HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-11-22 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesar -~ ~ ....... -,._._.,--.. .~
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER-22, 1968
VOL iU, MO+ -., t llCTIO•S. •PANS
More Blasts
Dim Odds
For Miners
MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UPI) -Two
more "very devastating" methane gas
ei:plosions rocked the burning Man-
nington No. 9 coal mine today, further
reducing the grim odds for survival
of 78 men entambed three days 700
feel und<qtUIUd.
Wives of the trapped men were beard
sobbing loudly nearby when a coal com-
pany official told newsmen the explosions
were so powerful a 20-ton concrete and
cinder block cap was blasted off a mine
opening and thrown "several hundred
feet."
William Poundstone, execulive vice
president of Consolidation Coal Co., said
the explosiona "delayed the possibility
of sending in any rescue teams."
"We're largely back to where we were
a day ago," he said. "We have no
con~ol over the fire in the mine."
Nevertheless, be said, "We are no
closer to a -decisit '..l to seal off the
mine" -a move which would signal
abandonment of all hope for the 71
men trapped in the mine'• seven-mile
maze of tunnels.
t Poundstone's. atatemellls ffre piped
by loudspeaker 1o a place in the general
store where the families of the trapped
men were gathered.
The -" the """""' could be beard clearly )!Y •U al~ news briefing.
A Ulllltd Mine Woi:~.~ •"'ety
..., eiper\, .im Evans, ~\'j;'~
v1omen: "I ··• to ·'-',_.,,..r .. ... :.;;:,_ . w-m-1:1 ·"'"" very \;,l'C11r.
"!'his mine Is not gptng to be sealed
until evuy poaible ami.ue bas been
t!xplored to contact the men to eUect
rescue or recovery -whatev• it might
be."
Since the first of eight explosilln! oc-
curred be:forl! dawn Wedne8day, the rag·
ing underground fires and tlllck black
smoke contalnlng dangerous carbon
monoxide prevented the start of any
attempt by reacue crews to 10 into
the mine.
Poundstone 1aid there appeared no
doubt metbanl! gas was involved in the
explosions.
He said a reading at one bore bole,
taken after t.he l_atest two explosions
today, showed a high methane and low
01yge'.l content and some carbon mono:i·
ide.
Poundstone said a third effort would
be made to cap the mine'• nm portal,
near which nine: families of trapped
miners were remaved from their homes
because of the gas danger.
I ~ Mourning I
Actress Jane Russell, formerly
of Newport Beach, emerges
from Hollywood private funeral
chapel Thursday art.er services
for her actor husband Roger
Barrett, who died Nov. 18. They
bad been married three
months.
P~K~
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At SF State
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By Faculty
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -About 11111
faculty members wearing yellow arm.
bands were stationed on campus fo
keep the peace as classes resumed to-
day at San Francisco State College.
The faculty members, seeking to pre-
vent a repetition of Thursdiy's violence
that brought armed police on campus,
stood on the stairs of the administration
building.
Pickets calli."lg for a shutdown o(
classes marched outside several build·
(See SF STATE, Page %)
Japanese Airliner Falls
Into SF Bay; 107 Saved
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From Wirt Service•
SAN FRANCISCO -A Japan Air
Lines 707 jet inbound from Tokyo came
down in San Francisco Bay a mile
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C..ast
Weatller
You may be olf for the weekend,
but the · fog ia back ori. It'll move
in tonight lllld Mick around Ull noon
while coaatal temperaturtt Aft
tabbed al .. end lnWJd ll1er<UQI
• pl ,1'.
.. INSJDE TOD~Y
TU the ,..,.. for Chm'"""
piaV•· ~ of Old Jam<• Pla~r1' oerricm of "'AmalU and
the Ntghi VUitori" ii Codar'• co...-f<at"'c In WEEKENDER maoaz!ne.
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short of the airport today but tbe eoa.t
Guard reported all 107 persons aboard
were rescued safely by small boat.a.
The. weather was foggy and overcut
but ·the airport was in normal operaUon.
The big plane came down about 1:45
a.m. off ,Coyote . Point about 11 miles
south of San FralJcisco.
Four life raftl w2re put out from
the plane and were towed ashore -
a dislani:e "of abou~ ·300 yardl '-by
launches. · 1
Ambulances and doctors were called
to the """"" but the Coast Guard
reported that lf there wero any Injuries
they apparehify ...,.e minor."
Tbe plane came · down rightslde up
·--mile -· .of the end of 'the nearest nmw11. 'the trinp and most
of tbe tuaelage were above water.
'l'be bl,)' al that polnl ii -end msrshy. .~ •·
Chuck Sdelelmaltr, llllillanl range
...-al the Coyot< Point Rllle Range,
aid the plane ... about 300 yardl
from lhe pier of the Coyvta Point Yaclil
Harbor. lie allo nparted that •J>Plffllll1
no one was injured.
"It was on iU Ona1 approach about
thret mlles loat,b • of th4, akJ>ort." ftl!Ol"led.a Federal Avl.atlclo Altll<J c:oo-
tnil tower apok~
"The plane WU under rad..-end t'1ldlo
<Ollttol becan,.,of the bea"11fQl·.1'!'"·
1111 can on the r~ lndfe<d evr:ryuunc
wu all r&ihf.. but ••'11 have to look
at the rea>rdlnp apln before we can
II)' Uia£ lot pe."
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UC ·Regents
May Cut
Prof Power .
From Wire Service•
SAN DIEGO -Hedged about by·
guards, University oJ California regent&
today were ready to strip pro[eseon·
of the power to hire ' 81'1 mn spl!dal.
ltcturers like Black Panther · Elclridge
Cleaver, ,.
Today 's meeting pn tile univenity'a
San ·(!ieto ~-""',. • tlii l regeri!a ~ F reconV$M! lllDlioa ·
UGl-70 ....... nquOll. ,.. ..
Governqr RonaJd Reagan was due at
the m.etl!>i-Security l!Wda doployed
to bead ott an1 re~tJtiOn of the ttcent
Santa Cru: ·meeting In , wlDc:h Maa•i-s
and Stat. Superlnl6ldelit ol Public ,
lnstructloo Max Ral!eny >me joetled ,'
an'd jeer~ by students. ~
A1J the regents met, 160 studenbJ .and f I
10 prolessora at UC San Diego were
In the thlrd day of a hu"nger strike
protesting the propoeed reduction of
faculty authority. ·
But Tom Shepard, San Diego student
body preslden~ told regents' "While
yoo'n here, I doo'.t ezpect you to be
confronted by any violent demonstra-
tions."
Regenia commttt.es laid the ground
work Thursday for the two major items
on the agenda -the Cleaver affair
and the budget.
One committee affirmed a two.month
old ruijl)g that no credit will be granted
for the -cburse on racism which hu
seen Cleaver lecture sis: times on the
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Killed . hy F-..e. T~•~Ji.:
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Berkeley campus. · ' • ~ ' u~h~~oul";;":'~J•=.r:,. re::. : .. ORANGE ·COUN"N, f.1RE'i\EN .WORK: TO,l'=:v.1c:i:iwPRoM wn"C~"'f ~~-
uc classrooms wlthoot '.the permission .. ...aa111911•,l•liiiio! ~oti~ ol.Mtr,.DIW ln ,PJ,. T • -~~tr1P11~11!'4.Rilo.An11'H~ ". '
of an official with the rant of dean · · • • · · .• orhlgher. . ,. ······,· ... ,,c······-:·~:·~-.·.· :· .
~!tf~e:r:ire~e~~;:u~~~ Nation R_ eca. ·. lls Trag·edy' · '·p.~#~~.!'E!.~~.!.~s .
to appear more Ulan once.
ru?;g ~~:edha:~ ~~.:.-.~ Of Fl . • y . . A : ,p l!.J.__. , Car;'0>8it"'Man : =~-=~::::.~ · .. ive · . ears . go: .L ,o~y ' ~~.~ :w:t~k 1
The new policy clearly op~ Gov. . , i • • • , .,.
Reagan'sdemandthatCleaver'bebanned Five yean ago today -in a SUflo> No one Deeds ' to recount all 'eventl An Orange CountJ fife truck. ipee:d-'
from campuses. 'splashed Texas 111etropotl1 -:the o.f \he three' days in Dallu.: / · 111: tO a cQJ.. in tbe • Ma·uei,:ts
But the modllled ruUng appattntly . ultimate price of leadership !"U spellod , Time dln1'. the r.correctlofl of thlnga area, slammed, bitO .~ .Ot4a at .a ...,. I·
. failed to satisfy faculty leaders or oe,it tor every l:kly who eou,td 'grbw up comnii.Ued, felt1., aeeo, beam 'lnd smelled 1 ~ted interstctton · TftiandaJ1 e
•ludenta. to be · JX:"'ldent u American blsloly In Dallas: 10urdfl,, otet. ~ ·aed . · ..1\..1 · • venlag.
The 134t mlllloo budget -calll tells that he can! ' · · the spice of ~ llowan.. , tl1llng the drlf'r -"!~ of lhem.
for ISO million more than lbe 1191 mllllon ·The world· wat<:hed ·In horror. MEMOtUEs ~ ' · Dead ii Tbi>a\!u Clif!On! Ai<ber, 45, 1
granltd the nlnr><:ampwo tm1vers11y . i. J>l!W,trful nilio.n'• ln!a,. 11uJ ... veo: ..aut•lbe ...,.... do·~ althouab · ol)u~ ~ 4ve'.',~·w He -r
,oetwork by the Jei!llotm:e 111<.the <uirenl tjwl(ed , u shots 'ang rut Jn· DallU" , lre11h· ,and lilQlllrly 'terrible "°'' ha.ve cwnbed cif be;ll! lnjarl .. aU:olla M e a a
llocal year ending-In June. .-Dealey . Fla%a oo F,rlday ov. "'2 .. tlliS, · been ad<\ejl; .with . the pollUcal ,nwnfeQ • Memorial Hdepital · an boar af1tt t b a l
The regents 181! year asked lor 1311 shatle!lng 1'1)!81<\ent Jol\ll · Fitzgerald of SehatO.: ~rt · F: . Kamed)' . ·and dash. " " · 1 j
million and were cu! back to '291 mlllion. Kennedy'a brafn and with it a thouJand Dr. M~n Luthe~ King. • · ~ .. --.. ' · · o.
181 The b~et package Includes faculty dream•. not all hil own. , . • . During' . lill ' ct1mpalgn ; for · t b e , l.Gn-1~ ; W':JU:":,1"!)'.; i'J. ::_
ary e8B<!3 rlOllng from 4.7 to Harlem $>elhine boy) •epl, Heads Dem((CraUc presfdelitW nominallons,llO\ \:L Ltcu!la -:... She wu lleat,tid {
· 6.2 percent, which PresidenC Charles J, of governments 'mourned.-A feW '!ho . long aft.er Dr.· King w~ 1IBID; ~ i iUfnji, ~l;t~~ 1 •
lllt<:b llJ'• are designed to keep the had hated the .vita! young Presldont . ~:Jie ·waa.hmnlni ai""'81 .P9llcles,; ~lnlct;'drlnll •by ·Luty c.t ;i;:::=~~·· · ~,loft,'rl~~J:~~-~1":: a;.;'u.. 'I~ .,,:,'e'~il'ul -11ta "'-iliilil&'1n111o ~ •
Reagan, In a spOecb In Beverly am. • ll'hne bu dimmed the c:haln of events · ·oi>m&; ls on a pe\iJOua Course," be 1 11• Detlll Ttll ltl
Thunday, eaid be would "preieot the which ..,.. 111. began In the mln\I> lald · • • · · · · 1 •
la& of ll[e" to the lllllveralty rqanflng of a clile'bc:bant<il "ex·Mal!no ai,nerM.d " My, there will .~ mullJ<d driima, · Plllle. It, ·JJU;olllit'...., .. llff'lllD •
lta P'oposed bodiet. Re>gan aid he Hlin(ey O....ald Who booght a mall order salutes, -, meQ1«lo!I 1111i1 , the , A~~~ i: ~ ~ i::
hid no qumet wUh univeni\l' needs 7.a 'ma-rtfla . with wblcb lo ~ melancJ>oly -.of l>u(lt taps. belnc • "" 1 :!'P!J-e.:;j~
but noted the state i.... linancial pro-hil track pojt::. pla.yed 1lltlr an --of ltpllkaoco ~ :..,. . • ..,_ 11 Plllaadiro;
ble1111. POUl'ICAL l'L{lT! .' lor the day.. , • • ' • • lrm,er'l" ~ ...,,:.,.. "a a
Spec;~ Verdict Upheld
SP!IINGFIELD, m. ~ -Tho
llllnoll SUlftlllt C4ort a lod81 tht
d<alll penalty for Richard Spock, Who wu CIXlvlcled of munlerlnl eliflt aoneo
Ir\ Ohle.,. In 1111. The courl ~
1rith lawyen for 3P«t that Speck could
not get a lair trlal In Peoria County.
Othen ..,. I( .... • poUllcal plol. GJlA VEI TO DIG . . . altuck brut'de ca the ._.. -
perhApl ' lllcked by Ille' ~ .Alllf wlthlo a In houre.i1t Will i bo • ~--~illll.,t,l!)'llie~
Po)l'trful l"l!l~-ln!!Ullritl l"""~ lnr • Saturdf.T, Nov. 11, with teleTlalon ..... , ~ Wiik° 111§o1.lie iw..• Illa ~all
volvln. """' of -le, -of 11..m ball. IMm lo .mo; .m11b!o the 'I* ' l!:<jnt ,ddo. • t , , ........:.... • · ~ , • ' to .~and. everrwbora-A-to •~ a1111 ~~~ .. r.-iki.~fu.~~~=f.'.si'!; · °"!!V..,.rvmilna"•·tda~' .. ~iri~=m J>l!I, J nl;tit ti llilpiler, ind .... I W )'tit;" Wbkih ii 'boyt ........ HJd . I fta J
hf<i neWay>ea '!!lo ~!p lo ' Cfl_.E. T.·ielber '(US~ Ret,j l ..... , -flrt~tr•d~ll!llba
<Ruby'a home -· 1Wn1Q -ha -' manqea &lee )1111 Burlal Part It\ Tau, .. nm to tba.cil~ a w.,.iiOUll.blul 11 llTt •
Olwilkl end arrived belora Ibo i\oUce. (lllo UNNBDY, hp I) (l!lot CR.Ull, .... lJ ,
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! l>o'llV PILOT
: Kennedy's . '
Protest Orange Route
; Beach Citizens · Faniil . .. y
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•• J; .4 t Grave · --::fl-
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• lldUl!rY. H ... lndl,..... H!illln# . '•l ~.~ ... lllg ~ ali<11 01 'fr-
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,_.,. ~ ID lot llll "liarl •!•""° oiai
---oll-11111,..--Wp llll'Mloi&Jt.. "bad fiitb" on the part ·of the state A core of about 300 pald mem~rs
commlllloa in adopting the so-called ol. the CCC . bave been successlul · ln
Orarige Une for the future freeway. raising strong public outcry against the
The adoplt:d alignment is the Newt~d Orange line ln the past.
Street line for the nor t b ·a out b $,000 ON PETJT[ON
superhighway which is· also called the Petitions signed by more than s,eoo
Route 39 freeway. persons in Huntington Beach, Fountain
FILED Aj;J'ION
Jerry L. Sapp, an airline pilot of
1141 Wadebri\lge Clr<:le, filed the legal
actttoo In his capacity as vice presldenl
of the CCC.
The CCC Includes homeowners living
east of Beoch Boulevard south of
Garfield Av.,ue In the lluntlngtoo Crest
subdtvllloo. /
Valley, Westm.lnster and Garden Grove
were presented during hearings locally
on the freeway line.
Prior to the entering by the CCC
Into the freeway dl8cussions, the cities
were divided among three main study
lines through West Orange County.
AMERICANS PAY RESPECTS TO FALLEN PRESIDENT AT ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY
. -Tod•Y M<iil<• Flftb•Annlverury ... John F.' Ktimody'• AsHaaljlotltn . .
CCC Presldenl Larrr CUrrWn of 1131
Wadebrldge Clrcle, a 'la"Wyer, p:epar«l
papers for the lawsuit which .W an
injuncllon to IOI aside the commllslon'a
•election of the Newland Street line for
the norUHoutb Route Ill freeway.
• Action by the CCC brought Hunt ington
Beach, Fountain Valley and Garden
Grove solidly behind the central (Red
Line) routa for the freeway and opposed
to the Orange Line.
Marines Stag~ Clwpper
Attack 1Tra 1 OQO Reds
p...,.. P1111e I
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KENNEDY ••.
'!be alllt charges !bat unnamed per10111
"'conspired" and entered into a ~·ICheme
to establlab and fix Ibo adoption" of
the freeway route.
where Oswald lleB. It charges, too, that unldentifted
Some feara were expressed by the buslneuea made "secret contacta0 and
management that the preaence of his that tbe: results or the c:ootactl were
remains would drive away the business not made pobllc.
This left on1y Westminster as the
strong voice for the Orange Line which
nms east of Beach Boulevard roughly
along N"'land StreeL
Stanton, too, waa for the Oranp Line
which had been recommended b7 the
state highway engineer after more than
100 heBringg and meetings Oil the rouUng.
of people who must someday join Curran llald !bat "adoption b7 the
wreath bcn a m:nall whtte card SAIGON .'(UPI)' _ U.S. Marines hi for ilie first time since the Commtmilirtlll presidenta and acaised asseulns allke commiss.lon of th1a route (Orange study
said. '"'!be Pnlkleol" their largest bellcopter assault of the dog them 20 yeara aio. on ~ual terms. ' line on the freeway engineers' maps)
CCC members lnveotlpted extens1vel7
and as a result decided the Orange
Line, which runs very near tbe bousiDg
tract where most of the paid members
live, was not correct for the city or
West Or""ie County.
hen tn Amstca ad ~ war ..,_ '-'-the "Dodge City" area 1be acUon marked a new upsurg ' memories of the American people shows that the will ot the people was ,....kl, m--were beld -ww ped ol fighting In the nortborn provinc are qulle short," Col. Seltzer said. completely Ignored, leaving no choice GOING TO COURT
tay to the. 35lh l'roildenl ol the 13 mil .. tlOUlll ol Da N""i and trap ·of Soutb Vietnam. A military spokesma foe us but to look beyond tbe results
fed Slates, "We ha'" DOI forgollm." :'!'~~ l,OOO __ S°';".~~ 8:.,! said loday U.S. artillery shelled the of public bearings in an effort to find
Curran said that the deciBlom of the
Highway Commission are final unles..
overturned by the courts and "that's
why we are going to court." Mn. -pl-to -.. tlio -,~ w ..... -~g· .,. northern ball or the demllltarlzed .... McCarthy Era Aide out what really happened."
8llll1'mll7 GalollJ • .i. 1111 -ftal"'"' -~ "'"'8hL Tburaday for lhO !Int Ume ·since Preal·
of the 1111 lam--,_.., u.r twlY* carr...,.....da frlXn Da Nang repor1«1 •deol Jobnaoa cafled o11 an bombardment Name i m' . Consp:~acy MOST EXPENSIVE seenta17, ~ 'l'll:bl--.i. 1ba1 the .,..at1m beilD WednelCla7 . of the Communlal naUon. Q ~ He said tbat the facts developed by -"' -w,.. la ,'llew York pd -a lm:e of 7,ooll Marlnel an<!_.~ The reports llald the Marines had tilled tbe CCC and many otbers involved in
He· warned the commission late tn
October that the matter would come
before the court,, if the commission did
oot agree to reopen the matter. Sf&j~1&~.S~1"~o~•~ol~U..~daJ~la~-~~::_--~-:!=::!:-='..:bll:::...:lbo::_:Comm=::":nlltl::.;~=:;=' 90 of Ibo enemy, believed part ol a, NEW YORK (AP) -Roy M. Cohen, the freeway study show that tbe Orange ...; buDdup fm' another attact on Da Nq, the la~r and financier who gained Line is the "longest, most expensive ~ national fame in the 1950s as chief and will force the largest number -Of :ror~ ln ~ n:edln mwt9ch ~ counsel. for the 1ate Sen. Joseph R. famitlies ~ be Wipi:b1 ~ca~ 1:1;
Mirines and government Infantrymen McCarthy, was lndleted ~ay on con-fu:;.~ amage us an
were flghtlng almost aboulder t 0 spiracy charges in connection with a Highway Commission C ft a l r m a n
lhouJder. New York City bus line now in Venwn Cristina said Thursday from San·
The aru. held thousandl of civilians, receivership. ta Marla where the commissioners were
most of them under Vlet Cong control. A federal grand jwy returned the meeting that the conspiracy charge is
and the Marinet ~ they bad lndlctment following an 18-month in-"a personal insult."
puaed .. more than 2,200 of tbem through vestl.gation of financial deals among a He said that his own lawyer may ~ D1US1ve mllltary cordon thrown web of corporations, including Fifth look into the possibility of libel.
around the area. The clvlllam were Avenue Coach IJnes. He pointed out that the commission
FroM Page 1
CRASH ••• -
Mesa Drive. The fire was out on arrival.
Archer WM the owner of three taco
shops in his name on Catalina Island,
Newport Beach and Balboa Island. Un·
ti1 recently he had been manager of the
Jolly Roger Restaurant on Balboa IJland.
wmied by leaflets to leave. 1-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiim;;lliiiiiiii~;;;;;;;;;~liiliiiil;iiiiiijiiiliili~a;;;;;:-A Marine spohlman eotlmated the I
!~~~~ DREXEL'S FABULOUS ET CETERA 5~~ ~go::-&'~·::;::: CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!
The spokesman said the ~ llled
71 bellcopten In tbe usaul~ \be blgeat
tbey have made by a1r.
Two salvos from US. guns Tltunida7
lilenced two aotiJircraft machtoe IUBI
!bat opened fire flnt on U.S. apotter
planes from the nortbem half of Vlet~
nam'• border.
Hanoi radio dllputed lbe report. lta
broadcaat beard In Tokyo today llald
allied artillery and naval guns had hit
three villag .. In the norlhern DMZ foor
times previously -on Nov. '11, 17,
20 and II.
The United States, the radio llald,
"must. bear fuU "SfJOOllblllty for all
the consequences" ot the "utremely
brazen provocatl.'(.e acts.'"
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams' U.S. Com-
mand bas protested repeatedly the Com·
munlsts' use of the DMZ as a military
base in violation of an understanding
that brought the northern bombing halt. REG. SPECIA~
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TURMOIL AT SAN FRANCISCO STATE COLLEGE CONTINUES
Student Recoils From Blow ., Riot Squad Quells Protest ;Meeting Slated
For Dimes TAP
$179 $149
DAILY PILOT
............ c.n .... ........................... W•' Pa ....,.,...., -OJIANGI COMl f'UIUSHIHO COMJ>AN't
I.I.Ht N. Weff _ .. _
J•Jr: L e.ri..,
.'ltt l"l"l!IWMt ..i ~ MINt!r
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SF STATE ...
. ing.s and campus entrances.
A classroom invasion by militant
students sparked Thursday's confron-
tation with Police. However, although
the aimmpbere was tense. many stu-
denta walked through the picket lines
this momlog and Into classes.
Prof. Gary Hawkins of the speecil
department, spokesman· for the ftculty
gmip, llald: "We "" just trying to
pm.nt violence. This group has DO
name. We art just going to stand
around and hope for the best."
A counlywlde planning meeting for
students ir.terested Jn the March of
Dimes' Teen-Age Program (TAP) is
scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at Golden
West C.Ollege in Huntington Beach.
Jay North, former star of television'•
"Denni! the Menace'' and 1969 TAP
chalnnan for Los Angeles County, wtll
be on hand to greet Orange County
Studenls.
Nancy IDil a 17-year-old Newport
Harbor High Scbool aenlor who beads
Or""ie County 's TAP, &ald the meeting
will be beld intbe Community Center
Rooom of the college 1t Goldenwest
Street and Edinger Avenue.
Additional information about th e
meeting can be obtained by calllng 54'7·
6124.
Police and some 200 !tudents scufiled
Thursday as college authortUes worked
to keep the 18,00l»tudent campus open
in the face of oppoalUon by the Black
Stud«lls Union and otber group.. Two
wUJJini abols ~ fired by an officer .--.mg • fellow policeman trom • American' :.;:;..ioiinaire beating. ~6
The atrlken demand major changes in R S d D d the llchoo1, lnclru!lq c:ruUoo of a Black 8}18 tu ent eman
Studies Department and 1be r.lilrlnt of -. · • •
a Black Panlber George Murray, ..,.. PALO ALTO (UPI) -State American
"""1ed from the faculty fir advising Legtoo Commander Bradley·J. Stephens
Negro students to carry gtm on cam· today asked California's 12 4, 0 0 0
pus. Legtonna1res to use aU tbelr Influence
Classes Thunday nigbt wero beld agalnsl the -t upheaval at San quietly ml c:olle&o Preoldenl -.i D. Snlitb termed aftornooo •tteodance Francllco Stata College. "~" In ......i depertmenta, "We refuse to accept the asalnlne,
es -and JJll1lleal edu· dllruptlve, .....Ued 'demands' of a
ca oo. rldlculoua minority wbo lie when llley
AJ>.indo!lenclonl cblclt tlhowtd spme clllm to represeot the voice and -
atbrnd•ooe ID eae dauel and almost of •~ petcent of coosclenUoua ltudentl
normal tumouta In olben, Including 1he wbo 10 to college to learn, DOI to
busi-departmenl. desltvy," be aald In a staltmenl
('
REG • SPECIAL
REG. SPECIA~
$159 $129
•
Christmas time •••• encl ~ome is whare th'e
p1rti11 arie, with evtryon~ drtJsed -to the
$239
' · hilt. DNss· up your home to 1T11tdJ..Wh1t a
world . of holiday, glamour this wo.,dtrful
Drexel collection offen. See them todey at
tliese ••'J speeiol prices. For 1ome·very..,..
ciel furniture,' stop by tod1y • . .
.,
. IXCLUSIVI DEALERS FORi. HENR'EIJON ~R.axti .:...lfERITAQI .
90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER . TERMS .AVAILABLE ·ON APPROVED CREDIT
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W•tcllff Dr. 642.2050
OPIN NIDAY '?IL t
•
INlllllORS I
Pror..lonal lnh'rler LAGUNA BEACH
Av,u..:l:''~~SID 345 North <;::;. !!i~, '?IL t
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Baity Paper·
YOL. 6f, ,NO, 281', 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NoVEMl~lt: 22,' '1968 TEN cENTs
Orange Route Hit
Beach Group Files Suit on Fr-eewa:y
By WILLIAM REED
Of .... Olll'r ,llM Jt.tf
Leaden of Hunllngton Beach'• Con-
cerned CiUzeM Counclt today have on
file a lawsuit against the California
Highway Commlsslon seeking to set aside
the adopted route for the future Hwt·
tlngton Beach Freeway.
The legal actton filed Thursday alleges
"bad faith" on the part of the stale
commission in adopting the so.<:alled
Orange .Line for the future freeway .
The adopted alignment is the NeWla~
Street line for the north·&outh
superhighway which is also called tbe
Route 39 freeway.
2 More .Blasts
In Mine Snuff
Hope for 78
MANNINGTON, W. Va. (UPI) -Two
more "~eiy devastaµng " methan~ gas
explosions rocked the burning Man-
nington No. 9 coal mine today, further
reducing the grim odd!: for survival
of 78 men entombed three days 700
feet underground.
Wives of the trapped men were heard
sobOing loudly nearby when a coa1 com-
pany official told newsmen lhe explomons
were so powerful a :Z:O.ton ainc:rete and
cinder block cap was blasted off a mhie
opening and thrown "se.veral hundt"ed
feet."
· William Poundstone, e1:ecutlve vice
I) presi!fent al Co...ildal\Oll Coal Co., said
the expl""""'5 ·~ ,the ~bilily
of sendlng in any~ teams." -
"We're lqely baci to Where we wefe
a day ago " be said. , 11"'e .have oo ' .... ~ ' . control over the fire Jn Uie miot.f'
Nevertheless, he said, "We are no
closer to a deeisl1 l to seal off the
mine" -a move which woold signal
abandonment· of all hope for the 11
men trapped in the mine's aeven-mile
maze of tunnels.
Poundstone'• statements were piped ·
by loudspeaker to a plaCe in the general
store where the famlllea of the trapped
men were gathered.
The sobs of the women could be beard
clearly by all at the news briefing.
A United Mine Wortw (UMW) safety
expert, Lou EvanJ, ~ Ille crying
wtimen :
"I want to make this very clear: ~ mine is not-gojag. lo bo sealed
until every pOBsibJe .•venue has been
e:rplored to aintact Jbe men to efleet rescue or recoveJ7 -Whatever. it mlgbt
k'' . :
Since the first al eight explosions oc-
curred before dawn Wednesday, the rag-
ing underground fires and thick black
smoke containing dangez.ou. carboo
monos:lde prevented Ule start of any
attempt by rescue crews to go into
the mine,
Pound.rtone said there appeared no
doubt methane gas was involved in the
e1ploslons.
Jerry L. Sapp, an airline pilot of
8141 Wa<febridge Circle, filed the' legal
actiton in his capacity as vice president
al the CCC.
The ax Includes bom.eowners living
east of Beach Boulevard south of
Garfield Avenue in the Huntington Crest
subdivision.
CCC President Larry Curran of 8131
Wadebridge Circle, a lawyer, prepared
papers for the lawsuit which asks an
inJunctioo to set aside the commission's
selection of the Newland Street line for -
tbe north-solith Route 39 freeway.
The suit charges that unnamed persorui
"conspired" and. entered into a "achem•
• ·-•
~~ ~;, .... 7,
. d, 9'. .
< .' -..:l't~, U,f Tt._....
I~ llfournU.11
.Actres.s J'ge 'Russe)!, l9nnerly
ot New.port Beach,. emerges
from Hollywood private funeral dtapru Thursday atier services
for her actor husband Roger
Barrett,' who died Nov. 18, They
h8d been married three
1months.
Burglars Hit
In Huntington
Bufgiars struck the Huntington Beach
home of' Mrs. LoWe Bohl Thursday tak·
ing an estimated '416 worth of jewelry,
a camera and a te.levislon seL
Mrs. · Bohl told police she returned
about 12:30 to her one·story residence.
at b8st Brannen Drive and found two
bedrooms ransacked.
Police said the thief apparently made
his enlry by prying off a bedroom-window
screen then pushing in the window.
to estobllsh' •nd IU the adoptioo" of
lhe freeway route.
It chariea, loo, that '"'l\lt11Wled
busine!RI made "secret. ~·' and,
that the ...Wll al the cont.els were
not made public.
Curran wd that "adoption by the
commission ol this -. (Orange stlidy
Une oo the freeway engineers' maps)
shows that the wW or the people was
completely ignored, leaving no choice
for us but t.o look beyond the resultl
al public bearings In an Ollort lo find
out what rtally happened."
He aald that the facl.s developed by
(See FREEWAY, Pote %)
~apan Airliller
Falls \n SF Bay;
All I 07 Saved
'
From Wire Services
SAN FRANCISCO - A Japan Air
Lines 707 jet inbound from Tokyo came
down in San Francisco Bay a mile
short Of the airport today but the ·Coast.
Guard reported all 107 ~ns aboard
were rescued safely by small boats.
The weather was foggy and overcast
bul the airport was in normal operation .
The big plane came down about 9:45
a.m. off Coyote Point about 18 miles
south of San Francisco.
Four life raft.s were put out from
the plane and were towed asboA -
a distance ol .about 300 yard! -by
launches.
Ambulances and doctors were called
lo the scene bot the Cout Guard
reyorted that il ~ Wer< any injuria
they apparently were minor.
Tile pluo come clowo ,rillbllldt up abOu~ on• -fun. lhort ol the end of
the nearest runway. The wings aiid moat
.of the fuselage were above water •
Tlie bay at that point lll !hallow and
marshy.
Chuck StlefeJmaier, assistant range
mpster at the Coyote Point Rifle Range,
said the plane· wu about 300 yards
frqm the pler' of the Coyote Point Yacht
Har Dot., He also reported that apparently
no cine was injured,
1'Il was on its. final · approach about
three miles sou~ of the airport,"
reported a Fed2ral Aviation Agency con-
trol tower spokesman.
"The plane was under radar and radio
control becluse of the heavy fog. 11le
last call.on. fi. 'tadlo indicated everything
was. all "rglht. but we'll have to look
at tbe record1np again before we can
say that fOf IW'e." ·
The tower official said the approach
for the landing was normal as the plane
swoop:d down over the San Mateo Bridge.
about two miles south of Coyote Point
and 17 miles south of San Francisco.
"Then, there was nothing," he said.
"She just disappeared off the radar
-no further radio communications, no
nothing. The weather did not appear
to be a factor. It's regular procedure
to make instrument landings here."
""',.......
AM!RICAMS PAY llliSPICTS TO _FA'-LIN PlllSIOENT AT AftLIHGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY
Tocl•Y M•m Fifth Annl.0.. .. ry of John F, Kotlllidy'1 Aau11lnotlon
• ' I ,1
JUNIOR ENTRIES-·Candldates for ·Fountain Val-
ley Junior Miss uµe . aie /from, 1ettr Vera Kliun,
Amy Honda, Sandy' Zenll:, Nancy O'Connell; Mar·
cbelle Hammack and Susan Lee. Annual contest, set
OAl~Y •IL.Of hlft .......
fqr Satur.iay at Taml!l'll ·School, is spo11sored by
Junior Chamber of Commerce, Huntington Beach
contest will be conducted ~ month (!Oe page 3).
Valley to C1Wose ·
Its J.,_nior Miss .
Saturday Night
·Folll')tain' Vall~y wlll ha Ve a .new Junlor
Miss Saturday. Seven ypwic wOmen Wm
be judged for poise, pefsoplJftY1 talejit
and appearMce Jt the. annual · pa.ieaiit
starting at 7:30 p.m. at Tarrlur3 School.
The Junior Chamber of Commerce
sponsors Ute contest. 'I1le Fountain Valley
winner receives a scholarship and gifts
from city's men::hants 'and ~
the city ln statewide competWc:n
Dlsk jockey Spider MacLean will serve
as master of cer.emonies at Satuiday'1
pageant which ii o~ijj"bl)c, Ticke.i.'1!'11'1!'1 ~· ~ 1r1m·
aoy Jaye«, or ·ii the door. The school
ls b:ated a1173t0 Slnta Suumne St. .
Giril co,nl!Ollni , ,.e SandJ Zent,
Marchefl6 Hammack, Nancy O'Connel~
Vera Kuhn, SU!all Lee. Amt Honda IDd
Shella Schuller.
'Flying Gra:ndfatlier'
Heads Across Sahara
CASABI.ANCA, Morocco (UPI) -U.s;
flying gr~dfather Miµ: Coqrad ·took qfl
across the sahara today for West Africa's
Ivory CoaM on the next le& of his
round the world flight.
Conrad, 65, of st. Louis was nying
across some of the earth's rbost desolate
rcuntry on bis fllabt to Abidjan on
lbe Ivory Coast.
Speck Verdict Upheld
SPRINGFIELD, ru. (AP) ,.-The
Illinois Supreme Court upheld today the
death penalty for Richard Speck. who
was ainvlcted of murdering eight nurses
in Chicago in 1966. The court dl.sagr~
with lawyers for Speck ~t Speck could
not get a fair trial ln Peoria Councy.
~~~~~~~.-~~~~~~~~~~~--,~~~
' .
·schools 'Waiting. to See'
$1 Million ·in Oil· Taxes
' .
West Orange '¢ounty schools and citifs
may have more than $1 million coming
to the.m from lmJ>040ded oil tax,es which
havl! been treed by the Call(ornia
Supreme-Court, but lhe.y aren't spending
the money ytt.
When and lf :tbey do get the ·llloney,
they likely will spend It on pr!)jectl
cjdayed ·because ·th<y ·had ·not rec:,dved
the oil tax .. ...,y oblce l!Mj4. .
A Supreme Court ruUni !J:«d the tax money wbiCh wu be~ by tbe county
wlille the. -.J>f.411 -~ell i Pll -·of;~ pdl<llJ,-U.-tl> prOOueft;, ~ the Dte wl1 pr~
thtdugh the courts.
. ,\Itho\'11! ' °*'' ... ' llD-doy ' ll>!llill pirlod, ~ cour1 decided t1iat'11i< a:ss~
Ml!lt P,0'<1C«I"!:~ ...... Jiriiper. Md that lhe~\f,~.<D! ~~-1<. !l\.ellmod-ded toxes·loU°"tog,llJe --.YI"" . .
· Wllhout lncludiflt1 in~st. on ~e
monox, lluntlllllon , ll<!lch Union High
School rP!strt~ Will r~eive 4boot
'531,119, ilunllpgjoo !!<~ch .c~y, lZ14,~31,
city school district, $313,003, Seal Beach
Sciiool Dl3triict; !44,763• &nd· the cily ol
Seal Beach, ~,862. ' . '
"N oth1nt at all bu cbanged, ·~ said
Dr. Ethan Fullmer, asslltant , lllperin.
tendent, for business of 1 the Huntington
Beach Unloo High School Dlltrlct: "It's
not a wl.ndflll, it's just money that
we lhould have 'betn receiving an along.
"We. haven't •ot the money 8ftd we're
not spending It unW 1'e do. Some of
Jt will go to the building fund just
as ft was levied. The rest of it likely
will go fo.r operation lf we ever receive
the money.
"Al fir as we are. concerned, howev'er,
It ti sUU hUJlf up ond there bu been
no change."
Finance direct.or Frank "Ben" Arguello
of Huntington Beach agree that he is
not' planning on spending . the oil tai:
money unW It has been deposi~ to
'
I ' I . '
the ctt)!'s ·acmuntJ
"II 'We get the money; ~ llbl1 will
go to the 'Capital r tmpi'ovement tunct..
For" 'the · years this ~mormy has been
impounded, :the city )JU) delayed • lite
amount or caplt.al improvement&. '
"It has .. always ·bee>, oliy policy,
hdwever, ta recommend .that "' do not
spendJrmney until we get iL".
· The " "don~ ipsd 11 unUI you gs
it altlblde" wis' ljOilenlly r<illecta! by
ulllciail. ol. alhe< looial ogmalel wllo wen lo rec:oht _._ 4lf Ila oil tu
money. l:\1. . ~... ...
Ill ·~ll)o OraJ!le ,~.Junlor 'Qilliiil& -"111· ~ • toiaI fl fltO,iSt '!'lie. !Ota!' ~ r//. -lllOOeJ' !l? the lnipoundecl ,.tu ,iccounl ll ... 143,91$:' • • ..,. •
<Nell all~' ~JI life Su · · ee Court
decioion wei:o 14'1"· paid ·& ...-
by the ·~il ·com~• lli -~ 1117•
Thal ami>ilh( cailld •dd ftd .lhllllon lb
city rev~u.e.! sJv,iu!d .tbe .Supreme Court decide lo free the money; ' ' . · I --f ' •
. I ' '.''
Beach Police
" . ' ;
Auc.tio~ Saturday.
o 0v« 2llO !Oii &nd apparenUy forgotten
items go on the auction block Saturday
in ~.parking lot adjaceal to th•
Hunttncton Beach polJce llaUon.
Bicyclea. jewelry, radioll,. camera, a
ltleviaior> oet, •aurlboan1' .and other
unclalmed' goods held by police for llz -tbs wW.go on the bloct,
Blddlng begtM. at 10 . a.m., Arllcles
tO>¥ .be viewetl llarllng.ot 9 o.m. There Ui: a cosh only pollcy ;Md l!ldderl under
l8 musl be accoQ}plJUed by a parenL
• .F'IJnds ~ala,ed lhiough the auction IO lrito the city's generil fund. '
Nation Recalls Tragedy
Of Five Years Ago Today
"Mari.ha High Play
TickeiS AvRilahle
' . i Ticket. are ltilJ available for "1984"
being staged \olltght and Salurd>y by
the Marina , Hiib School Drama Depm.
ment In the school cafeterto.
•CUrtalo ,I.Im# ii l .11.m, The. 75 cenll
~ $1 tickets are on sale at the high
schoo~ 158'11.Sprlngdalea· -
• Five ye.an ago today -ln a sun--
s;plashed Texas metropolis -the
ultimate price of lead ership wu spelled
cwt for e.very boy who could ,crow up
to be pre.ddent aa.. Amer.i~ hiltory
i<lil that be can. '
The world watched in horror.
A powerful naUon's image 'wu forever
changed 111 lhota rang out !ft Dallas'
Dealey Plaza on Friday. ov. 22, lMS,•
shatter'in& ·President Jobn Fitzgerald
KehnedY'• brain and with It a thousand
dreams, not all his own.
Harlem shoelil1lne boys wept. Heads
of govmvnentl mourned. A few wbo
had . hated the 'lilal young President:
..mlly · nJolced, And over oil . liwla
a sense of bon'ible historic importance.
· Time bu dimmed ,the chain of events
which 10JT11 say, be1aa 1 in ·the , mind ·
al • dbeochanted ex-Marine oam"ll I,.ee
IW'v•J Qowald wbo bought. a moll order.
7 .a ~ rifle with which to make
hll trqjc poinL
POLlTJCAL Pt.01'1 'Otbeh oay It wu a poUUcil p)ol,.
perl\ajll bl.eked by . the lncredlhly .
powerful 'mllltary-lndQltrtal coinplel, 1J>.
Volvlntr .-.. of people, 111011 ·a1 them smrdMd. .
Tber lncblded OIWald, nliht club -Jack'Ruby, Dallu l!"Ubenian J, n Tip.
pltt; I ri!pl ciUb ~ .. Jld ....
11"> .newsmen who .. .,..""I\>' ~ lo
lluby'1' 'hOme an.r learninll ' ht lhol
O.Wald aild arrived befcn the pollce,
. '
No one need& to recount all events
of the three days in Dallas..
• Time dims the recollecllon ol things
committed, fel~ -· beard and ornelleq, in Dallas: murder,,pief, l'jnabotl am
\lie tplce Qf• fl!oeral flowtn. I• '
MEMORIES REMAIN
But the memories do relnaln, allliough
fresh and 81nlllarly . terrlbtt. ones bJ~
been added, .with the political muntm'
al Senator Robert F, K~ and
Dr. Martin Luther· King, · · .
During: hil' C4JnpaJgn for t h e
Democratic prealdentlal bominatlone, not '.°.')§ healler Dr, King ira -. lll'lt
"""' ·WIS ..-.. .,_, pOlleler,
DO! men.
"I run . tietause I llD , convinced tlils
countrj la on a perUoua ·COW'la,'' be1
aaid.
· Today, thet. wW bo muffled ~
lllutes. llOtbl>or. -.am.. the-
molancboly -'al bo!ale Ups belnc.
played WUll u added note of atplflc•tM'll
Ice the dq, . .
GRAvD TO.DIG . " • . Am· 1011)11n I {,,., tioui.; Ir WW ' bo §at~, Nov,'=.. wlth _~'loo4>
t;aJJ., )ea•• . lo nn. ~be '\lie Cl!' to 'WU, and evuywben -&raWI to .,. ,. ' -· ' . •'We.,. Mllllaa ,llGll to 11111 ln1o11...,1a,
per yw'," ;hlch .. ·-....... ~ Co!, E, .T. Sether ~ • .¥,,) 'Ibo. ... _ :llooe' liul Burial Put In Tma,
where OlwaJd Ucs. · , ,.
• ... • I
OrlUlfe
I
• : , ' weat.fler :
You m•y;"bt. off for the.' w~end.
but the' log .~ ~k on. lt'JI mo.,
IQ tonlabt and atkk around .up noon whii~ ~ turd are'
tabb,ed at 6i and wJi inercuq oi7'1 --•• '
INSmE TODit. Y
Tis IM ,..,.. f(/r Christ"'"'
pl.qs. Prd!Uto o/ Old Jam11
Ployers' •erlioll of ~Amahl and
I/II 1 Nill hi Vlriton• .I• rod<>~'• > ~r feotvr< i• 'W!:IKP:NDBR
~ .... l ' £!: --== 1it .. ·
:::Ti:o. .:::
' ..,.,.. ,._.,.. I ..... --;:: -~.,= ............ ' -.. 1 .......... .. tt ' ........ ••
ll --.. ~ ... rt."';w,I. J u ...... i~
f1 :, ... ' t N. ~ I " . " -J ' .. ·= ,_ ..
•
. ,
<
•
~ f DAii. Y PILOT
,.,,.._ Pqe l
Ji'JffiEWAY ••• '
GOING TO COURT
Curran Bild that tho dec!llona of the
• ·· Hi&hway CommllSloo an llnal -
• Olt'erturoed by &bl courtl and ''tbat's
-why wt are lolnl &o court."
• He wlt'Dld tbl cqnmlM:ton late ln
Octobot tllat Illa -would ..... befcn Illa coarll If Illa ...,.,,,_ did
•
•
nol -lo -the malter. The-wull8llletlby
George T. Karcher, ebllrmln ol' the
CalilorDla lll&hfty ml FIMway Cam-
mltteo, who pclDlod wt Iba! there bavt
been 111111 llltd bllon ml "ncae bu
been IUcceastul."
UC Regents Meet
On Prof 'Powers,'
Budget Requests
From WIN....._
SAN DIEGO -Hedged about by
guards, University of CaJUomla regents
today were ready to strip profesmn
of the power lo bltt lllY men opeda1
lecturers like Blad: Panther Eldridge
Cleaver.
Today'• meeting on Ibo unlveralty'1
San Diego campus alao was to see the
regentl COOllder 1 l<COl'd PU m!Won
1969-70 bodiet requeat.
Govermr Ronald Reagan wu due 1t
lhe meeU.,. Security auardl deployed
to bead off lllY repellllon of Illa ""'8lt
Slnlll Cruz -,,, ln wlllch Reagan
and Sllltl 5-lntmlent of Publle
lnstrucUon Mu Rafferty were joltled
and jeered by 1tudent1. ·
A< the reg.nll me~ 160 ltudentl llXI
10 prof.....,, 1t UC Sin DI... wero
ln tho thll1I day of 1 bung« llrllce
protesting the pnipoeed reductlcm of
faculty authority.
But Tom Shepard, San Diego student
body president, told regents: "While
you're here, I don't expect you to be
confronted by any violent demonstra-
Uons."
OhllY Pl lOT
l•Mrt N. w .. 1 ~--"*"'*' J•ck I. c.,r.., VIII,,...... Miii Germai ~
n .... i .... 1 ·-~~=1111
AINrt W. l•t.t W'ill'1111 •••" ~ __ .... ·~
Mllr c,., 1~11•
I' .............
JHlfflStn.t
...... AIMHt P.O. 1 .. 7'0, 91,41 --......... ,,,,, ................. rf
C11i1tt MN: Dt WW ..., """' u..ltk'l1nar-.. .-.-
I'
------------
• •
OA1LY PILOT Plltfl n Ttnl Tlf\rl
Along With V.S.
Kennedy Fami~y .
M0urns Death
WASl!INGTON (AP) -~ of
Pr<aident John Fttzgeraid Kennedy's
fllmily, lncludiJ!i clilldren clutching
flowen, ptberec! In tho earlf morning
chlll t9'fay at hlo VlYO OD lhe fdlh annl~ ol hll &IWl!neUon. · An'l4nt 1tb1 lil'lt to Vrtve wu 'Sen.
Ed•otd N. JienatdY. tho.aole ""'1vln( Kennedy brother, accompanied by four
children. presumably Owe of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy ,Whose remains lie
buried only feet away from h18 brother.
In another car Joan I( en n e d y ,
Edward'• wife, brouJhr two ot their
children. And Mrs. Hugh Auchinclos1,
mother of Jacqueline ·Kennedy Onassis,
th~ late President'• wfdow:, brought a
lj)l'!( of flower• Jo Illy on lhe llono
younpten from' ll1cbr.r. gtlllor High
School, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on a tour
of Wll8hlngtoti.
An esUmated 14 mllJJmi. people have
viaited Kennedy's grave and Uie name
lhat boo burned w!UI ooJy lllght ln-
lmllpilon1 aince hJ,I borlll three d111
ofter hll d .. th.
Across the river in the nation'• capital,
worahipper• attend a noon Mass at St.
Matthews Cathedral, where the Requiem
Mass for Kennedy was held.
Another memorial Maas was planned
in Georgetown's Holy Trinity Church.
Kennedy's home parish during hla SeMte
days.
at Ktnnedy 11 eravt. p K
Visitors to the grave were expected eace e. pt to total in the thouaanda, trlcklln& by
Lhe Cape Cod . marble memorlal built
ln 1987, lhe eternal flame Md the floral
tributes. -A SF s President Johnson 1ent a wreath as t IJlte
he has every Nov. S2 since 11183 'when
Kennedy was gunned down In ballu,
Tex. The red and whlte carnations and
blue com f1owe.n were brought to the
grave by Lt. Col. Hugh Rablnaon, a
White House military aide.
A.s Robln!on placed the wreath on
By Faculty
its stand, lhe milllllry honor guard SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ "-·t lOO
ORANltl COUNTY PIRIMIN WORK 'TO l'REI VICTIM FROM WRECKAGE
l .11"°" l1l1nd ·RM11ut'llll Ownot Died In Fire TrvcloAuto . Crash In Santo Ano H1lght1
saluted, removed the.it caps and atood 1WW
a few seconds silently with their heads faculty members wearlng yellow arm-
bowed. bands were llllUoned on ._. to
Tbe wreoth bore 1 lllllll wbllll Cini keep the pMl:o u cllaa reoomtd to-
Fire Truck · Rams
Car; Coast Man
Killed in Wreck
All oratlg• Coilnty In truck, •Potd-
lng lo 1 call ln lhe Santo Ana Heights
area, ahmuned into, two: autos a.t a con-
gelted tntenectlon Tlmnday evening,
. kllJ.lng the driver of one of them.
Dead la Thom.as Clifford Archer, 45, ·~ of 110 Onyx Ave., Balboa lslud.,lla-'l'c-
cumbed of bead Injuries at c«itl.'itt 1 a
lllemqliai Hoopital on hour iftei: I h e
crub. · ··
'Ibe second car wu driven by Mn.
Marie Louisa Walker, 49, of 1135 La llllra-
dl SL, Laguno Beach. She WU treated w -lllJurfa and releued. The f1rt truck, driven by Larry C.
·1111 Couty Trllfte 111'1
l!Z Death Toll 111
1'11de, 39, was rolling """lh on Red Hill
Avenue, !ta red llghtl naablng and Ill al-
ren screaming, when it struck the two
can at the Plll!ades Road intersection.
Both autos were eutbound on Pal.Uiadea.
Archer'• Muatang convertible W a s
struck broadslde on tbe driver'• door
and carrfed about 100 feet by the imr.ct·
The Walker auto WU hit on the e rt
front arde.
Flrt.men and Caillornia Bighway Pa·
trolmen worked for 20 ml.nut.ea 1o extri-
cate Archer from lhe wreckl&e. T h e
IUlo WU dernoltsbed.
A aecond fire engine continued on t b e
run to the call, a warebOUle blaze at 1571
Mesa Drive. The fire was out on arrival.
Ard>er wu tbe owner of three taco
lhopo ln hll name on Callllinl Wend,
Newport Beach and Balboa laland. Un-
til recently he bad been manager of the
Jolly Roger Realllurent no Balbol lsland.
thal aid, ·--Preatdeat." ..... day at San Francisco State College.
Ellewbero In Amerteo and thro!llboul Tht faculty memben, seeklnfl lo pre.
the world, memorial HIVltel wee held vent a repetition of 'Jbunday"1 violence
to "Y lo the lath Preaident . of lhe th t b~I eel -"·· Uni·-• s•-•-, "W• ·-~ ·-J '-~ten." a arm ,....... Oil camp119, i.eu wi~ u.y,. lJU1o •"'I.av• stood on ~ sialrs of the administration
Mra. Onusla planned to oblerve the building. annlver~ quietly u abe hu each Pickets callklg fOr a lhuldown of
of the lut four years. Her private classes marched ootalde seVeral build·
secretary, Nancy Tuckerman, aa1d &be ings and campus entrances.
would attend Mau 1n New York and A classroom invasion by militant
Marines Stage Chopper . .
Attack; Trap 1,000 Reds
,;pend moat of the day 1n lecluslon. students sparked Thursday's confron-
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Marines In days ln their concrete bunkers, spider M be left the cemeteey, Edward Ken-tatlon with police. However, although
their )araest helicopter asaault of the bolea and tunnels wblch honeycomb the nedy paused where newsmen were the atmosphere was · tense, many ltu· • a!Un• t "-m-•-•ate and told them dents walked tbrouf: the picket llDea
W" new Into the "Dodge City" area w • a i..in::i aw • • 1. • • .1 ln 1 area and 0UUJ Ume we an going to "We appreciate your understaDdlns -this momL'lj auu c wes.
13 miles south of Da Nana: and trapped outwall them. All the indications are in letting us go up there." . Prof. Gary Hawkin! of the speech
an estimated 1,000 Communists in a that we are going to get a payoff lhls Five lltUe aprtga of nowe:rs _ white department, 1pakesman for the faculty
labyrinth or caves and bunkers. lteci.vy time." roaea, laven<ier chryaanlhemwrui and red group, said: "We are juat trying to
lh f·-" ' ff In t prevent violence. Thla group has no flnb•; .... was re"",.....i tonlgbt. ed roses -were e IUIWY I o er 8 a ......... ,. We are i'ust goi.... ~o stand .. ..... i-...... The 1p<>keaman aaid the Marine us Kennedy'I grave. At the back of the ,....... "'6
COtTeapondents !rom Da Nana: reported 71 ?1ellcopter1 In the usault, the biga:et1t grave wreaths were placed, brought by ar~li~'"a!t ~!o~th=t=-~ scuff1ed
that the operaUon began Wednesday they have made by air. othera who remembered the day. Thursday as college authorities worked
when a force of 7 ,000 Marines and South Two salvos from us. guns Thursday Al8o among the early vialt.ora was to keep the 18,000-student campus open
Vietnamese hit the Communist hideout Mrs. Evelyn Lincoln, pen:onal itecret.al')' in the face of opposition by the Black for lh. flrll ••-e a.ince the Communiats silenced two anUaircraft machine guns to Pr--~ent Kenn~y. U 1 d lh Tw "'"' ~u = Stude'.lts n on an o er groups. o dug them 20 years ago. that opened fire first on U.S. 5potter There wu, too, a group of girla from warning 11hots wen fired by an officer
The action marked a new upsurge planes from the northern half of Viet-Trlnity College, a group of youn& people rt11cuing a fellow policeman from r
of flgbttng In the northern prm-lnces nam'a botd~. from American Unlveralty and 189 beating. or South Vietnam. A military spokmnan 1..::::::..:...;:::.::.::.; _________ .::;:;:_..;.:;:::.:.::.;;.....:.=.:.::.:;;:.;;...::::.,....:.;;....;;...c;.::;.;:..:: _________ _
said today U.S. artillery shelled the
northern half of the demlllt.ar:lied ione
Thursday for the CJ.rat tlme alnce Presi-
dent Johnson called aff all bombardment
of the Communist nation.
The reports said the Marines had killed
90 of the enemy, believed part of a
buildup for another attack on Da Nang,
and that they had killed more than
90 o[ them 1n the neep in which the
Marines and government infantrymen
we.re fighting almost shoulder t o
ahoulder.
The area held thouaands of civilians,
most of them under Viet Caoa: control,
and the Marines announced they had
paS8ed more than 2,200 .of them through
the massive military cordon thrown
around the area. Tfie civilians were
warned by leaf1ets to leave ..
A Marine spokesman estimated the
Communists could hold out up to four
DREXEL'S FABULOUS ET CETERA
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!
Assessor Argues Against
!fax Raise for Hospitals REG.
$179
SPECIAl
$149
By JACK BROBACK
Of flMI DtllFf Pli.t Slllf
Unbelieving ears Thursday heard
Or~ge County Assessor Andrew J.
Hinshaw fight agaln5t a raise in tax
assessments sought by two convalescent
home owners. Hinshaw charged lhey
wanted to make him a party to getting
more Medi Cal and Medi Care benefits.
Altonished county supervi.!on:, tuned
lo hearing Hinshaw fight against reduc·
tJom in ISlelStnentl, refuied the higher
vaiuaUona, lhu1 backing the asaeuor. ·
Denytng cbargeo of "mtlkin1" Medi
Cal funds were spokesmen for the lS!·bed
Ideal Care Nursing Home, 12611 Hasler
St, Garden Grove and the 160-bed
Brookhunt Convalescent Hoop!~. 11861
W. 11th St. in county area. 1
Ideal Care is owned by , K.H.I.K.
Enterprises and lhe Brookhursl ,flclllty
Patriotic Show
Set for Marina
H.Dellp. for Ded.lcaUon, 11 a pt biotic
procram of music, eong and dJnce, will
be lllgM 11 t p.m. Tuetday by cl•nl
t!1'<'IPI 1t Hunllngton Beach'• Mortna HIP School.
The show ln the hljh ICbool ll}'IDDUium
II open lo the public Without cblrae.
The combined taleotl of the l<\!Ool's
coocorl choir plus a opec!a111 l!""J>
known u "The Mar1nen" wtll ~ oo
dtlplly during the opec!ol perfondi'nce.
School eflJciail aid both IDUlical
t!1'<'IPI ore availlble for IOCll publlc
appear1-. OrganWIUom Interested ln
ochedullnc lhe fll'OUPI wi cootacl Terry Danne, ltS-6571.
by Hy-Lond Inc., operator• statewide
ot 12 similar hospitalJ.
Both !inns frankly admitted they woi.Jld
receive greater financial benefits under
the Medi Cal program if their assessed
valuations were higher. Medi Cal alloca-
Uons are based parUally on property
valuations.
Attorney JUchard Levin, representing
the Ideal Care firm said he resented
the implication that "thiJI Js a scheme,
of some sort."
Jack L. Breltlgam, chairman of HY·
Lond said, "It is nectlMry because
we cannot break even undet a Medi~
Cal rate formula baaed on our current
assessment.''
Levin contended Hlnshaw'a '607 ,DO
cash value aasenment of the ldtal ~
facility was well under the pl.D'Chase
price of $736,000. He went even further,
arguing for a $9:U,OOO asseument as
shocked supervisor's listened. BlelU,am
Raid the 1831.l!IO .......,...t of lhe
Broothurst Convalescent Hospital WU
much too low. He qgested a $1,131,4'15
figure.
Supervtaor William H. Hirstein aald
he had be• n on the board 14 years
and it was the flrst Ume be bid heard
t'lrro flrma uklng for higher asaessmenta:.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen backed
Hlnshaw's lower asses!Tllmlt saytq, "We
could be accused of belna: a party to
a sort of acbeme to get more money
wt of Medi.col. u the 11n111Uol ~ ol the con-
vaieocenl hooi>ltals liad been ll'&nted,
111,IOO would have been edded to coonty
lllxes paid by the flnnll.
H1nabn aid • llltewlde pUSh .. bolJll
mode by rat and eonv11etctnt bomel
to lDcrtase property aaeasmenta so
mart money wUl be allocated to them
by the atate.
RE6. SPECIA~
REG. SPECIAl
$159 $129
thri1tm11 limo • , •• •no liomo i1 wlioro t~
partio1 ore, with ovoryon1 d .. 1..d•to tho
hilt. Dmr up · r homo to ,,,.tct ~t a
'¥'O<ld o/ 1iotoc1.., vlamo... this -..!rid
S299 S239
, ,Dmol ~ olfon. S.. them tod.y 11
tho.. ...,Y spacill prices.Jot ~ ·._., spo-
ciel fvmitvro, rlop by today.
. " .:....
EXCLUllVI DIALIRS FOltt HINRIDON-DREXIL-HIRITAGI
90 DAYS NO INTIRIST-LONGIR T•RMS AVAILAILI ON APPltOVID CltltllT
NIWPORT llACH
1721 W-1111 Dt-. 6620IO
-fltl,U '111.t
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VOL 6'f, NO. 28'1', ~ SECTIONS, SO PAGES
• e 1ner
Coast Man Killed
By
As
Fire Engine
Engine Fire
An Orange County fire I.ruck, speed-
ing to a call in the Santa Ana Heighl!
area, slammed Into two autos at a con-
gested intersection Thursday evening,
killing the driver of one of lbem.
Dead Ls Thomas Clifford Archer, 45,
of 210 Onyx Ave.·, Balboa Ist'itid. He suc-
cumbed of head injuries at Costa M e s a
litemorial Hosp ital an hour after t h e
er.ash.
The second car was driven by Mrs.
lifarle Louise Walker, 49, of 835 La Mira-
da St., Laguna Beach. She was treated
for minor Injuries and released.
The fire truck, driven by Larry C.
196'.s County Traffic · 195'1
in· Death Toll 111
Pride. J!J. was rolling south on Red Hill
Ave nue, its red lights flashing and its Si·
ren sci'eamlng, when it struck the .two
cm at the Palisades Road intersection.
Both autos were eastbound on Palisades.
Archer's Afustang convertible w a s
READY FDR PET SHOW
LIM T~a1, 6, and "Beau''
"
Pet; Hobby Slww
"" struck broadside on the driver's door1
and carried about 100 feet by the impact.
'lbe Walker auto wu hlt on tbt left
front srde.
Firemen and Californla Highway Pa-
t"rolmen worked for 20 minutes to e~
cate Areber from the wrtebge. T b 1
auto wu demolished.
A second fire engine coritinued on t h t
run to the call, a warebwse blaze at 1571
Mesa Drive. The fire was out on arrival.
Archer was the owner of three taco
shops in his name on Catalina Island,
Newport Beach and Balboa Island. Un~
til recently he had been manager of the
Jolly Roger Restaurant on Ba1boa Island.
Artists Tackle
La Quinta High
In CIF Playoff
Laguna Beach H1gb School'• un-
defeated cr.sm.w League ·-pion , foolball team lravell to Bolsa Grinde
High . School -tmigb~ to __
~·-·~~ ~toaigbt · ~ ineet•-·~ • 1Uib m u.
' first round the ClF iooship
playolfl. .Klckorr ia at a o'clock.
Tbey've come a long "11 iince the
Artists Ou-ridden team of 17 players
· ~ out a 13 to 6 vlctocy over Katella
·10 weeks ago in the seascm opener.
Laguna's Varsity is t Wini, 0 k>Bse1
for the season. LaQuinta la 7 wins,
Z Josoes. Tbe Artlstl are 1llgbt favorites.
Laguna rana plannin( to ... the 1ame
should leavt early becaust seatiitg at
the Bolsa · Grande stadium In Garden
Grove is limited:
Here are two route! to reach the
stadium:
-Out Laguna Canyon Road to Santa
Ana Freeway, go north to Garden Grove
Jl'reeway. Turn west on Garden Grove
J'reeway to the Brookhurst A venue
turnoff. Go .south on Brookhurst to
Westminster Boulevard. Then west on
Watzninster.. to the school at 9401
Westminster Boulevard.
-An alternate route ls up Pacific
Coast Highway to Corona del Mar, inland
on MacArthur Bou1evard to San Dtego
Freeway. North on San Diego Freeway
to Brookhurst Avenue turnoff. Go north
on Brookhurst, then west on Westminster
Boulevard to the campus stadium.
• Marine Jet Crash
Suit Continued
A $.100,000 personal injury suit brought
by Mts. Anita Brown, 71, of %71 D
Avenida Sevilla ,Laguna Hllls Lei.sure
World, which was to have been beard
in U.S. Diruict Court in Loi AngtJes
Wednesday bu been conUnued to Nov .. u .
The trial WU to determine the amount
Mrs. Brown lfill receive rrom injuries
she suffered when two Mariile jet plana
crashed into the Leisure Wor'id com-
mttnlt)' on a rainy n\iht Jan. U. 19'1.
The government has admitted 1lablllt1
ln the cruh, accordlng to MJ'I. Brown'•
attorney Jamea: McCarthy.
Federal Judlle E. Avery CflllJ 11 to
detenni{ie the amount of compensaUon
A. r· f w ld · Mra, Brown will receive. She hu Wi-t Op 0 Or 'dt!rgooe five surgical operaUon1.
Lui year Ille governmeol paid 1241,259
la d S da• In 11 claim! slamming rrom Ille cruh s te atur y which desfroyed three u~r\m•~t 6uildlnga and killed lour penorm.
The firat Pet ind
sponsored by the Top
School Parent-Teachers
""lor"SatU?ilay. •
Hobby Show
ol Ille World
A>soclalk>o la
Local dlgnilarie:s, including Laguna
Bea<:b Police Chief Hmy Llbroo. anti
Fire Chief Homer MaMt wlU be oo
band to award priz:el at the event,
scheduled for 10 a.m. at the echOol,
11601 TM Top Lfne.
Really big OOc> wlll pande promptly
1t 10:10 1.m., Utile dop at 10:11! •,11\-
ll)Cf pu11ye1la it IO!IO I . DI,
_n._.. animals will march """"' jlldires at IJ : 10 aim.
ffOt clop, soft drlnb, cotton CandY
and .balloons will be oo aale at the
eve~ or~1nlicd by~. Jop.
BaUl)lmani Frank 'l'br'rM!gofd 1'1111 Wlr·
ren Wa1ktr. "' I j
Cause of the crub bu never been
announced and will ml be .....ied in
abe coming -Ille 1ttornoy Ille!.
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\.. ' . ~ . ' QRANGE OOUNTY, CAUFO!!NI,.; fRIDliY, NOVMER 22, 1968
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Laguna Corliici_l Defe~.ts
. -. . . ,. . ' . ' -. ' -
Reduced Sideya:rdsPlan
Laguna Beach counCilmen by a S. ,to
1 split vote Wedne!iiay turned thumbs
down cm a proposhl · tO ease sideyard
requirements for narrow lQl,s.
Representatives . of Laguna Vista,
Boat Collision
Defense Opens
qwners or about 100 25-by·l0!>-f09l Jots
In the easterly section of Arth Beach
Heights, a~ke(I tbat a· four-f?Of: sideyard
requirement be whittl_ed to three feet.
Lane ~llanks aa.icl the sjdeyard and
other setback requirem~ts ·amounted tp
aJ>out 31 percent of the propUt.r and
would make it difficult for owner's to
devek>p thelr loll on 1,020 bnildable
square feet. The homes could .only be
11·fed. wide, he said.
B. E. Swartout said the situation might
A 53-year-Old Los Angeles dentist ac· seriotisly 8.Uect a bond buyer's com-mitment on an aBsessmer;rt district tD cused in the alleged hit·run sinking of .develop more than 400 lots in the area.
a small outboard o!f Newport Beach He said the city should conskler-the
testified Thursday that he had blacked amount it has expeDd.ed on incidental
out prior to the Sept •. 7 incident. and engineering expenses.
Warren J. Hoke, charged with Councilman Roy Holm, who oppbsed the 11.SSessment district for development operating a boat in a negligent and of the narrow hillside lots, said, "U
reckless manner, tofd the Newport-Mesa Westen Bond Company would wit¥raw
Municipal Court that he could remember their Commitment and that ~ould mean
nothtng of the collision between hill J2. (assusrniint district) M-1 WOOL:!Ja~ p .
foot cabin cruiser and the II-foot out-through, that's probably tbe best beWS
board off the Santa Ana River jeUy. I'll hear aU night." • ,
Four: peniODI aboard outboard were Mayor Glenn Vedder note~( the
reacitld by other vessels. Arch Belich Heights )6jliDClition or
'MM! RV~·wom&n, five-man jury was Property Owners a~ i~ 'fC~~ ._bad
expectfl(I to get tbt case tbls afternoon. heartily endorsed ~~.revls1ons
nie lrla! 11u In Ila fourlh day today. · lhllt coq!8jn the alli'1Jll'd hi!iulrell)ent.
Hoke teslifiod Thunday that lherl Coundhnl,D..:Oiarnaft Boyd1 fivored
,..,. blink spola ln:Jds.memory covo(lng lhree-f09t•ll4ef~;. Vedder*"<!, 'f dJ>.
• _wllil·long period before_ and alter CQ\Ult the' ~ ol o boo4I eomp,ny
·Ille ~ · , • • . willl!l!:iwl,ni: Ille city w .'.,16 <oiutact
•Dr. jlterlln( Pof!Ocl[, the Hoke family with the .. bond cbmpanj · r<garcling
~· Nld .be had been called ,IO 1 :11deyard1. u..t. HOD fur • !JunP ,an lhe right~ · Councllmen directed Ille city attorney
of bis f!ead lhe day. alter Ille accid~L i ·to prepare the ordinance .,n!llMfmenla
Tbe dentist · complained ol a held~ . for adoption. Boyd voted against the
and blurred vJ.aion. Dr. Polloet said. · measure. ~
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Suspended· in
N arcoti~ Case
A 16-year-old b o y anti his 14-year-Old
sister ~ve been suspended from Laguna
Beach High SChoo1 ·pending a juvenile
court hearing of narcotics charges
·B1Iainst them.,
The youngsters were picked up during
a reeo..nt South Laguna raid by narcotics
~ents and police. Both were arrested
011 suiplcloq of selling mescaline.
· Dr. WUUam Ullom. schOols sUperin-
tendent, said the youngsters have been
suspended unW a Dec. 6 hearing in
JuveD!fe Court.
He said the high sc~ool principal had
met with the par;ents of the youngsters.
Under a recently adopted, school
na!colica p01lcy, the prlndphl wlll recom·
nlehd to Ullom dliejpllne 'which could
inciud<. suspenaloo or "1Jii~oo. ·
A(ter the 1uperiqteildel1t's dedsipn, the
students and parents have a rlght to
ar:>peal the dedlion to th'e 8Chool bQ.ard.
Jn the event of appeaJ, there is a
board heering to which the 1!'!""'11 may
bring an •'!DtneY· ·The lioard lhen
dec:ides to affirtn.. revQU or modify
the superintendent•s-aecislon. ·
During the procedure's school officials
attempt. ·io· dct.umine ·whether the return
• of the su.s~ or suapects to cllWE!!I
would be detrimental to other atudenta.
Steele Jlforlceu
· NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe ltock mark·
et Improved 1n ~y .-in t'a'.ocUve ~
Ing !ale this altermoo. (See quo!atloils,
Pages 8-9).
' Gal1111 outnumbered loues by nearly
300 issues .on th e·New ·York Stock El·
ch~e. The Dow Jones ln~lrlal aver·
.age was up about ·a polnL '
N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
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107 Aboard
Japan Plane
Rescued
From Wire Services
SAN FRANCISCO -A Japan Air
Lines 707 Jet inbound from Tokyo came
down in San Francisco Bay a mile
lhort or the lirporl todoy but Ille Cout
Guard""reported all 107 perlODI aboard
""" rescued safely bJ tmall boata.
'lbe weather wu foggy and overcast
but the airport wu In oonnal ope.ratlm.
The big plane came down about 1:45
a.m. off Coyote Point about 18 mllel
IOUth of San Franclsco.
Four life rafts were put out from
the plane and were towed ashor.e -
a distance of about 300 yards -by
launches. ·
Ambulances and doctors were called
to the aicene but the Coast Guard
reported .that if there were any Injuries
~ey apparently were minor.
) Tbe . plane came down rlghtslde up
about one mile short of the end of t.he nearest runWay. The wings and most
of the ~lag_e were above water.
The ~Y at that point Is shallow and marshy,
•
~ Stiefelmaier, usiltant range
master at Ibo Coyote Point Rifle Range,
Wd the 'plane was about ~ yards
from Ille pier of the Coyote Polnl Yacht
. f!a!bor. H~ ll'lfl "portod ~t 'pparon!IY
DO one WU lnjured.
.'.:ll l!Jf-"" lb final ·~ uwr .,._ies IOUtb of the ~
upprled. I F.,ietal Avillf.., ~ -~:e":Z::Uuri:ier radar and )'adio
conlror becauae ql Ille heavy ~oC· The
1¥1.<allOlllhendlo indl~ everything
was all rg.lht. but we'll have to loot
at the recordings qaln before we can
uy that for IUJ'e."
The tower official llld the approach
for the landing was normal as the plane
swooped down over the San Mateo Bridge
about two mil .. aouth o! Coyote. Point
and 17 miles 'south of San Franciloo.
"Then, there waa nothing," he said.
"She jUBl disappeared off the radar
-no further radio communications, -no
nothini.' The weather iUd not appear
to be a factor. It's regular procedure
·1o make instrum!"l landlnp hen."
Within mlnules, 80 l1'1llada "' llDlall boata WBJ organized for the rescue opera·
lions._ Many of the passengus took to
rubber We rafts. At least three
hellcoplera new overl)ead.
'lbe IW'Vivors were transferred to the
small craft and sped aabore to be taken
to hospitals in nearby communities.
The COatlt Guard reported diVera wen:
dispatched W &he craJh scene to comb
the wreckage of the jetliner, which made
a stop at Honolulu enroute to San Fran·
cisco. OZI the tail-6eetion . of' the blue
and red craft wu painted a tsuru,
a Japanese bird symbollilng good luct.
Speck Verdict Upheld
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -Tbe
Illinois Supitrqe Court upheld today the
death pe~ foe llldlard Speck, who
w34 convicted of m~erlnJ,elghl nurses
In Chicago l!l 196&._ The .court dlsagreed
with lawyers for SPeclt .. ~Speck could
not get a fair trial in P8*ia County.
Ora11ge
,~
Weather
You may 'be off (or the weekend,
but the fog ls back on. It'll move iJI toelght and stick around Ull noon
while coastal temperatures are
II-'!II f' and· riillnd -mll<lll'Y
it 7$ ..
JNSmE TODAY
'Tis the season for Chriltma.s
r>l411f. l'"'ll<» oj Old Jamn Pla~r•' vmton of .;Amall and
tM' Night Vtr«or.s.., · it Cod.at.h ~ ,/fatwT< i• WiEKiNDia
~ ... • ,,,...Hw •
11411 Mc9' -, .. \4
. ll =•-·....C ~ •. , T...-,.
·j .. ~ j . ., ""..... , , "·-I "-' ........ 11 cw.. " .. 1 ......... It .... ......
...... ' ,... .... t
........... 14 ..,..... ' ,...,... • .,.. • ...,..,... I ....................... ' ....... ~ 1 ............ ..
-
(
•f*"'"'"""*"""±,..a,.. .... , .. , .. , .. , ....... aos .. osososc"""u.,.s .. .,. .. OD..,.£~•2.:se:zt'lJ~kli!"!M'_~Pl!"'OSllEll!£!1!!""!!'1£!!1!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!1!!!11111! .. ,ILllllll~'"'"'"'"'sacsacsassas'!"~!'!!!"""!~"l"':I""':-::-::-::-;;-:::-:~~-.~----t: ... ---:o..-=-=-------~~ --~-..>~-r ... 4' ~ .-=~--.. --.. --.. ~ .. -..................... ---... ... _ ... --~
' Z DAILY PILOT Frldly, -2Z. 19611
·More ,B.l educe dd . fQr TI!apped Miners:
•
~ ..
SAH<J'llANCISCXJ. (AP) -<\!MIU! 100
faculty members wurtng yollow arm-
bands were statlooed on campw: t'.o
keep the peace as classes ""1ll1ed to-
day at San Jl'nndlco st.to College.
The faculti memben, R<idng to ptt-
vent a repetition of 'I'hursday'a violence
that brought anned police on camwa,
stood on the siairs of the admlnlstraUoa
building.
Pick.U ..WO. for s lhuldown ol
cl.-lllSJ'Cbeil ... -lltfenl balld-inp and campu1 ealrlncel. ·
A clamooni iDvulon b7. mllltanl
lltudentl IJ)6lbd Tbunday. -tatkln wttli polJee. However, llthouCb
the I-WU 2-1111111 1"5·
-wolbd -the pleb! lines thla momlog end Info cluoel. .
Pm!. Gary Hawklm of the lpeech
departmen~ spobomon for the loculty
group, uld: "We ore jllll trylq to
prevent violence. 'Ibis VOOP bu no
name. We are just gotng '(o stand
around Ind bope for the beat."
PoUce Ind -· 200 -IC\lffJed 'I'hun:day u college authoritiel worked
ti> keep the 18,000'student campu1 open
in the face of opposition by the Black
Stud"'1s Unloa and other groilpa. Two
,. , , warning abols were fired by an officer
mlculng 1 feDow poUcemon lrom a beating.
theThe~nd~~~"fu~
Studla Do Ind the rehiring of
a B!acl: IDlber Georre Murray, Blll-
oended from the facufty for advlalng l'iegro students to carry gtm on cam-
pus.
Cluses Tbursday nllht were held
•.• , quietly and college Pn!ildellt Rohen D.
Smtih lenned afternoon attendance
•. _ "very good" ]n ....m departments,
, • eapoc1allt bualnesa and phyllcal edu-
.. caUon.
• ' An 1ndapendelll --aparao alteadlnco lo -.W... Ind almolt
norms! -In olben, lncllldln( Ille bualneas department.
, •• ' • ' '
• • • • . -. ' '
' ' • • •
But limith uJd "I do not know what
would bappen" wben Wed U there
would be another "1tbrell.
Theodore Moriam, preaident of the state collefe trurtees uld correcUonal steps are mandatory.
He said the ~erning board
of the lkampul state collefe IYllem-
wlll "hive to act furthtf ID wllatever manner Is deemed necessary lo end tbls
dlsgracefu11 unprolessiooal and unreal-
Utic 1ltuauoo.'
Pastor to Speak
On Pike Seance
Rev. Arthur Ford, pi o o e er
parapsychologist involved in the televiaed
seance with Epilcopal Bishop Jamea: Pike
in an ethereal aearcb. for Pike's dead
llOll will apeal: in Santa Ano toolgbl
"New DimenalOIUI of Rellgton and
Science." 11 the tiUe ol. the a d d r e s s
at 7:45 p.m. in the First Baptist Church
at 1010 W. 17th SL, Slnta Ana.
Rev. Ford la probably America's most
well known llvlng medium, with a
background of 40 years in psychic
reeearch, daUng back to Sir Arthur
Conan Doy~ and Sir Oliver Lodge .
QuesUow: -as completely as possible
-will bo amwered.
DAI! V PILOT
OIUMGI COMT PUILllMIHO COMP'.-,N'I'
R1Mrt N. W1M .. ~.._.,_..,.,..
.li d l. C.rl1r
Ykll "'91deftl fflll GCMrt./ M•"'~'·
n.11111• 1e ••• n .... 'TM••• A. M1,..S.i111 -.....1t1W
-·-
ki1.•eN P. Nill P11I Nin•~ ~~ Mwnlllflrl Cftr I.., D'"dlr
......... °'"'• 212 f.,fff Ave.
M1lfh.t A4'tH11 P.O. ltr 666, fJ611 ---.. . a. ~ • ..., ..,. ltf..t • • 1
I • . •
•
......,.,...:m1w.1 .. -.. ... ...,,
IM1t• .......... : »J IHI tlteet
Ji
• .
.... o. .....
'·
-• ,_ ,.~ ~ ""*1
al'!ll'lota••• !II all lllpe f<>" !ht II
lW trUIJld • tbe ..... ··=Dill ..........
,:;:r.;: «•'"'• ':' ...'= lllore wliett !he f:Jtf: of !he trapped
men were gathered. .
The sobs of the women could be heard
clearly by all at the news brleflne. -••
A United Mine Workera (UMW) safety
expert. Lou Evans, auu.red the cryi.nJ
' , '
-· atlempl by reacue cren to go into
"? ..... -11111..., --....... . 'lllll Wsl II i2ill ..... lo M -Pola-said thin a~ no ... _,. J!Ollfblt ....... h¥ betn ..... .. lo ODOlacl U,. men lo ofllct d!JUbl methane pa WU involved la the
,_ •recovery .:-whatever it niJgk eiploclon1. -
be." • He aald a reading at one bore hole,
Sloce 1,1\1 fin! ot·•l&ht llPIO!dOnl G.. taken after ~ latesl .two uploalona
cumd before dawn wednesd4y;ll>e'(ag-today, •bowed • blib methane .... low
ini! ·ii)iaers<oWid lli8 iDd flill:t ~t O.ygeo d!lltonr and !ome·cmon rr~>-•
sinoke contalnln1 dange:rou.t carbon ide.
monoxide prevented. tbe start or UJ7 . • PQWlClatone said a third ff fort would
be made to ctp Ibo mine'• ron portal,
.... Wbida fam!HM cf trapped ---·-----bees ..... the ... danger •
The elgbt1' -.ploalon blew off the "'°'
crete and clndU block cap for the second
time.
Pllea of cinder block, aand and cement
were stacked at the mine, for use In
the event It "as dedded to cap all
•balls and portals lo elllogulsb the
Wldergrouod lire. , .
Pair· Fa~~ Bu.~garly C~~rge
Two Linked t-0 Rece'!:t Wave of ~guna Thefts
Laguna ·Beadl police IOcfl¥ were seek·
1111 compla!nll aga!Mt two young men
In -with a recenl :-Ual
carrying a stolen 9 mm automaUc pistol out of the wet sand at the Cress Street
when arrested on the stairway to the submerged in water in an office wute
,~wave: • , • waltln:J for low. tldo>•ond g ,. 1n· .••• d, polke ~ lilld 4ffl'.
Cress St.rttt beach by ot'Dcer Wesley b'astet today to prevent o~aUoo unUJ CIZ~r questioning Kyser, S!(ID and retumed lo Ute factory for repair.
Det. Ale>: Jlfilenei picked ' tjp Oona!d Most recent • burglarle8 ftported !no
u,,, .......
' TURMOIL AT SAN FRANCISCO STATI COLLEGE CONTINUES
Student Rocoll1 From BiOw 11 Riot Squad QUollt Protut
Businessmen to Help City
. .
Solve Downtown Parking
A joint parking committee of city
officials and five Laguna B e a c h
merchants will begin looking for solu·
tions to downtown parkin& problems.
The council decision to include the
businessmen in trying to iron out some
of the long-1tanding parklng woes come
Wednesday night at lhe recommendation
ol. the city manager.
Gordm Strachan, chairman of the
Downtown Busin~ Association, agreed
to appoint five repreaentaUves to the
parking task force.
City Manager James D. Wheaton
ln a report to th e councilmen agreed
that solutions are needed but added,
"What is not so readily identified j3 the
proper solution."
The DBA has ree-0mmended that meter
feeding (by store employes and others)
end and a token method be sub!tituted.
'Ibe token could be remdeemed by
cooperating merchant.s.
The new meters and method, Wheaton
points out, would in es.!ellce provide
free parking for customers of downtown
businesses. Another provision would be
removal of meters enUrely and posting
a one or two hour parking limit, he
notes.
"To rush out and expend m,ooo for
new meters that do not have an ex-
perience record that we have been able
to obtain would seem hasty in the face
or lhe urgent but nonetheless complicated
problem" Wheaton states.
UC Regents Meet
On Prof 'Powers,'
Budget Requests
From Win Service•
SAN DIEGO -Hedged about ~y
guardll, University of Call!ornla recenb
today were ready to strip professor! or the power to hire any more special
lecturers like Black Panther Eldr1dge
Cleaver.
Today's meeting on the university's
San Diego campus also was to see the
regent.s consider a record '341 m1lllon
11Nl~70 budget request.
