brakea -and impr<11ierly
an ,., ankmenL adjusted brafu.
happened twl" In two The ofl!cen also are trying
fOCently with ttucb car: to find out wby the dri1en
military rockels from didn't stay on 'U.S. 395,'wljl<:h S~port, La., to U>e Sima. one officer pointed out Is
AmbiinJUon·Depot at Herlong. "straight as an arrow1'•zvucb
One Fucker was killed. of the way, compared to the
~s deputies a n d tortuous mouQ.tain ·route ' of
'"' ... . ~.
OP~ SUNDAY
11 '° 5
'
~.. . ' ... l ·~ ' ~ (OSTA MESI, 1601 Newport BIYd• ii 161h ., . .
GARDE~ GROVE -12372 GA.EN GROVE BLVD.
Cl!-·•· to-tho -.ol u.a.•
Two u-!ea have been ""' vanced by offlceri: Either the
driven were not awant the
leg.traveled mountain route
is ao rugged, or they were
lr)ling to avoid paying a fee
of llO to l90 to trav~ the
llO clDilel of U.S. .195 through
Nevada.
. Sherlif Stuart Merrill of
sceok, 1 pa r s e l y populated
Alplne County says mBDy
trucks turn off U.S. !195 Md
travel along the w e s t ,
Gallfomla edge of Lake Tahoe
to avoid the Nevada fee.
One ol bis deJ>Utfes, Arcbll
Wood, ~ IOU1Jlg lrucb and
hay ttucb also use the moun-
tain "1Ule, but thetr driven
are more experienced and
know the long. steep grades.
Last year, be hid, two
ttucb -one carrying hay
and another. carrying heavy
constrw:t!on equipment -
were wrecked in almilar ac-
cidents on the same grade,
the northern slope coming off
8,3lil-foot Monitor Pass.
Wood aaid louinl trucks
have a special braking system
which helps the drivers main.
taln control, and the drivers
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
·546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to-9
SATURDAY 9 to SalQ
SUllDAY ·IO'tt 5:89 '"
ll,,,.""""'li110111 lllTEIUllMlllf
BLACK & BRASS WOOD
\; '. Bt-SKEU.:.. -
Very popYlet ltt111 •f •~¥erj.,°"ler;
· pric• I popultr with \US c•u .. · '4\
l:iuy the1e fOf" 22c ••·). S1ti11
fini1h1d Dlic.k b11k•t wffl. 1c.c1nt1
of br111 I /lffl1 f11t. 4••
6 FOOT RUG RUNNER_
K11p ti,. \id,.)'o~·~drfp'pi~:
' 0¥1t ~ ~1111Jff U~t (Mitti
. thitrri"f0"',(11di• t~'JKtctlC. fOf ·~· Wi11t1rrOlymPfC1.l · •". &.111rou1 1i11d 6' r 77•' 1'lnfi1
rwg ru11111r i1 worth eh•vf 1
$25.00 rug e111ni119 job"""'"
'''"'"ti119 mud 1pl11h11,
RAM SABRE
SAW
WALL CABIND
Ca11 ~ "'""'" 011 th• will Of' f111ldi1d with
l.t•· Sfiii11t frot1f, ldeel
for l:iook .. ,r•c6Nl1, •dil•
••" •nd1. hidy t• f111l1lt
111 peint, 1Jf•l11 w1llp~ptr,
111pd dec1ls. .,,Jtill '••v•
pftill 111d ClrYI I d11ltl\o
2''
~--~~------------~-----
·1 ·stilf ·Smell Slnoke .
FiRE TOO .. SETS -YOUR CHOiCE
•. . . )
. ..: -t' ~ .... ,) -Hammerwi trilis, Satin Black
~ng Huclj!td Walnut
.. • .... .. J,_ :.·~-
H1ndy, ll•c•r1tiY• l••I 1et• wUI •rtlienc1
a11y fitt1pl1c•, Ho. 62-212 ,idurM for
flr1i1h, tho 1niddlo lo .. \11 •llir• Ifft
r•vlld w1td h111tll1.11f!lth ~· ... !'ill\o ~·
1ood •Id H•. '4·51 11 tiatlJti•o.I ·
••-••d blac;k fi11ith, All' J ••h lnclvd•
IM11, ,ok1r, 1h...-~.:.~;J ~~ . .
I I
88
62-212
64-58
62-252
· ._d.,•rti1td •'*cl1,l1 9ood tl!r11 ti\'"'"'"'' 17,, f_tjf, 1111' w1 wlll .. , CLOSED
lHANKSGIVIN6 DAY 1._ th1t 111•f111 c•11 9.t th1 "•ltl t1•l. . EA.
, .
" ' ,,, ~ ...... ~.· .. u;··"'" FIRESIDE' CO R
BRIQUDS
J111t fttr•w 1 ''"" ..J ti.ft• i~ tho flamt• onil
'flll , .... " l111t111t
r•h),bow -.f ,,,., · •
hi9h)l9hta •• IAt'ltl h1l19
k••P •11r city c:l1t11: E1t
• 1oa9ull:1
10 n. RAIN GUmR
,.
"i:,ir H•Y• 101ne f1111 thit w1•k111d,
~. p11t Ill' 101111r1l11111H•r. Ono
~'""'"~"-of •ur 91IYenbatl, 111,jolnt, 1"4
sac
ln·Slnk•Erator GARBAGE
DISPOSAL
G•od tlm• to it1d1ll n•w •r
r1pl1c1 old ono, will h111dla th1
holW1y l•ffoY•r• y•• m1111t t•
r1h11t bvt fott.+. IAr••11tl owr
hou11, the °'~ c"1h19
felfHo likl Jo I M J ..
llntt 'Jirt•W th• iaff--..J
' !
27~ • •
' QUllN
SID LAP
. TRA1'1
G;reot·fot iii••• 1tay.f11°1Jt4.
111.tfto•m•rnlnt -'.tU•y
'•r1111ch11, or late t1!9ht TV
1111ac•1. H••'1' fray flt• ever
11;, flva1 •mpl• fOlrll
fat foff.
.88'
' .
MAGNmc CATCHU
•
•
-••vtifulfy ti•11r-I
'ff,..Mt witli ,._.. 11'"
•1tdir•11s. 4, 'IK• t9ol ••t, flro1cro•" wltlt
bl1ck -M cvrf1i1t, ·
' ' 1cl11.•r ''"f .. 1114 . re~my lot lt•ilr•'-·
2588
IONA ELECTRIC KNIFE
'•rfectly ltelaKM 1114
1v,-r a/1111 fer ntre fttl•
1licl1tg. IWoed, 1111ylM
they'll 111 ••t l•u. l
'"'9et time anti w•rlr
u••r for th• lt11ry .......... __...,_
th111htfvl tJft.
12••
TURKIY
•ASnR
lerg• c1pecltr 11Jln N.tor h
u11ltr••lrtbl• •IHI •••Y f• cl1111.
Wh,11 holiday. •r• •var, ''" IM vs~ .(or w1torlns pl•llh,
11if111111lftt 9r1•IH, •r fi9Mi11t
~cli wJ!•n yollr _ kl(1 , .. 1 .... ~ tfrl• w•t.t ,11t•I.
79c
"mi.ON. NG-!mcK
·•o~•·uc~ .·.
Stv•11 ,-.1tt.11 -.... il•c:• helft r•a.t t. ......... ~,.....
tl¥111t ....-clrcti41ti•11 '.f heat whidi ..,ft'I• tit. 1"Mfl't'
}Ill••• 1!Nll ftav.,.. N• hr11l11, Ifft *11i..,.. 41q t. .,. ...
Msl•r t, cl•1• with 111 •tld: hfl11t &J .. , c. .. ,. ... ~
h111p1r1t1u1 Part f•r rrftct ,.,,,.,,,. ·
3 .''
•
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• 'Jc"i• ,.
9'"JQI
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DAILY I'll.OT
Apollo ,8
Crew Rap
I
'Silly' Yi~w
CAP1ll KENNEDY: Fla •
(Al') -Tbe Apollo I
~don,·qree....ith •l prominent British' ..,_,.. who aaya their
mOcm .nit fUlhl. lrun • "CloeWlc •lew, la cW>c-. 81111: ad waatoluL
,,,. tnnsatlaalk dispute
atarted Wedneadaf when Sir
l\OnW'd !AmD, -ol Britain's Jodrell lllolt
Obaervatoey, aald In u ID-
tervtew:
.. On a lcieatific basis this = Ill wutsft IDd llDJ.
.. -, ~ .. ~--
!'!-.':t'.::.-:..-=:
Jilt • 1 I I lit dlt JaAID . • ·· t ti ret lnlormaUoa about moon." Grim faced but dry eyed, Mrs. Iris O~vis Summers
"1 king lo< tbe th re e and her daughter Llilda Kay, 2, are still )\opeful that
Apallo,I aatronauta, Air Force her brOther Dale Davil would be counted. aa a sur·
11!11.t· William A. Anderl .told vlvor of i:m;e blast at Farmington, w. Virginia. But
__,.. Jl'ednead•1 nigbt; . latest word from ConoolldaUon Coal Co. today was -~ ~ ~, = that virtually all hope of re1clllng 78 men trapped in
fllmarily a n operaUonal _:expl::!:::°"::·::.on::....wa.;_s _los_t. __________ _
-and we •iroal!Y lee!
---• • • 7' ... ""jlh
Court Uplyllf!,s
Cleaver Ruling
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Black Panther leader Eldrld~e
Cleaver -author, ei-convki,
black m1Utant a n d con·
troveraial ' lecturer at the
University of Calllomla -suf·
fered a setback Wednesday
In the Cslllornla Supttme
Court.
The tribunal let atand a
lower court declaion ordering
the 33-year-okl Cleaver back
to priaoo u a parole violator.
Hi• attorney Immediately an-
noaneed that the decls\on
would be taken to the U.S. . . . Com! . 8"C alrtid1 baa oerved
-,..,. In the llato ptllon _..._.be--wu-<>r!glnally cm-
victed of assault to commit
rape, assault to c o m m i t
murder and aasault with a
deadly 11reapon.
Releaaed on on parole,
Cleavtr joined the •tall of
Rampal'ts Magazine a n d
beoame active tn the milltant
Black Panther Party. He wat
arreated last April during a
• shootout between Panthen
baQk to prison for violaUnt
and Oakland pollc.e and 6enl
back to prtsoo ,lor vtototing
termJ of his parole.
However, CI eave r' 1 at-
torneya tought hll release on
gr<>und1 the Nearo author of
•1Soui on Ice" wu beln,i held
becaUH of bls palltlcal views.
The release wu 11'8.Dted by
SuperlOI' Court Judge Ray-
mond J . Sherwin of Solano
County, where Cleaver was
being held.
Judge Sherwin'• decision
waa reversed by the State
Court of Appeall Sept. %7 and
CleaVer Wai onlered blq Into
...-. lill~ ·'* .. S . -~
-af!lrmed Ille Ip. te court11 ruling Wed-
neaday.
Takes Own Life
SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -
A veteran San Quentin guard
fired a bullet into bis he a d
Wednesday while on duty atop
a •foot priiJon wall, accord-lni to offlclal.s.
PLUMP
TfNOl:R
. cTOftl
TURKEYS
A·T
AND
GIVES You
DOUBLE
BLUE CH!P
STAMPS
·ON TOP
OF THAT?
Fooo
FAIR
.,. a manned platlorm In
.... O!'hlt with the opera-
ta..l_ eq_~pment we have can
... lijpllllclnt bite and pi<ces
It -tlf\c ...... ledge.
"'Ibo old ............. the
-proboblJ aa1d the ~ wouSd · never work
Czech Students Quit
4-day Sit-in Strike
WE HONOR A!.L APPROVED C IDIT CAROS
A TIRE FOR EVERY DRIVING NEED
•
, : _.,, Air Force Col. PRAGUE (UPI) -Carrylnr
rr.11: Borman · ml N•VJ bedrolll, blankets and empty ClliLJ-.. A. j,ovel! Jr .. mllk boWa, -dreds al .. scheduled to r o c k e t
stodenb in Charles Ulliversity
today peacefully endod their
I~ sit-to strike.
• • • .. t
s.w.d the in.ocm. Dec. 21 ott
a *-day -In wblch y k. 0 ........ to mbll • miles 0 0 no
-. the kmar oarflco for • "°"" Cll cbriJlmoo -b' ... part"'~ oa.vaald. . Loses Ba y 1e tllOtk, Ander• • ~ta• real reuoo for
Aflllo 8 to be a lunar orbit
-on. Wo lhlnl: ti will be
a ... I booo for fulm'e Apollo
1111 h I 1 to ~ve the
' • • t o llJ"ophfc, uavlgaUoo. ll'lld:lng and mapping and
-knowlidge we'll brin& '9c:t. It will DiUe it easier ... tlltln to land safely and .... ....,d ...
TJoo .... , I -. ...
million is to t.est t h e
lfPCPBhip and to learn
-thing about llyJnc In the
Yldoiity of the -bot that __,. scleoUfic rnants were
"""'1ble.
BEST.
Tk DAILY "I.OT .ffert' .. ,... 91 .. IM.t f•ature1o h actual
..,., of r••lt•r1o eYa(laltl• lill
.., tw1p1p•r .a. tM ••ti ...
LONDON. (AP) -Beatie
John Lennon's Japanese mi.to
treu, Yoko Ono, ~Y lost
the baby abe and Lennon were
e>pedlng In Fehru&J1.
'!be Queen Charlotte Maler·
nlly llDlpital &lll10UDced that
the '4-year-old !IC\llptress and __ ol_.,___
""'. ~ tl!ll DiarD-lni· A hospital spokesman said
Lennon was at lier bedside
and her conditiou was satis-
factory.
Miss Ono eniered the hospi-
tal Gil Nov. 4, when llhe wu
threalened with a mbcarrlage.
F"" da)'l later Lemocln'• wife
WU granted I divor<e Oii the
grounds ol his adultery w I I h
Miss Ono, who ii the -llli·
ed wife of American fthnmak-
er TOIQ' Cox.
• .. ~.· . . . . . • '.?-• • .. :. . .
Tile students qroed to
cease their movement 11ainst
cutbacks _In Czechoslovakia's
democratization progr am
after being told the cabinet
mel this morning' to consider
their protests.
Students in the pblloaophy
department, nerve center of
the natlonwlde strike move-
men~ filed wt ol the bulldiog
in groups of "° to prevent
any possibility of incidents on
\he streets ..
fio police were in aijht. The ,
students quleUy left on foot
ar m --W--~
. and -"""' ll'flnf 1n the un1.era11y buildings
lince SUnday afternoon.
Students said slt-lnS at
Bruno, Nllra and KOSice
Universities would continue ..m tonipt.
~-•The n a ti o n ' s leadenblp
ltlued a solemn warning
Wednesday" night that II the
ltudent-worker protests con-
Urwed Czechoslovakia faced
"IOclal upheaval."
Just Jround
the Corner •••
Now •t South Co4st Plata there's on excitement and fts·
tive feeling juJt b;e.ginning to-take over. '"
The 84 stores and s•rvices fa our all-enclosed, all-w,eather
mel are brimming fuft. with ~citing holid1y rnerchandist-
.tha big important gifts, •• .;eu as the n111o thoughtful ones.
If you lee! a thiv"'Y squiggle of excitement •I over, you're
just beginning to think Christm•s.
5Girth Cont Plau, open nightly the
ye1r 'round until 9:30 p.m., makes it
fun to tl.iok 1boul ChrislmH.
atll f oast ?laza ............. -.. ,•--
f PIY 11,lltoll 670•15 F.E.T.
600.16 2~7
. ·~ 650..16 EXCHAHQ(
"Big 4"Quality
AMY SID UJllAD
WKITEWAW ruBEWS 4 F$4~ 0 •XC". fl P:.a.T, 9'C
819 lite .
.Tread Desl9n
' POR
8UAllAflfTl:I. l!"vtrf' new I . '· Goodrklt ,,_,.,car.,,_ not br.,,.;ltd "wc-
Ol'lll'' I• t11t1r•ntwd for 1flt Iii. of Ille hlNI tr.Ml, l'H9rdleu of •M IN'
mltM•, "''"'' dtlKl1 In IMIWf'llll •rid -1ul\ll'llhlP. tlld ln no•ITMll "°"" <D!nl'Ml"Citl P"""'811• e.t MNlq, •Nl,.I f•llurp u .. 111 b'I' Nllld ll•ttnb
11111'1 IMlllCll119 .._.1r11)1t """"""'· II tll'l:tl fire ff,llt u*r this -rantee .,111 It '° ._. be'l'flMI ,_.,", the ...,... wtlf _,.,.. tull in-nee ror
,.,,..111'"9 tt'tlld towlrd .. Mrellmtt tf • ,... tlrt " -IMfM'.Wrt •I the °"'""' rwtetl "~·lit" ~
FREE WHEIL AUGMMENT
WITH 1111 PUlCHASI Of' nus
,....,. ..... ". C..)
• 9.95
VALUE
Phone 14MHJ ,..,. Heurst I a..m. tt f '""· MeMay thru Frid1y
M'-4421 .. tvn11y I 1.m.,. s p.m.
' 2149 Harbor llvd. <at lay) COSTA MESA
WI HONOll ALL APPROVID CR!DIT CARDS
I .•. ..
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Ag"1nst Pasadena
'
Racial Suit Not Released·
PASADENA (AP) -The
U.S. Justlce.Departmeat
refuies lo r<ie.,.-i report
It may use in a raclal
dlscrlmlnaUon suit agaloll the
Pasadena School D l at r 1 c t ,
ICh\>01 offlc:lala aay. .
' Burns 'OK'
Says Senate
GOP Leader
The ckpartmeol hu pell-aludeoll at l'Uldena Hlgb
Uoned In Los Angolea federal School are Negro. Al Jllalr
court lo like over a autt flied mp they c:onsutu-i. about 22
earlier by lbree parent.I. Its pmeol. 'lllae flium, achoo!
ICUon reportodly la baled oo olllclall nld, reflect the
1 report bl' the Health, Educa· dlslrlcla' ~tage of Negro
tlon and Welfare Department. students as a whole.
'l\e suil allegea the iltatrlcl The dlalrl~I aays It h., been
set •~ WoU lo l!l'e-encouraShfc Negro olqcknto al Vent Neero enrollment at the John Mltlr mp, where they
two predomlnanlly w b f t e make up about 3t percent of
schools from escoediog the the enroUrnent, lo attend tbe
entire di.strict'• Negro student other two scboosl, dlltrict are attending :z· .
percentage. Undtr a cllrrerit plan, Negro A previou.I deelsloo b the
"We have no idea w h a t students in an IJ percent board to alter ele tary
they're basing lhla tblng on," Negro "open dlslrlct" lrilbln school dlalrtct boundary lines
said Josepb Engholm, acbpol the John Muir diatrlct may to achleve better r I c la I
board preiSdent. attend either Pasadena or ba1anee we ov#,ed in
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The About eight percent of the Blair while whites In the 1967 by a newly elet d bo~.
SenaW'a Republican Judtr l' ~ _,. ,
'Free UniYersity'
I ~ast on at UCSD
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A The fut, awt.d WM·
ltrlke by about 110 nead17' \rill lut n hours -
students pro!est!nf curriculum unW tile lloanl of Regents
COJ)~ls proposed by Gov. meets Friday -a 1pokeaman
Reaaan waa under way today sale!. Some faculty will joln ~ Uolvers!ty of Calilorola tbe students In a "silent Yigll"
. dUrlng tbe meeting, Prof.
FBI Seeks
4 Youths
. ~~Bombings ,
Walter Munk said.
Reagan w.Dts an end to
faculty autonomy in IUCb
aru1 u appolnbnent of pro.
lesson and authorization of
couraes.
. ••• ....
-". ~ • -fhund17, ""'mbtr 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT ;l
t
Ml!JLIBA§
COMMUTER ;
•
' . . • • •
TO L.A. INTL AIRPORT
2 3 TIMES DAILY
~~r$4.00•
cam•1t-MF•
AYotO-F-drMnolncf .... 1"11~
IEftVICE-Evary 30 ml ..... during popul.,travel
hours from The Gtand Hotel terminal at~
COMFORT-In modem, deluxe alr-condltk>Md
motor co.c:hea.
"ELIABLEr-No weather problema-Dellvery direct to vour air termlnal-No transfer by tram
be~n termlnalt at the airport.
Tlk• The Flrtt lttp Of Your JoumeJ The Euy,
. . .
•
• • • • .
~ • . . . • -• . J . . .• • • .
. ..,. ... wlJI puab'lor -R . I\ • ' I -. -.::,.o1o1~'!.~:t.;.: eve. uJ1ona:ry ... ·M "~ U OAKLAND" (uPI) -A,,. n .. , onw!do ....,0 1-..... wq
for lout yolll1fl petfool baJltv.
ed to be part ol a -...
coosplracy r..,ponlfl>te f ... Ill
After Black Panther
Eldridge Cleaver wu a~
pointed to tbe faculty of UC'1 Berkeley campus' Reagan, an
ex-offlclo regent, proPQled
I.bat ' faculty •members" .. be "'" --· ' ::
in "" ol t b e upper house • w!llil &be legI.slature meets in · ...
1i:'b.nald L. Grunsky, (R· Prildn 'Think Tank' for New
f.ltlonville) said of Burns: ' ' ' '
1 'IU's one of the best frlen<la !MN 'LUIS OBIBPO (UPI) lhoolout In which a· pollcemac · to ceyllal1zc tour phtlooophy.
"9 have in I.he legislaturf." -Huey. Po Ne~ Black waa killed. I treuure Emlng a revolu-
.., Grunsky told reporten ln Panther defense rnlnllter con-~e has re:!used to work In tionary, evo · to ihe new
ID interview Wednesday that v I c t e d of · v o I u n t a r y the · prlson and under the man, I.he re oluUona"' man."
fttiecUon of Burm should be . 1 ·-' ·a mere formality and "a vote manslaughter, _will s Pend regulations must therefore He be.U ves the U.S.
ti. confidence." He sa.Jd he much of his !ane in prlaon stay in his ~D except to see economy should be r u n
knew of no senator who could working ·to become ' • t b e vlJttors or eat meals. without fiJiancial profit to Jn.
muster the coalition of 21 revolutionary man." In hia first interview since dlviduala./ Q\.taUoned about
Republicans and ~ts Newtqn, 26, was admiUed bla arrival, Newton to Id how the Blact·Pantben wouJd
needed to OUl!lt Burm, preai· to the California men's colony Gilbert MOCll'e of the San Luis run the ¢ountrr. Newton u.td,
dent pro tern alnce 1957. two weeks ago to serve hts Obispo Telegram Tribune : "Each group in the country
' Qrunaky tried lalt January two to 15-year sentence in "Priaon ·with solitude gives woald 1Jb reflected in the con.
and failed . connection with an Oakland· yoq time to use µitrospection sUtuU<¥t·
'
AMf.:ftlCA'~. LA":cSK8T PAM I LY CLOTHING
Regularly 29.99
• ~ICH, LUXURIOUS
DOUBLE-KNITI
• BIG COll.ECTION OF
CHIC STYllSI . .
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fOR SUPlltl "!_I ... ·
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OPEN -"·
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USf' OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN .. NO EXTRA CHARGE
COSTA MESA, 1601 NEWPORT. BLVD. AT 16TH
GARDEN GROVE -12lll GARD.EN GROVE BLVD. •
•
bomblnp in the San Francta-
co Bay area, accordinc to the fBI.
T h e announcement w a a
made at a Wednesday oew1
cooference sponsored by the
I'll! and lbree local ,.,. ...
forcement agencies.
denied authority to "organize
qr govern the university." •
The governor also asked
that facully not be permitted
to authorize -and supervise
coones, u:ctpt for 1pecUic
delegations by Ule rt84;Dta, or
to make faculty appointments,
ar,d that 1he regent's approval
be required for awarding
degrees. ~
The vote rullDg Reagan's
m~, out of order at a meet!n& last month WU JN,
He la expected to put the
• For ')'OUr-convenienoe -Ill 1Chedule1 operet.
with throu;h coaches between Orange County
Airport and LA. Intl AJrport (In both directions)
AIRPORT COACH SERVICE
.· . ' .
. . .
. . -. . . . •
It came shortly after a Qftb
=peel In the COlll(llraey 1lu
formally cbaried with -bomblnp at the Unlven!17 of
Calllomla and the OU!Ud
Courlbcrlue. moUm bel'~ the regents ~===============~~ again Frtdly., .:
KITCHENWARE
FOR A BETTER =.
. THANKSGIVING_
eautiful· oking. . . beautiful cooking ...
FARBERWAREGD
* Enjoy carefree cooking
and elegant serviµg
AUTONJATIC ELECTftlC
COOKWAR~ . with beautiful Farberware •• ;
truly America's finest automatic .
AUTOllATIC CAN OP!MEI. 11111-rutll
..• Clll ll pltlJied autGIMtlcllly, Stops auto-
m.tlcally, rtl&ftlt drM ~ IWJY fm Uft,
cut tires ara rolled bat for Hftty. Sh11p.
ener helps JOU keep }# Ulvu etfklently
Hll'Ptned. $15.99
STAUIUSS STW. ~ ••• f•ttr
than lnst1nb ••• exd111!¥1 SUP£R.fAST brltr·
Ina acllan tsWrts • rJch, perfect brew every
llmtl TtmPtfltUrt control keeps It Dfpl111
hot. Truly the fllltSt, most heeutnul Cofr•
mUer llldt. Crcfted In ale111i11 $TAIHLESI
STW. •
I CUP $19,99 llllP $22.99
Outdoot lighting you .
never· thought you could afford!
,
electric cookware!
..... llUITJI"• D.ECTllC llllUR •••
hduM'fl "cool mne" bnlRillf Nib In tht -
flltar ..r IUtrJenb-lhn tlllt delitiollS
aatdoar 1bvor ltldoon. Coml*tt tlS1'fNI• STAnfl.ESS STm. bnllltr with 111 .,_._ '
drip tray, NO SMOKE, NO SPATIII .... '
'de.., kJIChen w1ll1 Ml cablMtr, too. Eitrl
larp 10" 1 15" llrolllnc IWfa. ~
$21.SI
STAlllWS STUL FIY )Al ... for tllo ltlit-
inlte ln every •Ind of tasty disheal Stelk,'
stew, or ellborate P1nn•t creatJons, Pit
dl•I the rWt ttmperatura for Pl{ftcl r..
aults witholt hot fpob or scordliiw, tllllb
to FARBERWAIFS •1num dlll llotlle • ••y.iodtM STAINLESS STm..
