HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-11-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. --.... ~
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• . . • AWOL Soldiers Ju nap ' '
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 2T, 1968
VOL '1, 110, .. I l •c:TIOHS. • 1'.t.G•l
True/a: Three at Large
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A VIP Panning
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:£ ·::.1.: • Jti:~ x ·~ • • ..
, . Gltiaver · ·AtteSt ·
DAILY PILOT Sh" ..... t.
CARTOONIST VERSll_S CARTOON IST
Virgil Partch .Ra.a A Fritncf
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Cartoon'. Alley
Coas t Gagmen Pai1i~ Theater F ence
87 RICHARD P. NAU
Of ti.. WllY l'lllt stllff
Th• sl&n carried by lhe mllltanl Jf\lle
old Laguna lady in *'"" ~ J11!1. "OCJnlt ttnt to actorL" _,,,. ~
"That's Frank Interlandl. H!.'a the
pollUcal one. Hll brother P1ill ii Uie "'Y one,;.· confided an utlsl tpe<:taler.
Frank was hard 1t work with paint
pot and ltulh doallrtg a blgg<Nhan<llfe
carlooll on a lenee pant! '1i!llt-leet ldch
tor lhe ~.ooo fadnty that ii 1o he
coml!leted next April adj.-the
FesUVal of Arts grounds oo BroadWay.
~ lbe fence from the lnlerliuidls, ~ill PlltCJi (VIP). of COrona del Mar
wieldeCt Ilia trush over .. Big George."
Seated \oo a bar atoot, Georse is aaylng
~ .: 1::,m;r~ ·~,?t~o Utl:ek ~~
loterlandi."
Fwmel..t.a&una.scbootboaro .preSld<nt
D o .n T~ was a trifle pall I~ as he
ft(cecl th~ boards. He had rJ.Sen £rom
(Se\ CARTOONS, Page !) . \ ..
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PrisOn Return lgnOl",ed
Black Panther
Fails to Turn
HimseH In
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Black
Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver lgnO'!'ed
a date for his return to prison today,
and an order was issued for his arre!l.
Cleaver was to tum himself in at
9 a.m. but had not appeared by 9:30
a.m. The California adult authority,
which supervises parole cases, said it
would Wll,lt a "reasonable time -about
another hall hour" and then ask polict
to issue an all points bulleUn for his
arTest. -Cleaver's wile. KathJeen, and his at·
torney, Charles Garry, arrived at the
ttat.e building shorUy before the scheduJ..
eel 1U1Tender time and made their way
through a corridor jammed with about
100 newsmen.
·Garry told newsmen that r\filher he
nor Mrs. Cleaver had any idea on the.
whereabouts of the Black Panthera'
"minister of inlonnation."
"I have not lalked to him since Sunday
and I have not seen him since last
Thµraday w6'n be made a &peeeh,"
Garry said.
Mrs. CJeaver said she last saw her
husband Sunday night. She said she did
not think it possible that he had fled
the country.
"In tbe fiat· place I don't think-he
has had time and in the second place
he gave no indication he was laving
(See CLEAVER, Pa1e !)
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Fire l(ills Lido Won1an . .
Victim Suffocates in Mystery. Blaze
Newport Beach socialite Georgi a
Spence Davil, ex-wife 9f. a prominent
(..aguna Beach Land developer, diecl'Tues·
day nJgbt when names and smoke· swept
through her Lido Isle home.
'Ml.e Orange County Coroner'• oUice
said Mra. Davlt, 55, ol 148 Via Trleate,
died m suUocatlon.
F'lremen found her lying unconscious
on her soot-covered bed just before mid·
night.
· 1ile llvfna: room of the' single-story
Jlome WU totally involved in flames'
when firemen arrived.
While aome of the flrmeen attacked
the blau from the front of the building,
others entered through a rear ~drQOm
window and found tbe victim, who was
alone In the house.
Flremen attempted resuscil.aUon as
they awaited an ambulance. Mrs. Davis
never regained ·conaclousneu. She was
pronounced dead on arrival at Hoag
Memortsl Hoopital.
lnvestlgaton: said cawie of the rire
wu not immediately known. They said,
however, that Ill origin · Waa a comer
of the living room.
Damage was estimated at •t5,000.
Mrs. Da.vla wu formerly married to
Everett Davi.!, Jr., developer of La~a's
Rancho Laguna estates ln Blueblrd·Can-
LA Police Arrest 49
In Call Girl Roundup .
Frtm Wire Services.
Cloling. &Df!"elght•mootb probe of a
loose11 knJt lov•for-money ring wh!ch
actually bou~~t and sold glamorous call
girla, police began making mass arrests
of the network principals Tuesday ..
A total <>1,A9 out Of. al Pe"""" lndlcted
by. the countY Grana Jury •ere rounded
up by Los AnfleleJ police and lheriff' •·
deputies by Tuesday night.
. Pollee Chief Thoaw Reddin called
~on.: ·The' ·oavises n1ade their home.
in Laguna. She moved to NewPQrt alte;·
Ute divorce li'9e ~ igO. 1 -: • ' : '
Her tragie deltti shoCked her mart,,
Lido Isle lrlends.
She waa active .In the l.Jdo Jal!
Women's Club, eerving ·aa boOks sect.lot
chairinan last yeu; ·.and was on Ult
decorations committee of lhe Women't.
Club.
The attractive socialite is sunived b:;
her mother~ Mrs. Rudy Br~t of Coste
Mesa; and i,,. ilauglljen llY a marrlq!
prior lo the Ill.di iUa!Tlqe.
Lut rites are pending at Baitt
Mortuary In Corona del Mar.
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Wea~~
The clouds wp\ bt high on ,
Thanbglvlni,. but U.-lamperatun
won't. It'll he a dlllly IS aklng tlio
~. and 1' furl!l!r . inland '"l"'f
j l1lOIUy lllM1 lkla. • •
~!::-;'. .. ~ -~. iKOuie.' Phil bad
hU perl midlcat.d Mondt, "'Queenie"
saying, "U all Ille 1""'ld If a ~
"~ aro all Ille ~ All I know
are clowu.~~ appears daily in
lbe~~uiJU'.;...,.ted"~ from
l h e Oyin& ~ of sl.J talented men
""• part of lbe areat Laguna Beach paint..tn Tuesday at the lite of the new
Lquna-Moulinn Pilyhou,. now Wlder
3 'AWOL Gls Flee T k the whcileiale roundup the-lar,..i Tic:e
_ ·_ 1nvest1gaU01t In the h1slQey of Ctlllomla, r u c one lnvolviDg opera\on irom coast to'
C<Wt.
' INSmE .TODAY
The holidov mlcelld of/1r1 a
construcu:on. •
Al artlat...-g1"""1, Ed Nolzi&er hustl-
ed thither and ym, lbe le.le came
lo Uhl In rivltf redll blues, greenl allll
yelloWI, a rtlnbow e!gbHeet high ,and
103 le.I """· When lhe ,..,.. hu -its stint
a.round th&. fm,i~auon uf. the »seat ~i:r· ~it will be aueUoned panel by
ProccecJ. from sale o( the original
wort. ..r ' lo till! bUlldin1 f1e<1
A teen-age soldier was :M:riously In·
jured Tuelday when ht and three other
AWOL GD )e.aped from a pri1tm bua
speedlnJ nOrth on the San Ole(o Froeway
in Foun&ah1 Valley.
nle h other ... = ~ were unhurt lad rem at large to-
day. , • I
Aufhofttles at H d n t I n a: t o n In.
tcrcon\lilublty 1~1tal.lild Pvt. Randl
B. Adams, Ji, ~ Ft. Riley~ Kina., .a:u •
fer .. f head lnilflOI' altc~ l(lmplrit from
the rear door pf the bus a1 It pttllled
b<nellth Ille Slater AVtlllft lfrlt!Jt.
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The four were part or • group or
2l mtlitary pr1sonen en route from the
San ~go to the Long Beach Naval
Statloo. They eoc1ped oul the emergency
e:dt when the five guards on bo11rd
niphell lo subdue another prlsoott ..1'o I
bad lunged 1 ...... m1 and turned off the
!~"' key. •'Ille >thl<le wu travellns
abOUt fJO mllea per hour at the Ume,
a mllltary lpoWman said.
The chief petty officer ordered tile
d'rl'ver to keep ping. He wu aware
of the rear-dclor -pe but not thot
~ of the eiC.l)iOil liad been JnJurod.
'
said the miUlary aotirce. The boa coo-,
tlnued o nto the I..oqg Beach installallm.
Still belns sought are Army, Pvtl. c.n·
J. -. •·"11v1n. J. ll8Rliin<, a. uc1
William Cooj.er, 17, The)' ..,_,,. )lat -·
by an unidentified molor\11 u 11\q.
ICrambled -. lhe · -of the freewoy. ~ WU nmng dvlllati
clothes, offloen>11kl. .
Tile 11 Navy prllonera <XI board waro
bound 191' the Loni Beach brlg.r1'be flv~ Aon1 porllOM<I were lo be trllllfeo-
red .. lbe FL MacArthur stockade.
Glamorous glrls ._ 101ne or whom
earned up lo 11.ooO -lly In the ring
-were 1eaerally lsnored. ., l;iwmen
went afler Jl(illclpola behind lbe ....... Uon. 1 f-"'I~---
Moel al lhe amat<a ...,. booked "' char'" of pandertnr. · = l!fd ~..,., to commit ~ ... t/le result of an 111-Dllll vl.0 tasl force,'
"'11ch -ked fer' Marl): a 'year on the cue. I I •
The lnv..O,aUon wu t1IOllly ceneered '
on the pa Strlp area of Well i..,. ( ROIJNDIJP, Pap I)
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numl>fr of lllmtric:al -
around PTOnQC. Coiiruv. S11 l'n-
lirl4in .... ~ Pode 19.
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W~11, Nowmbtr 27, 1968
Ky to Head S. Vietnam Delegation • Ill
SAIGON (UPI) -President N&UY<n
Van Tbleu Wednelday announced the
appointment ot Vice President Nguyen
Clo Ky "to cuitrW. guide and superviae"
~ vaa ... , tt'._.,, co ttce .. J>ioded Vietnam war talu In Part..
!Be said South Vietnam would be on hMid 10< the !lnt regular meetlnjj within
tlio nut 10 dlJa. jly, the llamboyonl ""1ner al r -1. ii Soulh -·· leading ' Oboerv.,. Aid hia appointment
Uy iodlcated Saigon would main-
hard line poilcy In 111 dealingo
theCommunllts.
Thieu made the ......-ent In a
brtel televloloa ·-!nm Salpo In
wblcb be urged the S..111 Vietnamese
to "fight harder than ever befort."
The Communist strategy, he warned,
was one of "figbtlng while talking."
"l lllPlli .. ,.. -lo lot .... put yoo to lileep with their peaco
scbemes,''' he said. "You should not
forget that the peace we want II a
,,..ce of f-and nol lilavery and poverty.
"We must win milltarlly u well u
poliUcally."
Thieu spoke to the nation shortly after
the Saigon government announced it was
endlng its ~ay boycott of the Paris
talU.
He &aid the -Vietnam ... delega-
Dl.1L Y PILOT 111" Pllolt SYNDICATED BLONDE FINDS SOAPBOX
Phll lnt1rl1ndl and ''Ou .. nt1''
From Page l
CARTOONS ••.
I bout with the flu.
Tobln 11 "The Little Woman" ls wearing
fw's and commenting, "I'd like to be
1 first n!ghter but I'm always late."
Roger Armstrong 's happy dog, six-feet
DAILY PILOT
He.pert..... CMM ..... "........ ...... L.t-•• a.-111 ..... ... ... ...... ..,.
CAUJOINIA
OAANOli COAJ1 f'UILllHIHO C.OMP'ANT
Jl•Mrt N. W.14
,,.....,.. .... P'vlllllllw
J•c~ 11. c~r1irr
""-..,...... tflf Offttrel 11\aM"t
T••111•• ic,.,a ....
t•-•• A. M~r,.hl111 ~IEdlltt
l1MI Nln1tt --. ·-' ..-c:.. --l ..... ..., . .,,... "._, IMcfil: mi we.1 ...... ..,ltVt,,.
'--1M1c111 Ill "'"'"91111 A-~ ... ; at"~'"'"'
.. ,Hi, =
high, with large loogue Is eul!y apolled
u the long f1mous Napoleon from the
"Napaleon and Uncle Elby" strip.
"Out Damned Spot," saya Nofil.ger'a
HAnimalogic" looklnl: in comic dismay
at a big colored blob on his muIU-colored
coat.
Undaunte<I by gritty wind and in-
terruption.. of photol?'apben, the talented
crew painted on. Phil was hung up
for a moment 011 lhe design of lhe
p e a c e symbol on Queenje'a pendant.
Twin brother, Frank sketched the l)'mbol
in the air and the worked raced on.
Space has also been saved for cartoons
by artists. John Dompsey (Playboy)
Paul Darro.,., Marvin Meyers ("SOit Seil
Sam'', also in the DAILY PILOT) and
Ferd Johnson ( .. Moon Mullins").
When lhe last daub of paint had been
placed, the crew led by Norma Nofziger,
Playen general manqer, ind hU1band
Ed, qllled fO<th lo Soddlebl<l illll.
Beverages, pod talk, '""a c o m l c
bartender and a petlt raven-tressed wait-
ress blended therL. along with ..ahrlmp
and Yo<ba eochllaifu. Ono of the wag·
gilh cartooolsll eiplalned lbal a Yortia
eochilada ii ooe Crom President-elect
Nixon's bome town.
Someone e!Je suggesttd lhat Nls'nn
should have done Uncoln for the
Playbouge. And, 10 It went u the
lhadow1 leqtheoed.
Tito PardoD8 936
BELGRADE (UPI) -Preatd<nl 'llto
today lfal1led amnelly to 916 Yupln
prilooen, releuins U7 ol them, In «JO-
ntctJon with Friday's 25th annlverury
cl the 10\llllllni ol the Yu ... IH Federal
Republic.
.
lion would be In Paris foe the non the NaUonol Aiaembly and religlom and nam lbal the Unlled Slalel opposed
regular session ol the tallcs wblch thus pollUcal groupo. lhe lmpoliltlon ol any coallUoa govern-
far have been confined to the United The nom1na1 leader of the South. VJet-menl with the Communlsta on Soulh
Slalel and North Vletnom. Tbe seaaloos n.-e delegaUoo Is expecled to be Vlelnam and. PfOlnlsel( Sal&on ~'a lead·
...,... ,. -bllll .., Wododl>l_odai.,,,..,.~-.lld!'O.J'b&Dl IJooi -· Ina role" in dilcuslions concerning liufh.ive been pciotpooed ln ,....I weeks Salgarl's •-llrPOl'li • pol!Ucal aelUeme:rta.
because of Saigon's refusal to attend. DtplomatJc l!IOW'ces in Saigon reported Obllrvers Aki that Thieu'• ckclalon
Thieu said Ky would not d1rectly tbat1evtn dnttl. of the U.S. statement to •_... 'liil)tGCt~Sl'!lllitr~
parllclpala lo the talks -hia rant ol UlurlJICell willc~ led to Saigon's • fnjm • powlof ....uolllDo Iii& lln
would be too tpp for the ambassadorial dec~lon to mler lhe Part. lalks was wu lllllo ._i ~ llllo ........ -
le""! o( the meeUnp -but ...Wd ad submltled to the Thieu· governm<ol • Sojdb "1e!nlm. 'l'l!'Y' """~ l'tilfy
as overall dlrector from behind the before it approved the wording. ~~hid M =· vt'~t ..... iii> de~
scenes. They said U. S. and South Vietnamese tht tl1D b!l aps-rtrdly' telt
Diplomatic sources said Saigon would diplomata conferred on the phraalng fOf' ho CaUld 1~ iii blnd 1bt p-o-
send a delegation of about 100 members, two weekl before Thieu finally gave cr,.,_ttaG.,_
Including mllllary, poliUcal and l«hnical approval. · Tm ~ .. , • .,... .....--
advilers, u well u representativea of Tbe lta.tement reassured South Viet-I 'lflll Yldart~ 'la -••
• Smith Quits SF lJnder Fire
Pressures, Politica..l Forces BUimed for Resignation
LOS ANGELEs (AP) -Blaming
preuures from trustees, faculty, militant
studentl and "political forces," Robert
R. SmJth abrupUy ended his six-month
term as president of embatUed Sap Fran-
cisco State College.
Gov. Ronald Reagan and olher trustees
of California's Ikampw: college system
unanimously accepted Smith's reslgna-
Uon Tuesday and named Prof. S. I
Hayakawa, internationally known seman-
Uclst, u acting president
Reagan, college leaders and Hayakawa
apressed doubtl that the ovemlgbt
change tn presidents would be enough
to paclfy pretesllng students and br1nJ
the campua back to normal soon.
"Hayakawa will go out fast.er than
Sm.Ith," Prof. Nathan Hare, Negro
coordinator of the San Francis~ State
black studie1 program, said in San Fran-
cisco.
'NOT REQUESTED'
"l can aay without h&iltalion," Reagan
said, Smith'• mlgnalloo "was not. re-
quested."
Black and eUmic studies programs
and other demands from campus minor!·
Will County Mace Heist
Be an Arme~ Robbery?
By TOM BARLEY
Of the Dlltt Pllft Ir.ft
A Westminster robbery may prove
to be the tint "Mace " case in Orange
County hlltory.
'lbere 11 no doubt that the man who
held up the Burger Q drive-In Saturday
night will be charged with armed robbery
-if and when Westminster police can
find him. •
He forC9d two employes to hand over
$270 at gunpoint before he squirted the
virulent, searing liquid -now widely
used by the nation's police oUJcers -
Into the eyes of his Victims.
But the holdup bad district attorney's
olfk:ers tbia: week pursuing a novel line
of leglil Inquiry: II lhe man had relied
solely on the use or "Mace" to carry
out hi5 theft could he have been charged
with armed robbery?
Fresh from some in depth research
Into California's Penal Code Ind allied
legal tomes, Deputy District Attorney
Ted Millard bad a flnn "Yes" to offer
to the question.
"Under Section tllA of the penal code,
this man could be charged with robbery
in the first degree," Millard explained.
From Pagel
ROUNDUP ••.
Angeles, bul the nelwork extended to
New York, Miami -lite . of the
Republican convention -Las Vegaii and
San Francisco.
"These individual organit.aUon heads
met periodically and exchanged in-
formation, bought and sold list.a of
customers, and in some cases bought
and sold females among themselves,"
said Cblel Reddin.
He· said they bought and 10!d aoalled
beat IJats -names Gf pollce and
~ers Utought to be cooperatlnR to
break up the vlct network -as: well.
Ball for 53 men and aeven women
picked up In the series of arrestl ranged
from $5,000 to $50,000, accordlng to Jail
record:!. .
Vice Detail Capt. Harry Nelson said
most of the girls were paid a minimum
of $S0 for tbdr lust-alleviating charms,
but Ups were rouUne and many girls
made up to $1,000 weekly.
'l1lll could amount to 20 men tn the
seven da,ya each week, based on hard,
bare mathematics.
MO!! of lho<e arrested were in pool.
lions leading to ...,. conlael wllb
customers, such u restaurant maitre
d', parking Jot attendant, or buslnemnan
eager to please clients.
Many are well·known to police vice
aquad5 and lntelllguce teams, due to
prior contacti and arrests, according
to Cap!. Nelson.
'4Tbat aectlon contains a reference to
the uae of deadly or dangerous weapona
1n the carrying out of an armed robbery.
"The argument then may be whether
1Mace' is a deadly weapon." Millard
&ald. "But It seema pretty clear to
me that. whatever the outcome of that
issue, the l'tuff can clearly be labelled
as dangerous.
"It's a substitute for a gun," Millard
said, "and It's being carried as a deadly
or dan,ge.rous weapon. I don't think
anyone who challengea: that code pro-
vision is going to have much luck."
In any event, subsequent research by
Millard revealed, a n y use of "Mace"
or anyone who tries to aell the tem-
porarUy blinding spray II pretty well
pinned down by another Penal Code
provision -Section 12420.
Under that wording, "Mace" could
be classified as a form of tear gas
and Its user or seller to any person
other than a police officer could go to stale prison f or up to t w o years
and be fined up to $3,000.
All that remains is for the w estminater
police to get their "Mace" man. District
attorney's investigators have already
done their homework.
ty group students have been the focal
point of ~emonstrations, a student strike
and ln~nnlttent violence that kept San
Franclaco State'1 cla.sse1 closed for most
of the _past three weeks.
Tbe campua hu 18,000 sludeol> and
about 1,100 faculty members.
One demand' can. for rtlnstal.e.Qlent
of Black Panther George Murray, a
part-time Eng!lsh Instructor 11111pended
by tbO college system'• Chancellor Glen s. Dwhke, early thlJ month. Murray
is being Investigated by campus officials
for reported remarks tn apeecbe!, such
as urging Negro studeoll to carry gum
on campus.
Sm.Ith also cited "desperate llmltailou
in flnaDClal reaources" u one reason
for his request to return to work as
an education profelSOI'.
Smith said one reason for his reslgna·
tion was "inablllty to reconcile .ef-
fectively the conflicU between the
trusteu and chancellor, the faculty
groups on campus, the militant student
groups and pollUcal forcea of the tta.te."
CONVOCATIONS
SmJth had agreed to dlscuaslon ot
lhe l!sues during cam.pwi:-wide con-
vocaUona which superseded classes,
although lrustees bad -normal campu,1 routine resumed following a
shutdown Nov. lS-20.
Hayakawa ordered the ~nvocations
ended Tuesday olghJ. Bui be Aid be
didn't know U clulel would resume
as planned Mooday.
• Hare said Hayabwa 1'tak~ the hard
line. We'll be readv for him.·~ ain Aid be ''very ttgretlully" ao-
"' Smllb's raignaUon.
er Reagan and Slate Scbool Sup!.
Mu Rafferty told newsmen they wanted
"profeutoDtl agitator!" removed from
the campw:. Rea11lD menUoned the
student& far a DemocraUc Society when
asked who some of the agltaton were.
!!I a 1 e par ate acUon, tnultees
unanlmoualy ·approved a 10.point ouUlne
of "unacceptable campu1 behavior" that
included "failure to comply" with a
campus president's dtrectlona.
agreement to attend the Parll talb,
because It 1aid itr demandl were met
"in tbelr es!t"'...ntial aspects."
But Tbleu aettled for lem tn the end
than he had demanded.
Thieu said he would nol 10 to Part.
11119 111a m.r illiadil .. 'plill er .......... ""'="'• ... ......,.... Iba
Oong wouldstl .. ·-la~ "'"1 have -lo lhll IOIUlon.
Thieu Allo proll*d on lloy~-I 11>&1 tlio~ 1ovornmenl hold "'" alW ~with Ille u.ws-pJ.,ia, • ,.........,. ... 'nit u. 8. njectld
lldap~
I * '* * Hanoi, Cong
Okay Saigon
Seat at Talks
PARIS (UPI) -The North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong delegaUons to the Vietnam
war talks today formally stated their
agreement to attend expanded meetings
with south Vietnam and the United
States, assuring an early aeries of down·
to-bwlness meetings.
Dlplomall &ald the lalks mighl start
next week.
Assurances from the Communist fac-
tions came after South Vietnam ended
a 2.S-day boycott and agreed to attend
the talb which have been cooducted
unW now solely by Washington and
Hanoi.
A apokesman for .Xuan Thuy, chief
Hanoi negotiator, said bis delegation wiJI
be at the table. The date of the first
expanded meeUng will be d19C\JJSed
shorily between North Vietnamese and
U.S. officials behind the scenes.
But there were problema: ahead.
The Hanoi spokesman denounced the
Untied States' pos!Uoo lhal the Allies
do not regard the talks as four-sided
and that both sides would operate as
a unit -the U.S. and Saigon, North
Vietnam and the Vlet Cong -ln an
.. our side, your side" arrangement.
A3 expected, South Vietnamese Presi-
dent Nguyen~ Van Thieu named Vice
President Nguyen Cao Ky, the Viet
Cong's public enemy No. 1, to 111pervise
the salgon delegaUon.
A spokesman for the National IJbera-
tioo Frnot (NLF), the poliUcal wlog
of lhe Viel Cong, denOWICed this
beforehand and aald Ky'1 presence 1lmp-
ly proved the South Vietnam regime
was an "American puppet."
Tbe NLF said it would lake part ,jo the lalks bul would challenie Saigon's
claim to be leMal spokeaman for the
Southern ball of the Country.
Graham to Vietnam
MONT!IEAT, N.C. (UPI) -Evangellsl
Billy .Graham said today he bas accepted
an invitailon from Gen. Creighton W.
Abrams Jr., the allied commander in
Vietnam, to visit troops in South Vietnam
during the Cbristmu aealOft.
From Pagel
CLEAVER •.•
The Uue preclou1neu or t 14K gold Om~• bracelet watch Is tn the love that goo
with IL Tht Ome.Pa you ~Ive or recelvt today will become a proud personal possea·
olon •.• ~roolouo beyond comparo lofWhtl tt 1jmbollzH. ~ • · • ,.
the country," she said. "I think he
11 in the San Fr:mcllco Bay area."
Mro. Cleaver said Tuesd>y &be hoped
her bmblnd _.ici nol surreoder.
"Ho lw aln)'I Aid ht ls not goln1
back to the penltenUary," Mrs. Cleaver
said. "I would like to have him not
go book to priloa. ..
When uked by whal meam be could
invenl 11. she rtplled: "Acy .....,
oecea11ry."
"II !he)' -11\1111 to forct him,"
Ille aald, ''hi llhould -'""' nol lO .....
The D-JW'Old milllanl WU amoled
!or vlolalloD cl (llrola WI Aprll e !on ....
1111 • gun ht!Ue belwten Ookland pollco
and Blacli Pant!wo. Bobby Hutton, a
17.,......id Panther, wu ltllled and
Qaanrwu-ln 1111-f
•
W!lhln each elegant case 11 the peerla11 Omega movement. Each part 11 made wtth
meUculoua care to give yeari of faithful performance. Even the diamond• al'9 loupe-
lnapected 10 assure 11awt .. quallty Ind perfection of cotor, cut and brlUtance.
See our complete· collecflon of Omeg1 watch11 for men and women, $85 to over
I \.$1000,
A-24 cl"-*, 141( 10k1 bf-lti ~., ,.,, ., ,'800,
1-141( tMd ~tlllM o-. MM1111r..i.t •• , ••. 13U.
C-11 dl...a. 1411: tol' btae.l.t •'1dl •• , •••••• ITU.
J. C. ..Jlumphrie6 'Jewel,.
.lt2J NEWPORT AVE., COSTA MU.I.
22 Y1tn In n., S1ru1 Loctffon
"""'' -
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Dally Paper .
VOL 61, NO. 285, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 TEN CENTS
,.
3 Jump From Bus
GI Prisoners F'lee in Fountain Valley
A teen·age soldier was seriously ~
jured Tuesday when be and three other
AWOL Gii leaped from a prilon bus
speeding north on the San Diego Freeway
in Fountain Valley.
'Ibe three. other escapees apparently
were unhurt aod remained at large to-
day.·
Authorities at H u n t i n g t o n Jn..
torcommunity Hospilal said Pvt. Randy
B. Adams, 19, of Fl Riley, Kans., suf-
fered head injuries after jumping from
the rear door of the bus u it paased
beneath the Slater Avenue bridge.
Ul"IT~
CALLS 1ia1Jffl "·;>
-~at···;hllll!,,. ....,,,,...
The four were part of a grotip o[
21 military prisoners en route from the
San Diego to the Long Beach Naval
StaUon. They escaped out the emergency
edt when the five gUards on board
rushed to subdue another prisoner who
had lunged forward and turned of! tho
jgnition key. The vehicle was traveling
about 50 miles per hour at the Ume,
a military spokesman said.
The chief petty officer ordered the
driver to keep going. He was aware
of the rear-door escape but not that
one of the escapees had been injured,
VPIT .......
. ,; .,,_.~. . d I '''o..i t.J:c·l<1'' " ,~. " .. -1 ~r H•Lm Lr ~-u''Olilll -.rr..,, fri:• rwy~ -"
Smith ,GiV.es ~ Up at ·SFS'C;
Trustees Pick Hayakawa
. ' . .
LOS ANGELES '!API -Blaming
preasures from tl'ustfes, 'taculty, militant
students and "politicll lorces," Robert
R. Smith abruptly erlded bis sb:-month
term as president of erhbaUled. San Fran-
cisco State College.
Gov. Ronald Reagan and other trustees
of California's l!kampus cellege system
unanimously accepted Smith's resigna-
tion Tuesday and named. Prof. S. 1
Hayakawa, intematiOnally known seman-
tici.!t, as acUng president.
Reagan, college leaders and Hayak~wa
expressed doubts that the ovenught
change in presidents would be enough
to pacUy protesting students and bring
the campus back to normal soon.
''Hayakawa will go out faster than
Smith," Pro£. Nathan Hare, Negro
coordinator of the San Francisco State
black atudies program. said ln San Fran-
cisco.
"I can say without hesitation," Reagan
Divers Al)a'ndon
Hunt~
Of Lost Ship ..
Divers searched the sunken oUsbore
o11 operalloo thlp Trtple cro... in *
feet of water off Santa Barl>ara Tqelday,
finding no trace ol nine missing
crewmen, including one from Newport
Beach.
said, Smith's resignation "was not re-
quested."
· Black and ethnic studies programs
and other demands from campus minori-
ty groop ltudenls have been the foc:al
point of demonstrations, a student strike
and intermittent violence that kept San
Francisco State's classes closed for most
of ltte past three weeks.
The campus bas 18,000 students and
about 1,100 faculty memben.
One demand calls for r,etnstatt.ment
or Black ·Panther George Murray, a
part.time Eoillsh instructor suspended
by the college system's Chancellor Glen
S. Dumke, early this mootlu Murray
is be1na lnvestlgated. by campus offlt:ials
for reported remarks in apeeches, such
as urging Negro studenta to carry guns
on campus.
Smith also cited "desperate limitations
in financial resources" as one reason
for his request to return to work as
an education professor.
S~tb said o~ reason for hls resigna-
tion was "inability to reconcll~ ef·
f.ectively the. confllcta between the trustees and cbancellor, tile faculty
groQPS on campua, the mWtant student
gl'OUPfl and poliUcal foFces of the state. II.
Smlth had' agr'eed to ~on ol
Ille lasut1 during campu>-wlde con-
vocations whlch rm>erseded clusu,
altboogb trustees had ordered normal
C8mpll rou\lne resmqed lolJowln& •
shutdown Ncw. lJ.30.
U.,altawa onlered the collVOCllilons
ended 'lllesday nJgbt. But he said he
didn't. know if claaaes would relUIDCI
u planned Mooday.
said the mllitary IOUf'Ct. The but, ro.
tinued o nto the Long Beach iMlallatJon.
Still being sought are Army Pvtl. Carl
J. Sands, 20, Alvin J. Hase.lgine, 23, and
Wllllam Cooper, 17. They were 1aat seen
by an unidentified motorist as they
scrambled over the shoulder of the
freeway. Each was wearing civilian
clothes, officers said.
The 18 Navy priloners on board were
bound for the Long Beach brig. The
five Army personnel wer-e to be transfer~
red to the FL MacArthur stockade.
Cleaver Skips
Appearance;
Arrest Ordered
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Black
Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver ignored
a date for hiJ return to prison today,
and an order was issued for his arrest.
Cleaver was to turn himseU In at
9 am. but bad not appeared by 9:30
a.m. The California adult authority,
which supervises parole cases, said it
would wait a "reasonable time -about
another half hour'' and then ask police
to i1Bue an all points bulletin for bJs
.,... .. l
· C1eavers wife, Kathleen, and his at-
t.Orncy, Charles Garry, arrived at the
&.tate building shortly before the schedul-
ed surrender time and made their way
throu•h a corridor j~ed wilh about
100 newnnea. · •
Garry JQW .newsmen that nel1htr. ~
,... MtLCIOofi'r had ail) Id~ oo the
wheriabouts oi tile Black Panthen'
11mlnister of information."
"I have not talked to hinl since SUDday
and I have· Dot '&eeD him a1Dce laat
Thursday wbea . he made a speech,"
Garry said.
Mrs. Cleaver said she last aaw her
husband Stmday night. She said she did
not think it possible that he had fled
the country.
"In the first place l don't think he
has had time · and in the second place
he gave no Indication he was leaving
the country," she said. "I think he
is in the San Francisco Bay area."
Mn. Cleaver said Tuesday she hoped
her husband would nOt surrender.
"He has always said he is not going
back to the penitentiary," Mrs. Cleaver
said. "I would like to have him not
go back to prison."
When asked by what means he could
prevent it. abe replied: "Any means
necessary.''
uu they use guns to force him,"
she said, "be should use guns not to
go."
11le 33-year-old militant was anested
for vlolaUon of parole last April 6 follow·
ing a gun battle between Oakland police
and Black Panthers. Bobby Hutton, a
17·year-old Panther, was killed and
Cleaver was wounded in the shootout
IT'S COLD, BUT
BURBANK COLDER
Orange Cout re'ildents buttonod up
their crvercoata Tuesday night a brisk
winds sent temperatures s p i r a I i n g
downward.
Newport Beach was the igloo o( the
coast with a 51-degree reading, but lhe
Loe Aoitla CMo Center was lower
sUJJ with 50. LDwest. In the Southland,
apparently, wu "beautiful downtown
Burbank" at f4 degrees.
PAllY PllOT 1'1191e W ,.. 0--....
Toral Toral Toral
Navy Lt. Douglas Haines prepares for takeoff from
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station in SNJ aircraft
'81tered to Japanese Zero design for film re-en~
actment of attack on Pearl Harbor, "Tora! Tora!
Tora." LL Haines and o1lher-Navy men, workinz
while on leave, are helping to make movie.
Ky to Lead South Viet Bandit Armed
With 'Mace'
Delegates to Paris Talks Armed Ro~ber?.
~y TOM , 11&'(,r..., •
SAIGON (UPI) -PreJ;idcnt Nguyen
Van Thieu Wednesday announced the
appointment of Vice . President Nguyen
Cao Ky "to control, gui4fi and supervise"
South Vietnll1!'f ~~lliotioa to .. ~ elt·
pa,ided Vleinam war talks in Pw.
He said South Vietnam would be an
baod for tbe.lltst regular meoling wllhln
the next 10 days.
Ky, I.be flamboyant former air
marshal, ls: South Vietnam'.• leading
hawk. ObServers said his appointment
apparently in<Jjcated Salgoh would rr1:sJn--
tain a hard line policy in ils dealings
wllh lhe Communists.
Thieu made lhe announcement in a
brief televl.sion address from Saigon in
whJch he urged the South Vietnamese
to "fight harder than ever be.fore ."
The Communist strategy, he warned,
was ooe of "fighting wbJle talking."
"I appeal to you not to let them
put you t.o sleep with the.lr pea«
Boy Pirate Gets
Dunking as Surf
Overturns Boat
An 11-year-old Huntington Beach pirate
was taken "to the brig" at Juvenile
hall Tuesday after his hijacked vessel
overturned in the surf off Beach
Boultvard and Pacific C.Oast Highway.
A neighbor of the Craft's owner. Dwight
Willard, 15368 Mariner Drive, called
police when he became suspicious of
the unexpected absence of Willard's 17·
foot outboard from the Willard dock
In Huntington Harbour.
Several inile! later city Ufeguatd.!I Bill
Richardson and By Gerold spotted the
boat proceeding 90uth along the surfllne.
Moments later It was turned turtle by
a wave.
Pollce theorized the youngster, also
wanted on bookey playing charg~, was
apparenUy laldng a sea route to bla
home on JUdgefleld Drive in the
southeast part of the city. ·
Lifeguards r i g h t e d the undamaged
vessel and turned its privateer over
to police.
schemes," .he said. "You should not otm.o.itrrittl-;::'" . .
forget that lhe pea'ce wt Want la a A Wesb:J\inster roQ~ may prove
peace of freed~ and not slavery ~' to 'be the ifrst .. M.ace" case in 'Orailp
ix:;"rty. ·; . --..., · Coun!Y hll!orY. . .
, -Wt musl win mlli\111111 a( well ""' There ls 00 cldUlli lhal th< man who
pollUcally." .~ · . . " bell!-up ~-Btqer ·Q'l!ri...., SatUrdJoy
Thieu spoke to, the J'~. ahortly Mter a!lllt will be el!arled with.~_,.-y tbO·~·-~il·WU -Hand when Westmln6t0r ·pol>!, can
endla, Its 2$<lay tioYco/t ol Ille Pliria find him. • . '
talkl. He forced twO employes to hand 'ayer
He.aakl.lhe South Vietnamese delega-$270 at gwipolnt berore he aquliied the
tion w°'1Jd be in Parl5 for. the next vlrul«;nt, searln&· llqu!d -nw !flddy
regular se9alor1 Of the talks which thus used by the naUon's police o~ -
fu have been conf1ned to the United into the eye1 of.hi! vlctimJ. ·
Statea and North Vietnam. The seSslons ~t the bold.up. had ,dimict ·attomey11.
UIUally have been held on Wednesdays Qfficers this weei pursuing-a novel line
but have been putpooed in recent weeks of legal inquiry: U the man. had relied
because of Saigon's refusal to attend. solely on the use of "Mace'.' to carry
Thieu , said Ky would not directly out hiB theft could ·he have been charged
participate in the talks -bis rank with armed robbery?
would be too high for the ambassadorial Freeh from some in depth research
le vel of lhe meetings -but would act into Caillornia's Penal Code and allied
as overall director from behind the legal tomes, Deputy District Attorney
sctpes. Ted Millard had a firm "Yee" to offer
Diplomatic sour~ said Saigon would to the question.
send a delegation of about 100 members, "Und~ Section 211A of the penal code,
including military, polllical and lechnical th.ls man could be charged wllh robbery
advi&ers, as well as representatives of in the first degree," Millard explained.
the National Assembly and religious and "Tbat section contains a, reference to
political groups. the use of deadly or danlj:erous weapons · ·
The nominal leader of lhe South Viet-in u~ carrylng out of an armed robbery.
namese delegation Is expected to be "Tbe argument then may ·be w~
Ambassador Pbam Dang La{n, now. 'Mace' is a deadly weapon." Millard
Saigon's ob5e.rver in Parts. said. "But it seems pretty clear to
Diplomatic sources in Saigon reported me that,-whatever the · ootcome 9f thati
that seven· dralta of the U. S. statement issue, the stuff can clearly be labelled
of assur.ances which led to Saigon's as dangerous.
decision to enter the Paris talks was "It's a substitute for a gun," Millard
submitted t.o the Thieu , gove.nuno..nt said, "&J)d it's being carried as a deadly
beCore it approved lhe wording. or dangerous weapon. I don't think
They said U. S. and South Vietnamese anyone who challenges that code pro-
diplomats conferred on the phrasing for vis.ion is going to have much luck."
two w~ks before Thieu finally gave In auy event, subseq\ie.ot research by
tij>pr'oval. , Millard revealed, a n y .use of "M8C9"
The statement reassured South Viet-or anyone wtio triel to ..U the tem-
naril. that the United States opposed porarily bqpcHng IJll•f ls pretty well
the imposition of any coalition govern-pinned down by another Penal Code
ment with the Communists on South provision -Section 12420.
Vietnam and promised Saigon "a lead-Under tMt-wording', '"Mice" could
ing ·role'' Jn di.!lcusslons concerning be classified . as .a 1 fonn. of . tear ass
political settleme!lts. and Its -"'J to Observers siid that Thieu's. decision uaer or IM:.I er any person
to •nd lhe boycott probably stemmed other than a. poli<•h ollker could go
fr6m .a. growing reat12;atlon that 'there to slate prison to r ·up lb t: w:o years
was little support for his positio(l outside and be fined UP, to $2.,000.
South Vietnam. They sllld 'Ibieu relilly
had no aJrernative but to agree to enter
the talks eventual)jr but apparently felt
.be could strengthen his hand by pr~
crastinaUon.
C:Oas&
Search for the n;ien who were lost
when tho brand-n°'"\ ft million T!iple
Crown aank during pi'edawn houn M~
day has 11nct been 1111Spertiod by !be
U.S. Coast Guard's Stare band Rescue Beach School Bona· Seen D..raf t-dodging
MQ Senten~d
braocb. ,
Pianel, hellcopWI ,.00 the culllr PolDt
Judith scoored about+ (IOI) square m.llet
of clwmel waters w1thoot finding lllY
trace ol lht losl ~ ,"""• ~ lor two life ralta and a life Jiiaet..
SUrvival time k1r men · dllmpod Into
Jiit · cold, wind-whipped waters was
toUmal<ll at IOW" to sill boon.
Lael al0!\11 with elgbt men. mootly
from Ventura c.unty and th• Loni Beach
•· wu well·known Harbor Are•
yOt.lmsn Mart Von Mills, 46, ol IOll
Cliff Drm, Nnrpol!I B!Y<h.
~uthori!Jel lllld '!'Jelday Ula! ...
aminatloll ol lhe Triple Crown at , Ju
l'<lllng place In Ille Sallla Barban Cha,,. riel gave •bsolute\y . no c:hte u to what caulf'I her to sink.
· The wortboat attpptr«f by George
G Os k i I I. 1$, ol 18515 E. llrd St.,
• ••
<51 SEAl\Cll, Pqe II
... I
.... ..__
Trlistees Con8ider Arwther Try for Needed Funds
Future ~ plam In the Jlw>.
Unaloo Beach Union High School lllstrict wul be at state Dec. 10 when the
pooslbUlly ol another JiQildlng bond •Joe.
Uon will be ~ by trusleet.
The matter came before the go\lerning
board ol Ille dlslrict 'lllelday night, but
......... -to hold Ille Jaue open far dlaclmlon Dec. 10. whoo Dlfmb«I
ol the diaU-ict'• adtllory conllnltUe cobld
parllotpale.
A IU mlllloa boad laue failed ' lo
get Ille --mojo'1ty In the Nov. i IJIO!Ol'al election and theni
has been IOllie thougl1t liven to par1A1
Ille amwnt lo jull 'liblt II oeeded to
build one school, about I mlllloo.
.... .
The ·-bu maintained that the JU ~ nrure la lhe Jelll amount
which Will dO lhe job. locluded In the
f JJ mllllon would be money for bulldlnl
one acbool, purchue of an addttton.l
site, coDltrUttion of more clulroom&
at Weotmlnsler Hiah Schoo I, 1111-
provementl to district ~ and
a contingency fund for repairs whlcb rni1J!1 be needed under provisions ol
Ille llate Field Act, • lsw ltlling up =-mJ.atant llandardl Io r
'lllesday ftlCl>I, Trulllle M a t t h e w
Weyuker arl\*l 111.11 the .-.,i abould
' be raduc..r to Jasi ""'"8b to build •
llCbaol ... '"" aln!l<V ....... by lhe
4
district, probably at Golden West Slrett
and Warner Avenue.
Membon ol the advloory committee
baa ~ a $Z3 mllllon bond
iBIUt to care !or Ille dbtrlct'1 building
needs OYtt a five.-year period, but
~ had cut the a._t \o llJ
Jll!llli!O Ii> ....r a ibr ... year period
for lhe -· I elect!on. Dr. M 11 fOtney, district auperln-
-.nt, bu malntalaed that tlle -
-boy oohool slta .. -.. the
-la determined and bulk! -so that Ille scboola an opened at about
lblt a.me Ume u 'fm!Ur.t move tnco
mw tr.tdt ud pmlde the hlCb achoo!
-ts.
'['
A toll AJMlltoC j!hysldan has been' sentenced In Lao Angeles 'Federal Court
to three .y~ara la Prlaon for h1s rtfllll:I
t0belhductec11ntoU..u.s.Ahii1 .• ,·
Judge B. Aviry Criry hahded the
j al 1 tenp to Dr. Mo&s b. P01M.r, 32,
ol 1281 Wendy Way. Dr. POt!oer "U
c0ovlcted In the ialne court Jasl Oct.
I~
It was taUll<d U..t Dr. P~ at .
lint refused Induction on the grouQds
that ...... ...-11ous1y °"-' to
mllllory -· n. !Ma elalmed bardahip and oceupaliod delenndlt in
•. -•pPiearancO -. lhe cb'all'
boon!. -board.
'. INSIDE TODA 'l'
Th< llolldar W<<kerid offm •
number of thtatrlocil trtall
•rolmd Ormlo< Couniv. See ET> 'f1":'•"'<!1.t ~Jf .. _ .
c........., n~ _,,. ..
·~ " OMii.,-...._ t
=~ J ........ d "
-. =,... .:: ....,,.... .... w -=' =--:a ...... tMI = 1? ==-''JI -" A.• U..W. II =:...--.': -.
--w ..........
'
•
.• .,,...-r:. '"t .--. . . ·~· _...._._ -----
• •
I DAILY I'll.OT Wldnt!day, --ti, 196&
Reds Oka~
Paris Talks
P A1U8 (UPI) -'Ille North Vllbwn ...
and Vl<t Cong delesattons to the v-.
..... lalb today formally atai.4 thelr
...-to -_..sod meellnp ,.W. -V11bwn and the Unlleol
Slolea, -tac .. ...,,. -"' down-..... -...... ~ Aid the lallal mlcbl atart n.s-.
..__ -the Comm ..... fao-____ V_ mded
• ..,. ~ and ...-to ·-the lalb wlllcb have beeft <Uldoclod
unlll -IOld1 by Wlllhlnlloa and --A ...,...,..., for X111D 'l1!u:J', chief
-~. Mid bll delegation will
be al .. lalile. Tbo dale "' the !Int
---will be --~ --North Vlelnlm<oe and U.S._. ... behind the oceneo.
N tblnwon problemo ahead.
Tbo -..,.,._ .. donounced the llDltod lllalea' poollloo lblt the Alllea
do '"" ......i Ille lalb u !«u-skled aad 11111 boll! 11111 .. would operate u
a 11111 -the U.S. and Saigon. North
-and Ille Viet Cong -In ..
''• llde. 70UI' side" arraqement.
Al apeded, --Pm!--NRm Vu 'lllleu named Vice Pr-Npyen Coo Ky, the vi.t °"""' pohUc -., No. I, to oupenlll ~ SU,. delepHon
A IP'i:•nan ~&be National Lfbera.
Um ..... (NLF), Ille polttaJ wing
"' the Vlei Cong, d-mced tills befcnbml and aaJd Ky'• presence simp-
ly -ed the --resime WU Im "Amer1can puppet. 11
Tbo NLF Mid II would lake part
1n the talb. but wqukl challenge Sal&on's
clalm to be lepl opolcesman for th•
Soulllem ball ol Ille ....,1ry,
Prom Pqe J
SEARCH ••••
SUMel Beach. begon Hating about 3,1
a.m. MOllday, film llipped llen>lirr
lnlo the ... .u. In ooly three minutes.
S1zteen aurvlvors cut into the St
when the Triple Crown went down were
plcted up wtlbln an hour by the Paclfk
Salunl, a Long Beacb-ba8'd lug uNllng
In the oU operalloo. Tbe T!IPle Crown bad jml about hauled
In file i.ill "' • 2,GOG-foot cba1n used
.... Imp -holding .. oll drilling
platform In placo when the .n.aater
O<Cllm!d.
Ofliclall ol Santa Fe In~
Corp., ........ "' the boat -..porledly
Ille moot pmnrful llUCh craft In the
wwld -Mid It WU equipped to handle
lot im., ..., pulllq welgbto up from
2,000 feel.
The wortbolt cmted aboul lllO tons
ol cba1n u8'd lo anchor file drilling
plalfcrm Blue Star 11 to tho channel
bottom in 250 feet of water when ahe
sank.
Ownen of the lhlp today are conferring
on whether It will be economically feul·
ble to raise the lhlp--buUt In Port Ar-
thur, Tu., and flnlsbed only three
months ago.
Sbe WU contracted to ffmnble Oil
Co., one <i a dozen flnna which bid
Oii rlghta to drill Into federal -
hi the o1H1cb channel to tap muftl.blllloii
dollar petroleum .........
Tbo Newport Beacb vlctlm, Von Mlll!,
bad ligned on ~ • week ago today
u llnl mate Ill flla llH•tod ahlp, whlch
left P o rt Hueneme Saturday on lb Jut
voyage.
Mn. Cecella Von MIDs, wUe ol flla
mJllln( yacht Utpper, Aid Tusd1y she
lllll beld hope her hUlband mlChl be
.Un. but added that pl'OlpeCt!: were
dim.
Tito Pardons 936
BELGRADE (UPI) -President Tito
today granted amnesty to 138 Yugoslav
~. ffieulng 147 "' them, In ..... nec:Uon with Friday'• 25Ut anniversary
of the found1n& of the Yugoslav Federal
Republic.
DA llV Pll01
l.Mrt H. W"' , .......... ,_..,_
J •• 1i .. °"'" ~ ........... ., .......
n.,.. •• r: • ..,11 ·-n ...... A. M .... la1 ~ ... .
Allt1rt W. l1ltt Wllff1111 R11J
AllllClalt ~....... '""" .1:•1er City ldltw
H er ........ °"'99
JM ltti Chet
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'
Praetice Makes Perfect
Mus Arre1ts
' •lfl.iVe-f r-Money~
Ring Smashed
From Win Bervkff
Cloolng ao elgbl<nontb probe ol 1
1-Iy knit love.for-ll)ooey ring which
actually l>OU(lll "and eold allll1lqnJUI call
glrll, polke btlan mutag .... arretta
of Ibo QltwO\"k Principals 'l\leodv.
A tolal Ill 49 oul of llO penons Indlcted
by Ibo county Grand Jury wue rounded
up by Loe Ang'1es poJlce ll1d sheriff's
depuUea ~y 'l)leaday !)lght. .
Pollc:e Chief 'j'bo""8 .R<ddln called
file wholesale roundue tbe Iarg..t ·vice
Inveltigatloo In the hlltory of Callfomla,
one involving operators from coast to
CO&ll. .
Glamorous girls -IOl!le of wbom
• eamtd up lo '1,000 weekly In the ring
-were generall¥ lgpored, as lawmen
went after principa)I behind tbe opera·
tiao. Moot ol Ille .....,iee. wero booked
oo cbarga of pand"lng, plmplnl and
consptraey to commit pl"O!tlluUon .,
the result of an 80-man vice task farce
which worked for nearly a year on
the case.
The investigation was mostly centered
oo the Sunaet Strip area of West Los
Angele!, but the network extended to
New York, Miami -site of the
Republican convention -Las Vegas and
Sail Francisco.
"These individual organizaUon beads
met periodically and u:changed in-
fonnaUon, bought and aold llsll of
customers, and in some cases bought
and sold females among themselves,"
uld Chief Reddin.
Apollo 9 Command Pilot James McD!vitt emerges
from practice craft following simulated splashdown
In Gulf of Menco. Already guided to llleralt by
Navy frogmen are astronauts Russell Schweickart
(left) and David Scott. Apollo 9 ls due to be launch·
ed sometime In February 1969.
Lido Woman
Dies as Fire
Sweeps Home
Newport Beach socialite ·c e or g I a
Spence Davis, u -wUe or a prominent
Laguna Beach land developer, died Tues-
day night when flam.et and smoke swept
through ber Udo Ille home.
He said they bought and sold so-called
heat lists -names of police and
customers thought to be cooperating to
break up the vice netwnrk -as well.
Bail for 5.1 men and seven women
picked up in the seriea of arrests ranged
from $5,000 to 15(),000, aca>rdlng to jail
records.
Airport Control Def ended The Orange County Ccroner's office
said Mn. Davis, 55, of ltl Via Trieste,
died of suf!ocaUon.
Firemen found her lying unconsc.lous
on her sooktlvered bed just before JDid..
night.
Parent Protest
Over Time Switch
Trips Valley Plan Noise Foe Says County Can Regulate Flight,s The U.tng room of file slngt..story
home was totally involved in flames
when firemen arrived.
Nleblas School In Foontaln Valley will
stay on its current Ume schedule until
trustees of the elementary llCbool district
feel the "modllied day plan" baa been
accepted by most parents.
There ls no legal foundation for the
contenUon that the Board of Supervisors
cannot regulate the number and type
of planes flying out of Orange County
Airport, Daniel Emory, chairman of the
Airport Noise Abatement Committee, told
supervisors Tuelday.
Emory, a Newport Beach resident,
::;poke as supervJsors voted to receive
and file a report stating that Rep. James
B. Utt'a propoaal that fees be char11ed
airlines baled on the noi.se factor was
"not within the legillative authorJty of
Orange County."
The noise critic said the decislon wu
based on a j'federal bureaucrat's opi·
nlon" and had no legal weight He said
the question of local control of airports
had never been deeided in the courts.
Emory said his group would meet
soon with the Assembly Transportation
Committee and urge a plan for the
state to intervene in airport control
matters. He said the state Aeronautics
Board should rule on all money granted
by the federal government to local
airports and take over control.
Emory also had some thoughts on
an Instrument Landing System (ILS)
agreement between the county and the
**"* *** Group Takes 'No Airport'
Stand for El Toro Area
A new anU-alrporl group hu been
formed ln the El Toro area to figbt
pouible conversion of the Marine Corps
Air StaUon lo a civilian airport.
Tile Airport Study Committee 1w been
organized by chalnnan Iaadore Schnelder
or Irvine. He hu issued an appeal to
all homeowners in the El Toro, Turtle
Rock, Irvine and Mialon Viejo aras
lo join In opposing flla propooal.
'lbe Marine air ltaUon wu one of
five possible recICllal airport altes aug-
gested in the master plan ror air
Apartment Foes
Write Letters
To Tell Stand
SunRt Beaeh resldentl want parking,
not apartment&, on the abandoned
rallroad right.of-way running through the
center or the beach community and have
started a letter campaign to tell everyone
of their deolres. -
One plan shows 75 apartment bulldlngs
on the mile Jong, 80-foot wide slrip
formerly used by the Southern Paclfic
Railroad. Carlton Builders ls the ap-
plicant
In an effort to let all government
olllclals who might be concuned with
tbe unincorporaled county territory
k n o w how the reildent.t feel t h e
Chamber ol. Commerce Is encouraging
resldenu to wrtto lo all legWaton and
state ofOtl1Js involVedr
Residents lndlcated Monday nJa:ht dur-
ing a speclal meeling called to d!M:uss
~ apartment plan that they want park·
1ng spaces, not high density apartment
developmenta.
transportaUon drawn for c o u n t y
supervisors by William L. Pereira &
A!soclates, The military opposes the sug·
gestion.
Sclmeider said bis group will study
the situation and offer alternate sites
to the Orange County Airport Com~
mission.
As one suggestion the county should
cooslder establishing a joint Orange
County-&m Diego County a\J"porl between
San Clemente and Oceinslde, Schnelder
said.
''No consideration should be given to
converting the Marine A i r Station to
civilian use," Schneider said. "The
available space would soon prove to
be inadequate and the cost of conversion
plua the reestablishing of another Marine
air base would be costly to taxpayers."
He said his committee will gather
signatures tor a petition to be presented
to the Board of Supervisors t o
demonstrate the feelings of the people
in the arta.
Stokes to Head
Young GOP Unit
George Stokes, newly-elected chairman
of the Huntmgtoo..Valley Young
Replbllcan!, will assume olflce in
January. No date bu been set for the ceremootes.
Serving with Stokes will be new officers
Beverly Totman, first vice president,
and Dan Barker, second vice president.
Other new officers are Charlene Stokes,
correspoodlng aecretary and lr<asurer:
Judy Harkins, recording secretary:
Donald Loeffler, singles chalrman: and
Lois Walker, membership chainnan.
Those 'interested in joining may obtain
more information by calling 543·3873.
Mrs •. Breedlo.ve Stricken ,.
After Divorce Testimony
A drug oYenlooe hoapll.allad flla """" bride of ooeUme Cosll M... fireman
Craig -.,. -bolder ol flla world'•
land aulo opeed r<C<ll<l -Tu..Uy followinl I dlvorct court lppar~
with ber husband.
Mn. carot)'D I. Breedlcm, SI, wu
trutod at Central Recehl111J H01I>llal
In Loa All('1M lollowlnr flla lncldoo~
then lrllllfemd to County.USC Mldlcal c..ter and Ietor releued.
Tho -appeand In 8uporlor Court Tue.Say 1 where Mn. Lee Arm
Breedlove, bil fint rie, wu aeek1hl
a lllllnctal aettlemenl ~ J
The finl Mn. Broedlove contends ber ._ .• marrtaa• to flla lleCOl1d Mn.
Breedlove ll DO( legal, because her
divorce IUlt in California wu penWna
when ht obtained a Nevada divorce.
Hotpltal ""°"""""" declined to diacula the second Mrs. Breedlove'• treatment.
The ll·yUNl&d auto buHder and racer
holdl Ille world'• land apoed l<COl"d for
Pllollnc bia Jet car more than 600 mllM
per hour oo flla Utah ult flatl three
YNt'O qo.
Hil former wife holds the womeq't
1111d apoed reconI f<r blttlna 131 1!111 ..
per hour over the same course.
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
He said installation U n.s would make
the airport more attractive to airlines
and be of oo help to private flyers.
He urged that, even with JLS In-
stallation, the present limits on visibility
ceilings be retained to promote safety.
Emory, 2250 Golden Circle, was joined
by William Harris, 2012 Anchor Way,
Newport Beach, another critic of airport
policies. Harris said he was at the airport
having dinner Saturday night and visi.bili·
ty was so poor you coold not see
across the runways.
He said the Cable Commuter Airline
plane which crashed should never have
been allowed to leave Los Angeles. He
warned that similar accidents could hap-
pen any night end called the airport
"poorly managed.".
Supervisor William J. Phillips said the
county wu not to blame fo.,r .. f:lle late
in.stailatlon of ILS. "We agreed 10me
years ago, in 1960 to install the !)'Stem.
It is an FAA responsibility and lack
of money has held it up. The county
cannot be held accountable."
HBITis said the county should demarid
that the FAA divert planes from tbe
airport If there la a low celling.
Despite the opposJUon the supervisora
ratified the JLS agreement with the
federal government and filed the letter
on Utt's noise fee propol!al.
While some of the finneen attacked
the blaze from the front of the building,
others entered through a rear bedroom
window and found the victim, who was
alone In the hoUle.
Firemen attempted resuscitation as
they awaited an ambulance. Mrs. Davis
never regained consciousness. She was
pronounced dead ·on arrival at Hoag
Memorial Hoopllal.
Investigators aaJd cause of the fire
was not immed,lately known. They said,
however, that lll ortgtn waa a comer
of Ille living room. ·
Damage WU estimated at $15,000.
Mrs. Davia• was formerly married to
Everet\ Davis, Jr., developer of Laguna's
Rancho Laguna estatoa In Bluehlrd Can-
~on. 1be Davlses made their home
rn Laguna. She moved to Newport after
the divorce five years ago.
Her tragic death shocked her many
Lido Isle friends.
She wu acUve ln the Udo Isle
Women's Club, terVing as books section
chairman la!t year; and was on the
decorations committee of the Women's
Club.
'The attractive socialite is survived by
her mother, Mrs. Rudy Brandt of Costa
Mesa; and two daughters by a marriage
Prior to the Davll marriage.
Last rites are pending at Baltz
Mortuary in Corona del Mar.
Board President Dale Stuard Tusday
reaffirmed. for parents protesting the
schedule shill that file plan bad been
shelved "indeflnltely."
The trustees' action came in the wake
of a peUtton sJinea by 52il of the ap-
proximate 1,000 adulle living In the
Niebl.as area. Signen objected to prO-
posed dismi.ssa1 of atudenta oo Tbundays
at 1 p.m., two hours before the normal
di.mtlssa1 time.
School officials say the Thunday af.
ternoons would be devoted to badlJ need·
ed teacher-planning conlcrencea and that
the total number of classroom hours
would either remain the same or In·
crease.
Nieblas Principal Don Hendricks said
be was stepping up bil efforts to win
pa.rem approval or the rescheduling now
adopted by seven other schools in the
district.
Group representatives Jerry BaJ:•.e
and Charles Barbieri argued the plan
was an '1unproven experiment,. which
would also cause hardship for working
mothers by requiring them to hire
babysitters on Thursdays.
Balkee added that proposed 45-mlnu:te
lunch periods would be insufficient time
for the children going home for lunch.
The true preclousne11 of a 14K gold Omega bracelet watc~ Is In tM love that QOM
w1tri ft The Omega you give or recelvw today wlll become a proud peraonal po11e1·
al on .,, precious beyond cOmpare for what It symbolizes.
;_
Wj th ln each elegant case ls the peerleu Omega movtment. Each part 11 m1d1 with
mttlculoue care to give yeat11 of fllthlul performance. Even the dlamondt are loupt-
lnspecled to assure llawleN quality end perfection of color, cut and brllllance.
1ee our completf collecllon of Omega watches for men and women, $85 10 over
;1000. .
C'OMYltnm Tl!ll;lt\I I ANICM\ElttGAltO
#MT11t CHAlfl
A-14 flllll'IOMf.141( .... br...-. Wtlolt ••• , ••••. SIOO.
II -1411: gold ~ •-· Motll ~Kolot ... , •. PM,
C-12 di.....,., 1411 told btHtM1 ••tch ......... t 718.
J. C. J./umptried 'Jewelr
.1121 NEWPORT AVE., COSTA MESA
~ 22 Yttrt In Thi S1n11 Locetlon
)
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Laguna
•
VOL 61, NO. 285, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
Queenie .Quip
GAILY PILOT lttif """'
$YN?llCATED ILONDE FINDS SOAPBOX
Phil lnterl1ndi ond '"Quffnlo"
PLEA IN TENNIS SHOES
Fronlt h!miondl Kids Mhin
NAPOLEON IAAKES SCENE
AnmtTont Doa His Port
··--'-· --~•-.o.
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIJ>. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 •
• ano1.,
• ar1s • eace
Laguna Stages Paint-In
Cartoonists Do Their Thing for New Playhous~
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of ti. D•llY Plitt Shit
The sign carried by the militant little
old Laguna lady in tennis shoes said,
"Don't rent to actors."
"That's Frank Interlandl. He's the
political one. His brother Phil is the
sexy one," confided an artist spectater.
Frank was hard at work with paint
pot and brush creating a bigger-than-life
cartoon on a fence panel eight-feet high
and four-feet wdie.
Nearby, his twin brother Phil had
his pert syndicated blonde, "Queenie"
saying, "If all the world is a stage.,
where are all the actors? All I know
are clowns." Queenie appears daily in
Saddleback JC
Officials Vote . . .
To'ltequest:Ai_d
" By THOMAS 'Jl'OK'l'IJNB
., Of fM D•llT ~n.t tr.ft
Despite . ;;\; obvious aplll a I 0 n'
philosophical lines. trustees Qf South
·Orange County's Saddlf~ok· "1unior
College District have ordered diatrlct
administrators to seek $250,000 in federal
aid to help c·over building costs.
The decision came on a 3-2 showdown
vote Monday night. If received, the
money would be applied against the
cost of interim campus b\lUdings.
Several tim,ea earlier this year, the
issue had been •Skirted, with deadlines
for federal app_li,cations slipping by. Each
time. district officials said they were
not adequately prepared to file for the
money.
One s u c b occasion two weeks a g o
prompted Trustee Louis Zilnik to ask
district administrators if they had not
••fumbled the ball" by not bringing
federal afd opportunities to the attention
of the board witil the last minute.
The matter came to a head Monday.
Board President Michael Collins and
past board Pfesidenl Hans Vogel said
they would have to oppose any federal
aid application.
Zitnik, A1yn }ltannon and Patrick
Backus argued that local taxpayers are
paying money to the federal government
and they should have an opportunity
to get some of it back.
Ray Chermak, college building and
planning direotor, told the board he had
learned the district may be eligible for
up to $250,000 in federal aid as a new
district.
The amount, matched by an equal
sum of district money, could be applied
toward purchase of interim buildings
which the district presently is leasing
(See FUNDS, Page !)
Stock Murkeu
NEW YORK, (AP) -''The'slockmarket
late Urla afternoon had trouble main·
taining a higher level as weakness in
key blue chips dragged down the Dow
Jones industrial average to a Joss of
about three points. (See quotations,
Pages 10-11).
·-Round Two
the DAILY PILOT ..
The theatrically oriented cartoons from
t h e flylng brushes of alx talented men
were part of the great Laguna Beach
paint-in Tuesday at the site of the new
Laguna-Moulton Playhouse now under
construction.
As art.ist-oi-ganiz.er, Ed Nofziger hustl-
ed thither and yon, the fence came
to life in vivid reds, blues, greens and
yellows, a rainbow eight feet high and
103 feet Jong; ...
When the fence has served Its stipt
around the foundation of the 350-seat
theater, it will be auctioned panel by
panel.
RESIGNS POST
Victor Andrews
Proceeds from sale of the original
works will go to the buUding fund
for the !4!0,000 faclllty that is to be
completed nell April a~nt the
Festival of Arts-grounda on Broadway.
Down the fl!DCe, from the lnterlandls,
Virgil Partch (VIP), of Corona de! Mar
wielded his brush aver "Big Gelrge."
Seated on a bar stool, George is saying
to the bartender, "U you think I'm
a bad actor, you ought to ~ Pbll
Interlandi." Form~r Laguna school board·, president
D on Tobin was a trifle pallid as he
faced the boards. He had risen from
(See CARTOONS, Pap !)
• ·,
NEW PRES.IDENT
John Wald
..
Andrews Resigns Position
As Hospital Board Chief
Civic leader Victor C. Andrews of
Emerald Bay hu resigned u president
of the South Coast Community Hospital
board, a post he had be~d since 1958.
The position will be filled by Lagunan
JQhn Weld, who was elected by
unanimous vote of the board Monday.
Weld has served as an officer· and direc-
tor since the hospital was organized
in 1954.
In h i s Jetter of resignation, Andrews
stated that heavy demands on hll time
from business and other committmentl
would prevent him fron continuing on
the board in any cipacity. '
However, he· wu asked · to remain
as board chalnnan and replaCed Adolph
Kroch who will become chairnum
emeritus. Dt. Kroc h was one of the
organizera 0£ the hospital and served
as president before b"..ing made chairman
of the board in 1958.
Donald H. Teetor of Emerald Bay
was elected vice president and Tho'mas
A. Forster, San Juan Capistrano, was
elected a director to replace Richard
O'Neill who re'slgned.
Forster, a descendant of the pioneer
Forster family of San Juan Capistrano,
is administrator of the TRW Systems
Capistrano Test Site. H · native
ol Laguna Beach and was gra
from the United States MiUtary Acad ·
my, )Vest Point.
Jn his annual report to the mem-
J>ersbip, Andrews, characterized 1968 aa :'tfie most even~Ul ,Aftl'.l slgnU1i:ant ·)1!11'
1n the life ol our h0sp1tal." He ·warned,
however, that the major eEP&nslon Pro--
gram, scheduled for 1969, might ~
into a financial roadlilock ,if aDocaUon
of State and Federa1 mat.chihg funds
(See HOSPITAL, P11e I)
·' . .
Business Licenses at Issue
Round two oJC the great business license
debates is scheduled in Laguna Beach
council chambers tonight
Councilmen have scheduled an ad·
journed meeUng on Tha.nklcfving eve.
to take up again the controversial pro-
P<JOais.
At luue I.I:
-Proposed hike in the: schedule ot
rates which have not changed since 11M5.
-Whether license ratea shall be .et
by ""°""lion (Q p...,._i) er the m.,..
-,
tim~ng ordinance m t t h o d •
Bu!lnesSmen prt rer lhe or d In 1 n c e
method.
In a brisk meeting last W$eldaf,
councllmen. were: ' told bj • G o r d o n
Strachan, chabinan of the Downtowp
Bu81iiesa AlaoclaU6n, that chinles 'froip
ordinance ti> ruolutJon method ''Is jllll
about u •• W>Amerlcan tlil"' · u l'OU
peoplf can ~." Lo!Jd ai>J>lauae
foll-hh ptOOOUn<emenll. •
Both city ollldlls .. and w.llnui !Ji.
' tm~ are upectcd to come ann<d
•Ith statlatlcs tonllht in an effort to resolve the standoll.
Coundlmta will. probably •srre that
lee atttlJILremaln ID atdlnance fUncllon, n qreemtnt ••,!!, be reached on the
1 ... --.... , tDm... alJd. how: mucb -·qi,:~ niay Kl Dec. f
'lor'!lnt nadloi di a new ordlllanCe.
It aoold ·.have ....;.i reading Dec.
11 •od be law lmnMldiattl)' in time
to set new ralea t.r 1111. ·
(~ •
•
Today's a~g
N.Y. Sf.eeks
a s
First Meet
Possibly
Next Week
PARIS (UPI) -Tho North Vietnameac
and Viet Cong delegaUona to the Vletaarn
war talks today formally stated their
agreement to attend etpanded meetlnp
with South Vietnam and the UnlUd
States, assuring an earlY aeries of. down-
tl>buainess meetlnp.
Dfplomall said the talks might start
next week.
Asauraoees from the C.mmuolJI fa<.
lions came after South Vietnam ended
a 25-<lay boycott and ·~ to atl<od the talka wbich have been conducted
until now ilolely by Washington and
Hanoi •
A spokesman for Xuan Thuy, clllef
Hanoi negotiator, said bla delegation will
be at the table. The date of u;e· ftnl
expanded meeting 1'l!I. be dilc:uued
shortly between North Vi'""'"-and
U.S. officials behind the se<nel.
But there were problems ahead,
The Hanoi spok_.. denouncecl the
Vnltea States' jlos!Uon that tho Allies
• · Jo not regard the talks as fqu?-llded
· aDd that both 1ldea would operate as . tt..::.;; 'Ille U.ll. and Saigon. l;O<th , · V: and the Viet Cong -Jn an .,our aide, your side" ana:ngeiftt.at. 1
Al~,S06tilVJetn ..... Jresi.
denL Nguyen Von TbJeU . .-~
Preoident Nguyen Cao JC.y, the Viet
Cong's public enemy .No. ·1, 'to ~
the Saigon delegaUon.
A spokesman for the National LibtJ'&:.
tloa .Front (N!.F), the polltkal wing
of the Viet Cong, denounced this
beforMand and said Ky's presence simp-
ly proved the South Vietnam regime
was an "American puppet."
The NLF lald tt WO\lid take part
in the talks but would challenge Saigon's
claJm to be legal rpoiesman for th~
Southern hall of the country.
Slaying Suspect
Plea Date Set
Charged with the boning 1mi£e ·slaying
or her· husbarid, Pearlie Mae Holston,
45 or . Loa: Ang~es i.s to enter a plea
to lhP charge of. murder -Dec. I in
Laguna Beach 'Miinlclpal Coort. ·
Mrs. Hol&ton i.s accuSed lit the Sunday
death of her 56-yeu-old, ~' James
Roy Holston. Hi died of a stab Wound
in his left ilde ~ what police allege
was a domestic dispute.'
Lawrence Buckley, deputy public
defender, waS appointed to represent"
Mrs. Holston at • her Tuesday ar:
ralgnment., She Ui held without ball irl
Orange Coan!)< Jail,
Ahern'1't1iy AUfug
WASHINGTON, IL C. (AP) -Th r
Rev. Ralph Da"41 .A~, described
by an aide as suffeiihJ trom. pneumonia,
today cut short a viS:tt to North Carolina
and prepared to return home to Atlanta
for hos ltallzalion.
Oraage
Weedier
The clooiia will be hilJt M
'lllanPlg!v~, but Jbe.~tuie
won't: n·n'be &:Cbllly • iitong 111e
coast aod 75 further inland under
mostly sunny lkles.
J
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t OAll. Y PILOT
Fe·stival Restaurant Proposed ...___ ------
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DAILY Pll.OT ltd .......
CARTOONIST VERSUS CARTOONIST
Vlrgll P1rtch R191 A Friend
From Page J
CARTOONS ...
a bout with the flu.
Tobin's "The Little Woman" is wearing
furs and commenUng, "I'd like to be
a first nlghter but I'm always late."
Roger Armstrong's happy dog, six-feet
high, with large tongue is easily spotted
as the long famous Napoleon from the
''Napoleon and Uncle Elby" strip.
"Out Damned Spot," says Nofzlger's
"Anlmalogtc" looking ln comic dismay
at a big coloi-td blob oo his multi-eolo~
coat.
Undaunted by gritty wind and ln-
terruptlOD! of photographers, the talented
crew painted on. Phil wu hung up
for a moment on the design 'of the
peace symbol on Queenie's pendant.
Twin brother, Frank sketched the symbol
In the air and the worked raced on.
Space ha! also been saved for cartoons
by artis~. John Dempsey (Playboy),
Paul Darrow, Marvin Meyers ("Soft Sell
Sam", also ln the DAILY PILOT) and
Ferd Johnson ("Moon Mullins").
When the last daub of paint had been
plact!d, the crew led by Nonna Nofziger,
Players general manager, and husband
DAILY PILOT
Ott»4GE. COAIT PUlllSHING COMl"ANY
lobort M. w,,.
.......... 1 ... l"ut-!1'11er
J1ck It. C1rlory
\'kt p,_ldeN MCI Gtllel'al Ml,..,.,
Tli'"''' Kt1,il .. .,
111111111 A. J,f,,,1ri1110
,..,.M11111 E•ltor
lllch1'4 '·Hill
LIWlllll IHCIJ cur l!tirw
P1•l Mi11t11 A•.,.11111.,.
DltKIOI"
a.. .. IMdiOflke~
221 Forotf A¥1,
M1ili11t ,.,,.,,, .. , r.o. ••• '''· •2•s2 --c.M M9.-~ • Wnt..., ..,_ ,....., ~I ttll '#olt ............... ,. "~ IHdl: Jiit JI~''"""
-,ci -
Ed sallied forth to Saddleback Inn.
Beverages, good talk, a c om I c
bartender and a petlt raven-tressed wait-
ress blended there along wUh sbrhnp
and Yorba enchlladu. One of the wa1-
glsh cartoonist.s explained that a Yorba
enchllada is one from PresldenHJ.ect
Nixon's home town.
Someone else suggested that NlJ:on
should have done Lincoln for the
Playhouse. And, so It went as tbe
sbadOWI lengtbm<d.
Blaze Destroys
Irvine Company
El Toro House
Fire destroyed an El TOro residence
owned by the Irvine Company Tueaday
night. Occupant of the 5471 Valencia
Ave. home was Warren Norton Jr.
State Forestry firemen said the 10:30
p.m. blaze was caused by a defective
chimney which did not have a flpar-
arrester. IJ'he roof of the structure caught
fire and the building was totally involved
when the firemen arrived.
The blaze was fanned by strong winds
and there was no water available al
the location. The Irvine Company pro-
vided a 3,000-gallon water truck to fight
the names. One firemen, Ray Russell of the
Laguna Hills station was injured when
he stepped on some nails. Damage to
the building was estimated at $7 ,000.
Marion Westler
Funeral Held
Funeral services for Marlon Westler,
64, of Laguna Hills, were held at 10:80
a.m. today in Laguna Beach Funeral
Home Chapel with Rev. Edward J,
Caldwell officiating.
Mrs. Westler of 535 D Via ~lrada
died Suoclay at South Coast Commuhlly
Hospital ••.
She is survived by her widower, Horton,
two sons, Horton Jr. of Laguna Hills
and Peter of Redding; a brother, Harold
Krueger of California; a sister, Margaret
of Mlnne!Ola; aod sl:z grandchildren.
Tito Pardons 936
BELGRADE (UPI) -Preaident 'llto
today granted -to tll Yugool&v
prisoners, ttleulng 1 iT of them, ln coo-
noctlon with Friday'• ISth lll1l1lvmtry
o! the fuundln& of tho Yugoolav Federal
Rtpubll ..
Laguna CofC A.s~ to ttK Link With -Puppet Theater
Iii .... ..............
Lquna Be.ch Cbamber ol Cammerc.
dlredor• were asked Tuesday aftemocn
to ...,.....,. the •nelolur• .,. the
Fe!Uval of_ Arts mtauraftt-10 It wouJd
be connected with the authorized ZJl).aeat,
puwet lbeattr.
Speaking to directors during a luncheon
meeting ln Hcilel Lquna, Verner Beck,
vlce president of the Festlval ot Aria
board. said u enclosed restaurant ad·
Jolnlng the theater would aerve u a
line meeliog IJ>OI.