Governor Ronald Reagan was due at
the meeUng. Security guards deployed
to head off any repeUUon of the recent
Santa Cruz meeting in which Re.9.gan
and State Superintendent of Publlc
Instruction Max Rafferty were jostled
and jeered by studenti .
Dallas Be~alled
JFK Met Death Five Years Ago
Five years ago today -in a sun·
spluhed ~xaa metropolis -the
ultimate price of ltadenhlp was spelled
out for every boy who could grow up
to be president as American history
tells that he can.
The world watched in horror.
A powerful nation's image was forever
changed all &hot:!: rang out in Dallas'
Dealey Plaza on P'rlday ov. ZZ, IMS,
shattering President John Fitzgerald
Kennedy's brain and with it a thousand
dreams, nol all his own.
Harlem shoeshlne boys \Vept. Heads
of covernmenta mourned, A rew-~whO
had hated the vital young President
secretly rejoiced. And over all hung
a aense of horrible historic importance.
Time hu dimmed the chain of events
which some say, began in the mind
of a disenclutn\ed ex-Marine named . Lee
Harvey Oswald who bought a mail order
7.6% mauser rifle with which to make hia tragic point.
POLITICAL PLOTT
Othe-1 ..,. It WI! a poUllcal plot,
perbapa bacl:ed by. !he incredibly
powerful mllitary-lndustrlaJ complez, In-
volving 00..na of people, moat of them
nowciead .
They Included Oswald, nJahl club ovmer
Jack Rub)', Dallu pollc<man J. D. TIP"
pltt, a night club llriPP:'rr and even two newsmen who ttponealy went to
Rub)''• home alter learning ht ahot
Oswald Ind arrived befora tbe police.
. ~
No one needs to recount all eventa
of the three days ln Dallas.
Time dims the recollection of things
committed, felt, seen, heard and smelled
in Dallas : murder, grief, JUil.Shota and
the spice of funeral noWen.
MEMORIES REMAIN
But the memories do l'f:maln, al\bougb
fresh and similarly terrible ones have
been added, with the Political murders
of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and
Dr. Martin Luther King.
During his campaign for t h e
Democratic presidential nominations, ~
Jong·· aft.er l>r. King wu slain, RFK
said he was running against policlel,
not men •
..I run becauae t 1m convloctd thla
country ill on a puilOUll course," he
said.
Today, there will be muffled dnuns.
&Rlut.ea, somber memories and the
melancholy sound of bugle taps being
played wllh an added note of significance
for the day.
GRAVE& TO DIG
And within a few houri, It •ill be
Saturday, NOi'. IS, w!Ut televlafon foct.
ball, leavea to rake. maybe tbe car
to wax, and everywbere -irava to
di(.
"We are niMina: 500 to llOO interment.I
per year," t;hfch Ja about average d
Col. E. T. Seltur <USA Rel.) who
manages ROH ltlll Burial Park tn TCIU,
where Orwald lite.
,recovered .. UCJ· l400 lape te.:order tllaJ1ct. Vic Sagan ~ bad been ptcllad
fl'o_ll! a b\ufl tiito ljJo -• • ' 1Saian alleged that Jl'altet Gnni llYler.
11 of the Doi Camino l! 0 lei utll s.
Cout Hlgbway, had ' cbucked t h e
n<onling Instrument Into tbe ocean after
taklq it In the burtlll'!' of .. Ocean
Front !><me.
. Polke sllo alle&od that K)'Rr ·was
)Meeting Slated
Wor ~e11 TAP
A countywldo planofng meeting ·for
atudents interested in the March of
Dimes'· Teen-Age Prvcram (TAP) is
' ICbeduled for 10 a.m. 8aturday at Golden
Weot College In Hunt!ngton Bescb.
Jay North, former liar of televilloo's
"Deooll the Menace'' and 11169 TAP
cbalnnan for Los Angelea County, wUI
be on hand to greet Orange County
Students.
Nancy Hill a 17-yeor-old Newport
Harbor High School aentor who beads
Orange County's TAP, uJd the meeUng
will be beld lntbe Community Center
Rooom of the college 11 Goldeowest
Strftt and F.clinger A venue.
Camera Theft Told
The theft of '315 Jn camera equipment
from a Voltawagea van wu reported
Thursday to Newport Bescb police by
John William Cbes&ell, 25, o( 315
Alvarado Place.
BfY1>1 Gln&ilcll;' :n, allll a !~ear-old , claded the F..,Uva! of·~-· Police girl who boCh llltid llle~ ad!lns3. . ·· oal<f a pa1r · of boots, a , "If and costume
JlrneheZ Sala· fli:drt'arrests· ate ·hoped · 'jeWelfy were 1•\en. ., ·' .__
for in the mulU(Jle burgtsrles that • The manager of the Uiuna Shores,
amounted to thousands of dollars worth 420 Cliff Drive, reported -the theft of
. of items in the past few days. a $123 television from one of the rooms.
Besides the tape recorder, police have Margery Maas. 164 Brooks st., Apt.
recovered coins, radios, a aecond gWl C, reported the theft of her purse wlth
and ?i.1arine officer uniforms. papers and $31. The papers were found
Sagan said he dug lhe $400 recorder later in the 100 block of Oak Street.
:Skateboarders May Fall
To Laguna Authorities
The free and easy s p o r t of 1 k a t e it on roads.
boaJ'dlng may feel the drag of authority
in Laguna B~ch.
The land-8urfing sport came to City
Council attention \Vednesday In the fonn
of a letter of complaint from Jeanne
HarUn HWlt.
She complained that skate boarding
in the area of her art gallery, 735
S. Cout Highway, W&ll a noisy,
dangerous annoyance.
Councl~an Richard Goldberg lilgreed
that it was a detriment to t.l}e business
area and a hazar~ to youngster!. He
suggested that an ordinance against
11kate boarding be enforced more closely.
City Manager James D. Wheaton said
the cit ordinance prohlblti the sport.
on sld alkl. Stato law, he !'Id; prohibits
He said the problem was at its height
three or four yeara ago with Starlit
Drive one of lhe great slolom courses.
Councilman Roy Holm said it seemed
sad to prohibit the sport and wondered
if it was: "all that bad." MayOr Glenn
Vedder sai4 .be had tried in the past
to get the council to put a Skate board
course In Irvine Park.
City Planner Al Autry said the bwiy
bike path at Bluebird Park tbight also
eventually be used for !kate boarding.
"Actually some of the best nma: arc
down the Laguna Hills. . .three miles
Jong," said Holm.
Councilmen instructed the c I t y
manager to look into better enforcement
of the state board Jan.
, ....... ,....,
'ltf trf"p
DREXEL'S FABULOUS ET CETERA
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!
REG.
$179
REG. • SPECIAL
•
REG.
$119
·: a
SPECIA~
$129
Chriolmas time •• , • ono. ~ome ls .where th'tl
pilrtieo •••• with everyone · dre21sd to Ille
hi~. Dress up your home lo maich. What a
.lworlcl of hOfidty glomour this wonderful
' Drexel collection offers. S.. them today .+· -
t2'9 $239
thase vory SpKial priceL For some very ,,,..
clal lvrniture, stop by tod1y.
EXCLUSLVE DEALl!tS IJOll: HINlliilON-DREl(IL-HIRLTAGI
90 DAYS 'NO LNT!ll!ST-LONG!R T!RMS AVAfLABLE ON APPltOVID CR!DfT
NIWPORT llACH
1721 W.tcllff Dr. '4J.1050
OPIN PlllAY 'TIL t
LAGUNA llACH
S4.I North CoMt Hwy,
PMSlllNI fnt.rltr
Doolpn A•1ll1~la Al~SID °"" PlltAY 'TIL t -.......... "' -._ ........
I; t '
_.... -----
4""'5Jt
I '
' •
' '
I
'I I
I'
--• •
• •
\ . .
.
,.i -
·Lagan.a .
• .r ' \ -I
B ~ ~:e· eae • .-
"
. '
. N•Y. Stocks
NOL &T, NO .. 2af, ~ $£CTIONS, SO PAGES . ' ORANGE .COUNTY, CA(ll'ORNIA
' I • '
FRIDAY. NOVEMB~R 22, :1968 •
' . Tl;N C~&
• • s Ill '
•
. .
' ·!".
(:oast Jtl~:n Killed
107 Aboard
Lagqnan Injured
By Fire Engine
Japan Plane
Rescued
'
From Wire Services
An Orange County !ire truck, .speed·
ing to a call in the Santa Ana Haigbts
area, alammed lnto two autm at a con-
gested intersection· •Thursday evening,
killing the driver of one of them.
DeiµI is f'honfas C~fford Ar-tjter, 45,
of 210 Onyx !>-ve., Balboa Is)and. He,.suc-
cumbed of head injuries at Costa M e s a
Memorial Hospital an hour after t h e
crash.
The second car was driven by Mrs.
i1arie Louise Walker, 49, of 835 La Mita·
da St., Laguna Beach. She was treated
for minor injuries and released.
The fire truck, .driven by Larry C.
!MS County Traffic· 1161
!!It Dealll To!J . 18'
Pride. 39, wa&-·tolling sOuth on Red Hill
Avenue, its red lights flashing and its si·
ren screaming, -when it &truck the two
cars at the Pali.sades R,orut intersectian.
Both autos were eastbound ' on Palisades.
Archer;s Mustang conVertible w a s
..,
struck broadside on the driver's door
and carried a.bixlt 100 feet by the impact.
The Walker auto was bit on tlie J •ft
front side.
Firemen and California Highway Pa·
trolmen worked for 20 minutes to extJi.
cate Areher from the wreckage. Tb e
auto was demolished.
A second fire engine continued on t h e
run to the call, a warehouse blaze at 1571
Mesa Drive. The fire was out on ·arrivaL
Archer was the owner of three taco
shops in his name on Catalina Island,
Newport Beach and Balboa Island. Un·
til recently he had been managu of the
Jolly Roger Restaurant on Balboa Island.
Artists Tackle
La Quinta High
In CIF Playoff
•
Laguna Beach High Scbool's un-
dl(e$ed -Crestvje'f League champion
football team travels to Bolsa Grande
'·• l!igll,. ~L~to<li!illl. ,jsl~q~ to meet n.QUltia ~-.. titiDlt~ltifllum tonight
to meet LaQuinta High School in the
. first round of the CIF championship
' Pet; Hobby Slww
At Top of World
Slated Saturday
Tiit first Pet and Hobby Show
iq»naort!d by Ille Top "' tbe -Wl'Cld School Par.ent..Teachen:. A5aoclaUon ii
oet '"' Saturday. Local 'dlgnitarifll, Including, Laguna
Boach Poli<e Chief Harry Labtoe and
Fire Chief Homer MIM, wl!l ,bo on
band to atrard prim It the\ W!!!il.
Acheduled for JO a.m. •t the ICbool,
11601 Tree Top ...... '
Really big dOfll wU1 parade promptly
al 10:10 1.m., Utile dop at 10:30 a.m.
and puaycab at 10\50. a. m".
MloceUaneoUl'lnlmal> wi1I maid> befOI'<
l~" 1111:10 aim: ~ doc•. llifl drinb, cotloo Candy ~ , baDOOOI wih be "' aalt! at the
ev°" .. organized by Mmes. Jon Bauglim.ilJ, •l\'ant-'l'llt .. dgold and War·
ren Walker. ~
. . .
•\
"
playoffs. Kickoff II <! I o'i:loclt.
They've come a long way s1nce the
Artists flu-ridden team of · 17 players
eeked out a 13 to ! yjctQl'Y. over Katella
.JO, weeks ago in Uie s!ason opener.
Laguna's Varsity ii 9 wins, O losses
tor the season. LaQuinta Is 7 wins,
2 losses. The Artlsta are slight favorites.
Laguna fans pla~ to see the game
Bhould leave early because seating at
the Bolsa Grande stadium in Garden
Grove ii limited.
Here are two routes to reach tbe
stadium:
-Out Laguna Canyon Road to Santa
Ana Freeway, go north to Garden Grove
Freeway. Turn west on Garden GroVe
J'reeway to the Brookhurst Avenue
turnoff. · Go south on Brookhurst to
Westminster Boulevard. Tben west on
Westminster to the school at 9401
Westminster Bou1evatd.
-An alternate route Is up Pacific
Cqast Highway to Corona del Mar, inland
on MacArthur Boulevard to San Diego
Freeway. North on San Diego Freeway
to Brookhurst Avenue turnoff. Go north
en Brookhurst, then west on Westminster
Boulevard to the campus stadium.
Marine Jet Crash
Suit Continued
A $300,000 personal injury suit brought
by Mrs. Anita Brown, 71, of 271 D
Avenida Sevilla ,Laguna Hills Leisure
World, which was to have been heard
in U.S. District Court in Loa Angeles
Wednesday has been continued to Nov.
26.
The trial was to detennine the amount
Mrs. Brown will reeeive from injuries
:she suffered when two Marine jet planes
crashed into the Leisure World com-,
munlty on a rainy night Jan. n,, 1187. '
The government has admitted liability
ln the cruh, according to Mrs. Brown 's
attorney James McCarthy. ,.
Fede.al Judge E. Avert Crll')' Is to
determine the amount of com~Uon
Mn. Brown will -receive. She his un--
dergone five surgical operatioQS. ,
l.ut year Ille government )>Ii~ 1216,ISt
In 11 claimt stamming from the er~
which destroyed three a p a r t m e n t
buildings and killed' four persons.
Cause of the crash has never been
announced and will not be> revealed in
al1e cominl action, the attomey lald.
Left Students Clash
With Naples Police
ROME (UPI) -Studenls and .,.uce
batUed In the tlroet! of Naples today
as deepening t><>llUcal and labor troubles
gripped Italy.
'1'he cla!h In Napl" broltt out when
"""" than 1,000 leftwlq -...u .. over the faJJure !)( 1u c ces /ive
government.a to CaJT)' out educational
rcfonn.s lried to ilonn the barred ...
trance of cily ball lo tallr wllh the
mayor.
! 'r ·,, ' '
Laguna 'council Def edt:s-~
. ' . ' '
Reduced 'Sideyards P·lan
Laguna Beach councilmen by a S to
1 split vote Wednesday turned thumbs
down on a proposal to ease sldeyard
reqi.Urements·for narrow lots.
Repreientatives ' of Laguna Vista,
. \
Boat ·Collision
Defen8e Opens
A 53-yeJ!,r-Old Los Angeles dentist ,ac-
cused in the alleged hit-run sinking of
a small outboard off Newport Beach
testified Thursday that he had blacked
out prior to the Sept. 7 incident.
Warren J. H1>ke, charged w Ith
operating ia boat in a negligent and
reckless manner, told the NewpoPt-Mesa
Municipal Court that he could remember
nothing of the collision between his U.
foot cabin cruiser and the 18-foot out·
board off the santa Ana River jetty.
Four perso~ . aQoard outboard were
rescued by other vessels.
Tb.e seven-woman, five-man jury was
expected 'to get the case this afternoon.
The trial was in l(s fourth daf today .•.
Hoke teaWied Thursday thet lHere
we,;e blank s~.tn;hil. memory coverJng ,
a week-long ~od;. befC?te and, after : the acldent. · ....,. ~
Ill'. Sterlin& Pollock, tbe Hoke r.mµy , pbjisi_ci~; ~ ·he \'~d ~ callf!4 to
b'eahl!OU;lor,a ~oo·lll'e rijht.alde '
of hll .JiMd ·ttie 'daJ alter ibe accident.
The dentist complained of a head<dle •
and blurred v~, Dr. Pollock said.
oWners of about . 100 2&-by·loo-f~ lots
in the easterly section or Arih BeaCh
Heights,· asked that a four·foot sideyard
· requirement be whittled to three feet.
Lane Shanks said the side'yard arid
other setb8ck reQuirements am'ou0ted to ' ' _ a~ut 31 percent of the property and
would · make it difficult for OWf¥lrll to
develop· their lots on l ,020 build able
: square feet. The bom·es could Ofily tie
J 17-fee! Wide, he said. ..
B. E. Swartout s8.id the situaUon might
·seriously aUeet a bond b1.1yer'• com·
milmef\t on an assessment disgict to
develop more than 400 lots in the: area.
He said the city should consider .the
. amount it has expended on incidental
and engineering expenses.
Councilman Roy Holm , who opposed
the assessment district for d-eveloj)ment
o{ the narrow hillside lots, said, "If
Western Bond Compat1y would withdraw.
their commitment and Ulat would mean '
(assessment district) 66-1, wOUldn't go
throu.gh, th'at's probably the best news·
I 'II hear aU night. " . . . . .
Mayor . Glenn Vedder noted lhat the
Ar.ch Beach H·eights· Association of
Property Owners an4 it,s architect i'iad
·heartily endorsed, the 91"(1inance li!vtslons
that co11tain the side;-ard requlrilnenf.
CotincJtrhan ·Ch11rlton BJly.d favored
three-f~ sideyards. Vedder satd, "I dis.
co1urt ·the threat. of a bobd company
·wiihtlraWfng:c the ·ctfy~1\ai rior coriti'ad:·
with the bond company regardjng,
sideyards." · 1 · • , • , "
~ A>uncilrnen ditect.ed. tbe icily.·~·
to. prepare· the ordlnJnce ,amendm¢nta
.for: adoption. Boyd voted agajnst, the.
measure. ' .... •• ,, ..
"1 • ' . ., ••. ) :· , • . •
J 'l ,~ 'l; • ~ 1 ~ ! ! ' . ·YmuJt,: 'Sister , :
' ' • • • (: ' ' I '
S,AN FRANCISCO -A Japan Air
IJne. 107 jel lnbow\tl from Tokyo came
down in San Franc;isco Bay a mile
•hort of lhe airport !Oday bljl 1be COafl
Guard reported ll!-107 .pmiona aboaid
were rescued aafely by small boat& '
The weather ..... fas'gy and overcnt
but the ,airport WU ln normal operation.
The big plane came down abOut t :·45
a.m. off C:Oyote Point about 18 miles
south of San Fran~. ·
Four life rafts were put out from
the plane and were towed ashore -
a distance of about 300 yards -by
launcl)e3 ..
. An:ibulances and dociors 'ftl'e called
to the . ace:ne but the Coast Guard
reported .that il there were any lnj~es
they apparently were minol'.
' The plane came doWn right.side up
about•; one mile '!lhort of . the end of
the nearei!t runway. Tiie wtngs1and moat
·of the fuselage were'above water.
: 'l'he bliy ·at that ·pdint & stiallow and · metshf.: .: ' 1 ~ • •
• . <;h~ck .Sll,efelqlai~r, 8'sis~nt range · '1'~1" .at ,lhe CQyote Point Rifie. Rang\'.
; liald "lhe. 'Plan• ·was · aboiit :JOO yaida
· from Ille pi<r of 1be Cojoole Polpt Yachl
:eybor, lle·aliofreilorte<I that·~ no~ooe was tnjim;;f. '
"I~ 'l\'as on ·its flnlll ap~ aboul
·three: ."J'I .. -~ of:.·~~ c!Ji!fl!ttd.a r~ .... -..... &rcif tower spokesman. -• 1 : ;
· "'The pfaiie M'U wtdtt radar and radio
~cantrali btca~ .of· Ute' heavy {Of.. The
~st.call on_ tbe radiO'iitdicated i!Vel')'il\IDi
Suspended' in .
• wae 'all' rgiht, but we'.ll have to look
it the re<ordlngi again before 'we can
. . say t~t. f~r llUfe." ' , ,
e· tO)'ltr officilll oald the approach , · ·:f lhe llindlJlg '.was nOfJll!ll 4! lhe ]>lane
opped dqwn over ·tne San Mateo Bridge
_ a ut. tWO mUes south of. Coyote Point
. N arcoties Case :
.A• 16·year-old b o y and his· 14-ye&Mlfd and 17 mili!s ·south of San FrB.nciaco.
sister have been suspended·frotn Laguna "Th~, there was nothing," he said.
Beach High School pendlng 8 juvenile "Sbe just disappeared off the radar
court hearing of narcotics charge·s -no· further ·radio ~mmunicatioos, no
. against them. · nothing. The y;ea'ther dld. not appear
The 'youngsters were .picked up durin~ to be a . factor. It's re.gular ~edure
• a recent. South Laguna raid ~ n8.rcotios to make ~ent landings ~e.
·agents ,and poll~e. Both w~ aires~ Wlt!Jin ~s, ah arm.act& of amall
on su.plcfOn; o( selling 'meSc;.ude. . ~ats was organized for the rescue opera~ · Dr. Wlllihm , Ullom r schoofs ![tiperif)· ·lions. 1Many of the passengers took to
'tendent, said the' :Yo~gste.rs' 'baVe been ~bber · life rafts. At least three
suspended u,ntil a Dee. 6 hearing 1n nelloopten flew overhead.
'Juvenile Court. . .· · The autv:ivors . wt!l"e transf~ to the
· He safd the high school princli)al h8d . small c:raft.. and sped ashore ~ be taken
met wit~ th·e pare~~ o'f 'the youngsters. to ·hoapitals 1n nearby commwu~es.
Under a recently adopted school The CoaJt·Guard reported.divers were
narcotics policy, thi principal Wilfrecom• .dlspat.ched to the ~~ scene _t.& comb
mend to Ullom dlscfpllrte -whicti could the wi:ec~age of the ,etliner, which made
include.suspension Qr expulsion. a. stop. •t Hcmolal~ ~te to San Fran--
After the superintendent's decision, ·the •CISCO. On the tail-sectio_n 1of the blue
·students and pari!nts have a right tO and red er~ was ~ted a tsuru,
appeal the decision to the school board.· a Japanese btrd symbolizing good luck.
In the event of appeal, t,here is a
board hearing to which the parent$ may
;bring . an attorney. ~:board then
:decides to sffirm,. revoke or modify
the sliperintenck!nt's ~ecfslon.
During the procedure's school officials
1·attempt to determine Whether Ute return
• of the suspect-or suspects to classes
would be detrimental to other students.
Stoel< llfarl<ets
'. NEW YORK (kt') ~ 'l'he itook .;ark·
Jet fmpfbved an ~8.rly gafft-th~actt\>e' fratf'.
ing late this afternoon. (See quotatioiis, Pages 8-9); . . .
f Gains 1out.mHn.l>ered . lasses by .. nearly
:300'r.'i&$Ues .on the New 1York Stock Ex-
'cbange.'"llle Dow Jones industriil aver· i age1 w;as, up a~t ~ ~t. r ~ . '· "
'
Speck Verdict l!pheld
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -Tiie
Illinois Suprenl'e Court upheld today U.
death penally for, Richard ~peck, who
wa1 convicted of murde;lng eight nursee
in Chicago in 1966. The court dJSag;eed
with lawyers· for Sptck thal Speck could
not get a flllr trial in Peoria tounty.
Orang~ Coaa&
· we.there
L~ga,·Land .Grab: Recalled
. ' • •1 • • • • • • • I ' • ' ' >-' , , ' ' • '
You may be off for the "eekend,
but the fog is back on. lf'll move
Ill loolgbt and stick ll1lllnd $.JlOOll
while . coastal tem~atul• llrii
tabbed at 118 and lnlobd men:ury
at 75.
INSmE' ·TODAY
. . . .. . ' . ' . . I . • ...... , .
Laguna Junk De.cjler ·foU1s ti>· Cet 'H'}s :Laiw.: Back . . .... ,.,,. ..
~ llOW1d city hall Ihm clays bi!came ne<esiary, he ·nld, ~ filr1iler >torit recall Otten alclts coonCnmen~ said;
reriwlibera when the cliy condemned.the · clfy clerk Ed Beaver t«lli!n'I -'"tlib wu. before my Ume.", P<ddlcord
l1ncLol' Lagwla Buch Junk dealer Char-; Ille d<talls. . , · , : · • · · •· 1 'added lbat bl, bad ...... oeollle oil ~Is
lit 'Peddicord. , i.!lJ:. w~uiellifl£. c=:: ~~ buiil db· a !l>oC'11j1i' (uri!Wed) 'at I h ~
Nobody except Peddicord, that ls, )Im! : sOeklog ,an ..s.lilii.1 lrO¢ ~,~·ow; ·,· \!DitloC!1]~~ .. ~,}'a_,~
he wu ~ diyhaD Vigorously Ille Peddlcorcll' l!inl:1'ird. , ' · • -.. -,., _,
• olh'et nllht.. . . · . • 'ped<Jl(,,rd ia\d lie wa r iwardid '41~ ~ an4 loolt • lhe mlC:nlllJm to
"I doo'tlllo! to beat Y"' felloM," l!e<J. · oeverances $y,the .~ Be salll,bll op-, !'M If a.clolldollted'*"" t!Mlm-tb 1111
. cllcord lold councllmtn, ''but. I'm IOIDI ponenta.JD tM maltef ...,.. ....,.811 Clead nr6fle11Y · • • • . • ·
to get my land' back." · I pd ~l.ed lhat ~ilali-dlcl In !ht; 'si!d ~Oadli:or,11,Jn ~t ~.Ila·
Peddicord said he lu\d.....rtbe'd the ~ o( tbe · ~ lhal p~ i!t dpl\O what .Ibey aald llieY'llinle4.lht
by-lep1 acUon lo Ille mlcrofllm Or· '· •OiJiht lo be run oul Of, town.• • . laM for.and lll1 attome:t·&IY• !.oio pl
• (.~ve> of !ho coorthouse baaemenl. Tiils 1 1 attonfoy Jtlck J: ,RliJI!!-Ir~ hio' tt'b>ok. "' ' :" ·
..
"Tis the 1eaaon /Dr Christma&
pt.n111. Preview of Old Jar:nes
Plouen' .,.,,;.,. of "Amahl and
lht Niaht Vllltor<" . ii tod4r'• cover !••t..~ in WEEKENDrR
maoazbst1 ·-'• ., -.... c.Mt 1s ·
~ .... , 11 ..
I OMfil .... ~ , ~. ' E=.~; I.... f I 'twi I lC ............. 11 -" -' ........... ,. --. =:;'-.C .,.
1 .
•
. •;\I; "''-t·
'
•'
' Jt DAil Y I'll.OT
• • • . ,...... . :t~ '.''\f -·~ .. ..
;,(,: ·Wf'-~a!IOO (AP! -About oo
• ;; lacqlt)< ~ ....,1ng yellow arm-!'!': · ~ "6; atatloned on campus io *" ... keep· ,the· pe1ee as classes resumed Irr 1
"' • day at San l'ra::ilcio Stll&e CoJlele
•
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' I J;
I • •
••
12 • • • .• • •
• II. ••
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'Ille lacully ---.... to .,... vent a repetltion al Thursday's mtence
that brought armed police on campus.
· stood on &he Uirl cl the P,inistratlon
~~,~:l for • -of ---bulld-~--P"'--.....:.._r'"':::..."J. = -....... -· '"""-::i.-=srn a.':t. •,:: p."';:l.:
lbll manilal ad lalo -Pnll. Gary -of Ibo ai-h depebidtl, ~ !<Jr the facalty
pwp. said: .•we .,. .lull lrJIDI to prevent vtoJerw:e, 'lb1I &f'GUI hu-DO
aame. We are juat lolnC Co lland lll'OUlld and !lope for Ibo belt."
-and ---ICUllled 'l'lmnldQ' .. CDllep --to keep tho 11,llOktudelll camjlUI open
In tbe lace of oppooltloo by Ibo Biact . 811-u-ad --Two .....i.,-.wwaftredl>)'anolfieer ....... -,., ....... -. :.14!.~-a:=~
-andtbe~ol
a Bladt = JlamlT, ...
--Ibo for aill'lllng ~ ..... -to carry l\IOI .. Cllll·
IW-CW... Tbunday Dllht were held
oulel!J: and college Proildoal &ber( D. &nwi termed afternoaa atUnd•DCI! •my gooc1• ID ""'""'1 olepmtmeata,
eopedtlJ7 -.... pbptcal • caUon.
An IDIDde!liklPo""ltd-1!111 diect --
-ti --and olmoot -tm-111-. ........... tho busineM~
But llmJtJi -"I do nol -what
..... 1d .,_ .. --u Ibero
wuuld be --Theodorv Morlam, .,.-i of tbe
atate coUece -aald -slept are mandatory.
He aid the --.....m.. boord
of the ~ -Collelo .,....._.. will "ban to Id lmfller JO -..r
manner 11 deaned DeL.WllJ.'1, to end dds
dll~ ..,~_,..., ind --iatiC lltuatlon. or
Pastor to Speak
On Pike Seance
Rev. Arthur Ford, ploaeer
porapsychoioglll lnvol...S In tbe teJevtled
seance with Epilcopal Bllbop 11111e1 Pike
in an etbe:real IW'Cb for Pike's dud
... will speak In Santa Alla tonlgbt.
"New Dlmaiolom al BelJglon and
Science.," ls the title " the a d d r e s s at 7,41 p.m. In the Finl Baptllt 0111rcb
at 1010 w. 17th St., Santa Ana.
Rev. Font ii probably America'• moot
well mon living medlmn, with a
background of 40 yeara ln psychic
....ardl. dating back to Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle and Sir Oliver Lodge.
QuesUons -as completely as possible
-will be-
UAll r PllOI
GllMH: COAST l'UM.rlHlHct C<W.llAHY
w..tN.W.M ---""1 .. c..i.,
Ya rr.ldMt •ttd ~., H..111,er
n. .... "''"" ·-n.... A. .... ..,111~. _ ... ..
kl"'-4 P. NtU Pt1I Nin•~
~-· "r~'"' '---22:2 ,.,... "'"· ..,... MIN111 PJJ .... lli. tl•1t ·--e..11: ... , -... ..., llPMI' ,....,. ...,., "" .... r=i hvlMtf
11 '""""'ctn•• "'"'
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TURMOIL AT SAN l'RANCISCO STATB'COLLEGE CONTINUES
Student R...il1 1'1'111\ Blow at R .......... Quolls P-1
~us~essmen t(l' Help City
Solye Downtown Parking
A joint parking committee of clly
officlaJs and five Laguna B e a c h
merchaota will begin looi!Jlg l<r solu·
lions to downtown partdng pr00lem1.
The COUJ)C.il decision to include the
businessmen in trying to iron out some
of the lonc•tandlng parting woes come
Wednesday night at the recommendation
of the city manager.
Gordon Sltacban, chairman of the
Downtqwn Business Association, agreed
&o appotnt. flv. representatives to the
pmtJng taai: force.
City Maoqer James D. Wheaton
In a report to t b e co11ndlmen agreed
that solutions are needed but added,
"Wbal ii not ao readlly ldenlilied ii the __ ..
· The DBA bas recommended that meter
feeding (by 11<re -loyes and others)
md and a tol<eo method be IUbaUtuted.
'Ille tol<en oould be remdeemed by
cooperating merchants.
'J'he new meters and method, Wheaton
poi.nU: out. would in esaeoce provide
free parkina for c"8tomers of downtown
bualnesles. Anotlltr provision would be
removal of met.rs eoUrely and posting
a one or two hour parJdn&' lim!t, be
notes.
"To nab out and expend $52,000 for
new meters that do not have an ex-
perience record that wt have been able
to obtain would seem hasty In the face
of the urgent ~ut nonetheless complicated
problem" Wheaton states.
UC Regents Meet
On Prof 'Powers,'
Budget Requests
From Wire Sen1cu
SAN DIEGO -Hedged about by
guards, UDivmity of Call!ornia regents
today were ready to strip professors
of the power to hire any more special
lecturers like Black Panther Eldridge
Cleaver.
Today 's meeting on the university's
San Diego campus alao was to 1ee the
regents consider a record $341 million
1-.10 budget requeot.
Govtm0r Ronald Reagan wu due at
the meeting. Securtty guards deployed
to held off eoy repetition of the rec<nt
S•nta CrlJz meeting in which Reagan
and State SUperlntendent ol Public
JnstrucUon Mu Rafferty were jostled
and jeered by 1tudenta.
Dallas HeC!alled
JFK Met Deatli Five Years Ago
Five years aa:o today -in a sun·
1plashed Texas metropolis -the
ultimate price of leadership was spelled
out Jor every boy wbo could grow up
to be pruident as American hiJtory
lelll that be .... •
The w«ld watched in horror.
A powerful nation's image wu forever
changed as abots rang out in Dallis'
Dealey Plua on Friday ov. ZI, llllS,
ohatterlng Pnosldenl John Fitzgerald
Kennedy's brain and wttb it a thousand
dreams, not all his own .
Harlem shoeshine boys wept. Heads
of governments mourned. A few wbo
had haled the vital young Pmldent
secrotly rejolcad. And over all hlllll
a sense of horrible historic Importance.
Time has dimmed the chain of events
which some say, began in the mind
of a disenchanted e•Marine named Let
Harvey Oswald who bOught a mail order
'1.62 mauser rme wllh which to make
hil Lraalc point.
POLl'l1CAL l'tOl'1
Otben 111 It WU a political plot,
porilapo bacl!ed by tho lncrtdlbl:Y
PolJerfuJ millllly-lnduatrlal complex, ln-
YolYl!w dor.em of people, -of them --· Tber locluded Oswald, nfcbl club owner
Jact Ruby, O.U.s policeman J. D. Tl)>'
pitt, a nllht club stripJ>fZ, atxt mn t,.. newcnen who reporiedJy went to
llabJ'• borne alter ltlnllnS be abot
09wald and artlft!d btfcn the poll<e.
l,
No one needs to recount all events
or the three daya In Dallaa.
Time dims tbe recollection ol thlngs
commlttod, !el~ ..... heard and anelled
in o.Ilaso murder, grief, gunsbou and
the 1plce of funeral flowers.
MEMORIES 1IEMAIN
But the memories do remain, although
1 .... h and limllarly terrtb1e --ha•• been added, with the pollttcal murden
of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and
Dr. Martin Luther King.
During his campaign for t h e
Democratic presidentiaJ nominations, not
long after Dr. King was slain, RFK
said he wu nmning against polidea, ·
not men.
"I run becau3e I am convtnced thlt:
country is on a perilous course," be
said .
Today, there will be muffied drums,
uhdet, somber memories aod the
melancholy IOllnd or bugle tapo being
played with an added note ol "'"'!icanco
lor the day,
ORA VES TO DIG
And wltbln ·a few bourl, tt wlll be
S1tunl07, N ... 23, with te-focll-
ball, ......, to ran, lllO)'be the car
to wax. and evUJWbln -sr•• to dlf.
"We art running 1110 to 11111 Interments
per ym," 1'htch ii about a~ld Col. E. T. 5eltur (USA Rel. w1lo
manqa 8-Hill Burial Part In
Wbett OrnJd U...
f Qr ·· TFanpe~ ·Miners·
j • , •
~=, ... --~ ~ble ••emit bu i.a, ...... cootaict .the men to ~
recovery -whatever it m1glit
be."
be made lo' cap the mine'• run portal,
~ .-tbelr~
because ol ~-· Tbe elgbtliibn .blew off the con-
crete and cln4it' block'c;op for the second
Ume.
· 5lnie the lll'lll of qht eiplollOos DC• taken after the latest tio exp!Oalon; '
CW1'4 before d•W)l .1\'..~~!!XLthe.J!'I• -Wd•Y,Jl!!oW,11!!_~ hi&h.~~,AA!l low
ing underground fire! llUfU thlct 01ack oxygt!l content and some carbon.monox·
PU~ of clnller bid. ieod and eement
were ttacked. at the mlne for use in llie ei>en! • il wia ilecldJ lo eap all
6balts and portals to eitlngulsh the ~fJre,' smoke containing dangetaus carbon ide.
monoxide prevented tbe Start ot 1111.· • Poundstone said a third eUort. would . .
Pair Face B~glarydli:~tge
Two Linked w Rec~nt _Wave of Lagu1ia Thefts ,. -
Lqima 8eacb po11ee today were aeek-lni ccimplalJ)ta agalnlt two Young !D•n
. lit .connection, with a ....ot ~
, ~veior low~,~~.
: in•lba :,rnll,-llOlloe.~ bld'..,'Tsii . ...,;.;,. • . Ifill $IOO tsi>tr.' .._... ... -
'thlll llcl: Vlc'Sepn sal¢hlil'¥<" i>lld!ed . fli>m • blQll Into the oceeo. . ' Saian alleged that wa11er·oraritltyier,
II of !lie Del Camino Hot e ~ 1%119 S.
Coast lllgbway, bad c:ltucted t h e
~ lnstrumeot lnln the ocean alter taklDI li In tbe burglary ol an Oceao
1'nlat borne.
, Police alao alleged that K,aer was
)Meeting Slated
iF'or Dimes TAP
!-countywlde plannlng · meeting for
studenta lntettated In the March ol
Dim"' Teen-Age Procram (TAP) is
ICbedu1ed kir 10 a.m. Saturday at Golden JV'91 College Jn iluntlnglon Beacb.
J07 North, lonper ltar al television's
'1Deonll the Menace'' and 191!9 TAP
cbalrman !or Im Angelea County, will
be on band lo greet Oranga County
Studenta.
Nancy Hill a 17-year .. ld l!lewport
Harbor lllgb School senior who beads
Orange County'• TAP, aald tbe meeting
will be held lntbe Qlmmunlty Center
_,, of the coltege at .Goldeowest
SJ.reel and l!'.dlnger A venue.
Camera Theft Told
Tbe theft of '315 In camora equipment
!run a Volllawagen van WU roported
TlmradlQ' to Newport Beach pollco by
John Wllllam Cheasell, 25, of 315
· Alvarado Place.
carrying a stolen 9 mm automati<: pistol out of the wet sand at the Cress Slreet
when arrested on. the stairwat to the , lllbmerged ill water tn an °'ce waste g:~. Street beach by Officer Wesle~ ~ .l>~~et ·t®ay to pre~ ~on lDllil
Alter questkmlng' Kyser, ~g .. and rel\Jrned to!!"' la~ for .,pair.
Del. Al .. Jime.., picltetl up Qonald Most ~.: bllr,glorles reported In-
Bryon Glngrjcli, U, aad a If.year-old • !')ucle<l'il>o<~·of:~~ge. Police
girl •ii<! both·llsled !!"'&tel ~.... , 'Wl a'i!~Jf 'IJi!iils,,ai~~ costume
Jimenez said"""" aiTests 'he hoped .Jewe1ry..en.4.1<en; >A ·
for in the multiple burglaries that The manager of Ute Laguna Shores,
amounted to thousands of dQJlars worth 420 Cliff Drive, reported the theft of
of items in the pa!t few days. a $l:U televta:lon ·from ooe of the rooms.
Besides the tape recOrder, police have Margery Maas, 164 Brooks St., Apt.
recovered coins, radios, a second gun C, reported the theft of her purse with
and Marine officer unilonns. papers and $31. The papers we.re found
Sagan said he dug the $400 recorder later in the 100 block of Oak Street.
Skateboarders May Fall
To ·Laguna Authorities
The free and easy s p o r t o{ s k a t e it on roads.
boarding may feet the drag Df authority
in Laguna Beach.
Tbe land-turfing ~ came t• City
Council attention Wednesday in the form
of a letter' Df complaint from Jeanne
l-larlin ,Hunt. <
She complained that skate boarding
in the area of her art gallery, '135
S. Coast Highway, was a noi11y,
dangerous annoyance.
Coundlman Rliliard Goldberg agreed
that it was a deiriment ro the business
area and a har.ard to youngsters. He
guggested that an ordinance against
skate boarding be enforced more closely.
City Manager Jamet D. Wheaton said
the cltY onlinanCe · prohibits the sport
on aldewa!U. Stati law, be aid, prohibits
"' ·.[i.. , .,
He said the problem wu at its height
three or four years ago wUh Starlit
Drive one of the great "slolom couraes.
Councilman Roy Holm said it seemed
sad kl prohibit the sport aod wondered
if it was "all that bad." Mayor.. Glenn
Vedder 11aJd ·he had · tried Jn the past
to get the council to put a skate board
course in Irvine Park.
City J>tinner Al Autry said the busy
bike path at · Bluebird Park might a~o
eventua.Uy be used Jor skate boarding.
"Actually some of the best runs arc
down the Laguna Hills ... three mile::
long," said Holm.
c.ouncilmen instructed the cl t ~
IIUllUlger to l<J9lt inkl bette< enforcem<.,'
al the skate boml la1'1. ·
DREXEL'S FABULOUS ET CETERA
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!
REG.
$179
REG. SPECIAL
$299 $239
REG. Sl'ECIA(
$119 $129
Christm.s time • , , , . ..,;i ~om. is ~·tliel
parties 1rt, with everyone dreSsetl ·to· the
hilt. 0.... up your home to melch. What-a
--id of hot.day glamour this w....d°""
DNxel collection offers. S.. tliem tcHlay at·
these very special prices. For some very ,,,._
ciol fllrnitura, stop by today. " •
EXCLUSIVE J>EALlltS POI• HINIEDON-DRIXIL-HlllTAG.E
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ONifNllAT °"Lt
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IN1BIOU
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Da...,_ MS -Cwt Hwy, AYllla~ -fllDAY '1Lt•
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AMERICANS PAY RESPECTS TO FALLEN PRESIDENT AT ARLING'l'ON NATIONAL CEMETERY
Today Marks Fifth Annlverury af ~ohn F. Kennedy'• A11111IN1tion
Kennedys Gather at Grave
Family Joins Nation in Mourning Slain President
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Member! of
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy's
family, including children clutching
flowers, gathered in t.he early morning
chill today at his grave on the fifth
anniversary of his assassination.
Among the first to arrive was Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, the sole surviving
Kennedy brother, accompanied by four
children, presumably those of Sen.
Robe.rt F. Kemiedy whose remaJm lie
buried ~Jy feet away from his brother.
In another car Joan Kennedy,
Edward's wife, brough\:. two of their
children. And Mr15. Hugh Auchincloss,
mother of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis,
the late Pluident's widow, broughJ. a
sprig of flowers to lay on the stone
at Kennedy's grave.
Visitors. to the grave were expected
to totaJ m the thousands, trickling by
the Cape Cod marble memoria1 built
in 1967, the eternal flame and the floral
tributes.
Assessor Argues Against
Tax Raise £01~ Hospitals
President Johnson sent a wreath lJI
he has every Nov. 22 since 1963 when
Kennedy was gunned down in Dallas,
Tex. The red and white carnations and
blue corn flowers were brought to the
grave by Lt. Col. Hugh Robinson, a
White Hoose military aide.
As Robinson placed the wreath on
its stand, Ute military honor guard
saluted, removed their C¥P5 and stood
a few seconds silently with their heads By JACK _BROBACK
Of "" Dtil"' l"H•t Stat!
Unbelievine ears Thursday heard
Orange County Assessor Andrew J.
Hinshaw fight a&ainst a raise in tax
ass~ments sought by two convalescent
home owners. Hinshaw charged they
wanted to make him a party to getting
more Medi Cal and Medi Care benefits.
'Astonished county supervisors, tuned
to hearing Hinshaw fight against reduc·
Uona in assessments, refused the higher
valuationa, thus backing the assessor.
Denying charges of "milklng" M~
Cal funds were spokesmen for the 132-bed
Ideal Care Nursing Home, 12681 Haster
St., Garden Grove and the 160-bed
Brookhurst Convalescent HOllpital, 9861
W. 11th St. in county area.
Idea] Care is owned by K.H.t.K.
, American Legionnaire
Raps Student Demand
PALO ALTO (UPI) -State American
Legion Commander Bradley J. Stephenl5
today asked California's I 2 4 , O O o
Legionnaires to uae all their influence
against the student upheaval at San
Francisco Slate College.
"We refuse to accept the ass.inine,
disruptive, so-called 'demands ' of a
ridlculous minority who lie when iliey
claim to represent the voice and attitude
of 99'1S perCent of conscientious students
who 10 to college to learn, not to
destroy," he said in a statement.
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-IT ........
la JJew•I•• I
AcUel1 J--1, lonnorly
of NllW)IOlt llMcb, tmlflll
lrom Hollywood private fllnerll' , ?ar.J Tblll'IUy Iller •tvlcu
for her actor hu.ollud Rofer Bar~~ who die( Nov . .!& They
Enterprises and the Brookhurst facility
by · Hy·Lond Inc.. operators statewide
of u similar 00.pl!.ab.
Both firms frankly admitted they woWd
receive greater financial benefits· under
the Medi Cal program if their assessed
valuations were higher . Medi Cal alloca-
tions are based partilJ.lly on property
valuations.
Attorney ruchard Levin, representing
the ldeal Care firm said ht ~resented
the Implication that "this is a scheme
of some sort."
Jack L. Breiligam, chairman of Ry·
Lond said, "It is necessary because
we caMot break even , under a Medi-
Cal rate formula based on our cvrrent
assessment."
Levin contended Hinshaw'• $00'11820
cash value asses1ment of the Ideal Care
facility wa11 well under the purchaSe
price of $736,000. He went even further,
arguing for a $924,000 assessment u
shocked supervisor• ll&tened. BreiUgam
said the $835,360 assessment of the
Brookhurst Convalescent Hospital was
much too low. He suggested a $1 ,131,475
figure.
Supervisor William H. Hirstein said
be had been on the board 14 yean
and it was the first time he had heard
two firms f!ISking for higher a1Sessments.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen backed
Hinshaw's lower assessment saying, "We
could be accused of being a party to
a sort of scheme iii get more money
out of Medi-Cal.
If the unusual request of the con·
valescent hospitals had been granted,
$15,500 would have IJ:een added to county
tai:es paid by the firms.
Hinahaw said a statewide push is being
made by rest and convalescent homes
to increase property auessmentl so
more money will be allocated to them by 'the at.ale. ~ ·
bowed. ·
The wrtath bort a small white card
that said, "The PresidenL"
Elsewhen in America and throughout
th"' world, memorial servico were held
to say ·to the 3Mh President of \he
United States, "We have not forgotten."
Mn,, Ooaail ·planned to observe the
anniverprf quJeUy 4s 11he hu each
or lbe !lat four years. 1Re.r private
secretaey, N'ancy Tuckerman, said she
would att~ Mass in New Y;ork and
spend M<Mit Of the day itl seclusion.
As he left' the cemetery, Edward Ken-
nedy pau~ where newsmen were
waiting at the main gate and told them,
"We appreciate your undentandina; -
in letting us go up there."
Five little sprigs of flowers -white
roses , laveDder chrysanthemums and rtd
roses -were the family 's offering at
Kenl')edy's grave. At the back of the
grave wreaths were placed, brought by
others who remembered the day.
Abo among the early visitors was
Mrs. Evelyn LJ.ncoln. personal aecret.ary
to Presi~ent Kennedy.
There was, too, a group of girls from
Trinity College, a group of young people
from American University ,lod 189
youngsters from Rickards JU'lior High
School, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on a tour
of Washington. ·: .,
An' estimjioted 24 miWon people have
visited Kennedy 's grave aM ti;. ilame
that has burned with onlY .Ught In-
terruptions since tii1 burial three days
after his death.
Across the river ln the nation'! capital,
worshippers attend a noon Mau at st.
Matthews Cathedral, where the Requiem
Ma1.1 for Kennedy wu held.
Another memQrial Mass was , planned
in Georgeto\tn's Holy Trinity Church,
Kennedy '• home parish durin& hLs Senate
days.
'Keep the Money'
Victim of Purse Theft
W ant,s Pictures Back ·
"l:eep lhe money, what UUI• lhere
wa1. But Plea.It. pleaae &Ive me back mr picturea and documenta ...
Tbl wu lht •. plea' of'a dfstrAlll)ll"
cc.ta Mm widow 'nlunday u ahe
·-for the ~ ~all thal Ill< lalnfy bolle•• , wflt ..... com• -lhe
lonfl'<l-for • ..,,, lhat her stolen billfold
.... ---· Ironically, Mn. Alice bwna, II, ol sa Vld«ia St., lolt her pndoua:billfold
~.J.~ SU ft contained whlle oho Wll ...,.,. Dlltuiall for a· proJ«I wbldi
--111oi.i.W.1fewdollan
making airi.unu &IJta.
Mn: llilml put ber punt down wblle
• h. -~ fibril -.u... u&erlal ln a Garden Gtove ltcn and
f11d her 1>elat bllttold oo lop o1 Ii ,,or
• ftlOO'lenl."-' Another mqment.,r.ter, lbe
llld, i,\ .... gone.
.
lhe'U' get by, she bravely cfahm, if
1he could only get lia<:k conleni. o1
that blll/qld that are u,.i.._ lo the
tllle! IKlt llt-... t fenUm• -lo Mn. lleamJ.
The billfont Itself wu a ~"i· 111t
from l'ah'Vl<w State Hoopltil. Colla
M e-t 1, where Mrs. Beams workeel •
a food ten1tlt operator for nine )'tart . ru hu/'l' farced her reUren>ait fl'om
the .... fadllty. '
Doi In llial bfflfold, Mn. Bwm rec:au.
ed, W(N. • 1"cture ol her huJ!>and>Geor1t,
wllO Clleif II y-.... ·~ ..... laUn
durlnc-courl1bip ..... tlliii ~ *"" ago,'' • llkl, "And l don 'l have anotblt~
plctore of bD." . Olll<I' !1111 ' -.,,;..... ,_.,~ •
wollan mtdl<al emf ,;'bkb ~Mn.
lleaml lo -ive llOltmenl for ulcor
an<I arthrltle condJlionl; her drlM'I
Uetooe '1"1'1c8hel1 on crecllldrd. ~··~111 grldly Mttle for .t)lol4;1 ahe '1tldi
•
Marilles •
Trap 1,000
.In Attack
. SAIGON (\Jfl), -U.S. Marina In
their lugeat helicopter usault of tl!e
war Dew into tht "Dodge City" ..,.
IS riillei aouth of Da Nang and trapped
an ea:Umaled 1,000 Communlsts ln a
labyrinth of caves and bunk err. , HeaVY,
fighUng WAI reported tonight.
Corr-.ni. from De N111g reported
that t.bt operation began Wednuday
when a force of 7,000 Marinea and South
Vietnamese hit the Communilt hideout
lo< the first time lince the c.mmun111a
dug: them ZO years ago.
The action '!larked a oew up1Ur1e
" filhtlnc In the northern provlllcel
ol South Vietnam. A military spok,.....
said today 0.S. artll)ery lhelled the ' northern baH ol the deml.tarhod """"
Thursday tor the first time since Prai·
dent Johnson called off all bombardment·
of the Communi!t nation. ·
The reports aald the Marlnet1 had killed
90 of the enemy, believed part ot a
buildup for another attack oo Dti Nang,
and that they had killed more than
90 of the.m In the aweep in -which the
Marlnea: and government · infantrymen
were fighUn1 almost shoulder t o
lhoulder.
The area held thousand!! ·o1 civilians,
most ol them under Viet Cong control,
and the Marines announced they had
passed more than 2,200 of them through
the massive ·military cordon thrown
around the area. 1be civiliam were
warned by leaflets to leave. ~
A Marine spokesman estimated the
Communi!U could hold out up to four
days In their concrete bunkers, spider
holes and lUMela which honeycomb the
area and "this Ume we are 1oing to
outwalt them. All the indications are
that we are 1oin1 to get a payoU this
time."
The spokesman said the ~arlnes U3ed
71 helicopters In the assault, the biggest
they have made by air.
Two salvos from US. guns Thursday
s.ilenced two antiaircraft machine guns
that opened fire first on U.S. spotter
,Planes from· the northern half of Viet-
nam's border.
DAILY Ol~OT
•
~"'!led l\i,r. Ch~rl~s A, Lindbergh·and·bis writer wile, .\nne; w~
honqred 1bur¢~y in.New York with gold medals for "distma\11~
service tO ·~umanity." Famed couple.were given awards by .Natimr· ·
al IMblute o( SocUil Sciences. . . . . ,
FriemhHokling Soire.e .. ::·
. . .
:• f
For Car :Crash Victim ·
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A party Is ec~edule<!-S~day at .a
posh Netlport ·Beach resteurant · as
friends raff>e money:. for tile '.30-CallOO
"Patty's Driving School ·Benefit."
-Harbor Area residents' are invited to
drop by Feliciano's, formerly the
Versailles restaurant, 1611 Westcliff
Drive from 2 to a p.m., to have a
drink or two and beard 1ood sounds
by excellent entertainers.
"l think they're being great abou\
thia," say a Chef's Inn boltess Chrb
Mendoia, nottni the, r e s t a U r a n t ,
nonn1lly closed on Sundays, ls. making
Its premises open for the fete.
$500,000
SALE OF
Funds._ will so to help d e f r·a y
·bospttallzati_on CO!tB for Mn. P~ty
·Gerard, 15432 · Cromwell Dr.lve, Tustin,
• who . WU criUca11y . wuie«i Hallowfta
. niiht in a Niwport eeAch car~ '.
The victipt wu only r~ Rnt
·home from llbag Memorial !IQ&jjltaf after
·have a' piece of nual cart.Uaa:e driven
into her brain cavity in the bl'ick-Wall
collision, according to frieocfs ..
Mrs'. Gerard, who helped support her
six yaungst.en u a cocktail waltreu
·at the Chef's Inn In Cor-ana del Mar
now: facel .some aeriowJ blla.
Le French Beau Monde Jewels
The Original 1969 Look '
in Parisien ne Jewelry
FE~TURING THE FAMOUS
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.66.60 cts.
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November "'22 '& 23 ',. J
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FINE JE.WELS
32 FASHION IS~D e NEWPGllT .BEACH ,
PRIVATE SHOW!~ NOVfMIER 21 1Y
INVITATION ONLY, e 644-2040 .. '
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ha4 beta• marr!M ·~montha.
t ~
'n11t 01110ftty, UW! llld,' WU aO 8he
hod 10 U.. Oii andl Dec. I """' 1101" nest Soci.11 &!curlty dleck ~ duo. Jut "R'lrtah tbll~ !IOM ..,, a1Wty1'l'e(lllc0 l'..l===== the money." ••
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' 'Jack Enjoyed
• Presidency'
' NEW YORK (UPI) -"Jldt enjoyed belni prosldent," llhe sald with a IOft,
lad smile, a mother lllklna about !>er ...
• "'You read about some preslderita
· thinking Jt'a loaely life. ~ about
_, ·-• .. \t. the disadvantages," Mn. ROI!! Kennedy
AJnasa will bo•-"it;Ho!Y;:rzia. .uid. ity .Church In DJlllis ~ tpr~fll• { ·"'But I tblnk he really rev~ In tho
late' P-lclW ·.u.twi1'°'"1C_..ty, _)ll1portunily it pve him to mab history .. ~-L ·u • .i-. ·ind to meet people -are maklni hls-l'he Va.., 1!4V • .,.car • n,.-'' -tory and to bi able to aecompllsb thlnp."
former prlelt'"at H"\Y ~,-.,i-·She was talking about her .......i 80t1,
ministered ltie Iaff' !i(eo 1" di~ .John Fi\Jjlerald K<nnedy, 35lb president
President, At '.'P.affiaDd 11!"1!1~ ~ the Unlkd Slates. ·
Hospital. , K0mtl<!Y was ~ -tiv.t " 'And Ille tall;ed tod>Y on Ibo !11th
years ago"tooay 8s he i-odf ~ · annlv~ ot lib death by an assassin's
Dealey Pl&za in a. motorcaAe•,., A bullet m·diiWntown Oalls, Nov. ZZ, 1983.
$100,000 memorial to,. him,. to · JM But the mother _of a murdered prest-
iocated i""'l'tbiock• from the P,\Ua; 1 .dent aod an usasamated senator, Robert
bed ..• ~.;. _ _,~ ,_ ~~. F. Kennedy, rel1u<d to mourn. ts sc w.wi.1.ur-'-'Uli!J'lniOD .i..u' ~ "I .have cltildren, grandch!Idren, and
Jber of 191m. I refuae to be daunted," Mn. Kennedy
. . • said in an Interview laped Jor NBC.TV'• ' · · ' ••roctay'' show
Detectives in Las Y,-e.gas, N~., "I have a ~ which I found In
s.ot ready for a murde'r investiga· ••• one of Jack's favorite boot 1: "I
t1oq on Monday when en 11-year· know nOt age t1t wearineas or defeat.'
aid boy reported he foW)d. part of &nd I adopted that. u my own motto.
a human foot in the desert. Homi· I think it's wonderful."
cide detecUve:s uncovered not only Pre.ident Kennedy'• widow, now the
a foot, but a hand and law a body wile ol Greek shipping tycoon Ariltolle
of a ~pound gokH.a. Detectives Ona.sail, spent today "quietly at home"
.ue puzzled. No one bu reported a with her two children, C.:oline, IO, ~nd
missing gorilla. John Jr., 8. Home_ ill their plwh Fifth
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Avea\JO-~\Juslplf.Centralfark.
Tho National Communicable m ..
tase Center in Atlanta, Ga. say11
whooping cough has been steadily
declining in tlle Umted states for
lhe past 24 years. The downward
trend was brok~ by increases in
lhe 1940s and 1960s, says the NCDC,
hut these were only temporary.
•
In St: Louis, Mo., J~s W.
Symington, dtmocratic congres.s-
man elect, had some word of
praise for Sen. Everett Dirksen,
Senate Minority Leader. Syming·
ton told a dinner audience he
was thankful to Dirksen "for
• making the world safe for folk
f singers."
• A 115-year-old Engelmann spruce
from Utah is on its way to the
capital for duty as the nation's
Christmas tree. The sp ruce will be
placed on the Ellipse between the
W h i t e House and Washington
Monument. The tree is to arrive
Nov. 26 or 27. A Forest Service
spokesman said the tree would be
worth about $t,4.20 as timber, but
its value astt(e national Christmas
tree, including labor and transpor· ·
tation, it about '3,000,
•
~ J~· °-'!"'ii probably will
g~-~~h sometime dUring the day,
au..,.wig ·lo ~ former' first lady's
secretary, Nancy Tuckerman. She saJd
John Jr. and Caroline-were upected
to go to acbool as uauaL
Mr s. Roe Kennedy said ' Pastdenr
1K en n e d y had planoed1 to ~ the
years after"-1eaYing the> Whft.lf House
encouraging the world's youth to enter
public service .
"He thought }te'd spend his declining
years in B o s ·t·o n ·in the . libr~ en-
couraging youn' ~pie tO come and
work for the.. government and With the
government from all over the world,"
she said.
Mrs. Kennedy, who has but one living
son -Sen Edward M. Kennedy, (D-
M3SI.) ui.d it ii possible he may run
for president someday.
Cleaver Expects
Return to Jail
SAN 1FRANCISCO (AP) -Black
Panther Eldridge Cleaver aays he tx·
peels to return to prison. '
He told a gathering of some 500 a\
California HaU Thursday nlgbt: "My
parole officer told me today that I
should telephone him· next Wednesday
so he -·can \ell me where tq,_.meet him
for the trip to San Quent.in."
The crowd donated m9re than $1,000
to Ure lntemaf:jonal Comm.ittee to Defend'
Eldrid&e Cit.aver ..
.... ' ' .
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In uve It. Ko bu called Ibo !ram:
.all.ji as 1 rock and aa.ld devahllltion woUlci" be lft j'1b&utdity."
F-'1 financial men said Ibey l!<li~v·
ed. the P nilluon loan by the world'•
10 rlcbilt atlolll and lt!O million In
cr.,ilt 1mn ~ternauoaai -wr fund . WU . not enOugb -France . WU
too . hard Iii! by tho ,student ' and la1>9r =..i ol iQr '!P'inf and the '""'1iai>t
Jnnailon """"1it by h!<,reased· _.,.,..
and prices. • ' I : _', ~ ' '
Britain ,,,,,.,....,... beaYJ ..... tu•
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Good News-TWice
Medal of Honor winner Dwight H. Johnson, his hear tlle good news after receiving the Medal o!
mod:ler, Mra. Joyce Alves, and his brother, D.ave, Honor at a White House ceremony. His father. Bren-
admire the awal;d. aftef lel.J1ling Thuraday that ton Alves, a native of Jamaica who now lives in
Joh1J.Oon'1 d~ s~etwill !>e-all<>Wed ·to?e-England, was OI.!ered out <1l the coontry 12 yeal'll
)ufll to this C?JllllfY· Joh\l~retUlfl"!\.to.Detroit.to ago because he entered illegally.
1 .... "'"".-,,~~~~~~~-.~--,~,-,,::--==========
Hanoi.Makes New
_,; "' ~ ' can to noo-pen-""·
Ta1ks in Paris
PARIS (~Pl) -North Vietnam..ealled
on Washington today to open immediate
peace talka In Paris while· keeping a
seat ready at the conference table for
Saigon.
The new proposal for direct peace
talks with the Amercans and without
Saigon waS made at a specially called
news conference by Nguyen Thanh Le,
chief spokesman for Hanoi delegation
leader Xuan Thuy.
Le linked the new call for tripartite
talk! to include Hanoi, Washington and
the Viet Cong with accusations that
the United States was guilty of a
"serious" violation of the demilitarized
zone ( DMAZ) ln Vietnam.
For the first time in many months
lhe Hanoi official accused ·the U.S.
military command of escalating its
operalioos to neighboring Cambodia and
Laos.
He '8fd, "\Ve fully support C~botija'.•
prol.¢ al:,,U.st. the. vil>latio~ of lb fl'on;, t!efa ~ bierfca{i tr~.:ll -J i;' .
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Dunlap's s Year
Picture tube
Warranty
fPair. Gj e
Blast Ki11s· 11
In Jerusalem
JER\Jsiu:M (AP) ~ A mainmoth
charge of ei:posives packed lnalde a
parked car blasted a croWded marte.t
place In the Jewish sector of the Holy
City today, killing 11 persons and woun-
ding SS.
Within secOndJ, the macl<et, jammed
with Jewish shopper• stocking up for
the Sabbath weekend, was a scene of
terror and chaos as hundreds: fled la
panic.
It was the want aabota&e .incldent
In the 20 years of the Jewish state's
existence.
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.Me~tftigf
'91:1DAV ' • Hlllltliwton ._.. l• CW9it .._,.,.. -..m 11'111. Huntlnthlll 9Mdt. QIO
·~· H•rbol-A,_ To.dnlalW'1 Cl!Ao 1"'4. ,._. v..-Countrv Ck*. co.t. MIN,''·"" U.S. N1,,.1 SM ~ COrJe. n.s 81rr1nca RoM, ...... AM.. 7 P.IWI
H-1 HM'bor JuftJor CNmlW af c-c., V•,..lllef , .aentunnt ....
1'17 Wetkllff Drlvt, """"°" IMcfl,
7:1D "·"'· 0.-aflll! COUnfY CN!lllt Onion l.91-a.ddltbldl IM. S.11tt~ AM, 1;Jt
P.tn. MetonlC Llldlte• 10011 H I 11 , W•tmlll:lftt' A-•I Otlw -Str"9t, w .. tmrrmw. 7:30'11.m. Ore-Con! Rtwal Ard! M.t-
SMl11'11'1f MllC!llc: T-11, 1AOI 11th sr .• Nritport htch, 7:JD .......
H11nt1111ton 8MCh JUftlol' Cl'lamblr of Col'nmtl'«e, SllM'llon 8"41 IM.
Hunt1111tlln 8"dl. t "·"" N..norf' Harbor Elkl clb. Elb LOO.•. lA56 Vl1 ()porta. Nt'#POrt hfdl, . "·'"· Amll'lcal'I Ullll'I l"olt ~ AINl'iall
L"l«I Hau. SU w. 11111 St •• COii!• Miu,."·""· ' Sia. SLmori '11d J.. M9n't C\ltl,
t"trlsl'I Han, a:i1 lOltl st .• HuntltWllllA &Md! •• p.m. ~
-.. Be~ver Sufnnµrine ' :ir1111e C0Uftf)I Cndlt UJ'lloft l.lffUe, ~11ti.c1c IM, • .sant• ~ T:)ll Emerging: from the Beaver · subm&rine workboat,
livlltlns~ =•0:;,,,. c 1u11, . two North American Rodfwe]J. Q.ivers fi.niih up
SMr110n letd\ '""' H""""'"°" ~jdockside" tests conducted Thursday at the COll)-IMd'I, 12:16 "·'"·· -'Mrlntr'•. Lions c;1uto 1111 N"""°" P81'Y'• sonar pool in Anaheim. The test.a mark the He11itt., SM't Shirt, 2U1 W. Collt .. ....t f .. .-..1 .1.1.. .. ,'h.... Hl•'""•Y· N9WPOtf 1-=ti. 12:1s p.m. first--tinle divers. have left, ~ re:-en,.._~ ~e 'PW¥"" Divot-ces marine through t1ie 1ockout system. s.a trials ii!
DIVOltC11$ l'ILID deep~ environment will begin· later Ulla year
8•btttll ,.,.rln F•rrtrl .... Alblrt l"•ul oft Catalina :Island. ·
Fttrtrl . --~ .... -------,----------JI E11M 11: .. l'tr1111111n "' 1tor111lll c .. n l FttllUMn .
DI•,.. Key Chtlorllr vs ll:tctwrd live. ClwllaMr :Y,lrlM A, a.mtonl YI ll:ldltrd A .......
/toll P. Dr1btdt Ill John Jt""" Drtbtd: lo~ Dahan Ila ODr\t.ld H. Dot.on
Nomi.In Dautftt(ty vs Wtnd•I .. DDusllMliliv -• ' ' Doi/tr hndo\ph vs.MVtlla P. llendolpti
Ellt G. F. J-vs Bot!IJlt L. J-Ctf'tll MM ll:•ldltrd 11:1 11.11111'1 Lt
ll:th;h•rd
Judge Won't Drop
' ·Conspiracy, Tlreft
sr~er Alll'I ltker 111 G-.. ll:cw SANTA ANA -Superior Valley and Charles-R. Blllinp,
L•wmw:• e. Bunch 111 Thttmt !. Court Judge Robert Gardner .0, cf 12501 ChrlJty Lane, l'°8
''""' of .. .... Low.11 Nut1 ,,.. c1ro111111t ~u11 _ _. re.fµsed :'fhursday to, diSIDlss Aiamitoe w~e two, "'f9 ... .
Je1n11ent G. Thrw:t YS l~ni .ff.. Ctul.nifacy and grand : theft defend~ls nam~ lri. • teeent : Threet ~ . ~-r -...
N-• L .. W•1t011 "' Wtllhtm Mtro1c1 charges against two Orange Grand Jury lildictmenl ' ..
W•llon ' ' . ' I .... ~· .... Coast men accuSect o me.llLU.'6 · Billings was Ol1' pf. l;be fbur
"
Fire Call#· false representauoi)s m setting defendants ,.11o appeared, in.
......... ...o . :e:::d fo~da~ons to ~W~~~1'.aa.,ooe .~ ~. ·_ ..
':ft. 'f:i. ~~:·/~'·"'1 .~""'' Gustave. Galas, 39, Of 1119 .JUdge Gardntr ordered the ''2i:.:" ~ ~1~r ·~ • 4a ~ ~e. i'ountain tssue .. .of -bench,· warrant. ·fM. "I ·-· v...... Balas and hll . ·-,,.,; ' 7:S t.l'n. '1llu..._., ~ 171!1 kt lbaenteea but will delay tlieif ' l=~·~~ ~~~. ·~ ·,ai~'.1 · H. · ( ·St · enfmcement ,Jor aa -tnaefinite
.... """"-IMC:lt ' . oop ar period~ u:o:i 1t.m. Tllur»lr, tu ie.ii. '" It ls aU-ed tJ\.at· the defeno CNSISI. ~ '"'& h ,.
12:11' 11.m., .mlelur!·flrw.177lt .totntw 1 T Q _.. dants worked th r o u C ,,~r1~m., -i1u1 •1d • ..,. A1111r.ae o ~rve American! Building Constitu·
,,29 P.m., WAll)down, adtnMr enc1 tionallj', a DOOprt>flt trust with
s ~:im~;,. ~ flf1. ·1 '~·O· ,.Days. hea~quarte_r1 ur Blrrlngt,on, Ale-uln ' , • • • 1 Ill •. •The trust,: the-a~y · · ,~ .. ~ ..... -al .. ·comp1-t..4o «lflteil ,, .' ' 1 Of f .1'1. Th\lrw-11'. ra.cut, tlN Ml!l(lt r !.. · • • •• ·i'!?~. r?.' JOfJH ' t ~· '< ,.
121ta .•."':.. ~,.. n :i-~ Collen '--•ketban atr.r ~ed ~ Orante ;Qt..ll·pt.,,, ... , · ~--·-··'>«,>••" 9'"' -.., .. ..'...I.IA ..... a flO 'cM v ~.-_, ''!l.!"-T~.~,.•Jf"'· l'f! •IMI 11ntt Joaeph Ware dre'f a s<klll'~ ~-r;;i;~~ · r ,
1:ii ... ~~ ""'' 1m "'-' jail ·~ in Supertor Court "vis"·~·~· ·. ••r'!•'!:"J;._.~ ,.
0r1.... • Th•--'..... after · he -admitted ·· J:ts e.m. Frilllr, ltllbtlc tultt, tt7I ... -,, b
a1m1r11 l'llC9 violating. prob a tl on y
soucittng. Salvation DEATH 'NOTICES
BELLBRO~WAY
MORTUARY
111 Broidw•r. cw ·M ... ·
'LI~··
DR.DAY llllOTllEd.
• ~ Villei '
.Mortowy
1'11118-11 Blvd.
Runllq1oo_.
90-7771
•
l!ZITCtil'F MOllTIJARY
., .. 17111 81., ~ -....
Judge WiQiam S p e I r 1
ordered the Cal S t a t e
Fullerton athlete tD return tD Army Ask$
court Nov. 27 for definite com-
mlbnenl The jurist «dered '
th• delay tD enable ware, 21, I Donations .
tD reglater for the' aprlng 1
sem.eita' on · w PuUerton · campus ·and tD check on the S~A ANA '-'lbe ·jNJ>
-1blllly of Ware's oerving ~ !I nearly ban et !la!••·
hill sente~ in a work tiOn ~ bea"4u~·bete,
furlough program. . · Brtgadler Jolin Alleil· lo4ly .
•• t l&lued ,an ..urgent 1•Ppeal for
doruited. materlala Jo keep hll
·smaU armY of 100 mm. busy
at Sal,Vatloo Aim'y workshops. Payments
Corning In
SANTA ANA -With the
Oecember 10 deadline for par-
ment of the first half of the
1988-69 property t ax ap-
proaching, County Tu; Cotlec·
tor Don S. Moze!y report<d
remittances of f I r 1 t in-
stallment& "better than last
"We need hundreds of cut-
offs from Orange Cowlty
donors . who want to help ~
c0ntlri\Je oor rebal>llltatinn
p~am," aald the Brfpdlat.
llcinMed materlala Will he
repaired, p a I n t e d and
otherwise prepared for Ille
a the Salvadon ,4.rmy'• Red
Sliield Thrift Stom. Pn>coedl
from the sale of· refurbllhed
goods support the orqnlu.·
tioo's aervice center for ............ year." .-...,, Total payments this week men seeking rehabUitation as
reacbed $15.8 million. At this alcoholics, or who are tern·
time lut year only $12.1 porarily without homa and
million had been collected. j~nated arttcl!s will he
Mosley e-.cpects that almost picked up by Salvation Army
onH!alf of the fitcal year's Red Shield truckl .. For Jn.
total chp.rge of m4.i mllllon formation, call 541.(1831.
will he·tn the coffers by Dec.---------11. Late payn•mta will 6e
assessed g percent' penalties.
'!be county bu 3S8,m pro-
perty taxpayers.
,,
I
Give the United Way
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'Dol!vtry· allll nOrfn.I lntiallallon: Somo
modelt avtllablo In Avocado and ~,..
tone.
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eaey. Jns'lallatlon. Big capacity llnt tra" ••• All the lflltll!M l.
• , •,. ~ti¢esa~ lo..!Jlve year roun~ ,drylf111 c0pvenient1yr • ~', ·:,
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lirln\lu ., tumblod Oil wllfl. "'"!~ -.litd lltot» Whtn you 1tltet the ·. Ptrm•nt . ~ cycle, Offtt . .111rts only after M!plf'lte tttrt ~Ii pimMid, SW,S
--"llY wllen iloM ~·.,.nid, ~---''""' 1111111111 utection af dl}'illf HIM Ult tit 140 1ri111tn.
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•• f~V PILOT
LEGAh NOTICI
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DAILY PILOT ~
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. -·-· ..,._ ~ -.... ... , --.-..
, • lit ilAJLY. P,u"' rrlQy,. -.,,.., 22, )M '! -~~~~~ ..... ~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
. .
-f amim.a Pluphouse Prod!r4!tio1a
. ~ ... - -.
~-. ' .... :-: ,.'f :.. 'l·· ...... ~Lion iri Winter ~ Superb Drama
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......
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n1ght wlth an out!landlng pro-
duction ol Jama Goldman'•
"The Lion in Winter" at ~
l.ofUM Playbouse.
SUperb on all counts,
brillianUy directed with a blue
ribbon call, thls 12th century
drama tinged with biting com·
ody stands clearly as the
year's most impressive of.
ferlng and -along with "A
Man for All SeasoM" and
"Slow Dance on the Kiiling
Ground" -amoog the finest
Laguna playa in r e c e n t
history.
Borrowing from historical -l
events surrounding the strug-•
1lrongest perfonnance once
he conqu<rs a diaturblng rig·
idity. Ken Kornweibel-wbo
also destJ<ned the jmposi"' set and flne costumes-ls el·
cellent as the youngest, a
simpering and pooling teen-ager, while Robert Wallace
coma thrOugb very effeclive--
ly as the !ldtemll>g )1llddle
spn favored by neither par· ent.
CONVINCING
OillLY PILOT If.it,..._
gle for succession to the
throne of King Henry II,
author Goldman has injected
''T!i• LION IN WINT•A" A •l•'r bl' J.,.,... GolcltnMI, dlr9C:ltlcl bv
Jalwl l'l'n1cu, Mf 1Jld co.rume o. .i.n IW ken Kornwtlbtl. Mdlnkll dj·
l"llClot P1ul Tott. Pfesetlltlcl Wed.....,.,.•
"""-" s.rurc11v• C•~aopt TlwlnU.1~·
lnl) untll Dec. 1 II tlllt Ytuni PllY•
.. '*-· 31t ci:; =~ Lii-9tedl.
Kint HMrY II ...... ••ll>h ltlchmofld ~ EIMrmr •.•. /MrtMU• R111d1ll
ltldwinf •..... , ••••.... Mldl•I )urtal GeotrfW ...•.••••••.•• llalltrt Wtlllet Jotv. •.•••••••••••••••. I(.., K_ll ...
AlllS ·····•···••·••·•····· TOlll Hldlli l"hll• ......•.•••••...... f'IUI Wiiton
his characters with passionate
lnsedsitivity as they plot and
counterplot for the upper
hand. The lust £or power
surges through the veins of
each, exposing his or her
Achilles heel In a compelling
game of theatrical chess.
Hot Time in Town
John Ferzacca, who directed
"Slow Dance" an d the ex:-
cellent "Subject Was Roses"
before it, has staged his finest
production. His direction la
virtually fa u ltless,
manipulating his characters
into strong and weak poglUons
depending on their siluaUon,
always with a clear seMe of
dramatic, yet untheatrical, ef·
feet.
Sultry Diana Walke charms Tom Ant!lony (left)
a:nd ~t~v~ Nisbet in a scene from "The Gol den
Apple," giving its final performances tonight and
Saturday at the UC Irvine Studio Theat er. PREMISE SET
a. : TEMPLE SHARON . .
Thi eon••rv1tiv• 1yn1909111 for th•
•ntir1 Ht tbo' Ar••
. 61 7 WW H•Mlttff. C.... ,.._
The play'a premise is quick·
ly and clearly established as
Dad, Son Team
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Alt J9WHll •-•lln ar1 llivlflld h ltolll U1 Ill' trvly rn•ftlftlflll
IUiATJ't iYININ• SllVICIS ,llDAT .t 1:11 P.M.
John Carradine and his son,
David, will appear to"gether
professionally for the first
lime in "The Good Guys and
the Bad Guys" starring
Robert Mitchum and George
. '
Ellle\' 1111 llne 1ln9'fl9 at Ille TlmCll• Shtrcn Cl'lolr
911111 lhl w.rm hllowshl• ol our Ol'le'9 ~htbll
..... , ...... " .... lhl!Mul k'-1 -1111111 TvttHY. OdMtr u
Cal: '46-SSSZ w 541·14JZ
. Kennedy.
.iOUD·STATE CONSOLE STEREO
Futwring .o.kNc.e FMJ.AM/St•NO FM Radio C\~ ,.,__;fi't:;,.!J
•
t he llttftn•t• In ~t.r.ce F..-tur• ~
• Adv1nctd kl~'llled Cil"cuilry in S\MeO FM Aedio \
• 10·Pu1hbu11on Studio Control Pinal
• l•pe lnpu1/0utpo1 •~ S1ereo Hffdphone Jedts
• P10¥i1ion '°' Oprionl'I E1nension Speeltera
•• , ..
The MOLINA • Model UN
MIJMllC 1Ndi1en1,_..n Ry!MI Clbon.t '" ~
0... Oft --~ Nlecl Nfdwood llOfids, or P'ICltn
..... ~ MIKt h .. dwood ~bod! with kd; of
Me dmflSling. tnl-light, l9COf"d llOol9I ......
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••m••r
Henry greets his quarreling
family jokingly with "Well,
what shall we hang, the holly
or each other?" This sin1le
line sets the stage for lbe
mediation with his disc1trded
wife, imprisoned through all
but the holiday eeaaon, his
bloodless sons who all despise
him, his young mistress and
her brother, the king of
France whose father was once
cuckolded by Henry.
As the bellowing, SO.year-
old lion that is King Henry,
Ralph Richmond delivers a
most powerful, yet sensitive,
performance, ln every way
consls~ent with his regal ro le.
He is a commanding figure,
uncompromising at every turn
until compromised into the
ultimate decisioo-whether to
kill hi.s SOM or release them
that they may someday re·
turn to do htm in.
Marthella Randall as the
captive queen Eleanor is a
remarkable contrast, match·
ing Henry on his own ~rounds
in the arena of invective, yet
succum bing to the tender,
protective emotions of a wife
and mother. Miss Rw.idall
brinp to her role a dramatic
presence and affinity for char·
acter rarely glimpsed on a
community stage.
Of the lhree sans, Michael
Sulton a.s the eldest has the
potential of conveying the
Tonl Hachez as the French
princea:a w h 0 purportedly
loves Henry as a m&t more
than as a king is strong and
convincing, Darlicularly as
she presents ber own u!Uma·
tum. The young but shrewd
king, bitterly jea1Cll1S of the
English s vereign, is excep..
tionally well played by Paul
Wilson.
The play reaches its height
in the Virginia Woolfis.b
scenes betw~ Richmond
and Miss Randall who strike
sparks on each other with
ominous venom laced with
comic subtlety. "Did you
ever love me'?" she asks ;
"No," he replies ; ''Good,"
she counters, "that will make
this pleasanter."
Sta~ed in a regal manner
befitting its setting in history,
"Lion" throbs with the lnten·
sity of monarchs playing ooe
upman!hip with the fate of
two countries. Completing the
overall e:icellence is stirring
background music judicially
employed.
This highlight of the coon·
ty's little theater season will
be staged through Dec. 7,
g o i n g dark Thanksgiving
night, al the Laguna Play·
house, 319 Ocean Ave., La·
guna Beach.
Hitch Returns
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
Alfred hitchcock has returned
to the film wars with "Tc>
paz," Leon Uris' novel, with a
cast of new faces.
A Real Snapper
'Mousetrap' in 17th Y ear
LONOON (AP) -Agatha
Ch rl st le ' 1 play "The
Mousetrap" starts its 17th
year Monday.
More than 2Y, million tickets
have been sold since the
murder mystery opened Nov.
25, 1%2, when Harry S.
Truman was president and
Winston Churchill was prime
minister. • The cast has changed many
times ; 112 actors and ac·
tresses have played in the
eight roles.
The biggest mystery about
the play is what keeps it so
popular?
Theater manager P e t e r
Saunders 11ys Miss Christie
has written 17 other plays
and "The Mousetrap" is not
the best one, but it is now
fixed firmly on Lcndon's list
of toorl!t attractions.
"Business is still very good
and we have absolutely no
intention of taking it off the
slate," a spokesman said.
The Ambassadors Theater
declines to reveal e x a e t
figures but 11 has taken ln
well over $..'! million on tbe
play. This hasn't made a pen·
ny for Miss Christie, the 77·
year-old wife of B r i s i t h
archeologist Max Malloran.
She ga've all rights in lhe
play to her grandson Matthew
Pritchard, then 12 years old .
Pritchard is now a wealthy
man:
Movie rights were sold 12
years ago but it can't be film·
eel until six months after it
1
goes off the stage .
The lines have been rewrit·
ten to keep up with the times.
In 1952 the characters chatted
about food rationing, which
has long since e n d e d .
Costumes have chensed to
keep pace with fashion .
All the furniture on stage,
except for a chair &nd a clock,
has been worn out and re·
placed twice. ----
UfltoOKOISTllUYCO_Cl•• .• OHIO IUll9f:DllllSIEY80".6Sl"1J••Eun.i.sP1~TS !3 99 t/5 t.
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2300 H,..r:,:ir Blv~. • Ccrsta Mt1a
fhon• 54.0-71,1
HOURI : WHkdoyi 9 1.m. to f p.m. S.tvrd.., t ..,.,, to ' p.m.
I
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·1 ' . . ~ !
'' •
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Reporter
'Rents' SRO
Radio Bqotk
All Money in Trouble
Without 'World Reform . . ' . T,, •' .... •
BAstL; . ..SwitzerW (UPI) ... sodle currencies are s(ronger
-International banken are than others on tbe basis of
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. convinced the French franc, , current exchange rates, there
(AP) Newsman Bob the British PoUDd a!ld maybe will be continued wild specu· the American dollar will con-lation in money llllll'kets. Krauser'• radio JrQadcullllg · um.;· to lie Iii ·b'ooble untu ·The bai1keis say curing the
atudlo has standing room only w or 1 d currency exchange rnooey Ills ls out ti tbe1r ~ far ~ j>erlQD at~ time. rates are brought up to date. hand!. Thef llY Jt Cl!1 now
KrlUSeJ', a reparter for The Jut time ezchange only be done by government
MJami'I• WIOl>r-WU · Jllacued . nta We~ established ft'.lt' all leaders. The bankers aay tt
by buly lignala, long linell currencies was July, 1944, in will take a great deal of \:Ht· and no ~Jwhm J:t1 ~anted Bi:e«ort WoOds, NJt •. when za teal courage. For some eahd·
to telephcipe WJl!\:11ews fnlD natj1'ns got together to en: will have tO lower t e
Broward Comal,'a iColirtboiiit. stralibten out lhetr money .in value of their money, mean-
So Krauser 11<11liat,.i !Pe. the fading mootha ol World Ing money will buy I.., In
15 monthjy ...W o1 a phone Wir 11. · for.ign trade.
booth from • tlie Tdepbon< Since !hon' drutlc changes The world bankerr said c.m~•f. rn. ai,Mn from have taken place. Defeated . .ho~er putting a realistic
r-"' Welt Glnnari): and Jipan value oo • naUon's money is WJOD wtred qi. booth with ban became rich. &.r\e ol the only way &o 1top the sptc·
a n;Ucrgpbone, $111fttrol panel, t&e vict<n, -.icb as Britain, ulatiao that bum almost
JlgbU., and •. 0 clock ~ -become ~omlcally eveupne. ~·;IBCOOd ~ to ti.mil wMRJ:: ;=?!-·~ ,.. '. •"'-Ncn'CtlRBWO~ hll ,,..,.I --.reports.,<_ '!'lie ~-bmlght lloa. Tiley say-that tempcrary upAU:':,d·~A.lr'~ao'!f: ble to ~e weak. CrOOJllJroand help"for the franc and the
away the 'ninfanned· and ~a~°! slip~ ~ pound will not cure the eo>o
uwu ,,;uu.uw.cs have nomlc woes of France and-curioua while Krauser ii Wied to bolster the Brit.I.sh Britain. Tb.me nations simply
broadcasting. , 1IOllDd and the French franc buy too much and sell too
"I've been lllll!ni Iola of. io'tlmes ol.crilll. little In loreill!l trade. Accord-
decoraUng ideu from . the ONLY TEMPORARY ins: to the baltkets, even tem-
ladles," Krauaer · ~ ... I ~t. say the world bankm, ~ary' Credits hnd supports
already have wall-to-wall ~are only temporary·ao-WUl'stl,Il leave the !ranc md
carpetlng, but I OiIDk tba, wlloias. · the pound·'""' and subject
1ludlo doe1 need <hpes ~y say tliet 10 lt'l1I 81 to speculatlqn. .