From $21.99
Why
Dishmaster1
•
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is the most
prodical way
of doing
: dishes
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• DAllY PILOT T~, NO\ltmbtt 21, 1968
_New Flu So Far
»ild, Worst Due
• '-l\IASll1NGTON (AP) -The
surgeon general 1111 early
c¥es of the new Hong Kong
nd have been mild, but a
lqC of people will still spend t\t or three days in bed with t1* disease this winter.
l!>r. William H. St.wart aald
In! an interview the new flu
ai\>ears free of complications or: aftereffec!.S, even though •iou still don't feel very good
wlaen you have it."
kind ol. flu," Dr. St.Wart
said.
So far public health officials
have identified flu outbreaks
among Marines In San Diego
and civilians In Needles,
Cal~.. as .)>eiog of 1be llllog
Kong variety.
But nu outb~ks suspected
to be of the lloog Kong variety
have occurred In COiorado and
New Jersey. O!!icials expect
to know with.in a few days
whether the new strain was
involved.
•• ·-.-._r ,. .. ,...._..,. .
YULE ·H1T·
BY SWEDES
Cosrrwnaut Sees Planet Flights Within 10 Years~
GENEVA (AP) -A So•let Yegoro• llld. "The lint organllm durlog A io., ~ 'year-Iona Olcbll in the ..Ai.•1 ye81'1 11 me ''ll the natlool
coanonaut predicted Tueaday rocket flight Wat made in lll06 ls still ihe main problem. -orbit coukl be: made in IO -waril It".
STOCKHOLM (AP) -Some man will be making year-Jong when a Ftendi lcleotlst !ired But lie llld So.tel 1cleo~ •
S ~-ttac""" the lt1I Oighll to distant plaoell ., . , , • . . di= ~. ctirb~.. bus!: within IO yaen. An American some mice Into space. II took .,. espel'IDlOllting with • •• Free Demonstra!alon ·ness with Challqina poetere, apace expert said year·¥in& man another 1.M yean to mixture malnJy o( 01)'1'11 aDt1 T
leaflets and even p bone space rughts might be posalbl~ make the first fllght. I do. 1.7 percent carbon dlollde
threats to businessmen. in • decade but only in earth not think it will take that wbJch co.w..onauts woutd wbW
They use 8 special glue to orbit. long a1aln to reach deep during the final st.age 'of tb'.e
stick their p0i9lers on sbOp Cosmonaut B o r i s B. space." flight wh!!\1: acceleraUod 11 at
windows. This makel the ppst'· Yegorov and Dr. Walton L. Yeglrov, 31, said be hopes its greatest.
ers almost impossible to re-Jones ol the U.S. NaUonal to be one of Ute crew wbic.h This seems lo offaet the
move and 1D some cases ~ Aeronautics and S p a c e makes U'f: first proloaged physiological changea In the
dows have had to be repla~, Administration " ere ad· rught into deep space, but body and increase b o d y
irate shop owners complain. dressing a news conference added that 50 appeara to be tolerance to aceeleratic,i. he
One poster shawl a hand at 'the UUrd inttrnaUonal l)'m· lhe maximwn age for a coe-said.
Psy~hedelic Paint . Art . '
Ft1•inttin9, r•¥e11in' for th,r1py, Lon cre•tiv ene11I ,'
U1e for Tthle Top11 Decoration•, Pichlres l Applle1 t o .
ALL. 1urf1 ce1, includin9 -gl111. Al10 1ntique flnl1hlngl ·
BOB'S HOBBY· -HOP ripping oU a Sant.a Cla)l.S poslum on tbe probJema of mooaut. Jones a i d "considerable
mask to disclose I death-bead man in space. The SoVlet. spaceman aaJd research" is still needed
wltll dollar stgns in the e'!1..f:'-_ "The. time bas come to think welghUessness and its possible-before envisaging long fUgbti ~!~~ds~&.wc ~w~r~e~a~ch~ln&~dislln~·~~t1g~a~ta~xi~~~"~·~cl~lec'.:!:l.s'...___~on'__~the~-h~u~m~a~n'__~ln~~~d~ee~p~spa~ce:=_.~Bu~t~he~sa~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Demon.maton also are dl.s-
tributlJli leallet.s in their liiht
agai..t what they term "!he
b\lllnessmen's d i 1 g u 1 t I n g
coounercial feast."
..
}.Iter two or three days
'1ou're back on your feet,
btlt you don't feel quite up to'; par. It's no more serious
""'ordinary .inll ...... " "ittewart said pe.rsonS In good
hOal\h and under 65 yean w
• won't even need the vae-
cibe: developed to ward off
~ dlse ....
~ surgem _general noted
that absentee rates in Needles
schools nm about 20 percent,
compared to rates of up to
40 percent past flu outbreaks.
He said it is too early to ,=::=:=::=:=:=:=:=::=;;=;
tell whether this is a hopeful
But the surgeon general said
hE: expects the disease to
reach epidemic proportions.
/'I· think it's sate to say
tlLat we will have an active
yi!'.ar -that we will have
a 'ot of people who have thi9
BAIT CUWl.-ALOIS ... """' ... -· 1ht mott IMlb" --era open •lld , """""". -20 ~. ""' .
MDloriflt's 1rtlt ectlon sel Oftlr
16 It. tr•tk.
-'tt:bu, flflCH, ...........
__ .. .............
to ... hlD --· .......... , .....
sign. ,
Tht new strain, officially
designated .A>Hong Kong-68
because it was first noted in
Hong Kong this year, is a
variety of the A2 flu that
went around last year.
WIS*IMll
TAll.E l
CIWI SET
SHARP
If you·,, • •h•rp tr•dtr, Ill•
th• DAILY PILOTS f•mo_u\
Dlm•·A·Lln• c:lt1•iflM •dt S•._
11rcl•y•. M•lr• • b•tt•r d•tl • , •
wh•th•r yo11'r• buyint 'tH' 11nln9,
RINllS l
THINGS
'":-t .x ...... ' . ..
.., .,,
•
• .
;
',;
You Simpf y· Must Take Tile Family To
HOLLISTERS
• onJerfanJ
' . ... ,
SEE OUR DELIGHTFUL
DISPLAYS ••• •.
* SPARKUNG LIGHTS
Som• teeny-weeny, 1ome fl•shing, some
with 60 bulbs. Som• for outdoors, 1omr
indoors. -.
* GUTIERING 'TRIM A nteE'
Orn•m•nts • Mu1ic.1I Themes, Ging'\r.
Bre•d, Circus Themes and many others.
* GARLANDS FOR DRAPING
Bluti • 'Silver • Gold and multi-colored.
*USE AGAIN
Chri1tm•1 trees from 2' to 7' tall. Wh ite, gre•n and
spruce. Re•listic. beyond comp1r1.
EVERYTHING A TIRACTIYELY PRICID.
BRING THE KIDS!
RANUNCULUS
6 HUSKY
PLANTS
St•rt•tl bulh1 r•1dy
t• 1row Int. full
bloom in • 1un11y
t•rd 1111. T1c:alat•
•tl'•i~ -"'4ix•tl
c•l1ri.
89'·
TULIP BULBS
Mind c•lar•, D•r·
wlR' 1tr•in. EnJoy
tlotlr r1119nlfic1nt
ltlaom n11t 1prln9.
SPECIAL
89c •··
.... 1.H •
WINE BARRELS ,·, '
Solitl, h,,..., ••!.:
••••••, 1tutdy 1tt•I ....s:::l:::'f=J:~ ..... h•nd1. 1111/t to lt d
for Y••rs, bc:•ll1111t
for 1p1c:lr11•111 pl•10t·
H J, for tr"' •nd
1htub1. 25" ••t1id1
~1illl•m•h', .
549
BUOY THE
BACKYARD
GAROBI
Pl•111t Wlnt.r C•b·
l.•t •• l tocceU,
C•11Hflow•r, On·
ions. H11•\,;y pl•nt1.
79¢. Dot.
FIRST OF
THE SEASON
CamefAa&
Sel.ct ind pl•nf now i~ • 11i1dy
loc•tfon. E•rly bloomin• •1ri-
etie1 now in full flow•r. M1ny
popul1r v1rietie1 -O'&ik1911r1,
Col. firey, Purity, Debut1nte1
Pop• Piu1, Ch•ndleri Ef•91111
and m•"l' others.,
lAlGI -S dAL. SIZI ·'I
GARDENIA
V•ry •ff•cti•• fM fr•t·
r1nc:e, h••uty •ntl I•""
,,,,. v•lu1. L • ..,., +htif•
ty dMk 9r1•1t pl111h.
1 Gal. Sin
98-
lt ... lAO
TAM .JUNIPlR
ITALIAN
CYPRESS
s .... .., . .,.~ ....
•ec•llf
pl•11tin1 ..
,. ... If ., ..
m .. ,, ..
1r•wi11t--
1.,, .. hu1k-(
'''""· ....
1.60
1 GAL 'SIZE gs-•
HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.t.I. TO 6 P.M, SUNDAY,$ 10 A.t.I. TO 5 P.t.I.
SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THltQUSK SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24
'
2641 'Harbor ·Blvd.
COSTA MESA
Qui/a., •"' s.,.;1.~ s1~ .. 1'46" CALL 546-5525
II
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Ch ' J ..
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• .• 1 Infectious
Fo¥ The ' n~ · ~ :
I ~seases
~.ARY ' .. ~---' .. . ' ~ .. -.,;. ' ...
.. ,
-..,.----•;--<r-.
. -.. -....... -. . -· . --- --· --.. . -.. ...
After Oil Ballng · .
C-Oanty Due T<tx~Windfall
. ' &lop , ·~· • 'Bring /oy
... and Wonder 9 1oa
chlld'1 ey~,
Rll!INs Cmdli'!
lllllRatff llllaP ., '
Candlelight it ~ Ila moat
romantic, .. bat!t
gifts
that pal'(ll>tlr. · · l'nsi 1
_,.ici11s alf ~
.Cuther Goods
Frames that flatter
-, .~luxury gifts "i• . . In ~pe leather.
TREMlma ~!Iii "
M'PHElft'E.
~~
Prlzejl lllfll
rellectlllQOllf
hatlv9 heritage.
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,,,.,.,..,, -21, 1!61 IMJI. V PILDT /)
•
A..-+hrofTHllks
,.., ~~GI!~~~
la,,._ty fOr
U.S. ~ cqntml~t
'
•
1 We wi1h to !hon witli 9reot ,sincerity th,&
huridtods who wor~ed ' so ffiir'd, ond cootrl~d< J . 1 j
, so much, for t\le•Oron9e County Campoi9~ ,,(
Dr. Miu Rafferty . T)io<lgh Dr. Rolferty lost stet .. · . ~
wid.,· he won in Otenqe County by • merqjn
fer in excess of the Republicen registratio'l m~·
iority. · "
. . ' Your efforts••• 9reetly opprecieted by D•,,
Rafferty and our~es. We .urge yOJJ lo cert.
tinue your interest in goQd 90Vemmen't '19 that ·
,
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"
CXJr elected rePre~ntetivs will efweys heve '"' ~ V' ' ... " '·
informed and intelli9ent electorot. behind thtl!I• ,
l ..,;.
~ ,, ,, . ·~ ... Very· gratefully, . "·
Carl Korchet , Chairmen. . . . . '
• Oron9e County Rafferty for .,
"-: • . •. ~·-·~.s::·~fte <;:6Mrni~~ :1~; .~i ~. ··1~::1.liJ.:i. ~ . 'r.tr:-,., .•. /l'fT , ."'11.'~ "'' ,, • -.,, , ·. ., ,• 1 •• ~:r ' . . ' ,, ' ~· .. . . .. ~
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J. DAii. Y PILOT
Library
Has All
Bea~h Whi1e Bouse?
. -
Key Bucayne Thinks Idea's 1Fi~
• Answers
RIVERSIDE (AP) -"I j\IJt
owalloWed llOlllOlhJna. Do you
hive a book of anecdotes!"
''Can you help me? I have
to mate a persuasive speech
on the kidney."
"I'd like to find out when
the city of Rivtnide became
corrupted.''
"May 1 have the herb
departmen~ pleue?"
These ani a sample of the
questions pitched at a
library's infonnalion desk.
The person who hu been
on the receiving end of
thousands of them -and bas
K II Y BJSCAYNE, Fla.
(UPl)-Pn11lden...i.cl Rich-
ard M. Nixer.> may topple
Jackie G' "llOn 1o1 ur..:rowned
kin& of Mloml and hla sui>-
)eda are scurrying to build
him a caatle.
• _on, who II not yet used
fielded most with duterlty -, ____ _:~~~----.;,;;;;;;:;m;;;;;;'--..1 is Dorothy Smllh. She's bead ,.
of reference and infonnaUoo ~ •1 let it ro-it looked silly on you IJWN&y."
for \be Riverside County -----"~-------------
library s)'1tem.
The downtown library gets
more than 100 queries a day,
many by pl>ooe.
The funniest? A call froril
a woman on Chrislmu Eve.
She said she'd jun butcl>ered
a pig and wanted to know
how to make head cheese.
Mn. Smith said she spent
longer t h a n she thoogbt she
should reading Information
over the telephone -"But
how cou1d I refuse when it
WU Qlristmas Eve and the
pig already WU butchered!''
Not all of the questions are
odd. But enough ""' lo keep
the staff oo its toes. Mrs.
Smith had her staff Rep track
of some of the stranger ones '
f o r two weeb and here are
a few.
"Cou1d you tell me what
boob you have l.n t h e
library"?"
"Do you validate parking
ticktts?"
"Where in this building can
I cet a dog license"?"
1\en there's the guy who
wanted "everything you have
Oil shrunken heada ...
And the l4-year-<1ld girl who
w b Is per e d confidentially,
''Where are your love stories?
Yau know, the GOOD ones."
And perhaps the best of all,
the young man who, sur-
rounded by lheJVes and desks
groaolng under books, ln-
qulrt!d:
"ls thi.s the place to get
books?"
High-Pay
Jobs Go
Begging In
Southland
FEW TAKERS AT
$1140 A MONTH
House Libe':als Eye .
Change on Committee
WASHINGTON (AP) -Lil> er ah.
e.ral Hause Democrats an If they succeed .they could be In a position to push thW eyeing a vaCF.>C)' on the_ candidates through the Com·
Ways and Means Committee mittee on Commit~ onto
from which to launch an as· other eommlttees.
sault on conservative control Alth0ugh the re"cent Coo--
of other key committees. gressiooal. elections produced
If they can capture the seat sll~ht change in party lineups,
thel.r nut goal would be to retirements belped swell the
put members of their own number of Conunittee vacan·
cboming on me ~trovenial cies.
Committee on Un-American Of the five Democr'ats on =:f:e_ aOO the Judiciary ·w Un-American .A.dlvities
Oi\mmilt .. '"' ipslance, 'O!lly In the long nm', tbe.lilMrals • twO will return. .1,.
hope to wealwl, U not dim· 0. Ill J d' -' c.in ·1
inate, the rigid seniority l)'I· .~ ther~ 1!r!c~i O::C:.
tern that now ~Ina.tel the cratiC seats t~ be ruled all
commltees. · · .fonnerly held by ~&ttve
The Democrats on the %~ Southerns who f.l:equently vol·
and Means Committee ed wilb the ReJ!UbUcan mi-
the e<mmittee AYWnnt.nta norlty to exercise effective for their majority colleagues. -CQntrol ot the committee.
During the lint days cl • In • ihe ....U r<malnlng
new ....ion the l1 Ways Loci befori the new 'Congrus be-
Means. Democrau sit u 1-gins liberal.a boPe to find can-~nuttee on committees and dldates for tbW vacancies
fill any openlngs that. have OC· -behind whom they can unite.
curred since the previous Con-There . are approximately
greu. 140 northern ind western Any vacancies among the congressmen who belong to
Waya and Means Democrats the liberal-mode.rate Demo-
ll!'e filled before Congress ~ craUc Study Group, which ls
gms by all ~ Democrati~ leading the drive. They are an
members vo&g in a party ablolute majority of the 2U
caucus; Democrats in the 91st Con. It will be at such a caucus • grt5e5 and can control the
Jan. 2 that the liberal-moder-Cll.H;US if they vote together.
ate group will try to fill the Cruci81. to their success
single open poaltion on Ways however ts the aditode tawi
8;nd Means, whlch by most ~ 'toWard . 'thelr endeavor by ~ tnnates now ls spilt ?·to 7·~ Speaker.John w .. McCormact,
tween conservative and lib-(0:M"8~) So far, they have
heard nothinl" to indicate be "111 opjxJ<e tiiem.
Famed Opal
On Display
The world famous 66.8 carat ,
opal jewel "Forest Fire" from
the Kelsey Newman collection
of Australia will be on display
t o d a y through Saturday at
Weinert-Clark Fine Jewels in
Fuhion Island, N e w p o r t
Beach.
AIM oo display 'trill be the
Le Parisl.ennse jewelry Col·
lecUon. The opal wu emlbited
last year at the Los Angeles
Comity Mwieum of Natural
Hi!lory.
Math Topic
Of Article
cart J acober teaches mth
grade 1t ~ Part
Elementary &:hoot In Costa
M e s a. He doesn't stumble
when it comes to teaching
dJvision ol fractions.
"I'm not dying
for a cigarette
any more •••
are you?"
...,,'"~
The field of Court Reporting
is a little-known pro!easlon.
Each Superior Court through·
out the land has a nan .or
woman (men bold ~bout 60%
of the job1) that records
every rebuttal. acrusation or
word that ii said during the
course of a trial. All this 11
done on a little machine
which the court reporter uses,
taking dictation easily, ml·
er than anyone can talk. Be-
cause the work is 90 little
known, thousands of jobll
ex.isl with no report.en to
In fact, Jact>ber Is so adept
at mathematics th a t . two
pages ol hla calculations usine
algorism and calculus are
reprinted with his article "The
Mathematician and t b e
Trwformer" in the journal
Electronic Engineer.
'"Som• time ago I rt0tic.d that Cl 5ot of my fri.,ds; had
.topped lf'\OkinQ. Ofhm W.... quitting too,, ~y
. wtthout effort. What's "'°' .. they wM b.coming ,.,..,,_,,..
types about tt.. Smokirtg Control Centers of thrt'Amerle.
Covndl on Smoking & Health, w+tere tf...y t.amed hew to
. quit amoki"IJ qufd:ly & palnl.uly ... without pHh, hypnolls,
The article says that Jacob·
er applied his theotttical stud-
ies of a number serlel to de-
sign ol a multi·tap transform-
er.
fill them. The National Registration
Shorthand Reporters Asso-S · B h
ciation estimates that over et Ill eac
5,000 vacancies exist now Hunllngto:I Beach resident!
with the number increasing who are not regi!:tered to vote
yearly. may do so at the office of City
Clerk Paul Jones daily be-
-HIGH PAY, twetn s a.m. and 5 p.m.
SHORT TRAINING-The clerk's office is in City
Hall, Sth Street and Pecan The pay is phoenomenal, con· Avenue. Jones said that ciU-
sidering that students are rens who have moved, recent·
gradU1ted in about 2 years. \y married, new to the county
Earning a base pay of or wWt to change pany reg·
'1140.00 a month, it is not Un· is tralion need to re-regl.ster to
common for court reporters be eligible to vote kl future
to boost their pay as high aa elections.
a'f'91'eatlng or .motional vpMt. And deRnftefy without wff.
pawer , .. You're woy ahead of me. I went. And I -.utt, tool
Do m I did. Call end make an appalnfment for o free
Initial cor'llultotton. Learn how YOU con stop dying for a
cigarette.'" Call weekdaym 9:30 A.M. to ?:30 l'.M.
tmerima Uo11cil 01 S1oki1g l Dealt~
Smoking Conkol Centen
Orange County
C..ntnl T•wu, U.J.011
Bndt Sqa•~ O,.u•
"'-· ft~!;.4202
Long Buch
U24 Lens Belich Bhd.
Pit.. '21-1217
Loo Anpleo
6S6S SDMl lll•L llollyw,U ,,. .. "'"''"
Torrance
1555 T~ Bl ... .. ... 170-15'1
Sl9,400 a year by "moon· ·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'iiiiiil;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ji-lighUng"; local wage scales I
call for a $37.50 fee for just
appearing in court, even it
leM than a hour. Another un·
uru.al fact ill that the "gen-
iui" type does not do as well
u the average person. The
belt students are high·
achool graduate! (thiJ ill re-quired to apply) who can w attention to detail. Oth-
er lhldenla, however, ro ,.e1r llP Into years with the "'°mm'• top at II• 50, and ,,,.,,., about -40. Orange
County boast. of IM1]1 one
1ellool .,, h 0 • • l'IP'!rtln& eourwo II 1,,,,...wd lr1 tllo Ho.
Uonel ShOrtbol!d ~
-· Callet tbo Oran,. County si-~
Sdlool. tlllJ ... -at 1745 If. Grand Ayt., lo Saalo
AllL Tllo adlool otfc1 bGCll
d&1 ad ...,,t cow--llllthll ..,_tloll -
---llaollld .... 1414524 °' Ml-WT.
NOW!
Mercury S1vln11 naw effer1 . .
haM Improvement •• ., te • $5,000 111111 1t1ht y11rs at I••
rat•• 1na 1m1ll 11a1thly paJ·
mints. Inquire at Marc•ry
S.Vblll 11141 I.NI. AIHclatlotl.
illlln• "'"' Offict: -827-2320 -
Hilatii>cton 8tlc;h Office:
~050
• FR££ WE D£l'OSIT IOXI
For Mtrcury aawn· malntalnlnf
mlnlmul"lll ~---000-
• Mercury s.Mnst .
poHc.yeuu,..)'QU:thl ..... m.oft_fot __
• • Funcll um 11rt....t from 41t• ef
r.celpt. Fllndt l'K9Mcl bytt..titnth
of the A11Dnth "'" lntltl'llll '""" the
fk'lt. lnttf'tll compoundtd dailY'-
bonus ..::o&tnts a\lalllblt.
MERCURY SAVINGS .,,,._,u; n Ntot
- -•R -,..._ -i'llt °'--~ ...,..._
7'11 fll111r Ava. lftttllltH --""'"".......,..,..., _
--________ ..... ~ .
Magna"o~
: ... with BIG SOUND'' plus laBtiiig
SOLID·STATE reliability!'
lt's "tubejen". Adru>.Ccd. highly depca4able
Mas• .. ~ 1<>1id-state cin:ilitry roplaoea .tubes-
Ji..., yoa ragged, lanlng.reliabiljfy !!W's
backed by file nnequolod Magoln'OX
reputation.for quality in. JOUD«i
Enjoy the most beautifhl'
music you'.ve ever heard
from a portable!
ONLY $7990
lhMn~·trim-ont·piece stereo ffiodel 2503 with
awing-down player; two extended·range speal<ers.
Beautifully. compact fine·lua:age case Jn elegant
colors Is . e1sy·to-carry. anywhere you got M'obill
cart optionally available et mod~st cost.
KERM· RIMA . MAGNAVOX
HOME ENTSlTAINMENT ~ENnl
• 1.or.,,.. c..;,,ty'• l'l.-t Faetory Dll'9d _De>'le. · e EXPERT SERVICE . e
2666 6855 . 12116 So.
H.bor llvd. West111lnster '"'M:lu; it Ave. --
LEGAL NOTICE
-
----· -. ~~ . ~. ---.. --...
Contemponiry ,.;~, ;69<52~1th
Instant Automatic cpioi; ,nd.all the
other fine-performan<:e Magnayox
features detarted below, Also In
Mediterranean and Colon la! sfy1es.
ToclaY.'S Biggesh Pict1Jre , .. ~··.
in spacc::S~vmg fine rur~rure·"
PAUltNE'S
DANCE
STUPIO
• <
. . ·" . . • ! \f' .
-TOY -HOJJSI~"
Sinct
1951 .
• --'~·<'1,r .,.,
100/o· _Off ·$~LE!
FRIDAY l SATUl'l)A·y :.;.·rtfV. 22 & 23
10% OFF ON ANY . PURCHASE
IN THE ·STORE '•• +
t$1 .00 1Minf~·.,~·1 ' ' ...
. LAY·AWAY '
. Tho.. c:awratiis.
TOYS. NO*J ..
THI
223-E. 17th St. · 3442 Via 'Lido
C:-,._ -Ml-MM ~ .. ,... ...... -·'7MUO
•
t '
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. ·-· ... . -Get 8Q¢ off the regular partY.slze price, and ·aet your
ball rolling In a 'big wa,y. Just pour over ice to discover ·-· "''"""~: s
Jl'or.•U..lted
.. ~,e'i~e.ll•t
48 oL ~ty •lze
only
•
; ,.. '
;..Eotra °" Martial ..,.....,_uan"'.~ulrl ---·-.. neu111e1n
ADVENTU~OUS COCKTAILS ·
In other Si&H: Mal·Tal. II.ck Ruttl•n. Clrakt,,4'11ntm 416c Car, Old Jluhiontdl\Wla , loUf, TtQ11lla Sour,~ Sour,!11t10-I Gin Mattlnl, Vodk• M.vtl"lt:-!Jllln Dry« t1·to.1 • . . " "
' -~ '' ..,.., ~~·
~ ~I
,
•
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DAILY PILOT J.I
'frne
'. ' -=-OPEN DAILY. 11 A.M.·9;PM .... _ .
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'" ~ ,. ~ .
?o:
• _It(,
•.:<
:I-!
'.J
,, ...
.,,,~ --Jo; .,. ..
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1
<'
1
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Jt .Takes '
• ~Many : .
--*"-21. 1"'8 w ' ------• MR.MUM
~or Survey ,,...,..,..,_
U you h1',Ve new ndghboni
or know or anyone movina:
to our area. please tell us
io that we may extend a
friendly Welcome and help
them to ~ome acquainted
in their new 1urroundinp.
Huntington Beach
Visilor
536-9626
Costa Mesa Visitor
642-6014
' So. Coast Vililor
494-0579
Harbor Visitor
67S-3433
oo•~o!'o• .
• . : ~. "".!~ .. ,,.~ PHARMACY DEPT.