"I think giving someooe a lease on
the restaurant is the wty to get It
built with no cost to th~ city,'' suggested
Bernard Syfan. ·
Bill Lambourne said ICOOrding to the
From P .. e 1
HOSPITAL ..•
b delayed.
The hospital's 1argest fund-raising
campaign to date brought in over $1
million, he said, "by a very subatantial
margin, the largest amount of money
ever raised for t h e South Coast Com·
munlty Hospital." However, the alloca ..
Uon of Federal matchlng funds will prcr
bably not be determined until after the
first of the year.
fl.I MILLION SHARE
"It Is my hope that we will qutllly
at this time," he declared. "Should we
be suceessful, our share would be ap-
proxlmal<ly IU mUllon."
"However, aa recently as Tuesday,
I wu advised that there Is a good
chance that our allocaiton might be
set over to the 1$70 allocation. I
have been led to believe that because
of our new aervtce area, we would
be virtually guaranteed a number one
rating ln the 1959-70 allocaUon. Should
this come about, the dedalon to pm
up th1a very large sum of money In
favor of immediate con.istructton would
indeed be a weighty Qne for the nei:t
year's Board of Trustees.
"I hasten to point out that our percm-
tage of occupancy h a s leveled off to
about 85 percenL It is AdministraUon'a
judgment that we could get along as
we are for tbe balance of 1969. nus
would allow ua to continue to accumulale
funds and thUI lharply reduce tho
amount of money we ultimately will
have to borrow to complete thil ex~
panslon."
H. D. Oaborn, tr.....-.r, ln hll llnllldal
rep:>rt of .the year's operations, reported
g r o 1 s income for the fiscal yeu of
14,llOO,OOO. He comp&Hd this wilb total
Income of flOl,000 ln the llnl year
of operations nine years ago.
"Groa income from t.o.pttal opera-
UCOI for the put nine yean hU been
$17 milllon, wblle our net income for
this period hu been $500,000.'' be
reported. "OUr earnings have accordingly
been about s percent of O\D' grogs
bualneaa, a very modest sum and far
from providing the funds necessary to
1enerate capital ln tbe amount of $10
mllllon that 11 required for today'• needs
to aerve the South Coast IU'Vlct area
populaUon.''
DEVELOPMENl'S
SllJlll!Cll11 dtvelopnentl durtoi the
year reported by Stanley W. Volaa, od-
mlnlltr1tor' 1ncluded: -JnauiuraUoo of Wlolir emergency
room servtct wit,b an attending physician
on duty at all tmies.
-Eatablllhment of a Mme care pro-
gram in conjunction with the Visiting
Nurse AssoclaUon of Orange County.
-Installation of a new c a r d l a c-
pulmonery laboratocy under the .nr.c1lon
ol a lull-t 1 m e peyslologisl, Dr. n-r•
Kemp. -lnsUtulion of a retirement program
for hospital employes In cooperation with
Aetna Lilt and casualty Co.
()fficials Weigh.
Oosing of Mine
Where 78 Caught
MANNINGTON, W. Va. (IWI) -Of-
Dclab mot today to cons1dtr u.tog foam
or sealing all openlngl to entngulsh 1
fire In the Mannington No. 9 coal mine
where 78 mlnen have been trapped
for seven days. {Related Story, Page
4) Relatives of the trapped men pleaded
wlUt the olficlals not to seal the mine
-U the only ........ for aeaJing WU
to extlnaullb the underground rtre.
A decision on which act.ion may be
taken wu to be announced following
a meeting of federal and state m1nea
olllclals and representeUvetl of the
Consolidation Coal Co., owner of the
mine, IUld. the United Mine Workers
(UMW). ..-
Citing the prevalence of dangerous,
volatile gases at various levels of the
mine, a company spokesman said UHt
only way to put out the namea wu
to «!close oU all oayl:n ~the fire."
Tbe tunpell1 llJIO u1d 11111ple1
of air brwghl up tbroulh fiva bore
holes drWed to different levels o( the
mine showed "very high" content of
carbon mooozldo and methane pa. The
methane pooed the danaer o1 more
underground exploefCIOI, iht llJ>Okeamlll
said. . ,_ Dill« ozplotlont and •P-
"""' C £•11)' -~ I -ant emit' ii ••lltll lf' it II catered. "Thla makes
many Commercial lnltrettl back oU from
klllnl the liclllty, alllCI they Itel it
mllll _..te lllS do,y1 a year In mler
to be prolltable," he commented.
Mayor Glenn Vedder suggeated perhaps
lhe F..Uval ol Arts mlgbt undenrrlle
the encloe:ure aometlme in the future.
In otbt.r butlneu Tueoday llternooo:
-Dlreeton tnmlned a l'tlOlutJoa from
the Matton Commlltee r1COITllllending
the Clwuber replaces Ila mootbly
lw\Cbaon meellnp wllb week!J \>reUWt
meetlng1 from 7:IO to 8:30 a.m.
Bob Shapard, giving the report, said
weekly breakla.st meetings are quite suc-
cessful for the Anaheim Visilors and
Convention 'bureatL He suggested they
begin the m-. Jan. • and ...
entertaining progl-ama for partlclpanlt.
rently a.re COliUmed with beautlfyin&
trash cans . -Bill McCroody, who Is ln cllarl• -An airport study rtpotl was given of chamber Chrlltmu effottl, sald
by Mayor Glonn Voddor, .,.tlll Aid cur-. meii:haofi, 'wlll turn their (jbtiltmal
reDUy the coon!y Is teyinl lo raltt llcht .. njn unltoo Friday, Dec. e. m6'ity lot the ttcond pba,. o! the Laguna Christmas trlmmlng, acc:<ltdlnc
program which lncludea alte telfilClion, to MCCready, will include a buge tree
legal plannlb.S and tbe ldoDtkm o( a 'belide 'a Santa ClaUJ House and
detailed tlmeteble for the irol:Uon ol Chrllbiiu pone1t on the north, soulb
1 new airport. l!1d Laguno Canyon eotranceo to town.
-Harry Lawrence, Ctwnber pretident, -Eloise Fulmer claimed man: of the
nlated that a representadVe of the money beipg sent to the Eiler Larsen
butlneu community wW give a ~reaen-fund 11 from people living ln Newport
talloo before the City Council W-y Beacb and Coota M .... "We would llk• nliht olferlnl 1 IOlulloo to the 1>otlneu to bavt more· people from Laglllll on
liC<!lllO laaue. the lltt," she COIDDll'Dted·
-1.oulat Turner said Mermaids aro --Dlnclorl were told that the Wlnttr
moving ahead wllb their lloouty Spot, Featlval wu tcbOduled for Feb. 21 to
Flipper aod C"'1rlet7 1wardt aod cur· March 2. '
Frotn P .. e J
FUNDS ••• ·cleaver Fails to Show;
Panther's Arrest Sought
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -' Black
Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver ignored
a date for his return to prison today,
and an order Vtas is.sued for his arrest.
Cleaver was to turn him8elf in at
9 a.m. but had not appeared by 9:30
a.m. The California adult authority,
wh ich supervises parole cases, said it
would wait a "reasonable Ume -about
another half hour" and then ask police
to Wue an all points bulletin for his
arrest.
Cleaver's wife, Kathleen, and his at·
torney, Charles Garry, arrived at the
state bullcllng sborUy before lbe scheduJ.
ed surrender time and made their way
throu1h a corridor jammed with about
100 newsmen.
Garry told newsmen that neither he
nor Mn. Cleaver had any Idea on the
whereabouts of the Black Panthers'
"minister of ln!ormaUon."
"l have not talked to him slnce Sllllday
and I have not aeen him since tut
Thursday when he made a speech,''
Garry said.
Mrs. Cleaver Aid she last saw her
hU!band Sunday night. She said she did
not think it pooslble that be bad fled
the country.
Trustees Weigh Physical
Future of Laguna High
Wlll Laguna Beach High School be
remodeled, have major reconstruction
on Its present site or eventually give
way to a new campus?
Pooslbly all three will have occurred
aa the yean roll by, enrollment grows
and teaching methods change.
School diJtrlct trustees were taking
a preliminary look at the future pro-
babillUes Tueoday night as they heard
reports from both OWen Tait, assistant
cllstrlct 1upertotonden~ and Robert
Reeves, prindpal.
A cornerstone in the declaloo process,
Tait lndlcated, wU1 be the determination
whether the school l.! to continue with
coovenllonal tucb1Dg methods or regear
to the mcn bmov1Uve flexible scheduling
and team teaching.
Team teaching and flexible scheduling
are In effect at Thurston lntermediae
School and Top of the World Elementary
School.
After deciding oo. the type of teacbbig,
sald Tait, school officials will have to
plot a growth curve and calculate the
plant capacity with 1,200, 1,400 and 1,soo
studpitl. 11lere are now about 1,000.
Prlnclpal Retvt1 said that bolb
bomema.klng and auto 1bop faclllUes are
crowded llready. Retve5 1ald lbe faculty
apporenUy bu ito hand! full plannlng
for nest ye.ar 11 needs.
The board Wo broached the possibility
of acquiring the Mormon ctwrch that
11 adjaotnt llChool property. Superln·
tendent William Ullom said, "the church
b growing very r1p1dly; I think: they've
reached the point where they're Interest-
ed in 1elllng."
Trustee Larry Taylor &aid It might
be poasible to tear the church building
down and build two or three stories
high.
ln a Jeaae.purchate arr1111emont, ht tald.
Board members gave these nuoos
!or voting Iha way they clld:
Zltnllt (Laguna Beach) -"I'm oppooed
to Iha led<ral government taklne our
money for educaUon, but u tone as
that is the system and the money leaves
our district I feel we have a
i:eaponaibillty to get some of it back.''
Collins (Laguna Hilla) -"Detplte the
fact it pains me to send money to
Wasblngtoo and get none of it back,
I think It ls necessary at the local
level to take a stand and try to lain
tilt lnltiative agaloat lncrwlng ct!>
trallz.ation of government."
Backus (Dana Polnt) -"Being In
education I know it la tough to get
the things you want. Whether people
want to realize it or not we are ln
competition with other junior colleges
for money our people are paying oul"
Brannon (Santa Ana) -"Thia amounts
to five or six cents on our tax rate
for one year. It will save us expenses
on future overrides or bond lasue.s. This
money la provided to help new dlatrlct.s
and I think we should take advantage
of It."
Vogel (TusUn) -He said ht 11 oppooed
In principle to federal aid and the people
who elected him expect him to stand
on that. He also said he hu doubts
about strings attached and' the pouiblllty
federal money might be withdrawn after
It is promised.
Mr. Carr Rites
Set in Indiana
Funeral services will be held In Indlan-
apolis, Ind., for Laguna Hilll resident
McKinley Carr, 79.
Mr• Carr, 515 A Calle Aragon, died
Sunday at South Coast Community HM·
pita!. Local arrangements are being
made by Laguna Beach Funeral Home.
A retired insurance broker, Mr. Carr
ls survived by his widow, J. Kathleen; a
son, Slephen McKinley Carr of Massa~
chusetts, and two sisters, Ellzabetb S.
Carr and Martha Carr, both of Indiana.
The true preclousmiu of a 14K gold Omega braoel1t Witch Is In the love that goes
wllh It. The Omega youtlve or receive today wlll become a proud peraon•ljOaee.
a Ion .•. precious beybnd com pate fol What Jf'aylribolllea. ~
W/thln each elegant cue 11 the peerleu Omega movement. Each part 11 made with
metlcutous care to give yeera of falthlul perfonnance. Even the diamond• art loupe-
ln apected to 'ssure Oawleat ~uallty and perfection of color, cut and briUlance.
SM our complete coll'°11on of Omega watch•.• tt>r men and wome~ $&5)0 over
11000.
A-14 ......... 141C 9llhl k-i.twlldl .. ,,,,,,.MDO.
l -l41C .... ~ -· """--... ......... . C-11 ........ till&: to1C WIColltt WMM ......... 1m..
--.1121 NEWPORT AVI. COSTA MESA •
22 Yecn h1 Th• S•1t1• Loc•tlon
ll<OllmltelJ I -minor bluta bavo been recolided tlnce befon dawn 1ut
WedneldQ -the flr1I IMJor ~ ploalon boomtd tbrouP the mine'• oeven
mllet o! tunnell, tr1ppin1 ti llltft. ,.....,_
ty-<ne ol tilt mlnert escaped saltly houri
tltet the iDltlal bWl ''---------------------------------·
I
'..._•j •
l
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•
DAILY PIUll a
Smith Quit·s SF S_tate
Blames Pressure; Hayakawa Successor
UPIT .........
CALLS IT QUITS
SF State's Smith
Uf'IT ......
NEW MAN AT HELM
S F St•t•'• Hey•kawa
~·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Blaming
p«UUnS lrom trustees, faculty, militant
Jtudenb and "polltJcal forcea," Robert
R. Sm.llb abruptly ended bis 111:-month
tenn u president ol embattled San Fran·
claco State College.
Gov. Ronald Reapn and otheT trustees
ot California's lkampus college system
unanimouJly aocept<d Smltb's reslgna-
tlon Tuesday and named Prof. S. I
Hayakawa, internatlooallJ known seman-
Uctst, as acttng prealdenl
Reagan, college leaders and Hayakawa
ezpressed doubts that the overnight
change In presidents would be enough
tq pacll)' protatlng .-nts and bring
the campus back to normal soon.
"Hayakawa will go out futer than
Smith," Prof. Nathan Hare, Negro
coordinator ol the San Francl!co State
black studies program, said in San FJ'an..
clsco.
"I can say without hesitation," Reagan
said, Smith's resignation "was not re-
quested." ...
Black and ethnic studies programs
and other demands from camPus minori-
ty group students have been the focal
point of demonstrations, a student strike
and intermittent violence that kept San
Francisco State's classes closed for most
of the past three weeks.
The campus bas 11,000 students and
about 1,100 faculty members.
Tora: Tora: Tora:
Navy Lt. Douglas Haines prepares for takeoff from
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station in SNJ aircraft.
altered to Japanese Zero design for film re-en-
DAILY ~!LOT ...... 11, P.t O'~
actment of attack on Pearl Harbor, "Tora! Tora!
Tora." Lt. Haines and other Navy men, workint
while on leave, are helping to make movie.
Will County Mace Heist
One demand calls fer reinstatement
al Black Panther George Murray, a
part-time English instructor suspended
by the college system's Chancellor Glen
S. Dumke, early this month. Murray
is being investigated by campus officials
for reported remarks in speeches, such
as urging Negro students to carry guns
on campus.
Sunken Boat Search Ends
into the swells in only three minutes.
Be an Armed Robbery? Smith also cited '1desperate lim.itatiorui
In financial resources" as one ~n
for bis request to return to work u
an education prolessor.
Divers searched the sunken offshore
oil ope.ration ship Triple Crown in 250
feet of water off Santa Barbara Tuesday,
finding no trace of nine missing
crewmen, including one from Newport
Beach.
Sixteen surviYors ca.st into the sea
when the Triple Crown went down were
picked up within an hour by the Pacific
Saturn, a Long Beach-based tug assisting
in the oil opfraUon,
By TOM BARLEY
Of "'-Dtllly 1'11•1 ll•ft
A Westminsler robbery may prove
1 be the first "Mace" case in Orange
..:ounty history.
There is no doubt that the man who
:ield up the Burger Q drive-in Saturday
night will be charged with armed robbery
-if and when Westminster police can
rind him.
He forced two employes to hand over
$270 at gunpoint before he squirted the
1·irulent, searing liquid -now widely
nsed by the nation's police officers -
into the eyes of his victims.
But the holdup had district attorney's
officers this week pursuing a novel line
cf legal inquiry : If the man had relied
solely on the use of "Mace" to carry
out his theft could he have been charged
\Vith armed robbery?
Fresh from some in depth research
into Calilontia's Penal Code and allied
legal tomes , Deputy District A'.ttorney
Ted Millard had a £irm "Yes" to offer
to the question.
"Under Section 21IA of the penal code,
this man could be charged with robbery
in the first degree," Millard explained.
"That section contains a reference to
·the use of deadly or dangerou.! weapons
in the carrying out of an armed robbery •
"The argument then may be whether
'Mace' is a deadly weapon,'' Millard
said. "But it seems pretty clear to
me that, whatever the outcome of that
issue, the stuff can clearly be labelled
as dangerous.
"It 's a substitute for a gun," Millard
said, "and it's being carried as a deadly
or dangerous weapon. I don't think
anyqne who challenges that code pro-
vision is going to have much luck.••
In any event, subsequent research by
Millard revealed, a n y use ot "Mace"
or anyone who tries to sell the tern·
porarily blinding spray is pretty well
pinned down by another Penal Code
provision -Section 12420.
Under that wording, "Mace" could
be cla.ssified a1 a fonn ol tear gas
and its user or seller to any person
other than a ~ officer could go
to stale prison f o r up to t w o years
and be fined up to $2,000.
Smith said one reason for his resigna·
tion wu 0 inablllty to reconcile ef·
fectively the conflicts between the
trustees and chancellor, the faculty
groups on campus, the militant student
groups and political forces of the state."
Smith had agreed to discussion of
the issues during campus.wide con.
vocations which superseded classes,
although trustees had ordered normal
campus routine resumed foUowing a
shutdown Nov. 13-20.
Hayakawa ordered the convocations
ended Tuesday night. But he said he
didn't know if classes would resume
as planned Monday.
Santa Anan Killed
A Santa Ana Heights soldier is among
30 U.S. servicemen on tbe latest Defense
Department list or military men killed
in Vietnam.
Sp. 4 Gary W. Hulse, 20, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edward E. Hulse ot 20281
Birch St., was tilled in a batUe near
Slip
Search for the men who were lost
when lbe brand· new, $1 million Triple
Crown sank during predawn hours Mon-
day has since been suspended by the
U.S. Coast Guard's Searc hand Rescue
branch.
Planes, helicopters and the cutter Point
Judith scoured about 800 square miles
of channel waters without finding any
trace of the lost crew men, acept
for two life rafts and a life jackel
Survival time for men dumped into
the cold, wind-whipped waters was
estimated at four to six hours.
Lost along with eight men, mostly
from Ventura County and the Long Beach
area, was well-known Harbor Area
yachtsman Mark Von Mills, 46, o( 3016
Cliff Drive, Newport Beach.
Authorities said Tuesday that ex·
amlnation of tbe Triple Crown at it.."I
resting place in the Santa Barbara Chan-
nel gave absolutely no clue as to what
caused her to sink.
The workboat skippered by George
Gas k i 11, 35, ol 16515 E. 23rd St..
Sunset , Beach, beg&.ll listing about 3: 45
a.m. Monday, then sJJpped stem-first
Our Christmas surprise for you
The Triple Crown had just about hauled
1n the last of a 2,000-foot chain used
on a huge anchor holding an oil drilling
platform in place when the disaster
occurred.
Officials of Santa Fe International
Corp., owners of the boat -reportedly
the most powerful such craft in the
world -said it was eq~pped to handle
900 tons, even pulling weighb up from
2,000 feel
The workboat carried about 500 tons
cif chain used to anchor the drilling
·plaUorm Blue Star II to the channel
bottom in 250 feet of water when she
sank.
Owners of the ship today are conferring
on whether it wiU be economically feasi·
ble to raise the ship-built in Port Ar-
thur, Tex., and finished only three
months ago.
She was contracted to Humble Oil
Co., one of a dozen firms which bid
on rights to drill into federal property
in Ute oil-rich channel to tap mu1ti-bi11Ion
dollar petroleum sources.
The NeWpott Beach victim, Von Mills,
had signed on just a week ago today
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WE'RE HAVING
e '!ft 11C DAYS TO 11111',,. AWD All STOW11LL IE OPEi UTE EVEllY •IGJIT, JllCLUD!NG SlTUJIDlY, D11J1l CR111f1!l~
o EYEIY ITEll ADYEllTISED HAS IEEN REDUCED AT LEAST 111Oil1/2 OF ITS 0111GllllL PRICE.
o AU YALUES ARE Flltll llEGULAll STOCK,,. 10 SPECIAL PIJllCHASES!
• IE'lL SIFT lllAP ALL YOUR SELECTIOIS ••• so YDU'!E •or ONLY E"JOYING SAYINGS, YOUll GIFT $£LECTIOl llLL ., WDY TD CIVIi
o SCIUY, 10 lWL, PHOIE GI C. O, D, JUST CllllE ElllLYl
u ·umS'
as first mate of the ill-fated ship, whlcl
left P o r t Hueneme Saturday on Its Jut
voyage.
Mrs. Cecelia Von Millil, wife of the
missing yacht skipper, said Tuesday ft
still held hope her husband mlsJ!t bt
alive, but added that prospeci.a were
dim.
Meningitis Hits
Marine Battalion
CAMP PENDLETON (UPI) -An out·
break of meningjtis at Ulla sprawling
Marine base has spread to the staging
battalion, where Marines are p'l'OCE!Qed
for duly in Vietnam, olliciab revealed
Tuesday.
Spinal meningitis was diagnosed Tues-
day in Pvt. Kent Johnson, the first
member of the staging battalion to be
stricken .JVith the disease. The outl:reak
previously had been confined to the 2nd
Infantry Training Regiment.
Johnson's case is the 17th of meningitis
reported at the Marine hale thb f.U
but all previous cues bad been coo.pneci
lo the 2nd regiment
•
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•
• II F ASlllOH ISLANI> • IONDAY, lliURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30
~ • OTHER DAYS 10:00 Till 5:30"
• •
"" 'rJ
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Wtdnaday, Novtmbtf 27, 1968
' 'Ibo Wblte HoUle bu a ~und 'turbf for 'lbanlalglvtng ~ the an-
-1 clA tram Senate Republlwl
Loader Ev.-M. Dlrbtn on be-
half ot poultcy producera. Tiie big,
1'hlte bin! wu preeonted at a brief
Cere!llOl)Y. • -Alltn Schei-, :II>, WllJ Selling
more than pizza from ttie delivery
Inlet he drove f<>r a local :i;vtau-
ralll, 'said lllO!roJ)o11ten n· a·c{a
County nan:otlcs officen w)!o ar•
reoted Che )'OUfh Jn Miami Beacb,
Fla. The nal'C\'li<;s officen charged
SCbelner with two cotmls of sale of
'heroin and said he had been selling
.it from bis piZza truck. •
Pete the PenguinJ a Mtiot of
ice and 8tl01D who camt 1outh
to btcome the mascot of tM
PUbburgh Penguim of t h e
Nolio11GI Hock<y LeO{l1'<, dltd
lcut wuk of pneumonia.
• A Wayne State eclentiat In De-
troit says Chere may be somellllng
to the ldea.ot social drinkln.( -at
least among !he elderty. D.r. ·1tobvt
J. Kamnbaum reported that a
study of elderly penom at Cmlllng
Hospital· In Massachusetts sbowed
0 group involvement was signifi·
cantly greater with wine than with
grape juice.'' • !>out Holberry of Scarborough,
England Is bald today because he
lost a fishing bet. 'Ibe wager with
Lan Phllllps provided that whoever
cauilbt· the blgg .. t flab could· ll'eep
his hair Len woo, kept his handle-
bar ~. and gilt to &have his
frieoll's head. •
Thit ~I popltt t!IQCM fig•r<
bends °"" lo gi.,. a Qnmd bfllo lo
nnv Derek Bednark, 2, of Highland
Park, Pa.. TM towering ffgurt ti one
of .uwral that toiU UltUk through
downtown Pittsburgh in the 6th an-
nual Thanksgiving Parade, which
formally usMrs in the YUU season. • Writer.reformer Upton Sinclair,
who died Monday at 90, once said
of his first successful novel, "The
Jungle": 0 1 aimed at the public's
heart and by accident I hit it in the
stomach."
Rocky, Brooke W Qn't Join Nixon Team
NEW YOIUt (UPI) -Two promlnenl ==-lodoy turned down •P-io bl"1 pooto -at least
OD1 of Clbb>et, level -In the ad·
mlnbtralloo of Presldenl-elect Blchard
M. Nl1on..
New York Gov. Nellon A. Rocteleller
and MaaacbnatUI 5a1. Edward Brooke
bolh declined poeltlooo on the N-
team but lor dllblr<nt .........
Brooke, I Nesro-ll1d be bad been
allerod • -In the cabinet but declined
it beeauae •1 think I can but aerve
the CC>lll>l:y and Mr. Nhon In the
Senate."
RocUleller, occordin& to Nboo'1 prw
oecretary, Ronald Zlqkr, Informed Ni>·
on at a tl1vate meetlq ~Y in
Nlxoa'I 1partment lhat be WU not l.n-1«-ln • pool In the admlnlatr•tton. •lRoatfelUr cocf1rmed what ht had
Aid pobllclY urller, that be did nol
desire a poe!Uon In the adinlnlllralioo
and wantod to atay at bll pool In
Albany," Ziea:ler aald.
7Jea;ler did not tncncate whether
Rockeloller bad been alltt<d a cablnei
f'OllUM but It hod been reported that
be wu ccos.ldered a poulbillty for eiyier oecmary of delenoe or oecretary ol
Typhoon mts Area
South Vietnam Armada
Circles Enemy Island
SAIGON (UPI) -An armada ol 55
U.S. and South Vietnamese bo&ta and
ship1 clamped the war's biggest blockade
. around I Viet Con( island stronghold
and sent 1,000 infantrymen storming ln,
military spokesmen said today. They
found few guerrillas but walked into
a typhoon.
The South Vietnamese soldlers Miit
Monday .Into the 21>-mlle-iong Island chain
where the Bassac River tpills Into the
Sooth China Sea 75 miles south of Saigon
reported few signs of the ComrilunUit
Pakistani Riot
Wrecks U.S.
Agency Library
RAWALPINDI, Pakiatan (AP) -Se•·
era! bundftd rioting otudenta 1ttackld
the American Center ln Peehawar today,
leaving it a shambles, reliable tources
reported.
The -reporledly stormed throulh
the c•tller housing the U.S. Information
agency library, bteatlDg windows • n d
destroylna books and typewriters.
ODe -Pikistanl employe was badly cut
about Iba lace u be tried lo pull down an
iron grill over the front windows, one
IWrce 11111.
About 1,000 studenls paraded through
the main itreet of Pftbawar in an anU-
10vermnent :demoostration.
A grog pbl 'several himdrtd turned
down 1 llilO -t lo lbe -.. Cent· er and began rtontng it. PoUce moved 1n
and am11t.c1· 1our p0n-0m.•t1te director ol
the ctlller, llooaid Hotan, 1ald.
Rail Engineers
Walk Off Jobs
NEW YORK (AP) -Coina\uten on
the Long Island Roll .-_ beset by a
complete shutdown of the line for the
put two da)'I <M to a tralmnen'1 atrike,
IOI only ''mlnllDal" --.!<o today as moot
d the engineen walked oul
An LIRR spo-.ft said, "Uolortu-
nately, the trafailna pOhlic ii laced with
the lad that Vf!1:1 leir tralm will be In
operation and II appear. that service
at best will be minlmaJ."
He said the railroad was going into
U.S. District Coort in Brooklyn In an ef-
fort to hait the "illegal" action. He added
that be could give no reason for the work
stoppage.
The 350 elJil,Deen. members of t h e
Brotherhood ot E.ocomotift Engineers,
ha Ye beett called to. a mass -membership
meeting this ""'1lln&. the LlRR spokes-
man reported.
supply bastion they upectod to find .
They lay dlreclly in the path of
Typhoon Nina, whoee 100 mile per hour
winda began pounding V i e t n a m ' s
southern couUine today, grounding
planes and helicopters and curtailing
most of the allied war ellort.
Military spokesmen said the allied
armada kept all Communist escape
route! blocked, however, from the
Mekong Delta supply hue I.bat bu serv-
ed u a latmebing pad for llllJDer'OUS
guerrilla assaults toward Saigon.
Allied headquarters deacrtbed the of·
fenslve u the biggest of tts kind cf
the war and 1ald U.S. planes "aoftened
up" the lls l.s1andl flnt with t.oo,000
propaganda leaneta urging the Viet Cong
to give up.
The lnfll'ltrymen killed two guerrillu
ahd captured three 1n the first two
da)'I. They stopped 121 sampsns lo
search for Communllt contraband and
questioned 152 local v1111gen about Viet
Cong afftllatJona
U.S. military weatbennen ta 1 u e d
tevere rtorm warnlnp for the Mekong
DeJta ln preparation for Nbla's onslaught.
Heavy rains and 40 m.p.b. wiDdl Wbed
coastal Yung Tau as the typhoon beaded
inland.
In Saigon, U.S. bwiquarten Aid the
tearcb had been abandoned for tbl trews
of two American planes shot down over
North Vietnam on Monday.
A spokesman Jdentilled the planes a.
a Navy !WC reconnalnance jet and
an Air For c e F4 Phantom wh!cb had
been guarding for another picture-taJdng
plane. Each aircraft carried two men
who were listed u misalng 1n action.
Speeder Chasers
Deliver Baby Boy
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two Calllornia
Highway Patrolmen started out to catch
a speeder and ended up delivering a
baby.
Glenn McCauley and J1Jn Martin
reported they pulled a speeding car off
the aide of Intmitate SO ln Sacramento
Tuesday. The driver, Harl"ey Barnes of
Sacramento, jumped out and abouted
that bis wife, Martha, 28, wu 1n labor.
McCauley llDd Barnes lorpl the ticket,
called ID ambulance and then helped
Mn. Barnet deliver the baby. Neither
ol the officers had ever been a midwife
before.
Mother and the child, a boy, are
reported doing well at Mercy HO!pital
In Sacramento.
Tracy Leaves Forhme
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Act.>r Lee
Tracy, whole portrayals of fut talking
polloemen, poUUcians aod reporters
brought bJ.m movie stardom in lbt 1930's,
loll an estate al n million. Tracy died
Ocl ll
atate.
Brooke did Doi ,., whot oeat he hod
been o(lerod In !bl clhlnet.
Nixon also met with Rocktfeller11
yow>Jtr brother, lloYld, chairman o!
the Chue Manbattan Ballk, and -ed & Variety al IUbjtcti. There WU
no iodicltion wbetber David Roctefeller
might come Into the N l • o o ad·
m.lniJtraUoo.
Nixoo aJso. wu to meet with b1a vice
presiden~ect, Spiro T. Agnew, to
dlacusa Aenew'1 role 1n the new ad-
mtni.s!raUon.
The nooo seuloo wW be the fillt
'.Another Goodby
Murpi\J propogaill by COmmlJDlst China
to mett with Nison ldmtnistraUon
representatives F e b. 20 1n Warsaw to
d1lcuu "peaceful coexlstence."
MurJt111, a top.level · cllpt.mat ·dodol
Iba Eil'Dhower ~l?atinn, hu u
ol/Jot In the State Department nbr
s.c..tary al State Dean Rttalt'1 IJld
hu ...,. to an cllpiomalie cables oo
be CID be IUlly inlormed on loreip
devdoPtntnta. It ii part of the rormii11
'ln!<tld out by Jobtuoo aod Nboo for
!ha·tr&Dlliloo period.
• UPI T........,.
Luci Johnson Nugent (third from left) shares the
plight of other military wives as they watch the
plane carrying t!Jelr husbands back to Vietnam duty
take off from Honolulu International Aiiport Tues·
day. Luci, her husband Pat Nugent, and their son,
17·month-old Lyn enjoyed one week together while
Pat was on R and R leave from Vietnam. Luci will
return to Texas.
Sharpest Prices
Hike in 17 Years
ShoJt'll. in,O~toher . ,. . ,-, ..
"'..ISHINGTON (AP) -l.ivltig costs Juh:iJ>td six·tenths pf One percent in
October for the blggest monthly rise
In eight yeats and increasing 1958's
.stiarpest rate of price .bikes in 17 years,
the government saJd today.
Clothing and transportation cost.! were
up nine-tenths of one percent each, food
and housing up four·tenLh5 each and
medical care rose seven-tenths, said the
Bureau of Labor statistics.
Assl Commi.!8loner Arnold Chase of
the bure_au said the over-all rise in living
costs in 19118 '1cou1d very well ~around
4.5 percent for the year," highest since
the 5.9 percent hise in 1961 before Korean
War prW.WVe coatrola were iMpoled.
:But Cbue 18.id the rate of rlnctt!ue
la e>pec\ed lo taper off and I.bat the
1overnment sees DO ·need for 1imllar
controli now.
Flower Child
Plastic Posie Plugs 'Pipe'
DENVER. Colo. (AP) -Janet Young,
18. who-wu treated ror asthma for
nearly five years, left National Jewish
Ha&pital Tuesday night, carrying in a
teat tube the tiny plasUc flower -a
lily of the valley -that actually caused
her coughing and wheezing.
Two weeks ago surgeons here removed
the small bit of plastic from her left
bronchus, the part of the windpipe
leading to the left lung.
The coughing subsided, the wheezing
stopped and when she left the hospital
to fly b o me to h e r family in Boise,
Idaho, the was breathing normally.
~ attracUve., brown-eyed blonde wu
I rel med to Natioo~ Jewish on Oct. 14. '
-Wlletl sh4' arrivedj',lloctors li$ened to
her brtathtna and one heard what he
described u a "11Uplclous noise" in
the left airway to the lungs. "We
'
suspected that either a tumor or sorr
foreign body was blocking the bronchus , '
he said.
The doctor then asked Janet if sh~
had swallowed anything.
"I said I had swallowed a plastic
fl ower five years ago, but it went straight
through," she said.
The doc tors theorized it may Instead
have found its way into an air passage.
Surgeons confirmed this and removed
the flower.
Janet, a daughter of Mr. and Mr!i.
Eugene Kerr of Boise, said she swallowed
the flower while visiting a girlfriend
in her then-home town of Billings, Mont.
She said she was nibbling on it when
a playmate slapped her on the back.
Other patients at the hospital gave
her a large plastic flower as a going-
away gift. "'l'hey told me, I'll bet yo·1
can't swallow Uris one.' "
E'aee Sad Thanksgiving
Families of Trapped Pray
KN01TSVILLE, W. Va, (AP) -When
Winds to Taper Tonight
Juanita Mayle makes pumpttn pies for
her family's Thanksgiving dinner aM
mates 15 at a time. She's not making
any todayr
Juanita's husband, Hartzell Mayle, 51,
is ooe of 78 miners trapped since last
Wednesday in the burning Mountaineer
Coll Co. No. 9 mine.
C.Orcorm vowed that the search would
continue as long as there was even a
remote possibility of findlng the men
alive.
Comrades of the enl.ombed men-mem·
hers of United Mine Workers Local 40-42
--had turkeys and bags U fodd ready to
distribute to the strickea .families.
"It's all we can do for them," said
local President Norman Willard.
didn't know if he should," Mrs. Matlsh
said. J immy beats the blg bass drum
in the nearby Shlnn.ston }ligh School
band,
She said she told him, "You know
that daddy always wanted you to march
in that parade, so you go on and march.
That's what he always wanted."
h-lrs. Matish, who clutched at her ros-
ary beads as she talked, is a strong,
proud worn~ but a damp handkerchlef
was knotted in her hands. Temperatures Plu1ige From Fraser w International Falls She la among those wbo believe he
wUl be found alive.
"l've been with him ever slnce he'1
beeD down there," she aa!d, her brown
eyet: reddened by teatt. "And you know
what? Re's worried aboat·ua. 'l'flat's the
«:eHfornia
V .S. Summar11
......... -'""'* ................ ~ .... ,. """ ..._... ....
"""""" Tn.tt. Cold "'" 'fl'l't -!tier piqued ll'lll<fl f1I tflt Ntlon fM dlly ~ Tl\lflk,.lvlne. s~ tel! trom tti. _... Ohio
Vi ney to -"'*" Hww e,,.1111111. L191itl ncM .,...., tc.-Mlr1Mm H-
E"'1.,...., mMM"'9 tfl Ind! 1n IMnJ ·-tl1ftt w.w.i wide tl'WI ol h "'"'""'
...... "''"" .,., """""' Arttllatt Tllilfdal' Ind c..11""'9d todty, H .. W ,,_ ..m l ... ...tw Ml'lllnft wt 11'1 tl!'Kt tar toUftMMt T-.. ...., -fll
•I'd etntnl mauMtlllt tnd til«il....,. al ,... Mnk:o.
'" ..... '1lft'lllrodW fl( "" ""''°"· It waa ttlr ~ fkY, llllt «iM. ,,._,
• , ...... --"" ., a.Mt '"' .i.v111o1, ~ ... _,..,, ll'lllnlolrle
""-'tlq ti lS i.tow nfO, ..._ d•-the IMftVrf ,.,...,.. from n at •-Ille, T .. ., ta 1 11 Hltlbl'M
alld ln!M+ii"'"91 lltllt. Minn~ t llllf ..,_.,_
•
·-·--" ....... ·-a11~1'dt
l•M ......
Chlc:.H
C!lldl'INll
ci.....11nd
°""" .. -.. .......
lurtk• Fort Worffl ·---· Ho;1,11tell
Ka-Clt'f Lat v ... 1
La. NIMIM ---M-• H._, Or!Hl'll
N.wYOl'll
O.kl9M ........
PHO A:ob6e1 ,,. .. ~ -1"11Ttbllrtfl
"orl1•1111 11 .. 111 City
l!ld '""' ... --SI, lol,rlf
Stl!Nt
htl Lett Clt'r
'" -J.ltt FrwictK.
illftfl ••"'-•• ...... -M --· W11f1'"'1'1:1t
Hlllll LM Pnc.
G H
D ' .... " .. ... .. ..
-'1 • M ... " !I .. .II .. " 41 lJ
<W t~ . .. .... ~ ~ 1.U .... .... ,. • .21 ... .. " n " " n <I D " " n " .. "
klnd of man he U." ,
Mr. IOd Mn. Mayle hava II Children.
Their agd rq• ltml ihe twins,
Cindy lloe ud iJnda Jm; who are 4, to
SJana, who ill ~-'lbtre are eight glrls
and •lght boys .
"I have !Ucb a wooderful familr.''
the 46-yeat-old woman said, managing
a falnt lnille. "We are lucky to be as
well off as -we are."
The llmtl)< ii Juo1 one ol the famili<S
of 18 miners trapped for a wook in a
bun>!J>i coal mine wbicb lace a Hd
'lllaOl:igh!nf. •
"What have these people got to feast
abolit!" aoted Mn .. Robert l'riend ol
Parke.rsb2; whose brother Is among
the triP. mlnen.
"You how moat ol ~ lomlllel
wtit be speoding Thanbgivtng," said one
nilner. "'l'boy'll be rllhl there in the
a ;t church praylng-Ul:e they have all
'' JJ along." : : Last Wtdnllday at $:40 a.m. the first
"' .. .• erplostoa: bal:lned throlfgh Motnltalneet : f: •111 Coal Co, No. t mine, jusl as the 99 men
" • m the mldnfcht shift were about to 'l':!lt. : r, 1'wentJ4K'I nn to safety or were pulled
• .o . u trom tht smoking pits.
•1 17 Tbere bu been no conllct, none at f: ~ all, with any of lhe other men despite :! : around-the-clock re9C\.le efforts. And an--
" a .11 other expl011ion-the 14th In seven daya
'' 11 -hit the mine TUesday jus( after Con-: !: soUdlUoo Coal Co. President John
But coal miaing people are proud and '
Mrs. Frank Matish would llbt accept the
food. "I don't want it: I was a good
money manager and ,we don't need it,''
she said. ;
The "we" are Mrs. Matish and her IS.
year-old son, Jlmmy. Her 56-year-old
husband Ls somewhere deep in the smol-
dering honeycombs ol the mine.
Jimmy "wanted to march In the
'l'llanbgiving parade tonight but be
'
C.Orcoran. whose company b the par·
ent firm of Mountaineer, told a news
conference Tuesday, "No matter how
remote the po.sslbllity, we won'.S....close
any avenue of escape. We won't li\!t-the
~~·-mlne will not be sealed, he said,
"until a reasoo for keeping It open does
not exist. ..
Los Angeles Must Wait
200 Years for $3 Billion
LOS AlfOELES °<AP> -· 1be City of
Los Anjl'l" moy b. In for a 13 ~illion
gill -In about :ioo ytaro.
The prospect of that money was left to
the city In the wW oLDr. MaJmlililn Lan-
tto, a Los Anjleles optometrist wbo clled In
1966 It age 8'.
I.ando ielt hall of bll $'121,IU .... te to
the city, blJt he Aid the ~ must be
lei! to dt.-.1 ltiterelt roi * years before
beb1r turned .,.,., to the city where he
said-he "spo11t hoppily the lut rears
of. my life.'1
Financial e>perU Aid that llnoe ouch
I llJDd, II I ptrCl!JI~ '""1d double ..,...,
1$ years, the bequest would exceed $3
billion by lhe year 2166.
The remainder of the money was left
to the University of Minnesota to be uaed
for scbolarsi.ips.
But five cousins art contesUng t fti e
will and Superior Court Judge Adalpb
Alexander h a a t.akea the matter under
cons:ideratiab. He will have to decide It
the doctor's unwitnessed two-page will
b Invalid because It had an ~
printing of Dr. Lando '1 name lmtead Cl
hls signature.
Under California law, any will signed
without wllncsses must be ~Urely hand-written.
•
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1tll•
Fire Calls ...__
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10:4 1.m. ru::!..,.~1c11 ,111, l»I• son. 8ulb-shaped portion oi; bow, as large as the
Twin H11 .. ortY1, Nit. 1 Mayflower which brought Pilgrims to New England, l~i' .~~~·w:=11:~· c~r:,"'~'·s. houses transducer for highest powered sonar system
StKn Dr1W...n.•11r aboard any surface ship currently flying flag of a
2:n 1.m. TunUy, walhdal#n, s.n DI-western power. HO F,,_1,, Ind 5Prl .... lt ____ ..:_ _______________ _
... Marriage
~. ~· ··· .. Licenses '···~-··
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IJWm. w.=i.n2', ~ ~rt
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f :ll p.m., me4QI 1111. Edlllfft' Ind _ .....
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12:1S 11.lfl .. air fi"..220I °"111111· ltotd J:• 11.m,, bl'\llM fire, DD¥ft' .,.. cn•-7:27 11.m., r"t lnWrliNlton, Mlt
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11:52 11.m., dntcl\lre "" 1• v• Trlldt • --12:17 P.l'l'I. T......,y, 1trvcti.ire nre.
-J1'11 ltled
Pilot Visitor•
Tou" •rt COllClvcied Mlllld•Yt 11111
Frkl•Yt tor Khool er.-rit flnti erld1 1"'91 111<1 11Nw1 or lllhlr 1111'•
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el. lritw.lld tl'WPI 1'1111' all Mr.
OvdllY JUdl, Ml411, b.L 271.
CAC Plans
Delayed on
Courthouse
SANTA ANA -The Com-
"""'· jl.t._ba;lfl ~.J:~ri. ••.ai. munlty :Action Council'• pro-·~-;.:~·~'"'""'-. " ~ ~ pouJ to take over the entire
J • ...,~-;.r"'~ '"6."'-~vnµ~ top floor of the old -Orange
31, o1 Geolen Gr"D'V',, Co t ~-~'· bull"•• Jim DO'I' .. , 21. 1nc1 v11..nt c. s.u-. un y ....uwwuuse .,....16 11, bofh of Hunll/IOfOll Btltdl.
Eut1tn1 P. V1nGr1Mv111. 31, ot Hvn-rent-free· ran lnto de 1 a y
IJrttton ~· -.cl ~:r;:ltvt K. . r.!-:C';;.141, °'•~ 11M'irdr• E. before the Bo a rd of
~1 . .i.-, si. N lh ot Hunt1nsto11 Supervisors Tuesday.
Lll'l'Y J. SNl>tllntOI\. 30. of M"""'°" Ro Id L el d CAC e..m. 1'111 L1'1d1 0eer1n., •· ,,, na unc or , e1-
1c.~ ~ ~-21, ot :f:"'' ,,,,., ecutlve director, pointed out
c1r1 t-:""oW,.,...'.· 1:,,m~"~t .. no that CAC's present ·head·
!INC.II, Ind' 1(1fht1'illl GioJM, 1,, ar\er t Jrd s f1f u111"' N'9u.1. • qu s a 206 w. t.,
WHl!e l!v1rirtt l u'11,ll1rdl, 53. Ind eo~nta Ana are inadequate and 1(1lhlnn JfWlll M('Donlld, 4/, bo!ll OXI I c~wr.~::!c,.1;.,.,., 14 f1f AneMlm, unheated. Ind Jlmm!t Nell H1 rl, 21, of Hvrt-e~'l:"'"~~~d!l-.tt, "· ., c .. 11 He , said CAC, which war
M111. rwm1m..:i l lnd1 l" l.,,..,,n. accepted as the ofllclal county 20. f1f N~ 11..U.. .
11:-th 8f'vol o.U1 .. 11, ,.., 1n11• poverty fighting group lut GklvlllN 11. !Sertollnt, 21, oot'tl
.. ~C..~·Ktll•, .«i, •nd tetM June 5, would ha ve closer Ues ~P'!Jllr. -. botll of Ntwp«t to the cotmty if located in I I / ll•d'I. 1 • f'rtw Af'llllla, 24, of N....,.., leecft, the oourtboust
1 Ind D..... Merit II~.. "" OI' '
· ' 'Ii~ '~A-. 2'. ., l'tuftt•'" Claire Ennl.9 of the County 11 v111w ..... -,.-.nc.v T. MtQUm•"' Admlnl!trat.or'a Office palnted · I 2', llftN-iior'I lleecl!. : ~Mr'!fllw'.l!fWln A1nvr. "· 111 OA1111•1 out that SUl'Jilut county office 1 P11!'1ei. P'rllderldt, !$, -« 11 ' w 11.m. space was being grabbed up
-BAL'l"li MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR 1-Mlt
Co1tl Me1a Ml 1-UU
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadwa1, Costa MeA
LI 1-3433
DU.DAY BROTHERS
1 • Rutlacto• V.Oe1 ' . '~"' · Mortuary
17111 Beach Bl>d.
•• HaaUDstoa Beacb
""'" ... Mt-mt
PACIFIC VIEW
• · MEMORIAL PARlt
Ce'inetery • MorturJ
Chapel
l500 ,Padftc View DrfT•
Ne-.t Bea .. , Calllonlll ' ".rT"" .....
q u I c k l 1 by overcrowded
departmentl. He said the Ha11
of R<eorda from which the
Dlltrict Attorney's office and
courts have moved to the new
courthouse bulldlng, WIS belng-
taken over by tbl Welfare
Department and the Aileslor.
Supervi!Or C. M. "C)'O"
Featherly suggested the court
building at Ith and Rots
Streeta, but Ennis said that
would be demolished to ollow
Santa Ana'• propOled reJoca.
Uon ol 4th Sl.
Superv~ David L. Baker
pointed out that thert are long
standing p I an 11 to UH the
courtl\OU!I! 81 a C 0 U D t y
hlltorlcal monument an d
mllleWD.
Superv!IOI' Alton E. Allon
suggelled that the lllbject be
poltpooed for two wee.kl and
it wu aet for diacualon Dec.
10.
County Departments
Honored for Safety
SANTA ANA -Perfect no-
lnjury on the job reconls for
the past flscal year were
pral!ed by the Board of
Supervisors Wednesday as l)
county deparbnenta recelved
honors.
The employes outstanding
record led to lhe county wtn-
nlng the ,California
Supervisors AssoclaUon first
place safety achievement pla-
que for the lowest injury score
among large counties. ThiJ is
the s.IJ:th consecuUve year for
the honor.
A second fin! place plaque
from the NaUooal Safety
Council was also received.
The :!O departmenta with
perfect non-injury r e co r d 1
from .Jilly 1967 to July 1988
each rectlvtd safety councl1,
It.ate CompenaaUon Insurance
Fund and special .Board of
Supervisors award!.
County government dlvialona
receiving recognlUon Included
Ad min 11 tra tl veOfflce,
Agriculture, AgrleuJbire Er·
tenalon, Airport. Auditor-Oen·
troller, Board of Supervisors.
Clerk of the Board, Clv I
D e f enae, CommwticaUon1,
Coroner, County Counsel, Data
Services, Harbor and Parb,
Industrial F.ann. .
Martha!, Harbor Judicial
District; Marshal, s but h
Orange County Dlatrict;
Medical Center, C e n tr a J ,
North and South County
Judicial Di.stricU; Personnel,
Admlniatrator, Public
Defender, Purchasing, Real
Property Services, s are t y,
Retirement Board, SherW,
Rosamoor Dl!trlcl, Vet.rans
Services and Water WorU
Dlstrlct No. 4.
Sujierviaora' Chairnwi C.
M. 11Cye" Featherly noted
that the county '1 average for
lost-Ume Injuries for the paat
111 year1 la sUghtly above
five iRcidenta for each mllllon
manhoar1 woritd.
"Not Only were fi!mployea
spared many unnectuary m;
Saddlehack
Meeting Set
Saddleback College'• llQ..
member General Advilory
Committee will review current
and future college progrilma
at a dinner meeting Dec. 4.
The clUzens' organizaUon,
comprlted of mldentl of 14
communitiu, wu formed thJa
year prlot to the openln& of
the new junior couer,e. .
Tbt committee I i!lvlded
Into 11 subcommtttetl, all
related to the camt.ilfl opera·
tlon. Propoeall of the 1Ub-
commlttee1 are submitted to
the admlntatraUon and In tum
relayed to the board of
tru!ltees.
Cbalrmen of t b e sub-
comaoltteet ..... tnellil>an ol
tbe college ltalf.
juriea but very IUhstanUal
savings ln workmen's com-
pensation costs were received
putting Orange County'• In-
jury imurance rates among
the lowest in California,"
Featberly said.
'I.be supervlaors com-
plimented county workers on
tbeir achlevement and cited the Safety Office staff under
Purchasing Agent Courtney
Chandler for ita · !UCCesl 1n
accldent prevention a n d
claims control.
New Reeortl Dae
Juvenile Court
Cases Mounting
ORANGE -Orange County
Juvenile Court cues an' well
on U>eJr way to a new record
and musbroomlng cal<ndan
at tbe Mancheltar Avenue
faclllty have compelled
Juvenile Court Judie Bruce
Supmer to advert.lie fw • new
Juvenlle court ..r ....
An aoa1yall ol tbe flrll 10
moatbl o1 111ea u-. !bat
the court bandied 41,0ll ._,
U7 men t'?.an were proceaed
In the whole of 1187 when
40,m cues were loued.
O! the Ilea tally, 23,2$8 ma~
ten: we:rti juvenile traffic of.
femet. !n IM7, traffic of •
fenders accounted for 22,m
o1 tbe 40,m total
About nine pettent of the
Ilea ID-month total -1,189
-involved juvenile offenders
1n detenUon proceedlnp. That
compares with a 1917 percen-
tage of 1llghUJ less than n1ne
percent for the aame type
ol proceeding.
Fines collected for the
January-October, Ilea period
totalled 11 s 4 , 41 5 • 71 , the
an.al1sil revealed. For the
calendar year 1111, juvenile
court authorities turned
!m.401 over to tbe c:oonty
lund.
Superior COUrt Ad-
mlnl1trator Lellle L.
McCartney defended the
dedslm to appoint onother
juvenile court referee u being
forced upon the court "by
an unpncedented and con-Unutna: lncreue in juvenile court proceedings.,,
Recent state and federal
court declalona which Jed to
the application of adult court
procedures to many accuaed
juveniles played a part In the
Increased traffic ol }'OIDI( of·
referee court bad b e e n
greatest.
AppllcaUOlll for tbe ll0,0'12
Vacanc)' In Judie Sumner'•
court must be attorney• wbo
have been admltted ·to prac-
Uce belcn the Supreme Court
for at leut ftye years,
McCartney aald. Wrltton ap-
plicaUons will be welcome at
the olflce ol the court Id·
mlnlltrator, be Nld.
Yule Food
Featured
At Bazaar
A holiday benefit bazaar
featuring Christmaa decor•·
UOlll and food will be held
Monday at the Memorial
Garden Center Ill tbe Orange
County Falrgrounda properiy.
Sponsoring agency Is the
Orange County Me mor I al
Garden Center nonprof i t
educational organization, led
by Mra. Heory Read, of San
Clemente.
All llOl'la ol materfala for
making deCorations, pl u a
jams, jellies and confections
wW be on sale 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., with drawings for
prhea every boor. -
Fund• will cu to maintain
and improve the Garden
Center, a memorial to the
old Santa Ana Army Air Baae
and all war veterllll.
•
PEE& FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'111e old County Jail wu
another auueat1on but Ennis
Nld lblo bulldlng_ waa In 1Uch
bod abape It ahould be tom
down. The old coorthoule
area wb!ch the CAC coveta
Is DOW occuptod by
~ I and Z GI the
SUperior Court. TheJ wW
move out Dec. 1$.
·course Over
Obarlea M. Schelnolt, 1"'5
Santa Clara SI., rOUDlaln
ValleJ·ll-a-ll-
ol the· southern callfonila
Bdl1io Co111p-.•7'1
Tr 1 n1 po r·t 'a l.1 onilclbool
llcllelnoot-II emplo)ood 11 a
Tbe General AdvllarY Com· mlttee wW meet it l p.id.
at Mannlnp Banquet. Room
In Lqulla llllll, I..iaare
Wcwld.
(btlifmais ••• •
1111 BolA A ...
;tlallmtamr 111 IUI
--II the com•• HUntlJtllOll Beach 8 • r • I c a c.oi..
'Messiah' Slated
Kristin WinamS. dlucirter !If
Mr. and lltl. Delbert J.
Wlnctrd, IOIS Ocean Blvd., N""°" 8eaclt, ta • mamber !If !be Seat\le Pacllla Colle(e Or""'1o _, Wblcb will
praenl Handel'& 1'Melllab"
Doc. t ID Soattla opera ~.
littint On luta.'s Jn••
')
·--------------·-~-----
DAii. y PILOI' •
All the Flxln'a for YO<Jr Proucfaat fNlll
Thanksgiving Dinner
Be a Hero ctn ThanksolYlng
Get Mom out ol the Kitchen
HERO BUTTONS COST $265
AS LIT'l'LE AS ......
C,~ta me6a (}of/ & e. e.
Open lll1nksgiYint Day lor Dinners
St1rtlng 1t 1 p.m.
111 1111111•1 l11c11cle 1011p or 11l1cl, toll and ltut+.r, bever.,.
1..d cl11Mri.
,.,DUN• TOM 1VlllY -C......, -521.1: DN•1oOEA11TJS.C.mllllfJrllefrf ';• ,,.,
IOAS'r u• Of POU ... .,,.. S... I~ ,
Chilclr111'• Perll111 CUncler 121 f •rk•y 111d Pork •• ,. S1.lt
IOAST LON• ISLAND DUCKUN•, S..C. II ....... P .IO
ran•• 1111 °' ITlll IUf -.. .... • ••••••••••• M.JI
llOIUD U.$, CHOICI NIW TOlK STIAl , , , , • ••,,, $4.tl
'
•
.,..... .. _
lea Cralfll S1111cl1-Pumpki11 or Ml11ce M11t '1•
Auori1d Minh
ffn T•• M• ...... H.,. ....... "'91..,....•
RESERVATIONS PLEEEEESE, 5'I0-7200
•
I
-..,,
.
' •
• t •
' I
I
,...., .... ~---'!"",.. -' .---~~~"'""~-~-~~" ...... '!!~ .. !l! ............ l!!l!l'Ol"'!lll"!'"l!!!"'!llllllll!!l .................. I! .... ~ .. ·------'
I'
Je DAILY PllDT WtdM~, Novfmbt:r 27. 1%8
LEGAL N.OTICE Middle-aged Ai.9 e OVER THE COUNTER ·
Real Money Bags We1l•rn NASO Li1tln91 for TueJd•y, November 26, 1'61
... ,'" •A•,. c•a,.1•1CAT• 011 IUSIM•SS •tCTITIOUS 1111111 M-'MI
""' ..-nltned doll -.iw certlf'I !NI Ill 11 condudl"'51 I /MU 0.6tr
bolllntu M I" lnlllYkt\1111 II P .Q, aft
lit. Wedmlntttf ~' C.llfortol1, Ullder
1flll flCtl~ fl"" NIM of Pll.OOlKTIVI!! t0~$ OF (-'LIFO.MIA Ind ft\11 Mld ,.,.,,. 11 compOooeU of m. tollowlM pt,..on,
""""" ftlC1>e In tutl •nd 11~ 04 rMIMMe
It II t.141Dws, .... ti: lloblrt O. 01nlell. :tU II CtrOfll AVfl!Ut. ~ Be11ch. Calil<>rnl1.
"01'911 Ntvfin!Mf 2:2, lf61.
: Rotltrl G. O•ftltlt
iT-'TI! 01' C:-'LIFOltMIA. )
By SYLVIA PORTER
ti you are under ;(>, you
gtt all the headll.nes in the
markclplace tod.'.ly. "Think
Young!" i! lhe batUe cry or
the rnarkttb1g experts; tap
that $18-$20 bllllon teen-age
bonanza is their obsesal.on.
"Nuts," say J, Crom the van·
tage point or lhe'alOllent over-
30. "Mirage!" adds Fabian
Undcn, cb.ief consumer
economist of the NaUonal
lodu.strial Conference Board,
and Linden salves my ego
by adding:
"\\'mLE OUR youlh are the
ones gelling all the headlines,
the 'hard core' of demand
i!I in the purses and pocket.s
of the middle-aged -and it
will stay there, even in areas
generally associated w i t b
youth ." To back it up:
-Teen-agers may have an
income of $1S.$20 billion a
year but that's a tiny fracUon
of the nation's total spending
COUNTY 01' DltANGI!" l M.
On NO'Afl'ber '22, IUI. tllf<lre ""' LEGAL NOTICE
• Nol...,, PWllC ln •NI fGI' ,,.kl Coln>f'I -----~cc"'------I ,..u Sl1N, l'llf'IOrllll'( •-••"' R~rl P·llhl
G. 0111itoll t.-ri ta "" lo tie !ht Cl!JITll'ICATE 01< &US1NE$S
__, wftolt fttm4: 11 1ubocr1btd Ill FICTITIOUS NAME
lf)I wllllln IMtrvtr\1111 ind IC.kr>OWlell9"' The u,,...,,rslened don certlty I '"'
to nw lf'l.ll N t:i.K\lttd IM Wmt. conll<Kllftl 1 bu1Jnen •! "" Fflf Drlvf,
WI"""* ""' Miiii Ind lflL Cosll M-. C11!1arnlt , und..--Ile· CSE.ALI tl1lou1 llttn "'me o1 CD LL E G E J1m11L1""tllt < 0 NOtlrv PullHC In lnll tor Pt4AllMACY f ncl lf'llt ,_.!d lrn> l tom-
Mld Coun,., ,..., s111e l'Osed o1 ""' followlng pe.--. whoW
t!OHALD L OloNllU.s. Atht. "''"' In lull • ..., Pl•c• Df re1I01nc:•
,,, 1:111 Olif,Mlll An. 1' ·~~~ws~. DREYFUS, $101 NlllflrOI Qr,,..., C1lltw"ltl1 W•v. CCllll Mn•, c1111ornf1. 1"11111111\ed Or1noe CO." Diii'/ l"llol, DI!"' November J 1961
HDvt1mber 21 lflll Dtctmbl• (, II, 11• GARY A. oREYFUS
1$ 2011"'41 Stai. ot C1lltornt1, Or1ng1 County:
LEGAL NOTICE Dn NOVftl'lber 5, 1961, befGte m~.
• Not1ry Public 111 lflll fOr wld s1111,
Pf"''"llll'I' •PH•r@cl GARY A. DREYFUS
1"·1177f knowll lo ml lu be IM perwn whole
Cd'tl•ICATE OF •USINl!IS """" ,. SljbKrfbld ta "'• within 1 ...
•tCTITOUS ICAMI! ''"""""' I nd 1dO'IOWied111 IN ei<K>llld
TM in'ld~ do artl,,. ti.. ,,. tlll -· Clf'dllCtlfte 1 DU1lne11 fl 1515 E. 17111 COFFICli\L SEAL)
St S..IN D, Slnll ........ C1Qtornl1 '21'1. ROSELLE C, KNOX
...;.;.., tM flcl!lloul Hrm ........ "' THE NDll!Y Publlc..C1ll1onl1
LEARNING CENTER trid """' Uld flrrn Prlnc:IHI Of!Jct 11> 15 t;amPQHd ot tht h:ll-lne oe,_, 0<11>11t CounlV
....-lllmll!I In tun 1nd plecn ol My CommlulOl'I EllPlrft
tttldenc• 11'11 fl lolloWI: Jyty l, 1JJ2 ELNORA SCtHMA.OEL ,..,, C111l1 PYbll11!ed Or11'111I C<>e1t D1Uy Plkol,
st. N-orl lle1d\, C1llh:lmll. Ncvember '· lJ, 20. 11, 1'61 197'1"'
MRS. JEAN H. DAVIS, :mr Ceul•
St.. NtwPOfl er1d'I. C1lltor11l1. LEGAL NOTICE
0111<1 Novemtllr •. 1961
ELNORA SCHMAOEL P-31111
JEAN H. DAVIS Cl!llTll<ICloTE 01< &U51HESS $1111 ol Ctlllomll. Or1.-Coullf'J': P1CTITIOUS NAME Ott Novtimber ~. Ifft. befor1 ""'·
1 NoTlll'Y Publlc In 1nd fGr wlll s11i.. Tl>I v"""rsJgnld -artlty hr Is • 1 11' o-red ELNORA COl>lluC!lng I bu1lnasl 11 12~1 IMmory
stwf,.::;l!L inll JEAN H DAVIS knowot Line. Slnl1 AM, C1lllor1>l1, under ft\I
foll IN! foll lie •""' per..,.,; whoJe NIMI lldllklu1 !Inn n.mt r3' MEMDftY LINE
ttt tubK!'lbed 1u fht within !nttf'UrM<ll ONE HOUR CLEANERS Ind th.II llld
lnll Kt-'«fged 1f1tY tllKVl!d 1M firm It coll'ol>OI"' OI tht h:lllowlne "''°"' whow "'m• In luU •nd pllct of r"ldentl
........ 1l •• follows: (OFl'IC~LrvS~~l.r11. MURRAY SAUL. m BordHl/ll L.,1e.
Not•rv Publlc..C1t11om11 Cost• Mew. C111tornl1.
Ptln<lptl Ottlct In 01tld November 6, 1''11
Orinee (Olltll'Y MURR-'Y SAUL M'J Commltll<HI EJ<llltt<S St~!t ol C•llfornl1, Or•1>11I Counl'Y: Mire!> 4 1970 Oft NcYemller 6. lffll, before mr,
Publhllld or~"'' Co•sl D1Jl't' P!lol. • Nolllrv Public 11> •nd tor uld si.1,, N -ber 6 ll !Q, 21 11'61 1'26-61 Mrtonll!V IPPe.red MURRAY 'AUL ov..,,, • • • known to me lo bl !he pertGA wh<I,,.
LEGAL NOTICE n1me !1 tubKr1btd lo !hr W\ll>ln lft-
lfN/nl!\I 11111 1etnowlldttd llt tatcultd --------------In.."""'· T-ntf\ (0FFl(.IAL 5EAL)
HOTICI! TO C•EDITO•S ~h E. Dlvlt IUl"f:•IOlt COUltT DF TMI: STATE Nollry PubUc.C1Utornl•
OP C.-'L ll'OltHIA FOlt TMI! Prlnc:l~I Office I"
COUNTY 0" OltAM•I Or1n;1 Co;intv HI, lo .. l!h My Commlul<><> Exolrn
E1!11t of MARY ALEASE Me.DONALD, Ju,.. 1!, Ul'O Oece•1tcl. Pllblllhtd O•l"!lf Co111 Diiiy l"lkot,
NDTICI! 15 WEREllY' GIVEN foll the Novernbtl' '· ll, 10.. ~1. IHI 1'17 ...
crtdllort ~ the lb<>vti Nmld de<;fdenl tri.I 111 ~,.. lllYf!'>I cl1lm1 1g1ln1t LEGAL NOTICE
'!ht 11lcl cl1ellle!ll l rt required to Ille;[--------------I "'toftl· with "" nKtllll'Y vouchert. ~,. io.:nm
""' office ol "'' cllfll of Ille •DllYt (.l!ltTll'ICATE OF IUllMllS enlllled r;oun. or to presrnl thlfll. with PICTITIOUS MAMI! !ht lllCelll!Y YOUCl!ert. lo tri. II,.. cltAlgned •I 1111 offlcr of Frt~k M. Th• Undtnlgn@d does cer!lfy tn11 h•
MOor Alto•...., <11185 L-1111cn 11 conductlftll • bu1l11eu al 7003 Quill 8ou.;;.rd t..-Btidl Cilll<lrflll td01 Slrt11, Newport e .. cn, C11i+ornl1, unll1r
wt>1dl l• ·-allU oi buslntu '111 l~ lh<I llcll!IOUI llttn Mme ol EXECUTIVE "~'""' In 111 "''"'rs i>er1flftlflD AVIATION Ind""'' u lll flrm II~ to ""' etllt. o1 11lcl de<tcltnl, .,..!!hlft ol 11>1 lolloWl!'>I l>efton, wlw»t 11111>1
i ll motlll'>I •lier ,.... !Xlbllcltton ol till• In tull 11><1 Piia of resldenu 11 "
llGllU !ol-.:
power. Only 6.1 percent nf •1t• ASICllO IUI AIK•D lMr..NI • all U.S. household! are now hi.11•·M1C.• SMD ltiou11ln11 11\l »¥t i..on...c.. 12,,. AmChnlt'•C• U'n » rl"'-•OC:lltm l>b. 14 ~,..o,... M beaded by a person under 25 001.11oPF-u »'n "11owtttin1.0t.. •• "3'JJo L.lllrlll1'C• 1• and theae households account AmGv1r111ivLne ,,,,. i'°"' ...-....iPur-» £t t..,..0rwstNl st A,.,M,rtLllein1 ll'°' 14'A A.lldllfOl'liU IJ'n U.'4 L,S.St.ttl M for only 4.7 percent of the AmN•ll111C.O l•l'lo 1M DlttoBPIC f$ BIO Mtcnllf'tnllnc: "' O(f · t A•oon•~llMVo 11 M Ali-.oUO.,. 1•~ .. .,.,, fMeMGvloil ~
spc 1ng m our coun ry. a1nr11c111s11.1 '"' " .. a1bcD(.kEltc u 1uo MetAHllt11e: '""
-By 1975 the entire 18-34 80111"~1!1• Svlvan 3 '"" Bu11~ Cl 41 Mtitllr.t*rdl"A .. .o • C1111LltllnsCo 71..., """ a.1 .. ..w.11 , I-Al 1~ MltofllollSoK PV. year age group will account c .1-we11t1nSt•tr u,,., 26 a.u.r1nc: 11'-tm Md.M11ttw!u• .i
I I bo t 29 t r Cl'lubbCoro SIVt U'4 "'''"-••-" •oO ... -·•"'O • or on y a u percen o C.NAF1 nc:1•1Cm ~ ~\'I ...,,111;;'' '"' » >1 Mifl;~1t':1 ~ :ill spendlng in the U.S., while c.NAF1nc:1.1P1c1 ~~ lS.,. e.,U111.:~.,.. » J6 111P1t 1\4
h
... ~ f 7 ComOt.lnlCo ~ l1\~ IM"'11Enl•r M * ~rd!Mtk ~ t e vast IAIUI 0 1 peret.nl COftG"'"•I 11\11 12 ~UllP.. ah •
will be spent by tht over-34 :;::ia~!:;!::i" \:111 ~~ ll~o ~ ~ =~·=• ::
age category. Firme<'•N....Wcl .,,.. ,1 1iwnl.8A1u111"' no 110 ~•cMtr tt Frm1Underwrlra '1\'io 65V. l•lw!CHlltl lMI :1$14 N1IEIW~ n
Fl<1ell1'YC0to 21V. M 8ow1t1rP•I" '"' ~ 1IH_l .. IC,... IS~ -THE UNDER"' age FlreUnd ...... rft1 ,, BIO lridghlrllFllOd• ..... "'Ntin'llllMll'CW JI . . ..... FrllAmTllle 1"'i '°"" lfllnlwhlDnit " ~ NftworbEIK 31
bracket is re.spon.'ilble for only Firs1N1tL1f• Hlo s.,, 111rt11rr. u » Nw~f1 a..
bo t th. d f II f 't F,.ntllnLlle 7filli mo C.1lbloclllf!I ~ Ul'll NldlGl-l<llt ..,.. a u ooe-Ir 0 a Utru ure FundAmC I> J7Vt ~ 1UIG9!lll"1llnc: U'l4 IJl4 Ni.tllf\A.C. i.'4
and appliance buying. Out of G•1>·R•1n:' 360 147 c1u1P1cu11111 mi. nn NotentA1r1 m
000 000 U S Ha'IOvffFlre ''~ OJl'i (.1IUPorll1t111C. II 110 Orffl-tGu 11"
some 100, , cars on •. Hir1tordFlre ,~ o~ c.111M'111rsv 2'1-\ • ,,.,......, 1~
roads, . teen-agers today own j~~~:;~~"' !.s"" ~ c:,::;:!~~11111 7~ ,'f" Dt••~.e-.,,,,.. ~"
an estimated mere 1,500,000. Llnt'llnNatC0tp 11~ Ill-'> C•PTKhlnc 1~ ll'lo OrwonMlt ll'l
A large proportion of the auto Loulilafla&Srn lt\io l'O 111PllJl•M1~ ,, .... ,u"" P1blt1r:!" 1~ . Mtrcllf""/Cfl 27'.'• 21'/o •K1tNUG•• 11'.lio fl), P•c.A..,toll'rod ,
buymg by teen-agers and Mlulorl EQ11111es 20"'1 11 tnlVrvProf'erllft • :-" PicEllelrocotd l!\.'o
those in their 20s is for used !!'11,~~c,"Ltlns ... ~Vio' *' M1«>Enwc.e1rp ~\l:i ,,.~ P1cF•rE•1t " nl un Oftl'!r• ...,.. 1,,. AllChlnc:.Co :Ito,:. ,.
c a r s, involving relat1vely N•IW"-'""LI l~ 1o>i1o ci.em1t1.1111n9 :io'h n =:c~:::::::; !~
small urns of oney N111onw111eCorp nv. 11v. c111:.1n1u111" JI~ ll'•• P1cVetOllCor1> 1)'~ S ID · NoAtnf'rLICasCo 11\lo 11~ Oc!Ptllll l'f lD PaGii&W•l9r 7t
An iJlCome and thus Pad!lcNllLllo 1'"-""" c1111111ov111m1c1 1514 ls>.i P1l()!'n•rMe1rtea '"' --' P•clllcEtandLlle 17 17\.o coc.aCol1LA n 16 P•rlwwGomlnt 12111
a spending power -• in the :!~~~~~~~11,.. j;~ ~m co1emanEngln• 1y, ''" P•uievPa1 n
$10,000-and-up range lS rare RlchmondCon> ..av. 51 co1we11co 31 :w Pett!~tM~m 21'\ii . th d •< b k t Slle<;0CO UV. U om11ulerE<1IUP 11 ll'h PloneerN1!G11 2l\\ 1n e un er....., age rac e . s..iecoe°'v.tv ,~ ,,,,., on..,utockPrMI '' JD Pubsvc~Nm JD
But nearly one in three in Se1bollrdCor1> 11 111'1 cor .. 1s1ore1 W. 10'AI t:tedcorcon> 2J
th
"« b k • So¥tr19f>lllt IS fl) Crtt.e91'!tTKh ( •lio 11.rnllnc: N
e """'" age rac et en3oys s~rstvLll"" , •Vi 01wcorp 1~ "'"' t:t0111c .. 11M11 ll this amount of earnlnn• and TICorp 52'4 53 o..~eweuslrw1 •~ ''" RbrlsCon•ot 1114
h
· I -hi h Tr•velenCOl"l' JS ntt 111~lgnL•~ 11•.:. IN RorttlRue1rcll m;. l US IS a member 0 the g -Trud:Undrwr1ri 2J ]6 lft!trnlllonll 1•"1. 15,,.. Roonnllrot. 21
middle income bracket. un11"'111SCGAm 1ru ll\i o.t.u~e<:t>edl ~ .uy, Rov11ou1rnPe1 " . USFll!Gu1r ,, J6•ft DlilFlnanc:e 1$ .. 11 Rv1lln111dAm JS -The youth market Will Volk1-t&t1lns Rt 1'Ao Dlc1oonE1tc It '10'it SSPll>ll0.nlr1n l J
.,...0w the fastest between now w"~rnTr1veler1 Ji;, 1 D!tl~•P u 20111 S1>11An1t11r.c: IS! "" . , Wll1bln!lnt 7 7'4 J~rw!lflCCM 15'0 16 S1rvenllnd"1 19'1
and 1975, if you measure this 1:..n .. 11n1t1 01virw11ncP!cl u"' 1110 S•turnAlrwav1 2•111 · I b th f t that th ll1nktflT1V1I l<IV. "'"" Dotn!nllllt'IW•!er 11 11 S.C1nrnnE!ec 1Ha Simp Y Y e 8C e Cl>lmlnll;NyTrtl 12illi 12''. yleDinelll'n 30''2 Jl'h 5NWorld :JO\/lo
number Of households beaded Contll1N8Ch1 .41\lt. 41 >,. Orfl»nB1r1>K 6 ~ Sen.Ciruly 27
b
· d . ·d I d FlratN1llltC~I ""' '9'1• Ducommun!nc 7l'l!o 2,"' 5.,..1edc... 21 y an m !Vl ua un er age Fr•nkllnN•!NY ~ .... 44 Dunllriditree! ~1'1 ,7 ~UPCG 5f1.~ 25 is slated to soar 6(l ""rCent MfvflHIMveTr U\t 68 \\i Econam!clLlb O l-l'lt S!mOf'&S<hUl1er 1'h Y~ MGrtettGl'Y 121•1t 111 l'tV. :JO'' Sk1ev1P1vLni :JO".:.
in these nexl few years. But, N.,Bk'>fNA 11 J.J ,'.'':",.~,•.,1,,~ iM ,~ soe.1w11•r ,.
th ber [ h h Ids · W"''"' 1111111 ' '"" ' ' 0 S<IUfll011G•1 :ll'.!i e QUffi 0 OUSe 0 In-Arlron18k ?t\lo :>0>4 El•drOIUXCrP ~· JlV, SOOJll'IH1trnDr!I !IV.
valved will represent only 8 llkol'AmNT&SA " ""' S1tctronlcC•1> 3' 3"0 SoWn!GuCm nv. ll1nkffC•lSF ~ J1\\ E1..:1ronlc~m 56\':i JI 5wRsrcft&Gan UV.
percent of all U.S. households B•nkofTGlcyo li\.'J Jllft Eve.-.. tJtn"1"1 2•111 ~Ill Sp1et0nlr.a11C1 JV.
d th 'il d f 7 lle«erl'(Hlll1N1t 1~ lSl'I F1r,..,.,.11rolhtn. 1) U Speoc!ro-0'1' J! an ese WI o on Y per· c ... 11n•ll~Cll't'lv 20 21 F1rr!Mto..Cor11 "'~ ~1~ s.<orl"95tr.et 5\~
cent of the nation's total spend· centurYlk 1v. t Fe<1Me•!CorP ~ ~ ~11nd1rdP1clfk 22111 • Cl!'(Hll8H 21\<o 2~ FedSlgn51tn•I •It 11\'i 511"E~plr 7
mg. Cr111;kef..CllltMS 46\~ ~ DclCVvPlcl SS '9 ~ubscr!pllonTV 13
Fldefll'Yllk 16'h 1114 Flr1tllot.!onC01'1> 126 130 Sunierlndu1 2t
TIIE DEVELOPING FlrlfBlncorio 12'11 l"l Flrs!Exl!OJHVt ll'Vo 11112 Tam1>exfrn: 115\lr
-• FlrtfSe-cCorp J.S'h 36\'i Fletcll1f(l1>Fur>d ll\'o 11"'° Tingerlnl!UI oO
surge in homebuilding as the G1tew1~N•!llk i1•1, 17'.11 Fl~cherFund 20 l1l"4 10.,111n " . llnHr!1\8k 2( BIO 42f'rQdLtdlnc: ll"• 1414 T t F 15\lr 1970s unfold will NOT be the LllMrt'!'Nl!Bk " ·~ FourSt1rTV T'ilo I'!· r!:u'!"1e~~::i 137
direct result of home buying Mi1>1tfectr.8k 11'" 11v. Grdl>LndCo '"" 1ov, rel1>1>Ronc1> ~111 Slnt1MonlU8k ll'lli l~ G5$YC 11 llW ttxfiAmOll 11~~
by the war babies of the 1940s SkPacN1!18k SW 57\'o Gcn«•IBrtwlM lHO 13"' 1tXIJCIPCOl'll' UV.
as they move into their mar· soea1111N1t8k s1111 53\io oe~•IRne••th 20 21 r1>erm,1P~r 11 Suml!omoN•ll 35 31 l~ntr'"-o 41V, TlmeFrelghl l'lV.
r ying and childbe.aring years. i~~!'eN!'~"' ~v.. ~\.Ii Ge1>Ttl.ll'll>tll 1:1\lo T•\~ n11nGroup 11Vt
The young married and the usNite1so JS 31 GoinTtl5P'll 15 1sv, T0t11ln0Undu• :w.