----------'----''""""---'-------'·-Speculaton will sWI dwe
Crossword PUZ'lle
ACROSS u~·ror·
•""1 1 ..... pt . 43 Dl..W.,.
5 Hldt.,,.,. dNfflaftr 'r:i: ~ 44 ~·=~'~· Uvtts_, 4' Alrsltlp 14 auMter stttfon ""'4uct 47 Tra..
U T•o or dwtt 4t le11Jc11 , ..... fut •1shff
WOldS.. S1 Ardlld fllndlf 16 FNndi• of J vesstl
111t1'1 n••• '5 U11UI now: 17 Gkl 2 words 11 Hocktr'• 57 Caust lltlta to slope lt MOff · 58 Island of 7 ltallan: Abbr. 35 bry and -
furllvely Scotland a Dtlaylng mon.otono~ 20 Frtnch 60 ChKt sound action 36 .Assuaging po11t•t,IYI 61 A\1111 oat/on: t Erpotttr's patn
21 Cold d sh C1111b.fDf11 businns ''st. Paul'•
23 As l1llc 'Z lklnocllnlc Ubrevt1Uo1 co.,anlon
htrtl •lntral 10 N1llon1I 40 Klncl Z4 Dtlroh.'s 61 •911*: .. .. • • • • .. of drug aet_., CM ... ,.. U -fl•t: 4Z Sug91sdn1 2' Garlleot , M S9COlld kt Fixed idea poor health 21 L1t1• Nit of . commd: 1Z Ttanspol'· ., ...... Cll' 1t0iotlul .,.._.,, tatlon 111!1flm 45 Tract or Jsnd
U• ,5 C.W..u.tly U SOS! 46 D-. ·f« OM zt amrtl ~., · Z2. "Htllo 41 Aal•l's c...... " '"' " ,,.. . U.S.A. 67 ffmls ZS Gromld 41 Yentl
33 S"' ...,, llT COY.,. 50 Of.tarlltr
-DOQ l7 En ... i.r '""' c IJ 111 z'• ~:felM4 51 RIH df'IM ":.= l ~~ 31 WI~ 5l ~~alts Y1 u.".t 2 w-111 . •l••I 53 ltlsfl
11 ~ J li~'l~t, ~ l:,u,. 54 ;')=":'°"
tfter the 1lronger Wert Gef'oo
mark, dumping franca and
pounds u tliey ...
The bankerl say th!J will
bring trouble to other not-to-
ttrong CUJ1l!ncles such as the
ILalian lira and lhe Belgian
!raoc.
They uy that a new Bret-
to:i Wood! meeting LI the
ldelJ. sotut!on.
'llley prodlct It probably
woolcf mt.an a devaluation of.
the P'nmch franc. The Brlttlh
orund'• valu~mJ>Bred with lbe U.S. dollar-also would
..-obablf be cut but nol oo
heavtly u the pound's recent
devaluation.
Movie· goers
Getting Air
In Popcorn
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
M~ are paying !or a
lot more air In their popcorn
tbe1e days than in
grandfather's time, a popcorn
machine executive says.
Jt C•fft. • llllMtfdt: !~JC Wtdta, for . 4f 1•-·· 5•Pftoii., . " Qoop .... r-ct Dl91I • ..illlllOU. f.lluntss 56 Pb•ltlMllJ
Special procelSln( a n d
equipment pull the keniot up
to 40' tlmea Ill or!tllnal me,
saJd John C. Evam, vice
president of Gold M e d a I
Produda ol ClnclnnaU, wblch
clalml to be the -·• Jarr• ·popcorn m • c h toe
maklt.
· ..• 1 .. r. 6 .... ,.UI J4 bcotdlng 59 Nq1t1~ ~...... ...-.i . ltllA... • •••
'
'
•
M a raWt, Evana uld
!londay,,lhl·~ .... ti' popcorn In rnol!Jt bousel haMs · ooly a~t cme ounce
olcorn.
-------------------------- -
..
OAJl.Y Ptlql' JJ .
LEGAL NOTICE
Nixon Due
}'ust Brief
r • ·'
l)AD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Thanksgiving an'd Eiler
For more ~ two decades 111, Jmpo"111J fliure ol
Eller Larsea has ca.I !u lllllf 1hailpw alq Laguna Beach~· ·
His bearded messianic countenance, vigorow: wave
and booming heUo are familiar not only lo Lagunans
but lo tbousands of Art Co1011y VIS!tors. He's tbe Laguna
Beach Greeter.
Bom in Denmiu;k nearly 78 years ago, Eiler became
a clerk for the Ruso!an government al 19. He lived tbree
years in Siberia, taught Spani.h and physical education
in Argentina, worked in a· Cbllean department store and
served in lhe U.S. Army during World War :!.
He has been a Well Street bank messenger and car ..
laker of a 2,000..cre New York estate.
much of the world. And ns helped pay for a !rip
But it was Laguna =Eiler adopted after roving
lo ~is na1lve Demark t..£ ears ago.
The trip seemed to rally the greeter, who was in
poor heeltll at tbe time. His eyes sparkle. The life fires
seem well banked but nol lhe finances.
That's wlly Lagunans are being' asked lo ,continue
the Eller Larsen Fund. Thanksgiving seems a"good time
to be a part of the program. Contact the chamber for in·
formaUon. • ·
Our Undefeated Artists
KateUa, Brea, El Modena, Villa Park, Foothill, Tus·
tin, Orange, Mission Viejo and San Clemente.
One by one, they tried Laguna Beach High School's
varsity football team and came off sccood best. 'nle Art!f1s wielded a bold brush in tbe nine games, chalking
up 233 points lo \heir opponent. 51.
In Iota! yards gained, it was ·Laguna two lo one.
They racked up 2, 756 yards tO 1,346 by the aggregate op-
position.
What caused the juggernaut to rise from an under ...
manned squad?
have had a clue. They named Sal Akin.s "Coach
The Orange County Sp6rte· ti era Ass0clatlon may
of the Year" in the Crestview e.
They also chose Laguna, quar;terback St.eve Wlez·
bow•ki "Back ol the Year" and center Sieve Klosterman ..Lineman of the Y'ear ...
Other all-league selections among La$unan's s\l
~ts were Tom Scherer, tackle; Jeff Jahraw, guardj
Brian Bagley, fullback ; and Jiip ·Kuhn, halfback.
The coach and all the players deserve a loud cheer
for the first undefeated Lagllna teairi since 1946.
And tonight ls a good time lo give tbat ·hooray. The
Artist. lake to tbe gridiron again against La Qulnla in
their first CIF playoff game.
Let Scouts Wash It
Have the fog and salt air left your car looking a little
grubby? .
Laguna Beach Search and Rescue Explorer Post 717
will be glad to fix that. They're good scouts.
The group is holding a car wash ton1orrow at 855
Glenneyre from 9 a.m. until 3p.m.
Proceeds witl help finance the post's ambitious an-·
nual SO.mile hike Nov. 30. It's public and a great deal of
exercise. We recommend it 1-. the car wash, that is.
•. • • 1 ~
L
Mistakes of
Adoptive
Parents
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Reader Would Cha119e Electora·1 College
BY NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
Many couples, unable to have children
of !heir own, believe they \lave failed
as men and women. Some ftel' guilty:
or MO'Y: otben. fru.strated for 1earr.,
fear tlieir morriag~ ii ~-~ they decide lo ·•cJoplta' cJ>ifd, m a'q ?.:.
chUdJess couple;s have · dOubts abolzf'
themselves and do a lot of soul-searching
during their interyiews Wllh the adopUon
agency. Will they be good parents? WiJJ
the agency consJdi?r them well adjusted?
How·can they tell the child be ia,adopted?
Every year •pprollmalely I mlllkm
coup! .. In the United States decide lo
adopt a baby. Since'M more than 100,(IOO
children become available to meet lhil
demand, less than <ine ln 10 couples
actually become adciptive parents each
year. Obviously, the lucky ones are thrill~
ed, even though adopting a child is
not quite tbe same as ha\ring one of
their own.
MOST ADOPTIVE parents react to
their new , ,baby wllh mixed emotions.
Having waitec'I a long time, they usually
are five to 10 years older than natlU'al
parents. Striving tc> be perfect, they
are overly conscientious about their tiny
infant. The slightest deviation from what
they think is normal is cause for unusual
concern ; many call the pediatrician or
family doctor at the drop or a hat.
The adopted baby ls often held In
such high regaro that his parents almost
deify him. Nothing: is too good for their
son or daughter. They give love all
right, often· so much that tM child
ls overwhelmed and seldom challenged
by the small doses of frustration
necessary for normal per' on a Ii t y
devetopmenL
Deeper Bite
"UDClle Sam',s 'pay DOW and enjoy it
later' plan, otherwise known as .&ocial
security, will bite deeper into the
paychecks of employ es Ui.is year," noted Acme r.tarketa, Inc. ''The tax
rate o! 4.4' percent is the same as last
year, but applies now to the first
fl ,800 earned instead Of the first $6.600. The maxiJru.on tax due tWs
year .from an employe has been in-
creased W .80, from $290.40 to $343.20.
The increase wu legislated by
Congress to pay for the increased cost
of social security benefits.,.
ne American McdlcaJ .A11odatlo11
lssuect a word of w'1'n.lng concerning
commercially promoted "clubs" for
wefl:bt losers. "Since exoes1 Weight
may be a symptom of lllnelis," the
AMOCiatlon 1a1~ "It i& vital for
any. person w6o wants to lose ~·eight
Ii> 1l8fe a phylllcal examination by his
P,ll:nk:lan before participating in MY Of. flieH fO<>allod club programs."
; Ooeiw, 111. , Heral4· Tribune:
'~the MllQ' ~I Wt enjoy
In , lbl1 ~ and bt thaJJ)(!ul for thtit'~xUtoncl. Bo lhankful for our ~ • lo klil.Ve, wwt and od·
faioi1 Jat oar l\'eed'om lo _.i,jp; !Of ~ rilhl lo Int IPletb and free
tlect1Q01 , • • 'n1al)' lhere ta much
f« itbldi we ... be , tbanldut And
lhlJ ov~ of ,...i aboold ddly
r•mllld CU Ill ' Pfl1 far pea«
thraugbovt the world so tllat all
.mailklnd ma1 Jive ID harmony and
~oJo7 lb< IIWll al. a belt<r lilc."
(
Opposes Direct Presidential Vote
Why should anyone object to SOS
taking over control of the universi·
Ues? After all, look bow much tax
relie£ will accrue to homeowners
after SOS starts paying the bills.
-H.B. McD. Jr.
Tiil• ~1111r1 '1111Kl'$ re•••~· vi-. 11tt
MCftllflll' noe.. ef ftle ft....,PIP9r. hn4
pw "' .,_, '9 Gltom~ Giit. 01111 ,li.t.
To the Editor :
Because we were so near chaos at
the end of our recent election, people
are ready to ditch the electoral college
and demand that we \tnte directty for
president and vice ptesld~nt.
Everyone knows the present system
has its faults, but to do away with
it instead of remedying the faults is
the same as throwing lhe baby out
with the bath water.
THE BIGGEST faUlt is the provision
that a cangidate must , get a majority
ON THE OTBEIL hand, .adoptive of the elector'.al votes to win. Change --ta lend lo sel bi•• ---·-~, · '• .tbla IO a plurallly . and lei the high
.:-.., :i~ auu malt win and there would be no need
iBt · on strict confOrmity •!l'I' their ~ tAi 'YOtt)' about the election going to
)'ol.lllgslcr ./grows older( • Thef, strest• · il1e, Jloqse or Representatives.
f&rnlly values: ancl lrad!Uoos as though . ~The · i!)cctoral college syslem was
lo say: "Since you are now part of dt:s~nesi to preVe~t 1:Jle mor~ populous
our family, you must be exactly like states from dom1nattn.g i:1at1onal ele~
we are." Many demand res~ ~ Uons. ·~eh statei baa its O}Vll electio~.
absolute obedience at considera'ble cost If a man gets 90 percent of a· state •
to the child's striving for independence. popuJar vo(es he will get no mor~ elec-
Their expectatioOll and goals sometime toral votes than U .he had received a
are so high that their son or daughter bare majority.~ His surplus votes do Jl<lt
reacts negatively to their pressure for carry over .to .anotber state as.they do in
achievement and success. direct voling.
INTERESTINGLY, sexual inhibitions
in some adoptive parents frequently pre-
vent a confident adproach to sex educa·
tion while the chil is growing up. Since
most adoptive cbildreo were born out
of wedlock, their new parents seem to
fear they too will stray from the straight
and narrow path. So many adopted
youngsters are confused about where
babies come from, indeed, where they
Lhemselves came from.
FORTUNATELY, fewer families today
make the mistake of trying to conceal
adoption from thetr youngsters although
many reveal too much too soon, and
too often. Repeating the story over and
over ... again makes it too mechanical.
When Che youngster is 8 or 9 and begins
to have the normal childhood fantasy
that he had two sets of parents, <me
good,_ the other bad, B_Cfne adoptive
parents go int.o a tailspin when their
darling tells them they are his bad
parents and that he wants to ga back
to the ones who really love him.
SINCE AOOP'n.VE parents seek p~
ftsslonal advice freely, most chUd
imY<:.hialrists see a proportionately higher
percentage of adopted children in U:leir
offices and clinics in comparison to
children raised by their own parents.
But their behavior problems and emo-
tional hang.ups can be corrected if both
adoptive parents are \\'illing to face
their own personality confUcts and to
change thetr neurotic ways of adapting
to the everyday proble;1ns or living with
themaelves and with their adopted
children.
Quotes
Rep. Seymour ltaJpern, R-N.Y .. co-
1pont0r of I.ht provision In the foreign aid
autbor1iaUon bill urging P r e 11 I d e n t
Jobn10t1 to ttll Ph111tom tapenonlc
ngbter•bombers to l1ratl: "The White
House announcement about negotiations
on the jct.a may turn out to be nothing
more than a gimmick to evade the great
concentration of public opinion for
anotbtr month or 80. I want an ex-
planation of why Secretary Rusk avoided
a ye1 or no answer when asked by
reparteni if a deciston had been made to ae.U the jets."
Ysabel Slfredo, J' a I Ide I I -"ln
wealthy California why do we have to U$e
Ute antiqusltd ba!fot.-mar1ting way or
voting! With the voting machine you
close lht curtain, prcS& lhe Jevers, open
U>t curtain and tbe vote 18 c&'l ''
THE PRESENT Sl'&TEM should be
changed in three ways Bl! n:illows:
I. Keep the elect.oral college but omit
the electors. Each governor would certify
election results to Washington.
.J. Divide the electoral -votes in each
State in the same ~portion as the
popular votes were divided among ,the
candidates.
3. The man with the 1~eat ,nlltJl.ber
of electoral votes woUld be deClared
the winner, regardless of whether he
received a majority or not. ·
HARRY H, ROTHLEISBERGER
luto tlae Darkness
To lhe Editor:
Lest we forget-
"All is over. Silent, mQUrnful, aban·
doned, brokea CzechoslfW8kia recedes
into the darkn~s."
These are the W<irds of Winston
Churchill in 1939. •
Now -.this sad little country, after a
brief rucker of freedom'• light, again
rec~des inio \he darkness.
C. C. MOSELEY
Lfrense, Not Libert".
To the Edlt<ir:
"Academic Freedom!" This Is what
one hears echoing through the halls of
San Fnnclsco.,-state College, a college
that had to be closed because <if sporadic
vandalism and violence stemming from
a black student union strike.
Don't get me wrong -I am for
academic freedom -but I do not believe
that academic freedom gives anyone
Lhe right to vandalize or to riot!
BECAUSE OF 1be rernr .of a handful
of •tpdeni. 13,000 sludeota II"' not gclUng
the education that they have every ri&h:t
to receive.
As a publication of Coast Federal Sav-
i,ngs ~t it, •"lt is a great mWortune
that the iealoti or pressure groups
always U1ink with Ule.ir emotions, seldom
with reason. They have no compunction
in carping, lying and exaggeratmg with
the fiercest passion. They cry Ubcny
when they really ihean license."
RICK ' EVANS
Student
Felt Shaine, A,..er
To tile Edit«'
Con=nlng 111< lellor from Mr. Wilbur
Ballbach (Mailbox, Nov. 1$)~
I read hi! letttt twlcel 1be firat
time I felt shame. the second Umc
aniier.
I .. etters from readers are welcome,
Normally writers .should convey the ir
message in 300 words or less. Tile
right to cunden.se letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. :All
Letters must include signature and
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on request if sufficU!nt rea·
son is apparent.
I
He fee~ that God is to blJme for
all that is wrong with our wO'rld. He
blames Him for Hitler, Hirosl:Jima , the
H·bornb, bubonic plague, ghettos, War
l 80d II and even the house fly.
MY, HE CERTAINLY has the answer,
doesn't he?
Satan .bas a world of power too and
wUh th.ls power, using man has caused
some of the greatest inhumanities man
has ever ~ a witness . toc But if
I were to blame everything on Satan,
I would be in Mr. Ballbach's league.
God gave man choice and the things
he accuses God of causing and doing
were in reality man's choice, man's
mistakes .
JIOPE LIES in the !act man sometimes
learns by his mistakes, and in remember·
ing God's message can correct and
change. To hear God'• message·we must
first look for God. Try the church or
look closely at the laces of our. children
or perhaps learning about a mi'6ionary·
run hospital would be a good start.
But Mr. Ballbach should start looking,
he'll be surprised at what he finds.
In cl0:5ing. may I say, praise God
that in this wonderful country of ours
we again are able to celebrate another
Thanksgiving!
MRS. R. L. SHEETS
Good Performance
To the Editor:
·Last Satarday night it was my pleasure
~o see Jl very good performance or
"Barefoot in the Park," presented by
the Golden West College Little Theater
groµp. · This was the first product.ion
of the season, and was completely handJ·
ed by the students, drawn from the
daytime and adult evening classes.
It was so very well done I would
like to recommend the neit produCtion,
whleh will be Tennessee Wllll&m.• "A
Streetcar Named Desire" on December
B" George ---.
(Send ~ problems IO George
-misery loves company and he's
pretty miserable these days.)
Dear George :
I have been going with this
feJlow for 13 years and he is very
3tt in his ways. ~or Utt entire IS
years he h:i:s come to my house on
Tuesday and Friday nights and wt
pla,y Chlneso cheeken and make
fudge. We've been quite happy, but
t don't think be wlJI change h 111
ways alter 1 marry bim. Should I
marry a man so SC?t ln his ways!
MATILDA
Dear MaUlda:
Well, thln1t II over cmlull)'. Do
you want to 10 down life's hi1hway
with a hlt!band who comes to r.iur
houee on Tue&day and Friday
trlgbta and plays Ch1-cheokera
aDd tall fudge ?
5. 8, 7, 12, 13 and 14. Time: 8:30.
Place: Golden West College Little
Theater.
MRS. H. BOLINGER
Bullfighting
To the Editor :
It is with increasing disfavor that
many of your readers are fi'.tding ar·
ticles and pictures of the cruel sport
of bullfighting in your columns.
On July 26 there appeared a pidure
of a bullfighter thrusting two band.erillas
into a standing bull and on Nov. 1 you
published a lengthy article on the sub-
ject in your Weekender magazine sec·
tion. This sort of stuff can only appeal
to a demoralized pervert.
WE ARE SUPPOSED to be a Chris·
tian naUoa. Can you conceive of the
founder or Christianity, or His followers,
participating in such an outlandish
orgy? Not even the lowest animals
conceive of such fiendish cruelty. The
ears are cut off of the hapless bull while
be is partly conscious.
vean-ago laws were passed to out·
law this so-called sport in our couniry.
Your paper is participati!lg in breaking
these laws. This is unquestionably a
blight on your paper, which could, with·
out this bullfight backing, be a fine
publicatioa.
(MRS.) CORA B. JENSEN
'Delightful Surprise'
To the Editor:
Coming from a "big" city and several
experiences with one of the best known
and most' capable medical writers In
the country, Nelson with the Los Ange-
les Times, 1 had the usual anticipatory
responses of a big city mouse about lhe
cou!ltry when I heard that my Wk at
the Department <if Psychobiology was
going to be covered ny a reporter from
your paper.
THE ARTICLE that resulted, however.
written by Thomas Fortune, was one of
the most well-written, sophisticated and
accurate re~rts that I have experienced.
Dealings with the lay press for a re-
searcher, especially in "sensat1onal"
areas s u c h as mental illness or drug
abuse, usually result in disaster. This
article anti, obviously the writer, is a
delightful surprise and I felt I must let
you know how pleased t was about his
style, co'.ttent, and focus.
ARNOLD J. MANDELL, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry and
Human Behavior
School of Medicine
University or California., Irvine
Cost of SmoJdag
To the Editor :
Regarding your poll on smokers who
quit and their reasons: Hasn't anyone
but me consldeTed smoking as burnin.(
up money? Suppose your cigarette mCiDey
cdn)e9 to $-to per month, every mQnth
pol lour 110 )>ills lp llle . lfreplact and
watch them bum (tislbte eVidencf: that~
your money did no good to anyone}
and poSsible harm to you.
Aftu smoking ... ter 30 year& I quit
last Jan. l and haven't ID'!Oked ooa
clgaretl<!' since. I dldn'l.stop roe heallh
reuon.s nor fear bot because th.st 4?i
cents will feed a starving c:hild
somewhere ror one dA)' -and there
are milliOM of Rarvina: people all over
thelworJdl
VERY FEW . PEOPLE bave money
to bum -I cerWnly don't have and
so what llttle I have 1oes (or a oeed,
a real need for ae:lf or others. '
To sltlp smoking and spend the aame
amount ol mot111 the smoking costs
on supporUng a war orphAn or buyio&
food for a starving person would bring Cfl' mort pleasure and self-satisfaction
than cigarettes ever could.
Most people don't know how much
they spend for cigarettes -they toss
them in with the groceries -it's only
the guy with a mi.ni-pen$n whe tncrws
the real' cost of smoking habits, and
the ones without job or pension who
know hunger.
TV ADVERTISING is destroying the
nation. Last night I was walking my
dog and saw litUe kids -9, 10, 11,
13 sitting on a curb, away from lights,
smoking. When I was of that age, the
kids bad never heard of cigarettes. Some
men smoked cigars and some pipes.
but more didn't smoke , at all and those
who did had to go outsjde to do' so.
The flood <if smut that pours over tht
kids today -no wonder there are delin-
quents, criminals and sex perverts! And
to think the boys of my youth used
to get a kick out elf smoking cornhusk
"seegars" back of the bam.
Could you aay I quit for "economic
reasons" or for charity, <>r to help the
poverty program, or for just plain horse
senae, or for seeing mass foolishness?
Or a litUe of each?
R. M. MARTIN
Loguuca Book Fair
To the Edil<lr :
My sincere thatlks to the DAILY
PILOT staff for your splendid coverage·
oft he Laguna Book Fair. The success
of our project was in no small part
due to your kindness and cooperaUon.
The credit goes to an the clUtem
of Laguna who gave of their time and
talents to make it so. Al.so hats off
expecially to . the L.8 .H.S. boy's Key
Club, to the Junior Women's Club and
to the Fair Day committee.
MARJORIE REED
Chairman
Book Fair
Liberal•' Behavior
To the Editor:
Remember a few year.s ago when
all educators were denouncing loyalty
oaths on the grounds the oaths curtailed
academic freedom?
The Berkeley Board oI Education has
adopted a policy that no teacher be
hlred withoul agreeing to support un-
questioningly the district's educational
philosophy, and that tenured teacber11
who. disagree with this phil050phy be
fired, if neceasary through court action.
In other words the right to dissent
waf crushed in Berkeley! This type
or action 11 ' typical or oth ... bbreab•
behavior. ·They don't believe in loyalty
oaths IO this "°""try, but Ibey Insist
upon adherence to their own philosophy
· by harassment, pressure and severe
demands.
F. R. KING
-' -• . T -~~
~ Friday, Nov. 22, 1968
TM «11"1"41 page of U.. Dcilr
Pilot •«Ill lo Inform o1id slin>-
ulal< rtadcn bv pr<1tntlng Olll
!1<1Dll>OP<T'I .~ and com-
mcnt4'1/ .on iOpk, of lnkrut
""" riqorifi<oftct, bv "'°""""' • f"""" fir llt1 •:EJ>l'lllfoft of
our Teadcn' o,;niohl. and b~
pre.fmUng tM 1 dlotrtc ufcw.
pointi "1 lnf°""'d obi.,,,.,.
and spokmn<tl Oft. lopi<a of U..
dop. .
Robert N. Weed, PubUaber
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.At •·fcoilfee for th4 1.,aguna Beach Philharmonic
Gommittee w_hich ~k place in 'her new Monarch
Bay home 'I'Ue5day morning, Mrs. William H. Brug.
gere pours for fellow committee members Mrs. Win-
field Shins ID and Mn. Gerald 0 . Fanner (feft to
right). During the gathering members discussed an
)lpcoming trip which· they wilbWte·Tuesday 0,.:. 3.
Tbe destination ls ·lbe· I.as '4ngeleo 'Mmic' ·Genter
where they will bear a r~arl;a1: Of Uie i..Os Anjetes ·
Philharmonic Orcbes!N directed b)'. Ztibln Mehla.
Other c.ommittees within the O.range COqnty -PbIT··
harmoiuc. Society also w!IJ participate. ·
Festive Brunch
T earns Objects
Wrapping up reciprocity and hospitality ·in Ol!_e·
bright Christrn~s package, the Rancho Viejo Womtn's
Club is planning a Mistletoe and Membership Bruhch
to take place in the Mission Viejo Recreation Genter at
10 :30 a.m. Monday, Dec.16.
"Tbe brundl," explained Mrs. Theodore Cooper,
president of the new and energetic group, "is our way
of inviting women in the community to visit us."
The club's twO gOurmet sections, under the leader·
ship of chairmen Mrs. David Kaech and Mrs. Herman
Schmidt, are planning the menu. They will be serving
chicken cranberry layer ambrosia, pineapple twist, hol·
iday cookies and coffee.
Also 'getting into the act, the Garden and Beautifi·
cation Section, chaired by Mrs. Jame.s Hook, will create
table C011t.>rpieces, and Arts and Cmfts Section mern·
bers will display Christmas decorations ttiey created
under the leadership of chairman Mrs . Joseph Linden.
Memben of the Mannequin Section will parade
fashions from several ar'ea stores.
Special gµests will include Mrs. Vernon Cunningham ·
of Los Alami~. first vice president of the Oalifumia
Federation of Women's Clubs.
Other federation leaders attending include Mrs.
James McCalla of Tustin, Orange District pres;dent,
and Mrs. Gary Ratzlaff of Brea, president of Orange
Di•trict.Junior Membership.
Also joining an expected crowd of 250 for the festi·
vities will . be Miss Joyce Wilson, president of tht
Women'• ehib of LeisW'e World, Laguna Hills, and Mrs.
Malcolm Field, president of the San·Clemente•Woman's
Club.
Each of tile 125 club members is expeoted to bring
one guest. Reservations and further infomration a·bout
the gathering· may be obtained by caliinr Mrs. John
Black, third vice •president in chara:e of member~hip,
837"'968. .
When Tots ...
DEAR ANN'W/'l~RS' l•m..il>ameci to talk lo Ill)' .mln)IW about thla and
-my doctor won't t.aJte ·my problem
seriously. When I tried to di8cuss tt
with bftn on two· occasions he pve
me -llUljile envelopes of tru-quilizen and Pld, "Try the>e. All
molben go ,,,_l\':"'"I!'. tbia when their
chlldren are mue.1'
M1 -·-11! ml 411-'yean old. 1l>ey .,. ~ me crazy. Every morrUna I resolve· to be plsuant and
gentle with them. By DOCl'I I am Jbrieking
my head off and punishing 1t every
turn. By nlghtfllll 1 sm praying 1galn,
"~ar God , pleql forgi~ m&.for be.in&
to impatient •Uh.CO¥-children."
Wb)I mull ehildr<n teat their mothen
to the limit cl their tolerance! Do they
ever Jurn to do Ill the)'' atf. told the
fint time? I've read that yoa.iaster ..
love to please their pa.'cnts. I don •t
believe It. Mine hive rc':C:iv~ a crcal
deal more love and attenlion li•an mo!t.
, yd they seem deterntln'!d to igilOre
me and ®.aa they p,,lem.
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, ................ tN!t ~·
JunC.,4Mo-
;
rhree· Arch Boy
• ~ • . ·f • i • • ..... !
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Progra·m Ha:rmohizes i
1 Bel -I Ri -ngers, History i
An entertaining meeting awaits Three Arch Bay Wo~a Asaoclat ·
lion members wllo_ wiJi ga_ther in the Tbree Arcb Bay Community,_Clubh~
at 7: 30 Tbunday mgbt, Dec. ~. , , •
Tbe program will include entertainment by the Bell ~gers o4
Laguna Beach Pre.byterian Chureb, a group of junior aiid senior higlS
achool stutkmts. · 1 $
!') addition, John Arnold Ford, a singer and speaker,. will narrat.;
tales -of settlement in tile southwest°"" United Sta"'8. · •
Entitled ·Her°'"' of the'Great Soutlbwelit, Ford's program ia _pr_,ieJ
by the Southern California and Southern Counties G"8 Co. in cooperatlo1'
with the South...,,· Calif0<nia Symphony-Hollywood Bowl Association. I
The speaker, who will combine stoey and song in a ~ way of
preaentlng southwestern hial<ry, has appeared as baas soloist with Ille sm
Franciaoo and Los Ange)es Opera Companies and with the .Los ""8e)~
Phillannonlc Orcheotn and· Hollywood Bowl Symphony. · •
· He also performe4 ii\ opera, llgbt ·opera producti..U. lil tile Greek
Theater, and with the Pasadeea ·Ojlera Co. · ;
· Welcomillg perticipaiits', lo ttie ev(Jlt will be hoslj!ss Mrs.· Charles
Coghlan and· committee members Dr. Jack Froot and llie Mma. Earl.
Gulick, George Ernsberger, Pbillp Tierman, Fritz Peter&0n, Fritz Auate~
muehle, James Shu and Le!sel Vimable. _ ... -!
AlBo upcoming during the holiday seeson !Dr the group ia a triP:
lo the ~ Pa11de. wblcM.s being organi_zed by the Kaffee Klatdl. ,
A bus Will dep:a<t from the clubhou.se at 8 a.m. New· YeJf'• Dsy ant\
-return• in the lllA>rnoon. Reservatiom. may be ~bta~ by callinC Mn{
Gordon Dahlquiot, 4911-3151 or Mrs. }>rilz Au.stermuehl,,~1096. ,
I • , • 1 I 1 I , ' I : 1 J f;
Dec.!'181 at:lO>l!O 'a.m. lD·tbe •Miallion Vlejo ~•tlon,cenfl!r.:Mir ..
Kaecb is curat0< tmd>dean.Of>chalrin'en; and' Mrs. Jolin Bliclc'is'Tke
president_ and'metnberab!~ c)lalrma& · ." .' _ ·
, . rn ~· . '-'· .
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DAILY PILOT
·Dining ,in the 11-jeaf of the .Nighf •
RDd Stager, A<lademy Award winning actor in "The
Heat of tbe Nlg!it" (left) Is completing a two-week
lltay in la CloBta Spa at Rancho La Costa. Stelge~ Is
dining with Newport Beach friends,
Phil KeUogg.
Mr. and Mrs.
December
Rites Set
Mr. and Mn. lloymond
'-VOlll al LGn& Beacb hava
-the ..,.,.....i ol ................ -.-"° --Blee. .... al Mr. and M'n. r..d Him Bice
of Corona de! Mar. A Dec.
11 _,, in Looc -
II IJlqnod.
llloa 1'r1nD II 1 pllllo
al tho Unlversil)I al the
P~ Slocktoo where ahe
alllllated with Kappa Alpha
'lllell 'oorority, ahe baa -•
llAlllARA FRANKS
leld>1nc at RoUlnl Jilli& HIP --------
School !or tht put year.
HB Juniors .
'
High School President
Eyes Studen't ·controls °"" Schm!IJ ptelldonl o! 1.q1ma Beach HIP School,
will speak an h1I move to
..tabllob ~,for
lllld..ta dllrilla i ~ In
the hi&h ocbool Dal Tueoday ..
'llM 1atherine .. opooaored
by 1<aiW>a Beach Brapch.
American Auoclatlon 6 I
University Womeo, I "°"p coocen>ed with it t_. t I s t t c 1
~anlncreNelnthe
... "' drup ...... --lle!'I. •
• •,1In ... Qie face ol riewapaper
headltnel llhoutlnr out the '
Announce
dllrelpecl "' loenagert lot llm.iioQond U..UtuUona 1t1<1
tradlliont, 1 7oung man In
""' """"""'"ty baa come forward with an answer " uld
Mn. All«l &rnea, ..;bllclty
cbalrman. 1 p e a k i n I of
Scbmlts.
1bt ltudent was elected
fll'IOld«lt by fellow studenla .. !ht -di hll platform, 'Ille NewJ'Ntl(e,
An ambllbl8 scholar and
athlete, Schmitz wiU b e
uslsted by Tom Gonnan,
editor of Lquna Teen Corner
lo< tho, DAILY PILOT and
student jllbllc relaUona dJrec.
tor,, a politlml createid by Sch·
mtb u a llalson between stu-
~ pt11nent and'1he com-
munity.
Her flance, a graduate of
Unlven:ity of Southern
Ctllfomia'• School of. Ltw, ii ..rnnc u clert lo O>lef
Julllce Earl Warnn In
WubJniton, D.C. He alftllated
with SJama Phi Epsilon
fraWnlty and Phi Delta Phi.
Hallmark Art Judges
'Ille ptherlng wiU bqln
wW1 refrelhlnt.nta-at 7 p.m.
Gutlta are invited at that time
lo vialt tbe Purple Hau, 1
atudent art pflery.
Membership, ia Monday, Nov.
15.
? Toastmistresses Meet : ' Chapters Announce
Variety of Activities
Deadline for . high ochool
senlon wi!hlng lo enter the
Hallmark Art -Conte 1 t
sponwOd arula!1Jy hy the
California Federation af
Women'1 Clubs, Junior
Mn. Daniel Drqetel, line
arts e<><halrman of the Hun-
tington Beach Junior Woman's
Club, haa announced that
judges In that clty'a contest
will be Walter John1on 1
libfarlan; Mn. Rheta Gillette
from the Art League, and
P..trs. Frank Souza from the
~la will be served
unW 7,:IO In the cafeteria,
Wiler< the ~ meeting
1'lll take pl.act. Following the
meetlnJ and lludtnt presOn.
tation, enterta'lnment will be
provided by the Laguna Beach
Choral Rieder&, a group of
students led by c bar 1 es
Schiller.
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Conference Convenes
The Fall Conference of
COundl S I ~ , lnternaUonal
. ToastmistmlS C I u b I , will
begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow,
la tbe Greenbrier Inn, Garden
Grove.
Golden Desert Region and
former International
Toutmiatreu Clubs ' speech
coolest winner at the interna-
tional ievol.
Mn:. Howard Jones ,
F<lllawing a l!Odal hour Mn.
• ~-Burns, Ont vice pres!-. dent of the California dlvlslon
of Natlmal Alooclatlon of
Parliamentarians and put
secttlary and' treasurer of
International Toastmlatress
Clubs, will present a worksh!>P
on membenhip ltablllr.ation.
Luncheon spMter will be
Mn. Mary Lee To n ,
assistant supervisor of the
member and past president
of the Garden Grove club.
will narrate. -a presentation of
Other Areas o f Com-
munication durinJ the af.
ternoon ae.uloa.
ParU<:lpallng wlfl be Mn.
Pat BucciartW, Mrs. Mark
Comp and l\frs. Hal Balea
who wtD direct Miss Kim
KUoo, MlBs Nina Neuman
and Miss Evezyn Cimerot.
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Movie Guide
'~•'*"• NoM : 11111. "'°"' .. 91.ikle 1a ment for the We of •hi~ P,_1'9d by tlle film commlttt. d rr-
1t1rtior Councll PTA. Mn.. 11..m..1 Sor· THE LEGEND OF LYLAH
ltNQfl 11 Pl'ft!Otttl i ncl Mr1. Hart s-i.. c:orrvnlttte CN1lrm111. 11 11 CLARE -A sordid film
lnMnded ... ~ 111 ddtrl!'tl... J tr d ..... 1,,. 1u11ablli 1urr" fer cwt1111 ... U1 s ana:e a n .....,_.vory ,._ 1M wilt •PNSr """If· v-~ people: pracUctna Ir e e d ,
views ,,.. ldlclhid. Mell "*" to --.11-'""•• --1..1t-u1-and Mov" ;ulM, Qrt tA 1111 o.11r l"llot.) ~1u, -... __,U\IU
ADULTS loobianiom.
BARBARELLA (new) _ A LOVELY WAY TO DIE ~ -llecllctive beoul)I ·ls ao-BiwTe and taalaleaa oddity. -t<llOd, al ldll1'>g lief wealthy
THE GRADUATE -Comic elderly husbM<i.
satire of i young man who PERSONA .._. s w e d 11 h
b r e ': k s out °! ~ psychological drama about
materiallstic .world of hts 1 mentall.Y dl.sturbecl actreu
elden. and her . neurotic nurse.
HERE WE GO 'ROUND THE Engllsh dubbing.
MULBERRY . BUSH PETULIA -Briel encounlar
Shocking m11J1cal about hllh al unpredictable y o u n I
Mrs. Frank Young ,
chairman of Council Six, will
preside and Mrs. L o u i s
Cu1pepper, will serve a s
toastmistress.
Council Six is comprised of
nine Orange County clubs, and
memberslllp in Internationv.I
Toa.stmistreu Clubs is open
to all interested adult women
without regard to r a c e ,
religion, citiienship or country
of reaidence.
Members of women's clubs
in Orange County a r e
especially Invited to attend
this conference or send a club
representative.
Horoscope
A civil defense' program la
planned for the XI Mu Mu
chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
meeting taking place at I p.m.
Monday, Nov. 2$, in the Hun-
tington Beach home of Mrs.
Miiton Loma s.
Guest speaker wU1 be frpm
the El Toro Marine But
Speaker's Bureau. He will
Present a film and' speak on
Vietnam, and arrangiD'! the
program is Mrs. Caroll
Lindsey. Mrs. Stuart Hayter
ii civil defense chairman.
Members also will bring
donation,, of money and food
to fill a Thanksgiving basket.
Virgo: Let
. -
Yourself Go
SA TURD.A Y your lot with older persona.
NOVE"BER 2, ICORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
m :J Forces could be diluted.
By JYDNEY OMAllK Moana. people make demlndJI
'( from various directions. Be
'"l'he'wlae nian cootroll bis choosy. Don't 1Catter your ef.
dellllny : • • AltroloSY polnIJ forts. ·Somt may be offendod, the way." but progreas loday depeoda
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl II): upoo yoor aeledlvlty.
The ch.apt.er Will donate
funds from a rummaae ule
lut Friday llld Saturday lo
the Cyllllc Fibrosis program
accordint to Mrs, John Huber,
ways and meana cha1rman.
Mrs. Gib Lynch and Mrs.
Georae Bur1m usisted with
the aale.
Membera of Xi Mu Zeta
chapter are making plans for
a Cbristmu party on Satur-
day, Dec. 14. The group met
yesterday In the Westminster
home ol Mrs. Ralph Adams
and Mrs. William Leverem:
presented the program oo
Sense of Llgbt from the club'a
book, "Festival of Life."
Refreshment! were served
by Mrs. Felix Jebbia, courtesy
chainnan.
The next meeting of the
chapter will take place in the
borne of Mrs. Carl Wilson on
Thursday, Dec. 5.
Thinking
Man's Art
Exhibited
An Hhibit called Confer-
ence Room Quotations and
Sculptures will be on display
unttl nut Tuesday In Great
Western Savings and Loan in
Santa Ana.
. ' Korean
To Offer
Thank You
Juniors . ·
Entries will ~ displayed in
the main library through the
. week after the winners a r e
selected Tuwiay, Nov . 26, and
ribbons awarded at that time.
The winning entry will be sent
Ben C. Song, general direc-to the district competition.
Winnen from the district tor of Asian Impact ln Seoul, competition are judged on
Korea, will speak to Christian state and national levels with
Business and Professional awards being presented in
Women's Council of Orange each.
County during a dinner High school seniors at-
meeting in the Revere House, tending Huntington Beach and
Marina High Schools who wish Tustin at 6:30 p.m. next Tues· to enter may contact Mrs.
day. Drageset, 968-1275.
Auxiliary
American Legion Hall 1n
Costa Mesa is tbe setting
for meeting of the Auxiliary
lo Barracks 1249, Veterans of
World War I. The first Tues-
day of each month membert
gather for · a business session
at 7:'30 p.m. and the third
Tuesday for a social and
poUuck at 6 p.m.
Give to Your
United Fund
A teacher·missionary, Songq,====================;
is on a speaking tour of the
United States to say Thank
You America, 811 he feels he
owes his life and education
to American people who con·
tributed to his support.
For a Cool Yule .•.•
You'lf Gift a BOOK!
1.'he Bookstall JJJ 1. 11tti tt., c.s .. w ... 141""'''
Following the liberation of!I\;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1945. when Song was 7, his l1
father, a former governor
under the Japanese, was kill·
ed. and a series of tragic
occurances left the family
destitute and miserable .
Later, after the Chinese in·
vasion in 1952, Song was taken
Into an orphanage and was
able to obtain an education.
Reservations for the event
may be obtained by calling
Mrs. Bruce Bailey, 774-5356
or Miss E~ma Wiele, 541-4876.
CM Overeaters
ANNOUNCEMENT
SAM N. KOWln, M.D.
Wei9ht Control -6ener1I Pree.tic•
hen r•locoted Ids office to
I ~k ••\,ou, ALICE B. malr1Xl and Jaded aurgeoo.
'OOKLAS _ N1oe Jewish hoy SPREE (new) -Tuteless,
gtv., up hla sqllll'8 f1ancee wlpr and iliaappolntln(
and hill role in the establlsb· tour of Las Vecu. THE STRANGER RETURNS
-Duhhed Itallan with ex-
lmporiallt peoplo ... lntrlgued -tlAGITl'ARIUI (Nov. 21-
hy your opinions, uplraUona. Dec. 21); Slr<ss on yoor ablli-
Be direct, coofidenL Member ty lo protect poaeaaiO... Key
of oppoeite 11U can prove la being practk:ll. Don' faU
valueble ally. Your pel'IOllal for aoh atoey. G« wllal'a c<D-
mqnetlam woru overume. lni 1o you. Be 1wan al line
TAURIJS (April 16-M.v 20): P!lnt. someone la trying to
Good 1111111' upect lodaY coin-pOll wool ovor your .,....
dde1 with abllll)I lo ifel aCl'O!I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
point of view. Some who op. 19): Greater freedom ls ln-
poeed you can be woo aver. dlcated. You can cany out
Gain family cooperation -heart'• desire. Have courage
fine for travel planning. of convkUoos. Stress in·
'Ille photographs and poet·
·era, dtllpod lo help creala •
18512 •-h llvd., Suite 207
Towo l Couotry Sloopplot C•tar
(at Flve Points}
536°60H
confenoce room environment Overeaters A n o n y m o u s
condUcive to Clear thinking ' gather every We'dnesday at
have been created by Ruder I p.m. in Bear Street School, li~Coo~ta~M~e~sa~·:::::====~~====================================~
Bethel Honors
Representative
At Reception
A reception atven by Bethel
315, lntemaUonal Ordet of
Job's Daughten: next Sunday
wiU opotlIPt Miss LaRoyce
Allen, a put hooortd queen
and !lfll1d bethel """""" tative to lO'fa.
The event in the Seafaring
Masonic Lodge. N e w p o r t
Beach, will begin at t p.m.
Miss laU. Pickerel of
Costa Mesa recently waa nam-
ed honored queen. Other new
· offiCS'I are the M I 1 1 e 1
Patricia June, senior princess ;
Sandri French, j u n I o r
princM; Karen Roblnette,
guide, and lalle A 11 e n ,
marshal.
New members tnltlated dur-
: Ing a .........., loci by Miu
" Paula Robe:rtlon I n c I u d e d
Mimi Del>ble Albertooo llld
llllil ~ Prochulu.
. Hanukah Topic
•' · Of Workshop
~ Hanukab (ood, decorations
'" and blll«y wiU be cover«I • durln& • ~ oponaorod
• bi ~'~ Arel Rdorm
:,,r..,ia•1 -In Mon-
, ~~.Colla Maa
.i I 'll Mii 1'Hodey nlghl
A ~·•1Uoa on home
Rm•lroh decontloao ' rilitI . reClpea for
llolldllJ fOad wtJ( be
._ tho traditionel
..... lllho-.d
cessive display of cruelty
and sadism.
THERESE Af1D ISABELLE
-French flashbacks of gay,
young, times in private
school and the love of two
girls for each other.
THE TIGER MAKES OUT -
Off beat comedy aatlrlzes
contemporary frustration in
urban and ouhurban !Ue.
Joplin Ranch
Tour Slatecl
Plealed with the progrea
of the Jopllli Boy's Ranch are
members of the National
Association of Women ln
Construction, chapter 91.
Ray Stripe, dlreCtor of, the
ranch, wW speak to the group
when It meetl tomorrow,
Members will gather~at 10:30
a.m. In the parking lol al
Saddlehaclt IM, Sanla Ana,
and caravan to the ranch for
a first-hand view « the boys'
duties and achol11tlc ln-
structlon.
INTRODUCING
•
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 20): dependence of thought, action.
It may be difficult tfM>e prac-Live up to po t e n t i a 1 .
ilcal, but it la neceasary. Ap. Circumatancea turn In your
plies to health, WU'k, dealing favor. .
with asaoclata. Avoid forcing AQUAIUU8 (Jilt. 16-Feb.
luua. Y.ou may not 1ee com-11): Much that surround• you
plete plcturt -wail today 11W substance. Dlf-
CANCER (June SI.July II): ferenUate between llhalon and
A-.t on public .relaUona. ...uty. Use lmaghialjnn con-
M...,. atrlve loday to clartly atructlvely. Don't brocid about
your kltent.knl. Others co-what might have been. Change
operate H Ibey !mow · wJ>y. lo< better la due.
Your job II lo win aUltl. PIBC!ll (Feb. lt-'March20):
Speclal atlenUon ls required Accenl on lrlendl; hO(Jtl and br mate, partner. wl1he1. Sue<e11 dependl upon
and FiM, Inc. for use in ita
own conference room. nae
exhibit will be 1bown in Lon-
don in January.
Silver Sands
'Ille lint and third Tuesdays
at I p.m. memben of Sliver
Sandi 286, Native Daugbten
o( the Golden West 1atber
for meetings. Lake Park
Clubhouse In Hunttn1ton
Beach ls the meeting pl1Ct
tor the first session. Mrs. Jack
Wilson, Ml-1479, will furnish
location on the ne%t meetlnl
date. LEO (July 23-Alll .. II): your ability to be pr1cttcal. Promlae made lo lndlviduall-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
et e <llatlnce &bould be lullill-
od. Muna . atriva lo ~
together 1-endo. Aaloclale
can help find wrult you oeek.
Leave taU only when tt le
completed.
, VIRGO (Aul. IS&pl. Ill: t,i younell p l Meant he
true lo your own feelinp.
Shike off ralrlcUon1. 'Ille 10
alinll 11 Ht. Don~ ho c:onfinod
by arUficlal strictures. New
ltarta, contacts are f1vored.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. Ill :
Stick with experience. Cast
• • •
OOElNATIONAllV FAMoUS
{!HEF MIKE ROY
-.U."-AJlllVI AT ioutit COAST 11\AlA
MR. DAVID KOLB NOVEMBER 22-23
"' ,i'Moe~ut.~1 M'io'lt"'
ff}/.\"~1ill''t>'lf.~
PICKWJCX
BOOKSHOP
Mr. Kolb, formerly of Th. Bluffs, hu joined
th. 1t1ff of Ruu Thomp.on Hair Styfost,
~~
3545 E. Coasf Hwy. . Corona def Mar
Telephone: 673-6961
••
South Coast ?tua·
l~llTOl A~~ Dl!GO l'll~EwAY, OOIT~ M
-Mr,ibe yours is a mini budget,
Or. perhapo you'ra ready to replace her original mini with 1 midi or mild.
Any alzo, a!I our diamonds ,,.. exlfa ilo'ge °" quality.
y.,, &har1• t<c•11•t h w•l&Mllt -lt•~Mtficarl, M.ttt.r Ota,..., tee
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SLAVICK'S
J ........ 1117
• 11 F.ahlen lalind
Now,ort IHch -'4+1>10
0'lN MONDAY' ANO J-IDAY IVIHIN•S
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.~. ~~wport Barbor. ,lTeU)t'• O .. IJ ... . ~ .
' EDITION
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. VOL 6 !', NO. 28 I', 4 SECTIONS, So PAGES •
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TEN CENTS 01\ANGE COUNTY, CAllFORNI.&:. FRlO.AY, NOVEMIER 22, ~968 -' . ' • • , • 1 • ! .. • • . r
' . l .... ' l • ) I ; t . '
Plane Eallds· in ··s:F Bi,ty
All 107 Aboa~d· Saved : as .Tap~n 4.·irliner Di~s
,,_Wlrlllemeeo
SAN FRANCISCO -A Japan Air
Linea '/f1I jet Inbound froJl\ TollJO came
down .In Sin Francllco Bay a mile
, 'abort " lhe alrpqrt todq but lhe Cout
Goard ~ 107 penoo1 aboard
..... -by rmoll·boatl. 'l'be wea u foeir and overcast
but tbt._ was in nonna1 opefaUon.
The f5li plane came down about t : 45
a.m. off Coyote Point about ti milt!
south or San Francisco.
Fire Truek
' ' NEW. HARBoR JURIST -port'• smith .
NAMED TO BENCH
Newport's Rutter
· . ·Kills Bal
New Judges Rutter, Smitli . 1 ,_ d M
Share Many Similarities
Newport Beach altorneys J. E. T.
"Ned" Rutter Il and Kenneth M. Smith
have much tn common.
They both have la-,v offices in the
same block of Dover Drive. Both are
2$-year ruidenll of the Harbor Area.
And both are newly appointed municipal
judg ...
Governor Ronald Reagan's office an-
noupced the appointments to the local
bench this week.
Rutter, 37t. was named to replace Judge
William ~.who recently
r<tired. Smith, jl), ~ ,"'8igned a newly
created pm. He wiO be the Newport-' ' f..l.~• ..... . MffJ courts ..,,..,~e.., ·<1 <
Ulree children, Llnda, who aUends
Corona del Mar High School; Daniel,
Kaiser School; and Amy, Mariners
Elementary.
Since rettiving his law degree al Stan-
ford University in 1952, Smilh has been
specil!fu.ing in .personal injury defense
and gebetiJ practice. Me is qtil.te familiar
with cputtroom procedures.
So la Rutter, who bas specialized in
general civil trials since forming -a
partnmh;p . in 1959 'fitb Dennis E.
Carpenter, promlDent local attorney and
leader in Republkan party circles.
~\Ill:' lll1h ioiii · wif[li l'l.cnble have
smn an
' ... An Orange Coonty fire truck, 1peed-
lng to 1 call in the s.nta Ana Hellhll
area, 1lammed into two autos at a con-
gested Intersection Thursday evening,
tilling the driver ol one of them.
Dead is Thomas ClUford Arther, e,
of 210 Onyx Ave., Balboa bland, l:te suc-
cumbed or head injuries at Costa M e 1 a
J\.femorial Hospital . an hour after t.b e
crash.
The second car wu driven by Mn.
Marie Louta will<er, 49, ril &IS LI Mira-
da st., Laguna l!Ucb. Sha ·W..,lrulld
for minor Injuries and reteued.. ·
,ryt flH ~ ~.l""l .. C·
tiil 'dl&l\it 1 "'\!t:. t•· · ~ 'f'olf .. -Ill ... ~1
" Four U!e rafb were put out from , Tbe bay at that point is thallow and
the plane ~ were . to....-"'1 ashore ':-, manh)I. • · .
I djslance' of about IOO yuda. -by --Slitfelmater, Ullsfant rana•
lluncljea. mnlei' at ·lhe Coyote 'Point· RID~ Range,
Ambulances IJld doc:Un wen called . Ald 'tbe pldne IWa&J ~ IOO .yants
to lhe acene but . the Cout Goard from lhe plo;r ol Jbe' <:.nJo1e Polnl \' acht
~ l!ilt tt tbere: wett.., llljuries · Barbor. He alao ropotled tbat 1ppareoUy tbeJ ipparentq were minor. . .. no·one waa iipjured.' ,
~ plane came down npt.side up "It '!8S QA. its f~ approa~ about
about one mile abort of µte end of . three m~lea ; 90Ulh , ~ --~ 1 airport,"
the nearest run'tfay,iTbe wino and tJt9S1 reported a F~r!} A~tipn· Agency coo-
of the fuselage were above WM. ' .trot tower, sPot~' ·
Tfiey will probably 'doii 'i!ilJ# Judicilil
robes for OM-first Ume witbln."the month,
court sources \ndlea~.
Smith, who ijm 11'2GIO Tu$tln Avenue.
ls the son of Brig. Gen. A. D. S m I t h
(USA Rel.), wbo brought bis family
to Balboa Island in. 1M2. Tbe r...neral
and M1'1. Smltb IUD maintafil .. a home
there.
f~ 'Ctll'ldtei-.~,Ch: 11;-ihf.;·'lb.fj.ynn,
S; and Lee, (...:.'rbe family lives at
U.1 Vja Havre, Y!fq _ Isll;,
Rutter !<C1!1V<d 'bis li\f aefree from
USC in 1956.
. ,., .. ----11111111 Hill , A•.;.,., Ill rOd • nUbtng ·..a Jfs 11-
ren ......,lnlf, wben ft struck tho two
cars at the PaHt;ldes Road Intersection.
Both autos we Nllhotmd on Palilldb.
Smith IJld bis wile, Barbara, have
1)10y did 1l'4 know they had been
~ for tbe '18,12S+year po6ll until
Moilday, When tbey ,,... called by tbe
1overnor"a appolntmentl seaetary.
·Both meo are Republicanl.
Ardw,11 ·Mustang convertible w a 1
struck broadside' on tbt driver'• door1
and carried aboot 100 !eetPY the lmp1et.'
The Waller· auto wu hit on the 1 e f t
!rootllde ..
Fll)men and California mpway P•
trolmeo wOrbd tor • minutes to eaUl-cate Ard>er llmi 'tbe wtoCkage. 1' b 1 ·---"·"""' auto was~ /
. ' . ' ,
"The plane was under radar and radio
control becauae of the heavy tog, '!'be
. last call on the rllllio indicated ev~
was all rgiht. but we'll blvt to lobk
at the .reccrdlnp qain before we ea·
SAY. that for IUl'f:." •
The tower offtclat said the •Jlll'OICli
. for. tbe. ~g was noi:riJal as the plane
swooped dQWll over the San Mateo Bridp
abOul two mUea sooth 'of Coyote Polnt
IJld 17 milea south of San Fl'ln<tsco. ' l '
Boat Hit-run Suspect
Claims He . Blacked Out A secood Orio eftl\lie contlnued on I h •
run.to lhe can. a wa$ouse blau at !l'll Mesa Drlve. 'lbeoflte wa out on arrival. 1 1 , · • • .• ~ · 1 : ·.; • '""! ; · .... ,") ':. ·' ... 1 i · :>
~~;:.:. °:."°'ea~w:i: M. a· .z.at1-n· ' Yachts Await' ' .. ~&epll l>ei$e~ ' .
A ~yw-Old Loo, Angeles denUsl ac-D. Mulhetln and his son Thomu J. Newport Beach IJld Balboa Island. Un-UL . . r .. ' -
cuaed in the alleged hll·nm llnkinl of Mulherin, alao of Loo Angeles. ~ll,_,,uy ~ ~. ;::"Z !~Ian~ · ; · • • • C>tilif..:;!...i.. l L:O •al 6"' ·
1 small ootboanl ·off Newport Beach Eaton f!>ld pollce be llld his pusengers · ... · ·--.J.I oullllllm-.. L.
testtlled Thurld•y that be bad blacked were n.hlni -they .. w the cruiser w;nd to Resume·-Rac;ug . , 'Tui!gti.;..e.n... lsland,r..!IOr·~...,m
oot prtor to tbe Sepl. 7 incidenl approachlng on ·• collision courae about Mrs. Jolin.son Begins , " . . . , . · " . A. ofu.rt, 111,'dloif ·~ ~11 d• r
Warren J. Hoke, cbar)!ed w Ith 500 YOl<is aw'ay. ' , . ; . . · . . . •. . , :~ u.i.l¢ti! 1111er .:~ blllle
operating 1 boat lb a negligeot~ IJld Lilegllal'd boall picked up tbe oc-'Farewell' Journey By AJMON LOCKABEY , Mtr IJld Qiuba!co 1tlll clung with C81\Ctt· reckles! manner, tohl pat Newpoft...~esa cqpants al the arnall craft and stopped Of,...~"' '*' st.ff ptecarloualy to their lead. at the head Rosary wUI be recited at I o'clock to-
Municipat Court that .he could remember · the cruiler. WASHING'OON (UPI) -Mrs. Lyndon MAZATLAN -The , ocean , ol r ·of . tbe · 1 le ~t, but ~even. their ·see-aaw rupt ,.i: Batiz· M6l'lUaiy '.Chipet,! With
nothing of tbe colltslon between his ~ 8· Johnson let out today 011 1 four4ay Magdalena Bay Thuroday "'.ht relembl· , Aleadbo\fl\'. ,be\"i. ~enied ·b~· ~r. Class Mass to be celebrated Salilidliy al 10 a:m. tour, a farewell journey from the AUantfc ·~·1• StS
foot cabin cruber and the ta.foot out-s k v di t u h Id to tbe Pacific,. to IUl'Vty • "restless ed I Southern Caillornia yacm.sm~· con-. George O'Brieli'a Mir from Ro,a} Vim-ii( St. Jobn' vtanne; CltboUC Church 00
board off lhe Santa Ana River jetty. pee er C p e oew America." venlton . as the· 49 yac~ts. in tbe Loi coum Yadtt. Club llnif boo •H.istell'1 Balboa Island. .
Four penons aboard the ootboanf were SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP ) _ The The Flrll Lady's ''Thil II Your Cow> Angel.;. to Muallan wilted no .. 'loo ,Chui)-· 1ro!n Newpirt· 1farb0t •1(a<ht .iniei5neii\ .,tiI follow at'Pocl!lc View
reacu<d by other veaels. try" trip takes her lint to New Orle1111. plU..Ut for wind tbat 'woold ~ tberil , Club ... '!'!' ... attting .•belll!l1ol ach other Mer.atial Plil'f< i/iiMr: oenkert'• It. • . lllinoll Supreme Court upheld today lhe then to Cope K-....... , Denver and tr~lfoil to their liNOI ~. M -" 1 . >< <-F·'·· ltb ,_.. The aaven-woman, ft%-man jury wa• ho ........, .;.;.. · ma)Orlty ol the r.ace 1lOll . waa aome w ,...,,. , rom ~aw . .-w ten, Mary · DenUrt; "<l llalboa illand, expected to ,get the caae tblB .-. deatb peoalty for Richard Speck, ;w, · .Gallfomta, for dedkoUon of Redwood • .,. and JI·•"' Ch~bbY .boUlbll aome '10 mil,. .f"lther ~" ci(,N y • The trial was in it.I fourth .1 ... tad.av. wat convicted of murdering ei&=t · MaUonal Park. On Monday ahe trill end ~ated 'olf Mag 'Bay • . • ~·nl . out ·to seal -, · ' , .. ' ,. 1. • • and1Mrs. ~·· .. ~ " ew orr
Hoke t.stifled Thursd;;;' !hat Ibero in Cl\icago in 1966. The court · tier 1,000.ll\!le joomey 11 lhe LBJ~ ·1rom Uie poolttona given, ·most· of them But Peter Davli' M-foot sloop ·anent 'suUesls ~ e...lil>atloos to th•
wer< blank opoll in.hill memory covering wllh lawyers for Speck tbat S '<ould· -~ Thanbi!viiir_•ltb tbe Prtsi-, -1<1'h8ve been witbln•lllllinl -hld·;mov>d ·llll<>' crintei>lli>i>: llllOlli .the 1Arnerbn Can S9tl<t)'. ·
1 week·lon& period before IJld ifter not get 1 lllr trial in Peorla Coulfty. ' c:!.oacl> other. .!root~,.~ 1,~ldell-1 *• Deotert , -:••-o(, Ibo
lhe lcldent. tical to lluit ol Chubby, r wblle. · Blll INewporl-Maa ·~ ol ,Realton, 111<1
Dr. sterling Pollock, the Hoke family Wllio/i:s ·~~ Banta J!arblr-.Yaclit •bad'U llO!ICY ~ tlie bland,for :rl yean. ph~~·tald ·be had been calied to ·p •f M L , p t' · Club, :o;u lno\omg up •bout 14' ~es treal Hou f<ir a lump on the rlg!it '1ld• ro s ay o· se . ·o· we ·~ a!teln. ... , , . ' 1 ' ., .•
ofbtiljeadJl\e ·dayaftertbeaccidenl. · • • • •. ••. : ·•· .· .· ...... o.:. ltwa:tromc·to·•llunC!ri!dl•of :yachl!ng ,. Orufe · fleut
The d<Mllt 'complained of 1 headache " ·flJll •lto·mived )ler• Tbunday to bear :
ind blurred 1llloo.·Dr. Pollock aai<L · • .tbat · tbe , fleet .wu stalled ,llN than
Pollock llllnd tbai 1oa ol memory · b ; :;Joo i;nJlel away .ia 1 • IJrlll IJld llJliy ~·: ':" ~ ~~ UC Rege~ Mee& oo ·Strife-torn "4a .p~g!!:~Ca~~-·O;t1J":.~~1e ~
defericlan~ the doclor aaid, :•1 COOl!der ' ' I A ' " ' ftig)<I, . ' ' I ' ' ,. 0r." Hok~ to lie one o1 the flileat men r .... Wire Semceo •, Nlft«>led by ID!' violent llemotlk•• Rfaran'a.lttglancr'tbaioei..f~1Wmecr : Uiil~.U,· \,~-~~·'!l!'·Ja,r u ~· H~": ~wn~• aaid be had ,.!:; ~~;of "~':mi!~ .. 1g ti';\!~ COlllll1AWe& llld the ll'GUnd ~f:._~ n:_ ·,il-.~·dy :r.~llfa!~ 7·~ ~~
Hoke lllmle1f oUered tbe court two !.day "'"° reldy to lllrlp prof-. WU'k ThundtJ fw Ibo hn> mlj« Hems ,.;; lo ..iillY r::i:-1.= or &bout llOlio 'Sl~'nlil Wllllld lbOo!
posslb!IW....(or Ilia-· , ol. Ila -IO lift Ill)'~ -109 on the 11enda -.. o.ftr -.A.L.c ' . . • ;rr;: I all ltope(of ...... --
Flm,"111 Ill(' i. could hlvo "tailen lecbnn uu Black P111tller E1drJdlt • IJld the budpe ......... . • . ; " , , · .T!it'lllut l!lf ~~ ~
aaleep" wbill Ille 31-!oot cruiler con-Cleavet. ' One COmmlltee afl1rmed I --. 'hie $141 ~ ~ c:Ollt threlr lhe • llandJnp Into I
Un<IO<l lil -&Uto."""' . Today's nieOlblg oo tbe unlverm"':. old rfillna that no credit wfll lie sr&t11a1 1 · for •lllillloo ..-·aiaii,i.,~,mlllloii -of =al Chal!9"1111h --· ,..... '' for lhe .,...... on radlm wbk:b llu '"" "·····-""' · ... ,._.,,. ~·•'-'"'' · ""'""" '<""'""' "! -lo.., .11111 whetl!er f\'1 In-San Ditgo campus lllo .,, ... to .. lhe -1'<1 ! .,.,.,, ... ~ ;~ .. ,.,..,., ..._10 • .,..,...., •. ), " -
....,.,...,li'JIOl,"lbedi111l1U1ld. · regeill _., 1 .-d Pl! mnuoo -,... Cleaver lecture Ill< 11mis on !be 1Aloort.bylhUoglsliturafor.--But u of S p.m. 'l'burl\llf, the la~
Ta. --lbllfty wu that be tl&t-io 'bu<fgotreq.-. Berketey-pwi. flocllyar~ln _, .c· ,..,. ... lt:alatlollo,llilllarbd-• .. i.top.m.,te
hid lllppal -lhe tell .. llil tlying Governor Ronald ~ WU due II The NmO committee puled I........ Tf)o ,ltgenll ~"" .... fir~ ,_ hildlail ' .... &wt ~ lll·'tllt
1"11fielldlinlctld&-oolhecontrol lhe meetln(. ~guards 4eployed UonllillWllll!dblnguestlecluronftom mU!fao.lll4"-""~1::!n ...... -_ ...... ,..._ii
pon&I, -Aid. to -Glf 1111 lion of ... -UC --witbout the porml*lon 7"' IMIPI. ....... . -.--. · ..... lltOd b1lilo lit· 'Ille -bJ Ille --,..11 be SaDta Cnll meetlna Jn,,_ ilelll<D ol oo afllcttil -lhe mt ol <Inn .......,,_ ......... , 'IO -. .. !" '.: c.:.·. ,
..__ nn --1113' -~ IJld Stata SUperlnf...r .. t ol Pu6!Jc or iu,i.. l.t paceo&, 1ll>lcb ""'-~·~• I JnlliilidPl!IM•.MnllilNOlll#ln,-lie~ Roa r~ ")line 1nstrucUoo Mu Rl!WtJ wm joltled Special speakon' without IClldeinlc ·-~-' dealA"'1 w "-lbe "lil'!l'':ii'a'WJ·-f• .,.... .. .......,
DOI." ~ . llldjeeredby'<1tudenta. blcllgrwod_lllle Cl°'v" would require .o..,....mpis.sxlfem'•bl'u!!tltl.W ~·,_·~'·"' a..11•~. ~ .w.-acC!iMir ..,;,.,iil • ..m. Al lhe regenti M: Im -..IJld lhe lppro91il ol 1 compwi ..........,, Jlmolrd and Mlcllfpoln ~~ < lllillltll'lt...W•~A ... ~ •
llO'nHO;Glf )tbe -:Ji1111-. 10 jtrof-. al UC SID Dleao wer< li>-lllOl'ltblnCllCO. 'orl.i,w ) ··~Jit'I·~-:_.,....._t>illlPlii. P 11tftjfl-O(th1_crt<ll'd,_' In the thtrd day ol. huoPf 'llrlke UC Glflcflll ..... llld lbe H~ 'l'lilr1lllJ,'lllll'iii')looild "lrZI •Ila ...wiillilrllt .. -!,;' I 'f . eo:=.m~lhe~~ =~ty"'.,_ · -·" . ::.-Ind~:-.:·_. ...... r:ia:.11:r~=~·~~ :~;:.:a:;. r.i\:r.;·
Ot•lwnl -_.. r:omiutol. 8'lt Ten Sbepanl,,San Dieao student f~bandr<dl'ol<jlllet ... Jn wblcli l .bod ... qUn1I 'llltli -•.llfll -S. BOl""'"'"lllftl 4.. .
,._, __ IJ.-.ad1'1& bo"1 pi-, told npnli: "Wblle ---'8-ln•ltedto~ -llfilod!U 7.W.--llillicill·.-'tll;'lltlih~ LA\'Cl*' ....
.,U..lllrll, Ill IM ~.11111 t1lomos yoo'ro beN, I don't expoct JOU to be '!bl -polley dtlrlY ~ Goll., bloinl: . ". : ' . > • ' • ) • , ; (llilO ,iuia<n:AN,,.,....., .. • ·
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:t IWl.Y PILOT
; See ,.,. , .. ...,, •
. Plann··.,,.--
P e~e· If.ept
·By Faculty
' At SF State
SAN FllANCISCO (.\)") -Aboul 100
lacolty mem¥>" ~ JIPJVll ann-benda ,.-ere ltaUoned on wnpua to
-eep lhe peace u cl-. l'ff1lmed to-
day ·al ~ Francilco Stalo Collea•.
.. 'Ille flCWty ~ ....,. to prt-
veal a npoUllGll ol 'l1l0nda7'1 vtolince
lhll ·broll&lll,_~ ....... 111\,Clm(IU',
llood ... -....,. .. Ibo ~Oil
• ~ • .....i for ,i o¥*!Wn of
. e1;.;"'~ .. ~ -bolld-mr and am]IUS ~ •
... ~keel~'?; =~
' tatlon wilh PolJ<e. "-'"'· ~
. the 11m ........ "" ... -.~: HIGH TIDES BUBBLE OVER BULKHEADS, UI! STORltl DRAINS IN WIST NIWPOlll.T .. dentl walbd ::::':f!' tht pleat ~
36th StrMI Amont AroH Damponod by . Bay Wala-.: Action C-pl1!ell lly Cllf th~~~""' ~tJi. opeech
Bay Flooding
Several Roads;
Damage Light
Balboa ·Man Held ' .
In Stereo Theft
Lowll -EatGO, II, IJli W. Balboa
Boulmrd, 1 Wu Uf!ltld : on bursJary
cbarPI 'l1lllndq by Nowporl Buch
pollce In COlllltClloft with a -and
lholl ol '900 In '""'° equlpmllll from a-' Police .ald all the llolm equipment
WU ....ov....t, The victim nporledly
~...i In the ...,. apartment complex
u Ellan. ·~
~L
Stereo; Tapes Taken
,...; cu 1tarlo equlpmtnl llJd i.peo valued
at 1111 ,,.,.. ltporled llolen during
deylllhl 1loun Tbundl1 lllm the-.auto
ol Kiro1d Grice, 11, 1111\l lllmlllon wy.
Camera Theft Told
CdM LIBllARY GETIING READY TO REO.PEN
Llbr4rten Follcl• Young Pondon Talk
Tba thlllt ol llll In C1121ora equipment
from a Volln-Vlll WU rtporled Tburaday to Newport Beach police by
John William Che...U, 25, of 315
.\lwado Place. ~
$~4,400 •merovement
'New~ CdM Library Opens
eor... del !lar'l,6-11 anllfltll ..,i..
lie llbrlrJ will ...... 14_,, Dec. I,
City Llbrtarlan oclthaa 5hetly announc·
ed today.
The "4.400 1xJinajoo lllCI nmodtling
proftal II now all but -plete<I, Ille llald.
[)flit y 111101
t1AM11 ""'' PUIM.llt+t ... CflMIWt'f ...,."'"'"' -... -Jetk 1. c.,1., * ~ .... '""""',,......
U,..,1 KMv:l ·-~=toe ·
,J.,... f:t. 0.-. Pttl Hit .. 11 '"cit~ "SI:::.'"' ..._, __
Ill I -..... """"" llt .... .W.Mi P.O. .. llJ~ 11141 --ftr:-r::'.":!9".t~"t. ---··-
' I , '"" :.,. aill& .. ,
11.ti-Yft RfiEt=-lf=iS
"111&1>1 .,... wt'n wwklnl day and
ni&ht at otacldnr IC,000 boob on th •
lht1vt1. itloludin& S,000 that hav1 never
boln In dreulaUon bol ......
Tho library's floor "'' ha1 bean daub-.
lod from l.000 lo jull tmder 1,000 lqll"'
IOI\, lta INtlnc capacity lncrcued from
35 to !$ and book capacity lilktll !ram
11,IOO volum11 to I0.-0.
'l'i1o -addltloo inel•del a cool.,....
,_ for """"'lln111 1111 aod • c1r1 .. 1n
-.. ltlru ..... lofrs. ~ polntad CMll thal th• $11.-
ooo upaneioo bal been financed by I h e
cilY al no ooal lo the ltillral property
laJplJ'lf. Thi .....,, ii -1nr """' the
buUdlnC udle flm<I, wblch deftl°"'"
--to e«cN!n( to a lomi\111 ""' ...... """' .... """"" " -.... -· The orlltnol lihr•fl' bullllini at ao
Mmp!d -'-wu eonatl\leted In 19S9
al a caet ol 111,QIO. Nllltly ......,t of th1t •
Pastor to Speak
On Pike Seance
come from lifts.
Tonllhl, community leaders will at·
tend 1 pre-dedication event at the libra-
ry. Procetda from the benefit -adml>-
lioa II IUO -wW 10 toword l\lnt1lblni
the Ubrar1'• atudoot atud7 .,...,
ThClll e-'"4 to •114ad lnclllde NIW·
port Baecll cl\7 CCIWICll m-. .lleed·
Id by Mayw Donto Monl1all; llbrll')'
INlltll John A. Hopwood, chalnnan;
Dr. Thomas A. Blaliely, 1\111. Hancacl<
Banning, Roger W. Hartlacre and Mn.
T. Duncan Stewart.
Also among those attending will bl
the Frlen4s of the Ubrll')', Mrf. Jam11
Dowty, -1dlnh Mr1. Stanlty 1.o-
Lievrt, an. R1ohard Btt1ta, Mn. Peter
Dobbs, Mn. R. A. Pang and Mrs. Frtd
Ellis.
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· · · · • .. de~ opobomu tor the faculty . na11as·~:·Bee&11ed · · .s?:s~i?~
;-·. 1 •••• ;-··!~··' .... ),, ~ l-.~·r",.:. ~ .' ~-~-.~_ICUffled
1F.lf. Mei ·JJeiak lfi~ Ye~if4.s" -:~ . ~~r=a-:*1
-·· y··-· •• 0 .M ... _ 1n • .U.. No ..,. neOd. t0 ....oiuit'J e..Dts 8IUdoota ubl1111' allCt i>tlMr .,..,111~ ',. -· -....., wlrlllna llhots WVt fil'ld by ID ~ •plubed Te"' metropolia -the of the 111ret ~ In o.jlu. . nlCUlni a · fellow pol'-tn from •
ultimate price of !eadership was spelled , T1me d1m.I tbt ~ " ,thlnp beattn&. ,.,.
oot for every boy who could grow up commltted, felt. IMD, heard and 11D111Jrd
to bo president u American lllllory In Dlllu: murdar, lritf, pmllotl Uld ' • ,.,.... P.,e l
1o111 lhe1 111 can. 1be 1p1co ol lllnerl1 11..,,...: M A '7 .6. Tr A l\T
The -1'1 watched In horror, MEMOlllBI llEMAIN • . n~A+ f"'1'-·' • • •
'A powerful naUon'• Image wu forever But the --do NllllJn, altboagb
changed u lholo rang au1 In Dollu' !rah llJd llmllarly terrible """' have
Dealey 1'1111 on J'rlda:I ov. II, ua, been added, wUh the pollUcaJ murden
shattering W John ntqerald <i Semtor Robert F. Kennedy llJd
Kennedy'o brain llJd with It a thousand Dr. 14-'llilher KJnc. '
dnam!, not all hll own. During hie ,campaign !or I he
Harllln ~shlne boys wept. Head$ Democratic presldenUal oominations, not
of IO'ernmantl mournod. A few wbo long after Dr. King wu· slain, IU'K
bad bated the vlW yoong President said he wu rwm1ng qalnsl pollclel,
aecrtUy rejoiced. And over all hung not men.
a aense of horrible historic importance. "I run because 1 am convinced this
Tlmt bu dimmed the chain of events country ia on a perilous course," be
Wblch IOID• uy, belJl!l In Iha mind uld.
of 1 dloenchanted ... Marine named Le< Today, theno will be mullled drums,
Harvey Oswild who bou&ht a mail ordtr salutes, tom.ber memorlu and the '1.G mautll' rlfle with whlCh to mate melancholy aound of bugle ti.pa being
hll trqlc point. plaj<ed with Ill added note of •lplllrance
POLITICAL PLOTT for the da1. .
· Olhen AY It wu a pollUcal plol, GRA VEii TO DIG
perbapo backed by the inmdlbiY And within a few houn, It wW be
powtrfUI mWtary.tndustrlal complex, tn-Sa.tunjay, Nov. 13, wtth tele'fia!on (oot-
volving dozens of people, most of them ball, leaves to rake,· mlybe the ear
now dead. to wu, and everywhere -gr1ve1 to
They Included Oswald, nl&ht club owner dl1.
Jack Ruby, Dallu pollcemlll J. D. Tip-. "We are nmniJJ& llOO to llOO lnlorments
pitt, a nJght club atrlpper, and even per )'t&r," which ill about averqe aald
two newsmen who reportedly went to Col. E. T. Stltier (USA Ret.) who
Ruby'1 home after learnlnfl ha obot man'1jOI Rose Hill BurW Pllfk In Tens,
O.Wald and arrived bofora the police. w~ OsWlld llOI. . . .
Nevin, CYC. l Roboa Ill. Bob Grant,
NHYC; 7. a Ue between Oiubalco, Don
llallell, NHYC, Cooquesl, B 111 Polly,
LBYC and Sliame, SldRenkow, DllYC.
Clnla A: I, llUcal, :I. Cbubuco, I.
Westward, WlllhdBell, L.\YC;
Class B: 1. Intenneno; 2. Bohon W;'
3: Release, George Sturgis, LAYC ;
Class C: I. Red Head, Larry Maio,
San Die10 Yacht Club; 2, '!)pee,
Llewtllyn Bi>by Jr., LAYC; I. Pirate
II, fderr!tt Adamson, LAYC;
Class D: I. Danzante; 2. Whlmsey
!I; 3. Babba.
Lotltudo and Longitude poo!Uons as
of Thursday morning;
Novi• c1e1 Mar, iw -111-a\ ~ "'" ~ -'!\\'' ' "'" ~-'~· ~"· -11 C:""""llCO. 2 -, • -t ltl.Ul -tt·1ll
14-it -1~-21J Wi<Wil, u -ua-111 c1,.-1c • 1, t•11 -ltMt1 saiidii1"r, tUI -1.n.
N.iu II\ mi -11>17\ """:Ii' -llm• l!trll 11, W - 1 t-»1 I Ill, S -11;,., ~, ..... 10 -ll~-~, tltllt, -"lt -1U-OO; ':;(.' 2-"M -rif-ai lnf""'"91ro, :a.Mr -n1-. 1,,_, 1•20 -il)-101 flmo n. ~~ -111-ni P l!>tflN, 2.4-lt -1·1z.U1~n~Mn'fr:.1, -· 1114<11 'l'Ut O'Tl'l_111 Kitt, 2-" -lll-00; rw1dor. ,24-2' -111-ar; Ptr:.t• 1, 24-n -llt-ffi Allurta II, ,._.11 -112-111 MKcMlll, flO
rfPOl'1r Atdhead, J4-t7 -112>1/'1 T•l!Qt"', 14-?'I -112-lJJ VI~..,!, U.JO -1 1-371 NIJll'IH !', ~ -111-=StVVll. M lJl"°"' T.,_, 2•11 -11>-l•i 1!1 !4-t• -·161 VtfYt, Z•lJ -" ... ' c-. 'li\1.:-""' . Hollt_f, U:M -112· I Prv"91. 2'-tt -llZ·Jl: ,...._tM, 1'-M -11 301 Meurlce J, 2•-Alll -112.;51 Wl'llmNY II 14-'5 -1U0201 Sll•n-11 21-lS -11 .. 171 ~HMlut, 110 t-11 l N-, 24-5• -lli-1Mlltl r110 12 -llJ.10; ~.n1 .. "'!i:tu --m, ~.r:. \ .. ,,
-11M1.
DREXEL'S FABUlOUS ET CETERA
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!
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$179
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SPECIAL
$14\
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S~ECIA~
8129
Chrl1lmas time • , , • eil<f liome 11 wltt!t tll•
por+t.s are, wltli 1Vllf10"' dreatd ff tho
hilt. Dr.ss up your home lo melcli. Whit •
wOrlcl of hotod1y 9loinour thl1 wonderful
o.e •• 1 collection offen. s.. tht111 tOcley •t
;heat V1fY spacial prices. For IOiM _, IP9"
.w """"-· riep bY. 't<iiley.