WHITE t lET us PlllCE • FR. ONT j YOUll NEXT ~· '::";. . .,:-PllESClllPTIONI
Water Pill
Om/ Hygie11e Appliance
Ecooorny MocW 31
fe•turing conveni9"t
new hold•r for jet tips
i,;,1Tu~!&.~.~~.~:ri1"1,,m~=1
'11011 Ill PNA•MA T ONLY! SAVE .4 70 WTIM 1 _!!1!!~·~~-_ --~ - - _ _!2U!!!' j
Ntwesl model honi tnlt 011g1n1I ma~et Revolu!oonuy 1
new w1v to rlt'•n 1e,.1h ~T t>orne Reo on •'!'lended by If<~~ )
ol 1hou~<1r>1h ol den1o~1s 10 ~11p1Jlen1P"I •"'JUIM :nu.,! '"9 I
Clnn1 Happed fl)(ld Pllll" 11< 111d l•~rd 10 1e.irh ol,.. .. , """
• rt1frnhing. p11lr...111lg 1~1 ~••edn1 o! Y•~•e• ~nd ~ss•Sl "'
tftt!'ling on:l'lod0!1!or apoh"" t" l"!!d brodgewot~ ' •d
p•lO.I dtnlUtH . l ht Wdlt< p,~ ·~ ~-n~lf T•;ht. 111t11~i.v~
ComH wi_!h lour 1•t 110~ r.orwto1r11t lU11•9t holdgr.
td'*.tH pteMu•e c1111l•ol tod ous~ buuo" Oil ou ""''cf.r,
£J(CLUSIV£ ACTIO N:
~IPPlll"I to bt 1 Jlttd'r' s11um ot y,;1cg1 ;, • _1~.11v
20 Mplltll IPl'llA etch 5'll:Ofld thlll mlli..• 1h•
1l4J5s Wt11tP.._u~efft<"l1yt.
WHITE FROHT PHARMACY
COSTA MESA
JOU llfstol Ave.
Juot off Nowpo<t Avo. bot-n
Son Diop frwy. and Bokor St •.
---. -
--
Ex-Nazi Threw ..
Se·lf to Leopards
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. I _; ,. ,p
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-,.
l(OVENS
~
3333 Bristol Street, COSTA MESA
PhoM 546-4510 SO/JTH COAST PLAZA
Unique, ouJ\-of-the-
orQinary, di!ferent, &
conversation ring,
handcrafted In 14k gold,
with seven scintillating
diamonds, 27s.oo.
"
Where can a travel agent flyyou
that an airline can't?
. ~ "'• ...
..... ' J ~ •• •• •\') .• r:.
' ·, . .
. ' . ,. <· ..... "';
' ' ''
Chicago. New York. Hawaii. You name it. • •
What's the difference? A Travel Agent can get you , .
·-\ ,. f ' there from Orange County Airport. N.~ J~ee~y-·'1
drive to Los Ange~s. ·No parking ptobl~m.;~i ~-' ,: ::I . . .......
Any travel agent can arrange it on one.ticket. And .
one phone call. And it doesn't cp!-fyolJ one per\nt.·
extra for the convenience. !Trav&ti;i;~7n.~(ei'P,ciid~t'
·by the: airlines, not the pliblic.l ·" 'f: ' . , •;','f."'• '. " ' . . . ' ,. Why1 cire we telling you all this? We're .the tr~vel.,ogent's
secret: Golden West Airlines. We fly ne'l,'(f.l~;PC!~~e'nge~ J;~it,~"
between Orange County Airport and Lo~Ang~leslntemalional
Airport. Thirty-five minutes each way. $7.95 plus tax,
eac~ way.
. ·1··
Face it: .The easiest way to get to an airp~~~ is ir_t ~~ air~~!l~·
In Irvine, may we suggest:. In Newport Beach, may w•-¥lgesl;
Trans Globe Tra't9f
' 4201 Cc:unpus Dr .. Suil9 M
833-0454
In Costa Mesa, may we suggest:
May Co. World Travel Bureau
.3333 lri1tol St. ·
546-9321
Trani Globe Trav-1 Burtiau
1880 Nowpart Bini.
6.46-5006 545-0421
Me&a Trav1J'Ag1ncy
2788 Harbor Bfvd.
546-8181
Costa Me1a Trcrftl Ag.ncy
230 E. 17tfr St.
646-Cl>ll 549-2246
•
NtJ,pomrT1VYel & Tows,.
1107 J•O!bono Rd. . ,.4'4360
" N•-~al e,.K . , -.
Wes'tcnff.ot Ool'er
1142-3111
Moriner1 T"°"I & 'r0ut
1617 w .. 1c1111 o..
~ "'5-7105
lubalyot Tow & Travtl
201 MarlM Ave.
675-4140
lldo'1'rcr¥1I S.rvk•
3" 16 Via Lkfo
673-3310 ~-41.U
Aak Mr. Fost.r Trawl 5-rvke
1toblnlon'1 Newport Center
644-1661
w.ridfff r,...r s.mc.
Jl29--ffO. .
642-3020
Golden West Ail ....
• 541010'
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• -~ •••W n..w-Nl<CM-"M.I P• II
... ,.
Bidding !Dr potiuw are m~ of the' Orange County guilds
whicb OO!ltrlbute llUppcll"t to the.. '. '• Hospitil of'Orange County.
The oombined gl!ildJ '1'0' · · ~ Irons for their ~ mejor
funding event:· the seventh ann , · .~-~tbins,on fashion s!u>W which
will take place Feb. 19, 1969, in the ,\liaheiln Conventiori Ce9ter.
Chairman of the spectacular benefit is Mrs. Richard Voemke • • Littlest Angel Guild, and patron chairman and ro<:hainnan are Mrs.
George Glade and Mrs. James J. Fio'1nce, Litle Red Wagon Guild,
Orange. _.. "~· 1
Proceeds will be used in the 'hi>tPl.tal's·CIUtPaliezit Department
to lielp offset the deficits of part'.pay patients.
The active and expanding Outpatient De~t includes 27
•pecialty clinics such ~ general pediatrics, Cystic Fibrosis, ear, 006e
and throa~ g~enl,surgery, neurology, Mwreular J)yotrophy, urology,
ora·faclal, speecll pathology, bir\h defects. aurgery, child development,
Oollagen diseases, diabetic, orthopedics, family counseling and many
other operations.
.. Few realize the intricate coordination of professional personnel.
services, facilities and fin8nees -necessary for. tihe -smooth operation
of th..., dinics. ·
More tha.n 300 doctors comprise the volunteer medical staff
and contribute up lio half a day per week for 10 months . Twu permo·
nent doctors are Dr. Matjlyn Myers, Oiltpatient Direct.or, md Dr. Merl
J. Carson, Medical Diredior ot CHOC. · · .
Also comprising the permanent staff are three int.ems and
two ·pediatric residents. Six seruor medical externs from the College . .
of Medicine, UC!, sp.d, their time in the Outpatient Depsrtment, INVITATION FROM CHOC -As. details for the J. W. Rob~on Gui!~, Mn. Robert T. Cosriove. Queen Of Hearts' Giind, and •
win '" Fll!Bter, Ci!lderella QUlid. Proceeds from the'beneflt, tat •
ing place fell. 19, will be designated for the hospltai's-Outpolle•''' proviill1111t"l/.~slic . . •;l·'•l!';•s,,,'L .'1' "' ' • 'J;i>'i!-~pe9ta~ular -~ compl"!ion, 1)1~!11.1?"!' of the. ul!. . ' o\ (Jltt Jiiirl-P"Y , p , isr.fllid~l .. ~gh funds -<O~.~ ~.;. ~e annil,al , """'1tl !Bre -~nlliAt\'~~ ' '
tributeil bv the 13 ; Inservice W.1 !'jlanors and county -~ cllo0o, halllDJrk .ot.the Ohild!'en's'il'ooplti! of. ~.
United Fuiids and Oimmunity Chest · . County, are (left to right) Mi's. Robert M. Klees, Punch and Judy
Department. -C::
• ' ~'t
Sanctum
Visite
A peek into 1DU1tc'1~ Inner
sanctum will be takelt by
Orange County PbilhannoniC
Society enthusi.alts --:\bey •• 1-... ''•
travel to t!;le -~~--~~
Music Center ~Y-,; ~¥ 2. • . ~
Billi loads m previeW-goerr
will attend a .Lubin , Mehta
rehearsal. sbclety· meMhen ·
and their ~ wfu_,~l
in lryine cOait ~tly,1~ ' , ' ..,.. . .
at & a.m. ..wt. re!lliu .•t.~°" p.m. The II tickel iocludi!o
transportati~ lunchem and
the rehearsal; and more ,than
250 music !oven are ~
to at~d, aUi,-~.~:~~·.
Ferguson. ptev1n ~-
Although rehearsal mm.bJ. are~ a· deep park *1t!£, ~
cording to Mn. E d w .a r;d
. Schumacher, the . group·. an-
Ucipat<s bearing a ,bf .'Ille
numben wbi66 Will '-b1e
· ~allll'ed In the" conclet! qldng
plaoe Saturday, Dec. 7. ~iiiii tli.·w~'.s
Cop'!mUttes o.> prt:'Ti.tw ch-are the Mmes,.
Hennu Johmon, Mell Barton,
Vicpia Doretilµs:, B a I I s
Twist, Kennell< BroW.#ger,
John ·Paxson, I:.eo ~,
Richard Le&, c .. 1;;_!'.~l'F'°"·
J"'""' Eubuk. ........ Out· mans, Muryl Rallm1n, Stanley
Bun111, Charlea Lee._, -Broxon. John 'McAndreW and
Alennder'StiDJ*ll•" .• ..,
SelecUons they ·inlM an-
ticipate hearing~ Toe·
cata by Waltit P!itorl~ Octet
In E Flat ...ior-by Men-
deluolm w Coacer1o In D ml·
jor by Brahml, .,,
~-
'EYE OPENER -Catcbfug a quick cup of coffee on I
the run are (lefl to .right) MR. J. Donald Ferguson,
Mn. Loren Heat.er end 111s. Raymond Dosta, mem·
hen of the llnmge Counliy .Phllarmonic Society.
They w:iI1 ~~a Pm/!!W~ aiven by Zubin
For Philharmonic Series
Israeli
' ~· -Yirtuo~o . .
/ Concert Solo·ist.· . \
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' The Orange COO.nty Philharmonic Society will ~me the return Of ~.
the Los Angelas Philharmonic Orchestra, Zubin Mehta conducting, aild ;f
Jlzhak Perlman, the )'OUlll Israeli violioist..as soloist on Saturday,. Dec. 7, jJ
. The outstandini event, second hi the society's current:subecription. I!
senes of sev~ conce~. marks their 15th conc~rt season and celebrates .~ ~ ~en yejll"S of mufi!c by the Loo "Al!gei.._ Pbillulnnon!c. • i:
· · ~e concert will toke 'place· in llC!'s campus hall .. It will btgin i)
~D!PUY at, 8:30 and no one will be seated during the opening number, I'
Seats will be ·held only until 8:25 p.m. j
Melito will open the program with T<iccati by Walter PiJton. tho !'
• oontemporary _Amerieon comP(\Ser. Fol!Owin~ will be Octet in E tiai major 11 ~Y ·~ondelssohn. and <;ionc~:.V m~JPr b'Y Bnbms ~ violin and ..., •[ ~ chestra fe.aturing Itz.hali: Pet ' -es sololSt 1 • .~ '' -~ ' i
Ticket& fw the ·-·· ·of seven concerts. at $21, are on aal~ in tho l
ONll!ge County P~onic Society office, 201 W. Cout Highway· New•
port Beach. Single. tickrts are $4 end student tickets are ·$1.75; .AdclltiOllal ~"
information IS available by calling the office, 646-6411.
Mehta, who at 3.~ ha,, gained international recognition as one of ~
world's finest conductors, needs no !J1troduc~on to Or~ge y.ountya~diencti,
He and the Los Angeles Philharmoruc lire being pteoentetl ~·thetr (i,
seventh year in the community by ·the 90Ciety. : j
Perlman, 23, I.! one of the ecpiowle_dged leaders ,;_ng.u.;.·world't Ii
young v!olini&ts. He ill the mll!.lcal product 'Ol , two counirtes, line! and'
\l>O United States. Borll in '.!'el Aviv, his first studies were at th ... Tel AviY
Academy of Mwic. . . . ·
. In 1958 FA Sullivan traveled to Israel to Pllt together a 'package of '.!
'Dative talent to return to America for hil TV 1bow. Per~ Cllme to New ~}
, York as a part of the !foupe and declded to reina!n in tlila .diuntrf to coo. ,i
• -tinue hi.! mUSical studlea at tbli,Jullianl Scllool .. .. ;. .· a
• ,_ •· .r • .,v , , ' -.. , ,. •. , ·' In 1964 he won ihe Ci!veteci Leveutiltt MemotlaJ:AM.n!·rni.;.national l,
Mehta In tne Los Angeles·Muslc C81l\8'.~'!\ie•tl!'Y" . Competition. He lri"-"hed .Uily-ln 8 field f 19 bl ' •--•• !..~ .~ th l. Dec. a. More than 250 music: loven·-."fll"~Vel ' by . _..,,. ' 0 . ,a e_icon~~wt .uu • ::
bua foe the preview and an '8 tictet:llicludea trans· public qwckly recognized a major new lflar rising in 'the_rants of violin ::
portatlon, 1uncbeon'.ant1 the perlormaq , . virtuosoo. Time· Mapzine oooc\l!deo tllll "The U.S. and the world "Will be !I
.. , ··-, ; ~ " heartne a lot more about Jllbak, Eerlq)an In the nry.tneer tut.n. ... · j: ... · .. ,·, ' i' • • ' \ ' <. ~ I ,. • ~ • ~ i -1· ' j • .. ~ ' ·" ·~ • ,11. Marin~'.J4it~ the T ~iarigUlar Ti'ail l GV~r Hill, :over Dale, . ~ .
(
•·· 1had~~11pU·roco•err -ARABEU.A • --· tM ----~ r""V"...._ room.~· . , "!";!be" lll'lt to calL DEAR A: I'm ..... 7.a Uked IL So *1 ... tM dllplM f1d'b m
•• "'Ille. •!'II!'• ~'4M't tall:. llld 11ut1nU ti a!t-aid Jllitlldau. __....,,_, .., I ·• -·'.to JOU. .lo•j'ust eOlnloC>do!Jbe · __ .. ,,,..,............ "" '-a..t'tewls ~-...
aneolhell<P' J1f "°""" """1ed. ~Sbe • , · _·_ . _ ..,;, an .... leel!aP -. ..w
_, blft to ta!lc -Ill die has DEAR ANN: 1 lave bad 1001e VUJ • W ." -ti -i-., ,_
to do a;.-.. I wool > lo tell b« diaturt>lng clnama •late17. I *-GI a -*<rr 8"' 11'1 ..... w
f,NN LANDERS ~
' DEAR ,<CAN'T: I llllllor 111'.tt ,_ ... -..... -·--· Im ........... tldl=MI wife
1e marry. ,.,.. ftat_• law ii
..... lie ........ 11 wp jut ,.. ,... ' llWL • ;
' DIWI t ANN i<AllDERS: Tban1" you
!« the -la -, .. aald -"People IO to the bi>apllal becauae they
' •
.. ~ lkk, Id because they are Ioneoome.
Do your hoopltallud friends end rdaUvet
a rivor. Leavt them alone ...
I've made up tnY mind that U I had
lo io In the hospital again I will post a, bl& alp on my door -NO VISITORS.
Alld tlJ'" will be llO ~ In my room.
Tbe doy I "-' operated oo, lrlenda
end family phoned mt an hour after
..... tblnc'.· ,,,.. o11e • ..-.. end """" -"""' the -. Ibo .. -. .... ...-... ~w-1~ on aliapt -cruf ll\flJc ber llWe --.tllo TV ropairmao ad --1'1lodiia<,_11t
neplieWJllid .. : e•en the -boy.>l 1111 a ._iablt' ~-------,.. Tbt ~1 '.afl<r IUrll'fY, ~''l'iilt<ra married woman, ~1'11'>'• lino , l'r' u;-..,;~,_........_1 came , end tallted their fool heada off. family. I have ,. ln ~ .. ._ ,.. ...........
It took me twice· 11 looa to reqver -than my -.i. ·M1 ._ :'· J ., ·" •
becauae I had to--.-be1nc have mume ~and f ' Aim Liildeft'""' &"'11 )'"
plwant when I abould have beeii r01Uftc ·1111 flllod "!'Ill> C.. you _uplaht you -:rvur ,.-_ to.it
end .. lllng my rtrqth '*"-thla! -TO SLEIP • · to 11or In .... at ,Ille DAILY
You 01t111t lo mun thal column ever1 DIAll ........ , -.. • en~ a llampod. • ---Ii I yW, Ann. It would be a na~ ~. tem•" .. , J* ... ......_ M I'*! envelope.
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Arts .Club . Say.ors Bake scite·~·· . .
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Horoscope
•
Aquarius: Be Mentally P!lert
FRIDA y .. p1 napoosibiiily. You can f.._. with one In authority. PUCES (tob. INlarth JO): J
. IWn acclaim, but you alao AQl!AltlUS (Ja. 2o-Ftb. You eiperltuce JWDlnp.
NOVJ;MBER 2] mUsl fuUiii oblicallool. u lh1I Ill: What )'(11 lhinl: you need You lhinl: gus la ll!ll@l>OI' •1 ~ OM.\111. you do, day la featured bf la I• lt)lray. key la tO itrlte, al:noi ~ w11.. Appjf cciil>--
AJUEs (March 2I·April l l )' COOllrllcUvt aclica. M-t _.s, be mentally alert. """ ,._, 'I)'* iJooe lo
I -·"'·• ....... ·• rectived which chan&t1 pllD. Dani "'vt •M --'•'·· for """ do cale. Yoo are not " .......... ~ .....,.e or -VIRGO (Aug. 13-sept. II): ...... ~..:::"""'"" ,.. ' '-'' vance, cbed< lepf ~· s i hold nochlni. _., h -•. ~ •• onptd. Bt •
Get papen ,In prda' . .Dqn't tr ve to on to money. .tructfve -but ayoid fOJ111 .~f. but avold, deatruc-
P"r!lllt "'1~'""'-to,.. away Pon't bt a chtck grabber to .. 1remt1.. ·• tll('\lctlon. .,
wilh you. ,M-bt oure or tonight. Some eocourage ex·I;=:===:;:::=:;=::;:;::::::!::=:::::!:=====:=:=; 1nstructlom, •ware of. details. travagance. Heed your own • ' A. • .... ~ · ·' ' ' '
•TAURUl(AprUZO.MayJll): =Jii:~:;~.:~ '..' , .~ '. • ~tut ~=:1~ =:'. emotions defeat logic. nnou_n_ctna
Travtl plans could bt upoet ·LIBRA (Stpl. 23--0ct. 21 )' d u 100 are tora~tluL Mta!IS Sudden c,.,_,' surpr1s1o& WITH PRIDE OUR be o b 1 e r v a n t , alert. development.a are featured. A
GEMINI (llay 21.June 211)' new start, cootocti. lndiC8ltd. NEWEST 'ADDITION
Inner 1confllct+ la: 1.evldent. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-NOY. 21): ' '
Spe,U; frabkly to chlJdmi -Have faith in ·YOUl"-1 MEN'S ---also ~ any ~ with judgment. lntWUve intellect ta
roroantlC Weral lloy to gain honed lo razor sharpoe,., Yoo
understanding. Domestic quea-perceive motives, trend .. ,
,Uon can be~ .,etiled if you Your bunch about relative" !a
are fortlirigbt. . apt to be correct. You couJd
CANCER (June 21.July 21)' discover a secret.
Oblaln hint from GEMINI SAG!TfARIUS (l'iov. '!
.,......_ U )'OU try lo duck Dec. It)' Fri<riil needs your
1!ll1Jor·llot•" yoo an thrown •'moral-support. A &Ill toa~
for Jou.•· Ac!cent m home, could aCC«npllsh mu c b . ·
IOCUrity, marr1a&e. CAPRICORN (Dec.· 2',Jan.
LEO (July :P.AIJ&. 21)' Ac· 19)' Avoid magnifying dif. • •
Club
I ,,,,,,
1b~$1D_Sl
~. . .. ·, ·.~ . .
ELK ' LEATHER · OXFORDS OR
~ . ,. .
CANVAS
Top-Siders
'24" '. ..
.
(IJ ~(J/itfSHOES . YY,~ THE 1Mn11flJ,:,.n, .
vorlng every mlntrte in preparation for their. an-Mams and Cannery in llµnlington Beach. _Marly
Dua\ bake sa)e are three Sweet"Aris members (left, _el1borately decorated c11kes with holiday motif.• will
, ript) the Mmet. Peter Tatwn~fl~lllte Jamisoo . be offered acc;o!llin&.Jo 1'fn .. ~armson, DreSldent. am Mia Zada Taylbr. ' The evf;llt Wlll \akt pl~.t?,'. ~s wiU.1:>".'1iseif<fo fipirice a Ghristmas pai1y
y, Npv. 2S outside the Alpba'lleta Mar~'il\, !Qr.senior ciliz'ehs~i· ,BayVI~ Convl!Je,scent Home.
I ' l
I
t
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· (?THIS.JS THE BIG ANO FJNAL CLEARANCE BEFORE THE
.,,:; NEW YEAR ..• Ah~ lfA(t· MERCHANDISE MUST BE
CLEARED TO M>.KE RQ<:l.M FOR l-IOLIDA Y AND SPRING
GROUP. . ·:. '
BETTER DRESSES
One and Two Piece
Reg. to
50.00
Famous Maker
COORDiNATES
VJ OFF
REG.
PRICE
Or W el Seel Charge
t/t.~~· ~~Six Sout.hlend locations ....:..
270 E. 17th St. ,
. , ·. COSTA MESA
548-1222 -c..-MUm --673-3300 --· 494-3194
I (I
~\
; Mesq S'eniors
I .
\
. <'
Buffums·
C.ULTURED PEARL
NECKLACES
14.99
Du~~! .c.ultured pearl event, you can
ooy our stunning baroque pearl necklaces
at this \'ery special price. Select from ·
; "( .J1.~i\01111"!" f aduated choker necklaces. All
'•"' Ji;efll"K ~Id clasps. 'what a beautiful
' Christmas.present for her! . ~ '
Costume Jewelry . . ... ~. ,,.. -1/o'':j ,,. -' 'l " ,..., r' ' :" • "\.'
~ Cw!lif .1 l'•llllin ltlMd • 144-2200
Mon.,Th\ls.,Ytl. 10:00 1111 t:JI DOW Oqs tt:OO tlll S:SO
r
'
'
-•" ·~ I Jlelrpoi1 'Beach
.
' •.. at its elegant best!
, FIJLL.LENGTH COAT
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·i .
.
;
~
fxP..••• yourself elegantly in this fun i.n,tt.j
Mink from the exching collKtfon of Mastwr'.l
furrillr Cherie• C~ohen. !'riced to 1a.,.. yi· ~
hundr.d1 HOWi '
,2977;
' -~ PTHERS ••• $977.TO $4477 1
~ . . '
' ~~~~OLI.EURS, SALE Nt;JIN '977 14 '2177 .·
New Length5? New· Fashiona! . f!!'77· '1!!'7,oit ; NATURAL M1NK JACKEI'S, SALE NOW d to d I ,
' I
Repeat o! a Sellout! \ '37~':
NATURAL M1NK 5!0LES .. \,'F;RY Sf~\"''............... I '
Trhnmed and Untrimmed, Dyed Black 1 '189 '677 · BROAIYI'All) PROCESSED LAMB JA.CKETS . . . to
Young and Snappy! Pl\IBh µ,xucy Flll'll! . ~ '!!'7""1 SHEARED BEA~ JACKE'rS, §ALE NOW ................ , d • . ' -~ ' ..
New 1969 F'uhlona!'Large selectl6n! 'J -· I '69 '
NATURAL MINK HATS, FABULOUS VALUES .. t ......... from
Fluf!y Long lWred Beauties!
NATURAL BUIE FOX SHRUGS, SALE PRlCEDtfOW ........ ,
,• ' -' . .
NEW HOURS ••• 'TIL CHRISTMAS
9:30 TO 9:00 P.I. MOIDAY 111RU FRIDAY
'87
SATURDAYS 9,30 ·A.M:TO 5':30 P.M. ,:,l',~~~.:'! ',;,~ ,'
•T•1 E"'P..t.. "·!"• "'~'"""' ot.uocltltlm'I. Fur "'Oltueh tw.i.d ftl .,..,
O...l<lt(Y O• W IWOll OI lf......i ...,,. .. .
PH. 543-9444
1525 EAST 17TH ST •• SANTA ANA
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r f
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r..."'~--"-........::'---'--=-~.:...:....;;...-..._~------~--------------------------------~~--
,---
Juni9r . Eqells )~~ady
Baby-sitting · Instruction
Bay Group
Gathering
For Work
The number al quaWled
bobyllu.r. --dur--in& lhe active bollday .. uon.
In order to aU.vlata lhil
altuaUon momben al the
Juolor Ebell Club qi NeWport
Beach, led by I a fe t y
chairman, Mrs. · P' r a n k
H~he1, will bolt a free baby-
alWna cllnlc Saturday, Nov.
' • ' •
JS from 't a.m. to S;30 p.m.
In the Con>lla dd MM lligb
School cafel<ria.
The cllll la pllMed lo 10-
commodo\e aD Junior )ll&h and bl"1 i!Chool alUdent,a.lntuested
In devolin& lhe day lo bolter
equip ~vea 11 attters.
The courae, wblcb .la In-
tended lo lrain and P<OVi<le
J •.
--
Torkey Trot
Reservations . Due . '
Renrvaljons are still. l>ei!J8. taken .. for
'J'w\ey ~ lll:e.~r d8netl!_'!j1nem.Ji8rs
and i\iesli ";/the Tuesday Club of Newport
Harbor. \,,
The event will take place Satutday, Nov.
23 in tile SBDlll Ana Countcy Club. Begil)ning
with a 7 p.m. cccktail hour, the 8 p.m. dinner
will be followed by an evening of dancing to
the music of George (Judd) DeNaugbt's
orchestra.
In keeJ!lnl wi1h the com)ng liolfday, .• .
traditional tlir[fey feast wilt1ie served inl<1'
setting of Thanksgiving plenty.
Reservations can be made by calling
Mr!. William Hendricks at 67~1593.
. .
Christmas Program
Executives
Entertainment by the Bob
. Mantzke Singers will highlight
the Christma!: program for
· Executives' Dlnne1.,,€JU.b of
Orange Coait next Monday
night In the Ne~lm. ·
· Mant.ke, vlhi> dlr•cti' a
lf'OUP of college students
carefully selected for their
voices, bas won several choral
· cbUnplonshlp1 and has made
televilion and personal ap-
. pearanca: throughout. the
, wOrld.