•• t the f V•lltYPhoenJJ! 2•"' 24:i;, GeofhrmelRnlnt 21V, :ll•lo Tr1cO!'lnc: J1 young paren.., ren roo S WeHll'•t'9Gllt tJ U\io GHTecholovY I A Tr1ll!Corp 16'1•
obver th~llrthebeadhs. Th ... ':!.._ do not 11.1119(.!.!:~.."' .. 1"' G1:~~:"'"'"" i~:. ~~·~ i~:;:r~:~11 ~ ...
uy unti Y ave ~n mar· AmSva.LnVt•ll 21 n GrlnMICe1r1> 171 121 Tn1Yelod9eCor1> lll'>
ried for several years· only e1mon1sv&Ln 211'1 '''~ lll8nc:tTKhCM ·~· 5 i~°f.'i~u ~:,,, ' . C.1plt•lAtll•n1;9 t'ill m Dl!foPfll 11 20 r • 1
one in IO U.S. households 1n :01umbl•SY9&L" , 110 um19l!Sv11en11 '6 • ir1n1rv~11u1 ~~
th nd •• b k t El!ulllblaSv&Lfl 7\/o 7~ HlflryEn11lnCo 6'4 7'/i vc1ot1 11 e u er-Mil age rac e owns f!quiiibiesv&Ln 33 nv. weircilPradlnc 31v. 38 UdtcoCGrP ",
a home. Flr.IL!ncolnFI" 1, Ul'I HISher1Cor11 ••VJ '4V. ~:::=~~=~:.r 1~~
N 'ii thJ Flrs1Sur,1'YCGr11 10 li:Alo f+ocNlrCo{TlleJ 3'V. 3J -Or WI S younger Flf1IWHl1rnFln 5 $T/i HOndaMotorCo ll U V.S.EnY :n
group be the key force behind Hawthcrn1F1n 17\11 11''> u.!1>1>FHr1et1 ""' ll:. ~/:~i,;."11:Lind 11~ , P1CSY9l.Ln,t,...., JO :;11\'t H'(ltff 4S'llo ~1.1. the expected cocitinued up-Rlvers1"-Fl1>C01'1 ~ .,, lnlorrNtlcilnc: u ,, vwrUt!loCrP 21·~
swing in auto buying install-Tr•,..cos1111v111 '"' \'t'oio ll!llridCOl'ltllflf' MN> .n v1cco1n11 .. 1Co Jl., • ' . llldwllrfl ll lnNrfttlChlfn 111 111 V1cuO.,,C11 •I~
ment borrowmg, recreation .v.ic..... 14 " 1,.1'"'~""'a11: n a1c v111ev<>11eo l:N.
spending. They key consumers ~:i~!. 1! ~., ArM1 .. 1e,_ JI :r1 ~r,r~;t::• itv. . JI th ill be th '"" JIJl'l'efl'ltnG~ry W. 6V.. l'AI m a ese areas w e Arre.111 151\ 16 Jl!!AlrFrt'lthi 1' 37 vnroc.""' :i.t\lt
25s A d th do · t Alrbornril'll!eht II :zo · Vlvl111eWoodrd JH'i
over-. n e m1nan Alrlnlluitr!es '""° Im ll:DICorPor•tion ., 4 W1ttde!1&Rffll 70
consumers will be the over-AL8er1so1>1 l•"· 16\4 ~:;!;';5IHI ~ ~ W1lktr·S<:o11 ioo""
bee r lh
· h Alllel!Eourtlt1 U,,_ U\!o W1rnarEle.llfll 10\'• 35s, ause o e1r uge Alltf'dPrweriin 50 1110 K1menC0n> 1tvJ 711'/.o W•lhN1tG•• 21111
numbers and their ,,..,.nding •111e11PrGP 102 e10 li:•M11Eie-cPwr 11 11'h W1Y1>eM'11 :n
Y'" A!lvnllac°" 21\lo. :12\li Kfi1woo0Co 11 U W••IMrforclCo 10\lt
money. Am8IM11 ... 1 ,. 2$ KyFr1dChlckPn '5'AI -¥ WelllftglonMtl ''
E b. The l t I Amerl!"~Prt'll 121A 1'11.i ICeVStaMA IA U W•lltlndu1 6;;.
OOUg po n sure Y -'mtrFo.-tProd d211io "4\ft KlnGllr1>1Procl 9 9Vt WHlllVFlnCoro 1\li is made with this abundance AmerGr.:1"" ~l'I .U\lt 11:1ng111111oCe1r1> ""' ~,,., ni.rnPublCo 30
I t
• • l AmerPIPt&C 20ol 2J\ft ll:lngR"°"'"'"eCo 11V. TN We11tteC11•0A" 12~
o s atLStlcs to prove, n AMRllRPla• 1t11o ioo 11:nuc1.ene:or1> t1V. 44 Wllo .... OMI• 11
Linden's words "that our Am!roP,.. u 1-m 11:ar1con> 21\\ 71 Nl1t1CoNrmn 11 ' 'nMlta1nc :n14 23\'I K..-r~.XcPfd ,,.,.. lllD Wr11htrCorp 19
youth have been vastly over· ,nchorC:o..flll ,,..,. 20v. L.AA!rw•YI • 1 ,..,c ... 1rF,.1eht :1211r.
rated as a markel" '""""""'1uw. .,w; '5\'io LAOrw JS e1D u1>11nc1utCn. M\.'o '1>11lllCIM1•rtd SS\'i Ml'I l l'WCll'lt!>duslT1" lW, ll'fJ ltlolOOf'lcl 10
A""""M•Vf•lr lA 1M uwrvsFIXl'h lllft «!':~ llvrePld Jl\li Oof'l'd G OJ Uynellowtr IW. It tl-Ul1~!11n 12 011i!cl Novtmblr l , ,... Wllllt'm c . C1rlbtrg. )II Unlwr1ll'Y MAltY /4.. JENKINS Awnut. Cot!• MH-1. Ca11tornl1. THE KIDS do set trends,
Mtnl1>l1tr1tr!x D•led NovPf!lber 1• lHI. as they al ha e a d the
Mutual
Funds
04 "" Elf•lt ot ttl~ w11111m c. Clrlberv ways v , n n too... n1mec1 decedent. stat. ot c1111om11, o,.,,.. CPuntv: the older folks -with the U d
PltAMK M M001t1: °" NOvtlmller •, 1™· bllor• m<!. h t hand Ither Reform rge •s L"'f 9i1tll IMI • Not•rv Publle In 1nd tor said s1.11. cas a - e approve ~ l1t1ell, <•""'"'1~. ,.., "''°""11Y 1ppe1rtc1 w11111m c. c1rlbtrt or disapprove and make or Contracts for Police
Tiit u1n C7"'21 ~""wn to "'' "' bl '"e person ""'°" break the movement. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Allomt'I' ter ,t.<lmllllalrtlr1• n1mn la subKrlbed 10 lht wUflln lft--
Pubnllltll Or•"9e c .... , D111~ ,::;; ~VO:,'~~-"'>II •ct.....wltdllt<I "" extcut.ci Of course, "Think Young!" President Rudolph Peterson of
tiOWlll'llMr '· u. 1C. 27• lHI !OFFICIAL SEAL) you marketing men. But then • Conni Grall•• the buge Bank of America
LEGAL NOTICE Ktit1rv Put>Uc turn your full attention to 1 I •·
st•!• ~ c.111Qf'll11 lh 1 h Id ugh has called or a comp e""
Computer Setup
oseo usw oareo eno
NOTIC• •.:: i~orTo•s ~~~:·~=~' tn to buy young. overhaul of the national farm
SU,•••ott COU•T 01' THI MY Comml!Slon Ew1r.. li to ph t • t su-sTAT• °" CALll<OltMIA POlt AU9Ul1 lD. 1'10 po cy ase CM.I pnc r
TM• COUNT'!" 0, oaAHO• Publllhrel Ortt>te COlll D•llY PllOt, port and most other controls.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Contracts art being 1igned
I.his week for a SS million
,.., A-'1,.1 NOYlmber 13. 20. 27 •nd December N N
E1llM or Ml!LLIE C. IEYRAVC. ~. "" U.J&..61 ew 3filC Jie proposed tO substitute 3 computerized ntrVe Center to
NOTICE 11 HEREllY GIVEH 10 lllfo LEGAL NOTICE program for the gradual help combat Cali!omia crime, [lea1Md.
crealtor• "' "" •boY' 111mtc1 c1ec.c11nt NEW YORK (UPI) buying up of s ma 11 , says Atty. Gen. Thomas C.
"'-' •II ,...._. htVl!'>I cl1!m1 1111ln1t C.lllTIPIC-.T£ 01' IU51fllSS "" 111c1 d9c11ten1 ''' rec1111rtc1 to 111e Flctlllwi N•m• International Silver Co. will uneconomic f a r m II and Lynch. ::::"':in~"' o1"''1t1t.nec;1~1:1rv orv":."'':bo~~ Tiie 11Mtrs111ntc1 ao.. certify "' ts ask shareholder s at the annual rehabilitation in society of the Full operation is ::;n~,:, or ~,:~entiu 1111.:: w: i:~:.c1~":...:cnw~:'J.. •t.~i~m:Z; ~:~ meeting in April to approve small farmer who no lo n ger by next October,
expected
he an-
11..,19ntc1 11 1111 olfh:n ~ 1>11 At~vs trw 11ci1tous tlrm ,..m, of HARBOit changing the firm's name to can compete wilb I a r i e nounced.
HART & MIER.-.s, ll16 N Flgue.,,. HULL CLEANlHG 5EllYIC£. 11\d !hit J•eilco I mec•·-'-·d farms. Th• el-troru·c da~ system St., lot. Angt1n, Clllfornll '°°'2, wt>!tll Mid lirn. II comPot.11(! of 1111 loUoWll'>ll '"" , QC, ll<SIU...C:: "''-Ul !~!ht 1>lltt of buslMU 04 IM underllgntd Pl!•->. ""1GM "9mt In 11111 Ind PllCe~I----------------------------------------'---,
In 111 rNtltrl --'•'""" lo 11\t ftlll9 ol rnllleMt 11 u lolloWt: ot Miii ll«edent. within hlllr "*'"" Rl<Mrcl w. Wlklfn1n, 2111 Plet1ntl1.
,,,.,. "" n,.1 P<Jf>11e111°"' of "''' no11.... A.Pt. u . '°''' Mftl. C11llorrll1 011111 November I, )Ml, 011111 Nov.,.,.bt<" 26. 1,..
-'lbw1 H. EYl'"IUd Rldllnl W, Wlklmtn
Mm11>!tltltor 04 1M Esl11'1 51119 ol C1llfomll,
ot "" •bov• namlll cllCNenl °'"""" Co..MY: HAltT & Mllll-'S. Oii NllYtfl'lblr ~. lffl. before ""' All9r'lwp Al Lor#, • Not1rv Publlc In INI tor ukl Sllh!.
SSM H, Pit-SI. P•rllOfl&llV 1~rtd ltld>lnl W, Wlldm1n,
U. AlllllM, C1•tlrfl!1 ttMI ~-lo mft lo bll 11>1 -IOI! Wt\olt TILt DU) :IM.UU n1ma 11 1ub1drbM '° tl\t within 1 ...
A"'"'9ri tlf Aclnllllilltl... SIN"""! lnll lttnow1tdted 119 UICUft<ot
l"vblll!Md Oft .... COit! Otll, Piiot, !ht Mtnf'.
NoYlll'\lltr n. n. V 11M1 Otltmber !Ofl'lcl1t SllU
•• 1~ IH0-61 J . llDutll.
LEGAL NOTICE
....itrY Publk • C..lllom!1
Pr1nclMI Olf1<.'I In
0r .... '°"""' '-lltM M' Cemt'l'llulool 'El(Jlltt:1
Ull 1"7 AW. ,,,., INt
C••Tll<ICAT• Of' I UllHESt PubHIJ'IM .Qr•!'>lf C:0.Jt 011" Pllol, •KTITIOUS •11t.M HloMtE NO¥M'lllolr ,, end Oeotttt'>ber .&, II, 11,
flit .,,......... W />Ifie¥ Ctrlllv lNI :t01MI
lhtl -~ Cllftldvdl,.. 11> 1r1 1allerv ~ -11on1,..., '' C.P1r..,.r• 11 '*' North LEGAL N011CE Ct11tl Wlttow"l'I, LH11na &tlCh, C:allforn!1.(--------------! w,,.,., !hi llctlll-nrm 111mt ~ FETS Cl:RTll"ICloTt. OP' IUllMll•
AND OETS I H T E It NAT I 0 NA L UHO•ll: •ICTITIOUS l'IAMI
GALLfltlE' •l>d llMI ••l<I firm 11 'ni., ~~ISl!'IC'd d9 htrTlw ar'ltf>r ~ ol tti. follow! ... --· wt>oti I~! tl>n' 1r• (Onlfucll!'>t t bonlllft• ......... 1'I full lnll PllCt1 ti fttlatfl(t 11 SIM Ordlld, eor-D<tl Mir, C.!"°'1>11,
IA 11 flDl!llwt. to-wit' tor tlr• ""'"' 1ftCI fl11ttol .ctlvlll•.
Dsll Fort l"fil. >'21 s.tvlt,., Co-under 111t fk!UIOt.11 fl"" nt""'-. llf PIO ·a. ,_ 4llf Mir, t:lllfomll, l!NTL!!ll"RtSES:. lfld ll'llr Ml'lf' f'lml 11
l!NllM l.MllM Ottwll1'1. lClll C!lrt ~ ot lh!! +oltowlne ,........., -'-
Ori .. , Ntw-' lltldl. C1llfor"l1. "'"'" lftCI ~Ll>CM of f'11dfofw:9 ... Ot'IM Octraibl• 17. IM. at h:lllowl Dwtl I', •ttt GENER.&L PARTNER Cr11t1 S
El-L ~llt l1Jln , 100 Orcnkt Ceroni HI Mir,
St-'TI! Of" C-'Lll"OllfllA.. 1;1t1lorfll•.
COUl'tTY OF DltANGI!" I n . LIMITED l'AltTMER: lrl•n R
Ofl ~ "' 1-. Wef't .,.,., t ~. Mt Wet! ... !..,., Cost• MIU, .....,., PllMI: ,._ ft "1i .. 1d ,_..,. C1mor"ll.
-..... WIQIVlll'I' -'"" Oorl1 DA.TEO· ~bfl 211, lfQ. , • , ,..,. ~ ... .,..._ L.eul• Ottwel1er Cr11t ,, l•lllY
' _ ~ • -Ill .. fM -.<o~' --~II P1rtntr ,._ lllt"t ~ .. ..._ within &r11n It. &lltYOdt
• • 1111""""*"-~ ~ If> IN llmlltd ,.,.,_ ~ """'~ .... ..,., STAT!!: OP CAlll'Oll:N1A
Wt"-"'1 "9111 tM •I. COUNTY OF OR-'tttlE I
"fOf'P'KIAL MAU 0.. ~hi 1"" dlY 04 N""""'bo-', 1161, ~ °""' .,.._ -• Not1rv Pllbllc I" •1'1111 ,....,., ~· oMlflM '°'" 1111 Mid C".ollnl\" Ind Stilt. rMl<llnt ,,_.., Olnof Ill ll'llffl"• <lul'I' °"""''"io...d lf\CI ,_,., 0-...... Qof111Y -n1 _....,. Cr11t S. ll•lift 11'111
,_ ~ ...,... •lln It. ~ ~ I'll mt le
Od-"· ,,.. 119 "" --....._ """'" ... ~ ........., on.-C... ~ l"llllt, OCT''"' 19 ""' wl'lt>lfo 111111\lrtvnt, .,.. .........,. #..J!llllllJ Aig: 4 n._ 1-. am._... ia JM 1111.f """' wecu.-* ~"--
Pilet 1'hlt.or•
'~ii
,l
WITNESS IYI• NftCI Ind llfl'l<l1tl u .. l
lllALI JoM It. 0.Yll
NollfV ~llbll< I~ •ftCI ""' wld C:ou..iv 1rw1 s11w
PUblltlltd Or•Pte C1111t 0111'1' 1"111\l,
~ fl •rod December o1, 11. 11, ,... ,..,._..
(
STEREO SENSATION!
The colorful sound of
Orange County Music
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
....
From Fashion Island, Newport Beach
------=:::====::~======--.. -----
MSL Growing
·A·
"
,:t'.J Ht .. LIW CltM J:
•-C-
l
IWl.Y Pll0!_!!
·--Wednesday's Cloeing Prices -Complete New York
'I
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" ----•• -~.~-~. --~·-,.--... "' -
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Business License
.. lt'• a shame no one was here to speak for the
do&s," sald Laguna Beach Councllman Richard G<>ld·
ber&.
Goldberg'a: comic relief came as councilmen were
preparin& to hll<e the dog license fee last week. They had
just gone through the sound and tbe fury of merchant
opposition to:
-A change In the method of establishing business
license rates from the nonnal ordinance method to fee
setting by resolution.
-Hikes in the business license rates which bad been
Italic since 1945.
Goldberg's lament !CYr the pooches might as well
have applied also to those who will pay increased trash
colJ.ection rates and will likely pay more to seek build·
ing variances or other accommodations by the city.
Property ta.z:es are up also.
The business license rate hike was just one source
of added revenue the city say is needed to balance the
budget after overdue employe pay bj.kes.
Businessmen opposed the resolution method of set·
ting (raising) rates because they felt the ordinance takes
Jonger and requires notice in the form of legal advertise-
ments.
It seemed an implied protection against a stealthy
resolution by some future City Council,
What the businessmen may not have known was that
Laguna's first business licence ordi-nance (Ordinance 8)
was passed in 1927 as an emergency ordinance. It be--
came effective immediately and took no prior notice.
The same thing could be done now.
However, constraints could be built into a resolution
to prevent such haste. It could require six public hear-
ings, newspaper notice, notice to the chamber, notice to
each business license holder.
Indeed, they could require that the dty finance of-
ficer light a torch and pass th.rough U1e business dis-
trict three times as notice of proposed revision.
This is somewhat academic, ho\vever. If business-
1nen prefer the ordinance method, tJiey should have iL
Jndicatlons are they will.
The fee hike is the nex't big question. It now runs
!ro1n $15 annuaUy to $100 with fees graduated on the
basis of gross receipts. The $100 fee is for a business
that grosses $IOO,OOO. There is no greater fee for greater
gross.
The proposed rates are $25 to $750. The $750 would
be paid by businesses grossing $1 million or more an-
nually.
The method. ot levying fees for business license .
varies in different cities. It's d•e by the gross method,
flat rate or number of employes or a combination ot
these metnods.
In Santa Ana, for instance, it's a $15 base and 20
cents per $I,000 gross up to $100,000. The next $100,000 i!:
15 cents per $1,000. Over $2 million gross it's 10 cents per
$1,000.
Businessmen, with some variation on ·the theme,
seem generaUy to maintain that licenses ought not be a
source of revenue for the city since business pays prop-
erty tax and its customers pay sales tax.
The city, on the other hand, points to expanded ser-
vices for the business community and a fee schedule un-
changed for 23 years. Services include concentrated
traffic policing in the business area, police night patrols,
bad check service,' inspections by fire and building de-
partments, subsidy of Chamber of Commerce advertis-
ing and promotion, and beautification measures.
lt seems inevitable after 23 years that some upward
adjustments in the fee schedule are due.
. ,. ...
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<.
L
Media Are
Being Blamed
For Troubles
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Reade,r Disagrees on Cause of lJC Tr011bles
CHICAGO -A little post election
travel produces a strong impression that
the news and entertainment media,
particularly in electronic form, are being
held responsible for a large portion of
the nation's troubles.
People have the ling2ring feeling that
radio-TV and the press to a lesser degree
have built up and promoted racial
disorder, leftist demoostrations, campus
rebellions, the smoking of pot and the
mulish behavior of the younger genera·
[jr.,1. and have created an abnosphere
condoning and encouraging violence.
.• otiting draws a more favorable
response from audiences 'than self
criticism by a speaker from the news
media pleading mea culpa on behalf
of his colleagues, if not himself.
'1'HlS ACT OF abnegation draws to
Ote platform sympathizers from the au·
.. ~ .. ~c who express their views lo the
speaker when he is finished. They say
ti,~: -vhat bothers them most is a com-
bination of opinionated news com-
1 .. ..:1.taLors and writers and the way the
electronic media lends itself to ex-
agg2rating and promoting violence and
disorder.
Cit\7.ens, despairing of self policing
by the news and entertainment media,
are beginning to take lhings in their
own hands. Their concepts of how to
go about shaping up radio-TV and the
press are often not gentle.
At a recent meeting of the Ameri can
Petroleum Jnslitute one of the ""·orld's
richest men , H. L. Hunt of Texas,
distributed literature promoting the
formaUon pf his ncw~st organization,
League for Liberty, which Mr. Hunt
said would begin "policing" the news
media. "Actually we won't do it
ourselves, but will have the advertisers
do it. I assume they can Ito it," Mr.
Hunt said.
LEAGUE FOR LIBERTY is anti-com·
munislic, moralistic and pa,lriotic. It is
seeking support r r om "entities which
advertise extensively" -in other words,
companies with substantial advertising
budgets whose otUcers or advertising
directors might be: expected to have
some influence with editors and publish· .....
Each month a bulletin will be issued
to members of the League ''calling mem·
bers' attention to the TV networks, radio
networks or groups of independent sta·
tiom which are giving the Liberty side
tbe best presentation in enl.ertainment
aa wcll as public affairs."
Mr. Hunt's brochure continues.
"Serioua atudv of the League for Liberty
Is the city powerless to do anything
but watch while a hole! becomes a
flophouse for society's dregs and a
breeding place for trouble?
-J.F.C.
Tnll h1Nno "'IHYI ..... ..,. ~·--MCtsurlt, ,,_N 1t tM n1wu1Hr. l4!MI </wt ,_1 _... " Olelrn' Ou1, D111Y P'lll1.
bulletin will enable members to support
Liberty as far as practicable by
allQCating part or their budge• to the
media in each communications field
which is best serving the cause of Liberty
and thereby be entitled to a confidenti.il
citation or honor."
THIS JbEA OF A veiled boycott of
intractable news and entertainment
m e d i a also h a s occurred to Bruce
Palmer, executive director of the Na-
tional Industrial Conference Board. He
recenUy told southern n" e w s p a p e r
publishers that a great many big ad-
vertisers are on the board of his
organization and he coold through them
call an adv-ertising boycott of the bad
actors in the radio-TV business who
are promoting violen~ a n d discontent,
but decided not lo do it that way.
instead, he has enlisted Bob Hope as
the spiritual leader of a new m o r a I
crusade and just how he will handle
rad.it> TV's promotion of violence and
discontent will be announced later.
One of the distressing aspects of the
vigilante attempt to shape up the com-
munications media is that it takes ad-
vantage of v.·hat otherwise is a com·
mendable effort by corporate leaders
to get themselves involved in the solutiion
of national problems.
TlllS IS GOING ON in many big
industries as they address themselves
to economic aspects of the race problem,
or face up to air and water pollution,
public safety and the municipal ugliness
crealed by garish. dilapidated and filthy
gas stations and other retail ouUets.
A large part of the present generalion
of corporate leadership recognizes the
se lf interest in becoming involved in
improvement of the environmenL and
human betterment. The old ideas of
the public be damned are no longer
practical instruments of corporate policy.
It is something else again v.·hen cor·
porate power is used to influence public
policy by advertising in some media
and withholding advertising fro1n other
media.
This does noL change the fact that
there is a strong undercurrent running
In 1)Ublic opinion against the method!
of the communications media. and the
executive leadership of the media v.·ilt
ianore it or brush it aside at its peril.
'Decorator Accents'
11NiuPll at Lar(''
People 'fbo buy ''decorator •~nts"
f4r' their homes deserve nacUy what
\)e pbrue 1mpllt1.
• • • •
CU an)'thlnc be mort absurd Utan I.II vk:tl:n tl)'lq the losers for "war
«Imes," -~ h31 ..... beec trWd for Ibo c:rla>e al war ll>ell! • • •
will fill the vacuum by arrogating lo
itsell the reaJm of promoting the genernl
interest, whtther rightly or v.·roogly. • • •
The decrta.slng amount of sunlight we
get. due to increasing air pollution, may
lum out to have grave long.term genetic
effects on the human organism, &Ince
recent research indicates that the
amount of light enttring the tycs ot
1nimel& is propartl<mate Lo their resist-
anct: to infection and loxiCJty.
r
'Science, Ethics Are Reciprocal'
To the Editor:
In the Nov. 13 DAILY PILOT an
article by Dr. John W. Oswald suggested
that the University o[ CaJifornia is in
trouble with its supporting society
because it is making a greater effort
than most institutions to meet today's
problems. As a layman, with lintited
knowledge of the subject, I respectfully
disagree with the doctor's diagnosis. The
problem is that the university hes not
been vigorous enough in articulating the
frontiers of NEEDED know ledge.
IN THE PAST the universitfs main
thrust was in the physical sciences rather
than social sciences. There were two
main reasons for Utis orientation. Neither
of them is valid. The first reason is
that physical sciences are both simpler
and more ut'illtarian than social scieaces.
The bewildering complexity of atomic
physics is far simpler than making sense
out of human relations. The iecond
reason for overemphasizing technology
is that a deep commitment for social
problems put the university in the sticky
business of making ethical judgments.
Unfortunately, oor tradition has largely
excluded the educator's right to be wrong
at times. This has tended to drive the
university toward simpler areas of scien·
ti!ic precision.
THE FIRST proposition is not valid
because technological knowledge has an
optimum yield of benefits beyond which
it adds less and Jess to human happiness.
The atom bomb is an example of e.z-
ceeding optimum results. The second
proposition is not valid because the
energies of science and ethics must
evolve with equal powers for they are
conjunctive ·and reciprocal; 'neither can
stand alone. To pursue a s(rong science
with a weak spiritual attitude is like
harnessing a percheron and a shelland
pony together to pull a cart.
THE UNIVERSITY, in the past, has
admirably advanced scient.ific knowledge
and technology. Can it now structure
the spiritual values that will ameliorate
the destructive power of its own science?
I can hear the objections! "This is
the role of the church." But is it entirely?
Should the highest seat of learning pro-
vide endless scientific knowledge while
dismissing a moral "alue system to
control the power of science? In our
system of separation of cliurch and state,
should the university interpret the prin-
ciple so conservatively as to inhibit
elhical education?
TODA V YOUNG people all over the
nation sense the imbalance between
lechnologics l power and ethic a I
sociological power, and are fulminating
~'ith frustration, knowing that the
mnterlahl to produce cornucopias are
at hand, but where are the means Ott--·
knowledge to produce peaceful.. happy,
hun1an relations? PutUng it anolhcr way,
will 11 round trip to the moon have
much value to a sqciety wh"e huge
pbJ>Ulations in urban centers, like plWul
wou:ided animals, scream with social
pain?
JOHN A. MACDONALD
'UCI St11de11I Uousl119
To the Editor:
1 wish to thank the DAILY PrLOT
and the mmy real estate agenclei aod
reslden\a in the community for their
cooperation in helping UC lrvlne to ease
• severe shortage ln student housing
this fall .
AppUcaUons ror student housing on
campus e.xceedtd our capacity by more
than 600. Al the result of an article
you published and an lmmedlale response
from the community, more than 200
st11dents were able to find ac-
co1nmodaUons near the campus,
Hopefully, this cooperative spirit will
'
Letters from readers are welcome.
Normally writer1 :lhould convey their
TJU?1sage in 300 worW or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel ii reserved. ALL
Letters must include signature and
mailing address, but nan'le.! may be
withheld on request if sufficient rea·
son ii apparent.
continue next fall, at which time out
student housing shortage is apected to
be even more acute.
DANIEL G. ALDRICH, JR.
Chancellor, UCI
Bala...,e, Perspecth'e
To the Editor:
After seeing the morning newsstand
editions of several other local papers
in which a UCI protesting group was
given Lhe usual front page headline treat-
ment, I was expecting more of the
same whtn the DAlLY PILOT arrived
at noon.
It was a pleasure to find the matter
unmentioned, and instead, £ront page
space given lo the tutorial program
being carried on by a group of UCI
students in a disadvantaged area.
I CONSIDER the internal rumblings
of UCI to be o( much less interest
aJKI importance to the community at
~e than what the students and faculty
at UCI are doing [or, with, and in
the surrounding community.
This is not a request for all sweetness
and light in your reporting, but for
balance and perspective.
Congratulations also on your accurate
account of Chancellor Aldrich's remarks
to the local citizens who gathered in
support of the lnlerfailh Foundation at
the universiLy .
CHARLES HEGE SWORD
Bullfighting an Art
To the Editor :
I wbh to take issue wiLh the thoughlll
expressed in the Jetter of ?.lrs. Cora
B. Jen.sen in yoor Ptlailbo'I Nov. 22.
I. BulUJghtlng is not a "sport." It
is an art.
2. Were Mrs. Jensen to visit a corrida
in Madrid or in Mexico Clly she would
not refer tQ the spectators a s
"demoraliz.ed J>(!rvertll." The P~ident
ol Mexico Js not a pervert.
S. She states "Not even the lowest
animals conceive ol such fiendish
cruelty."
B11 Geo1"9e --
near Geori'o
Is it true that girls always play
hard-to-get? Evt!:ry time 1 try to
kiss my girl she hits me in the eye
with her fist.
CONCERNED
Dear Concerned :
Many 11~1.; like lo pl17 hard-1<>-rtl In your case., however, l
ihlnk your girl IS hard lo get.
Eitber get a new glr~ quit trying
to klsl lhe one you have now, or
wear a catcher'• mask when you
park.
(Send your probtmu to Gt'orge.
On "°"""" thou&ht, woold ii be O.K.
tf n Mnt George to your pro-
blems!)
TO BE POLITE, 1 shall use a French
idiom : "Bourrage de Crane."
Has Mrs. Jensen ever watched a cat
torturing a mouse? Has Mrs. Jensen
ever watehed a spider waiting for a
fly to die a death or agony in her
web? Has Mrs. Jensen ever seen a
leopard pouncing on the neck of an
antelope? •
As to her reference to Christianity,
1 suggest that she dip into "The Dead
Sea Scrolls'' by John Allegro or "The
Letters of Pontius Pilate" by W. P.
Crozier.
EDGAR D. PHELPS
Navlgatlonal Aids
To the Editor:
Now that the inevitable has happened,
will the Orange County Board of
Supervisors continue to deny Orange
County Airport the equipment it muit
have to prevent further tragedies?
Perhaps our astute supervisors could
be made to personally explain to the
families or the latest air crash victims
why they have not approved purchase
of navigational aids desperately needed
by the airport.
The Federal Aviation Agency, as well
as the Airport management, have been
denied their requests by the non-pilot
county government officials.
Do we need more Innocent victims
before the importance of proper naviga-
tional aids is evidenced?
MARTIN LEV AN
Olynaplc co.,erage
To the Editor:
Upon my return from P.fexico City
l had the opportunity to review the
progress or the Olympic Games via a
number of Southern California daily
sports sections my wife had been saving.
I would like to congratulate'the DAlLY
PILOT for its truly oot.slanding coverage
· of the 1968 Olympic Games. In my
opinion, it far surpassed anything I saw
fr om your competitors. I've been told
by many that It was only through the
DAILY PILOT that they could get in-
formation on their favorite Olympic
.sports.
l'J\t SURE YOU'VE gained addll.ional
readers as a resull At any rate, it
was a masterful job of reporting and
I believe Glenn While shoold be highly
commended for his outstanding work.
It's his kind of dedication which makes
a sports section great.
Again, my sincere congratulations to
the DAILY PlLOT and, specifically, to
GleM Wh.ite. Believe me, your work
is appreciated.
MONTE NITZKOWSKI
J\fr. Nitzkowski W<l! assisk.lnt water
polo coach on the 1968 United State.t
Olllf1lpic team, which fini1/1ed fifth in
Muico Cit11. He WG.t a 81Dimmer in the
J.952 Olympic1 at tleWnki.
-Editor
WU•o"'• An11ex•tloH
To the Edltoc :
I'm delighted Uul Costa Mesa Vice
P.fayor Bob Wilson advocotes annexation
of Baj• Caillomla, and the brlngini
of Amtrican culture thereto.
Where Lhere now are only miles ot
untouched beauty, uD.lnhablted •rk!
desert, sharp bl&et volcanic puts, and
bays am white beachetl without number,
there could be created another outpoat
for the American Way ol Ufe.
The lnnaltioo wouJlf no1 be dlffK,,ill
First, Wilson must mate arrangtments
to roll 011t lhe giant cactus, then peve
Uie are• with good black asphalt . Next,
traffic signals must be erected. Thtrdly,
thousands or uUU ty poles must be put
in place to be festooned with myriad
wires. The neon signs should be added
quickly to beautify the landscape and
enhance tlle background.
THE OTHERWISE barren rock out.
croppings at Santa Ynez should be
painted with "Jesus Saves." Eight fillin&:
stations and 36 beer bars should be
sufficient to serve the residents or that
rancho, who must number a gQOd round
dozen. The sadly winding streets ot Sin
Ignacio should be squared off for tract
housing, and the homes should be built
without sidewalks along these straighten-
ed streets. The nr.ns of the chapel
at La Purisima-eould easily be renovated
and turned into a bowling alley.
Perhaps Vi~ Mayor Wilson might even
prevail upon Col. Sanders to smile down
from his bucket in the sky onto the
populace of Costa Mesa de! Sur. Ralph
Williams could be invited to merchandise
automobiles.
AND, OF COURSE, eligible voters o:
lhis peninsular establishment o I
Americana should be instructed to vote
"No" on all school, college and public
facilities funding issues. This would put
education and local government on equal
terms with that in the parent community.
A mayor would have to be elec~.
The first Utlng be should do is Wk
acquisition of Borneo so that the cultural
magnificence of Costa Mesa could be
extended there also.
BULLY FOR Wilson. He has beeri
able to see clearly that remole, sparsdy
populated areas, where people only fish,
raise cotV>n, harvest dates, and husband
cattle, areas where people are kind
friendly and willing to offer a helpini
hand to a stranger, are so lacking in
charm, that they should be made into
exact replicas or our flawless cities.
Now that everything has been fixeC
in Costa ~sa, it's really wonderful
to see one of our leaders strike oilt
to apply his exquisite skill in other
areas. Beautiful.
DA VE EPPERSdN
End of Editorial
Chestertown, Md., News : "An editoriol
In another newspaper, observed; ·~
upon a time. people saved their money
th.inking it would be worth more later.;
End of editorial."
Fnlton, J\fus., Times: "Excessife
speed continues to hold lop spot in tbe.qst
C?f acci~~nt causes, with reckless drlviAg
and driving on the wrong side of the road
taking second and third plaCes respec-
tively. Pedestrians were at fault in many
of the lat.al accidents, with cl'Olli:lbg
between intersections being the top kUJer.
Youthful drivers ho ld the greale.!lt
responsibility on the highway death list.
Almost one third of the drivers involved
in fatal accidents were under 25 yea.rs of
age."
--WWW-.
Wednesday, Nov. :1:1, 1968
Tht tdftortczl pcgt OJ lM lJrcdlJ'
Pilot seekl to inform and 1tim-
ulatt rtatUn b~ pra1enting tlUI
ncwapapcr's optnto.n, and com-
mntary on topic.s o/ fntcrnC
and <illftl/ialnc<, bv proold"'41 • forum for th.f ezprasri0tt of
our r1~r1' opfnionl, and hr
pre1enting the dlvn11 oft•
pointa: o/ fnform.td obsnwn
and ipoi«,,,,.,. on topla Of U..
dav.
Robert N. Woed, Publisher
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Santa . Socked
With Honors
If all the stockings this Chrutmas are the size of the one which
will be featured at Mesa-Harbor's ball, Saturday, Dec. 7, Santa might
have to make several trips.
Stockings of. all sizes will be featured in the decorations for the
Sock It oo Santa Ball, in the Balboa Bay Club which will hooor the jolly
gent. Socks filled with Christmas decorations will be placed on bright
red and green ta·blecloths foz:min,g centerpieces while two large Christ·
mas trees decorated with Santa Claus ornaments and crystal icicles
will flank the dance floor. Swags of greenery will drape the bandstand
with a gold and white color scheme carried out in the rest of the room.
A no-host cocktail party, starting at 7 p.m. will open the festivi·
ties with an "epicurean" buffet in the old English style following. Dan-
cing will be to ttie music of the Bay Club orchestra.
Mrs. Alfred Van HOOl5en, chairman, promises seve~al surprises
for entertainment and dancing, following dinner.
. Making preparations for the Christmas party for members and
guest.Sare Mrs. Robert Klees, Mrs. Clarence Sketch, Mrs. Lloyd Baker,
Mrs. Wendell Williams, Mrs. Edward Zielinski, M;rs. Tommie Skinner,
Mrs. Richard Hamilton and Mrs. Louis Pratt.
.,. SS
•
a a a osss: E I c c e a p a o ; ;a; us : s; • sac:
KEEPING THEM IN STITCHES -Mrs. Clarence
Sketch (right) is up to her ears in stitches as she
puts the finishing touches on a giant sock for Mesa-
Harbor Club's Sock It to Santa Ball Saturday, Dec.
7. Keeping track of her progress are (left to right)
Mrs. Richard Hamilton and Mrs. Alfred Van Hoosen.
The event in the Balbo;i Bay Club will feature dan<:-
ing, buffet and entertainment.
Las Vega s Style
Irvine Stagette
Gambles on Golf
The city 1n the desert, made famous by its miles of neon light!
·and whirring roulette wheels, will share theme honors with Rowan and
Martiri's Laugh-in at Irvine Coast Country Club Tuesday, Dec. 3.
40Las Vegas La.ff-in at Irvine" wui be'. the name of the annue.l
stagette for the Irvine Coast Country Club Women's Associatj.on which
will begin with a shoigun tournament at 11 a.m.
Members and guems participating in the event will be "gambl·
ing" on winning one of the prizes offered. But even losers will be treat-
ed to snacks, games and dinner which will feature surprise entertain-
ment in the true laugh-in style.
Proceeds from the event will be donated to a charitable organi·
zation. Profiting this year will be United Cerebral Palsy.
1 Dealing extravagant plans to her various committee chah;men
ls Mrs. Robert Smith, this year's chairman, who is assisted by Mrs.
Paul Rife, ro.chairman. ' . ._
· Serving in an advisory capacity iJ Mrs. Gordon Peterman while
Mrs. J. R. Freebairn is lining up some prizes worthy of a "big win:•
Decorations chairman, Mrs. Robert Yardley, will be creating a Las
Vegas atmosphere while Mrs. Donn Kemble is in charge of providing
••games of chance."
·BIG DEAL -One of the "b1",esl deals" .of the
· sOa.son at Irvine Coast Country Club ii the women's
association's stagette which will be called Lu Vegas·
I.atf·in at Irvine. Dealing pian.s for a successful
event Tuesday, Dec. 3 is chairman, Mrs. Robert W.
Smith while picturing tile resuiis of the tournament,
dinner and entertainment are Mrs. Robert Yardley
{left) and Mn. Paul Rife.
Taking no chances on accurate scoring will be Mn. William Les·
ter wb-0 will also take care of pairing. Lining up ''top acts" for, the en·
tertainment portion is Mrs. Willi.ain ·MJrams while Mrs. Bart McHugb
is making arrangements for the golf toumament.
Forinulating plans for the charitable donattOn is Miss Marian
Parks while in charge of publiciziJli the eve~t is Mrs. Ri~ Pa&er.
'
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I
Em 1bittered W·idow Deceives ·--Hers.elf·~·~n ·Gi v~n~ Jha·nks_
DEAR ANN LANDERS: ruta1ow ls
Thanu1lviD1 . ..and 11.,.w .,. the happiest •
'l'llarWllvlnt" 1111 -1olnllJ .... bad In 10 yecra. Wb1! ,Becau.e .Jll)' husband
dkd ftn weeb qo. lie llnall3' drank
blm..U lo dealh. ·
For onco I will sit. down with lll1
four chlJdnm and 111 arace and thre
will bl puce In the boule. No longer
will lheJ loot at me wlDI t«rifled eyea
and Ilk why Docld1-la ocreaminl and bra~ thlnp. 1'o ICllcer wlD I have
.. l•lte -lo Illa neiPl>or'• In the
mlddlo of the ~ lo proto<t U-
q amst the brUtt1ftJ ol 1 man who
behaved lille a -.... an1mal when
.the whlll:ey got lo film.
ANN LANDERS ril
I always have worked to aupport thfl famJI¥. How much wier It wlD be
with no liquor ~ no couct COil&,
no attorney'• fees, no ambulance: blJl&.
lt'I heavenly to bt able to go to
sleep-al nllbl lnltead of walllnf Ille flocr-.. u my husband --ed. out in a bar OJt In tome tramp••
~L y.., can't 1mqlne the feellna
of sbome wben I got U-3 a.DI.
telephone callt Win& Ill( lo "come
and get him." v ... AM, Thia TbaJWtlMnl wlD ...
-... , ·--· ····------~-~---------
my happiest, and I bad to loll someone.
And you an the only one I dare tell. Thanl! for"~· -FREE AT LAST
DEAR FREii:' I'm pd I prartdod
yoo wllll .. ijljMtully .. .... ~· A,.i -IUI you Wto, I
....,. 7'S will """"" ... bl ......... In "!" karl wilb a DUia '°"',.W.0. .
DEAR ANN: Wben -1• mltlil!at
-tbly ... be reported lo the
Society for lhe Pr.venUon of Cluelty
tn Animall. To whom do I report a
man who re:fUlel to allow his wife to go to a doctor because he _.,. all
doctors are quaw and If they can't
find ID)'.tl!ing wronc they will mate
up someu.Jni oo they can seod a , bl(
bill?
The -victim la DIY neigbboc and l\>O
asked me to write for an uswer. Pleaie
irovide ooe. -LADY NEXT DOOR
DEAR u.oy , Aolmlls -........ -........ ...., .... , ~
lhemselm. A womu wbo ll H co•
plelely doOl!ql;d II)' ber •-IUI iloe wocld ollow lllm lo keep lier r..,.
a""c-lo41 --tllO ·II ID la lieyoad .., -~ -... ,...., too.
Sis! -•peal" ..... dorp-. (P.1. Siie ...,. be oat •ol .........
too.)
DW ANN 'LArqlERS: 1.'m .one of
thole unlottlinite ,.zya wbo can't cattJ
a tune. I !mow I 11nt1· off lley, "but
love lo join In when 1111 Rolan' buddiOI
l\ng "Harvest Moon'' and 111>own bJ'
the Oki MUI 8trMm."
Last niabt at a lodge moeUng "'
all ~ 1D1 fa...U., "God Bloll AmtrlCi: i tNni Dl&j'be 1 was lllOllnl
Ioocler lhan Ulll&I. My -7onked 1111 sleeve and )"ded ln my ear, ''U yoo
don1 llnil up I'm leavi ... " I'd Ute
y0ur ~ of ,th\<. -THE TIN $AR •
DEAR EAR1 Yov wlle la , allo"'1a(
loo madl lmporilaeu lo .,_ ...,..
•
'
I
'
I
•
ff'\An.Y Pit.OT Wed-. N-27. l~
f • I
San Francisco H~neymotin
:·Bride Claimed •
In HB
At borne In llunllngton
~ a/tor I weddln& lrlp
to San Franctace ar •
newl)'Wtdt Mr. and llln.
Pete W. Lewis, who were
married In Ille Finl airtsltan
Owrch, Huntlnitoe Beach.
'Ille a ... Dan J. Moa of.
Octated al the clollble r In r -· Mrs. Lewis, the -Patrlcla Houatoe, I& t h e
daughter of Mn. C, M.
Uplslander of Huntington
Beach aod Jack -of GearclL Her !Nlband la the
... ol PeW w. Lewis ol Lone lleacb.
1'he bride w o r • • ,.tllte
crept elnplre ..... with ....
pllqued Dowen. The trafo and Joni 1 le eve I were JDtde of
matcblnl 1-and lb< carried
I wblte ~ aurrouncled by
whit. carnations.
Mra. Bob Davie, matron " honor, wore a i&vendar a:own
wblle the maid of honor, Ml&a
Cbrla Slenk1 ..... a llme
green d r e 1 1 • Brldelmaidl,
)lln. Richard Ven Kefnbelk,
li!laa Ter<U sterald aod Miii
Kathy Cbambin """' , ..... of abock!ng pink, bib)' blue
and yellow:
Laverne and Lealle Auger
were flower Pi alld ring
~-
Bill J-aerved u belt
man aod lllhen lnclu~ Bill
Stevens, John McKee, Jobn
Morris and Wally BanldJW
Mn. WUUaro Milli ol Santa
Ana, the bride'• co u 1 l n,
-at the nceptloD In !be Lab Parl: lllubboUle.
II)' NANCY MC I:ITYRE
"DEAR NANCY: W11Y eoo;ldni the
pllsrtml bav• celtbralld 'l111nkqMng
wllh a lmlD. -blHlae fowl IUch
u IOOM, '° w' wouldn't bave ibe pro-blom of turkey teft.<rven.
I've run oul ol ldeu oe how to dlltulM
tbe bird 10 It tut.a like veal on. rt1dly,
meatloaf oe ~lmday, aaup oe s..oo.,
and myatery euaerole on M o n d a y •
Pleaae ! An or11bi11 roc!pe IOI' turkey
left.-Ovora that _, lute Ill<• lbl
day alter 'l'hanbllvlng. MARJORIE 8.
DEAi\ MARJOR!j!;;
The Pllgrlml bad
DlalQ' problema In
the New Worfd. Tiii'
key lllt.ovlll'I WU
-They lhouJd
have eomulled tbe
-.. th!& cuJI. oary predlcameal
Having I hi&h clvill-
iaUon, t.be Aztecs
bad alnad:1 aolved
lbl problem of tur•
key le!Wr/m IOI)
:run before the arTlval ol the Pilgrim.
They created Turkey Mote which I& a
lively dish lbat lea-a 'op!ey, blibl¥
Oavored 18Uce that baa ao tntereatlng
touch of chocolate. It'• lll:rlclly . pirmet
-'-· Al you ...... by the -of splcel, II baa plenty of ole 1 .
Booe cooked turkey aod cut Into chunk·
alJed ploceo. Melt 2 tab!.._ cooldng
of! In I large aklliel and qulckly brown
turkey, aprlDkllng meat with I teaapooo
aa1I. Transfer turkey to a caaaerole dish.
Add I tab!.._ more oil ID aklllet aod
llule 11> teupoon cruahed nd pepper
aod I teupcm cblll powder togethor with
-
... cyp chopped ,._ cblJe pepper• (re-
movad *'!l,J I> cup chopped onioos and
II '"P ol\opplld be~ peppar.
Cooi. unUl vq:ftablet art m lo
another saucepan, browa f ti~
aewneoeedland$oc.al!Yll'ld-
ln 2 tableepoono of!, and add I mJncld
clov .. of garllc, I ~ plll>ontol, I
teupooe vanilla, II teaspoon anl&OOd, I
clovra and f~ ounce& Mexican cllc::leolate
(or 4 oz. tem.ltweet chocolate ad 1
tableapooo cinnamon.)
Melt chocolate over low name. Blend
lnto chill m.l.J:t.urt with 3 tablespoons
tomato pastt.~'I' cup crushed e<rn chlpa
ana f cupa chlcten broth. SJJruner unUl
1auce reduce. IDC1 th1ckem Jn about 15
minutes. Pour over turkey In cuterole
aod bake 11 boor. SOrvt with tortlllu
and rice.
Ooe of the prized hanul of the world
ls a succulent, petal-pint delicacy from
Germany called 8laet Forest Ham. It's
sliced very thin' and ta atmllar, but,
1n my opinion, betttr than f>roeclutt.o.
I wu delighted to discover thls ran
ham In a amaJl shop lbat 1pectallus
in an appetliing assortment of Getman
fooda.
They make their own Bockwurst (veal
sausage), Btatwurst (large pork
sausage) and the be!t Uvenrrurst you've
tasted tbl& 1ldo of MU11lcb, u well as
a variety of other amote meats.
Be sure to aample tbelr homtma<le
breads, especlally the 9tnn~ rye which
Is unllke ani llandard rye. Thia i. oo
place to count ealoriel. .tverytblftg Jn
the ·-"' alnlulJy laU.n!ng. s. n .. a little! ·
For i.nform&Uon reprdins t b e 1 e
gourmet servk:M, call the DAILY PILOT
at IMM!Zl aod uk for NANCY'S HINTS.
f,\RS. PETE W. LEWIS
E-i"I Nuptlol•
The bride !l"ld>Jlted lnnn
Marina Hllb Scliool and I beauty collep. Her busband ........... ,...._......, ........ ,...._... ........ ....,,...._......, .... .....,,......,...., .... ....,..,...,. ........ ,....
fa I pduate of Wllaon High
Scliool In Lone lleacb.
Horoscope
Cancer: Boost Mo~ra le
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 28
By l!YDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March Zl·Aprll 19):
Despite apparent opposition,
yoU aet what you need. Those
wbo lj'y to block you find
that :tour awes p r e v e n t
ObltrucUm. Your own original
approocb wins the day.
TA!,111UB (April ZG-May 20);
GQanl • beallb by maintaining
program ol moderation. Avoid
utrea\es. ~e evening for
attend1ug lecture, th e a t e r .
GEMINI (May 21.Juno 20):
Social aetlvlty "' lncru!ed. Not too euy to concentrate to-
'
Teacher to Wed
day. But you can win friends, all atlltude. Diplomacy aw.
·Influence people. Don't IClt-arrogance lose! today. Know
ter forces. Key is creative re-thil and act accordingly.
lanllon. Go wllh the tide. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
CANCER (June 21.July 22): If you don't know, do nothing.
Boost in morale Indicated. Best today to play waiting
Meaningful compliment by one game. Premahlre action could
in authority doea the trick. 're8Ult in delay, loas. Let
LEO (July 23--Aug. , 22): othen asaert their 1 views.
Good lunar aapect hlghlighll!. SCORPIO (O c L :13-Nov.
writing a c ti v J t y , You 21): Necessary to handle prac-
overcome emotio!W blockl, Ucal matten. If you ak:ip
gaJn greater feel.bJI o f easenilal.!, you are forced to
freedom. Important to get repeal Realize this -aod
facts on the record. Leave . apply yourself. Accent on
nothing to chance. r work; pacing, steady ap-
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): proach. If you concentrate,
Money situation a f f e c t in g you succeed.
bome, family should be open SAGITrARJUS (Nov. zz.
for discu.ssioa. Avoid know-it-Dec. 21): Finiab what you
start. Your views, desires gain
wider attention, acceptance .
CAPRICOBN (Dec. ·22.Jao.
19): OuUook is brighter on
Rites Date Anr.iounced
domestic front t h r o JI g h
revWon ef plllll. Aim to'Ward
greater future security. Some
who express views are merely
beln& stubborn. Be I lbrewd
obeerver. Grice Methodist Church In
Lona; Beach will be the tVtn·
In& aetting for the Feb. a
wedding of Linda Marguerite
Moody of Loq Beach and
Dami Walter Stoskopf of
Lakewood.
Miao Moody, daughter ol
Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbard M.
Moody of Sunset Beach, I&
an alum.Ole of Huntington
Beach High School ID d califoinJa State College at
Long Beach. Currently &hi I&
a -teacher at W ard1ow School
In lluntlngton Beach.
The beoedlct-elect, aoo of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stookopf
of lloWngtoo, Kan., la a
gradUatu of Kanw stale
Coll>p.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :IG-Feb.
II): Avoid dlspu"' with
relaUves. Some Ideas are sub:-
ject to change. Best to permit
one cl0rl8 to you to set policy,
PISCES (Feb. ti-March 20):
Check assets. Be versatile.
Give full play to curiosity.
Aat questlon11 -ob t a I n
aswen; Take nothing fot eranted wbvt mooey is con-
cerned. Definite gain po6&lb1'
H you are alerL
Rummage Aids
City of Hope
Anne Burke . Marries
During Catholic Rites
1ll. John the Baptist Catholic
ctwrcb in Costa Meu. WU
the setting for the morning
nuptial& linking In marriage
Anne Marie Burke and David
Joseph Balough.
The Rev. Anthony McGowan
performed the rite!: for the
daughter of Mr. and Mn.
Joseph Burke of C08tl Mesa
and the son ol. Mr. and Mn.
· Joseph Balaugh of Coeta
Meaa.
The bride wort a cbantllly
lace over peau de IOie aown
with Jong fitted aleeves and
scalloped neckline. She carried
a white orchid IUlTOUDded by
white cbrysantbemnm1.
Her sister, Mra. Cbarlel
Lambert, WU matron of
honor. The hmor attendant
and the bridf'lmakt•, Miu
Catherine Buchanan and Miu
Kim Heffner, 1"ll't iVOI')'
gowns bordered in Austrian
tapestry at tba hem and
neckline.
Thomu Balouah the
bridegroom's mother, wu
belt man and the brlde'a
brothers, Wllllam. ind Tbomu
Burke, were uabel'I.
Ml3s Mary Cbarneley of El
Monte assisted at the recep-
tion for 125 guesb in the
church hall.
The coople will m a k e
their home in Jl't. Hood, TeL,
where the bridegroom la
stationed with the Army,
following a wedding trip to
Lake Tahoe.
Both graduated !nm Colla
Meaa High School Ind the
bridegroom attmkid Oranp
Coast College.
MRS. DAVID JOSll'H IALOUGH _ ...........
A Rose Is a Rose Is a Rose
A top award In the I9j!8 Thanksgiving Rooe Show at
Rose Hills Memorial Park, Whittier, went to. New-
port Beach rose enthusiast, Mrs. Lyman Cralle. Th•
area resident receives congratul·ations from J. L.
Seppi, vice president of Rose Hills Memorial Park.
Mrs. Cralle won for her entry of the best bouquet of
2h or more roses. She competed with rose grower•
from all over Southern cantomia.
OC Guidance Center
Elects Nine to Board
Mrs. John Mcintosh, newly
m.talled president of the
board of directors of the Child
Guidance Center of Orange
COunty, announced the names
ol nine new memt>m: of the
board.
Sen1ng from Newport
Beach are Mn. Robert B.
Berilard, Mn. Geor1e Brown
and M'rs. J-b Slap. Others
Mt Arthur R. McKenzie,
co.ta Mesa; Lawrence M.
Reed, Huntington Beach; Mrs.
Mary Christensen Wyman,
Laguna Boach; Mn. Sophie
Gendel, Fullerton and Dr.
.Robert N. Htltoo and MrL
Walter C. Ralston, Garden
Grove;
The addition of these new
member& increases the total
bolrd mimber to fl.
Mrs. Mcintosh, •ptatiaC at
the orieDtation meeting, •
plalned ii' purpose. s h •
described ho\V the C.Otc
treats children -and tbetr.
families from all over the
coonty. The Center L9: a non-
profit, countywlde supported
psychiatric clinic for emo-
tklnally disturbed children Jnd
adolescents from preacbool
age to 17 years.
Some salaries for the Ralf
Ire received from c6untJ;
graol&, but the major portlm
of the Center's growing atlDUI]
bud.get deriYM fn:m ita oQ
supporting groups. In addition
there are contributions from
service clubs, foundatio111,
church groups, the Communf9'
Cbeet and United Ftmd!.
Council Theater Party
Benefits Hospital Ship
. Parllclponta j o l n I n I a tbOotar party ljlOllS«ed by
Soulbem Council of Phi Mu
will be supporting t h e
"""'111'1 naUooaJ charity u !nil u applauding the Up
Wltb People cut next Satur·
day In the Anaheim Con-
ventlcn .center.
A boopllaJ &blp c a 11 e d
HOPE, Wblcli responds to ln-
vlt.atkm from underdeveloped
natlom to wry 11' volunteer
lllaff lo '-Olelr llhorea, will
-from-Ille theater party. Once there a volunteer lllaff
of teleded docton: and nurses
treat patients and train
medlcal perllODDtl to carry 00
tbe ...... afl<r lbe lblp leav ...
Mt-, wldcb 'haft been
lakfnl plam alnct !llO, lnclud-
ed -. Vietnam, Peru,
-· Guinea, Nlcarqua and Ceyioa.
llfn. Floyd Andenoe baa
been~ bJ Robert Wynne,
pnoldOnl of the Southem
California Council of Phi Mq,
to cbalr the benefit.
Cornrnittee members
au.lsting Include the Mme&.
Gene Maxwell, and WendeD
Loftsgard of Saota Anal
James Hannon, David Mut-
ger and Joseph Nichols ol
Anabehn; MerriU Conroy t.rf
Westminster; Forest Mercia,
Buena Park, and H.M. Lydq
Jr., Huntington Beach. ·
Members of alumnat
UIOClatlona in Los Angelq,
Glendale, South Bay, Lone
Beach and San Gabriel ara
upecled to attend. Tho
Soutbem Ca!Hornla Coundl
repreun.ta about 1500 alumna1
In the area.
. HB TOPS Clul:i
Sa-rq I Gain TOPS Cluli meeta: every Monday at 7:JD
p.m. In Smith's Elernentarz
Scbool in Hu~tlngton Beach.
Century Club
Tw<atioth Contury Club of
'\ '.llundiiatoa Beach galhen at'
f;'!I p,.m. the third Tueaday hi 1*"' Park Clubbouae.
M their next fund.ratatn·g
project to beoefit the City
of Hope. members of the Gina
Ubrlaub chapter of Huntington
Beach are spoosorln1 a rum-
mage Ale between I a.m.
and I p.m. Saturday, Nov.
00.
Cards Played
For Charity
'Ille Woinan'1 Clubbwle lo
Costa Mesa will be the eettln1
for a charity bridge a:ame
sponsored by ·the American
Contract Bridie League. All
proceeds for the I p.m. benefit
will be .donated to the Cancer
Fund.
Five Great ·Looks
·119~u/u Bound . . .
LINDA MOODY
llotrothed
' '1tr. lliil'lln. Dmd H. Cc4fniiil d c..ta M ... are
8' L. tlle l.S. Lm'llne Wllld! will Jilt them lo
Boaollllll for• nation. ,,
'l
1be l&le will take place in
the Odd Fellows Hall, 226
Main SL.
Films Shown
Mias Ula Nelson will show
filml of New 7.ealand and
Australia during a meeting of
the Laguna Beach Woman's
Club in the Woman's Club-... IHllte Priday; Dec. I.
Luncheon will be served at
11:30. p.IQ. Reservations may
be obtained by calllntl Mrs.
Oarlee Muller, 49H332 or
Mn. L. J. 'lbonw, -~ byW~.Dec.<.
Nov. 29 L9: the date for the
card party. Further in-
formation may be obtained
by calling Mrs. Helen Creed
at 847-3«5.
Emblem Club
The Elks Lodge ls the set-
ting for..Jrleetings of the Em·
bl!m Cliib 201 of Laguna
Belch. Members gather the
flral aod third Tuesday at I
p.m.
VIRG11¥1A'S
SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE
1114 E. Coa1f H~. e Corona del Mir
Pho•• ORlol• J.1050
' • iknOw wher• fo find fahion'1 fine&t fabric•
•ncl trim• 7 You are invifod t. browse at
leitu,.,
U. T ... 11 I Al!tslwl 91 M-. a..
'---'-----VIRGINIA ----'
W•011111lo!reth ,_~
Tiit Swinging S<it1.
No question about tt.
this ls today'• look In wedding-·
All In foU,_ ktrot IOi<tured gold.
.__ ...... C.SllO
0. ...... _
SLAVICK'S
.H•I~ $1flee ltl7
II hthien l1l1nd
Newport leach-6'M..IJIO
o,., Mel'Mfrr eM M4tT ...... ..
.-
,.
I
I
s ,,
"
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9
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d· ...
E
d.
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9
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1
' Newport· Harbor Today's C:fosblg
'
VOL 6T, NO. 285, l SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
0
'LA Vice Squad Boss
Assistant Police
Chief Appointed
By JACK CHAPPEU.
01 tM ~llY .. UIT Sl•ff
The head of the Los Angeles Police
>epartment Vice Squad is Newport
ieach'a new assistant police chief.
Appointment of Capt. Harry A. Nelson
) the Newport position was announced
.OOay by City Manager Harvey Hurlburt.
Nelson, 49, will assume his new duties
.r8.nuary 1. His appointment ends a six·
,nonth search for a new assistant chief.
The post was vacated in June when
Merrill V. Duncan left to become Chief
of the Orange Police force.
"l was very pleased with the caliber
of the applicants and I am especially
pleased with the appointment we have
been able to make," Hurlburt said.
;'I am famlllar with Capt. Nelson's
performance in Los Angeles. I believe
that he will be a great as.set to Chief
James Glavas," he said.
The new assistant chiel's duties include
supervision of the Newport force's detec-,
live and patrol divisions. He will also
take charge of the enUre foroe while
Chief Glavas iJ out of the city.
The move will mean a slight drop
in pay at lirst for the Los Angeles
captain. However, he is now eligible
for a pension from Los Angeles whicl1
\vould supplement his Newport salary.
Nelson has been with the Los Angel e
(See CHIEF'S AIDE, Pa1e %)
UCI Teacher
Assails Head
Of Department
By THOMAS FORruNE
OI tM·O.l/'f ,.!IOI ll1H
Dr. George Kent, one of . three UC
Irvine aMistant professors sla(ed to lose
their jobs, today launched a ·bitter
personal attack on the chairman of his
department, history Profesaor Henry .c . Cleaver Ignor es
Prison ·order;
Arr es.t. S'!ught
~' Call_\n8 '"' ~((· "impeach-.• ·' · bet.ff ., c'll!nplJl"ga1l!erlog -ol
SAN FRANCISCO · (UPI) -Black
Panther· leader Eldridge Cleaver ii?lored
a date far his return lG prison today,
and an order ~as issued for his arrest.
Cleaver was to turn liim.self in al
9 a.m. but had not appeared by 9:30
a.m. The• California adult authority,
which supervises parole cases, said it
would wait a "reasonable time -about
another half hour" and then ask JX!lice
to issue an all points bulleUn for his
arrest.
Cleaver's wife. Kathleen, and his at-
torney, Charles Garry, arrived at the
state building shortly before the schedul-
ed surrender time and made their way
through a corridor jammed with aboul
100 newsmen. ....
Garry told newsmen that neither h ·
nor Mrs. Cleaver had any Idea on th·
whereabouts of the Black Panthers·
"minister of information."
"I have not talked to him since Sunda··
and I bave not seen him since la~·
Thursday when he made a speech .'
Garry said.
about 500 persons.
"Thero Is DO ~ for dealing
wllh pel(y tyranny and egoµiania," said
frent duting a conclave called by u(:r
Student ·Body President Ron Ridgle of 1f1S Aeyge)es after the eon.tract term:tna-
Uons were disclosed last week.
In qpeoing the conclave this morning.
Ridgle said: "These firings wiijiout any
substantive reasons or ju$llication Cll-
oot and will, not be tolerated." ,
BUt " Dr.· .Tarries McGBU'gh, d e an 9f
biological sciences, told the gathering be
found "offenSive the introduction of your
student body presit1ent."
An estimated 500 student., facuHy
n1embers and staff members were on
hand for this morning's conclave. UCl's
!>1udenl body totals about 4,000.
"This is not the time to judge. It is
lme for solerrin review," said McGaugh.
He said students could contribute to
;{isting faculty review procedures by
• valuating professors on I.heir own.
"You have had several years to cook
1p an evaluation and you haven't d o n e
JO," he said.
Jn his talk before the groop, which In·
eluded faculty members supporting the
•firings, Kent, a 50-year-oJd assi!tant pro-
fessor of history from Newport lleach.
Mrs. Cleaver said she last saw hc1
1 husband Sunday night. She said she di1i
I not think it possible that he· had flee:.
the country.
demanded proof of assertions by senior
members of his department that bis per-
formance was below University stand-
:mt.'l.
"I say that's a lie," he said.
Another faculty member not. recom-
ne."lded for retention,· Dr. Stephen I Sto"k Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock markc.
late this afternoon had trouble main-
taining a higher level as weakness in
key blue chips dragged down the Dow
Jones industrial average to a loss of
about three points. (See quotations,
:~ages ll}-11).
Shapiro, a 28-year-old assistant profes-
sor of English, took on the entire uni·
versity system, charging that the ran~
of young faazlty memben who are in
some way dlfferent are being sysiemat·
ically decimated.
~a lro exhorted students to "do
so about a 'system that stllles
dissent. m not golng_to be here very
(See CONVLA VE, Page I)
Harbor Area Churches Set
Rite s for Tha)lksgiving • !\1'any' Harbor Area churches have
sch!?duled speCial 11ianksgivlng services
tonight and Thursday for Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa residents.
Details of the servjces are-
Genlral Bible Church, !3rd-artd Orange,
Costa Mesa : Special praise service at
9: 30 a.m. Thund&J.
Corona del Mar Community Church,
Congeptional, 611 Heliotrope Av~:
Service al I o'clock tonight in the
sanctuary.
SL Mtcba<l'1 and All Angels Eploc:<>pal
Church, ms PaclflCVl"1 Drtve, CM<!h~
del Mar: Thtte wUI be' an annual
"ingatherlng" ol food gifts for t be
Epbcopal llome for Children on Thurs·
day.
Newport Harbor Lutheran Q\urch, 2501
Cliff Drive : A service will be held at
9 a.m. Tbunday.
Luther•" Church of the Mute:r, 2900
rwnc Xlew Drive; Ceron.a «I ,r ~
!
A worship will be conducted at 7:30
tonight. 'Mle mesaige wfll be "A Day
of Prayer aod Thanksgiving." The: senior
choir will sing.
The First United Methodist Church,
GO W. 19th St .. COlltA Mesa: 1be. chotr.
u n d e r the direcUon ot Gerald Olsen,
will present special music at a service
at 10 a.m. Thursday In the aanctuary.
SL Andrew's Prubytertan Church, t!OO
SL Andrew's Road, Newport .Beacb: E.
Kim Strutt will preach at a service
at 10 a.m. Thursday.
Pr!Dce of p...,. Lulheran Cbut<h. 1917
Mesa Verde Drive, CotJt.I Mesa:: A
Thanbgtvtng Day pageant will be 1lq<d
al i and !0:30 un. The public la tnvlted.
Other Tbanugtvtng oervtca .,. set
al all Ou1stlan Science cburcbel along
the c o a 1 t. "1ban'u Be Unto Ood f or
l{js Unspeakable OifL." the golden-text
l'lf lhe teuon-sermon , wftl be the opming
lbcme for the aervtw. "I
c
EDITION
'
ORANGE COU NTY, CAUP.ORNI>\
' ' W,EONESDA Y, NOVEMBER. 27, -1968
• •··' • 1es Ill •
•
Smoke Kills
Woman in
Home Blaze
Newport Beach .socialite Georg 1 a
Spence Davis, ex-wife of a promlnent
Laguna Beach land developer, died Tues·
day night when Oaznea and smoke swept
through her Lido Isle home.
The Orange County Coroner's office
said Mrs. Davis, 55, of 148 Via Tries£e,
died of suffocation.
Firemen found her lying uncooacious
on her soot-covered bed jwit before mid·
night.
The living room of the single-story
home was totally involved in flames
when firemen anived.
While some or the firmeen attacked
the blaze from the fr:onl oI the building.
others entered through a rear bedroom
window and loond. the victim, who was
alone in the house.
Firemen attempled resuscitaUon as
they awaited an ambulance. Mrs. Davis
never regained consciousness. She was
pronounced dead on arrival at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Investigators said cause of the fire
was not immediately known. They said,
however, that Us origin was a comer
of the living room. .o.mage was estimated at $15,000.
Mn. Davis was formerly married to
Evered Davia, J r.,-developer df La~a·s
Rancho Laguna estates in Bluebird Can-
~on. The Davises made their home "l Laguna. Sil' mov'JI .. to. Newport after " Ii divorce fiit~ ....... 1 :-,.,i •
°'*'"., PH:OT '"""""' -
CORONA DEL MAR'S. 'VIP' KIDS ·A PAL
Vlrgll Pertch Debbled In Lagun•'• P•iftt:oln-
Cartoon Alley
Coast Gag men Pain~ Theater Fence
By RICll,Ulll P. NAU.
' Of ... Dltb' "Ii.I ll1H
The lign carried by the milllant little
old Laguna lady in l<nnla -.. said.
"Don't ren' to acto.n."
"Tba1'a Frank Interlandl He's the
political one. Ill& l!rother Phil ii the
IU)" one,~ .. caDnded )an arilst apectat.er.
Frank was hard at work with paint
pot Bild brush mating a bigger-than-life
cartoon on • f"1Ce panel eight.feet high
and four-feet wdle.
Nearby, hts twin biolher Phil had
his pe:rt syndicated blonde, "Queenie"
saying, "If all the world ii a stage,
where are .&U the actors! All I know
are clowns." QJeenle appem dally in
the. DAILY eij..OT. ,. ....
The theatrically otiented cartoon& from
t h e Oytng bn1shes of 1ix talented men
were part of lhe great Laguna Beach
paint-In Tueltday at the lite of OW: new
Laguna-Moulton PlayOOuse now under
construction.
AJ artiat-organizer, Ed Nofziaer huatl·
ed thither and yoo, the fence wne
to life tn vivid reds, bl!Jel, lftenl and
yellows. a rainbow eight f<et htflh and
103 feet Jooi. • • +
Wiien the f..,.. 1w .... 111 tu lttnt
111Wnd the foundallon of the lllO-,..t
tbtater, it wtll bt auCUOoed panel by 1
pon<I. • '
Proceed• from Ull! of the orl&it1al
woru wllJ "' to U1e bulldtng ful'<I for the fll;0,000 facJllly !hat la to be
compilted nert Apt11 adjacent the
Fl!lltvei ol Arts"""°"' on Broadway. Down tbe 1 ..... ln>m..tllo-lat.-londil,.
Virgil · Partch (VIP) of Corona del Mar
wielded his brush ~v·er "Blc George."
Stated on a bar stoiJI, George ill aartng
to the bartender, "U you ttllnk I'm
a bad actor, you ought to see Phil
lnterlandi ...
Former Laguna school bo&1'd president
D o n Tobin was a trWe' pallid .as he
taced....the i>Wds. He had rtlen frool
a bout wtth tht'fla. -~ •
Tobin'• "'!lie Llltle 1'ionwr" II wearing
furs and oommenUng, "l'd like . to be
a lint nigbter bul I'm alway1 late."
Roger Armtlrollt• happy dOI, llx·feet
high, with large tmcue ·la easily spotted
-the lq f•"""!I· ~ !•Diii . tbe "NOl>Olloil and Uocte11l1ry• tiiiti>.·
"()Jt Damned Spcit,'.' 11&)'1 Niililger'I
"AnimaJoclct' loo1Clng in dlnilc djlmay
(lee,CAll'IOONS, Pap I) ' , .
. .
Her trqic doiitl> lhocked btr llW1)'
Lido Isle lrl<n!IJi
IQJe WU 4tlf.. Ill di. · Lido lilt
. Womei11s dub, ltn'inJ u boob section
. ~an , last year: and wu on the
.deooraUont commJttee of the Women's
.Qub •. · . ,
'nle actraetive socialite is iurvlved by
, h••" mQther; ~. Rody Braodt of Co<ta
Meaa; and two daughters by a marriage :Pl.'ior to theJQavil marrl-i~.
-List tites are pendlCJI at Baltz
MortuJry la Corona dal·Mar. . -
Noise Foo Says
County Holds
Airport Control
There is no legal foundation for the
contenUon that the Board of Supervison
carmot regUlate the number and ty~
of plane> flying out of Orange Coonty
Airport, Dante! Emory, chairman of the
{Jrpott Nolle Abatement Coormittee, told
aupervison Tuesday.
Emory, a Newport Beach resident,
spoke u 111..1pervlsors voUld to r'eceive
and file a report staling that Rep. James
B. Utt's proposal that fees be charge!i
airlines based on the noiae factor was
"not within the le.gillaUve authority o(
O.ange Comrly."
The noisf! critic said the decision was
based on a "federaJ. bureaucrat's opi·
nlon 11 and had m legal welgbt. He said
the question ol locaJ control of airports
bad never been decided In the COW1I.
Emory said his group would meet
soon with the Assen\bly Transport•tloo
CommJttee and urge a plan for the
!lalo to intervtlle to airport cootnl
matters: He satd the state Aen:mauttcs
Board should rule on all money granted
by the federal govemineot to local
airporta and take over control.
Emory ll3o had some tboughb on
an Instrument Landin& Syatem (Il.S)
agreement between the county and the
Federal Avlaltoa Admtnlattalloo (FAA).
He said inltallaUon U n.s would mate
the air.POrt more altracUve to tlr:Unea
and be of no help to prf•ate Oyen.
He urged that, even wllh n..c; in-
atallatlon,. the ~t llmJ!I on vl•lblllty
ceUlngs be ret.alntd to promote aafety.
-E;,,ory, 2llO Golden CIJ'Cle, wu )O!ntd
by Wllliam Harris, 20t2 Anchor Way,
Newport Beach" another critic of airport
pollcles. Harris utd be wu at tht airport
having dinner SaJunlat aJchl and •lsibili· ty W a I IO VoOI" J 0 \1 OoU:ld l'IOt I e e
acrOll die 'runway>. ·
Ht -the cable eorm.-All11M
plane ;rtl>tdr crull<d lbod1d ntvt;, ba•~
been allowed to Jeove to. .\naolu. H~
wamod,lhal atmtlar occldents i:<>Uld bap-
pen .., olshl and. called' the airport
"poorly m.&IMIPd ·"
Supervlaor WUUam J. Phillips said the
county wu not to bllj'llt for the late
loatallalton ol !LS. "Wt qlffd -
yWI qo, tn !llO to inltall ibo ayl!tm.
!SU QllPOllT, Tap 11
----·------. ---....:....-====-~-~~--~-
N.Y. StotPJcs
TEN CENTS
• ire
SUCCUMBS IN BLAZE
Mrs. Georgl• 5. D•vi1
Tliie.u Names Ky
To Head South
Peace Co1itingent
SAIGON (UPI) -PreSidt!11 Nguy!"
Van thieu Wednesday announc9d ~
appointmen1 d. Vice President Npyen
Coo Ky "to cootrvl, guide and ......,.. •.
SOutb Vietnam's delegation .to t.bi. u-
pended Vietnam war taJb tn Paris• JI• said South Yletoam '"'"1il 11t en 1w.n~ thtfiHI l'egalar lileClin' Within
the neit tb diys. · ; 1 •
Ky. the flamboyant 1 f<irn'lef • Ir
mai"sbal, Js South Vldna:!:n'a. -Jea1iN
hawk. .Ob6ervers s4Jd. his a~l
apparenUy indlcaled S~gon wGUJa malib
taJn • hard line policy tn Its deallnp
with the CommtmistJ.
Thieu made the announcement In i.
brief television ·address from SaigOn In
whiCh he urged the Soolh Vietnam"'
to "fight harder than ever before."
The Commmillt itrategy, be wariled,
was one of "figbUng while talking."