NIWl'OlT llACH
1127 Welltllff Dr. MNOSO
-llllHY'llLt
, ............. '""'* De•""'" A"llaW. ,_11>-fUIO
LAGUNA llACll r
... "'"" C-' Hwr· ....... , __ ,..,...,
-,.,._ -.. ._C...., _1141
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·Reporter All Money in Trouble
'Re~' SRO . ?l'Otil WOtfd Reform
Radio B'!"th . " 'j..-1,tnd etWU ,.... currencl .. are su.nier
• · -tlonsl blnWI are than ·otber.s on the basis of FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. convinced the French lranc, cunent exchlnge rat.., there
(AP) -Newsman Bob the British pound 8!Xl maybe will be continued wild specu-
Krauser't ri.dlo broadcastlng the Ameri~ dollar will con-latlon in money markets. itudio bu standing' room ori1y llnue. In be In lr<>llbJe. UDl!J . The banken 1ay curing the
_ for one ~ at a time w or 1 d currency exchange money' ills Is out of their
v-, • 1 ,ctllr, · f 111i.. are broug!>t up to date. lw)dl. They eay It clO now ~·~· re · or · The fut llJ\ie exchaJ!g• or>ly be done by government lo\lam1 • wioo, w,"-Plfaued . ra~ ,..,. 11Sl¥>1lahed ,,,.. ill 1eoc1ara. Th• bankers uy It ~~,Way ~$;' loo( llno!I cun'enci"es wu July; 11144, In will toke a great deal of r.ut· """ no ~ . he wented Bre1t9n 'If,...., N.H., when 21 lea! courage. Fot some ead·
lo taleplia!lo , . """"" rtom-n a (lo n i 1j,t logelher lo era will have lo lower Ille Broward ~· ~->lralDten out their money Jn value of their money, .....,..
l!o Kra-nqoUated tht 1hi radlni ~ of World Ing lllOM)' will buy 1eu Iii
1$ monthly rental of a ·pbont Wei II. -· • · forel(n trade.
bqolh . Im!\ ~, Telepbomo Sli>Ce ·Jh.., drulic clwu!es The world banken lald Compeny. ~ from have taken ~-DeleaTed however putting a rWlltlc
WIQD wireij Ibo . llooth with West GvllWl1 end Jepan . ·~ on a natfoo's mooey la
a IJ!lcropbone Centro! penel have be<iomo rich. ~ of Die only way1o'stop the spec>
lighlln& 'end ' i . clock wtui t1'o vlclon, ouch u BrlWn, ulatlbo thal bw1s l)rilost
sweep .!""""'1 l!lnd lo tlmo =./••>01119 •• ~~ ev_.,..
h!a lrOqjlent newi reports. ' 'Jl>e ~ i>riUll>t JrwP ,NOT~ wOJIS A lljn cm the roof Utl!ll ble lo tb Weak Credlla and 'Ibey uy •~t tempomy
up the "!"II "On Air" lo ateer declar•u!., of W...... lrcm lleJ!,.(ot the Irene a.Jiii the
away · the lilnloniled:. and other cOllillrlel hi.V.. been ..,.... will not ·..,.. the eco-
curlous whlle Kra...,. la used lo bo1ate1' the Brltllh nomlc ....S of France end
broadcuUng. pound and the French franc Britain. TbOlle naUoDI limply
"I've been getting Jots of kl times Of crisis. , buy too much and aell too
decorating Ideas from' tile ONLY riiMl'o · y lltUe In foreign , trade: -
ladlea," Kr•-'tild. ·•11 Bu~ say the :::/d banlcen :;~_J'/1:.:i1~even tem-
already h a v e waU.to-w,.U . theae are only tempor117, . .,;. will ititi leave the f~
carpellng, but I . think the luUons. • ·, · tho. pound ...U-end subject
1tudlo doOI need drapel ni.,y ..,. that'oo long u 'l<i IJ)eculatlon.
Speculalon .will stlll cl>ue
Crossword !PUzzle . '
ACROSS 42-'-llf ,..,.,
1 R•• IOll 4' Dmld ti
5 Hlde1•11 1~11': t Ont ol ., 44 "•c11ttlltld fabled dlfflflWtH
UutesOllf 41 Al llrl 14 lll11bbtr a:dJ
prodllot 47 Trio 1S.,T•• of tllttt 4l l111lc1n Mou• lut dltht• ., ··=~· " Atdool l!ondl• .. ... .. ,,.. of 1 n111I
11 ~l':I "'"' 51 UoUl~ow:
11 Hoolllf'• '1 \::;,
'·
11/Z!AI
-.. ltlta to ,,,,.
lt love S1 l1l1M of l ltallan: Abbr. SJ Drf 1td · f'1rtfvt1r Scatland I Dtl1yln11 •011.ttonou1 '?0 ,rentlt 60 Chnt tound 1t\IOll lli A11U1QJ1111 r:1H1etve 61 AllM 111t1on: t bporlet'I P1in
ll okl di•" C011-.fot• -U1lnt1s St i" ll'M1l'1 ,tJ 1l1Uo 61 llenocllnlc abt1Nvl1tlo1t i::I'"
%4 'o"' It' •lotlll ID Nation•• . 40 • .... • "111100: • • • • • • • • RllOlilMr C•I· .,,. 11 -ftlle: 4Z SU•1tln1
ll ,.,..., 11 ~ S-lo rim Idea -hMllo
21 lt,..1111 . --11 Tllnl,.._ 411•1• •r:.
ye.109lcal ""'"''' t1ittot1 •"1• 45 Tl'Kltl. d
at ~r:." . ''<tlc.:v-1•u, u ffl.~'110 ~' x:r.~~ .... f.!~~ ~ tt ar..... u G;;.;.~· .. t~, · » ;.,, -• "' °''" IO ~1fJ.Wlllf • ... ,lot DOWI 17 bc,,t r.r .,~ c~ . ttt5 fi~t JI R'tM *1111 "I 1 ~~ .ncur"" si!'.!~.111 n ·p;_ .. 1 •• 1 "~I~ I~ · 1 ~~f. fi ill" S4 ~t:::'n:lon . St . . t 1 """" f'Or
".. "'~ ~ o.n ··•C.-' 4l llll " ' 6 ....... I '4 oiijijfog S9 N"'tl" .• ' Ctl".,. ,.., . ...,.. 1111••
•
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afllr ·Iha atronctr Weat Gtr-~ dunljling . ,,...,. and
Tbo ::.= 'i'ar this will
bTln( tmlbli to other -lltrOlil . currenclel IUd1 u the
llallan lira end . the lleli!en
l\'!!1<· They aay that • .... --loo Woods moetlng Is the
Ideal IOluUon. . '!'bey predlcl It p'®ably
woUld ID~ a devaluation of
the Frandl Irene. The BrUlah -··value-compared with !ho u .s. dol1ar-alJo would
probably be cul but not ..
htavlly u the pound'• -devaluadou.
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M • ' ~Vie· goers
Getting Air
In Popcorn
SAii J'RAllCl8CO (AP) -
Movlt-(Dttl ore \>aylng for a
lol mono air In tbei( popcorn
tbelt dlJ'I than in
ll'endf•thtr'• ttme. • popcorn macblna cncullve aays.
8peclaI proceu1ng a a d
equipment pull the •ertta1 qp
Jo 40 times Its orlglnaJ alae,
taid )Qbla C. Ev°"" vice
pmldllll ol Gold M a d a I
Produclt ol CIDclnnaU, wllltlt
clalml lo bo Ille nation'•
larPlt popcoru maoblne rolker. ,
M •• -~ Evan• Aid
Maadq, Ille ~-....
of popcat1I Ill '"°""' -• hofdl OD1J abolll OllO -., .....
--..
N~nDue
Just Brief
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DAILY PllOT JI
U!XlAI. llO'IJCE LEGAL NOl'ICE
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DAU.Y PILOT 13DlTOBIAL PAGE
:Costa· Me·sa",d~l · :Sur ·
, Pull up lhare, Herb Alpert, IOllC! 70'lf T\juana
J1nu ill the Oievy pickup and IU• a poaltloo llt )he
bead o1 the parade. We'"' mardlin&. v1a Ftillbrook.
)"lseondldo llld San Diego, lo Melico.
We'n ~ that . I.I, If the CoSla Mesa City'
CoWldl bas'lla way. By a +.1 VIiie councilnleo are U)'gillg
P?f!ldent..elect NI.too and the new Congress lo<:0nslder,
d~ actou.sly, tile purcbase of Baja CalUornia and Ito
onneulioo to Los Est.iclos Unidoo. ·
The naUves haven't been beard from down 1n San
tanacio. La Pu, Enseoada and Tijuana. Cbancea are
tlie 11)..,&ge is stijl Ued up In the U.S. Po!lal S}'stem. that mstituilon having already adoPled ·&Omo bl the llUUIBDa comp)e.ze1 of our friends lo the 80lrtl\.
Al anx rot.!, whether or bQI they lake it seriously,
Vice-Mayor Roben M. Wilson, who proposed .the plan
at U:ul week's •council meeting, is ·as earnest as ·he can
be about tlie 'rroject. And his chief supporter. Council·
man Wllliam st. Clair, is bavin' a hard time holdlng
down his enthusiasm for the proposal. Two other ooun,
cllmen who voted with Wllsoo, Willard Jordan and
Mayor Alvin Pinkley, are mosUy mumbling ill the waka
of Mtloday'o vote. The liltb coundlm8n, George Tucker,
submitted a 4etailed and heady negative aoa!ylis·of the
situation, .~udlng that it might be a good lllea but It
requires 'more study.
There are uidced many things that this great and
11001e.. ~untrY couJd bring to the simple lives of \ne
natives of that llCJO.mile penin•ola, Wit.bout such a hold
propogal their simple existence may never be enriched
by American contributions-by ~ay1 and •Orange
Juliu. stands and Jlick·tn-lhe.Box •amburgers and
CbriMmas ~ jingles for MiasiQn Pit.
. Vllionar)' lt may ht, but )llO laki!olier does b'a .. Ill
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Mistakes· of
Adoptive
Parents
BY NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
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\(any coupl .. , unable to have children or tbeiT own, believe Ibey have failed
u uieo and women. Some feel guilty
or angry: othen:, frustrated for years,
feat U>elr marriage Js threatened. If
t h e y decide tb adopt a child, m a n )'
clilJd.less c:oi:iples 'have doubts about
tbemlelves 1Dd do a Jot of aouJ«arclllng
durlog their interviews with the adoption
agency. Will Ibey be good parent&! Will
the -comlder them well adjusted? HOii cu Ibey toll the dtJld he'll adopted!
Evvy year 1pproxlmately I million
coupla In the United Stites decide to
adopt a btby. S1nce no more than 100,GOO
cblldr<lt become available to meet tbll
demaild, lea than one In 10 couples
&dually become adoptive parents each
year. Obviously, the lucky ones are thrllJ..
eel, even though adopUng a child iJ
not quite tbe same u having one of
their own.
MOST ADOPTIVE parents react to
their new baby with mixed emotions.
Having waited a long Ume, they u.suaUy
are five to 10 years older than natural
parent&. Striving to be perfect, Ibey
are overly conscientious about their Uny
infant. The slightest deviaUon from whal
they think is normal is cause for unusual
concern; many call the pediatrician .or
family doctor at the drop of a hat.
Tbe adopted baby Is often held In
IUCh high regard that bis parents almost
deify him. Nothing is too good for their
son or daughter. They give love all
right, often so much that the child
la overwhelmed and seldom chall~nged 111 the small doses of frustraUon
neceaary for normal p e r 1 o n a l i t y
developmenl
Deeper Bite
''Uncle Sam's 'pay now and enjoy it
later' plan, otherwise known as &octal
aecur:lty, Will bite deeper into the
p~checks of employ es this year,"
noted Acme Markets, Iae. "The tax
rate of 4.4 percent is the 1ame a1 last
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
l thought C. def M. '1 Ol'le·Way
streets were lo make We easter for
residents. But our merchant oll-
garcby decided comfort wouldn't be
good for business. Ia what's good
for the Chamber of Commerce good
(or C. del M. '! And who made Dee
Cook the voice of the people?
'' -E.P.A.
TWI ,.,..,,. rwflKn ... lilfT' .._ llff
-Nrffl' ,.... .. 1119 _,,.,, .....
~ .... -.. ._, o.-. Oail'r" '"1ltt.
ON TllE OTHER hand, odoptive
parenls t.nd to set high standards and
Wist on stclct conformity aa their~
youngster grows older. They sb'ess
fa'mily valuea ana tradiUom as though
to say: "Since you are now part of
our family, you must be exactly like
we art." Many demand mpect aJXI
absolute obedience at con.slderable cost
to the child'& strJv.lng for independence.
Their expectations and goals sometime
are So bigb that their son ·or daughter
reacta negatively to their pressure for
achievement and suceess.
• INTERESTINGLY, sexual inhibitions
in some adoptive parents frequently pre-
vent a coofideq_t approach to sex educa-
tion while the child ls growing up. Since
most adoptive children were born out
ol wedlock, their new parents seem to
fear they too will stray from the straight
and narrow path. So many adopted
youngster1 are confused about where
babies come from, indeed, where they
tb~ves came from.
FORTUNATELY, fewer families today
make the mistake of trying to conceal
adoption from thett youngsters although
many reveal too much too soon, and
too often. Repeaµng the story over and
over again makes it too mechanical
When the youngster ls 8 or 9 and begins
to have the normal childhood fantasy
that he bad two sets o( parents, one
good, lhe olher bad, some adopUve
parents go into a tailspin when the.ir
darling tells them they CIJ"e his bad
parents and that be wants to go back
lo the ooes who really love him.
SINCE ADOPTIVE parents setk pro-
fessional advice freely, most child
~chlatrista see a proporUonately higher
percentage of adopted children in tbeir
offices and clinics in comparison to
children raised by their own parents.
Bul their beha\·lor problems and emo-
tional hang-ups can be corrected if both year, but applies now to the first adoptive parent.,, are willing to face ~,a earned instead of the Orst . .Jbcir own personality conflicts aod to
.... The maximum. tu. due Ut.ia diange their neurotic wa}'! of adapting
year from an employ• hu been in· to the everyday prob!E:ms of living with
creased $52.80, from $290.40 to $M.1.20. themselves and with their adopted Tbe lncreue was legislated by . d.re.n
Congnis1 to pay for the increased cost chil •
of aoclal 1ecurt1l' beneflta."
Quotes
Rep. Seym-H1lpon, R-N,Y., ...
1ponor of tht provlllon LD the foreign atd
n~ bill 11r&1A1 Pre1ldt•t
Jotutaoa to sell Pb•n10m supersonic
ng111er-bomben 11 1ane1, "The While
House anMJneement about negotiaUons
on the jets may turn out to be nothing
more than a &immlck ta evade the great
concentrauon ol public opinion for
another month or IO. I want an U·
plana1loo GI why Secmuy Rmk '""ided
a yes or no answer 'then uked by
r.poiUn ii 1 decision had been mode to ..u Ille )eta."
Ysabtl Slfretle, Pa 1 • d t • • -"ln
wulthy California why do we havt to use
tht antiquated ballot-marking way" of
voting? Wtth the voUng machtnt you
close the curtain, prcu the levm, open
t.ht curtain and the vote is cast."
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drawb~ A ll'lexlcan oUlclal, JU,t u seriou and
earnest u VU:e-Mayor Wll-, point. out that Mexico
hu a federal • consUtUUOaal, statute fqrblddlng .dllpool·
•tlon ol IUlY of the 1)8tlon'• !errljory., Thi$ could put a
11\gbt roadblock in the Coola Mesa plan. Suc;h a tran.-
aC'tloo, alter all, does reqolre·bolb a bu)'l!r aDd a seller.
ilut tbese drawbacks need not pe~ ,queer
the deal. -Other avenues are Open.
We have · b~ard suggeotioljl, for example, that we
swap Arizona for Baja Cal!fomla, but that led to a
quick counter proposal that Cuba.U p!<>babl,y more avalJ. al!I• consfdertng it. present .tat.! of affairs. And others•
are suggesUng, if we afe going to trade anything, it
should be Texas.-But wby, ot:bera ask, would Mexico
want Tex&s! ,
The takeover of Baja California. ('wbi#> actually is
comprised of the state o! Baja California and ,the IA!rri·
lory of Bai• California, Sur) really is noC!llng new. It
bas been propooed oft and on in varying stages of ser·
lousness for decades. Al no time bas Mexico shown !Se
llig!ltest tncllnatlon to relinquish It.< territory-state. Jn
f~c~ when it w8s'be!J:ig discussed down tn the Imperial
Valley some years back. the then governor o! Baja Calif.
ornia said, no, Me.zlco Isn't tnlA!rested tn selling any·
thing, btit It Is bmre<ted tn buying California, North.
With that would come a reverse flow of cu1ture:
plaster ol paris bulls, thriving seat-cover industries, and
reasonably priced teqllila.
Next we expect t0: hear tllal the Costa Mesa
Police Department's Search and. Rescue ,Squad is to be
d\spa.tched on a prelimiMry road mapping expedition
and tbet former councU candidate Ted Bologb will be aent aa aa emissary irrprelimina!y negotiations .
Ole!
' N
Reader Would Change Electoral College
Opposes Direct Presidential Vote
To the Editor:
Because we were so near chaos at
the eod of our recent elecUon. people
are ready to ditch the electoral college
and demand that we vote directly for
president and vice president.
Everyone knows the present system
has it! faults , but to do away with
it instead of remedying the fau1ts is
the same as throwing the baby out
with the bath water.
THE BIGGFST fauJt is the provision
that a candidate must get a majority
of the electoral votes to win. Change
lhi3 to a plurality and let the high
man win and there would be no need
to worry about the. election goiog io
&he House of Representatives.
The electoral college syJ.eni was
dealgned to prevent the more populous
states from dominaUng national elec-
tions. Each state has its own elecUon.
U a man gets 90 percent of a state'•
popular vote! he wtD get no mbre elec--
toraJ votes than U he had received ·a
bare majority. His surplus voles do not
carry over to anottter state as lhey do in
direct voting.
THE PRESENT SYS'J'.EM should be
changed in three ways as R>Tiows :
1. Keep lhe electoral college but omit
th~ electors. Each goverb91' would certify
election results to .... Washingt.on.
2. Divtde the electoral votes in each
state in the same proportion as the
popular votes were dlvided among tbe
candidates. •
3. The man with the largest number ·
(If electoral votes would be declared
the winner. regardless of whether he
received a majority or not.
HARRY H. RO'nlLEISBERGER
Urense; Not ,Llbertg
To the Editor ;
"Academic Freedqrtl t" This ts what
one hears ecOOini through the halls or
San f'ranclSC(I State College, a college
that had lo be closed becaUR of sporadic
vandalism and violence stemmirlg from
a black student wtioa strike.
Don't get me wrong -I am for
academic freed om -but J do not believe
that academic freedom glvea anyone
lhe right to vandalir.e or lo riot!
BECAUSE OF lhe fervor of a handful
of students 18,000 students are not getUng
the education that they have every rl£ht
to receive.
As a poblicallon of Coast Federal Sav·
ings put it, "It is a great misfortune
thal the zealots or pressure groups
al.,ays think with their emotions, seldom
with reason. They have no compunction
in carping, lying and exaggerating with
the fiercest passion. They cry liberty
when they really mean license."
RICK EVANS
Student
'Delightful Surprise'
To th& Editor:
Coming from a ''big" city and several
uperlences with one of the best known
and mosi· capable medica1 writers in
the country. N~son with the Loll Ange-
les Times, I had the usual anllclpatory
responses ol a big city mouse about the
country when t htard that my talk at
the ~Department of Psychobiology was
going to be covered by a reporter from
your poper.
11IE AR11CLE that resulted, however
written by Tbomas li'ortune, wu ooe Ol
the -t well-writt.n, sopbistl""ted and
ICc\.lrate reports that 1 have experienced.
Oealinp with the lay press for a re-
searcher, especially in "ten581lonal''
areas s u c h as mental Illness or drug
abase. usually f'efi\llt i.n diuster. Thia
article and, obviously the writer, Is •
dt;llghlful surprlst and I felt l must ~et
Letters from Teadm aTe welcome.
Nonnally torit.l.rs sh.ould oonve11 their
message in 300 words or less. The
right to cundtnse letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
Utter& mun include siQnature and
mailing ad<irei.t, but names matt be
withheld on request if sufficient rea-
son ii apparent.
•
you know tw e1e:se:d
1
' rt, ~t... bis
style, co:ilel'it, ·and fOCIS&:; • • 1 •: •
ARNOLD J. MANDELL, M.D.
Department cJ. Psychiatry and
Human Behavior
• School of Medicine
Universlty of California. Irvine
.Liber~b· Belta.,lor
To the Ed.!tor:
Remember a rew years ago when
all educaton were denouncing loyalty
oath,, on the grounds the oaths curtailed
academic freedom? -
The Berkeley Board of Education baa
adopted a policy that no teactier be
hired witboul agreeing to support un-
questioningly the district's educational
philosophy, and that tenured teachers
who di>agreo with th11 philosophy be
fired, if necessary lbrough court action.
. In other wordl! the right to d1saent
.... crushed In Berkeley! Tbis type
of action ii typical of the libreals'
behavior. They don't believe in JDyalty
oaths to this country, but they insist
upan adherence to their own philosophy
by harassment, pressure and severe
demaDds.
F. R. KING
'Wh£re Tk.,...,'a a Will'
To the Editor :
Several days a.go, at a public meeting,
the Orange County Board of Supervisors
decided to push ahead with development
of Upper Newport Bay. Al a witness
.-----B11 Georse
Dear George :
I bave been gotnr; with this
fellow for 13 years and 'he is very
set in hiJ ways. For the entire U
years be bu come to my boule -c:n
Tuesday and Friday nlghta and we
play Cblnese cbeclrers and make
fudg~ We'vo been CIUiio happy, but
I don't think he will change b I s
ways after I marry hlm. Should I
marry a man so sel in bis ways!
MATILDA
Dear MatUda:
Well,·UllN.l1.over °"'"ull>'-Do
)'!Ki want to IO down 1He'1 highway
with a husband who comes to your
house oo rue.tay and Friday
nighls and plays Cb1neoe cbe<W'
and eata fudge?
Dear George:
What. I want to know is why peo-
ple can an lndlln head penny by
that Mp\e but call an lndlan bead
nickel a buffalo nickel.
L J.
Desr I. J.:
Look, t J., I doni '"'° know
why t"'1 call them pcnniel and
nlcUls -I'm trying to nm a 1 lovelorn coltunn her<.
Are you the guy who keeJ>ll
writinr and t.lllni what color ii a
mallard duct! II not, I'll aend yoo
/u. addren -you ~an write to
each other.
at that affair I would like to makt a
rew observations about Olis L!sue.
First, the supe.rvisors {and the DA~Y
PILOT) continually refer to thr. land
swap plan as a "recreational develop-
ment," which is a distortion or the
rruth.. Any project v.·hich is 95 percent
resid~ntial and commercial and 5 perttnt
recreational does not qualify as a recrea·
Uonal development in my opinion.
SecoDd., the supervisors claJmed lhat
there Was no possible source of funds
to develope the bay as a recreatloo
area.. However, the county found the
funds to plan the present development,
fowu:I several m.illi_911 dollars in federal
funds t.o dredge the )>ay, found several
million 'dbllars for the Dana Point recrea-
tional development, etc. Seems to me
that the county didn't look for any fund.I
for Upper Newport Bay' public develop-
menl
TRIRp, THE LAND would cost about
$20 rnilllon to buy from the Irvine Co.
If the whole Upper Bay were to be
made into a public recreation area .
However, Mr. Featherly himsell quoted
many cases where the Irvine Co. sold
land to the county for half price. Why
woukln't the Irvine Co. sell Upper
Newport Bay land at hall price?
Fourth, if the Irvine Co. didn't want
to sell the land the county C(IU]d condemn
the land. The coonty condemned land
by right of eminent domain to build
Dana Point Why nol Upper Newport
Bay? " •
Fifth, the DAILY PILOT, reporting
on the noted meeting, listed all lhe
people who came to praise lhe land
swap without even menti'oning the fact
that so many people came to condemn
the land swap that the supervisora had
tQ cul oU the public hearing after more
than an hour of objections.
WHERE THERE IS a will there is
a way. Apparently the supervisors just
don't want the Upper Bay to be a
public recreation area. The DAILY
PILOT has deemed il "impossible." I
guess I have more [aith in the people
of Orange County than eitlier the
supervisors or the DAILY PILOT have.
When the citizens of Orange County
finally learn what the Back Bay develop-
ment really is (no thanks to the press
coverage) they will find they have only
one more subdivision al the expense
of Southern California's only estuary.
F\lture generations of Orange County
citizens can only damn I.his ge-ieratioo
for lt.1 shortsightedness.
KENNETil S. CROKER -
Obey the I.ate Day
To the F.dltor:
An article in the DAILY Pnm by
writer Jack Chap~ll and lttled'
"Gratitude or Guff -That's Cop'
Reward," re.minded me ol an exiietience
in connect.ion wilh the Newport Beach
police. --.! ... ..
Whil! driving, f ""''loped I !~ling
ol weaknen aDd nausea. I bartl)' tnadt 1
It to the curb .. Wlille ln tbb: condJflon
I WU lppl'<)IChed by I pollc<man.
Assuming that I WU drunk, he ~
upon me with verbal ablfse and a variety
of obscene language.
This ..Aclloa cea..t when I wu kfcn..
tilled by a' spedator. Neverthelen I
wsa held there lw almoot two l\O<n
durinc which time I iiu b~ (rup.
lured ulcer) lntemally. · Blocil Joa
a.mounl<d to Ii. quart&. Sttbloqueo!ly
all cancemed d I 1 c 1 a·I med 111:1
responslblllt, and K wu ..-.pt under
tho ....
DURING MY coovaleM:tnce I foond
m)'RU refiecllng le8I on my Infirmity
and m0re 0. the' unrtlOlved probltm contronlinl me. 1'1e milundenllndlng
between Ille publk: and Ille poll<:< ~
appalling.
I auggeot thal cme day per -k be
set aside to be known u Obey Tba
Law Day. Lel the police be b)own u
leade"rs rather than avengers. Make the
people fully a"1.·are of the laws. Ll't
the police feel and advertise compassion
and syritpathy for people. Let us all
subscribe to tht philosophy that we
•bould be for people and not agalnat
them. That it is sufficiently diff1cult
for the struggfing mas& of bnrnanity
to make its way against adversiUes
of nature and the hnplacabllity o( fate
without the addiUonaI burden t f
fratricidal hatreds.
"We must not make a scarecrow of
the law setting it up ~ fear {frighten)
the birds of prey and let keep one
shape UH custom make it their perch
and not their terror."
O. S. HAWKINS
Pities Dia 'l9110ranc£'
To the Editor:
Last night I read the letter from
James P. Jones tn regard to why the
school bond measure didn't pus. .As
a student of Orange Coa.st College, I
feel that I must answer his letter •.
Ju.st because a mall minority of the
studeots have Jong hair doesu't mean
that they are trouble-makers and are
in school lo slay out of the service.
Many of lhese young meo are in 1ehool
to get an educatloo and many are very
good students.
AUO I DO NOT like the allusion
lo our long·baired and bearded teachers.
Mainly I take excepUon to thls because
os:tly two or three teachers have beards
and these are not tangled messes but
clean, well-groomed beards. And as far
as I know", none ol. our teacher1 has
overly Jong hair.
If instead of knocking Orange Coast
College, Mr. Janes would take time to
find oul what kirxl of teachers we have ,
he would realize thal OCC ill a very
good school. Typical examples of our
great teachers are Mr. Pb i 111 p s
(psychology teacher), Mr. Lumlan
{history teacher) and Mr. Holland
(speech and ·theater llrtS teacher).
ALL THESE MEN are clean-shaven
and do not have long hair and are
true representatives of the teachen at
our school.
If only Mr. Jones would stop and
think that il · is: because of the efforts
of the studenll and· teachers « Orange
Coast. ~ge that we have not had
"111 demoomUons. I rWize 1'!r. Jones
. .ii typical of conaervaUve Orange O:Kmty
aod it is people like hlm who voted
down the recent school hoods which
lu!pt badly needed funda from Onna•
C.ilsl College. 1 cah only pity bis lgnoranc:t.
SUSAN T. HOGLIND
----Friday, NO.. 22, Hiii
TM editotlal P<rll• Of ~ Dollf
Pilot "'"' lo lnfomi ncl -
Mlatr -"" -!lftf 11111 ..... __ • opinlo!u 11114 .....
"""""" .. ioplca ., llllc7wal """ aignJfiomt<e, br proofdlop a tonan for ~ ,......., of
our rtoden' OJX11fonl1 ctnd bf
l"l•entlnQ ~ dfffrsr ""1o-
J>Olnto of Informed ob•..,,.,.
and IJ>Ok<"""' oa topka of ~ dar.
Robert N. w...i. Publlll>er
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~ -,,.-.. -•• -c.;;-,-:.;-.,_,-,,,.~. ';'. ';"""Pil'"'""'"~· ...................... ..,_,,._..,.,, • ..,.,.,,_:::.":.,.>& .......... 'l!:>•O""''"'•l.!'15 ...... ,0!.•Z-o:c ZC--""!'!••-. .. c"!"I ... -----·-·---........... ~-~..., .. -·:--... .,,,·-· ..... :;mo-· --~-::~· -=~
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.......,, *' 1': 1 .. '"lr<M ... ,.
I ••Al: ......... "ldffOr
--. =-=
Candy ·-.. <:.an.es .
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SUppo~t Ball . .
As aweet as a rooloction shop will bo·tlle .•vart.h"6ted by tile
Junior AUiiliary of !he A>sislat!Ce"League ol:·!'l~wport Beach Friday,
Dec. s.
The :I01l1 annual Oandy Cane Ball wlll '6rlj>;( 500 ·members and
guest.a to ttie. Balboa Bay Club '!or the g)Jtt¢11g ~ p.m. ev.ent which
will feoluN cliniJig and dancing. to tile music· of The Society for the
Pr .. erw.Uon ol Big Bands with Fred Ball8ntine and his COO>bo provi·
ding em.ertainment d~g the intermissioh. · ,
. . peconting the Jobby.,will he giant <!Indy. canes uip. trees.decor·
aled·..iai. die delightful confecdons and tied Wltb ·::i-nbb<>~. Ta'11es
will feature Clhristmu basket. filled wid> gr.,.. fe 8nd ·..a azaleas
and topped with gH111eriug ornaments.
Commitee chairmen assisting Mrs. Ernest Schag, b8ll chairman
are the Mmes. Stewart Clark, decorations; Hanns Baumann, 1bomas
Roosselot and Grant McNiff, invitations; Josepb Bush, music ; Robert
Bein, courtesy; Byron Tarnutzer, hostess; William Von Essen and
John Cashion, reservations, and Mn. James M. Peters Jr., publicity·.
The Candy C·ane Ball is the major fund raising event of the year
for the Juniors. Proceeds of thH spectacular are dispersed throughout
the Harbor Area in numero~ charities as well as the league's own D<!ntaf Healtb Center, •erving> needy dllldren dunng tb~. sclloo!-yelir
and the Social Service office for temporary aid to families in need.
Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian's schal.arsbip fund for deserv-
ing university ltude!IU, American Field Service, Crippled Children's
Society and others also benefit.
Christian Women's Club
Luncheon Fits
Holiday Style
The t1Uestioo, crvmat shoukl I wear?" has been per·
plexing women for centurie&.
During the holiday season it becomes even more
urgent since social calendars rapidly fill with bazaars.
soirees and open houses.
Helping to solve this quandry will be members of.the
Newport Beach Christian Women's Club who will view
fashiom for tile coming Non at llMir nert 11111cheon
meeting, Tuesday, Dec. 3.
The luncheon will lake place from noon to 2 p.m. in
tile Nowporter Inn. Commenlator lot-tile afternoon's
ll!oMng of apparel from several area llhopo will h<
Miss Florence Smales, fashion coordinator. An addiliooal treat for tl>ose alt.en!fu>g will he the '
short ta1k and appropriate musical selections by Mis :
Joyce J..endorf. The sparkling radio personality is alsC'
a recording vocalist and ha,, been a minister <:A. muSi'
for San Gabriel Valley Youth for C!lrist where she direc·
ted a ~voice chora}e known as the Top Teens.
The guest vocalist a1so was cl~ly associated wit~
Pbii Kett in his 11Monday Nite Musicales" in tile Pasa
dena Olvic Audil!»ium and hu org8Ilized and directe<'
various small singing groups. Possessing a voice wiU.
a range that spem four octaves, Miss Landorf is a fre·
queot .peaker and vocalist at conventions and banquei
all OV« the Soothland. Many members ol the group
heard Miss l.Alndorf speak in June.
The pub·Jic is welcome to the event and reservatior
can be made by calling Mrs. Lewis Mertz at 833-1221 o
Mn, lfmlld Fischer at 1162-1129 before Nov. 29. Nurser
facilities are avaflable by reservatiOtl: and eancellatior
are necessary. ,
'lbe area chapter ol. Christian Women's Club is pa1
of a new international organization, havin& more tha
600 clubs in the United states and Canada as well a
several other foreign countries.
"The reception of tbis comparatively new group is '
silent tribute to !ht m .. 1age it brings and tbe quality o:
speakers, vocalista and spoclal features appearing each
month on the first Tuesday," says Mrs. Beecher Wallace.
publicity chairman.
F0< ~ information on the orpniz.alion and it.
·· otiviti .. call Mrs. Wallace at~.
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SWEET suc'cess -'11ha't's wb<a(the iJlth a~n~a! C.ndy cane Ball
will be according to three member& of the Junior AuxiliarY,, Assis-
tance League of Newport Beacll (left to right) Mrs. Joe. Brockman,
,
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Mn. "1'1\on\u · ~e/OI Z!d Mrs. Michael Helin. The g~~
event ~ll laki!> place Friday, Dec. s .in the Balboa ~~ €lub. 1:1~;:
than 500 memben and guests we expected. ...:
Hoag Expansio·n
\ . . I Be a.Deer
'~ .. ·tetter·s ·-o.u .. t.
. ...... . . .
•• • • ... • .• •'
( .. -:. . ' ;~. :.· ... -: : .. ~~ . -~ ·!'-'t• ••• ~ ..-;: ... . . .. ~· .. . ~ , .. , .1;.:.:.:
! ...... .. . ..... .. ' ..... .. ....... · .. -.. ~ ... -; .. • • .Remember Rudolph? ;;::
He"s .Iii• deer 'f\'llo led the. way for ajl oi;; :' s~"a'r other ' reindeer ·On 1on8 fo&iY ·~ ;:·i.,
ma$ EVe. ·· ;.;.. !: ' ..... Rud91ph'i se850ft is her:e. agaih~ and hia;~~!
aong will· soo& :beo.b~~ ~on ~·~·~-te!~~~.'.:
· ' Bion s~ .. r,. · ' · -. · · · ·.: . ,, ' ' . !""':"~ . • . . • -4-, ~ ' · .Birt ~e w00:1t have to,l'eiad•alooe; tlhts ;yNr;t-:.·~i;.:·
: for he will he joined by thousands ol other • •
11deer" wtio are le~ding tl)e way. for the ex•; :
pansioo of H7g Memorial H.Spital, Presby~·.;;
terian. . ·
Lelters •t being mailed to Orange Coast1 =:
·restdents-b ttii; yeai's· r~ a D~·-chi.ir•f
man, Andy Devine who is beading tlie·Cb'.rlct;..~i
' ··~ mas patrons. · · ;~ .. ~·i
'lbe letters say thai · ,tl)is year H~g i(~ ;
launching a 11Reech" EJi>ansioo Program r.:-'
witll maturity plans which will· iidd 284 !"' ';.;
ient rooms wiUtin the next three yea.rs. Thes :.!; . "' years, 1969, 1970 and l~l are. appropriat~t~:~
called th~ "!leach" yea~s. , . ;;:!.,,
By being a "deer" your name will he piacJ;i;;:
on the patrons" scroU ·in tbe hospital lobbyf !':. ....
Donors will have thr~ oPport~ti~ to rla~i~;..
with the hospital tow~rds its goa(1 Dona~ooi;~
can be in the form ·of a 1968 "Be a Deer'.' gtftr~;._;:
a "Be a Deer" reach pledge or a·''ae· a Deer;t:-;::!
patien_t room· pledge. · ,-' 1 If:::
"All ·fift;s , larg~ Or sniall, wil!-be)p -1u,a:.;;!_
·'reach' toward the alleviitiOti 'of ·out critic:d!;:•
shortage of htlopilal ·bec!S; arid at ttia •1amo\1l;
time aUow Hoag to k~'pai:e Witltleaplodlnif;-:
medital kn.Wied-.. ·•c<ordf-tO An"" ~ ·::-• .. , ~.. • .. ,. &.PP'.~ vl~emplilyin~ lh;s.year'~ gOal ·i; ii;~ q1~'fj;·~
-llOii" lriiln ROl>ert -ninl'• . ~.. -;.
.-. Sarto .. 1."Ah, but a11nan'i ~tnoUfd .ex f
• cMd his grasp, or wJ:N!it"s i. h~veq·~.1:·. ~ i,(;
., • ' \ -• ~·1·.~ .t:J
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December
Rites Set ·
lit. and ¥n. lll71llOlld
-..-of l.ooc Beacb bave
IVNYK'td u. ~of
bot dafllbler, -Frankl
... -Hau Bl<o, ... of lit. ud Mn. l'red Hau Bice
of Corooa de! llar.· A Dec.
II wedd1nc In Lona Baacb
Ii planned. -
MIN Fnnb ii a sraduate
of Ibo Unlvenlty of the
P~, stocktoa where she
aff!Hated with Kappa Alpha
Theta worlly, ahe bat beeo
BARBARA FRANKS
'
High School President
Eyes Student Controls
Dout° -pnaldent of
Lquna -HJ&h SdloOI, .; ~w(ll 1,.U on hit move to
oatabW!' • ,bou-f o r
&llideota duril!I a ~ In
the high edllxil --y nllbt. •
Tbe .aatbriic la ~
by Lquna Beach Brlnch,
American AaoclaUon o f
IJnlYenib' w-a -coocemed wj\h It.at\ 1j IC s
&bowing an ~~ ln the
use of drug• amq teen-
agers.
dlsrespeet of -for !lnl~ l..tliutlOn& and
tradiUozw, a younc man in
our coaununity hu come
rorward wtlh an 1U11Wer," uid
Mn. Allen Barnts, publicity .
chairman, 1peakln1 of
Scll!nitz. the itudent was eleded
praldeDI by fellow sludent.
oa _Ibo ~ of bil platform,
'Ibe New PrestJ.ge.
teachin& at Roiling Hllil High ---~----
School for the put yeu.
"In the face of newspaper
beadlineo li>OOtil)( out the
An ambitious scholar and
athlete, Schmitz will b e
ualated by Tom Gonnan,
editor of Lquna Teen Corner
for the DA\LY PILOT and
atudent publl~ rejatfona direc-
tor, • pooltloo ere.led by Sch·
m.ltt u a 1lalson between stu-
dent government and the cpm-
munity.
. • •
~-Dining in the 'Heat of the Night' -..
Rad Steil•, Acodom,y Award~ -In "The H..t el. Ille Nl&lrt" (left) i. C0111Pleting a two-week
~la La Coola Spa et Rancho Le Oc!lta. stetier ii
dinina with Newport Beach friend&, Mr. and Mrs.
Phil Kellogg.
Her fiance, a graduate of
University of Southern
cattfornla '1 School of IA.w, b
serW14 u clerk to Chief
Jwitice Earl Warrtn in
Wuhington, O.C. Ht affiliated
with Sigma Phi Ep si lon
fraternity and Phi Delta Phi .
: Toastmistresses Meet '' : '
.. Announce . . •
' Conference Convenes Variety
' : • The r.n Conference of t Council . s 1 z t Inttrnatlonal
··~Club&, will belln at I a.m. tomorrow,
In Ibo Groenbrler Ion, Gardon
Grove. . Followlni a IOCla1 hour lfra.
. J11n1 -· One vice preal·
deal of tbe CaUlorhla -of Na&isal "'-1alloll of Parllamenlftlam and put
_.eary .... --of lnternatlonal Toutmlltres&
Clubo, will -I a -Ubop on 'membership statilllzaUon.
Luncheon 1peai:er will be
Mrs. Mary Lee T o n ,
uslstant tllpervilor of the
Movie
fidltor'1 H•: Thll ,,_le 9Ullh k ~,..,, bt ftle 1\llft cammm.. fll
H•l'llol' Counc.11 PTA.. Mtt. tt'*'1 Sor·
-11 ~ •nd Mrs, H1!1 s.-la commltt• duolm111n. II II
intended .. • ~ In dotterml~
l"9 11111.tii. Htm1 tor ~•Ill -,,_ and wlll ..,...., weekly. Your
""-.,. IOlkl*I. ....." fhlm 10 ~ Gllld9, a ... of "-Diiiy PllGt.1
ADULTS
BARBAREIJ.A (new)
. : Bizarre and tuteless oddity.
·THE GRADUATE -Comic
: · -aaUre of a young man who
· ·breaks out of the
: materialistic world of his
: elders.
·HERE WE GO 'ROUND THE .
''MULBERRY BUSH
• Shocking musical aboot high
achoo! set.
Golden Desert Region and
former tntern1tlonal T-Clqbo' lpeecb contut winner al the lntoma-
Uonal leveL
Mn. Howard Jone 1,
member and pul president
of the Gardm Grove club,
will narrate a .,._Wlml of
other Arees Q f . COID·
munlcatlaa durlnl Ille al---on.· Piutldpalint: will be Mn.
Pal Bucclan!U, Mr1. Mtrk
Comp and Mrs. Hat Bales
who will direct Miss Kim
Kast.on, Miss Nina Neuman
and Miia Evelyn Cllneros.
Guide
ment for the life of a hippie.
THE LEGEND OF L YLAH
CLARE -A sordid film
of strange a n d unu.vory
people practicing g r e e d ,
aadi!m. drug addlcition and
lesbiantlm.
A LOVELY WAY TO DIE
-Seductive beauty is ac·
cU.ed cf killing her wealthy
elderly husbarni..
PERSONA -Swedi11h
psychological drama about
a mentaUy di!turbed actress
and her neurotic nurse.
English dubbiJl&.
PETULIA -Brief encourtter
of unpredictable y o u n g
matron and jaded surgeon.
Mrs. Frank Young,
chairman of Council Sh<, will
lftf.lde 'and Mrs. Lou J 1
Culpepper, will serve a a
toutmlatrea.
CoullCU Sil ii comprlted of
nine 0rll"8t.County club&, and
membenhlp In lntenlalloofl
Toutmiatreu Clubs· la optn to' aU !ntereat«I adult women
'fltbout regard to. r a c e ,
rell&foo, cWum..mlp or country
of realdence.
Mmibera ol women'• clubl
In Orange County a r e
eapecia.lly invited to attend
this conference or send a club
representative.
Horoscope
A ~civU defense program is
planned fOI' the Xi Mu Mu
cbapler, Bala Sigma Phi
meeting taking place at a p.m.
Monday, Nov. '25, .in ~ Hun·
t1nlton Baach home <ll Mrs.
Miltoa Lom>,s.
Gueat ll)e8ker will be from
tJie El Turo Marine Ba,.
Speaker'• Buread. l{e will ......m a ll1m and opeak on
Vietnam, and arranginit: the
pro1ram ii Mrs. Caroll
LlndlOy. Mn. Stuart Hayter
ls cl"lil defense chairman.
Memben also will bring
donstions of money and food
to nn a '11lanklgiving ba!:ket.
Virgo: Let
Yourself Go
SATURDAY your lot with older penooa.
NOVE"BER 23 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. It):
,., Forcea could be diluted.
By SYDNEY OMAR.It Meam peoj>le make demands
from VariOU8 dlre'CU<ne. Be
"The wise man controls hi11 choosy: Don't scatter your ef-
destiny .•• Astrology Points forts. Some may be offended, the way." but progre11 today depeodl
ARIES (March It-April 19): upon your ,.Jectivlty.
Important people are Intrigued SAGmARIUS (Nov. n-
by your oplnions, aspiraUons. Dec. 21): Streu 00 your a bill·
Be dlnct, confident. Member ty to protect poase88ions: Key
of opposite sex can prove la being practical. Don't fall
valuable ally. 'Your pe.raona1 for sob story. Get what's com-
Activities
The chapter will donate
funds from a rummage iale
1ut Friday and Saturday to
the Cystic Fibrosis program
according to Mrs. John Huber,
ways and means chairman.
Mrs. Gib Lynch and Mrs.
George Burgeaa aai!ted with
Ult 11le.
Members of Xl Mu Zeta
chapter are making pl.11.n1 for
a Chrtstmu party on Satur-
day1 ~· 14. The group met
yesieroay In the Westminster
home of Mrs. Ralph Adams
and Mrs. William Levereni
presented the program on
Sense of Light from the club's
book, "Fem.ival of Life."
Refreshments were se rved
by Mr&. Felix Jebbia, courtesy
chairman.
The next meeting of the
chapter will take place in the
home of Mr!. Carl Wll8on OD
Tbunday, Dec. 5.°
Thinking
Man's Art
Ex-hibited
An e&hiblt called Confer·
ence Room Quotations and
Sculpluret will be M dlsplty
until next Tuesday in Great
West"em Savings and Loan in
Santa Ana.
HB Juniors Announce ·
' Hall mar~ Art Judges
Deadline for high school
seniors wishing to enter the
Hallmark Art Contest
spol\90r'ed annually by the
California Federation of
Women's Club!!, J uni or
Korean
To Offer
Thank You
' Membership, is Monday, Nov.
25.
· Mr•-Daniel Draa:eset. fine an. co-chairman of the Hun·
tingtcm Beach Junior wonlan's
Club. 1w 8llDllW1()l\d that
judges in that city's contest
will be Walter Johnson ,
librarian; Mrs. Rh~ta Gillette
from the Art League. and
Mrs. Frank Souza from the
Juniors.
Entrie! will be displayed in
the main library through the
week after the wtnnera a r e
selected Tuesday, Nov. 26, and
ribbons awarded at that time.
The winning entry will be .sent
Ben C. Song, general direc· to the district com~tition. Winners from ,.the district tor of Asian lmpact in Seoul, competition are judj:ed on
Korea, will speak to Christian state and national levels with
Business a n d Professional award! being presented in
Women 's Council of Orange each.
County during a d i n n e r High school seniors at.
meeting In the Revere House, tending Huntington Beach and Mailna High Schools who wish Tustin at 6:30 p.m. next Tues· to enter may contact Mrs.
The gathering ~in with rtfh:shment! at 7 .m.
GuesUI art invited at tha lime
to vi1it the PuJi>le Hue, a
student arl pllery.
.Refreshments will be terVed
until 7:30 in the cafeteria,
where the bu&iness meeting
will take place. Following the
meeting ljnd student pmen-
tatlon , entertainment will be
provided by the Laguna Baach
Choral Readers, a group of
students led by C h a r 1 e s
Schiller.
Auxiliary
American Lea:ion Hall ln
Costa Mesa is the settin&
for meeting of the Auxiliary
to Barracb 1249, Veterans of
World War I. The first Tues,.
day of each month members
gather for a business session
at 7:30 p.m. and the third
Tuesday for a social and
potluck at 6 p.m.
Give to Your
United Fund day. Drageset, 968-1275. A teacher-missionary, Song:!.=====================;
i& on a speaking tour of the
United States to say Thank
You America, as he feEils he
owes bla life and education
to American people who con-
tributed to his IUpporl.
For a Cool Yule ....
You'll Gift a BOOK/
The Booklltall •n L '"' "· c.o. 11-MM611
FollowinJ the liberation or1~;ii;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;i;;;;;;~ 19C5, when Sona WU 7, hiSll
father, a former governor
under the Japaneae, WU kill-
ed, and a teriell of tragic
occurances left the family
desdtute and miserable .
I:.ater, after the Chinese in-
vasion In 1952, Song was taken
into an orphanage and was
able to obtain an education.
Reservatiom for the event
IlllY be obtained by calling
Mra. Bruce Bailey, 'n'f..5356
or Mla Emma Wiele, 541-4676.
CM Overeaters
ANNOUNCEMENT
SAM ft. KOWlft, M.D.
hos ............ Mt office to
I LOVE YOU, ALICE B.
TOKLAS -Nice Jewl!h boy
gives up his square fiancee
and his role in the establish·
SPREE (new) -Tastdess. ·
vulgar and dilappolntlng
tour of LU Veps.
THE STRANGER RETURNS
-Dubbed Italian with ex-
cessive display of cruelty
and sad.ism.
magnetism works overtime. ln& to you. Be aware of fine
TAURUS (A!B'il 26-May 20): print. Someone ii try!n( to
Good lunar aspect today coin-pull wool over your eya.
cldu with abllity to get acroos CAPRICORN (Dec. :!Wan.
point of view. Some who op-19): Greater freedom il -ln-
The photographs and pool·
en, datcned to belp create a
conference room enviroriment Overeaten Anonymou s
cmduclve to clear thinking gather every W~y at
have been. created by Ruder 8 p.m. in Bear Street School,
and Finn, Inc. for use in Iii -=Costa==M= ... =· ====== ,own conference room. 'nle1r
18512 laoch lllY<I., S.lte 207
ToWll • Country Slioppi"9 c..tor
(at Five Polnta)
536-606'
Bethel Honors
Representative
At Reception
A reception given by Bethel
S13, International Order of
Job'a Daughters next Sunday
will spotllgbt MIM LaRoyce
Allen, a past honored queen
and grand bethel repr:e10D-
taUve to Iowa.
The event in the Seafaring
Masonic Lodge, Newport
Buch, wtll begin at I p.m.
Mia Leslie Pie kerel of
Colt.a Mesa recently was nam·
~ honored queen. Other new
olficen are the M I s s e a
Patricia June, senior prlncesa;
Sandra French. j u n i o r
princeaa; Karen Robinette,
guide, and Leslie A 11 e n ,
manfoal.
-... ..Nw memben initialed dur-
: lqa a ceremony led by MW
r PaWa RobelUo!I In cl u de d
; Mi8I Debbie Al~ and
·: Mifl Debbie Pn>cha•ka
.
• ~anukah Topic
• Of Workshop
THERESE AND ISABELLE
-French flashbaclUJ of gay,
young, times in private
school and the love of two
girls for each other.
THE TIGER MAKES OUT -
Off beat comedy satiriies
contemporary frustration in
urban and suburban life.
Joplin Ranch
Tour Slated
Pleased with the progress
of the Jopiln Boy'a Ranch are
membeni of the National
Association of Women in
CoMtruction. chapter 91 .
Ray Stripe, director of the
ranch, will speak to the group
when It meets tomorrow.
Members will gather at 10:30
a.m. 1n tht parking lot of
Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana,
and caravan to the ranch for
a first-band view of the boys'
duties and scholastic in·
lllrucl.lcn
INTRODUCING
posed you can be won over. dieated. You can carry out
Gain family cooperation -heart's desire. Have courage
fine for travel planning. of convictlo111. Stress in·
GEMINI (May 21· June 20): dependence of thought, actloo,
It may be difficult to be prac-Live up to pot en fl a I .
Ucal , but it is necessary. Ap.. Circumstances turn ln . your
plies to health, work, dealing favor.
with auoclates. Avoid forcing AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
iuuel. You may not see com-18): Much that surrounds you
plete plctutt-Wait. today lacks lllbstanct. Dif~
CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): ferentlate between illlllloo and
Accent on public relatlorui. rtiaUty. Use Imagination con-
Meam strive today to clarify structively. Don't brood about.
your intentions. otberl ~ what might have been. Change
operate U they know wby. for bett6 Is due.
y,... jo& ii to win .m... PISCES (Feb. It-Much 20):
Special attention la required Accent on friends, hoPU and
by mate, partner. wishes. Succea depends upon
exhibit will be ahown In Lon·
don in Janu'1')'.
Silver Sands
The lint and third TueadaYI
at I p.m. memben of Silver
Sandi 281, Native Daughton
of the Golden West aather
for meetlql. Lake Park
Clubhouse in Hunttncton
Belch ii the meetlnt place
for the first seMion. Mn. Jack wu.on, Sll-1479, will furnish
locaUon on the next meeting
date. LEO (July 23-Aug. 12): y,... ability to be pracilcal. Promi>e made to lndl~dual1-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
at I dil\anc< should be fulllll-
ed. Means s\rive to piece
together loose end.I. Aaoclate
can he1p find what you seek.
Leave task only when it ii
completed.
·VIRGO (Aug. :J!,'lept. 12):
Let younetl go! MelDI be
true ID your own feelings.
Shake off re!trlctions. The go
slgna1 Is lit. Dm't be conlined
by artificial strlcturea. New
starts, contacts are favored.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 12):
Stick with experience. Cast
• • •
.
INTllNA TION-'LLY PAMOUS "'
CHEF MIKE ROY .
. ' MR. ~AVlb KOLB NOVEMBER 22-23
"'" .~·1to.'!'l\\.A.~1 ... '?.l"·
ffWl.·~'l: .. ll"t. 'It\,~-Mr. Kolb, fonneriy of The Bluffs, h .. jo;n.a
ti.. stiff of Run ThomplOft Hei\ Stylist.
PICKWICK
BOOKSHOP ~1~--=: :.;:::.~.:: 3545 E. Coasf Hwy. Corona del Mar !(i~M:.~ .::= Telephone: 673-6961
&Guth foast 'Plaza
MJITOL AT I.AN DIEGO '"E£WAY1 COIT.\ MESA
Ooam, .. lllO ''-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--''
• -• M oybe yours iS .: infnl bud gel. · --
Or, perhepo you',. r9aiJy to replace her original mini with 1 midi or mul.
•
Airy llzt, •!I our diamonds are extra ilrge on qu111ty.
SLAVICK'S
..... Sinot 1tl7
11 F•1hion l1l1ntl
Newi-ort letdi -U4. I JIO
Ollffl! lr.AONOAY ANO F~IOAY IYIHIH&S
' "
............................. ----------~~~~~~~-----·--------'~-'----------
r
'-
•
' 1
•
Mesa
-EDl:TION
• • , • . -... I • l
voi.:. 6T, NO. 211, ~ 5£CTIONS, so·PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CADFORNIA
I . '
FRlDkY, NoVEMBEg 22, 'J 961 .JEN CENTS ' . <
• I
Plane Lands • Ill SF Bay
•
All 1011 A6oard Saved as ](Ip.an. Airliner Ditches
---
From Win s.m ...
SAN FRANCISCO -A Japan Air
Linea 7f1I jet inbound from Tokyo came
down in San Francisco Bay a mile
short of the airport today but the Coast
Guard reported a11 107 persons aboard
were rescued safely by small boats.
The weather was foggy and overcast
but the airport was in normal operation.
The big plane came down about 9:45
a.m. off Coyote Point about 18 miles
south of San Francisco.
Inglewood .
Solon Backs
Baja Buy
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tM l>1llJ' Pli.t Sllff
Impetus was added Thursday to an
imaginative Costa Mesa-initiated move
to bring Baja California under U.S. rule.
as a Harbor Area manufacturer jumped
on the bandwagon -or Tijuana Taxi,
:is it we.re.
Inglewood City Councilman R. Gary
Smith plans to introduce a resolution
patterned after one by C06ta Mesa Vice
Mayor Robert M. Wilson, seeking
American purchase of the Republic of
Mexico slate.
The Inglewood City Council meets on
Tuesday at 1 p.m., according to the
City Clerk'• office.
"l -11Y 1liillk·il,l! a ~ "'*'' sitd···sm"flli , eonia~ctl:d at
ever hop on.a bike~nd.·zip away with ~e-wind .in your hair and your
l)wn priva!e 'thoughts to rM!ect upon? Costa Mesa Pollce Department
Re<:ords Clerk Irene Loucks, 22, takes a break. to try OJJt bike set for
auction Saturday at 10 a.m. behind police faclity, 99 Fair Drive. More
than 100 bicycles will 1be auctioned off, aloilg With at.her unclaimed
items. ' ,
ThemWdynamica SYllleml, 3lllO Campua
Drive, adjacent to Oranie County
Airport.
. "It would open up a whole new area,''
said the young cofponuon vice president.
Smith aaw Vice Mayor Wll900 on
televlslon Wedne8day night, explalninJ
hJs concept of the U.S. negotiaUng to
buy Baja as the Slst state and 1aid
be wu immensely impressed.
Newport-Mesa Fish Fry,
Parade Set for Telecast
A telephone survey of Mexican sources
Thursday, however, revealed those in
govemment-3ppointed posts reluctant to
commeat officially, while those in the
tourist trade sounded s o m e w h a t
hyrterical.
Wilson maintains that the l a n d
purchase idea is serious and workable,
predicting that it will at least stir up
some broad interest, whether il ever
becomes a reality. Thousand! of people annually enjoy tbe
Costa Mesa·NeWport l!arbor Lions Club
Fish Fry Parade, but the number will
be drastically increased next June. it
was disclosed 'IJlursday.
Just like twf,ig brcther in Pasadena
on Ja:i. 1, the June 1 Fish Fry Parade
down city 9treets will be telecast to all
the Southland viewing public.
"We think we've got' a good thing go--inl, '.' said CIUf Wesdor!, chairman or
Mystery Blaze
l;:auses $3,500
Damage in Mesa
A mystery blaze possibly sparked by ::t.auc electricity nartd up in a Costa
Mesa home Thursday as workmen wett
gluing ~ carpetbg in Ute master
bedroom, e1Ullng 13,500 damage. -·
. Eu1ene S~;iitn, ol l'19 Eµes!l'~
Ave., bad -~ die fll't wllb a
a:arden hOH by the time Fire Depart-
-.ent units arrived· at the scene.
,A Firt: Deplrtmeat s)J9k~man today ·
stressed that the uact cause of the nre
has not ·been de;WminfJ!. but tpition
cf the glue bf stattc eleclrlc!ty ill a di.r
tinct poalbUlty.
No O.'le W¥ injured by the SU~. ~tupUoo ol f1alnet, whldh ..nt .nnOfe .
pouring through Ille -. who8e dam-
l(ed --ted for IZ.000 w«th
_o1,i.em. . • , ••.
lledroom IUrnftuni bod boen-nmOYed
to ...U -IOI'. Ibo carpetlnJ jab. or
ebe lhe Joa m!pl have beeo much
blP<r. l!rwmoo Al4. • ~
-Speck Verdict Upheld
SPRINGl'IELl1, 1D. · (Al')". -1bt mioois ~-Court upheld tod>y the
del,th pehaJty hlr Rlcllarcf Spd, who
w@r convt.11ed ol munlerJnc ellJ>t nurroa
in Cfil<MO In 111111. The court dlsipted
with la1l)'W:I lot. ~ lblt $J1ic1o could
not &el• lalr trial In Peor1a COunty.
I . -
the annual comrnunily benefit parade.
Wesdorf said the television concept
grew out of talks between himself and
~atade Director Orville Amburgey on
methods of improving the big show.
"We took a page out or Westminster's
history and checked how to get it tele-
vised-," Wesdorf said, referring to last
summer's Westminster Founders Day
Celebraton.
As a result, KTLA has tentatively
scheduled Sunday, June a, 1969, for the
Fish . Fry Parade.
The cost amounts to a total of $1,200
from the city, with the additlonal $4,000
coming from other sources, mainly area
new car dealers.
"I think we've really got something,"
he said, "this is going to go farther
than most pei>ple think.''
The vtd! mayor said he was nervous
Wednesday during his television in·
terview.
"I'm not Sam Yorty," he quipped .
Much enthusiasm has been genera~
for the plan to join Baja California
politically to its geographical counterpart
on the north, except for certain elements.
He said these particularly include
Americans who have vacation hideaways
in the rugged, sparsely populated
peninsula.
Regents in San Diego,
May Cut 'Profs' Powers
From Wlre Services One committee affirmed 1 two-month
SAN DIEGO -Hedged about by old ruling that no credit will be granted
guinls, Univer1iity of California regenta for ·the C!OW'se on. racism which hQ
today were ready to strip professors seen Cleaver lecttre sJ.z Ume! on the
of the power io hire any more special Berkeley campus.
l~ui'ers · like Black Panther Eldridge The same committee pmed a resolu·
Cleaver. tton Lhat would ban guest lecturers £rom
Today's meeting on the university's UC classrooms without the pei:nUssion
San Diego campus also was to see lhe of an official with the rank of dean
ngenU consider a re.cord $341 mlllion or higher.
U69>10 bodget nquut. _ ..,.special ljleaken without ocademit
' Governor Ronald Reagan wu due al background like Cleaver would require
the meeWtc. Security guards deployed the approval of a campus chancellor
to-bead off mry repetition of the recent lo appear more than once.
&aPta.,C:ru _..., In Pich llupn -UC ollldall ha.. said the originll
and Stale Superintendent ol l'll~Uc rulini -aimed it Cleaver, a Negro
Jn.<Jlnlction Max Rall~ were jostled militant anclparoled convict -~ al·
aqd jeered by studenta, fected ~ ol other ~ In whlc!I
I.a lhe regenll met, JIO lludenll and olf-campua aperta were Invited to opeU.
10. inf-at UC San IJlqo -• The new policy clearly opposed GOY.
• In lhe third clq cl a bun1er llriko R<-'• demabd lbat Cleaver ba baruicd
prolestlnf die propoatd r<d1":1fon · ol from campustS.
faculty aulllQrlV. -Bui the modified ruling apporeat)y
But TOm Shepard, San Dfq:q student failed to aatilfy faculty leaden or
body --~ told repnllJ:. "While studenll.
)'OU're !Jtre. l 'don't expect you to be The 1341 !ll!llim budget request call.!
CCJGlronted by any vlole!lt don!onslrt-for IOO millloli m«t than the 1291 million
tiODS.'' granted the olnKampus unlwn!ly
ll<genls -committees laid lbe ground networlt by the legWature for lbe cur'rtnl
..... t. Thunday for lbe two ll!aJor Items llJcal year ending In June.
on -Ille ..,encta -ll1t Cltavw al!a!t 'Tha rqtnll laJt year ut.cl for 131 t
and lht budget. • million and were cut baclt to SZtl mllllon.
I '-<
-----"'-------------------
Four lifa rafta were put .oUt from
the plane and were towed uhore -
a dlrtance of about 300 yards -by
launches.
Ambulances and doctors were called
to the scene but the Coast Guard
reported that if there were any injuries
they apparently were minor. ·
The plane came down rightside up
about one mile ahort of the end of
the nearest runway. The wings and most
of the fuselage were above water.
'!tie bay ,at that pplnt II aballow and
marshy.
Chuck Stlefelmaler, aasWant range
master at the Coyote Point Rifle Range,
said the plane wu about 1 3QO yards
from the pler· of the Coyote .Pflint Yacht
Harbor. He also reported that apparently
no one was injured.
"Jl was on Its final approach about
three miles south of the airport,"
reported.a Federal Aviation Agency con.
trol tower spokesman.
"l'he plane was under radar and rodlo
control because of the huvy foe. Tho
la!t call on the radio lndlcated ev~
was all rgibt, but we'll have to loot
at the recordings acain before we can
say that for sure."
The tower official said the approad\
for the landing was normal as the-pJene
swooped down over the San Mateo BrlJ:lg•
about two milea south of Coyote Point
and 17 miles sOuth of San Francisco.
,. . • ' DAlt.Ylltl~~-:S.-n. ORANGE COUNTY FIREMEN WORK 'tO· FREE VICTIM Flt01'\ ".WRECJQGE, '
&alba lsiand.Rfftaurant Owner Died in Fire Tn.itlc'-Auto Ctad) In ~ant~· ~,"!•l~ts ,
Fire Truck Rams
Car; Coast Man
l(illed in \Vreck
An Orange County fire truck, speed·
ing . to ·• call in the Santa Ana Heights
area, slammed Into two autos at a con-
gested intersection Thursday evening,
killing the driver or one of them.
Dead ls Thomas Clifford Archer, 45,
of 210 Onp"·Ave., Balboa Islind. He suc-
cumbed of 'head injunes at Costa M es a
Memorial Hospital an hour after th e
crash. , . · ·
The teCood car was driven.. by Mrs.
Marie Loullt Walker, 49, of 835 La Mira-
da St .• Lqun.ai Beach. She was truted
for minor [njuries and released.
The lire l<uck, driven by Larry C.
J HI CoWltj> Traffk 111'1
lft Dea&b Toll. IU
Pride, 39, wu rolling south on Red Hill
Aven11<, ils red lighll Oashing and lls si·
ren ICftaJJ)ing, 1'(hen It struck U.,two
cars at the Palisades Road intersection.
Both autos were eutbound on Palisades.
Archer's MU1t,ang convertible w a s
struck broadllde on the driver'• door
and carried lbout 100 feet by tbe impact.
The Walker auto was hit on the I e ft
front ilfde.
F1remen and California Highway Pa-
trolmen worked for 20 rnlp~tel to eitr\-
cate~ Archer from ~ trrteble. Th e
auto Wll! demolished. · J .J
A seccnrd fire en&lne con~oed'on the
run to the call, a ware~ blaze at 1571
Mt18 Drive. Tbt llte. •• "Iii oil arrival
Archer waa the °'"'"" Ill U..... taco
lhOp5 in hil name on Catalloa fJ.land.
NO\fl>Ort Btadl tl!d Ball>orl&laad. Uo-
Ul .-ntly be bad boa! mallqer,ol lhe
Joli) Recar Rest.urant on 8aJbOa,laltnd. _,. ;
NEW YORK (AP) -Tlie itoClc muk-
tl Improved an eari, rain In ocllve ltad-
lng Iott this alltrnoon. rs.. quotations.
Pageo N). .
Gains 'i>utnUmlleftd foola by· nearly
lOO baue1 on I h o New Yori Stqck b ·
ch-· The -Jooes lndu!trlll av<r· r Wal u)l abclul,1 polnL .: ' · I
Faculty ·Keeping Peace
At Boiling SFCollege . . .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -About 100
faculty members ·wearing yello\f ann·
bands were stationed on campus to
keep the peace as clasSCS!I resumed to-
day af San Francisco State College.
'Jlle faculty members, seeking to pre-
vent a repetition of Thursday's violence
that brought armed police on campus, stood on the at'a·irs of the admWstraUon
building.
· Plclliu calJl:ig for a shutdo'ifn .of
classes .marChe(I oUtaide several' bUilcl'.
lngs and campus entrances. . ·
A clasatooni invasion by militant
students -l<ed Thursday's COl!fron-
tatiqn with Police. Howaver, although
the ailn91Dhtre was ~nse. many stu-
denll walked · throuKh the picket lines UUs m~ and litfo cl&sses.
Prof. Giry Hawklm · of the' speech
de~ent, spokesman for the te.culty
group, sa(d: , ."Wt are .jlial, -.r to
pfevent. violence. Thls:a.· ·bu~ oo name. we· are jult . (o a\and
around and hope for e ·bes . " .
Police and som.e.200 1tur'ent( ~Oed • ThlU'ldly as college authoritlel worked
to l<eell the 11,000.tudeht campus open
in the· face of' nppostUon , 'by the Blatt
Studf.rJU: tlnlon sod other ~1-:two
warning shots w~e flrtd by an oftlctr ,~ ... .wi... polloeman -.. . . ' .
bt!ating. :
The strikers demand major chames In
the school, including creation of a black
Studies Department and the rel'l1rlng of
a Black Panther George Murray, ms--
pended from the faculty for advialng
NWo students to carry Kim on cam-pus.
.Cluses · 'nnasday. night were held
quleUy_ and college.!'mldent Robe!i o.
Smith termed afternoon attendanoe
"very gooil" In ..Ven! dOpartmenta.
~ially . -... ~lcal -
~ ln<!el!<lldent clM!cl< lh9w:'!I ~ attendance I!) S9tpe ciaSses and almost
normal turnouts In· otbero, ~uding 1he ~uslnesa . department.
,
Wqfiier
You may be off for the weekend,
but the fog is bfdi on. It'll move
In looight and .Uck ..-. WI noon While coastal temperatures are
bbbOcl at le aria lnllbd -cucy ai 75.
INSIDE TODAY
• •
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nitedFunfl -.
NEW HARBOR JURIST
N1WPof.t11 Smith . •
NAMED TO BENCH
Newport"• Rutter
·_,Blasts _, Rip Mine
Grim· <j~ 'Given lor 78 T appiil Men
..
f,!ANNINGTON, w, Va. (UPI) ..;Two sm<>ke coolainlng-dang.....,. carbon Poundstone said a third effort woold
~-mete• uyery devast.aUps" me~ au monoxide prev~ted the §\art ,of ~r ... be made_~ ~P ,the~·· r:u~ portal1
' eiploQOJ)I' rocli.ed th9 bUn\lrl& ~an-aUempt by rescue crewa_ to go , ii:rto , near wblch .n!Dt lamWn ti •tra~
"nlni!OO No ·s coannliii t&Ur;~ · .Jiii.mine.-~:... -• -· --~mlnerove,.. =o~.lt!llllJb•lf homes • . · ' . • Powtd!lone l\!d there a)>pWld no beca\J!O of the gaa ~anger. •
reductna the grun !>dds for .• ~;:. doubt me~ (u was 'ln"'1\,.i 1n the ' 'Ti., eighth exploCion• blew off )he con·
ol 11 men en to~ · three ~· . ~ .~. explollons. crete and cinder block cap for ~ second
feet unclfllflllllL · , ~ H .... _,..,.. t , ~ hole, Ume.. .' , • I
Wiwl of lbe' trapf)od men ...,. hiard • -•.:"'.'"":" • .,. ~· . Pilea ~~bloc~ aand and cement
f!Ob1'inl lo\ldlY ~ wlien a coal com. laken &lier the late.rt two oploolOlll were alactilll at lhe mine, for uae In
ahv fHci&l told newSnWi the ;,. ...... 1osfons today. showed • hlgh methane and low the event tt waa dedded to a~ all P ' 0 _,.. oaygeo cool<nt and l<>ll1e carl>oo lllOllOI• •lhaft. and portall to utingullb the WCre S0 powerful a 21J.-ton Concrete and ide.. I I underground fin.
cinder block cap waa blasted oU a mine
openln& and lhrown "several hW)dred
feet."
William Poundstone, executive vice
president of eonsopdaUQn .Coal C.O., said
th< e:rploolooa "delayed lbe J>06Slb01ty
ol •nCilng in. any reacue teams." · ·
Dallas Reealled
JFK Met Dei.it~ Five Years Ago
New Judges Rutter, Smith
"We're largely back to where we were
a day ago," he 11;111d. uwe have' no .
control over the rue in. the mine."
Nevertheless, he · aald, "We are. 110
closer · lo a declsh 1 to seal off the
mifle" -a move which would signal
abandonment of all hope for the 78
men trapped in the mine's seven-mile
maze of tunnels.
Five years.' llO .;.,II' -1n-a aun-l been added, with 1hil polllkal nmn1en
splashed Texaa metroP.qll• -the ol Senotqr-' }llt>erl F-. Kemiedy and
ultimate price of leadership WU.spelled I Dr. Martin Luther~
out for every boy ' who could grow up I Olrrlng his cam'patgn for th e
Mesa CofC
Share Many Similarities .
Nam.es Three
New Directors
Newport Beach attorneys J, E. T.
"Ned" Rutter 11 and Kenneth M. Smilb
hl"nl,.D)uch tn eammm.
,,,.,,. -haft law offices In lbe ..... block of Dcmr Drln. Both ... .. ,... -I> ol the -Area. :And liolh &re .....i, appointed llllllllclpol
jud&IL
Oo•e&DIA' Ronald Beqao'1 office an--
'lllree --...,.. named llOUllcejl lbe appolnbnenta to the local '1bunday to ...,.nc1,. oo the Colla beach lbla week.
Mesa Chamber ol Onmerc:e board. Rutter, S?, wu named to replace Judge ~ meellna al the Ca> Wllllam ~. who rec en 11 y
P Two .,.. eucuu.... ol major area relfnd. Smftb, 40, wu ualgned a newly
manufacturing aod -.r<b plant., cr.aled poll. He will ho lbe Newport·
while the fourth 11 1fftll•ted with • neW Mesa cauri'1 ,fOUrtb Judie. . car dealenbip. They &re: '1be1 will probably dilo. Jlleir judicial
lloberl C. Vande Vrede, vlce pres-robes for the l!nl Ume within the month,
Iden! and ~ manager ol ADantlc court llOllrCel lndlcaled. ·
Reaearcb Corpontlon'1 Milalle Sylteml ' Smith, who Uvea at 2020 TultiD Avenue,
Division. ls the IOll ol 811(. Gen. A. D. Sm 11 b
Norm&n Adiea, encullva Vl<o prest. ;(USA Rel.), Who brought hla lam1ly
dent ol Hyland DITiatoo, Travenci Lab-to Balboa illand In 1142. The pneral
or&lorlel. and Mn. Smith lt1ll maintain a borne
. Roher! Robinl, -pro&1denl ol 'lbeo-Ihm.
·' doro ~ ~ IPDCY· ~· •· Smith and bla wile, ll&rbara, have
They .. N -""' -WW -three chUdreD, Linda, who atlenda • d Installed Saturday In a <laNlwfdod 19th Corala del Mar High School· Daniel
r j JAnnua1 IDslallatlon Banquet at lhe New· Kaller School; and Amy, ·~
• ~ porter Inn, featuring veler&n &howm&n Elementary. ~~mh..i Dumle. Since ....ivtng bla law a.,ree at Stan-;. •. <ivwd wUJ 'II>.:~ ~ ford Unlvenlty In 1951, Smith bu been
•.. Harry Babb!tt pnee111 Durante with a 1p9el1!!zing in peraonal l.nJury def--..n.se ' • l>laclUe 1'lllo& bJa llWll' ·c1eca4o1 In lhow and ...,.,a1 practice. He ii qall< famlllar ... bUJfneu. with courtroom proceduret.
; The _.,,. ii under dlnclloa ol So ii Ruller, who bu opeclalizod In
· ' Colla 14.,. Viet M1171'1' Roberl W, leneral civil trW.o 1ince fonnlnf a
: Wlilon. , p&rlnerlhlp In 11119 with Dennil E.
: l Mesa Post Olfice Girds
' . ' :: For Yule,. Offers Advice
E3'y malling, lllb~ oecure wnp.
ping, and cornet, c:omolele addm!lrig
will help the Costa Mm Post Office
this Christmas season as personnel
. • • handle some 70 million holiday items.
• • The work force-often in a dither dur·
: • Ing yuJ..-ien • lwldlul of be1plul :1 hints to smooth oot the operaUon and
-. ~· help them enjoy a merry Christmas
• ~ with the family too.
; ; A good kitchen bullelh board check·
; .: list ml~ht include these :
·1 :.. -Mail early to avoid overl~ of
• '· the postal l}1Slem and assure on-time 1 • delivery.
-· -Get all it.enu to the Post Office a.!I
; , soon as addressed. Don't save up a
, .. ; load big enough to alretch Santa's own
: bag.
·. : -Mail early in the day to prevent
. possible 24-hour shipment delays.
,; :· -Write or print addresses clearly
: ·-and fully, using Zip cOOes to speed tbe.m
·': ;; to their destination.
:; '--Place addreues on the L'lSldes ()f
: ' .-----------.
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DAllY PILOT
eaAllOI cout PUILIJH!HO COMl>AHY
lt~rt H. Wtff
J.,i. A. c • .i..,
Vlq ,,..klMt .,.., ~.i ""'-"'
n•111•• r ..... n ....
llit111t1 A. M•r,Jil"' -·-''"' NJ ....
..._. __ .._ __
JJO Wttt lay St,.1t
t.(•tlfitt.Ulrtttl ,,o.'" 1160, 91616 --....... tNd!: ml Wat .. 1111111 lwlrtlr41 ~a.en, ttl ,..,., ·-flUH11uttw 9-dll -Mfl llrMI
package1 u well u the outaide, In case
wrappinp ahould come loose.
-Pad Md pack all parcels well, to
prevent damage to the cont'ents .
"Remember," said a Post Office
spokesman, "mail travels in sacks and
your package might be on the bottom
with dozens of sacks-each one weigh-
ing up to 80 -pounds-all piled on top."
$400 Million Plan
'.Asked for Schools
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The 1969
legislature will be asked to approve
a $400 million local school finance pro-
posal sponsored by the Califcmia
Teachers Association, Capitol sources
reported today
The leacbers organitaUon confirmed
lt will push for the legialation nezt
year and try to secure support from
other major educaUonal organiz.aUons •
While the groups, including acbool
boardJ and t.he State Department of
F.ducatJon, have met on the proposal,
·there u yet I.! no unilied backing for
the huge outlay.
Pair Found Shot
iln Burning House
TUCKAHOE, N.J. (AP) -Two
grandparent.I 4'rtte found shot to death
In the~ t'Utl!'oouth Jtney homo Thur>-
day nigh~ police said. The holl!e hod
been set afire.
Carpenter, prominent local attorney and
leader in Republican party circles.
Rutter and bla wile, Lenore, have
fwr cblldnm, Tom, 11: Jobe, 10; Lynn,
I; and Lee, t Tbe lllDilJ u... at
Ill \Ila Ham, Udo !Jle.
Rutter recelftd bla law dqree !nm
USC In lllG.
They did not !mow Ibey had been
oelecled for the 128,llk·year pollta wrtil
Mond<y, when Ibey were called by the
1overnor'1 appointmenta RCretary.
Both men ""' lltpubllcans.
Council Se'lects
'Cadillac' Model
'Adding Machine
You 1et what you pay for and the Cos-
ta Men City Council bu decided to lhell
out $3,035 for an office machlne describ-
ed. u a Cadillac with all emu, compar-
ed to Iii llrtpped-down hotrod competl·
tors.
Flnanct Director Robert Oman told
councilmen lhe Friden adding machlne-
tape punch with auxiliary removable
cootrol panel ii by far lhe beet on I h e
market.
He sald modelJ: by Burroughs and Mon-
roe business machine flnnl are IQDlt-
what like a stripped-down Chevle iJe.
side an El Dorado with the emu by
comparlaon. '
councllmen also !\ave approved pur-f.
chase of 130 cram clttrldges for a Na· 1•
tlonal Cash 8-gllter machine In tbe Fl· '
nance Department's data proceutng cen-
ter.
Alslatant City Manager Fnll. Sorn·
bal e:rpl&ined that the lleml are &llgbUy
Ulod, but llW1 good, dropplnC their coot
lrom 1180 each to 115-
Thieves Convert
Hardtop to Loot
A topless incident was reported al
fashionable South Coast Plaza shopping
center in Costa Mesa Thursday.
Randolph J. Parker, of 510 38th St.,
Newport Beach, said he spotted a sleek
beauty in the parking lot, completely
uncovered In the upper portion.
Officer Dave Stern was dispatched to
um~stigate and found that thieves had
stripped the '200 convertible hardtop
from Parker's sports car while the victim
was at work.
Meeting Slated
!For Dimes TAP
A counlywide planning meetlnl lo<
students interested in the March of
Dimes' Teen-Age Prosram (TAP) is
scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at Golden
West College in HunUngton Beach.
Jay North, former star of televi.!ion's
"Dennia the Menace" and 1969 TAP
chairman fof" tos Anplea COunty, will
be on hand to greet Orange County
Students.
Nancy Hill a 11.year~ld Newport
Harbor High School stnlor who heads
Orange County'• TAP, aaid the meeting
will be held inthe Community Center
Rooom of the college at Goldenwest
Street and Edinger Avenue.
Poundstone's statements were piped
by loudspeaker lo a place in the general
store where the families of the trapped
men were a:atbered.
Tbe -ol lhe ....... could ho heard
clearly by all at the Dl!Wt-brieftng. •
A United Mine Workers (UMWJ safely
expert. Lou Evam, assured the crying
women:
· "I want to make this vr:ry clear.
Th111 mine 11 not going to be lealed
until every possible avenue has been
explored to contact the men to effect
rescue or recovery ...... whatever it might
be."
Since the first of eight explosions OC·
curred before dawn Wednesday, the rag·
ing underground fires and thick black
Halecrest Ouh
To See Movie
0 The King' and I," wUl be featured· at
a theater party of the Halecrest Club
in Costa Mesa tonight, prior to a big
family parUclpation work and cleanup
sesslon Saturday.
The film begins at 7:30 o'clock, with
a dance to follow through recorded
music provided by KWlZ disc jockey
Gene "Spider" Mac.Lean.
Club prealdent David Letmitoo said
tnemben 1'Pl land.lcape • total of two
vacant acrt1 Saturday as part of thelr JieauUflcatlon program.
lo be president as American history Democratic presidenUal nominations, not
tells Umt he can. Jong after Dr. King wu . llaln, RFK
The world watclu!d ln horror. said be was running agt,lnst policies,
A powerful naUon'1 image was forever not men.
changed u shota: rang out in DalJA4' "I nm because 1 · am convinced thls
Dealey Plaza on Friday ov. n, 1983, country ii on a perlloua coune," be
shallerinfl Preaident John ~aid Bald. ,
Kem>ody'• brain and with K a lhoumd Today, thore will be mu1!W ilrtmll,
dre1m1, not an bla own. , w-. aomber -and the
Harlem l)ioHbh• boya wept. lleada me)aucholy -ol !loJi)a lajll bolo& of IOvernmenia: mourned. A few who played wtth an added no&e ol slptflrmlai
bad haled the Yitai )'1IUDI Preoldent !or the ctay. 1
.....uy rejoiced. And over an lnm4 And within a 1,., houri, It will lie 8 Ttm....,e buof~~C::r-01 events S&IUrday, Nov. Z3, w!lll te1evla1Gsl 1~ ~ 1.1KC ball, leaves to rake, maybe the car
which some aay, began in the mind to wax, and everywhere -gravt1 to
of a diJenchanaldledhoexhou-Marlneht namaledl orderLee dig. Harvey Osw w g a m "We are running 500 to eoo lnt.enneuts
7 .62' ma user rlfle with which to make per year,•• which ii about average ._td
hll tragic point. Col. E. T. Seltr.er (USA Rel.) who
POLITICAL PLOT? manages Rose Hill Burial Park In T .. u ,
where Oswald llea. Other• say it wu a poliUcal plot,
perbaps hacked by the Incredibly,
powerful milltary-lndustrial comple1, in-
volving dozena of people, most <!f them now dead. ·
They Included <J;wald, night cluh owner
Jack Ruby, Dallaa policeman J, D. Tip.
pitt, a night club stripper, and even
two newsmen who reportedly went to
Ruby's home &fl<r learning he shot
Oswald and arrived before tbe police.
No one needs to recount all events
of the three da)'I In Dallu.
Time dlm.s the recollecUon of thinp
com.mltted, felt, seen, heard and smelled
in Dallas: murdt:r, grief, a:unshols and
the spl~ of funeral flowers.
l\.tEMORIES REMAIN
But the memories do remain, although
lr"11 and .limJlarJy, terrible ones bav•
~al Time Rule
fllits Smoke Ads
WASjl!NGTON (UPI) -A federal ap.
-peals court, holding tbertl 11 ·11ample
evidence" smoking la probably dingerou•
to health, bas ruled that broadculers
who air clgaretle comm.erdall must
allow equal time ror argwnenta against
smoking.
In a strongly worded opinion, the three
judge panel noted tobacco companies
have "• financial clout and f (Ompelling
interest In the presentaUorf "of one aide
unmatched by lta op)lllllenL" . . .
DREXEL'S FABULOUS ET CETERA
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL!
REG . SPECIAl
$179 $14~
REG. SPECIAl
$159 $129
•
Chrislmos lim• .. '. . anCI liom1 is whart tlie
parti11 1r1, with 1v1Tyone dressed to th~
hlll. Drwu up your hom• to mal<:h. Whal •
wo~d of holiday glamo..-this w....iarlul
0,.. .. 1 collection off.rs. Ste tlitm toaay at
REG. SPECl~L tt.. .. •wy specie! prius. For some very spto
$299 $239 cial lumlture, slop by !Oday .
•·~-
State Police aaid Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay
Clarkson, aged II and II .... pectively .
we"' foand partilJly d<llhed be)llnd the
front door of their one-and-a-half-.story
frame bouoo oo lbe ClarUOo N"1Mf)'
farm, whlcb they ran.