Entertained
The evening'• .en-
tertainment, an-anged_ by pro-
gram chairman W i 11 i a m
Imhoff, is expected to close
with ~asi carols.r.
Hosts. and hostesses greeting
members at the 6 p.m . ...soclal
hour will be. Mr. and · Mrs.
Doe Seal and Capt. and Mn.
Gerald Linke. Joe Long will
give the invocation and ~.K.
Kroch will lead the Pl'dle
of allegian<'<.
• •
safe and co n1 c le n tlou 11
bobysillero, will be taught by
1peclallzed members of the
community. A film on Mouth
lo Mouth Raualtation and the
aplanaUon of emergency pro-
cedures will be given by a
member of the fire depart-
ment. A police representative
Wlll 'OUUine safe pracUces for
answering the phone and door
and tell how to o·b ta In
emergency numbers.
· Baby care wilt be
demonstrated. by a Red Cross
worker, bow to g l v e
medicines, signs of illness,
poisons, what to do iu case
of poisonini and generaJ dos
and dort'ts will be discussed
by a pediatrician. Haodling
children a n d entertaining
them will be demonstrated by
a nursery school teacher.
Finally. a mother will explain
a sitter's repon.slblllUes to the
parents and the parents'
responsibilities to the sitter.
Certificates will be awarded
by ·those completing t h e
course. Students are uquest.ed
to bring a lunch and provide
their own transportation. For
registration, call Mrs. Hughes
at 644-0574 or Mrs. James
Murar at &W:-0667.
A wwksbop .... tlo& will be
staged ·by members of the
Bay Circle, Florence Critten-
ton Hcane, tomorrow.
Memben will gather at
noon to help stuff and ad-
dress envelopes containing
the Little Red Stocking Chrlat·
ma.s solicltation for funds for
the new home for unwed mothers lo lie buut near
Orange.
The setUng for the meeting
will be the Newport Beach
home ol. Mrs. Bert Sahr. Mn.
Fred Dul'rt<, cbairm., of
Bay Circle, will conduct a
brief buaineR meeting before
luncheon. Guests are wel·
come.
Any woman interested in
the group may visit this meet·
Ing by calling Mn. Sahr for
luncbeon re,,ervaUons at 675-
'548.
Newport Bethel
• YOWlg womeo affiliated with
New p 0-r t Beach Job'•
Daugbten, Beth.el 157 gather
the sec-0nd and fourth Mon-
days at 7:30 p.m. The Masonic
Temple is the setting for
meetings. Information
regarding membership is ob-
tainable by calling Mr s •
Walter Tuz, 545-1755.
BE FREE OF
FACIAL HAIR
FOREVER ••••
Let us show ycu hoN
easy It ls to remove
excess hal I"" wlth
rtlodem electl""Olysis •
medically approved,.,
safe. fast, gentle.
You're Invited to
C01'l5Ult With our
liqensed technician,
in i:>ur -Beauty Salon.
Newport Center
$500,000
' .
SALE OF
Le French Beau Monde Jewels
The Origino I 1969 Look
in Po risien ne Jewelry
FEATURING THE FAMOUS
Forest Fire Opal
66.60 cts.
November 22 & 23
. ... i., ••• '' ·~ -'· •
•
• ,· ·-
'•
. ,
•. WEINERT -CLARK
Fl NE ~ 1.-.\-EJL.S • . .
;
JJ ,ASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH
; PllYA'll ~ 1'<WIMI• IT !If. ' 1
INVITATION ONLY e 644-21MO
1 ', ,•
-·
•
save ftont:..JO.QO to 17.00,. ~. quilted bedspreads . •
in twin, full, king : •• even huge dual bed sizes
'
twht Md •• ce111p· ...... 24.tt •••••••••••..•••• ; •••.••••••••••••• 14.il
1w1 w .._, ...-. . ..._ 2t.H ...•••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••• 16.99
..................... ,lt.ff. •••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••.•. 22.99
To b• 1ur41 of our cornp1rative1, we 1enf our shoppeNi out h:t evaluate th•J• b.ed·
1pre1ds. They came b1clc end told u1 that 1imil1r 1tylln9 ind t1u1lity is selling else~
whe,.. for I 0.00 fo 17.00 morel We purch111d the entire stock of e top m1nuf1ct ..
urer's one perticuler line, They're beautifully teilored throw styles quilted with ece•
tete clown to the floor • , • the very ones you've w1nt1d for holiday perk-up. Tiie
selection i1 .hu91, but 'not ell p1tt1rn1 or colONi In every .+art. NO rn1il or phone.
m'y co dr1p1ri11 tnd b1dtpr11d1 113
shop with Your convenient Mey Co Clwrge-Plate
'
.. '
11iop at home ••• order 'iolfl
C!lltom made slip COYerl-ll!OW
for Christmas deRvt.Y
95.50* 1lip cover 1.+ .. for: • 6°ft.
at1nd1rd 2 or l cushion 1of1 and I 1t• ...
d1rd ch&lr.
lm19lne -for under 100.00, Mey Ce
tr1ntfOrms your 1ofa end c.helr ••• in
time for Chri1tm11. One of our decor..
•tor·con1ultents will bring you hundred1
of 1w,tch.1. All 11ip cover febriee: ere
1oil0 r11i1tent, color-fiat and dur1bl1.
•Price 1ppli11 to .Jip covers th1t •N
t1llored with 1.99 y1ri:I f1bric.
... ---. Moy •C:.. for
ltor•to..your-door J1rvic1. No chart ..
no obll9etion. may co. custom febrles JI..
•
' ' Mllh allt pl•ll. ICli ••to frffway 11t bristol, cCISN IMIOl
thop lllOllday tin •lwday, Ul:OO a.in. to 9:30 P-lll·
~ 'f~
---
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•
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Je OAILV PILOT T""""'1, -21, 1908
Par·ent-teac her Uni ts
• ,
P•.r••A' wilhliJ "°·•College P~. PTA
reglster )'I. vote f!>IY call Mn. Burlelp llunbem
Mrs. WIUjlm Stepl/enloo '1 ' President
Mt-3131 for ~. REPORTS : Ice cream is sold
each Wednesday at noon by Canyon. PTA . PTA membors. . ~-Mis. Dennis Miller Robert Marold, teatlt)er :.-aid
President . chairman and cOmmlttee
REPORTS: Thomas Barnes. •have completed 15 projects;
deputy p~atioo officer of they me.et every ·Monday ,In
Orange County, spoke at the the curriculum lab. . • .
Nov em b e-r meeting ... ,PTA magazine subscriptions
M~ahip plaque YI a s ' m&~ be purchased by con-
....,..red to 'Mrs. Melvin < , tac\ing Mrs. Al Hurst,
McNutt'a elasi, with l.00 ~ magazine chairman.
percent mtmtien. . . . '-' PTA Mothers' worllbop took f'le rper
place yesteniay, 1r b ere ~ Mn. Harry Kohout
Christmas favan " e r e President . , . made for each stwleol. COMING UP: Board meeti>gc ·
~ook Fair's a 'Real 'Winner'
al 7"9.-~m. ~ondv, Dec.
2, In the Costa M.,. home .,,Mn. Loy Jollnlton.
Lincoln PT A.
Mn.· Doane Blocl
J'l'a\dent,, COMlNG 't)P: • .Mnoal book
falr will~ pia¢t ,from
8 a.m. to 7 p.m. ,.onday,
Nov. 25 aDd ((om a a.m.
to t p.m. 1'esday ... Nov.
2G, In the library. B. Dalton
Book Store W11I supply the
books. Mr&• l!Mr .. Coricb
is chaimian. ..,~!'17,.
REPORTS: 'l\?JmelJ In the
poster contest were Lisa
Bauman, .Jane Bowman and
Andrea McAdam.
• • !loping to make the Lincoln School Boolr l"air 'a Nov. 25 and :.11 with books being supplied l>Y B. D'1·
twinner'' are Utree ""'1 winnera (left to right) J ane ton o! Fashion Island. Rerord• and poster~.~ will
ll!>wman, Andrea McAdam and Lisa Bauman, whose be · available;! .'.lbe Book Fair Is directed•ll>t. Mf'.
pooters were judged Uie best during a com..! {pr George Garich. The pool<or conte6t was ~
Ith graders. The PTA sponsored fair will take place _b..:y_M_rs_._Bet_t.:.y_H_an_d:..Y·~---.-.----·-·--
' ..
'
Students Prepare for :Holi.d~y_.,
Pomona PTA
. :Mn:·-~el '···--~....., '".··~ ·~ t\~ -~;..._.f"I ... _. .• ~
·~a ~aper -difv, . ~·.,,the ~t
council aooll'TA will tHe
place from 7:30 a.m. to 7
p.m. ~mo . NewspaJl'r -·i -ict up • b& ~a\1aiJa11le. ..,._ • --..De w " ·~o
I.,... -'1:1 . ' ,.1!;.ruwwt. .r • • ·,.aun es • , ......
1 ... , ~lbutlng. the most paper.
; ;~~·-PTA . .
l"'R· .,.,.,,._ ~1111111 ,Je11o11.,, ' . .• ·' . ; . ' ' i \, . ~ I . , n'( · ' ., ,·:COM!l!G_ )JP; C ~r.ls tm.as
' '"""1'd -~~al ·7 p,rn. . !Ni!sday;tNov. 26. Members
are, requested to bring a
toy' lhat will bo distributed
•y the "1nerican Legloq to _i;......~-. ll(s..M. n. !~ ............ ~ •• ,. : 0 WW .-.. ~.•·: ~ ,-t.f. '·".J~ '• "
.: ' •· •' . .#;
''·I~· ~ '
!
,fEdllor'I Nole; A POe MYoted fo ~l•ln val'"°, HunH119lon lie.ell. n View, 5"1 Se.ch and Well·
lit'< Scl\ool Oldrlct p1rent-INCher
nl11tlon1 wlll •-r in rtie LY PILOT INleh weelo.. lnform1-ttlrl mu~t be l'!'C'llved by Mn. W•~ Ir.Tl Pul!onl, 172&0 S.nl1 Luci1,
F_,nllln V1lll"f, by 5 p.m. l;i"l!MY
tot pU(!Uutlon Ttiund1~.)
REPORTS: canned food drive
ends next Saturday, reports
Mrs. Clifford Kent,
chainnnn. Surplus of food
wW . be given to t he
W .est minster Coordinating
Council.
at unit meeting. FOurth predation Night Wu) 'be ..
graders presented a 4)bserved at·7:30 p.IJl. :rues-
HB Council
Mn. Ray Myers
President
COMING UP: Christmas
Bazaar and potluck hmcheon
at 10 :30 a.m. Wedn~ay,
Dee. 4, in the Westminster
Civic Center.
Arevalo s PTO
I Mn. 8. J.'Worb
President
q>MING Ul>:" tickeU! rot the
Superintendent Parent cou'n-
cil spon9DT'ed ballet by Urie
Laguna Beach Civic Ballel
iwlll be sold [rom 8 to I:~
a.m. and 11 :30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Nov. 26 and 27, and
Dec. 3 through 6.
Performances are scheduled
fnr 2 and 7:30 p.m. Salur·
day, Dec. 7, in Huntington
Beach HJgh Schoel
audttoMum. For more in-
(onnat1on~ you may call
Mn. Bert Schuman, com·
1 mlttee chairman, at 968-
'576. Admission is $2 f()I'
odulll and children th.-ougb
lol 1 b oc~oot. '1·
-will be oerved ~ inlmnlsllOO. : "With • Sooa In
Circle Vw. PT A
Mn. Ron Jensen
President
COMING UP' ~pus CapeTS
is ti.Ue of Variety Show
which. includes 35 acts of
songs, dances, instrumentals
and skits. Perfonnance is
al 8 p.m. tomorrow, ia the
auditocium. Adnllssion 'll!i 50
ct:nl!,and ~-wfil bo
used lo purchase Cbristmaa
gifts for the classrooms.
. Mro. Robert Wel>bor l8
chairman, assisted bJ 'Mn.
RQbort Cosio.
DeMi)le PTA
, Mn: n.'b.rfWblleslcle
· ·President
COMING UP : Underslanding
of Your Child'L!I Welfare is
topic of unit meeting at 7:'l
p.m. Monday, Nov. 25, in
the multipurpose room. Mrs.
Frank Boucher, family life
specialist with West.rnirister
School District, will lecture.
Parents will be shown films,
models and cba(ts of what
the cblldren will be learning.
Lake View PFG ·
Thanksgiving program. A day, Nov. 26. Moilien cf
decorated cake, photo album second gradl!ra ~;111 serve
and a certificate of ap-pi'*-"~'-10th f4t!er to ..
preciation were presented reglste.r at the -~ will
by school and PFG to Joe receive a pri1.e. M• High
Birzler, retiring custodian. School Choir wiU filt?tain'
Nie bla s PTO with soogs. . · 1 .
Mn. Richard Wllbelm Villag~_ Vw. :Jrr.A '
President _. .Mkl-::~ M@qad
OOMING UP: Boar:d meeting ";t' P.fes.ldent -'
at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. REPOlri1~1"""'8-Rlbl\ard
.3. M&r ;;ha l l , P~tdg)'am
REPORTS -. United States Sav-cba!rmP, repi.i'\a \ lemlly
ings Stamps are sokl every life~ films were ,Ilion to
Tuesday morning, sponsortd bo1( and l!rls. TllJ fObool
by the FOU11\&hl Vall(\1 • .,,...... were hi atlenilance
Woman's Club. .\ ! tO aqSWer QuestiOQ.ll.
' Oak Vi ew PTA Wardlow PTG.
Mn. H. Bruce TW1H!r Mn. Geor&e ~ee~
President President '
CO~ING U\,: ''.Pr Ince a a COMING UP: Blc~ ,Bafet.Y,
Cinderella , w1U ~ .shown ... _ iohiiili::Miif..'HnW:l._M nda , at 1 p.m. Satur<iay, Nov. · ·,-.. ,.,,.,. ... q Y1
23, in the · Dtultlpurpose No•.~ !S.
room. Mrs. Dorotha Ken· REPORTS : Mrs. W a 1 t er
nedy Is chairman, assisted Pigage, safety chairman,
by Mrs. Hank Standridge reports 197 idt!ntlCJcaUon
and Mrs. Irving' Duke. bracelets and necklaces
Admission ls 35 cents, which were sold . • • Detective
Includes a Cree bag of pop-J . L. Reinholtz oC tbe Run·
corn. Additional popcorn lington Beach p o 1 J c e
may be purchased foe 10 Department described the
centl a bag. U you are advant.agea ol tbe Parent
lntereotad In belj)ill& with Safety Bloc:k proJP'IDl, al
the movies, you may call a meeting recenU, , l .
Mra. Kennedy at 847"6C. Chairmen for the year are
' •!
"
Prqgrarns;
St. John Aux . ·drive en& Dec. 1%.
Mrs. Robert Reid ~~nora PT A
President I ~¥rt. Dfnald MOusca COML~G UP: Thanksgiving President ~
Pantry Shower Monday thro-CbMING UP; Chuck Jones
ugh Wednesday, Nov. 25-27. magic shows will take pl?ce
Mrs. Joseph Devlin, chair-j at ~,'~ .. P~" for morning
man will place t?Ollectian kinderjaJiea~ough third
boxes in each classroom. : • !lgra4e-l"pg'.l!,. 3'.: 15 p.m. for
Board meeting M o n d a Y , kindergarten through sixth
Nov. 25, in the home of grade, WedJJesday, Nov. 27,
Mrs. Paul Doutt. in the multipurpose room.
REPORTS: 115 members at· Tickets will be sold £or 50
tended the N 0 v e m b e r ttnts Nov. 25·27, parents
meeting. Grades one 8 and and preschoolers are invited
two B tied for the at· to at~nd. •
tendance award and banner. U ' ' 'ty PTA Membership vo te d to niven.•
allocate funds ror remedial Mr. and Mn:. Robert Kerr
reading supplies. Mrs. Leroy Presidents
Taube, mem b ership COMING UP: Book and
chairman, reported that the . ,; F.ducational supply fair will
{ , I .., . ---
' .. ,.
lake place Tgursday through
8alurday, Nov. 21·23, ID the
multipurpose rom . Thul'Jday
fr~ 7:30 t~ 10 p.m. autho~
Arnold Hano, Adrian Jo~
Wesley Man: and Terrf
Shannon will au tog rap~
books. Books will be soffi
F'ridaynfrotn 3:30 t.o 9 p.
and 9 a.mr !lnlU neon Satu
day. Mrs. Russ Frank Ii
chairman. ,
REPORTS : November boai-d
mee~ing took place in the
home of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Goldstein, ways and
means chairmen, Volunteer
wOrKers in the library,
teacher aids, book fair,
paJH!' drive and narcotics
proj'iUD were ~
'
I• :ft=--(;a<let~ G;:
-led the 0., ...... =. lln. 8. J, Worb,
._ .... _ ...... t --Uoil-
--~ ..... r ... -111..ic.oi
Mn. Dam1I 8el1«
PreJklcnl
OOMING UP: Studenll will
pctlclpatt In Oporllion Mer·
ry <JJristmlll by brinP>I
ClllDed .-lo ICbool , ... DiledJ' lamllleo • • , PFG
w1ll donlll Olrlolmu jrea
loeachclastnloln.
P PTO tht Mrnel. Edwenl Spang erry and Don Whan, mem-
Mn. ,....,._ _, h.t r 111.1 p '• )I er o 1 d -~· Sc~ ••w•ette: COMING UPr ~ 'rl!. AloOto -. publiclly ;
and December wj1I' • J'l!ll Om-. r o o m p 1 M • f Th · f 1>ociJJculoo\l11r:ae~ ~i.Plece.••hty;· rogram s us1c o e1t ars
• Higb Scito.1. ncht.. 'l!O c8tis ,w 8dwl. im 'J5• :
cents for chlldl'lll, will lie Ullilli~le at Ille ,Cloor. I
Evary child In the music department will be particl-;
paling from ~ginning Ottheatra to lijlper'!avel sing· I
Ing groupo. Proceedl will pwdiase equipment for
the music room.
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-"" l>'l'O.
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flitiiddelllt
REPORTS; Dr. Clarence Ifllll,
'lltJ*liltmldtnt al 'O C I I D
View School .D1otrld, opokc
Oil the llrturt ol the dlltrlct
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~-al llil.. ~ .. ;&,,._ ~:o.'nt:t' Pzactlclni ~r l\WDbff for the Fall FooUiRbt Fn.. itJIS:~ tld-Dona~ ).lct1 presesrted by Johll C. McDowell Sdlool music Springd ale PTA Moull~ tele~· 'wilJJam d~ent are (left to right) LuAnn Strother, Mar-
Mn. 08' 1111119 ' · : lleWf',ootlt .aiV111e. :a~ 1' garet l!ieyera, Dianna Saltman and Lori Calderon
Prtlldool JamM Curry, ways' and ~Will-' Iii~-Th~ event will be !J',rl•
COMING UP: Fath<!-Ap-means. day, Nov. "22 at 7:IO p.m. In Ille Fountain Villey
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D~ILY PILOT' ) J; •
Orange County Symphony Holiday Bazaar, Read y
S.eventh .Se~s.on Opened
Library Hour
Coota ~... Library " the
Doors ol Mlchoel'1 Inn, Giiiespie, 11a1e oocohd vl<t ...., ol a library otoey boor
Fullerton will swing open at ~ldent. ev«'f Tbuaday at 10:30 a.m.
IO a.m. neit S.turdly for' a .-;:::.;;;;;;================~· Holii!iy lloutlque Bazaar a001r luncheon. s po n ro red by
Oraogewood National Cooncll,
Epsilon Sigma Alpha.
'.l1>e lormal opooinc c:oocert
of the oeventb ...,.. llw>cbed
by the Sympbooy Orcheslra
o1 Cronce COWlly Wiil be
Saturday, flov. 2S at S:IO p.m,
In the newly r.turblsbed
audJ,torlum of .. Cbapman _eo1g, Orange.
A seeond Identical concert
"Will be perform>d the n¢
day at I p.m. In the lllino
location. •
1be orchestra, conducted by
Daniel Lewll, wl.lLi otte1» the
Symphony P 11 to ra I e,...by
Ginastera 'and .Concerto
Grouo No. I by Blocb. Adrian
Ruiz, plJnlst, will p I a y
Rachmaninoff Plano Concerto
No. I will( the orcheolra.
A native ol I.al Anplet,
the planlal rtceivool 1111 early l!'•lnlnt al u..._,_...__
ol MUlic \under JI u d .:.!iC
Serldn, He a1ao llal
with Amparo l~I, J~
Gimpel and LIWan St.ubet, . ' He aLteqded the Unlvenlty
bl southern 1:ililon>!a· where
lie rec*!Ve<I bla bacbelon <1ea-cum Jo..i, and bis
master'• ~ lie. r'IQllveil
a graduat. lillOonhlp at I/SC
and WU -by 1be -ol lnternailoaal Education to
Italy to -participate · in 1be
Busooi Internallollal Piano
competition, for wb1dl be
Sizes 1-a ~ 20
Cheeto,,..;.
'fM .. ,..
.-.of
.. -.:hard-to-find
·~ 11-20 at Half-Size
Shop.
from $15.00
' SIZES
18-20
12Vz·26 V.
'r
Did you know that Haff-Size Shop I
has SPORTSWEAR TO SIZE 46?
Effa · Nor's HALF·SIZE SHOP
I 1105 New)HMt llY4 .. c .........
"Vi W.c• "°"' .. 111' Strfft" .,
. '
......, .. t 100
AIM' 224 Oro11..,.., Moll,
,., .. rt .. ··BB "
There's a pretty
new kid in town.
You'?'e going to aee .-lot
of this lovely lddaldn
PUDlj> h1 Life_ 's~
Blac~. Siu• end
Brown Kid $15
•
WESTCLIFF PLAZA-17th I IRVINE
I )
received a 1pecia.I award. He
is CWTenil)' assistant pro-
feuor of muaic at San
PIANIST
Adrian Ruiz
Fernando Valley St ate
College.
The aololst has received
' several awards and has ap-
peared with numerous
orchestras .
Adult and student tickets
ate on sale and available at
the Symphony Office, Town
and Country Sulte 124, Orange,
or by calling 548-8165.
The Symphony reflects the
support of hundreds o f
volunteers who have given
1hbusands of hours of service
for the development and
lllStenance of the association.
'11!e objectives of the Sym-
' phony Association have been
to exp&nd the enthusiastic
part_iclpation of all organiza-
tions, ,businesses, young people
Holiday ~lions cle..lgn.
ed-l>jYl!n. ·£#1-WlllMF,Alpha -
XI ~. and bootbl with
displays arranged by
. participatlog cbapten wW be
featured at the e""'t which
wW be l>o6led by members
ol Alpba1Xl cbot>ter; GU'den
Grove arid <Eta Alpha chaptor.
Santa Ana.
I~ In 'uie ,P.Wght wW
Include a Blue · Cb!p Stamp
tree, calendars .and k. y
chaina, books and book marks,
nuts, date bari, florBI ar-
rangements, fancy b ow s ,
Christmas boxes and country
store merchandise.
Mrs. ow Bry, stat. prest.
dent, ·will come from Torrance
for the event Other honored
guests will include · M r s .
Angelo Isquierdo, junior past
president for the state and
intern at1ona I wwkshop
chairman and Mn. Everett.
TOPS View
D.iet Menus
Nuts to Nibbles chapter of
TOPS will greet a guest spearu at th~ir ·meeting 10-
morrow at 10 a.m. in the
Huntington Beach Recrutioo
Center.
A speaker from .the Heart
Association will discuss holi-
day menu plannllig with em·
phasis on low calorie foods,
a diet for the sake of your
heart. '
The public is lnVited t? the
event. Members of other
TOPS groups are especially
welcome.
and adults In all walks of----------
lile. Give the United Way In the past six years ap-
by
SUSTER
BROWN.
~-. ·-· -
T1ie Antiqued t:ook
For Young Ladies
Now 2 Stores lo'Beller Serve Yoa
'JJ!Y!~#,:-.@§f;)
In · W estcllff Plau
No.wport Beach
30 F~shion Island
New.port Bo.ach
ENTIRE STOCK
Regardless Of loss ,._
Terrific SaYlnlJS -Jewelry, Watches,
Gifts, Rings, Christmas Items, Dlomoncl
Rings, Office Supplies, Hundreds of
. other fine items.
ALL
RUTHUSSLY
'PRICE SLASHED
FOR QUICK . ' LIQUIDATION
Dealers and' Decorators Welcome
BOB'S BARGAIN .
CENTER ·
1812 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
Ftwe • Parking In Rear
proximately 400 t a I e n t e di iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii young musicians have been11
f:.:::::: .. ~~;n~·;:t·~ OVER ... $.10. "· .0 .. 00-0 -'SPANISH , MEDiTERRANE""'·· well-known artists and musi-1
eians, Thl'Ollgh the Young • '. . , • / . STYLES TO CHOOSE . FR.OM '• Artists Auditions, 111 first _ ,
place winners have received
scholarships and cash awards
and perfonned with t h e
orchestra. •
Duffern Helsing, president,
and Mias Marcelina Arroues,
execuUve vlce president, in-
vite organizations and in-
dividuals to call Mrs. -Harold
Blerma at Ute symphony of-
fice fol' informat'ion on special
courtelles.
The Tee
Tattler
IEdl1'Dr'1 Note: A column of Wo.neii•1
T1111 901f ICOl'l!I wlll •-r e.cti WM1c In 1M D1llY Pihl!. 'Ta rtllOrt
IOlll'H for IM W.-. plf,f.. mill
them ti! P.O. lllolt 1$60. Coilll M8M.
TMr mv1t i.. recelwcl by Monc11v.l RAHCMO SAN JOAQUIN
AC• TOUIUU1M•NT, LOW N•T -
WIMIR, IM """"'· w1n1t Thomes, actll Joe W1tlt\llt, l"ll91tt IJ l-IYM Thomtt. l"hM 2l Philip Jcihn1kltt,
1'11"'11 J1 John SChwell9, Orrin Wrl-"1•
Fnonl Altl;r-. IYlll $tvrYl1 Md
W11ttr' Wllll, 111 75. Fllthl •1 lleecl
Shttl..,, ~ "'Tur11tr, 11, Fntht S; £. I'. P~I. n, FH9ht •1 Gllber1
IH, RGtltrt LIYl1111lon, J . m I I ~. 71, Flltfll 11 R11'tl Trout·
!Mn. w1r,,., wt1111, Phlllt eor-n.
Tr1vl1 FOf"fl'J', 1', Fl11ht I.