'1 ·appeal to you not to let them
put you to sleep wjtb theit peace
schemes." he said. "You should not
forget that the peace we want Is a
peace of freedom and not slavery and
poverty.
"We must win militarily as well as
JX!litlcally."
Thieu · spoke to the nation shortly after
the Sai'gon gOvernment annO\Dictd it was
ending it.I ZS-day boycott of &he Pari.s
talks• .
Re' Aid the South Vietna~e deieca· . . tlon ~ld be In Paris fur: the nelt
·regular session or the lalka wlllch Uius
far· have been coriOned to the Uoited
Statel and North Vietnam. Tbe sesalom
usual\)', have been held on wedpesd.a,I
but have been pbstPoned in recent w~
becaqse of Saigoo'11 refu,W to a~ebd.
Thieu said Ky woold not dlreCtly
partjctpal< tn the talis -liiJ ·rank
would be too high !Or the ambassadorlA1
leYeI ·ot the meeUngs ...:. but woWa ad
aa overall direcSor f:mn behind the
""""'-DiplornaUe sourcea aald Saigon would
send a delegation of about 100 mem~.
including military' political and i.ctmtcaJ
advls!n, as well .a.a represenlatlves of
the NaUonal Assembly and religious and
poltUcal f!l'Olll":
Tl>e nomin,aJ leadtr ol the Sol\th Viti· namese deles~':!kula ~ fi> be ("See · , l'ale !}
c. .. ,
--
l
'
,2 DAil Y PILOT
Efirlt1 Meet Seen
-N. Viets~ C pg
OK Peac Talk
f'nJll P .. e .l
CONCLAVE •• •'
' • .., --aod ..... ·lo -the talb wbScb have &een cooductflll
until ..,,. ~ by WAlllingU>o and
Hanoi.
A spoil...... for Xuan 'lbuJ, dlle!
Hano1 aecot1a1ar, oald bla delepttoo will
be al tbt l&ble. 'l1>e date oC lbt !lril
ezpaaded IQlletiDI ·WW be dllCll If
abort'1 betWw North Vietnam• and \
U.8,ollldols bebbl lhe..,.,,..,
But there were problemJ ahead.
The Hano! spokesman denounced Ille
UDllod Slates' p>O!Uoo that' Ille Allies
do not rqonl Ille lalb .. four-sided
aod tlaal llolll lidea '""'1<!' operate 11
a 1111it -Ibo U.S. an4 saJP. Nar)h
-ml lbt Viet <long -In an "our aide, your side" arrangement
As expeded, South Vietnamese l'rtll·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu named Vice
Prelidtnl Nguy., Cao Ky, the Viet
Cong'• public enemy No. 1, to supuvl.se
the Saigon delegation.
A spokesman for the National Llbera·
Uoo Front (NLF), the political wing
al the' Viet Coq, den«mced this
befcnhand and uld Ky'• presence lhnp-
Jy proved the South Vietnam reglme
wu an "American puppet."
Tbo NLF Aid II would tab part
In tbt lalb bal would chalknge SaJcon'•
dalm to be lepl spokeoman for Ille
Saatl>en boll al the COWllry.
LA Police Arrest 49
In Call Girl Roundup
From Win llenleel
C1ooiJ11 an elgb>mooth probe of a
loosely knit love-for-money ring wh!clt
aclually boughl and IOld glamoroua call
glrll, police began maklnl ..... omsta
al the network principals Tuesday.
A Iola! of ti out of 60 penons Indicted
by the CWllty Grand Jury ...,. rounded
up by Loi Angel<1 police and lherllf'1
deputies by Tuesday Diglil.
Potlce Qdel Tbomu Reddin called
the -... le roondup the largest vleo
lnvesti&allon In the blalory of cantomla,
ooe Involving operaton from coast lo
coast.
Gtamaraua &irll -eome of whom
earned up lo $1.000 ~ In the ring -nr• generally lpored, u llwmen
w.m lllet principals behind the -·· Uan.
llolld the ............ -00 charges of panderm,. pimping and
COlllplracy lo commll pnlltllutloo ..
the raull al u 80-mu vice laak fon:e
wblcb worted for neU'ly a year on
the cue.
Tbe lnvesti&atloo wu lllOltly contered
on the SWl!el Strip aru al West Loi
Angelea, bol the -k extended lo
New York, MWn1 -olta of the
llepubllcan co11\•entloo -Lu Vegaa and
San Pranclaco.
"These Individual or1onlsat1oo beads
met perlodlcolly and ucban(ed In-
formation, boogltl and oold Usla of
CUltomen, and ln IOllle Ca&el bought
and aold females amona: themlelvu,"
said Cblef Reddin.
Ho Aid they boutlbl and IOld. lll>a!led
beat UJtl -names of pollce and
c:ullomtn thoucbl lo be cooperollnl lo
break up the vice: network: -u wtll.
Ball for 6S men aod teven women
picked up In the oerleo al arreota ""fed
""" 1$,000 lo $11),000, ll<C<lrdlng lo Jell -Vlco llelall Cojll. i1arrJ Nelooo Aid
-' al the clrll """ Pold a minimum
of llO for their luaHllevlalln& chumo,
bal Upo ...,. routine and 11W11 clrll
made up lo 11,000 wmiy,
'11111 could omount lo IO men In tile
aevtn d"fl ucll Wftk, baaed on bani,
ber1 mathemaUCI.
Moot of thoM omaled ,,.... In pool·
Uooo leodlng lo eaay cootact with
custamen, IUCb as rutaurant maltre
DA IL Y PILOT
CllANO& COAST PUIMJIHINI ~N4Y
a.wt N. W1tcl ---.Hu a. c.~.,
Ytll ,,..,.... .......... MeMw
n...r .. "*"'*
TkMtt A. M1rpt.fM ·--.,.,... P. c:.IHn r..t Nh ... "Z:"'~-~net" ..._ __
2!11_ ..... _, ..
M•"'-t~fA .. 1111.t!lll --W,Jj'"'-~"'::: ..... ~ ......
d', perking lot altendut, or bualnwman
eager to pleue cllentl.
Many are well-known to pollce v:fce
911.uadl and Intelligence teams, doe to
prior contacts and arresll, acconllng
lo Capt. Nellon.
F.....,. P .. e J
CHIEF'S AIDE .•.
foroe for • yun, ri1Jni to Coplefn
of the Vlco Deparlmenl through the
ranb.
JUJt 11111 week, ht wu one of the
leaden in whit Loi Angelel Police Qlef
1bomu Reddin and 6berlll P-Pl~
cl)eu called "the 1._i vice tn-
Vlltlaatkm ever cooduct8cfln Clllfcnlii."
Nolloo fllurod prmilmmUy In the niun-
dup of IO poncllll Indicted by lbt Los
AngeJM Grand J u r y on chargt1 ot pan-
dering, pbnplng, and conspiracy lo com-
mit prootltuUon,
Nellon attended Waablntllon Stole
College and the Unlvon!ty of Southern
cantornla. He majorod in public od-
mlnl!lraUon.
Ne.laon, h1J wife of ti yean, Marcella,
and his two children now llve in Temple
City. They plan to JllOVe to Newport
Beach u IOOll u poutble.
PASADENA STUDENTS
His daugbttr Barbara, %2, and son
Thomas, 19, are" &tudenta at Pasadena
City College.
Nelson was picked from a group of
29 applicants fer the $1~.ooo a year
job.
0 He paced finlt on our test.I," l'Qlice
Chief Glovaa • al d. "I lhoupt we bad
.. ucellent group ...
"Becall!I al bla "'l'Orlence and ......
OI uportlle. be will bring ..-ox·
perlmc:t to tbt depertmen~" Glans lld-
ded.
From Pqe l
CARTOONS .••
at a bl& colored blob on hla mulU-colored
coat
Undaunted by srttty wind and In·
tmuptlons of photographen, the talented
crew painted on. Phil waa bung up
for a moment on the design of tht
peace symbol on Queenie's pendant.
Twin brother, Frank sketched the ,ymbol
In the air and tho wa<bd raced on.
Space hu alao hem saved for carloono
by ar1111o. John llm>Pl'l' (Playboy ),
Paul Darrow. Mmln Msyen ("Soft Sell
8am", alao In the DAILY PILOT) and
Ford Jolmooa ("Moon Mulllno").
-the lul daub al polnt bad -!>lacod. the...., led by Norma Noh!Jer,
l>Iayen s-ril manqer, and husband
Ed, llef!Jed forth lo Saddlebock inn,
BeveJ'qel, aood talk, a c o m I c
barlendu and a peUt raven-lnued wall·
--thert alool "1th obrlmp and Yori>& """"lloda One al the was·
1fo11 -explained thal a Yorba
.oilod• " .... -Preoldml..iect Nlson11 home towD.
l!omoono eloe suggllled thal Nixon
lhould have dono Llnc:cln lot tho
Pl~. And, IO lt went u Ille
-knitbtDed.
Fro• P .. e J
AIRPORT •••
II Is '" FAA .......U.llltt and lick
al -bu beld It up. 'rho county CIDbllt bl hlld ecoountlble. It
Hurto Aid the county ohould demand
that the FAA dlftrl pianM from tho
airport If then II I low celling.
Deeplta the oppo&lllon tho IUpervllorl
ratified tho ILS qreement with Ille
federal .......,..m and filed the letter
.. 1111'• -fee ,._i.
NEW COMMISSIONER
Mrs. John Owtn
Claudia Owen
Appointed to
Parks Board
Orup County Grand Jiil"'/ member
Mn. John (Claudia) OWen bu been
appointed lo tho Newport Beach ParU,
and Remotion Cammlulon.
Mr& OWen, 1211 Marlon Lane, II the
unonfmoul IOlecllon of tho City Council.
She lllCCeeda John Downer on the
parU board, which roles on all reerea~
Uooal and beauUlleaUon matten In the
dty, subject to colDlCll approval.
Mn, Owen, wboae buabud II employed
by Phllco-Fa<d Aeronutroulc, will flnllh
her larm on the Grand Jiil"'/ In Jumary.
Her porb commlllloo tum al olllce
ezplree In June, ll'IO, Downe!-resigned
lut weet for perJODal reuona. It LI
normally a tour.year appolnbnenL
Mn. OWen WU nominated by Co\m.
cllmu Robert Sbellon, •ho pointed out
that abe bu been active tn many c.Mc
proj-. Including the United Fund, Glrl
SCOull and PTA. "I'm dellihted lo make
th1I recommendation," Hid Shelton.
CllmnUy, oho lo oervlnl on I com-
mlU.. of Newport Tamomiw, the wld ..
rqing community pil lludy.
Relldentl of Newport for nine years,
Mr. and Mn, Own have three children,
Pamela, 19; Uoyd1 17, and Sally, 18.
.... --.. -... ·-~ ..................... " ~ "' -.
Colwge oard ee
., THOMAS FOllTtJNE
Of ... o.11¥ •1• llatl'
Despite an obvious split al o n g
pbllooopblcal lines, truateel of Sooth
Onmge Comity's 8addleback Jmdor
College District have ordered district
administrators to aeet '2SO,IXKI in federal
aid to help cover building costs.
The declllon came on a W abowdowa
vote Monday ntgbl. If received, the
-y would be applied •galml the
COii al lnterbn campus bulldlnp.
Several times earlier this year, the
Issue had been skirted, wllh deadlines
for federal applications slipping by. Each
time, di!trict offlclals said they were
not adequately prepared to file for the
money.
One 1 u c b occuion two weeks 11 o
plOll!pted Tnlme Louil Zllnlk to ask
dlalrlct admlnlllralon U lheY bad nol
"fumbled the ball" by not bringing
federal aid opportunlUea lo the ottenUon
of the board unW the laat minute.
The motter camo lo a head Monday.
Auto Smashes
Into Store
In Newport
A converUble weltbound on W. Coast
lllchw11 In Newport Beach rumbled
aerou a railed divider, jumped a curb
and plunpl Into a. elothlng lllon early
this morning,
The lllon, Beacbcomber'1 Shop at :M33
W, Coast llJihwlJ, I"' clooed ot the
ti.me ot the accident, 1:80 a.m. It re-
mained cloood today u clerks picked
up the pl-.
The car, driven by Sbfrley Mulligan,
81, al Balboa, malhed through the
llOH'I plata glall window, crunched
dllplay cues and lopplod over clothing
nob. Bill of flUll and w melal puts
"'"' opnad over a. wide aru lnllde
tho llbop.
MW Mulligan, an olllco manager at
Hoa1 MlllllOf/al Hoapltal, wu holpllallz.
ed there with neck injur1... She ....
Board den Michael Colllno and.
past boml ,prealdent HIN Vogel "Id
they would have lo oppliee IJlJ' federal
aid application. ' · ·
Zllnlt, Alyn -erannoo and' l'iU!c'k
Backwl itgued that l~al tazpayers are
paying money to the federal government
and they should have ao opportunity
to aet -of II back. RlY Cllennak, college building and
Plamllnl direclor1 told the bOant be had
leamed the dlalrlct 11111 be ,0Uglble for
up to $250,000 in federal aid as ~ new
district.
The amount, matched by an equal
sum of district money, could \i•&&: toward purchase of lnterlm
which the district preuntly la leasing
in a lease-purchase arrangement, t)e said.
Board members gave these reuoot
for voUng the wa1 they did :
Zilnlt (Lal!llll& Beach) -"I'm oppoaed
to the federal rovernment taking our
mOMJ for tducaUon, but as long u
that II the ayatem and the money leaves
our district I feel we have a
responolbllllJ aet-al 11 back.• ii' ti Colllnl (Laguna lllllo) -"Desplta • ~act U J!llirts me lo Mod montf l
Wuhlqlcio ~and -iel. aono al It lioek, '
I think.JLls nmPll)'_ al tbe ~
level lo take a stand and try lo galll
the inlUaUve against 1ncre..m1 c«>
tralizat1on· of pcrnmant." · •.
Backus ~Dano· Potot) -"Belal In
edueaUon 1' l;now It II tough to . Ill"
the !!itnc• )'OU wool Whether people, '
want ~ rullze U or not we IN ~ eompeUUon with other junior coUeg , •
for money oqr -'•art~ ouL" ' Brannon (Santa Ana) -"'l'bis amountt'
to five or al• cents On Our tu ralt
for one year. It wUl save us ~
on future overrides or bond Iuues. 'lbia
mooey Is provldell t6 l!eljn>eW"dlllr1<i'J
and 1 think we shoold take advan!att
of It." ...
Vogel (TUIUn) -He Aid be II oppoaed
In principle lo fedend-atd and tile -le
who elected him e~t him , to stand
on that. He also said be ha doub!U
about atrlni!• ittaehed aild the posajhlllly
federal mqney mlghl be wlthdJ:awn after
it is promised:
Stork Too Early
Med Aid Officer Proves Know1ww
Mrs. Jack Neutleld made the Costa
M e 1 a police log for the aecood t l m e
in nine months today.
She alao made the policeman who
teaches medical aid to the enUre force
prove his knowledge.
Patrolman Dick Bersch arrlved at the
Neufield apartment at m .W Bay St.,
because the 2'1·year-old e :x p e ct ant
housewUe was having severe labor pains.
That wu at 3:25 a.m., when the y
were coming only eight minutes apart.
At 3:32 a.m., seven mlnutea: liter,
ahe had the last one.
Prepared by countle.!s classroom ap-
pearance.! in which he coached fellow
officers In the procedure, Officer Beracb
ushered a aeven·pound, nlnHUDCt baby
boy Into the W<>rld.
"Mother and ton were doing tine, '1
Bersch noted In hll report after holh
zoomed off to Orange County Medlca1
Center in an ambulaace.
Recording the medical aid report. clerk
Carolyn GU!ens noUced the name Carol
Neufleld and thought It sounded famillar,
so she checked the file.
Records showed that on last Marcil
S, Officer Bob Arnold very nearly bad
the honor of presiding at the anivaJ
oI the last lltUe Neufield.
The mother-to-be, however, made ii
to the hospllol before ohe wu.
Council Orders Plans
B I Hit r!porlod in utllfactory condition. urg &r8 Polfce ln~ton ald the acclde,nl To Hold Back Bay Flow ,
occurod momenta llftar the woman drf~ Mesa Garage lettilemy'•Reltaurantpuklnglolaboul Newport Buch city councilmen Mon-bulkhead ii 1oo low for blgh tid<I and
a bloclc east of the Beachcomber'• Sbop day told the engineering llalf lo prepue is "faUlng fast." He said last w~'•
Bur11art broke into a garage and a on the oppollte 'llde ol the hllbway. plaol to hold bact the bay near Newport high tides washed over the bulkhead
car In Colla Mesa Tuesday, llWlnl She told ofl1cerl that llllt blacked out and also backed up storm drain ouUeta,
more than teOO worth of appliances ana and loll control of the car. Police 1ald Island. bubbling up Into the streets.
camera equipment, police said today. abe may have stepped on the accelerator Publlc Works Director Joeph T. Devlin A new, higher concrete bulthead and
Lewla }{. Hlmmelrlch, ot 1103 Balboa won authori&aUon to design a new gate.s to drop in front of the ouUet.!
Ave., Balboa, • at d aomeone look Im lnolead al the broke wblle maklnl a bulkhead at tho end of Short Street, during blgh Udo sieges are needed, he
worth of 1oocll, moolly cameru and lane clwlp. overlooking the Rlallo Channel, and to said. Total c:Q,;1 he esUmated at IU,000.
equlpmen4 from the trunk al bla parked Demap lo the lbop wu not yet design Udal ptes for two storm drain Alter receiving council approval to
car. delarmlned, but fJ u:pecled lo be more oulleta In the channel. begin plens, Devlin Mid comtrucUoo
Th e vLctfm Mid th e theft occurred than 11,000. · Devlin Aid the p...-wooden city would start within six monlba.
either u South Coast Plaza Shopping ir=========================:::,:;,,;;;;,;;;,;,;;;;,::;;:::,=:;;:====~==;;,;=::=:=:==~====; Center, or at the company be 0WD1,
ilelCllll Controll Inc., In& Monrovia
Ave., Costa Mesa.
A aewtna machine and two btcyclea
worth mi were stolen trom the home .
of Otcar Holl, 1173 Loyola Ave., by
IOMIODe who eoetred the garage, the
vlctfm told police.
Newport Wreck
Hurts Mesa Girl
A Costa Meo girl was Injured Tu<lday
night in a four-car rear end cotlillon,
in wh.ich a Newport Beach man escaped
injury, police said today. '
Phyllis V. Ratti, 18, of 894 Joann
St., was driving 80\lth on Newport
Boulevard 1pproachlng 18th Street when
her car coWded with a string of stopped
vehicles, poUce said.
Andrew F. Fo, ~. or 700 Lido Park
Drive, Newport Beach, w a s not hurt
when hls car was rammed, driving It
Into another driven by Marlhall J. Styli,
a, of 473 Ogle St., Costa Mesa.
1111 /J!yli car ,... bumped forwml
l n t o a fourth vehicle, b u t the drlver
left wlthoul bothering lo make a report,
due to no damage.
From Page l
THIEU •.•
Ambauador Pham O.ng Lam, now
Salsan'• observer In Parta: .
Diplomatic 11011reU In Saigon r.porlod
thel ..... dralll of the u, s. llatem111t
(If --which lod lo 8efam'• deelllon to -r the Pll?la talks WU
submitted to Ule Thieu government
before II appioved tho wonting .
They Aid H. 8, and South Vlelllamae
diplomats conferred on tht phrulng for
iwo wet.U belwe lbleu finally 11v1
approval.
The llalamenl reassured South Vlal-
nam that tbt United Slates oppoood
the lmpoelllon of any coefJUon govom-
m4111 with tbt Communllla on Soulll
Vietnam and promlaed Saigon ... lead-
"" role" In dilcualON concernlni
polllleal -· Obw1n Mid 'that Tltl111'o decllton
lo end Ille boyeoll probably --from a Bl'<lwtnc rullzotloa that lhol'I
wu littlt support f0< hll ooolUon outalde
South Vlttnun. 11>e)o oafd Tltleu reell1
had no allemoU" but to ._ to enter
the talks evantual'1 bul apporenU, fell
he could -.-hll 'hand ..,. ,...
crutlnaUoo.
'f,
•
'
The true pr.ok>uanen of a 14K gold Omeoa br1ce1et watch Is In the love that goes
With n. '1111 Omaa• you gift or ric•lve today wlii bocomo a proud pereonol pone•
1lon ... preolout beyond compare tor what It aymbollzta.
W/thln each elegant cau It th9 p .. r!eu Omega movement. Each part 11 made with
mttlculoua care to glvt yeara of faithful ~rformance. Even the diamonds are loupe-
rnapected to uaure fl1wl111 quallty and ptt1Ktlon of ootor, cut and br'llllano•
Jtt ovr complttt collectlon of Omega watohea for mtn and women, $05 to over
;1000.
A ... 14 ft..-. 1U: ION ....._ 'lftteti, •••••, •• tlOO.
1-1...: .... '*"'"""" .......... ~ ....... .... c .. 11~1..c.., ~ .............. ..,..
ltJI NEWl'OU AYE. COSTA MESA
ll Y .. n 1,. Tt,e s • .,.. Lec:etlet1
• ..
..
L~-..:....--------....:0-.-----------------
... DAA.Y P1LOf JJ.
Wednesday's Oosing Prices -Complete New York Stook Exchange List
•
.,_ ... _ct! VOW JONEI AYKllAllES tt..---dl'b; ----~ 'D.i---i '1111:.i---ct! .II ~ ; ~~.~~ .... ,,~-·-,} ll £a.. f tt..~"l:" J_.11",lll!1m;· .. JI.. oll \Ill :Ill li:i ~'no I~ t.. Ill: II :,:·u . J .:, IM ,,,'T..r.tt-.. 'ft'i_ ~~-WOOIWlit'IPI , ,n ,. L ,. + =~ ~ llt m ilr i&m+ ,.. .... 111 fr' r ,__ E::"=t-.._ ~=-v ..
+ JlR 214.• Z77.JI f7.H~ + f: ' , • --V' 1•·11 '.f;f, llt.R · -t . • ':".:'.'.~.~ .. ~.~.~:it ·. Amer1·can Stock Exchange Oosmg· 1
; ~.· .......................... . '.'
Borax Pays
Directors of United Siiia
Boru • Chlrnlal Corp.
meeting hi Loo Ang 1I11
declared a quarlerly dividend
of ~ C<llll per lbaro .. UJe Ut.t,te common I'll are a
01llllandlng. '""' dividend " payable Dec. ti to
otockholdm ol record Nov.
29.
' I
'
t
-.. ···-"· . -. . -
DAILY PILOT EDITOIUAL PAGE
-.. . . . • . . . ....... -. -·-~-·· . . --. .... ...
,,,_
•
City Income From Oil?
'Don't worry about leftovers whiJ_, I'm around!'··
'~:~
• • A deleiatton of Newport and Costa Mosa oflidals
t<IW'ed dlsguJsed oil i~atioos In Los Angeles lasl
week.
The tour, a highly instructive one, was arranged by
the Standard and Oecidental oil companies.
Need one ask what the oil companies had in mind:'
And they succeeded in making their polnl , judging
from the reactions of ttlose who took the trip.
There wa!!I no questioning it. Everyone was impress-
ed by the neatness, the lack of noise and the nearly
total disguise bf oil operations. And the visions ol a giant
new source of income Inllst have danced in their heads.
But it was, it should be remembered, a guided tour.
The exhibits were ·carefully selected. There are other
exhibits -just as typical of what the oil industry can
do -just a few ugly miles upcoast.
No Time to Dilly-Dally
There were two news stories concerning the New·
port Freeway last week.
One dealt with the decision by the State Highway
Commission to reopen hearings on the routing of the
freeway's southern -terminus. The other dealt with state
plans to widen the existing portion of th·e freeway, be-
ginning next summer.
What the two stories together add up to is this:
·There bad better not be much dilly-dallying over
resolving the freeway route choice from mid-Costa
Mesa to tbe coasL The rest of the freeway isn't going
to watt..
Media Are
Being Blamed
For Troubles
CHICAGO -A lluJe post election
travel produces a strong impression that
the news and entertainment media,
particularly in electronic fonn, are. being
held responsible for a large portion ·of
the nation'• troubles.
People have the lingering feeling that
radi~ TV and the presc to a lesser degree
have built up and promoted racial
clisordei', leftist demonstrations, campus
rebelliona, the smoking of pot and the
mullsh behavior of the younger genera·
tJon. and htve created an atmosphere
condoning and encouraging violence.
Nothing draws a more favorable
response from audiences than self
criticism by a speaker from the news
media pleading mea culpa on behalf
of bls colleagues, if not himself.
THIS ACT OF abnegation draws to
the platform sympathize!! from the au-
dience who express their views to the
speaker when he is fini.sbed. They say
that what bothers them most is a com·
bination of opinionated news com·
mental.ors and writers and the way the
electronic media lends itself to e1·
agg~ating and promoting violence and
disoniet.
Citir.ens, despairing of self policing
by the news and entertainment media,
.are beginning to take things in their
own bands. Their concepU of how to
go about shaping up radl~TV and the
press are often not genUe.
At a recent meeting of the American
Petroleum Instltu.te one of the world's
richest men, H. L. Hunt of Texrui,
distributed literature promoting the
formation of his newest organization,
Le.ague for Liberty, which Mr. llunt
said would begin "policing" the news
media. "Actually we won't do it
ourselves, but will have the i:;dvert.isers
do it. I assume they can do it." Mr.
Hunt 1a.id.
LEAGUE FOR LIBERTY is anti-com·
munisUc., moralistic and patriotic. It is
seeking support f r o m 0 entitie.s which
advertise extensively·• -In other words,
companies with substantial advertising
budgets whose officers or advertiaing
directors might be expected to have
some influence with editors and publish·
us.
Each month a bulletin will be issue(!
to members of the League "calling mcm·
hers' attention to the TV networks, radio
networks or groups of independent sla·
tiooli which are giving the Liberty sidt \
the best presentation in enlertain1ncnt
as well as pubUc 11.ff:iir1."
Mr. Hunt"s brochure con t I n u es:
''Serious atudy of the. Leillgue for Llbarty
•
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Is tt true that the new "singles
only" apartments are going to be
called "The Rabbit Warren"?
-E.S.P.
ni. ,..,_ f'llfJtal "•Ott'S" • ....., ... -Jarlly 1119,. If ""' _ ... ,_ s.114
t.w Mf -t. GleMl!t Oua, DlltY ,u.I,
bulletin will enable mambers to support
Liberty as far as practicable by
allocating part of their budget to the
media in each communications £ield
which is best serving the cause o{ Liberty
and thereby be entitled to a cmifidential
citation of honor."
THIS IDEA OF A veiled boycott or
intractable news and ent-ertainment
m e d i a also h a a occurred to Bruce
Palmer, executive director or the Na·
tional Industrial Conference Board. He
rectntly told southern n e w s p a p e r
publishers that a great many big ad·
vertisen art on the board of his
organization and be could through them
call an advertising boycott of the bad
actors in the radio-TV business who
are promoting violence a n d discontent,
but decided not to do it that way.
Instead, he has enlisted Bob Hope as
the spiritual leader of a new m o r a I
crusade and just how he will handle
raclio-TV's promotion of violence and
discontent will be announced later.
One of the distressing aspects of lhe
vigilante attempt to shape up th~ com·
munications media is that it takes ad-
vantage of what otherwise is a com·
mendable effort by corporate leaders
to get themselves involved in the solutiion
of national problems.
TIDS IS GOING ON in many big
industries as they address themselves
to economic aspects of the race problem,
or fae up to air and water pollution,
public safety and the municipal ugliness
created by garish, dilapidated and filthy
gas stations and other retail ouUets.
A large part or the present generation
of corporate leadership recognizes the
self int.erest in becoming involved in
improvement or the environment and
human bettenoenl The old Ideas of
the public be damned are no longer
practical instruments or corporate policy.
It is something else again when cor·
porate po'A·er is used to influence public
policy by advertising in some media
and withholding advertising from other
media.
This does not change the fact that
there is a strong underCllrrent running
in public opinion against the methods
of the communications media, and the
tJ:ecutlve teadenhip of the media will
ignore it or brush it aside at its perit
'Decorator Accents'
• • •
' .
wUI fill !he vacuum by anoptlng to
Ii.elf the realm ol promoting !he general
interest. whether rilbily or wronal,y. • • •
The dttreruing amount or !Wlllght we get, due to in~asing air pollution, may
tum out to have grave lo~-lenn geneUc
effect.I on the human organi!rn., a!nce
r~t research Indicates thnt the
amount o! tight enterlna the eyes ol
•rllmals 11 proporUonate to thcir rcsi&I·
ll>Ct to lnlt'CUon and tOJ.lcily.
Next summer. according to the Division of fligb·
ways , work will begin on the Jl.6 miUion widening pro-
ject, whlch wUl see a 13-mile stretch expanded from
four to six lanes.
·rttat means a Jot more traffic \Viii be dumped on
Costa Mesa's surface streets -and very quickly.
If the new hearings on the yet to be constructed
portion of the route are not expedited, and related steps
by the state are not taken with reasonable promptn~ss.
the entire Harbor Area in a few short years could find
Itself in a traffic nightmare of epic proportions.
Bold, But Sad, Project
A group 'oC Harbor Area mothers bas embarked on
a bold, but sad, project.
They have taken it upon themselves to finance
supplemental teaching of their children.
Last week, the mothers received Newport Beach
city permission to use the Riverside Avenue Scout liouse
as a private "schoolhouse."
'fhey explained to the Parks Commission that their
youngsters are on half.-day sessions, and that isn't
enough. So the mothers hired a teacher to provide the
other half-day oC schooling. All they needed was a place
for the instruction.
Parks commissioners were very sympathetic. Use
oC the Scout House was swiftly approved, but with a con·
dition. It was 11only for the duration of Ute emergency."
That emergency should not last much beyond the
next scbool bond election.
I
N
Reader Disagrees 01a Cause of UC Troubles
'Science, Ethics Are Reciprocal~
To the Edit.or:
ln the Nov. 13 DAILY PILOT an
article by Dr. John W. Oswald suggested
that the University of California i.9 in
trouble with its supporting society
because it is making a greater e.rrort
than most institutions to meet today's
problems. As a layman, with limited
knowledge or the subject, 1 respecUully
disagree with the doctor's diagnosis. The
problem is that the university bas not
been vigorous enough in articulating the
frontiers of NEEDED knowledge.
lN THE PAST the univer~Jty•s main
thrust was in the physical sciences rather
than ·social sciences. There were two
main reasons for this orientation. Neither
of them is valid. The first reason is
that physical sciences are both simpler
and more uiilitarian than social scie:lces.
The bewildering complexity of atomic
physics is far simpler than making sense
out of human relations. The s2cond
reason for overemphasiting tecllllology
is that a deep commitment for social
problems put the university in the sticky
business of making ethical judgments.
Unfortunately, our tradition has largely
exCluded the educator's right to be wrong
at times. This has tended to drive the
university toward simpler areas or scien·
tiflc precision.
THE FIRST proposition is not valid
because technological knowledge has an
optimum yield of benefits beyond which
it adds less and less to human happiness.
The atom bomb is an example of ex·
ceeding optimum results. The second
proposition is not valid because the
energies of science and ethics must
evolve with equal powers for they are
conjunctive and reciprocal; neither can
stand alone. To pursue a strong science
with a weak spiritual attitude is like
harnessing a percheron and a shetland
pony together to pull a cart.
TlfE UNIVERSITY, in the past. has
aUnirably advanced scientific know.ledge
and technology. Can it now structure
the spiritual values that will ameliorate
the desLructive power of its own science?
I can hear the objections! "This iiJ
the role of the church.'' But i.s it entirely?
Should the highest seat oC learning pro-
vide endless scientific knowledge while
dismissing a moral value system to
control the power or science? In our
system of separation of church and state.
should the university interpret the prin-
ciple so conservatively as to inhibit
ethical education?
TODAY YOUNG people all over U1e
nation sense the imbalance between
technological power and e t h i c a 1
sociological power, and are fulminating
"·itlf frustration , knowing that the
materials to produce cornucopias are
at hand, but where are the mean! or
knowledge to produce peaceful, happy.
human rel11tions? Putting it another way,
will a round trip· to the moon have
much value to a society where huge
populations jn urban centers. like pitiful
"·ou'!dcd animals, scream with social
pain?
JOHN A. MACDONALD
UCI Student llousl119
To the Editor :
l w~h to lbank Ille DAILY PILOT
and the many real estate agencies and
resident& Jn the community for their
cooperaUC11 ln helplna UC Irvine to e.ue
a severe lhortage In student houslnl
UU. fall .
Apptlcaliona for stuaent housing oa
campus exceeded our capacity by more
than 600. Al the result of. an article
you published ind an immediate respoNe
from ~ community. mort than 200
111udents were able to f l n d IC·
commodaUOM near the campus.
Hopefully, U\lJ c:ooperatJve: spirit wlU ,\
LetteTs from readers are welcome .
Normally writers should convey their
message in 300 words or less. The
Tight to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
letters must include signature and
mailing address, but names ma11 be
withheld on rtqust if sujficiclt rea·
ron ii apparent.
•
continue next fall, at which timt Our
student housing shortage is expected to
be even more acute.
DANIEL G. ALDRICH, JR.
Chancellor, UCI
Balance, Pet'#peclhle
To the Editor:
After seeing the rooming newsstand
editions of several other local papers
in whJcb a UCI protesting group was
given the usual front page headline treat·
ment, I was expecting more of lhe
same when the DAILY Pilm arrived
at noon.
It was a pleasure to find the matter
unmentioned, and instead, front page
space given to the tutorial program
being carried on by a group of UCI
students in a disadvantaged area.
I CONSIDER the inLernaI rumblings
of UC! to be or much less interest
and importance to the community at
large than what the students and faculty
at UCI are doing for, with, and in
the surround.Jng community.
This is not a request for all sweetness
and light in your reporting, but for
balance and perspective.
Congratulations also on your accurate
accowlt or Chancellor AJdrich'a remarks
to the local citizens who 1athered in
support of the Interfaith Foundation at
the university.
CHARLES HEGE SWORD
Navlgatlo11al Aids
To the Editor:
Now that the inevitable has happened,
will the Orange County Board of
Supervisors continue to deny Orange
County Airport the equipment it must
hav~ to prevent further trqedles?
Perhaps our ai.1utt supervisors could
be made to personally explain to the
fam1Ues of the latest air crash victims
why they have not approved purchase
of navigational alds desperately needed
by the airport. . ..
Dear Gcorse:
Is It true. tha( iirls always play
hard·to-eet ! Every Ume I try to
kiss my girl $he hits me kl the t)'t:
with her 1ist.
CONCERNED
Dear Conce.med:
Many glrb like lo ploy hard-to-
&~t. In your cue, however, 1
lhlnk yoor gjrl IS hanl lo g>t.
Ellher g<t a new girl. quit trying
to kW the one you have now, or
wear 1 calchtr's muk when you
!)Ark.
(Send your problems lo CfeorRe.
On aecood thouah~ would II be O.K.
U wt atnt Georte to your pro-
blems!)
The Federal Aviation Agency, as well
as the Airport management, have been
denied their requests by the non-pilot
county government officials.
Do we need more innocent victims
before the importance of proper naviga·
tional aids is evidenced?
MARTIN LEV AN
SDS a Si11ister Force
To the Editor:
Perhapr you woµldn"t have1 wiitten
a r~t editorial condemning Clay
Mitchell, president o! the Orange County
School Board of Education, ii you were
aware of a booklet circulating on some
local campuses, Including high schools,-
titled "Toward a Student Movement"
and according to its fly leaf distributed
by the Students for a Democratic Society.
In case there Is any question that
SDS doesa't intend to be a sinister
force in regard to protests over Jong
hair, etc., may I quote you a few
}:laragraphs from this booklet:
0 THE lllGH SCHOOL campus ii
already eiperiencing great confllcts.
Dozens of underground high school
newspapers have been started across
the country. In many places, high school
students have organized themselves:
over everything from long hair to the
w a r in Vietnam. At one Los Angeles
high school, 30 students sat-in over lunch
and burnt their student activity cards
in prot.est of the cancellalion of an
assembly. At another school, over ISO
11tudenta picketed the administration
building in protest of Congressmen •••
We are supposed to identify with the
doers, and look down at the rest or
the people frvm our percll as legislators.
We don't have to deal with pollce who
aren't our friends, foot·long rats, and
slumlords. We deal In the polite world
ol committees, and are carefully shielded
from the horrors U1ose committees are
responsible for.
" •.• THE LOS ANGEL.ES student
ment underwent a very interesting
genesis 1n a year. Th.legs started with
an attempt to form a city-wide student
right.! organization, and much of the
actJvltY cent.ered around hair and
news~pers. Within seven months, there
was a group called High School Students
Against the War, with people at JO
campuses, and over 50 active members
which was able to get over 200 high
school students o u t for 1 dtmonstra·
ti on •.. "
The SOS ha.t been expo$00 11 a major
contributor to violence. and disruption
in practically all major universities'
demonstraUons.. Certainly, Mr. Afltchell
is justified in alerting the students to
the purposes of the SOS before it
becomes a diarupUvt forct on Uie high
&cboo& and Junior ... col.lep. level as it Is
on lht university level.
A. S. SCHALL
ll1il•o••'• 11n11exoilon
To I.he EdJlor.
I'm dellehtt!d that Costa Mesa Vice
Ma)'Or Bob Wibon advocates annexation
of Baja Calllomia, and the bl'lllllng
ol American cu.lturt thereto.
Where lhett DOW °"' only mlles ol
tm!Oud>ed beauty, uninhabited arid
-rt, lbarp bl>c'k volcanic peakl, and
bays and 1'hlte beaches without number,
there could be ~ated another outpost
for tbe American Way of Life.
The translllon would not be dUflcull
First, Wilson mu.st make arr1ni.gcmenta
to roll nat U\e a:lant cactus, thtn pave
tbe area with &ood black asphl;Jl. Next,
traffic signals must be erected. Thirdly.
thousands of utility poles m\15t bcl put
In place to be festooned with myriad '------------J 1'ffirta. The n«NJ 1tgm al>ould be added
quickly to beautify lhe landscape and
enhance the background.
THE OTHERWISE barren rock o(lt.
croppings at Santa Ynez should be
painted with "Jesus Saves." Eight filling
statiom and 36 beer bars should be
sufficient to serve the residents of that
rancho, who must number a good round
dozen. The sadly vi'inding streets of·!ian
Ignacio should be squared off for tract
housing, and the homes should be built
without sidewalks along these straighten-
ed streets. The MnS of the chapel
at La Purisima could easily be renovated
and turned into a bowling alley.
Perhaps Viet: Mayor Wilson might even
prevail upon Col. Sanders to smile down
from hla 'bucket in the sky onto the
populace of Co5ta Mesa del Sur. Ralph
Williams could be invited to merchandise
automobiles.
AND, OF COURSE, eligible volcr!I· of
this peninsular establishment 0 r
Americana should be instructed to vote
"No" on all school, college and public
facilities funding issues. This would put
education and local governmeat on equal
terms with that in the parent community.
A mayor would have to be elected.
The first thing he should do ls seek
acquisition of Borneo so that the cultui'al
magnificence of Costa ~1esa could ·be
extended there also.
BULLY FOR Wilson. He has been
able to see clearly that remote, sparsely
populated areas. where people only fi11h
raise cotton, harvest dates, and hus~
cattle, areas where people are ktnd,
lriendly and willing to offer a helpitlg
hand to a stranger, are so Jacking ·in
charm, that they should be msde iDto
exact replicas of our flawless cities.
Now that everything hss been fiX:ed
in Costa Mesa, jt's really wonderful
to see one of our leaders strike dit
to apply bis exquisite skill in other
areas. Beautiful. •
DAVE EPPERS6N
End of Editorial
Chestertown, Pi1d., News: "An edl~I,
in another newspaper, observed: 'OACt
upon a time, people saved their msit;ty
tbinkhlg it would be worth more lattt.:
End of editorial."
Fulton, !\.111s., Times: ''Elcess&e
speed continues to hold top spot in the llsl
or acci~~nt causes. with reckless strf'(tlg
and dr1v1ng on the wrong side or the rad
taking second and third places re~
tively. Pedestrians were at (ault ln.J'Olll1
of the fatal accidents, with troKlhg
between intersections being the topJdJlf:S'.
Youthful .dri vers bold the ~
responsibility on the highway d~lJ!t.
Almost one third of the drivers lnVol-.
in fatal accidents were under 25 year .. ·or
age.,, -I> J .~ ,. . .. -• '
-----Wednesday, Nov. Tl, 1968
The cdftorlal page of tht Daa~
Pilol ..... to mform cmd •tlm-
ulcU readcn bg prc1entlng Wt
11t1Dfpaptr'• optntona end coft.1'
t'Mfltar\t on topict of intntd
cmd rignl/icance, bv providlng ;.
forum f()'r the 1.ipra1tioft *l-
our reoder1· opfntcnu, ond bt.
prtstnting the dfvtrtc vMtw-
potnt.s of informed obstrvera
a,uf ipokesmen on topics of tht da~.
Robert N. Wte<t, Publhber
I • • I I
ol
"' ..
..
hi ..
" ..
u
11 ,.
~ L
" ..
f(
)''
II
" to
IJ
c ,,
0
8' ..
. . .
' '1, -:--. -~ ·.:
~osaa
VOL 6~·. NO. 7tf5, 3 SECTIONS, 30 P>,GES
Mesa Today's Oodag
EDITION
.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA" WEDNESDAY, NoVE!;iBER 27, 1968 TEN CENTS
Reds OK Expanded Talks
AgreeUJ£nt Comes After South Ends Boycott
DA.ILY ,II.OT Sf'ltf ....,. ' CORONA DEL MAR'S 'VIP' KIDS A PAL
Virgil Partch Dabbled in .Laguna's Palnt·ln
Cartoon Alley
Coast Gagmen Paint Theater Fence
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of ,... 0•11' '"" '""
The sign carried by the militant little
old Laguna lady in tennis shoes said,
"Don't rent to actors."
"That's Frank fnterJandi. He's the
political one. HlB brother PbU is the
aexy cne," confided an 1rtisf spect.ater.
Frank was hard, al work with paint
pot and brush ettaUng -a b}aer·than-llfe
cartoon on a fence panel eight-feet hl.gb
and four;feet wdif!.
Nearby, his twin brollt<r Phil had
his pert syndicated blonde, "Queenie"
&aYinC1 "U all the Wcrld is a st.age,
where are all the actor•! All I know
are clowns." Queenie apPeara da1!.,y in
the DAJL Y PILOT.
The theatrically orleqled i:arlooM £rom
l b e Dying bro>ltel. of llx ~ mtn
"""' 1lll'I of the .... 1-·lleach palol·ln Tuelday at !ht !tli, <# .llu,. new .
LOJ(lna·Moullon Playboou "'"' under
comtruction.
Al artisl-<>rganlW, Ed 'Nofilger buml·
ed thitbm' and )'Of!:, the fence came
to Ute In v!Ytd !l!dl, bloo, gr<tns ·and
yellows, a ralnbo'lt' eljbt feet high and
100 f.,l Jong.
When the rpce has llttVed Ill !tint
~round the 1oun4ation . of the 35G-aeal
theater, It will be auctioned panel by
panel.
Proceeds from ' sale or the original
works will go to the building fund
for the $450,IXX> facility that is to be
complett'd next April adjacent the
Festjval of Arts grounds on Brpadway.
Down the fence from the Interlandis,
Virgil Partch t VIP) of COrona de! Mar
wielded his btuah over· "Big George."
Sealed on a bar stool, George Is .saying
to Ole bartender, "ll you think I'm
a bad actor, you ou&tit· to see Phil
lnt.erlandi." 1
Former Laguna ochOQl·boml pr..idenl
n·o n Tobin wu a ~e pal)Jd as he
fa<;d Ute boardl'. He bad risen from
a bout with the Do, I
Tobin'• .. The Uttle Woman" (g wearing
furs and commea~, 1"l'd like to be
a.filat olgbter but.1'i'D al1'ay• late." RoS<r Ann11rong'1 .hep(J)' dog, arx4eet
high, with lar&e longut !! eully !pOlted
as the long famout Napoleon from the "N~looo and llncle Elby'' strip.
''Out Damned Spot," says Nofrlger's
"Animalogic" looking io comic dillnay
at a bit colored blob on blnnultkolor<d
c<ial
Undaunted by grilly wind and b"
terruptioos of ph-Otographer8, the talcnled
~(See CARTOONS, P1(t 11
PARIS (UPI) -The North Vietnamese
and Viet Cong delegations to the Vietnam
war talka today formally stated their
agreement to attend expanded meetinp
wilh Sooth Vietnam and the United
SLates, assuring an early series of down·
to-business meetings.
Diplomats said the talks might start
next week.
Assurances from the Communist fac·
lions came after South Vietnam ended
Ousted UCI
Prof Blasts
Dept. Head
Dr. George Kent, one of thrH UC
Irvlne dist.ant pro!es,,ors slated to los~
their jobs, today launched a bitter
personal attack on the ebalrman of his
department, history Professor Henry C.
Meyer, calling for Meyer's "impeach·
ment" before a campus gatherk'lg of
about 500 persons.
"There is no procedure for dealing
with petty tyranny and egomania," said
Ken~ during a conclave called by UCI
Student Body President Ron Ridgle ol
Los Aneeles after the contract termina·
lions were disclosed last Week.
In opeatng the conclave this morning,
Ridgle said: "These !lrlnp without any
substantive reasons or justification ccur
not and will not be tolerated."
But Dr. Jamq McGaugh, dean of
biolo2ical sciences, told the gathering be
found" "Gffensi•e the introdtlction ~ 1our •to-body pres!dool." ' • "'1 estllllatail !lot atudenta, {8culty
nie)nbon •••f·olall,!MOlterJ .wti:a, ... hand IC( wa ~···~'1JC!'a
stodellt body IOt>1' about 4.000.
"'lbll 11 IOI 18 IQ to'~. llo.11
Ume foC' solemn nvlew," 1Wd McGalJ&h. · He .aid · itudeiils CQClld CIJ!ltrlbute to
,existing faCllltY iov1FW· prdcedur<s by
evalualin& pro(..ssotti>d l!tdr own.
"You have bad ,..;vera)'.)'ean to cook
'up an evaluation arid yqu bf.ven't done
so " he said. . in hiJ Wk before the group, w~lcll In-
cluded !acuity members (llpPorllni the
firings, Kent, a 50-h:-old asslstant pro-
less0r of history New]lort Beach.
demanded proof of as>ert1ons by senior ·
memben of'"hls department that his pet·
(See CONVLAVE, Pap II
I
Officer Takes
Over as Stork
Jumps the Gun
Mn. Jack Neufteld made lhe Costa
M e 1 a poHce log for the second t I m e
In nine months today.
She also made the policeman who
teaches medical aid to the entire force
prove his 'knowledge.
Patrolman Dick Bersch arrived at the
Neufield apartment at 32$ . W Bay St.,
because lbe 2'1-year-old ex p e ct ant
housewUe wall having severe labor pains.
That was at 3:25 a.m., when they
were cadtl.og only eight minutes apart.
At 3:3Z a.m., seven minutes later,
she bad the Jut -· Prepared by .countless clallll'OOm ap-
pearancet in which he coached fellow
offietrs tn the procedure, OfUcer Bersch
ushered a seven-pound, nine-ounce baby
boy Into the worlil.
"MoUler and aon were doing fine ,"
Bench noted tn his report after both
zoomed ofl to Orange County Medical
Center In ID ll!lbufance. Recordlnc the medical aid report, clerk
Carolyn Giffens noticed the name carol
Neulield and tboqgbl ll sounded familiar,
so she checked the file.
Records .11howed that on last March
5,..(lffl(er Bob •Arnold very nearly had
.the honor of prtSiding at lhl arrival
o{ the la!t little Neufiekl.
The mother-~be. however, made it
lo the hospital be£ore she was.
a ~., boycott and agmd to attend
tho lllU "bicb have been conducted
unlll now oolely by Wuhlngtoo and
lllnol.
A apotmn.•o for Xuan Thuy, chief
Hanoi r.ejotlator, said bl! de1egation will
be at Uie table• The date of the first
expanded meeting will be discussed
shortly between North Vietnamese and
U.S. offlctala beblnd the 11Ce11<8.
But tben were pr®lemJ ahead.
Killed by Smoke
The Hanoi spokesman denounced. the
United States' poaltloo that the Allies
do not regard the talks u four-skied
and that both sklea would operate as
a unit -the U.S. and Saigon, North
v letnam and the Vlet Cong -in an
"our side, your side" arfangement.
As expected, South Vietnamese Presi·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu named Vice
.President Nguyen Cao Ky, the Viet
Coog's public enemy No. 1, to supervise
Lido Socialite
Perishes in ·Fire
Newport Beach socialite Georg I a
Spence Davis, ex-wife of a prominent
Laguna Beach land developer, died Tues-
day rrlght when flames and smoke swept
through her Lido Isk! home.
The Otange County Coroner's office
said Mrs. 'Davis, SS, of 141 Via Trieste,
died of suffocation.
Firemen found her lyln& unconscious
on her soot-covered bed just before mid-
nighl . .
The living room of the single-story
home wa.s totally Involved in flames
·when llrenjen arrived. .
~ ....,. of the firmeen all4cked : u. lilUe l!'om lite lnmt of the bOillllng, otlion entexed tbrwgb 1 rur bedl<(Cllll ~,--,...~--llone JO !lie 1iowie. ' Firemen -attempted teslllcl\8.Uon u
they '!'l!led an ambulanci!. Mrs. Davis
.never, ft#linecl consciou.sneas. Sbe wu .
pronoanced dead on arrival at Hoag
Memciial Hospital. (f'
Investigators said' caµse of the firt
was not immediately known. They wa.
however, that its origin wa1 a corner
ol the living room.
Damage was esUmated at. fl5,000,
Mrs. Davis wu formerlf DlAl)'ied to
Everet't Davis, Jr., dtveloper of Laguoa.'1
Rancho Laguna estates ·In Bluebird Can-
ron. The Davises made their home
1n Laguna. She moved to Newport after
the divorce fiVe years ago.
Her traglc death shocked her many
Lido Isle friends.
She was active in the Udo Isle
Women's Club, serving as books secUon
chairman ~t year; and wa1 on the
decorations committee of lhe Women 's
Cli.tb.
SUCCUMBS IN BLAZE
Mrs. Georgl• S. Devis
The attractive aoclalite V,·survived by
her mother, Mrs. RU<iy Brandt, of C.OSLa
Mesa; ,ind two daughters by a marriage
prior 'to the Davis marriage.
Last rites art pending · at Baltz
f.1ortuary in Corona del Mar.
Noise Foe Says County
Can Regulate Airport
There i! no legal foundation for the
contention that the Board of Supervisors
cannot regulate the nwnber and type
of planes flying oct oC Orange County
Airport, Daniel Emory, chairman of the
Airport Noise Abatement Committee, told
supervisors TUesday.
Emory, a Newport Beach re!ident,
spoke a1 supervl&on voted \o recelve
and file a report. stating that Rep. James
B. UU'a proposal that fees be charged
airllnes based on the noise factor was
"not within ~ legislative authority of
Orange County."
The noise crlUc u.ld the deciaJon was
based oo a "federal bureaucrat's opi·
nion" and bad no Jecal weight. He aald
Ille q-uon ci local cootrol of alrporll
had never been decided In Ille courta.
Emory said his group would meet
soon wUh the Assembly Transportation
CommiUee art!. tD'ge a plan lor tbe
state to intervene in airport ·control
matters. He sajd..llle &tate Aerooautlos
Board lhould rnle on all mooey llTAnted
by Ille federal government to local
airports and take over control.
Emory al80 had some thouah&s on
an Instrument Landing System (tl.S)
agreement between the county and the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
He said installation lf ~· would make
the airport more aUractive to airllnea
and be of no help to private flyers.
He tD'ged thal, even with IL.S. ln·
1tallatlon, the present limits on vlslblllly
ceilings be retained to promote lalely.
Emory, 2250 Gol<l<n Circle, waa joined
by William Barria, :1012 Anchor Wxy,
Newport Beach. another critic of airport
policies. Harrls)ald he was at the al'rport
having dinner Saturday night and vlalbill·
ty ·was so poor y ou could not see
acrou the runways.
He laltt the cable Comaiuter Airline
plane which crashed 1hoWd never hAYe
been allowed to leave Los Angeles. He
warned that slmllar acclderita could hap-
pen any night and cilled the airport
"poor I)' managed." ,
Churches Offer .Thanksgiving Rites
Supervisor William J. PhllliP1.aald the
county was not to blame for the late
lnst.lllaUon or n.s. i.we agreed llOme
yeara ago, in lMO to install the rystem.
n ls an FAA reaponalblllty and llck
ol money has held Jt up. The county
cattnot-.be held .ccoun\able."
Harrla Said the ooonty lhould d<mlnd
that the Fl/A divert plonei from the
airport u there 111 low ce111n1.
Delplto the opposition the .... perYfaon
r1tllled the D..li ..,......i with Ille
lederll sovernment and ntect' the letter _ ... uw111011er .. ~1r-, --MallJ' ~Arel~ have atheduled apectat' Tblll ' vfn& 8erv1cu
tonflht IDd 'lbun<IOY kt ewpoit B<acb
IDd Colla Mtaa ..-11.
Jlltalll "' Ille ~ ·~ . Ctntral Bible OIUn:b; -and Orang .. <:-. Mt11: ~ pralle service at
9:31· a.m. 11\unday.
Oonu del Mar Community Cljurch,
·...i, lit ~ Ave.:
el I o 'clDclr JoniC)>I In tile
I .. . "
SkMlcbatl'I and All.Allgtll Eplacopal
Church, ms Paolflc view Drive, conma
del Mar: 'lbere will lte an annual
"lngatherlnc" ot I o o d &ifil !ct t b e
Eplacopal Home !or Cblldroo on nmr.
dxy.
Newpoit Harter Lutheran Oturch, ~t
CIUI Drive: A 1mlce will be tield at
t a.m. Thllrlday.
Lutheran Church of I lu Master, llOO
P>Cllic View Ori""; eor... del Mar, /
A wonhlp will be conducted ot 7 :311
tonight. The message will be "A Dxy
of Prxyer and Thanksgiving." The seni«
chair wtD ling.
The Flrlt United Methodilt Church,
GO W. lttb St .. Colla Met1: The choir,
u n d e r the dJrectlon of Gerald Olsen,
. wlll present special music at a xnlce
at 10 a.m. Thundxy In tbl sanctuary.
:;t. Andrew'• ptesb>'t<rlon Church, eoo
St. Andrew'• Road, Newport Beach: E.
•
--~~------~------~---'-----~-------.._
Kim Strutt wtll prucb al I .JOrVlce
at 10 a.m. Thllrlday.
PrtQCe of Peace Lptberan Olurch, 298'1
Mexa Verde Drive, Colla ~: A
Tbanbtllvlog Day Pll!Ollll will be aqed
alt .,.f 10,311 a.m. The public ii Invited.
Other Tbanb&lvinl amlcel ore tel
at all Olrlallan Sdeitoe cburc:bes aloog
tbe c Q I I t. ''Tb&nb Be Unto God f o ~
ms Un>peauble Giii." the Soldtn-~t
of the 1-.n, will be. tbl openlnc
~eme for the tervicea. .
NSW YOl\K CAI') -The lt<IU markel
tale tbil lfternoon had -matn. talnlnc I blper le•tl U 9'llmejl In
key ~ cbll!I dra1111ec1 clown \he Dow
J-llldumlal •ver... to • ioo. of •bout threo pointa. (See ~ttoos.
Pac 0.11). '
the SaJgon delegaUon.
A spokesman for the National Ubera·
Uon Front INLFI, the pollUCll wing
of the Viet Cong, deoounctd this
beforehand ond said Ky's pruence almp-
Jy proved the SouUt Vietnam reglmt
was an "American puppet."
The NLF said it would take pan
in the 'talks but would challenge SaJgon·E
claim to be legal spokesman for th,.
South.em half of the country.
Cleaver Fails
To Surrender,
Now Fugitive
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Blacl'
Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver ignored
I date for his return to prison todoy,
and an order was IMued for.hill arrest.
Cleaver was to twn himself in at
t a.m. but bad not appeared by 1:311
a.m. The California adu!t authority,
which supervises parole cases, said it
would ·wait a "reasonable thne -about
another ball hour" and then ask police
to issue an all poinls bulletin for ~
arrest.
Cleaver's wife, Kathleen, and his at·
torDey, ~harlas Garry, arrived II ihe
atate build1nt shortly before the acbedu\.
ed IUmmder time and IDIMla tbelr way
through • corridor jammod 'with allool
100 newsmen. '
Garry told ne.,smen tbal ·neiu. he
nor Mi's. Cleaver had any idea on tht
wbereaboutl of lhe Black Panthers!
"'minister of information.'' .'
"I have nol talked to him alhce -~
and I ha"" oot aeen him since 1aB1
Thursday when be made a apeecb,"
Garry aald.
Mrs. Ckaver said ahe la,t saw her
husband Sundat night. Sbe .lald she dltl
not think It pol3Jbla thal be bad fti<J
the country.
"In the first pllce I don' think be
haa had time and In the -plact
he pvt no indication be wu .leaving
the country," ahe Said. ·u1 Uiink be
is in the San Francisco Bay area."
· Mrs, Cleaver said Tuesday she hoped
her husband would not surrender.
"He has always said he Is not going
back to, the penitentiary,'.' Mrs. Cleavel'
said. "I would like to have him not
go back to prison."
When asked by what means he could
prevent it, she replied : "ADy means
necessary."
"U they use guns to force him "
she said, "he lhould uae guna not 'tc
go."
The 33-year-old militant waS arrested
for violation of parole Last April 8 lollow·
Ing a gun beWe between Oakland police
and . Black Panthers. &bby Hu~lon, a
17-year-old Panther, waa ,JdlJed and
Cleaver was wounded in the shootout.
IT'S COLD, BUT
' BURBANK COWER
Orange Coaat reafdenls bulloned l.P
their oven:oato Tlieodoi' Dlsht u bril:
winda sent temperatum I p Ira 11 ~ g
doWnward · '
Newport Beach WU the Igloo of the
coast with a 51-degree miding, but the
Los Angelea ·Civl~ Cen~ was lovtier
still with 50. Lowest In the SouthJ~
apparently, was "beautiful down
Burbank0 at 44 degrees.
Orange
The clouds will be lilp on
Thanl<agivlll(I, bul the temperature
won•1, It'll be a chllly 115 along the
coast and 75 fllrther inland under
mootly IW\ll)' RJea. •
INSmB TODA\'
Tiie lloUdoil to<lk<nd o/fm 1
numbff of thcatncal trcall
Gt01incl~ cowr,_s •• ,,.,.. -
-~l'llg•l
' ' c~ ••' c.... 2t -" --. -. --" ......... " ~ 1•11 ~ .: ........ ,. -" ........ --.
'
•
l
I
~ DAILY PILOf
Front P•fe I
CONCLAVE •••
f°"""""" -below Unlvon111 stud--· "1117 11111'• • lie,. bl .....
m=/:''!..~nr"/':
Shapiro, • JI.~ ...i.tant prolto-
.... of Englbb, look oo the enUie uni>
wnl\1 ~llm1, dla!llini lbat the ranb
of JOlllll •""'""Y memtien who are In ...... .,, dlllenol ... being aya(omal-
lc.Uy deClmalecL --Sha&; -1tudenll to "do some about I syalom 11>«1 .imoa dJssent. m not ...... to bl lMrt '"'7
long, b)lt )'Oil are. -fie 4ai4. ~
A third !aculcy -llOllllid that
lfe Will oat be rillal~ -~of~-·-.~ wu to SPeak u tile euuc.ve headed lato
the afternoon.
Earlier, Dr. Kenneth Ford, a pl\yB-
lcl.st who serves u chairinan or t1te· uct
Academic Senate, said t.acher ev-1ua· tion Is the one areo._ln wblcb ~pa
tion or &1,udeoll lo linlvtn!IY. piacltCa
is not possible. ~· • -~ · " · -:
Connlllinll about Ille flrlhp _.
!rom siud-whtl<sald•the -im. ~:.
ant pm....... "" amooi ucr. -bat
lnstrucion. •
l'rOm Pa9e , I
CARTOONS •••
crew palnled on. Pbll was hwig up
ror a moment on the design of the
p e a c e symbol on Queenie's pendant.
Twin brother, Frank sketched the l}'IDbol
ln the air and the worked raced on.
Space bas allo been aaved for cartoons
by artist.5. John Dempsey (Playboy),
Paul Darrow, Marvin Meyen {"Soft Sell
Sam", also In the DAILY PILOT) and
Ferd Johnson (11Moon Mulllna").
When the last daub of paiDt had been
placed, the crew led by Norma Nofziger,
Pl8'1ert1 general manager, and huaband
Ed, sallled forth to Saddleback Inn.
Beverages, good talk, a c o m l c
bartender and a peUt raven-tressed wait-
""" blended there along wllb obrimp and Yorba enchiladas. One of the wag-
gi!h cartoonisll explained that a ·Yorba
enchilada ls one from President-elect
Nixon's home town.
Someone else suggeslod lbat Nixon
Bhould have done Lincoln for the
Playhouse. And, so it went as the
shadows lengthened.
Burglars Hit
Mesa Garage ' .
BW'glan broke into a garage and a
car In Colla M.,. Tuesday, ateallng
more than $600 worth of appliances and
,:am.era equipment, police said today.
Lewis H. Hlmmehich, o! 1103 Balboa
Ave., Balboa, s a t d someone took $392
worth of goods, mosUy cameras and
equipment, from the trunk of his parked
car.
, Tb e victim said t h e theft occurred
either at South Coast Plaza Shopping
Center, or at the company he owns,
Descent COotrola Inc., 1789 Monrovia
Ave., Costa Mesa. .
-' BAUBLES AND BANGLES -Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley
(left), 1968 Junior Miss Lynn Harris, and pageant cbainnan Lonny
Maurer e:samlne decorations in preparation for city's annual Christ·
mas Decoration and Miss Tinsel contests.
Tinselist Sought
Jaycees Launcli Beauty Contest
Enttfes are now being accepted in
!he Colla Meaa Junior Chamber ol Com·
merce'1 Miss T1n.sel Contest, wlth ·the
wlnner,compeUng u the Jaycees' Junior
Miss later.
Pruldelll Bob Shipley announced lbat
J8'1cee Lonny Maurer la chairman o!
the popular cooteat, wblch ls open to
all glrla In the Newporl-Meaa Unified
Sclloo1 Dl!lrtcl
Appllcanla for a chance to 11.1cceed
1968 Jnnlor Mlxs Lynn llarrll are
available at each area high 1chool throulh COUJ1!eiors, prior to the Dec.
13 Junior Miao-Miss Tinsel Pageant al
E-cla Hlgb SChool.
The winner will receive a $300
ochnlarahlp, accordina to co-chlirman
Jobil Nusser, with a cba11ce to compete
in Orange County finals, then state and
perhaps national contests.
-Girls must maintain a B average to
enter the Junior Mlas-M!ss Tinsel com-
petition and Judges will base their
declsion on polse, personality and a
mt11lcal or artistic presentatilon.
One of the first duUes of the winner
ii to preside over the Coata Mesa Com-
munity Projects Committee's annual
Christmas DecoraUon Contest awards
program Dec. 19 in City Council
chambers.
Judging or the popular contest will
lake place thrnugbout the city on Dec.
15 and 16, according to committee
1pokesmen.
Entry blanks are available at local food
markets and at the Chamber of Com·
merce office.
LA Police Arrest 49
In Call Girl Roundup
aC!dlehack Asks -Aid . ' '
College Boa:rd Vo~ 3-2 ro Seek $250,000
moMAS roaTUNE
Of ... DOifY ...... "'"
Despite an obvious aplil 1 lo n g
phllaaopblcal lines, -ol South
Orange County'• Sadd1eback Junior
C.Ollege District have orderild distrld
admlnlatraton lo ""' $250,000 In federal aid lo help nover building coats.
The declalon came on a a.2 showdown
vote Monday nlgbt U received, , the
money would be applied against the
cost of interim campus build1ngs.
Several times earlier this year, the
issue had been 11klrted, with deadlines
for federal appllcatiorui slipping by. Each
time, district officials said they were
not adequately prepared to file for the
money.
r.lannlng dlreeliir, told the board lie Nd
aarned the A!s!rict ll)a)' be eligible for
up to $250,000 .in-'federal aid u a new dlstdct. . • ·.;:.
The amount: matched by an equal
---or-~. coald bMpp)led toward of interim l>ulld.lngs
wblch the let presenUy Is lea$1ng
In a Jeue-purdlaM orranpment, bo aald.
Board members gave tbese reu:m
fnr voting the W"'I they did:
Zltnll< (Laiwla Beacb) -"I'm opposed
to Iha federal governmenl taking our
money for ed~on. but u long as
that II the system and Iba mimey leovea
our diltrict 1 feel we have 1
rupooalblllly to get some ol 11 ~."
Colllna '(Lquna Hills) -"Despite the
!act It palm me to aend lllOlle)'' lo
Washington 4nd get none of.' . .11· tiOct,
I lh!nk ii la ileceasary at 'Iba, Jocal
Ieval to take a &land and ' 111 19 gain One 1 u c h occasion two weeks a g o
prompted Trustee Louis Zltnlk to ask
district admlnlstrators 1f they had not
"funibled the ball" by· not bringing
rederal aid opportuniUea to the attentioo
of the board until the last minute.
--.
Mrs. Breedlove Stricken: •
• The matter came to a head Monday.
Board President Michael C.Olllns and
past board president Hans Vogel said
they would have to oppose any federal
aid application.
After Divorce Testimony
Zltnik, AJyn Brannon and Patrick
Backus argued that local taxpayers are
paying money to the federal government
and they should have an opportunity
to get some of it back.
Ray Chermak, college building and
Newport Wreck
Hurts Mesa Girl
A Colla Mea glrl wu injured Tuesday
night in a four-car rear end colliaion,
In wblch a Newport Beach man escaped
injury, police aald today.
Phyllis V. Ratti , 18, of 894 Joann
St., wu driving south on Newport
Boulevard approachini 18th Street when
her car collided with a string o! stopped
veh1cle111, police said.
Andrew F. Fo, 55, of 700 Lido Park
Drive, Newport Beach, w a s not hurt
when bla car was rammed, driving it
Into another driven by MarWll J. Slyl!,
42, of 47S Ogle SL, Costa Mesa.
The Styli car was bumped forward
l n lo a fourth vehicle, b u l the driver
lelt without botllerini to make 1 report,
due to no damage.
A drug overdose haspltallzed the new
bride of onetime COsta Mesa fireman
Craig Breedlove -bolder of the world's
land auto speed record -Tuellday,
following a divorce court appearance
With her hUBband.
Mn. Csrolyn L. Breedlove, 24, was
treated al Central Receiving Hospital
io Los Angeles following 'tbe lncldent,
Fair Manager's
Assault, Battery
Trial Continued
Jury trial !nr Orange c o u n t y
Fairground> manager Alfred Lutjcans,
aCCllSed ol wauU and battery by a
CON Mesa teen-ager, has been continued
unW mid-December.
Tbe 43-year~d fairgrounds etecut!Ve,
pf 182.12 Bayberry Way, Irvine, was
scheduled to bt tried Tuellday In Harbor
District Jadlclal Court, but a number
of other casea are being tried.
Trial ii now set Dec. 17, court aldea .
Shankar Progressing ..ifli. early AUl(Ull Incident Involving
After HemorrhagA. Randy L. !JD11y1 .. 1e, of i« Brookline ~ Drive, -In a complaint being
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Uday Sbankar, •1'ned against Luljeans.
brother of sitar virtuoso Ravi Sbankar Young Duffy waa riding a mini-bike
and considered lndla's leading dance on the private Orange County
exponent. ls reported making progress Fairgrounds pr o p er t y when Lutjeans
In tlla hnopllal after a brain hemorrhage. ordered blm to leave, In a rougb-and-
ShAAkar, 88, collapsed Monday night tumble manner, accordlng to the victim
In bis Sao Diego hotel room while on and some wltneuea.
tour with bis company of 30 Hindu Guffy alleged be waa cbased down
dancers and musicians. He had to cancel by Lutjeana In a car and aasaulled
performances at UCLA acbeduled today twice, after which bis veblcle waa ,,.,.
.
then transferred to CounlJ·USC Medical
Center and later released.
The Breedloves appeared In Super!«
Court Tuesd8'1. where Mn. Lee ~ Breedlo~ei bis !!rat wUe, was seeklnt a &anew settlemenl ·
The first Mrs. Breedlove contend/I he:
spouse's marriage to the aecQJKI Mrs.
Breedlove is not legal, because btr
dlvoree lull in Callfanila was ~when he obtained a Nevada divorce.
Hospllal spokesmen decllned lo dJscu&;
the second Mrs. Breedlove's treatment.
The 31-year-old auto builder and racer
holds the world's land speed record for
plioling bis jet car mora than eoo miles
per hour on the Utah aalt Oats three
years ago. ..--.
His former wile holds the womenJs
land speed record for bllllng Ill mllf.l
per hour over the same courae.
Library at OCC •
Hit by Burglar
A burglar with a taste for Shakespeare
has looted the Orange Coast College:
library of 26 recorded albums of drama
and poetry worth 1279, Costa Mesa polico
6ald today.
Detective John Stoneback said fndr.~
than half tbe albums were· Shali:eapearwi
works -from King Lear to Hamlet
-althoogb Edgar Lee Maatera' poeti:
Spoon River Anthology ls also gone.
Mrs. Dorothee P. Lay, of the OCC
staff, said the burglar may have wee:
a key to obtain the literary weaW1
from a storeroom.
She also reported theft of I 135 IOOlll
lens from a movie projector at tbt:
rear of hte OCC Forum building durini.:
the past week, although tlla reconl'
were stolen earlier.
A aewing machine and twa bicycles
worth $272 were stolen from the home
of Oscar Holt, 257S Loyola Ave., by
someone who enetred the garage, the
v1ct1m told police.
From Wire Services
' through Saturday. flacaled, but ordered returned by police.
A loJal of 49 out ol 60j>erSOllJ lndlclid \1.::='==='=========='======='='==============
Suit Considered
In UC Credit {tow
BERKELEY (AP) -The Academic
Senate of the ·University ~ Cellfornla
at Berkeley has voted to consider legal
action tO obtain IChotuUc credit.a for
a course featuring Eldridge Cleaver as
lecturer. 1,
'nte senate~ by a 2?8-143 vote Tuesday,
caDed for the study nn behalf of !he
45 lludenll, taking Social Analyall 139X,
the experlmental course in racism to
which the Black Panther leader has
been lecturing,
University reg e n t s have prohibited
credentialed guests -such as Cleaver
at Berkeley bas voted to conside legal
-from lecturing more than once to
a credit course.
DAILY PILOT
flltMO• COUT J'UIK.ISNIHO tCMl'MY
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Closing an eight-month probe of a
loosely knit love-for-money ring which
a&tually bought and sold glamorous call
girls, police began rpaking mui arrests
ol the network prlnciptls Tuesday,
Thieu Ndmes Ky
• •
To Head Soutli
Peace Contingent
SAIGON {UPI) -President Nguyen
Van Thieu Wednesday announced the
appointment of VICe President Nguyen
Cao Ky "to control, gulde and supervise"
South Vietnam's delegation to the ex·
panded Vietnam war talks In Paris.
He said South Vietnam would be on
hand tor the first regular meetlng within
the next 10 days.
Ky. the flamboyant former a Ir
marshal, ii South Vietnam'• leading
hawk. Observer• said his app<>lntment
apparently indicated Saigon would main-
tain a hard Une pollcy In !ls dealings
with the Communlata.
Thieu made the announcement in a
brief television address from Saigon ln
wblch he urged the South Vietnamese
to 11fi&ht.harde:r than ever before."
The communist strategy, he warned,
wu one of "flgbling wblle Jalklng,"
"I appeal to you not to let them
put you to sleep with their peace
1Cbeme1," be aaid. "You should not
forget· that l1lJI peace we want ii a
peace ol tmcfom and not alavery and
poverty.
"We mu.st win militarily as well as
,poliUcaUy."
Thieu spoke to the nation shortly after
the Salgoa pvernment announced It was
endlna Ill 25-day boycott of the Paris
Jalks.
lie said Iba South v1a1nam ... delea•·
Uoo would be In .Perla f« Iba nest
ncular -ol the lalka wblcb thus far have i-confined to Iba United
Stalsl and Non& VI-. 'ft>I -
usually bava boon bold oo w~
but ha" boon pootpooed In ,....t weeks
becau.. ol Salion's refusal to attend.
Thltu aald K7 would not dlrectly
participate In !he talks -bis rank
would bt too blgb fnr the ambasasd«l1I
level of Iba meetlnp ,.. but would act
a1 overall director from bebllJd the -· I;
---·----------------
by the cowity Grand Jury were rounded
up by Los Angeles police and sheriff'•
deputies by Tuesday ntsht.
Police Chief Thomas Reddin called
~ who\uale roundup· tbe lirgest vice
' lnvestlpllon In the history ol Callfomla,
one tnvolvlng operators · from cout to
coast.
Glamorous girll -some of whom
~ed up to '1,000 weekly In the ring
-were generally Janored. u lawmen
went after principals behind the oper•
lion.
Most or the arrestees were booked
on charges of pandering, pimping and
conap1racy to commit pl"Olt!tution as
the result pf an 80-man vice task force
which worked for nearly a year on
tbe case.
The lnve1UgaUon wu moaUy centered
on the Sunset Strip area of West Los
Angeles, but the network extended to
New York, Miami -site of the
Republican convention -Las Vegas and
San Francleco. 1 "These individual organizaUon heads
met periodically and ei:changed in-
formation, bought and sold ll1ll: of
customers, and ln some cues bought
and sold femaJtt among tbemtelvea,"
aald Cbie! Reddin.
Be said !hey bought and sold a<><alled
heat lists -names of police and
custoriten thought to be cooperating to
break 'up the vice network -11 well.
Ball for 5S men and 1e1fe:n women
picked up In the seriOI of . ....-ranged
from $5,000 to IS0,000, accordbll to jail
records.
Vice lleiall Capt. Harry Nelson said
most of the girls were paid a minimum
o! ISO !or 1be1r lusHlleYlatlng cbarml,
but Ups were rouUnt and 1n1n1 atrls
mad~ up IQ 11,000 ~.
'l'hll could amount to IO men In ll>e
seven day1 each week, bued on hard,
bare mathemaUOI.
Most of those arrested .. were in pos1.
lions leading to easy cont.act with
custome~ such as restaurant mallr_t
d', perkJn1 lot attendant, or·OOllneuman
eager to please cUema.
Many are weTI·lcnown to poUce 'flee
squads and intelligence team11 due to
prirr conlacls and lllTOSll, '9<C<ll'dina
to Capt. Nalloa.
Tito Pardom 936
Bl!:l,ORADE (UPI) -Praldenl 1llo
tod8'1 fl'lllled 1U1U101ty to 131 Yuaoalav
prlaonarl, reieufnc 117 ol lbem, In con-
nection With Frld8'1'• 11th llllliverwy
of tho founding of tho Yuplav Federal
Rapublle.
TM true precloueneu of a 14K gold Omega bracelet watch 11 In lh1 lov1 that goes 1
wlt!\ll Thi Omega you give or receive tOdiy wlll become a proud personal poc~~!-1lon.,: preclou• beyoM comp•,. for What It IY!l!bollzu.
WJlhln tloh elegant case 11 the peerfeu Omega ·movement Each part is made with
meticulous cart to give yeara of fatthful performance. Even the diamonds are'loup&-
lnspected to assure flawless quallty and perfection of color, cut and brilliance. , -. Se• our complete collection of Omega watohea for men and women, S&5 to ovor /
$1000. ' (
A-2:4 dl&ll'IO!litll. 14K told brtOlf" wlfdt,.,.,,,, .s~.
1-1411! 091c1 floi.ntlnell c:-. Mffh br-ttt., .... ~. c-11 e11.monc1e. 101: told twaotitt •.ich .•••••••• sru.