Pastor to Speak
On Pike Seance IXCLU91VI DEALIRS PC>lll HIN RIDON-DREXEL-HERITAGE
r:!"-:!'°Tl --A-.. .,. ,.n:..-:= w "-•• ';;
........... Clill1 ............. I ............. ~ ... -. ... & ..... ~c.... ................ -----------c..-... ' I et I m•• f4MJJ1
Q • f M: s "*I IU•MJC =----... .... ........ . ....... ,..., ... .. ....,,...,..,. --..., ... ·== ..... ..cW ,... ....... --· -~-.. __ ...,_ .. ,. .... .... ... a..--._~ ......... .. . .,.,., .. =:: .... .-.. ......,,
• _.,. , ... ~¥
Marines Accepting
Toys for Holidays
The Marine Co.,,. recruiting lltaUon
In Colt.a Meu has ennounced tt ti ac-
cepting donatlono ,.._ the Corpo' annual
'"fO)'I ~for Tot.a" Ou1stmu proiiram .
Anyooe wlahing to doo&le IO)'I can
contact JJI.,,~ Don G=d:;,.Slefl Sin. MlU .,.,., 11 the lla-
tfon, 11157 li&rtior Blvd. .,
Rev. Arthur Ford, "P 1 one er
parapoychologlll involved In the tele-
,..... wllll Eplscop&l Bllhop J-Pike
In u etheno1 oearch tor Pike'• dead '°" 1flll ll!>'ll In Santa Ana tonighL
"New Dlmenstona of Rellglon and
Science," II the title of tbe a d d r e 1 1
at 7:45 p.m. In lbe First Baptill Church
at 1010 W. 17th SL, Sant. Ana.
Rev. Ford ii probably Amorlca'o l1IOll
well known llvfna: medium, with a
background of 40 years In poychlc
rMW'Ch, daling back to Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle and Sir OUver Lodi•·
Qu--u coau>letdy u ~bl•
-Will be lll!Wered.
90 DAYS ND INTIREST-LONGER TIRMS AVAIL.AILI ON APPROVED CREDIT
NEWPORT llACH
1727 Waetclllf Dr, 642-2050
OPIN NIDAY 'Tll. t
IN1IRIOIS
,,.,...._) lnltrlor LAGUNA llACH
°"'''"'" Avall1ble-AID-NSID
S45 North Coott Hwy. 4-51
OPIN HID•T 11L t
,.... , ............ 0...,. c..,, 141·1 211
j
L .
ifl' ., • • r • • • _.....,. ............... -.................... ...
•
Ul"I T1lt111101•
This Call Is Important·
Whatever It wu he had to say ls mu.ot have been Im-portant for w.a· fellow to use a ''pl"'1o _ .. on
Manhatten'a Flflll Avenue. Tho .booth hotf been
hori1m>tallzed In an accident.
but bis number wu busy.
The phone worked
Reporter
'Rents' SRO
Radio Booth'
All Money in Trouble
Without World Reform
BASEL, Switzerland (UPI)
-Int'ernational bankers are FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. convinced the Frend! franc,
(AP) Newsmin Bob · the Btlllsh pound a.'ld maybe
Krauser's radio broadcasting the American dollar will con-tinue to be in trouble until studio bas 1¢mrling room onJy w o r J d currency exchange
-for one person at a tia;le. rates are brought up to date. Kra~er •. a ' teporte"r
1
for The last time exchange
Miami's WIOD., was plagued rates wefe established for all
by busy ~· Jong llnes currencJes was July, Ii«. in
and no·dimti when be wanled ereuon Woods, N.li., when Z8
to telephone with news from n a 'ti on a. got together to
Broward County's COtitttiouse. straighteil' aut their money tn
'i So Krauser neg$ted the the fading mcmbs of World
~ $S monthly rental of a phone War II. booth from · the-, Telephone, Since then druUc changes
Company.: Engln~s from have-taken place. Defeated
WIOD . wired the booth with West GUrnany and Japan
8 microphone ~l panel Have become rich. So~ of lighlinl :~and 'a -.~k with + :!~~c~~~~Y ~eep second band to Ume_., weaker.
bis fr~uent J!~'!S reports. , The change. ,brought tf9u·
A sign' :on 'llle' root lighl.1 ble to the we8k. Credits and
up the word "On Air" to steer declarations of support from
away the ninformed and other countries have been
curious while Krauser _It; uua· to ;bolster the Brtttsh
broadcasUng. pound and the French . franc
"I've been getting lot! of L1 times of crisis.
decorating ideas from the ONLY TEMPORARY
ladies," Krauser l&id. "I But say the world bankers
already b a v e wall-to.wall theSe' are only temporary sr).
carpeting, but r think ·the Jutlons.
studio does need drapes They ~ that 10 !Ong as
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS •Z -I« .... ~
l 1'1:0111 .. aod 43 Oevo14 of
S H ldeaw1)' suj)erflulty
9 One of 44 Reconclltd
fabled differences threesome 46 Airstrip
14 Rubber sec:tl9n
PftdUC:t 47 Tri• 15 Two of tht11 41 llt1t'lc:an
famous lut dishes
words 52 Atdttd r.ndle 1• Fr.nch• ol a wsst1 11an11 na•• 55 Until now:
17 Gltl._, Z word& 11 Hoc-, s 57 Cause llklla '· to slo,e
19 Move 51 lsl1111f of 7 U11\1n: Abbr. 35 Ory and turtrvtl)' Scotland I Dtltylna 11an.otonous 20 French 60 Chest sound action 3' As1u1.1111g
possessive 61 Asian nation: 9 Exporter's paln 2:1 CohS dlsil · COllb.for• business 39'St. P$11's 2:S Asiatic: •z llonocllnlc abbreviation coapanlon h1rb •lntral 10 National 40 kind
2.4 Ott.roll'• U •aa•: .... · · -~ • of d111g neighbor C•b. ftnl 11 -fl1t1: 42: Sug;ntlnJ
U G-•l 64 s.CMll IR Find ldtl poor healltt 21 L.,.,,, Mii of • ..,...., u T,...,... <U looton '" .
!eolOllcat lltfDtsal taUon •tdh• 45 Tt1ct of l1nif I• IS co..,.1•"1 n sos1 "' 1>111, ·rat one 29 RIM·ef lflt· · Z1 "HeQe 41 A1tlul'1
C11tl!da l IW:tlO . " <II• I ·
U.S.A. 67 0-ZS-· "V-3) Stop ndt b COYlt 50 Obl~arlllf tourlnt DOn Z7 E•cnit fOr •w•
' ... ,., . Ute fict 51 'Rnd orean
,. Yoom1 J AllpNtf 21 Fdoht""4 ..... ,
.... ., --: ·' ltli ll-""" 37 t1SI'" 2 latdl •51111 53 lrlsh
, ·~ ~~·~...:1.ia. ..... nu: ••.•. · .. ~i~i:!" . Jt ColOr · 4 lltl•mt ••fn• •Hoe, lor
40 Trntl •· J PlllCt-' SS Chlap ont. . . 4t 011111 -........ ftllMHS Si PhYtloptOllY 1 ~l Bet: 6 ... .... S, ktcat'dlfll St llepUvt
-l eoe-..... """" ..... .. ••
some currencies are stronger
than others on the basis of
current exc$ange rates, there
·will be continued wild specu·
lation in money markets.
The bankers say curing the
money ills is out of their
hands. They say it c~ now
only be done by government
leaders. The bankers say it
will take a great deal of polit-
ical coorage. For some lead·
ers will have to lower the
vilue of their money, mean·
ing money will buy less in
foreign trade.
Th~ world ~ankers said
however puftlng a realistic
value gn a nation's money is
the only way to stop the spec-
,ulaUoo tbat hurts almost
t'IVtryone. ' -
NO'f CV11E WOES •
'1'1>ef ... say that. temporary
help for ' the franc and the
pound will not cure the eco-
nomic woes of France and
Britain. Those mitions simply
buy too much and eell too
little tn forelgn ttade. Accord·
ing to the bankers, even tern·
pOrary credits and supports
will sUll leave the franc w.id
the pound weak and subject to spet:uiation. ·
Speculator1 wUI still chase
after the stronger West Ger·
mark, dumping francs and l>O\tlldJ u Ibey go.
'!be banken say UU.. will
bring trouble to other not-so-
atrong currencies such as the
Ifallan lira and the Belgian
franc.
They say that a new Bret·
to:i Woo& meeting is the
ideal solution. ,
They predict it probably
would mean & devaluation of
the French franc. The British
pnund'a value--compared with
the U.S. dollar-also would
orobably be cut but not so
heavily u the pound'• recent
devaluation.
.Movie-goers
Getting Air
In Popcorn
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Mo~ Ire ,paying for a
tot more air ID. lhelr popcorn
these day1 than Jn
grandfa1her11 Ume, a popcorn
machine execuUve says.
~ procealng a n d jq(\!Pmei>I puff the kernel up
lo tO lllnM Its original sl;e,
se.id John C. Evans, vice
presldeol · of Gold M e d a I
l'?oducll 61 Cincinnali, whlcb
cla1ma to be the· naUoo'a
l&rgeat popcorn m a c b i.n e
maktr. l<M a -it, Evans said
!Wdly, the ~ box (lf ._,_ ... ,,. tn movie hOUICS
holda oo4' •botJt ... ....,. ,, ......
~ ---~--------
Nixon Due
Just Brief
Honeymoon
'
F'rldq, November 22, 1968 GAILY PILOT JJ
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l'ICB
I I
I
----~·----------~---------------------~
I
' ,I
' -...... -... -......
n),tu,y l»JLOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Costa:'-
, -Pull up tllere, Herb A.JM ·1oad )IOlll' TIJuana
Brass in the Chevy pickup ali4 lake a position at the
head of the parade. We're marching, vja FaDbrook,
Escondido and San Diego, to Me1!co.
'
We'r• marching, that ls, U the Costa Mesa City
Council has its way. By a 4-1 vote councilmen are urging
President-elect Nixon and the new Congress to consider,
dead seriously, the purchase of Baja California and its
annexation to Los Estado1 Unidos.
The natives haven't been heard Crom down in San
I~nacio, La Paz, Ensenada and Tijuana. Chances are
the message is still tied up in the U.S. Postal System.
that institution having alrea4Y' adopted some of the
manana complexes of our friends to the .south.
At any rate, whether or not they take it seriously,
Vlc~Mayor Robert M. Wilson, l\'hO Proi>?Sed the plan
at this week's cot111dl meeting, is as earnest as .be can
be about the project. And bis chief supporter, Council·
man William L. St. Clair, is having a hard time holding
down his enthusiasm 1or the proposal. Two other coun·
cilmen who voted with Wilson, Willard Jordan and
Mayor Alvin Pinkley, are mostly mumbling in the wake
of Monday's vote. The fifth councilman, George Tucker.
subn1it_ted a detailed and heady negative analysis o! the
situation, concluding that it might be a good idea but it
requires more study. . .
There are indeed many things that this great and
noDJe country could bring to the simple lives of tne
natives of "Uiat 900-mile pel'linsula. Without such a bold
proposal tpeir simple existence may never be enriched
by American contributionS'-l:>Y freeways and Orange
,Julius stands and Jack·in-th~Box hamburgers ·and
Cbrli;tmas radio jingles !or Mission Pak. .
Visionary it may be, but tpe takeover: does have its
Mistakes of
Adoptive
Parents
BY NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
t.fany couples, unable to have children
or their own, believe they have failed
as men and women. Some feel iuilty ·
oi ,angry; oUlefs, frustrated for years,
fear their marriage is threatened. If
t h e y decide to adopt a child, m a n y
childless· couples have doubts about
them.telves and do a lot of soul-searching
during lbeir interviews with the adoption
agency. Will they be good parents? Will
the agency consider them well adjusted?
How can they tell the child be is adopted?
Every year approximately I million
couples in the United States decide to
adopt a baby. Since no more than 100,000
children become available to meet this
demand, Jess than one in 10 couples
actually become adoptive parent! each
year. Obviously, the lucky ones are thrill-
ed, even though adopting a child is
not quite the same as having one of
their own.
l\.10ST ADOPTIVE parents react to
their new baby with mixed emotions.
Having waited a long time, they usually
are five to 10 years older than natural
parents. Striving to be perfect, they
are overly conscientious about their tinr
infant. The slightest deviation from what
they think is normal is cause for unusua:l
concern; many call the pediatrician or
Cari1Hy doctor at the drop of a hat.
'1 he adopted baby is often held in
such high regard that his parents almost
deify him. t'iothing is too good for their
son or daughter. They give love all
right, often so much that the child
is overwhelmed and seldom challenged
by the small doses of frustration
necessary for normal p e r s o n a I i t y
development
Deeper Bite
"Uncle Sam's 'pay now and enjoy it
later' plan, otherwise known as social
sccurit)'. wiU bite deeper into the
paychecks of employes this year,''
noted Acme 1ttarkets, Inc. "The tax
rate or 4.4 percent is the same as last
year. Out applies now to the first
'1;300 earned instead ()( th. first
$61600. The maximum tax due th.ls
year from an employe has been in·
creased $52.80, from $290.40 to $343.20.
The increase was legl.sJated by
Congress to pay for the increased cost
or social security beoefils.''
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Why doesn't Bob Wilson a!pire to
be governor of all of Mexico? Why
stop at Baja California? Doesn't
be have any guts? (He must be
kidding!)
-C.L.C.
T~•• ,.uur. Nfl•m ,.•••rs' ~l•WJ llft
lllKHUrHY ,,,.,. ltf tM 1111.,...l'l"r. Seajjl
'9Yr Ml ............ Gl-1 GW. .01Wr Plitt,
ON THE OTHER hand, adoptive
parents tend to set high standards and
insist on strict conformity as their
youngster grows older. They stress
family values ana traditions as though
to say: "Since you are now part of
our family, you must be exactly like
we are." Many demand respect and
absolute obedience at considerable cost
to the child's striving for independence.
'Theit expectations and goals sometime
are so high that their son or daughter
reacts negatively to their pressure for
achievement and success.
INTERESTINGLY, sexual inhibitions
in some adoptive parents frequently pre·
vent a confident approach to sex edufa-
tion while the child is grOwing up. Sirlce
most adoptive children were born out
of wedlock, their new parents seem to
fear they too will stray fror.1 the straight
and narrow path. So many adopted
youngsters are confused about where
babies come from, indeed, where they
themselves came from.
FORTUNATELY, fev.·er families today
make the mistake of trying to conceal
adoption from tht~r youngsters although
many reveal too much too soon, and
too often. Repeating the story over and
over again makes it too mechanical.
\Vhen the youngster is .a or 9 and begins
to have the normaJ childhood fantasy
thai he had two sets of parents, one
good, the other bad, some adoptive
parents go into a tailspin when their
darling tells them they are his bad
parents and that he wants to go back
to the ones who really love him.
SINCE ADOPTIVE parents seek pro-
f essional advice freely, most child
psychiatrists .see a proportionately higher
percentage of adopted children in their
offices and clinics in comparison to
children raised by their own parents.
But their behavior problems and emo-
tional hang-ups can be corrected if both
adoptive parents are willing to face
their own personality conflict! and tn
change their neurotic ways of adapting
to the everyday problt:n1S of living with
themselves and with their adopted
children.
s .. ~ '
~ The American l\1edical Associattoa Quotes
• ,
issued a word or warning concerning
f.'ommercially promot.ed "clubs" {or
-we.igbt loiers. "Since excess weight
may be a symptom of ttlness ,·• the
AffOdaUon said, "it is vital ror
ADY. _person wbo want& to lose 'o\:eight
to liave a Physical examination by hl11
Jlllr.dcjan btlore partlcipaUng in any
oC:tbese ao-called dub p-ogranu." •• • • Oir!ier, I 11 .. Herald· Tribune: -~~ Ute niaoy liberties we enjoy
ln ... tb.11 nation and be Uwlkful for
llj.i. nlllence. Be thankful for our f/HidOn) to achieve, wort and ad·
. ''1nce: for our treedom to worship:
lit ...,. right to free 1peech and free
•tibt(c:u • • • Tl'ubr there is much
for which •• aao be thankful. And this ov,:!lowlni al food tllould dd!y ~ Ill to pra7 for peace UUvucJ>oul ibl warld to lbat all J!Wlldnd m07 Uvo "Iii hannoru and p.i., !be trulft ol a ~Uer life. .. \
Rop. Seymour Jfalpern, R-N. Y., co-
sponsor of tbe provision In the foreign aid
authorliatio.t bUI u.ralni P r e 1 I d e n t
Jobnr;on to tell Phantom tupc:rsonic
ncb\tl'-bomkn to lsr•el: "The White
llousc announcement nbout negotiations
on the jets may tum out to be nolhing
more than a gimmick to evade the great
concentration of public opinion for
aoother month or so. I want an ex-
planaUon Of why Secretary Rusk avoided
a yes or no anlr'Wer when asked by
report<'ra if a decision had ~ made to
sell the )'1& ...
Yubtl Silredo, Pas •de 11 1 -"ln
wuJUty CiUfornJa "'hY do we have to use
the anUquated baUot-marklng w1y of
voting: With the voting machine you
close the curtain, prtu the l<'V'l\U, open
the curtain and the volt: ls cast.·-.
---~~----------
·---·----... --
Sur
f I ~ •
drawbacks. A Mexican olllclal,. ju~t as seJioul a¢
earnest ,u Vice-Mayor wu.on, poln!& ou~ tb&I Me><lco.
has a fed,ral constitutional st.iit•t• forlll<lding di•!?""'·
lion of ,any of I.be nation's territory. This could pqt a
slight roadblock in ·lhe Costa Mesa plan. Such a trans-
action, al\er all, doos r•quiie bo\h a bpyer and 'a seller.
Bui tliese drawbacks noocl 1><>l permanenUy queer
lhe deal. QUter avenues are opell.
\Ve hive he~rd' S\1Jgesti9ns·, for exrunpl,e, that we
•w.ap , Arl~ooa for Baja California, . bul thal •led lo a
qwcl. COU1ller propo~al th~t Cuba is probably more avail·
able considering its present-state oC affairs. ,And others
are suggesting, if we are going lo trade anything ii
should be Texas. But why, others ask, would Meitico
want Texas?
Th_• takeover of Baja CalUomia (which actually Is
compnsed of the state of Baja California an4~e terri-
tory of Baja California, Sur) really is nothing new. It
has been proposed off. and on in varying stages of ser·
iousness for decades. At no time has Mexico shown the
slightest inclination to relinquish its "-territory~state. In
fact, when it was bell!g t:µscussed down in the Imperial
Valley some years back. the then governor of Baja Calif ..
ornia said. no, Mexico isn't interested in selling any-
thing. but it is interested in buying California. North.
With that would come a Teverse flow o! culture:
plaster of paris bulls, thriving seat-cover industries, and
reasonably priced tequila.
Next we expect to hear ttiat the Costa Mesa
P.olice Department's Search and Rescue Squad is to be
dispatched on a prel~inary iyad m~pping expedition
and that fonner council candidate Ted Balogh will be
aent as .an emissary in preliminary negotiations.
Ole!
•• • • • • -iw.. •• ...
~.
c
' .• j!) . . " ...
< ,.;~-->1~'
· Render Would Cho11ge Electoral College
Opposes Direct Presidential Vote
To the Editor:
Because we were so near chaos ~t
the end of our recent election, people
are ready to ditch the electora~ college
and demand that we vote directly for
president and vice president.
Everyone knows the present system
has its faults, but to do away with
it instead of remedying the fauUs is
the same as throwing the baby out
with the bath water.
TllE BIGGEST fault is the provision
Uiat a candidate must gel a majority
or the electoral votes to win. Ch!lflge
this to a plurality and let the high
man win and there would be no need
to worry about the election going to
the House of Representatives.
The electoral college system waar
designed to prevent the more populou1
states from dominating national elec-
tions. Each state has its own election.
If a man gets 90 percent of a state's
popular votes he will get no more elec·
toral votes than if he had received a
bare majority. His surplus votes do not
carry over to anonier state as they do in
direct voting.
THE PRESENT SYSTEM should be
changed in three ways a.s rollows:
I. Keep the electoral conege but omit
the electors. Each governor would certify
election results lo Washington.
2. Divide the electoral votes in each
state in the same proportion as the
popular votes were divided among the
candidates.
3. The man with the largest number
of electoral votes would be declared
the winner, regardless of whether he
received a majority or not.
HARRY H. ROTHLEISBERGER
License, Not Llhert11
To the Editor :
"Academic Freedom!" This is \\·hat
one hears echoing through the halls of
San Francisco State College, a college
that had to be closed because of sporadic
vandalism and violence stemming from
a black student union strae.
Don't get me wrong -I am for
academic freedom -but I do not believe
that academic freedom gives anyone
the right to vandalile or to riot?
BECAUSE·OF the fervor of a handful
or students 18,000 students are not getting
the education that they have every right
to receive.
A1. a publication of Coast Federal Sav·
ings put it, "It is a great misfortune
that the zealots or pressure groups
always think with their emotions, seldom
with reason. They· have no compunction
in carping, lying and exaggerating with
the fiercest passion. They cry liberty
when they really mean license."
RICK EVANS
Student
'Dellghtlnl SNrprise'
To the Editor :
Coming from a "big" city and several
experiences with one of the be.st known
and most capable medical wrilen In
the country, Nelson wllh lht Loa Ang•
le8 Times, I had the usual anticipatory
responses or a big city mouse about the
cou.itry when I heard th•t my talk at
the Department of Psychobiology was go~ng w be covered by i. rePorttr rrom
your paper.
111E ARTICLE that resulled, however,
written by Thomas Fortune, wa& ooe of
the most well-written, soph_isticated and
accurate reports that I have experienced. ·
Dealings wilh lhe l•Y presa for a re-
sean:her, especially 1n "sensa,1onal"
areu s u c h u mentaJ Ulotn ot drug
abuse, usually result In disaster. Thil
article and, obviou!lly the writer, it a
delightful aurprlse and t felt 1 must lei
•
.. , ... '·'·
Letters from readers art welconie.
N onruzlly wrlters should convey their
message in 300 words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit lipace
or eliminate l'ibet is reserved. All
letters must i11clude signatu,.e and
mailing address, but ?lames may be
withheld _pit. request if sufficieiit. rea·
son is apparettt. ..J.
you know how pleased I was about his
style. co:itent, and focus.
ARNOLD J. MANDELL, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry and
Human Behavior
School of Medicine
University of California, Irvine
Inept Renaark
To the Editor:
It is regrettable that one person can
taint the reputation of an entire organiza-
tion. As a member of Estancia High's
Booster Club, I am certain that the
Inept remark made after the Fountain
Valley game did not represent the feeling
of the majority of the members.
I have been very proud of the fine
attitude of the boys, which 1~m sure
is a reflection of the coaching staff.
Anyone can be a good winner, but it
takes a great deal more to be a good
loser.
MRS. WESLEY GR!FFIITS
'1t'here There'• a Will'
To the Editor :
Several days ago. at a public meeting,
the Orange County Board of Supervisors
decided to push ahead with development
of Upper Newport Bay. A1. a witness
at that affair I would like to make a
few observations about this Issue.
First, the supervisors (and the DAILY
811 George ---
Dear George :
I have been going with this
fellow for 13 years and he is very
set in his ways. For the entire 13
years he hu come to my house on
Tuesday and Friday nights and we
play Chinese checkers and make
fudge. We've been quite happy, but
I don't think he will change his
ways after I marry him. Should I
marry a man so set in his ways~
MATILDA
Dear Matilda:
Well, think It over carefully. Do
you wanUo go down tue·a hljbway
with a huSband who comes to your
house on Tuesday · and Friday
nights and plays Chinese checkers
and eata: lud~?
Dear George :
What 1 want to know ls.,wh1 i>eo-
ple call an Jodl.m head penny by
that name bot call an Indian head
nickel a buffalo nickel.
I. J.
Dear I. J.:
Look, I. J .. t don't even know
why they call them pennies and
nickels -I'm trying to run II
lowilorn colwnn bere.
Are you the guy who keeps
. writing 11nd 11sk.int what color L! a
mallonl duck! JI not, I'll senCI )W
his addreSs -you can wrltt t.O
tach otlicr.
PILOJ') continuacy refer to the land
swap plan cu: a "recreatio_!µll develop-
ment," which is a distortion of the
truth. Any project which is. 95 percent
resider\tial and commercial and 5 percent
recreational does not qualify as a recrea·
lional development in my opinion.
Second, tb6 supervisors claimed that
there was no possible source of fund!
to develope the bay as a recreation
area. However, the county found the
funds to plan the present development.
round severai million dollars in federal
funds to dredge the bay,· found several
million dollars for the Dana Point recrea-
tional development, etc. Seems to ml!!
that the county didn't look for any funds
for Upper Newport Bay public develop-
ment.
TIURD, THE LAND would cost about
$20 million to buy from the ·Irvine Co.
if the whole Upper Bay were to be
made into a public recreation area.
However, Mr. Featherly himself quoted
many cases v;here the Irvine Co. sold
land to the county for half price. \Vhy
wouldn't the Irvine Co. sell Upper
Newport Bay land at half price?
Fourth, if the Irvine Co. didn 't want
to sell the land the county could condemn
the land. The county condemned land
by right of eminent domain to build
Dana Point. Why not Upper Newport
Bay?
Fifth, the DAlLY PILOT, reporting
on the noted meeting. listed all the
people who came to praise the land
swap without even mentioning the fact
thot so many people came to condemn
the )and swap that the supervisors had
to cut off the public hearing a!(er more
than an hollf of objections.
WllERE THERE IS a will there is
a way. Apparently the supervisors ju.!tt
don't want the Upper Bay to be a
public recreation area. The DAILY
PILOT has deemed it "impossible." I
guess 1 have more faith -in the people
of Orange County than either the
supervisors or the DAILY PILOT have.
When the citizens of Orange County
finally learn what the Back Bay deVelop-
ment really is (no thanks to the press
covtrage) they will find they haVe only
one more subdivision at the expense
·of Southern California's only estuary.
Future generations of Orange County
citizen.a can only damn this generation
for its shortsightedness.
KENNETII S. CROKER
Ohe11 the L•"' Da11 .
To the Editor:
An article In the DAILY PILCYt' by
writer Jack Ohappell and t i t 1 e d
"Gratitude or Guff -Tbat•s COp's
Reward." reminded me of an exper~
in connection with the Newport Beach
police.
White driving, I Jkyeloped a f«!hli
of weakness and nall5ea. i barely n\ade
it to I.be curb~ While Jn this condition
1 was approached by a r.liceman.
Assuming that l was drun , be aet
upon. JTle wl(h verbal abuse and • Vuiety
of .-, Ian'""".!
.1'tl11. ict!on ceue9 wtitn I w111 lden-
Ulll;?d bf a s~. Nevertheleq I
wts held thtre for almost two houri
clurina: which tltne I WJS blecdillg (tup-
tured ulcer) Inlelnally. Blaod 1.,.,
amount.Gd to t W. quarts. SubsliquenUy
all concerned disclaimed 'any
reapooslbllllY Incl H waa !wept Ullder
the nlf.
OUl\ING MY roavale.setncc I found
royself reflecling Im on 1ny infinnlty
A •nd mON! on &ht unre.;ol ved problem
f 'conlronUng me. The misuntlcr.slnndini:
belwcen the pubUc arid tht police 1s
appalling. ,
I suggest that on~ day per week be
·set aside to be known as Obey The
Law Day. Let the police be known ·as
leaders rather than av~ngers. Make the
people fully aware of the laws. Let
the police f~I and advertise compassion
and sympathy for people. Let us all
.Subscribe to the philosophy that we
should be for people and not against
them. That it b sufliclently difficult
for the struggling mass of humanity
to make its way against adversities
of nature arid the implacability of fate
without the ad(litional burden o C
fratricidal hatreds. r ·
( "We.._must not make a scaretrow of
the Jaw setting it up to fear (frighten)
the birds of prey and let keep ooe
shape Ull custom make it their perch
and not their terror.''
O. S. HAWKINS
.Pltie• Bb 'Ignorance'
To the Editor:
Last night I read the letter from
James P. Jones in regard to why the
school bond measure didn't pass. A~
a student or Orange Coast College, 1
feel that I must answer hjs letter.
Just because a small minority of U1e
students have long hair doea.1't mean
that they are trouble·makers and are
in school to stay out of the service.
Many ol ~ young men are in school
to get an education and many are very
good students.
Ai.So I DO NOT like the allusion
lo our Jong-haired and .bearded teachers.
Mainly I take exception to this because
only two or three teachers have beards
and these are not tangled messes but
clean, well·groomed beards. And . as far
as I know, none of our teachers bas
overly long hair. ·
If instead of knocking Orange Coast
College, Mr. Jones would take time to
find out what kind of teachers we have,
he would realize • that CX:C is a very
good. school. Typical examples of our
great teachers are· Mr. Pbilllps
(psychology teacher), Mr. Lum i an
(history teacher) and Mr. Holland
(speech Jnd tbelter arts teacher).
ALL THESE ·~ are .clean·shaven
· and do not ·have long. hair and are
true representatives of the ieachers at
oUr school. ·
If only Mr. JoneS would · stop 1t1d
think that it is because of lbe efforts or the students and teachers of Orange COast College· that we have not had
, WIY. domonstn,~ona. J ~ )\Ir. Jone.
It typical of comerv,.Ive Oran&• County
and it is peopli!! ~e him Wbo voted
down the recf!llt .school bOnda which kept badly needed !undo from Orange
Coast College. ·
I cao l)\llY pity hfl li!l••t>~mftic•e.-
SUSAN T. HOGLIND
-----' Friday, Nov. 22, 11168
TM tdilodal ""'1• Of lh• D<rilf
Pilot '"'" .. 171/omt nd ljjm. ulate ,.od<rr by ,,........, WI
ttrwsJ)oper•1 Opini01W cnld com.
mrntor11 on · topici o/ ffttfnlt ..a ligmffQJ11ee. bu prot>idm" •
torum for tht e.rpre1rion of
our relldtrt' opinioftl, and bt1
presenting the dlver&t olcw-
polnts of lnfonntd ob1m:itrs
and apok<1m.., Oii lbplct of U..
dau.
Robert N. Weed. PUbu,I>er
I
•
'
BY
WllllAM
REED
•.-ct• ...
In the Wincl
Gayle Wayne, who loU. behind
a typewriter for the Ocean View
School District1 whipped out a little
collection of 'Thaiiiful Thoughts
From the Third Graders."
The random thou~hts were pen-
ned. by thankful third ~raders as
a part of a '.l'hanksgiving lesson
in Miss Betty Wildermuth's class
at College View School.
'
Views of the childrep o n
thankfulness are especially in·
teresting to parents who feel the
kids have plenty of reason tD be
thankful but seldom see the ex·
preSsion1of that thankfulness.
MEXICAN-AMERICANS LEAR,N ENGLISH AT' HUNTINGTON BEACH CLASSES
R .. identa Loom L•-Not •• Hord oa '111oy Tllouthl In Woolcly S...ions.
91>1 ;i -ON THE JOB TRAINING AT HUNTINGTON•COMMUNl·TY·CIENT
Nalghbarhood w ... i-a Hlldo Ruiz. Anita_-..., I ..... •t•-
·• * Well to begin with, Bridget
Hallig.;,, said that "! am thankful
that I'm not . a tii.rkey." Sounds
reasonable.
Der Poverty War Personal
Shelli Pherigo says that "I ain
thankful for everything, but not
green beans. I'm thankful for-
·cburch and school and food. I'm
thankful for a nice home and whei;t
mom helps me when I'm sick."
She tossed in for good measure
that her sister is thankful for Lang
hair and added that food , church
and school is good for all.
Mark Moreland says that "I am
thankful fOr my ·brother because
if I didn't have him I would be
lonely. I am thankful for my
mother. If I didn't have her I
wouldn't be here."
* .Virginia Huffman, obviously a
girl of a few words. says that
"I am thankful for God because
He is nice and He gives us food
and He , or She, is very nice and
He helps us grow too."
Jim Ballentine is "thankful for
our food and our school. I'm
thankful for our books. We are
thankful fr -our land. We are
th<inkful for our third grade class.
We are thankful for everything."
He adds that "I'm thankful for
our girls. I'm thankful that I'm
not a girl." So as you can see
the youngsters are indeed thankful
for a wide variety, all the way
from God to not being a gir1. -* .
While on the topic of things to-'"
be thankful 'for, Ralph Kiser,•
Southern California Editon Co.
district manager, tells me that
those ugly black poles along Atlan·
ta and Lake Street will come down
a"s soon as the wires can be
transferred to the gray poles.
McNamara Burned
CALCUTI'A, India (UPI ) -Com-
munist students today burned wortd bank
president Robert S. McNamara in effigy
outside the U.S. lnform~Uon Service and
danced around the. smouldering ashes
to chants of "Vietnam Warnlonger
McNamara."
. . -
By WILLIAM REED
Of 1'le D9tty P'llff Staff
For Mrs. Alice Medina the war on
poverty ia a very .personal batUe being
fought in Huntington Beach daily among
I.be rnagnific.ence of shiny new homes
and Uh! affluence of a population Qicb
has never had it so good.
Mrs. Medina, mother of 11 children,
is coordinator of the Community Center
housed in an old office building on Maln
Street at Garfield Avenue.
She terms lhe center as "a grass
roots meeUng place where neigbborl..inus
Is spoken jn both English and Spanish."
Mrs. Medina ls employed by the Co'in-
munity Action Council ,Jn Santa Ana
and i.s paid a amall salary to work
seven hours per day , five days per
week among families termed poor.
And that's all the hours she rtports to her bo&. .
1be Community Center is actually open
seven days a week and for as many
boors per day as are needed and always
Mrs. Medina ls there "doing her thing."
The "doing" includes a wide range
of activities. Monday she was in Anah~
Beach Chest Campaign
Plans Per·sonnl Visits'
For the first time, the Huntington
Beach Community Cllest campaign this
year will include person-ll>person visits
to the city's business men 83 the 1968
drive to collect $100,000 movee along.
teers In the local Boys Club, Boy Scouts
and YMCA programs. It is ex.peeled
that this phase of the campalgn will
be completed during the next two weeks.
"Last Y••' •nly s1 or ""' 1oea1 Junior Miss
businesses responded to our mail re-
quest," Frank Zangger, chairman of the •
Community ,C""st's .business and -p agean, t ... Set employes d_ivlf!.on, recalled. , _ ..J
·; "Wi"'tb:ini: OM: poor~ last year · H
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iras partially the Ql<sfi 1au11," ho con-At Beach H igJi tinued. "We plan to mill a reminder
to all 'of those business men who have
not yet responded~to our lriiUaJ feqOest
which was sent out two weeks ago.
"But more importantly, we are going
to visit as many of our fellow business
men during lhe next several week! as
our manpower and shoe ' leather will
permit."
The Business and Employes Division
ls comprised of six section chairmen.
They are Edmund Bretz, Jim DeGuelle,
William Jacoby, Jim Manuel, Rudy
Pelleriti and John Stickles.
These men will be aided by 35 men
who are working year-round as volun-
• •
1be annual Junior Miss Pageant ,wiU
be held aL the Huntington Beach Union
High School auditorium at a p.m., Dec.
8.
Contestants will represent Huntington
Beach, W'estm1nster, and Marina high
schools in the Junior Chamber of Com--•
merce evenl
The girls must be 16 lo %9 years
of age and must have a grade point
average of B or better. They wlll be
judged on scholastic a ch I eve men t,
personality, physical fitnesa , poise, ap-
pearance .and the girl's chosen talent
or creative ability.
The winner will represent the Hun·
Ungton Beach. Seal Beach a n d
Westminster area in a district pageant.
Winners of district ~ state pageants
go on to national competition.
Prizes are donated by the locaJ
merchants, generally ln the fonn oi:
cash to go toward scholar1hipa. On a
higher level, 17 state Junior Misses
shared approximately Ml,000 at the Na-
tional finals in Mobile, Ala. last March.
These are admlni~ by the non-pro-
fit America's Junior Mlsa SCholarsbip
Foundation. Local and ltate scholl!ships
swell the annual tout ' to more tl)M
'250,000 each year in all 50 slates.
The naUonal IJ)ODIOl'I of the America's
Junior Miu Pageant are John H. Breck,
Inc., the Chevrolet Division of General
Motors Corp., ~ Kodak COmpany
and'the Scott P•J>lf .company.
Adml..ton to the Junior Miu Pageant
Is lree and the pibllc Is cordlally Invited.
For further infonnatlon, oontact Jr.
Miu Cbalrman, JllJl ZletblnC. llOlll Crali Lane, telephone*2;1331.
Unwed Mothers
' .
Home Delayed
P 1 1 n 1 to build orange County'• f\rlt"
private ~ for unwed 1 ~ ra:n
lnlO comeUcaUooa We<IN!odaY -. "'! or..,.. eou.trl'lal!nbli CommlitOIOe. ••.
Allel dlec:uuioo, plannen )lOlllpooed
action for one week. •
~vea al ~ Florence Crit-tentoo Home req-..I permlalon to
build the homo at the rear ol property
-_owllld by 1 church near Bond
Avenue and S.miqo Boulevard in the
EIModellaw. Pllnoeri queatloned the ellglblllty al
..,,. tbt requtJt ._, uee variance, or
tpedal ..........
A clwrdt la penoilled und« • ~
UH COnlidtratkln in what commlulorlm'
coiled a hlglllY .mtrl<llve ·""'"" In a ....u --dlalrict.
-al the -prololted the ..i II lo queotlonable wlletber
Worianen lay brich for FOUD~Vlllley Ctty Hill addllions now well
underwll)' aiid dµe tor compl ,byearly DOlf\ ,... •• The four-montb-
thl ... wlllln( to l1drln&o
.. 1'» I ~ W a delall·
ed plan I Ji1omm expc.....t wrprlao
lhlt plw -oo rar wl-dlectr· ..,......,pWlema.
olil mlllhjG dOllar ccmttucb wtiJ provih llilW'1l6llct fld)I.
tiet,• • ~rea&n building and Pl'-llbrary and ldminlll'
trallve ofllces.
e ~·
'
because "there was this Mexican-
American couple an<i they wanted to
get married, but all their papera were In Spanish. •
"Well, I had lo take them somewhere
!O the papers could be translated," ahe
explained simply.
"Don't you give me no credit for
nothing," she added sharply, saying that
thoae who volunteer Ume, materials and
money are the onea who should be
credited.
ln her files are story after story
of people aided through the center in
the short weeks it has been housed
in the old Holly Sugar Building owned
by the Huntington Beach Co.
An elderly lady needed a wheelchair:
someone told Mrs. Medina a school
di.strict was giving away book!; a man
died and his widow had no money to
bury him -these are mere samples.
The record in ber files is of people
wanting to help themselves out of a
wide range of problems, not the lea.,t
of which is the inability to speak English
. fluenUy.
"We need more volunteer teachers
tc teach English to those who speak
mostly Spanish and need English for
a beUe.r job or just lo be a better
I
citizen. She needf volunteu "achen:
of government and civic affainl too.
"We need teachers who will teach
Spanish to tboBe who , want to learn
to better a.Id the ' Spanish speaking
members of our city. We Could use
transportation to claases, too, and a
few folding chairs."
The center ia a pla~ for meetings
to be held and once each week the
students come to sit around the. lables
made of old cable reels which are painted
and covered with red, checkered table
cloth!.
They come not to look at the meager
Size 39 to 43 Thief
Gets $1,000 in Coats
Sometime during regular operating
hours Wednesday, a size 39 to U thief
made off with $1.000 worth of sport
coat! from racks at J. W. Robinson's,
Fashion Island.
All four coats, each valueij at· $250, ·
were taken from the men's wear depart-
ment between 10 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.,
Newport sU.c.h police said.
No pants were taken. '
·.
.
$500,000
SALE OF
surrowidlngo, oot to eagerly appiuldi
i...oiiL They numbei-211 to :Ill· lll'l1hg
4nd range· in ag~, fto~ 9 _to 58. All
are clUzerui of the·unlttd~tes.
The Community Center 11 an ~· pe~t in the' cit~'. which .. ipay -'or
may not make iL ''Right' now , .. ' iaya
Mrs. Medina: "then 'is doubt ~t ,we
will be able to continue the ' ce.nter ·at
the ·pr...nt lociiUqn. AnothOI"' bW!cn.,.
may 'be needed." -· ' "
'Ibere.'s no lack of int~est. nor) of
Volunteers in some areas althouab ~aH
help I• welcomod.. Unforltmately the...
is not al'lf&Y• the ~ans .to take alf.
vantage al the .offora, . IRlcl/ a1 U-
to teach sew~ng or otbei" ~
· There la. a Small .llhrary, ~ever,
and a television set. where ~'1 a
couple of teen·a•• boys aat. One wu
M"'1c111'Amerlcan, the other probaoly
Irish. They w,ett but two· of the nem-t;;
20 persona who viaited the-center Tut.-
d•f· .
"They CouUI be out getting into IOlne
kind of trouble, you know-· Instead the91re
here reading and watching telev.lsion.
That OUjhl to he '('!fib -thing to
the community ln the lOdg run." laid
Mn. Medina.
:r t:~.r;;Jt:.· -· l !!::·· i :
., J:,_~ .. $1,..J• 'I~: • ·t
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Le French Beau Mon de Jewel$· ..
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The Origina I 1969 look
'--"" in Parisien ne Jewel~y
FEATURING THE FAMOUS
66.60 cts.
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November 22 ,& 23
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WEINERT
f ·INf JEWELS
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32-FASHION ISLAND e .-NJWPOR~ BEAC.H
PRIVATE SHOWIN$ NOVEMIER 21 IY
INVITATION ONLY e .... 2040
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4 DAil y I'll.OT
'Jack Enjoyed
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·,-:.,?residency'
·• :, " ...... will bo llllitt. Holy Trin-
icyCcbun:b In Dall!il •·J\l!' Ille
late P-ldent Joi!" ,f~§ir;~..-IY~ The Vory Rff.,~, 'HuMirt,
!otiner prten. 'II,~ . · .'Ill"
ministered . .Ill• JM itt-• 'lb•
President ~t'P~ M:~:
Holpital K1!Dne¢y: WllS ~.Jin:
years agb tqday as !J;e,i:ode ~
Dealey Plaza in_ a· rilolorCad.i· .A,
$100,000 ·nwnorial to him, ~.ht,
located tWo bloolt• .fl'OIJ\. Ille pl.,,.;
is schedi!iitil: for compjeti<>n 'in OCt.
ober ol 1$68. : • -• t 1 •• • l Detectiv.es.. m .Las 1 Vegas, Nev."'
got readY for a m~ investiga-
tion on Monday w!len an 11-year-
old boy . reported he found part of
a human foot in the deoeit. Homi-
cide detectives uncovered not only
a foot, hut ·a hand and later a bodY
of a 6()(1.pound gorilla, Detectives
are puzzled. No one bas reported a
missing gorills. • The N1ltional Communicable Dis-
ease Center in Atlanta, Ga. .aays
wh<>oping cough hu been lleadily
declining in the U-sta1e& for
the past 24 yean. The downward.
trend was broken by increases in
the 1940s and 19605, oays the NCDC,
but these were only temporary. •
In St. Louil, Mo., Jamu W.
Symington, democmtic congress-
man eU!'et, had a:OTM word of
proia:e fM Sen. Everett Dtrbtn,
SVUJ.tt Minorit11 Leader. Syming·
ton told a: dinnt:r audience M
wa..s thankful to Dirksen "for
making tht world MJfe for folk
singers."
• A ll~year-old Engelmann spruce
from Utah is on its way to the
capital for duty as the natioh's
Christmas tree. The spruce will be
placed on the Ellipse between the
W h i t e House and Washington
Monument. The tree is to arrive
Nov. 26 or 27. A Forest Service
spokesman said the tree would be
worth about $14.20 as timber. but
its value as the national Christmas
tree, including labor and transpor·
talion , is about $3,000.
NEW YORK (UPI) -"Jack enjoyec!
.being president," she said with a soft,
aad smile, a mother talking about her ....
"You re1d about IODM president.a
tlilnking It'• lonely life, talking about
the diaadvantages," Mrs. Rose Kennedy
uld.
"But I think he really rovelod In the
~ty It gave blm to make history
aind to meet people who are making bis-
!Oty and to he able to accomplish tlilnp."
She WU talking about her second IOll.
John l'lbrierald Kennedy, 3Slh presldeot
Ill the United Sllllel.
And she llllkod today an the fifth
annlv~ ol bis death by an aaaM'ln's
bullet In: downtown DaIIJ, Nov. 22, 19"3.
, But tllie ~ Ill a munlerod preJl-
dent and an usauinated aenator, Robert
F. Kennedy, nolused to mourn.
"I have cblldren. grandchildren, and
I refute to be daunted," Mra. Kennedy
aid in an internew taped for NBC.TV's
"'T~y" lhow.
"I have a motto which I found in
••• one ol Jatk's favorite books: "I
know ~ qe or wearineSI or defeat.'
and I adopted that as my own motto.
I think it's wonderful."
PreslC!ent Kennedy'• wldo'ft', now the
wile Ill Greek ablpplng tycoon Arutolle
Onusil, spent today "quietly at home"
with her two children, Caroline, 10, &nd
John Jr., 8. H-is UJelr pi1Ph Filth
Avenue apartment juA off Central Park.·
MI'S-Ja<;tJUelloe, O!IWil probably will
go to church oo~e during lb< day,
according to tile l!l<n>f'r~ lint lady'•
-.n--l'lam:Y T!!Ckerman. She 'Yid
John Jr. aod Caroline were u:pected
to go to acbool as usual.
M r 1. Role Kennedy said President
Good News-Twice
Medal o( lfonor .winner Dwight H. Johnson, his
mother, Mn. Joyce Alves, and his broth.er, Dave,
admire tlle award after· learning Thursday tl>•t
Johnson's deported _stopl'a1!!et will be,-allow,ed to ·Te-
turn to this country. Johnson returned to Oeb;oit to
Hanoi Makes New
Xenned:f.~ to spend Ult • • · --._-;-;~-~
year1 ~ iJlr !fl!fle ~ . . ' ' '· ;r '
eocour•ging .,.,Jfy<N11 to~ &II to 'Reopen.·
public service .
"He thought he'd spend hi.I deellni,ng T lh-• p '
years in B 0 I t 0 n in the librazy eu· aJJ:il!j ID ans
couraging young people to come and
work for the government and with the
government from all over the world,"
she said.
Mrs. Kennedy, who has but one living
son -Sen Edward M. Kennedy, '(~
Mass.) said it is possible he may run
for president aomeday.
Oeaver Expects
Return to Jail
SAN f'BANCISCO (AP) -Black
Panther Eldridge Cleaver says he ez.
pec1s to return topriaon.
He told 1 11therin& of some 500 al
California Hall Thursday night: "My
parole officer told me today that I
should telephone him next Wednesday
10 he. can t.t1.1 me where to meet him
for UM! trip to San Quentin.''
The crowd donated more than $1,000
lo the International Committee to Defend
Eldridge Cleaver.
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PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam <:Bl!ed '
on Washington t.odllY , to qpen immedi•t.e 1
peace talks in Paris while : keiping a
seat ready at the conferenct table for
Saigon.
The new proposal for direct peace
talks with the Amercans and without
Saigon was made at a specially called
news conference by Nguyen Thanh Le,
chief spokesman for Hanoi delegation
leader Xuan Thuy.
Le linked the new call for tripartitf:
talks to include Hanoi, Washington and
the Viet Cong with accusations that
the United States was guilty of a ·
"serious" violation or the demilitarized
zone (DMAZ) in Vietnam.
For the first lime in many month!
t~ Hanoi official accused the U.S.
rrulitary command of escalating Jls
operations to neighboring Cambodia and
Laos.
He said , "We fully support Cambodia's
protest against the violation of its fron-
tiers by Ameiitan .troops."
Rain Damp~:ns Northwest:
Tr~velers Warnings Posted in New England Blizzard
£olifo,.,.I• ·-·-Ali.ti).
kklff\rlellt
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l'..ci.lt11a. -llMIM M .. h-~'9
dft( "_..,.., .... ""' ~...,-. • l'ltttlll.lnh ~'-t ...... ·-... ; ~ ........... "~ c.lltoml<a ,_ Wt~ -" R,-Cltr
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1--!WHIM """" -""' .,_ ...... , ......... , ... -.11;;=. "'~':::'"' tell 1t SI. ~..\vt:'M • .... _ •
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•.
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. " ' '!..sa • .. " . ..
·" • " ~ , 'tr:_ •
hear the good news after receiving the. Medal of
Honor at a White House ceremony. His father, Bren-
ton Alves, a native of Jamaica who ·l'lOW lives in
England, was ordered out of the country 12 yean
ago because be entered illegally. , . :
Blast Kills 11
In Jerusalem
JERUSALEM (AP) -A .mammoUt
charge or el:po!ives ~eked tnsidf · a
parked car blasted a d-owded market
place in the Jewish sector of the Holy
City today, killing JI per90M and w-
cling 55.
Within seconds, the market, jammed
with Jewish shoppers stocking up for
the Sabbath weekend, was a scene ol
terror and chaos as hundreds fled in
panic.
It wu the worst sabot.age locident
in the 1:1 ye.an ol the "Jewish atait'I
existence.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Dunlap's -
~Year
Picture .tube
Wan'GllfY
••SUIPLl'FIEn COLOR
·.TUNING ' , : "YETER GUIDE'ITUNING
',' ~LO ... MINDtll" Reftr"'ri"f'
· . ' ~trolo '
• · ulomatie Rlilr.funinr . ~ . .
BIG •
295 SQ.IN.
PICTURE
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His and Her lflinks~ '
' Eli7.abeth Taylor, followed by her husband Rich~
Burton, enters limousine after ani~g at Los Ail-
geles International Airport Thursday to atterid the
funeral of her father Francis Tayh>r,BI. He died at
his Bel Air home Wednesday. WeaEng matcbitJg
minks, the Burtons arrived from P·ans, France,
where they are filming a rilovi~.
Oshkosh State Closed
' ..
After Violent Protest . .
OSHK~, W~. (AP) -
Classes were suspended today
at Oshkosh .State Unlvenil¥,
anid more ... than 100 Negro
Students were ordered ex-
pelled as a result of a violent
' 'v
~-•'
Bomb Rips
··.
Building
BLUEFIELD,, w.va. (AP)
-A bomb rlj>P'd through
the walls and roof of a new
physical edueatlon-buildlng on
the Bluefield 'State College
campus Thursdiy night and
city police 'lmznedlately went
on seven-Oay ahlfts. · ·
No one w;1s lojur~ _!Ji the
ei:plosion,· the most ~ln
cldent in a series :of ~ttifeits
and acts of ~itsrii. fhat
began last faU.,,atter student
d e m oMttiUOllJ · demJl!dlng
i.niprovetnentJ for N e a: r o
students .
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:;Julie's ·
' . #.... M'ft~r~age
Date T.oW .
End Violence; ..
Thinkof Sex
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' DAJl.Y "1.oT I
NOW
$5fill · FIFTH
you .first
Under the hood, it'i more of the ume. We
tucked in a -4,27 --cnbic-inch 390:horsepower
Turbo-Jet vs. B~tbat up,.there'o ~heavy-duty clutch,
stabilizer bar and. a special 3-speed trans-
~"i d;._.:~ tlJt.t ~? It me&n. the SS
427 .is-the kiitd.of C'1 you can, take for a work-
out.a.ven if you).9 ju8t g*1g·to Work. ,;.~~1.exci~t ~·iha.o~r .pack•ret
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too: Corvette .Stlnrray; CbtftUe ss· 89&,.'
Camaro SS, Camaril-Z/28 and Nova·S9. .
You'U ·find tbam-all wbeiw the· hie· noiee lo ,
·coming from. The Sport. Sljop•at.your Ghav-rolet dealer's. · · -
V aumrrooo6ooooommml.
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C Wt.'/ PILOT
Gene Count
Test~ed .
For Sirhan
L08 . \\llG!LES (/J') -
• Sllfiaa Blllwa Slrhao'a at· ---1 aoys ha'U soek a
. ~ loll let his client
bellil,'e Sirhan .... lo trial
.. • -.. <i mut<ltrlni Sen. _ .,. Ktrlll«ly.
. Altonlel' a.-D E. Panons
aold Tbunday tlial Sirhan bas
bees• "pr.tty lully enmined,
but Im mt had Ibis
cbremosome test to m y
~~the trial date ...
expod lo ut I« thls last
and .otbtn," PaJ'ICIQI tald.
In a recent California cue,
Raymond s. Tamer, wllo
pleaded IUlllY lo -with · intent lo oomml1 rape, ....rn.
lo clwip bis plea lo innocent
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MR.MUM
becauae,beaays, bepoues1e1 -------------------an a bao rm al cbromolame
On Property
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Pr~b~· of PantMrs Fm~b ~~d .~------,~
R . _;;f b J 9Leanmg'' What'! rookin1? . e1ecteu y ury . , ..... · ~ , . -ToFe,d-r0$t
SAN F'RANCISCO UPI) -with usaqlt to comm It ., .. , ,: , •• , •
Tbe Sm\ FranclfCO Grond Jury mun1er, He and two ot)>er ; ,~', Al:lll• ~\ll'O · -
Thursday rejected Ma Yo r p~ ,._ also cl>arpcl GO~ •. \iOl\!!d,'.lleq~ ba'ljeyes
Jcmph Alloto's reqlle!t for wttha..rvlcestaUonrobbery bis . ~~'·1 1 • ::tli',! ~:~~!°~rofP~ whJcb ll<'<"ded the;ahootini "leanlng1' lowatd ~I an
in coonecUOb '!leflt>e BhooUng The dlfl<)ct attoniey•s o(l(<e • a~t !ii'Ule i!oirii'li 'a11-, •
of three police olfi~a. said U., five other blact · lll~onlQCPrell••·Wtect
Alioto said lite jury11·acUoo militant.a wm be rtleaaed. RI~ 111. Nil°""';....,· •
showed a ''timid and play.It-AllOtO ha4 aated the l"IY 1be .......... wiy mfrrlng
we ottitud•." lo fl'Obe ,llte Pantben lo aae Tlt"'8dily lo r.t Gov ~
The action came .tttt if the organh.aU~ was tn-1l ~ who . n;veAied . this
autbcriUes said only one of volved in a conqnracy to kill •-'-.,_ .:i-n--1 White police offi w~ -~ · • ~g~B=r::=:u~ Ju1,y ~·reman Don H~ staff appqlD~')>ut.
ch ed Fuackerly uid lite pttstding might be available !pr, a ~ .m..,., were wounded superior court judge adviled ".~J."d: be c~--,· la Tuesday after halting a panel agalmt t be lnvesUg'atlon, ve .. ~
truck carrying lite eight. The saying ·11 might be "Improper leaning toward , go!Jig ·. t.o
truck had "8i8ck Panther and pttjudlclal" to the panel's Wasblngtoo/' Jl'.eapo qld at
Community New1 Service" consideraU011. of the case · a meeting ol .~e Rldlo ·~
painted On ttie !idea. agatnst Brehl · Te~:viflon N e 'f I . Directors
Willie 1..et·Brent, 37, a Black Alioto said 0 hundreds of AssoclaUqn. . , Pan~. <;•l!taln· wltl charged grand jury investfa:ation.s are Should the_ 1.i e u t e na,n t
carried on afte.r arresll are govefDOI' ~ Rea~ said
tnade to determlne whethtt be was 'not ,decided w~. be
others might be implicated. would appoint to i:eP.Jace ~-...
~ THANKSGIVIN G DAY
~ AT
::•~; Disnc~tlond ,. , -· SPEOAi. THANKSGIVING MENUS -IN
THRE~ DISNEYLAND RESTAURANTS
Th• elegant Victorian decor of
The Plaza Inn
E11trat of Ro .. t TUl'by or Baked Vlrotnf1 H1ni
' $2.50
!J!lll .............. iiiiiiii .............
lh• New Ortt•ns Style
French Market
EnlrH-ROlitt Tui'key •
.• $2.50
•TM Rom1nUC! ,Mool111t Aimoephirw of
Tli~ Blue Bayou Restaurant
~·1 trial date II ..,,.
aet to< Dec. t,·WI p......, I
lald he'll uk for anolher
ct.1111 to allow .. unlcloattited
-iate time lo -his . work. 'Income-ability' ;Tax S.~~e Free Demonsttation
\ . ' ·-. rsychedelic Paint Art ,
' ' ., Entnti-flo11t Turke,-
$2.95 __ ........................ _,
• Dlf'llWl'I .. rved from 11 :30 AM.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A VOTE A. GE ..,. .,.!hod or property tax-
•tton. hued on a family's in·
DECISION come and ita ability lo pay. :na proposed today to the
SAN ~ (tJPl) _ ·K0Vernor'1 A d v i 1 o r y Com-
'lbe Calif--'• Coaltitutiona1 mission on Tax Reform. .,_ A reaearcber told the com-
Rmskm fOwnmlakm qreed .rDilldon that the plan would
Thurada!' to -.ier Iowerin( inean tow.r property taxes !or
the minimum votfn«i age to about 2,003,500 householders
18 or JI. and hlgher tue1 for 701,900
1bt lllue wu broqbt up . othen -those with the
by cunmlwlm member . John b1gbelt family income.
sprcul. 'Who uJd the people The report came from
of CalifClmla "lhould be allowed Bruce T. McKim:, an asaistant
to decide the 1epl voting age economics professor at the
·at the pollL 'lbe eommisslon University of C a I i f o r n i a
then voted rr-7 to put the Riverside campus. The com-
que!Uob on tbe qenda for mission is headed by State
Its January meeting t n Controller Houston I. Flour-
Paiadem noy, and is Gov. Reagan's sec-
•-• lald lite choice should ood try at finding a majoc tax ...,.......... reform plan that stands some ho bdween the age1 of 18 chaoce cl getting through the
· oc the .......,i 11, but another le"'•'•ture.
nmnber said the final decision McKim told the commission
might lnvolvo dnlpping the that "It II apparent that the
limit lo It. property tu .. !ta -
temporary lorm II asked lo
Murphy Pays Taxes ,
Owed to Uncl.e Sam
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
U.S. Sen. George Murphy bas
mnoved a tax lien against ru. rul eatate holdlngii by
paying the U.S. Internal
Revenue Service $31128 in
overdue income taxes.
paid hi.I share of laXOJ and
more," saJd Murphy.
The IRS lald the back tues
covered a special assessment.
The nature or tht assessment
wasn't revealed.
'Rat' Boycott
Set at Harbor
fObL~
CAI WASH ..... ......
"' Atm.,,,l>et wh9" wuhlng th• ol' gn
bun>' w•• a populer tonn of famll)I
,..CN•llon 7 It •tlll I• •t Am•tlC•'•
nr#Mt, nne1t •utomatlc drtv.-thru cer
wash. It'• run to "Follow Cherll•"
through our ncluslY8 ooln-op 1)'9t.lft
thet _,.. the dirt and grllM from
your Cllr-ln ._. than two mlnutell
You never leaq your cer. Fellow
••1 wun't aware my creclit
was IO bad with Uncle Sam,"
the Republican senator said
'Thlnday after the matter
became public. ''I just hope
the IRS will be equally
diligent agaimt others. ..
Murphy &aid the I R S
notified him urlier um year
be ""ed 16.000 In -......
Chartle _,_and bring th• kldll
.;:. AN-=~!~ THE PRU'!?
cl Loi Angelel Harbor ef·
fective this afternoon in a
dispute with a union over rates
aboard a cargo · ship. The
Pacific Maritime Association
late Thunday announced a
complete embargo of the
harbor, effective at 5 p.m.,
except for military cargo.
Murphy aaid . be paid half
the mooey due, with the .in-
tentian of seod:l.ng the ba.Janct
along later.
He explained he WA! so busy
campaip.l.ng for Republican
candlclala In October """ early Novmnber that the mat-
ter slipped hill mind. The lien
WU filed Nov. 13.
"You bow a ltnltor doelill't
a1...,. -a lot <i mooey
OD band.., be ldded.
''I tbooPI they ran a Utile
bard ewer a fellow wbo bu
Operationa have been slow-
ing down aince Monday, when
NOW OPEN
7 AM-11 PM Dolly At
Longshoremen '• and 30101rlstolStreet
Warehoulem.en'1 Union refut-
ed lo unload the lines !'real-0• --....... -dent Taylor, charging one bold
was infested with rats.
~~Ti~i~miy~;;m;:f ~
• 1inll Dinntr
-
Be A. Hero On .Thankagiving
Get Mom Out of the Kitchen
HERO BUTTONS COST AS ll11U AS $2.65
Codta . meda (}ol/ & C.C.
OPEN_ TJIAN~OIVING DAY fOR DINNERS
:uARTING AT 1 l'.M. ·
1111 DI W IDclude IOllp or 111.ad. roll and butter, beverage and d_,t.
,.._ TOM-TURKiY with Country Style D...alnt $2•
C.a Ir If lw Md •II th. Trimmings
..,., LH Ofl l'OllK wlrh Apple Sauce & Dreulnt
ag:ie'N'S J!OR.:r!ON (UNDER 12) TUllK!Y a, PORK $1.SO
Muf LON9 llUMD QUCKLING, Saum llgaraclo •••• , •• , •• , , •• ti.SO
Piii• WOP JTm UEF -Au Jus ......... : .............. $4.H
1-.1D U.S. dtOICW NIW YORK STEAK ...•..••..• ,. ....... $4.95
CHOICE OF DESSERTS •
D Cll&AM llUND¥~l=~ll MINCE MEAT Pl!
' 1-.Y•,_ ... ~l-Arelnoxponolw•
,
RISllVA PLEEEEESE, 540-7 00
•
. For reaerv1t1on1 call (71~) ~se ·
F~cj.f'•fin9,~•.,••lin9 for th•r•py, loY• C~Mtivene~1(
u,e for TA~ Topi, Decorations, Pictures! Applie1 to
. All 1urface1, includi1119 glass. Also antique finishing!
During the entire ThanksgMng weekend
Sp9dlf Nighttime Entartalnment ·1t1rrlnt
THE RIGKTEOUS BROTHERS
THE KING COUSINS • SKll£S & HENl)EllSON
GARY LEWIS AND THE Pl.A YBOYS
$11.95 Valuol
Samsonli.,
Bridge Chair
.. , ,.,;,,;. . $ 7 tl9
tal, s-44.C ..... . _.,_
21 x21 Inch•
Cotton Corcl.uroy
Roor PllloWs
•$6.'5 Valuol
Musical U'luer
Decani.n
~:-..J4ti .....
Mo,.. thin ~ Disi.eytand adventures tnd 1ttnic5ons
f0r ygur holid•Y enjoyment.
$1 :00 Vciluel ,
Disposabl. Aluminum .
Baking Pans
$3.99 Val.._i
Stainless Sfttl
Giftware
A..,.. f~ ""' .. ~64 J>OM • • • aD h_,,.. . c
41d:J" atum.lm11a. 'l'09I
theta out aft«' 1lliQ"
or-jilfJ' ellllll. -
== :.:L":': s244
bal:ed. Cbolct ot JIOPll•
..,. 1eninJ ltaa.
$11.88 Udico
Electric
Con Opener .
4 6Mle -.oo ~at ·-==~-~~ .. 111114• .. ~ ,.,. ot -·
~:· 3-Ql.t Fllttril ,
;Electric
Com ' Popper
lt'Rtlllllil'ftM
t.usoa , .... ---~ :=_11L llM
J -• . . • ,
$2"'
$2.ts
Val-1
English Bone China
Cup and Saucer
or Pl1te T~·u _,. ,...,,. 9611.
Xeat'' b7 U. tn.Aaluce11cY. P' "'hi'--''rlnir" 9nd JonlJ" _patt.erm.. Bt11TJ" Wlllle ltocJc.I Llltl
$2.99 ...... 1(1"
French
Cook Knife
14-1 -~---l'!'lJl;' .=-$_ 1 " e:.::,;ooe-.
.... ;$1.49
Family Siu
Rllcnting l'an
:.=.'::\',,:,,,,,,, 99· II Jtldb:llJl...... ,.
A\• I
.... 39c .. ch
CManiic '
Coffee Mugs
s:~~6i$]
f-. • v
•
•
·For The
Recoid
Meetings
Ill at DAY
Hu"""9tefl Mell L._ c• &Mttt.
t..n '""' Hl.Mltl .. i. 9"'dl. ... ·~ H•rW A'°" T~tln Cll* tlM,
Nine VW'Ot C°"'Citry Cllllll, co.II .IMN·' '·""· u.s. "'"' s.. e..iet c-. nu ••rr•llCll JtMCI,. Stnlt ,.,,,., J ''"" N""'°" H1r1lor J\lftlor OIM'llllw Ill c-c., V-llles 11..t&utaril.
1611 W•kltff Ortn, N"""'1 llMdl.
7:W p.lft. Or.,... eaunlY CIW!t Union tee-, $tdd11Ndc 1...., Santa AM, 7;JD
p,m. MalClnlC Loff9, JOOI' MI I I,
WM""I.,,.,.., AW(!Ult 1t 011 .... Street, W•tmllllf1r, 7:lt p.m. Or•nt• C.1t Jl.0)011 Ar.di ......,_
1fff1rt1111 ""tonk T"""'-• 1401 15'tl St., N_,. IHCll, 7:Je 1t.m,
HOJnf!NllDn &Mdl JUftlor OWlmber ol eommercce, Shtr1tofl 9ttdl 11111.
HIJflft"'1'111 .... dl. I P.m. NIWllOrt Hirt.or EIQ Clb, Elkt Ledl'e,
:M5' VII Oporto, N"-1 &Hell, . '·"" A~lcan lMlon P(llt .US,. Amfftun
Ulloll Hill. $65 W. \Ill! $1,, O.h1
MtW •• p,m. ~'11. SI~ 1tld ~ Men'1 Club, P9f'l111 Hell, 221 ltlh St., HIHlrll'Olbl
a..qi.. p.m. or'""' C9uflfy c,.a11 Unloll L-. Sadclltbedl: IN!t hfQ ""41, 7:311
·-~ UTUllDA'I"
HUntl!'llltoll Beedl llcit1rv c 1 u • , st.r1tion lffd'I ln11, HUftrlt11kwl ••ad!. 12:10 ''"'·· V11rl,,.r'1 Lloafts Club II N_.-t
Helltll .. Stvf't Shirt, U.l W.-Co< Hltlrft'I'. NfWl'Ol"t II_,, 11:11 p,m.
Divor~es
Dl'IORClll PIL•D
B•bttte P•rln Ferr1rl VI AIMl't Paul
Ferr1rl Elletl llH FM'lllllOll vs It-If DHft , .. _
01 .... K.., Chlliwlff YI llUcN1rd •l'l.d
"""'"' Shlrte. A. •1rnfol'd vs flldianl A
B1mford Nol• P. Dr1bedc .,, John J•f'MS
Dr1beck . tor-Dotson w Doneld H. Dolson
NOrm1n Dollthertr vs W1ncMlle
°""'""" ~ ll.1ndolph \II .IMrtM P. ll.1l'Mlolph I" 111 G. I'. ,._. VI Bobbll L. ,,_
C1rol AnM ll1!dl1rd vs R11ph LI
Relchtrd SvlYll Ann Biker YI G-.1 ll:O'I Biker .
L1w~nce I!. lh1ndl VI Tl!elrM E.
B1111dl • Lowell Nun vs C.rollne Hull
JN11neft1 G. Threet YS aer111rd H.
Threet
Nonn.1 L .. w111oi1 "' wmi.m Harold w .....
Fire Calls -·-t :Jl 1.m. TllUnda'I,· rucur, titn 1ttll
SI. Apt. A .
7:.U p.m., °"'c. tiulldlns fire. 463' C1m-OfjW '"-fall! V1l9r"
7:35 '·"'· ,,,.,,,..,,., ~ 17l!I s.n-11 h•bitl . . .
J:'9 1.m., iwc:w. Mnnol11 11'111 E~ \
llltr' M1111111'1 .... t..o '
12:CO •• m. Tiwm.y, Ml 1911!, tU:
Crwst SI.
11::11 p.m., •tnM:tu,.. fl,., '171t Ec11nter I
1:02 p,m~ !Mdlcll 1kl, bit A1V1rado ,
Dt1-..e ' 4:2' it.m., -llOCltwn, ,hh11tr aNf B...ch l.olllwllnl s:.u 1.rfl •• c.1r . fl,.._ DaW.-f -'"' I
A~ln . • c.•-.. I
7:07 1.m. ~. -tttl5 M'-
12:2G "·"'" .trvdu~ fl,.., .. t: ..... mer., sum ..__ ..
4:22 •. ,,, .. fllle •1.vn:i. 11111 •.r' ..... ,. ... ,,. ... _..... . ':."'" ,
s:g~m .. 1tnldu.r: flrt, 1sn Ml;M '
!:2:5 '·'"· l<rldt,y, llUbllc ••Ill, "" Blfrlflll !"lac.
DEATH NOTICES
DENKERT ·
JOlffll A. Dtftkltl't, .-_ .. '71"d1tw-d d .. ,,., Novembw :11. Jl:•ldlnt of fl'
P"M Aw., ••t'-111.,ld. survl'tfCI
by lllt.n. ,...,.,. ll.. DWikHf, ••*'-
l$lend. '"" Mn. ,.,.,. J. 0.!'IMl'I. o.:.. .... i.. Hew York. ltouN, t.>
nllllt, Friday. I ,.M, l•lh: Chtl>el.
lS20 IE. Cololl H!llhW•Y• C,,_ del
...... r. """""' Mn3, $1!\lf1My, · 11 AM, 51. Jahn Yi-IWll!Y CNo~, l•lboll
11tarld. F•mlly IUHn!i lho9e wlih-1,,. to lfl9ke nwmort•l mntrlt:l\llklo\I,
Pi..M <lDNht to tfle Amotrletn C•nnr
SocietY. l•lf1 Mortwory, Olnc:tors. Gm es
O$cft" 0. Gfbbl. 207 Gnnd C.n.11,
8.11-1i.11nct. DI._ ~ clNlll. Ko¥. 20.
Survived bY wtk>, Mlory V. Gii*;
dwtll-. Mn. Mlr98 Llnd11!h 1nd I flYlo tnonddllld1'9". Prlvtii. .,...lcel 1t
l111l Mortu.N, 35211 E. C•sl H01fh-w1y, CGrW4 dtl Mar.
MUUJNEAUX I
W•IW I!. MulU-UX. 2D A M•lelu· l
l.QuM Hiils. 0.1• '°' Miii. Nov. 19. ' s.urvlved tw n\«P, It*"'-Hunt, c-11 MeM, Servlcet., Monclly, 12 Noafl,
Llfl1P CllUl"dl f/I tttt. Fi-t'I, l'"-1
LI-G..,_.•"· Slltr Merhl1ty', l5l'O E. C•st H19t1w1y, Oll"KtorS.
GIJllREN
MlldrM Guf'l'911. 1• c.n-..v Drive,
C05l1 ~-5'Nkft N!'ldhw. ltll a,.,....., Mortu1ry, n• a,..llM.,,
Cmhl ~. DAWSON
Ned M. O.W-. $tl"¥1cM "Pe!lllll"'°.
11'11 .,....,..., NoortvMY. ,,. '""°"
WIY• co.t9 ,!MN, CARMICHAEL
Jahn 0, CMTl'lldletl. f7'3 C'"""K
Dr1w, Huntll'!ftarl e..ctl, "'"""" b-, brdtlen, Ktnnllll Ind J-" H.
C1rTr1iCNl'I; 11'1•• IE~ Thaltllln. s-ic:. w411 W llfld In ,.~, Flor-
Id•· LOl»I 1rft,..._fs bY ""'* 1"1m-1 eotonl91 I H-.
BALT.ll MORTIJAIUES
C.... del Mar .OR 1,1411
C..laM-Mlf.MU
BELi.BROADWAY
MDRTlJARY
11 Jlrpodw,ay, <:-. M-..... :U.. NQS •. ' -
•
~ )IOBTUAll'I'
"' g, 11111 Iii., COiia --·
•
-·---. --=:-,.~ ...... '!" ...................... ~ .. _ ... _ ........... ..,, ........ ~ ... •-• ............................ -~ ' -)
•
I
•
• • . .
DAit'!' 1'tt:.OI' 'I •
. -· ---------· -I - -. ,. --,, Co~t}«~ges Draw:Su~rwr Coµrt 1~sig~mel}f8;:;
Beaver Sufnnarine
Emerging from the Beaver submarine work.boat,
two North American Roclcwell divers finish up
"dockside" tests conduct..i Thursday at the Com-
pany's sonar pool in Anah<im. The tests marl< the
first time divers have left and. re-entered the sub--
martne through tbe lockout system. Sea trials in
deep ocean environm"'1t will begin_ later this year
off Santa Catalina Island.
Judge Won't Drop
Conspiracy, Theft
SANTA ANA -Superior Valley and Charles R. Billings,
Court Judge Robert Gardner 40, of 11501 Christy Lane, Los
refused Thursday\J.O dismiss AlamitoB weie two of eight
conspiracy and. gr~ theft defendants named in a recent
charges 88ainsl two Qrange Grand Jury indictment.
Coast mep. ace~ o! matiiig Billings w.as one of the four
false representations m setlini defendants who appeared in
up ~rusts and · foundatioM l.b: cwrt. Galas wa.s one of the
avoid taxes. • "-· f:m. who didn't
"Gustave Galas, 39, of tt79 '\Judge Gardner ordered ·the
La Rose Lane, Fountain ~· ' of bench warrants for
and bll -... absen but will delay their Hoop Star ~~~m~for'" indef-
11 is alleg that the defen-
To Serve dants work through
AmericaM Buildlqg Constitu-
tionally ,.a nonproa~·th
30 D headquarten In • ays Ill. . The trull, the a ey
~ . gen<ral'.a. COIDPJoinl . ,
College basketball s t a r charied Orange C o u a
Joseph Wire ~--a 30-day ~ a $10:500 ,, '""""'
jail term in Superioi-Court bersbip fee.
Thursday after he admitted
vio1ating probatjon by .
soliciting. ·Salvation
'
Arniy Asks l
Judge William S p e I r s
ordered the Cal S t a t e
Fullerton athlete to return to
court Nov. 27 for definite C1:1m·
mitment. The jurist ordered
the delay to enable Ware, 21, I Donations
to register for the spring 1
semester on the Fullerton
campus and to check on the
possibility of. Ware's serving
his sentence in a work
furlough program.
Payments
Coming In
SANT A ANA -With the
December 10 deadllne for pay·
ment of the first half of the
196H9 property ta x ap--
proaching, Coonty Tax Collec·
tor Don S. Mozely reported
remittances of f i r 1 t ln·
stallments "better than last
year."
Total payments thi! week
reached $15.8 million. At this
Ume last year only 112.8
million had been collected.
SANTA ANA -The dJp-
board is J;le&tly bare at Salva·
lion Army bea(\quarters bei'e ..
Brigadier John Allen todt.y
issued an urgent appeal for
donated materials to keep bis
small army of 100 men bul7
at Salvation Amey worbhopl.
"We need hundredJ of wt-
«'lffs from Orange Caunty
donors who .want to he1p us
continue our rehabilitation
program,'' said the Brlpdler.
Donated materials Wl11 be
repaired, p a i n t e d and
otherwise ' prepareil far sale
i!'I the Salvat'ion Army's Red
Shield Thrift Stores. Proceeds
from the aaJe of refurb!lhed
good! support tbe orqntza·
tion's service cent.er for needy
men seeking rehabilitation as
alcoholics, or who are tem·
porarlly without homes and
jobs.
Donat.cf articles will be
picked up by Salvation Army
Red Shield trucka. !'or 111-
f ormaUon. call 547-<Gt.
Mos1ey eJ:pect.1 thlt almost
one-half of the fi~ year's
total charge of $274.2 million
will be In tJie coffen by Doc.
11. Late payments will be----------
asses"" 6 percent penalliel. Give the United Way 11le county has 351,372 pro-
perty tupayers.
The only medication
that gets to a major cauM
of hemorrhoid•
. ' . .
SANTA ANA -Sever a 1 man will vacate hio Deport· 2. Law and Motloo, Robert Van Taleobow , _ • . , larl ~·Ilario ! I
Oranc• Cout ,....., 'ljo(<o -dieot U henCll Gil JliltT 10-L.-Corlmlft~&arlutr tJ -ft,--~----.n.---~'
been nameci to viIY: Nnch '"'" the balm of the yeer s. 6-rll 'l'r l a l-Pr<illlle, p..,_1, ll'!ft'll ~. Cmneron l'ridlo1 Cllendar, -ft Raymond Thompoon 20. General TNJ.attllemon~ 1tm1J >, • • po1ts in the 1989 assignment .oo the law. and moUo:i bench 4. Domestic Relations, Wil· ' •,
ol court clepartmeoll, b~ ~-in Department t,o, Iiam t. M\lll''l' (to April I) --
perlor i::ourt !'™ldlng ~Ilda· Jud(es Cjlarla A. Buer of s. ~inal Calendar-Grand • ., See bv . Today' r Samuel~· llonllngtoo Beach and WU· Jury, Robert Gardip l '
N:';!':. ~ ·-~ " ~~hc.a~P!:.: ... " ~~Ill -P~rt~ i...t<tinal • · .. w~nl A~: . ~ '. '"''l"r:"". ~ .i.A~ OV'1 m PIRIC ·~ '""'--wuu .... 1. General Trltl.settJentem, ,,.
Department PJ~' ,Jn wha( is wear two "bat-'• in t.. Ra•.--.t. Vlnctnt • Mam: Loft M1ntt • I'll'
reprded ., . ..,. . .,the......,., , JU<fae Baller Is Jg<Igt Drel· a'.G;°,;;,111 Trlal-8etllement, ai,..· ,...,.._..,. f!da ,,
mo1t ~t IBllpm«tts zed's choice for 1ener.at frlal Oarles A. Bauer · beeutiful aatuNJ nnth • .,
-~ ~i ••d :'~T:t~,erJ.:; c!.=:1(:.rr=-~i ~ .. un-.ul)> •.
Grand Jury. ~!(<lie Gudper Speln• has thO general trliiI-. 10. Nol.yet ..,Igned •.,. .._. •. --!\· '. will terVe u · tbe court's Uai-• criminal pa!1el 8¥igntl1ent in 11. General Tr1al -Criminal ThHe CUlhSom 'Will ..re. .. ~
aon with the l~·panel Depan?nent ll Panel, James R'. Judge your fall. U ,._. ~a .. •
and will 1Je, ..J,..t.ed 1o pro-Judge Dreizen, faeed with 11 General Trial, ~-L. d>alr, ... -W.·!i!Y ,. lmminent transfer of his 21· Corfman (to JulY 1) a cqntouted oDt Jor d ":o: ~_..letll ~ Jlll Ill); pro-judge ·cOurt to tlie almost Claude M. Owens ' ((rom • -· Otlabn.U., ·• , ,..... crtmii1aI fbdlctment. completed new county court·' July 1) Otl<ln" Turby Dq .•'
Retained u -!ding Judie house, baa decided ·to make IS. General Trial, II~ tbla ant1qut· -7: • ·
al !he juveolle :COW'! II Ju!lge hio 11169 awitche1 effective s. Her!M\I! ble, 1n uceDent ~ !~ Sumner ·of ~a from the date of removal. 14. General T'rlaJ, Wllllam • ,..., ___ --t .. i ~· ThlJ will be tbe Ari The weokend of Dec. 11-15 bas · S. Let --·-•·
Colooy Jurist's -Wm In been hopefully let for the 15. General Trial • M<ntal '""' ·""' -tD b\l> ,; : the youthful offenders' divi-transfer.· Health, M. Walter Steintr • Noe tradltlonal..:.a~
sion. 1 , •• ~or Courl 19&9 141lgn-11. Gfneral Trial -Crimlnal room tel., at. dart
Named to ~ trill di· meD{s ·are: · Panel, William C. Speln •Leather lAWtll-. • •
vlsJ.ons are JtidgeslWl!Uam. S. DepartmenlA11lpmcnt.Judge 17. General Trial • SeWe-New leattitr aoods. ''!:"
Let o1 C..la Mesa ·and Robert 1. Pre.Dding Judge, Samud ment.crtminal p-i, Byron dw & -~ •
L. Corfman of 'Ne TI> or t 'Dreizen · K. McMillan . uoorted -
Beaci>. JP.4&'1 l'..ee'l" ls 'i full· ·i; Law aod Motion, Claude 18: Generol Trial-setllemen~ ""°'"'L
yur posting but Judge Corf-'M. Owens (to July I) Reciprocal ,Cllendar, loiter ' .. '.
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llAILV PU.OT
Thursday's Closing Prices -Complete New York
American
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cJ! DA!lV l'ILGT r-rial).~ ~. J»I
" 1.agiitta Playhouse Production . ' -.
· ''Lion in -Winter'· Superb Drama
ByTOMmiJS
Of .. OttlJ P'tlllit.I""
Commllnlty • U.:Ow I n 0r..,. Cot\0'1 roached 1i.
SWMllt for 1981 wec1ne..r,y
nltl>l with an ou1atandi111 pro.
ductloo ol Jam .. G<>ldman'I
"'lbe Lloo Jn 'Winter'' at the
Laguna P1-yhowoe.
Superb on all ~ o u. a t 1 ,
Hot Time i• Town
Sultry Diana Walke charms Tom Anthony (left)
·alld Steve Nisbet in a scene Crom "The Golden
Apple ," giving its final perfonnances tonight and
Saturday at the UC Irvine Studio Theater.
a T~.~~~~~.~~:~~~
. 617 Wtst H•!Nftu, C... MeN
AH J...till f_l.._ •rt ilrlltM l't +.111 n 111 tnlly ,,....,111.twt
SAllATH IVININ6 SllYICtS FllDAY .t 1:11 P.M.
fnlOI' !tie fi(le 1int111t ot 11\e T9"191• SMron Choir tl'd b .,.rm kllowlohlp of our Onew Sh.lbll
•..i11r1tle!i' Hor "...,._ a ••"'*"-k "'91 -""11 TwM11y, Odeftr 11
C.U: 646·1512 • 141·1432
brilliantly directed with a blue
ribbon cu\, this 12th C..Uury
drama tinged with b!Ung com-
edy stands c!wly q lhe
year's most lmprea&lve ol-
lerilll-111111 -aJona with "A
Man for All SeaaoM" and
"Slow Dance on ·the Killing
Ground" -IWOOI the finest
Lliuna plays in re c e a t
biBlory.
Borrowing from blstorical
eveotl surrounding tbe strug-
11'! for successioa to the
throne of King Henry II,
author Goldman bu injected
"TH• Lieut IH WINT••" A 111» w J-Goklm•n, dlrec:Md bl'
Jal'ln l<l'r'Z1CC11. Mt •ncl ca1lllme ,,._
11111 "'1 I("" ICornwelbll, rt(llnic.111 dl-rKtor f'•11t Toft, PreMnr.d w.d-r•
tfl,_11 SlltvrdlV• {llll-1 Thariiu•IV•
Irle) Ulltl1 De(. 1 ., !ht ~· .... .,.
l'lou», Jlf Oceln Av• .. Lfflllll lffdl.