LOW N•T -Wl11119B. IM ""'*· I'. W. ~ 7f, l"ll1ht 11 H1rrt1
eott1m, Phllll Joh111111"1, to, 1'119hl
.21 ANln H.ttl, Ahlln UPll\l, 111, l'llthf • I L NteUIL COU NTRY CLUI
l.ADl•S DA'!' T I MW H l $T L I
TOURNAMIMT -FU,ht A, the Mmn. ltllben M9rvln, '21 RlcMrll AlllMU, ,
"' H1rokl Cow1rct. 521 Ftlsht II, ""' Mm•. H1rrv LOW'!, •1 ColYlfl Whlll"ltaft, 47; A.,_rt Cole, 4j1 F'l!1hl
c , IM Mmtt. 11;-r Llllntrom, S71 Irwin K .. IM 1Uc1>9rd How91~ 51:
Fllelll 0, IM Mrt'lft. Ed HOlklnJ. 4 ; Wiibur Lt'l'I" Mii ~ Atldlt-
~.
~9IOWAS
MEXICO
~IMAS
-YIAR'S 'IMlllCllUISE
hc.19 ........
~ • MAMC>aous PUM-flU.f.D
CAliFUI DAYS
fl...t...., c1 ...
H.+.l......,i...1 Ch•r· *" ....... c.,.
-l11 tits: 114-
1 l I Di1•i ...
""-· Sia •1:a1: '''t:.'-"'-' .., lllt IG.,. l::-1 ..... .. d .. '11 ,.. ...,...._cttr. ,, •. If', •• I •••• -.T--.c..... ...... =.:··· ..... .,, .....
'w;i;"tf,._ __ ,._ -Dr.a-..... .,.._
, ...... Mlltftl
Ll9'lll MllJo -~1'· -trr.t411
..
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For ttt. hom1owntr ·with dlecrfmlMtlna bate and 1n •ye for auperb worftm1n1hlp,
hllt'I 1r11 l compl11te roolns of Sp11nl1h dtisl1ned furniture at un1ul')llls11d "''luesl
Th• Jivln1 room 1ns1mblt is werml)' aecenttd wlUt' hand ctryed wdod. trim on the
, sofa and IOYll '1e1t that fullr, compHmtnt their sumptuous velvtt fabric1: A ICMfy
fem treei wall pl8QU1 •fld' emps fill th• room with •lea•nt warmth 1nd charm.
Welk Into the bedroom 1nd you'll Immediately flU 1n-tove with th~ ;'"'4:1ous hlrnl·
ture that carries throu1h th• "'llSlerlul haltd datl1n •ncf suptrb construction. lnspect-Vlls 1roup·
Ing cerefullY , •• from the ·majestic mirror 11'1d lrlplt dtHlllf ••• to the kinaslz• hetdbo1td 1nd
full size nite stinds , , , all deep In d*tllt tnd constn.K!ted for• lifttlme:.A tiw: p;eee dlnir11 room
Mt tomplltl• lhis...spl1Mjd ·!roup1n1 with ~·~ SCroll·worir Oft both bbla pede1t1I •I'd th1lr
lueds, enl'l&11Cld b~ .plusl! v nyt ~••ts. Our proteufofttl de~rato~ art. It your svvJce. Easy
-1trms.-of cou~. 1 .. • ., ~ ..
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Campltlt l R""' 11"11 lncludts:
• So~
• squart w hll tommoH
• toelltil table • trtt
• Jtblt i..i, • luoe'OI ~ ..
• ,ctura • triple dl'ISlll"
• llllrr« • 2 litt stlnft
• l;,,piu ileolboa~
• 5 ... jia·~-*
. .
.u. 1 c • ..;w .... ....,. ,., o..rr
$799°0
Each· PJKe can be
• plll'Chased separately
at equal lavingi
e .OPEN SUNDAY TILL 6
FOR YOUR CONVEN.IENCE
EASY TERMS e WE CAR-RY
OUR OWN ACCOUNTS
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Ja DAll.V Pll.OT Tilllndlr I NCl'lltfl'itlef 21. 1968
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Knudson Co.
Sets Record
• • In Earmngs
New Tips
On.Stock
Losses
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•., ' •. ~f ; ... • ± ' . ~6 .Mm1t'wH>.f tfiey(r• ln·Jk~ market for, our re ~ri~f)nd tli' DAIL"( PILOT Is tli• besf
pi•ce t!> put the b1te·.~n 'b1r9ain1. And they Clo it 1 t~ th•· ~~me 9u1to ., the gourmet her9
1howln9 how mucti hi •ppr,clate's the wares of the famed Alkmaar Cheese Market In The
Ne1:herland1. Y" don!+: have to-tr•y•l 10 far to find ,9,oo~ ·things to eat, nice things to wear1
new •ppli•nc•• _et ba·rg•in pr1c!•• a •·••I cir liuy in'-,•v•~ .. chunk of ch••••· Just shop th•
"Mlllch•'fr m•rket," the o~ our •dvertisers delive r1b yourdo0r ev'e ry day • ·---... •• • -• ... -· ~ . ,, -,_~-. --· ~ ·~ -. ' . • > lo; ...... '
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' H D,lll.V ~II.OT -· H-htt n. 1961
Pirates, Rustlers Bag 5 All-Conference Berths
Five Others
~lected 1.•.,
To 2nd Team
Randy Valaha, Golden West College's
pass-catching phenom, and Paul _Le-
moine. Orange Coast College's all-time
pas.sing leader, head a contingent of
tq. coast-area players on the All·Soulh
CMst Conference team selected by the
citcuit sports WTiters.
JOining Vataha and Lemoine on the
first offensive team were a pair of Orange
Coa.51. linemen, tackle Kevin Grady and
c8nt"er Randy Bass.
Only coast area player lo make the
first defesive team was Orange Coast
back Bill Jenkins.
The two area colleges bagged half of
tb!l. backfield posit.ions on the second
afJensive squad wilh John lnglehart of
Golden West selected as quarterback
and Wayne Tinlin o[ Orange Coast picked
as i:i running back.
Other offensive choices were OCC's
Craig Allen at end and GWC's Dan
Cunnir.gham al tackle.
The w r i t e r s selected San Diego
City College backfield star Stan Murphy
as the offensive player or the year,
Santa Ana tackle Leon Van Gorkum
as defensive player of the year and
San Diego's Harry West as coach ol
the year.
,:,, Fint Team OUeue
~ McCoy, Fullerton 1110
St. Vataha, Golden West 1'15
T~ G•ady, Onnge C..1t US '£}-Ward, San Diego 225
tit-Roop, Fullerton Z20 g:.-Campbell, San Diego 217
~ Basa, Orange Coast Z05 Qt-Lemoine, Orange eout.175
&;. Murphy, San Diego 170
B;.. Steward, Santa Ana 170
~ Terrio, Fullerton 200
~ First Team Defeme
~ Davis, San Diego 190
9-Grieb, Santa Ana 200 'i4-VanGorkum, Santa Ana .230
Blash, San Diego 2Z8
Zunlga, Fullerton 200
Stahr, Santa Ana 205
• Slough, San Diego 220 LI-Rasmussen, Santa Ana 205 Rt--Jenldnl, Oran1e Coast lt8
~ Chase, San Diego 167
Deckert. Santa Ana 182
Second Team Offeue
~ Patterson, Rio Hoiido 182 ~ Allen, Orange Coatt 111
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Fr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
RANDY VATAHA
GWC Offenslve End
2 Suspended
Eagle Stars
Reactivated
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -SI.Ir pass
receivers Mike Ditka and Gary Ballm~
have been returned to active status by
Joe Kuharich, the Philadelphia Eagles'
general manager and coach, and being
suspended Tuesday u "troublemakers."
Kuharich, who announced the reac-
tivation at· an afternoon practice session
in which both players participated, said
the "temporary suspensions of Mike
Ditka and Gary Ballman were lifted
this Wednesday morning atter' an es-
tensive discussion with ~ players."
Both Ditka and Balhnan, in personal
appearanes and interviews Monday with
sports writers in New York, bad criticiz..
ed the offense of the Eagles, wlnlesa
this 5eason in 10 National Football
League games.
Kubaricb said, 1'1'here was no need
for e.ction of any type after a harmonious
eooversat.ion relative to r e c e n t
Cunningham.. Golden Wtttzll i Worley, Fullerton 215
So.
So.
So. newspaper commentary.'' So.
McFarlan, San Diego 209 So. He charged that "the entire situation
Sawyer, Santi! Ana 115 So. wu magnified completely out of pro-
Hendren, Fuberton 210 So. portion."
laglehart, Golden Wert.17C
Tinlin, Orange Coat %OI
So. Ditka, an eigh\·year veWran tight end, ~ ..... Was'1 lpKhd ak fllyfrii ~ht' wanted to
~ Morgan, Fullerton JM
st-. Anderson, Santa Ana 170
So. return to Philadelphia next season but
_t Secopd Team Defense
So. would not play for Kuharich.
rA-Haxton, Santa Ana 175 Fr. 3 Claycamp, Fullerton 175 So.
Corcoran, Fullerton 200 So,
Bron, Mt. SAC 210 So, ..
-Jones, Golden West lli: Fr.
Li-Youngs, Mesa 210 So.
~ Lannon, Fullerton 215 So •.
LI-Valdivia, Santa Ana 1115 So.
BL. Sweet, Fullerton 215 So.
~ McMahon, Fullerton 111> ,So.
B-L Costello, Sant.a Ana , 18i So.
'konorable mention : Barsuk and Oliver, O~nge Coast; Simone and Parkman, G~den West.
•
The four-time AU-Pro, acquired two se3sons ago from the Chicago Bears,
insisted that what he said was: Kuharich
didn't want him .. .aod that he didn't
want to play loc . an1one who didn't
warit him. ~ • ....
The 28-year-old Ballmal'J, w h o m the
Eagles also picked up two years ago
in a trade with the Pittsburgh Steelers,
said Philadelphia ·had. a stereotyped. one·
two run and·k.ick Offense which disdained
the long pass aod failed to keep the
offense honest.
T h e suspensions had even brought ac-
tion frOm Philadelphia city officia!J.
~or Creating Interest
' ) .
tChapman, the Workl's
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lJiggest Little Col"lege
;
~y self-proclamation, Reno, Nev., Is
thf: biggest little city in the world. 'Y deed, Chapman College in nearby
D¥oge may be the biggest lltUe college
irit the world . . . at least as far
aajbaseball is concerned.
i<6J.l Deese, the 29-year-old baseball
c di of the Panthers. has made a
g erally boring collegiate sport exciUng t~ tbose who have followed Chapman
fop:Unes since he began working miracles
t~rt in 1964. i 1 has &uided his teams to a tot.al
t $ J 'rlll,,,,,#,,4
1lrHITE
' 1 WA.SH
. • ~ 1' ...
ott42 victories and 71 losses in those tie seasoos. And don't think he fattened
ul by playing junior grade .gppo1ition.
~udeci-on the ~an echedule
been such m.Jor varalUea u USC,
• UC Sant.I 5arbara. el<. Lut
hlJ Panlhen blanked SC_ oo their to a ~II r«<>r<I Ind the llm8ll
NCAA duimplonshlp. .
In the naaltinal flnlll Dteae"1 ran rou8hshod .. ., Delta Si.It
ppl), -IHJ.
a WhJIUer College IJ"ad\lat.,
lried to promote lhe sport lie is =~~ to by hootJng NCAA regional 1 hric:e. and by butldlng a~
..--is tar Orange Counly .
ltt/1 """' up wltll 1 ..,. plot
., lalerllt -he"• pullJni on
I
an April tournament which will feature
the University of Wyoming, Grambling
College, University of New Mexico, UC
Santa Barbara, Cal State (Fullerton)
and Chapman.
The Panther tutor won't say his
charges should be favored ror the tiUe
because he believes New Mexico may
be the strongest entry in the tourney
and one of the top major colleges in
the nation.
However, when you pump Deese for
facts on his own outfit and fiud he
has six of eight starters returning .and
six of seven pitchers back, you get
the feeling that he may not immediately
offer a forfeit to the gents from f'few
Mexico.
Or anyone else, for that matter.
Deese will tune up his team and spec-
tator enthusiasm for the tournament with
a nilty pair of home games the weekend
before festivities begin in the April
classic. That is, he'll host USC and
UCLA on successive nights.
Shortly prior to that he h a s
engagement! with Cal, Stanford, Oregon
State and Ariiona State. The onl)' foe
he's been unable to get on the menu
is Los Angeles -Dodgers, that is.
And it 's a fair bet that such an ktea
haa at least crossed hi! mJnd once
or twice.
Deese's reputation is widespread aod
obviously it's a solid one. Lul week
he accepted an orfer to coach an
Anchorage, Alaska collegiate team thls
111mmer 1t 1 handsome salary.
He wW recru.lt top talent from around
the country, take the players to our
41th state. then win 1am .. (~nllng
to the contract).
When Jt comes to promotJon of (!OJ!ege
baseball, P4ul Deese I! always in there
pllcl!lng. And it"• not likely he'll '°"'
atrlke out .
PAUL LEMOINE
OCC Ouortorb.ck
KEVIN GRADY
OCC Offensive Tackle • RANDY BA$$
OCC Center
BILL JENKINS
OCC Defensive Back
Olympic Hero Becoming a Legend
DETROIT (AP) -Il'a almost b•and
new and completely uajested, but built
41'0000 Olympics' hero Spencer Haywood,
tbe University of Detroit basketball team
)!: becoming a legend amoog fans. . 'i The anival on Haywood, a 6-fool-81h
sophomore, h a S' conjured up images of
poet season tournaments. And it's more
than a w e e k before th e Titans open
up their season.
"We want to go' to, the NCAA," admits
Ute usually-modest Haywood, w h o
skyrock.tted. at 19 ·yeara ol age from
We~her Last '
R4Jadblock
' ~ ,..,. .
For Peggy Ann
LOUISVJLLE. Ky. (AP) -The
possibility of inclement weather can-
pg lhe program te<med lo .be the
Qn)y timder'ance tO Peony Ann Early's
scheduled debut today as the first woman
to ride in a professional thoroughbred
race in the United States.
Miss .~l.Y wu f)ated,)<>i;ld\ \f.ilness
ill lllOI a.lrcbUI ;~.JJiliilli-;t..,., ~ ciilmii\B· eveAf 'ovei' slf fllrtolill lot
2-year-olds.
A t r a c k official warned Wednesday
of possible program cancellation if the
track failed to thaw out by the afternoon.
·Miss Early's chances looked bright
deaplte the pessimistic tone of the of·
ficial.
Wayne Moran, one of the ·tJorse.'s
owners, promised, "U the horse comes
out of that gage, Penny ·Ann Early
will be on it."
"This one looks good," said the 25-year-
old Miss Early, wbo has ·-been denied the cbance of ridlni since she
was granted a teni:porary jockey'• license
last week.
· La!t Saturday her mount was scrat.
ched. On Monday a male jockey wu
sub5tltuted.
Miss Early· commented lh<!t Ulie trainer
took her off because be ""dfd not want
the malt jockeys to strike. •
Talk of a "conspiracy'' to prevent
her from riding has brought in an oHer or outside help from the Lollisville and
Jefferson County Human RelaUons Com-
mission.
Dr. Martin Perl~y. •Uecuti.ve director
of the Horoan Relations Commission,
said lhe girl jockey could . appeal her
case to his commission.
obscurity to national fame when he led
the United States basketball team to
a gold medal at the Olympics last month.
It's caused a stir on the campus of
the coeducational Jesuit acbool. Students
make detours so they can glimpse a
bit of practice.
The Rev. Malcolm Catron, university
president, formally announced plans
Tuesday to make Detroit a top basketball
power in lhe country. ,
"We have the potential to be the
outstanding team in the history of the
Sports In Brief
•
University of DeUoit. 11 says Bob Cali~ill!? ·
who is in hia 1lat year as ba!ketDail
coach.
''But, we still have to prove It," be
adds. ·
And ci Haywbod, he says "He's got
the best potential of anyone we've ever had." .;; .
A naUve ol Silver City, Mils.1 Haywood
played biJ freshman year at Trinidad
Junior Colleje in 'Colorado and then
won a place on the Olympie basketball
team.
' ·'
Nevada Bolts WBA;
Angels May Get Stuiirt
LAS VEGAS -Nevada has unan-
imously voted to bolt the World Boting
Association because that body refused
to give a Las Vegas boxer a share of
the world junior middleweight title.
The Nevada Athletic Commission
agreed 4-0 Wednesday to join four
ottier stat.es outside the WBA. The other
states are New York, Calif9rnia, ~assachu~tts and Te11!.
The vote followed a WBA decision
upholding the result of a bout in Rome
last Oct. 25 between Italy1s Sandro
Mazzinhi and Nevada's Freddie Little.
Mazzi~ghl failed to answer the bell
for the ninth round in the bout and
referee Herbert Tomser declared Maz·
, zlnghi still champion. He called the bout
"no contest."
ANAHEIM -One of tbe great long
ball hitters in recent baseball history 11
hoping to beceme • member of the Cali-
fornia Angels.
The club announced Wednesday that
Dick Stuart, wb9 has been playing in
the Japanne professional league for
the last two 1ea1ons, will come to traln-
inP: camp next spring a1 a free agent.
The 3&-year-old righthanded first base-
man bas seen previous daty with the
Pittsburgh Ptrates, New York Mets and
Los Angeles Dodger• in the National
League ind with the Boston Red jo• in
the American League.
Daring that span be bit %27 homen.
./ ./ ./
SA!'{ FRANCISCO -Don Coryell, head
football coac~ at San, Diego Sf.ilte, was
confirmed Wednesday as one of the West
'
coaches in the Shrine East-West game
Dec. 28. "
Coryell, who has a SS.I record in
three seasons at San Diego State,
replaces Gene Stallings ol Texas A&M,
who withdrew ..
Coryell joins Dee Andros of Oregon
State and Nebras.ka'1 Bob Devan,-· .on
lhe w ... ~ta11. "' ~ The East coaches are Duffy Dougherty
of Michigan State, assisted by John Pont
of Indiana and Tom Cahill o( Army.
I I ./
Powerful S 1 n Diego State and North
Dakota State remaJntd one-two. but
Chattanooga and Indiana, Pa., gained
ground Coday in The Associated Pren'
weekly smill eollege football poll.
The Alt.eel, Idle lut weekend, drew
13 of tbe If first-place votel cut by
a regional panel of sports writers and
aportacuten lot 11t. pofoll.
I I ./
DALLAS ·-:'Federal gra,nd jurors in-
dicted a Dallas man and woman Wed-
nesday on charges of converting about
$72,000 in U.S. Olympic Committee fllnds
to their own use.
They are Joyce Ann Dodson Tate,
previously indict¢ on state charges o(
felony theft and ' embeu.lement in lhe
case, and Joe William Tate, who had
not been charged earlier.
The government a 11 e g e s the Tate
tricked pub~e spirited persons into
permftUng use. of their names id ,
soliciting dona'.Uons.
Steam-Car in Indy's 500
Mrs. Tate was office mSllager for
a firm in charge of Southwest collections:
for the (un<I, being raised at the tfme
to meet expenses of U.S. athletes in
the Olympic Games.
Charges of mail fraud, Wirt fraud
and conspiracy are included in the 21·
count indictment.
RENO (UPI) - A steam-powered
racer will be entered in next year's
Indianapolis 500 by Lear Motoni' Corp.,
according to industrialist William P.
Lear.
' "We not only expect to be In the
n ee, we expect to become a winner,"
1&.id Lear, who added that he was willing
to s~nd $500,000 on a steam-driven en-
!J"y.
The industrialist, who made a fortune
with the private jet that bears his name,
announced earlier this year he waS,
gambling $10 millit>n on development
of steam-powered cars.
He said the racer, being designed by
Ken Wallace, would use the same steam
engine being put In a test car for the
California Highway. Commission. Both
engines wilf be ' finished about mid·
February.
Dodger's
Fllll.ERTON (AP I -L. F"ac:o
Thompaon, vice president and general
m~er of the Los A n g e 1 e s Dodgers
and ., t6-)'UI' veteran of professional
bueblll, died Wednesday night at 66,
He died at St. Jude Hospital after
a long illnea, reportedly Involving a
liver ailment.
A& tht end of the 1968 baBeball season,
ThotiiJ>80n entered I.be hospital. He was
placed on the critical Us'l Nov. J after
a third operation.
"We'll have a tremendous advantage
in th.at a steam car can ·develop mu·
imum torque at rero speeds," he said.
"We'll have a lremendous torque coming
OU t of the turns."
The racer will have a rear-mounled
steam engine, 11 inches in diameter,
with the boiler mounted beside the
driver. It will burn white kerosene, and
have a capacity of 450 horsepower. It
will have 40 percent front wheel drive
and 60 percent rear wheel, with a
planetary gear system dividing the tor·
que.
No driver has been found, but Lear
said his people "are Working with
Firestone. We hope to hav~ one of their
drivers."
If the car doesn't win. Lear sakl,
he at least exPects it to demonstrate
the reliability of steam automobiles.
.
I I I
BOSTON -'lbe Los Angeles Klnp
bring their quest for thdr Ont Nadonal
Hockey Leque niad victory of the aeuoa
to Boston tonla;bt when the7 engq:e
the Eastern Division Bndm.
The Kings Wednesd1y nlgtlt appeared
to bave tbelr ln1U1l victory away from
home u they led u.e rugged New York
Rangers l-1 1oln& Into the final period.
But the league leading Rangers e•·
plOOed for three. talllee In the Hnal
frame for a 4-Z win. ....
PASADENA -West Texas Slate,
featuring the running of E u g e n e
"Mercury" Mon-ls, is the prime can-
didate to play in the Dec. 7 Pasadena
Bowl.
Th.ompson Dies
Thompson. one of the brightest
speakers on the baseball winter circuit,
broke Into baseball u an infielder at
the age of 21 ror Grand Island, Nev.,
In 1923.
In nine years in lhe mljor leagues
-at Brooklyn1 New York, Philadelphia
and Pltl.!16urgh -he batted .298 ln
1929 he hit .324 for the Phillies .
After serving 11 m1n1ger, scout, field
iupervlsor and director of minor league
opcr1Uons for the Dodprl,. Tbompaon
'
I
became general managl!!r and vice pres!·
dent last June 4.
He spent 30 yean wlUI the DodRrs.
His widow Margaret, a daughter, I
sister and brother ind four gr1ndchlldren
survive.
Rosary will be recited Friday in
Fullerton, w~re Thompson lived. Re·
qulem high mass will be Saturday morn·
lng ln St. Julhu\8'1 CathoUc Church with
burial In Queen of lhe Heaven Cemetery
Jn La J>utnte.
Haywood, however, wanted to return
to hill hometown. He wu inlerelted
Jn the university's curriculum in radio
and television.
He has excellent speed for a man
his size. He has great jumping ablllty'
and agility," exudes Calihan. "He bu
all the attributes of what you find in
a smaller type man."
Haywood will play the pivot pogiUon,
and hi.I role will be playmaker rather
than IJUl1ll".
Davis Cup
Play at BBC •
Postponed
Injuries to Arthur Ashe and
Clark Graebner of the United
States Davis Cup team have
c a u s e d postponement, per-
haps even cancellation, of the
squad's scheduled appear-
ance at Balboa Bay Club, the
DAILY PILOT learned today.
Bay Club officials said that
the America,n Lawn Tennis
Association called off the De-
cember exhibition because
Ashe's physician recorrunend-
ed that he abstain from
competition prior to the U.S.-
Australia s h o w d o w n next
month for the coveted tennis
prize.
However. BBC sources also
stated that there is a good
chance the event will be re--
scheduled in January, which
means the area could toast
the learn favored to bag the
cup from the Aussies.
Purchasers of tickets for
the December show can hold
on to their ducats until con·
firmation of the January
appearance. Or. they can
seoore a refund, Bay Club
officials said.
Coaches Agree
That Barry Is
Much Improved
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two
Americn Basketball A s s o c I a t i o n
coaches, each of whom coached superstar
Rick Barry while he was in the rival
National Basetball Association, agree he
is a much improved ballplayer.
Alex Hannum. who had Barry when
he was rookie. of the year at San Fran-
cisco, sa1d; "I'm requiring him to be
more of an all around player than before '
and Rick enjoys the challenge." •
Hannum had just watahed the Oakland
Oaks slip bY the Im Angeles Stars
129-125, in their first appearance of ~
year at the Sports Arena.
Barry. the ABA's leading scorer htt
for 37 points, hauled in six rebo~nds
and made seven assists .
"He'a taking it on himself to give
them whatever they need -shooting,
ball handling or rebounding," said St.an'
mentor Bill Sharman, who coached Barry
during hiJ sophomore season in San
FranCisco. when hi!! led the NBA in
scoring. "Barry is playing more of an
all-around game Uian when he was with
the Warriors."
Crawford Honored
UCI's gymnasium, formerly called
Campus Hall, has been renamed Wayne
H. Crawford Hall in honor of the Lrvint
Campus' late athletic director.
The name change w a s by action ol
the faculty Academic Senate.
Crawford. first chairman or the
Physical Education Department and
director of athleUcs at Irvine died May
29 this: ye.ar of tuna: cancer. '
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JhundQ, NMINllr 21, 1961 , • DAILY PILOT II
All4rvine Quite a Rrospect....-Y ou Bet
Football • • ·' Selection$"
~plo1» Lola roin4 · 1ra1 • ~· p
Mqno1Ja coJJllll"I' jl II a· 'a 9Jo ii ~ tNni .,..111ona•m 1lliJ oillolai ~
vloli · Ltqut ~ fll ti* ~
co®(y ~wlltln<~lllan.
C<nna dol Mar ud FOlllll,lla·Valley
each j\leked up !jlO .._ In the elite 22. . ~
lleadlni· the llBt fer Corona do! Mar,
third placo · !lnlsher In f!nal 1oQP •ltancl-
inp,, was Brian S&ern _ 'at. an.i.ve end
11.uey Gri..wollf, •-vt-9llJ!IOJn Valley bltl"i,Ydirt with 14ai1i:
Aileiimzo Jn the -llnF . and d~v•ba<kJobn'~ ·.
r..ta -J>iclllcrll!' • '911'1 '1'1111 ~ &t,,ard; . .i,·. U.O ~'°clelenslve
teem ind' F.stancia'e ~Jeff SdVer •wil
accorded a flrot 'loam berth oo tbll
offensive Beven.
Loara dominated the special booon
with coach Herb HID designated c:oadHil·
U>t:year-.