J. e. .J.lump~rie6 'Jeweler
.1121 NEWPORT AYE., COSTA ME5A
12 Ye1rt 111 Thi S11ft1 Locetlo11
~I
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Wednesday's Closing ·Prices -Complete New
Borax Pays
Dlrectors of United SlatM
Boru • Qicmilcal C«p.
m .. Una In l.oJ An11l11
decJered • q..-i, di-al II Clllll per lbere .on the
4,22a.1'5 common 1b.are1 OIMalJdlnc. The cllvf411ld, 11 ~bh Dec. lJ "' Iden o1 r--.1 Noi.
29.
Market
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J»AD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
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•..
City Inc ome From Oil?
A dele1ailon of Newport aod Costa Mesa officials
toured dl•guised oil hut.allatioo• in Los Angeles lasl
week. ,
The tour, a highly tnstl'uetlve one, was arranged by
the Standard and Occidental oil col)lp!Ulles.
Need one ult what the oil cotiipanies bad in mind!
And they succeeded in making their point, judging
Jrom the reactions of those who took the trip.
There was no questioning ft. Everyone was lmpress-
ed by the neatness, the lack of noise and the nearly
total dlsgulse of oil operations. And the visions of a giant
new source of income must have danced in their beads.
But it was, it should be remembered, a guided tour.
· The exhibits were carefully selected. There are other
exhibits -just as typical of what the oil industry can
do-just a few ugly miles upcoast.
No Time to Dilly-Dally
There were two news stories concerning the New·
port Freeway last week.
One dealt with the decision by the State Highway
Commission to reopen hearings on the routing of the
freeway's southern terminus. The other dealt with state
plans to widen the existing portion of the freeway, be-
ginning next summer.
Wliat the two stories together add up to is this:
There had better not be much dilly-dallyjng over
resolving the freeway route choice from mid-Costa
?.fesa to the coast. The rest of the freeway isn't going
to wait.
Media A re -
Being Blamed
For Troubles
CHICAGO A little post election
travel produces a strong impression that
lbe new1 and entertainment media,
particuiarly in electronic form, are being
held responsible lor a large portion of
the nation'• troubles.
People have the lincerina: feding that l"lldio,T\' and the press to a lesser degree
love tiiiih. up and promoted racial
Disorder, leftist demonstrations, campus
rebellions, the 8lll0king of pot and the
mulish behavior or the younger genera-
tton, and have created an abnospbere
condoning and encouraging violence.
Nothing draws a more favorable
response from audience& than self
criticlam by a speaker from the news
media pleading mea cuJpa on behall
of his colleagues, if not himseJf.
".THIS ACT OF abnegation draws to
tSe plaUorm sympathiurs from the au-
dience who e:.:press their views to \he
speaker when be is finished. They say
that what bothers them most is a com-
bination of opinionated news com-
mentators and writers and the way the
eleclronic media lends itself to ex-
aggerating and promoting violence and
disorder.
Citi1.ens, despairing o{ self policing
bY the news and entertainment media.
are beginning to take things in their
own bands. Their concepta of how to
IO about aha ping up ra& TV and tht
prw art often not ge.ntle.
At a recent meeting of the American
Petroleum Institute one of the world's
richest men, H. L. 11unt of Texas.
distributed literature promoting the
formation or his newest organization,
League for Liberty, which Mr. Hunt
said would begin "policing" the new5
media. "Actually we won't do it
ou.rselves, but will haYe the advertisers
do it. I assume they can do it,'' Mr.
H\Dlt said.
LEAGUE FOR UBER.TY Is anti-com·
muni.stlc, moraliJtlc and patriotic. It is
seeking support f r o m "entities which
advertise e:rtenaively" -tn other words,
companiea with substantial advertising
budgets whose officen or advertising
dlrecton might be upect.ed lo have
tome influence with editors and publish· .....
Each month a bulletin will be issued
to members of the League "calling mem·
be.rs' attention to the TV networks, radio
networks or groups of iDdependent sta·
llo111 which are giving the Liberty side
the beat presentation In entertainment
as well n public affairs."
Mr-. Hunt'1 brochure cont I nu es:
'1SeriOUI 1tudy of tbe Lague for Liberty • ,.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Why should anyone object to Stu-
dents for a Democratic Society
laking over the universities for
their left wing purposes? After all,
look how much tax relief will
accrue to homeowners after SDS
start.5 paying the bills.
-H. H. PttcD., Jr.
Tftlt. fUNrl r8flHft ""'"'' ¥1"'" wt M<ll'ISMlf>t ll'l9H 9'I tlM 1ttW1oP1"r, '"4 .,.. "' -w• " CMeorw1 Gi/1. Dellr P119t.
bulletin will enable members to support
Liberty as rar as practicable by
allocating part of their budget to the
media in each communicaUons field
which is best serving the cause or Liberty
and thereby be entiUed to a confidentiiil
citation of honor."
THIS IDEA OF A veiled boycott of
intractable news and entertainment
m e d i a also h a s occurred to Bruce
Palmer, execuli ve director of the Na·
tional Industrial Conference Board. He
recenlly told southern n e w s p a p e r
publishers that a great many big ad-
vertisers are on the board of his
organization and he could through them
call an advertising boycott of the bad
actors in the radio-TV business who
are promoting violence a n d discontent,
but decided not to do it that way.
Instead, he has enlisted Bob Hope as
the spiritual leader of a new m o r a I
crusade and just how he will handle
radio-TV 's promotion of violence and
disctlntent will be announced later.
One of the distressing aspects of the
vigilante attempt to shape up the com·
municalions media is that it lakes ad-
vantage of what otherwise ill a com-
mendable effort by corporate lcader:oi
to gel therru:elves involved in lhc solutiion
of national proble1ns.
TJUS IS GOING ON In many big
industries as they address thenlselves
to economic aspects or the race problem,
or fa ce up to air and waler pollution,
public safety and the municipal ugliness
created by garish, dilapidated and filthy
gas stations and otl'ler retail outlets.
A large part of the present generation
of corporate leadership recognizes the
self interest in becoming involved in
improvement of the environment and
human bettennent. The old ideas ol
the public be damned are no longer
practical instruments ol corporate policy.
It is something else again when cor-
porate power is used to influence public
policy by advertising in some media
and withholding advertising lrom other
media.
1bis does not change the fact that
there is a strong und~rcurrent runnJng
in public opinion against the methods
of the com1nunications me<lia, end the
exeeutive leadership of the media will
ignore it or brush it aside at illl pcrll.
'Decorator A ccents'
•
Sfduey llarria
will fill the vacuum by arrogating to
Itself the realm of promotin&" the general
1n.._, whether righUy or wrongly. • • •
1be: dtcrcas.ing amount of sunlight we
g&, due to iDCrtalfng air polluUon, may
tum out lo have grave lon.q.lf:nn aenetlc
elfects on the huma11 organism, since
recent re.qiiilrth indicates that the
amount or U,ht enttr1ng the eye~ ol
animall Js proportionate to their re.$lst·
1nce to in,Cection .and lo.1idty. \
Next IUll\!Der, acconling to the Dlv\Jlon ol High-
ways, work will begin oo the $3.6 million widening pro-
jed, which will see a IJ.mlle stretch expanded from
rour to six lanes.
That means a lot more traffic will be dumped on
Costa Mesa's surface slreets -and very quickly.
I( the new bearings on the yet to be constructed
portion of the route are not expedited, and related steps
by the state are not taken with reasonable promptness.
the entire Harbor Area in a few short years could find
itself in a traffic nightmare of epic proportions.
Bold, But Sad, Project
A group of Harbor Area mothers b8.s~ embarked on
a bold, but sad, projecl .
• They have taken it upon themselves to finance
supplemental leachlng of their children.
4st week, the mothers received Newport Beach
city permission to use the Riverside Avenue Scout House
as a private ''school house."
They explained lo the Parks Commission that their
youngsters are on half-day sessions, and that isn't
enough. So the mothers hired a teacher to provide the
other half-day of schooling. All they needed was a place
for the instruction.
Parks commissioners were very sympathetic. Use
of the Scout House was swiftly approved, but with a con-
dition. It was "only for the duration al. the emergency."
That emergency should not last much beyond the
next school bond election.
c
Reader Disagrees on Cause of lJC Troubles
'Science, Ethics Are R . I' ~ ec1proca ·-::
To the Editor:
ln tlle Nov. 13 DAILY PILOT an
article by Dr. John W. OswaJd suggested
that the University of California is in
trouble with its supporting society
because it is making a greater erfort
than most institutions to meet today's
problen11. As a layman, with limited
knowledge of the subject, I respecUully
disagree with the doctor's dJagnosis. The
problem is that the university has not
been vigorous enough in articulating Ule
frontiers of NEEDED knowledge.
IN THE PAST the university's main
thrust was in the physical sciences rath-..r
than social sciences. The :wefoe two
main reasons for this orientation. Neither ot them is vaJid. The first reason is
that physical sciences are both simpler
and more utilitarian than social scie!lces.
The bewildering complexity of atomic
physics is far simplei· than making senss
out of hwnan relations. The second
~eason for overempha.sit.ing technology
1t1 that a deep commitment for social
problems put the university in the sticky
business · of making eUtical judgments.
Unfortunately, our tradition has largely excl~ded the ~ucator's right to be wrong
at limes. This has tended to drive the
university toward simpler areas of scien· tific precision.
THE FIRST proposition is not valid
because technological knowledge has an
optimum yield of benefits beyond which
it adds less and less to human happiness.
The atom bomb is an example of ex·
ceeding oplimum results. The second
proposition is not valid because the
energi~ of science and ethics must
evolve with equal powers for they are
conjunctive and reciprocal; neilh2r can
stand alone. To pursue a strong science
with a weak spiritual altitude is like
harnessing a perchcron and a shelland
pony together to pull a cart.
THE UNfVERSITY. in the past. hall
aLtnirably adV9nced scientific kMwledge
and technology. Can it now structure
the spiritual values that will ameliorate
the destructive power of its own science?
I can hear the objections! ''This is
the role of the church." But is it entirely?
Should the highest seat of learning pro-
vide endlellS scientific knowledge while
dismissing a moral value sy&tem to
control the power of science? In our
system of separation of cburch and state.
should the university interpret the prin-
ciple so conservatively as to inhibit
elhical education?
TODAY YOUNG people all over the
nation sense the imbalance between
technological power and e t h i c a I
sociological power, and are fulminating
with rrustralion, knowing that the
mnterinls to produce cornucopias are
at hand, bul where are the means or
knowledgt kl produce peaceful. happy,
human relations? Putting it another way,
"·ill e round trip to the moon have
much value to a society whcre huge
populaUons in urban centers, like pitiful
wou'lded animals, scream with social
pnin?
JOHN A. MACDONALD
IJCl Student Bo1asln9
To the Editor:
I wish to thank the DAILY PILOT
and lhe man1 real estate agencies and
residents in the community for their
cooperaUon In helping UC Irvine to eaat
a atveni shortage. in student bouslne
this fall.
Applications for student housing Oft
campu!J e:rceeded our capacity by more
than 600. A:oi the result or 11n article
you publl.shed and an immediate respon1e
from the community, more th8n 200
studenu were able to f Ind •c--
commod1Uons near the campus.
llopef\JOy, thls cooperative spirit ~Ill
Letters from redders are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
message in 300 'words ar less. The
right to candense letters to fit space
or eliminate lilnl is Te.served. All
letters mu.st include signature and
mailing address, but names may bf'
withheld on. request if sufficient Tea·
son is apparent.
i
continue next tatl, ltv ·wbictCf~ ~~
student housing shortage is expeqted to
be even more acute.
DANIEL G. ALDRICH, JR.
Chancellor, UC!
Balance, P er spective
To the Editor:
After seeing the morning newsstand
editions or several other local papers
in which a UCI protesting group was
given the usual front page headline treat-
ment, I was ezpecting more of the
tame when the DAILY PILOT arrived
at noon.
It was a pleasure to find the matter
unmentioned, and instead, front page
space given to the tutorial program
being carried on by a groop of UCI
students in a disadvantaged an:a.
I CONSIDER the internal rumblings
or UCl to be or much less interest
and importance to the community at
large than what the students and faculty
at UCl are doing for, with, and in
the surrounding community.
This is not a requel!t for all sweetness
and light in yotir reporting, but for
balance and perspective.
Congratulaliom also on your accurate
account of Chancellor Aldrich's remarks
to the local citizens who gathered in
support of the Interfaith Foundation •l
the university.
CHARLES HEGE SWORD
Naviga t ional Alb
To the Editor :
Now that the inevitable has happened,
Ydll ' the Orange County Board of
Supervi:oiorll continue to deny Orange
County Alrport the equipment it must
have to prevent further tmgedies!
Perhaps our astute supervisors could
be made lo personally explain to \he
ramllles of the latest air crash victims
why they have not approved purchase
of navigational aids desperately needed
by the airport
' B y George ---.
Dear George:
Is it true thnt girls always play
bard-to-get? Every Ume I try to
kiss my girl she hits me ln the eye
with her llsl.
CONCERNED
Dur Concerned :
Maey gtrb like to play bard·to-
get. In your cue. however, I
think yoor girl IS bard to gtl
Either get ..... girt, quit trying
to tlu ~ ont you heve now, or
wtll' a catchtr'!I mask when you
park.
(Send your problems to George.
On aecond thou&hl, would it be O.K.
Ir we 1ent Georee to your pro-
blems ! )
The Federal Aviation Agency, as well
as the Airport management, have been
denied their requests by the non·pllot
county government officials.
Do we need more innocent victims
before the importance of proper navlga·
tional aids is evidenced?
MARTIN LEV AN
SDS a Sin ister F o rce
To the Editor:
Perhaps you wouldn't have written
a recent editQ.rllll condemning Clay
Miichell,.presid!nt of the Orange Collnty
School Board of Edueltion, if you Were
aware {Jtt. i -bOokllt~ulating on some
local c·ampuses, including high schools,
titled "Toward a Student Movement••
and according to its fly leaf distributed
by the Students for a Democratic Society.
, In case there Is ahy questiOn .that
SOS doesn't intend to be a sinister
force in regard to protests over long
hair, elc., may I guote you a few
paragraphs from thi3 booklet:
'1THE mGH SCHOOL campus ls
already experiencing great conflicts.
Dozens of underground high school
newspapers have been started across
the country. In many places, high school
students have organized themselves :
over everything from long hair to the
w a r in Vietnam. At one Los Angeles
high school, 30 studenls sat-in over lunch
and burnt their student activity cards
in protest of \be cancellation of an
assembly. Al another school, over ISO
students picketed the administration
building in protest of Congressmen •• ~
We are supposed to tdenUfy with the
doers, and look down at the rest of
the people from our perch as legislators.
We don't have to deal with police v"ho
aren't our friends, foot-long raLs, and
slumlords. We deal in the polite world
of committees, and are care.fully sbield6:1
from the horrors those committees are
responsible for.
" ... TUE LOS ANGU.ES :oitudent
mcnt underwent a Vet'J' interesting
genesU in a year. Things started with
an attempt to form a city-wide student
rights organizaUon, and much of the
activity centered around hair and
newspapers. Wilhln seven months, there
was a group called Higl\ School Students
Against tile WN, with people at 10
campuses, and over 50 acttve members
which wu able to get over 200 high
school students o u t for 1 demonstra-
tion •.. "
The SOS ha!I been exposed as a major
contributor to violence and disruption
in practically all m&jor unJverslties'
demonstrations. Certainly, Mr. Mitchell
is justified ln alerting the students to
the purpose.s of tl'le Sbs before It
becomes a disruptive force on the high
schoo! and Junior college level as it ls
on the university level • A .. SCHAU.
Wllsott'• A1u1exatlo11
To the Editor:
I'm delighted that Cost.a Mesa Vice
Ma.,vtir Bob Wilson advocates aMCJ:atioo
of Baja Calilornla, and the brJneina
of AmOllcln <ullllle thereto.
Where there now are only mUes of
witouched beauty, uninhibited arid
desert, t1wJ> bi.ct volcanic J>OllU, and
bays and wti!te beaches w1lhoul number,
ther< could be created another ootpoot
for the Amtttcan Way of Ute.
The tranaition ~ not be dlfnaiJL
Flnt, Wilson must make arTangemcnls
to rolJ n11t the giant caetus, then p&\fe
the area with good black asphalt. Nell.
lraftJc sipal3 must be erected. Thirdly,
lbousands of utility poles 111wre. be put
ln place to be festooned wJU, myriad
~----------~ ~ .1,.... The ...., """ should be ldd..t
quickly to beautify the landscape and
enhance the background.
THE OTHERWISE barren rock out-
croppings at Santa Ynez should be
pairited with "Jesus Savell." Eight fllllng
stations and 36 beer bars shoukl· be
sufficient to serve the resldents of that
rancho, who must rnJmber a good round
dozen. The sadly winding streets ol.,._'Sad
Ignacio should be squared off for tract
housing, and the homes should be bi11lt
without sidewalks along these straigbtCQo
ed streeta. The Mn:"! of the chapel
at La Purisitna could easily be renovated
and turned into a bowling alley.
Perhaps Vice Mayor Wllson might even
prevail upon Col Sanders to smile down
from his bucket in the sky onto q.
populace of Costa Mesa del Sur. Ralph
Williams could be invited lo merchandise
automobiles.
AND, OF COURSE, eligible voters of
this peninsu]ar establishment o f
Americana should be instructed to vote
"No" on all acbo61, college and public
facillties funding issuei!J. This would put
education and local government oo equal
tenns with t?tat in the parent community.
A mayor woold have to be elected.
The first thing he should do is seek
acquisition of Borneo so that the cultural
magnificence of Costa Mesa could be
extended there also.
BUILY FOR Wtlson. lle ha befn
able to see clearly that remote, spm:se1:y
populated areas, where people only fi¥I
raise cotton, harvest dates. and husha}>d
cattle, areas where people are kind
friendly and willing lo offer a bel~,i
hand to a strange'r, are so lackirlg .:~n
charm, that they should be made ltlio
exact repllcm of our flawless citlf:8.
Now that everything ha:oi been ftad
In c.osta Mesa, it's really wonderful
to see one of our leaders strike '&It
to apply his exquisite ·skill in ot9F
areal!. Beautiful ··,.
DAVE EPPE~
~
End of Edito1ial ,., -Chestertown, Md., New1: "An ~
Jn anolh~ new!!ipaper, observed:·=~
upon a time, people !laved their ~
thinking ft would be worth more..foi[ii'.:
End of editorl>J." ·• ,., ·····-=· -:.:..-:
FulLoA, Mia., 'nmet: "E1=
speed continues to hold top spot in U.
of accident causes, with reckless dfi ·
and driving on tbe wrong side of tJi1i rlpd
taking second and third places re.
lively. Pedestrians were at fault ift ~
of the fatal accidents, with ~
between 1n1......uon. being the iop:s~
Youthful drivers hold I.he ~
responsibility on the highway de&&b.Jit:
Almost one third of the drivers J~
in fatal accidents were under 25 year~iof
age." 1
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-"-=~·"'~"'--mo"•"""""._ ____ _.,,_ ___ .., ____ .•·-·-~--..L..__.:..... ,,_ -~ "--------' . . ... _.. ""-.--. ""-' --------..::.. ,-=-~----~-~·---~ --- .
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BY
WILLIAM
REED
.........
In the Wind
On this pre-Thanksgiving day 01
Greasy Murphy dropped in to tell
me that he is one of the most
lhankful of ~rsom in Huntington
Beach and ' it's all because of that
there city council."
Well, I know the council II not
taking a BOiter aWtude toward
oilmen, so it must have been
somethin~ else. sure enough, 01'
Greasy finally said that sillce be
often sits up late with the Council
he sure appreciates the new seats
in council chambers.
It's true a¢ all of us who attend
council sessions re~arly and en·
dure the oratory of those both in--
side and outside government really
appreciate the new, soft red seats.
* Councilmen and the administra·
~ion have provided soft chairs for
all attending the council sessions.
The staff and members of the
press who usually attend the full
length of the meetings also are
seated on soft padding-the chairs,
I mean.
There are new tables for the
staff and press and , best of all,
a new sound system so all can
hear and be heard. Although this
does have its hazards for the politi·
cians, they seem to be bearing
up.
* \Vhile the council was out talking
to an employe, I dropped over to
the police station to see Lt. Bert
Extrom and his night crew. Capt.
Earle Robitaille was there so I
suspected something was up since
Earle was really on vacation.
Over a space of about four or
five hours the police cars rolled
in with their cargo of suspected
peddlers of marijuana and LSD.
It was one of the department's
roundups of persons identified dur·
ing weeks, and months of un·
dercover work. The weather was
cold Monday night, but officers
lingered on to talk with unhappy
parents and to do what this police
force is noted for -giving tbe
citizens not only what they are
paying for, but that little extra as
well.
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Wednesd11, Novtmbtt '17. 1968 DAILY !'IL.UT 3
Worshipers io Offer Thanks-
Comt Churches Scliedule Rites T onight, Tliursday
UPIT ..........
Tis the Season
Thousands of tiny white lights decorate trees aloog Michigan Avenue,
adding holiday glitter to famed Chicago Water Tower, sole survivor
of that equally famous fire started by Mrs. O'Leary's Infamous <:Ow.
More than 100,000 tiny bulbs have been used in Windy City's down-
town Christmas decorations.
Toys for Tots Program
Opens Officially Dec. 4
The "Toys for Tols" program will
begin officially in West Orange County
Dec. 4 with ceremonies at the Huntington
Center shopping mall in Huntington
Beach.
The 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing Barut
from El Toro will begin the program
at 7 p.m. with a biUld J!9ncert before
Major David A. Ramsey of the USMC
explains the "Toys for Tots" PI'9gram
sponsored by the marines.
Mayoni of all West Orange County
cities will have proclamations ready
pledging support of the program.
A large drop box will be provided
near the Christmas tree in the mall
for donations. Toys should be either
new or in good repair and they should
not be wrapped since they have to be
sorted as · to age groups for boys and
girls.
Included in the event will :be "The
Mariners,·~ the singing group from
Marina High School. They are directed
by Terry Danne.
Many West Orange County cburchea
bave ICheduied special Thanksgiving
aervkes for HUntlngton Beach and Fo1&
la!n Valley mldenls.
Here is a lilt of the services supplied
by tbe lllmtingtoo Beach-Fountain Valley
Mlnlstttial Assocl4tion :
Finl UnlWid Metbod.Ui Cblll'clt, 18225
Bushard, Fountain Valley, will hold
Tbanbglvlni: evening service at 7:30
tonight. The Rev. Ken McMillan will
lead thinking on the theme "Things I'm
Thankful. For." The Chancel Choir, under
the direction of Bill Drozda, will sing
an anthem of praise, and Mrs. Ano
Olmstead will be the organist. Nunery
care will be provided for amall children.
Redeemer Lutheran Church, 16531
Springdale St., Huntington Beach : The
Thanksgjvlng worship service will be
held 1bunday at 9 a.m. Pastor Eugene
Schramm will be preaching on "The
Song of a Grateful Heart." The choir,
under the direction of John DeHaas,
will sing.
St. Wllfred.'1 Epbcos-1 Cbureh, •
Chapel Lane a n d Ellis, Huntington
B e a c h; communion will be celebrated
at tbe special Thanksgiving day service,
at 10 a.m.
SS. Simon and Jude Cburcb, 20388
Magnolia St ., Huntington Beach: Masses
of Thanksgiving will be celebrated at
St. Francis, 20400 Magnolia St., at 7, at 9:20, and 10:40 a.m. and at SS.
Sunon and J udge, 321 loth St., at I
a.m. All these services are on Thursday.
Fint Baptlrt Cburcb, Sixth and
Orange, Huntington Beach: Thanksgivinc
U.S. Makes Effort
To Get Yule Gifts
To GI Prisoners
WASlllNGl'ON (AP) -The United
States is making another effort this
year to get Christmas packages to hUI>o
dreds of Americans held prisoner in
North Vietnam.
An effort also ls being made to get
holiday packages to the 82 Pueblo
crewmen held in North Korea.
But Pentagon officials indicated today
they are not optimistic the packages wlll
get through.
"The families have been told that
there is no assurance that such packages
will be delivered," the Defense Depart·
ment said. "Last year North Vietnam
refused to accept Christmas, packages
and returned them to the senders."
Na of last report, 338 American
servicemen were listed as captured or
interned in the Vietnam war, plus 871
men missing in action. There also are
the Pueblo crewmen captured when their
intelligence sh.ip was .seized el! North
Korea last Jan. 21.
Our Christmas surprise for you
Day Service, at 10 a.m. Pastor Wlllia:
Loar will preach on "Mister, ~ You
Rich!" Speclal music will be providod
by tbe choir and the "Laymen Four.''
Mrs,Adele Lear will •ing tbe illany.
Commualty Melhod~t CllU<cll, 116&:
Hell Ave., Huntington Beach: At 7:30
tonigilt tbe Senior High MYF will lead
tbe Thannglving wonbip service. Tho
anthem wW be presented by tbe choir.
The service will be led by Pally Bonhanl
and Mark Hammer. Two young people,
Ed Loose and Barry Pe1er1, wW deliver
the meditations.
Faith U:dberu Cllurch, &200 Ellis Ave.,
11\mtingtoo Beach: l1JanUg!ving service
at 9;40 a.m. Thursday. There will be
special music by a 75-voice children'•
choir. Putor llIDOS De••np will preach
on "Am 1 My .Brother'a Brother?~'
Grace La-Qorcl, Ed!ncer -Golden West, Huntlngton B e. c h !
TllanirciYini -at 7:30 toDflbL Pastor Ilobeit l..onen will preldl.
' Lutberu Cllureb flf tbe -. 9812 Hamiltoo, Huntington B ea c b :
Thanksgiving EV• V~ tonight at
7:30. Pastor Arthur TliigJey wilt -k
on ''The Measure ol Our Gratitude."
Clayton Kradjian wW be orJanlst. Tho
senilJr choir, dlreeted by IJoytt•Danielaon,
will sing.
Finl Melbodln Cbartb, rm 1'IUI st..
Huntlni1<m Beach: Thanksgiving ·Eve
communion service will be condtKVd
at 7:30 tonlght.
.
Man made waterfalls tumble 350 feet from top of ~ew Ml>npw Point
Dam in Black Canyon of Gunnison lU\rer near C.i.ma.rra!( · Calo.t •u
technicians test g'ates on .US.foot dam. . ...; ,
"
. •
•
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY WE'RE HAVING
'
o TIO llG DAYS TO SHOP,,, AND lll'STORES llLL IE OPEii LATE EVERY lllGHT, INCLUDING SATURDAY, UMIL CHRISTMAS.
• mil'< mM ADVEllTISED HAS BEER REDUCED AT LWT111 Dtl 112 OF ITS ORIGlllAL PRICE. • -.
o ALL VALUES Alll Fiii! REGULAR STOCK,,. llO SPECIAL PURCHASES!
o WE'LL GIFT 11RAP ALL YOUll SELECTIONS.,, SO YOU'.llE MOT ONLY ENJOYING SAV INGS, YOUR GIFT SELECTIOM llLL IE READY n Glm ,.
o SOlllY, ID IAIL, PHOME OR C. O, D. JUST COME EARLY!
u umS ' '
• II FASHTOl4 ISLAND & • • ~OHDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TTL~9:30 • OTHER Di.JS 10:00 TILLS:~' •
' .
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t
I
1
I
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• • '
4 DAil Y PILOT
Rocky, Brooke Won't Join Nixon Team
(~ ..... O;lllr "• ...,
'lbe White House bu a 40-pound
turi<oy"for 'lbenUglving -the an-tlllll gilt from S-la Republican
Leader Everett M. DlrktOft on be-
hllf of PoUltry producers. The big,
white bfrd wu presented at a brief
ceremony. • Alltn Scheiner, 20, was selling
more than pizza from lb,• d~Uvery
tn1d: ha drove for a local realau·
rent, aild moti-opqljtaJl. D a d' e' Ci!tnitY~ca 'Qfftcen wbo af..
rested 1114 youth In l\llaml Beach,
Fla.. 'I'hi.iiarccit1c1 ofllcm<cllatled
Schelner:wllh tWO ~ of ~ala ot
liercln ill•filald heha(I beell'.'selllng
it from hi• pizza truck. •
Pete th«· Penguin, a Mdvc of
fee and mow who ccme south
to b•comt the maacot of tM
PittlburQh P<t!gUiftl of I h t
Nllllonal Ha<ktf/ Leag..,, died
Jut wuk of pneumoni:_a.
NEW YORlt (UPI) -Two prominent
Republlcano todO)' turned down ap-
polnbnents ln btgb polta -at least
OM of cablftet level -tn the ad·
mlnfltntian ol · Prutdenl-elocl Rlchll'd
M. Nixon.
New York .Dov. Nelson A. Roekefaller
and Massa~etts sen. Edward Brooke
both declined pos!Uon1 on the Nixon
team but !or dilferent .........
Brooke, a Negro, said be bad been olflnid a oeat In the cabinet but declined
It because "I thlnk J can but serve
the counby and Mr. Nixon In the
Senate."
Jtockefeller, according to Nl.J:on'• press
aeeretary, Ronald Zle&ler, lnfarmed Nix·
on at 1 private meeting Tuesday ii
N1'00'1 apartment 'tbat be wu no\ m.
te.-..ied In a poot In the admlnlslraUon.
"Rockefeller ~nflrmed what be bad
aaid publicly earllet, tbat be did nol
desire a pos.tUon Jn tbe admlnlatraUon
and wanted to stay at his post ln
Albany," Ziegler aald.
Ziegler dld not 'lodlcale whether
·Rocketeller had been offered a cabinet
pooitlon but It had been reported that
he waa considered a po311blllty for either
aecrttary ol defense or aecr<tary of
·Typhoon Bits Area
South Vietnam Armada
. Circ'les Enemy Island
SAIGON 'ctiPI)' -An armada of 55
U .S, and South Vletpameoe boats 1nd
ahJpe: clamped the war'• biggest blockade
around a Viel Coo& llland 1trongbold
and aent 1,000 lnfank'ymen storming ln,
mllltary spokesmen 1aid today. They
found few guerrlllas but walked Jnto
a typhoon.
The South Vietnamese soldiers 11ent
Monday lnlo the 20-mlle-lnng bland chain
where the Bauac River spills into the
South China Sea 'II mllOI llOUth of Saigon
reported few lilJll of the Communist
Agency Library
supply bastion they expected to find.
They lay directly in the path of
Typhoon Nina, whose 100 mile per hour
winds began pounding V I e t n a m ' a
southern coastline today, grounding
planes and helico~s and curtailing
most of the allied war effort.
Military spokesmen said the allied
armada kept all Communist escape
routes blocKed, however, from the
Mekong Delta supply base that ha1 serv·
ed u a launching pad for numerouJ
guerrilla assaults toward Saigon.
Allied headquarters described the of·
tensive u the biggest of its kind of
the war and said U.S. planes "softened
up" the sll: islands first with 200,000
Jll1>paganda leaflet& urslni the Viet Coog
!Ogive up. ,
Tbe infantrymen killed two guerrillas
and captured three in the first two
day1. They tlnpped 128 sampaao lo
seareh for Communist contraband and
questioned 152 local villagers about Viet
Cong afflllaUons. .
state.
Brooke dld not il1 wbat -Ill llad
betn offered In the .-.
Nlloli &!so · mel with Roeliefeller'•
)'OOlller brother, David, chaJrman of
the Owe Manhattan Bani<, and dlJcuaa.
ed a variety ol 111bjecll. There wu
no lndloat!on whether David Rockefeller
mJpt come Into Ula N t.I o n ad·
mlnlllraUon. .
Nixon also wu In meet with l>lt vice
preafdenklocl, Spiro T. Apew, to
d1acuu Agnew'• role In the new ad-o
mlnlslr&Uon.
Th• noon ulllfon wm be the fltll
Another Goodby
meellnl belween llllQn ~ "-.iace Nov. t and l)Jelr ieoollll llai:t ~ eJeo.
11oo. A ; N1IOtl I\»~ Aid tbo
preaJdeol.<locl had ilummalJjd Aln•w to
clllcuto _,.... In wblch lie wlll· take
ID adlve put. '
N!Rn . olao wtll mael with Robert
Murpb,y, l>lt ch!ef Uahon with the
Joh!lllon admlnllitraUan, and aet a rejiort hl,'°"eu In Iha. Vie~ ~ In
'.Ille Saliot> &ovet'omeqt ' lllllOUllQOCI Tlleaday nlJbl It 't!iiii14i;eD1rAt ~
and -• d~ .19' 1111,.lalJili.
Be allo WU ~ tQ.-~ illlh -. ' ' .
.Murpl\Y pn>pOlllls by CQmmunlll Cblna
to meet with NlmJ admlnl.stratlOD
;reptestnt.atives JI'. e b~ JO, In: lf~w to
discuss "peacelUI ~,.
Murphy, a top-level diplomat during
the Eisenhower adln.IDiStratloD, ~ ao
office in the State · Department. near
Secretary of Slate Deaa Jluslt·~ and
ha! •ccw to all dlplomoUc cables so
he cBn be fully informed on fore~gn
devilopmenll. !Ua part of the formula
worked out by Johnson and Nixon for
:Uie ~00 perjod.
I .\ '
UPIT ...... te
' RAWALP)NDJ, Pakistan (AP) -S.V·
era) hundred rioting -·-the American Center In Pelbawar todO)',
leaving tt a shambles, reliable eourca
reported.
U.S. military wtathermen Issued
Severe stonn warnlnp for the Mekong
Delta ln preparaUon for Nina'• onalaugbt.
Heavy rains and 40. m.p.b. winds lashed
coastal Vung Tau as the typhoon headed
inland.
In Saigon, U.S. headquarters said the
,,..,.b had been abaadoned tor the crewa
&f two Amtflcen planes shot down over
North Vietnam on Monday.
Luci Johnson Nugent (third from left) shares the
plig-ht of other military wives as they watch the
plane carrying their hmbands back to Vietnam duty
take off from Honolulu lnternational Airport Tues·
day. Luci, her husband Pat Nugent, and their son,
17~month-old Lyn enjoyed one week toge'ther while
Pat was on R and R leave from Vietnam. Luci will
return to Texas.
'!be mob reportedly •tormed throu&b
the center bOUllng the U.S. lnfarmailon
agency library, breaking wlndowa and
deelroylng bool<s and typewriters.
One ·pak!Jtani employe was badly cut
about the lace u be tried to pull down ID
Iron grUl over the !root wlndowa, one
""""' u!d, About ~000 student. paraded through
the main street of Peshawar· in an anti·
IO-eo>'.-trllll!n. , -
'. A ·~Pol -~turned ~ i ~.~to the ~icaa Cent· er and began ~ ft, PollCe moved In
and iimlted· four pef>ooa, the director of
the :center, Donald'Horan, a~ld.
Rail Engineers
Walk Off Jobs
NEW .YORK (AP) -Commuten on
Iha.Long Wand Jlall Road. ·belet by a
complete shutdown Of Ille Une for the
pBI& two days dae'to.a trainmen~s ltrike,
Thla • ' I ~-I L -.,._,,. got oory ''minimal" iervlce todaY. as most N gian · ...,.., · """''K ,,..,. of tlie·eiJ8ineen wa!Ud out. ·
A spoktsman JdentWed the planes as
a Navy RA5C reconnai8sance jet and
an Air F or c e F4 Phantom which had
been guarding for another picture-taking
plane. Each aircraft carried two men
who were llsUd u mlsaing 1n action.
Speeder Chasers ·'
Deliver Baby Boy
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two California
Highway Patrolmen started out to catch .
a speeder and ended up delivering a baby. .
Glenn McCauley and Jim Martin
reported they pulled a speedjJ!& car off
the II.de of Interstate IO in Sacramento
'I'ut!sday. The driver, Harley Barnes of
Sacramento, jumped o~ and shouted
tbat his wife, Martha, 28, was In labor.
.McCauley and Barnes forgot the ticket,
caned . an ambulance and then helped
Mrs. ·Barnea deJiver the baby. Neither
of the officers had ever been a midwife
before.
Sharpest Prices
Hike in 17 Years
Shown -in: October
,'"1•GTbN1 ·~f ;.._ Livlng costs
iwiljled sis-lenths' '<>I -0ne percent In
bdciber, for, ~! ~~t-monthly rise
in eight yearS and ll)Creasing 196811
sharpest.rate.of. price -hikes in 17 years,
the government said tOOay.
Clothing and transportation costs were
up nine-tenths of one percent each, food
and housing up four-tenths each and
medical care rose seven-tenths, said the
Bureau 0£ Labor Statistics.
Asst. Commissioner Arnold Chase of
the bureau said thfo over~,U. rise in living
costs in 1968 "could Veiy well be around
4.5 percent for the yell'~· bJchest since
the 6.9 percent hlse in 1961 before Korean
War ·price-wage controla \tereJmposed.
But Chase uJd the rate of increase
is expected .to laper on and that the
government sees no need for slmllar
controls now.
Flower Child
Plastic Posie Plugs 'Pipe'
DENVER, Colo. (AP) -Janet Young,
16, who was treated for asthma for
nearly live Years, left National Jewish
Hospital Tuesday night, carrying in a
test tube the tiny plastic flower - a
Wy of the valley -that actually caused
her coughing and.wheezing.
Two weeks ago surgeons here removed
the small bit of plastic from her left
bronchus, the part of the windpipe
leading to the left lung.
The coughing subsided, the whee:t.ing
stopped and when. she_ left the hospital
to fly home to her family in Boise;
Idaho, 1he was breathing normally.
The attractive, brown-eyed blonde was
referred to Natl<wtl Jewish on ,Pct. 14.
When. she arrlVf:JI. doctor1 listened to
her brtlthing '1ld one heard What he
described as i 'f"lsusplclo111· '101.se" In
the left airway to the lungs, "We
su,pected that either a tumor or some
foreign body was blocking the bronchus,"
he said.
The doctor then asked Janet if she
had swallowed anythlng.
"I said I had swallowed a plastic
flower five years ago, but it went straight
through,'' she said.
The doctors theorized it may instead
have found its way into an air passage.
Surgeons confirmed this and removed
the flower.
Janet, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Kerr of Boise, said she swallowed
' th~ flower while visiting a girlfriend
in ,her then-home town of Bllllngs, Mont.
She said she was nibbling on it when
a playmate slapped her on the back.
Other patlenta at the hospital gave
her a large p~Uc flower as a going-
awQY gilt. "They told me, I'll bet yott
cad't swallow this one.' "
be1ldl .ooer·to',gjoo':a·gr<md hl!llo 1o An LIRR spokesmaa ... Id, "Unfortu-
linp Derek B~, :2, of H.lghlancl : nalnly, the travelllu!•i>ul>Uc is laced with
Pork, Po. Th< IOtDerlno figut'f . it one · the fact thal very lew ·trains will be in
of 1everal that will walk 'th.rough operation and it appears that service
dmontown Pitt.burgh in the 6th an· at best will be minimal.''
nuol. Thanks¢Vina :P<mzde_, which He said the railroad was going into
formal.l'JI ushen in tht Yule season. U.S. District Court in Brooklyn in an ef·
Mother and the child, a boy, are
reported dolng well at Mercy Hospital
in Sacramento. Face Sad Thanksgiving
• fort to halt the _"ille1al" 11;Ction. He added .
W.riter-refonner Upton Sinclair, that he could give no reason for the work
wb ,,~ M da t ~ 'd stoppage. o-. Ul.t:U on y a w , onc~ .. sai The sso enginten. memben of t he
of bis-~&J. su~cessful ~veI, ~e Brotherhood of Loc<imotlve Engineers,
Jungle : I aimed at the publics have been called'to a mass nwnbership
heart and by accident l bit it in. the meeUng this morning, the LIRR apotes-
Tracy Leaves Fortune
LOS ANGELES (U PI) -Actor Lee
Tracy, whose portrayals of fast talking
polk:emen, politicians and reporters
brought him movie stardom ln the 1930's,
left an estate of $2 million. Tracy died
Ot-1. 18.
Families of Tr~pped Pray
.
stornacb.~' man reported.
Winds to Taper Tonight
KNOTl'SVlLLE, W. Va. (AP) -When
Juanita Mayle makes pumpkin pies for
her family's Thanksgiving dinner ~he
makes 15 at a time. She's not making
any today.
Juariila's husband, Hartzell Mayle, 51,
is 0-'le of 78 miners frapped since last
Wedne!day in the bu1'1ling Mountaineer
Coal Co. No. 9 mine.
Temperatr.tres Plunge From Fraser to International Falls She ls among those who believe he
will be found alive.
"I've been with him ever aince he's
been down there," she sat~ ber brown
eyes reddened by tears. "And you know
what? He's worTled about ua. 'lbat's the
Calitot"ltie
Coutal
Ct.tr 1111-taQy wtlfl 1119'111~
.. ,,.,.. ..... tut. """ .,...,.,..~ •.
Wll'ld1 ~"'1'r. 12 fro 16 m .11.h.
Tod1'('1 hltll. U lo n.
Y"'9nl..,.. '-•tunll r I 11 9 Id
ll'Ofll I hleh fll 72 to I low fll M. I~
llP!d 1-fu.rt ..,., 7( to Q , TM w.ttr ..,_.tu,.. ..,., '° -.,.....
Saa, Moon, Tfdf!s
n1H11a1DA'f'
hQirld ,,..,. ....... , ,. S:ts P.m. (.2
Second low . llf:041 1.m . ~.J TNUltSDAY
";,_. tillltl .............. s:Of 1.m. s.o
W low .,, ........... 11:1•1.m.1,1
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.... II ... lt: .. I.IOI. S... , , ..• , .• ... It'-4;. 1.m, la 11"6 II.In. ... -· ...... -" I
V .S. Suttatncl"ll
ll1lf1 illd I,_ llrvd!; thi 5ol.illl Ind
Scx.lftl-t IOdlv •""' ~ ttn """"'9h Teo<11. Cold Ind wet -lhl!r
flll9\IM mucr. ol thl Miion thl doll'
lltf-Tllri,.lvtnt. ~ ftll from tt.e u-Olllo
Vlllt't' '" IOU!Mrn Ntw Eno!1nd. Ll"1t. ,_ •l"ffd ICT'DU nortMm Ntw
En1ll!ld, "-lllrll'!ll IA Inell 1" mlll'f ··-11.1111 wtslw!d Wldf ll'M• flf h IOUtl!-
lfT\ Pl1lns 11111 -IWll Artt1 .... 1
TtH:$111J 111d tDlllllMIM todlY. Hff'l'f ,,_ IN:! !ti""" -rnllllll _, I~
.rltd f'Of -~I T•••• 1nd _,111 1l'ICI ctr1tr.t ITl(Mlhlha 1!06 lllel!l1Nb
ol New "'-ico.
'" thl _.,.lndtr Of 1111 flllliel\, II wt11 f1lr 111d ory, but cold, fr1wr • I Cola"tOoJ C(lfl'llPU1NlllY If I.WO ,..,
11w1tlOI\. ~ '" "'"' momfnt! ._....i.,,,.. ot IS lltlow 1-. 8"""
..__ "" nwn:>lf'1' ,.,.,.., ,,,.., n '' 1,_...i1i., Tl'!l., to ) 11 Hlllbl"' l<'ICI lllt-lkoMI F1lb. MIM~ •lld
L1.-W-, W,...
----'--~----------~=~~ -----·
A!bl.111~1
A1"11ori119 •
At111111
ll•k~fleld
Blsm1rdl
8olM
80$lon
Chlc100
C!ncln,..tt
C1Wtl11'1d
°"""' [le, Moine' o ..... ··-Fort Woortll Fr.1no
"""" -·· ,_..,
K1,,._1 City I.•• v .... LM-
Ml1ml Bff(ll Mltw.wl<n
Ml!l.-P<>1l1
N-Or!eti'" N..,.. York o.-•11111 """"' P1t0 Robltl
Phll!ICl.iPhl• Pl'loenl•
Pltflbl.lroll
Portt1nd ._Id. CltY
Red ,IJk/11 ....
laUl'!Wll!O
51, Leul1
S1ttM1
51!1 Llllt City ••n Diwo Ian Fr1nc~ S.MI 81111tr1
S..ltll ~
-·~ ,_.,
Wnhtntforl
HIM! Leow Prw<:. " .. I.ind of man he ls." ~
Mr. a.'d Mra. Maf~.blve.'!S children.
Their ages range 'rom the twins,
Cindy Sue and Linda Lou, who are ": to
Siana, who is 25. Tbeie are eight gtrls
.. . .... .. " " ,. .. " " " " " • ..
" " " " .. , . .. .. .. 0
M " " " u • .. .. ,. .. .. " .. .. n .. ,. " .. " " " " " .. " ..
" " .. " " ~ .. ..
" ..
" " .. 11 .. .. d ..
" " .. • " .. .. n ~ .. ., .. .. .. .. ..
" " .. .. ,, ..
~ and eight bo)'l. ' .nd I f ·1 " · "I have ,such • wo erfu amt~·
the 46-year-old woman said, managmg
'11 a faint smile. "We are lucky to be al
well off as we are." _ 'l'!le family 11 just one of the families
ot '/& riilnm "trapptd tor a weei In a
1.u burning coal mine which face a sad
'jbaob . vi.., "Wbaf have thes• p.!Ople got to (east
•21 about?" asked Mrs. Robert Friend of
Partenba whose brother ls among
the trap miners.
"You how most oC these f•rnllle.s
will be spending Thanksgiving," uid one
miner. "They'll be right there in the
church 'praying-like they have all
along." •
La!t WednesdQ at 5:40 a.m. the first ·°' explosion boomed Uirough Mountaineer
·'0 Coal Co. No. t mine, just as the 99 men
m the mldnlglll ahlft were about to qull
Twenty-one tan to !8fety or were pulled
.11 from Iha omoldo( pits.
'nwre has betn no contact, none .at
all, with any ol lbe other men despite
•round-tht>dock rescue eflom. And .,,.
.11 other expJoslon-the 14th In seven ~
-hit the mine Tuesday ju.st alter ()on.
solldatioo Coal Co. President John
Corcoran vowed that the search would
continue as Jong as there was even a
remote possibility of finding the men
alive.
Comrades of the ehlombed men-mern·
hers of United Mine Workers Local 40-42
-had turkeys and bags of food ready to
distribute to the stricken families.
"It's all we can do for them," said
Jocal President NOnnan Willard.
But coal mL"ling people are proud and
Mrs. Frank Matish would not accept the
food. "I don't want it: I was a good
money manager and we don't need it,"
she said.
'The "we" are Mrs. Matish and her JS.
year-old son, Jimmy. Her 56-year-old
husband is somewhere deep In the smol-
dering honeycombs of the mine.
Jimmy "wanted to march i:i the
Thanksgiving parade tonight but he
dldn"t know if he should," Mrs. Matish
said. Jimmy beats the big bass drum
in the nearby Shinnston High School
band.
She said she tcld him, "Y9u know
that' daddy always wanted you to march
in that parade, so you go on and march.
That's what he always wanted."
Mrs. Matish, who clutched at her ros-
ary beads as she talked, is a strong,
proud woma:i but a damp handkerchief
was knotted in her hands.
Corcoran, whose company is the par·
ent firm of Mountaineer, told a news
conference Tuesday, "No matter how
remote the possibility, we won't close
any avenue or escape. We won't cut the
rope."
The mine will not be sealed, he said,
"until a reaso:i for keeping it open does
not exist."
Los Af!,geles Must Wait .
200 Years for $3 Billion
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Thi Clfy of
Los Angeles rriiy be · lri for a $3 billion
gift -in about 200 years.
The prospect of that money was left to
the city in the will ol Dr. Maxmillian Lan·
do, a Loa Angeles optometrist who died in
1966 at age 8t1. ·
Lando !ell hall ol his l'/28,m ... tale to
the city, but he uld the ...... must be
left to draw intertst for 2fiO ytan befare
being ldrnod ovw ln tbe city where be
said Ile "•~llapplly the lijt y e a rs
of mt life/'.
Fltlanclal ·tsperta uld Iha! sine< lllch
a fun~ ·~ 51J>!if~li would 1doublo every
15 years, tlle bequest would exceed $3
billion by the year 21fl0.
The remainder of the money was left
to the ·University 0£ Minnesota to be used
for scholarships.
But five cousins are contesting t h e
will and Superior Court Judge Adolph
Alexander h a s taken the matter under
consideration. He will have to decide if
the doctor's unwitnessed two-page' will
is invalid btcause tt had an embossed
printing or Dr. Lando's name Instead of
hUJ signature.
Under C.lifomla law, aay will signed
y,•tlhout witnesses must be entirely tiand-
wrl'tto:n. • ~ t
•
• -------
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl
Mansfield Says Nixon
To Get Support-'H'
Japanese
Re-elect
Premier
'
Prlees Rising
. .
French Approve
' .Austerity Drive
TOKYO (UPJ)-Prbne Mln-
l.lter Eisaku Sato, a staunch
friend ol the Uniled Stites, PARIS (UPI) -The Na· of our country."
defeated an intra-party chal-tiooal Assembly'• f In an c e Couve de Murville outlined
lenge today and won a new committee to d a y gave the program Tuesdsy to a ma004~ to lead his conserv. neceasary approval to Prui-.,. raucous session of.the Natlonal
atlve part, and the govern-dent diaries de Gaulle's SI Assembly. He Appealed for
ment of Japan. billion "pain, effort and "pain, effort and dilclpllne,"
disciplloe" ~rity drive to The Whlte-halred. premier's U. Sato, 611 was re-elected save the franc. Prices rose, mhilite speech wu punctuated
presldent of the ruling con-politicians a h o u t e d and by the jeers of opponenta
servative and pro-American students grew restless. • tmhappy with the changes.
Liberal DemocraUc Party Committee approval waa Travelers reported police in-
([Jjp), a post which automat-given a few hours before the specting wallets and purses
ically carries with It the job 487.member assembly was to to enforce currency restric·
begin debate on the program Uons designed to halt ruinoU!
of prf· ie minister. announced Tuesda,y. Final ap-speculation ln francs. .
In ballotY.ig at • conven· proval was assured by the Tb e austerity program c u t
tion of LDP Diet (parliament) 13.1-vote Gaullisl majority in $1.07 billion from t be 1989
by memben and party repre-Uie assemb1y. Frenah budget, to be made
sentatives from each of Ja· What Prime MI n is t e r up parilally by Increased tax-
' ref Maurice Coove de Murville es on profits. It sacked the
pan I p ectures, Sato easily called "the war to save the nation's nuclear testing pro-
defeated. former foreign min-franc" sent the cost of gram for at lea.st a year.
* * *
\l~IT .......
Ne:rt Ma11or2'
Loo Angeles City Coun-
cilman Thomas Bradley
smiles happily as ·be an-
nounces that he wilf be
a candidate for the of.
fice of Mayor of Los
Angeles. He said that
be will not '"have a
foreign policy."
lster, Meo Mild, fl, and automobilea, gas, electricity
Shigesa.buro Maeo, SZ, former and consumer pxts jumping.
secretary general of the I.DP. Food held the line.
Sato received. 249 votes on Students at a suburban Dollar, Pound· Climbing the first ballot to Mlkl'a 107 branch of t he Unlvenity ot
and Maeo•1 95. Paris pelted their dean with tomatoes when he re.fused. to FRANKFURT, German Y In London, the Br!Usb-paund Sato's victory raises hopes explain a faculty appointment (AP) -The U. S. dollar con-climt>ed today to its,best rate
for the maintenance of .sectll'· they ;did not lik~ On another tinued to climb on the since the monetary crisis
Uy alliances between the campis, students sebed a Frankfurt money market to--erupted, ranging b e t w e en
United states and Japaa and lecture room. day u the demand for U. 2.3870 to 2.3815.
an amicable settlement of The leader of the Com· S. currency remained strong The franc remainea low In
Okinawa's return to Japan. munist Party In Franct:'s Na· in West Germany. London, and the Bank of Fran--
Speaking after his election tional Assembly" deplo~ De T!Je dollar opened at :S.98Z2 ce was believed. supporting the_
Sato said he was determ~ Gaulle's austerity program u marks, up from Tuesday'• rate by selling forejgn. U·
DELux:e
THANKSGIVING DINNER •
In Acldition to Our R•giul•r Marni
Special Children's Prlc•
S•rvin9 12:00 Noon to 11 :00 P.•'"•
k9"n'1ffet111 Ac .. , ...
A... ............................ .....
M2-4298
NEW YORK (UPI) -
R e p ublican President-elect
Richard M. Ni.%0n will get
suppart and sympathy from
th e D e mocratic-controlled
Senate if his policies respond
"to the world as it is today,
not as it was a decade ago."
Senate will not · accepl a
reverul of present policies
tending to disengage the
United states from its role
ln the defense and economic
support of other countries.
Among foreign p 0 l i c y
reforms he mentioned were
cuts in the "lavish use of
military . resources and man-
power overseas" as well as
in foreign aid. Mansfield long
has urged a cutback in
American ttoop ltrf:ngth 1n
Europe.
to tackle die major problems a 0 m.ena'.ce to the workers closing at :S.9815. change facing Japan. He cited Uie .~~~=::....~~'...:"~~~~~~~~-----::!:~::.· ______ _;i.,,=,..,=---~--,.;,_ _______ _
That's the word from Senate
Democratic leader M i k e
Mansfield, whose reference to
"a decade ago" was meant
to cover the years under
President Eisenhower.
In his first postelection
speech Tuesday n i g h t ,
Mansfield made clear the
KTTV Gets
Putnam for
$300.,000
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
Mansfield also said the
Senate -Democrats and
Republicans alike -would
support Nixon il be continues
to try to negotiat.e an end
to the Vietnam War.
Public Use
Housing OK
curly-haired tel e vi 11 ion NEW YORK (AP)
newscaster who ends his pro-grams by saluting schools that Teachers College at Columbia
fly the U.S. flag said today 1Jniversity has an no ulJ\ c e d
be has become the highest-plans for a $60 million building
paid journalist in broad-_program Jncluding· housing for
carting. residents of the. ~ighborhood
George P u t n a m • an as well as graduate students
Irishman loved by his fans
and scoffed at by his critics, and faculty memben.
is one of the best known "AJ far as we know we
television personalities in the are the -first academic in-
competitive Los An g e I e s • stttution to provide housing
Hollywood area. He specializes for the public on its own cam-
1n a direct, personalized brand bn
f •-u . 1 d . pus," said Dr. Jo H. o =very -inc u 1ng
editorialJ -that he says will Fischer, president of the col·
country'• security, the return
of Okinawa aod the United
States and stu<!ents' prot>-
Jeim.
There ii currenUy wlde-
•proad student unrest In
Japan. Some 51 univtnlUes
report trouble and eight cam·
puses are shut down by
strikes.
One ol. the chief targets of
the radical students is the
security treaty between the
United States and Japan, sub-
j<Ct to ...... a1 In 1970.
Sato has cbampimed the
security treaty. He 1w stated
repeatedly that 11 hu permit-
ted Japan to prosper in peace
under the protection of Amer·
ica's nuclear umbrella.
Houston Cross
Burning Told
HOUSTON, Tn. (uPI) -
A ail:-foot wood cross wu
burned Tuesday nlght on the
la " n ot a white Unlvenity
of Houlton administrator hav-
ing Negroes to dinner,
Edwin Bennett, 46,· an ad
mlnlStrator in the student life
division, had Jessie Brown",
a student and part time
newsman for KPRC radio.
television, and his date, Ann
Morgan, , both Negroes, for
dinner. earn him $300,000 a year for Jege, Tuesday.
five years with Metromedia -='il--jiijjjiijjiijj~------iijj~------iijj~I affiliate KTTV. II
That's more, be said, than
Walter Cronkite gets from the
Columbia Broadcasting
System; than Frank Reynolds
gets from the American
Broadcasting Co., and it might
be more than Chet Huntley
and David Brinkley get
together from the National
Broadcasting Co.
The three networks refused
to say how much they pay
their tQp ne\ts persona1itles.
,But sources in all three said
\:hey are pretty certain Put-
nam is correct.
Freckled-faced, cough-drop
chewing Putnam gives a fast,
present·tense delivery of the
news with a personal touch.
He often refers to "this
reporter." He announced
Tuesday that he'd accepted
the job, leaving rival station
KTI.A.
U.S. Expanding
Romania Ties
WASHING TON (UPI) -
Tile Unlted States ii e•-
pandlng cultural exchanges
with Communist Romania, ln-
chldlng television broadcasts
by public figures.
state Department
spokesman Jl o b e r t J .
McClolkey uJd in BMounclni
tho-..,......i Tllesd11 lhol
It wu "a matter of mutoa1
interest." Tenm aho call for
sUJdent euhangel one! wider
porllclpotiall by government
..,...,ie. .. bolb sides.
&•··~····· e * TOlllght * e e SKI NIGHT e e w.,_ Miiier'• e
• SKI :'VIES •
• SKI~ •
· :MR. ·oo·s:
• fllUeP-.rA •
• lllDS e IOUNDS • ITVPf.
··;64~:~:1
IERG'S
DELTA
TIRES
NOW ••• In COSTA MESA2.
141 E. 17th St.
SIZE
650.13
700.13
73S.14
700.14
ns.14
7S0.14
8:15-14
loo.14
'5S.14
850.14
(Opposite Bob's Big Boy)
TIR,E SALE!
"4 Ply Delta "Suprame" 110
Tub.I"' Whitewalls"
PRICE SIZE PRICE
13.44 885-14 19.97 900-14
.14.54 670.15 15.62 n5.15
15.48 710.15 16.67 915.15
16.26 760-15 17.97 14S.15
17.29 atS.15 19.87 900-15
18:42 91S.1S 20'.66 820.15
lach9 Ta ...... "-• 11.11 .. $1,,1,_1h
•
IACKED IY RcjAD HA?AaD $UARANT1E fOa LIFE Of
fltEAD, H:O.kAT!D OH Tl':tAD WlAl Of ACTUAL SELL· IN~ PICE -AHO NOT OH A FICTITIOUS LIST Pl':ICE.
NO lHlNl--IO Bll4P-HO ViBRAllOll
Use YOllt llonkAmorlc•rd or Mollw Choreol
HOUU!
.. l :JI 111 ... tin M . ... ....
DELTA TIRES
..... ; .. ·~
Wait till after 7 p.m,and call anywhere in the covntry fQr a dollar.·
· A .!ot ·ol loni distance caDers would be in·
&eVenth heaven if they co1.ild put one over on
the phone company.
Beause they think we're puttinr one over
on them.
-Tbeirgripe ii that they'~poylnsl!IOl'l lor
calling long distabce dwini the day than in
the evening boura.
But since most people iDJist on callini dur·
•
ing the day, our<>ve"1ead .-up;11p. up. SO
our prices ean't IO down, down, down. ~d
that'• why we charge ouu•gulaua~ •
But at nl(lhttltoe, we can ~tleally hell' a
pin drop. Hardlyanybodycalil lolli'diilalloe,~
oo hordly anr-eqaipm111tllboinl .-!. ,
And that'• wbtn Oll7 lliaa· !lislall,CI ..u,...:
... bet.t 111 Olli of • eoup1o of bodi.I..
Becausei!;yoacannltllllal\erT]).m.«m:I
I
•
•
•
•
·---------------------------•
. '
l
....
I
•
•
I
•
MAGNUS ORGAN
"'Play rtal music 111 &a sac·
111•s ••• wtt•o•t l1sso11s.•
Features 25 full·sizt treble 17 9 7 keys and 6 cMd keys . .Hi·
impact Polystyrene cabintt.
13'1 •.
Cookware $IT
MIRRD-14 piece rus~I Alumi""'
cookwart set.· High-
lighted witll avocado 3 · 5. 9 , covers a!ld while liall-
dles. "ow! Cook right
· Mg 'fritti mom. •
Walkie Talkies
Basketball slT
VDIT -otf<ial Si1' and weirht all-weather b1sketb111, 4 98
complete with official
size Joa! and net • , •
Y"' "*nd Oljo)'lllOllL I
· Basketball
•
YDIT -t.ninatol ~bber "0-grJpb"
bask1tb1ll, reiulltioo 3 79 Sill and weiglrt. Wl-
t"Jlmof and bff.
proof. I •.
~
Jose Feliciano
RCA ALBUM
feat vri•1 .. Hi-Mee! 'Souled" s..ak.,," "" "H•!Ch· CAJCk R•lwoy" ~" ..,,
"'"
"Whoops" CAME
,....,, I WHITMAN -S~· tilt Spi-! °' tilt
stunt! Squea~ the 2 3 Squeaker! Everyo11 9
plays · rtery spilt· 4.g
year old~ 1-4 ployers. •
Billiard Table
Wa[J·proof h>rdboard pl•1il11
loord """° witll <111 ~llianl cloth. 6 pockets w/ult~thne
~1·:~.\ flol~4,, legs
9
40
8
1" •
'11'!1".
I
•
la Mar -Cuddly 3 98
little sh11gy J111·
mals, kitty, do1,
and otlle<s. • 11.
"Candy · Cane 11
P!Ns
H111g 'em ~ your lret!
Stuff 'em in your stockinas
••• decor·
lfl ''"415~ pack11es.
l1a;. lie
, ............ ~.,~.,,,~~
' ~ ~
'
-PILOT -ADVERTISER Wtdnesdiy, NMmber 27, 1961
"Little Channer" w11• Baby Crawl-Along
Vital is PLAYPIN
HISllAll-!11 •i•~
IS" tlll . w sit b
lul~ ~itlol. Slit "'
bt made II cuwl, sil,
do htad slaod. 011md
i11 matchill.J drt~ aM
ponly set. -
5.99
Baby "Sweetums" ~n
UNIDI-w/h1ir -Jusl likt 1 re1I baby.
IS" Sweetwms "'dtiol and 2 98 wet. FtrNr jointed, she optns
and tloses eyes. •
12" Sidewalk Bike
lr.-C...orts hom ""1' lt 1il1s' mod~.
Stocdy steel fr1me.
Chr01111 plotol adivst· 1 g 95 able htodlt bss. Con·
tour saddle. lurquo~a. 1
12" Velocipede
llI.J11l1r-St"l ""'tnio-· '°" with sl1rdy rur ru, deck. g 88 BaK bea<in& pedal 11" wlletl.
!djostlble ""'1elar. Red finisL •
18" Dart Board
F11rC1•11l10tt-3 29 lloubl1 sided boord w/
I l111uha1"'o1 tipped
darts. •
Ping Pong slT
A 11" ~ullll I• for tllt ""'It fnily. ~eludes -~.. 3 . 29 net, l1llber fa pad.
dies, irack111 onl .
halls. I
Golf Game
MAii-i-t.o comp~le wi111 sllot
maker cl1b. set. 11 5 98
m1111-elubs, ~· shi)t size lf!t!ll, to1n1
lllYo!'t and nm. •
. C'limbing Tractor
IUIX-Stlol -••• """"'1
cocksjrilc -l!itll
. b!akund key lttaciled. 2 39 . Realistic IMrt hlllllllm
'!larks emit 11!roogh •
hood.
Bruiser Truck
. ....
. . Tool set
AllfltCAN -llrilo, ""1 ooyio1 , ... """"""""""' !Dols of lli&tt l!UlitJ 4 7 7
Hligned "' -liYI pity. I
"Twister'' ...
=.--:~ '= tlllt3tlll 6J011911p drift '"" olllb. It's
the "'Y slocki•' fe<t
1ame. •
Kreskin's E.S.P.
lllllLIY-A f11<inatin1 I""' wh!!1
~IY'" "plort tho 1nlricuin1 world of Ex-3 98 tr1 Sensory P•teplioo
with the mister of
ESP, Kreski• himsett. •
Spin Art
IRUMllHll -"lrt+m1I<" -Just
"""'" colo!s .. ,,. .. •ing turntable, Set 5 49 p1Ctures fomi 111 Ste·
onds. Ill boird and 4
colors. •
~. s1m sin Plush
).. real delight for big girls
as weK as little children.15 98 Choose from lion, pony or ·
chimp. · fa . •
Christmas "Corsages"
ChooSt ~om 1 lllY Holi~
a"'1)ment of ,bit~. '°"''·
belb lflj ""' will vorious
cotor ribt1e11i:
llMCO -Wi~ N&il:
hMness 11111 lioy pockel·
book. -""ltaini•g ~trap, p•sh
tile but"" and
watck ker
crawl an4wi1· 111.
13.88
11" Teensie Tots
MOllllAll:...~1 •loy' hlly )oinlld
wi~ OKly 1110lol Mir. Sile """'
.,.mp1ete with her 3 39 OWll comb, bnlsh,
mirtW', pi1rse1 C1111en. 1 . .
i1111 Scooter
' Myio. bea-01 tltH and staid
f0< par\iof. Black
~tastic 1rips.
Baked file Engine
Red Finish. . 4.29
Musical Tower
Cllll HllWIC£ -15\/i" tin, dear,
tor visual delight as wtll as educational.
17 metal colortul rotes 2 69 sollld when ball is put
tll~ugh top. •
Woodburning sET
· ILDON-Mafuk "Oesig ..... ·Ma!il:" tips
to th• desig• 01
plaque• ~witll 3 67 electric pe.;il and 6
ft. cord. 8 pieca of '
basewood ll'lcl designs. •
"Chatter" Telephone
FISHER Plll~E-Oesigaecl f0< pmcl'OOI·
ers ••• JMJll along al!d
0
it sayt "chatter-chat· 1 98 ter" and eyes roll UJt
ind down. Teachin&
colors and mimlm. I
Erectof Set
CILllRT-Moloriz!d • , • Oll!lplete with
steel girdeB, plates, 7 79 pulloys to boild Mobi~
Radar sea.... Oriti
Press ~ more. •
Bake SET
ly IDIAl -Betty Clocker set includ" re~ cakl mixes, plus 4 66 assorted utenslfs far
"'°kmt and I llCipe book. •
Knit-0-Matic
KENNEi -~t~ kottinr mochine.
Make and •r your
own scarves, mitto~s. 9 98 hats, etc. Contains
yn, threading hook,
stitcher, patterns. •
Yahtzee
LOWE -fami~ "'-action, '""""· cllance and skill. Alt 1 6 7 excellent palty game
!Do! ...... ,.. tr.ink
while having firn. •
Pony-Go-Round
MAILIN -Wini! ~e knob, '"""~
goes ro1nd Ind round 3 49 while horses jump
up and dowft as the
-music11lays. •
Walker Wagon
IJ PUYSllOL. with blockl. f'oi>ular
for begin"' walker, 4 99 loddl ... HoW.I II IS· '
sorted sc1led color
building blCICks. •
Chemistry Set
. PDITll -A well f<!Uipped home
~a.~~c~:·1~;in81 35 clla2mica91s
f<!Uipmen!. 514
1xperimts. •
HAIR DRESSING
Keeps hlr 111t aQ Uy
wll~11t 1r11se.
7 11?. R11. I.ft
77c
Ivory
LIQUID .·
Gelltl1 wMtt Hmplt1'
fer dlsbes, f111 !Ms.
32 Oz.
•
~MAIOMAY
Eau de Cologne
2-0l.
SIZE
3.50
ga11tasia.
Hair Pieces
Wiglet
100); Hum"
Hair
7.88
Posticbe
(Oeluxo) 100'.l:
H11ma11 H1ir
10.88
Casca11e
Ringlets
Box of 4 curls
7.88
Q Styrofoam HEAD88c full
head
ChrilltmU;S CARPS
2 Far Tbe Price Of 1
•tlf•Ctm"assort·
men! of 15 one of a 212 00 kind canls, some with
foil decoration. •
''Tr1fitl111I lftl'4
::·;..i..r? .. ":i 213 50 . ·~"'"'*-.
•
Wtdn -
BAI
PU
or -
-~
c
ff'
Krlr
• ~
. • • • • •
I
,. . --w~. llOffmber i.1, 19til
~~· -• BAND-AIDS .
PWYIC STRIPS
orl.UR STRIPS
,, 71
9~
SCHICK
Alto Band .....
CARTRIDGE
lt~r Suinless Krlll mlut Hies . . . '
J .• 19
PANASONIC
PILOT·ADV!RTISER-
Excech-in
Tablets
Thi 11tr1-str111th
,11n nllner.
1.49 l1ttl1 11 IOD
93c
Electra-Sol -
For Electric
Dishwashers
Naw: Slip Spatting.
20 Oz. Bnx
29c
9" Portable TV
fl1tk & Wllt1 -'7HE ClEARl'IEW"
-9 Sol~ s~~ devi<llo~ll!'li!J portlll~ •/~tr1C1•·
~I Miid~ and 38-sq. 69 95 Jn. sharii picture de--
I.o il. l!lt-109. •
.
Maxwell
House
INST ANT COFFEE
lO Dz. Sitt
1.49
..
Polaroid® c111a PACK _
land Camera
Cok!; plcillm ~ I milllfl. ,
• bladi l wllitos In sacoadL Fiii~ 39 95 lllomotic with ., tledlie 'Y•
1111! main perf1ct ""°""' Ml)limo. #11211 I
l!Pf.lt • • • • 1 59 Blacl l wllll for "Swtqs". •
rm.n ... • 1 59 llllCI I llill fw
"Bil Sliqw". •
Portable Radio
All/Fii Fer Y11r ElilJlllfl
JAD£ -Deluu Z bm, 4 ilades flllio;
Jet blae'I cist IOI landsomo llOtJI
froal ~· wi~ oar-. aiJJ· ln1 cast
S\'I ,\ ', \:'\ L \ . . . . .
TIPl·lll •••
Bloell-TIP£·1M ... Color AIM
#1211
I Yott llltlrf
CARNATION
Instant
Breakfast
Chacalate ar
Chacalate Malt
r!:, 79c
11Sna-Flok" Kit
1,98 3.79
WTMAN IODAll
Color FILM
•CX.1H-12•um • Cl-111
• CX-1!7
•Cl.fie
fun easy-to-apPly! Fire retardant
Apply wi~ .. ~aust fype vacUl[m
eluner. Comp~te wilh ..,. -~-:.; -evlfjlbin1 to flock 2 29 ·your own tree. Refills
available. •
9.75
aquD Statione11
...... • .. 111--..i-·--·-2 29 ~ lldilll nltk:olall :',nots. 11(.UI •
11Panti-Panti"
HOSE
~.:.--1 1'11111 illl .... ............. ........ "' .• -,.,;: : • Iha .. -£ 1.98
DRUG· STORES
OP.IN' A.M. tt 10 PJL. 7 DAYS AB
.
NIWPORT alACH ••
,. llYINI IN w1ncLI,, PLUA
HUNTINGTON aUCH
SPRl-LI & IDlllOR
)
• r ••
HUNTINGTON aucH
-· AND laookHURIT ' .... . . ' -111111•••·------·-. "
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...
Fin~h Going~
Cabinet Spot Of fered
a e11binet post unW he know1
who wlll 5Ucceed him.
Finch generally draws his
most. enthusiastic 11 u p p o r \
from the party's more liberal 1 wing while some of Reagan's l l
triggest backers are among tl\e ·
state's Republican con-~.1
servatives. ~l
•
M llUHll WOILD • Mil.MUM
SACRAMENTO !AP)
Calllornl". Lt. Gov. Robert H.
Finch u.'fs he hu discussed
jolnlnt' the cabinet o f
Preaident-e.lect Richard M.
Nl.J:on. But he adds that bis
final decision awalts talU with
h1I family -and a conference
with Gov. Reagan over who
wllllUCCeed him. Finch said, "I feel a vested __.-....__
interest" in the lieutenant --_ _, ''There have been
dlacuasions of several possible
cabinet jobs," Finch said of
hi8 conversation with Nl1on.
He declined to name them
and aa1d Ni.Ion bad not offered
him I specific post.
governor's office and sald be
has an obligation Lo the voters
who elected him to a four-year
term in 1966.
Asked what he would do
if Reagan decided to p i c k
someone whose vlewa conflict·
ed with hlt, Finch saJd, "I'd
have to ra.lse my voice if I 1
didn't think it w~ someone
compe.tent to handle the job."
, '
- -... · . ..
Phone 548-3007
• 1001.
A11•nclR•
"' L•¥·A·W1y e N1w • Utt" w C•rr+PI• ..
lil-1 $ft.ti
Mesa
Mini Bike
• y,, • . ....... e lllillcU., . ""'' e UI' k.at.I •
• z.w.
e ••• K•t
2267 Harbor
Cotta Ml ..
1/2 GAL. SALE
SAN JOSE CLASH -Militant students battle with
uniformed ROTC cadets and instructors in class-
room building Mooday •I San JMe State College.
Brawl was .part of terror campaign evident through-
out the day in an effort by militants to close the
23,000 student campus.
B Arrests
Finch WU interviewed Tue!-
day night by telephone from
San Francisco where be was
stopping overnight en route
from New York to Sacramen-
to.
A close friend and adviser
of Nixon's, Finch said he had
spent the past few daya in
New York helping the in-
coming President pick a
cabinet.
Presidio Conditions 1~~~~~, s~ee ~by ~Tod~ay·s~
SJS Strike Try
Called 'Failure'
SAN JOSE (UPI) -At·
.empts by black and white
activists to bring Sari Joee
stale College Lo a standstill
• Tuesday were termed a
:. failure by the school's ez-·
. ecuUve vice president William
.. J. Dusel.
Eight penorµi , sir of them
students, were arrested on
charges r angi n g from
r esl!lin& vnst to battery
following spOradlc violence on
the C<lllege campus. Four
students were treated fo r
minor injuries.
tbe strikers charge,
discriminates against
Negroes.
other demands called for
increased support for a college
program that aids minority
group students and a depart-
ment of "third world" studies.
'111e black studen t s'
d'emanda were read Tuesday
at a convocation attended by
about 1,000 persons represen·
ting the faculty, st u dent
government, the United Black
Students for Action and the sos.
Finch said that Reagan's
choil!f! of a new lieutenant
governor will influence his
decision on whether to move
to Washington.
"It's a factor, but not a
controlling one," he said.
Finch said he would like
lo see Reagan choose someone
1vhose views are "attuned"
to his own posiUons.
"We can work o u t
something," Finch said.
Tuesday, Re a ga n's ex-
ecutive secretary W i Ilia m
Clark Jr., said that he and
Finch had discussed several
potential successors.
He said Reagan will not
make a decision until Finch
resigns from the post. Clark
made that statement i n
response to reports that Finch
might be delaying accepting
Several windows w e r e
broken in two buildings and
six small fires were started
in traah bins. Plainclothes of.
ficerl from the San Jose
Police Department were call·
ed on campus to make the
arrest..
'Double Life' Priest
Sentenced to Prison
Dusel iasued a statement at
the end of the day saying
the strlte had failed because
"the overwbebniDg majorJey
of the studenta: condnued thelr
studies without ioterruplion. '.'
He said the college was able
to maintain "'reasonable order
and Jntegrity" becauae of the
cooperative· ef f or t s of
responsible lludent leaders,
faculty, admJn1'trators and
campua and city law officers."
A student strike was called
for by the Students for a
Democratic Society to back
the black students, whose
demands included e1clusioo of
Brigham Young University of
Provo, Utah, from t b e
Spart.ans' athletic schedule.
The Utah :school ·is owned
by the Mormon Church which,
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A
federal judge se!ltenced a Ro-
man catholic priest to two
yean in prison for failing to
JAL Jet Makes
It to Dry Land
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The Japan Air Lines jetliner
that splashed into Sa!! Fran-
cisal Bay short of the inter·
national airport runway last
Friday has reached a place
on dry land.
Lifted from the water by
huge cranes Sunday, the DC-3
was towed Tuesday to a Unit·
ed Air Lines hangar for re-
pairs.
THE
it•
THANKSGIVING f EAST
ROAST TOM TURKEY
With Ch.stnut Dr•ssing $ 4.00
VIRGINIA BAKED KAM
ROAST RACK Of LAMB
louqu•ti•r• of Wild Ric• ··-····-·············· S.50
For Two P•rsons .. ·-···-........................... 10.00
ROAST l.Oll6 ISUllD · DUCK
With Wild Ric •, Orent• S•uce ................ 5.JS
CKH'S SPECIAL N£W YORK SlUK
With l •rn•ii• Seu.,: ............................ ~ 5.75
l"cl.1d•t
lteU.NJ Tro.y Fn.U& Cup or Shrimp CocklaU
Sovp and SaJad, Choict of Dresringi
Pototot1 -Au.Cratin, Whipptti,
Swttt or Can.died Yam.t
V~tf4ble -Green Beam Almondine
De1sert -Pumpkin or Mince Pie
Betferage -Co//et. or Tea
CHILDREN'S DINNER -$2 .25
Clll.ic1 11 'Entr1•
IOAST TOM TUUIY -With Chestnut Dr•ssing
Vft,fNIA MOD HAM -Witft Pln••ppl• S•ue •
l"ch14.1
Clw>f<e of Fnllt Cup or Shrimp
Cocktail or Soup tolth Salad
V-01~lu -Po~• -Milk -Dessert
1045 aAYSIOE DI., tlWPORT -675-0200 . ' -. .. . .