THa CAST
Kine Henry II ..... lt1tp11 ltldll'Nnd ~ !IM.-.... M..-thetll ltMd1H lt~rd ............... Mlduotl Slltton Ci9tft!'ff .............. ltoben Wal*° .Jolln •.••• , • • • • . • .. . • • . KM Kw-It.I
Aiiis , .••••• ,, ••••••.•.... Toni HadltJ l"/\ltlll •.•....•.•...•.•... "•VI Wll-
his cbatact.ers with passionate
insensit.lvity as they plot and
coonterplot for the upper
hand. The lust for power
surges through the veins of
each, expo11ing bis or her
Achilles heel in a compelling
game of theatrJcal chess,
John Ferzacca, who directed
"Slow Dance" a n d the ex-
cellent "Subject Was Roses"
before ·tt, has staged his finest
produelion. His direction ls
virtually faultl e ss ,
manipulating his characters
into strong and weak positions
depending on their situation,
always with a clear sense of
dramatic, yet untheatrical, ef.
feet.
PREMISE SEr
The play'• premise is quick·
ly and clearly established a!!
Dad, Son T eam
HOLLYWOOD !UPI)
John Carradine and his son,
David, will appear together
professionally for the first
time in "The Good Guys and
the Bad Guyll" star r ing
Robert Mltclwm and George
Kennedy ..
&OLIO-STATE CONSOLE STEREO
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••••••t•on.
M11q11c. M1d111rr1n11n 1rylld c.1bjo.1_ in genu1n1
Dlft. OH ven11n llld lelKI h..-dwood tolid1. 01 PKan
~I and Iii.et h..dwood &Olidl, both Wt!h look of
hn. dittteuing. ln1 .. oor light. m:onl StoflQI •P-·
NO DOWN
36 MONTHS
TO PAY
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TV &
APPLIANCE
CENTER
Harbor Center
'.•
3.100 Harbor llYd. -Costa MellO
. ,._. 540-7131 ~ I ,, • ' • •
HOulS: WMkclayi 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. S•turd•y 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Henry &reels bis quarreling
family j~ with "Well,
what shall we hang, the boUy
or each other?" This &Ingle
line sets the lltage for the
medlatlon with his , discarded
wife, imprisoned through an
but · lhe hoUday season. bis
bloodless sons who all despise
him, bJs YOW'lr8 mistre.u and
ber brother, lhe kl111 of
France whose father was once
cuCkofded by Henry.
A& the beUowlng, SO.year-
old lion that Is King Henry,
Ralpb Richmond delivers 1
most powerful, yet sensitive,
perfonnance, in every way
comistent with his regaJ role.
He ia a commanding figure,
uncompromlsinJ at every turn
until compromised into the
ultimate decisioo-whether to
kill biJ ·sons or release them
thal they may someday re-t.urn io do him in.
Marthella Randall as the
captive queen Eleanor Is a
remarkable contrast, match-
ing Henry on Ills own grounds
in the arena ot Invective, yet
suecumbing to the tender,
proteclive emotion.s of a wife
and mother. Miss Ra~dall
brings to her role a dramatic
presence and affinity for char-
,-
strongest per!onnanco ...,.
-C<ft!UUI a dlsturi>iill MC· lditf. Ken Kom-"eibel -who fbO deslgni!d lhe lmpool111 ¥t and fine eostwnes-11 ex-
celler.t as the YQWllelt, a
slmoerinl and pouting teen-alei-, w.6Ue Robert Wallace
comes ~.~~-elf~Y&ly as the b;'~lddle :'t. favored by nel par·
coNvJNCJNG ·ii.m Hachez u lhe French
ptlncqs " h 0 purportedly
lov" Henry . _. a ma!1 more
than· u a ting Is sirong and
convjnclng, pariicularly aa
she Presents her own uUpia·
tum. The young but wewd kinf, lbUwly jealous ol lhe
Engliih s veretin, ·is u:cep-
tiooally well played by Paul
WllsoQ.
The. play reaches its height
in tbe Virginia Woolf"!Sh
scenes. betw~ Riehm~
and, M1"' R8ndall who strike
sparka on each other with
ominous ve.nem laced with
comic subtlety. "Did you
ever love m~?" she a!!lks ;
"No," he replies; "Good,"
she counters, "that will make
this pleasanter.''
Sta~ed in a regal manner
befitting its.setting in history,
"Lion" throbs with the inten.
llity of monarchs playing ooe
upmanship with the fate of
two countries. Completlng the
overall excellence is !!lirring
background music judicially
employed.
Thi!! blghlight of the coun-
ty's little theater :season will
be staged through Dec. 7,
g o i n g dark Thanksgiving
night, at the Laguna Play·
house, 319 Ocean Ave., La·
guna Beach.
Hitch Returns
acter rarely glimpsed on a HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
community stage. Alfred hitchcock has returned
Of the three sons, Michael to the film wars with ''To-
Sutton as the elde!!t has the paz." Leon Uris' novel, with a
potential of conveying the , cast of new faces.
•
A Real Snapper
'Mousetrap' in 17th Year
LONDON <AP) -Agatha
Christie's play ''The
Mousetrap" start!! its 17th
year Monday.
More than 2lfi million tickets
have been sold since the
murder mystery opened Nov.
25, 1952, when Harry S.
Truman was president and
Winston Churchill was prime
minister.
The cast has changed many
times: 112 aciors and ac-
tresses have played in the
eight roles.
The biggest mystery about
the play i.5 what keeps it .so
popular?
Theater manager P e t e r
Saunders sa)'?I Miss Christie
has written 17 other plays
and "The Mousetrap" is not
the best one, but it is now
fixed firmly on London's list or tourist attraction!.
"Business is still very good
and we have absolutely no
intention of taking it off the
slate." a spokesman said.
The Ambassadors Theater
declines to reveal e J. a c t
figures but it has taken in
well over $3 million on the
play. This hasn 't made a pen-
ny' for Mis! Christie, the 77-
year-old wife of Br is it h
archeologist Max Malloran.
She gave all rights in the
play to her grandson Matthew
Pritchard, then 12 years old.
Pritchard is now a wealthy
man .
Movie rights were sold 12
years ago but it can't be film -
ed until six months after it
goes off the stage.
The lines have been rewrit-
ten to keep up with the times.
Jn 1952 the characters chatted
about food rationing, which
has long since e n d e d .
Costumes have changed to
keep pace with fashion.
All the furniture on stage.
except for a chair and a clock.
hll!! been worn oul and re-
placed twice. ----
Smart girl,
Smart guy.
Smart buy,
SUNNY
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T o!.:e ~ne sip of its
marvelous mildness ~r:::;::;:;.:~
and you 'll agree:
there's no smoother
whiskey than
Sunny Brook
at any price.
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Harli~r Center
2300 Harbor BIYd. • Ctllto Mesa
' Phone 540-7131
HouRS: Woolcilays t a.m. te 9 p.m. s.turday t a.m. to 6 p.m.
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TAI• Call Is lmpototant
Whatever it wu he bad to ay Is must have been Im-
portant for tills fellow to use a ''prnoe booth" on
Manbatten's Flflh Avenue. '!be booth -bad been
Reporter
ACROSS 4Z--t fer ·-1 ROllmt to4 4] OIYOI• Of
5 HldeawlJ' suptfflislty 9 One of '4 RtconcUld.
f1bltd dlffaftflCU thNes•t c• Alrstri, 14 RubbH stcUOll
product 47 Ttlil ~ 1 15 Two of dtree 48 Mexican
famous last dlshts
words SZ Arch.:! hand It
16 Frtntlt-of a "11111 111an's na•e 55 Untll now: 17 Glrl z words 11 Hock11's 57 Cause
llllllt& to sloJt 19 IO'lt 51 Island of 7 ltallan: Abbr.':35 Dry and
furtlvetr Scotland I D1l1yln11 111~otantus 20 FreKh •O Chnt sound 1clton '6 Ass99ln1 eo~sesslvt 61 Asian nation: 9 Expofttt's pain 21 Cold dlsb Comb.fol• ln11lntss 39 St.' P1ul'• 23 AslaUc 62 Monocllnlc lbbrtvlatlon companion htrtl 111ln1ral 10 Katlonal 40 Kind 24 Deb'olt's 61 ll11gt: .... -- - -.. of dru§" nel~bor C•b. fO,. 11 -ftle: 42 Sut1111t1n1
26 G1r11ent '' S~nd In Flxtcl Idea poor health 28 La.rt• part of · couand: · 12 franspor-0 loolen c.ap
gcologlcat lnfotul tatlon 111tdh• 45 Tnic.t af land
ti• 65 Coflftalmtly U SOS! 46 Da•;for Ollt
2• Rl'flf If . "''' · 22 "Hello 48 AnJ•al'a ca•• " C~• . " c.raiw • U.S.A. 67 Olftnd• ZS GMIMI 4t Vessel 33 Stop••• W cot« so o.,'..t•ll•
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-tu rt., . 30 llM 1 5? -:~alts 37 Ltll• i ;-.i,, Ml•a 53 kl.n
31 RDdf•s' Z U.S. c.ltt Jl Bird 111cl•1llon conillorlttr ) Ir. lelras 32. AdJecllve 54 l')tchlt11.
'' Color 4 W.tt'tnt 111ffl1 wtftt, for
40 Trani en S l'llCll •' » ·~'t::.ss 56 -:'~iiOf'lftlY 49 Din -.. slNC:tlM ....... , •t M-111.. , 41 !et: ,lR°"prlll 34 lltt ...... n. " .. ., c.~........ ,.-Cl" . •tdlllfl .......
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but bis number was busy.
Movie-goers
' Gettin Air : g
In Popcorn
UPI,....._
'!be phone worked
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
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Local War on Pover.ty
Noarl;f f9ciotl4n since the lmlceros left West Or·
ance County ahd the spotlight was taUn ol4 mmonty
croups are the oaes left -the M'elican Americans, the
poor of all co!Ol'I and cre<d.s, and the alienated youth.
· Aini. >,lica Medina, coordinator of the Huntfniton
Beach c.:.nmunJty Cen"'1' bu not fOl'gotten. The center
•I Main Street and Goi!leld Avenue b a grass roots ap-
proach to solving some of the serious social problems of
tbill aroa.
Filwlced by the Communlly Action Council Jn S..n-
ta Ana with War on Poverty funds, tt is operate(\ by Mn.
Medina .,. a place where people can help themselves.
'Ibero are volunteers, but not enough al tbell).
There lo 40me money, but not ..,.ugh. The<e ls tlhe
building, but it n11y be taken away. But there is no l•<l<
Of persons needing help, nor Is there a Laci< of eothus1·
asm on tho part of thooe who becomo Involved with peo-
pie who l'!lally want to help them5elves ·and ask only
treatment u human beings.
Wal\ on poverty, to many of the af11uent 1n Wert
Orange County, is some l<lnd of government boondoggle
in 1lle llholtoo or baclt east. To Mrs. Ml!dlna, Huntington
Bbch ls a battlefield wh...., the ills ol our society inay
be foullbt wlth<iut fires,shootlng or r!Dta.
To her, a class in English ii more important and
will llCCOmplisb more than burnings. Deve!oping mutual
unde?Randlng through Spa,ni.11> cli.ssea and through
clasSles in Uhited States government do mucih to prevent
the -dlstruot which leads to trouble, .she exjJlains.
Mrs. Medina believes that jobs and education are
the answer to the problems of poverty for the majority
an4 she works bard at finding the jobs and arranging
the cl.....,.
The center ii open seven days per week to help
people help themser. ... Here· ii tlw! center ol informa-
ti0'1 ' In S(ianl5h for those ' who read no Englieh. Hae
thooe·who do not nad at all find guldance, too.
Those who havo been in trouble with tho law find
an unQerstandlng o! how d!Micult It is to g•f a Job with
-a reronl and those who need undontandlnc juJt IJe.
ca"'" they are different-the youth f91" inatance-&4
understanding and acceptanco ,W\lbout judgment
W eot Orauge County lo indeed fortunate to blve the
Commw\ity Center and Mrs, Medinll. Th«e is a biC job
to be done and •he cannot dP It alorie. Call bor at 847-
4647 and ask what you can do for your community.
You'll help yourself In the long run.
Library Progress
Huntington Beaclh councilmen hue purchased tho
site for a new central library for Huntington Boach at a
bargain price. They sbould go ahead with plans foi; con-
~ctioo.
The land was purchased far $12,000 an acre in an
area where land usually sells for twice that much. Thi&
bargain can be attribubed to the tenacity of City Admln·
istratoi-Doyle Miller and the bard work of. Roger Slates,
w2:Lo handled much of the final negotiations.
Construction cost ls estimated at about $3 million,
but it ii possible that the federal government will pay
about $1 million toward this coot.
Although voters did not approve 11ffieral obligaUon
bonds for the·library, the J>e9Ple a'fe paying now for
construction Of the library through the trash collection
fee.
Thb money can be used I<> repay bonds sold by a
non-profit corporation or under otber means of raising
money. Cou.ncilmen should proceed rapidJy toward con-
struction because the facility is badfy needed now to re-
place the iuadequate facility on Main Street
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Mistakes of Reader Would Change Electoral College 'It
Adpptive
Parents
BY NORMAN NIXON, 1\1.D.
Many ~pies, unable to have children
of Uleir own, believe they have failed
as men and women. Some feel guilty
or angry; others, frustrated for years,
fear thelr marriage ii threatened. If
t h e y decide to 8'1opt a cblld, m a n y
childless couples have doubts abput
themselves Ind do a Jot of sou.I-searching
during the.tr interviews wtth the adopUoa
agency. Will they be goo4 parents? Will
the agency COD8ider them well adjusted?
How can they tell the child be iJ adopted?
Every year approximately 1 million
couplea in the United States decide to
at10pt a baby. SlnCe no more than 100:000
ohildren become available to meet this
deihand, less than one in 10 couples
actually become adoptive parmta each
year. Obviously, the lucky One! are thrill-
ed, even though adopting a child is
not quite the same as having one of
their own. ·
M~ ADOPTIVE parent& react to
their new baby with mixed emotions.
Having waited a long lime, they usually
are five to 10 years older than natural
parents. Striving lo be perfect, they
are overly conscientious abwt their tiny
infanL The slightest deviation from what
they think Is normal Is cause for unusual
concern; many call the pediatrician or
family doctor at the drop of a hat.
The adopted baby is often held in
such high regard that his parents almost
deUy him. Nothing is loo good for their
son or daughter. They give love all
right, often so much that the child
ii overwhelmed and seldom challenged
by the small doses of frustration
necessary for normal p e r s o n a 1 i t y
deve1opment.
Deeper Bite
''Uno)e Sam's 'pay now and enjoy it
later' plan, otherwise known as social
security, will bite deeper into the
paychecb of employes this year,"
noted Acme !tlartet1, Inc. "The tax
rate of 4.4 peccent is the same as last
year, but applies now to the first
S'7,800 earned instead of the first
$6,600. The maximum tax due this
year from an employe has been in·
creased $51.80, from $290.40 to $343.1JJ.
The Increase was leglslaled by
Congns1 to pay for the ina-eased cost
of .sod.al security benefits."
Tbe Amertcu Medical AslOClatfon
ls1ued a wont of warning concerning
commercially promoted "clubs" for
weight lo1er1. "Since excess welght
ma1 be a l}'tnptom of illnes1," the
Mlociation said, "lt ii vital for .&nJ. peoon who wants to Jose •·eight
lo hm a pliyllcal eumlllation by ltl&
pllyllelan before participating in oey
ot. t&eM IO-Gllled dub program1."
I >
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
A would-be K B. developer told the
City Council his mistake was to
rely on city laws. He found that the
letter of the law is seldom the law
at all here. The council's way ot
assuring him the Jaws will mean
something hereafter was to assure
him a variance!
-S.D.D.
Tilll ... "'" r.tMdl ... o.n-... -. ....
llKftHrllr .... et "" """"''""· s...c '9W "' _.,, i. Glollrnr o.,.. 01Wr l'IM.
ON THE OTHER band, adoptive
parent& tend to set high standards and
inaiat on llrict conformity aa: thelr
youngster grows older. They stress
family values and tradiUons as though
to, llY! "Siooe you art DOW part of
our family, you must be exactly lllte
we are." Many demand respect and
absolute obedience at considerable cost
to the child's strlviJ'l8 for independence.
Their expectatioos and goois sometime
are so high that their son or daughter
reacts negaUvely to their pressure for
achievement and success.
INTERESTINGLY, sexual inhibitions
in some adoptive parents frequently pre-
vent a confident approach to sex educa-
Uon wbile the child is growing up. Since
most adoptive children were born out
of wedlock, their new parents seem to
fear they too will stray from the straight
and narrow path. So many adopted
youngsters are confused about where
babies come from, indeed, where they
themselves came from.
FORTIJNATELY, fewer families today
make the mistake of trying to conceal
adoption from the1r youngsters although
many reveal too much too soon, and
too often. Repeating the story over and
over again makes it too mechanlcal.
When the youngster is 8 1or 9 and begins
to have the normal childhood fantasy
that he had two sets ol parents, one
good, the other bad, some adoptive
parents go Into a tailspin when their
darling tells them they are his bad
parents and that be wants to go back
to the ones who really love him
SINCE ADOPTIVE parents seek p~
fesslonal advice freely, most child
psychiatrist! see a proporUonately higher
percentage ol adopted children in their
offices and clinics in comparlson to
children raised by their own parents.
But their behavior problems and em<r
tional hang-ups can be corrected if both
adoptive parents are willing to face
their own personality conflicts and to
change their neurotic ways ol adapting
to the everyday probltms of living with
themselves and with their adopted
children.
Quotes
Rep. Seymour Halpern, R-N.Y., ~
1ponsor of the provision In the foreign illd
1utbortzaUon bill afll.na P r e 1 l d c n t
Jolwon &t lt1J Phantom supenoNc
flghter-bomben to Israel; "The White
Hoose announcement about negotiations
on the jetl may turn out to be nothing
more thari a gimmick to evade the ereat
concentraUon of public opinion for
another month or IO. I want an u-
plinaUon of why Sec:re\ary Rust avoided
a yes or no answer when asked by
report.en il a decialon hid beeir made \o ..u u.. ,..., ..
Ynbei Sl[rtdo, P 111 de• a -"In
wealthy CalUomJa why do wt have to use
the anUquated ballot.marking way of_
voting? With the votln& mM:hintl you
dose the curuln, ~ the levers, opco
the curtain and the vote ls cut."
Opposes Direct Presidential Vote
To the Edit.or:
Because we were so near chaos at
the end or our rectnt election, people
are ready to ditch the electoral college
and demand lhat we vote directly !or
president and vice president.
Everyone knows lhe present system
has its faults, but lo do away wilh
it instead of remedying the faults is
the same as lhrowing the baby out
with the bath water.
THE BIGG~T fault is the provision
that a candidate must get a majority
or the electoral votes to win. Change
this to a plurality and let the high
man win and there would be no need
to worry about the ~lecUon going to
the House of RepresehtaU~u.
The electoral college '-.JYslem wa!I
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
message in 300 words or less. The
right to candense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel U reserved. AtL
letter.! must include signature and
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on request if sufficient rea·
son is apparent.
lnlr> lhe Dat'kness
designed to prevent· the ~ populous To the Editor:
states from domfnatillj.. aatiilaal elec-Lest we forget-
tions. Each state has ita Owft election. "All is over. Silent, mournful, aban~1
U a man gets 90 percent of a state's doned, broken Czechoslovakia recedes
popular votes he will get no more eJec-into lhe darkness."
toral votes than If he had received a These are lhe words of Winston
bare mafortty. Hill SIIl'plus--voterdo not ---ctiurchlll in 1~.
carry over to anoiber state as they do in Now this sad little country, after a
direct voting. brief flicker of freedom's light, ap.in
THE PRE!ENT SYSTEM should be
changed in three ways as rollows:
1. Keep the electoral conege but omit
tM electors. Each governor would certify
election result:s to Washington.
2. Divide the electoral votes in each
state in the same proportion as the
popular votes were divided among the
candidates.
3. The man with \he largest number
of elect.oral votes would be declared
the winner, regardless of whether he
received a majority or not.
HARRY H. RO'l11LE1SBERGER
Obey the La10 Du11
To the Editor : An article in the DAILY PILOT by
writer Jack Chappell and t i t I e d
"Gratitude or Guff -That's Cop's
Reward," reminded me of an experience
in connection with the Newport Beach
police. .
While driving, I developed a feelin g
of weakness and nauaea. I barely made
it to the curb. While in Ulil condition
I was approached by a policeman.
Assuming that I was drunk, he . set
upon me with verbal abuse and a variety
or obscene language.
This action ceased when I WB! iden-
tilied by a spectator. Neverlhe1ess 1
was held there ror almost· two hours
during which time J was bleeding (rup...
tured ulcer) internally. Blood loss
amounted to t ~) quarts. Subsequently
all concerned disclaimed any
responsibility and it wu swept under
the rug.
DURING MY convalescence I found
myaelf reOet;:Ung less on ID1 infirmity
and more on the unresolved problem
confronUng me, The misunderstanding
between the public and the police i1
appalling.
I suggest that one day per week be
set aside to be known as Obey The
Law Day. ~t the police ~ known as
leaders rather than. avengers. Make the
people fully aware of the Jaws. Let
the police feel and advertise compassion
and sympathy for J*ple. Let m all
sub8crlbe to the philosophy \hat we
should be for people and not against
them. Thal it is sufficiently dillicull
for ' the struggling mass of humanity
to make il!i way against adver1itie1
of nature and the implacability of fate
wtlhout the additional burden of
lra!rlcklo! hatreds.
"We mult not mate a scarecrow of
the law Rlling It up to (ear (fn,hten)
the birds of prey and let ketp one
11hape Ull custom make It thclr perch
and not their terror."
0. S. HAWKINS
re.cedes into the darkness. •
C. C. MOSELEY
Llceiue, l\'ot Ubert9
To the: Editor:
"Academic Freedom!" This is what
one hears echoing through the halls of
San Francisco State College, a college
that had to be closed becaw:e of sporadic
vandalism and violence stemming from
a black student union strike.
Don't get me wrong -I am for
academic freedom -but I do not believe
that academic freedom gives anyone
the right to vandaliJ:e or to riot!
BECAUSE OF the fervor of a handlul
ol student:s 18,000 students are not getting
the education that they have every right
to receive.
As a pubticaUon of Coast Federal Sav·
lngs put it, "It is a great misfortune
that the zealots or 'pressure groups
always think with their emotions, seldom
with reaaon. They have no compunction
in carping, lying and exaggerating with
the fiercest pass.ion. They cry liberty
when they really mean license."
RICK EVANS
Student
Pities His 'l9nora...,e'
To the Editor:
Last night l read the letter from
James P. Jones in regard to why the
89 Geol'fle ---.
(Send your problems to George
-misery loves company and he'&
pretty miserable these days.)
Dear George :
1 have been going with this
fellow for 13 years and be is tery
set 1n his ways. 'Fdr 'the enth'e JJ
years he has come lo my house on
Tue!lday and Friday nlghts and we
play Chinese ehM:km and m•ke
fudge. We've been quite happy, but
I don't thlnk be will change h Is
ways after. l marry hlm. Sbould I
marry a -man so &et in lits ways!
MATILDA
Dear MaUld1:
Well, think 1t ovtr carefully. Do
you want to 10 down lile'.1 highway
with a husband who comes J.o your
houoe on Tuesday · and Fllday
nights and pl111 aUnese ch<clera
and NW fUdgd
school bond pieasurt didn't pass. As
a student of Orange Coast College, I
feel that I must amwe.r his letter.
Just because a small minority of the
students have Jong hair doeSal't mean
that they are trouble-makers and are
in school to stay out of the service.
Many o! these young men ate: in school
to get an education and many are very
good students.
AL50 I DO NOT like the allusion
lo our long-haired and bearded teachers.
Mainly l take exception to this because.
only two or lbree teachers have beards
and these are not tangled messes but
clean, Wen-groomed beards. And as far
as l know, none of our teacher~ bas
overly long hair.
If instead of knocking Orange Coast ·
College. Mr; Jones would take time to
find out what-ldnd1 of teachers we have,
he would realize that OCC is a very
good school. Typical examples of our
great teachers are Mr. P b 111 i p s
(psycholQgy teacher), Mr. LumiaJl
(history te.acher) and Mr. Holland
{speech and theater arts teacher).
ALL THESE MEN are clean·shaven.
and do not have long hair and are
true representatives of the teactiers at
our school.
U only Mr. Jones would st.op and
think that it is because of \he efforts
of the students and teachers of Orange
Coast College that we have not had
:..ny demonstrations. I realize Mr. Jones
is typical of conservative Orange County
and it Is people like him who voted
down the recent school bonds which •
kept badly needed funds from Orange
Coast College.
I can only pity his Ignorance.
SUSAN T. HOGLIND
• Felt Shame, ftnget'
To the Editor:
Concerning the letter from Mr. Wilbur
Ballbach (Mailbox, Nov. IS):
· I read his letter twice! The first
time I felt shame, the second lime
anger. ·
He feels that God is to btaro.e. for
all that is wrong with 'our w!>rld. He
blames Him for lliUer, IDroshima, the
H-bomb, bubonic plague, ghettos, War
I aod ll and even the house fly.
MY, HE CERTAINLY has the answer,
doesn't he?
Satan has a world or power too and
with this power. using man has caused
some of the greatest lnhumaniUes man
has ever been a witness to. But if
J were lo blame everything on Satan,
I •·ould be in Mr. Ballbach's league.
God gave man choice and \he things
he accuses God ol causing and doing
were in reality man's choice., man's
mistakes.
' ' HOPE UES in the ract man sometimes
learns by his mistakes, and in remember·
ing God' 1 message can correct am
change. To hear God's m~ge we must
first look for God. Try the church or
look closely at the rites of our chlldrerl
O< pei:haps lellflli-. lbout I miuiono1y-
run hospital would be a good Pr\.
But Mr. BaUbach ohoul<j start looking,
h<'ll be SU'1Jri9'd ot what he finds. lil Closing,, may I say, praise 1locl
that In thi1 wondtrful COUl'ltry of ours
wt: _agajn are Ible to celebr1te tnotber
Tlwlbgl\'fn&! lllRS, R. L. SHEETS
G .... Perl-tt
To the Editor: Lu) Saturday nlgl>Ut was my pleasure
to ltt I Very good ptrfcrinance of
"Blreloot In the Part," prtotnl<d by
the Golden West Collea• UtUe Theater pwp: Th!J waa the first production
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ol the;..,.,.,, and w" completely hand!·
eel by the stµdents, drawn from the
daytime and adult evening classes.
It was so very well done I would
like to recommend the next production.
which will be Tennessee Williams' "A
Streetcar Named Desire" on December
S, 6, 7, 12, 13 and 14. ·Time: 8:30.
Plae&; Golden West College LiU!e
Theater.
MRS. H. BOLINGER
Buflfightlng
' To the Editor : '-It is with increaslng disfavor that
many of your readers are finding ar-
ticles and pictures ol the cruel ~
of bullfighting in your columns.
I: On July 26 there appeared a picture
C6f a bullfighter thrusting two bande.rillas
into a standing bull and on Nov. 1 you
published a lengthy article on the sub-
ject in your Weekender magazine aec-
tion. This sort of stuff cao. only appeal
to a demoralited pervert.
WE ARE SUPPOSED to be a Chris-
.. tian-nation. Can you conceive ci \ht
founder of Christianity, or His followers.
participating in such an outlandish
orgy? Not even the lowest animals
conceive ot such fiendish cruelty. The
ears are cut off of the hapless bull while
be Ls partly conscious.
Years ago laws were passed to out-
law this so-called sport in our country.
Your paper is participati!tg in breaking
these laws. Thfs is unquestionably a
blight on your paper, wtich could, with·
oul this bullfight backing, be a fine
publication.
, (MRS.) CORA B. JENS'"'
'Delightful Surprise'
To the Editor;,
Coming from a "big" city and several
eiperiences with one of the best known
and most capable medical writers in
the country, Nelson with the Los Ange-
Jea Times, I had the usual anticipatory
responses 0£ a big city mouse about the
COO!l.try when I heard that my talk at
the Department of Psychobiology Wa3
going to be covered by a reporter from
your paper.
THE ARTICLE thal resulted, however,
written by Thomas Fortune, was one of
the most well-written, sophisticated and
accurate reports that 1 have experienced.
Dealings with the lay press for a re-
searcher, especially in "sensational"
areas s u c h as mental Illness or drug
abuse, usually result in disaster. This
article and, obviously the writer, Is a
delfghlful surprise and I felt I must let
you know how pleued I was about his
style, cootenl, and focus.
ARNOLD J. MANDELL, M.D.
Depal1ment or Psychiatry and
Human Behavior
School ol Modlc:lne
UlliversltJ4 Colllomia, Irvliie
--W-
Frid ey, NOY, 22, 1968
TM edltorlol 11<111' of lllf Dallv
Pilot aeekf to inform o:nd .1tfm.
ulatc rtod.tn by pre.ren~na Utt.I
ftt1(:11J)GJ>tr'1 opfnfom and com-
rMntarv on topic:• of inUre1t
cuul nf/111flamu. bv i>roWUng •
forum for Ille •1'>ruston oJ
our readm't oplnioni, and br
prtsmtino tl&t' dtver.re ~
pofn&t of informe:d ob1eroen
cuul IJ)Oke....,. on IOpicl o/ u.. 11ow.
Robert N. Weed, PubU..ber
1
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Hc>'fiday ··salf
Mood · G'lows
As sparkling as .. omamenta on the Christmas tree are plans for
the season's major fund.orafsing event sponsored by the.~ View
Liitle League A\lxiliari\·
A dazzling Tinsel Ball will take place tonilllrt in the Meadow-
lark Country Club, 16782 . Graham St., Huntington Beach, between 9
p.m. and 1 a.m.
The public is invited lo atend th• benefit, and proceed• lrom the
ball will be used lo pureh-necessary eq'!ipment for the Little
League teams· rompnsuig the OceaiiView District.
Ticketo, at $2 per person, may be purchased at-the door.
Centering red .and green tables will be ft'agrant green boughs
with toy soldiers fashioned fn¥n multicolor~ glimmering fuil or pine
cone angels with golden wings. and halOs.
The auxiliary will serve hors d' oeuvres and membtrs and
guests Wilt d.ince t.o the music of the Al Martin Trio. Among prizes to
be·given away during the evening will be a $50 tinseled. money tree, a
tabie radio and a family book of tickets to Disneyland.
Mrs. J-ames Werner, auxiliary presider«, is servin~ es general
chairman of the ball and she is being assi&ted. by the Mmes. Conte
Stone, Jack Blaha, Bud Phipps, Jim Skipper, Pallr)ck McGinnis, Durlin
Keller, Harold Cvu!son, Buck Williams and Daviil Troup.
Thoughts
For Sale
Thought for a Day boob
compiled by members will be
amo~g the unusual gift selec·
tions offered when the Hun-
tington Beach Junior Woman'&
Club sponsors its an nu a I
Christmas Bazaar and lun-
cheon tomorrow in the Com-
munity Methodist Church.
It's a Small World will be
the theme and the bazaar will
be conducted in two sessions
between 11:15 and ooon and _
1 to I :45 p.m. with auorted
salads also available for s~
pers.
Coinpi!inl the book were the
Mmes. Ken Andeison, William
Biss, Gary Brown, Da1e Bush.
Edward Heftnigan, R a y .
Hopkins, Edwin Hu m e ,
William Lokken, J am es
Mahan, Maurice Wells and
Erwin Zuehls.
In addition to booths and
tables filled with bazaar item1'
there will be a doll decorating
contest. A handmade nativity
set will be given the winner
and all entries will be donated
to Operation Merry
Christmas.
Tickets may be obtained by
calling Mn. Errol Taylor, 89Z-
1553, or Mn. Sla!!ley Hettinga,
\V&)'S . and meam chairman,
893--0317.
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TIHStL ANO SILVER -A Tinsel Ball "JlODsored
by.ihe Ocean View Little League Auxiliary will fill
. ~teams' treasury with silver to pr~vide o.ecessary_
equipment fol: next season. Th~ public is invited t.o
attAmd the lwli~ beqellt_ lak\ng pla<e in Meadow-
Ja.-k Country Club. Arr~iini! perky soldl.,.1, J!i!lt
<!'nee ~nd thristmu greenery are Oeft to right)
Mrs. Durlin ·Keller, Mrs. Conte.stone.and Mrs. Ji.Dies,
SkiJ>i>er. - . _
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·Surf Sounds . . • .
. Arti,st Debuts . . ·:\.·-~; .· ;
Area
-. -. --
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lli"'1DDIWfliABTINGs
Of IM o.!hf. ~IOI lttff
PARTICIPATING-In lhe
third .•nnual ltaJian Festival
which will mlr.k h er
PrOfesslonaI debu.t ts·Martlnne ·
Monteleone, talented wHe of
Dr. Luigi Monte)eone.
Helen•claJmJ·thll•is ttle;best .. ~~·¥Or 1t:fk! return' tifp-the'
~ar they have ever had even Stewarts-battled through a
though temperatures r-nged seven-foot snow atorm, and
between IS ·and 20 degrees according to Helen, they wore
liejow ..,., Jake -the !>'aclically -emythln( lhe1'
caribou af'ter hunting only .Gne had' tai:eo with them. "It wu·
hour, and the next day found a wonch!rful trip, and tbe peo->
the mome in half that time. pie tip thete are somethinf
While havtng the meat pro-to 'remember,'' ahe said. Marianne wUI be the only
American-born a_l' t 1st ap-
pearing in 'the festl\'.91 which
takes place Saturd.Y; Nov. 30,.r-------------------"'I
in the Santa Moatea CiviC
Auditorium. Other performers
will inClude top arti!tl from llnly. -.
She will sing in both.Ehgli.&h
and Italian aQd. her .ae:lections
will include "Gonna Live 'Ti!
I Die" "Golrig OUt ·Of ·, My
Head," and the two award·
winning songs sel~ted at ~
San Remo FeStival w(:lich she
will present m· Italian.
Marianne ma~e her first 31>"
pearance u ·an artist when
she appeared before'. flmily
and hiend! following a di.Qner
party apptoximately a ' year
ago. Since th.en she hU. been
studying with Dlt •. ·.pa u·l
Thomasen a~ J e a·n ~ i t e
Goldenberg, yoice ~ch. •
TWIN GIRLS, M i'c he 11 e
Marie and Melissa, ·have been
added to the Edwaril::Shane
family In Westmlifster. ~Tbe
new arrival) ·wue · btlrn in
SI. Mary's Ho8pi~, -u.i.;
Beach.
WONDERING ll'BAT ·tq dq
wllh all that !rleal an. Ht>Iin
They're Official
. . -
AAU·W Br~nch
To Celebr,ate
Members of the Huntingtop Beach Branch,
American Association of VliiVerslty Worlien,
hav.e·another cause f9t c·eiebr&tiOn·in addition
to a'pproachin'g h'oliday s.easo,n. . . · .
• Apd ,celebrate they will-at nO<in IWurday,
Nov: ·23. · ~ · · ,
They will· be joined by their tiwibands foi a
get acqu.liiit~ IUDcheon and.die olficial rec-•
ognili<in of;tbeir vew bravch in the !luvtington
Harbour Beach Club,: U2l 'W'8I'Jl.er Ave. ,,
-Mn. Robert E. Paradise, pn:&dent of the ·
AAUW California state Division,: will speak
briefiy on the association . a'nd officially ·pre-
sent' the elected olficets of th.e group tO tho
ne.w and ctiarter members. and tmeir hUJ. others assisting with a
rangements include the Mmes.
:<'rank Souza, Richard
\1acGregor, Roger Weninger
Jnd ,.,_,Jor.
,. and Jake. S(ewlrf'Of'lfunttngo
Thrift ·Shop Stocked for Christma~ Shoppers _
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• •. l ing lrlP: to A}Uka •here Jake
bBl!d•·. ;. . ._ -.
~~·~ ipembers ne co1*a)IY Invited
lo.'!llen.<f·ttie luvcheon, and rese"'8t!oos may
be. l\l.•de by oonta<;ting Mrs. Rqbert Homer, A jeweled mosaic Christmu
'ree featuring tiny blinkiJll
lights will be given away dur·
ing the afternoon. and ad·
ditional lnformaUon re(ll'dinf
the ·award-may be obtained ~
by calling Mn .. Ted RMdlCi:
prior to the bazaar.
An exceptionally nice variety of mercllaJtdise suit·
able !!or li!>Udlay gl~ing Is appearing on· the shelves
of the thrill' shop_ sponsored by tlie Asiiistance
League of -l!~Unjton Beach. The fre~h ·selection
is the'"nitllf 0( last Week'c 'J>ut' n' 'l'alte tea'-wtth IC' ' . .
tive, auetatning, aSaociate-and provisional le;:lgue ..
members seafcblng their cl06el! and cupboards. ~ "baggod" a 't~pOuti<I moose
• · · · · · · ~ · , · • and « b-pound1cit1boiJ. · thrilt .sto.p d~Jialj•ns)'lrs" ~illi~~ Litmb, cl!airml' : _ The Stewar11 di<>••-_,.-
0( Put n' T•ke, off&tl· an pnu1ua1 ll~UdaY, d"!'oratl_y9 ! , Miiepost 17$ on tbe Alcan
wbl!e Mr>. John Ci.rrjveau .ac:ceptk a bundle 'from ·: Highway and_ were-~Jil'tl _31J. :·'li!n. w.;,.e Flane ~ry ,(left-to ..... t\>" ' '"':1 miles .lo .a r#jOb ll!-J!lr .
· m_em"'i;ihl · Ch~rman, at 1147~
'!'be.new \rancih was formed laSt summer
un(e[.lb(gu)daiice of 'the ~-'l\alRh.Ba-, var. ,Ho_,, ,Klaus l'ch"8tt, 'I..Oiiis Fresta
JUld Ron~ Coyne. _ '"· .,. •
....,.. 1.'6"'-,. '1buSh ," or graalng ~. •
. .... • -· • '"~ ~· · ;' • , where horses 1'tte,~~· l""l'~',.;'~'!'1--"!"--------•--•--l "1:•''',, . ,,,
; t" •' • • .. ""
..Ii I • ~ . '
When --· lots A rert' t. ·L~a ·zy . . I Th.e;; bJ sually?•~Dn~:v.~·-:Mo:m~~r,a' iy·~ t ~ I .J., ~I • ., ! '
~ • -~ • • \' -I • j • "~~ ~ • ' •I• • I '
DEAR-ANN LANDERS : I'm .,hamf.i
lo lllk 10 my mlnlster aboot this and
my doctor W.O't lake my · ll'>l>lem·
oerloo1ly. When I tried 10 dllcua li
with him pn "two OcculODll be nve
me oome ample envelopeg of tran-
quillzen Ilic! lild, "Try !bes<. AD
mothers 10 lhroup lhll wbell their
children are llttle."
My chlldren are VO and 4\1 ,yun
old. They are driving me cruy. Every
""'"'"" I .....ive 10 be pleuant Ind
gentle wilh lhem. By "°"' 1 am lhrieldng
my head off and pmlsblna: •t eve()'
"""-By nlghUall I am praying again,
"Dear God, please forgive me for being
ao impatient with my children."
,
~· • "-.\ ( I' ,. 1'~¥ • •l! I ,.. ' 0 <.;,;
end .. ~ o( lhollno'\""> l"'•amlnl wile~ ~ .. 811(~ afford ·10 would be ,bteki,tll -lilr,.. II
" and pul•bln1 followed bf·~ feelings keep tbe ·a~nt.• _ , . od K, ....w Ill a ;... -• •
ANN LANDERS
, .and ~rt•r ,i ............ '.yoa eeed The. ·'" 1. 't and c2 ' , _...... ~ , · ' . • eat. f fl e lielp. fiariq111&.eit art DCi . • • ~fl, ~ 1 . -• ~ I~ ~ rttlnMil· ti -~1 ·~ tlllt I a _.,
. .,, euwer; •, .. --"'"'·' · th~·~ Aillfi"a'c~ ~·Waht11o'~ · womu 10W (eve1 ~,...-mW:'
• Why muit children test lbeir molhe~
to the limit ti. thetr tolerance? Do they
ever learn to do aa they are told the
fint time? I've r,ead that youngs~a
lcrYe 10 pleaoe tbell' paren11, I dj>n't
believe ll. Mine have rect!ved a tn"eat
deal ' more love and altention thr..11 most.
yet I.hey' ieem" dctermtncd to 1iinort
me and do as they pleue.
•
. ·., !If., .... .._~~-., ln .1ftbifllrllll<i0d·-·hldband·leff . .,.,. iie-1 ·aoo1 :......, -.11111111:
r-' ~-J.·,, <lfo'°'~"""Jal-.-·.forVle1namton~qo.. Wbltodt ................. "llof llome"-I don't thl k .f"' llillk Somo .,. in., _ • ....,. ...... ~ -' I ~·Y. tbe ·. !'l!Ud' lbelo\lq . •lllj ber _, --..,. ... -~·-_ " ·u 1 lee. Wrt&f lo ! fllt N-"-lalloft · parei)ll. Allo, woo\qn, If_ lit a 1ood , • · • •
tt lhrn\lgb th< next three yeors, wh<o JO< ~ental llf'"'-, lftl;? !I Ciljiin.,,,.· idea '!f "altt w!rit biCk lo h!ih' llcbool CON'1riENTJAL '!O 'lllLL 1111: Oil"
they bolh will be In . .tebool. ~· you Clrclt,'l'!t~ Y if.Y. 11111. , , •• ond (OI a.)lttle more !<fueal!M? pi._ •. 1\'0N"t: llllT: 111,..;o II hi _,_
say ~ that wUl h<)p me koq>, " , • ·• ' • .' cloi!!I !tll ine lo MJ/pB. 11'u'1 -, Why llioold baT '1'111 ...... _ .......
my aaliitrT !>!em ."Y· -F.ALLJl!G' ,. QI!: .!NN.LANDEl!$:_M1 aialer" ii a, wk!<!•·•'l'I ~ hu Mlled for -Aa1 1•n•1J ........ lo -
APARi , '. · _ aon, ;rh, ill 'CQiril fiilo 'Ifie ....Vice -my "'"""-•I 'told: her_>l -no Ann JOll • ,_ pa "zr1 -111zit
DBAR F,\f,!JliGo Ever)' ..-;w inGottlL lie lnljJllLWlftJlave1been mar-Landers but I offered ~your lo lier lo Mn <! ... °"8-Y ftA11!
ba1 ~ll'• and oueb days obouid be u-rled 1.., than six i\ionthll.· 'A -family -oP!i;lori:PJeiie""'liirp:"..: ' --1iolnc a _,.., .. 1 ° Ir pp ;ii
peeled. Bat U y11 are baVlnJ ....U di5pule has ari-. O.er WheJoe Tu'• DllAB -ntJMPID: .Of ·i.. s1J1 _,,,_
' .
Q .\ , }I
................................................................. ~ .......... ~ . ..._~-~~--..... --_..,
....
I~
........ -----~---,,_ _____ ·~-·--,... -----·--~------------------.----------..... ......----------------~ ---·--~ ---~ . '
December
.Rites Set
lit. and Mn. lla)'molol p--•1--.ha••
"W'B'(#I the enaaaement ol.
ber dlllPter. --
" -Hau Blco, -al llr. &Dd 1111. Fred Hau Bice
al ear,... del Mar. A Dec.
n -,. in Long Beach
lo planned.
' Miu Franks ii a graduate
al the UnlversUy of uie
Paclflc, 8tocltlon where Ille
alflllated with Kappa Alpha
'llleta IOr'Ority, she has beoo BARBARA FRANICS
H ig~ School President
Eyes Student Controls .
Doug SchmlUI pmldenl al
Lquna Beach Hlgb 8chool,
•W speak on hll moYe tO
.aiblllb bound&ries tor
lbldenta dur.ine a meeting in
.. hllh ""'°"'' next ~ ntaN. •
'l'be ..... ii """"""'
by ~ -Branch, A-loOD ·-!Im of v~-.aconCflmfld with 1 t 1 t I • t l e •
Jhowlng an """"-In the -ol ...... __ _._,.
dlreapect ol teenaren for
-lnotltullona and
tradltlooa, a YOWll -in our tumnanttJ -bu camt
ftvward with an mmrer," Aid
Mril. Alle<L liar-· publicity chairman, 1pe1kio1 ot sdurulL
The student was elected
president by fellow studenta
on the buls ol bUI 'platform,
lbe New Preatlge.
tNchiQI at Rolling Hilla Higb ---------
.• "In the face GI newspaper
beadlln.. lboutlng out the
,An ambitious scholar Ind adtlete, Schmitz will b a
usisted by Tom Qormaii,
editor ol Laguna '!'"" Corner
for the DAILY PlLOT and
student public relaUona dir<c>
tor, a poslUon createt:I by ~
mitl; as a liaison between stu--
dent government and the com-
munity~ _Dining in the 'Heat of the Night' . ..
.Rod Stelier, ~ Awanl'Jrinm>g ador ID "1be dinlnf witll Newport Beach frit11ds, Mr. and Mn.
Heat of the Nl&bt" (left) II eompletillg a tw.,_week Pllil KelloCf·
: • • · -«ay In La Colla Spa ot Rancho La Co8la. stelfer II · . . ; • ' •
School far the put year.
Her ftanct, a graduate ol
Unlvenlty of Southern
Callfomla'I School of. Law, ia
servinc • clerk to Chiel
Juatl<e Earl Warren in
W ..... , D.C. He affiliated
wttb Slpa Phi Epsilon
lratemlty and Phi Delta Phi.
.. . :'Toastmistresses Meet • ' . Chapters Announce
• Conference Convenes . • • . . . • of Variety
•
: ••• !l'IM> Fall CGaferolloe al
Cooncll S I • , International
ToMtmistre:sl C I u b 1 , will
begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow,
In the G..-brier Inn, Gordm
Grove.
Following a IOdal hour Mn.
Jorry Burm, --inoi· dent ol tbe call!aniia-dlvlslon
ol Nalional ~tioo ol
Parliamentarlalll and 1>all
oecretary and -ol
Internallonal --ClUl>o, will -a warDbop cm memberabJp wtahlHptloa..
Luncheon ...... will bo
'Mn. Mary Loe Ton ,
as!lstant "!perrilar' al lbe
Movie
• • ll5cl~1 Not9: 'nllt mcwi. 91116-II
ore:i.Ad t>r !he Ill"' eommltfte Df ' Harbor (;Guntll PTI\. Mr1. Robtrt &or-
• tnlGll II __..... •!Id Mn. H.911 s_... II ammlttee dlelrrnen. ti II , ~ a I ,..._ Ill dftermln-
• ... tullallole fllm• for ctnllll '"
Go-1-t llqion and. Mn. Frank y 0 u n 1 •
farmer ' I n t e r n a t t o n a I · ,cbairman of Couocll Six. will
-Clubo' opeech ...-lllCI Mn. LO u 11 contest winner at tbe inUnJa.. Culpepper, -:"Wlll ~e 11
tlonol.leYel -Mn, Howard • J 0 n t I , Caullpl Slz i'I COl!lprilod of
member and ]IOll ·~ nine Orlnp County clubo, lllCI
ol the Garden Gron club, membenhlp In lntetnatlonfl
will narrate a pr 1 1 r-wkn of Toutmiltreu Clubs ii open
Other Amil of Com-to all interestod adult ....,..
munlcatioo durlna the If-without .qard lo r a c e ,
,l«nooo -· rellalon, -<ltl:elllhlp or country Participatiq will be Mr~ of midence.
Pat 8uCc1attlll. Mrs. Mll't Membert of women's clubs
Comp and Mn. IW Bal,. in Oruae Coonty a r e
wbo . will direct MlJI Kim Olpeclally Invited to au.nd
Kut.an, Miu Nina Neuman thia conterence or tend a club
and MlJI Evefyn a-as. repreoentaUvc.
Horoscope
. A civil delenoe proaranl la
'planned for tbt Xi Mu Mu
chapter, l!eta Siama Phi
meetlqg taking place at I p.m.
Mooday> Nov. 26, in tbe ffun..
. tlngtoo -home ol Mn.
Millan Lomas.
Gueat -will be from tbe El ll'oro Marine , Bue
Speaker's Bureau. He will
~ a rum and rpeat on Vietnam, and arranglnj! the
program is Mn. Caroll
LIJ!t!aey. ·Mn. Stuart _Hayter
"' civil def .... chairman. Member• allo will bring
donations of money and food
to fill a TbanDglvlng buket.
Guide
ment for the life of a hippie.
Virgo: Let
\
Yourself Go
Activities
"nlt chapter will donate
funds from a rummage sale
wt. Friday and Saturday to
the Cytttc Fibrosis program
acc<lrdln1 to Mrs. John Huber, ••YI and means chairman. ' ·
Mrs. Gib Lynch and Mn.
George Burgess assisted with
the Nie.
Memberl of Xi Mu Zeta
chapter ar:e making pJan.s £or
a Chr1tfrnas party on Satur-
day, Dec. 14. The group met
ytlt.e:?Uy in the Westminster
home cf Mrl. Ralph Adams
and Mn. William Leverenz
-preaen~ the program on
~ of Ughl from the club's
book, "Festival of Life."
'Refreshments were served
by Mri. Felix Jebbia, courtesy
chalrmah.
The nes:t meeting of the
chapter will take place in the
borne of Mrs .. Carl Wilson on
Tbunday, Dec. 5.
Thinking
. -• HB Juniors Annoi.Jnce
'
Harl mark Art Judges
lbe gathering will begin
with refresbmenta: at 7 p.m.
Guests are invited at that thnt
to visit the Purple Haze, a
student art gallery.
Deadline for high scbcol
seniors wishing to enter the Hill.mart Art Conte 1 t
spoll!CJl'.ed annually by the
Ca Ii for n i a F«l:erafton Of
Women's Clubs, Junior
Korean
To Offer
Thank You
Memberthip, ill Monday, Nov. 1 Refttshmerits will be served
25. ·until · 7:30 in the calet«ia,
Mrs. Dame! Drqeset, tine •llett. the busi-meeting
aria c<>diairman of 1he Hun·' will we place. Following the
tlngton Beach JW)}or Woman's mtetidt and ~udent prqen..
Club, has announctd that tati~, entertainment will be
judges in that city's contest provided by the Laguna Beach
will be Walter Johnson, Choral Readers, a group of
librarian; Mn. Rheta G~ s~ents led by C h a r I es
from the Art League, and Schiller·
Mrs. Frank SoUza from the
Juniors. ·
Entries will be dls!>layed in
the main library through the
week after tbe , winner.! i. r e
selected Tuesday, Nov. 21, and
ribbon.I awarded at .that time.
The wlMing entry will be !<nl
Auxiliary
Ben C. ~ .... , -neraJ dlrec-lo the district competition. ,,.... •-W'mners from !he district
American Legion Hall In
COllo Mesa .js the selliq
for meeting of· the Aullllary
to Barracks 1249, Veterans ti.
World War 1. The first Tues-
day of each month members
pt.her for a business ses1ion
at. 7:30 p.m. and the third
Tuesday· for a social and
potluck at I p.m.
tor of Asian lm~t in Seou1, compt:Ution· .ari judged on
Korea. will speak to Christian ttate and natiooaJ leveb -1th
Business a n d Professional awarda beinc presented in
Women's Council of Orange each.
County during a d i n n er High schciOl seniors at·
meeting in the Revere House, tending Hunilngton Beach and
Tustin at 6:30 p.m. next Tues-Marina High Schooh: who wiah to enter may contact Mrs •.
Give to Your
United Fund day. Drageset, 9flS..)275.
A teacher-missionaey, ~Bil.==''=================;
iJ on a speaking tour of the
United States to say Thank
You America, as he feels he
owes his life and education
to American people who con-
tributed to his support.
. I ~. . 'For a .Cool Yule ....
Following the liberation of
1945, when Song was 7, his
father, a former governor
under the Japanese, wu kiJJ.
~ You'll Gift a BOOK!
The Boolutall •n·L '"' 11 • ...,.. -"~"
• -• ·-o!ld WIN '"""' WMll;ly, Your \l1ftt, -lllllclled. Melt !Mm to • Morrit GI/Ide, C.rto Df tnt O.lly Pllol.l
THE LEGEND OF LYLAH
CLARE - A sordid film
of strange an d UMavory
people practicing gr e e d ,
sad.ism, drug addicitioo and
leabianllm.
· BARB~LTS(new) _ A LOVELY WAY "ro DIE
SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 23 M / A ed, and a series of tragic your lot with older penons. an s rt occurances left the family SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): destitute and m Iser ab le .
ANNOUNCEMENT
.. . oddi -Seductive beauty 15 ac· BIW'l'e and tasteless ty. cused ot. killing her wealthy , ·TIJE GRADUATE -Comlc ' eld<t!y huaban<.
utire of a young man who PERSONA -s wed l 11 h
b r e ~ k ." . out of t1!e psycholo&ical drama about
materialirtic world of his a mentally disturbed fctl'ess
eldtn. and her J1e1frotlc nurse.
HERE WE GO 'ROUND THE Engll!h dubbing.
MULBERRY BUSH PETULIA -Brief encounter
Shocking musical about h1gh of unpredictable y o u n g
school seL. tr d · ded I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. ma on an Ja surgeon.
TOKI.AS_ Nice Jewish boy SPREE (new) -Tasteless,
gives up his square nancee vulgar and diuppolntlng
d ... 1 . .._ llobl'·'-tour of Las Vegas. an 1= ro e m uic e -·-THE STRANGER RETURNS
Bethel Honors
Representative
At Reception
A reception Jiven by Bethel
313, International Order of
Job's Daughters nest Sw>day
·will spolligbt Miu LoRoyce
Allen, • put booored queen
and grand belbel ~
tative to lowa.
The event in the Seafaring
Malonlc Lodge, N e w p o r t
Beach, wlll begin at 1 p.m.
Mias Leslie Pickerel of
Costa Mesa recently was nam·
ed honored queen. Other new
officers are the M I • I e I
Patricia June, senior princeal;
Sandra French. junior
-princeaa; Karen Robinette,
guide. and Lei.lie A I I e n ,
-··marshal.
; New members initiated dur-
• Ing a ceremony led by Miss
Ptula Robertson I n c I u d e d
; MlJI Debbie Albertson and
• Mja Debbi• Prochuka. . . . . • ; Hdnukah Topic
• r ' ~ Of Workshop .
'! -iHDubb food, deeoratione
: and h1atory will be covered
• during • -kshop """""""'
·: by Barbor Area Reform
,..~ !'m!jlle'a -_ Jn Mon-
'.'· tteaOo-...,CostaM..,
t;:.at l:IJ-'l\M9day nllbt.
-Dubbed Italian with ei:-
cessive display of cruelty
and sadism.
THERESE AND ISABELLE
-French Oubbacks of gay,
yoong, times in private
school and the love of two
girls for each other.
THE TIGER MAKES OUT -
Off beat comedy satirizes
contemporary frustration in
urban and suburban life.
Joplin Ranch
Tour Slated
Pleased with the progress
ol the Joplln Boy's Ranch are
members of the National
Auoclation of Women in
Constroctlon, chapter 91.
Ray Stri~, director of the
ranch, will speak to the group
when it meets tomorrow.
Members wW 1ather at 10:30
a.m. in the parking Jot of
Saddleback lnn, Santa Anl,
and caravan to the ranch for
a flrst-band view of the boys'
duties and scholastic iJt.
llructlon.
INTRODUCING
FOfctl coWd be d I J u t e d • ~ttt after the Cbii'leae iJt.
81
llYDNEY OMARR :: ·= ==·~ Exhibited ... ~In l95%, s.o, was tm.
u'lbe ,rile maa c;9t1trob his choosy. Don't ICltter your ef. into an orph~ and wu
destiny . , • Aaln>loCY pointa forts.· SoJne may be offended, An ezhiblt Called Cooler-1ble to<>btain an education.
the way." but progress today 'depends ence Room Quotations and Reservations for the event
ARl)!S (Morch 21-April 19)' upon your ,.lecUvlty. Sculpturea will be on displsy . may be obtained by calllng
Important people are Intrigued SAGITl'AIUUS (Nov. Ii-tlJ t Tuelda . G t Mn. Bruce Balley, 77.,_
tiy your oplnione, aspU'aUona. -Dec.'11): stre9I on JOl1!' abffi.. unw . ne.Sa •··· Ynd'"i:.oare:n .or Miss Emma Wiele, 5t1-4676.
Be direct, confident Member ty to protect poaeaiODI. Key \ estern Vu"6"' a n
cf oppoalte aex can prove is belhg practical. Don't fall Santa Ana.
valuable ally. Your personal for IOb story. Get wbat11 com-', ',!be photographs and poet·
magnetism works overtime. ing to you. Be aware of fine •en, designed to help create I
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20): print. Somecne 11 trying to confer~ room environment
Good lunar aspect today coin-puJI wOol over your eyea. conducive,~ clear tbinking
cide1 with ability to get across CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ba •--led b a .. ~.
CM Overeeters
Overeaten Anonymous
gather every We\:lnesday at
I p.m. in Bear Street School,
Costa Mesa. point of view. Some who on. 19)· G ter a.-...&..-• 1-• ve ~n ctea Y , """" ,.. , rea u~ 11 ur and Finn Inc. for UJe ID its
posed you can be· won over. dicated. You can carry out . own cooference room. Th;:.t==========
Gain family cooperatioo -heart's desire. Have ·couraae ei:hlblt will be shown l{J Lon-
line foo: travOI planning. ol coovictiona, Sires& fn. don in January.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)' dependence ol. tbougltt, action.
Jt may be difficult to be prac· Live _up to · po t e ~ t I a, I .
tical, but it ls oecessary. Ap-Circuinstances tum ID your
plies to health, work, dealing favc:r.
with asaoclatea. Avoid forcing AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
islues. You may not see com· 18): Much that IUITOllDdl you
plete picture -wait. today lacks substance. Dlf·
CANCER (June 21.July 22)' ferenUate between Illusion and
Accent on public relations. reality. uee imaglnaticm coo-
Means strive today to clarify strucUvely. Don't brood about
yoor intenUons. Others co-what might bave been. Change
cperate If they know why. for better is due.
Your job Is to win allies. PISCES (Feb.19-Marcb20):
Special attenUon Is required Accent on friends, hopes and
by mate, partner. wishes. success depends upon
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 )' your ability to be pracUcal.
Promlae made to individual
al a distance should be fulfill-
ed. Means strive to piece
together loose ends. Associate
can help find what you seek.
Leave task only when it is
completed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)'
Lei )'Olnelf go ! Means be
true to your own feelings .
Shake off restrictions. The go
signal is lit. Don't be coo!ined
by artificial strictures. New
starts, contacts are favored.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22)'
Stick with ei:perlence. cast
• • •
-.
Silver Sands
The flnt and third Tuesdays
at I p.m. members ol Sliver
Sands JM, Native Daugbten
of lbe Golden West gather
fer meettnas:. Lake Park
Clubhouse in Huntington
Beach "' the meeting place for the D.nt Selaion. Mrs. Jack
Wlboo, 1148.1478, will fflrnlsh
locttlon-on the ne:rt meeting -·
INTRNAT10NAll Y P.l(MOUS
CHEF MIKE ROY I WM. AmA1 u sount COAST "'-"L\
•
SAM N. KOWlft,.M.D.
Weight Control -6eneral Pra,tiea
.., r..-ad his offlca "'
11512 ·--.. S.lto 207
Towa & c--, Stlopplog Clfttar
(at Five Polnll)
536-606'
;:• A demci:altratlon on home
:·• and table 81..nukah decorations r-11 plarw.t, di! l'fdpt:I for
.. apedAl bolldOf food will be
........ Latliea, the tradltlooal MR. DAVID KOLB NOVEMBER 22.25 ' Maybe yours is a mini budget. '
::B-dlllJ, w 111 bo aerved Mr. Kolb, formerly of The Bluff., has joined ..............
• 1a _...., -~ the st•ff of Ru" Thompson H•ir Stylist.
:._ --""'* .. the .~Ji. . tfp'Yle ........... ot tbe
t 1'.., ..... relevlDC)' '°'" .,_ (
..=, •;;;::.• Z'!!tl:: 3545 l Coast Hwy. Corona def Mar.
_. .... I' I .., .nm, T I h 673 6961 -... •;:; !&'?,' .. 11• e ep one: • ..... .. .. ''-------------'------''
1
• --------""'-..... --''--'-------------------
llf. ill'iji,'1'a\.4.l!WIH M'l°J."
§M*l!a:•.L"'t. ... ~
PICKWICK
BOOKSHOP
&Guth Coast ?lua
9'JSTOL A'!; SAN 'OIEQO FREEw•Y, CaerA ME8A
Or, perhaps you're Judy to replace her originattnini With a micl or ll'l8lCi.
Any siza, l!I Our diamonds are Ol<trt lttve on quaM!'y.
SLAVICK'S .......... ,.,7
11 Fashion ltl•ttd
Nowport lo .. h-644-lllO
O,lN MONDA1: AND fllDAY MNIH$S
...
•
,
'·
' ' . ~.
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•
·,
L
tolflll lb/ VNf'{ l;r l«ll!E? '
~"°'~&-ru
ii
GORDO •
JUDH ~ARKER
MOON ~ULUNS
~
Complete Printing Service
Top Quallty -Fast Service . --
•
Nowport INch
) I
!
. ,.
h .... Je••••
'
'"
' . ;; _,
-T .. -,·
'
7 •
GANGSTIRS -Sammy Davis, Jr • ._..,,,,, lliia
with Elizabeth M:oall<mery, Jim .......... J<iiy
flllbop and Henry Sliva In Ille lliollOG Dldare,
"J<Jlmny Cool," tonight at 7:30 on Channef I. 1b.t
two.hour movie Is the story ol a young bo1 ralaed
lo a1111"nate membtn of Iha M>fia. •
•
Two Slorles
' On 'lromdde'
,I
'
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QUALITY DISCOUNT DEPAP.ll'MENT STORES .
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1.49 value · 97c
Fint qualify stretch
nylon ponty hoae
hove 1eomleu sheer
nylon1, stretch pan.
ty, Tontone, beiQe-
tone; 5,M,L.
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WIN! ·VACATION for 2
in HAWAII N•rt .. yef
ZODYI
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UMIT1
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·Area Prep Stars Sweep 'All-County
~ ' ~,__~~~~~~-..,,
Scalpers
· · Slated:
To Suffer
-:·•-... -...... wtll ba ,.,. 1<r USC.UCLA foollllll tlcbla
Sallrdil1T -lht -llltlnc "°
pajlcullr ·--11111 ........... '1ialol ·ltlnltloo. tltey'IJ .be -~ get
rid ol -Ibey have lot IO at, IO
peroontof-
_.,... UCLA W1111 to pal lht Jli'C!lll
l1llhn probably n,ured 00 miring with
. what lht UckN mJcb1 fO l<r,
Juot fer luJt we --a Colllelnn -scllpr lul -. !In ......... prier
.. Ille ~ State Roll Bowl
. d«lder (Wblclt WU teJe\'llod locllly). · *" IUD'I llrlt -WU f' for a
-•ollcbl Of! t1te 40-JWd line. W111D
·---·~1111--
to lint --""" .
;... ...... " Cotlo -.. -s Jf?lr•z •er-... .... Ill '91ri
.JI# Doi -_.._ d---no - -1•1od II Ir "l1lt .,, .... _# ......... _ .. .-.. ..-
-hal ol --loll: -• foci ...
'
Honors . ~
~ esbninster's -·
Berg Top Baek
For Grid Elite •
D~I Bera. \JeWnlnster HI g b
Schoel• lfld~e. was named
BacW-g:J;ear OQ • the .offtcW All·
Oraf!ft ty (op<bolJ team u lelected
by tliO Orule CoooJly Sports Wrfters -. ..
Berg led a parade of 11 Cl{uge Coa!1 oreo gr~de~ wbo ...,. ilOlllOCI lo the
lwo teaim. ~
Ttie w~ tlMb waa ai unan-
1._ ~ '"' tbe -ofter laadlng tbe !JOAI lo tbelr fill' aulrlaht Sumel
).eague ~P In libtory. Th<\ !Jona, 'aller losing their linl ... • <Olllll!lr,, mpt tO• eJiht otr.i,Jti ¥!<> -" n.i • ...._,;-.. Anabttm.. .... -
coidei! "'ih1""'~alM>l-tb&-Year UU_e
wbile eo80b Herb IBll of 1-0 -named Coacb«sl!Je.Yaar.
IIlil edied rlvol coocbes BID Bolwell
ol Westnilmter and Hal Ailns of Lagumt
Beach for the hooOf. .
W..imlnater picked ·off four first team
paoltloos ·wltb <ltuck SUler..1,_.,\l.._ . i!C-
'. ·:~ .... _ lalla Mel ..... JOlttllll
Jlerg. . ' . Mater Del'• ~olm ~ .... unled
... Ille ~ -1•• -.i.., Wltb llmrlflllal .. Ile-.. --. Add, 11un:'•ck> --two si-ttWw cm the flnt dlls m.. tllDI ·'1!>~ i:.-ud T"'1 ~ ~~~-=o.'~ , and i..un. Beach'• Steve .!lkiltermln #:'Ilia clefeiiaJve· gym. , " ('' *''-* ·.,..f:i ' .
• , AU.-OllANGB ~ ,
•
suussusuusu self& seas
wmrE
'WASH
A ttpOdal United Slate. postage !lamp
will be issued IOllletime nm year to
commemorate tbe IOOtb annlverury of
football
'·~Teul~ .. •• Poi P)a,_ , WI. Cilau -~ ANhelm 111 Sr. CL:.-E--&..,,_...Lowed' -~ -uo --sr •
._, T-Suter~W•tmlmter ·Ill Sr.
.•T-Ilya', Loan· Ill Sr.
<J:-lUI», Aubohn · .a Br. . ~MMNr. Mater Del l lit Sr:_
C.,McCaati, W-1-Ill . Sr •
-~la die B•rd Wa11 .
Loi m--'ao::.:Wiyne Rlll!edae (!alt) had to tall to the Ice 12,.ftoD 'lbtit llf ' 'a P1t11 EjpO!lfto Thursday n!Rbt In Boston .
• : ' ~;-~ •' 170 Sr. KillgB ·1oot their filtb straigbt game, 4:1. LA hlll ICo:ed !t11I al f1961s · .,::~~ !' '· ' ... llt Ir.
in Its first 17 games. "' • ' ,., • J!:~-W~Qutllta , m fr: .···~'r--. ...I lit :to get !out lll!er aholl put Rutledge and the
. '
LONDON (AP) ~ BOb.ll<wltt of Soutb
Africa ,.. Into yel anolber IIerx ...
change with a lawn tennis umpln,
survived the o:change and goes into
the semifinala today against U.S. ·Davis
Cupper Stan Sm It b of Los Angeles In
a covered lawn tenni.IJ tournament.
Umpire Peter Lake asked Hewitt fer;
an apology after the 28-year-old Hewjtt
had thrown his racket from the back
of the court, hitting the umplre'11 chalr.
'lb.en Hewitt muttered a moment and
Lane told him, "J must ask you not
tJSC:, UCL\. Poised
West's 01.d Rivalries
!oR ·"JV ~e~e,rul~·~!L~'fok
llJ 1llllit ~ 01 J) '4ltldl . lord's U.L .
llnce 1111 ~ J!owl ~ allto<ly For tbe Indians, victory over Cal more
hU -lllW ~ · Iii , loalbean !bu Ukely will tave coach John Ralston'•
callfomll, 1111,:a~ loolball '"-litm-. job, Stanford Is Hsi ud a Jl.3sl record
dq In !lie • OlllllMll oim would justify uotber contract for tbe
10 bock. lo ~ . wliu It ·bllllouily likeable coach. B u I tho . alumni (Loll
bu been ,. ~ '"'* • lPca1 Angeles branch). Is screaming ud a utloo. · ,,-.. ,' 1ou could cost 11a1mn bis scalp.
.1'411 ............ ' There Is DO IUch problem In tbe
/ '·~-~uqion . = :· T-M<LM;u.,, W-1-110 s..: -T~ .-1 JJJ Sr.
Ma-Klottani!ilt, Lacillla Ill 1117 • . ~it';,~ ., Ir.
. 9-Game String ·it-~{:.~ ii ~'.
. . -B-llelloo, ~-lit Sr.
WS ANGELES (AP) -The longest . B-Lollgnecker, Mapolla · 150 Sr.
" ' lli<ood'T .... ou-,'llllltllng streu In National Basketball E-{:anary, ·Savanna no Sr.
Alsoclation history LS 1~ games, set E-DeJeSu.s, El Dorado 170 Sr.
br. Washington in 1946 and;ued by Boston T-Ev~ savanna 220 Sr.
JJJ 1959. T-Voron~, Marina 205 Sr. the Los Angeles Lakers are half way G-Hudgina, Sonora 195 Sr.
f§ breaking that mark • G-Bell, Western 175 Sr.
,'the Lakers ha ve bagged nine straight C-DelPozo, Fullerton 175 Sr.
gunes in route to the best record.in B-Wielbowski, Laguna 174 Sr. ~ NBA -13-4. Tonight they host B-Dunn, Mater Del 170 Jr.
the San Francisco Warriors in a Western B-Shepherd, Westmln.ster 190 Sr.
IM.vision contest. B-Curtis, Santa Ana 186 Sr.
, The Warriors are 8-9. Second Team Defense
J,os An ; · h t In · E-Scherer Laguna 186 Sr. gees goes wit .ower g Wlit E-Willi~, Fullerton 210 Sr. Chamberla~n at center, Elgin Baylor and T-Kleinknight Kell!ledy 183 Sr.
'l'Wtl Hawkins at forw3:fds. T-Bright, Wesiem 228 Sr.
Lakers Risk
Aaaltelm mp Scbool'• c ' o 1 d to throw your racket and don't use
VlllloGrtbeb t.et" apparea11y ru. •l, language like that around here."
...-, ~ M llillll'.....,'111 .. 'Wul!lngtoo.WllU game. 8Qlll iJollooll
""" • lit llli ....,, IM "Chr ·Jiave 'oslnc ncna •ll'!Oulb wllblnlton
rl>I ........ If 14 ........ "" (1.44) jlOUll pt .. lite .. nw1t wltb
8ut the San FrancJSCo front wall ls MG-Scheel, Garden Grove 185 Sr.
1111ch taller -Nate Thurmond, 6-foot-11, LB-Jackson. Rancho Alamitos 185 Sr. at center and Rudy LaRus.so, S-{oot-8, LB--Pekarcilt, Loara 180 Sr.
,. -I -lib Coloolll ,_ Hewitt's outburst came wben be .-.. a.n v..-1to11a -• .. · 'dlaureed •bout • 111o1 11¥· Brllaln'I .11111 thlar ... bis Trojan,• ·~ ud •. Ylcterr. "" !be Ooafirt, • vlclor7 "tild Clyde Lee, 6-foot·IO, at the comers. LB-Sanchez Kennedy 150 Sr.
·'!'be LallQI 10 witb a iuanl com-B-ltubll, Laiiina lie Sr,
..,. ti .... -. . Groliom )lllhrelL • Utan tbe "Big One." That would be over the Huski•, 'espeClaDy at the end
rttalnlnl . tbe No. I rating In the final of another tOotng campaign (U.l), is
blutlon oJ Jerry Weal and Frod B-Moen, Marina 180 Sr,
Crawford. . ' _ ~. Newgort IJO Sr, ~ oll,.110 W jlll ...ie..a I 'Ille llllfdl ....r.oo ud l!ewitt WOii
..,it ol ....,., -W....-HLM,M. • • 11111&. ""° .....,, ""1 -,_ Tho -.-lflnol wl1l motdl Bob ...... Aatt lolor, -W-Lull& ol IM ....... jl!IOlbor Amer!CID
wtek of the UPI coachea rankings. worth considerably more. It would be
The Los Ani:etea clty championship the f i rs t in league play th1s year a n d
Jt with croutown rtVa!. UCLA. The Bruiml vault them over Wuhlngton into seventh place.
J e 11 /rllllllnl go I 19.polntt and Joo EU!• 11 at g1lard for tbo Warrlort
Wedoaday nJgbl In a llJ.10'1 defeal .... 1, .. " .... ..,, !•Cl .. tile Darill CUppir, ud ~Cot" lrttlla.
..... lz#tk ---Lall d-Owoil l)lYidton ol ,,.,, Pit•• rr. 1111 -AUllralloi-7,M,l-21nlhe~
e,ren-&; what they UBed to be when Gary at tbe ltlDdf of ClndnnatL , .,
•.• ....._. ·-· tt11 -• p11 ., uc1 ear -11'.~ w~
: I I ,.,, Encl•"", M, .... .
Beban wu running tbe show tbe put
tllree Ytara. IO the mighty Trojan!,
N, are tolld H polntfavorttea. ' Cincy's Johnny Bench • '···~ •. --w~~ Smith --llaflrlct et 11r1-. • ... -~ lllnf.1,1-21nlhe'~-
-...... -...i '*"-defeated U.S. 0,.. eNmpliii: 'Arilllr ..II'_.~~~ Dm7I B<q lo Albe, Richmond, Va:, ud Smltb In lht
Up In tbo llOltbem end of Ca!Uornla,
tt will be the 71.st anmaI "Big Game·~
bitween Ca!Uomla 11111 Stanford, whllo
f\lrther north, Oregon ls •It Corvallil
lo do batile with. state ~vol Oregon ,
State, and at, Spokane Jt will be
Washington Slate against Washington.
• • H
NL's Rookie of Year . -~ ...,. London Queal'• .Club Tolinwnmt Jut ··· a "fa'I llet ....w .... ldd, Ber1 -. ~ ............ 1'111'911 tt ....... .. ....... ---~ .... ...,. I fllll -·t P"1 II &el . ..... .
•-·,Ir rtl11' 21' W•t.t. f • t t It a I I .,.,.... . -·· .. -.... ,..,.. .,. .... lira I 'lell wldi Arlelm
, ·-... --""11 kw.a; ._, '.f<lll tlle1 ...,.. • ~ pme tle
---.. -ail ...,. •• Ilk• • . dlmolt111l11•......._,, ................ c ...... lf. z. '
A baltt'*I llul dliot fOd pol ai tbe
--for l.of06a -'t 'lAn7 Taylor
• tot _ ..... 11111,)>elploc put • BW
Ttnlir • II WU a flnl dolt -.. ..,. """' -• booltb1 .poaUoo ol -8hleeo Cooto Mao lloyl portlclpoled
to • pntlmluaJ b111fldMll , ...... :1'e Fonm, prtor to 1 i.ter Ult.
·Tiit 11111 -.... JI, II tmd II, ..,. .~ ,,,,:W ~ ............ bukftkU
•
IJ M •ta.
• lqulld members Included ' Robbie lllr-
ril, lion' Lam~, Jack McMIUlllUI,
C1teJ Cail!lell, Gory Confer 11111 Kevin
'1-, Jrrry Miiler, John Neobl~ Larry ~. llllke lUk!f, Mart"Jacquea,
....... CJouch, Tim Wlgmore, Kevin
_.. oncl Jerry Lawrence.
Jr o.w. --Olympie ....
.... --· pndtcto a llllp""llll:!J~e00a MMIDI 1oo1 lo ~ ·-.. -°'1mlle ttlle ....... ~.
211· • -·:=,...•:
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•
OUea!de of the USC-UCLA game, t h e ... · '" 1 i-.. Pac-l gameo mue er b<ealo the CINCINNATI (AP) -CI n c Inn at I In the buslnea.~
lt&flOft for local followers. Victory for catcher Johnny Bench said he was quite Bench QPtaiued he ;tfU not relu:ln«
'OCLA ....-tbe·Trojans could start dan· excited -, not reaTiy l!Ul'Jlrised -about at tbe plojO 'bot Biter bo did, lht blff
clng In tbe streets at Westwood. being named tbe Nailonal League's came -ud fl'oqueittly In tb11 clbtcb:
• STABS TEST NETS .
AT SPORTS ARENA
0rognn Stele, &.1 11111 second to USC -Rookle--Of,tb•Year today u "I felt l Allor IOltlng Info. tbe tlliilln& llnodi>.
LOS ANGBLES (UPI) -The ,..uillll hi tbe league race, can gain a measure had a 50-50 chaqce." ha said he wanted lo bll abl>!lt .l'J9
Lot Anpltt lllln, comlni off o defeot ol revenge for itt lrustraUng loss to Bench, who claims bis goal Is to wttb about ,IS bame n1111 11111· drive
f,y the OU1and Oab,. tonight -a the Trojans a week ago by beating become 11the best in the business," said 1n about 80 nm:t.
team Ibey 'foe! !bey can bea~ tlie ,New Qregon (~). It's not tbe same as a he !mew eltber he e< Jerry Koosman His prediction wili almost' perlectl1,
York Netl, Jn an American Buketball Rote Bowl berth but for tbe ~Beavers, of New York would win the award. accurate. ·
Auoclatloo enconnil( ·at tbt Sparta and Ducts too, lt'1 the nezt best thing. 14He bad a great year," Bench, 21, .....+-1Lw1t~v.n
Anna. . 1 • The same goes for Callfomla in Its said about the New York pitcher. "It ~-~-7"' 11 •
The Stan dtfeated.1 the Netl JU.tot Ruggle wlUt Stanford. The Golden Bears was about ball and half !or the award." -wi :t..S~ei:-" '\
Jut net In lht llnll pme of a -wore oolld contenders unW tbo TrojfW Bench admitted be had been tblnknlg , = fl.'t'l.."r.: 1: dll.
1ame f'Old trip. to that meet1ac,-_1m laid them to rest two weeks ago. Now, about tbe award ror quite awhile. 111 •· • '* ~
Watley acoadiii{ rar It points m-. a victory °"" Stanford can alone .for especially ofter tbe ,....,, closed l "" • • , ,
IM AnClltl to tbl wtn. tM USC loll and also can give Cal because "I knew I h a d. had a decent 11t ~; l: :$: .~t ·
'Ille Sim IO.., tho"*' oftor l<mfll!I'• 11" belt r<COrd In 11 .. yean under Cooch . year. J-~rn..";:n~ ,
game, openln( tbelr teCOlld road trtp lll:r'WUIM11 ' , ~It tbe goal l l!llli.f to attalo," 1~ ._, cH<
Sunday nJabt·at HOUiton. Tbe Beeri io into, tbe cantell With. be' ll1cl. N&ll'dlna ilotli' ti award and jnH:''i~'"'~'r~ :., 3tti
_,...;,......;;.,,,. ________ I "°1 mall --pond to Stan-' llit J:IU!ll. "l 'l'attl lo bo tho betil Hr-t::l'~~"i";:::"~· '°
Penny An~· CoDiipg . 16' C~Iif ornia . ~. ._
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP.) - A "dl<ap-
polnt!<I and dlsgualoa" Penny Ann Early,
tbwarted In her latm atteinpt to become
America's first woman tlat·track .
thoiooghbred jockey, 11y1 she doea not
lnt«Kt lo give It up. ,
Mitt !:orly, II, WU tchedWed to ride
Wltneu In Thunday'e a1ntb l'll'O al
Cltuidlll1 Dowllt, bul Ibo ..........
-=elod a. ... ~ aol ...
..... hr tho -....... lht .,_.;.
''llley (the jockeys) ... caDlnc
tbemaelv" men, bot 1 ha .. no mpecl
. 1 ' J • • ~ "
fot tbn M ,_,.. 11111!>.' lllst Bar1r C1111Gm1L "I Ito!» tlWne"' & cllflenol Aid Thursday's cancelatlon came only uld'. aftw U., 'ncl '-4 tie. CIDeil. elm al,... tbwa." .i • '-!-. .-.a f t e r a day· long effort to assure that "1· ' , , ' ... oddatl • bot*! to ride al ~ · Ml88 Early would have a ch&noe to
"N-t( -aaalil loill -ID Ile Atilla wldCb ~ Ma ...., -ride. Originally, she was scbeduled to fll!. h ~ ID-'J)a:e .,. • • · -ride in the fourth race.
,... 11111 di ..._ lo -........ •• :' t"u -1111 -When ,Jockey• couldn't be found !or
.,, n tit .. rldo ....... ~. .. In • -ol «; ff'! Ci tr fw tho ~ -.1n !be race, it WU postopned
llJI .. t( .......... Qj;j f = ...., ...... ~ ud made Ille nlntb OD tbe card. °""'*'-:ao. ~lied liaiii ~la ride 'Ille dels.Y meet lillle. Late.l)mnda;y Alllr •en ..,, '111111llL!!li1 • • "liillW • Wllirlitoiiii-m....im. an.-tho Cfiul:ddll Dona troo1i..,. ,
• ..... ,. •• ll?lllt ..... a. • .. " -.. .. • """""'"7 mOaJed the tdntll not liad lo C T .... lffll lar a ~ , T ' ;.-Wit ,....-aboard bem .-ec1.
~ --bJ ,...r.r jockey. The lllUlOUllC<lllete WU poeted' with
"I hope ll'a dllllnOI," Ibo said about Informed ..,.._ al ChurcblJ1 Downs boos and catcalls from tbe stancls.
"
~~------------------------'-------------------· --· -------__ ,_ -
'
At VCI CH11lc
Pretty Lynda Davis ol Onmie
Cout i:ou.se WW lab .ell. '~·~-= edacaUon cllrilc S a fU r 4 a )'
morning et UC Irvine.
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·--.................. ------..-.......... --.,...,_ ............ .,......,..... ..... _., .... -----------·-----------------:-----•• ---.... .... ... --.. -.--~ • 1' ... --.....
' \ -• fridly, ·-22. 1'161 OAILY I'll.OT JI
Laguna Tackles .Aztec~
' I
.. Lions Battle .Tarhahes
HAZARDS OF THE 'GAME -Weotminste< Higb's
Ron Shepherd expect& drier field <00J!l1i<>m tonight
when bis mates host Com¢on High s Tarbabes in
CIF football hostilities. Shepherd is seen deaning
DAILY PILOT Plllt9s.,. P•t O'Dl!Mln
tile mud from his l8Ci! and hands during last week's
mudbath with Marum. He is an All-Sunset League,
All.Orange County back •
Sports tn Brief Gaucho Foe
Has Strong
Rushing Gaine
Officials Questioned
George Hartman would like nothing ,
On Players'. Return
better than to end his first seasoo at DENVER --· · of ••· -11K:: comm1ss1oner uic: Saddleback College with a winning Western Athletic Conference announced
record. he bad launched an Investigation into
But he and his Gauchos will have the officiating al the Colorado State
their work cut out for them Saturday University-West Texas football game la.st
night wnen they take on the third-ranked Saturday.
small junior college team in California, Commiasioner Wiles Hallock aaid initial
Gavilan from Gilroy in the Salinas Valley reports indicated that two ejected play-
1·0 the1'r season •-·'e. Sadd1eback ii ers---one of them NCAA rushing record uu.iu bolder Eugene "Mercury" Morris -4-4 for the .year. allo ed to ret to ••· The Rams have a bruising ground at· were w ur11 u~ game.
tack and a rugged defer:i.se that has Hanock said Morris, West Texas
carried them to a 7-1 record. Included halfback, and Colorado State defenaive
in Gavilan's seven Vict1ms iJ College tackle Jerry Gillingham. got into a ICUffle
of the Redwoods, currently the top-rank-in the third quarter of the game following
ed small 11Cboob divili<lo JC t..m in an intercepted pw.