Hauback Brant Llibl. was~ back·
of'fiie'.year and teammate Rick ~
WU llneman-of-the-1~·
The undefeated Saxons enter CIF AAA
action Friday night aa the number one
seeded team In the playoffs.
J'our more Corona det Mar Rlayers
made the second team offense aa the
Sea Kings dominated the selecliopa from
~ Orange Coast area.
* * * . .
AILmVINE LEAGUE
Fint Team Offense
p., Player WL · Class
~ Stern, Corona del Mar 2IO Sr,
E -DeLesk, Loara 200 Sr.
T-.. Dyer, Loara 115 Sr.
T? Seiver, Estancia 1sa1 Sr.
~ Allegrezza, FV lllS' Sr. Gt-Wilde~, Magnolia . 1801• Sr. c+-Hickerson, Loara 195 Sr.
:S:-Omer, Magnolia ~;.i Sr. ~ W.alket, Loar4 J', ( ( '1~f Sr. B'-Light, Loara -. 175 Sr.
.a;.... Iverson, Magnolia 191 Sr.
Fint Team Dd.,e. t
E-Rimell, Loara 116 Jr.
E-Ryniak, Magnolia 115 Sr.
T.o... Hickerson, Loara 1115 Sr.
T-Griswold, Corona del Marl72 . Sr.
LB-Henry, Magnolia 191 Sr.
LB-Pekarcik> Loara 180 Sr.
LB-Edwards, Cooja Meas 1'12 Jr.
B-Carroll, Foontaln Valley 157 Sr.
B-F1ood, Magnolia 111 Sr,
B-Longnecker, Magnolia 150 Sr:
\-MWer, Loara ): L _,-, lll"i: Sr.
.,, • , j fJ'Hf'/-. e.-
Secoad 'f-oo .....
F;-Barnett, Estancia 150
E-Rausch.I, Loara . 180
T-Gleason, Costa Mesa 215
T-Salazar, COrona do! Mar 1111
G-Wurtzbacher, F'V Ul5"
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.·
G-Yect, COrona del Mar llOi ~r.
C-Koch, Estancia 111$ Sr.
B-Terry, Corona del Mar 1IO Sr.
I{-Joboson, Eatmic.ta 160 Jr.
~ <Ezzell, Ccrooa.del Mar 190 . Sr~
B-~. FOUDllll! Valley 140 Sr,
-·.1 • • ., i
Stat.e Jaycee -.
«;ARY ROSSMAN, SJC • Eiid • ,.. «·•"' ., ,.. •1
Four Fastest
·' F11nny:::{:ars ,,,
•
Vie at OCIR
Br.acke~ Set ·. h4.~~~~1.U:q=:-~
.... 1 • • -· '" mOl ~an four will be on haod Sabir· 'lbret of four lirackets·bave been filled do,Y. nlgiil at QrBJiie Cqunty Inte!;DaUCllal
for the MCOod anDUll state junior college Raceway.
rootbln 'pl8youa. The occ.uioo is OCIR's second ,annual
Still 1111 In the air la the second bracket, 111'1,000 Manufactur<n' Funny CU Cham-ptO!llhip., ' al. 7:)11 p.m.
whfc;b 'l\'.lll pit Cllrua !'; ""'1¥!'10J'I of _No "' ,tho ·' ·are )'ord eutrlea
tbe S«oili~ Con{~ alf'almli iny -Sid")~'•' N:9'11 #Om New
_ J 1--..;.,,•·--.Ori"""' •'"' Tom .Grovi's ?.tu"••• from
-w -·-......-11:iyyCcalil. ~ r~-;;.w ..
'!be CO!"Pleled,bl;ac~~·Jook Uk~ llis> are~ -snii\o'1,'Ctiarger dut ·of Fort
Marln -11 .FWinO ('niiirlday,H~oVI ·:al), Worth, Tew, imd Don Schumacher's
Dtablo Valley at El Camino (Saturday, Barracucfa ·from Park Ridge, Ill.
Nov. 311), San Diego at~ (Satur-FO!ler . wu a late 0111rYF' l>e · adckd
d'!>',NOV,,311).,,;Jf 1 '•ti! to~.~~.!leidV( . 'rl\et atalo atl>lttJC • totod There are'20' ...... te m .
recently to admit 'a con!......,. c»dlani-Six manufacturen -clievrole~ Ferd,
ploo lnto the playolfa. Cilrua and a.... Plymouth, PontJac, Dodp and Mercury
moot are bolh unbeaten in league play -have enteretl itemL
and will .decide their ....,.,.,,.. cblmp · '!)le OCI!I event IJ ~ richest f11n11y
thla Setunf01. · . car cbampl~ · m<tt In tbe United ™'Wiiiner'• 1oe 1n t1ie·p1a,.as w111 Sia~·~ mmbel 'of 'tbt ·~ be fll f --.1•1e .......,-'-Sbwld team Saturdlf w!ll .-Iv! !Ii». 1be one our ,....... -~..... Ol(erall lndiYidual ~ "wll! clalm 11.SOO San Di'IO M--San Diep City and the ru...rup _ . Saturday, for inlllncej Fullertiln Would ..... then be 1 CO<bamp of the South eout.· , At file ""l'l'JelloO of the third round
And aboold Eut LA 10oe lo Santa of the el!mli)alioo type event; the two
• cars b!vJi>i' Ille lowelt elapoed -Barbara Saturday ~ "V.-a beat and w110·~ •on"•ll ~ i-oudCls ... m Gl~~e, U... Ventura II • e<>diamp rate eaeb _,. "Iii · tbt• foorih round
of. !)le )l'eslern State&. q1ru1 ~-~-~ for the lt,500 .prize. • mont coold make them!d ... ,....,...,.. The favorlta for ther larp bundle
by IYlnC S.lurdOy. : t la SclMnnachet. lie n>Ci..d the ~
De Anu. of the Camino Norte Oobo cat aet twO --... -1" lO(iOd rerence In the Bay Area ii U-llll1 tlaPoed. llmel fll 1.•, 7.jl and 7.9
a co-champ but was beaten by Marin. / at OCIR. · '
•
~ ....... ~ .
~ t) •• Pirates Battle-..
' . . ..
· FJC ·Poloists
For Crown
By J"D,,t!gJWARI '
(H ... Dllf .......
'
•
Two undefeated water polo teams. Orange Coast Collet• and· Fullerton
Junior College, are oo a col.llskln coune
and Pirate <lCllldl Jack Fullerton bop<o
his 0CC """"' CID nlm U. •Hornell out of the pool Friday .-.
Ac<1on in the -whfcb will decide the Eastern Cooference cbam-cets uoder way 1111:311 ln the hDarl<iD
pool. . -
"We've IOI lo mab FuDerWa play
aurtlndalpme,e_po_to .in.·· Fullerion Aid. '
•we play • fut.breU: aly!e and ntm
a ~t ~ more than Ibey do.
'"lbey'd rather slbw down the action
and control the ball. U1 we can mate
them increase the tempo ol their game we can win it," he said.
B o t b clubs are 7-0 in Eastern Con-
ference play, but the Pirates have a
more impressive seasoo record. Orange
Coas( has recorded an 18-3 record, los-
ing ~ to four-year schools. •
FPlleHon '1u: ~ ~'t ~ mark, but·"b~smlrtml !rOni .~ pair Yfl. close
losses to the Pfrates last season.
:Orange Coast edged the Hornets 6"5
ln double overtime for the EC t!Ue and
then went on to' beat them again, 9-7, ·
In tbO-Southein California playoffs.
The Pirate Coach credits b1J team's
fine lbow~ this aeasoo on a strong
offensive atta«: and the willingness o1
his p~yers to feed tlie ball lo an open mu.
"We're not· as strong deftnsively lhts
year u last year. but we have a better
attack. .
''11lil ts ·one of the fines\ passing
~ rve eve,; seen. We have a high shocitlllll W\'OMe (50~) ""'"'use 9!11' ooYi'"are ' wtiiinl li>J>i:il !hfifan,;Mz> whm they're open to I teammate who
has • better shot. in its· 21 games this year, Orange
· Coast Is averaging U.6 goalJ a pm,,
wl!De , !JoldlnJ .the opp<151Uon to : u
scores. . Dan Oirlaly leadl the .. Bucs In Ille
scoring column J\'1111. !O goalJ, while
Mite Allbright has 47. Steve Wagner
and Mike Wilson have chipped in with
28 and 17 goals. ·wqner leads the club with :al ualstl
while Qiristy has 27. ·
-· recOrtl!O : .. _.c_. nN1 ~ . ......,... n4"tt ·
ts ......... J I• El (amino , •
1• -le<Nllit 5 I Cerritoi -t
1.J II.lo 2. J Clllitfff ' 11 .. n:lPMOMCa' 2 10 l.w -.cf! '
11 01 t 7 S.n OMe M•tt l I c.r-rttlia J I C1I P.., llL.0) 1
' Cerrlttt' I I UCSI f'radl ' S UCLA 11 7 lllwnld9 . 1
' Use n 11 s.n ~klo J
2J CltrW ll ' ~ hid! '""' • JJ Ml, MC ' I S.1119 Ml _A 1J ~~ ' If ~ I' fi ,,
11 ~i "'-'·. ..-' • !#.Cdl!'!t 1 t· .,
' '-'!If_ ~ "'"' ., ' ~ Wll"I J 11 °"'"" 7 "6.lttC_• l!Ylnt" 't 11 11 ~ s n ust ,.,_ 1
7 c.rrttw ' 1 •i-Hcnlo • 1 11 s.ni. Mil 4 ~ "Gltnlt 1
. 11 lllWnW. 3 ' Cllltfl'Y ' ft ltlo HOl'lllD 6 I Ml, SAC J
16 Sin llmlnllno t
· It's Laguna by' 12-
. ' . '
Say Grid Expe!18
LallUl!OfBoacb la a 12-Jl'?l~t.Jay_orllf
over ta Qufnfa and Wesurunsier a
healthy . lt-point cboict over Compton
In this weekend's DAILY PILOT football
odds.
Tb e PILOT sports staff was l~Z for
last week's game1 for a seuona1
performance of 99-30 and a .767 percen-
tage.
Tbe odds~
Friday
Lagw!a U over La Qulnle
Westmlnaler 19 over Compton
Anaheim lt dYet Welt C<Mna
Fullerton • over San Marino
Loara t over Azusa
Salonia,
Gavilan I over Saddleback
lJSC U over UCLA
Cal I over Stanford
Mlc!tdalo S over Otrlo State
Rimi 7 over New York.
• •
7 -Gdm .Pol~j8:ls -Jlonqre~ -
Irvine League kingpin C<lrona cfel Mar
dominated tbt Al~ltvlne L<ague l'eler
polo selectlana '!lljlo • S.. playen on tbt
!int team Ind -two oo tbt-oocond temn.
Jim Bradburn of Corona del lbr wu
named player fll Ilia year Jn leadlnl
the Sea K1DO lo tbt "Irvine Lelfll title. .
Costa Mesa, runnerup In the 1._
and In 1be C1F ellmlnaUOlll alOO( 'l!llh
Corona del 'lo!ar, vabbed oil two 'Dnt
team poolUOlll and f.,... oo the -team, t 1,.
"
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Br.
Sr.
Sr.
Ir.
Sr.
Gd -· Corona del Mar Sr. •• Gd Ullell, Ellancla Sr.
Gd Roy, Costa M.,. Sr.
Gd PllunlH, Costa 111... Jr.
Gool Jlanila!I, ~ Sr.
Gool Sponaile, Costa Mesa Jr.
llclDcnble Mnkll: euru., CdM; Born
Olll; NIWClllll!. CdM ; Oltbelmer, F'V; Kial. al; Req, CM; liln*lq, -Cll;
Pbillpl, Ell: Aydelo\tt. ·EM;
W-6elcl, FY; Noah, FY; GGodyalr, ....... ' \ . .
So. Playtr'fll t6e.Year:. Jllll Bradbotnt,
Ir. 10...dlll.tlllr
•
lier( -u..-" Gool'le 8erf who -tllea a .,,.... Wes!mlmf.er -O!!lllack ...,,_ a 1'd--efirt II USC. • :
n.rtor IPl'llW pnetlce 8eri ,.. by
.. --lht fi>olball player i.. "' --• *"'I !*'fld•ta fGr'tha ciif ~
fll Iha ,... award -but ilot!NU'IOllid
clear!): recdplle the raw talent. ; '
"Dlrryl .... • llllla a"""'f """°
but ~':IUD~ bfln .. ~·our othtr aoad yo11111 bacb tbal ...W
-Rao Sbet>lia'd, Cbarlll ~.a
Mike ilaynel," -recalla..
Berlo _a1 f.11 and 111, 'WU pd ~ to ... -lderablo duly • • jmlinr
last year. Bui In ..... lo ltalDc ...
ucelleol runo1nc beet. 11 o a w e 11
dlacoverecl bll JnllMICI-illo ~
and with aathorlty. Al Ml ~ <OilCiJ
WU r..q lo -ail -'"""""' fer a.., Wlto ~ _.,If'_. ........ pol!eqia. • . •• -oi;~ • ' ' 0 Wt ..,_eel~ bl bid ••1 JI eJ .,..,.,.,.,.,._,. -.Un...i,.t.1':.
"He WU: Jlel!lllabted la one eye and
faraJabted In the• other, wlllch makea
it kind of bard lo caldi.-."
Berg WU OUlfllled with . iipt-flttlni contact lenles 6y a ·Long Beach ·op-
lbamolofllst who alaO ftla USG'1 'myopia
cases. •.
And ., wltb ~1;oyeslcbl'ln 1oc..;
BoneU wu ~with Iha problem
ol 1111gD1ng ·• Po&tion to 1. player wbo
could run with the best, block, pass
and caldi -· He dectded . 111 wingback. "\·
1be • declsloa bas wrought fruitful
. results. Against Santa Ana, for """1%
-.. coaches from lhnlqbout~ -,,. 1be range la from U
Harvard and from Ottgoo lo
Conea:e. '
USC bas to ~ P'tQ>lnentlf.i Berg'• choke, however. Hla <OUlln
~ and Boswell 11 a former Tio
performer. • t , 1
"Darryl 11 Iha ,_ aJl.retmd """" !"'-ever colcbecl," bis coach 11y1. -,-J.
"There Jani • alngle phase fll footlloll
th1l be doesn't esctll at." . ' One who woilld agree wltb lkcw J.!.'t
--la Clare VanHocre-, ''""'I Anaheim metitor. ~
"Berg bas a lot iOinl f'"' him." 'V .. ,.. .
"He bu ~. speed, movtl, ~-
'. ')!ARR.VL llRG ~~.' ml be doeso\1_mlnd blllln& -1'! f 1
• • . ceoi recall ever bavlng ,... • ~ • . ' < eolleie pniapecl In Onn&e Coonly ~
WMl!•dMlll' -'!P aPind a 11iq footbaD. There'• been pleoty who M te1m tbel U.>-U.. _ .. .....,,. _ -t runners In blgb acbool but D!lio. beat.. .. t v r with bis size..'' ' ;a I!
n-· , Berl, wlii> . la the Sunset ~ .,.,.gperoona!!ytootcbarge.Hocauahl ~of tbt year, will be a m>i'id'
three -for Tl yarda, two 1or 111111 again l'l'tday niiJ>I when bis ~·
touchdowm, and Uu:ew another to set up lacklet Compton In the Bnl rounl?~
W-·1 other _.. In a U-0 win. the C1F playoffa. . . ' •1ol"'I
He carried the ball three • limes fer It's a cinch Comptoil will not= 11 yards and Intercepted a pass bun i>Jayed against the likes of Berl: T
his ouJal.de llnebacter poollloo. Berg can be a painful ordeal.
Berg bas ...,.. a hall Inch aJnce when Berg IJ tackled, It la be •wli>
the current· eeuon started, giving him inflicts most of the damage. . ;1cr"
ob: fee~ one-and-ball Inches for ~I 1 JI'• sort of like teylng lo llOP~'a
llO pounds. WIJ.t nu2bave.. ~~lbel1. ~ that's falling clown the stilri.,~
Is sure-thing majer ~ege fooooau stan-falling piano makes lousy mUlle far
douL He's a U student' anyuie trying lo stop It but for Biii
Wbtn tbe1 aeuon enda, Bonell ~ Boswell and Wesb;nlnster followers, IV~
give Berl a . ~ of fetters from unsullied <l>opln. ,.,
Buv NlNJ AND MIEI ~HION
• Orlatnat E«u!Pm.nt T1n1 • tow profile -oontoar •Trlpt.-T~Jllo~
Cord. kdJ foi comfort
Dde,., dW'ddllty.
.... Mid• npecWIJ fo-r •hou1der for bttffr
1_pe9, ?few C.rs., •tHdQI ~
8/acltw1//1
At.IV
SIZE
LISTED
Whit11W1//1
. ANY
, SIZE
LISTED
• FOR
ftg" r.:• .. ~
--.... ,.._,' .. ,.,... .... -l.50x1J·
7.3Sx 14 &15xl5
l.25x15
IA5xl5 1Jhl5
--.. ... •T---6.95114 . 7.00xlJ 7.35114
b1·1'•l4 l25 15 us 15 .
11$ xlf
. •There eci&ts no lnduitly wide. system d qU1ljty .t.ncs.n:ls on cr1dlnc of tfNI.
The Power CUlllfon tire meets Goodyear's own first llne,ri&id •tt~ of .. m,. .. ..
GOODfiE~ll
NEW TREADS==:.°"...;,..
-·~:-,.1.i: ._ ,..tn w.tti M ll. l .. ~ (~ ••1•1•1r111111tlltelltlll .... ...
1 00 .... ,.; •• ,.,., 1,,._ ..,,_ ....... tJpp
"''d dMlp th•t coia• Oil nr MW cu ~ Cu11ltoA" tint .. • "" lllMIDtbW ii J .. .,.. • •Jltelt,_,ai._.,.-.il~G1a:IJ• -.... ._.,.._,,,., -~
717Sal4 C7.50r1G '7.75115 C6.'70lll!il • 7.00.IS
1.3511• 0.00.141 . 1.35115 l&liGllll UOllJ.1'
f .9!11' !UOtlO· f.40ll5 •. tall . ,,_,_. ·$12.00 . .
' ,.
BUYNOW_ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN:..-=.., ••
" SERVlNG-ALL SO_UT ... ER" CAi.IFOANIA. •
. ~
YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO.
' ! •
'
LAGUNA, • 4G OCIAM.AVL \ ' ............ •
• ) YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO.
•
.THEOOORE ROBl"S FORD 2MO H.Ut'R ILVD.
·."'-642. 10 COSTA MESA
" • l
• I
•
• -· -•• __ ____.._ ----------• Jo, - -.... '-------... ------------------....:..~
,
•
f$ ~ .... ••
!5ki Vista
"Remains ' •
right
y ESTHER BILLINGS ·
Of fM DllllY "41et S..,.
eather couldn't have been
ier at Mammoth Moun-
n last Satur~. Sunday the
' was patched with clouds, •it the expected stonn waited . allow skiers another . day
.ucellent skiing.
his weekend should be
er good one, with June ·
ountain opening for the
· son to join Mammoth. The
.. postponed its opening
last weekend to this to
"serve its snow as a base
anolher snow fall .
be Southern CaWornia Ski
aif8" Lift Operators' snow
rt, including ..June Moun-·
, is now in operation at
3) AT 7-9711. June Lake
rvations may he made by
.,ijolliing (711) 648-7'/94.
~~e l{ing Family -all 50 ~ t~e;m -will be at Marn-
•:fuoth Mountain Inn t h is
'· ,----------r.:_
Ski Trails
weekend filming their January
TV special. The U.S. National
Ski Team, along with Cana·
dfan team members, were
training at Mammoth through
·1ast weekend. :i decided to take some
tPatning and enrolled in a
cla"ss with one of Mammoth
Ski School Director G u s
\lieber's instructors, Bob p,. DEFENDING CIF CHAMPS -Gettin~ ready to d~
mg1e. Bob left the big city fend their CIF water polo championship are mem-
for Mammoth and a calmer ' bers of .N~ort Harbor High School's team Which
life years ago. goes to &amona, Friday. Members include (top row
He has stayed calm even from left.) Eric Lindroth. John Blauer. Bob Ke!gh,
row-Doog Dovey, Bob Jenness, John Wilcor, Bruce
Talmage, Ed White. Third row-Matt Greer, Bob
Searles, Jim Wil!on, Steve Parkford. Fourth row...:...
Doug Snyder, Jim Stansbury, Kevlli 'Charles and
Tom Warren.
Fuller~
Dominates
' AD-siars ·
Champion Fullerton .
dominated lhe ~.y '
League cbolces ir!Ur e!IJ>I ;
grlddors ac<orded finl team ,
• honors by the <>ranii· County
Sportlwrft.,.. AsaoctiiUon. •
Noim Kepner ot LoWeD,
however, was accorded Back~
, of·the-Year honors. ·
; . Kepner fmtabed bis lhiee.
year career at Lowell by peaa-
lng for 1,759 yards -a CIF
llandard.
Llneman-of.tb~Year ls Bob
Bales of Fullerton ;ll!hlle "°'
coaches . GU · Tucter and ,.
George van Vliet of FuDertoo
were named Coacbe.5-of-the-~
. ·Year.
.. undef the pressure of teaching Bruce Johnson, Tum Warnecke, Jeff Wilcox. Second
all varieties of skiers the finer-------------'------------------------------
points of the sport, which he
YMCASets
Programs
· did for me during the lesson.
'· ,No matter what class skier
: ty\e is, lessons help. For a
beginner, they are a must.
All ski areas have ski schools
: and are happy to provide in·
· fonnation on lessons and
•r,tes.
Friday's CIF
Grid Sites
3 Coast Area Teams
In Friday Polo Tiffs
with Long Beach Millikan
Wednesday, 11-4.
SoCal Five · Instruction in trazp.pollne,
Opens Play
'wre!tllng, handball, VOlleyball
and S)Vinuning is in pre~
at the· Orange Coast YMCA,
2300 University pr i·v e ,
Newport Beach.
The opening tip-off for Scuba and fencing classes
Southern California College's ~e. scheduled· t.o begin this
basketball season is scheduled ' rqonth, also.
. · · · rurther information .can be
' Support You1 United F..Uncl • ..
" T SKI PACKAGE
SALE! •
' ·SKIS, STEP-IN BINDINGS
' · · AND POLES
a 9 . 8 8 reg. 56.90 value
lllffums' offer.bnnJS you ,..,inpol17.llZ ""'
individuilfy·Jlliced ski equijMll!Dt. All fineet qualify
In ~test sfyles. A 11eat &ill suggestion for 1!1..,ki
bill. Conplele '!'ltkai<>' COlltaios: Matl<·lll Jllllli-
' ply laminated ski< wi~ inledocked """°
<"r. 311.00~ Sam Combi ~in llindiJ.111(18."1);
supei liiditweiidit pol,. (6.!Xit tlalbl llllPil nty
leash (2.00). Total value it;io. · · .
Sportsma;n's Shop, .
. $Ip 1; f,r Balflm1' ·ski l1iift l!lP fur Feb ' r . • !Sr~r~ B~. Only 180.001.ll'lson fl toa'room). ~f , . ' •
As!< IOI further de~ils.
Head qualiNtd lfoaler '
Ro5si17101 • Fillier • •1C11eml • ~·rt
Buftu~·
for 9 p.m: t?rught when , the ~ by contacting Bill
Vanguard 1un1or varsity squad ~. BroWn YMCA dliector at · '
-'
Mt. Reba ski area at Bear
Valley is now open for the
season. College and university
stµdents are being offereO a
'~~ial discount on ski lift
;jic,tets every week day Mon-
:d./i)' through Friday with the ~ception of holidays and the
Three Orange Coast area
teams go into second round
action in the ClF water polo
palyoffs Friday with defending
CIF champion N e w po r t
Harbor and Corona del Mar,
Irvine League tiqists,. heavy
All games involving the
Orange Coast area teams are
at 3: 15 p.m.
Second Round
Upper Bracket
Newport Harbor at Ramona
Beverly Hills at Buena
SUMy Hills at Mira Costa
Downey at Costa Mesa
takes on visiting Cal Lutheran : < , • . • ' ' • llM., 111n.,fit. iO:oa \Uf i:3o 0.-.,_,._...II•
Bible College of Los Angeles,1_~::,,·==·=========::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;:;;;;::;::::"-::;;;r-;;;;--;;;;;"-;;;--=:at 9 p.m ..
•
~ .. ri'!C\, covered by the National
pine S k i Championships
·' b. 22--25 on presentation of
...tudent body cards.
Heavenly Valley is really
heavenly thi! s e a s o n .
Remodeling, new mountain
carved trails, and two new
lifts on the Nevada flank of
its Sierra Nevada perch from
""' v_.. lrldl.t biii.11 W'ICoar1 11 U\.f>elml MIYlalr 11 Cat11orn11 Blsl\cp McnlllOl'ntfY VI Rclilnv Hiiis at El Cimino JC L&Ovna Bffdl YI LI Quln11 II Bo1s:1 Grlll\de Low.r 1,..dcll'
Neft al SI. Jolln Bolco al Cerrlto!I B""'erty HUIJ 11 Santa Mlfll San Marino 11 Fullerton Baldwl~ PMI< vs Claremont 11 CltrU1 "
which skiers can descend into ,__ •rad!" Oflt1rio If 8..-sklw previously untouched Nevada 11:1ver1kk Poll' 11 e1 ceMro
A snow give the rsort some 20 u,... 1rmll' ·r h I \/1111!'1' Ctirbll1n 11 Coecnell• square m1 es of " eaven y" A111>!e v11111 ,, 8"1!1111'!1
ki. L-lr1cktf S 1ng. St. 8onlo¥e<ltlre 11 H1rv1rd In addition it has other uni-s...11 Ynez •f Peso.Jlobl.s Sin111 smooi. que assets, like gambling, top Webb 11 P~~1~1:rld<ll'
nightclub entertainment, and Nctre 01me 11 Hc1rv11~
LAwtl' Schoclls un1imited varieties of ac-Morro 61v ai T.titc!\ep;
commodations. I'll say. The =;;;'-;;:;;;";;~,-•-•_• -"-"'"-',.;;;;;=
area sits snow-crowned next
door to the world renowned
casinos of Stateline. Nevada,
overlooking Lake Tahoe.
Since summer visitors still
exceed winter ones, it is the
only ski resort· in the world
where winter motel rates are
lower than summer fares. But
the nightlife doesn't end sum-
mer or winter, nor the snacks
to gourmet food, nor the in-
expensive to l u x u r y ac-
commodations, nor the fan-
tastic scenery.