1
report income of $111,000,
after refusing to allow court·
foonJ discussion of the cler·
gyman's J?C:"SOnaJ finances.
U.S. Dist. Judge William
P. Gray imposed sentence
Tuesday on the Rev. Robert
Daniel Nikliborc, 37, presi·
dent of an orphanage for
teenage boys at Banning,
Calif.
Nikliborc pleaded' guilty
Oct. 22 to charges of failure
Lo report income totaling
$11 1,000 during 196.1 and 1965.
With the remark that Nikli·
bore was not charged with
misappropriating m oney,
Gray cut' short Tuesday an
effort by U. S. Atty. Matt
Byrne to intro d uce the
priest's finances and way of
life into the discussion prior
to passage of sentence.
Rapped i~ Law Suit
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Unbearable living conditions
at the San Francisai Presidio
Stockade have led to one death
and "some 30 serious suicide
attempts," according to a au it
filed in U.S. district court
challenging the Army's deten-
tion of 27 soldiers who are
being held on possible mutiny
charges.
Attorney Terence Hallinan,
who represents 17 of the men,
Tuesday charged conditions in
the stockade were in direct
violation of th e Fifth a n d
Eighth Amendments to the
U.S. Constitution by inflicting
cruel and, unusua1 puniShment
and denying prisoners due
process of law.
The Anny denied t b e
chaTges.
Ata news conference,
Hallinan said there was "no
doubt" that the fatal shooting
of a prisoner, which touched'
off a sit-in and subsequent
detention, was a suicide
brought on by conditions at
the stockade.
He 1 a i d the bther suicide
Sam Yorty Hits
attemplJ resulted rrom the
same conditions, that o f
overcrowdedness, unsanitary
quarters and inadequate food.
In addition, he a 11 e g e d
stockade guards were under
the influence of a I c oh o l,
narcotics and dangerous drugs
while on duty armed with
shotgura.
"Guards frequently point
guns at the prisoners ... and
discharge their gum into the
air in a manner designed to
create a state of terror ... "
Hallinan charged in the suit.
suit.
Act of Congress Lets
Wedding Bells Ring
SANTA MONICA (UPI) -
It took an act of Congress
to make the wedding bells
ring for airline stewardess
Sandy Anderson.
But it's all over now , and
23-year-old Sandy has a hus-
hand and the assurance she
can go on working as a
stewardess for U n i t e d
Airlines.
Jt was disclosed Tuesday
that Sandy had kept her long
postponed wedding date wilh
Robert N. Baird, 39. They
were married Monday at the
First Methodist Church here.
Sandy's wedding plans last
year ran afoul United's rule
against married stewardesses.
Her union backed up her
determination to marry and
hold her job, and at one time
threatened United with a na-
tionwide .strike.
The union protested that
United did not apply the rule
to male stewards, and charged
United with violation of anti·
discriminaUon Jaws.
Two weeks ago United gave
up the fight after Congress
had passed a Jaw protecting
married stewardesses, and a
federal agency threatened to
intervene.
UCLA Hecklers·i~===========
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Mayor Sam Yorty, angered by
stude!lts heckling b i m at
UCLA, is urging Gov. Rea·
gan and other UC regents to
crack down on militant stu-
dents on California cam·
puses.
The mayor's speech before
1,000 UCLA students Iut
Thursday WU comlantly in-
terrupted by -and l81Jih-ter by a group ol hecklers.
TKANKSGIVING DAY iRVICf
10 A.M.
SI. John The Divine Episcopal Church
2043 Orange Ave.
Costa.Mesa
R•Y. John W, Don•ld1oft
ONCE MORE WE PAUSE TO
ALL OUR GIVE THANKS FOR
MANY BLESSINGS
LYNN HART JOHN HART
I
Want Ads:
e Shape Up aM Ship Out!
Position open immediately
for quaillied shippinr and
receMn&" clerk.
e THE PRIZE •••
A n 0 v e I MW electrk:
range, won but not need·
ed . . • will sell for $185.
• Mi.uina: Llnk.
An elSt'ntial tool ot hla
trade, a ~r saw, wu
Jost by a man on Satur-
day. e Unfo?'Kettable
A litetlme gift • • , a trfp
to Europe tor atudentl -
all the unusual plaota. e You ARE Needed ••••
as a housekeeper/cowr-
ness for this .father and
ro".
• Mature woman needed for
secn!tarlal and bookk~
ilJi' duties by &CC"Ountant
See This FRIGIDAIRE
,0 GAS 0
DRYER
NOW ••• at DAVIS BROWN!
~--·---=--=-=--=---=-•
ii --Im-11 ' <::>
Even this budget-priced
Frigidaire Dryer has
Durable Press Care
e DK:. Prop•' f•1111>tr•tu,.. pl11s 1nd·of.cyt.T1 cool~•w" ltrfft'
D11,1bl• Pr111 it'"'' out •f t+.1 olry1,, '••dy t. w11' ., 1'114:
•••Y with•11t ir•tti"9·
e 5•"fl• Flowin9 H••'· '''""''' f1Dric1, dri11 tl.•rr+ 1oft & fr11~.
e No·H••f S1ttin9, F•r •lrtllf
' fl11ffi"'.
e N• 1toop, fl"• 11111h D•ct•ll
lint tCl"l•n. lt't ri9ht •R +Ii•
door for 111y cl11nln9.
Our 22nd Year In the Harbor I.real
@ DAV I 5 R R 0 \V N
411 E. 17th St.
Dally 9.9, Sat. 9-'.·
' Com.MNi
646-1&14
• -
•
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DAILY PILDT 8
New Reeord Due
For the Record Juvenile Court
.. Meeting•
Marriage
Licenses
BELL BROADWAY
111.Q.RTIJARY
110 Broad~o1ta l\leu
U8-3433
DILDAY BROTHERS
HunUn110• VaDe1
~-ry
17111 Beach Blvd.
, Hutlqto• Beaeb
.• ' BC-7771
PACIFIC VIEW
,. · MEMORIAL PARK
'· Cemetery e Mortuary
Cllap<I
-Pacllle Vltw Drl ..
Ne""*' Beacb, Cllllonda
MUIDI
PEElt f'AMILY ·
•OOLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7111 llolaa A ...
wenmmmr -
..
• •
• .
Cases Mounting
OJIAllGE -Orange County
' .Juvenile c.o..at CHl!I are well
on tbe1r way to a new record
and mlllhroomlni caleodan
at the Maocbester A venue
faclllty have compelled
Juvenile COUrl Judp Bruce
Sumner to advllrille for a new
juvenile court referff.
renilen, McCartney added.
Law revlllon1 had dlrtclly
Jed to a conalderable lncrtaae
hi the number ol conte8ted
c~, the administrator ad·
ded, .ond this WU Wbert the
atraln on the, curront lour·
referee court bad b e e n
greateet.
Applicatiolll for the l20,a72
vacancr 1n Judge Swnner's
court musl be a~yl who
have been adll;tltted to prac-
Uce belore the Supr<me Courl
~.., ... htdl .i.
An Ully< ol the ltnt 10
moaths ol 1168 ahowo that
the court handled 41,099 cues. m more than were proceaed
In the whole of 1118'1 when
40,m cues were logged.
Of the 1168 tally, ZJ,2:1& mat·
terl were juvenile traffic of·
fenses. In 1M7, traffic of •
fenden accounted for 2a,f77
for at lellt five years,
McCartney said. Written ap-1,;oiiii
pllcaUom will be welcome at Alf tho Flxfn'o for Y041r ProudMI Fuotl
::n •.m. Tuftday, NI , ...ir. JJ.f ...... dwll.,
2:• p.m., w.td1 tlurnlnt. t• a. F llW .d•-•• .,l."jl;,~·= ri ... "" '""" ... ar Frotn ;r•Ou• "'Kler AOt, 0
•:&,.:~m;!r'""49'· c.r 'ir.. 1'1 This' unusu~-lookinl vessel is Navy's USS Wllk.in-
1014 1.m. Tu!:!.,~..:r~1 •Id, U3lo son. Bullrshaped portion of bow, as large as the
Twin 111111 or1~ •• ""''· 1 Mayflower which brought Pilgrims to New England,
10:23 11.m .. 1r111 fir~, 2.Qlll flll It. h I d f hi h I red I ,,s:1 1.m. wo11llft<l1v, cir tr,.., '°' s. ouses rans ucer or g es powe sonar sys em
Shor• oriv'ttt..rmi..-,.r aboard any surface ship currently flying flag of a
2:2' p.m, Tuna y, -M>clown, S.11 pi-Western power.
"a FrffW•Y 1!ld $11rllltdel1 -----'--'----------------4:24 P.m.,, fir. lnv.$lllllttlon. MIOl \'1f. i..:-110
11:21 p.m .. ~. lJtll B1r1tw Clrt.lt
"Wllall Velt.,-
t :JS '·"'· ,...,.dlly, medial 11d. S.11
Ditto F-IY 1t Sl1!9r -· ':JS p.m., rntdkll 1ld, l!dll'lfff' ·incl
Mll1noll1 HllllH11tllll 8Mdl
•:O<I 1.rn. Tvesc¥y, ''"" ""'-'201 MMllltn'll,...n
•:SJ 1.trt., t1r1 lnVllflHllo!l. 16'SI tlrn--':56 p.m., trill! fl,., 12'1 H__.
N-.f Beeat
County Departments
Horwred for Safety
of the 40,m total. ·
About nine pet<>ent of the
1918 10.month total "-3,&89 -lnvolved juvenUe offenders
Jn detenUon proceedings. That
c<mparts with a 1"7 percen·
tage ol allgblly less than nine
percent !or the aamo type
ol proceedlna.
the ollJce ol the court ad·
minLstrator, he aaJd.
Yule Food
Featured
At Bazaar
Ftnet collected for the A holiday benefit bazaar
January-October, 1168 period featuring Christmas docora·
totalled f I! 4 , 41 5 • 7 5 , the UDlll and food wUI be held
analysis revealed. For the Monday at the Memorial
calendar year 19'1, juvenlle Garden Center in the Orange
court authorllies turned County Falrgroundl property.
fm,401 over to the county Spomorlng •leDCY ts tho
1:51 1.m. TUftd1y, air ""' a 1•
$aoUhorW Orlvt l2:1S 1.m., .:er 11,., m"I OllMtl ftM
2:90 p,m., bn,1111 IJA, OoYfl' Incl
Cliff Prlvt
1;'11 '-'"~ fltl lnvtslkltllon. 1611
lund. OraJ!ie Collnly M e m o r I a I juries but very 1t1bstantial S u p e r 1 or Court Ad· Garden Center non p r o I 1 t
1avlngs in workmen's com· m I n I 1 tr a t or Lesllt L. educational organlzaUon, led
pensation costs were received McCartney defended th e by Mrs. Henry Read, of Sm\
putting Orange County's in· declalon to appoint another Clemente. OCNn Bl .....
lO:JO PJl'I .. mo..., ns Vii Orvltt&
ll:Jl -.m., .emtdUr• tll'IJ. HI VII Trlllfti
Thanksgiving Dinner
Be a Hero on Thanksgiving
Get Mom out of the Kitchen
' ' ' 'r
HERO IUTTONS COST $265
AS LITTLE AS ......
" CaJta me~a ·(Jal/ & C. C.
Open lhlnkJQiYina Day for Dinners
Starting at I p.m.
all "'''"" ln~r.rda ..up '' 11lad, roll and b11tkr, J>.v•r•t•
ind d11 .. rt.
YOUN• TOii TUlUY -....... ..... S2'5 a...-.. CNllMny ~_.all M Tri ......
lOAST LICi Of POill wltti Ap,a. S..-• D .....
Child,..ft'I Portion IUnd•r 121 Turkay and Pork •••• 11.lt ' .
C•I•~ 12:17 p.m. T~ay, .irvctu1t1 t1,.., :mt J1v1 ROid
SANTA ANA -Perfect no-
Injury on the job re<onls !or
the past llical year were
praised by the Board of
Supervisors Wednesday as 30
county departmenls received
honors.
jury insurance rate! amoni Juvenile OOJrt refette u belng All sorta: of materials for
the lowest In Callfornta," forced upon the court "by making decoraUons, p I u 1
Featherly said. an unprecedented and con-jams, jellies and confections IOAJT LON• ISLAND DUCIUN• .............. u ...
'l!le super•l1or1 com-tinulng lncreue in juvenile will be on eale 10 a.m. tq PllMl l llS Ofl m11 IDf -M .tn ..•••••••••• $4.JI
Pilot Visitors plimented rounty workers on court prt>Cttdlngs." 4 p.m., wlth drawlnp for .. OIUD u.s, CHOICI NIW YOll STIAI , ••••••••• M.tl
their achievement and cited Recent state and federal prizes every hour. ewu et ID-"
the Safef;y Office staff under cow1 declslOOI wbich led to Funds wUl iO to maintain le• C,..1m Sunda.-Pu;,,p.in or M111c• M11t Pl•
Purcbasihg Ag~t Courtney the application of adult coort and Improve the Garden A11ort1d Mint•
Chandler for its success ln procedures to many aCCUled Center, a memorial to the NtwY .. M•AffM"H••lllttHl~I...,....,."
TOl.ll'I IA COlldvcttd MendlY* Ind
Frld1n for toehoot cl••ws of fll'th
1r1de level 1n0 1bov1 or Giiier or·
11nl11tlom of 11 1'1!111 !hit "' ~
ti. lnttl'Mlld '""'" IMY Clll Mr. t>\ldl9)' Rk:tl. "'2411. a.t. rn.
The employes outstanding
record led to the county win4
ning the California
Supervisors Assoclatioo first
place safety achievement pla·
que for the lowest injury score
among large counties. This is
the sixth conJeCUUve year for
the honor.
acctdeot prevenUon and Juveniles played a part In the old Santa Ana Army Air llaH RESERVATIONS PLEEEEESE. 5<40-7200
cWms control. __ lncre~:!:ued~!_tr~al~ftc:...!!olJ)'OUn(~!.,!O!!:f·~and~~all'!.!war~v~e~ter!:_!B!l.!~.--_11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'""',.111
CAC Pl3DS
Delayed on
Courthouse
SANTA ANA -The Com-
mwtlty Action Council's Pro-
posal to take ()Vet the entirt
top floor of the old Orange
County Courthouse building
rent-free • ~an into d e I a y
before the .B o a r d of
Supervisors Tuesday.
Ronald 1.un<eiord, CAC ex·
ecutive director, pointed out
that CAC'11 present head·
quarters at 206 W. 3rd st.,
Santa Ana, are inadequate and
unheated.
He said CAC, which was
accepted as the official county
poverty fighting group last
June 5, would have closer Ues
to the comtty if located in
I.he courthouse.
Claire Eooi! of the Cowlty
Administrator's Office pointed
out that sun>lus county office
space was being grabbed up
q u i c k 1 y by overcrowded
departments. He said the Hall
(If Records from which the
District Attorney's office and
courts have moved to the new
courthouse building, was ,being
taken over by the Welfare
Department and the Asseasor.
Supervisor C. M. "Cye"
Featherly suggested the court.
building al 6th and Ross
Streets, but F.nnis sa1d that.
would be demolished to allow
Santa Ana'.fl proposed reloCa4
lion of 4th St.
Supervisor David L. Baker
pointed out that there are long
slandlng p 1 a n s to use t he
courthouse as a. county
historical mooument an d
museum.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen
suggested that the subject be
postponed for two weeks anct
it was set for discussion Dec.
10.
The o1ih County Jill waa
anOtheat suggestion but Ennis
said this building Wal In such
.l!ad shape tt ahould be tom
down. Tbe old COIJrthou>e J _. •:trhicb the CAC .covets
.~. ·now occupied by
Dopar1meets I and 2 « the
SUperlor COUrl. 'llleJ will
move out Dec. 1$.
•• •
t'ourse Over
Charles M. Schelnolt, 17205
Santa Clare St., Foantain
Volley ts 1 recent lflduale
ol . Ibo Soulllml Cllllornla -j!:.~taon -C:onipan1'•
T.ra111'Portatlon School . Scl1tlai&t II emplord u I
aervbman at the company'•
llunl1ng1al Beach S er v I c o
Center.
• •
A second flnt place plaque
from the NaUonal Safety
Council was also received.
The 30 department.I with
perfect non-injury r e c or d s
lrom July 1967 to July 11168
each received safety council,
state Compensation Insurance
Fund and special Board ol
Supervisor• awards .
County government divlaiont
receJving recogniUon included
Ad minis tr ati v eOfflce,
Agriculture, Agriculture Ex-
tension, Airport, Audltor~n
troller, Board of Supervisors.
Clerk of the Board, Clv I
D e f ense, Communications,
Coroner, County Counsel, Data
Services, Harbor and Parks,
Industrial Fann.
Marshal, Harbor Judicial
Dlstrlct; Marshal, S o u t b
Oiange County District;
Medical Center, Cent r a I,
North and South C o u n t y
Judicial Districts; Personnel,
Administrator, Public
Defender, Purchasing, Real
Property Services, Safety,
Retirement Board, Sheriff,
Rossmoor Dblrtct, Veterana
Services and Water Works
District No. 4. ·
Supervisors' 'Cbairnian c.
M. "Cye" F.ealherly noted
that the county's averq:e for .
Jost-Ume injuries for the past
six years is sllghUy above
five incidents for each million
manhours worked.
"Not · only were employee
spared many ~eceSW"y in-
Saddlehack
Meeting Set
SaddlebaCk College's 110-
member General Advlsory
Committee wUl review current
and future college proKfams
al a dinner meeting Dec. 4.
The citizens' organization,
comprised of residents of lf
communities, was formed this
year prior to the opening of
tbe new junior coll'F·
The commlttee LI divided
into 1 I subcommittees, all
related to the catnpul opera-
Uon. PropouLI ol the oul>
~ttees are wbmltted to
the adminlstration and ln tum
relayed tq... the board of
Vusteea. J
Chalnnen ot t h e sub-
committees an membert of
the college otalf.
The General Advilory Com·
mittee will meet 1t 7 p.m.
al Mllllllngll 8_.t Room
In Laauna llllll, Leisure
World.
'Messiah' Slated
KrLIUn Wlngenl, daughter ol
Mr. end Mrl. Dolli<rt J .
Wlnlenl, ION Ocean Blvd.,
Newport Beaeh, ii a member
o1 the Seattle Pldllc College
Oratorio Soclely wlllcb will
preee:nt Handll'1 "M•'ab"
Die. 4 ID Suttla ()pore Bouae.
'•
(luist111u is •••
\
littinl On Iota's Jn••
Seta am... at Saulh Cooat -
Plua thlti ..... Nontllhor 29th.
Hewlll be ill our~ Court
to lmd oa ear. lt'• .c.netbJng ho'• llOOd at.
•
'
' •
..
loath toast ?Jan r _.,_____ t
J
• I I
• •
--------------~~----·---. _ _. __ -·---
"
I
I.
'I
I
•
J 9 DAILY PIL.Of WtdMsd41, Noftm.bft 27, \968
Middle-aged Ai·e OVER THE COUNTER
Real Money Bags Wutern NASO Ll1tlng1 for Tuuday, November 26, t'61
o..tallitM tfWll TlMJl"W1r. 1111'1. 11 • ..._ ~O.. ,..,_ • • ....._ ...... ......,,
LEGAL NOTICE
f"..JltsJ . ,.. ,,.
c••Tll'KATI! Of' •USIMIP.lf l'ICTITIOUS PllllM NAMI!
Tti. undtrll....., dot-I !>e'rtllY c..-1111
'"'' he II condu<llMI I Miii 0.-M• bu•f,,_, 1• 1n !n(llvlck.o•I 11 P 0, 8<1•
100, WHimlMlef' "6fl. C1tltornl1, ..-r
ll>t lltlltioo.11 """ M<M er' l'ROPVCTlVE IPEAI DF CALIF'OllNIA 1nd lh•l 11lcl
flrm 11 GOl!'lltOM'd ot n>e follow!"' tt•...,.,
-1>1me In tull 1M pkct er' rttldtnct
II •• follow1• i'll'Wif: Rofllrt G. O.nleh, 'H5 I cor-
• Av..,ue. i.-eeacll, Ctl!lorl'lla.
O.ttd November n, 1961. , Ratoer1 G. O~nlt!i
'$AT1! OF CALIFORNIA, )
'CDUNTY OF ORANGE ) U.
By SYLYIA PORTER
U you are under '8, you
get all the headlines In the
nwketplace today. "Think
Youlli!" ts the battle cry· of
the marketing t.xperls; ll.p
that $18-$20 billion tffn-age
bonanr.a is lhtir obseMlon.
"Nub," say I. from the van-
"'Be polnt of lht afnuent oVel'·
30. ''Mirage!" adds Fabtan
Llnden, cllie! c o n 1 u m e r
economist. of tJie NaUonal
todustrlal Conference Board,
and Linden salves my ego
by adding:
"WHILE OUR youth are the
ones getting all the het11alin1?S,
the 'bard core' of demand
is in the purses and pockets
of the middle-aged -and it
will stay there, even in area.'i
generally associated w i I h
youlh." To back it up :
-Teen-agers may have an
income of $18-$20 billion a
year but lhat's a tiny fraction
of the nation's total spending
LEGAL NOTICE • On NOVPml>!!r 2), lNI. befvtt A\I, ~ Netarv Publk In arid l!)t ... 1c1 County ~M S!lto, _ _..,,., IPJl'llred RotieM l'-JUll
(;, D1nl•lt knc-lo ..... to "" llW CEl.Tll'ICATIE OF eu11Nf.$I """°" ~f name Is tot>Krllltd lo FICTITIOUS N•MIE ~.,. wftl1!" rn1tr"""'"' ""' lt~nowleOveO T,.. undtrol•ned cloeo cer!llY I '"' 10 "'* 1h1I 1'le uacuted ~ •lmt'. Cor.ducll"' • llllilneu 11 .ci F1lr t>rlv1. 1Yltntu m' hind •na SHI. c~•• Mfl.I, C•llklrnl•, under ,.,.. llt-
!SIEAl.l Jimtl L. 5mltn ll!IOUI firm """' o1 C 0 LI.CG E Nol•rv P'ut>llc Jn Ind tor PHARMACY l'MI INll ••/IS l!rm Is ~
said Count'I' and SI•'• Poled ol lhtl tollowln9 person, whow
f>ONILD l . OAMIELS, AN,. ~•mo In futl Incl pl•Ct of rtsl.Scnce )I II fo11DW$:
>U •1.i Clll"' .. " An. GARY ..... DREYFUS. Jl01 Monroe
Or1ntt. Ct llttl'ftll Wiv, CO\ta M~. C1111!ornl1. 'Pul>"'hf'd Or1n<1r C<»sl 01111 Piiot, O led NoYembe 5 1161
f.lov""'l>V 21 ""' December " 11. '.!i I GARY A. 'oiiEYFUS
1'6t ion Stitt o1 C1\llor~11, Or1ro11e Co.ml'I':
On Noveml>!!r ~. 1'6t, twfare m~.
1 NollrY Pub!lc In 1r>d far Hid State,
Pef'l(ln•\1¥ IPl'tl•ed GARY A. DREYFUS LEGAL NOTICE
... :nm
CfllTl•IC.ATf Gt< IUSOIESS •ICTITOUS MAME
1u1own ta m1 to be the per.an Wl'IMI
MITll Is subKrlbed to !I'll wllhlft 111-
tlramtnl t nd ldt.M'#lecl9e tll l.lKU1ed
!ht ... IT't. (OFFICIAL SEAL) ROSEU.E C.. l(NOX
Nol1rv Publlt,C1Hlonl1
Prlnc:lg1I Office In
Ora"llt COU<lt'I'
M1 Commlelan E•1>lret
JulY 1. 19n
T-7-und«1!91'11d do ~rllf'I' '"" '""' cc~ I bonlMll 11 Ul5 E, 17111 ~ ;' SUit. C>, SNlh AM, C1Mtotnl1 '2101,
,.,.,, ..... 11.e llc;tll'lous IJrm ..am• of THE
LEARl'ollNG CENTER 1nd f111I ""Id fl,m
11 ~ ol Ille lollowlnt pe.._,.,
"""""4' nemn In lull 11>11 PllC~ ol
rHldtnc" ''' 11 follow~: ELNOl!.A SCli~'ADJ;L 7t'l1 ~I .. NtWl>ort &each. C11ifornl1.
C111l1 Publl1htd o .. n.ge Coe11 01111 l'lkll,
MRS. JE ... N H. D"VIS, 21127 C•ull
SI., ~pOli &111<.h, c1111ornl1,
November 6, 13, 20, 11, 1968 191' ....
LEGAL NOTICE
D1llld November 4. 1'61
ELNDll.A SCHMADEL l'·J17tt
JEAM H. DAVIS CRl.Tlll'ICATE 01' •US!Nt:ll
Stlte er' C..!llcm!L Orlr.cJe Co<tril'I': ll'ICTITIOUS NAME On NoYembef' 4 1'611, befol'• me. 11 HOllN Publle In Ind for ... lei Sl1l1, TN underil9ned does «r111Y Ill h
1>lr1an1llY -•..t ELNORA(llndudlllll I b\l>lnen II l?Al !'MmaN SCHMADEL incl JEAN H. DAVIS knoWl'I Line, S..ntl Ana, C1!1fot1'1!1, under !ht to me to be tM penof\S ~ l'llnw:t flc!l!lou1 firm neme ol MEMORY LANE
ll"f svl>sa'lbed lo the wltnln lnslrumen1 ONE HOUR CLEANERS Ind tn1t ... 1c1
incl lldt-1edeed ltleY execVIH !hi' firm 11 com!>OSH ol ll'>e followln1;1 11er1011, •~mt. ""'°"e na""' In tull 1..a pla.u or r.-ldl!KI
F C' L
''
LJ ls 11 lallowl;
COF I .:.N L~ Cl1r~ MURRAY SAUL. "' BordtlUX Line.
NolaN Put>llc-Cltllornll Costa Me.a. C11itornl1.
Pr!nclpll Of!ICI In Oa!ld NovPmt>er •· lH& o. • ...,. County MURRAY 5AlJL MY Cgmm1nlan Ell~lru Slate ol C11Uor1111, Orange County: Mardi " Ul'O On November 6, \NI. befor• mt.
Publlltlecl Or1°"'t Coa,I 01llV P\lal, I NallrY Publ\c In Ir.cl !or ula llate,
Novlll'nber ,, \), 20, 21, 1t61 1'1Mol PlflOfle\IY l~t1red MURRAY SAUL -'------'----~----!"-10 me fa be !'\a P<!r'IOl'I wtlo•e
LEGAL N OTICE Mrnt 11 1ut>K.rlbed to 11\t wllh\n II'>-_----'----------· l1tru..-1 1nd ldlncwledglld M exKltllld the ... mt.
T·:JJtn (OFFICIAL SEAL) NOTICE TO c•EOITOl.S Jootph E. O.vls
IUP'E••o• COU•T 01" TME STATE NO!lfY Publk~1Ufornl• 01" C•Lll'O•HIA 1'01. nta "rlncl1>1/ Offic1 Jn COUNTY Of! OUNOa Orange County
!ff. ""nn MY Commission E•Plres
E1tl11 o1 MA•Y ALEASE McPONALD, June 2!, lt10 0.-c:Hwct. Put>llslled Drane• Co.1st 01111 Pnot,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ta tllt Novembt!' 6, 13, 70, 27, lt61 1911"'8
a?<fltor1 Qf tne 1bow 11o11mld deceotnl IC:.C::C::C..:C.,C..:.::.CO::..C.:'--,---'.:C.:: I
f!'la! 111 • .,.,....,,,. 111v1,,.. c111m1 111111ns1 LEGAL NOTICE
"'" u!d dMedlJ'fll 1r1 '"ulred fo 1111, --------------
•.Jlftl CIRTll'ICATE OF IUSINlll
,.......,, wltl1 tne MCelfffY voucll1r1, lnl ·
11\P o!lltl of !ht cl«k of fM lbGY!
""""l!lfd court, w-~ prnent lhfl>". w11n "lh• nKISlll"I' WIOKl'lerl, lo ·lflf' un-l'ICTITIOUS NAME • dt'•1k!l\ICI II "" ol'llce .,, Frink M. TM Undf'1'1l1Md OOH C!rltlY ,,,., "' Moa<"e, A~y, MllS ~ !ltldl II cond\lctlM I bvslneu 11 1001 Oulll
8-ui.v1.,,, ~ e11(h, Cellfarnl1, fOll07, Sl•ttl, N~ 8Hdi, C1l1fornl1, l/n<llr
• -Ith 11 !ht pla(e of llllslnttl of 11>1 lht lldlllOU1. !!rm ""me of EXECUTIVE
• undenl1ned !n 1\1 ..,.lt•ri ~rta!nl"9 AVIATION Incl lt>et ... 1c1 !lrm 11 COll'IPOM!d
la 1'l'f nt1t. ol stid decedt'fll, wllllln of !ht lollowlno PffS(ltl. whoM 111rne
1lr ....,,.,, 1ller !hi P11bliC1llan of lhll In !ult ""' Pll« ol re11denuo 11 Ill natlc~ lolk>wJ;
... .,.. ...... ~-
pot.n!'f. Only 8.1 petttt'll o[ •10 a.ucao 110 AS.:ao ,,,..,.,.. •
au v.s. bouseholdt are now ··-·!\(I SIMU Arl1lou1ITNI 21~ 2M lf(k1rc-Illa
h ded b nd "" A.mG<lnl,..Co 2Slll M rlU..<"OCJwrl ~ 14 Ltllul'tOr-6t eJ Y a person u tt ~ 001.toPF 55 JM rowH1r1Cor• •1 6lYI LIUYl!ll&.Co u• and these households account M10u•r•":tt111 1~14 u111 .-.ciPur so JI ~0r11911,. st
r·· only 4.7 percent or 1•· ~.",'"1,:,"1_,,. 1~ u 14 Audltronlu 1M 1ev. L.s.si..1 •• .,. an; "'" " ""' Ul\ lSV. 011»•"1' tf 110 Ma<rociYMlllC Joi
spending in our country. ~~J~~n:.,vo ~ i:"' ..... i~G.~ 11~ 16\.\ MaaNoWlola nil 8-I ,.._,. -.. » llD MtlA11l1lnc: I.WO
-By 1975 the entlrt: 18-34. IV 111 •~ho•n ) ll'I lrnsHndpll • " MllUndrGt'"""' .. • Ct UILll'll'llCo :llVt ttVt .. llMMkh 1.. J ' year •g• group will account c1i-w .. tem.st1te ,,14 'H ,.._,~ sw. M1r1t11on• !11'1 c bbC -·-Z1* 27llt Mc.1.11nlllllw .,
for only about 29 percent of c:.F1,:;:1e1n ::!"' ~~ =~n~.:!1nc • ••t> Merdll"'•Llnt 21 all nv>nding in the U.S., wtille CNAF1t1tla1Pf1! ~ m. .,. JI Mi.11..oc..1111 ,~ lhe•r:~ bulk ( ComD1lntC1 ~ JS 81rk1hlttH•t11 )S 3' Ml:111'1t N
\'11..3• o 71 percent C....0-••I 111t 11"' 1av ... 1rl!.ot1r • • MlrllrttlMttt ""'°'
wiU be spent by Ute ovc~ Ea1K1torU.tM1 u 21 llloc~1""' JOlll 2M Mer•'lll'lanCe ,.,,.., Empl...0-11 lll\li 1o.t 81rfrtlltr(.ttp ,_. 1 .... MITllllCl'MIWI 2S~
age category. F........n.N....Wcl J9Vt •I llnln11ArUnl1& 22G &!Cl ~l'Kh\lr ZS
"'Frm1Unc1trwn,.. '31'1 '5111 Boltane11tllll 3'11'1 3S\/o .. 111!!11vr~ tt
. l'lcllllt'l'COO"'ll 2'1.lo 21 llow11..-P1pr 'l'I ~ 1IHGl"4t11C,_ Ill'
-THE UNDER-35 age Flr1unc1 ..... ""1 ~s Bit> lltldgflarct~ •'• w. N91~nM•,_ •
b k t • .bl r I Fn!AmTlti. 11"11 201'1 Brun1w11;10 ..... , 41 °"' NtfWwtlll!IK: • rac e JS respons1 e or on y F1 .. 1N••Llte Aro 51'1 av"""-:u 2t Nwenoe11 m1o
about one-third of all furniture F••nkllnLH• :iN ~ c11blod>lm U'll uv. Hlct101tonF111 *'1'I u~-Fun.sAmCorp 57.,., 51 llfGtotr411AC 1,14 IW. NlllMnA .. C. 1'Yil
and appu~nce buying. ()ut Of Gt11·A:e-tn1 360 :U7 C1/lfP1cUl!lll 2:M m'I NeC1nlAlrl Sh
some 100 000 000 cars on us H•no'ff•Flre ~"' .i.w. c1111Port111M1c1 Al 1110 Nort11-1Ga• 121'1 ' ' ' ' H1rtlordl'ln: 4}b .,... C1UIW1tH1iV 2'\'1. » nerium 10'1 roads, teen-agers loday own 1n1erco.tL!k ,v, 1oi~ 11T111U1C1sua11 ~ M OIMC. '1-.,
a st. Jed l 50!) 000 Jllm~l'llo!Con> '5 ~ CalVV)n.Mllk 71 II Rd.Cllftl!._ 2t n e Ima m,ere , , • 1.1ncotnN1tCor1t ''" n v. CaPTech1nr; 12'1i l:W. 11"'11 A large proportion of the auto tou111•n ... 5m 1tv, n 111,11111-•v• 14\'J 1J\'J ~-27Vt
b · b o. d l'Mrc:vrvC11 '"'• 11V. llUtN•IGll )fl.lo lll'll Ptbtllrl* 1Cl:Ni uying y ...::en-agers an 1r111,,1an £Qt.o111n 20l-'r 21 ..,tvryPrnp1n1t1; 4 .f\lll P'KAuloPf'lld J those in their 20s is for used MnarchLllru "'" olO f\l!coEnvCori S\\ 6 1>acE1tc1rocord uv, NllUnlonF I•~ .l!)Vt 11'4 ABCl'll .CO :116\. VVI P1cF1rE11t '4
cars, involving relalively N11W•1!r•nLf 10\oi l~• C/>ell'IM~ln 10,,1 22 l'1ci>1~1111t1 17'•
small su .... o of N111anw10~0,.. lSl'I l:!Vt 1
1 v. PKOuldoarAOv 11t~ ..... money. NoAfTlf•LICllCo ""' 11~ Cltlion1UI IA 31\io ,.," "•cV"90llCOO> t)'l
An IDC, d lh P1tlllcN11Ltlt 11Yi ,,, .. DDPldB 2' "1G11&W1llf 2' -Ol!le -an us, P1clflcE••-L,-,, ,.:~ a.s111Qynem1U IS'A 1~
d
. "" •• , .... c Col L. _ 16 PtlomlrMortCo t'lll a spen mg power -in the Pen11Lr1eeo 11 111-\ ou • .. ,. P111<vwGemlnc uv.
$1 d
. 11..,ubN1tlllns :l'Nl ~ o,_nl!'nt1"' f'h JI.lo PaultyPll lt
0,00().an ·Up range lS rare RldunotldCar1t .itYt 51 Co1w1l1Co )ol 36 P1tllboneMl!lll 11\1.
in the under-2$ age bracket S•tecoco '6V. " 11reo1uP 11 11v. Pl~N11G11 :131'1 . SllKOCO'lhcv U 211'11 COAIDIRoel<P•od 2t 30 Put>SytofNm JI)
But nearly one in three in S..botrdeor" u 12111 '"""''s'"'" t'llo 1~ •«1«<C°"' n
the 4S.54 age bracket eni'oys Sa'ffrlonLI!• IS to Cr9KtMTt<l'I ,!.., 11'> R""41nc "" . Siwet'l'Lflno 1 '"" OAMCorp '""' 16°"" Ro111krallMf1 13
this amount of earnings and T1con> si"' n oe.i.-Bvtlnn 1•;, 1v. Rt>rt1CGr1oot 11tJ.
thUS js a member Of the high-T•1v~'e..CO... 15 l~ D•tal>fllgnL•b l1l.~ lN Roct<1tlle1e1rch 7':i. Trut-Unarwnr, :n '' 0Clntem1tlan1I 11\IJ 25V. RllllerlBtGS 21
middle income bracket. un11..a1n.Q>Ar.s lN lit~ Oel.uKe<t>oct1 ~ """' R""1ou1CflP11 t4
T '-lh k t · U!FldGu1r 76 76\.\t OlalFlfllnct 1•\/io 11 RYlllMlolAm JS
-11e you mar e Will votk1w11~IM ~ TV. DlckJonEllc i• 2ll'ri SSPll'Oullriel lJ
grow the fastest between now 'Wetl'!<nTraY11~1 31'1 1 0111N1Ct11 " lll'"' sn1aAnl111nc 1ss . , Wllsl'tlr•l"f 1 nt O!Wt'Hllnd:M 1JIJ. l6 S.f"ftl'llllllkn. 15'16
and l!J75, 1f you measure lhts l!11te.11 a1,.k1 oiv.ruUr>CPld ts•12. a1D SaturnA1rw1v1 ""'
simply by the fact that the BifOke'IT•ust 14i;, "" Dom1,,_1wa1~r 11 !4 Sc:1nrnnl!let 11•1 Chtm!lJ1kNyTr:s1 n:it. 17"11 OoYluiO&neB 30\ lll'J Se.World JO ....
number O( hOUSeholdS headed Conl!llN9CM 4'4 .UV. Dr .. imBir:: ', ~ SfftCtndy 27
b · d' · d I nd Flr.tNet&kCll! '8\1.o 6'\lo ouc:ommunl m~ ,...., Semtech'°"' 21 Y an in 1v1 ua u er age Fr111kllnN11NY •na " D<.'nllric1st~ 4611; 41 SeYe.....tJ11co sS1<
25 is slated tO SOat 60 percent M'9rsHinoYeTr 6''111 1111~ Eeo<>omlaLlb 13 ll'h 51mon&Schul!er 7"a . Mor;1nGh U7'h 121 Sk1avsP1vLeu :io>.:.
tn these next few years. But, N1tak<r1NA 31 35 E1~~ 191-:. 301~
th be £ b eh Id · w..ia ... 111.,g EIKl, ..... 1r11nc ~ '""' ~~~\~: ~10
e num r o OUS 0 s In-Arlton1Bk ~ '°'" Eloct•otu•Cr• ~ 11v. Saulhtio1mor11 11v.
volved will represent only 8 BkolAmNT&SA t1 tua SJKtr'OftlcCI" ~ ... ,-, SoWu1G11cm 1.v.
f II
8lt'lkffC11$F ~ S114 EltelT'onkMem "'"' SWllo<'Cll&Gtn 11\1.o percent o a U.S. households !l1n1orTo1tvo 3sv. ..... Ev.,H1Jenn1,,.. W/2 zv. -• ___ '' 14 5Hce0"'M'ICI 3\1.o
and these will do only 7 per· Bever1<rH11"N11 ,.,_ ''"'Far..--.. ,. 5Qee1m-OV :n • , Cmtlnell1CllY8J' 20 11 1rrl11111tonCorp 11\lo .,.., 5or1""5trttt SI.lo
cent of the nation s total spend· centurve~ •'" • F1<1M1>.rtc:or1> 21U 2""• s1.i11111n1P•clfk """ ing CllvNBBH ,,,~ 14\l l'ld510n51-t olO'" ~,,,., SflleE•Plr 7 " Croc-fr-Clll1e ... 4414 4411o OOCVvP!cl 55 !i'P SUl»crk>tlonTV 13
Ffdf!ll'l'Bk 1~\.'i 11\'o FtrslBCilonCorp 11, UQ SunH!lndUI 7f
-..
" , ..
~D .. ....
"" " ~ ~· •• , .. •• ... ... "" "" n• , ... .. ..
" " ,,. •• .... ,, .
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~ ~"" .. •• " '" n• • 13''>
" THE DEVELOPING FlrolB1ncori> l''"' ll Fll"'!E•t-:iJllve 11"r 18'~
surge in homebuilding as th; ~~11:!~~~0~i'ek ~~2 ~;:~ ~~~~~~7,~ur.c1 ~\"' ~~ f :::!~~~. i:i\
1~
1970s unfold will NOT be the lm.,erlft lB-1" BID l?PrrdLldlnc ,,,_. l.W.. T1stee-Fr.e1e B'r'J ,, , llbtrtvNalBk t m Fovr~11rTV .,.., I'~ TecumstnProd 137 lU
d1rect result of home buying ManutactriBk 11v. nv. G'1fnLndCo t !lt HM retonRonc~ .uv. 4S'h
b h b b
, [ h S.ntiMonltaBk 13¥. U:W. GSSYC lt 18~ TeK1•AmOll 11''> 11"• Y t e war a 1es 0 t e 1940s Sat::PacNatllllk 56'4 srn. GfMO'illlrewlnv 1~ 1.w. TeKisca..COl'P 161'1 11 as they move into their mar-SoCillrtN•tBlc: 51"" ""' Gener11Re ... rdl 20 21 Thenn•IP-11 it . • . SumltomoN1!1 3! 37 tllndultrlet 47 •V. TlrntFrelllltl ll\4 31111
rymg and childbearrng years. 5uret'l'Nalllk 1~ H GtnTel"r'JPfcl 1~ 1~''4 Tll1nGn1111> ll'VI 1m
Th · d d lhe UnlonBar>Corp .ffl'> 60'1io .,L e young matrte 8D VSNa!lll~SO lS 3o1 GtnTelJPfd lS 1~,,., TorolnoflndUI JI.a I
Young parents .... 0, lhe roofs Y1ll••"1111t"1~ ,ra ?H6. ,. .. ,"~~trrt 11 111, nvo Tr1cor1nc 11,,,. ", •• . .,. WtllsF1r90Bk 61 •l'h ""' 1e,.,...,.., N Tr1)1fCgorp ,. •-
over their beads. They do not 11v11111 & 1.01~ Moldlnt Glaucotlntmnts 14 15 Tr1l'l'contG11 n,,,L ~
b
· C.,,,PlftlH Gn.$VllY 1""o 15''4 Tr1ns1>Con1lnll ., ••~•
uy until they have been mar-AmSv&LnUtan :n 13 GrlnnelCon> 111 17'1 TraveloctoeCon> n 111 n v.
ried for several years· only Bln\ontSv&Ln 2M 26\• Guld~nc:eTtc11cM ..,. s r,;•,,"',,,~. ~!.,. 36'h -u S h 'td • CtPllllAllll"tf ... tT1 Olll!IPtd 11 :ZO 20 one m 10 •• house o S 1n cclYmt>laSvt&Ln , BIO Hflmavesv'""" I! a Tr\n11v1r.c1111 28'~ ,....,.
the under-25 age bracket owns Equ1t1b1esv&Ln 1v. 1'1'1 HtnrYE"glnCo 6~ 1v. Tuu, ~oeG" ,','1' 111~ Equll1t>llSv&L11 ]l :Jllll He>!CtlProdt~ 36V. l$ va c ...... 12
3 home. Flri!Llnco1"Fln 11 UV. HISl'ltt"1Con> ~\'J 16\'J UncleJol!nResl 12\lo 12"1o
N ·u this Flro!Surt!YCor• 10 111'11 HocW!rCo{'fllel Sol'.lo lS UnlanR!ldtMl!tr t\.'i 10
-or WI younger FlritwmemFl" 5 sv. HOnd•Molol"Co 13 11 u.s.E~~ :n nv.
group be lhe key force behind H1wT1111rneF1n 171'1 11.,., ttoll"tonF"r1e11 """ '°" ~:·~~r':i"'L nc1 11~ 115
th led t, ed l'1CS"f&LnAt$n 30 llV. Hystlr LWo ~ I I I t\.11
e expec CG~ lnu up-RlvtnldeF!nCorP 3\11 4'4 1nfomllt\e11nc 15 67 v-u1doCn> 21•1. 22
swing in auto buying install· Tr1n1Cosl!n-6\/o vn~ 1n11ndC.,..11lnr 40'/t 12 v1ccolndu1C1 ,'",., '"
bo · ' II lnclv1lr11k lnl9'f'...,1Chem 111 11~ V1cvDrvCo S\/o ment . rrowmg, recrea on AArco,... u 1' IMtni~iTtek 71 tiio v111r1"G.t.Co 1;io.;. 111'1
spending. They key CGnsumers A&EPl11t1~ 36 ll And~er11t111 ,. ,. vara<timeln6u• l'IVI 21 · ll lh 'II be lh AcmfEIKtrlc 1... 1ru J MG s\.\-ilVI V11'C<>MftCorP 1\/o t m a ese areas w1 e A1re1111 uv. 16 J~zr:rwltlllr;arv :J.I n v11roeono >t.V. i1
over-25s. And the dominant Alrb::>tnetr1!11M 11 20 i<otc'oroor•llon 41 f 12 vtv11n1wooc1r.s l1'h :m-.
'II be lh Alrlnd111trles '"' 17'h !ll'l'Slftl 51\/i sav.. Waddell&Reld 10 n consumers w1 e over-AL1er11ons 16v. 1~ K• · 71,,.. wa~ott 201'1 21v.
35s because of their huge Att1tdEqu1t1~ '""' 13~ ,ooP1c1..,. ~~~ ~ w1merE11.Br11 ~ :l!l"A • AllltodP""""11es 50 BID ·-·-0"' ,. W19'IN1tG11 21'/• 11\1.o
numbers and their spending Af!!todPrDP lO'I Bto K1n1•1E1tcl"wr 11 ltVi waY!llMI• :n n Al,.,nB1con 21~. :n:v. Kl'llwoodCo 11 IJ WN!htrl'onlCo 101'1 11 money· AmB!Mllnl 21 25 l!;yFr!ISCMcktn IS•4i 411 Wllll111i'1anM91 4t JO'h
Enough, The point surely AmerE~11nin n•;. n:v. i<evitvneA " "• we1111i\du1 6f• 7'111 . . . AmtrF~re1tPr(lcl 6111> '4'h K!n0Dro1Procl t 9,\ WH!!liyFlrtCorp !'\lo 2Vo
IS made with this abundance AmerGrttfln• ~3Vo ... ,,., KlntRld'loCo•t> !fV• '°"' we1...,..Put>1Co 30 JI
of statistics to prove in t.mf'l'Pl"'&c ?..,~ 2w. l<ll'l!lll"°"rctCo """' ""' e1~1eC1!"A" 1ti. 1J'l'lt . ' AMRBRl'llf 11•~ 111 l(no.>dJenCOO"'ll 4 1'2 44 Wll1M-0Mfg 11 lt
Linden's words, "lhat our Am!roPtOP u · 12:v. K.,,._. 11111 n N1111coHrn'WI 13 is
Youth have been vastly °'er· AnAa1i..1nc :nv. nVi ra.rA.XcPfd ""'1 810 ,.llltrCon> 1t 1fV. AllChorCo,.,.181 lfl"t 10•;. LU.!"""' I 1 lrFrellht n v. 11
rated as a market." •n""-'ltt&uKh Ullo •sv. LAD,..... lS 1110 Yubllndu.cm ,...., 211 "'anectM19MI :l3Vli MV. ,,_,1ro:1ustrllt 13\lo U\.'I lllo500Pl<I 10 111'1 ArdenM..,fl\r 16'1 11"1 L_,.,,.,,oadl :JI\~ «M LtYl'IPllS 'l'.!o. ,~ .... 011e.i Nowmt>tr 1, !NI w11111m C. Carlt>erii, 311 Ufl!Y11r1lty MARY A. JENKINS Av1nu1, Ceill Mfl.I, C11\lofnla. TJIE KIDS do set trends, A1Sm!nl1lr1!rl~ Otled NO'leml>!!r I, IHI. as they a(WayS have, and lhcn
DoPlcl G 4:1 L1yneB-1r IM 12 tion.Ut1h81n 11 12'\lo
Mutual
Funds
o! "" EJtare or "" w1ur1m c. Carlberii • et>ovt "'"""' dtcede~t. $1111 of c1111ornlD, Or1nv• Co.mt,.: the older folks -with the
• FJl..,NK M. MOOl.I! On November I, 1961, l>fio•t me, U d • ~"' ~ 111,~ a1v11. 1 Notary Put>uc In er.cl 1or u!d st1!e. cash at hand -either approve 1•ge
• L""• ••~th. c111fol"!l!a. .... 1 1>trson•111 11-•rfd w1111am c. ci r!btre or disapprove and make or
Reform Contracts for Police
• T•1: nin •11..on1 ~""wn !<> me to I>!! the P!rson wllDH
• •hor.,.1 tor •dmlnblr•tr1• n•me 11 sublcrlt>Hl to "" within 1n-break the movement. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
PubUlhl!d a...--'""' ,,,.. "'"· "rum..,I 11..r ed<1'GWllldlled he t•eculed Of """": k y '' ...... ....... .. "" course, , ... n oung! p std t R d I h P t r 11ov....i.er '· n. 20. 21. 19i.a 1'311-61 toFrsri~L SEALI re en u op e erson o
Donn• Gr1101t you marketing men. But then the huge Bank of America
Na11ry Public turn your fu.11 attention to LEGAL NOTICE Computer Setup
1A1. 11'4 ~·~~1:,1c:,\111;:i1:n those of us who are old enough has: called for • cqmplele
NOTtCE TO CRE01T0Rs °'"'"'e coun1Y to buy young, overhaul of the national farm. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
IUl'ERIOR COUR.T OF TMI! MY Commlulan bPIO't1. STATE 011 cAL1110111e11i 1101. Aut1111 111. 1910 policy to phase -out price sup-Contracts are being signed
TMa COUNTY 0,, o•AMGE l'ubll.ne<I Or11111e Cot~! 01111 l'llOI, M•. A .. 110 ,.ovemi. n. 10. 21 ""' oecembe• port and most other controls. this week for a $5 milllon
Es11.., o1 NELLIE C. EYRAUD, 4. 1'61 lUMI N N Deceeltd. ew ame lie proposed tO Substitute a computerized nerve ceoler tO
NOTU.:E 1$ HEREBY GIVEN to the LEGAL NOTICE ro lh g ad I cr,1111or, o1 the et>oYe nomlKI 0.Clldent program r e r ua help CGmbat Califoi::nia crime,
11111 111 "~"-'• h1v1no c111m, •••lnit NEW YORK (UPI) buying u. p of s ma 11, says Atty. Gen. Thomas C.
lh• .,.Id df!'<;tdl!fll &rf 1~ulred t.. file CEl.Tll'ICATE' OF •uStMf.SS I • I llltm. wl!ft '~" nro:en•rv vouch!ri. 1,. Flttlllou• Mam• nlernat1ona Silver Co. wlll uneconomic farm S and Lynch.
"'' ottlce 01 "" cier1<. a1 ""' 1bGv1 T,... unc1er111nec1 ~1 <•r1uv "' 11 ask shar eholders al the annual rehabilitation in society of the Full operation is expected l'nlllllld ClllJ~I ..... to pr-nl 11\e<r\ Wl!h co""vCll"ll I bu•!MSS ,, ?l>J3 w Cotti !ti!' ..,.ceu~,..., voudlfri, 1o ~ un-H ....... N""'llCI" !INch, ca111orn11, v"""' 1neeting in April to apRfove small farmer who no longer by next October, he an·
dtn11n111 '' '"' o1•icn of 1111 Atta...,, tM 11c111ou1 firm n11me ot HA"'BOR changing the firm's name Lo can compete with I a r g • n-··ced. HAll;T & MIERA.s, sm N. FltutrH HUl.L CLEANING SERVICE. 1na tM! VU.ti sr. La. Ang•lel. ca111orn11 f(ll)47, Wlltdl wld 11rm 11 comPOWd "' "" tot1ow1ne Insilco, Inc, mechaniied fanrui. The electronic data l)'stem
11 ~ Pl-a of bu1lnn.1 of tt>e u.-nltned P1r1Dn, wllDM Mmt In !vii ""' placo I ----'------------_::_::.:::==:.._::_c...:_ ______ _:;::_:====-..::=_::::.:.::::::
ln 111 milt.ts Pf'l'felro!"" lo 111t ntile ol rnldtnco h 11 lotlowl:
ot Nici Ol<Mtinl, wltnlft tour PnOllllll •kh•"' W. Wll$nflft, 2115 Pllctnllll,
I ll?• !!If llrll PUb!ICl!io<> or lhlJ notice. Mil. u. COlll MtH, Ctllforllll
Oa!H Novetnbt< I, 1961, DllH N!M!mbt< 'H, lMI
Albfn H, EYrl""' Richard W, Wllctmlft
Admlnl11<11or OI' lt>o E1t1t1 Slate OI' Calllorftlt.
ol Ille 1boYw Mmed clrcedel'lt Or.,1tt Countv: MAllT & MIElllA:L °" Novembl!' ,, ,... belOt ::;:-;"':.:,!. Llw51 t Notar' Pvbllt In' 1..a f-x MllS
1
S!;;:',
Ltl Aft.ti. C"u~ ,_.1 H•-+lv IPHlrtd Rlchlrd W. Wltdmtn, T • 1 I ~-n lo m~ lo bt tne Ptrlon wfloH ~~~I 1211) llt•Ult name h s~lrbtd lo !I'll w\lhln In· • .....,., tw A~flhtr11., 1tNment ar.d 1t'kMWle<afd ~. •ocutlld Pu~lllhlld Ora""' COii! D11i. l'llol, 1!1t i.emt. ::·~~;'-.. 11, 111, l1 •11<1 Ptctmt.r (Offltlll se.n -----------~·~""'== J. B~.
LEGAL NOTICE
Noterv Put.tie • C•llfll'llll PrlnclP•I Otntt lfl
orenoe C...Uft!Y
l"-Jlt'M M~ Comll'lltalcwl Ex•4fTI
IAlll ltll Aut. M. , ...
UlllTllll'(ATI. 011' •VllMUI l'ubllfMcl Orlnllf Cot-1 0.fly llllllt,
ll'tCTITIOUI PIRM MA.MR Ho'vln>btr 11 Ind DlcM'lblt 4, 111 11, f~ l'Ader11trn.a dO hfr!by c..-tltY "" ""4
fttl -ltf c:onducti.,, 1n Ir! tllltrY
bv1l111M 11 Co-Partners 11 .it1I Nortll LEGAL NOTICE
Co.i.I l'lllllw1~, l.1t1>111 l!ach C1lllor~lt 1---,"°''°'=c-_:_::_:::_::::._ __
Ufld"r lhl fldllla!ll I!"" .... ~ DI FETi Cl!RTll'ICITr 0" •US!lltRtl ANO DETS I NT E JI: NAT l 0 NA L UHOl!ll PICTITIOUS NAMa
-COALl.ERll!S '"" "'81 11ld nrm lo T"9 unatnlgMd '° •--' ~ "' IN! tollOwlnt -......_ , ..... v, cert"" 'Mrnt1 !fl 11111 IOnl. ,.,..,.f 1"-1 ll>f"I ltt condl/dl'"I I Mlfl~U
irt n followl.. ,::,."''"" ol rtllOtncit ti JIU Oro;hld, Cot'Olll Dtl Mir, C1llfornla,
• Dor\6 Fori ,..,.; ,_1 S.vR.'°CI-f'Qr tl•• Wll"' 11'111 rtl11fl:l Kltvlll-.. ' ,_ tllll Mar C..ltlirnla "*" tht fkllno..1 fil'm -II l'/D o f:lllltl LeVi..-°""'"1.;., I !NTERPRISES, •nil lhtl ..,,Id n"" It Or! ~ • :JOI CIHI f'Dm-al tne ttilll:rwt"' l>et'tot'<I .,._ DI;: Ocfrvbfr t1 ~ .... C..lltorflll , .,...,.,,... -P!t c" al '"~ ,,..,: ' fl lollow• ~~ '°..: ~... GENEllAL PAllTNE•· C••ll ) STAT~ Of' CAl.IFOlll.HI " 'c"llfov. XM Drtftlcl, CorOlll «I /Nir, -•ll~lt. COUNTY Oii 0111.AHO• I" Ll¥1TEO P'All;TN!;ll · !lrlt" I! °" Odi!ilM'I' n. IHI. """°'' mt, 1 ,.,,f'YOC~• ut w~• wlhonn. <oit• Mtt1. Hifa,y Publlt In ind for 1114 Covfllv C111!ornl t
•,Pod S"ft, --It+ IPHlrl'd On•l1 DA TEO No~•IT'brr 'XI 1"°'
Pan lt1!1 '""' Rlei!tt Uutw DMWl'li,r C•llt $. l•lltY '
'l/'tW" " -.., be lflll --· Wf\oiO G• ..... 11 P1r-!)e!N:I fllfY ......,..,,. .. h wt!lll" •rlen R. $1>rvoct ~' lllld •OOt:A'l•••• " m9 Limited P•n-tllft"'"' .. '°'*' .... ,.,,.,._ ll•'fE OF CALIFO•NIA
Wl1M'M ""~ ... -l COUNTY OF ORANG!. l
IOf<,K:IAL llM.) °" tnk Ulh t11 o1 N(7Y...,br• It .. , ......... 0-, bl-lo,. mt I N~ltl' Publlt I~ t tld
Nlllarr Jl\lbk • GllifrlnM r.er "'"' 111c1 c.,,.,tr • ..., s11 ... ,...1111,.. ~I Dl'lkt tit ""''!'In. otutv c:ornmlHlbnlld • ...., ·-n
cir..... c-tr --.11 ... -rtd er11t '· 1,,;w1 1,.j "*' ~--~ • .. "·" Ill Vtrrot~. ~-to -l'I)
Od. "· "" ""' ~ ""'°"" _,.,..., tr• IUD-• l't.ltlltfllf ~ O.lf a.I., ..,..., tCrttllta lo Nie Wfll\f!, ll\ttrvm9'nt. -• ~ 11 W DIClillh... 4. fl, ... acl-ltcltM .. °"I lhfl "'-¥ •>"ltUlllll ,.. ---·-
'
WITNISI mv hlftd •nd otl•ele! -L CJIAL.1 Jt1Mt ._ 0•~11
"ftf9fY P'vt>Jl( "' -""" Wld C-tv tn(l ~lttt ~ ... II.... OraM• C01'1! Ot•I\' Pi"'!
i-cullMlf '1 '"" °"'"""""' 4 11. 11' .... )G,. ....
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STEREO SENSATION!
The colorful sound of
Orange County Music
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
....
From Fashion Island. Newport Beach
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DAil Y I'll.OT~
York Stock Exchange List
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OAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Hard Work's Reward
Fenton E. Jones wlll be S\vom in ., .. riday as the
fourth jud.ge of tbe West Orange County Municipal
Court In Westminster.
Jones, who bas practiced law in west Orange Coun-
ty slnce 1958, joins Judges Celia Baker, Walter· Char·
amza and Harmon Scoville in handling a caseload so
heavy that more courtrooms must be added less Ulan a
year afte;:.tbe new Westminster facilities were complct.
ed.
Jones, however, has never shied away from wor~.
He is a self.made man in every respect. He worked his
way ~rough school as a construction worker, stevedore,
house painter and anything else which would allQw hjm
to pursue studies.
It took 20 years from the time he was graduated
from high school to the day be was admitted to the bar,
every one of them working days, says Jones.
His record is good -as a citizen, an attorney and
a neighbor.
Welcome Judge Fenton Jones!
Sunset Beach's Problems
Problems faced by Sunset Beach residents and by
homeowners in the fluntington Harbour marina area of
Huntington Beach are tied together in many ways. To
solve them, both areas are going to have to resolve
past conflicts.
Sunset Beach residents have serious parking protr
lems, in their unincorporated community problems
which could be increased by a proposal to construct 75
apartment buildings along the abandoned Southern
Pacific Railroad rigbt-of·way.
Residents would like a parking lot development to
take care of the need in the community for parking
space. County officials are studying the question . So
are officials of Huntington Beach.
The situation is aggravated becau.se any OlO'Ye by
Huntington·Beach officiaJs is viewed in Sunset Beach as
a move toward ''forced annexation" of the unincorpor-
ated area.
It is unlikely that Sunset Beach can go too many
rnQrc years wiLbout annexation to either Huntington
lleach or Seal Beach. JI that \line comes, the· people •
should annex to the city which can benefit the residents
most.
In the present situation, Huntington Beach officials
ackllowle<lge that, if ll>e residents really wanted It that
\vay, the railroad strip could be "prMOned" to the use
favored by residents, even before annexation.
Acros§ Coast I-lighway , residents o( Huntington
Beach have become angry at the Sunset Beach Sanita-
tion District because of the odors coming from the dis-
trict's sewage treatment plant on Warner Avenue.
Residents of the marina area differ little from the
people across the highway in their independent attitude.
They do not understand why this matter has not been
taken care of. They have applied to the courts for re-
lief.
So far the only suggestions for curing Utis odorows
problem have involved an increase of four to five times
what SWlset Beach residents pay now for sanitation
services. While most restdents of the district do not feel
the problem is theirs. it will become more so as the
months go by and the anger mounts.
It, however, the area joins either Huntington peach
or Seal Beach, it will then be up to the taxpayers of the
cities to cure whatever problems may exist. All alter·
natives seem to include more cost for the Sunset Beach
residents.
The probltms for all in this area have become acute
and it is time for the animosities of the past to be put
aside so representatives of all the involved agencies can
work together to cure these ills. H
'High Priority Issues Will Prov e Ecmumaical in Long Run'
-::Necessary: Huntington Beach Parks, -Library Bonds
ro the Editor:
With proper foresight we can !upport
needed economical measures and avoid
wasteful spending. the parks and
library bonds are necessary.
Y~ can't blame people for voting
down bond issues since indiscriminate
government spending and policies waste
BO much money. This encourages in-
Oa.Uon and rising prices and ta:a:es to
Uie point many are concerned about
tilldlng onto theJr property or keeping
ohead.
·We suffer from the modern liberals'
Idea of progres.s that many are like
a child wbo must be given a,n allowance.
All problems ~ solved by increasing
Utls allowance (and taxes).
JNnEAD, WE SHOULD find ways
to give the individual the dignity and
te:lf-respect of independence and self-
ttliance. But the "givers" win votes
af blocs they keep dependent.
Some people sincerely believe they're
;xirrect in supporting such spending pro-
grams proposed "for the good of lbe
.comtnon man." Does wasteful spending
1ielP"tbe workingman? Actually, liberals
often are more concerned about the
"votes of tbe common man." Spending
that needlessly raises our taxes? That
feeds inflation so that prices go up!
Sincere people may support prudent pro-
grams when they realize the folly of
"Uberal" ways.
Yt'E'VE ONLY ourselves to blame if
we let our hopes bUnd us into eletting
ext'essive spenders who promise to give
us "what we deserve." The tendency
towards class legislation i5 the greatest
weakness of 1 repubUc. Remember that
these "'free gifts" cost w in taxes and
prices.
Yet, we must support high priority
bond issues that . prove economical in
the long run .. Our wonderful lake and
land resourt'!el are cheaper now (because
of inflation and coming land scarcity)
than they'll ever be.
Our choi~ are : (1) buy now, (2)
pay much more later, or (3) later decide
nol to develop because cosb will then
be too high, The needed new main library
is planned on the proposed recreational
development.
THE LIBRARY bonds will be self·
liquidating through the lrash fee. The
rtqueisted bonds will be retire<! over
the useful life or the park!, largely
by the beneficiaries.
Ltt our decisions support our greater
true benefit consistent with reasonable
economy.'
LEONARD WRIGHT
Time Not Sh01"ten ed
To the Editor:
!\fay I suggest th~t before you write
another editorial about Fountain Valley
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Dw-GI....,. Gus,
1bere. ii one adv1nt1ge in httvlng
a lottery to chooH tbo8e that are to
be dralUJd. Each dtalloe con blame
Lld)r Lad! ror pWng dratted
--.,,. -" CIJll\I ud -""" .... l17lnl to con-
..... fbe -H.B.M.
.,....._...,..~ ........ ........... .,., .. _.,w.IM ..... ,..... • .._.. ... Dfllr , ....
elementary school policies, "Confidence
at Stake," (Nov. 20), you do your
homework first.
You admit the Fountain Valley district
has been responsible for many in-
novations ln education, but when do
you suppose lhese innovations were plan-
ned? Between 3 and 5 p.m. on Fridays,
as your editorial suggests as ample time?
Our teachers and building educational
leaders have worked long hours after
school, given up part of their weekends
and summer vacation to put these in·
novations into workable fornl..
YOUR REMARK about "youngsters
attending the two .hOlU'S of classes en
Thursday" is incorrecb First ol all,
the "minimwn day" is not Thursday
for all schools. My son's minimum day
occurs on Monday. It begins at 8;45
and ends at 1:20 p.m. How can i.'OU
possibly call that two hours?
You suggest that if a "new move,''
Is to be made it should be that teachers
spend more time wilh students. At the
school my boys attend the instructional
time for levels 1, 2, 7 Ind I has increased
by 30 minuteB per week. ·Levels 3-6
has increased by 20 niinutes per week.
These Umes vary among the seven
schools using the "minimum day," but
the instructional time per week hu not
been shortened in any or the schools.
IF THE INSTRUCTIONAL time has
now increased, why are you and some
parents complaining because o:ie day a
week their children come home early·!
Could it be these parents depend en
the schools as babysitters? The working
mother is still a minority in Fountain
Valley and if she really wants the best
education possible for her chHdren, how
can she or any parent complain about
increasing instructional lime?
Have you visited the schools to find
out how the teachers use their time
on a "minimwn day" or have you simply
listened to a group of notorious com·
plainers without checking the facts?
KAREN ACKLEY
IJC I St11de11t Ho11sl119
To lhe Editor :
I wish to thank the DAILY PILOT
and tbe many real estate agencies and
residents in the community for their
cooperation in helping UC Irvine to ease
a severe shortage in student housing
this fall . ll
Applications !or student hous.ing on
campus e:a:ceeded our capacity by more
than 600. AlJ the result or an article
you published and an immediate response
from Lhe community, more than 200
students were able to f in d ac-
commodaUons near the campus.
Hopefully, this cooperative spirit will
continue next rail, at which time our
student housing 3hortage is expected to
be even mort acute.
DANIEL G. ALDRICH, JR. 0 Chaoccltor. UC!
Not l'f9oro11.< E11f!11gh
To """ F.ditor : In the Nov. 13 DAILY PILOT an
article by Dr. John W. Oswald suggested
that the Univermty of C.liforn1a 1s m
trouble with Its supporting society
beeau~ it Is making a greater effort
than most lnslltutlons to me-et loday'i;
problems. A!! a layman, with Umlttd
knowledge of the subject, I respectfully
disagree with the doctor's diagnosis. The
problem is that tht university has not
been vlgorOW1 enough In arUculaUng the
frontiers of NEEDED knowledge •
JN THE PAST thr unh·er<y"s main
lhruJt wu int~ 1>hys1cal sciences rather
than socla.I science.'I. Ther' were two
main reason.~ ror thi~ or1cnlatloo'."Nellher
ol them ls valid. The £irsl;.rca.son ls
I,
.. _ .. _ ---
Letters from read.eTS are welcome.
Normall'JI writeTs should convey theiT
message in 900 words or less. The
right to cO'ndense letteTs to fit space
OT eliminatt libel is Te.served. All
ietter1 must include signature and
mailing addTess, but names may bt
withheld on Tequest if sufficient Tea-
son is appaTent.
that physical sciences att both simpler
aad more utilitarian than soclaJ scl~es.
The bewildering complexity of atomic
physiC! is far simpler than making sense
out of human relations. The serond
reason for overempliasi.z..ing technology
is that a deep corrunitmenl for social
problems put the university in the l!lticky
business of making ethical judgments.
Unfortunately, our tradition has largely
excluded the educator's right to be wrong
at times. This has tended to drive lhe
university toward simpler areas of scien·
lific precision.
THE FIRST propoSltion is not valid
because technological knowledge has an
optimum yield of benefits beyond which
it adds leas and less to human happiness.
The atom bomb is an e:a:ample of ex-
ceeding optimum results. The second
proposition is not valid because the
energies of sclenet and ethics must
evolve with equal powers for they are
conjunctive and reciprocal ; neilber can
stand alone. To pursue a strong science
with a weak spiritual atUlude is like
harnessing a percheron and a shetland
pony together to pull a cart.
.THE UNIVERSITY, in the pa st. has
admirably advanced scientific knowledge
and technology. Can it now structure
the spiritual values that will ameliorate
the destructive power of its own science?
I can hear the objections! "This is
the role of the church." But is it entirely?
Should the highest seat of learning p~
vide endless scientific knowledge while
dismissing a moral value system to
control the power of science? In our
system of separation of ci1urch and statt,
should the univer.sity interpret the prin-
ciple so conservatively as to inhibit
ethical education?
TODAY YOUNG peo;>le all over the
nation sense the imbalance between
technological power and e t h I c a I
sociological power, and are Culminating
with frustration, knowing that the
materials to produce cornucopias are
at hand, but where are the means or
koowledge to produce peacdul, happy,
human relations? Pulling It another way,
will a round trip to the moon have
much value to a society where huge
populations In urban centers, like pjllful
wou~ded animals, scream with ,acial . , pom .
JOHN A. MACDONALD
the surrounding community.
This is not a request fort all sweelnesa
and light in your reporting, but for
balance and perspective.
Congratulations also on your accurate
account of Chancellor Aldrich 's remarks
to the local citizens who gathered in
1upport of the Interfaith Foundation at
the university.
CHARLES HEGE SWORD
Bullf19J1tlu9 an Art
To the Editor :
I wish to take issue with the thoughts
expressed in the letier of Mrs. Cora
B. J~ in your Mailbox Nov. 23.
t. Bullflghling i> not a "IJIOrl-" It
is an arL
2. Were Mrs. Jeoseq_ to visit a corrida
in Madrid or in Mexico City she would
not refer to the spectator.I: a s
"demoralized perverts." The President
of Mexico is not a pervert.
3. She states ''Not even the lowest
animals conceive of such fiendish
cruelty."
TO BE POLITE, I shall use a Freach
idiom: "Bourrage de Crane."
Has Mrs. Jensea ever watched a cat
torturing a mouse? Has Mrs. Jensen
ever watched a spider waltin~ for a
fly to die a death,;. of agony ia her
web? Hal!I Mrs. Jensen ever seen a
leopard pouncing on the neck of an
antelope?
As to her reference to Christianity,
I suggest that she dip into "The Dead
Sea Scrolls" by John Allegro or "The
Letters of Pontiw Pilate" by W. P.
Crozier.
EDGAR D. PHELPS
Na vigational Aids
To the Editor:
Now that the inevitable has happened,
will the Orange County Board or
Supervisors continue to deny Orange
County Airport the equipment it must
have t9 prevent further tragedies?
Perhaps our astute supervisors could
be made to personally explain to the
families of the latest air crash victims
why they have not approved purchase
of navlgatJonal aids desperately needed
by the airport.
The Federal Aviation Agency, as well
as the Airport management, have been
denied their requests by the non-pilot
county government o!flclals.
Do we need more Innocent victims
befort the importance or proper naviga-
tional aids is evidenced?
MARTIN LEV AN
Ol11111ple Cov .,,.age
To the Editor :
Upon my return from Mexico City
By Geo rge ---,
Bal ance, P ersp ecti ve Dcor George:
To the i<Utor: Is it lru~ that girls always play
A(te.r seeing Lbe mornl.ng newsstand h~rd·to-get . Eve~ Ume I try to
edirJorui of several other local papers "'~~, my glrl she hits me In the e}'t
in which a UCI protesting group was I with her llJl CONCERNED given the usual front page headline treat-
ment, I was upectlng more of the
1ame when the DAILY PILOT arrived
at noon.
It was a pleasuR to Ond the matter
unmcnUoned. ind iMtead, front page
space given to Ille llltorial program bein& carried on by a group ol UCI
studel'Jts Jn a diJ.3dvantaged arta.
Otar Concerned ~
Many girls llke to play h&rd·t~
1et. In your case, however, 1
think your girl JS hard to gel
Ellhtr get a new girl, quit tryln&
to kiss the OM you have now, or
weir a catcher'• rnuk when you
park.
(Send your problems to George.
On """'"'1 thought. woold It be O.K.
if we 1ent George to your pro-
bltmaT)
I had the opportunity to review the
progress of the Olympic Games via a
number of Southern California daily
sports sections my wife had been saving.
I would like to congratulate the DAILY
Pllm for its truly outstanding coverage
of the 1968 Olympic Games. In my
opinion, it far surpassed anything l saw
r r om your competitors. I've been told
by many that it was only through the
DAILY PILOT that they could get in-
formation on lheir favorite Olympic
sports.
l 'M .SURE YOU'VE gained additional
readers as a •fesult. At any rate, it
was ·a masterful jot> of reporting and
I believe Glenn White should be hlgbly
conunended for his outstanding work.
lt'.s his kind of dedication which makes
'a sports sect.ion great.
Again, my sincere congratulations to
the DAILY PILOT and, specifically, to
Glenn White. Believe me, your work
is appreciated.
MONTE NITZKOWSKI
MT. Nitzkowski wa.,, assist.ant to(lter
polo coach on the 1968 United States
Olympic team, which finished fifth in
Mexico City. He wru a swimmer in t1~e
1952 Olympics at Tletsinki.
-Editor
SDS a Sl11later Force
To the Editor:
Perhaps you wouldn't have written
a recent editorial condemning Clay
Mitchell, president or the Orange County
School Board of Education, if you were
awal'! of a booklet circulating on some
local campuses, including high schools,
titled "Toward a Student Movement"
and a.ccording to its fly leaf distributed
by the Students for a Democratic Society.
ln cal!le there is any question that
SOS doesn't intend to be a !iniister
force in regard to protests over Jong
hair, etc.. may I quote you a fSW
paragraphs from this booklet:
.. THE IDGll SCllOOL campus is
already experiencing great conflicts.
Dorens of underground high school
newspapers have been started across
the country. In many places, high school
students have organized themselves:
over everything from long hair lo the
war in Vietnam. At one Los Angeles
high schoo~ 30 students sat-in over lunch
~d bumt their student activity cards
1n protest of the cancellation of an
a~mbly. !il another school, over 150
students picketed the administration
bu.llding In protest of Congressmen ..•
We are supposed to identify with the
doers, and look down at lhe rest or
the people from our perch as legislators.
We don't have to deal with police who
aren't our friends, foot-long rats, and
slwnkird3. We de11I in the polite world
of commiUeea, and are carefully &hiekled
from the horror! those commjUeea arc
rtspora.ible for. ,
" ••• TllE L05 •;\NGELES student
ment underwtnt a very interest(n8
aenesi!I in a year. Thi.n&s started with
an attempt to rorm a city-wide .ltudent
r1ght5 GrianiUIUon, and much of tht
acUvlty ctntered around hair and
newspapers. WlthJn seven months, there
was a group called lilgh School Students
Against the War, with people at to
camputeS, and aver 50 aeUve me.mberl
which waa able to get over zoo high
school studentt o u l tar a demOMtra-
tlon •.• ''
Tbe SOS bu been eXJIAled u a maj<r
contributor to "iolence and disnqKton
In practically au major universities'
demonstraUon.!. Ce-1.ilnly, Mr. Mitchell
UI justified In aJe:nfng tht lt.udcnl1 lo
the purpote1 of the SDS before il
t CONSIDER the lntf:rn~ run1bUngs
of UCl lll be or much le.~ lntuut
and Importance tc the CQmmunlly al
IArge than what the srudl.!nl.JI and ~lty
at UC! .,. doll>I ror, wtlh, •'!'l" !Ji -------------, becomti • dbrup11 .. rorce oo lhe high
school and junior college level u U ls
on the wUversity level.