1be atai.. Bill Kohl, the head line8man ll1d one
Gavilan tripped Redw-early in lbe of the three official& ealling the game,
season, lf4.4~ but lost a ahot at the called umportlmanllke conduct penaIUes
state playofb·several weeks ago in the on both team.I and rtportedly ejected
mud when it dropped ·a 3lt clecil1oo Monis and Gillingham.
to Hartnell. Both players returned later, however.
"We made all kind.II ·of mental mistakes Morris caught a +.f.y a r d pus in the
in that game/' said RaJIUI aaj.staot final period that eet up West Texas'
coach Bob Garcia, ' "We fumbled the , wirutlol touchdown for a 22-17 victory
ball away four times inside our »yard and .et "two NCAA rushing record! in
line and then.didn't-field a kickoff and tJ>e ProceSs -for a 1in&le aeuon and
let them recover the ball at cur .one. . career yardage.
"But that's the 1Xl1y -bid ~ we Hallock said what.ever the outcome
had all year and it ?• p1*yed In a~t of the investtgabon, the result of the
three lnchell of llllld ·w -·-•···ed H 'd Gavilan r:tfnJ out . of. the power-I and "' game w renwn ....... _... · e ~8.1.
relles on the. hard-ruzuU:ng of tailback the WAC , officials could be penalized
Bob Goularte ~ a strOog offensive or Oven a :_,amtnc~ ""'
m;he ~ Govlarte has powered -!oe Ware,·Cal SWe (Fallenoe) buket-
h · for1oe:i yards in elaht aames blD 1&ar. wu MDienced le a days 1. s way 11 die 0nqa Cou:ly JaU nanday t~H~~:r~ breakaway threat," Gerda for Yieladel ol ~Wint of probllioL
said~ "But be' ll,ln!; can pick up the Wan will Ml"ff'tlile time • .-....
y~e. He'1 .. real bWl of a nmner, ,Tl!e dlltricl -·· -re,_w
ju1t JIU ·Jim 'hP!r~Ulld to be. He'd W• *111W tilild.i "'tr ss' '$' 1
rather run over peDiple dm arnund them _.fer-. Be pietlsllllJ Md pleMed
and cooa.-lY drlOP tocklen 4lolC pllty .. --.......... -with him l<r acldtticiW yardap. TllO -le aa .n .... ,.. -eai, hr
only wey 1o atop bbl! ii •to -tackle · 1llddt .. -,._ .. -years ,.. him ." 1b1d9. "
... ... ...
Academy bu l<Nll'ed hilh oo !ho list
ot teams u n d e r consideraUon. for the
No. 1 spot Jn lbe Liberty Bowl foolboll
game here Dec_ J4..
The Falcona, counted out after their
loss to Artz.ona two weeks aao • .-ed
much of their hlsW with a 38-1 victory
over Tulsa lut week. Tbey elate Out
the regular season Saturday qain1t
Colorado.
A.a of now, TeU8 Tech and Nebruka
are at the top of the lill but looses
Saturday could eliminate both te:aaui
from the running. Tens Tech tUes
no lou&h Arkatllal, anil Nebrub meeta
resurgent Okllboma. .........
FIJUERTON -RourJ wW be recff<,;
tonlgl!t al I 1w Lal.,..U. r...c.
'111ompt0n, II, cenenJ m ...... ·Of. die
Lo1 A11~1 DOdpn, wbo died · Wed-
nesday Blgl!i al 81. Jade JloqiltoL
Tiie rosary ' wlD be al Waller aad
McConnlct M-ary l!ere. A aoltlba
rogalem mUI will be eoltbnl<d ffl'
,,, ... _ Satmdo)' a1 11· Liil. a1 s~
Jllllana's Chrdi wfUI bulaJ f'lllo•
in La hente. .........
RIVERSIDE -Amateur race car
driver Eugene Willbanks of Loi AlamGil,
N.M .. WU injured Thunday when blll
car rolled at Riverside fntemitlanal
Raceway. •
Willbanks w a s drivine a Fiv ....
Formula A u-Chmolet -1lt
apparently lost control of bil car. ' '
He. wu.. b'µted at 81\Wllda Ollt.
mmllty l!Oopltal ll1d releUod.
He WU. practicini for the all-amatu'
American Road Iiace of a.a,= lo be held !)ere Saturday aM ad •
\ ~. ~ I
' -Westminster l La Qufuta's
Star Back
Ready Tonigh!
~i:.oa--..... -. 1111~1-.......... ...
-rillbd la u. 4.u cir, .... """ __ ...., ....... ....,.
1o bottll ·u..i.a ~HIP --
la ...... -al lie CD' -8 Jilt1oftL
Klekoft' la set far I o'clock.
:ror ~14rt11ei it'•• ell• 11c4lo
to-tllelrwla-lo It and
lo'-. a llep .-1o tM cir lltle.
La Qulnla, --............
It llllo 1111 -U. ooly vlllltr dtom-
plolllldp la ., ~' .. .. ... :,__
blMm1 al the .......
The -llld fer Ult ...... -
pioollllp -1\andl& ..\llmllO{ ad
Gti'don --.... mm. OMrd . .
'lie La Quinta -la 7·1 lt!cladllC
• -win -!11,itlJ -lillpoila.
l!eltlm ..... llu pla,... • -·· _.. The cloMll -parisGn Is La
Quinta's ~-win m, F-1n Vallty,
Fountain Valley'• 14-7 Iola to El llodena
and 1.a.-•1 a,e Ylclory ow El M-.
Coach Hal Aklnl wlD be lltldltt( an
Arlilt ..... free al Injury -the
exceplko> al blllboe.t Jim Kum, wbo
Is°"''"' the remaladtr of a.-.
La Quinta will be In ... .,.llent lliape
according to coach Dan Webster 1 with
star back Ken Eppelllelmu bllck al
a halfbact post.
Eppelhelmer ba• -for 1,311
yard!: and . a pbenomenal 1.1 avera1e
pin per carry in what amounta ·to
.even and a half 1a.me1.
.Mother bock, Mickey SIDcjalr, bu
l'lllhed 1<r eoo :r>n1s dw1nJ the -aild lbe quarterblck. Mlke Erickson,
Is a 50 percent pauer with 30 completlom
tn eo attemptt, &OOd for s e v t -•
touchdowns.
But for Ille 111<111 part, Eppethelmer
11 Ille La Quinta -~ ... _,..,,
..... tllal-11 • ~ Is llfld lo
1111-dqrd;' La•Qolilla -,m Iii" llliil>li
to advance In lbe plo)'Olla. ·
Laguna Beaeh, behind the quarterbock· fnl rt ste•e WleDwUI ll1d lllllback -BqleJ, Is a IJ.pllnl favorli.. w-.· ..,..111s ...,,. 1111111 • .iop-1111--
npmlnc of Bacle1" firll --try
lo keep the roll out option -al
111e A!lilll 1o • minimum. ·
Mlk• Al>bty bu nplll<ed Xuhn in
lbe Laguna backlltld • and Is upaci.d
to ploy • ~ nile In 1111 -of
tlleArtllta'olf-.
U. evNSTA LAevaA .IM:M ,. ··-• -'" '" -T = ,.
"' -• '" •N -.. < --n• lN -• -~ "' '" .... T -...
>U ..... • M$01••"M• "' .. ·-a W.,_I '" •N -· a -"' '" =::"im.r • =' •P '" • , .
HB CYCLE PA.HK
HOSTS A~A EVENT
' . .• .
Anleater8 Open
<:age Hostilities
Mond~y .Night
·uc Jnble!a -.&l'fity buketball. team ' -Ill -and whit coaeb Dick Davll ..,.. wlll • be Iii best ......
lland111 nflltl: . ' ... :t\I, Amu"!' tak~ Pt\ the ~Cl fro.h
In Ille second IJlllUjll ,.var>i!Y·lroah ...
-· Tlp«f. Iii ooheduled for 7:30 e.m. Jn CamJ!li, ~ _ ___,_ . -
The ~ Were M Jut year
-'narrowly misoacl 1 berth In the NCAA'• mUeae divialon pl1yoff1. They
.tarted the 1191-61 season with an tt~
W!n· oYW coaeb Tim 1llt'a freehmon.
!><vis ·-bis !int llarlin8 D!*tP· H•1I tap three juniors ltllj two
aenlora to start MQnday night. The
anion are forward Nick Sanden (&-3)
and center Mllie Heckman (6-7).
The romlln!ng froot·liner ii Junior
forward Jeff CuMipgham (M).
Tbole three were lbe m.:.t rJ Jrvlne ·1
attack 1ut )'W. ' . .
1be pa.rd• wlll be junior ·Mlke &met
(~ti), a &rlPlfer from Rlven.ide Cily
Coll ... and Sieve ,Sabins (M), a junior
from Glendale City College.
_O,.vlt 11.)'ll hll number one front line
sub la _. Dave FonUus (H)', Ute
1Qflllfr 'Hew119rl HarlJoio High otanaout
who can play center bl' forward.
Slated to· 1ee blCkcourt duty are
Chully --(6-21), Kellh -ll<an
(~1) and Jim Farley (6-1).
Tile Anteatm' regµlar' ...,.. opener
Is Saturday,·Hov. 30, wltll UC San Di<go
vtsltlnr UC!.
Davis..Jt •.!!lfiecl with the progrw
bil cac.er• bavt made so far.
"We've had some very fine jlracUcet
In the tut three or four days," he
ny.;, .
·~we've bad JO workouts and I'd aay
we'rt just about ready to play ball.
We're ltartinl to wonder U our firat
. I Heavy favori~e
Over C.Omptoi)
BJ EARL GUST!t~ ' S
Of ... °'"' l'lllt ..... • ·~
Weatmlnlter Hllh SChool'I lJcN, wllli
a blctlitld any junior cnU.;e <iadl
would like to have Int.act,, tab'"~
Compton Hi&h on lbe Lidos' turf l*>lalfl
In the firll round of 1be CIF pl~·
1.0ckoff Is set for I. .., •
wesbntnster (8-1) ratel U a MaftllY !~point favorli. to dwnp Compl•1ii" (Y,
1). champion of the Coast 1-· Tllo
LltinJ captured lhl coveted -Leaaue crown. · • :
Tbc Tarbabes are confrnnted wj\!l lbe
necessity of at least ~ -lie talented Lion ball carriera. ' :-"'
Darryl Berg, the wln&Mek;. ii a ~
did.ate for CIF player of the yelr boqGrl
but cooch BW' Boswell 11so hU _.
genuin< threats in fullback Ron Sltepllord,
Mlke H1ynes and Charles Buckland.
The Lions offer lmpos1ng c:redentUk.
They're the No. S.rated team Jn "the
CIF and have cmp,....i .wllh IU<:h
eslabUsbed powers u El :Rancbo,
Anaheim and ~ta ML
Boswell's juggernaut IOll lls=--pme
of the year, a Zl-12 declalon to
but'ltanfntewmiijliloiiilifil;"
Compton bu ""' lour ... ~ alnee
losintf -ll1d IJtq -~ lint . five games. Cotlcb. Joe W _ team
ia on a bot atrt¥. ha aJven .up
only three' touchdow.;, lo 1111 four
week11,-wblle beatJnc Downey, Domillpl!S,
CenteMil and Paramount. '"'!'""'
"We've jelled ctYU .the 1ut llalf~ of
the~," Wide says. ~
.. "Our passlng game bu "'"" 'Anltlnd
-lt'was pretty lliU:y u fll'lt." ~ ~
Thi quarterback 11 Hubert fJll'ka',
who likes to U.... lo -iv.rt 'Reid
Morlhel. llld· Real< -· 8'rieu uys the Tarbabe recelven-are flittm.
"Compton Is .~enielx q iil~ k defensively," he 11ys. ·1-• "n.er nay make a mletake on defeiwe
but they-recover io lj:fil'cl,JY y00:--:-c1n't
always take ~vantqe ol I\" ·•··"' Boswell ·say1 moot lealiltl bayt ,Ud
to go lo Ille air to ~ Comptoa. 11
_the Tarbabes do ~,.)'(~;•~ iP'Oiiiil~tbett he'll •Ir~~
<(1larta1iact, Ed-· lo llatl firftWi •
;i:;;~ :~ ..... ~ Eagles. Face
DI.vii will have Mcnday!a varslty-frolh
• • • . ' ..
...,..lllmtd ll1d thee ,,. .. llld Tilt will Rebuilding·. scout, UC San Diego'• game Tuesday
qllntll a Mexican lnlernaUonaj !Wn .
Davia Nyl nt-hOI " lhat ooly Year· m· .:,·69.
•
' ;
;
' one 004 veteran mide the team at
UCSli this year, the otlim blin( elbowed '
out by JQ lrUlfm. • ;
Tilt will Uri a laller t..m than Delplt'o a S.7 ovtrlll -and Ille lbe vanity Mooday : Stevt Wbite (H) Irvine League ce!lar..i..Jlu <!ilh • a
and BW Moon (J-f) at ''"'an!· Bill ' wWess record, what looma to<'EataD::la
Gto<p (H) at-ce¢er, ll1d Gary Fen High School -for next yeer'1 loolball (or·
( .. 2) and :Robbie Sagehorn (8-3) at tunes boill down to a febu!!drnc ~
auan!J. Gone will be Ille -olfemlve Ilile. Hmtever, It · im't _qU!te a dtm&r. UCI SCHaDULES , Coach John tmry ~ have bolh « b111
""'" · quulerbacks baek llong Wltll I Jll'la>e 'Jt ~SAN 01100 candidate ' up from {be Beet. it ; " ~~. ~" += And, Deve JohnlOn, .mo Jed the -or-. ..~~:::~Jr~ an.ge: Cou1 .erea b l'Ulbhur statil&.lcs .t'-=~.';; · unW -an. injury sidelined bin for' "fba
• uc :[~\~j I balance of lbe -wW be f!aci. UC~Vll Johnson hi a leCOOd teara ·choke'oft ~ '(li!il.'" the All·frVlne 1-...... ' CAL STATE.,~ l:= Paul Joyce and Curt. nx.nu are the
Ju'{ tW°~t~ ~':. ~
..... ,1 .. n• I to a• rutlning batk to uUl!u bis """*" Tr~ 11>1.iv.D1sl c01.L•c. ability and to give the Elalee a doubJe
•-threat in the .pas11ior 1ttaCk. ·
· '121 tt ••tt• c.i...!'~,:;.~g In the backfitld; ban Neuman from !1 UC o'!'UJ.~~ the Ilea and L c«tple of JUDI« vanity :.· n I I '.,.I) •t "°' ~~s:ic ~ ~ w,r-= I rolea,. • , • ·
1
,
1
1 KOY~ displayed abllltlll to l*'fart!I
1 at -dllr.oi.i pallllw ... --~ uaed u an offensive end and defiiilfve
I °' ¥Il back. ·-.. ~·.J MM or • • In the Une., three players COUQ\eQ/toft
1NTAltMuAA1. AL T will be Larry Moulfan, Kurt Levinler
Garcia lllild,'the Rams are prltnFi\y . , ' "' "' "'
a running -.i. lllillC thl -Ill-HAMBURG, Geimaoy -Czecboolo,,.k frequently and thee jllll 1o k..,. lbe IOCCer player Emil Hamor ha s dillp.
defenae boneit. pWtd lmn bia IWnbur( hotel and
... '<w'(YO ... -~ -" lino, did lilt' ,... ..!di .....,. !tr !Is -reiarlt but our t..m' ali'e.,oi bas to . be CIUI' lo P.rqiie. poUce reported 'lllur1day.
, 1nd Lee Fri~. AU llarted In !he
.u ~I to Reµiain In~epen,Ient ~~~ii
Loala F,llnl, JJm -· Crllill .... deleme. I ~ we bave the ~ 1be »~ 111m1r came to fb I 1
<!efehli,. t:t" c.cnI Cllllcnll, Hri o.m. I""-his !elm Slavla G~ c:....,,: are 1illl and 1..; and PnPe wl!lch wu dlifeated f.t !&. Ham:
defWll ___...,, 1111 -•~ lilowed 'buries 1N In an lntor<ltlts F Cllp our~-,--, ~.., -Wednadoy. --•n ,_ ~ -Qui'. • u.-~.. -11-llld ••-· .......... Ulefylila,O...--.llloqhand ~·~g .-... _, .._,_.
he'l lnlaaplod all -!Ml l'W·" 8-.footnd rofup wltll a Caechoslo¥at
Gattia -M JltfNll end Dav• famllyllVin(ln.~· ...
Tlplon .... Iii """"" --... 1bomu • 1111 ._, 1ooJ -ClllC4GO -°"81t·0... Halal I( HaefMft. Ill me.,. ..... IA 0 zweM •ti?.,,.
"We dool --.W iaJd. __ )11 .... JtlMMpllWW,
-Wt -l ---In "'"'*1, It -._... llr 1111 •
-11111 ... ••:• .... -.............. Jr.
The llbn ... -----. 'II, -' ltl .. "' • wftb Wlrrdl llld u.. t111J.,...,.. w1111 • "'9V 1 6 u •• J"e{ aw
"" u ""1m· ~ la • myolery "'=gl;\l;,i, • --. dU.. ..... _......, "-' -.'1111 Air , ....
• •
. '
.. ... t
-what of • dlladv-bcaule
-of Ille WOAC ldloali """w --lc~tban UC!-.
'"1111 wey IL-,_, ••n.wnun,
"' -............. unlll lite rljhl # rllon -a1oa1. We'n -lo.-.-tllol -..... -....~~-and
• llial -• -ialar<olJlclale ~a:;; -1*t Drtls 11
Ga tleGft U fa ..... lr'fllM'I J?miW.
,t'r IN to ta. WCN!
111ra ......i -· of the WCAC ..uc-llaitira.Saa'-5'*, -aara, Lofllll, lhd•olll!IJ al Bin .,..._, Uatvonf!y al hdlle, 81. ...., .................
•
mura ud MID Ptmeny, , ..:im;:,ted.,...._rJ:~~' '
'----I
...
•
•
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!
I
l ~
• •
'
Start Your OCC's . '68 Grid· Siatistics
,.
Engines. Top ~o&e of-'ti3 ~hEfmpions
--.· by Deke Hou/gate
Jim Hall, the brilliant engineer, desliner, car builder ind
raff driver m1y have to ICraleh that lut tiUe from l'lla
l!"ifallo. ~·• airnnlly ~d up ol Mldlf'1'1 ·Memorial Hoapilol ill•ftua wljh I ' badly ~en pol< o( 1.... 1f he driY<I
...., it will brt a<mlracle el modern medi~·
j1e w• btjured ht ..,, of .llloee frelldlh ha(>peoin .. of
m&or sport thlt turn an. ezcil.tn&.. race into a nightmare.
but tbt damage coWa have been worse. While Hall, WU
b5n&" picked out of the wreckage ol bbl Chapart"a1 at Lu
V<gU, he WIS engul/ed by fi.,...,
Etnergeocy crews llDOtheted the fire In seconda, not with
wat«, whkh wouldn't have worked, but with dry cbemical:f.
U they dkfn't ave HaU for more racing, they at lwt prevented
a ~c death.
Jtii! Uti> IOrl of <lp&blllly -le . IM)uirt ool I fin witb
chendcala -ia one al the major contrlbuticos racmg baa
made to safety. One of these day1 tt may be ezpected that othtt safety Secret.I of racing wlll aplll over into the mainstream
of~,
Jt•i puzzled me for tQJne ttme .why rubber bladden used
inSlde: fuel tanka ot race cm to prevent punc~iz)g upon
impact haven't bec91ne·itandaM equiPD!-ent ~ passenger cars.
U you'Yt evern seen 1 relµ' end colli:non that caUJeJ a
gasoline fire., rou'd jobt the outcry. lf1 led, iocldentally,
by Rllptt Noder.
* * Nit loq 110 Andy Granatelll scolded the aat.o ind111try
f• 11ot pauln1 on to tk public some of tile llfety ptGIJ"fll
made in auto ncln1.
Ht mendonei feur-wltttl~rive. and lte 1uaes\ed dlat Detroit
adopt 10meddn1 like tK Munet brakta1 ~ ued em
the BrlUU JtnSQ GT. It absolately prevents tockln1 vp of
~bruea .
' Irvine Leaf1.e Champ•
..U-lldl( 11111 -.S. -.,, 1a1o, both by roetac olflcllb Oorona del Mar High.School 's water .polo team faces Bolsa Grande tnday in the an. 1dpway ·eql.aeen.. II lite cruh barrier. h Loi An1ele1 secOnd round of the CIF playoffs. M"embers of Sea Kings' Irvine League champ-dri, are replada1 a "car eaU:ftr" wire fence wldl a iolld ionship squad include .(top row froffi. l~JJ,) coach Cliff Hooi;)er1 Bill l..<>itz, Peter
c&i.cnce waD .. lteavlly n.veled freeway ltCdou. Kemmerly., Tim McGill, Bruce Black.· Second row -Jeff Hillman, Jerry Eu-
·tt •m. tncredlble th1t safety engtneen are ln1tallln1 1olld bank, Eric Curti5, Tom Hom. Third row -Scott Newcomb , Bret Bernard, Bob
b4"1cada ~e 75 mlles away at Rlvenide tile racin1 fraternity McClellan, Steve Schwer. Fol!rth row -Jim Bradburn and Jim stoner.
ll ... experimendilc wltlt something to replace uylekllq w.U1 ---------.,..--.------~------------
Uk:e-.lhe ones behll baUt Oii the freeway.
'* * * ·l~e the boiler plate wall at turn g of Riverside Raceway i$ 1 ·teemd barrier made of water-filled cans. In uperiments c.ln{~ so far, when a cac:, ruts the wall, impact energy
IS .uiorbed by the watar, wblch splasbeo oot lnto a set
of''pliitic :bop. '
wii;. the wall lo perfect..!, ·racing ollicial! •%Jl'cl ii la
be J&U'ble for aomeone. to nnack the ne_w wall at 100 miles p ~. bounce off and continue in the race..'
'lb.t•1 the umt kind of impact that killed stock car champ
Joe -:Weatherly in the aame place. Think about it, auto safety
peOpJt. Maybe you're overdue for 1 day at the rllcee:, where
!hon mJtM be tlllrip,.. """1<1.Joom. ,_._.... -.
v®•re oat with It tf you don't baw'What'11 a tunny _car. '
,.~ funny car ii a drag racing machine that looka something
like a atock car but llOUnds and perfol'Dll!l like a fuel dragster.
You can't uy tt'1 the latest thing in drag racing, because
tUhriy cars have been around for a couple oC years. But
yOu can say funny car racing is the most hip thing In
dfag racing today. ll'• no fad .
.• * * * The blQut faaay car Oow in drag: ractn1 comes ftff at
Oran1e County lnternaUOllll Rliceway tltlt Slmrday night.
Westminster Finishes Atop
CIF ·Cross Country Prelims
By STEVE .EKOVICH Clemente copped fourth and as he ran one of his best
ot ~ D•llT Pli.t Stiff a chance to compete in the ever races to finish sixth in
JC's Enter
8 in Meet What is the ClF cross coon-finals (the first five teams 10 :50. Craig Sterling was the
t r Y p r e I l m I w it h o·U t in the prellhis earne:ct the op-next close.st Triton acrOM the Eight coast area jaycee run-
We.stminater, as' a ·maLter of ·pottunity ~to -cOm-----pete ·in the line as he ·completed the ·ners, headed by Golden West's
,tact "'hat 16 the CIF prelims finals·. .,., "' modntainous two-mile course Collegj's Rick DeNuccio, are
wilhDut Westminstet bumping Arid in the A divlsitif1'¥ater in 11 : 18. entered in today's Southern
the top stop? Del fell short with a aeventh Ray Ezell (33 rd, 11 ,35), California cross country
Tt11 unheard of, tht1t's what. place finish. St. Anthony, run· Richard Stoll (38Ui, 11 :37),-c n ·8 mp1onsh1 p s at
Most envious cross country nerup to the Monarchs in the Clay Anderson (t3rd, 11 :42), Southwestern College in San
coaches must wonder where Angelul! League rM:e, ffiade Pat Benjamin (59th , 11:55), Diego.
Wcstm\nster tutor Jack the cut with a third place and Bill Ayer (~h, II :56) Ora,nge Coast College, which
Hedges gets his 'talent to effort; completed ilie Triton finish . plB.ced fifth in the Eastern
always come up with a long W~tminster was lead by Terry McKeoo lead his Conference meet la.st week,
distance power.. indefatigable Don Dis ton who Mater Oei mates to the finish will have a seven· man tum
nd th ~·-finished eighth with a time !fop can el ead mudadurer have been •elected to compete A. ey all must have ....::n of ·11:01, followed by Steve line as he went the di.stance entered in the meet.
11J1dtr 1 poblt l)'ltem deviMd by OCIR'1 lmpre11ario, Mille asking themselves that quds--, Varga (12th, 1~:07), Kevin in 11 :19. Stevf: Horestmeyer The seven are Fred Sk.irde,
.Jtnea. It may not be dte heat way ie rate fvany can, tion again Thursday afternoon toleman (19th. 11 :12), Wayne finished 22nd in 11 :50 followed Dan Mooney, Terry Schmitz,
btlt ri1bt no• It's tlte llllly way. Here's the Mike Jones at Mt. San Antonio College Akiyama (20th, 11:12), Steve by Mark Dowling (28th), Rick Mike Flamm, John Thomas
vitem: all the Lions earned second Seyler {22.n<i, 11 :17). John Jermings (J7th ), Sob Leanz.a and Ed Bell.
De RambuncdOUI ai·-er ol Gue Snow, Fl wo~ .. Tex., place in the AAA division and Kilpatrick (35th,, 11 :28). and (55th ), Paul Muldoon (56th). DeNuccio finished ninth In
.... ·-a berth in the finals to be John Nichols (48th, 11 :47). ad Mt'k Moad 157th) the Eastern Conftrencf; last .b: the 1--' M ..... at 18S.ft m.• •., wWle die Stardust BarraC\lda n e · ,..,.,.. --. r-held Tuesday at Cal Slate Costa Mesa was paced by '" week despite several spills of Don Sffamacber, Part RI"-. m., ts the ela-..c time Lo ·--ch , .... "':•HI ...... t-" ( ng ~ ). Ralph Dean as· the Mustang over the mudd" and wet ••--pl .. 1t 7.-1 WoOi.mtn. n 1. 1111111 0.-, '3 J
0 Interest from the 1st of any 'month on
funds r~ceived by the I 0th.
8 Interest from date of tecei~ after the
10th.
@ Interest to date of withdriwal on
funds left 3 months or longer if account
remains open until qUarter's el"ld.
5% per annum compounded daily current
rate on passbook savings. . %' 5 25 pe• oonum on 0 'mlriimurTt term occCKJnfS
• , 'in multiple~ of S 1,0'.Xl.
~to i:ld ... jt.LAt caie"" cU>tte iM.
MUTUAL SAVINGS
ANCll '-OAN AaaOC!AT10~
2867 E•st Ca.st Highw•y •Corona Del M8r, Calif. 92625
Telephone 675·5010
MM.In~ • """"*" ~ -Col!ta Mesa, the only other maestro finished tenth in >. SI . .1.n11,..w. n '· l't~t1e, 111 course at Cal State (Long
-J, SI. Jahn Iosco. 117 •. Sl>ermtnl·i~~-=--==-:=-~=~~~~~~~~~~~!lllllll~IJll~~~!~~-~ mat ~ dJe kit hllllly ca bt the land. local entrant in the AAA ll:D6. Harry Noonah (IJ :24), 1n,t111.11t:. ,,. 1. M,,., 0.1. uo 1. Beach).
¢. e, .,.. n division, placed a disappoint· Ho-ard Priest (11 :41 ), Doug fff1 v•i1n,i61 '·'-,,..,"'1""P•lmi. t:'· * * * ing ninth. . MacLean (11 :44), J'oh n 1. u.ianct. n 't 1:1 :"'1""· 11,
JIS (. COlOAAOO alVO. • nfADflU., CM.tr. II IOI
'Mercury -Ed SchatPnal;I, Cleveland, driver of the Air Crescenta Valley took lhe Olswang (11 :52), R i'c hard f.a ~':"*::i'w ~~.,:... sr;, 6.~l:; U6, RatUer Cougar, 7.50 RC. and 191 m.p.h. top honor in the AAA bracket Prielt (12:11), and Mark ?~ ,~·v,i~~. ~''lo. ~~n a~!:;
.._ and h with SO team Points . Smith (12:45) rounded out the w 11 . Coe<llea•, 2•1 12. vuulH. "t<:Jymoul.b -Schumacher, 7.38 aec. 202 m.p. . W t · 1 1 1 f 11 ed f' , h 'th l8th th '"• 11. Slddlff>I< , i .. u. N-ln • . PonUac -Lew Arrington, San Jose, Calif., drive of the es mu1s er c ose Y o ow MuslanJ llUS w1 , 45 . 1' MA ~ ..... y· b'rd 1 •• and 1-mph with 81. and Irvine League 46th. 58th, 7lst. and 16th i. c •• ..,., '-'•l!•Y. 50 2 .
UllUC.I" 1.re I • ·"" sec. "'° · · · champ Costa Mesa garnered places. wwm1nai.r. 11 1. i..1 H111r1, t! Ferd -Tommy Grove, Hayward, Calif., driver of lhe new '· eu~n11;. 1u 1. .1.1111m11r1. 1l6 188. T h e San Clemente lllar in '· RMILonds. us 1. Loer1, u1 •· ~Ch ,J Muatan1, 7.411 sec. and 198 m.p.h. ln the AA ract S' n t.he·AA rate ·was Brad Winton Lowet1, iu t. Coet• Mftt, i• 10.
o.Oodge -Charlie Alten, Glendora, Calif., driver of the Sad· --------------~--------"-"-"-""-·-"'-"~· ,_ •• _,~_•·-·-~-· --I dleback Dart, 7.80 sec. and 192 m.p.h., along with Snow,
7.ao sec. and the &-plus m.p.h. record l!peed .
.:.thevrolet -Bruce Laraon, Mechanicsburg, Pa., driver of
tile USA I Cam&ro, 7.41 aec. and tJe m.p.h .
... "American Moton -Clyde Morgan, Garden Grove, Calif.,
Javelin, 7.79 aec. and 113 m.p.h. AMC i:i: brand new in the
funny car businesl, and the best all-time marks improve
a1ploat every time out
* * * ... It's an education to 10 through the entry list for the American
!load Rice of Clwnplons. Sort of like playing "Whal'• My
Une?" without a teJevialon set . •
• ;.Largdt number fl the 337 entrants have something to do
~ U)I automobllt bullneu, or they are encineer• in nne >ftl.at!d line al work, U1t:e the aerospace industry. Many ate "'1 ........ ., * * *
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Do\ILY PILOT. !.l
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Rr., 6·pMs:, ho~ler,: omor., ftashrs. ~Al vinyl interior, duel ectiO., t~~ gale, fro~t lrm r.d, rear snl
arm rest with 1sh tray. Front .i.,.;, Uglit swit~hos: Hidden storogo, omer: 11esh•rs .. ~ilt & ;ur slit
bolts, bociuJ> r.ihts, left 9ulside , .. ; vilw-m\frM. Dual brol:ing syst~rp. B9E109'49~ '' · ' 1 ' ' • • . , ' • $7-795 . . "· . . . · J'ER MONTH FOR· 36 MoNTHS
· ON APl'RQYED CiEOIT •··
· · $495 Dn. -t. Tu& L~~orlr ...
:.OR
r ' -' ' . ' . ;)( , '
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PLUS TAX & UC.
, 69 CHRYSLER ''TOWN & COUNTRY'' Pai~nt~~
.s4495 . -
'66 CHEVROLET
STA'.!'IpN 11,'AGON. VB, ayt<t er, power steering, AIR 'CONDI··
maUc tru:us~on, radio, heat-
TIONING. llc. RUK 605. $ . 1-395
'63 DODGE GT
2 door bonltop, automaUc trans-
.. mission, radio, -heai.t;whlle side
wall tires. Lie. NYY ~83
'895
·$2'5 Dn.. ,142.11 . _.
Per Mo.~ fer H Mos.*" I•. on •11ppro...t c,,.r1t. '
... .,...--·--'-;-· ,·. I -~--1-l
'64 Pl YMOUTH
Station wagon. AutomaUc tram·
mJsSiorr; haaW', white W.11 Urea. Lie. NXT 749 . . .
01~·.~·;". •It..~ .•. _,, t.
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-~1· ,.,,. "'· .·r.;;·;-.··.~,'1~~""1·· """"I,
:··.'LA~'G:E·sr STOCK
lN SQrU~llEifN·: CALl}f 0 RNIA
0. V' 'r_n_ .. i f"' EK )'.T~··
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CASH' Or TR'ADI
DI LIV l 'R S .
A • y o f t ll • I r •,a ·411 N f• w
CARS . A .•. OVE · ·' -. .+ 'To & Li-on App....,..i·credJt .. ~ ·-. ~ ' . . ·-
...a.
. '
NEWPORT. 2 door lwdlo!!. l\i-
-dlo,-helt¢', -autOmallc~~
~o.n, _power ll)eeAl!g, at cqndJ..
tloned, whll<!'· wall lirel, lle..
TRS870
-' -.. • •
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'66 IMPERIAL '67 IMPERIAL f65 PL·YMoUJff -. . ::: ~ }85 , DOQGE
• _ • ··~. :· ,.·.1 a,1 ... ~.
~-:1~1111 ·.
Lel!aron. run complete power.
Dual air conditlonlllg. Loaded
with aD the lUXW')I exlrq, low miles. UCK049
s309s
'67 CHARGER
Automatic i.an&mJS.ion, ndlo .
and heafer, power iteenng,.elec-
trlo ·wind-. White olde>Rlla, factory 41r, i beo~tiful c;ar •. Stocl:
U.:526 088 '
~495
.... ·~·-·
!lanlttJP t<aopr, full pOl\'er, fac-
tory 'llr, '<!lettrlc windows " seats, balance of factory war-
ranty # 4458 . •
s4195
4 doOr. Automatic transmission, :~ac110, heate", white wall ttre.,
nice lllpe car. Uc. DHII 805
$AVE
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' Convertible. Rldlo, boater, auto. Polara 500,._;.do9r ~ .. fuU
maUc tnnsmiB3ion, ~ \1111ls. power, faf'!«Y alr;hctet -11,
Sbarp. Lie. MKE 622 loaded with extru .. Rf' ~53
. $1695~· ,,,
I ' -' . ,',I,.
'&4 IMPERIAl --... -
4 dOor lmdtop. All the finer JUX.
ury eppolntmeDlll Including tun ~· •\11111/F-intertOi'; and Ill COndlilonJni LI~. OPK 534 .
s.iz95 ·
f •
Radio; beater,}, ~-,A,,~
~ oow. Lie. PKK .208 .
· s91· 5·. ·. ·~
' . .. -. ' .,_.M.Q,.._ ... ,..-....-. • • '._. -,-1 ·,. . .;,i--T·.-.,r.--.:.,
•
. 96$ .. IMP~l.f~~
S~arpl P'<ilf-and ..;DlPJ•'1'· power
· lllclildlng . (~ct'oi:y ·a1r • con~q·
ing and leather intmor,PpGi881' .· '·s2···',~-
~ · UZ7
'T' • , • A ,..
Full power, electric wlnilowl A 1ea~ &1:.i;ond!U0nmc. A-nlc6·cJr at a Ti!al nl~·JiHCe:•L1c.·CSG 096.. ·:sm • ' • I ., ·' " .
. ~ "': . "":" .~ .~ ~. f!I' " fM!'llll
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Something TlW
s..-a..w.m-
...,U51i:; ~OR IALI HOUSU FOii SALi fj(IUSIS l'OllMLI ttqUlll irl* IAt. ._,., •••-Jr:I . _111C!!, 111MrJ ' ' iooo1i~U11 -lbOo
r ... > . . , '1.0CAL PlmlWtl!
Oi ClllSTA, at Hamilton It Bush-
ard in H'untln~ Beach, lDllQUncea \he pr•
'riew Ol"nin of UNtT 3. 'l1llc__ <il!"ninl ,ii for
local beloi. _adv~ Ill . the-.. u. •.•. -~'·
Beau · ~ ~ $16!41s lo tsl,'191.,... : ~ beioln in,U\'lu7 '
• ~ ~ clbiinc · roOm. 2 or S i=ba ' =&I••• Ille root, 2. oi a, car av• ' . . lj;lltlll' abullanCel, con....i& ff--
-.......,. Seleet, ~livonte plan & we will
'custom bulld'fllr7ou. Move In I')' May 1969.
I l!odela at Hamilton • Bushard.
" · IMMIDIA°iJ OCCUPANCY.II
RANCHO.,LA CU,ISTA in Huntington Beach '
bal JI nq holnei anlllbte fo.: iJlln!edlate oc-.
, cupancy =-ol cre41t rejecUoiia. S·BR. 2 ··
r-=·~ : ~ce, .•hake roof;~· ;
>I -' •
ALSO 1 inod.el home available for January
occu • . -,• --·-~
(!Ac: m~'7fao~ l!-.cl!J.
' ~A· YA a ComiontloMI ~
' CALL -.2929 ANYDAY "·~ )0 & • I a . ~ -=--=-=---'=---~"°-= .,...... CREDIT A PROBLEM? $so0 Ddwn IUY LIKE RENT 11
8'oip • -Pad .....
-"""'!. -,~ deep Anyontl __ _.....Dra,.. ____ ,,.,,. __
era~ Double Gar•1•! ...,,.._.. *vlna date "1ll,
While 8riclc FlreJ>la«• PoO toal1lce ! BR + .._ • room. Hu at:ra med Jot. Down. P __ IDJ!t Y<>IF-..,..nt blod< ...U. :II' -l $22,IOO' .llttl. Prke. -.. tlo ....... ...,:;. ~WJC-1100 _1'-' ~ .n--. _,1
.... .,{ -~·ltvlna'room.~ , ,... ........ ..,.q .•. 1Walker 'l lee ·~· ,,~
' --Open EWi. ~'°
•
Coldwell, Banker
OFRRS1 .
DoYer Shons Waterfront
Cuslom Spaniah illllin. Upotn. U.-
lng rm. W/1m bar. Muter llUile. Din-
ing rm. 2 'KWo & l!Uing rm. dm.
Pier It float .............. $129.&00
Mn. Rauktal
llayfront -.Int Usted
OPEN HOUSE 1-5
305 1von1,. Stor Lano, ~
4 BR. form/din rm. Wet bar. Pier for
large heal Just painted. Priced righl
........ ' ....••••••....•.. $84,750
Joo Clarbon .
OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN NOON 'TIL
DUSK -104 E91t Oea .. tfNtlt, NNport
Modern 3 BR, 2 Ba + lie Family Fun room .. . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . .. . $88,500
or lease -Abo lease/opt.;on
.W>lter H._
H0111e_ of Distinction
This tndltlonal rolonial la lllOll ap-
peal!ug. Each room floodC -llUD-Shine. 3 br., 2 ba., dinin&, Upemi.ve
cpt. It drps. Corner lot, treM. Bay.
crest. . .. .. .. . . . . . . . . .. . • $S2,500
Mn. MBrioo
llayshore Gem
Archllect redMllD w /lllOll modern im·
piovements, 11'!1 story. fam. rm .• Itg.
llllll8r suite up. Nice patio. $49,500 Kn. Harvey
Owner~ Will Troclell
Cllolct ~ 'llew 1ot W · flrollL run ~ i=.-t60, equity opplOY. $8,000.
awtotte Loni
W•'41 - T 1 -a Local
Ullill, Comm., or land, for 11111 'rlew
O.OU. IDJhl•nd 4 Br, 2 Ba., !ID. room
lllilie. 0.-bal purcbaaed anolh• ... ' Ka. Jfllioll
OFFICE OPBf
SATURDAYS
CO.LDwlu.. IAN U l co.
' 1e1.-1
H0UtU-Poll pALI,.. ~S!,S l'Qll "L.
....... · 11111G....... ·~ IDOi
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Y °" Clin S.I It,
Find It, Tr.do It
Wrtli a Want Ad
HOUSES FOR SALi li!)UllS ~0!'.', SALi : • • ........ -4000~ 1000
1IOISE ~VIRS .
LOOK NO MORE
JUST µsTm ~BR. 3 batlw.
lovely homt-on a half aete.
• """"' corral. 18xU """' room, individual work ahojt,
2 box atalla,. 2 covered atalla,
automatic waterlne tor 3
ocrrab:. Who:t .tint 1
$45,(109
(with ternw)
'
Newport
11
Vldorla
646-1111 -
111!!'!!!!!!1'!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I * 2.666 0..UB MESA e By OWnor e 3 BR 2 .. th -W. TLC ·
REDUCED $5,000
FOR 9UICK SALE
Owner Plll"dw.d
Anotller Hoiise
4 btdiola. s bath .......
Belboo -Pnlnl.
Cli>ot .. -.... Boot ~· .... tennll ~ ........ -Id ..... ....,, ---!nod ...... baa -patio at.o IWl deck
o!! -bedJOOm. sbo.u ptttmhly. by ,appolntinent.
T~.nnl. $58.SOO
ALSO
Bay Island
Bay ·Front HO-
l'ler &lld odlp tor Jarat boat
...... by advaJ><e appolllt-
!Mnt .onty. $125,000.
Pleuecall
Mn. ...,. ""' ·-· Bay" Beacla
. R'Nlty, Inc. .
2025 W. Be.lboa BlVd., NB
673-9200 Ent. Ml.ff66
.THE :
WHITE
HOl,ISE
THF. Q Ei\.l.
E~TATER~:
Newport Heights excellent locatlm ukinc
! BR, 2 BA, frplc, dshwr, $21,150. * 3'.l,000 IQ lt lot 1 cptg, drps, range, other ex-Birch Stre;et. County R-l
tru. Nr all schooh, lovely Asking $35,QOO. CA LL
)'/i, BBQ, room for boat GLEN Q U EE tf 540-llSl
stot. Aasurne 5% nIA. Pmt (open eves) Heritage Real
inc taxes $159 $26,950. 2315 _,,._ .. _,.=~===
Laurel J?l., N.B. 642-1719 SOCK IT TO '~!
Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
. '"" ,. .......... doff wMI ,.. ~ "'. ..... ; • p. t• .......... All tM,hclllHI Od'ell W.w
.. ~ ......... fftall .,,. ....,,...,.. ......
...... h "'49y'1 DAILY PILOT WA.HT ADL htrMI -.....,.,..11o_tN .... wre~ .. ..-
hl ... ""' .......... _ .............. PrN9f,
HOUSES FOR SALE
' ' (2 Bedroom & Fam3y or Don)
635 Hazel Drive, Corona del Mar
. ·642-1771 (Sat & SUn 1-5)
37-7 Ramona Way, Costa Meaa
642-5200
(3 Bodroarn)
2012·Barpanca, Newport Beacll
·--644-2039. . . -(Sat It Sun 1·5)
(3 Br. & Famt1yor Den)
2524 Loyola !Wad, Coota Mesa
545-4879 (Sat 10.6)
980 Presidio Dr. (Me .. de! M.'ar) CM
545-5487 (Sat & Sun 12-6)
1831 Tradewlndl Lane (llay<rest) NB
642-5200 , (Sun 1·5)
«104 East Oeeanfront, Newport Beach
675-2000 (Sat & Sun Noon 'Ill Dusk)
815 Camphor (Eastblutt) NB
_ • 540.1720 (Sat & sun 1-5)
S64 Mlra·toma, Newport Beach
6411-3255 ,. (Sat & SUn 1-5)
2031 Mesa Drive, llaclt Bay .
!!40-1720 · (Sat & Sun l·S)
(4 Beilroom) · ·
223 Haiiover Dr. (Colle1e Park) CM
54~2405 (Dally 1·5)
lQOQ Weslwirld, Do_. Sh-.
(714) 8U-8235 (Daily)
**305 Eftning star, Newport Bead!
9711-2000 · (Sat & sun 1-15)
(4 Br. & FamUy or Den)
1228 Sandpoint WflY, (Broedmoor) CdM
67$-8930 Ever. 844-237~ (Sun 1·5)
'/fl842 Santiago Dr. (Dooer Shores) NB
-846-1550 (Dally 10.S)
1719-Skylark. Newport Beach
813-9200 Eves: 1148-4810 (Sun 1·5)
2®0 Wavecre$l ll<., Corona de! Mar
.644-0()20 , (Sun 1-5)
'n6 Cameo llighlanllso Dr. (C Hlnds) CdM
('1141 642·8235 (Sat & Sun)
1324 G~uy; Di-.• Im.-~
(714). 642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
2882, Skomboli (Mesa 'jrerde) C)l
!!40-111?0 -..: i (Sun 1·5)
lilS Saritlago Drl..., R~ Beach
M&/3265 ,.,,, (SUn 1-5)
. (5 Bedroom)
287~.Coata-'
67*j850 . _ • • (Sun IU)
; ·/ (5 Br. & F.mily or Den)
116 VII' TMlle ~ llle) NB
e'fa.1919 . ~ WI> . :e-.1.lllhll-,., w. .
-~ ;.-• . ' , . (la.a-j
' --. . uio un1.....i17, Newpo.t lleacb
ff0.1'120 (Sot. &m 1.,,)
Dllplloa:• hr.SaM
_P_w-..r--·-
·eotlril, <laltlsi de! llar
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'
........ +" *' -• ¥' -+ • +-. .. • v .., ....,. ~.~, -·~P....,.•~·••~-~ .. _..,,,.,_44"0'0""0$144 .... Ul"l# ..... i"!#Pl!d$14Ct<l4""4,.0a •f"""ij4£11 "' 401"44'44"5$14Q4"¥1"14$149$14$ ... 0 ... 5""54""5i"""9P''"lf"aP""•....,•....,•....,-....,.,......,...,,.....,.,......~•.....,•.....,w""*".....,,.~w~•.--.,...+....,•,......•,......•,......•.-.+......,.,.., • .....,,......,.~=.,...•~·
..,. DAILY "'-OT F .... Nc1 ' 22, 1968 • ~ _,~ur-1 MiJiQtMl)ii1 £'Olt M!liCHAHDttf POil MllCHANDISll' l'Ot• MlllCHA!IOISl:POR .-MUCHAHDlll l'Olt -______________ ...,, ______ aojt
SALi AHO TUDI SALi AND TllAD~ SALi ANO TUDI IAl.1 AND TllADI .1.'LI AND TllADI - -7400 -"'"'~ IOOOl'umltur• IOOO T•l•vt--nos
~ lllNTTV •10 "I '".Ill ' No--rn.-.., -~ • Sp••htli " ·': . -IM-'lll • m.1110
Old World •s _112 _. Medlt•1TC1119" "' -· a H1.F1 a SlefM 121.0
• llOS1US
l'ART TIMI
OoM 0,,•rtw.lty
N111t ha..,. sood: ..-IVIOt
loutht Menufecturer'o -room'S•mpfoi SJB Au-IOI -llt<oo. Mediterra~ At Terrific Savinp) 2 , .. ....,.. ....., u~ ... Spanish Furniture 8' Wood carved arm divan, !J. miii•r' ~~; oartrldan, im. 1nota11«1
beaut fabrica. 5 Pc hexaron dark Oak din. ~lllO-=G4=0lll~•=~=~ APPLY IN PEftSON
I • 5 P.M. DAU.Y Recel...t c1n~ll1tion of $22,000.00 aet, w/black or avocado !ramed chairs; 5 Pc SUPER HEAVY HEAVY
Spainlth and MecllNr..-nun Purnltu,.. BR aeL 9-dr Mr. &: Mn. dreuer, le mirror, hit.a L.PL ~·!!!.record coll.
S!IClck 5"op No. 1
230S •• c...t Hwy.
C-•t Mor, C.I.
All N .. ,., .....,,. .._. "... 2 commodes, decoraUve headboard in Span-lOc • n .••. ~ · 1
Item! II °{Z';;-a:;;::: :'TL' custom Uh oak or IV'1Cado desi&n. rr;~~V:Jh.S ~tR ~d: -quilted sofa wilh separate looseJllJows with Items Sold Individually IJOO. 840-2531 oft ' pm.
h -• trim d d t hair 3 S)lop Around-before you buy see USI euy -ecor an ma c nc c ' VALUE $1f5-FULL PRICI! u29,95 mal<blng oak ocaaional tables, (2) 68" tall ... deoorator limps, hanjlng chain swag lampo "' t.rmt • low " $3.00 -k
in wroligbt iron, an a piece kin& alze muter No Down-Use Our Sto"' Charge Plan SICllETAllY· bedroom aulte in pecan panelled Medlterran-No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Valuea Inside Mustlli!c;!:~:!!_.,.._ eon style wilh top quality ts yr. warranty APl'ROVED FURNITURE To-•......_ Some_.. .ldo& 11u mattress & box springs. Spanish 2159 HARBOit COSTA MESA
t.nc1. • typkrc. s 41.Y week. d~ din.ina aet. etc. 12 Years nme locatlon-aame-ownen
~Jll to 5:• New air COlldi. WWI' ""9lhl ._ ....... S1UtM ~ Dally t.f ~::-*E ::~:~~I~~~----... $698.00 Su~~~~ N.-....,,Qar, hie. -Any Piece COii le Purchawl lntllvklvally ' r Har>or-.. Cm1a-. T....., aAvoll•ble -Nowc-. t. C11il.
.sitTiR waattd, m1 home.
2 to 10 PM, Mon thru Fri.
Call ~ I AM to noon,
rMll Approved lmmedl•lely
Mutical lnot. 1125' Pl..,...& Or;;ens 1130 Mlocellan-8600 l"""I'"" l ' FENDERteJeca1t~J Fl.E12LJS.TfJRKEY An.AS 1/24-1132 sclle slot Furn ture BaldwSft portab1e oqu .. with-t;very pta.no or Of'll.n racing. u..ck. Include I
Jobi • Mol\. w-. 7500 . Mutt tt!L Mm ofter, purehued befin ThanQ. ~di Monza bult:~ wall,
A H b Bl d -· 11v1.g .~ • ms ocal• '""
POU CE
DISPATCHER
$6»-$7$4 ,... .....
t ar or v . FENDER ""'""'"'"" _, GIGANTIC SALE! ... "'"" ...... Lap ...... reverb un.li, Stratocutu Floor moddl, rent retwm, oI a.bout 50 ft. M1tC 2-a.mp 1844 Newport llvd. Costa Mesa only """'· .-• ....,., ...., .. ...., dlacounl pow" "'"' ean ...
Every nltht 'tll 9 -Wed., Sit. & Sun. 'tll 6. c::LARIM!:T. Gcod condition modd&. alligator clip Ccommerclal O.qalll. 550, ~ ~ from • . • • . • . . • • $50. raceway) CObtrollers. WW
2 Manuala, COl'\bes, dx>tda, 9ell sepan.teQo. Mab Offer!
CITY OF
NIWl'ORT BEACH 8000 G S'I I022 Pl1nos A Ortans 1130 Hammond 4 """"' ......,,.. furniture · ar1p • • PWm from .......... $1T5 ---------11
MUST • .ii-.'"' T••te, GARAGE SALE' 1.arp""' •·PIANO SALi • G ....... ....-. "'"""' Chrisrmas Gifts? Pemwmrt. 1'111 time poli-& chain, b.dfet, high boy. water ..-hee:l 2 mont)' t.arrest tel~tlon ot fine re-. ·~ uprlshll. ll Ditter-For tboce 1rieodl and. rela·
tion u emeraeney equip-Hand CUYed maboptay Ii chan,-et"a l atrapa. NN conditioned sn,nda. ent rnak~. Save $ S S on tivea '°bard to pleue TR\'
rMnt dWPl~ b' . 0tJ walnut ~ burl imetL vmWator .tan. Daniab sofa. SAVI $ $ $ NOWI your Holiday pw"ChtM. a gjtt frorn
Pollcetwo ~~ ~ Abo metw &: 2 matclrlnc Walnut bu.Matern It y, Lay-.·w1y for Xm«iia Lay Away Available TREASURES Of 1~-~ _Hi•: ~· chairs. 2lU Len>ard Lane, dilldrera, &: ladies clothe1. delivery Tenns up to 4 )'t!an ALI ·IAIA e:xpe:rM~. H I h School NB. Sat I: sw.. Baby acceuorin:. Tables, No payments till Feb. OpeS:,:-on. Uk ion:· Eves. Ml9 Via Oporto, N.B. ~~a:t~ SALE! Household ~~2:st!:: ~~Musltu ~ONPp.m. Opent~~7:~s
3300 Newpcd, Blvd., New-~ n!..rinp~..:t table I.I.mp, red clay plpe1 ~· C in t'OR.ONA DEL MAR
port -Calli. by 5 · ' ' w (4" x 12"), ''" _, 1139 u-port lllvcl, CM ,.,. E. Cout HWy., ro-8930 * AUCTION * be.d·room 1et, Club ~ ~ Frldf.)r, Novembl!r Allltl\lnuni, many otben. =b:tor COi= rw~ 646·0271
1.:.:-'-·-------1·1111 c Bedrord Ul, NB boual!:hold u~. SAT a: 114 s. ii Camino Reil 642-200& SUN. m Costa Meaa St. Sin CS.rnente CANVASSlllS
I
SOLICITORS
I LADDDI back -· llke C.M. LI a-ons 492-4642
N!IW. $110. Good din.hw .ttil. ....., __ .. ~... .,_ H ~ -~==~===~
MOVING
! ! SALE !!
U )'G'J •W HU t6 bU1
atve Wtndy a try
AuctioM Friday 1:30 p.m.
Windy's Auction Born
Beblod Tony11 BldJ:, Mat'l
:m51Ai Nnf?'rt, CM 6f6..8686 · 12s. l '"'"l.Y matching din· ;;;;,. ""; ~ N~ s:;_ LOWREY ORGANS
h>& dn. ·Gll'11 wblte dte:s. Shutteri, carpetl, ~" Round See and hear the exdfin& We're movina; to lUEer quar-35 MM KODAK S:!anet 50
'•rt& Full Time lni lbl or dellk w/mlm>r. table 4 <Dain eota {nellda ~wlOliditatemodels.Hear ters and we h.l'Ve: a lot of camua, ranp finder, telf·
Laguna. Mlal»n VW:~ 8an &0-4917. ~), doub1e: bed the new automatic orchestra Pianos and 0~1 we don't timer, lllten, tripod, alide
Qemmt ~ Sal&l')' and MUS? Sell c.mplete liv. nn head b 0 a rd, combination control. .,,,,,,, wow &nd want to ltMl'Ve. Some are sorter, trays, 40 x 40 1Cn:eo,
conunlulon. aet. Good quality rattan-11 atlwe &: nrfta, latnp1, rythm leclion. Also ~ u.ed: IOme demos; IOme projector w/carryiria: cue.
UNIVl:RSAL POOL 00. pcs, allO diD.. at. can 1eat Nor!take Odna, life hbtory Hammond orpn, $26S. Open repos; aome dllcontinued Like new $100. M6-UD6
12225 Harbor mvd. 12, !1 chalra, buffet &: of the U.S. (12 Vol'1-), JU SundlJI'. models· and all have been 2l" CONSOLE T.V. $35
Garden Grove 636-CDOO matcbin& aheU. 213-44'1~ record ehana:er l misc Coast Music drutlcally dilcounted to atll Hammond e:lec ehotd Ol"l&n No b--"ence att g 21.M(l..000 item1 . Ml tmrnedLately! You must not S300 ak olf 24 I'""" 8.~.~SO"""F"A--,....,.toh"''"1ng""'s"'· "'"''.".:: * 6t6.&xt or &U-llll .. 114 S. 11 Cimino 1t miY tb1a rtall.Y spectacular 3 -~. m ~li.h"·.,.·,· ~ N~U11aryl ' ma ft Sin Clemeftf'9 &ale. Bu.v with nO money -"""06 --aeat, Blue fltnl. $140. White GARAGE SALE 492 4642 down 0 .A.C. l S years to 615-2022 449 Seawani Rd., Must have deen Callfornla O'Kede 4 Merritt blt·ln FRI .. SAT * SUN .. C.D.M.
driv\na record. Appl)' lto'fe top A: oven SSO. November 22, 23 6: 24 1 .......................... :8.Jin·s BALDWIN SIUDIO 1 "e~MAN=-.s~dl-..,-..,-.. ---. -190-
YILLC)W CAI CO. 6"-1.530 att 5 PM Oriiinal handcrafted 1tem1 H•ml!'M)D!i Spinet oraan 1801 Newport, CM., M2-MB4 pta, 2 almo1t new wedditi&
1BS E. 16ta SL 'IWIN 6' I" Olvan, Oriti:. a: wall haJ:iclnp. UilUIUal w/pm:allioD, nverb A Open Sunday afternoons 1ets w/unusual mountiqs,
, o.ta·M'-down. Modern formic a O\riatm&I ideu. WW abo _repnt. Save S225.. Woman's 11 kt IOltd a;old
MIDDLE Apel experienced dinett.t .et. 4 swi'fel din, take ordul. Used spinet piano, $395. •SPECIALS nus WEEKe watcfl & bracelet. Best of·
OCJQll2e to m1A11e 40 unlbl 2 anUque white end tbls, 7fl8 Allerheny Ave, CM SCHMJDT..PfflUJPS CO. H&mrnoOO/ctud ar:Ran •• fcrs. Call 642-8589
in H.B. Hwband mut be mirror como1e: iet. 842-§866 INr Soulb Coast Plua) 1901 N. Mafn • 20th ••••••••· •· ...... only 1195 Encyclopedia Brlt1nnlc1
bandy man. 1'rH apt plul LEAVD'fG Cameo Shott• 54M038 Santa Ana Baldwin Ora:uonic only $595 24 Voi A Bookca.e w/ year
salary. HUlband ma.Y WCll"k. mun aell GoYUl'IOI' Wln-GARAGE SALE I~"'"!'!!'"'"!"''""'""'""'"' I OONN BARGAINS books. 1963 thru 1968. Evea
J13-l21..l8'JI tbrop R<:ttt.ar)' desk, Movtna: m111t sell lots o1 UPRIGHT PLlno, re«nUy Caprlee, wal demo ave $200 6'4-0628
OOUPLE for Judtol1al work gold lrmd mirror, antique ttrlnp. Toys. clothe•. beds reconditioned A tuned. $225. Minuet, lP demo • ave i400 l===~~-~--
S hours per eve each. Hntg buttet. twn bed.a. 613-2479 -etC. Almost new, brlnc 494--1632 after 2: 30 Rha.Jt90dy, 25 ped, like new ~. U ~~!• t n:e
Beacb lf'H.. Cal 962-2147 Quality Klna:.Slze Bed, money & come early! Ill M 0 VIN G , Mu 1 t s e 11 • • • • • ·' • · ·• .. •• .. • ·"' "395 turkey I! low low price on
alt 4 pm SUn. or anyt:inte bH.utlful quilted mattress. The mutts • 404 Carlotta. WarUb:er 1plntt, ebony; like Abet Wurlitur p1anol &: or· your uphol. IOfa. Europeaa
!hru wl<. oplit foundalion, bit-in N.B. Start!: 10 AM Sat. W new cond. $GI. 87S:..280& p.111 .......... from $529 Ctatu ........... i ... &G-1454 23 I-========= I VWt .. _._,... frame. NC!Yer uaed . $98. -·--~=~=~ 1-Go Id M • C H ME BU' A: atoo1a, M'W A,.ndeo, -I Worth $250. "2-RELAX-A-CIZOR llSO; oil FREE TO YOU u .. .:;: ~?,'P'"Y . Polbher 4 .....,. 2'IJO
Women 7550 4 prf.X2: RCtkml daven-pa.mttnp $25 ~•·· addin& 2(M5 N. Main. s..nta Ana .ideal for ~.
ARGUS AGENCIES port. Forelt ll'ffll tuxedo mach., elec., $10; Rattu LABRADOR, 1 yr o Id· So. ti! Free..,.v M7.(l681 -1: ="'='""''":;,::l&S:::;,· 6U-<ll'l9::;,_:;;0-=-c · ' DR 4 LR Om>. wla $l5; t·--•·, --~. "'°"· li<. .. _ ~
W --L ... _ u--... .1... no N!P< needed. .,, .. ,_ .__,..... Mon & Fri eves 'W 9 CONTOUR ~-~ •K End vr. ,_1r ..-.-n9 :;:!.'"',,:._,, J~. W/W 1 sun; JaUl,J V•..., obedient R&iaed with .........-......,. ~ G.W""UIW"' -a........... -1 Sunday 12 to 5 table ns. Table lamp $6. Asst Project ~ •. ·• ....... other items. ....,L U«.J'"""" cats & am all c b 11 d . 1 '"""'""'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' Audlttr (CPA) •••••• ilD,000 YOUNG coaple IOOll to wed Dr., CdM &H--1396 llJ23 I . 0""' ~us ~ .. ~oor953 cushions $3 all.
Acctl Rec m Trn •••• $3911 need fumllure ti all ~· n.u.,.., ~ 18S9C Newport Blvd. u )'00 have any to a:i•e CONTINUOUS Garqe Sale: MOM'S Done it qain! 4 PIANoS
ea.ta Mua 5t8-TI96 sway, please call ~ Norelco shaver, Dew: CkUt t boJ. Mom Daiatr e Pllyer Pianot 10 x 12' GREEN nylon
carpetitl& W/pad. New con.
dltion . $1.50 sq. yd. 536-JQ'i5 '-=========\ RotcrBroil, JC&I mower, ckic..Dad fellow next' door. LARGE31' SELECTION OF I• SPANISH da and love lftL clothes & ml«!. Excellent wUb dllld'rMc 5 , NEW l l1SED School•lnttructlon 7600 Same a.a ft@W $165. Single 2958 Milbro C.M. .54Ml53 we.al> ... -U .~ 11125 WAWCHS MUSIC CITY mattrela le boa sprinp $20. '""{"'I ~ ...... ..,,_,_,i., . lmpr..,. your Income ~ -SA VE Olll' ~a. 2 nice c1tJ, MOO _.awi., C.M. ~3165
PUMP, NP"W 2% hp cent.
Self prime w/?JJ' auc. hose.
$110. 536-3665 by tmpravl"I your Appll1nc" 1100 1 on.nae. male, 1 gray 7' BALDWIN Grand Piano
typlntl Offie9 Equipment I0_1_1 Kenmore washer a: ps ~~~ il~~·st&-~ in xln.t67~T8 $2,!XK>. ~=;:1~· d=1, ri::: Varlet)' ol new dectric type. vr 6'(2...4610
wrltl!nl are avallab}e. ~· 8 UR R 0 UGHS J -1. O O dryar. or 496-1385 11/22 FOR SALE: Hamm 0 n d =-c--c-;---..,,-,-=
time or evenin&, by the Caku1ator and multipher. Very good condition. i--ts. CATS. Have lhota: 1 ttnUd chord qan, $350. Phone GE alectrlc ranae. Good. $25.
week or month. Neu new. $4CO Yalue, uk· eacb. 847-81.15 very vivid calico, 1 blue 962-2193 F1oor furnace 100,000 BTU
NEWPORT inc $180 ar belt.. 675--2968 AUTOMATIC kt; maker! boy, 5 mo'S old, smoke --------$25. 646-4043 .
School of lutlMss aft 1 pm. Servel R.dri&:erator. $50. Persian.. Free to good
m Dovt"r or .. N.B. ADDltESSOGRAPHS Worth far more. 6T3-9319 home. 545-0076 11/23 _T_el_e_•l_1_lo_n ____ a_2_0_5 %. NATURAL Ranch Mink
Coat. $150, Ca.sh!
f.46.0153 Reconditioned hand Ir elec. HOOVER walher, apt slze, ORGANIC Fartilber, a~d e USED TV's from $29.99
QIRlSl'MAS aUt, t)ipewtlt· models w I contracta (1) llke t1tw, ttiUlar $169. Sac. horse manurt ccmbined Lge 1election at Newporter SCHWINN Stinp'ay 2 speed
549-3219
1...,.. Qlldren, pudchll· 771-QOO for $100. 540-2947 v.ith wood abavlnp. Good TV, 2027 Harbor Bl, C.M. w/sprln11.: ,fork. Exceilent
~ )ICUtaelf' lndtvidu-8022 FRIGIDAIRE tr o st.tree mulch. ~ betwHn 8 & GG-1672 Sales l SerT. condition $40. 8J3...102'2
ally ·n:n!d Olil~t 10 let-Giripe Sale retrlg., cros1-top free.er; 5 Mon thru Fri. 11130 17" R.C.A. portable TV . Nice VIENNA Regulator aoda
e.m typllJ& acbool. 113 Dd GARAGE Sale: 1 ilQff&ble good cond. f15. &12-6396 GD. Uttle f@m. dos . 1 yr. loo~. Good picture $35. Men's wits t+f. long) Mlsc.
Mar, Ol, $&.28!i9 TV $2S. 2 rebi&enton $1l G.E. Refrigerator, xlnt cond. -all 1hota: &: license very 842-2342 143 Walnut St. (eut C.M.)
CZ YOKSKI 'S Custom A 1. Blonde wi&: UJ. iWf 3 yrs old Large freezer. •mart. does tricks
upbolstery a ch oo1 . eon. beda. tumitun l many noo. 673-3133 aft. 6 548-4152 llJ~ Fumlture toOOFurnltur. IOOO
t1ftQDUI dauea. o..,.' ETe . otber ittmL Fd-&t l Sun. 2 OLDER male kittens. mUlt ~==~=============i~ll 1131 Newport Blvd., C.M. ml Santa Ana A•e. CM. Antiques 1110 find new home. 1 very J.
M2..J45( 6t6-MfiO FOR Cllristmu j playful, l IOYtl !ape:, train-
Nols• •o• s ALE ! H 0 u I eh 0 Id we uat ed. M5-508'l ll/wl M ~Rc.;HA .,. r received a lute amount: l="""'='"==-~-',--SALI AND TltADI Fur nlahinp. 'l')tpewriter, O:it pua, Sllvtr, P\ou-btue, "DAISY-TYPE'' male do&, 1-"'-'=-'""=-----'-'-I sofa. dWr, dilbn, walnut art ala:A. ~ a;tua, med. plOCll~mix; I n>OI.·
fumltur• 1000 bedroom aet, Clu b brau l ~r. 50 pitcher old, nutty 1:: play ful . 1-----.;.,-"------I Aluminwn, many otbtta. l bowl sets, 15 •uiar 54i-558S
SC RAM-LE JS Ull c """""' "'· NB ahak•,., 125 dock" "'d KI"'=11=EN"'s"".-,--h-, •""t"'t.,..h-y-,&
642-6(0; M'UQ{ MORE! + Hiie flci.le11. t all t:>lk {fiutty)
ANSWERS NEW Jeather aoocts. aandals, aelectlon o( furniture. l &'A!Y (fiutt:y) 646-238811125
JU'll!S, wallets, bar act'e&· LARRY M 0 R G AN AN· SM Rubber tree, ta. a,pricot belt&, etc. Alao mi9cl & 'MQUES "-·· -Uner -~ _ •• _ ..... It-· •-~-t Dr, , N tree lmuat moT• Unmtd.} ...... ..,. _.. .._... ~ ~ u.,--• .428 ewport Blvd. CM .. ,_ "~• -111-~ -rntq,HTJ:N H.B. &n-6U2. Sat I: b . 548-l3Sl you ..,.. ~ .w
illr, -oaco al<!: DABY Gnod -,,_, A a~ P'REE'!IJ I foot yu«:a ""'·: '"l'r7 ul!'ki-• ~~ Ho•11hold "-'-"'~/ ntlqU91 .... ,.,.....IM You di& and tote .
""" n ..-n.1un .. L<~ ~ .. ._..... Ice cream dm.ln, Oll'&n. '62--065T ll/25 I .............. __ .. ~! 'ro8-Sun· .,P41 braA b@da. butcher'a Mock,
111n " ,..... Plua del Sur ~ MALE Potnter 16 monlhl 1"ro=iliil&~--..... ~--,..~,,-,-." tn-tm ' ' hall sear.. prlmittvea. shot&. licensed and trained. ~ ·chin. lllal:tfdr.-MCWJNG, C011tinUOG1 rarq:e '2624 =P~vd ... Cll ~ ll/25 -~'*Ina-UM iteWl ...._ Ho.ebokt l t em 1, VAsr stock Amer • !'Ar 2 KITttNs-8 we:ekg. 1 male
,._., dotbet. '°"" l1ll Bo!Ma fW'n l clocb. La r r "I blactc, 1 female calk.'o.
80LlQ ...... ™ .... Wq, C.M. Morsan ADtiqw. 2 4 21 TMined.. 642-6365 11123 coat?~· ,Maple f ll O D I GREDf ~ bi4t-a-Ntwpart Blvd., QI. TREE to l'OCld home, l wil;
...al. 1£1/All. u -°' lied.-. -..... ...... old omall-"" SfiiE6 ~ W que de& M*:. m.6lll aft API' · •• ...,.,., talr ~ * 191 lJal * 11121
dltlon, 125. -..... ,~==-·=-'-=""""" .., '*ell. a.. e1a1 to. s::m g p.m. UJVABl..£ t mo·• old female
r JllWCh,. ms. 5'M-"21 ~. Mqy o t l Da<hlhw'ld f'ree to home
I WAUlllf _,. ........ --· Sewi"I Medilw 1120 w!O. chlldm\ -1llrl
--· Ptl ior -)floe. ll-4 "'°' lbnl Sun I YR. old su..t ........ -.,,.-m.oitt• •DAlo,OI 1967 SINOEft. com1 wfthchlktren.H&dabflt&
CHES!' ftl ...... noll)' GARAGE Ilk. Mile Jf2m.I ;~al~e~Au:. 847~ 11/23
•1111«1' •lmlr • ....... l'ri • &an. $f5 IrWHI Ave. zJa-zq:, t~tlc, but· '1 WJt. o Id ~ ...U· emir. Al ra -.W 1'.8, ~ , ton h 0 1 ~., bllftd hema, mb:-bt'etd. Ve(J' playf\tl. To AHTJdUi ,..,,... +ailJe, GAJl4GJ! IWr. Ev~ OYtttuta wfibout 11taeh. rood homes. &t6-tOO U/2'2
Jbit cand· JIM Got .....,. 317 Jla:t Auumc $.1.IT mo. or '37311 3 FLUFFY ~ kltten1 llJ._j I . St.~-c.,,,. Cloli ,,._..., ..,.-11122
· · · PUBLIC NOTICE
· · · · · '$6~.ot50 · i,; · furnit'ui~ inventory
must ·be sold immodiat.ly.
Wholesale ~ Public
Many styles to choose from including
Medltetranean, Contemporary and
Modern.
STOCK INCLUDES • • • •
Dinin9 Room Sets
Livio9 Room Sets
Bedroom Sets
Lamps
AJ.L MAJOR BRANDS
RICK BALDINO'S
MOBILE WORLD
t9•32 Beach Bl. H.B.
•36 S. Harbor 81. SJ.
962-1377
531-8770
I'm. The Kind Of
Woman Who Gets
What She Wants
• ... ••• ·-.......... -·
••• Because I'm The
Kind Of Woman
Whoas Smart Enough To
Use DAILY PILOT
Classified Advertising
a.riff. me, there's nothirKJ •rourtd our l1ome 1nymort
th.et isn't beinq used -btc1UM the minute I discover
som1thin9 is no Jon91r ndded, I sel it, whil1 it still
has moximum value, through •n inoxpan~n DAILY PILOT
Classified Ad. That w1y, instead of • clutter of things
W• don't UIO, I h .. 1 the extra cosh thot lets me hive the
newer thin9s •.• the "ertr1" #iin9s my whole family
enjoys. Here's whit I me1n.
The c1sh I got for the good clothes •nd t•ys the ch~dr•n
h•d outgrown bought me the decoretor limp I'd boon
wanting. The musi"I instrum1nt no one played paid for 1
big port of o"' portable stereo unit. The power tools
redecorated our d1u9lnr'1 room. And, just for th1 fun
of it, the good choir th1t just didn't m•tch onything
anymoro toof my husb•nd.1nd me out for a f•bulous
/inner at ttte f1nciest rest1ur1nt in town.
Se through yOUt' home. Mtke 1 r.st of .n the worthwhile
things you ~nd tho! >rlft't bei119 used. (You'R be surprised
1t the number you fum up the first timo.) Then, di1I
M2-5671 •ny time betwoen I 1.m. •nd S p.m. •nd
giYe y<1ur fist lo • frieodly, nporlenced Ad Writer. Th•t's
el the .. is lo it. It's inexpensive tool It can coot you 11 little
u PENNIES A DA YI
Wei, -thlt you lnow my seuet -isn'I it time you
got st1rlod tow.rd Mtlor, Msier, hoppior &Ying with
DAILY PILOT Clwified Ads? St•rt b_eing the lind
ef .......,. who gltl wMt she wants tod1yl
•
. ._ .
CALL NOW
642-:i6'18
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•
ME llCHANDISI FOii
SALE AN D TllADI
Ml-ll•nMill NGO
AUCTION
1700 S11lbo1t1 ,BRAND NEW
*YAMAHAS*
HARBOR DRIVE I~
SWAP MEET
Every Sit & Sun
Comer of Harbor Blvd
.A: McFadden, knta Ana
531-1272 oft 7
12,000 l.B Capacity
aluminum frame tra.iler.
Make offer. Pallot jack
repo, like Dew, $ 2 6 0 .
Forkllft.. C1a.rk 3000 lb, $8.:iO.
(TI4) m.2691, eves 897-243.1
FQRlQ.JTI'; 2,(XX) lb Clark
pneu., rebuilt. $1750. (Il4)
m.2691, eves 891-2433
PETS and LIVESTOCK
Pets, ~n•r•I 8800 MUST Sacrifice! Le.....-klg
State. "Viscoonl" mewing MYNAH btrd in cage, great machlne, aJmoat new, wtattacbm~ $30. A big Cbrl.!tmas pet. $35.
s ft x 6 ft pie bookcase, -=::::::::*::::::"::'::-'"'1::::::::*::::::::::::::
GLADIATOR 24-We lliles,
bow pulpit. radio tcl@ph.,
motor, anchor, bead, com·
pus, plley, motor we)l,
lpeC.i.al wenches, l l t e
jackets, main, jib I: g;enoa.
~. A RN! Buy! • $50.
546-1782
t'OLUMB!A 29 "Querida" OVER COST
·wants 3rd partner. Sha?p!
-Many '"""· ,,., •. HERB FRIEDLANDER
~ey, encl ht:ad, aux, 9625 G1rden Grove BIYd. $.4,000 .See Balboa Marina.
642-3295 '67 TRIUMPH
BONNEVULE
RACING Sabot. Re.li.nlsbed. 120 ET; xlnt cond. Low A-1 Condition. 673-8593 mile, $800. 536-9935
Metro Mite, cu.1tom camper,
reblt encme. $750. 646-0737
Dune Buggies-
CHANGED mind. N e v.•
Safari type ~Y and hood
• metal !lake. $200 • cost
$235. 646-3718
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 838-1100
~Beach Blvd., W,atmnstr
L 1 g ht NICEST C~RS
brown, beiie int., AMtFM IN ORANGE COUNTY
n<Uo, ,,..,., .... rtng. powr 1965 Toyota
brakes, auto elec. •WU'OOf. Pi k U 90 h 30 ~96 534-2284 (1) c p. .p. . m.p.a:. im.Mst. or Will cany up to 1 ton. 4
·======== ;;:=;;-;;;=-==-=~7 1-....... Aboo!utely Im· Imported Autos 9600 '58 MB ?m S Sedan. 81.lnroot. maculate. The bot one. lJc.
-'---------Near cluaic. New tires, PIR09'J, e Spot Cub tor Imports paint, upbollltery. F.ngine
We pay more foe any import overhauled. Excellelt con •
reprdleu of year, make dition. 836-3234 w k d a y s .
$1295 '
ELMORE or condition. Try 111 before ='~73-43'13=="'='-· ~~~~ you aelL ELM (IRE EXCEPTIONAL '65 M.B. 190 MOTORS
MOTORS, 15300 Beach mvd. 9dn. B1k. w/blk. ltbr. int. TOYOTA
Westminster. 8:9t-3322. Buckels. Low Mi. Nu tire.11. Ph. 839-1200
ALFA ·ROMEO 644-2730 15300 Beach Blvd., Watmmtr
cost $1.20. W sell for $45. -
281 H ~t Mar. Od. w-BS84 Dogs 8125 S~A~CRIFI==CE~O~\y~m-pi~o~d-u-s I '&6 SUZUKI 150 xlnt cond.
Finn, tniler, cover; like 2,000 . mi, Dirt or St. 3 '63 ALfO Romeo SpyderJ
1962 190 SL Red Roadster.
Convertible. ~. caII
524-2888 afttt t PM. TOYOTA Doberm•n P lnscher n~. $850. 646--25Tf Sptocketa $300. S75-588l xlllt mech cond., $900. 3101 MERCEDF.S Benz 11162 220
Pups 25' TRI, 2 yr o 1 d alp. t ·:ile~.0~1 ~:rt!; 3'1001350 Loren Lane, Coeta Mesa SE Convert. New Pirelli We Hive 'Em AUi
AKC Will hold until Olli.st· Hd. galley, Very sharp? or oiler. 968-l226 --========I tires. Xlnt cond. 646-559t SEE US lST OR LAST
KNITTED FABRICS
"'FOR SALE
Mill mas. Phont 540.3076 Many """'• (213) 439-1468 -BUT SEE US!! Remnant!, &leli &. . ALPINE ··•· •·t ~ ... 8 to 2 GREAT Dane pu-• AKC. t'OLm~lA 5 5 •· ... '61 TOHATSU SS, 1500 mild MG cd l cs...-o3ll • vmr a.m. ... 'v&TU> · me..,r -$110. Xlnt value. Ca 11 tflll a1n: I
p.m. 929 &Mr, OD1ta Mesa. 'Ibe Apoll() of: dogs. Wann cond. Priced Rlabt! 1!l2-C4l 646-3192 'GO SUNB ~' UUWI
QUALITY hlnl size bed I: [rlm:lly. Deposit w/hold or (213) 799-0ZZS • I"'"""=""'°"""''"""--,-="° EAM A41iM, 2 MG
w/beauWUlly quilted mat· tUI Orisbnu. Show pro. '63 HONDA 250 Scrambler. =iti~~ P~t ~u~ WORTS
tress, imlit foundation. bltn spects av•.i!. ITI4> m-9395 Power Cruisers 9020 Rebuilt. engine. nems tune ·
frame. -r Never used .$98. MINIAroRE s c b n au z er '-""-'-'--'·-"=""---'-, ._•P~ll_l>_._5'6-_9544____ 962-2872 S1l11, Service, P1rtt ·
Worth $250 842-6536 AKC 3 mos. old, thota. 32' DIESEL Grand Banks •67 HONDA 160 Scrambler, Complete new MG inventory 1966 Harbor, c.M.. 646-9303
GIEGER coonter, J!l)Od con· Allero prevents ktepina: ~.~~r. ~J~1!.I e ~I Y 2600 miles. $315. CORTINA See the new AU&tln America TOYOTA
dltlon S35. Portable sewing _Sl!i0_._53&-8348~=~=-~ ~"'t'~ u• ar. • 540-2947 • ----------------.,.-1 Here Now!
machine, nttd adjustment REGISTERED Male 646-4633 8 to 4:30. Week '65 SUZUKI SS cc. $135.. Lo EliGUSiiFOiii
$15. Boat parta and equip-Shorthaired Pointer. 10 "'d"""=· -,,..,-,.-=~:-oc-1 mileage. A·l cood. After I ment. 54~ weeks old. Adult. Shots. QUICK Sale! 21' }1yin& pm call 546-4355 Compl•t• i•l•1 • S•rvlc•.
HEADQUARTERS
ELMORE Bargain! 548--5315 Brldre 150 HP Mm:rui9et, 100 mph, 32 mi. p•r ,.1.
POOL TABLES, tennis tbls, 110 8' dl.-Mo .._,,_ I • HON DA • f11U fi~• p•11. 1ph. 1tyllnt lS300 Beach mvd., w-poker tbl&, exerclsin& equip. AKC Min Schnauzer puppies. · .. ..,..,., "....,,~. ow · CORTINA ''"Pbone SK-3322
J1rtuµort
]l111por1 ~,
at discount prices. Call Champ bklod line~. Ready hr.. $2600. Sllp available. 3100 W. C.ua1t Hwy.
W.U..e '38--03U aft. 12 now ., will hold 'til 540-ll8ll d"Y•· 540-95M ,..,. MINI BIKES DI•. Z.Do0< Newo<>rt Beocb NICEST CARS
LIKE new-Jig ,.~ Atlu Clu'bbnu. 1125. 141-082 S--'-•kl Boots 9030 $1883 "2-!M05 . 54{).176< IN ORANGE COUNTY
J4" complete W./1t&.nd ·GERMAN tbo.t h aired ,..._.-... lt6t 'to' OR '6i' ·Authorized MG Dealer '66 ·Toy_._ -t• • IMMIDIATI DILIYl!RY VIV
craftsman Planer 4 'com-Pointer Puppies. Oa~n 1965 -15' HAVOC SKI BOAT * $239 * Ov•r so 2 Ori., 4 Dn .. GT'i NICEST CARS Sport sedan, dark a:reen or
plete w/1tand $45. ~ stock. 6 weeks. 962-3152 Men.icrr 1000. jwt had ma· HE·RB FRIEDLANDER in 1tock. FYUy •utom•tic or IN ORANGE COUNTY' canary ytllow. 80 h.p., :.i
•m_ HOLSTERING -11•.50J 2 MINATURE D a c b I h u d jor tune.ft~ Brand new "·1p1•d. '65 MGB mil .... 11 Room .tor ~• "f marine batt_...,, control box I !750 1• •c H I LVO HW '' T T d f ea pu ..... on. pc, (European craftsmen) pups f'ed, 8 weeKs ARC $50 ~·1 u.: · • op r• I or ,..__ the entire tamlly plus power
Free ael, de!, pickup, 215 & $TS. 96&-2'398 & cabl.e1. Contlnl!f!.tal bir; 12 llock1 So. 6 . Gro ... Fwy.I Your Present Cir ":""""petition orana-e, contraat-and economy. Thi. Ii the
Ma.In, HB "Berny" 536-6405 wheel tniler. Sacritice 'tor mg black .lnttrlor, w l re winner everyone'• talkin&
SIGNATURE Rana;e, like
new. Also mlscl . items for
aale. 198$1 Berkablre Ut,
H.B.
•••o off 1USC11 sale. 644-2862 or Aut s. · Theod R b• wbee!Ji, positively ~ .. -HorsH -540-4622 o rYltel Ote 0 tnS Lie PKM35f. Special. Only •• abOut. Uc. RSW.>111.