The area now has 16 lifts.
Skiing the Nevada side of the
snow dome brings skiers
coursing down into t h e
Stateline casino area.
favorites . -
Newport's Tars will travel
to Ramona High in Riverside
alter the Rams got by Clare-
mont, 8-7.
Corona del Mar will host
Garden Grove Leagqe cham-
pion Bolsa Grande, after the
Matadors disposed of
Anaheim, 7-5.
Newport and Corona del
Mar drew first round byes.
Costa M e s a , meanwhile,
after defeating Temple City,
9-4, will entertain Moore
League runnerup Downey.
The Vikings made it into
the CIF eliminations after
playoff _!est
Heavenly has runs which
vary from beginner. to really
expert, so has been host to
some of the greatest skiing
competitions ()f the racing
circuits, both amateur and
professioaal. Accessibility by
air or highway is easy .
Individual and group tour
rates are available throygh
travel agents.
Voit Basketballs 4" .. 13"
co•vn" Basketball Shoes 845
Back Boards 12" & 13"
Snowmass-at-Aspen will host
the U.S. Ski Team for downhill
training beginning Nov. 28 on
the four season resort's vast
Big Burn and Powderhorn
Run.
At Aspen Mountain Little
Nell hu received permanent
~equipment, which
will be usecl to supply snow
for the second cmsecuttve
year I'!' the U.S. Sid '!'w>!'I
Training Camp.
Tr~ut Pl~
LOS ANGELES COUNTY -
Leg L 1 k e , Puddlng>tooe
llelervotr.
SAN BERNARDINO COUN·
TY -Lytle Creek ~orth and
Middle Fora, Colorado River
ll~eedl... '
SANTA BARBARA COUN-
TY -1'lb c.dluma.
~ CX)UNTY
Plru Lab
Goals , 1""'" ,111 .. ,
Goal Nets
t.~~. .
Soccer Shoes
Soccer Balls
3" & 5"
95c· 1"·2'0 '"'
SOCCER
Soccer Shin Guards
8"-11"· 14"
8" .. 19"
100 .. 3'°
., .. i -;. • •
RALEIGH BIKES -PARTS
I. ACCESSORIES
TIRES -TUBES -LIGHTS
BIKE REPAIRING
~"" n. T• i.., .a._, fw ClilrtmiMll
Lower Bracliet
Lakewood at La Serna
La Puente at Whittier
The SoCal varsity plays the
Orange Coast College. Let·
termen's Club in an 11:20 p.m.
exhibition. The varsity season
opener for the Costa Mesa
school is at Cal Western Mon-
Bolsa Grande at Corona del
Mar
day.
The Vanguards' varsity
Coach is Bob Reid while Rich
Schulz handles the JV. Riverside Poly at California
"
Golden West Sets Banquet
Golden .'\Vest College's foot-Restaurant in Santa Ana.
ball awards banquet will be
held Wednesday night, Dec.
Cross country and water
polo athletes will also be feted
at the banquet, beginning at
6:15 p.m.
.TENNIS BALLS 7.50 Doz.
TENNIS DRESSES 13.00 to 16:95
TENNIS SHORTS, Mon's 4.95-12.95
TENNIS SHIRTS, /Mn's 5,00 I. 5.95
TENNIS SHOES, Mon's 7.75 I. 8.95
TENNIS SHOES, LodlM 7.25 1.J.50
TENNIS RACKETS 4.95 •to 39,95 WILIOM-1.t:Nc10PT-ou~l.or .
CIAGIN-OAYIS-11.ADN.ll
RACKET STRINGING 4.!».1o 15.00
• SQUASH RACKETS & BALLS
Boys '-ttlol Uniforms 12.95
Boys Footld Helmets 4.25
Boys Footbal J-ys 2.50
BOYS' JUNIOR & INTIRMEOIATI
FOOTBALLS 6.45
RogulatlOll Sba Footballa
..... _,,,._,,_._ ..... '. ..... '.'.\ __ ·: ·.:::_:-__ :_.:.·_· ····----·-! .. .. __ ......... ~ ...... "' . .. . . . .. . .
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T~, NMmbtr 21, 1968 MILY PU.OT l;J
1968 Prep, JC Grid Scores·
,.
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w.,on, • '"" neon. '
Featyr .. g1lort 1nd lllllg1tn ttiat 1wlng t1thtr .••Y· .. .
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New cem,.won hood lttlptl. N.w rold WhM. •, ··-.-
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modem moocfPlCk I FUry, ...,_.,
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or ""'1dlrful -Tllere n 11-•
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·'' -~ ATLAS CHRYSLER'·PLYMOVi'H. INC. -
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DAILY PILOT EDITOBIAL-PA~E ·
Protect State ' .Control
• -....
l..propoeal wblch would further complicate the al-
ready"111llcult process ol detennlnlng Calilomla free-
way routes, and which could too easily give the federal
govemmen.t ultimate veto power over route ded.slons,
is being pushed .. some klnd of Improvement In freeway
route sele<tlon.
'!be DAILY PILOT believes that th• suggested new
procedure, calling for federally-cooduotecl public bear-
lngs on location o{ federally-aided frenways, Including
their economic and social effects, would be a serious
blow to 1tate and l<M!al influence on iuch decisions and
a needless duplication of heerlngs. ·
Detaila of !he roule dedstoos of state and local auth-
orities would be subject to appeal to, and veto by, the
federal department, under the proposal.
The proposal comes not from state or local sources,
but from Lowell K. Bridwell, federal highway adminis·
trator. He said the intent would be "to afford full oppor·
Wnity for eHective public participation In road building.''
Gordon Luce, California transportation administra·
tor has correctly expressed concern that tlba federsl
al'iieal oysU!m could shift ultimate authority for freeway
routes to the federal government. There is ample his-
tory in fed«al agencies' actions to sugg<st he is right.-
and little to suggeot he is wrong.
Implicit in the federaJ.P!:\!P'!~ is thal the exhaust-"
Ive !'Outli stilay rulll bearing proceilures now conducted
by the California High~ Commission and its operating
divisions in 90l"De mywterious way leave local and state
residents with insufficient voice in determining freeway
routes.
The implication further is that a separate "federal
review'' and broader federal veto powers over route de-
tail! wou1d somehow provide a better, more available
forum, and wiser decisions.
This is patently nonsense.
No one familiar with the exhaustive and some--
times interminable hearings that result when free--
way roufel on conteoted, u tlley lnevilably are In Ul'·
banlzed areas (Newport Beach, San Diego, Malibu,
Beverly HUis, Foothill ,Freeway jµst to n8Dje a currenl
few), .can serioul!y cootel\d that local goverhment, indi-
vidual local citizens and slate and local or&anlzallon1
ol all typeo do oot get ample oppOrlllllity to participate
under extstlnc proceduns -or that they do not use
tbeae opportunU!as. .
Calilornla'• present set-up tias ·lllnctlon~ with a •
mlnlmum of political Interfere-~ Influence. A.111
furtller sl\ilt of de<IJion-maklng to Wublugton can only
looe local volcH In the jungle al Coocressional and ad·
mini~ pol!Ucs and !obbylng. . .
Tb~ fll)lp)y Is no sense In !nvilln& WUblnglon ln-
volventi;nt lq lhe ~-by-foot detail ol freeway route_ aJJ.gnq'a!nt. . '' .
Competition's Impact
Misconceptions aJ>out lhe American automobile In-
dustry have been many and varied. Even the President
of tile United Stale"• aaw flt1 not long ago, II> demand a
price roll~ack in the face 1of ever-increasing wage levels.
Now comes a revel6Uon by tile u. S. lj~u .i
Labor-sta\i!Ucs th~ the ·li\iler of WbOJeble A:utomoblle
Prices has decllnejl abo~! 2.5 percent for the lnduslr)'
under the lmpacl of price compettttoo. In t!Je ume
period, the general level of prices bas risen more·than
20 percent. ' -
In re)ation to average family income,· the average
price paid for a new car has declined slgntilcan\ly from
seven months of income in 1959 to 4.9 months o{ inCome
in 1967, • decline of nearly SO percent.
Competition ls •till a vital force, and not just In
price. Quality, beauty llnd uWity re!lect it .as well -
as jl\,Sl a glance a:t models ' of a few 1'ears ago will con·
firm.
•
Nixon Ruminates in Floridca Major Quake
In California
Long OtJerdue
lrievitahle Price
Federal Solutions Diffi.cult
M1AMI BEACH, Fla. -Richard M.
Nixon bu had a chance to ruminate
down here in law-and-order country at
his retreal iD Key Biscayne OD how
he will fulflll the clearest mandate o{
the 1968 presidential election. His most
Immediate problem is to get OD with
a settlement of. the Vietnam War, and
be is doing that in cooperation. with
President J obnson.
But the mand&tt! was not for a war
settlement; that was taken for granted.
The mandate waa to carry out the solemn
prom.iae ol. all three presidenUal can-
didates to restore respect for law and
o r d e r, suppress organized crime, curb
.-campus rioting, control urban rioting
and the urban guerrilla movement., and
in general create a fresh m<ral climate.
-?Jixon can appoint Charles Rhyne or
Robert Ellsworth, two or hiB ~
campaigners, attorney general and name
a new cliJef justice 1n pla~ of Abe
Forias, and this will be only a bare
beginning. The problem is ao immense,
so diverse, so weighted with Jocal
responsibility -and above all so
vtolenUy controversial -as to cause
desp8.ir of any truly e!fect.ive federal
solution.
;YET IT IS JUST THIS solution that
Nllon and all the presidential candidates
promised in one form or another in
order to satisfy what they considered
to be the most urgent demand of the
American people.
The accepted remedies, t a k e n
separately and together, do not look
too promising. New legislation having
the effect of nullifying Supreme Court
decisions which have weighted the ~ales
of justice more heavlly in favdr of
the accused is not merely controversial
from the legal and consUtuUonal point
of vlew. It is doubUul if this kind
of legislatioo would curb the incidence
of crime on the scale demanded and
promised.
Appoinbnen1 of a new chief justic11
other than Fortas would not materiall)'
alter the outlook for lhe maintenance
of domestic order. It would be hard
to find a chief justice who has expressed
, in more eipllclt and generally accept.able
tenm the iequirements of civil order
11 tbe complnion of · IOclal progress.
Vice President-elect Spiro T. Agnew is
one of. Fortas' admlrers in this respect.
ADMISSION, INTO COURT of evidence
obtained by wiretapping could have the ....
effect of curbing organized crime. It
might even alter the methoda of th11
underground urban guerrllla movement.
But wiretapping evldenc:e ls not likely
to alter the moralJ of youth, 'stop the
rioting in the cities, or put down violence
on tbe campuse1.
In the end, Nixon as President will
be forced to go to the root causes
or public disorder and youthful disen·
chaolment. A bard-nosed crackdown by
a bard-riding attorney general, as if
he were a newly appointed district at-
torney fighting a local crime wave, couJd,
and undoubtedly would, invite a poliUcaJ
reaction against the Nixon
Administration of serious proportions.
For it is the sad fact that much
of our trouble today involves matters
of. race, economic and social status and
v.alues, concepts of motalfty, behavior
and personal belief whlcb: official
reprepiOO m.igbt 'only serve to magnify.
When Catholic priests st.age a singing
demonstration against a naUonal con-
vocalion of their archbisbopl, we know
that there Is a atronr; current of dissent
running in tb.b: country againlt establish·
ed concepts. And we know that repression
ol that dissent Could create more pro-
blems than it cuies.
WE BA VE LEARNED a good many
lessoru1 on this in the past. The federal
government could not pre~t people
from buying, selling ·and drinking
Blcobollc beviraJes. The federal govern-
ment has been unable so far to Jnteg:rate
the public schools on any appreciable
.scale, or to enforce the morality ot
social and ecooomic equality of the races.
~A very clear distinction will have to
be made in the Nixon Administration
between measures curbing crl.rninality
and measures which, while curbing
criminality, also repress iOC.lal and
ecooom.lc aspiraUons and concepts or
personal belief and behavior. Il will
not be euy. Soon the National Industrial
Coiirerence Board will annoUnce a Jarge-
aca)e naUonwlde program back'ed by
leading ligutta: in com'merce and iodustry
to involve the whole nation in a moral
rebirth.
This approach 1nay hold more promise
than a hard·nO!ed crackdown b y
Washington.
Ray a 'Jail House Lawye:r'
1'1EMPffiS -There was some anger,
but mostly the mood of Beale Street
and the more substantial Negro com-
munity was one of cynJcism when the
news came lhat a continuance had been
granted in the case of James Earl Ray
charged with the murder of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. The case is now set
for March 3rd, 1969.
"We knew something like this would
happen ," said a Negro barber standing
in a shop door.
"It's always this way," said o Negro
man standing on the i;treet in front
of a clothing store.
A Negro attorney talked with In the
courthouse said there was suspicion of
the motive behind the delay. This suspl-
cioo is perhaps unjustified, but it reflec.t.'1
the distrust of law when it is applied
to a white man, and more especially
when at the last minute a famous and
picturesque attorney who h8! figured
so successfully in so many sensational
trialJ lJ brougbl into lbe case.
---WWW-
Tbunday, Nov. 21, 1968
7hf l<lilorfol JIOlll Of th< Dall~
Pllol tt•/u kl Inform ond •«m. Ulal. ,,_, bv J'TUmtlng thu
-~ -"""'""" cm4 -"""""" on IOpfu of lnt<Tul Olld rignlfloa11«, 1>11 providing a
fonUft for llt4 npruilmt of ""' ,_,.,,, o¢""""· and bv pl<11mllng l/t4 dtll<!'H ...... "°'"" •I lnj.......S Obi.,,,.,. = 'l'Ok,_ oa topla of IM
Robert N. Weed, Publlsber •
IT WAS NOT FELT, however, that
the delay would lead to any demonstra·
lions or violence, although sporadic out-
breaks later in the week were not ruled
out. The bitter mood seemed to be
that they will wait and see.
Judge W. Preston BatUe indicated the
court's feeling when he commented lhat
this request for a pcstponement came
in the 59th second of the 59th minute.
Displaced attorney Arthur J. Hanes ,
understandably indignant over h i s
dismissal by Ray, managed to throw
one last harpoon in lhe request for
postponement by n o t i n g lhat he had
been hired in m1d.June. Mr. Hanes said,
"I want the record to show that I
am ready to go to trial today."
The prisoner Ray was In court in
a pinsLrlped blue suit. He wore abo
a slight sell-conscious smile. A British
observer who bad seen Ray at lhe time
of extradition proceedings in London last
June said that Ray looked thinner, less
.rure, somewhat lick, but added, "He
was always pale."
IT IS PERHAPS fillioi thal In lbil mystery of Roy, lbe man and the
pri$oner, there shoyld bt smaller
enigmas. These swim a.long tn the murky
sea of speculation and rumor, attached
to the big whale exactly as pilot and
sucker fish go along wtth I.he leviathan.
'lbert ls, for example, the chance
of lawyera. Wu it a calculated decision
an-anged Juit ilelore the eve ol lhe
trial to obt&Jn delay? Or wu it a break
alter wtel<• of dlaconteot!
Ray'• llro(bn, Jolin and Jerry, ad·
mlu.dly ""' ln1tsted about the money their brother 1"' 'l geulnr. They have oomplalned Iha! bn>lber Ray ...,.ved . '
a ~e $25,000 from Wllllam Bradford
liuJt?, the writ.er, wbo himself will mak11
much more than that. The $25,000, most
of it, rep<J"tedly has already been paid
to Arthur J. Hanes, the now dismlssed
attorney.
THESE ARE THE two brQthers for
v.·hom Ray has expressed appreciation
because, he has said. they have faithfully
visited him in pris:on now and in past
years. They are being credJted with
influencing Ray to change lawyers.
On the other hand, Ray is known
as a "jail hou11e lawyer." He frequently
acts oo< or Instinct.. During bla trtal
In St. Louis, where he was charged
with armed robbeey:; be stwmed bis
defense lawyer and utonlshed the court
by saying he wu not satlsfled with
the way he was beln& represented. He
then insisted on belRI his own lawyer.
The court could not refuse. Ray proved
only that be who aervu as hll own
attorney bas a fool f« a client. He
lost his case.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus: ...
Now that the . election polls hive
proved kl be oo nry accurate.
Wi1Y nol c:onoide< aalng them in
luturo electlona, lhttoby 11.toc
millkm tn mmey and manpower
hours ..,.., li1. cadld•"" llid alill
ellmlnaie tho i!:loctoraJ Collep
farce?
'
Earthquakes are cOmlng. Dr. Ctiaries
F. Richter of t be California Institute
of Teclmology says he. would not be
surprised Ji a major ~ ol Canlomia
were devastated bJ a au~ke kinorrow.
The National Earthquake Infooiiation
Center at Rockville, Md., told EditorlaJ
Research Re,ports it receives word of
some S,000 earthquakes a y_e a r
worldwide, or be\ween 15 and JO a day.
An earthquake shoot up retklent.s ol
22 state!: aa recenUy as Nov. t. The
Rev. Donald Roll, dfr~· o I
seismologtcal .uidt,~ ai Lof.~la. u:.=1· ty,onNov.10sa1dno~tidt -· ri
were e:rpeettd in tht bear lub.ri. ''That
wa.s kind of a-:aafeb' valve," tie said. • $. •
"The prtssure which had
up bu been released."
been built
Everyone has. heard -of the man who
read Sb.akespeari ·late m lire, and tossed
the booll. ' ~ t 'Wif.h the dlsgusted
observation: "I can't see why everyone
makes ~ • fuss about him -his
plays are 'full of ttuotatiojlJ."
This ~ the price paid by genius for
Jts powers, and I was again reminded
of it While watching a production of
Bernard Shaw's SO-year-old comedy;
.. Androcles and the Lion."
WHEN PRESENTED In 1915, the play
~ Brit:Wi audiences, and was
called 11b1Ubbemous'' by many indignant
churcim1eo. • In~:Gtimany, at tl)e same
t I m e, the Crown Prince stalked out of
bis lJar. halfway through t h e
perform111ce. '~f .. · . • ··-. ·
(•Re!JglOU5" plays of th • t era were
sentimental spectacles, on the order of
''Sign ol the Cross," and audiences were
.abocked.and bewildered at Shaw's oblique
approach to'wtitt they considered sacred
matters.
Today, we can see that Shaw was
truly a religious man, in the deep sense
ol the word -that is, he hated lnjusti~
and cruelty, and held a view of man's
spiritual and moral nature that was
very close to that of all true religious
leaden eVerywhere·.
react -thiJ has by now become a
commonplace Observation.
Studies in the psycbolO(Y of religious
behavior (like lhGle of. WWlam James)
have convinced even the man in the
street ·that aome martyrs are genuinely
men atid 'fOmen Of faith and courage,
and some. are m6rely neurotic cases
with an overwhelming need to hs punish-
ed. -This was an impertinence, even an
lrrevei;frlCer qn !Pe stage of 50 years
ago; ~ wal.chlag il,Je play today, we
can but wonder wb,y Shaw created IO
much consternation 1n the rank! of the
orthodox.
MUCH OF WHAT he says in
"Anclrocles" is old hat; but we must
not forget that he was the first modern
to wear the hat, and to wear it long
enough for us. to accept it as a con-
ventional piece of apparel.
1'1:lis, as I say, is the inevitable price
paid by genius for il.! insights:
THE AREA INVOLVED nw: from
southeastern Missouri to the S t •
Lawrence valley. The epl~ter was
local..t by the -Wasjiington earlbquake
center. as Lil miles eaSit of SL Louis
at ML Carmel, JU., near the Indiana
state line. -
Shakespeare is fuU of quotations, and
Shaw is a m88ll 'Of· platitudes. Even
Freud ~ is pe_,!Mblg to sourxl a trifle
lllS SUGGBSTION"; in "Androcles;" old-fasJd"1ed,. · Ot!ty a generation after
that men· become religious zealots for his death -and no higher tribute can
Since the area has a history of quakes,
tremors can be e:rpected to recur, though
the timing l.s indefinite. The more im-
:qteqiate 'flreat ~ to an area, of OaUfornia
tl>at centers 'ar<411ot San Fr~ and
extends to most of California.
mixed reasons, and that lrl a time of be paid to a man than his speedy
crisis it is t h e character rather than absorption into the main stream of our
the creed that detennines bow one will thinking. . ' . ,.-it.·i;~ ~ • ,. ~ ' ... , ;., ' . ~ . .., They Alslf II ave Mo'thers . Roger Rapopor\ in bqulre magazine lei\afui lbat't~e:d>Ure :MJO.melnber .con-gregaUon o1 the-First Apostolic Church
of Bell Gardens, originally of suburban
~ ~. ~as left th& Golde11 State .Ir(~ At.tarita~ !Oa. 1'ie\pastoc. 'tHe Rev. 6oiiald Abernathy, .fiad a vision ln which
he saw the whole state swallowed up
by the ocean. "God told me -He is
going to punish California for ·tts sins.,"
the pastor says, "especially Hollywood
and Beverly Hills, where the movie stars
live."
To the·Editoro , ,
Witb al! Ille\ aUentlon ~r t#<!ID~ a!id
teen-Biers 'being rQC:used on Jnarijuaba,
teen-lge language, LSD and the like,
I would like to express a few words
about my mother. Belng aome 40 years
old, I have had the opportunity to observe
humanity, to study and read widely on
the sub~ of raising children, and there
is no 'doubt in my n\ihd llhai my mother
i.s one or the ,~f!iOmen ~ ever
TIIE MAGAZINE 93ys at least ihrff lived Qn ~~ 6f tJlli earth. • -t. ~'.
other congregations have been scared I. gr'ewt tltl~ lo the years of t.het Great.
out of California by the quake threal DejiidolOn. At age s1.t l w~ lsugbl
Bumper stickers in San Francisco'• the ~g or responsibility a:nd self·
Halgb~Ashbury area re a do "Quake b · dlscipUne. I had chorea to do al home.i
Coming, Prepare." : . . , .. , ~
nlfe magulne ouggesll that "erif/rmous · mt>tOTHER NEVER asked me to
stresses°' .re being caused to' • Warp do ~g she wouldn 't do he.r5$f.
Letien fr""' l'Wtdlrs ire weicom.. Norm•IJI' Wfltars
lf!Duld <XHIVW'f lflllr meu-In :ICIO --.11 or 1t11.
Tiie rlllhl to oondenlt letttrt to flt ap1t 1 or ellmlrlale
1!1111 11 ruerwd. "II letler1 mu•t 1~111111 1lon11ur.
•"" l'NITTl\f '41dreu. but n•lrlft m1v " wlltll\tkl on
reqw11 tf 1~flclen1 '"'°" 11 1pe11rllftl,
U.S.A.
Last January .the Supreme C-OUrt ruled
that urxler certain conditions a criminal
may riot .be . .required to register his
lire~. ill sa1d criminal regi5lered his
gun, ~ .wOQld ~~od to incriminate him.
Yet there 1re Those wt1<>-<say that Joe
Ooakest· "ho hu no criminal record
and owns his ' ,firearm legally must
register" ~· because it would cettain.ly
redtice µie cri'.me rate.
lntbeearth'«.crustinCalifornta.t'Sooner I w~ the car, cut the £1'•5' ~
or later," ibe.magulne observes, "there . the P.J'den, shoveled. snow and Wit&
must -come a dq of reckoning. A·sudden tt I l~ed the meamng of ~a~oo
and vlolent readJ1111lnent, of a mqnltude . In l!>e-P:"'lti' es well as joy ~ io~lY.,
comparable to the San Francbco ,~ IJi ii 1 had ~time :W"'!:(,' TREY SAY HE should Ile ¥!lamed
quake of April 1&, 1906, and l!"'hafll ~ 00: ~ or ~U.:;.J '!~ , for oWoaJng n!glslration laws ~ after ourpas31n&l~wllloccur." i: .' ·hJC alter ! In~ :,""n;,;iJ"e°:m ·•It, w. .. gtster our automobUOI, don~
. A seismologist who asu not,.'? .~ enousJI ~iy to ltay In ·~hoor wot !iJ.•j!Omeone bas a logical exiilanaUon
klenWled told Editorial R e s e a r. ch and ~ 80 on to co • Jd 1 for th!i very illogical reasoning, l have
Reporb t b a t heavy building of bol!>es iook al tie •,O.., __.. ol Ind y<t to bear or n!ad about ;~
In the aoll abovt California'• se'f'Ual hear .bo1f ·~'i:;-.,. inn~ Hun-ah for .the land ol the {ree and
known fault lines ts "sheer m-• d«J l.._lblllk. ''!Aro 11>111 nol!J!" Yea;' the-l!ome of (be bra ...
One theory 11 that geologtcal tnd!oadona they . ""' mon ~l•'thef bavo BRUCE H. BUCKLEY
call lor a m11Jor quake in Colilomla Ftvlflloe 'I never ~ or but tbey •
about ev•ry llO Yeatl-Tbe lut -llilo l>A•• ..-u ... 11n. u i did. .---a·, Geo..... --..., more than eo years ago. ... ' ' • "
• -II' 'l!IE'..,...... ol todoJ .,;Ill ....
UP UNTIL Dr. Frank Pna. now Iha -lo Ml their atsndardl hip, choll:man ol lhe geopllyllca deporlllltnt · upect -Ilion_. to Dve up to
of the M..Uchuaelta lllllltute o4 thein, tale .a .til:on lnlere&t In -~
Tl!Ctinolog)I, called lor massive -'!!di •. them .-.. ,thefr ....a,• ml ·
on the probabtllty of earlbquak"a IOll!• G o d la tbelr doll1 (f,. lmtea4. :lh
1001,.ywa OCo1 ael&moloSIJta In .-al lh e~ .. llundl,yl..llllJ.wtJ! UDdr ·
woo1d haw !old yo11 predldlnj -11111 tha ,..... ~ lll lodq ore
Inmon wu a fool'I (llM. At diot, J1!o1 u cro11 u \Illy-wao IO ~
wthQuake .-arch COll\OI ........... / .... • ' •
behind r-tlni In the ociaiWlc : ,.U.,.. B. 8Kil.&R
ponde. •
Tbe Eutbqulte Jnfonnllkm CleaMi' ·-·--...,. .. AU&Ull IJlll. ~ then la a Ch•i!be •bodJI o1 r-ch 1h lhe llold. I ' .
>
.............. _ .. ~ ...
llUr Georpo ,
WJlr don't you have mote .u
stufLJn ~r column-, Ute the·other
advil>eOOMnnlltido! •
~· CURIOUS Dear Curl01110 ,
WelL f« one -~·don1 thlnt
mallard duW .... -~ lltJY. (Thal nally cooluael them In
oewapapen where Ibo lint ..-!loo pi. Jell oil.) •
.(liend yoor problems to Goorp
an4 C6nfull him even more than -.~'f ~ cooltlsed, u poalblO.)
j
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•ooi••:,.