A. S. SCHALL
Wil-so1a's A 1111e xatio11
To the Editor:
I'm delighted that Costa Mesa Vice
Mayor Bob Wilson advocates apneution
of Baja California, and thelfbringlng
of American culture thereto.
Where there now are only milel!I of
untouched beauty, uninhabited arid
desert, sharp black volcanic peaks, and
bays and white be.aches without number,
there could be created another outpost
for the American Way of Life.
The transition would not be difficult.
First, Wilson must make arrangements
to roll flat the giant cactus. lhen ~VI
the area with good black asphalt. Next.
traffic signals mllit be erected. Thirdly,
thousands of uWity poles must be put
in place to be festdoned with myriad
wires. The neon signs should be added
quick!Y to beautify the landscape and
enhance the ~ckground.
THE OTIJERWISE barren rock out-
croppings at 83.nta Ynez should be
painted with "Jesus Saves." Eight filling
stations and 36 beer bars should be
suf[jcient to serve lhe residents of that
rancho, who must number a good round
dozen. The sadly wlnding streets of San
Ignacio should be squared off for tract
housing, and the homes should be built
without sidewalks along these stralghlen-
ed streets. The nt.:n5 of the cha\)el
at La Purislma could easily be renovaied
and turned into a bowling alley. !
Perhaps Vice Mayor Wilson might eveo
prevail upon Col. Sanders to smile dd'wn
from his bucket in the sky onto ihe
populace of Costa Mesa de! Sur. Ra}pb
Williams could be invited to merchandise
automobiles.
AND, OF COURSE, eligible voters. ot
this peninsular establishment o t
Americana should be instructed to Vot1
"No" on all school, college and public
facililies funding issues. Th.is would puJ
education and local government on equal
terms with that in the parent communJ1y.
A mayor would have to be elected.
The first thing he should do is s8ek
acquisition of Borneo so that the cultural
magnificence of Cost.a Mesa couJd be
extende<I there also.
BUU. Y FOR Wilson. He has bfen
able to see clearly that remote, sparstlj
populated areas, whe'rt people only tlsli,
raise cutlon, harvest dates. and lrusbincl
catUe, areas where people are kfpd
friendly and willing to offer a helJSJnl
hand to a stranger, are so Jack inc:: in
charm, that they abould be made (nu,
e:a:1ct replleu of our fiaw1ess cities.
Now that everything has been ~cd
in Costa Mesa, It's really wonderful
to i;ee one of our leaders strike out
to apply hil!I e:a:quislte still in other
areas. Beautiful .
DA VE EPPEi!SoN
-----Wednesday, Nov. 27, 11168
Thi t-ditortai page of tilt naa11 Pilot utks to inform end 1tim;.
ulatt rtacUr1 by prtstnting this
MIDfptz?fl''.S opWON and com.-. mentorr on topftl of ,,...,.,It
""" rigntffc<mc<. "' provldtng • ,.,,,,. ,... Utt •'PT•uloo Of
ovr rttxkri' opinio"', and b~
prt1nUno the dlvn-11 ofnt-
poinll Of mfonn<d Oblm!<n
and •pokum«n on topfci of tM
day. '
Robert N. w •• d. Pubr ,
-~· ~-'L:E~=~·"·'-'·-'·=··"--'·~-·~-~-_,-=~"'-'-======..;.:;....=rr...,o>.';:..o._,,._.nw•,_ _ . ---------------------'"' ------·------~·---·e=r=--..-·,-=-=~· '--='--"------------------------
/Chri :sf Enas
• • .. •
-
t:i·ght~ . .
Exciting pl11111 for the ll?st airtstmaa Cruise ot u,tJU electt1lled
mem~ ot the Huntington Harbour Pbllbarmonic Comml1tee dUJlni a
meeting and lundleon boDQring n..W members.
The committee, sponsors ot the annual boat parade througll the du1n.
nels ot the· marina community, also wlll sponsor the unique tund-r&!stng
venture w11lcb benellta the Orange County Philharmonic Society.
All area residents wUl be able to view waterfront homes dressed In
sparkling Christmaa finery by boat,
The First Cbrirbnas Cruise of Lights will take place Monday, Doc. 9,
and continue through Friday, Dec. 13.
Boats will leave eaCh hour between 7 and 10 p.m. from the Hunt!Dgton
Hlll1>our sales office at 4241 Warner Ave. Tickets will be 'l for adults and'
50 cenl.'l for children. No Ucl<ets will be li>ld in advance but may be purcb..,
ed prior to each trip, and there is ample free parking.
The annual boat parade, the only oue taking place in the Huntington
Valley area, will culminate the week's pr&-Christmas fesUviUes on Satur•
day, Dec. 14. The first parade for young people will begin at 1:30 p.m. and
the adult parade at 5:30 p.m. .
There wUl be two divisiOlll, one for child"'° between 5 alld 12 years,
and one for leen•gers between 13 and 17. Prizes will be awarded in both
aflernOQll divisions.
Trophies will be awarded for an events end there will be -sweep-
stakes awards for the best overall entries. Perpetual trophies for Ute bes.I
boat decorated by a cblld without adult help and the entry which best de-
picts the spin{ of Christmas also will be awarded. ·
Chairman of the annual Christmas benefit is Mro. Gilbert H. Thom!>'
son, and assisting with preparat:l.ons are the. Mmes. Arthur Knox, printi.rig;
Walter Janssen, advertising; A. Bayard Dod Jr., judges and awuds, and
Richard H. Morri•on, trophies.
Others assi.itng include the Mmes. S. H. Giesy Jr., publicity; William•
Testa, posters; T. W. Lapham, boat numbers and Robert .A. Jame•, bQal
entries.
Grand Masha!, 1968, is Robert A. James and William P. ·Uniak 11
parade captain. Guiding the day parade will be Earl Colee and night cal"
lain wUl be Mace Mason.
Judges for the waterfront homes which also will receive prizes ara
Mrs. Jobn Virtue and Mrs. Robert Kerr.
'TIS THE SEASON -Working on their mt Christmas boat parade
this year will be new members of the Hwrtington Harbour Philhar·
· monic Committee (left to right), the Mmes. J. M. Pullman, W. V.
Wright, George Kay and J. A. Willingham. Welcoming new mem-,
be rs and ann()Jltlcing details of the Christmas• Cruise of Lights and
boat parade during a luncheon in !be Town and Coontry Inn was
Mrs., C. Robert Hubbard, chairman of the board.
HOMES DECO RATED -Homes with their
multicolored lights tdlimmering in the chan-
nl!I wat6rs will be viewed during boat toura
taking place for the llrst Uma thil year. De-,
ciding on ·decorat!OllS are Mn>. Anselmo '.Pi-
neda,o Mro. G. T. Gerretsen and Mrs. R. D.
Devies, new members.from Marina Group.
BUSIEST TIME . AHEAD -Amoug new
members who wlll"be worldng on the com·
mlltee's . najor f!mdlng event for Or~e
County PhUliarmoidc ara (lotMo ri&llt) Mi's, -.
Embittered W:i,dow · Dec.eives · H,ers:elf
' .JlEAR ·ANN LANDERS : Tomorrow Is
~ and !£.,will be tho bappteat
rlianbllvlng Ill)' llUle lamilf bu had
iD 10 yesrs. '"'1? Became 1117 ....._
1 died five weeks qo. Re finally drank
blmsell lo death.
Fir once I will Ill down with 1117
four childrel and N1 ara<e and then
wlll be ptlCO Jo Ibo house. No Ioog.r .m Ibey look al -ma with lerrllied eyes
llld ut Wey 'DaddJ II ICl'eamlng and
~ thlnp. No longer wDl I hove
Ill take them to the oelihbor'r in the
ll))ddle ol lbt.. Dllht lo protect them
opinlt the bib\alltJ ol a man who
behaved lib· a ferocious snlmal when
Ibo whiskey got lo him.
I •hflJ'I tiave worked to ruppott the
~· r much euler It wl~ bl
ANN LANDERS 5l lociety !or Ille • PrevenUon ol Qouelly
lo Anlmlll. To, 11bom· cl<>, I ttpOI'\ I
man who refOMI to allow' hU wife to
JO lo I doclor boclule ho 11)'1. a0
-11;8 qii~ .and ~ll Ibey ... ,
find aJll\IJIJli . """" Ibey. will l1)lke
Up .... ellllni . .IO they .CID .Miid I bJ&
with no liquor bl!ia,. no court c:ooll,
no attorney'• fen, no ambulance bllll.
11'1 heavenly lo .... able lo '° to
sleep al nilJft insttad of nltlna Ibo
lloor wooderin& If my hutbtnd ... -ed out in a bar 1or In'· tome tnlnp'I
a~L You cad'\ lmqlne tho loellq
ol ibame wi>ln I IOI thole J a.m.
telephone calls utina Ill" ,lo . "cOOie
and gel him."
Yea, Ann, This 'l'baMicMnl will be •
111Y bopP{NI, and I had lo leD llOllleoM. bill!
And you are the oo1Y one I dare lelL '!be vlcllm II 11)1 JIOlillbor and llht
Thanb for llstOnlna. -FREE AT LAS'r asked me lo write lor .n WWG'. l'leul
DEAR FREE: l'lll &lid I ,...-povlde ~ -LADY Ntx:f Il!>OR
1"' wllll , 11 -IUllJ to -• DEAJI UDY1 4ofmlll -•o,.. ,.......,. hd -IUI•'°' NVI, I • loeted . 'lliic-lllq nii't ~.
liopt 1" w1D Np!-Ille Wllei-ia ........... A _.. 1lh II • -
)'till', .. art wllll 1 llllJe ·co'"""""°. R1ett11 domlutlld. "1 ...., -.-· w
......... ollow lllm ...... lltr ,,_
DEAR ANN : Wb1n people llliotnat iolns It-a doelcr wllfa· M\ 11 W ·h
animals they <ID be .. ported lo tho ~ Ill)' ...... -... r"l"• !-"·
.... '
..._ ____________________ ..... __ ~ .. -----
• 1n
J ODl!AN HASTI NGS, 642"'3'.!1
Lee Fink, Mrs. John Perry and Mrs. Lin W.
Bowlliig. The Hunllngtoo Harbour Pllilhar-
monlc Committee is comprised of Admiralty,
Madill and lllander il'OUP'·
aWl!ly--,orlldo el IL.Ne ..._.i. .. ..,..,, ...,.,..., .... _.. •-,-r...-aa1,.. --.... -.... ... ,..... .. ~ .,., ... lt'a ... ... ,.._
How wlll'JOQ "'°" -Ila nal "*'I
-ablc1 · "* Alla i-.. -for her-'1-or strllll Bow
lo Tell Ibo Dllhl•a. • -a -In cotn aril • .... ......... d.
llamped en...ioir. witli-10UI' nqwt.
' Ann \ ~ 'wJ~be 0&111d lo bolp _
yoo wlfh ,..,. .,-. Send them
to hlr 'In cani ol Iba DAILY .Pllhl',
elld<loin& Lillll(, oelf-. ........
OllVelope. •
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J.C DAllY ,llDT WHMMlaJ', Now:...W 27, 1968
San Francisco Honeymoon
•• • j
Bride Claimed -.
MRS. PETE W. LEWIS
Evenlng Nuptlal1
Horoscope
• HB In
.U llama In HuntJnatoa
Budl alter a woddlo& .trip
to San P'randlco 1 r e
..,.lywedl Mr_ and Mn.
Pete w. Lewis, who we r e mlriled In tile Finl Christian
Chlpdi, Hunllnston Bead!. 1\e Rev . Dan J . Mos,, of·
ftd:ated at the double r I n I
ceranooy-
Mrs. Lewll, the · rormer
Patricia H<mton, la t he
daulitler of Mn-G. M.
Hqlalander of Huntlngtoo
Bead! ~ Jack Houstoo of
Geor1ia. Her husband b the
100 of P~ler W. Lewill ol
~-· Tbe bride w o r e a white
crepe emplrt eown with' ap.
pliqued flowers. 'nle tralo!l and
long 1 l e e v e 1 were made of
matchlng laee ind she carried
a white orchSd 1WTounded by
white carnations.
Mra. Bob Davie, matron of
honor, WQn! a lavendar gown
while UM!! maid ol honor, Ml!s
Chris Sleraki wore a lime
green d re 1 1 . Bridesmaids,
Mrs. RJchard Van Kelnbelk,
MW Teresa Sierakl and 'Miss
Kathy ' Chambers wore gowns
of shocking plnk, baby blue
and yellow.
Laverne and Leslie Auger
were flower girl and ring
bearer.
Bill Johnston served as best
?Un and ushen Included Bill
Stevens, John McKee, John
Morr~ and Wally Hankins.
Mn. WtuJ.am ·Mills of Santa
Ana, the f1ride•1 c o u s i n ,
assisted at the ~~lion in
the Lake Park Clu~se.
The bride gradua~ from
•
ll)' NANCY MC J;ll'YJIB
\. DEAR NANCY: Wby -.1 1ha
pi1giml bave celobraied 'l'bankollvlnc
wllh a /lmall, IOllliblHlle fowl llldl
al CCM*o IO WI wouldn't have the pro-
~.., IUrkey lelt.oWJn. •
I've run out ol ideal oo hOw to diagulae
!be 'blrd ao tt Wies like veal oo l"rlday,
meatk>af oo Saturday, IOUP on Sunday
and lll)'ltery caueroUi oo M o a d a y •
Please! An orlilnal recipe f,.. turkey
--1hat doem1 IUle like Iha
day alter 'fbanksglvlnc. MARJORIE S.
DEAR MARJORIE:
The Pl1¢mo bad
many pr<bleml In
the New World. Tur--
key left.oven Wll
ooe.. T b·e y lbauld
bavt COlllUited tbe
Azleoa 00 thla ..u-
nary prodicamftll
Davine • lllP civlll-
zalloo, tbe -bad already oolvod
the problem of IUr-
key left.-Overl 500
yeara before the arrival of tbe P1lgrimL
They created Turkey Mole which ii •
lively dlah that features a spicy, highly
Oavottd sauce that hu an lnteitltin.g
loucb of chocolate. ft'• strictly 1ounnet
Aztec. AJ you can aee by the DWnber
ol apJces, Jt bas plenty of ole!
Bone cooked turkey and cut into chunk·
Bizod pieces. Mell 2 tableopoon cooking
oil In a large skllJel and quickly 1rown
turkey, ~ meal wllh I teaspoon
aalt. Transfer turkey to a cu.erole dlah.
Add 1 tablespoon ~ oil in skillet and
saute I II teaspoon cnllbod r"'1 pepper
and 1 teupon chill powder together with
•
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V4 cup clqlped ,_ dllM peppen (~
moved-.) lkeupdlo!IPod-oad
\k eup dlo!IPod bell --•
Cool< unW vfl'llblel .,. oofl.. Ill
-NllCOJ>lll, -· f la~ --....ii ... .u.--
In 2 lablel-oil, aDd add 2 -clovee of prllc, I cbopped pimonlnl, I
tea,_ vanilla, lk II-uiMed, I
cloves and ilk..-llabn cbocolllo
(or f 01. ~ dlOcoiall and I ~ ) 0
Mell cbocolate er low Oame. B1""'
lnte clilll lllDluie with I ~
lnmal!> pule, 14 cup crwrbed, -cbl!>I
and ' cupl -broth. -Wldl -r..i.-and lhl<:U.. In -11
minutes. Pour ''"'' 1urby In -and bake lk boor. Save with tertlJ1u
and rice.
One of !be prDed bamo of !be -fl a '""""1onl, petal-pink dellcacy fnlm Gernwl1 called Blad Foml Ham. ll'I
ollced Vfrf 1h1ll and ~ lllmllar, bul,
In my op1nloa, better thal1 Pmiclutto.
I WU delJlhlOd lo dOO>ver this rare
ham In a llllail shop lhal l)IOCiaitzes
In Ill\ appetizing -.Ut of German
foodl.
1bey mU:e their own Bockwurst (veal
......,.), Bratirunt (large pork
1a11&1ge) and the beat Uverwurst you'vt!
luted this llde of Munich, u well u
a variety ol other smoke meats.
Be '""' lo sample thelr homemade
brwla, eapeclalJy the German rye wbicb
JI unllte an)" standard rye, 'lbiJ ii DO
place In count calories. Everything In
the store ii llnfuDy fattentnc. So live
• little! .
For information regarding t h e • e
gourmet oervfcel, call !be DAILY PILOI'
at fC.4321 and aak for NANCY'S HINTS.
Marina High · School ind a \..--.--._. ____ ._. ____ ._. ____ ._. ____ ~-.....i
beauty college . Her husband
is ·! itiduate of Wilson High
School in Lone Beach.
Anne .,_ Burke Marries
A ·Rose Is o Rose Is o Rose
A top award hi the 1968 Thanksgiving Rose Show at
Rose mus Memorial Park, Whittier, went U> New-
port Beach rose ent;Jlu&iast, Mrs. Lyman Cra1le. Tire
area resident receives co~gratulations from J . it
Seppi, vice president of Rose Hills Memorial Part.
Mn. CraDe woo for her entry of the best bouquel ol
~ or more roses. ~e competed witb rose growers
from all over Southern California.
OC Guidance Center
Elects Nine to _ Board
Mn. John Mcintosh. newly
lnltalled P'esidenl of tbe
board of dlrectors of the Child
Guidance Cent.er of Orange
County, announced the names «. n1nt new members of lbe
board:
Cancer: Boost Morale During Catholic Rites
Serving from Newport
Beach are Mn. Robert B.
Bernard, Mn. George ·Brown
and Mrs. Joseph Slap. Others
are Arthur R. McKeorie,
Costa Mesa ; Lawrence M.
Reed, Huntington Beach; Mn.
Mary Christensen Wyman,
Laguna Beach; Mn. Sophie
Gendel, Fullerton and Dr.
Robert N. Helton and Mrs.
Walter C. Ralston, Garden
Grove.
Mrs. Mclntesh, lpe&kinf II
the orientation meetin&. el·
plalned ill purpooe. s h.
described bow the Center
treatl children and their
families from all over tDI
COWlty. The Center ii a noo-'
profi~ countywlde supported
psycblatric clinic for enioo
tionally disturbed children and
adolescents from preschool
age to 17 year:i:.
Some ularles fO'l' the rtalf
are received from county
grantl!i, but the. major portion
of the Center's growing aDJ\Ual
budget derives from it! own
supporting groups. In addiUon
then! are contributions from
service clubii, foundations,
church groups, the Community
Chest and United Fun<is.
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 28
lly SYDNEY OMARR
AIUl!S (Mardi 21-April II):
Despite appomit oppooltioll,
you get what you need. '!bole
who try to block you 1IDd
that, your alliel pr e v en t
obstQJcUon. Your own orlilnal
ApPl"OICh .wfnl the day.
t.{1Jl!llS (April :10-May :IO); GUm1 heallh by maintalnlng
program of moderation. Avoid
e.xtremea. Fine evening for
attending lecture, t he a t e r •
Gl!MINI (May :U.June :IO):
Social acUvlty II lncr<ued,
Not too ea3f to ~te to-
Teacher to Wed
day. But you caD win friends,
Influence people.-Deli 1 ,.,.._
t.er forces. Key Is creative re-
laxation. Go with the tide.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
-In morale Indicated. Meaningful com~t by one
In authority does !be lriclt ..
UCO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Good hmar aapect hlibUil>ll writine ac-tJvJty,,, You ......... --gain puler le<Ung o I
freedom. Important "' gel
facts on the record. Leave
no1h1ng to chance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Money !i~ affect Ina:
llome, family ohould be open
for dl.scussion. Avoid know-lt~
Rites Date Announced
Grace Methodilt Church in
Laog Beach will be the. even-
ing setting for the Feb. I
....icfing of Linda Marguerite
Moody of Looi Buch and
Darrel Waller i!toUoP of
Lakewood.
Mils Moody, daughter of
Mr. and Mn. Richard M.
Moody of . Sunoel Beach, is
an alumnae of Hunllnston·
Bead! Hf&h School a n d
California State C.Ollep at
Long Beach. can.ntly she II
a teacher at Wardlow School
In Hubtlngtm Bead!.
The benodlc:Hlect, IOI\ of
Mr. and Mn. Walter Stoskopf
ol Hoisington. Kan., 11 a
graduate of Kanau Stele
Coll•ee-
Century Club
Twomielh Century Club of
Runlizliloo Beach plhen 1t
7:10 p.m. the third Tuesday
in Late Park Chlbhouse.
. .
Honolulu Bound_
LINDA MOODY
&.trothed
Jlr. 1"4 Jin. :Pinld H. Cdflm.n « Costa M•1 are
aboonl tbe S.S. 1-linl wllldl will take them U>
H09olulu tor 1 naUoo.
I ~
all aWtude. Diplomacy gains.,
arrogance loses today. Know
. this and act aceordingly.
UBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22):
U you don 't know, do nothing.
Best today to play wailing
game. Premature action could
ruull In delay, 1.... Let
otben ........ tbe~ v1 .....
SCORPIO (0 c I. 23-Nov.
:11)1.N_..-y te handle proo-
tfcal • mattera. U you lkfp
'euent1a!1, you are forced to
r<peal. JIQllu this -and
apply yoi&neU. A«qt on
work, paclng, steady ap-
prOach. If you concentrate,
you succeed.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Finial\ what you
start. Your vlewa, desires gain
widtr attention, accepta.oct.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): OuUook b brighter on
dcmestic !root t h r o u g b
'revision of p111111. Alm loward
greater lulure oecurity. Soole
who el'pr'eSI views art merely
being stubborn. Be a lhmrd
observer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Avoid disputes with
relatives. Some ideas art aub-
ject lo chaoge. Be8I te permll
one cloee to you to tet policy.
PISCES (Feb. !~March :IO):
st. John tbe Baptist eathouc
Church in Costa Mesa was
the setting for the morning
nuptials linking in marriage
Anne Marie Burke and David
Joseph Balougb_ Tbe addition of these new
members increases the total
board number to 27.
The Rev. Anthony McGowan
perfonnod the rites foe tbe
daughter of Mr. and Mn.
Jooeph Burke of Colla Meaa
and the IOD ol Mr. aod Mrs.
Jooeph Balouib of. Costa
Mesa.
The btl<fe· wore a chanlilly
lace over peau de soie gown
with Jong fitted sleeves and
scalloped neckline. She carried
Cbuncil -Theater Party
Benefits Hospital Ship
a white otch1d surrounded by •
white chrysanUiemums. Participant. j o I a I n g a
Her sister, Mrs. Oiarles theater party sponsored by
Lambert, was matron of Sou.them CouncU of Phi Mu
honor. The honor attendant will be: supporting t h e
and the brldeomal<is, Miss IOnlrlty'1 naUooaf charity ..
Catherine Buchanan and Miss well u applauding the Up
Khn Heffner, '""" Ivory With People cut next SalUr-
IOWDI borderod In AUllrian day In the Anaheim Con-
tepestry at Iha bem and venlloo Center.
necltiine. A lllllptW abip c a 11 e d 'lbomas Ba Io u I b the HOPI';, which mpoo<is In In-
bridegroom's brother, was vltaU001 from underdeveloped
best man and the bride's nations to carry its volunteer
brothers, W1Wam and Thomas staff to their shores, will
Burke, ...re usbetl. beoeijt from tbe !beater party . Mils M>ry. Charneiey of El Once there a volunteer staff
Monte assisted at the recep-of aelected doctors and nurses
lion for 125 guests in the treat p a t l en t s Uld train
church hall. ll'iedicaJ peraonneI to carry on
The couple will m a k e the wort after the ship leaves.
their home in Ft. Hood, Tex., Miatana, w~ have been
Calllornia Council or Phi Mu,
to chair the benefit.
Co mm ittee memben
assisting include the Mmes.
Gene Maxwell, and Wendell
Loft.sgard of Santa Ana~
James Harmon, David Mug.
ger and Jooeph Nlcboil of
AnaheJm; Memtt Conroy ol
We:atminst.er; Forest Mercla.
Buena Park, and H.M. Lyday
Jr., Huntington Beach.
Members of alumnae
assocla.Uons In Las Angeles,
Glendale, South Bay, Long
Beach and San Gabriel are
expected to attend. The
Southern California Council
representl about 1500 alumnae
Jn the area.
Check assets. Be venaWe.
Give full play to curiosity.
Ask quesUOM -obtain
amwers. Take nothing for
grlnted where moriey la coo·
oemed. Definite 1a1n pooalb1n
11 you are aJerL
wbero tbe br1deeroom Is taking pilet llnce !MIO, lnclud-
stationed with the ~~ od ~ Vietnam, Peru, HB TOPS Club following a wedding P --. F.cued..-, Glilnea, Nicaragua
Laite Tahoe. and Ceylon. . Sa-rong 2 Gain TOPS Club Both 111aduated from Costa MRS. DAVID JOSEPH BAL-OUOH Mra. Floyd A&tdet!Oll h.. meeb every Monday at 7:30
Rummage Aids
City of Hope
Mesa Hij:b School and the been named by Rotitrt W~ p.m. In Smith's Elementary: bridegroom attended Orange Nowmber Brkle praklent of the 'Souiherft School in HtY.:IUngton Beach. Coast~ll.... ==============·==============================;;;;;==;;:========:=====;
Al their next fund-ra1llng
projocl to benefit tbe City
of Hope , rnemben of the Gina
Uhrlaub chapter of Hunlln&lon
Beach are spoflllX'ina a rum-
mage aale between I a.m.
and 5 p.m. Si:tilrday, Nov.
30. . ' The sale will ta'ke place 1n
the : ~d Fellows Hall, 226
Main SL
Films Shown
Mlsa Liia Nelson will Show
films of New Zealand . and
Australia during a meetinc of
the Lapna Beach Woman'•
Cluj> U) tbe Woman'• Club-
'botise FTlday, Dec. 8.
Luncheon will be served at
12:30 p.m. Reservations may
be: obt'ltned by callin&' Mrs .
Charles Muller, 494-4.13Z or
Mrs . L. J. 'lbcl'nas, 49MSl1,
by W~ay, Dec, f,
Cords Ployed
For Charity ,
The Woman's Clubhouse in
Costa Mesa will be: the !letting
for a charity bridge game
sponsored _ by lbe . American
Conlrad Bridie League. All
proceedl fQ.r u;ie I p.m. benefit
will be doolted lo the Cancer
Fund. .
Nov . %9 is the date for the
card party. Further in·
formation may be obtained
by calling Mrs . Helen Creed
at 847-3445.
Emblem Club
The. Elks Lodge i!I the set-
ting for meeting! of the Em·
blem Club •1 or Laguna
Beech. Members gather $he
first a!>d third Tueaday at II
p.m.
VIRGINIA'S
SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE
lJl4 E, Coe1t H!"(· e Coron• ~.I Mer
Phon• ORi•I• 1.eoso
Know whett to find fehion'1 fine~t febric1 •n~ trift'll7 You •r• invited to l:INWI• at
ltlwrt,
Ute ,.., It •• lw4 ., ...... a.we
•-------VIRGINIA ---~
'
Five Great Looks
Wa call 11111 fl'ffh Oew•tylo
The Swil'IQlng Sits.
No question abOut It,
this ls tO(fay 's look in wedding set1.
All In four1etn karat teitturtd gold.
A. "415 .. _ C.'300
D. $4'0 I . S2ll
SLAVICK'S
..._...,,SU-It.I_.,
I e Fa1hion l11tn4
Newport l•1ch -644-1 ftO
o,.,. M••v •11i Fr~•Y M11i•t•
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.
·' • · S~CE 1929 . .
WH.ITE •
FRONT
OUAtnY~ $ERVICE-• DISCOUNT• INTEGRnY,
Stain~s steel, 8 cup
model maims pelfect
coffee every time.
l(eeps it at the right
temperaiure for serv-
ing. #138
12:'.:K·1999
4 CUP PERK.
16.99 &CUP
Fully transistor·
ized for instant
sound, reliable
long service. 4
inch speaker. At~
tractive case. A
thoughtful gift.
Steel frame ~· olvblend bed.
Rubber cushions, wool cloth,
self leveling legs. Ball,
cues, triangle, bridge, chatk,
instruction s. COMP. AT 179.95
Paisleys, f\or-
· a Is, Aztec ·
prints. Rein·
forced cor·
ners. Vinyl
" covers ! .
aY alMifto\L lLICfklC
· · 10 SPEED BLENDER'
CHARGE IT
e IANIAMRICAID
e WHnl LllONr ·--' CllDrf CADS • • •
Solid stale design: has ~mer.
Stir. "1ix. C1115h, liquilJ and much
mO<e. UBL-3 • 4910
'·
.. ·OPEtl :·
l\\A*SG\V\MG
·DAY
10 ·.A.M·
103P.M•-
ft CREST . 3 TOOTHPASTE
1=-
.
FAMOUS
AlKA·SELTIER
I · , MAALOX
Ill .. ' 12 oz; LIQUID
(
~ ·, Easy lo tala antacid;
I li~ ', COMP.All .55. ~ 79· c . ·~"'=::-~.
--~:'!; .
j;l • ~ "
RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT
7 ·Oi. deodOrant. aero·
sol '69 ~-1.49
WHITE FROllT'S
PHARMACY
HAI KARATE
ORIENTAL
LIME
Cool and,..
freslling,
sulle · but
dlstiactive. ·
4 .,;.bottle .
in.gift bot.
AQUA VELVA
AFTER SHAVE
The favorite
of most men.
Cool, fresh
feeling.
Crystal blue
in a S oz.
bottle.
COMP. 59c .•r 1.00
~ I .. . . ,· . ~-I
( or. bottle
of cologne
nd both
oap.
gre_at gift
for dad, or
good friend.
COMP. S4. 197
WILLIAM'S 5 OI.
LECTRIC SHAVE
A great gilt
for the man
who uses an
electric
shaver.
·coMP. 69C ATl25
'
···:~·-ti ......,
Mennen's Cologne GlnFORTHE'FAMILT 5 LB. BOX OF
& Bracer Gift Set CHOCOLATES
fragrant after shave skin brac-A>sortment ol q"lity choco-
er and •ll purpose cologn~ !ates. Hard & sofUull & choco·
2 bottles in one gift box. I_ ate coatings. Gilt boxed.
1 ~~.AT180 3!o?.IT5.95
RYBUTOL
CHEWABLE
VITAMIN C
Year's supply • 365
lab lets. Assorted fla·
vor.s for kids or ad ults.
148
AT OUR WIG BAR
STYROPOAM I
HI.ADS 69( Use for styl ing & care of
wig~ falls. COMP.11$2 , 1.
STY•OPOAM·
HIADHOLDI• 88( Keeps stylin·g head 1n ·
~lace. COMP. AT $2. •
I 3 01. STYLE ,. W15SPIAT .
For professional look ing
wig •lyling. COMP. $2
I
I
PHISOHEX 78 -1
YICK1PORMULl44 J 19 CLEANSU I I COUGHSYIUP .6.oz. siie. ca11r. AT 1.7I JS DL skin c1e1nser. · Ctll . 112.15. •
Al.iYI$ lY '.
HlLICOPTER
AT WJllTI."""' ~
en SAT. llOV. 30
Santa will I.and by helicopter for a visit with .all aood.
httle girls and boys. He'll have a gift for ttie kiddies dtKTnc
his visit at Whitelfront. •
C•11op rali' ••••••••. l:SO •·•-Costa M111 .•••••• 11 :30 •·•· ·w11t lo1 A1t1•llr •••• 1O:15 1.111. E. Los A1111l11 • , •••• "t:30 ....
l1rr111c1 ••••••• , 11;001.ia. Coti•• •.•••••••• 10:1s1: ..
Pacol•• .......... 12:00 10011 011t1rit •••••••••• lj:OO 1.-. Ctntr~I •• ,: •• , ••• 9:~01.11. Sin l _e,1111rl111t ••••••. f i50 a.a
Downey ••••••••• 18:151.111. 11 01110 •••••.•• ,.1:301~,
An1U\111 ' •••••• .._J0:50 IJll. 1 Me••· ••••••••••• ~0:30 1.11. ' .
Separ-a.te free .zint
compartment holds 99
· lbs. -door ·Has 1011
-width packike shelf.
Slide-out refrigerator
shelves. Egg, butter
keeper. Tall ' boUlo
shelves on door. fast
freeze ice cube travc.
··1·79'7
DUR REG. 199.97
Slim-lined rOcker de-
srgned lor ·greatest
comfort. five . prona:
swivel base •. Variety ot ,
covers includin& vinyls,
: tweeds 'and fabrics.· $'. ~ ....
COMP.
ATl19.95 '
" •••
2.50VALUE 88C·_
BLACK & 'riiCKER
ELECTRIC: DRILL .KIT'
I/•" elettiic drift
and accessary iit.
Accurate drillinc .on au · materials,. . comes with stand,
bit·set, wheel arbor
1J99
.~I •
SHETLAND LEWYT
LIGHTWEIGllT .
SWEEPER VACU\IM
Adjusi '10 hiah -.~itJQ'w; pile$.
ldeal · tor ••ll·IA-w•Q .carpets
or small scatter ruis. · Rolls
anywhere • jumbo disposable
·dust~ags,1'!001 ., ... ,
.1·s·~
. ' '
3088 IRISTOL AVL ~-JUSJ-OFF NEWPOrr AVE. STOUtfOUU
IAIU ·~ 10 t <-
IATilUAT 11 10 t
iuMDAT ·11 TO ' I . ' •· IElWHN.'SAN.DIEGOFiWJ~ANll.IAKER ST. . . .
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J fl DAILY PILOT
Mrs. O.J. Keeps Hubby Out of Clouds . '
• Ule 111 1 IO!d 1111\ bowl, uys 0.
J. Simpson, hu its ups and downs.
"Sometimes it bothers me in !he
sen.se that all of this isn't real. My
Wllo keeps putting me back into real!~
\)', though. I'll be laying around tho
1partmeot listening to mus1c and
lhe'D come up and call me a lazy
bum."
lt renalns k>r Marguerlle SlmJllOO
lo llmll her huSband's hat slie to
aecoptable standarda. She WU with
him Tut.sday morning when USC
preoldent Dr. Nonnan Topping ln-
bmed o. J. th.al he bad won the
Hellman TroJ>l1y.
"Now rll have to stick your bead
with 1 pin," she cracked.
Sbt WU kiddlng, becauat It's a
fact lhlt Slmpoon lull acljlllled rapidly
to the adulation that surrounds blm.
every moment of his wakinc hours.
Mrs. Simpson says O. J. bu arrived
at the p o I n t where he must. Jeam
to say no. He's hardly ever on time
for any function becauae he goci:;
out of his way to pat small boys
on the head and he llopll and talD
easily with strangers.
"After last year's UCLA game l
t ad to wait three hours for him
to stop signing autographs for lltUe
kidJ," hlJ wife aald. '
"If be doesn't learn to politely ex-
cuse himself he'll never have any
Ume for hlmaelf."
Slmpoon enlo)'I lime. ll< lw oo
liang-upa aboul l~ like Floyd P1~
tetaoa OI' RogO£ Mart.. Wbeo an o(.
.,, .... _ ............ ~---
EARL
GUSTKEY ................ _"""""
renslve, cigar-chomping a 1 u m n u s
grabs hlJ haad ond liapo him on
the hick Stmpeon returna the fervor
Did Club Break Word?
Yankees Played It Sneaky
· ~ith Mantle, Draft Sheet
By IMILTQN RICHMAN
SAN P'RANClsd> (UPI) -Sometimes
-'IC New York Yankees talk out of both
.Jdea of their mouth.
They did in Mickey ManUe's case
and maybe that 's the reuon there's
so much confusloo now as to whether
the popU1ar but fading 37-year-old star
wUI play qaln for them or not nezt .......
1n all likelihood he will. The Yankees
need him a.s a box office luu and
Mantle needs the money, In deference
to his legs and bis years, the Yankees
have in miDd to showcase him at first
base. 'Ibat mWlll they'll play him there
occuionaJJy and have him available a.s
a pincb-hitt.u when I.hey don't.
ManUe admit.I he bu trouble getting
around on the ball now. At least he's
honest. The Yankeea should take lessons
from him.
Late in August when thett were the
usual late-sea.son rumblings thil might
be Mickey's last year, I went to Mike
Burke and asked him whether Uie Yanb
planned protecting ManUe in October's
expansion draft or leaving him exposed
for either Kansas City or Seattle to
grab.
Burke, the Yankees' chairman of the
board and pttaident, alway• had leveled
with me before and there waa no reuon
to think he'd do otherwiee now. But
he did otheriwise and I'm disappointed
in him because I like him and have
aJways taken him at his word .
Mike Burke made it aa strong u
he possibly could that the Yankees would
protect Mantle. He was 80 definite about
it he al.most made me ashamed for
even uking. He searched for the
Expresses Feelings
Polo Official Prefers
Freedom to Money
Olympic Game.s water polo official
H. W. Hofland writes from his home in
the Netherlands Antilles:
"I had a very nice time in Mexico,
they gave me two games to be a ref-
eree and (rankly I waa surprised. I am
Olympics champ with 39 points In two
games!
"11ley send me invitations from
Cuba, YugO!llavia, RuS!lia, East Ger·
many and HU!!iary but I am not inter-
ested. I llke to go to free countries as
.,,,,,,,,,,,,,
WHITE
WAS H
a free man in a free world. I like people
as your John Felix, Art Lambert, Jimmy
Smith, Guy Simonis (Canada ) and all
that people who likes wat,u polo as
sport! I hive a good business with nice
people lo work with and I am completely
satilfi: i
"For me water polo is a nice game
and I like it so far. J will never fight to
be a rtf. I only like to support the peo-
ple fighting for freedom in the world,
that's mort: important."
Other ra:idom noles and thoughts
from here and yon :
The Orange Coast area may have
three of tts fonner F':P stars fiartlng for Whittier College s buketball team
thiJ season. Tom Read and Chip Morvay
seem to be cinch regulars for the Poets.
And Read O!ristensen is a strong chal-
lenger for the flnt 1trlng.
Tuesday wben It was announced that
John RaJaton had been reb~ to guJde
Indian grid fortunes.
U ooe of Rah:ton's oo tllts ever makes
It to die Rose Bowl, I'll be one of the
Hrst to keel over.
But then maybe they can get San J01e
Staie and Stanford together In a two-
scbool conference with &he wlnoer goln1
to the Pasadena New Year's classic.
Tbat way John could be In the driver's
seal at last.
* * * Huntington Beach High basketball bos.s
Elmer Comb$ is already feeling the pres-
sure of being t~ the number one
prep team in Callfonlla. . .especially in
view of the fact state player of the year
Mike Contreras is slow to come back to
form after being out three weeks with
an ankle sprain.
Without Mike at his best, Huntington
would be jll!t another good team .
* * * Newport Opdmist Club members are
planning a motor safari to El Paso, TeI·
as, over the Cbrl&tma1 bollday1 to 1rans-
port memben of Chihuahua, Meiico's
basketball 1eam to the Newport cage
tourney.
Vallely May
Start Ag ain st.
Boilermake rs
UCLA basketball 'Coach John Wooden
said today that former Corona de! Mar
High and Orange Coast College basket-
ball star John Vallely has an excellent
chance of starting in the Bruins' opener
with Purdue's Boilermakers Saturday
night.
atroo.aest word he could and fin.aUy found
it. The word wu "unthinkable."
"It's unthinkable to us that Mickey
will ever be anything but a Yankee,"
said Mike Burke. ''He m~ definitely
will not be on our list of avaliablea."
Fine.
So what happens? Comes the American
League expansion draft on Oct. 15 in
8oltoo and ID and behold, gueu w-
name wu among the Yankee iVailables.
That's right, Mickey ManUe'a.
1be reason his name was included
among those exposed was because the
Yankees had gone to great length! to
get lhe two expanding clubs to agree
not to select ManUe.
They even went so far as to enroll
the services or American League Pre.ai·
dent Joe Cronin -for whatever good
that could do them -to · help them
convince Kansu City and SeatUe what
an awful thing it would be for Mickey
lo be drafted.
The Yankees could've made sure ol
keeping Mantle simply by including him
among their 15 protected players. But
they didn 't want him to count against
thelr 15 protecteea although they still
wanted to bold on to him. This, in
some circles, ls known as trying to
eat your cate and ha~ it, too.
Thett's no doubt Mantle wanL! to
finlsh up wi\h the Yankees, the club
he broke in with. All lhe big ones
prefer it that way.
The Yankees, in tum, alao want him
to wind up his career with them, They
could've shown it a little more gracefully
though,
Gun Threat
Puts Gridder
Behind Bars
HOUSTON (AP) -Former Houston
football player Charles Lockhart was
~ Tuesday after he allegedly pull-
ed a pistol on General Manager Don
Klosterman in a dispute over money,
police said.
Lockhart, 25, was charged with seri ous
threat to take a life and carrying a
pistol, Peace Justice Hugo A. Touchy
set bond at $1,600,
Klosterman, 38, said the incident oc·
curred In his American Football League
office.
''There were no shots fired," he said .
Klosterman said Lockhart, a free
agent, suffered a shoulder injury during
training camp and was released after
the Injury had healed.
Lockhart, a &-foot, 180-pound split end,
claimed he had not recovered sufficiently
lo play, Locthart told police the club
owed him $13,000. '
Tom Williams, 40, a team scout, sub-
dued Lockhart and grabbed t h e
automatic pistol, Klom.erman said .
Klosterman said Lockhart entered his
office and asked " 'Where's m y
money.'" "I can 't write you a check,"
Kloatmn.on said be told Lockhart.
The general manager said Lockhart
then pulled the gun, "flipped the hammer
and lunged at me. There was live am-
munition In the chamber."
tblle for lbllu!. He accoplo lbe-
pllment at race value no matter in
what form it appears. And 80 It hurts him when he "turns
to his old neighborhood In lbe ,Potrtro
Hill section of san Franclsco and
hll friend!: hide from him.
"I go baet to The WU now and
my old lrlendJ hide lrom me, they
really do. n\ey're doing tbe same
thinp DOW that I was doing with
them years ago but oow I'm lamoua
and they're stlil dolni tho 8ll1lO
lhillp.
'nlat kind ol hurts."
As for t.bt HeWnan, Simpeon talked
frankly o v e r lunch Tuesday in t h e
Student tlnion.
'
"I wu -• or lea pr<,.,..t !or Gory Bebu winning it Jut year,"
he said.
"Most of the wrtten I bod lllked
ID told me they thought be would
win, 110 tt dldn't bother me a&. all.
Hooelt()', I real\)' wa111i ~ about it 1t an lut )'ear.
"But alter tho Role Bowl g-
lut January, r6y wile and I qd
a f.ew other players went. over lo
Mike Garntt's pla,ce in AJtadena for
a party. I walked fu the doer Ud
uw tha~ bi& Helsrnan oa hb manUe Ind from lhlt ,,,..,.., on I rellly
wanted 11.
"I meao, I rully wonted H. Now
(See MRS. 0 . J., Pase 17)
MR . & MRS . HE ISMAN -0. J . Simpson and bis
wife Marquerite accept congratulations before
Tuesday morning's press conference at USC
where it was announced he'd won the HetsIDan
D'Jl.tLY l'ILOT Ili ff l'Mf9 t
Trophy. The Simpsons are expecting at Christ-l
mas and Mrs. Simpson said: "If all this keeps
up it may come before that."
'
..... lll!!~ .. ..,,...,, ............................................ ,.,, ... r.~'WJl""~lll!'""" ... ~· ..... -1 .................... ~
Lakers Fool
Hoop Experts
By Losing
NEW YORK (UPI) -Before the 1968-
69 National Basketball Association season
got under way the "experts'' predicted
the Los Angeles Lakers would run away
and hide from the rest or the league.
With their potent assortment of
superstars -Jerry West, Elgin Baylor
and Wilt Chamberlain -and a talented
backup crew, the Lakers figured to win
almost every game handily. It isn't work-
ing out that way.
For the third straight time Tuesday
night the Lakers fell to pieces in the
final quarter, losing to the New York
Knicks, l<M-100, in a hard fought contest
at Madison Square Garden.
J ith Bill Bradley leading the way,
t Knicks thrilled a crowd of 15,024
with a fourth period outburst which saw
them oul8core the Lakers 20-& in the
concluding minutes and notch their first
win in four meelings against Los Angeles.
The loss wu the Lakers' second in
the last three games.
Br.11dley, who played at Princeton under
present Laker co a c h Bill van Breda
Kolff, hit nine points In the final period
as the Knicks came back from a 94-84
deficit midway through the quarter.
Bradley finished the game with 15
points bul guard Walt Frazier took the
scoring honors for his club with 21.
The Lakers were led by Chamberlain,
who played one of his best all around
games since coming to the La..lters, with
23 markers. West had 22 and Baylor
18 for the losers.
LOS ANGELES NIEW YORK • • ' 0 • ' •• ,111r • ... "
.. _
' ., " """""'"" " '" " ••tlotmw ' •• " He'Mtlnt • ,, " Komlvu • •• • Wtsl • ~ v . ... ' •• • Cr1wtw11 ' ., " Ruu.11 • , .. • '°""" ' ••• " llowmen ' .. ' ··~ • ,., ' Fratltr • ., " li•ld.-• .. • arM11ev ' '" " -· • ,., ' -' ., ,
Tel•ls • :IO-JI 100 '"'-' ,., ' Tota II ~ l).:U 1~
'~ Angtl•• " " • 11-HlO
Ntw VDtk " " ~ Jl-11)(
F11t11td Oii'! -Horlt.
To!a! lwl1 -LOfo A"lltl._ lJ, l+tw Yort '"
Sports In Brief
Aztecs Finish No.1;
USC Favored by Two
NEW YORK -San Diego State, cham·
plon of small college football for the
last two years, leaves the college division
ranks as champion again.
The Aitecs, who ha d to survive a
final .scare in tying Tennessee State,
13-13, last Saturday, complete their
season Saturday night against Utah
State, 111 major coll~ge. 'Ibey will go
into the game as small college champions
for an unprecedented third consecutive
year, having been assured of the honor
today when the 35-member board of
coaches cast 21 first place votes and
awarded them 312 points.
The total was enough to edge North
Dakota State, which finished second in
~ final ratings wilh nine first place
votes snd 300 pointa after compiling
a 9--0 reocrd.
NEW YORK -SouU.ern Calilornla,
which m111t wt.a its season nnale Satur-
day U It h o p e 1 to defend Its national
collegiate foolball championship, Is raled
only two point. better than Notre Dame.
Tbe Trojans take a perefct M record
into the same at Lo! Angeles whUe
Noire Dame, which 11 ranked No. t.
ts 7-2.
11 a Tlaankssfving Day 1ame, Texu
11 a 14-p o l 11 t favorite over traditional
riv1I Teua A&ft.t. A win would send
Darrell Royal's Longhoru to the Cotton
Bowl.
Army Is picked by 14 polnts over
Navy Sablrday
CHICAGO -Outfleltler Willie
Horton of the Oe\tott Tigen has joined
another major leaa:ue baseball star,
pitcher Fergy Jenkins of the Chicago
Cubs, on the Harlem Globetrotters
basketball learn.
Both will appear at the Chiacgo
Stadium Friday ntght and will play wijh
the i:rotters as often as their schedu)ts
pernut.
"' .... "'
LOS ANGELF.s -Despite 1 l+t
road trip, the-Los Angeles Kings' Gel'T)'
Desjardins lowered his goal average and
the KJngs are hoping that may 1ive
them the edge I.hey need to keep their
winning streak active.
Ton.igbt at the Forum, lAs Angeles,
with 1 7-10-2 record int.be West Division,
bosta the Moatreal Canadlen1. la the
only other meeUng between the teams
this year, Montreal took a 5-Z victory.
"' "' STANFORD -John Ralston, who was
thought in some quarters to be out of
hi~ job as Stanford 's football coach,
will be back next year.
Athletic Director Chuck Taylor said
Tuesday that Ralston 's contract had been
renewed . Although he wouldn't discuss
terms, Taylor incUcated Ralston had been
rehired for more than one year.
ln six yea rs at Stanford, Ralslon. has
coached teams to a ~28-2 record, but
he has been very succes.sful 11ain&t
archrival California, winning fi ve cames
Pirates Win
Invitational
Morvay and Christensen prepped at
Newpon Harbor while Read attended
c.o.tl Mesa High and Ora:ige Coast
C.Ollep. Morvay scored 25 points in the
fin&' 0nnre County Nor1h-Soolh Alf·
Star Jome l>tld 1t OCC.
Vallely, a Balboa Isla~ resident, put
on an eye-popping demonstration Jn
UCLA's annuaJ inler9quad scrtmmage
Saturday night at Pauley Pavilion. He
scored 23 points and registered a superb
floor game.
occ Nears State Playoffs
Coach Jim Mcilwaln'1 Orange Coast
College haniers cloled out t.M 1988
season on a high note Tuesday by swee~
ing both the vanity and flmlor vanity
races in the Orange Cont Colle•e Invita-
tional. · ..,r
The Bucs took the vanity event with « points, followed by Riverside with
54, Santa Ana and Golden Weal with
69 elCb and Cyprus wtth 133. * * '
y,. eu bet Ckre were • lot of dis-
jJDW ....,_,. foetblU '911cnirttt
Stars Seeing Stars
After 124-ll5Loss
LOU)'SVILLS.. Ky. -1be Loi Angeles
5lart, bNtDnc ln liq in ......i place
In tho w-.. -ol the American
Bllildblll ~''""" moe1 t be' Ken· tud<f Coloolll ond !heir hokhootlng flll'nls. ' Do..i carrier and Louis Dun-
pier. timlJllll. 'lbe S 14 r I .,. --afJ I fM-U$
I 0. I to New Orleanl Wblch c•vej them
1 :.e r+c+e'll •nd lhe n11111ttUtV spot
t-''11 lhe QUllnd <>ab In the w..i. -. ,,
"bff tl},at scrimmage, I'd say John
has an ei:ceUent chance of starting for
us qainst Purdue," Wooden told the
DAILY PILOT.
"He's really been corning aJong over
the last week or 10 da)'1. He's adaptlng
very quickly now to our style of play.
"Asidt from Lew Alclndor al center,
l probably won't decide on • Nrtins
lineu p until Sat.urday morn.in&· But on
lhe basis or the progress I've Jieen
In John lately 1 have lo say he: has
an excellent chance.
"It's still tight at ,ruatd between Vallt"-
ly, BUI Sweek., Ken Helt& and Don Safer.
All the guards looked good In the ICrlm·
mage becau~ we di dn't do any pres3· Ing."
Vallt.ly, !A), trantferred to UCLA tht~
5emester aft.er a recont.bre.11kln4 caree~
1t Orange Coast . where he atllllhtd All·
American JC l!lceord. •
-~
s' dlt MWr;l!t a ,
By JOEL SCHWARZ
Ot .. Dlffr ..... ,....
Onl)' OWfey College, already a two-
Li.me loser lo Orange Coast College,
stands between OCC and a berth In
Ibo stale junior coflqe water poto pl,.Y·
offs next week,
Orqe COlst, a 7-2 wlMcr over Golden
W e It .lJ'uetd1y; WIS tehedi.i~ tif meet
Chaffey at noon todfty in the aemifln1la
of the Southern cailfornla playoffs al
Golden Weat College.
Q\llley made the oemilinals by whlp-
Plni El Cimino, f.6, Tutodly.
If the P1tatet whip Charley today,
they'll face the winner of the
Fullerton-Cerritos match at 3 p,m, for
lhe Southent Callrornla tltle,
Both nnanm qu11lfy for the state
cb&mpionahlp to be held at Chabot
College in the San Francisco Bay area,
Dec:. &-7.
-· .__,.. -
i' In other fira:t round game! Tuesday.
FUilerton defeated Long Bud<., M , while
Cerritos downed Santa Ana , 9-4.
Orange Coast coach Jack Fullerton
said the Pirates weren 't mentally ~ for
Golden West.
·'It's hard for your players to be
high (or a team Uiey've already b-'-aten
11-4. But I'm happy. It's aJways great
to win when you're not playing your
best llm<. '
"We, threw the ball aw11 too many
timea qllil\lt them and mmt have com-
mltl.ed 2$ tumovn, 1 wu pleased
tboulh, becaute our_ kids went Into the
(Jnal four minutes with 19 fouls on them
and didn't commit 11nother foul to gtve
them a ~a1ty shot."
"Coast has to bl": favorro to win the
pl&yoff1 ... said ~Iden W~sl's coach Tom
licrmst•d. ' ..,
"Wt played a good game against them.
but we'd have had to pl-r our best
game while they had 1 mediocre game
for UI to win.
"I think our defense had something
to do with ~ off game," Hcrmstad
said.
In the game , Golden West held a.n
early HI Mid on a ponalty throw by
Ross Cook, but Steve Wagner evened
the _. Wttll Lljtll-poriod pl.
TWo quick Plrata ,..1s by Wagner
ond Illa O>rilty on leedt from II.Ike
Allbrtpt aid Oranp Cout Into I I· I
le•d it never rellnQu\lhed.
Golden West ha1d the Plrllel ln "
4·2 maraln through three period,,, but
the ,,rat.et up1oded for three go11ls
in the lest p:rtod to clinch the victory.
' Chri!lty ind W11gner each scored thrrc
times for occ.
Tbe win marked the fifth straight
time the Bucs have won the eVtnt in
a streak that started in 1954.
Pred Skirde, In leading lbe Bua of
victory. took thlrd overall~ am broke
the OCC four·mlle record set last year
by John Partridge. Stirde covered tM
distance In zt ,oo, lopping u -otl
Partridge's mark.
Ri<k Muth ol Santa Ano toot llrsl
overall In 20 :2'1 to set a new coune
record. '
D a n Mooney w a 1 fl.fth for OOC \!;I
2l:33; Terry Schmtil, eJ&hlh, 2t:ff;
Steve Barton, 12th, 22 :35; t.d BeD, Ulilb,
23:03 ; John 'Thomazi, ~th. 23:23; and
Mike Flamm. 30th, 2'4 :49.
In the JV evtnt, Dennis fl'ullhata
led OCC In zt:S4. ronow~ }"' 1.arry
Hemming. fifth, 24 :~: Dave , phen11,
i;lxlh!·25:15: Bob Skinner, seven , 1S·lfl ;
and Pat Hickey. el&hth, 25:48.
-· ·-. ----------.· ----.,...... ··~~~~,.-.·-· ---------------------------------r -----~~ -~ ~--------~-~.-~-------..
Unpleasant
.
Memories
Reltlnclled
By RON EVANS
Of 11141 Dellf Plllll ... If
Laguna Beach High School will return
to Orange Cout College for the first
time In s i 1: yean when the Artlsts meet
Rolling HUis of the Sky Leaguo In the
quarterfinals of the CIJI' AAA football
playoffs Friday night.
For Laguna Beach and coach Ha:
Akins, it rekindles bitter memories.
In 1962, it was at <>range Coast College
that the Artists dropped a 32-7 decll!lion
to Brea for the clua A ClF cham
plonshlp.
The two &ehools bad finished one-tw··
in the Orange League and finally endet
up meeting each other for the ClF
title.
: The game wu lost when Laguna Beach
drove for what looked llke a aure
touchdown in the first quarter only tr>
have the play ruled 1topped short o
the goal line.
Concurrently, a fwnble resulted fro rr
the play and a Brea player sped 9·
yard! for a touchdown to give the win
llel'I I 7.0 lead.
Akinl bu never forgotten it and to
thil day is hesitant about revisiting the
scene of diauter.
But this Ume around it is the AAA
marbles the Art1ats are playing for and
the right to meet the winner of the
JAara.Califomla High match ln the Dec.
6 semlf1nals. . 'Ibinga aren't quite u rosy u 1n
the p a a t for Laguna after the narrow
14-13 victory over La Quinta last week.
· Laguna was expected to handle the
Aztecs fairly well, especially if La 9Uin·
ta's number one back , Ken Eppelheimer
did not play.
Eppelheimer wu sidelined for the en-
tire game but the Arlecs still g~ve
Laguna all it could handle unUI Brtan
Bagley cracked over from the one-yard
line with 30 seconds to go.
Akins later said he had underrated
the Garden Grove League school and
remarked that hi! club was lucky to
1et by them. >.. for Rolling Hills, the Titans wrecked
Blahop Montgomery in their CIF opener
with a 33-14 victory.
With no new injuries reporttd in the
Laguna camp, quarterback S t e v e
Wieibowsld is slated to lead the Artists
with fullback Bagley and halfback Mike
Abbey scheduled for most of the running
load.
Rolling Hills shapes up as the toughest
opponent of the year for Laguna Beach.
The Aril!t.s, for the first Ume this year.
may be underdogs .
Sea Kings
"Demolish
Condors, 8-3
By EARL GUSTKEY
Cl ..... 0.11., l'li.I ll•H
··Corona del Mar High'a water polo team
captured its 18th victory of lhe season
Tuesday afternoon, thrashing Cal High
of Whittier, S.3, in neulral Long Beach
Millikan'• pool.
The Sea Kings thus survived the CIF
quarter finals and advance to the
semlftnala Dec. 3 when they play
Lakewood. The latter nipped Whittier.
10-7, to make the semis.
Paced by separate scoring outbursL~
by Bruce Black and Jim Bradbum an·d
by the co11Bistent e1:ctllent play of goalie
Jerry Eubank, the Sea Kings encounterer
lltUe difficulty with the Condors arte~
I tight first period .
Cal High scored first on a 15-footer
by Bill Winkow•kl with 5:14 gone ir
the first quarter and it femained that
way unUl Corona del Mar unlracke··
It.self in the aecond quarter.
Black, alter Corona had missed sever
straight 1hota, popped ln an 18-footer
on a break with 1: 18 elapsed in the
second quarter.
He scored qain a minute later on
a deft follow shot and made it 3-1
wben the officiak save him 1 tee0nd
chance on a penalty ahot at 4:55.
With only :IJl oecoods aone after
~. Wiokmnl<I brouChl Calllomla
to -:1-2 with hls penalty llhot but then Bradburn went to work.
He lipped one rlaht over the Cal
.ggalle's head to make It ~2 and hil
spree conUnued lhroulh the lhint qu'116
unW the ICOre reached 7-2.
Bob McClellan gave tht Sea Kinp
an M lead -!Ollh baH a quartor left
to plaJ a.nd the flnll ICOre came oa
a Wlnktlw1kt lhot Wltb 5; 17 left.
Cllff Hooper, the Sea Kine coach, was
effualve In his praise of hls lfOllle.
Eublnk, wbo had 14•uvea.
"I doa' thlnk l've ever Mel a 1oa.tie
play like Iha~" he said.
• •1H I 1 teCOnd and third atrort.a were
rea"1oomelhlni-"
ANGELS SET DATES
FOR LA SERIES
Afl« an abltnce ti. nn 1e11m1, tbe
.(opia and Dodpn will ....... lhtlr GJM1on bMtbeD rlftlry nest aprJ.rc.
Anp\ -1 manqu Dick Walsh
aald today that the llnt pme wl11
be_iUYed 'l'hur1da1 nJcht , Aliil .. at """"'?.!! next lwo gamea will he plll)'ld Dodier Slodlum the followq """ . -~ Tbo Anilil are M .,-111a Qo1111r1.
. .. ..
SUNSET LEAl;UE CHAMPS -Standing still for one of the few times
this fall are members of Westminster High School's varsity cross
country .squad. Top row (from left) are Ken Hurst, steve Seyler, Jim
Poetoehena, David Tillett, Wayne Akiyama and coach Jack Hedges.
Bottom rw -Don Diston, John Kilpatrick, Kevin Coleman, Steve
Varga and Ted Mau.ter.
Tars Utilize
Ball Control
For 10-4 Win
. By GLENN WHITE
Of !tie O.llY P119! 11•11
LAKEWOOD -Relying on ball control
and an esplosive offense, Newport
Harbor High'a defending CIF water polo
champiom steamed toward a second
strllight c.rown by dezn,olishing; Buena
High of Ventura, lo-t, ~esday afternoon
at Lakewood High School. -
Now the Tars of coach Bill Barnett
will face old nemesis Downey in tbe
Dec. 5 temlfinals at Belmont Pla:ia
Olympic pool. Downey topped Mira
Costa, 10-5, in the second half of
Tuesday's twin bill, here.
Downey is the only team to defeat
Barnett's charges this aeaaon and it
was Newport that nipped the Vikings,
8-7, in the 1967 semis.
The victorious Sailors showed their
class in dunking Buena. They trailed,
3+2, with 1:59 left ln the first half.
But they held their cool, clicking for
two goah to take a ~3 lead at tn..
termission as Eric Lindroth and Jeff
Wile.ox made good from the penalty
line.
Then Lindroth unloaded • bullet throw
for a goal with 4:54 to go in lhe
third st.am.a, giving the winners a s.J
lead. That CU11hion allowed them to move
into a control game.
After that, Buena was hard-pressed
to get the ball, let alone to score a goal.
The Sailon exploded for five tallies
in the fourth frame, hitting penalties
and Umely thots from the pool while
the frustrated losers trled to hang In.
Barnett's group managed to hold the
ball 4:24: ot the.. period whHe Buena
had possession for a minute, 35 seainds.
Southpaw Lindroth, prime candidate
for CIF player of the year, had six
of Newport's &oals. Tom Warnecke pick·
ed up two others, desplte being out
llall the pme whejt he picked up four
qWci: personal foull.
Bruce Johnlon and Wilcoi rounded
out the """"' J)al:ade. Barnett lauded Steve Parkerford, John
Blaue:' and Doug Dovey for their e:a:-
ceptional defemive play and be was
generally pleased with hia team'• •how·
Ing.
MRS. O.J ... • •
cOa-from Pa1e 11
it means u much to my teammates
a1 it doel to me."
He ii hi! own man. He knows
what .he WIDU ud What J1o ._,I
want ls to play )rro ball la
P~lphia. · 'I'm not ID much concerned over
whether the team that draftl me
Is a winner or loser ft'1 jult a matter
of wbeft I'm to 1lff and I do nol w .. t to live tn Pbilacletphia."
0.1. talkl about livin( In Caliloml•
ud .Jr.> pt the -he npecta
ta ~ with the Ramo -year.
Ram ....... Dan n-oald
-.tly tho dub woo1d DOI par1 wttll
Ill -lldt round chit pieD to
acquir< him frool the ~ bot
be dldD'I Al' be ""'1ldn't--po with
two of t b e.m. a coople o( rqulan and--· And be lallti about lhe -..
He ta1b In lennl of lfye ,...... wben
discll•lDC pro f-. "Adina wauld ... n, be 1 c11ane.ce. I've lolkod with Jim Bron ·allool
Jt." '
If tt'1 one tllln& O. J. Slmplon ' 1ao·~ ll'a a bed ad«.
CIF Has Tie-breaker Lions Ninth,
Tritons Fifth
In CIF Meet For Football Plnyoffs
An old-fashioned tug-ot-war, dressed
up with tbe fancy handle o1 the California
Tie-Breaker System, could determine the
outcome of a football game thi& weekend
when the CIF Southern Sectioo playolfs
resume. ·
The system, which haa bittn tried
the last few years on the lower playoff
levell, bas been adopted for lhe re-
mainder of tbe playoff scbeduleiftlr all
divisions. .
Under the rule, when a game ends
in a tie the ball is plared on the 50-yard
line and each team will be given four
plays to be run alternately with the
opposing squad. No kick! of any kind
are permitted.
If neither team scores, the team ad-
vancing in the playoffs will be dete~n
ed by the side of the 50-yard line the
ball winds up on alter all eight plays
are completed.
When a score is made, the ball is
returned to midfield without a conversion
attempt and play ls resumed.
Penalties are treated in tbe eame
mSllDP.l' during reeul&Uon play, with the
offended team having the option of ac-
cepting the penalty or the result of
the play.
Under old CIF lie-breaking rule. the
team recon1Jng the most first downs
advanced in the playoUa.
The new alter..naUng-play system was
used In tut. week'• A division game
between St. Bonaventure and Harvard.
St. .Bonaventure wOn the game after
a 1J..1J · tie, by movlq to Harvard's
48-yard line on the final play of the
tie-breaking series. .
"It was like a tug-of-war," said winning
Coach Dave CUrrey. ''The fans 1n both
standJ stood throuJhout the eight downs
and we had to gain 13 yards on the
last play to win."
Lee Hanson, of Harvard, the first.
coach to lll'e under the system, said
he wasn't di!pleued with the new rule.
When Westminster High takes -. tWn
to the CIF Cr"Ol3 country finals you
can usually counl on teeing 1 lot of
Lion jerseys ln the lop ~·
If you'd held your breath Tuelday
afternoon at Cal State (Long ~)
when the top AAA nmner croaed the
line you would have turned red In the
face befvte most ol the you n I
Westminster harriers zipped acro11 1ht
finish.
When all points had been tallied,
Westminster atood nel:t to lut, ninth,
and only Alhambra ttood on •a lower runs.
San Clemente, on the other hand, ~e
through with ltJ best showing ever u
the 'trlto.. fiollhed filth In the AA
dlvllion.
Flnt acrou the, finish for Westminster
wu Uon ace DotrDlskm wbo t'Olllpiled
the hll!y Long Beach COllne In thirteellth
place In a Ume ol 10:01.
Fall Awards Night
san £lemente'a top man waa Brad
Winton who raced aCl'0811 the flnia:b in ·
15th. Teammalel Crali Sterling and
Rieb s t o I z catapaultt!d the Trttona: to
filth by following Winton In Zlrll and
25th places. Winton ran a 10:05. Baron Athletes Honored • 1. l!;ki "--IHI •1111 St. aerJMnl f"J a.
Mark Allegrezza and Doug Haynes
were named co-captains of Fountain
Valley High School's varsity football
team Tuesday night at the fill aporta
awards banquet.
John Carroll was honored as the most
valuable player:.
Harry Noah and Larry Hughes were
licked captalnl of the water polo team
and Robert Wurster wu moat valuable
player.
In cross country, Tim Funk wu cap-
ain and Kevin Wllliam3 most valuable.
Foothali
Varsity CaptaiOI : Mark Ail<grtaa and
iJoug llayne1: MVP: John Carroll.
Bet -CaptaW: Bob Elllis and Jim
Soltil; MVP: Steve Mohulskl.
• -
Cee -Captain: Bob Ferraro; MVP :
Dana Delpon\e.
Froah -Capt.ainl: D9n LaPointe and
Bill Lee; MVP : Curt Mowrey.
Water Polo
Varsity Captains: Harry Noah and L.ar·
ry Hua:hea; MVP : {tobert Wurster.
Bee -Captain: Tom Musser ; MVP :
Ron Cook.
Cee -Captain: Robert Rie<; MVP:
Ron Cook.
Cro11 Country
Varsity -Captain : Tim Funk ; MVP :
Kevin Wllllami.
Junior vanity -Captain: Gary
Weaver ; MVP: Cameron Haney.
Frooh-Sopb -Captaln: Sieve ~th:
MVP : Steve Brotman.
Cre.I tlN) '-...... l'wl1 (1Ul ~'I!"' O •J..-~: A'lllfloll (ncJ) 1. M. JlllPI llJ'I I. ~11 3r_k 11•1 f . SI. ~ { -ll.
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enjoy
. ' .
exciii;ng harness racing at
hollywood park by night
on thanksiJimng ,
luuulretU of rotlltsnl .,_,.,,
P""'iM 75° lllmpel'lllUn in tJ.. ~nda. •
~table ~ .. me. -"'6p. ... eall678-ll81jor'>'uer~ • -·~
a.:-1o .. 244 -
.
adllf 1111!11 "' 7: 30 p."'" mondoy rlsroufla ~·
r. s. v.p.
in psrio,._ ;ro»'U '°"fj'I • . ;
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-.
DAILY Pilat J7
Pasadena
Like Tars
-Boswell
By ROGER CAl\L80N
ot ... o.llr ,, ... '*'"
WeatmW!er w.i> Scl>oo1 nDOOd Comp. too lo the openfti« round . cl . the CIJ'
MM p]Jyollt, .._ Jut -... ti WU cblel1Y dooe with a dnulat!DC boll-
c:oatrol alil<L
'lbe'U--ted -.,. by a wide margin. utn Cllblal Ia Cll
two IUCCellfvl oocida kkkoffa
It'• -..... tacllcl lhol coadl BID Boawe1l of w.......... IO)'a ho !Mn
the most from Puadena In tho Llml'
ne>d step toward9 a poalble CU' dwn-
pioolhlp.
'!be Lions will meet the Bulldop ol
Puadella Friday nllltt at Santa Ana
Stadil,ID'l in an attempt to run their no
ord to 10 •traiabt wins.
Says Bolwtll of Puadena: "Tboy
hav .. 't ·clwlpd their philOIOPhY o1nce
the lut time I aaw them (lid):
"It's the ...,. ball control -
with an unbalanced line Md varlatlonl
oU a full·bouse T." "They don't throw very often bul
when they do they are fairly ell~ve.
"I'd compare them with llewoort
Harbor's Tars. They retemble t6em
particularly with the Inside~ lr•J>O and
the doubl..iwnlng 00 Ille -la the Interior al the line."
Newport utencied Boowell'L chapl 1Je.
fore bowing, 35-21.
He added, "Thelr bil delel!llve Uno
could Rive ., trouble lo oor l'1lllDlnl
game.'r-
'Ibe wei&ht advantqe, however,
lhould wort in favor ti. Wettmlnt*•.
Tbo Pasadena ollenM claims only ..,.
over the: 200 mart (center Dave
at :IOll). eatm1nster 11 bolste"'1 by a.id<
Suter (%18), GrtrMceants (211) Ind
John McLaughlin (%10).
Weotmlnster can be eipected to take
to the air about the tune as the la.st
time out'-15 tlmea.
And, il quarterback Ed Bane hU the
aucceas he had with Compton, the · rm-
nlng atlack of Wutmlnster abould flourish. .
Bane hit nine of U far 1114 yardl and
a touchdown to demollab the -Cl>an>ton
delenoe against the running ofU-llmi
Shepherd, Darryl B e r I and Mike
Hayne1.
-reporll .. lnjurloa In Ille Westmlnlter camp. Winner of the game will meet the
victor of the l!'J Rancho-Arroyo llrtlUle
at ML SAC. Weslminster bas aJrudy met and de-
feated El Rancho In prileacue action.
34-:1$.
Orang~ Coast '
Tops All-Stars
Champion Oranee Coast Co 11 e g t
dom1nated 'the All Eas~ Leap water
polo team aelected by the circuit'•
coache1 by placing four men .oa. the
lint team and two othen on the -
team ••
Heading the orance Coul 11n1-1eam
aelectlons were goalie Doug Schaumber1
·and ~ fonnrd Dall Cbrlaly.
J olnlng them Oil the flnt learn Wert
Mike· WU-and Slov• Wqner.
Gold!n West' College'• outltm:Un&
goalie_Gary_ Dtl:AI also WU • ~
d>olce.
Pini Team
Doug Schawnherg, orange Coat
Dan Cbrlaty, Orqe Coul
Fred Bek:ber, Fullerlon
Joe Godboat. Cballey
Chip o'ROofu, Fu11er1nn
Bob Rlw. Cbilfey
Mll<e Vitfoon, -0...,. Coal
M1rkNeJ-.SanllAna
Don ilelaon, Rio -sieve Wqner, Oranl• Coul
Gary Dren~ <;old .. Weal
Se<GodTeam
Mike Allbrilbt. orance Coul
Tom Sbaw, Fullerton .
Bruce McClay, SaDla Ana
Bruce Kram, Golden Weal
Mike lfoulin, FuJ!artoa
Rlcbard J!am!Jatld, Challey·
Mike Mimi, Nertoo
Pall! Mlhalo, Rio -Don Wall<er, Santa Ana
Bel Weal, Q>alley
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J8 DAILY PILOT Wtdnt:sd.q, Hm:mbtr 27, 1'968
Start Your
Engines
--by Deke Hou/gate
RIVERSIDE -"Im sick and tired ol hearing all tl>la
alk about raclni ii suppoeod td'be 1 proving ground."
The words come from Bobby Unser, winner of the Indianapolis
IOO. He ii Iha No. I spoktsman for that looae1y defined croup known as "the ntabllJhmtnt." When Bobby speab.
almost everybody in the pill nods ln agreement
The subject of the day Is B:ill Lear's steam cu. Wbat
rtar1'I Bobby off b Iha Idea that aotnebody ii aolnr to lrf
•net· again to revolutlonlze racing with a new kind of macbiDe
!bat advances the sport's technology a generali«I or tw:o.
"I suppoee the steam car will be approved far IndJanapollf,"'
Bobby said. ''If we don't let Jt run, everybody wW backnoutb
111. '
"They'll talk about how we are holding back ~eering
progress, and I am getting Ind up with bearing about bow
we are supposed to be improving the breed.
j'What everybody forgets is that Indianapolis isn't a proving
ground. It's a apom arena, and we are all P)ayen in the
arena. Nobody pays us to test machinery. We race cars
to win money."
Co•ts Will Soar
Bobby'• point, wbkh la dlametrteally oppoMd tt tbe .,mtoa
of Andy Granatdll. la tU:t unless Indi.ulpolil-type ncfq
Is restrtcied te can wbfch Uve aluady Mee developed,
the eo1t of rad.a& wW 1oar to auch het&bb that the tpOrt
wlll soon die from lack of can ta pat 1111 the track.
'I1te 1ieam car, Lor example, wm cod aaywllere from
$!08,IOI to baU a mllllom, and 1hat P"ObUl7 deea't cea:at
a lot ol en&lnetrlnc upeue that 1oe1 lat. Lear's overall
project -developmut of a steam car for Utt: lltred.
By coatrut. dte Fonts and Offy1 mU:!n& up most of
the field at btdy neU year wlD averqe out at $'7S,IOI ucL
Now, a $?5,IOt nee car lm't a poor bof• toy. It la
barely wtWa the read of many car owaen today.
But the fear of die Ntablhluntnt II 111.at some new mG111ter
like &be lteUll car wtU 101Debow render. obaolete all $'15,00I
can at Ute speedway.
Two Faetor• Overlooked
"What if the turbine car were allowed to go along the
way It wu?" Bobby asks rhetorically. He anawers himself.
"In two or three years we wouldn't have had any more
can. Everybody would have dropped out."
So, to the Wbliahment.. the steam car is a new peril
on the horizon. Here we go again.
Two factcn overlooktd by moet of those speculating about
the steam car are (1} it la to be built by Ken Wallis,
who wasn't very 1UCCessful at race car building after he
got oot from und..-Gnmaldll'a wing, and (%) there illl't
a present rule that w1Il allow tt to race at Indy.
Wallis WU Iha designer d the orlglnal STP turbocar
in 1967, driven by Pamelll Jones.
Wallis drifted away from the Granatelli organization in
the summer of 't:l, jooed forces with Carroll Shelby and
started a rtval turbine project.. It. wu abandoned In disgrace
last May before either of bi• two can aUempted to qualify.
As to the rules tedmlallty, It la slmP!Y 11\a! Indianapolis
cars are bull1 to a formula that atatel ipeclfically what
sort of power may be med.
The rules allow fuel~burnfng piston engines, turbines and
Wankel rotary pl5ton power, but nothing ii said about steam
power. Anyway, 90mebody will find a loophole IO the steam
car can nm.
DoufJIJJ Hard T ... k
•Bobby Uuer DMlll a hip. finllll, fourlb or better, to
"hi die USAC dsamplalllhlp and add another crown to his
collection.
Tbere II le.1 tlt:ta an nea cltuct be en accompllU
the fut, since Marlo Andrttd ioes into tbe flu.I race of
tbe year here Sanday, &Jte Rn Mays JOO, wltlla M-polat
lead.
What makes tlte tut doubly l&ard IJ: that JUven.kle bu
dnn•• the ......i lmlftl n.ld d the year -lopped Ollfy
by tbe Iadluapolb NO. A week before nee ttme 1btn were
ti entrle1.
The reuoa. for W. lm't too difficult to uder1tand. Rlverdde,
bavtnr a road nee, bu atlneted not only tbe lead.hi& USA.C
driven bat aJao every aporta car pilot who CGUld promote
himself a ride.
ln tire test.I out bere the futest man on the eoara
was not Umer or Marie AndretU bat Blatt Jacl: Bnbllam,
tbe hf•tlme world gand. prh: champ from Aultnlla.
ln the final major nee ol the year tll:rou(ltout the world,
everybody wllo h: anybody wDJ be hut.