PRE-O!RISTMAS SIO!• 4 -tI&~FT~.~G~lu~-~r A~v~.ion;on,:;1~9&7~l;;;&;;;P~ort~s;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9;;400;; PO RD $1795 $1395
Quart.en, 5 -Ap PY•,. Coe.st Guard equip'd., 60 HP '36 FORD&: '40 FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. ELMORE ELMORE lG--bones. ~ Laguna Ca-Evinrude, elec. start mtr.; PARTS Cost• Mesa
KIRBY Vacuum Oeaner & n)'OO Rd, Laguna Beach Vanson hvy. duty trailer, 642-lD ·~Rs tta hm ta. Tak.e All in Good Shape! "VU OTO mv • v a c en ove r CUSTOM wnterti saddle. 642-1684 '36-ltrans..,1-radiator.1· ~ M RS TOYOTA =t ~~:~~~ Belt offer. Call anytime 1N·=eo~ARD=1~ou~-...-~,--,m~ 1 right .tront fender, Con~ ;~:..~ Ph. 839-DOO
· 837-9682 over pyta., bal low. U' tal kit. 1.6 inch rima & tl.rH, ___ D_A_TS_U_N ___ ··-•-a-" Blvd .• w--·tr 15300 Bee.ch Blvd., Watrnnstr KING af Ktnga Holy Bible, 1 Johnaon Se a 1 port & trlr -.,. b"-pe•. _.,. ...... .....,.,,., '""' "'' .,....,.., 7 Id Paid •.-.T ww XI.NI' for shows & p euure '" ..... • ... o;:.uu., mo. 0 · ..,.. d! ~ •• ~ ho • 675-""'1 drlve ...... clutch. '67 DATSUN
sell for $35 or best otter. ri n2; 'n "" ...... ""' rse =====~-~ ·-• o~ t Call ~70t7 1,ii Arabian. $500. 675-5792 14' n..EETFORM el.asa bolt, '40 Ford flath!ad motor, ..,.,..an, au o trans, Jill'ie en· TRIUtAPH
I,-,=,,_=-,.,.--=.--. . 2 GELDINGS 4 & 5 yrs, 35 hp Johnaoa. Sacrif. distributor, a:enerator, st.art· a:ine. Xlnt gas mileqe. Thia
1.ADIES P11tinurn Dlamond 646-5421 or 642-0416 er & starter solenoid-both car WU driven by just me NICEST CARS Lorwfne watch wt 2 roW with all eqipment new, 1 . Hood k misc. other owner. Ex.ouc &Tetn ext!.!'-JN ORANGE COUNTY 11L=
braotlet 122 Qua 11 t y 536-l4M or 673-2527 Eltes Boat Mllntenince 9033 parts. Call only between 9 A lor, pl\JSh blac interior w/ '64 TR4
diamonds. ~ TRANSPORTATION 3 p.m. Call 536-8411 H.B. bucket Rt.ts. $8S caih deis,
LIGHT beige Mbr let out • BO'M'OM PAINTING • I =~~~~~~~!! J will finance priV11te party. Sebri.nc Coupe. Rich blade: . mink atol.e, $200. BOits & Y1ehta 9000 $1.35 Per. Ft.+ paint I· After 10:30 494-97'1'3 wtthcontruttngredintmor. I
e &4Q.-0647 e 23• OWENS. Very good con-Complete Boat Repair Triller, Tr•v1I 9425 169 DATSUN PICKUP For the sports mlnded per-I
Q1RJ.STMAS Ttee \Ot equ1... dttlon. Slip available. Newport Marine Service Loaded, 4 agd, dlr o/a:reen , ""'· I r Dry Docks &42-4447 KENSKILL '69 ·•· · · · .$1499 61 MGA Cpe $999 $1299 ment. Light poles, wldn& * 642-0252 * New 15• Standard fully pa.int, white side walls, 6 • • • • • • • • • •
I: flocktn& machine 545-3180 10' DINGY V bottom 2 hp u. lpd Load~ .th ......, ply tires. $188 Ca.ah or older '64 MCB, wire.11, HT .. .$1599 ELMORE
2 ~ SUnsnya. 1 Elgtn mo1or. Gd cond. Ph: m11 __ ••-•.,..•_E_q~u~lp_. __ 90_3_5 I :'~ts tor~ w~. ~~ .... ;;g torei&n car ln ~de. J>:-;nnts Herb Friedlander · .
rold, 1 blue. Excellent con-KI ~ S.A. 3 · FIBREGLASS runabout total dn. pmt &: .$38 mo. ~ C&U. alter 11 A.M. 13T50 Beach Blvd. (flwy 39) MOI'ORS
MllCI
-.CUlllT
aUICK 'l969 '
Sportwagon ,.
·SALE!·
1969 BUICK SKYlARK
Sport (OURI s3099 LOAD!D WITH
IQUIPMINTI ,
Includes -suptrturbin& 300 auto. tr1nL
Big 350 cu. in. V·S engine. Power steer·
Ing. Tilt steering wheel. Radio, limp
group. Deluxe wheel discs. Motor No.
4353792 10099. .
0//icW ..4n .. •~I
~~r;lJv' 1969 OPELS
IMM!DIA JI DlllVIRT
f'id• Selec1f.on of !11la •M° Colottf
McCARTHY QUALITY
USED CARS
Almost too new to H ullff nustd''
'66 lMEU
?ACTO~Y ~~ '°"°' V~I .•• ~ ~.i:::,, M.
• '67 MUSTANG
'""!!!~"• ~ ~ ·~'7'i'· ·w111~~ '
'66 IAllACUDA
~~~fl!ltr~·i't.!: ·= t;,._f~~';.'7;/IQ. H .. 1 ... 91'~.J'.~ · lh111"f nlct
$2266
$1644
dltion. $30 e•ch. 546-7515 20• CAB Crsr, head, b alt hulls, 16% ft $59-$159. Nt!w. 0 .A.C. Authoriud dealer l-========;-I 2 blka So. G.G. I'W)r. TOYOTA
'?WO Scbwtnn, Yan.it)' bikes Wlk..50,bp o'brd, Barpjn! Also boat paru: of all kinds, for Avian, IA.yton a.nd Terry FERRARI 893-T'SQi' • 531-6824 Ph. 839-1200 '65 IMPALA SS S50 eacti, 5.l&-f,000 $900 m.1496. seabl:, tank.!I, instruments, trail@rs.
1-"=='======-========;-I control c.tile1, steering Rick Bildlno'a ---------i---------115300 Beooh Blvd .• WslnWtr ~r'!l.J!!"~
Mlscoll1n...,. ' 8600 Mlsc11lonoou1 8600 • "• m b Ii"· P' 0 P Mol>llo World FERRARI PORSCHE NICEST CARS O!l • • .;;.:====--='-' windahlelds. ALL OR • ...,...,.,_ .... Bl H.B "'-""1377 Newport Irnporta Ud. Qr. --------.-l lN ORANGE COUNTY !!!ft.,~. · ''
IUJI Swopl Al Haoi>or llvd. Do-Iv.to
SWAP
_MEET_
MRY SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
CWH OUT TOUll GARAGI •• ,
HAVI FUN SWAPl'INGI
PART. SH at 2546 Green-.l'"""6 Dal"-"' " • ...,.... anae. Count;y'a only author-1961 PORSCHE 912 tTC 1'.I.116:
brier Ln. O>llea:e Parle, 436 s. Harbor Bl .• SA sn.mo ized dealer. s ____.. white with black • ,, Spitfire F!!tlti ... iiiii '64 SCOTSMAN. 14', •1~· "I"=" ""'-__... .. _ ..-11 ............. bl-~ c.M. 549-.QSOO aocq>ll SALES -SERVICE -PARTS lnterior, maa: wheela, radial~ .. .-..;,.,...,-...,.., ..... c~o=N""T~l~N~E=N~T~A~L~Boa~0t 1 6· K\I cond. eas refria:, nu tires, radio I-heater, tintN raclnc atrlp. A pe; and
Trailer lllitable for 18-20' ilde rm awning. Many xtras ciua. $4995. Pftt11 ~. I.Jc lJOPEIS2.
bo<L 1185-"'6 Bdstt>! C.M. SO Open SUnday Only
673-8593 111 . ..,._ T & M MOTORS $1475
Alrcr1ft 9100 ~o~y':t~~ ~· 't<G"',...-m'tT ~·~ ·ELMORE la.wnmowen. $130 or but 3100 W Cout Hwy Prl. Pilot Course off~. 9&l-046l N~ Beach • 19611 PORSCHE9118'Electric MOTORS
$75· dn, PJ.16 mo. Mooney U' ARISTOCRAT, a!pa. 4 642-9*ii -~l'ZM . =~ !:" !!ri:.:t!J TOYOTA
A1rcra.rt Salta. F M Pardo $850 -FJRM. AuthortJfd MG o..ra. h!tr wtmow, 'tinted gl&.sJJ, Ph. &31-UGO
On.nee Co un ty Ail1>0rl 842--G617 '65 330 GT 1+2. 30,000 ml, er. pW'd, $70 9,5 . 15300 Beach Blvd .. Watmnatr
Bolsa Ave.
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549-J886 tt' st&-1610 I -=========o tact. aeNlce, auptrb cond. · 534-ZIU or (1) 892-5551 '59 TR, $495
Mobile Homo1 9200 Trucks 9SOG $5llOO/o~ li3Mlll6 • PORSCHE "6 "911" ' lllool\y re"""41, MOI &ood l~;;;_: __ ....;_ _ _;;o__..; • .._....!..--;;;I -.....;.= '66 DATSUN Y,-TON ' 'Pd· Nu rsd!&i., brokes, tl1M63I
" Flll K-FUYGlOUND •
HARBOR BLVD. -DRIVE-II ·
* 3700 McFADDEN 1(
SANTA ANA • PHONE 531-1272 ·
la.Niii HAllM>tt. ILVD. & McfAIOIMI _ •
SE.LLEiS BIYEIS
$1.DOSatwUJ
$1.DO S-,.
TO SWA1 MEET
0000 SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M. TO • P.M.1
FRIE ADMISllOH .
T--11111 ........ _. --~ '-tmc:t. W11 .... CW IM 11 -"" 'Ill•• I TIN ,._ wM° """' JI!\. Ii, lM. J;>.P.
• MOW • • ~-.nr. ..... u.nt -.-.. ..... ---.' NICift CARI . Cett• MMi't ~ ,,;,.,.. &ti, $15 Caah delivers « tmmac, 26M" n:tl. $4500. IN ORA.NOi! COUNTY M••ll· H·-sa.-._,.... T··--~.. ol -#--trade. Pri. --•-"""'"'" "~ -~··-·· H5'.i1i M&.m '67 'I:~ CiT6 a.., ..._.., • ......, $36.11 mo. Fine prlv pty.
II'•. 16'• • IO's. 24 wld•, 001 after ll, 49f.9713 « 1968 PORSCHE 9US WoodH&rdt.offnd ck.Raclnl ~· t• .a•. s,.~1.1 '•"' 545-0Q.4 stet11uc wheel. ~ ltd. LoiMSld .tu.A IOOlt_..
print•• •li•w •M•t.. '60 I: '61 Ford A: a,evy blt"clr '~. fl.9$. S.Slvei~Llc.911$1. 1.ttY HARIOR PU-. v ... , ol•an. Some .. , ·sst..%ll4 or o> .,._ $2495
Mobile Homos Show new I ply lire• • point ~ ~-~.-~~· ·ELMORE 1425 BU St Cloe: f cyl wt auto lranl, &' UIJVll1'l .. ~nu~ ... _ er ., ta Maa a.di. From $48$ 962.-l.D ltlnt cood. 5*-6'01 att. 6 (At HuWI . '11 Fl.f.T "!" S!>jdet. Britt!h MOl'OR.S
·a """"T W-. II x lO' lltJST Mil ""'· 16 "°"' ............. belWooldtc ot""' TOYOTA $ at. J Ba. ONiplelW!IJ' lilt ~ too. P.U. $!50. '62 -Ford ~)' irnfOdl. Want '83 P01tSOIE aciet 'C&b.
up\D. l&mUJ part. Awninl !'.cooolbl P.U. $450. Both old« dl8". car now. Netd N.,.ew.,~~-Xlnteond~ 1s.m ~ ~Wl"bn.Dlb etC. 1 block .., ti.ch. ~ UC. ' iaecb. eond. 2 2 0 $550 and tUllO"f~ blnk ----
-· !W -ll'l1l0· A-c.M. 80-2391'. ..,....,,. .. Call -· l!PiiSSih ""' -..... -'fl GT 6 MK •••••••• $24lt p..-..m. '111 ao:v 'Ii .... ' -Ext. l8tl ""-' """' • tlm. IUllO. 'Ill Splt!lte ............ $129t
-b'ono. ROii lood cond. 11 ... OO FIAT 8'IO -Betl J13.!HI M&-3931 '15 TM wlnt ·••·•••• -AVAILAllLE NOW brlk ... -1510. Coll ,...,,,.o1_,.....,. WHY WONl>"""11.. OI' "."1TR3 ......... ··'· -
J Adult Port -8'1tta> ·-......_ $$50 PORTUNTl'ltS - -nerb• Friecllallder' Dr1ftwoad Beach aub, 21462 "65 J'ORl> '°' ~ Pick Up. le iake O't'eii Pl¥Qlent-.. Want dlitWNaed ti, Clullfttd Adi. 11150 leach mw. <11w7 a)
15558 _ ... 11v•~
W•tminster
Paclfie Cot.It Hwy, H.B. Auto, 'Rldt, Xtra nice .older Amtrltan cta.k!.'tall T\n Mell tD "Bn•,_ a.. ~ bUra-. G,Q. .J'yty.
s....,. #>&. S16.1731 -· $121S--~-..rt~·-· o.;;-;;.;;;;;U..;;;;.'.' ;.;,NOW;;;;r_..,.~-;;;,'llllll;;;; ___ _.tllT;;;.;-;;;i ______ ..., _____ "'f" ___ ....
..
T:'.li.,.,. .... ,.....,..,...,..,..~,,_,..,. ... ,..,..,..~.:~~-.,....,.. ... ..,...,.,..., • ;sqcc;e;:welijJ;;;qfQt ¥4 ; e a ; u Qi c 4 o Q c ; ; o o o e o & ; 250 a P » • ; • u • • • • • = • o • • • • • • • • • • •
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•
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• • . • • 1:. • • • . : .
r
VOLKSWAGEN
NICEST CARS NICEST CARS
IN ORANGE COUNTY IN ORANGE COUNTY
1963 VW Camper 1958 VW
Ready to go 1\1.m~ fbhl.na P\ck up truck. TbLs lS cme tn
or JUJl plain run. ' Loaded a million. 24,000 actual miles.
with all the gear. ~est Power rear lift gate. Musi
prtee ever. Uc. B'IT269. see to believe. #"
Only $895
51495 ELMORE ELMORE
MOTORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 839-1200
l5.'llO Beach Blvd., W1bnnstr
'68 VW's
$199 TOTAL
DOWN PAYMENT
$44.01 for 36 + 1
Bank Financing
T&M MOTORS
Garden Grove Bl. at Beach
534--2284 or Ill 892-&l51
162 vw with Sun Root Radio
& retiuilt ~ In First aass Corid. $850. Tel.
67>-7'l32
1965 VW Camper w/ SW"Kllal
equip. in.stall~ this year.
52,000 ml. RW'lli beautifully!
S1800. 646-9295
'59 VW Van rebuilt engine
good condition. $625. Phone
53&-0074 eves.
'GS VW, Porsche chromes,
coco mats, new paint &
engine, $1000. 548·2863
'67 V'IV. Org Owner. lmmac!
Red w/blk int. Stereo tape.
Sl695. G'15--0W6 aft G pm.
• 1957 vw $200 •
Suitable for Dune ~ •
Ptlone 967-1782
'&I VARIANT S Squarebtck
Wagon. Xnlt rond-Radio.
tl.295. 64fr15U
'64 VW, low mil., priv. party.
New tires, brk:I, clutdl; $900
EVES. 546-17«> '
MCYI'ORS
TOYOTA
Ph. 839-1200
is:n> Be-a.ch Blvd., Wstrnnstr
1968 V\V \Vestphalia c:amp.
er $2995. Bank financing.
$318. Total down, 36 O
$65.40 + one final payment
for title.
Opon SW>doy
T & M MOTORS
Garden Grove BJ. at Beach
534-2284 or tl) 892-55.51
'60 VW, gd cood. newer eng.
Runs good. $600.
'57 Bus, ovrhld eng, new
brks. Runs good. S400.
, CALL 642-5741
1965 VW Bug. Sunroof.
Radio. Original o w n er •
SllOO.
1957 vw
$249
534-2284 or tl) 892-5.551
1961 V\V Sunroof
radio & heater S595.
534-2284 or {1) 89'2·5551
65 VW. New paint. Diamond
tuft interior. Ex. tires, ex.
cond. Best otter. 545--68lli
NICEST CARS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
'68 vw
Sport Station Wagon Square-
badc. Spe.rkllng sky blue
with contrasting Ne.ck inM-
ior. Se.ve a groop ot mooey
im !hi!: one. Llc. WIE'l'91
$2295
ELMORE
VOLKSWAGEN
NICEST CARS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
VW Dune Buggy
Custom sparklln; bufiUOdy
pa.int with white top, Beaut.I.
ful oondltioo. -Can finance
Bil or i-rt · o.•.c. Uc. QOY •
188.
BUICK
ORANGE CO'S FINEST '63 ELECTRA Zl5 Conv.
ONE OWHER·~OW MILEAGE =·u~bl~;.!~ ..W::
QUALITY CARS Pvt .. ,.,. 842-imr
At Bargain Prices CADILLAC
CAD '68 CQ.Upe de ville silver
$1495 4 Or. h1rdtop, fullr •quipp1d incl. leather \C)flOJ, air cond, 1'66 9UICK Skyklrtt $2395 with bl<1<k vinyl top & blaci<
TRANSPORTATION
Used Car> 9900
CHEVROLET
NICEST CARS
IN ORANGE COUNTY
1962 Chev.
Impala Su. Sport. Sil'm' ~
lallic blue with conlnstln~
lntl!rlor. lAadi!d with e:<tras.
Absolutely lmmaeulate. Uc.
MC!il1'l
I $1095
ELMOR·E ELMORE :·;:5 ''~·u:~~00s:i:k·., ... , ... , ... , .. $1 795 ~~0~! =t ta~t10;x~'!;~
MOTORS .. Or, 1td1", fully 1q~ipp1d incl. ~~~Y·l:~u~ :~IY$5: MOTORS
TOYOTA f1ct •• 1r, 26,ooo mil11 ••• , •• , • • • • •• •• •• • bought '69 Cad . VTP 006 TOYOTA
Ph. 83~1200 1965 PONTIAC lonnevllle $1895 <7141 675-0926"' SH.oo« Ph. 839-1200
lSllO Bffcb Blvd., Wstmnstr 4 Or. h1rdlop, r<1dio, h11t1r, p1, pb, '62 CAD Convertible. All fac· ls:n'.I Be6ch Blvd., W~
'66 V\V Ca.mper 111!0, 21,000 milt• • • ••...•.•••• •. . . •• •• • tory extru! • including air. 67 CHEV. Ca~ 4 dr. hi,
,67LtVWc SU,!A~~' lf66 OLDSMOBILE Supreme $ ~;is..~nd. l-owner. $825. 396 cub eng, ~nd, tilt ._,11,~ 0 11 d 1 11 d 2295 str whl, autti, R&H, p/a. Lie WSS 239 ;,.,;· .~; 1~6•·00'0 Y ~(uipp• iflc.I. '64 CAD. Cotwert. Low miles p/b, p/w. $24!1i. 6+l-ll55
Very clean, low milca.gc ' ' ' ' m• '' · · · '' '· ·' • • ·' ·' '' • Sacrifice at wholeaa.le book. Pvt Pty.
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
COME AND GET 'EM!!
'68 DEMONSTRATORS
'68 GALAXIE 500 2-DoorH.T. No. 8052, Gold,
V·S, A.T., P.S., Radio, T.G., Vinyl Trim $2795
'68 MUSTANG, 2-Door, No. 6076, Dia, Blue, 6-
Cyl. A.T., P.S. Radio, T.G ........... $2495
"68 TORINO G.T. H.T .. No. 6009, Aqwt, V-8,
B/Seat<, A.T,. P.S., Radio, 'f.G. Wide ?s~
Tires ............................ $ 5
'68 GALAXIE 500 H.'f., No. 8004, Blue, VS,
A.T., P.S., Air, T.G., Radio
A· 1 USED CARS
'66 FORD Galaxie 2-0oor hdlp. 289 e ngine.
Pwr steering, R·H, TG, W1.W, fact. air $1895
'64 PONTIAC Grand Prix Auw., R·H, PS. TG,
WSW, factory air .................. $1695 campers. Hurrv! 1967 PONTIAC Grond Prix $2295 Sl.350. Can finance. iJ.5 E. '67 IMPALA 2 dr, air oond,
SADDLEBACK Coup•. Fully •quipp•d, f•ctory •ir, 17th, Costa Mesa while w/black int, vloyl
DODGE 37,ooo mil11 •••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 'Sf CAD. 2 Dr. epe. De top. Must .:eU. $2550. '
1401. N. Tustin, Santa Ana 1966 PONTIAC loftnevllle $2695 V~; white w/blue inter. * 49'4·9971 *
'66 MUSTANG 2-Door HT, 6-cy l., R.H., Auto,
Fae. air. 10,000 mi. Beige, match trim $1f95
'64 FAIRLANE 4-door Sedan, Auto., Radio,
Heater, PS. Very nice low miles ..... $1000
Just oU the Newport F'wy. , d f I , , I Afr&: pwi:. xlnt cood. $1995. ,65 EL Camino · ......,
3 :mins. trom 3 Freeways 4 Dr. n1r to,, ul 'f •qu1pp•d inc, M2-l530 ' 00-6499 E'fes , air, ~· eng,
PHONE M,7•9381 f1clory ,;,, 41 ,000 mil11 .. , ••• , ••••• , •• • pwr bcks. Like new Kosla
·· 1956 CADilLAC Coupe de Kustom Kars, 1980 Harbor
58 VOLKSWAGEN. Good 1963 PONTIAC Grond Prix $1195 Ville. Low mileage motor, Blvd ., C.M. 646-5484
paint, new brakes, major Coup•. R1dio, h•1l•r, 1uto, p1, pb, $175. Call 673-8466 19C7 EL CAMINO. Auto; djsc
tu o e ·up, radio. Will 4S,OOO mi1•• '·' ·''' '· • • · · ·; · · '· • • • • • • • 1964 CADII..J..AC Coupe brakes; new tires; re.dio.
"Sacrifice for $425 or Best. 1967 BUICK RlwfHa $3795 DeVllle Excellent condition. Lo miles. Just tuned. $2260. Oil.,, S-_ .. 281 "H" Del s-1••• ... """ ...,. Full pow'•r, f1ctory 1ir, · <.:>-...,.. I ~642~-~-~~"'~'-•re.,_S-'p'-m_. __
Mar, CM. or call 642-8584 11,000 mil•• •• , .•••••••......• , • . . • • • • SACRIFICE! '65 White '64 EL Camino, complete
66 VW. 21Ai yrs old. X!nt · C.dUlac Xlnt! Air-cond. new engine, Anseo mags,
~ri~~tsr:J:~·~ DAVID J. PHILLIPS s:Cad!llac Coupe* de64~~8:.3 ,_~~-~-,:i.._· ... _;,,.,_· ____ 397
_'_· _Af_'"
new tires, excetlent cond. '63 IMPAL.A 4 door hard
66 VW. 2% YT& old. Xlnt !Formerly SIEMONSMA, Buick.Ponti•c l $2300 * 642-6974 top. Like new, 33,IXX> actual
crindition, in &: out 23,00J mi. Air, RIH pwr strg,
mi. n22S. ea11 837-386& a1t BUICK-PONTIAC-OPEL, INC. s1150 .... ,., ..
6 PM, wkn<l> alt 9 AM e CLOSED SUNDAYS e CAMARO CHEVY fl 1"'3
'66 RAMBLER Ambassador 4·Door Sedan.
Auto., R·H, P.S., Air ................ $t795
'64 CHEVROLET 6 Wag, Auto, RH PS $1095
'65 CHEVROLET y-.9 % too Pick-up. Custom
Cab, R-H, Local car, Low Mileage .... $1595
South Coast Motors
FORD-MERCURY
303 BROADWAY, LAGUNA BEACH
494-8515 549-3851
':,~;,';.;:,:"'· 10 mu,., 310 BROADWAY 494-1047 '61 CAMMtD, v.s..., •">< Au,';,~1"~ CHEVROU:T CHEVROU:T * 673-roil * La9una Beach e w'~".':.""~'.',·_ .. ',,'.000""'~.1 =~=~-~-~ --------1--------1
~~~I
'"'l<lll "' .... '56 QiEV· Very clean 2 dr .,,~ ,,... .,... a•~•. 67 1 ....... SS. W/Blk * '66 VW SUNROOF * $1950. 642-0385 2 tone auto VS $350 642-2516 .,.. OIEVR.v....,,1 Impala 2 -u:.Y ... .,...
Ex.,.Uont condltioo. (Toll Free 546-1975) art 5,30 "' hanl top, white. A•, lnt. Odg. Own«. Low SllOO. 499--1479 1967 CAM.ARO. 7,00J mi. powll!r, clean, 1 owner. mileage. F\tl1 power, fact.
P /S, 327. PIV prty, Xlnt! '65 O!EVY Impala, xlnt. $1295. cash. 6 7 5 -4 5 31 air. AM /FM Multiplex. lm-
$2350. 838-5078 cond. $1..."00. 642...(642 alter between .{ & 7 PM. 673-4226 maculate! See to Appreciate VOLVO * New Volvos * GET A
BETTER DEAL
NOW'S THE Imported AutOI 9600 '67 CAMARO. xlnt eond, pwr 5 PM. anytime. $2495. 962-9886 --------·I steering, pwr brks. CUstGlll '65 EL CAMINO, r/h, ex-
VOLVO? interlor. $2500. 54G-8n6 ceptionitlly clellll. S 105 0. 'GS C'HEVELLE • 283. Brand '66 CHEVY El Camino, 8.lr.
675-2886 after 8 PM. new Eng., Trans, &: rear Pwr brks & stmg, :xlnt s u R F E RS 8pecial! '56 end. Sl2.00. Oean. 642-9575 cond. New wide oval tires. '65 VW Sedan, blue, new
brakes. nlfll super 1ood!
SIOOO. !M&-5835 after 6.
'60 V. W. Bus~ Eng. rebuilt
tr&nS. good oond. $650.
673-4229
MOTORS Herb Friedlander
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
CHEVROLET Nomad Sta Wgn. rflllt alt. 6 p.m. Best oUer! 528-3059
We Hawe Them All! motor, make offer. 833-2819 1961 CHEVY 6 cyl, auto. '63 SUPER SPORT Impala. TOYOTA 13750 Beach Blvd. (Hwy 391
Ph. 839-1200 2 blks So. G.G. Fwy. WANT AD 15.'lXI Be6cb Blvd., Wstmnstr 893-7566 537-6824 ============.!.===========-==================="="==~1 New Cars 9800\lew Cars 9800 New Cer1 9800 New Cars
'SIRVICE IS OUR MAIN
CONCERN"
BUICI(
AUTHORIZED
JAGUAR
OPEL
Sales· Service
1968 CLEARANCE
BIG DISCOUNTS ON '68 STRAGGLER$
9800
Limited number-but if wo have the model you went-you'll never find • bigger discount.
Rivieras, Electras 1 Le Sabres, Wildcats.
r12-1968 DEMONSTRATORS
Managers & safesmens personal cars marked way down . No bigger discounts until next year.
NIW .1969 OPELS
BIG SELECTION
ltADY FOi IMM!DIATt DIUY!IYI
Wouldn't yo1 f'tlly r•th1r 111¥• fl!Or• h11d room, 119
room. •hould•r roo111, hon• pow" & 1fylin9 for th• 11m•
1111ounl of mon•1 , •• •¥•n 11111
NEW '69 OPEL COUPE
ONLY ................... ~.191921
DtLIYlltD IN COSTA MtSA
Fully •quipp•d including du1t "'''''' cylind1r br1k1 •v•·
tem, h11ler, whit• w•ll1, du1I 1p1ed wind1hi.ld wip1rs,
w1rnin9 fl•1h1r, r1dlo, •It. 9101418
JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS
COMPLETE SALES • SERVKE AND PARTS DEPARTMENT FOR JAGUARS
'67 COUGAl
VI, 1ulo., PS, fie. 1ir. IULT479 1
AT•r191 r•l1il 1111• look $3070
'UI DODC'it 1/1 TON
C•111per Sh•ll. lon9 wh,.I b11•,
Long b .. d. ll217JS)
'67 llYlllA
Full pow•f, fie. 1ir. ITHBS21 l
A¥•r•g• r•l•ll llu1 look $4265 $J695
"'7 LINCOLN $]795 2 Dr. H.T. Full pwr., fie.,;,_ (VGY
t61 I A¥•r•9• r1t1il Blu1 loolr $'4lS
'66 LI SAIRt $2095 i2 Dr. H.T. Auto., PS, PB, f1 cl. 1ir.
(IY'llttl ATtrlQ• retell llu• look
1261$
BRAND NEW 1969
BUICK "· "'""''"· , .. ., ..... ;"''$298 5 r1dio, h11I••, d1lul1 wh,11 co•-
'"· h11d r11h •nd m1ny, m1ny
.mo••! 92105111
IMMEDIA.Tt DELIVERY
'65 CHlYSLll $1595 )00 2 Dr . H.T. Full pwr ., lie. •ir.
INIZS46} Av•r19• r1t1it llu• look
$2130
'61 IUICk INYICTA $1195 Sl1tion w~gon . Aulo., R&H , PS, tilt
whl ., h11;i9. rick, f1c . 1it. IWXV5l8)
'66 DODCif MONACO $2095 <t dr. H,T, Autorn1tic, PS, 1ir cond.
lTPUOl2) R•l1il Blue Book $2420
'6l RIYlllA
Full power, f1ctory 1ir. (!IK,001
A¥1r19• r•l•il 8111• loo• $1750
''J SltYLAllt
Cou11•· VI, ••lo111•tl1. 0XE1521
A••••91 r1l•il llu• loo~ $I 045
•
tn<r IUICl COlNHJ wt
134 E. 17th ST. COST A MESA
Soles-Service-Rentals-Leasing 548-77 65 OPEN: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
S1turd1y1 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sundtys 10 t .m. to 6 p.m.
I
SEE US lST OR LAST '66 Chev 2, 327, 4 spd. Good trat1~rtatoin Sacrifice! Leaving state,
BUT SEE USJ =="="=2"'4=98=°'·==-'-===CHAR==G°'E::IT=! ==-$3.50. 675-4130 must sell 673-2479 ~tall Lemle\ __ N_e_w_c_.,_, ____ 98_00_N_•_w_c_._,. ____ 9_soo=N=ew=c=.=,=.==="9'°'s'"oo=N=•w=c=,=,.====9=900:..
• IMPORTS
13750 Beach Blvd. (Hwy 39)
2 b1ks So. G.G. J:Wy.
893-7566 537-6824
Aufot Wanted
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
BLUE CHIP
AUTO SALES
2145 Hart.or Blvd.
Costa Mesa
642-9700
Will Buy
Your Volkswagt!tl or Porsche
&: pay top dollars. Pa.id for
or not. Call Ralph
673-1190
IMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP S BUYER
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
H. Beach. Pb. 847-8555
Used Cars
VEHICLES FOR SALE
'65 VW Can1per, Corvair pow-
ered, $2150.
BURRO, Corvair powered,
lots of extras, street legal,
race proven. S1600.
1921 Model T Ford farm wag-
on. Very good original con-
dition, $1950.
"390" Ford pcr.yered cam!)er
bus {was school bus), 12
speeds, auto trans, air cond,
Dush toilet, sleeps 7. $3500.
Ask for Ted, days: 1642-7391
Eves. 545-3169
N~wporter Motors
Cash for Cars
Lowest Prices!
Sth Annlwtrsary Stl•
Newporter Motors
NEED A CARt
CAN'T BE FINANCED?
eBankn.lp\t •Repeal r 1 ''""' •Bad Credit'? • DiV'Cft!edt
e Milltary e New tn Ana! """ """"' p-McCARTHY MOTORS
1'20 So. Main • Ed.,
(2 blockl N. of Seanl
Santa Ana Ph 542-35171
BUICK
'61 SKYLARK, 2 dr, fllr
cmd. pwr 1tttrlnt:-Xlnt
cond. JNl party. 6Tl-8740
01.AL direct 64.2-5678. Ow;.e
)'CK.Ir ad, then alt bl.ck and
Ust.m to the phone rfnl!
Every 1968 demonstrator ind comp1ny own-
ed cir in this od is priced below origin1I foe.
tory invoice!
NO DOWN
$124 MO. x-.
'68 CUTLASS SUPREME '68 CUTLASS SUPREME
HOt.IOAY ((lo,jpe. 11/dt.t ~ mn.ole, •Ir ctll'>d., P,$,. P.I . Sir. NO. ll72.
NO DOWN
$127 MO.
UMOl.
$]250 NO DOWN
$127 MO. x .... $3250
'68 CUTLASS SUPREME '68 CUTLASS STA. WAGON '68 CUTLASS SUPREME
ltOl..l°""Y s.:1 .... Tlll -· _,-•-· Ing, Tu.--! ... Set. NO, J2.ttl.
NO DOWN
$123 MO.
:M MOS. $3150 NO DOWN
$127 MO.
:M MOS. $3250
HOl.JDAY -· Budttu, ~-..,..cone!. P.S., P.B .. vll'IYI lOP. Blo.i•·-11• '°"· Soeriaol NO, 13U.
NO DOWN
$127 MO,
x-.
'68 CUTLASS SUPREME '68 CUTLASS SUPREME '68 CUTLASS "S" SERIES
!hrdl. .. 1, COf"llOle', 1ir cond., P.S. ,,,I . Aft
blUf. lollrl•I No. 06!-I.
NO DOWN
$127 MO.
.1' MOS. $3250 NO DOWN
$123 MO.
:M MOS .
100°/o FINANCING
ON ANY
NEW OR USED CAR
'67 COUGAR
IHVtltul dari: bit.-. """' ..t\11.t toP, rldlo -· l .-!, .., .. llf\. 9'nt. tllYIM2fl
'67 CHRYSLER 300 4 DR. H.J.
!-~1-wl!!I bll>Ci< ¥1,,.,1 too. A !""Ml ~tf. RllO,., ,.,._,
_.,... I r, 1111 ..... -· tvll -· -· lntN. !5111111 H<I. CMa rnuu•u
'64 FORD GAL 600 H.J. CPE.
.... '11'1111 IM!l:lllnll im.rlor. ll.ldlo ,, ..... ---.. -Ir-.. IK111n" aolr. JINI c!Nft. (HG$ .QI)
. '66 BUICK LE SABRE
c.--T _.. ,,.,..__ R~ ........-. ..,,., --. "-' .._ mr.
01.GV f.S.IJ
'63 OLDS SUPER 88 HOL SON.
NO DOWN
$123 MO.
MMOS.
Now! Qualified buy1rs mty vst th1ir good cr1dit
to driv1 home any n1w or 1Jsed car in our tre-
mendovs stock wllh nt money downl No side
loans. ne co.-signers, no split payments, no tr1d.
in necess1ryl Includes' -State t•ir, Lic&ns1 P'lfes,
tr1nsfer fees on approvtl of Fireside Thrift.
NO
DOWN
NO
DOWN
NO
DOWN
NO
DOWN
NO
DOWN
NO
DOWN
$8638,,, •.
3' MO.
" ...
$4989,,,., ......
l'ULL l'ttlCe
53050
FULL l'•ICI"
$1225
l'Ul!.. PlllCt:
$1255
SAU PRICES iFFICTIVI 72 HOURS AmR ADVERTISED
"REMEMBE!I, WE ARE NEVER SATISFIED UNl'IL YOU ARE" 2850 • 'UNIVERSITY H~RBOR
BLVD.
Now 546-lSlO
Unol 546-SSS3
-·'---------------~-~-----~-----..... ·-··---~-... -·--------------~-------- ------------------ - - - - -... = ---.. ~ --.
,
I
~~~~ ·~~·~-~~··· ......... , ..... .
\ '65 MotaA ' ~~~~·-wt ,. ... ~
• ~5 •
~T~~~~;::
~
• .,395 .
' .
•
\
..
-··
.. -...,. ., ..---.,,.....,,.. .......... ._.. ......................... _ .......... _....,_....,_ ..... _____ ~ -........... -...... -.. -.... ..,.,. . ... . .. ............... .. l ,
SPECIALS
'16 CORWlll
'3 DART G.T.
~ ....... 8 "'°"""· •• ~ ..... D1edlllOI blue rill -.. ~,o95
'6f JHUNDERllRD
II. 'I'. °""'"" !'llll _.., t.c!ai1 111r, ....... -.torch rod with ............ , • '?.95 ~ '
'68 IMPALA . '
4'J>Oor 'hardtop. V!I, aulomatic, ~-
~ -Ilia,..: •
• l
AYERSO.N·~
PLAYi
• • '• SWiii
l ,.,.. ·, 1
, . • · .ioRSCHIS '• '.
1.r..iiscH1 ti r .MltO. ''2 ..;~S.71 • SPO•
't6JIOUCHlttnl.S'° 'ff P'OASCH.lft21' SPO 'II l'OilsC!tf SP j ... '•19 l'Ol{~Hf,CK ~Oft '66 POlSCHl:tt2 'stO ,_. i • ,_.,"' ... •.i>•SC~I SP!I; • .... • '41 ~lSCHI sur ....
S'D_ • .. '· i-"' sro .' ( 3 ~,., ... , .. ._. ~~ f
'" V.W. t rAU IU~ , 'M ~.w. CAMPfl . ., v:w. aus ,. • .. v.w.-Dt.X '
.'MV,\\'. IUS~P ·-M '&t Y.W'llDlX f PASS tUI '67 V,W, c:.AMNA •
-
111alloll -.... ... -.,.. bealor.--.
OlDMllf '
UtMl'AC• • ..
•
,
'· .: '695
•
'65 RAMBLER
-........ -·...a.lord -' ~~.-:"~695
,. .
' •
'
•'
•
' • '
•
' . ' .
•
< • . -'
. .
. ,
OPEN '
'.SuNDAY
lQsOO ,• to ..
5s00
-----' . -.. ----• ---
...
' •
• ltQ-·~JN. ... -_ SIDAN , -$." f5 -v.1, ..,..._~ (•4fot, kata), ,-,-:-r tt .. r1119, wliif'l"'P'•ll 1Jrwo1, f · u .. ,... N'Ji:l'DA.~f2:. , , • Go... "'~ -~~-
, -tMJ'~ CotPD:llHI .
.. -,.IK•,·htr.! ~.·1tt., ,.,.,. ""''"·r'ft Wlfla,, fad. air, ' ~-··MvJ 'uc,,...,, K'111. · ""· , • •
-... ' ...
' .$99 l -~'-' ,1 'r l -'!OWi'! .. _•~Ta 9oil Uc-; .. ,. o ... c."' · ~ ·
ANY . TRUCK' 'IN :STOCK"-··
.. ~ •• -i
•
•
• I
.'LOo(( "to The Doily ~lfot
'
b Tpp Sports ' •. CoverQg•., ' .
• . ,
• • •
•
i51' TMUNliitllaD , s399 •.a.~•.w. -·~l~1)j' I •
-.. ............ , ......... ,,, ,, .. · · Mnol.CouNT ,
. •. CINTIR ..•
21U' .. COST" MBA · ·.
-• • \4 • • ,
• --
'
• . .
•
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• . ,
-
l'IRT•
'" PlYMOUTH ILY. ~ .......... .,,...
'JI FOID Pltbp
" TOii. Olln.
•
•
. .. . 161 CHIYlOUT " .
"",.1.·2 4r. H.T. va.. ~ ..................... wWh ... ,,.. (XSUI 11
:. . ..... "$1077 " : ... . . . -'
•
• • TPMS STAiT AT IASYI
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p()N11AC GRAND PRIX ~.,..
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OF SHELBY. CO.BUS! GT-3'50/GT~·soo ·
THE '69'1 ARE COMING!
A.a .Drop Conty's 11ly ~~•r AMrioM 'hlllr, w1 ere
111,wllilg.JID ... ,.., II clilr Ille I~ of ... 'Its at
DlSCOUNtsNEYER B,EFOR... I .
OFFERED 01'4 AMERICA,'$·NllMBER .1
HrGH · PERfORMANCf ClR!
. chisl Fro11 I S,eclal $rip111t11 .
llw ·1u 11111dift e111 lluil llcl1tlts IT8a,·tr•1
•• IT.&00 Ill's. a,teullcs, W,11•;-'• .V 0...
•11111ingl If, ... , •• ,.. ••• ,,.~ ...... ,. ..... '(
•ffonl t1ui & ~ a tho9~ ·11id1t ,,_ i.e. ._ it to0r
·, ... ~•• rour dr11• come true wltholll str1la"'-: 1our ~ULY AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY . .
~R.'.CUSTO'M-C,.,R LOVERS!
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NIW. •69 THUNDIRllRD
2·DO,OR 'H.ARDTOP
• NO~ ·;
OPE~
Niw ~69 MUSTANG
HARDTOP
DIRECT FROM
ENGLAND '
100 MPH e BUCKET SEATS
32 MPG e DISC BRAKES
:4 SPD. OR AUTO TRANS.
~-( ~Ji;i
CORTINA
300 FIRSTS IN RACES AND
RALL YS IN 25 COUNTRIES
-.....
PLU$ TAX I LICENSE .
ORDER
O"r;· .. , i\; .• ' •.
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SUNDAYS ' ... y-Sltoppl119 ca. ........ 10 a.111. to ~ p.1111.
NIW.19, •. ·
3A TON CAMPIR •PACKAGE •339500 F-25~o:l~KUP
AND CAMPER
PLUS TAX I L~NSE
PLU$-TAX I · tlaNSE
s1 8 8 3 00" ,.,,. '~ODAY!
; Pi.us .TAX l~lctNSE .
DELUXE 2 DR. SEDAN
SCOTSMAN CAMPER COMPLETELY FUR •
., i· ,,l\ll~~p .Wl!J-1 ~ il?l'•. ~tOYI;, ETC.,,~l.E~S, ~: ·
F-260 . .PICKVP HAS JOO 'ENG., lt.MP & OIL GUAGES,
1960 LB. REAR SPRINGS 151 8.00X16.5 8-PLY TUBE·
LESS TIRES, DELUXE HEATER AND DEFROSTER, ETC.
OFF SEASON
CAMPER SALE!
; . -~ j ~.· : -;
'
'ORDER
TODA YI
2 DRS. -4 DRS. -WAGONS
,NEW 1968
·FORDS . . '
MUSTANGS
FAIRLANES
' T•B'IRDS
NOW .
AT ACTUAL
Factory
Invoice
No Aitd0 0nsl You Poy Our
· Actual Factory Invoice ..
NETL Plus Tex end License
Still Many to Choose From!
TSMEN'S SPECIAL
· ~k·Away C1mpor
. '~l•coplc . . WUh '66· vrolet Pickup
Sltepf, 2, 1tove, r• ,,,t r•tot, 1lnk, dlneffL
ltl111A) 10'/. clow11 or .tr•de.
. $1895 $58 ::.
MUSTANG SALEI
io to ~ from. "'" .. ..,.. cYllndln. ( ....,.,
wto!Ntla. s-w"h _..,. lltM!'lnt • 1lr (lllldltkln-lnt. 1'65 fhrv IH1 mocklt, coiwertlbla. COUl)ft, ena
z+1 fnrbKb.
EXAMPLE: 1965 MUSTANG
Coupt>. Fullr eq.ulPP'd, elllO., IU.H, PS. (ATA45ll
20"llo doWn or trlde. $795 :~.~. $31 ::.~~ •
SAVE ON
GOLDLINE e ELDORADO e SCOTSMAN
HOLIDAY e FOUR WINDS
'65 FORD RANCH WAGON
4 cloor. v.1, eutometic, fully equipped. INOY
679 1•201. down or tr•d•.
1095 ~.~ $38 ~~.:..
'64 VAN CAMPER
For4 honoUne. Stove 11f111 le• ltox eq11ippN
E14TH412272. 20% clown.or tTedt.
' . '64 RAMBLER WAGON · . . Stick, SSO ·1erfe1. Equipped. IUJh741. It~
down or tr•cle. '
91 ~ ..... $28 ..... ~ PllCI ' ' MONTMS
'67 PONTIAC G.T.O.
'67 FORD CUSTOM $42 "114
,MONTHS •Dr. VI, A. ft>•n'-No.7JllZ111529. 20% cl11. « r;:..;;_;;,..;_..,.... __ ,;;..;~--
PULL PllCI Jt MOtmtl ' '6·5 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
4 door. 6 cylindtr, ellltoll'l•tlc. Mech•nic1 1pt.clol. 1wx•o2ol. 207. clown or tr•de. ·.· $595 :~~. $23 :~~~. $l395 ~~. $42 :~:: ••
'63 DODGE DART '64 ·MERC. WAGON 10 PASS.
C ~bl 6 lo " •1~ · .J 10·'-Colony '-tk. Ft.II powtr, •ir. IJZY7]1 ), 20% onv•n• •. , 111 ""'"'• ni ,1 tqu1p,..... m ~ tule ""· .. ~ '··· ..... ,.. s12" 9~'"" s42 ... JD $695 :~1Li1 $29 ::..;~S ___ ., __ ·r-tl .. CE..,.--'---M-O-NT-HS
'65 VOU<SWAGEN '65 JoRb XL V·I
$41 .....
MONTHS
Air conditionin9, convertible, full powtr ,n•w top
$' .PAlrtt. 5J6,ZICMS46, 20% d-n « trede.
1295 PULL ~A'7 Pll JD .PllCI .... MONTHS
TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS '65 INmtNATIONAL ..... _.,.. lS '*' _. Miii!; n..t-Clln bl' r.-T•llld II WholllWle tio fht J1UbUC..9etl tM deelt/'11 il" piclu1p. [Nl6171 l. 20 % down or tr1dt. _~_Sl_'vt_!_. _-_·SA_vi_n __ sA_v_E1_1 _. ~a95 :~~.. $32 ~:~T0Hs
Wegon •. RIH, 1uto., PS, V-t , Lo1cl1d. Bhrt lo•k
v1 h1e $2 115. (PUC lll) 20 '/'. down er tr1de.
1·495 ...... $52 ..... PllCI MOlfTHI.
'63 VALIANT WAGON
v.200 • do.r. Ne.. 17l2670ll2. 201. 4ow1 .r.
+rede.
95 ..... . "$22 ..... • PllCI MO~
'67 MUSTANG H.T. COUPE , , .
GT 1trlpln9 , +eek, 1 .. reo 1ouncl r1clio, fully •quip.~ 61 CADILLAC 4 DOOR·
ptd, wid1 ovel tlr••. ITIY 1101 20'.l clowR or Arctic white. F11U ;..tr • .'•lr cond. (16N74JI 20'1'
$1495 ~.'i. $45 :::~ ··795'·:~ $~ :~:..
'62 FORD CONVERTIBLE '67 T·BIRD LANDAU
VI, •ulometic, recfio, h11ter, fu lly equipped.
I 9P ]50) l•• l: llc.en11 down or tr1cfe,
>'r ..... $18 ..... ~ ,.ICI MONTHS
' '
full powtr, feet. •ir, .f•tt. w•minty, 2 4r. (flY.,
910) 20'.4 clow11 or trtde,
3295 ::.~ '$89 =~·
USED CAR SALE PRICES GOOD FOR 72 HOURS· Al.L PAYMEl"!TS .FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDn.
'
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Experien~e . An Aid TP His .Teach.i .ng -
.
Roy Shriver, chairman ol the bwliness division at Golden West Col-
lege, ,la an accountant who belitve1 money 1111~ everything. AMbough he
bas worked in many kinds of ~Ulinelses, he eDJOYS teaching most.
"Everybody bu to make a decision either to make money or to do
something which allo bas inbtnlic value such as developing the potential
of. young people," states Ule enttnlltastic Anaheim resident. "However, my
butilles! experience hal been extremely important to me as an instructor."
~y, who waa born in Chicago, ~nded Morton-mgh School in
Cicero, IlliDoit and received hts as~e in arts degree in accounting from
Morton Junior CoJ{ege in Janmry 1M2. Within a fflW weeks he joined the
At The Mmic Center . ~
Th• world pr9mi4tre fJf a new mwkal, "Lov• Match," -Is th. current
attraction In the Ahmanson ThNtr .. of tbe MU1ic Center, Los Angeles. Ster-
rlntf Laurene• Guittard, Patricia b'Ut~ and Hal Llpden, from 1.tt,
above, the mu1lcal 11 bas9d on the private Uni of OuHn V I c t o r I a and
Prine• Albert. It will be on st• throufh January 4. For ticket lnfO!'matlon
phoM 1·(213)-62'-5711.
Ml• .. "'1119-0All.Y PILOT
.... .l'fW.~ u. JHe "" ....... ..__..,. ............... . ~·
. Navy Air Corp where he served for four years in a Combat Information
Center, earning the rank of lieutenant. .
A year after he was releued ffPll\ the service, he was uaduated
from Duke University and ~ed his employment with Cec<>, Steel Com-
pany as a junior ezecutive management trainee in his hometown of Cicero.
While attending a young people's group at his church, he met a young
girl named Margaret. T}tey were married in 1949 and decided to begin their
life together in Oalilornia. On arriving here Roy went to work for Standar4
Oil Company.
A year later he opened a retail and wholesale food business in 'Ana-
heim, which he operated for !our years. He then went with Rheem Auto-,
motive ~ chief financial accountant and later became a partner in Indus-
trial G~ard Service. He is now president of the corporation.
Looking for other fields to explore he joined Whittier High School Dis·
trict as business manager and adult education instructor for four year~
before joining the Garden Grove High School District.
In 1965 ·he became an instructor at Orange Coast College and the
following year jalned Golden West College in the same capacity, when the
new college opened its doors. In July he was made business divlsioh chair·
man.
. "T~aching is a profes~on you just can•t put into dollars and .cents.
The challenge is ~any things rolled into one. In one classroom you may
have a 60-year-old man and a high school drop out, the A plus and the F
minus students. You have to find a way to reach each one," Roy explained.
"The young people are demanding more answers. You can't just
quote the book to them, but you have to be with the students and know
their needs."
Being a student is quite fresh in Roy's mind because he just received
his masters degree in accounting from Long ~h state College last June
where he was selected for membership in Phi Kappa .Phi, national honor
eocieJty .
Roy, who operates a tax accounting buslpess evenings, is also a
deputy marsball in the Anabel~ and Fullerton ~urts. In bis free time he
enjoys shooting on the police range a'iicl swimming.
'Ibe Shrivers have five children: Mart, tt, a freshman at California
State College, Fullerton; Chris, 161 a lq)bomore at Servite High School;
Mary 14, a freshman at Rosary High School; Susan, 11 and Petty 9, who
both attend St. Boniface Grammer School.
OpenJng Roy Shrivers life ledger one might see lfi.s assets as well
rounded job uperiences, an enthusiastic personality and a deep interest
in people.
-Dorothy Pltr
it'. -TRADl.?H:>NAL
; · T1'ere 11 riothin9 like'• bowr of fresh fruit end
ntih to grace the center ~of your table ~n Thinks·
9ivin9 Dayl Here et Newport Produce, you'll find
the finest of all the unusual to compllment your cen•
W, terpitct. Chestnuts from ltely, lel9ium Endive from
.~ Europe, Strewberriea from New ZHlend, Fl9s from
!Jt~~lllEl ' 6rHce, end meny, meny more ettractively priced
' et Newport Produce.
Don't forget Newport Produce for · your
Chrlltllla1 Tl'ff • • • ~ or ... In • .... ...;. _ - - - -... _ - - - - --1
I Fet Tha....,.tnt I Pet ThanklftwMt I Fet Thanklt~lnt
I NIW CIOP-lllDLlll IWllT-lllDLlll ' LAllOI llZI I
I NAVIL I Grapefruit ORANGll I AVOCA~~ I
7•1AcH ~ ·10 ... 'I°' I 2 toi 25c · : I L111dt I • I LIMtt 11 ..... I . Limit 4 I
I With thll C~ wf"' thll ~ wtth thll c..,,_ I
______________ ...,,
COUPONS DPIU NOYIM•I 27 Th••• ,.steuranh demand the fined for their customers. Th1t'1 why they encl
over 200 others buy their produce from NIWPOIT PIODUCI. Patronize tfteml
JoMh·C.... Ml .................. V1l9 MM·N..,,...., Aley West.
How about you callint us?
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GARDEN NOTES
.. . .
Those Tender
..
. OM of the advantages of living in coastal climate ls the very few
freezes ' we get. Yet, frosts do occur occasionally and measures must be.
taken to protect the more tender plants.
To better understand what methods of protection are most success-
ful let us look at the principles involved. The ground absorbs heat as the
sun shines on it during the day. Then du.ring the night the ground radiates
the heat back into the atmosphere.
If th• sky is overcast much of the radiated heat is bounced back to
earth. This is why it only freezes on a clear night. We can make use of
this same "bounce-back" principle by planting under a tree or the eave
of a house. Or we can cover the plants with something such as paper or
eloth or put a large cardboard box over a small plant.
The Important thing is to get something over the top of a plant with·
out touching the leaves. Where the plant touches the covering it loses heat
at that point and the leaf or branch may freeze. Sometimes it la not possible
to cover without touching it and so any covering is better than none~
Tim• and effort pemtitting, the ideal system ls to build a wooden
framework around the plant and put a cover over it at night. The plant
then can be uncovered during the daytime and the cover replaced at nighi. _
Houses, block walls and cement all absorb beat too, and plants neu
them will receive extra warmth. .
If a plant should get nipped by frost, remember lt is not the freez-
ing that kills, but the thawing. The slower a plant is thawed out, the great-
er chance it bas for survival so sprinkle the frosted plants with water b&o
fore the sun hits them. If the plants are potted move them out of the IUD.
If, ln spite of your ·efforts, some of your plants still come ui> with
frozen and blackened branches resist the temptaUon to prune the deed
wood. This only increases the chances for more severe damage If another
frost 1bould strike. In fact, on~ shouldn't prune any frost.tender plants un·
til the danger of frost is past. Pruning only encourages new tender growth
to start. For the same reason don't fertilize such plants during the fall and
winter.
-Don Horton
MUSIC OF TODAY AT
"Music of Today" is the
th em e ol Melodyland
Theatre's llewest sh<>w
opening tonight, Novem·
ber 22. Entertaining in
tou.rpertormance1
1hrough November ~
w i 11 be the Oh41Dbert
Brothers, Brenton Wood,
Shirley and Alfred, Senor
Soul and the M.C.
Squared. For ticket infor·
mation see Gulde to Fun,
Page 2.
A populer new 1 r o u p ,
M.C. Squ4arecl, describe
themselvM at "d r o p •
I n 1. 11 The five members
h9ft thNe of the country'•
top popular groups to pro-
duce• new kind of awar ..
... with their own ,,..
'Ciel brand of music.
Brenton Woocl 11 one of
the top billed perform-
ers for the Meloclyland
''Music of Today" •pee·
tacular, Nov. H-24. Each
person •ttendlng • perfor·
mane• wlll receive • compllm~•ry Brenton
Wood record.
._........, MJLYPUT
,.,.._,,Miu I & IM
I" .....
OLD JAMES PLAYERS PRESENT.
GIAN•CARLO· MENOTTI'S OPERA --..
'!be one act opera, "Amahl and the Night Visitors," written by Gian-
Carlo-Menotti, will be presented by the Old James Players of Saint James
Episcopal Church, Newport Beach on December 5, 7 and 8 at 8 p.m. in the
Little Theatre at Corona del Mar High School, 2101 East Bluff Drive, Coro-
na del Mar.
Mell(>tti. wrote th_e opera in l951 fo.,.. a television production and des·
eribes u as 4'An opera for children . ., It recaptures memories Of his own.
chlldbOod in ltaly where traditioftally ~stmas gifts are broll&ht by tht
Three Ktnrs, rather than Santa Claus.
Thr<R,Jgh the years the production which ta filled wlth drama, aus.
pense, humor and deep ~th in tile coming of Christ, has gained wide in ..
terest with audiences of all ages,
The story centers around a Cl'ipplec1 &>oy a1ld his mother who Invite
the W'eary Kings into their humbto dwellin& for a short rest before tiley con.
~ue &heir journey m search ol the Clarin Child.
Featured in the productlon are David Brewer, aie U, ol Orange, 1n '
the role ol the crippled boy; Gaynor Tnunmer, n.umo-sopN09, wtK> is 011
the mule-tacuJty staff at California St..te 1.-0pg Beec;h, lfnls ibt N!e ol Ult ~ef. Tenor Don Lindstrom from Corona del Mar is King Ka-.,ar; Jamet
COwell, baritone, appears as King Melchoir; Mli:e Gallup, ball, w1ll be
King Ualttrazar, and Mike Sherwood of Newport Beach sings the role of tbt
Pa&'· ·
Jrvin Ximber, orgamst and choir dltectOr at Saint James Church, will .
conduct the one act opera end Miss Sharyn Cue, eoprano soloist •t St. James. \fill be state directors with Mrs. Robert Schmlnke assisting them.
Mrs. Jadk SheryvoOd ts tn charge (1f costumes and props and Paul Seiersen ts stage manager. ·
See Gulde to Fun, Page 2, for ticket details.
·' ....... ;,
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Conductor Irvin Kfmber, rlpt, finch It la a family affilr with th,.. mtmo
bers of the Sherwood famlly •ppNrlng In the opera. S..ted It Steve, his
brother Mike Is 1t1ndlng, ind Mn. J1ck hrwoord who 11 a member of the
chorus 1nd in CM"I' of costumes. . .
.. . ~ "' .
Above., D1vld &r.wer who ~1y1 the role of the llttlt crJpplecl taoy~ AnMhf;
incl Gaynor Trammer -who iln~ t"9 ·role .. 1.St mother. At left, ..... cl~ .
rector Sharyn c ... , Miium the "Nddr .. 1 of John Miiier white Judith Mil·
ler and Vicki Clucas, from left,~ 1w1lt cottume Inspection. The opera Wiii
be produced December 5, 7 and I, In the Llttle ThHtre at Corona del Mar
High School.
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ATTRACTIVE ROOM DIVIDERS
Separating the dining area from Hie living room or dividing off a
speciol corner for studying nee.cf not be o problem. Porfitions of filigree
hordboord which are carried ot most lumber yards con attractively and
inexpensively separate areas.
See-through partitions, such as the one above, designed in 'geo-
metrical patterns which do not reach the entire height of the room will
provide more of on airy open feeling than most solid '*411 partitions.
Filigree hardboard also may be used effectively as o solution to
the stuffy closet problem. An interesting panel used as a door will allow
oir to poss in ond out of the closed space. It is also a decorative idea for
cupboards in the kitchen.
Children who shore o room· will appreciate a divider that will add
o little extra privacy to their room. One currently on the marltet includes
seporote study areas and o two-way storage closet in its plan.
Almost any homemaker, with a bit of coaching can work with
filigree hordboord. It ·is easy to point and moy be nailed or glued with
o special adhesive.
Other ideas for use of these panels and room dividers are offered
by the Masonite Corporation, JMnuf adurer of the portion pictured
ebove. Write to the Home Service Bureou, Box B, Chicago, Illinois 60690.
Request form 6812 for a fre .. filigree hardboard idea brochure; form
AE-~3 for the children's room and other room dividers on the market.
. -.
"
NOTEBOOK
Bedspreads
BY J. RUSSELL TUMf1 ,._. '_. ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-DECORATOR
Several manufacturers ofler bed-
spreads in a variety of fabrics, patterns
and colors which can be ordered from a
catalog or sample book. Throws with
square or rounded corners, fitted spreads
with a choice of kick pleats, scalloped or '
plain coverlets with pleated or gathered
dust ruffles are among the many choices
available.
Some manufacturers also will make
spreads t'O fit spedal dimensions. This is
especially helpful if you have an old-
fashioned bedstead of unusltal size.
· Additional fabrics selections are avail·
able in semi-custom armngement.s
which permit excellent choices at costs
far below the usual charge of custom
bedding shops. Bedspread manulactuers
are spedall&ts and are keyed to suit
most customers wishes.
When meuurlng the bed, keep the bed·
spreed style you have selected in mind.
For a throw bedspread, measurements
should be taken overall. The length
should be taken from head to foot and
width should include the mattress plus
the drop on both sides. Fitted bedspreads
and studio cover measurements also
sh<>uld include the size of the mattress.
If the above measurements are care-
fully noted before Y® make your selec-
tion, the clecorator will be able to order
the spread accurately using diagrams
provided by the manufacturers.
NEXT WEEK: CUSTO~ FURNITURE
Please addr.u lnquirie1 and qu.estion1 by letter to: Designers N~
W.ffender Mag•JlM, Post Pffice Box 1876, Newport Beech, ~~. ....... ...... '-~!'-'~~,.._~ ... ,
,.....,, twtuc• "111•1NI'" -
..
.•
l .. .. -: . I
, . . '·
-·
. .
--,.. ~--------
f
\ ,.
' " ~
Fortunate Oranfe Coqnty reddenta, bow·
ever, need not trek by jet or freeway to IUCb
me~lltali delftln.for ,an •ey.n&Jl1'1 aclveaa-·
ture ln'gutrono1n1. ~t In N""°?t Beach -a~y the ~Um tij(dvaiat ~ Qd.
caco th~• a rMtiuraDt with prmet fan
and sumptuom decor equal to the belt any-
where. . ,
Md ii ,tM Sleclld (Jtj' .... ...,.cial pdde
ln a.1eatM1 uiet»e.~ ~Room, New-port all do DO lea fer tbi emtenc. ol
Katam'•· Thll ~IMlte"" lltablllbment wow be a worthy iddlUQa to any clty'1 lilt
ol prime diniN -·~·
l11clvcle1 la .. d ., "911c• llrlt4
Pet.tote, llell & lwtter.
CllllclAflt P'ertlM ~ Pr111
A~~--······
Wlae&her y o u r j>OC.telbook allow• for
••IOIMthinl 1peclal" any nlgbt or but once a
year, It'• a place ~ to mate •very
· vllit a distinctive occulon. Since notbinf
topmost-toumedos of beef tenderloin, au
clwnp.l1on, for uample-copi~s at barlaln
prlc#, don't expect an lnupenlivt tab.
-. --~•
To paae the width fl!. wallet or pane you.
ahould taii, better count OD eom.thlJll In tht
neJ.&hborbood ol '35 to • to plct up a dinner
check, including drinU and/or wine, for two.
If yoa colllider lt an lnvutment to pleue
iiOI ..VAllOfl ~ '1fl ......
• __., ... c-t Mwr ..... ~
SWISS CHAI.IT
The Fin .. t In Contf nental Food
OUI IPICIA&.TIUi
• wa-ScW ..... w Pwi1l1111 e H, .. .._...._._.., ... ,
• SE ........ a.-..... ............... ~
. ~I P.M.·11 P.M....ctOllD SUNDAY
THE MARINE RESTAlJRANT * Excellent Menu * Fin• Service.
LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS
from 11 :JO A.M.
kes«v1tion1 recommended
...: I 644-1700, ... Ext.\' 445 . ..
MUSIC P.O~ YOUll IJSTtNIH~ AND ~AMCi. PUASUlll
NleHJLV, RON 1100 P.M. ,IN
'l'BE QJJO UtlJJVGB
'
J
I
I .
6
. • J J • •
For IOGP try lentil. Fnnch ~ •..,. or vk:hy1ol111 (all .71c). Tw top ...,..,
amoDf ltVtD oftend, &rt .. J.-NDali
and 1plnach (each •t.75). ~a
TANT~IZINO VAlll'!':o:t" $,lJ f
A la carte entreel otltr a.~ '6
tty ot Items like tona lllancf ..., •cilDolll.
11ute meuniere ($4.95); frog ltp1 r~
('5JO); ttnderlo!Jl of beef, en brocnene with Mabie rlct .($4.16); prime Yeal .. ~ !
In The AmetltH Tr.ditto" I II ,
:l'HAlllOGIYlllO. DINJlll·:
Wfth An The Pestf•• Trh'"'""" • ' hrvtnr from 12 Noon ~ {
$4.25 ~ ~ I
CHIU>RIH -U.S.. . \; ~ ,... '
&Tut:~~![ fl :
1241 Wtlt COiet .........,, Ntwp«t ...... ....................... . . '
, _,I •
PlfOlll IJwtll
117 qclAN Aft.
H•NnN•TOtt llACM
..,
-"-5' --
---~--·-
I _ ............................ UIP •
• UHK..... •· ~9'1H • &.Aft ,1Nf98&
• . , . Jiii L COAIT H,_HWAY
J4Y ~· MMAICA Ml• -"' . . ....
~i / "; , \ I
.Jaditlonal. .
'THANKSGIYfNG . DINNER·
. . . .
Roast Yqung ·Tom Turkey ;J 11
-~-· ~'t-
Roist long lsiand Dudding
Prime Ri.bs ·of ·Beef
Served from 1 :00 P.M. · ·
.....
PIOUDLY PllSIN1'S
Direct .... '"-"'-; · l"f9111Mnt .. L" V---' ••• ~ ..
Fabula~ ~Flam"1,go·.
·. · ~· 101. ·SIMS .
~ .. 1a~·o
IN THI COCITAIL LOUNA N...nlY .,
NO COVU e ~~~MINIMUM . ·~ . .. -
......... _, .. ftp.&-~
CLOllD ~DAY• . I •
1041 IA YSIDI DllYI. NIWPOIT j7WJll
• I •
./& ...
f w
Sup~
. <;hlne1~ Ctal1l~a
' ...... .
~ ......... , . -..... , ... ...
n, ..... .,...
l1ir c....
cw.J.. ...........
. $4.SO
..
•
I '~
CHA TIAUlllAND
F<>l TWO
--COSTA Mli#a :-• HOYt~RD JQHNSQN~S
. Old. Fashioned
THANKSGIVING DINNER
Clllu.ct Fruit CuP wlftl Slll<bet • Tometo Juice
Chlclttn Rice Sovp or N-ENI~ Clem Cllowdtr ROAST STUFFED YOUNG TURKfY
Giblet Grny C1pe Cod Cr1111Nrry S111c1
Wlllpp1d Pot1to.1 or Cendied T111u
P111 in lutter S111ce
HHm of lettvce
with choice of dre11in9
Assorted lrHd1 end lutter · '
Choice of •
Old F11hio111d Pumpkin, Pecen or Apple Pie ,
How1rd John1011'1 Ice Crum or Rupberry Sherbet
Fud9e Celt• Coconut .C.lte
Hot Baited lndi1n Puddin9 with Ice C-11m $295
TH C.ffH Miik .
~Hllf?REN'S DINNER
Tolcey &rapes · Mlfth M~1d Nutt
Fruit 0. or Chldlt11 ltlc9 ~
ROAST STUFFED YOUNG TURl<EY
Giblet 6rny C1pt Ceil C-111berry S111ct
Wlilppecl Pot1toe1 a.ttwred Pen
A11ortecl lr1114'1 111d lutter , $175
C1ke or Ice CtHlft witll Coeltle .
Miik er Hot Chocolate Apple ·111d Uillypop
2750 HARBOR BLVD.-COSTA MESA I • . .
'lnla on the menu ii broned New Yort airloin,
·rout· LOng.Island duckling. 'Donelw Roclty
Mo<mta.tn-rainoow trout, breast of c chicken
a la Kiev or prime rib of eutem beef. It'a
merely another indication of our changing
times.
,s~E CHOICES
· Should yoor family be in the vanguard of
· those eating in ·a restaurant next Tbursday,
Out !N' A boot otten a few sugg.eitions for
: total -enjoyment of the feast. The,e's the
Sheraton-Beach Inn, 21112 Ocean Ave., Hmit.-
'tngton Beach; The Newporter; 1107 Jamboree
~d, NeWJlOrl Beach; Coral R~, ?'M
1 ·Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa; ·Bob Burns, 37
~Fashion Island, Newport Center.
_ ~o. Stu.ft' Shirt, 22U W .. Coast Highway,
. Newport; Ben Brown's, Laguna .Beach Coun-
lry Club, '31106 Coast High'Yay, Soutl\ La.
guna; Ha' :P~nny Inn, Beach Blvd. at West-
minster, Westminster; Howard. Johnson 's,
2750 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa; Vineyard's
. . COl)t1~4d on Pa .. 12 : ., ' J " . • :
· "Where It's Happeningr•
Bill MARTINI COCKTAIL LOUNGE ------uo I. 17tli conA. MUA
64M111
"The Maximum Load"
futurlng PARK$ WILSON
With Jemie 111~ Cl.ipper
. cw Mertt ·~··· SPA~Hml DINNll
AU. YOU 1~• CAN IAT ~
IYllY MONDAY Nl•HT
°'-I• eo•ty H 111d111mrttl'I For Al
Olplplc ..... nc .. tsJ
llWARD IOOM
LADllS WILCOMI
-
PllllNO llNIHl'S A "THA·NKS" GIVING DINNER
'.
THANKSGIVING OAY AT
THANKSGIVING ~DAY MENU ,.
New porter Reliah Trey
Choice of
'
,
,
Censomm• T rienon T 0111.t .,.. ... S1f1d · W 11dorf S1l14'
Roa.It Apple Valley Tom Turkey ~ Giblet &rev.y
·Sag• or €he~tnut Drening -, .. · · : C::r~n~erry ~euce · -. ' · . .. : . . ·
Baked Sugar Cured H•m; S•u~• Cuml;etfencl ~
Bonele11 Rocky 'Mountain T r6vt Saute ..::..; Arna Reline
Road Prime Ribs of Eastern Beef -au Jui
BroJled New York Sirloin -Maitre d'Hotel
. : '\ . v,.t.hle -'•t•t ...
l1nen'1 lquai~ Corn P'ltien C.ncli1cl Y 1m1 . ) o ... .,. Whipp1d 'ot1to ..
Hot Minco Pl• -lr•ncly Seuce ""h Strewltorry lunclH PuMpkln Pio
I l.V.,19•
. T •• Coff11 Mlllr
SPECIAL CHILOlllN'S OINNER#~···· ... · ................... $2.60 · · ·
..
.....
• J
' f
l
• '
' ' I
j
l
-
NOW OPEN
IN NEWPORTS NEWEST HlGH RISE
LOOKING DOWN ON THE BAY
FEATURING SEA FOOD AND
LIVE MAINE LOBSTER
LUNCH -DfNNER
SUNDAY BRUNCH
I ~CtOSI ROM '"' A1lCMU ANO NEXT 0001 TO VILLA NOVA. .......
Three~s Company
JJeo11t an IQlnla
"Sopetb imteitalnmat , , • •
"GnailattnC lilef. , , • · · -
11Btft MW p0ap fD )'tllW • 1 t •
QE.i:r'a.
GRAND HOTEL
' f'1Mhna• Wq,AnaW .. f'll-""
''
~
Tht Ultl1111 .. t 1 In 5,c:i.C.t c.1.1 .......... ..
... ~e op~n to the public ·
INTllTAJNMINT I DANCI ... . Te
"MARLO & JAY" TUISDAY TltlU SUNDAY
LUNCHEON .nd DJNNER DAILY
8ANQUET ROOMS to 200
SUNDAY BRUNCH
.
New Look
.. Drinks illclude everything from coffee, tea,
milk and coke to select beers, wines and
Mr. OO's is ~n from 5:00 p.m. to midnight,
Colliiderable action can be found nightly
on the dance floor and during Th~ even.
A phenomenon ~,..to our Um~ Is lngt' ten-cent beer Specials.
Image making. In order to ~ wllatevel' .. ,~... · ·· . ,uch a program en ta 111, there'a 'tb.• ot• AND MVYIES TOO ·,
CQiGnal iD1tance ol -having io uadertaa For Uie ~ minclect, Wednesday even.;
a little image ~ beforelumd. SUoll .... ~gs ha~ .--,. designated. Ml nighta, With
Ii the cue with Jin) Hill, pro~etQr ~ lkl monee"aDd. Ml fashion aac1 eq~ · Of the -recCIUy opened ·~ 00'• at w. .. thoya Mid Ill~ with the Skill~~ ~Coast ~ay, 1N~rt~ · · Mr. 00'• ti" ham ~:to p.m. to ll\id.rilght,
· Taking oft? the premiau of the iormet • "1etday ~-a'lburiday and s u n d a y , · 1
J('Goo'a, ijill ll d~eloping an eatlre1y clif• 1tay1 opm 1Uilil !:00 a.m. Friday and Satur.
feret .uno.*" from that w ll l c h · ' daY, ~ ii Closed Mondays.
; dWactertle4 tile former pm.a hoUle. Be' a • ....._ • J>
· etmibl tDr more of a clinner houle ~ 'W
• l.>f .. .uon bUt Jlooiu, at the same ~ · to retam tie navoi tL a place o& fun
. mentm~ too.
FOOD .'.:
By a~ding touches like \able cloths an4
cancllea, he bellevea Mr. oo•a now ltrites
• balance as an ideal spot for both famllie1
and the younger dating crowd. lt'a ltill_posal·
. NQW OP.EN. UNDER -NEW MANAGEMENT
THE
PROUDLY SHO~CASES
THE .RIS~LtE.
REVIEW
A J.D. PRODUCTION
Appearing In
THE VELVET KNIGHT ROOM
Tuesd1y thru Sund1y
Servlnt DI..., -I te 10 p.111. -D91chlt
Closed Monday .
1045 BAYSIDE DR., NEWPORT-675..0200
AT ••• . TH'DORYMEN
• 'I • MRY MONDAY NIGHT
IS
FAMILY NIGHT "
PAM I LY
ITIM lEC.ULAlLY IPICIAL
Plsh 'N Chlpe • • • • • • • . $1.0S • • • • • • 89G
Childs Portion • ., • • • • • . 6Scr • • • • • • 54c
Chlcktn 'N Chips • • • • • • 1.25 , •• • ... Sl .00
Shrimp 'N Chips • • • • • • 1.60 • • • • • • $1.30
And
Newport Sty., Clam Chowder .••.••.• only 30a
-Aft Dlnllft'I Pecko9" Te Go-
2100 West <>c.1n Pront
Newport BMch -673-2200
locattd at +ht ftot of Newport Pl.,
Dally 121 Noon·I p.a .-111 1.m. Fri. A' Sat.>"
•
: · oUt ''If Aboater solicits comment.,
criticism afld praise about Otange Coast
-restaurants and ntght clubs. If you have something you would like-to aay, write
Out 'n' Al>Outer; Weekender Magazine,
Box 1875, Newport Beach, California.
L .. 1,hes from 11 :30
D•ily except Sund•y
Dinntr from 4:10
Nightt~ .
ENTERTAINMENT
. Nightly txcept Sund•y •
TONY FLORES
. Hia Son91 and 6uit.r
11 I. ~'la.J ~ Vin RESTAURANT
$TEAKS FEATURING •• 1
SEAFOOD PRIME RIB
Serving from I I :\0 1.m.
HOUSE SPECIALTIES
''THE BEST STE.AK SANDWICH IN TOWN_ $2.26
DAILY LUNCHEON AND
DINNER SPECIALS ·--·--·-·-·-··········· $1.25. $2.25 Entertainment In the Lounge Tutsday thru Sunday 1:)0 PM
THANKSGIVING DINNER
ROAST TURKEY wt+h Old Fathioned Ortuing >
-OR-· · ·
BAKED HAM wit+. Candied Y .,,;. -·················· f2. 91 SPECIAL FAMILY STYLE DINNER
(Whole Turkey end all the fT1mmift9al l
S~rvtd only to parti11 of I 2 or more,
by r• .. rv•tf• - --,,., '*'°" fl.00
MAKE YOUR RESERVATION BY 24 NOV.
In the VISTA .$HOPPIN& CENTER .
843 ~·19th St ... COlta Mesa 642.0712
¢OA.TES
• r
The Oki BalbM Pavilion, a favorite landmark •'°"I the Orange Co.st, has-a planilt-corri-
,.,r.fyrlclst by the name of Carroll c..._
ptay'ng Nch Wednlecley thl'0U9h S.tvl'My
night from t p.m. If you Ilk• toft, drNmf
piano In a spot with • view of the INy wh9n
you can call your own tu.-.•• well .. yeur
•v•r• brand. thl1 11 for ~· &nfoy dinner .
here aftcl stay °" for a tvnefUI evening. "
NOW APPEARING
AUTHENTIC, EXOTIC MIDEAST
·-HARl'9' DANCERS . .
FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS •
NO COVER -NO MINIMUM
'l'BE CASPIAN
1670 .... ,_ 1..aawn -c.... M .. -MJ..IZtJ
I
~ .. THANKSGIVING DINNER
~ ••.. , ................................... •311
::.~ ........................................ '2"
Serving 3:00 to 7:00 P .M.
RESERVATIONS
sabblesack tt'lD IY 111 SEA
.._ lectlln DAILY PILOT
~ .... , •'If & IHI "· : .. , ....
• 696 S. Coest Hwy.
Lasluna ~
4f4.94N
W• 08lr'
lfw ... Pllce.tO.l Ju.t tw the tt..--d. 'MllRRYMAC'
( lonus °""' E»lrte Nw. :.ti)
Mond1v-S...llhtttl Dinner rt .se
Jl« !. Co1at Hwy., C.D.M. "'c:roe• trom Coe1t Superm1rket)
ll1nnn
mv'41n tM
Gr!Wl Jl.'111Mr
•
$71 I. MAIN, ORANOB
-Wfftl s.., .,. S.19' eN aw.. .. ,..,11. toss• ., ., .. ~ b1k14'
br,1d. -----0.,..,,.,n. j)y th '''" DO'M1riic·l l111porh4' a.era ,
, l>ltfNll ... f. Ml, DAILY
209 PA~ :....ri.AtaOA 1 . · 6'7M774. . I . . . . '
PBESEHTS
JOHN
COOK
Popular Guitarist
Appearing
Wed. thru Sunday
l
(MfllCltllll/) In lttll'11 Mt$Uonuva/loJ 111 ltetl"4 Mon., llo't. ~I 1:00 11•. Dec, t, a:OO PA "A.,..,.. SM lltOff "-HfW ~ .
(°"911Nolt, /11 lttllClt
1Jl11t1.,....,. .. •:00 p.m. ..... 0.0. 7, •:00 .....
"OM o/ tlw Mt M.-. iii ,._.,"-H,Y , W...
.. ~.
·-.
~
r:rf---~--~-:-~----------------~--------------------=-~~~----
•
L "'·
SUI .,.... Prwr. et lrlllll. ~ft
o,.. 1.-6:41
""' ... toli.4 .... ......
. "THERESE
AND
ISABELLE"
~~------------------OSKAR WERNH
••
"INTERLUDE"
'Zf,utcd -~7tl • .tt~
~ \. . '' : . ~ . :·. ' . •• . ,.t.1.., ... ... ' .
ACADEMY-
AWARD
WINNER
aUT DMCTOR-MIKI N1CHOt.t
JOSEPH E. LEVINE -.... A
MIKE NICHOLS I
LAWRENCE TURMAN -
THE &RADUAlE
AH #ltO EM8AS$Y fl.M
tot.Oft ••-COOMolMY--
PLUS
"111• Swimmer"
On Stage.
Sunday, Nov. 24, 4 p.~.
The
Costa Mesa Symphony Association 1
Presenh The
ORANGE COAST .COLLEGE
COMMUNITY
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ·
JOSEPH PEARLMAN •...•....................• CONDUCTOR
SERGIU LUCA ·······-·-·················-·:········ Vl()f..fNIST
PROGRAM
ACADEMIC FESTIVAL OVERTURE ....... BRAHMS
SYMPHONY NO. 2 tN 0 ···--··-·······--t!ETHOVEN
VIOLIN CONCERTO NO. I IN D -·········· ,A6ANINI
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE AUDITORIUM
ADMISSION $1.00 .,, • .
0,..
6141 ,... ........... ..............
• NOW-I .. Tlltlllley e ................. ............ ..,,
.JOUIH SW .
'llOPKAL ftSH :
Largest Selection of
Tropictl F ls h &
Supplies ln the area.
NewJ~
111 W. WIUOM, COSTA MU~ '
171-0, lllye~ or.-~ , .. ch
<btttlnd tile Poel Office).~ Coif Fell"vltW Rd., ~79'1
.. ...
N•wport BHch's cornlcs. sic.1 ... Incl Hender·
son, will be 1morig the l)eldlln.rs ln .Dftn•Y·
land1s Thanksgiving WMkend st9 show
Nov. 28-30. Th• hour long revue also 1t1n
th• Righteous Broth•rs incl the King Cousins.
Gary Lewis and the Pl1yboys, in their first
d1nce d1te since G1ry1 releaH from the U.S.
Army, wlll pl1y for dancing during the big
wMkend of 1fter d1rk 1ctMti .. at Dian.yl1ncl.
* · • aucH • "' •u1a • • HUNTINGTON a•ACH • 847·9aoll
MISS PE66Y LEE llSS IODE AELOS --PEIER IERO JOHllY DllOill
FOR HOTEL RESERVATIONS PHONE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
Now thru Tuesd1y
. lt9tlWe4 .. NM.J7
Pnl New111en'1 Procl11c;flo1 of
~ltHOeot..oc•-·--''RACHEL, RACHEL'' tMDlll OM a Mii DlllO rrt1t • ·
,"PAPEB
UCB" . I
··Alarr Alaa
Lauren Hutton
·TueReal
. Detro.it Uona
-1
l
' ' LIVE
....... ,.;,;,,.i ....... -....;...,;.,.;....,~---.;....~-----------~--· ..... IHH• •&YN.ef
...., •• 1 .....
L •
-~ -~----~ ---
~
--~-L----'---"""'-~...-;..;.-l. __ --___,\i........-;.--=--------'--------'---'--
. ., .
•
~ ..
• , f • i 'J 'l''-i ; Nows ths tima , ·1 ~ to~ ~hahiJ~::~ver · , : · .?. ::t;'fo :fam'ous · · ~ _i J~~ '
1.1 f•' ·; ,.. ·rJ •· f"~.ct,ure *'!.aling. · · · "' .
~Genera(. ~ .! : • .,t • PREMIUM <;>UAlrrY · • SELF. SEAuN& . .
- -4 ---DP.~~ ODS'-:.
:e DUAL TREAD e FU4-4-PL Y NYGEN
BLOW.OUT PROTECTION e 28 % DWEil
NON~ID e DUAL mACK TRACTION ·
I
• PATENTED DURAGEN RUBBER I
• " l • • • • IDENTIFIES ITSELF • • • ~ND YOU~ · r ,
Front End Ali~ent ·
0. tl*f•1'8Ca torrtet~ ~ $8~! IDd llftW4tcll ,, .... , .._ . CAIS
St11r Ck4r of 'A.ccldent1 I
'J~ ! . ~J>L'Mf. "-'l 'flmt·IR'Dlng JltHtAlnhnmt I .~ .. ~~,. ~'j l'l"lf '
., .. i, ~ .. pr dmt In ... TODAY I .
•AT IJST PllCI PLUI .... a T~
... . ..
\ \
¥ .. ·~..-..... r' ••
·r:~~.~ .:
~-~~
.......... ---_...,., ·~ J •• .., .. .. ' .. """' ~ ..
I . ;.