•' ' I ' ' ' • • ,. '': .NO~DlilP ·V .INVL
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THP<O:fROPIC FORMULAR
• 1. hQlff dlY • S:el')l~ble , •,Cleon-up with water
• EXcellent.hlding• • .. w~·~ ~lp,1 ~rack or peel
PU~EST WHl'TE: AHO A · COMPl.nt LIN~ OF f'Of'Ul.AR ' DCORATOR OOLORS 1 ,
5.32 ·~
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•
WARIW
• 2305 1 •. c-1 Hwy.
COl'OftldolMor
67"9050.
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PROOF OP'IRA TOlt /
UNITID CALIPOllNIA BANK ---_..,...._h
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CoetaM~
OOUPLE for JIUtitor'..:ll work
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hand " !>Ping, 5 "'> -1< LAB -"""" plus pick· 1:30 to 5:30. New &tr mndf. \Qt • ·ditllivery. Own trans-
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Nahm Cadillac, 1"c. 2600 ~91ncles ...... Men &
Harbor mw .• Coeta Mesa. -Women 7550
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Sub • mlniature switch Pl:'4>-ntaJ. Aa:st. exper •• , • HOO
ductloa. Experience not re-Managt!r Trainee • • . • • • $550
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BABYSITTER w.nted for ls' Hakpr, refl • .'2 · · • • · • · .·$350
mos o'4 gtrl, 6 AM to 1:30 Companion/Hlkpr ...... $300
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613-84511 aft 5. 25' E. lst (LB. BL) 432...&M4
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Th• co1t .I yout 14 t. •t th•
tA4 tf the llh ti which tht
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66 llrOUOlitll I SIO •115sm•sl'O 'M tlJ I SID .... • SPA_,, 4
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'61 POUCHI S.n 4 IPD
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Uood Cars < 9900UIOd,C1rs 9900Uood Ciro 9900Uood C1n
•••
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~·-·
triated ,Selection ·Of
, P.revio1Sl-y Owne~ ~~!flaes ·
lN 'sOIJTHEiN . CAUFORNIA
• • .. .. •
•
'68 CADllJAC
ALLEN . ..
OlDSMOBILE
CADIUAC llC •
.. ,,." .
• Eldor•do, white wit~ bli1clr l•a+h., inter·
let, black vinyl top, fuU pG:W•t, factory air
conditionin9, n•~ cer wa#renty.
'~~,'~~~~~ .. II .. $5695
:!! ~!1~~.;.,I ~:~5695
,
··6595 J
' '68 CADILLAC
Sff, 0. VIiii. Wh+4 l.lk. •h1yl ,.,, bllr:.
lthr. l11t., ~II ,,-., .. fie. 11r.c.n.I,
55895
w .. i.t., f,ff ,,....,. fie. Mr concl., 111w
cot w1rr111ty.
•• CADJ11.•c s5795 . '67 CADILLAC
C,.. 0. VIII .. T•"'I·• !Hi. vill'(I t.p, Wk. •
Hllr. lat., ft.II C"l ftc. 1lr, 111w cir w1rr •
'68 CADILLAC $569*5 c,.. 0. vrn •• !kfil, llllc. vl11yl lep, told '
Elclo. Mid. bhit, f11f ,...,,,
f1ct.,., 1lr c;eMI,
'66 CADILLAC
C111p1 D• Vitlt. ••191, f11!1 ,_.,,,ftc•
tory 1lr c111cl., llko Miii:. I
'66 'CADILLAC
SMt11 De ¥i111, $old; ••II
peww,llff'NW, .
'64 CADiLLAC
'!H111, 4 ~. H.T. F.11 ,...,,.,, foctory •ircM.,.w..,...-. '
$3695
53295
52295
GIVI US A TRY ~U YOU IUY 1 •
OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC INt
Hj5HWAY
'94-1~ or 547.3103
'
LAGUNA llACH
•
•
1967 COUGAR
H.T. c~ Um. ~•t w/blk • .i°wyl
IM. A; +rd--..MH, P'S,.,,, UIMllH • · •
tnf +.-tniftY J.tli•r ..tr .. , itt;OOO "'!· C1r.tiltty .ni.'tnt. LI~. uno11. •A~ w~wim. ' .
$,595 ' ..
,,
·1966 CHEVROLET .
1.1 A: ,;.., ·w111. ' ,.~ •• ltt' .aetbi.
f. hll fee. ·~'tftltlt. ff ~·• 11 tr1iu., PS. htr. It li:.1 1 ltt11t. 111.ett Mite
ext, w/nL vift)'I J11t,, I •-.. llrho·
et! ... " .23,000 Ml., 11~1 & drf.11
II•• ""' Lk. TP'Ktlt
$1995
.. r .. ••
1968 CONTlNENT>..L
O.if111 a ....... con. 4 •• ch ....
"-· All l11111ry ~ ... lpt1M11t, ··~ c.i., ••ltcffottr ' ' • ' ''
Priced To ten. . ' '
,
----~~--------·---.
" ' .
· 1-96lT ;t>4E~CURY
C.I. '''*. ,; •. •t•. Wfll. -Strlkil1t ctNl~tl . N;4I w/JoofJfl •Mi.· 1111., 16.
trt!)t., ••);t. tir•Clflll' .. ,'5, Pl, tilt,
dnlg •. wlJ. ctf, •ftclnt CJJ'41, 111rt,
1119, ;'1ck; ch11l 1cH.ft t1lli1k, I
own. ur,-ri ... to'. 1~1t1.
ltc.-IXUl72,· ·: · • , · 'MCTOIY WatANTY1'
·. :$2~95·" : ..
'
') l " 1966 MERCURY
;Mo,kl•~ 4 .• ,. ·H.T. 1illly pwr .
.. ,pt ... If OJIO 'h•t 0 ltlNI '4ip rytf,
NW. bh11 "f/Mff. blao l11t. Fie.
otr cond:, l1Un '"" Sh ... ••"" cl1fful co,.. 'TAWl.84. , '
-IMI IVY CUIT WAWNTT
'• ~ '_$2495'
' ' . ' .
~
' • THI INCOMPAUIU
COUGAR!
'
'"
1967 OLDSMOBILE
I>· 'ti' 4,dt.<H.T. 1ttrac. MH>\1111 f1tt•
bh, rich. Unfi.:stnt ltlv.,lnt. wlbtk. I\ l11M1..-ro.f. Ln. 1qpt. w/a, traita..
, '5 r-I, 6·w.y ~•ft. •lu. wifld.,
\ • '~JI+~ -•11ly . 27 ,000 Ml, lty orlt-•
· 4wner & ,conf\il/:y m1JntaTn1J, Uc.
, Q:U114. · · ' ·:; '. $3495 I . ,
,
19.67 THUNDtRBIRD . -'
' ' birii°a•' 4.~Dr~ H.T ..... , •• ~ ..
~w~t. w/•114• Wk. Int. ~r.w/11laott
1f, rt1ryt!ilrtt. It w/1tw..t.,.. sy1., PW.''· n. '""v n. uf.ff,.,..,
.Ii f1c. •i!i<cMil., .+c. Loe.I I -•·
cir. Uc.'frrh. TXUlll. . . .
'$2995
i;. -~ •
' '
1~6f COl-.fl'INENTAL' · ll67 TORONADO
A+troc. 'c.mea Ct-. fiJI, w/col'ltr ..
'tlorl 1¥¥ t.U lthr., I.+. >,II ln•'Y
· ffo...-.11 ... iN1t1., l 'I ,..,_, 1•1'• '
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Pl,"'' 6-woy P$. '1..,-.,1Mll1t,j
Ilka 'MW"; J°'000"111J, l1c. TIY940
··-··~ .1 ·$41'95
•
• $roda111 Q.oW flo. w/1ati11 ltfk. Int,
'DI&: ,,.., flll .. ,.,., fac, air coH,
l • .,,. .. Ilka ..... ·Shows fottWl0111
',,,.., St.di-N.: 42-MA
..~$3615·
•
JOHNSQN & so~
Or•nt• County's Oldest Authorihcl Lincoln·Me~ury. 0.•ler
•WDT·COAfl H~HWAY • IEWPOIT IUCH
• Aile About Our FREE
i,49inten•nc• l.e•1• Pl•n 642--0891 , Soon To Bt In
Convenient Costt Mtse
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TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ----Uoed Cara 9900 UIOd Cars .9900 Uoed Cars , 9900 Uoed Cars • 9900 Uoed Cars 9900 -Cl'.flVROUT U"COLN M!RC,UIY PLYMOUTH PONTIAC ~-~~~~--1· .... --~--.,,_l ____ ;..:... __ ~1------.....__----1----~'-~~1
IN Jl~~I tc'oRJNTY ,'.!! ~~..:o:~ 1961 ~~CURY '67 r:=~~"'J 111
. '+J Clift • .,._a ,._....,..._,....alund l:C~':ot.:;. ::_;,.L
ROY CARVER
PONTIAC Lok-,._ Woaoo. .<uu> 11111 ..-, All/Fii ndio. matic, ~ heater. Pert • No. roz 631. Santa AM. Aw. .• Tuatin) : = = '9a Harbor 91., O'llta Melt
Kl 6 4444
....... Lie. OPIJ960. $1795 '86 MEllC Statloo W-. 0 Air ~ an,,.. °"""'>'• -
$695 . . lot Jal .. --. ~ ~ Plrll. '"' ........ --lle&1'r ... -~ .... ELMORE JO'il~~.!, SON :, ~ 1:""~1ri: : =:-rr---''~"'""'~"'·=."'o.~ .. ~ ... -v~ .. -... -1
~-... _ --~ . -t ....ntJoo 2 .. llrdO>f. xbit, .... .
MOTORS ~~ --~ -N ... 10 llldar. MB, Pw
TOYOTA ™'-81"'· 642--.MUSTANG can1>e-natt11e 11M1, ·--•••
J!ll. •wt '01 OQNT!NiM'AL • dr • Dolly Piiot --~ -. is... -118""., .__ -., ..... aood-I* NICllT CARS JUldot !tt SID w. 11o,y, al Ill• .ttll. ..i,, 41.000 -
'6' <JIEVlllU:T 1lloola 2 -IN ORANGI COUNTY 1-~Ml~41'~, !:Eld.~<111~-l ..':-~;ita:::_ _____ I
"' Jwd· 10p, w111te. Alt, '66 Mustang MUST s.u -.. ,.. ••--------1 ~· .:._an..,', ~w;.er, ,· MERCURY _, ep..-..., ""'· Bril· _, •1111 -a...1, _ _:l~IA~-:!!Ml~':!!~I " ........... -llMt ttd widl oonttbttrw tn. f'ICOOa •• l!l'd· $1. .. ... -
betw"" ••Tm -· '64 Mercury ..-. A""""'"' ,.._,. -. ~ NICUT CAU
anytime, Montdai"r Lie. RVEll<. Spoclal '3 PLY. _, ""7: • .,.i. IN ORANGI COUNTY
"'1 EL CAMINO. Auto; dbc $1295 PU&l-<rad., .._ -• brakes; mw ti.rel; radio. 2 Dr. H.T. Alpine white with m rear end. head.•r• -19t4 Ran6:l1r
Lo ~ Jtut tuned. fD5(1. ta.wn l.cWkwr:1 .W.. alt, PIS. ELMORE 54&-0332 a.attM .....,Ii' an-. lJtne
642-«6 liekft I pm. A: P/B. Sold by \II A .,... 6S PLYMOUTH. Fur7 JD. mllqt ...... Ueded wtttri
---viced by us. No. IOX 167. MCYI'ORS Xln nd hctor7 air accm lw. Tlw are bard
CHRYSLER $1295 TOYOTA ~. ~ . . •-Uc.-Oab
ht car lot on Harbor Blvd. Ph. 839-1200 '65 PL111iOV'iH ~ $145
'64 Chrysler JOHNSON & SON ism....., Blw., w-• Speed. llSOO . .uto 2 11111 -ELMORE
N.Y. 4 Dr. Llnooln-M=uzy '" MUSTANG °""'· v.. bucbt ....... 5*<l9lO
HT Enn1nt wblte wtth full Coat& Mesa Branch llWo. poWtt atrs', xlnt cond. '66 PLn«K11'H BelT. l, new MO'roRS ~ " tac. air. AM1nL 1941 Harb:ir Blvd. 642-7Cfill kt cub otter! 615-24ai _ tnkeL eaUm 6 CUltom • TOYOTA
A truly fine ear! ·NYS 60t "m Cl)L PK. 9 PW wagon.' 1Bl!i5 MUS'!'ANG. Exeefl. •&I QO'flllh. $18. -.1fTO Pb._ .. 1200
$1695 Alt, !ue. ,...., I'll • 11 ~ 1 ~: mlleo&•: -· ism ---m•. w-
·-•-t H bo 81.~ Diie B 1'1,996 Or o11.,, . · · PONTIAC ·62 RAiiil.m 'CI au I c ..... car .... on ar r vu. ~ -gs MUITANG · Exe llent l--------JOHNSON & SON oo Mi:RCURY Station w... ~lion.. · e '61 PonHH Bonnnllle ~··..!v,Drs.z~
Llncoln-Mercury on Air, etc. Xlnt cond. $1800. ''· * ~ *• Th!neb dare Sold esWtGr~ -~Mt.::.,:5:,,,,.,,._ ____ 1 O:Mlt& Mesa Branch C99-2380. , ' . • ma.tchlnl hderlor. f\111 pwr; • ii'Jii. ~. Golld
™1HarborBlw. 642-7'111 '11 MONTEREY 2 Dr. · OLD,MOlll,E alr-. ,,.. .. ..,.. &a AatD. ML Ori(,
'64 Olrysle-r eedan, r & h, Hardlop. Air, ps, pb. Xnlt !,... ' · -" ~~ ~-Vc:y low owner. $115. 6U..20Q1
PS, PB, CLEAN· $1!ei co!XI. $4~ ¥&-1543 'illll O~ 2 door ... ......,.... new mr1.=:==::::::::;::;:,==I
1"" Ne.,,.... Blw. C.M. ,66 M -'1>0. can . lie -at "" -• Will ta._. older T·llRD
...,.;75 Dir. ercury shallmu. OM cu•-.""' fine, ""·--------I
P rk La ...... ,,,. Call Ted.,.
a ne "ou:is,. • .r Sodan .um,.,_ * 1967 T-81RD" *·
Sedan. Fully klack<! with fac. Tram. car $100 '6' CATAUNA Oorwtrttie f Dool', ~11., wtili. aJr,
1--... -00-lllET--CALIE!ITE---I air, atereo tape, etc. Beaut!-e 548-1.lli e PIJPB. .mo, ,............,,, WEreo, .n JIOllJS, ..U..
COMET
!900 M hoaduru maroon -'la Blad< F-115 Clldl. cmld. tllO er --· -. -Alt I,
494--91!85 &tter 4 pm ftDll' ear. St. No. Z50. Vf!t'1 dee. $115. m-.-:a .:•=-=·-----I l====='==I $2295 ..,.,.,, "' LI: )IANll iOill .... v .. OWlfDlr'fl T-. • Dr. CONTINENTAL 11t car 1ot •• u.r00r mw. ,.. ms. ...., ....,.., ,_, .,., Ml-•·•·
1------1JOHNSON &SON PLYMOUTH -""' --m1. '"'' a-1o m1. """ '62 Lh::ohl Om&enttl ~Mercu17 SZD>. eo.o.e I ;;;JMl..3m:;..;;;,;...,~-~=~ exeellei.t condition. $99S . Costa Mesa Br&nch '64 PLYMOlll'H Sport Fu!")'. 'G PON'l'1AC Tempeal,. J OIUGINAL Oner a T:sJni
. Pboat 531.J.liO 00 Harbor Blvd. SC.7Ui0 Xlnt eoncf. Atr--amd. Lo sipee4, f . e)'llnder, detn. Sllver·Bladc: ktdwr -*-·
1962· OONTIN»rrAL, llkie mileage. SU-27'8 _ $295. EYea. ...._, ,._.,.&ft T:30 PM
new throughout! New tlttt. DIAL dittct 642-561\ a...r. •BJ VALIANT 2 Dr. Radio. '61 TEllPDJT f1xeNrpper C lJl5I THUNDERBIRD Qin.
MU8t .cl ~:IMS Jll'lr ad, then lit bM* ud Heater. 6 eyl. Stick. Clean eyL fOCid tires, MW lirabr9. wrt. R/H, pwr itr1'I. Orie"
1llte t.o the phcDs ftart Under Wf.l'l'llnt1' M8-Q67 S?S or t. 56-41'8 owner. S1IG. f13..3m5. •
CORVAIR
'65 O)B.VAIR Monza, Rllt, ""' -·· • ...... """° Mi., IQOd. hPe $800 . -= '64 MONZA coupe, xl.nt cond.
Rulli good. Make ofter.
962-2768 after 5 PM.
1960 COl\,VAIR •door, RAH.
•tick "1lft. Be9t' otter taka
~131
CORVETn
'68 OlRVETl'E rt.AWliSS!
2 .... all pwr, ~ ·-··tab vw .. ~
In tndo....,,,. C:::!A~ . ·---~ .......... ~--11167 C0UGAa XR T
BNUtHal dei:dl,1m•t·atl1e
trte wttb blaq laDda• top
and black leather inteflor,
Power ateerln&, power di.c
b ..................... ~
ratfto, heater. 11.000 ml.
Pbam IG41• after .....
Him ........
DODGIE
NICE$T CARS
IN ORANGE C:OUNTY
1963 Dodge
rm am epe. Automatic and
neat al a ._. Ardo wtaitit
witb contrut:ina: lntericr'. Lie.
GZSM.1. Only
$995
ELMORE
MO'l'ORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 8JB.1200
~ Be&.cb. Blvd., Wltrnn.rb
'64 Dodge Dar:t
GT, dlr, pwr steerln&. excel-
lent condition. Local car.
$85 Cub dela ar trade, take
payment., $33.86. 56-0634 or .......
FALCON
'63 FAL<Xli, 1 owns, under
20,lm ml. Auto tnn.a. Ml.
XIM mecb..,_, cabi. -Pvt party . .........,
'63 WAil • A ...,. pluga. --•bal.Oeu int. $ZIO. 't--. IB-1111
19&0 I rA!iiii ltattoa
Wlpll. ~ mot'Or, new
upholll•,,: $199. ~
'63 . i:oRI> J'lloa Ml. s<S6. Good ......
·Call-
FORD
'62 1'0RD GUslt 500 ' *·
lldQ>. ---1-mU.up ...... -.
.• roao. --
--»P» 1ill. -lol!DD-R--L
a ro -; -. I -. !Ill!. Pl&
' Orfs. °"""' ---... rmn GoJaxy v.a. ' Dr.
Ml. ---_,i.p-
New Cars . flllO
'SERVICI IS OUlt MAIN
CONCllUI"
' BID CK
' JAGUAR
OPEL
· \_968 ,~CLEARANCE
BIG 'otscoum ON ''8 iTRAGGLERS -. ,,_ ~lted ~ut ~'wliiW ~ moclol you went !-fOU'I -or find a bi990f dlscoJf.'.
Rivioru, Elecires,~e Sabres, Wil~ats. • -
12·1968 .DEMONSTRATORS ·
Managers & sole.mens personal cars marked way down. No b'99-JliicoUnts ..,t.1 nnt yNr.
. . . ~ ' . NEW .'69 OPEL COUPE
ONLY ................... ~191921
DtLIYila IN COSTA MIU
~ .. 1969 OPELS
llG SELECTION .. ,
u.lDf --Tl DllmlJI
Woal41't .,.. ,..tty '~ • ..,.. lllON ""' --. 11f
roo.._ .... Ww '°°"'" • .,.. ,_... I dyfl .. fer ti. same
•mount of mo"'Y., , 1•111 111•1
klty •quippitd J11cl""'4 ft.t _..., ..,UH ... ••A .,...
tem, h••t•r, whit. w•flt. 4••1 ~ w1"4tlll•l4 .1,.,...
w•rnl119 fl••h•r, r1di1, ek. tl01411
JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS
COMPijJE SAIES ·SERVICE All PARTS DfPARlMBIT FOR JAGUAIS
'67 COU•AI
VI, 1vto., PS, fie. 1b. IULT-47tJ
A••r191 ret1n ii.. leolr4]071 · s2495
. .,_...
Ml,__, fac. 11,. CTHl121 I
Affl•tl '"tlf .... &Mk $4261
I i
S795
"'' UllCGIJI ., • s3795 t Dr. ~.T ... n ,..,.., fH. 411,. fV.Y
f61 I A .. , ... r1t1tf II•• l•olr t4411
'"II Ulll $ i Dr. H.l.i A ..... rs, n. fMt, olt. 2095
llYVltt> ... .., ... r.+.1: llff ....
$2611
BRAND NEW 1969 .
BUICK
VI. "tomoff" P'•" ''"'''''$2985 r1dio, ........ 4lllllll wfteol ..,..
'"• h•14 ....., aM .. •llY• m1ny ·
morel tZtOll 11
IMMIDIATI DILIYllY
:0 ~:.~ hll ,_.,.,fie. 1lr, s1595 CNIZl"6J A .. ,, .. m1Wlt11 l11k
StllO
'61 IWICI INYICTA s1195 staff .. w11e1111. A9t... RlH, 'l. flit
wW ....... rick, fH. alJ. IWXVlill
'" -MONACO s2095 4 4r. H.T, ,.,.._M.flc, PS, •fr colMI.
fTPUOl2 I Ritt•lf llV1 leok $2420
'U IMIU.
'1111 ,_.,, f1d-v olr. lllKtOO)
A"'lfl moll llM 1-11 t 1710
.
s1495
5895
234 E. 17ffli ST. COSTA MES
548-7765
•
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Sal11 S.rvtc.1111ta11~1 rrlnt
OPIN: .... .,.. .... ay ••• m. .. tp.M.
~1Lnl.fe6 ..... S..ndoyo 10 ...... ,.,,. ...
New (ors
-
•
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"""'-• N-21, 1'69 DAILY 1'11#1' JS
9800Naw Cars iiOO NOW can HOO,..,. Cars W
. . : .. CH•n~·
· PLY•OilTH! l•l"Ei ....... RIAf
-dt~~G7;0/&aA1Ka .•.
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'67 CHMOlET .. • ' ' • ''5 DCl&E . l1111pel1 t Dr, H.T. YI. .. tM11fl ..
t1df6, ~ltw, ,. • ., tfffrl119, air
1"4fff•"'tt tlnyl reof. CTWS471 I e.r...t Mt t Dr. K.T. Ailtria., P.S ..
UH. a1r .. 114tffM\ltt l,.Utlll
, '
'2295 . 51695 .
RllAllCllle
NO PROl11M
We ,W•Y-
Car 111 . Tnide. . .
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U DAILY PILOT
-. •
Always at Sears ••• Scttisf action Guaranteed or Your Money ·Back!
'
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CLIP THIS COuPON
~n 525
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Quieter, Smoother, Better Traction ••• Sears
.Foll 4·Ply DYNACOR RAYON
Guards an
With the Road.Gripping Patented Feature
Anilablo
at Snn ..•
Steel Cord
Radial Tires
Ask Any Sean Tire Salesman
About· Th<ni!
Oon't Repair! Replace Your Engine with a 24-Month
or %4,000-Mile Guaranteed
Remanufactnred Engines
More New Parts in Every Remanufactured Complete Engine
• AD New Water 'hi.. • AU N-1!7ctr.allci • AU New llltake ValvH
• All New Rodtu SUfta Lifters • AU New Valve Sprtnp
• AU New ~ (lba(lll • AD !rl'ew BuUlna-• • All New Pll1ton11
• All New Tlmlq" Gean • All New Seal Ouket1 • AU New Chrome-Type
• AJJ New Mam Bmling • .&!I ·Mew Ellaut' Rlnp e All New Bed lklu1ap V.,..es
Thia Coupon Worth 525
On tlit Purchase of Any
.Remanllfaehlred
Awtomatie Tra• ... isslon
Offw .,.._ 8-L. llfll!& 0.. Coapoa J1f!f CllnolMl'-HSM 11/Sl/0 . . -·
:.&·M .. UI. w U, ..... Mlle
Rema.nuf:actand EnafH
G\JARANTEE
It any part faila du. ,lo
defect.a lrl mate:rla.la or
V."Orkma.:Wltp , • , during
firat 90 dayw or 4,000
mllu, whichever oocun
nrwt. w• will repak or re-
pl!lCil part.I tree of,dlqe,
provhling required serv-
ice hu ken pert'onned
ftCCordlng to (UU'&lllee
certificate. After to dap
er 4,000 mllu anc! up t'o
24 months or 2t,000
mlle1, wblchev.r occun
flnt, pub and ,I ab o r
rhure wtll be prorated
be.!led upqn ~ percent· R.,. or guaranteed mcmth11
or mllea, whlchavtt 11
1TUleT repreteoUne u ..
llf'I received. hrlodie
.uvtce 11 requlr~ to keep
ruaranlee ln effect.
BneuaPark • La P.Jma 11t S-a
$21-45SO
Santa Ana
In7 S. Main St.
:n 7-3371
30..Month Nationwide Guarantee
.. . ..
Sears Regular Low Trade-in Price
I
'
Regular
Trade-In
Price
$18.95!
At 25%
Off You
Pay Only ...
kllertotll' • bldtoas b&-
twem the ribs stop tile
.queannr around turns
and When brakiaf.
44
6.50xll
TubeleH
Blackwall
Plus 1.81 r .E.T.
and Old Tiro
Guardsman wean Ionau than the 4 major new car tires after %0,000
miles of Identical 'testtnr on our grueting PtttNJ, Tesu trade.
4 Ways Better!
Ouieter, Smoother!
With 4 Full Plie1 af
Dynacor Rayon
1. Gives Silent, Soft Ride
%. Quietly comen. easier ateerlftc
3. No Thump, and no bump!
4. No harsh warmups
Prepare Now for Wint.er with a Sears Nationwide Guarantee
ALL§TATE Battery
•
6-Volt Batury
12-Month Guarantee
~~t 699 6-Volt
Can ••·at WIU1 ........
12-Volt Batury
IS.Month Guarantee
~lt9~! ,_ ..
Searl llaa a, Batt•Q" lot
Evt.JT\Car' Effr)' Budget •••
FREE BATTERY TEST
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