Firestone Still Aeti..e
Raymond Firestone has apparently laid to rest specu]ation
about whether his company will continue to tumi&b tires
at races.
The company line ls thal Firestone has only discontinued
signing contracts to pay driven for use or its Urea, not
contract.! to lc3t tires.
The operating ·head of the tire company said he saw
no difficulty in flndlng good drivers to hire for tire testing
so that Firestone can remain competitive with Goodyear.
During all the palaver over Firestone's "pullout" from
racing, this has been the real dllei.nma or the company and
the quextlon whlch hasn'l been answered.
The key to racing SUcceM is testing success. With no
driver conlract.s, It wa1 believed that Firestone did not have
the ability to test. No testing would eventually mean that
Goodyear would create a technology gap that Firestone could
Doi bridge.
This apparenUy is nol the tase, since Ure testing will
conUnue with lop drivers, according to Mr. Firestone, in
these Word!.
Wo11't Pa11 to Test
"I md U b e for t, It w•• flClr poUcy a year ago, and It
hua'C cla111ed. We wtD contlnue to be In racing, and the only
tldq tut b11 <:bUctd Is tUt wt will no !oncer pay drlvera
er Cll' OWHl'I to ue oar pN>duct. We aee a.o dlttlatlty la ftodlnr
all tile drtven we wW Deed to tut our dres.
"We wut to p to ntCft wtth the bat Urt •vallable
11 tllat ti wW be HCtlAf)' for everyone to bave our ttru
la .-tit wta. Te win, CUt'1 whit It'• aD about." •
Rt ..W tak eompaay will .. lso <:00Unue to 'P,.y prize
.....,-1lt wtaen ti n<:n wbo nm Flrestone Uns and that the
-" .. -. dhtar.. will pnbably be '-••od . ...,. ... a.re .. --nctll &e wnloe ""' tb.u tftre •Jed to be. 'IW'• a Jl'd1 PMlllve 1&ud.
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
1;1911;m11119
'42-4321
2211 Woot ..... ...._ • Newport hu:J,
-. ·-• . -· ...... . -· . . .. • .. . . . . .... ~ ........ ~~ .. .
'69 Looks
Like FV's
~ig Year
By ROGER CARLSON °' "" CNillt ... ...,,
Some 11 vanl!J performers
and a flock of Junior varsity
veterans are upec:ted to give
Fountain Valley High School
Its flnt wlMlng eeaJOO lo
history next year,
But. u coacb Brue•
Plcldonl pub U! "Everything
ii lrind « up lo the air with
the new school (Edi.on) com-
ing In.
"That and tranders could
really hurt us."
But usum.lng Fountain
Vall~)' doeam' loae wha( it's
counting on, here's wbat
Plcldonl and Iha Barons will
have back nezt year for Ir-
vine U:ague competlUon:
To start wlthJ the Barons
have three returning
quarterbacks In John Svoboda,
Tom Malone and Rick Power.
All are capable and Svoboda
came through lo Iba clutch
lo Iha flna1 llapo d Iha .......
The Barona blanked their
last two foes of the campaign,
14-<l and 31-0.
others o:pec:t !cl to aee much
action-are Dan Shaw, Lyle
Raymond, Brady Moore, Rick
Martin, Robert Hoffman, Bill
Braack, Glenn Goto, Carl
Hanlin, Reed lWison, Rick
HarUfleld, St.ve Raupp, BUI
Krlstinat and Kip Morris.
It's hoped that Bill Oiam·
pion will be back but back
lnjurles may keep him out.
Up from the junior varsity
wlll be Robert Walker, Vince
McCauley, Mark Stauffer,
Mike Heffner, George Val·
buena, Leo Hernandez, Duane
McGinnis and Tecf Kirschner.
The Bees were co-cllampions
in the Irvine League and are
erpected to furnish s o m e
tapable replacements for the
graduation losses,
A question mark is Gary
Va1buena. Because of
numerous injuries he may not
be out, but Pickford says he
wou1d be an excellent end <Jt
Danker.
Haupert Top
Mater Dei
Hope in '69
A solid nucleu1 ol 11
retuminlng lettermen will be
back for Mater Del next near
with Bob Haupert and Mark
Dunn leading the way from
their backrleld poslUons.
Haupert, who'II. be a junior,
is the most promising
quarterback in years at Mater
Dei and fullback Dunn will
return with All-Orange County
honor1 under h.is belt.
Coach Bob Wood! ad<b that
he has the best group of
freshmen in Mater Dei's
history and he had ei~ht sophomores on the varsity
squad.
Included in the D e e
returnees are brothers of past
stan at Mater Del.
Those are Ted Hatfield, Pat
Heffernan and Don Roy.
Biggest problems for the
Monarchs will be the replace-
ment of Don Hellon and the
offensivt tackle position.
?be offens.lve tackles were
manned by four senior'll for
the most part and Woods says
he'll have to come up with
some capable replacement! if
the Monarchs are to lr.-1prove
on their second place finish
in the Angelus League.
No Fish Tale
Raymond Hagan of Hun-
tington Buch hu won the
South Pacific Marlin Derby
by reeling ln .a 716-pound black
marlin.
Fl..shing out of C a r i n s ,
Australia, Hagan landed hs
fish on 13·pound t.est Une after
a 00.rnlnute bilUe.
•
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL ~'OTICE
Nu• teOTtCI Of' &A.I-I -cn"nnu,.. ~ auso11s1 MtHiCit .. ~ SH _ ,........ ...,,,. ., u.. M9Mw ::! "" •"OO•dl•••·• ..... -..0.. <Mt!PY 4"" It NOTICE Ii Hl!llllY GIV"afih. ....
c-eMt!IW • '-'1'916 .t 7151 "-rt.. """'*" lit II-. i.w ~ '°"' llfty IMlllt'I~ C.n. M9a. Cllttorflle, llN:lel' rht """"",..,,.., Colli Mitt.JI Alllit W tlM !Id~ """ fl'fl'M .r ~A(l~IC Wiii .... el "'*lk l lldl ... .t _ ... PAll:T'Nllll. 1.W "" •Id fltm II -,.._... A-C-11 Me.._ Or ,..._ f/I 11111 f9lllliWlllf ..,-. Wl'lo&I COt.int'/'. C.lltom ... 1t I l'tklet: A.M., '"
-Ill 1111 W •*'° fll l"ftldtfla MO!lde-r, tt. fllo U-r ol °'"""""' 1-. i. •• frDl..,,.1 n. tollowl1111 OMUlbelll .,_.,.,, i.W11:
ZMll I,.. CM\~ t l'Ot '°"-*-> OrM 111 !Ni IMI. ' l....WAN W1r. C..f1 *"-a, (1llllM'nLa C.Ufonl la INf l"tolM 10 Hlltl'lbt
0...... Nov-Wl.1... -MAMflll 'Zonle 1.--Com!• llkl 1111 It IV 11W ~"*' ot Ml)tf?LIW IT.\TI. 0' CALlfOlll.NLA. 11W1 ·of h ..-..'9nld ~ wllll OltANGll COUNTY: coal1 of Mvert!llll'll 1M .._,...,, .. of
Oii No\'fmbtr .. lffl, befor" 11'\1, iale. • Notti')' P\ljlllc 1" .,_ to< Mid $tai., 011W tfovtrnMr )4, 1"41.
,.,_.1.., _..,_ lont1 Ir-Comtt hf!* J. COOMY. -· II,_ flt IM lit 1111 tlltt "'"°"' wl\oM (Mii ,V.W. A\llv WOrkt -le eutllullllld to Irle wlltl111 I/lo ~~ttl'lld Orenlt COlotl 01llY" l'llOt dr\lmeflt .nit edowwlldPcl .n. u:eclrled M_,,.,. t7, ltN 111JW ,. __
(Offlc:ltll s..o ~ f . Oe-rl' LEGAL NOTICE
Noll,.,. Pllbllc -Ca!llvmlt" ------,cc.=------PrlnclNll oni.c. 111 1 "41at a.---C-f'I Cl:•TlflCATI: 011' •UllNl:SS. Mr C-IM!tn IE)(llll'tl JllCTITIOUI NI.Ml
JUM ti, 1t10 Thf: llftdl"1911.d -· e«tll'r ...... ,.llbllll'llCI Or._ C:0.11 0.ltr P!llf, c:ondudlntl 1 boJllnHO 11 11(1 TU.ti• ~ i, 11, 20, 17, IHI lt11 41 Avtl., COlll MUI. C1Mfonl!1, '"""' rht
LEGAL NOTICE llctll~ !lrm nwne o1 THE CRACKED POT 11>d thll Mid lit"' II ~ .-----occ=-=c------1°' Ille fol~ .... pt.-, WllOll ... ,,,. U.R H• Jn fliH ..,., •ll<t ot rtllaolllU ~ ..
NOTtc• TO CRIOITORS lflllowl: SUPl:RIOfl COUllT OF THI! STATI! Oorl1 LIVKM Sdlofl1lcl, IUl Tvetlll OP CALIPOllUUA FOR TH• Ave .. (01l1 Mna, C1ltforn11. COUNTY a., ORAM•• 0.ted Nlftl. 1. lffll. tt.. A-4.llN Dorl1 L. kllOILald Eilltl• • L"OH _, CD<.LUM. ... S!1hl of Calltor,U,., Oran11 County : '""" On NaV. 1, JNI, bl-lore me. I HOl1tv ~. Pllbll(: In Incl 1'l>t Mid Sl1hl, ,.rlOMI,., MDTIC.E IS HER1!8Y GIVEN Ill lhl a1t11Mred Dot!i LiVerne kflolleld k-crtdll9rli ol Irle lllow ......,nao Oec.OIHll 111 ml lo be !lie Hrtoll w11oM ........ ffllt •II Plf'sont; l\lovlnt ci.1m1 ae111'1$1 11 wblcrlbtd to 11141 wlttlln lntlnl,.......t
thl llkl dec9dtnl lrl re(llJl...i "' tlle Ind .cllnowllcl!Hlfl .,,. IXIKl/Nd ltll .. ,,,.. thtn\, '#111'1 11'19 MCll .. ,, vouchlfl, ln (OF FICIAL 5EALl
1111 .rfiCll ol Irle C"'ll af !hi •bo,,. lhllllll ( Knoll
111llhill c.olfrt, « lo Pr••nl tntm, '1ilill Nollrv P~bllc-C1tlfot11l1
""" ,_..,., YDUC:f'Mln, "' ... U!I-PrlncJHI OfflCI '" ~19Md •I 1111 olflCI ol !Mir Al!otntY Or1ni11 County M. W. YOUNG, 102t llow111 Bldt., M1 Commlulon Ex11l11&
UI lov11I lll'l'lnl sir.... Lo1 An111l1i, Jui'f 1 ltn C.llfornl• 90013, Whldl 1• tilt Pila Publli.hed 0..11101 Coe1t D•ll'I' Piiiot,
ol b\1$lntU of Irle Undll'llloned 111 •ti NOvtmbet" 13, 29, 11 anct 0-..0.r l'rlltttra 111tl•lnl"'8 to lhl nt1!1 ot .c, 1'61 ltJMI
Hid dtoldlnt, wlltlln tlll fl'Wlnll'l1 atttr·1---~=~--=.,,-==c---ltlt ,,,.,,, .cib11a11on °' 1t111 "°uce. LEGAL NOTICE 011td Nove«1blt 1, 1"41 NOaMA AllMllllUST ,,_ LILLIAN II. IEll.RY Pl-11'Vt Co-£M«Vlorl MOTICI! TO CRIOITOltl
of lhl Wiii of 1M SUPlillOI COURT 01" THI! rTATI" 1'-"t 1'11....0 Mctdcftl 01' CALl~OtlNIA ~ THI:
M. W. YOUNO COUNTY 01' OllANGI: A,..,_, At Uw 111. A-61111
lt2t bwM 81111. Etllle of JO~N FRANK THULL.
(Mi Jevtll s.n. st. Dlctlsed.
Lal ... _.... C.lt.r1!11 tMU NOTICE I' HEREBY GIVEN t.. lhl
'f•h lllJ) mo.a credttor1 Pl 1111 1bow n1mt11 llltudtnt
AltenleY .... c.-auc........ 11111 Ill PltlOfll l'MIV!nt ci.1..... •••lnlt Publltl'lld Or111141 CDa•I 01llr Piiot. lhl Hid dltCMtnl 1r1 rew!rtd "' ft .. N-W .. 13. 211. v , 1'61 1"2141 ll'llm. wlllt ll'le nee .... ,., YWdltn. loll
lhl olflu crl 1111 ci.rt. ol lhl 1bwe LEGAL NOTICE 1nt1hid courT, Of" 10 .,~ """'· wi1111
-----....,7 ,,.,.-----I"" necftllrv ~ "' 111t1 ., ckrtll...:1 ~I olfla o1 1!!1 Alton'len. f'·ll'1J Gllbtrt, T 11!d Ktltr, a $0111111 C•RTl•ICAT• OF •USINISS S1>rl111 $1.W, Ut Num.ti.r lDOll, L• ,.ICTITIOUS •lRM NAM• Ante+ts, Clllfomla 9001J, wtildl 11 t1W THE UNDERSIGNED 11oe1 htr&by oll<'t ot buslneu al tM unclerti.11111 Clttt1'1 tllll hi I• conductl"9 • Window In •II nwiltttl ... ..,.lnlnt to ltll .,,.,,. c1Mnt111 ..-. butlnns •I llUI E. Fourltt, al 1arc1 cleclJdent, wn!lln •I• monlflt City ol Tutll11, County al 0.-11111, Slalt 11ter !M tlr•I 1111bllc1llon ol 11111 nQ!lce.
ol C1illornlt, 111>dtr !hi llctlllou1 firm D•hid NctYtfM.lr !. lNI nlmt al JUAN'S WINDOW CLEANING GUY JOHN THULL SERVICE. And 11111 tald firm la com-ExltCV!or
Powel of tM fcrllowlno Pll'llllfl, whose of tM Wiii or Ille .....,,. Ind addr•s •re 11 foll<JWI, 10-wU: •boff 111med decedenl JUAN OIA.Z, lo.tf $011th Dllm•n OtL81!1tT, THOM,SON AMO Kl!LLY AYe .. LOI A1191fts 23, c1ntornl1. 451 So\1111 Sprint stn-et WITNESS • mr hind 11111 1"'1 daY S11ll1 H1111111tr UOf
ot November, !NI. LM Ant•Jn. C1lllor11l1 '"" JUAN OIAZ ""-!: !21U 'JS-16'1 STATE 01" CALIFORNIA ) Attvntn 1w Ex1e11lw 1968-Year of the Field Goal
COUWTY OF Oii.ANGE J P11b!l'1>ed Or1ngt C1111I 01tlr P'llo!, ON THIS l"h 01r al November A.O., Nowrnrer 6, ll, l'O, 21, lNI 1'2 .....
For Coast Area Prep IGckers
lffll, betort me WHll1 w. Altlton •1---=c=-=-,===---Ngt1r-r PubUc In Ind lor uld County LEGAL NOTICE tnG ttatll, tHld1"9 lfltrtfn d!.llY" ~, -------------ml111oned Ind ,_...., oersonalh> •Pt>t•rtdl · JUAN 01.U k-. II> ,.,., lo bt lh@ P-J1'14
.,.._, whole nanwi 11 11111Kt1be0 lo CEllT9''1CATI! 011' llUSINl!SS
lhl wllllln ln1lrumtnl, •"" 1cknowltdted PICTITIOUS PIRM NA.Ml
Field goal• dominated the '61 gr:ld 1euon
ln prep clrcles with some tremendo11.1 ruultl.
RJgbt here In the Orange Coast area wtre
some of the best klcken. Roy VanDtt Aa
of Newport Harbor ioed four field goal•
during the season wltb 1occer-1tyle attempt..
He bit from U, 34, !7 and ZS yard1.
H11 field goals were the margtn of victory
over Huntington Bea.ch.
West:mhuter'• Deano Aldridge kicked a
40..yarder against Santa Ana Valley and
Laguna Beacb'1 Steve Wlezbowakl ·toed a
U-yarder agaln1t Foothill wbicb proved the
winning points iD the U-20 victory.
* * * A gridder by the name of Jim White
from Barstow High set the CIF record this
................... -~
ROGER
CARLSON
....................•
year when he kicked a 47-yarder and then
'l.dded a 45 and · 36--yarder on the same
night when the Ruffians ripped Antelope
Valley, 43-18. He had previously kicked one
from 45 yards out.
And, Uilit c<>rner viewed a 230-pound tackle
from West Torrance toeing th e ball from
53 yards out in pre-game drills.
The ball fell short three times in a row
directly under the goal posts. His name
-Paul Johnson.
* * * A basketball clinlc for intermediate 1cbool1,
ll:lgb achooh:, boy•' clubl and recreation
department coaches will be held at Newpon
Harbor High, Saturday.
Coacbet Herb Uvsey of Costa l\1t1a, Jim
Newman ol Centennial, Blll Wetsel of EstaD-
cla, Jobn Kaiser of Fountain Valley, Bob
Wetzel of Oran&e Coa1t Collece, Bob Speidel
of Santa Ana College and Dave Waxman
ol the boot s<boel will be i.e ,..,..._,,
Tbe Newport-Balboa Rotary and the
Newport Harbor Boosters' Club alont: with
I'll mt that he exeailll'd !tie wmt. THE UNDERSIOHEO dott lllf-IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I havt Mr11111to ttr!lty tllll 1ht 11 cond11dlnt 1 l1nltorl1I l\!cDona1d'1 Rtl&aurantl are 1poa•oring the Mt m1 ti.nd 1n0 •Nixed mv cff!cl11 service bu1!11111 11 !111'2 H1i1rc1 Aven.-,
'"' 1111 d1r enO Yllt In 11111 Cfftlllcalf $.lnl1 Anl, C11ltornl1. City ot S.11!1 event. llr1t •lll!'llt -1t1en. Anl •nd other., (OUftty of Ora-. (OFFICIAL SEAL) Sl•lt of C1ll,.,rnl1, undor !tie nct1noci.
* * * Wtslflr w. Alh!On """ n1me of MA l!Y'S JANITORIAL NoteN Publlc-Clllfornl• SEl!VICE. AnO lllal 11111 firm II P•lncl111t Offlct 111 comllOWCI ol lt>e lollowlnot ..,.-Jan, W!'IOll.f Rex Snyder of Corona de! Mar High was O••no• Coo.mtv """" 1nc1 ..:klrm. 11 •• tolla•Wl!, To-wit:
inadVAMAOlly left OU( of the fm" al top JO My C0tnml1slon Ex11frn MA.11.Y LOU MAGOALENO, SIO! g K Sell!. '" 1tn H1t1rd A.,...1111t, Santi Anl, C111totn1 .. of the Orange Coast area rushing stat.!. P11bt1•r..o Or1ntt Cot11 oait., Piia!, t270l. . Wo~ember JI, 27 and Ottemblr 4, 11. WITNESS MY hi°"' trlls ltlll •IY Snyder rushed for 467 yards on 107 carries 1N1 .mu. a1 November, 19611 •
for a 4.3 average and two touchdowns. That LEGAL NOTICE STATE ~11.6't?~o1t~~OALE";°
puta h1m ninth in the standings. COUNTY OF ORANGE I S ON THIS 1'1h d1y ol Novtn1blt A.D. Ufl'lllOI COUll.T OF TIU! STATE 1968, bttort mt Edtlf Loc:kPllrl 1 Not.;
O• CALll'ORMIA fl'OR THI: Public 111 1nG tor wfd Countr nd COUNTY OJI OUN•E 51tle re1IO!fflt lhertln duty oomm tul:...r * * * IQ. A .. 1. nc1 • I Estancia High School 11 In the new• tOft• OllOl!R '10 SHOW CAUSI! • IWOfll, per90n• IY" •PPflfl'CI MARV LOU MAGDALENO kn<1wn to m1 t. cemlng.out.of-area athletic event!. ~OR CHANG• Of' NAME be 1111 llf•so11 .l""°" n1m1 11 •ubtcrlbtd tn ll'lf M•"•' IJf he Al>olJClllon cl lo !he Within ln1trument, 1nO 1cknowled .. Tbe Ea1les, with 10 returnJn1 varsity let-lloaE11.T RAOUL LEYVA, tor Ch1"9t ..., ro ..,. lh•• ~ ex1ev1.o 1111 ,...,. •-fil tr k I ll of Ntmt. IN WITNESS Wl1EREOF, I hlvt hereunto M:Jwen, W e to Ho tvl e Feb. I to WHEREAS, 11\e 11>011c1~ ot ROllEA:T iet mY h•ncl 1n0 11f1wt11 'll' a1trc111
particlpa&e In the HOitville Invitational wreaU· ltAOUL LEYVA tor Cl'l•r.o• of name. '""1 lt>e d11 .,.,., .,,,, In lhl• Offl!l!c.1tt 1\11 been du!r flied "'!11'1 !ht clerk al /lr'I abovt wrUten. Ing tournament. lhl• (ourT. •nd II ·-••lnri from /OFFICIAL SEAL) Hid 10111/u!lon !'till Mid •llPllu nl ckllrts E!111r Lod<r..ri Tbe Eagle grappler• will be gone for "' 111.... ri11 n•m• ch1nriec1 to 111t Nol•N 01111nc-ca1110<"nl1
three day1 wi&b accommoda"oos sel ap with 0~ ,, • .,,. °' ROBERT RAOUL P•1nc11111 ot11c1 111 IJ MARKEil. Ofl""' Co.mtv the people Of ffOJtvilJt and tbe local LIOnl' NOW, TMEREFOIE, II Is hertbv MY Commlulcn tJPlrn orde,..t 1nO dlNC1td !!Ill 111 persons Ocl-r 1], 19'1 Club. 1"19rntN In ""' 1110 m•ll.,... of change Publ!!l>ect Or1ne1 coe1t 01r1r Jlllof,
Hol Ill I f o1 n1me • •I'•• r btfort 1bo,... ,.,,vttl>tllr l'O, 11 •ncl Ottemblr 4, n , tv e I called the "Carrot Capital o tnlllttd, CourT. In DIP•t1men1 Three 1w mJ..M
the World" and b01ta tbe California Anae1t ltle•111I, 1oc:11.o •I 10CI w .. 1 Elthth st!---~~~--------.s..n11 A.,., c111fom11 .. ""' 20t11 d11 LEGAL NOTICE prior to thelr annual spring tralnlng at Palm of DtcAirnber. '"" at .,,._ hour o1 t·JO
Sprin". o'C!ocll A.M., ltMlfl Incl lhtrt lo srio..1------;:-,;::,------C1u11. If 1n1 ""'1' ,._.,., wtir lht 1o-T-:111114
If'--•lla!lon tor dll"91 ct .......... should nol IN THI .u,11111011. COURT 01' T"I ...,...di Jim Warren'& squad la; expected be •r•nttd • A,TATI! to -'ve FOllDtaln Valley a battle for &be IT IS F°ull.TMER 011.0ERED 11111 • {)fl' CALIJIORN IH ANO JIOlt TH• !i' CO.Y ol lhl1 otOtr be publl>Md 111 COUNTY 01" ORAHOI! Irvine League crown. "" ORAHGE COAST OAIL y PILOT N•. A-4.lJ11
There wlll be 1eve.al night malcbeo ,_ • --r of tt.-•I Clm;l•ll°" OllOER TO SHOW CAUll l'OR &II" pfinffd end ~ll•hflcl In !he CllY oi CHANCE 011' NAME volving the Estancia club. C111te Meu. Co1111ty ol 0r...... Slit! 1n ""' ~ll!r o! !ht Ap0Hc1ll0t0 flf crl C1ll..,,.nl1, once tltl'I wetk tot tour 81!En LEIGH HOLCOMll, For (hi""
* * * U) 11.1c:ctsslv1 wtd(1 1>rlor to lht <lilt of Namt. 1bov1 H1 for 1!11 ll•u lno al Hid Tht 111pllcall0t1 of BR ETT LE IGH 1pp!l c111on. HOLCOMB lw Chl"9t of nam1, lll•lnt
Afte• vi'ewing 21 gamea and ,. di'ff..-ent D•'"' t.lovtmbtr s, '"' """ 111tc1 111 Court, ind 11 •111M11r1,,. MJ Rebert P. K""Land from tald 1oollc1tl°" 11111 Ai'IH M. teams in the pa8t nine WtekS Of p<ep football Judtl of 11'11 HALOEllM.AN, on bthllf al IPPllQnt ' SUPlfklr Court ha' flied 1n appllaillon P•-lno 111et lhese are the most entertaining games AL•tRT JIU.XMAN •PPtlc1nt'• n•m• ~ cri.,..PO 1o •RETT
Vl·ewed · Santa Ana 14 H ll gton Bea h 4111 sw111 s.11..,. St'"' LEIGI( HALDERMAN. . , un n C Lat A1111i.. C•llfwlll• "'" Now, "'~"· It !1 herfl7Y -•ttl 7; Costa Mesa 21, Estancia 20; Corona del Att..-MY "' P.i1t1-ind dlreci..o, 1ri11 111 11trson1 1n11r111..i . Y1i..111M (tll) 'U-!711 In 'aid m•l!tr Oo ~-• bfflt!-1 llllt Mar 19, Fountain Valley 14; Mater Der '2:W-OC Court In 0t-u1r1mfnt 3 on tht lOlll
32, Long Beach Wilson 25 ,· and Westm.inster P11b!l11ttd <>r1r1111 C11111 011rr Pllo! div of Dlcember 19611, II t :lll o'cloo:k N~r '· 13, l'O. ,,, lHI ins..M A.M., of ,.Id d11 hi M'>Qw UIUi.t wlty 35, Newport Harbor 28. lh• •11allc•llon tor cr..no1 of n1rne.
LEGAL NOTICE 1hould no! be 1r1Mfd.
* * * ti 11 llir!llfr oroertd 11111 1 -NOTIC• OI' IALI! of lhll Or""'r bt P<JbllsheO In Ille Ori .... NOTICI DI' SALi 01' PROPilll.TY Colrt 01llr P11'1-1 I -ll>ff" ol 1.....-11 Durlna the course of the 1161 varilty DILIN-DUINT JIOR c1ra.1111on, orlntll'd In talct county, 11 a IHJI onct ••ch WH~ !or lour IUCl:IUIYll football campaign, two bfgb schools In flON-~AYMINT Oii' IONO flO 1' W'flr.I 11rf(w lo"" d1v ot Mid he1rll'llJ. -• I d SIRl•I flO.) 0111!j Nawmbtr s, 19" parucu ar ma e the DAil..Y PILOT football llSUl:O ~011. TIIE IMPROVl!MINT OJI ROBERT p KHEELA NO lcll:s look good COSTA Ml!U. SANITARY OISTlllCT ·Judvt of S.:ld S.Uoerlot Coi;rt p · Del1111t hlvl"' io..11 ""'°' In Irle l!ILE•S, LOEWL IARANOliR ANO Laguna Beach waa f•vored io wlB in each 111rl'llt<!1' If 1111 followlnot nemH -= MYERI Julr l , INJ lnlltts! '°·" lMI Wts!(~ff Ori~•. Sllll1 Jll of lb lf p.Dlet during the ltuoft and Jl-'11 !, IHI ln!ernl '°·" -N-1 1 .. ch, C1Mllnlli nut •• A~-i. came ••-b •-·ta l'rtndoll m .J& Atttnt..,, "' ""•c1flt we rwa .... """g OD tv«)' ua. nee. AM ""' l'toldu a1 Mid bend 111v1no T1-..11o111: 1114, """"" Fountain Valley posted a 4-S record and ....,.,.,, Jn w-rttlnv "''' ltM Coi.tnlY PubHIPled Or1r.11 C01rt Dillr Pilot
the DAILY PU.OT hit It Ofl the 0111 eight !;:lfto °'..rv~i .. ~::.7" 11c;j :•": N1!¥Pmbtr •· n. to. 21, 1N1 1n1..i
limea , . , mlul.ng the l.nJUal start of Of" ••rul of i.nc1 ment!or>ed In !ht LEGAL NOTICE Hid bood. Now, fhtr9fofe. I 1!ve nolla Uie lt&IOll when the Baro111 posted a 1 .. 14 •het 1 will on 11>e u1ri div of Oeetmbtr;,I ;;:;:::--:=--::::,-::c-::==-~
Win --u--·bo AJ--•toa. '"" et 1111 l!wl' If f :lt .. CIOdl A.M,, NOTH:& qi' PVILM: MIAlllP•• T• v .... .._... -.uu ol 11111 .. .,. 111• If Pllb"c l\ldllfl •• M•LO .... TMI" IOA-.o 0(11
Dave Sc•ooaover'• ••yard field go-• ·~-ed Irle lot or IMl!'Ct ol l1ncl mentioned SUl'•ll.VISOtlS o~ OttANO• COUNTY, P ....,... a.I uw u I" MIO boncl, ...-10 mudt lhWecrl' 1i CAl.11"011.Nt.l, ON ZONING OllTll.l(T the prediction. 11'111 bt MCftlt'"r, •I Irle Oft'ICll "' MAI' 111.1-• CCAll! MO. le ...., 11ld Tr11_.,, unllu !tit 1rnount ct.-PROPotlNO TH• AMINOMINT o, ,,., Mid bond .,.,., !hi ttcrlH'd lnttral THI ZONING (001!
Jumper Has 'em· Jumpin'
lh•r-fOle:IP!lr wllll tha COii ol tM Purwu111t lo tile Pl1nnl111 incl Zon1119 Mltttllon of 11'1!• t'lof!ce ar1 Nkl: Law, •• lm•ncltd, nof1« I• llerMw
.nil 11'111 I will It Mii ltit Hmt •lvtn lf>el I •ublfc llll•!nt Will 1111
lo Ille --wllCI WIH lab lllt 11111 hlld br l~f Mid lklflrO of S..-rvltora
'""""' fil HJ.41 lot or Hrttf .r lfl"" °" I e<irteln SP«.lflc PLan 11111-fed 11'111 ~ !!It 1'1111 -I o1 unNld "l. .. lnt Olllrld MN Ill.MO fC111 Ht. PrinclNI •Ml l11Mr11t Oii 11111 bond. zc ... ~, .. ot S.Cllon 71 023 Of ""' '°''"""" W"llll t:mtl flt "'11tllc1t1on, C<td1tltd O<'dlnlllClt ot tt1e' c-w " Tiit lot Of" Nr"91 .r lflnO mtnllonlcl °''"'e< 11 .. · lo w-lnwn .,._
II! .. If llOftd tnd ft "' llOllf, ti ll'IOtt Al Genffli! ""'1c\111vt1r;... Olefl'lct ft Nrtk:u .. rl'I' dllcrltrld. lo-wit; h b-!!000 "Rfflfllntiel, llnt!t l"'•"'lty9"
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of "" DllllT ~"" Sid
lt waM'l too long ago that
European soccer-fltyle kickus
made their first imprint on
Amerit an football.
Now, if a 17 -year ·old
Barstow Hijh School boy Is
•ny lndlcatlQn, f o o l b a 11
coaches may aoon be phdina
their place ltloUn out d hlcb
jump plb.
In cue )'OU h1ven't received
your Bantow paper ye~ Jim
Whlte. a lllm 1-1, t~j>oWiaer,
booted a Ill-yard Oeld goal
for Barstow High tut Jr:rfdaf.
n I a: ht in a •11 CD' Ptana
vlct«y °"" Ont.no. It Wll_ 90. Oute.
"Jim '*' ldcted four field aoall of over to yardl before
wg Jet him lry that one,"
l&ld. bis coach, Art. Davis.
"He's l~for-16 for w."
For the .record, these are
the meU\Jrements on Whlte'1
1968 field goals: 10, 20, 21,
:M, 36, 43, two from 45, 47
and M. HiJ coach says White
1mer1tes tremendOUI I e I
power from blgh jump ~
periel>ce.
"He. doeln 'l kick it toCCer
style but his form is quite
different from the old regular.
style" Dlvll commented.
' ' M o 1 t A m erlcan-born
kickert art le:antna: forwud
whee lhey tick but Jim ii lwllnl back 11 he approacheJ
the bill, Just u he doe• •hen
takloa d lo the high jump ...
WbJt. woo't oet the ~
.. '" • .,. lo Iha blgb jump
(he'8 cleared f.-2 ) but there're
a lot of football coacbel in-
temted. Davia -be'•
received a ittter from USC,
among others.
White 11 a good .w-.
which figuru. Hil dad b
p<Uldent of Barstow Junior
College.
An a=mptlahed batl<elball
player, White la a :ll-polol-per-
11mo alwpobool«.
He ii allO a d&ht to bellold
on kickolta. 1
"He's ticked oa sr ctmes
thla ,..,. and avenpd 113.1
ylllda ucl1 limo," D&l'!l ·says.
"lie huo'l yet tlclied , oile oul of the end 10De bal he's
come awtul)f cloee."
'Ille -""'• pro-llcleoty rud>ed 1tarllJaa pro-PJI'"" hnl weetmda-op
when he booted Deld gOllS Tile 1!:11llr" Ill fNI "' StuthWIY" Olslrlcl, urt1ln • .._,.. tour .. ~ '611 1"I of Lal 71. 111 Tract '51, IM ..... bemtl'td tw Hlt'tlrO A measuring 47, 3' and 4$ yardl, '' ~·· CIU•tv "' Orano1, Sl•ll of ~In $"""9, C1tv.,r D•IYI Incl ..... --;:
all in the same game. 'I1w C.ll'IWnt•. 11:_.. "' Mill ~ °"" ...,,....,.,, "' 1111 1outt1 '"""" 1,. -''''' 1,.1ftlot"f'IWI. R~ ar... (F-ttl Olotrk:t IGlA 47-yarder broke the CI F """' .-i ...,. °" .. 111 bond .. ltC:ra..) ... • record "' ... ""' .. """ nofkt 11 .. fll'""*; SIN llUbM< 11@1•lnt1 on ""' .... • Out M Pr1ftdNI .......,.., at..5.J ... __. •1111 wl!I bt lltlol I His S&-yarder last Friday °"' .. _,,, o1 in,_., 1 JA er.."'°'" o1 1111 ao.... ., ~ "" 0.,,. tn •«Witt of ~ltlH I I .ff 111 "'-Ore C M cleared the: croabar by two '"~' .. __,,,..,. wnht-1rr llulldln1 !I~ Norffl OUfrt; Mrnlnlltr11r...
feel D 1. --1.. Tot.I 1mount fl.tt. 13' SI 1" .s..n,_" A 0.--mttnOrt 5trett, , l'l'&a MK!. 111 .,.,... Ill ....... !Mo Ml<I • .........-., °" ""' lit":' 4' '"':, C'S:f'I, Clil'°"""' If there ts Jny lmprovemenl If """ ,..., -r •bow Mm-II w111 ., ttr. ,_, ; 111111 ~· 1'"' left in White, he could IOI ~it!,,...,. ~blfrlt~ .,:' ~ 11 lllfllch ftrrtt ...,.. · • ..; c:;r .,:;!;
d1stance acble\-emerrtl In the 1111 n.. 111111n.n11 111w.w t«f"\tlnt1 ""' :'::"'111 Z,.~1111 er _1,,. Hid •II•
d •• 1 __ , .. "' "" If _,_ --""" bl Slld ..... ,._,.,. yearl \o COIDe ......... WUlllU ,..,.,.,.. .... """"" of ~ of fl'll z..:.. l<ldi I I •41 .... m-~ Bru-"--..1• k>ot lite .,._ "'"""'" ""'"'-•"" """ In lht vfl'tn of 111 ceo.., 11 on 11.. lllr _., .. ..., ~ ... -""'_, ..,. leW", I OUnlv Cllrll of .. I plker. Ill 11111 t9wlt Ill ..... 1\ldl .... Wlh ~~ .~ll~•."'8~ ""'!'! ... Id ~ ~--~· bu .. L.l .... A~ ................. r.i IMld!llOll " """ """"' '"' ......... l"-flen •• UUNlll:" Det>eT ~·t!O • ,.., ~ ... .::icrvl"' 11• to ., ... ,:;:tH 11111 *" .... ol "-1111\o
51-)'arder. In fact. DO m*"' :.,: ..... ":11,-:.'M .. en:""~:" ~ eY OftOl"ll. 01' THI llOARO ,,,_ 1"1Ue pro kk.br tVll' blL ,,... i-n of c.rt!f!Q .. If k it. SUPEll.VISOll.l OF OllA.NGI! COUNn',. -The -._ -~, let lft 1'6J TM COfTA Ml!IA 0A1L y ,.II.CIT Ii CALll'Oll.N IA '" l1J' U ~~U .............. 11111 -'!l•P•r +n which (I EAL)
by Ba 1 t Imo re '• Bert ''"' _.. *" 111 ,....,".,,..· w, t . '' >0HN n~1-•--la 16 A-..:iA -.._ o.1111 ............. 2t, 1,... C.V..ty CM •l'ld •lf'.Offlcle ~ ~~, )'llua. IU. t'IAM M. IWAPMl!R, CIHt llf trip lot,.. of~-AFL record la Q. let by T,.._. tf ........ C-'1 ef Or11119 C--ty, c.' , ,,__ Jl ... ftd .. ,J HOUiton 1n ' •• _,_., o. ""'"''· °""""' ., MPfl L, C..1tl!1, ..._.... _.-IA Pvbll--er-Glbf 0.ltr ~. ~ubll~ Of.,,.1 Ct.rt Ir Pl"" '&1. ~ "' ,,, lflll ,..... No¥lfTlbt,r "' 1"61 ,..,.,
•
• • •
•
\
-.. -·-----~-~~~~~~~ ............................................................................... ~~~~ .... -
'.
Two Refil Dolb
Betty MCKeever (loll) of Newport· Beach and Coota
Mesa'• Mary Macy will march as ltagg'°'y Ann 1114
Andy in ·tooigbt'a aMual Santa Claus Lane Parade
of stars In Hollywood. TV coverage oa ChannelJJl
and 13 begins at 7:3 p.m.
.Kennedy Specialist
In Western Films
By VERNON SCO'IT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -John
Ford, nuist.r ol the clustc
western mevie. ii 1em1-
rollred, but the reins ol Old
Paint have fallen into the
hinds ol Burt K-,, a
)'OWi( bone opori speclali&I.
Kenne<ly, a quiet man with a
l)lbleund fa<:e, bu worked In
Olten with John Wayne.
Henry Jl'onda, Kiri: Douglaa,
Glenn FOl'd, Yul Brynner lnd
currently with ~ Mil·
chum and George Keilnedy in
"The Good Guya and the Bad
Guys."
Kennedy hu written 15
westerns and directed 10 of
them.
An expert horseman himself
with a 300-acre caW.e ranch
in Jay, Okla., Kennedy waa
a member of the 11th and
5th cavalry rtgimenta in
World War JI, which is more
:tban old Jotm Ford can claim.
·· But Director Kennedy knows 'ilbal director Ford 1aarned
more than three decades ago:
the movie wutern 11 eueo-
tially 1 morality play.
'Ille good guys always beat
the bad guys in westerns,
Yirtue triwnplui over evil, and
psychiatrista are run out of
town on a rail
.. ' ' F u n n y thing about
~ms," Kennedy said a.t
W aroer Bn>o. the othe1' day,
."the actors in them rarely
;have hangups. Being out on
: · Space Stars
HOLLYWOOD (!IP!)
Gregory Peck and Richard
Crenna top.line the cut of
Columbia'• "Marooned," the
at.cry of a thrte-man space
ship which beaxnes marooned
In d<ep opoee.
location w I th magnlftcent
mountains and s w e e p i n I
landacapea b r I n g I the
performers down to size ....
Doapile the trend toward
mating movies an art ,farm
indead or an entertainment
inedlum, Kennedy , 11 . (.'ODo_
vinced films are In troob1e
if they don't return to en-
tertaining ·-Westerns, he believes, wlD
remain a <ellulol(otaple.
"When kids . linp pla~g
cowhoya.and Illdlans, l'll-linp·
Dll.k.iog westerna:,'' be Aid.
Thus far he bu directal
such winners u ' • T h e
Rounden,'1 "Mall 0 rd e r
Bride," ••welcome to Hard
Times,.. 1'1be Return " the Seven" and "The W a r
Wagon."
But there's a long, long trail
awindbig if he hopes to ·match
some of the great westerna
of the paat.
Kennedy lists the h •• t
we1tern1 .·.eftr made:
'4Stagecoach," • ; s b • n e , ' •
"High Noon," "Ride the High
Country,.. "™ Ox Bow
lncldent" and "Red River."
All are considered clasaiCI
by most film Q!Okera. And
all were overwhelmingly suc-
cessful at the bo:i office.
"'You can't research
wffterna," Kennedy I I l d ,
"because HoUywood invented
the wild wut u It ii seen
In movlu and lelevlli<in. By
comparison the old west was
dull . I tried to dci an authentic
western and it t:Hdn 't come
off.
"The most excltina thlnir
that happened in those small
western towns wa11 the arrival
of an lee wagon. And gunplay
wu rare. You can't wring
drama out of that ao you,
IO alor!g with the l!Dllywood
myth."
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS 53 ,.,..... Yesterday's P'uzllt Solwd:
S4 Act of l Sentry's ~Ing Wld co111111nd Un! 5 .lsJan natl• 56 Anllll .,
10 Close ..... ~ sta111c:ll l4·C:0.UllUOUI 51 French-
lS CNClll '2 si..,1n1:· UL--% .... 17 Slbtrlan. '6 funtrll
.fi'ltr sol•nl&J
lt M1111wkll 67 "8111'1111
fitftl outflow lt owtt down "Ian's ftMll 20 ulckly 70 Row of type tl Athnuc1 n Force out 111111<1 --: 72. Ale1Mdr11'1
2. .. ds rlYtt 12 Surrouindtd · JI Ancltnt Gnlt:
Z.4 Ir. 73 Achlrvtn1t1t 13 ~t .... dialect
Andersen 74 lrud If 41 P'Mted Wldw
Z6 Blg ... btt Englls1' graph«'• control of
27 11• oath t':"'" COflClrl anoUitr
)0 1111 75 r.-Zl Bltu111lno&11 ~·" -, HtJWDrth 19 rlttd llQ\llds 4J tt•I
:1Z Hav~ Jor ZJ .Cut ·--.... U Purmt 46 l ltwl ...... DOIM stealthlfy 41 S,ltk-
""~' 17 Xlnd of Md·lll'• 'J6 8• •rt l It of ttantflr: 51 Maraudtd 37 au"' wfth 1sslst1ntt · lntoniil 55 lnstct hot liquld t Clal111 2S Church st•11• )t Mak• sliootft 3 Unasptrat• vestMtnt S1 c .. ,,ess 40 Quietude 4 J11t1t 2' Ptrry v. '"''""! 41 Conctdc 5 C111el11 ....... 51 •!Ch-• 44 $tablN ' 'To, CM~at l'" word 9$ God In \!IOI • n s•1tn *' 59 Abtahui's 47 Across 7 let a thlrt 11lckn•• a Sacrttl I PerfuaH'I ' 33 C.urtyatd · Ml 1t1111btr
• 1crlJlut• l'ltctulty tticlosH ~J 61 F11tentr
tt Set1nd of t Handler · a clol•ttt '' _ tye
. I tituM 10 Stand •Ith 34 Fttllno"' •4 Fl•h I Leis pl1111p leg• 'f.'rt •••ht•• 65 fttdwo .. 1.01• stt• 11 P'trt. AW!\ 3S Co111hlt,. 61 Clllll
' .
•
Theater Netetl • 1,~. ~( ,J{'d ,:"'11t, .. 1 t.: . .,, ' .. ,,, ' ' 'Thur~er Carnival' Opens at Fullerton
' .. . . ~
TNAlllMfflM• llllAnNll ... __ 11141
..... ,,,..,,.,. "' ...... "'411,
* * * Winding up ill brief, two-
weetend stint at' the Costa
Meaa Civic Playbouoe Friday
and Saturday II "The Ir-
regular Verb To Love,''
direcled hy PaU Tamhelllnl.
David Goodall, A a d·r e y
Snit:.er, Barbara Garllcb and
Ed Little head the cu:t of
the Bdtlah comec\Y, pruented
at the Community Center
auditorium oo the Onntge
County Falrgrounda. neut.
may be ordered bv callln.g '
the Calta Mesa Recreatton
Department at 834-53113.
* * * Also in Costa Mesa are '"ftle
Three Cuckolds," cavortLnc at
South Cout Repertory'• Third
• ~ l • It.
"*""*t nalllCOlll9 ....__ ... unr1ellAP11tt1
Slep Theiler under the ~1°;;===:=:=;===:;:===::::§§'=§§;:;::;:;; tion ol Martin Benion. Ex-~
ecutive director David Dnmel
be1ds the cam of the ~
medi1 de!' arte production.
Featured in the cut are
George Barcoa, .Austin Kelly.
Billy MID..-, Carol Kretzer,
Martha McFarl>nd, · Elain<
Bankston and James Baus.
Performances are 'lburldl.y
Young Chorus
NEW YORK !UPI) -The
chorul Une at Julel Podell'•
Copacahana II the youngeat
In the cafe'I II-year hlltory.
The average age of the
beautlea is 19. One, who la
zo, 11y1: "I'm conaldered the old lady ln tbe line." -
2 of tho Yoar's -I
"P1rh1p1 th• "'•If b•a11tlf11I
111.t'lil ill hht•ry"-New y ...
........... c ...
NSO· .
tl1e: mesa
· ,., I . \\• A1 f,-.. ri!r 1 ,.!·
~:··.'.P'lR 1 \NO H i".~'BO R IN <OS TA M['lA
'llUPHONI 541·1552 FOi INFOIM4TION
FOR 4 RETURN ENG4GEMENT
BEST PICTURE OF THE YEARI
ANO
IEBI llll!Cl!l!-flld -
IEBllCTIIR-fU -~fllll
llllilllt.Bolt
COLIJMBIA ""1IBT QllEl!ATiall'llY (Colall
PIC'!l/R!S ' BIS! C0STIM: IEil6tl (r.io) ....... --~
FRED ZINNEMANN'S
AMAN FOR
-AI.I. SEASONS·
Ll1e-rnesa T . I'. * • I '. . . J ,.-~'\/ A . .
rJ r \>..;Pn RT A N U H'l~BO R IN (\!',[,\ ~1,1•,f,
lfLIPHONl.141·1152 FOil INFOIMATION •
SPECIAL HOLIDAY
JUNIOR MATINEES
FRI. and SAT., NOV, 29, 30
. ' ·-at. 2 p.rn.
2 BIG FEATURES
Ti*,
rtmt.~. llllY
LEWIS --. ' ..
f' • I ' -
......................
·AR Seats 50 Cents
production ol Charlot~
.. A Chrlstmu Carol" laDilay
al I and 3 p.m. In the Tlllnl
Step Theater, 1111 ... Ntwpmt
Blvd., Coat. M....__
James de Pr~ II-· the young people's clls8fc,
which lelluret Mlcllael Oouc-
la.u, Heath Park and Pat
Brown. Tick.ell are available hY calliq Ille tbtaler at Mf. ua.
AL r ' , •
l1Mlt1z
; 1,. '
Ja11e Fo11da .,B1r1Nrell.., ....
1Ci111 Nav.tk
"The lotlond '
of Lyt1h C:111,.•
Co11ff11••11• '"'-•btM"' a
$eMley frM I 110
-4 • l :H o.ty
NMioMI a....MI ...._ ,.... A-Jonnl--TurenreSta!DP uDave
C8ro1 White .. '
POOR COW
I
ALL Ollft.I" fTAltn
AT•1• ......,_12 _ _,
.:::.. .......
•111111111 ... ,.. ........
RllllitrtW.tllw COUl!l
"11:1µ.nl ••
Ad1m lotr\:I COl.Ol
...,,.. •• , ... llYIW'"
. ~·.
HnRBOR Bll'O -· --lll·lln
•-IMl'lllMI , ... ,,,...,, --"""" "'IAllAltUA•
o.ri ~ COl.Otl:
..,.YI CAID STUD•
W.::" ·-· ~-Stmriw Ol¥tl "· . l"ettr t..noflN C()l.OR:
"SALT MID""""
J"""'-COLOl
''THI IPUT" -==---...,,.....,
..ea1*a1
•·Mil •-.ii..,_.,....,.,
JM1111t WClod'nl'd ~
"'IACMIL, IACHA •
llfTl)1ar COlCMI:
"THI HIU WITH
NllOU•
"":-=-:-'J ·--arusta nt J Ptr ......
a..a.tW.tlw COi.Oil
'"llWIS J ..
....... COLOI: ........ , __ ,...
.......w .... ., ICUEMY
'" AWllD bchol-Raclloli
IH~ WllER
PAUL ,NIWMAN ...r ••G't'Oll-w....o&.: ,, JOSIPH f-UVIN(....._,
-[NICHOi.& The,.. ... LAWMNCE TURMAN-Wer of THE&IWIUA1E Harty _,.,.,"
h• c.;1 ... ,,. .. ...., .... UUJt--·· ·-COll1'll9UOn IMOWI ... -.....
TMU&. fNAttlMrYIN•
10
Academy,,......,
D•rh D•y
'"WMIU Wm YOU WlllM
tMI U•NIS WIWY O,ll1l"
&w1rils '""-".-.... -
EXClUSIVI
SOUTH
OltANOI
COUNTM
RUN .... ~ ........ -... .....
------:::71 GON~;.il~; \
"' 1'ICllNKlOtOl ...... . Clark GAlllE ...... .... ._ ~ --BOW AJID•DeRAVJUAND
... ,. 1114 . )'
VlvlenLEIGB•-O'lloN
AW.aid.I 1 al ........-. ....
WMk Dlyi, One· 9howlng at I p.m.; ·(ontlnuoue
Showlnt i.._ 12:301 Thonbfllvlnt. SOtvrday w -
Sundoy, Foetu,. Showlnt 12:30-4:30-t::IO; Spodal
Shopptn Moftneo, Wodnetefay at 2 p.m. __ ..
"SHALA KO"
LAUGHING,,, LCWING.·, •SWINGING I
. -AS NlVll UFOllfl .. l'er_.,
ABBEY LINCOLN· BEAU BRIOOESGj. .,_'TY. ..........
1'1111111 c•-111 lllllUICI -&/ l.lwEW
U/Rfl111/llE1
• • •U.0" . llT 'l&.U9 • • TtCl#COl..Ott • HU'"1MOTGM •U.C:H t .. ,. .. iaoa • A.U0
• lot ADA llUN
WM c .... A.Iii• A JS Yell' Old WV1 1 ~m ~·-~
...
• I
\ I
•
-
,
I
' J
l
I
'
••
' . .
PLYMOUTH . ..
CHRY~LEl·
• • IMPERIA1. .
.,
1rr101v THANKSGIVING
FOR THEIR-FIRST PRIC.E. Sl.ASHl:NG
• • ' . ,l ' •
NEW&:USl:D ·cAR •••• ~
. . .
PRICES SLASHED LOWER THAN OUR NORMAL . VOLUME PR·ICES. THUR • . , . ' .! • ~
.
48 MONTHS BANK FINANCl-NG
AVAILABLE ON ALL NEW CAlllS
ON APPROVAL OF BANK CREDIT '---------------------. . •· '
''
-" .. --
:
OFFER
SPECIAL ·
NEW U-4 C. Prr ... rs ~ •• l6 M.att. IMI. T• &: Uc.. l Flt1.U ca.,.. " .,,,.., .. ef Cllryslw CJMlt C.rp.
'69 VALIANT
LOW MILES
IMMElllATI! DILIYIRYI
Fully factory equipped. Heater, elec-
tric: wipen, light, emergency fle1hers,
front-rear seat belts, shoulder har-
ness, padded dash, w0 1°w option.ti.
low miles. IXTL 168 I •
51977
+TaxmidLlc-
$195 553
DOWN MONTH
'69 BELVEDERE
Fvlly f•efoty t~lpped.
He1t1r, tlee. wipers,
li9ht1r tll'l•f'9•ney f111h·
1t1, front·rtlr • • 1 f
b1lt1, 1ho11ld1r h1rn111,
padded d11h, w·l·w op-
tional. Rl2119El06740.
PA.CTOIY LIST $2671
5195 559
Month
'2277
FULL PRICE + TAX a. LlCINS!
NEW '69 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT
2 DOOR HARDTOP
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
C12JGtC14J716
FULL PRICE
+ Tcr 91114 Uc:e ...
52977
--·----------
$195
DOWN
'
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
Fully f1etory •quipp1d.
H11!er, electric •ip111.
lighl•r emergency fl•1h.
1t1, fronl·re•r 111! b11+..
1hould1r h1rn111, p1dd1d
d11h, •·•-• option•!.
PE21 ·190-1 I 6052
Factoty Lid $2111
5195 $62
Down Month
¥ $8142
MONTH ..
I . .
'65 MUSTANG HARDTOP '66 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE
CQufle. P'-d"-11.,., tl.lbMtlt. r*flo, heiltw. A rMI buY. (~It J15)
77 TOTAL s33 TOTAL s33 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLY. + T A L PYMT. PYMT.
'66 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR
Autom .. lc, r1dlo, '*""• n<;M>tloMfly eleen c.er. (SUL OM)
$977 TOTAL s33 ·TOTAL s33 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLY. + T ' L nwr. PYMT.
'64 PONTIAC STATION WAGON
Fldoty 1lr Wld., ~ 1~, lllto., lt&H, .te. CS.JM 721)
77 TOfAL ' s·33· TOTAL s33 TOTAL PllCI • • DOWN MTHLY. + T A L PYMT. PYMT.
'65 PLYMOUTH FURY WAGON
Air an:I., -•'-1~. •llt!lmellc, rMllo •nd llMW. (ltVJ 110}
$1077 TOTAL S36 TOTAL S36' TOTAL PllCE DOWN MTHLY. · + T 6 L PYMT. PYMT.
'66 PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA
LOW mlllll, -llonlNy nlee. 4 ~. rl'dlo, ti.tel', etc. (Tl'I' 514) 0[1177 TOTAL s3" 9 TOTAL s39 TOTAL "I PllCI DOWN MTHLY.
.. +TA L PYMT. PYMT.
'65 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
2 DI". H.T. ftc:IO!Y •Ir, ,.,,.... 119":1' •• •ulo., R•H, fvll vlnotl lnfll'. 40GYll66l
$1577 TOUL $53 TOTAL s53 TOTAL PllCl DOWN MTHLT.
+TA L nMT. PYMT.
'64 BUICK SKYLARK 'Or. H.T. •lldc.t -ta. lolded W/U1'r~. An uc.prlonll c:er. COTW JN)
$677 TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. '+' TI L PTMT. PTMT.
'64 CHEVROLET
4 DI'. H.T. ~k: 11'•1""'11tlb't. rtdlo •nd .._fer, fte. 10'-K Mn
$577 TOTAL s19 TOTAL s19 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTMLY.
' '+ T It L nMJ, PYMT.
'65 CHEVROLET
'Or, H.T. Au!Olnlllc,. rMlo 1nd PIH'ler, lo.did WllPI ftl'rlo.
$8'17. TOTAL s29 TOTAL s29 TOTAL PllCI DOWN · MTHLT" + T A L PYMT. PYMT,
'65 FORD SEDAN
,,_ 11Mrl,,., Mrlommtk Ir-., rllllo. PIMler, WSW, .CC. (UQI( NI : S677 ~~~L s23 T~~A~. $23 T:l~tT. + T It L PYMT. · nMT.
'68 DODGE DART GT
s1··a·· "77·T-~--~At ·16· ... 3~ :::~-s6 ... ~3-(~~~ ..
+ T & L PYMT. PYMT. -
'67 CHEVROLET IMPALA eeu.. ,,,_ INtf'llW •""""'9kJl'9dlo, ......,, WSW, (TGM • $1577 ;.~~:L s53 ~~ s5·41 ~o;:t~.
+t&L , PTML _ ~ nMT.,.
-· .
:nA1'I rmi.. ,._,. 11ftTln;, •UIO., 1t•H, elilY d Iii."'*· ('Ill lWI
$1077. TOTAL $36 TOTAL S36 TOTAL PllCI DOWN MTHLT. . . + T A L PYMT. nMT,
'&ii CHEVROLET '2 DOOR
. .
' ' ' J
$16'"'71' ... ~, .. ~~T~~sm5"'7""~ T"':,i;,. .... s's"'· 7"" 7.;. ... , -
PllCI DOWN MTHl'f.J . .,. + T& L nMT. . PYMT,
'67 CHEVROLET BEL AIR ,
&1111111\11 m1t9dor !'90 ""'IP"d w/fKtll"r l lr, I'S, Auto .. 1t•K. {lVK 7'1)~--
$13Tl · Tl>T.\l. jt46 TOTAL '$46 TOTAL, PllCI .pj DOWN h(THLfi.
. J + T • L PYMT. PYMT.
'64 DODGE 330
4 Dr. Seel. Atllorn.tlc lr1rwrolulon, tnlny oll'llf ftc:torY ••lrt1. (NGJ, t5()
$3Tl. TOTAL s13 TOTAL s13 TOTAL ' PllCE DOWN MTHLY,
_ -: 1 + T • L PYMT. PYMT.
'67 PLYMOUTH FURY ·'
FIO;fWy •Ir CMld., _, 1!Mr .• 1tUto.. R.&.H. Ol.rfttMd!N ¥11111. (UU.S 1oWJ
$1377 TOTAL $46 TOTAL $46. TOTAL PRICI DOWN MTHLT,
+T•L PYMT. PYMT.·
'66 PONTIAC TEMPEST • 2 or. H.T. "'!""-11<11 -w111R, rldlt, ,,..,.,., """" olh•r wtr•1. CIYC cmr -r . tOTAL 526 TOTAL s26 TOTAL 11l PllCI DOWN ' . MTHLT.
J + T • L ,..,MT, nwr.
'64 FORD COUNTRY SCj)UIRE
W-. ,._, 11wr .. 9\11111., l'lldlo, hl•ler. llffllllfvl w.-. tVW'W''CIM)
$6-n TOTAL s23 TOTAL s23 TOTAL. PllCI DOWN MTHLY'. + T •'L PYMT, P'YMTt
. .
Any Used Car With Gold Seal
100% GUARANTEE
GOOD FOR 100 DAYS OR 4,000 MILES
WHICHEVER COMES FIRST
At no· cost to you -Parts or .J.i.bor on motor,
transmission and' rear end. This seal sta1:.e6 in
.writing that Lee White guarantees the motor,
transmisdon ·and rear end 100% against de-
fects tor"loo days or 4.000 miles. whioh ever
comes first after purchase.
For Your Protection Any Used ,Car With
WHITE SEAL
• (5) Brand New Whito Sidowan Tires
• Rolino All (4) Brakes
• New Guaranteed Battery
• • Now Poinn, Plugs & Condonsor
--... -
• l . • ......... --..,.. w • • • ..,. - , ... = , o , 4 e P s • a p a u so s cs a o a e; a; c so a s s s: C Ci 40 us c: so ¥ s s s 4::UW4' .
SHOWN, THE MONTE60
MX TWO DOOR HARDTOP
AND THE EXCITIN6
MX WAGON,
, j __,
SEE 11' TODAY AT
JOHNSON'S! BUY IT
TODAY AT JOHNSbNSI
Safe Buy
Used CallS
AND NOT JUST SAFE • , •
e Large Selection
1965 COLONY PARK
' po11. 1to. w9n. losut. Grscisn •old w/mokh. int.
full foe. oquipt + suto. trons., foe. sir cond., PS,
Pl, RIH, rssr fee. ]rd usot, I own., well moint.
lie..-POE 192. .,_.
$2095
1966 COLONY PARK
' pouu. 1t1. w9n. F11ll foct. aq11ip. + PS, Pl, suto.
tronu., RIH, 8s1ut. pwdr. blus w/conh-01tin9 vinyl
int., I own., .c1Nf11!Jy mointolnitd. Uc. TAZl62.
$2295
1967 OLDSM0BllE "98"
'4 dr. H.T. sttroc. med. bl11s mot. fin ., rich conlnl.
blue int., w/bl). fsndou rf. lulf. equip. w/11. *''"'·•
PS I 8, 6-woy sooh, olec. wltld., drivsn onty 27,000
1111, by orig, ,.,.,., l csr;f11lly "''int, Lie. TXUa 14.
$3495
1966 MERCURY
Montcl1ir 4 fir. H.T. Fully pwr. •quipt., it h•• tl11·110
t1p1 1yll. Pwdr. blu• w/mtd. li1111 i11t. Fie. 1ir con.,
l1nd•v roof. Shows wonderful care, TAW!il4.
$2495
•
ASK ABOUT OUR FREE
MAINTENANCE
'AUTO-LEAS~ "PLAN
..
•
. !;;.·~. -'.~~w~·:r9~§o~·~~s~~ ·s~ow you· Mbntego •
. ::.i .•. ;so· re~~o~~ly ·v~eed you ',~ eas~y afford
: . '.' aw· 'ro-1 ditio:ni~~-And .lotS ~ore!
'
. . THESE FINE RESALE -CARS .ARE BEAUTIFULLY
CARED .FOR LOCAL TRADE-INS! BUY NOW AND SAVE NOW AT JOHNSON'S.
•· Popular ·Terms .. ·· . ··Best Buys •Volume Prices
,1967. TORQNADO IOELUXEI
Gr1ci111 901d fin. w/11tin a.1k. l'!I, D1I. c.,11., full
pwr., f1c. 1ir coiid. ·1 OWft., lili.1 fi•w. Sliow1 ft1fid·
itu1 ctr•. Stock Humber 42~~
$3695
' ......
1965 MUSTANG
c_... Arc-tic wht. _w/blk'.. vi;yj . Int.,' f•ll ftc, •quip.
Incl. t . trtnJ,, R., H, PS. 16,000 ect. mil11. Trtdtd
., orig. 'owntr. u~oxs11s.
$1495
1-967· MERCURY · COLONY· ~ARK'..
f' pn1. ta. w.gn. Strlklnt Cercilln11I ,.; w/1•tin blk.
int., a11to. trtn• .. R&:H, t ir i ohd., PS, II, tilt 1tr. whl.
Ctr. fee, lrd 1eat, r119g'. 'rack, dual jit. ftilgttt, I
. -n. ctr, rrunt 111 to tpprtclat,. Lie. TXUl72.
$aa9$
1966 CHEVROLET
ltf A0ir 1ft. w9n. 6 °pt11. In tdclhl. to full ftc. 1q11ip.
it ht1 t , tran1., I'S, btr. It htt be1 ut. dt1trt btit•
t)lf. w/bronrt vfnyl in t.', I -•.; dri~tn ¥1Y 2),000
mll•s, look1 I drt.,.••-llk. fl•w •. Lie. TPK219 •.
. '$1195'
·"67 .CQNTINEN,TAL H.T. COUPE.
A"'•c. C1111•0 9rn. fin, w/contr. drk. Jyy 9old lthr.
Int.· All 111•. f11.1 a. tr1111., R I 1fr. tapt, htr, auto.
temp. coat. olr coml~ PS, Pl, PW; '-••Y P -•· I
own. tdfnt., tik11 111w, Dr/¥1111 20,000 fltl. TIY960.-....
FACTORY WAIRANTY $4195
'
' 1967 CHRYSLER NEWPORT
4 dr. ttd. Rich crttrii' iitt. w~I\:. lnt,"F.111\jf•c. t911Jp. • + t . trtn1., PS, Pl, .ftc. tlr cond. rWtil onty
12,000 ml. tlld trtd~ by<Orlt. owntr. Uc. VEGi<f7.
$2195
1963 CONflNENTAL
<f dr. 1.d. ltaut. Tthititn ro1t fin w/m1tch Hhr inf.
t . tr1n1., R&:H , f11lly 0 pwrd, w/wind., 6·wty 11tt., dr.,
brkt., ntw tlrt1, I own. meinf, in •ur 1•rv. dept.
Lie. ITD<fl9.
SAFE IUY 4r• i!its WARRANfY-'<·-~ ~
1965 T-BIRD COUPF'
Asftc 9old trl. w/mttch, int., t. tren1., R&:H, full
pwr., str.,. brk1., wl11d, 11tt. -V.ry attrtc, -in. Ste
to tpptKlttt. l ie. OWWl69.
First Falnily!.
• • '
:• THE FIRST FAMILY· OF AME~ICAN
CARDOM IS UNQUESTIONABLY
THE LINCOL'N/CONTINENTAL
FAMILY. THESI!' FINE CARS
... AND THE MERCURYS
AND QO\JGARS ~RE·
WAITING FOR Y · U'·
TODAY' AT JOHNS N'
..., r '.
& SON ••• GREAT PEOP~j~~. DEAL ·
••• .... .. :.· ·~
1967 MERCURY·. COUGAR COUPE
Pop. St11on'( yellow fln • ..,/,.ijvtt'&lk. vlnyf l11t, full
ftc: ••11lpt. A. trtnL, lltH; ,S, tta. lttd. ••htt. I
irhota •11/y J?,,000 flti.1.Jc._;li!IAl14.o--(·-~ -~ ..,., ~ ••
. ''
FACTOIY WARRANTY S2495
1966 CONTINENTAL H.T. COUPE
· ltt11t.' 1•9• tofd fin. w/l'flttch. int., bl .. lendt11 rf.
L111r. tqv{,t. "f/•. tr•ns .. UH, PS, Pl, Pwind., 6-wty
. '""'· Iott, fe:c. o!r co11d, + mt11y mor• attTac. fee',
lt11ftif111Uy ,;.,111tti11td by ttlf. -11. SQW90t.
· SAFE IUY '$3495 CIEST WARllANTY
. ' 1967 CONTINENTAL 4 DOOR SEDAN 1
Pop. ctmto 9rn. erl. w/drlc. ivy ••ld "tthr, Int: I
Ivy 9old l111dt11 rf. AU 111~. fee. A. ff'ens., htr. I ftc.
tlr cond., I'S, Pl, 6·woy pwr. 1t1t, It w/1ttrto ftpt
1y1t. Show• bt1t of ctrt by orl9. own. I clri¥111 onfy
2 l ,000 mil••· Lie. UCJ02 I. $4395. FACTORY WARRANTY .
1965 CONTINENTAL 4 DOOR SEDAN
Attrtc. JtmilCt11 ytli--w/it. 1..,. 9old lt~r. Int .. •rt
landtil rl., t . fr•n•., lllH, ·PS,, Pl, l'·wind., P 6•wty
1ttf. Trad•d by orjg. twn.~look1 I -flrlv11' ll~t ntw.
Uc. PIY117 . • ,·
SAFI IUY _ ·$28ft-$ 'CRISJ WAKRAim 'JI!'•
• . I '
• I ' I I .... j 1 '
I f' tl ,.. ...
' I • '
. ·9r.ange County's Oldest Authorized Li ncol rfl.Merc111y .• Detrter
• • " •
\
" '
-. J !· '
' ,
" ,
A·CH ..... ... ' •
'• •
s9ot.-1 '.TO; BE ON HARBOR
BOYLEYARD IN 'CONVENLENJ
. CQSTA MESA , ..
i..:.r::__ ______________ .... ___________ .. ----"'-~---· -.... ___ _._ ••
r~ .. . • •
! •
I
,
·------~~-------~ -· -. -
• Wedi M"1, Ne;t •ar ti, lW
BENEFIT BOB -Bob Hope appean In a 'concert
tonight at 9 p.m . on Channel 4 In color. It wu a
benefit show (previously taped) raising scholanblp
fundll for worthy minority students to attend Ibo
"qnlvenity of Southern California. Appearing will be
Glenn Cainiibe1J, Sergio Mendes and Brull '66, Bar-
bara McNair and others.
TELEVISION ·vmws
Here's One
For Holiday
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -I'm going to tout you
11 to a televiskm show in advance today. It is call·
.d "The Thanksgiving Visitor," and it will be seen
fl!anksgivlng day on ABC.TV. It is a sequel to the
same network's ''A Christmas Memory," which w~s
a boyhood reminiscence b.Y Truman Capote, and 1t
ii jull as magical and lyncal.
Once again, Capote :wt" narrate th~ tale .. Once
al:aln. Geraldine Page will star as his aging spmster
CQUSin -bis best friend. Once again, Capote and
Elelll).Or Perry had adapted the story. And once
again, producer-director Frank Perry guld~ the
proceedings with exquisite taste and care. It 1s won·
derful to W'8tdl the work ol a director llke Perry,
whoee beautifully conceived shots are devoted to
progressing the story rather than show off bis grasp
of clnematics.
I THINK YOU will love "The Thanksgiving
Vlslt<Jr," which is why I am giving you thia advance
notice. I loved It. In the flood of thous.ands of tel ..
vilion shows that pau on by over the years, few
bav• t.bal special something tJJtt· makel them lodge
fondly in one's memory. "A Christmas Memory,"
which won all kinda: of awards,· was one. And "The
Th:anksg!vlng Visitor" is another. Their unique
American flavor and universal values find their way
to a viewer's heart and sense of decency.
Like "A Christmas Memory," 11The Thanksgiv·
ing Visitor" is set in the rural Alabama of Capote's
boyhood -and the location shooting of both shows
adds so much to their effectiv:eness that it is diffi-
cult to Imagine them being .a good without this
authenticity. ''The Thanksgiving Visitor," however,
takes place about two years earlier, says Perry.
THIS MAKES for a subtle difference in the
character played by Miss Page. The actress notes
that in "A Christmas Memory" the spinster "has
been hurt by 10 many peop\e that she'• suspicious
of everybody but Buddy (the young boy who is
Oepote). In 'Thanksgiving Vlsltor' she's terribly
naive. Sbe goes out to everybody and then she gets
hurt."
II Is the spinster'• naivete, in fact, which helps.
sot the climax of "The Th1mksgivlng Visitor" in
motion. In the story, Buddy, a small, sensitive,
literate boy is constantly bullied by an older, bigger
youth named Odd Henderson. An uncle want& Bud·
dy to light the Henderson boy, so he does, but is beat up. But he Is really chagrined when the spin-
ster decides to lnvtte the bully to Thanksgiving din-
ner in hopes ol trying to bring out bis better side.
THE BULLY COMES, and before the dinner
Buddy sees him Impulsively take a brooch that
means a greal deal to the spin.tor, and put it in bis
pocket. At the dinner table, In front ol a large fam-
ily gathering, Buddy sees his chance for revenge -
and exposes and bwnlliatn the Henderson boy. Bui
be learns a leslOR when the spinster tries to protect
the guilty, embarraased bully ~ that tho wom
crime of all Is to commit an act of premeditated
cruelty against another bumao being,
.PP.nnis the M~e
.
)
\
~~ ..... -~--~-~--------~------~-...----~••~-•~•r-....._..-~·-----·--~---------· ---· -~· -
GOIDO
JUDGE PARKER
MOON MUWNS
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
MISS PEACH
.,... .......... _
--
Mfl..Lb, 6RIF! t tJON"r "nnNK "IOI lMOW AU..
THE ICM MBE!
' .
'
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W//11' D'lf( tlAJ.I. ·-~ H;_MJMll!
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'IOO KNOW VER
HORSE IS PAAl(£l)
llJ ·A ',NO ...o
PARKIN' Z0Nc1
ly Al Slllltlt
(;;;;\
~
t -
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATl.ONS
e NEWSPAPERS •
·---·-~---------~·~-~------~---------·-
•
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Som
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tow; 1a.• ~· CL
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Ev.ryone Hu
~hi... n..t
s..-o... a.. w,,,._
•
~· NOW ' IS THE TIME TO BUY
'HUNTINGTON IEACH '.OF ICE-.MJ..4455 . -'!! , •••••• ~ _, ....... ,....... • ,. 0,..11 • 'NEWPORT · llACH
-..,.,, Dr ... """'"
COSTA MESA
21" 14A11C11 ll.Yll • .
OAll.Y l'Wlf
You C.. W It,
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
1M NOTICH
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Read
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-ORANGE
COAST'S
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• ·If you'w if1cttvereCI tfie DAILY PILOT, yoq're •• worldly wise •• tlie
' , ,4 r Wrd1 on St. Mork'• Squere In Venice. They know where to find food for •
the body: And you ·have ~ou'!'a· the place to find food fo ~'the mind. _Th. ' ~ . DAILY.PILOT do••~'t spoon feed· you ~ith pep, either. The brlghte.+
i I • < , ' ~ ., I ~ ,
h"'el1 of n•tion•I on'ci'loc•I. n~• 1•re mixed with fhe ineetieat edl·
fiorlt1I p•901 ·•rid topped by a)I excitin9 mixture of feetures, .funpits ericf
· pliotoa fer de11ert. S~r~ up yo~r. r~o~in9 'di~t:with. the be_st •.
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' -'
' -... •
Just like th• pigeonf'enjoying • summer hoffdey with th• . . .
· ettractlve tourist who· brought the DAILY P\LOT to Venice,
• ,you'll find you're in 9ood company if, y~u take Into yo11r homo
end •tt,Y11ur own vacation "the.news •per noarly ev•\'YlltnO ,, . ; ~ -~ * ~
reads elon9 the Orang• Coast." • . ,
•
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COSTA MISA
S4tl041
WAlllfSS
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-11J!Ip,1 I I · ,
'
OIDIR
TODAYI
FUU PRlCE
-IOMYI
p\,ut TAX'I. LICIMll
FULL PRICE
--.
FACTORY
· -CL-DUMca:-SALI -, ·, ·:
OF •LIY Clilllt lr~Nl/IT-•
THE '69's , ARE COMING!
~-Or,. ccluntis Giiiy Shelby Am~lll Dt1ler, ~·~re
COOR'lltfllt _wltli the.fac!Ory to ·clur:;!Ht lest of_ tlie 68 111 . DllCOUNTs. 11na ... _.
Oii&• ON 'AMlalCA'IJIUIMU 1.
HleH PluoltMAllcl CAlll
CHKK .TODAY.I •
~ COUNTJ'• ' -
VOWMI FORD . DIALER' ' ,. ' ' . ' • 1WO Of 11511.WS TO~ llOIJl
TRANSPO'RTATION. SPECIALS .
Htw ._...... ti.,. -11· ':Irr,_-= "-. ..... le 1e .. Mlle. _.., ,u 11
~,, .. ·11-.
.......... MfY' ....... (OH .. ...,, ......
~~ ptf@I. ~ ., ~ ,.J4MOMMI
-· · '6S' O(JS VIST CIUtSIK ,
~ ............ lllMnlt!c, v ... """' ~I" .. ~ .,11. Slwa ....... c, · tu .. ~'MONIMs
· ''1 fOlll MTOl\l . . . ·, .ta· v..;~""""'"' ...... ~. 7JtmJu1n -...... ,, ... --.. , ' -~ "' .. _...,
''4 MHCUH W<!fOll 10 :PAK. ....r. Ptrt. ,.ii ....r. .. *· u ... ~,. r .. r .. ~
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'65 ....... noNAL -...-,..._ \,._II,~,._,~
-Niil 111t8 tlJ. Pll M MOt«HS ,
'6S -lll. V-1 , ""li~-........ Ml---•-"91MASfl~9"~wn9.
IZll Ml...... "' PllMMOMttl '6SVOWWAGIN . ....... , ..,..... ~. !"HT---:.Tl *"""tr""*-•
.... ""' NICI "I .. M MON'fttl
'6' MUS ANG MAIDTqP COUPl
eT ...... .,.-. _.... ................ ~ lllllV -slllc. ,..y~ ........ t!Wlt.
..... ML Nta ,. U MOHM
'M IAMllll WHOM
.,,...... .................... ~llOWflr,..., IUJlt74)
,... Ml P1tC1 128 'I'll • MotrmlS
'M UlllUAC 4 DOOi
.......... l"will .-W, •Ir GMll. (~ 7a.-..,i OI' ~
f ,IW 'Ml .... ..14 MONTHS . ,,,. T-WIDAU
~~.....,-. .......,~ ....... l:lJ,~·"-·"-*·
~ Ml .... ""' .. H MONTHI
I
ll1 Ut1:11:
1111 'I:·' . . . • t . ' l '
·CHICK IVERSON
PLAYS
' SWED·
" h the tune •
Ovr u1W YW'• h•v• ,._,,J the VW 16 poh1t stf•ty 1114
petforM1iw:• t.1t. An4 h""• ow 100-i 1111ra11 .. 1 th1t
Wt'll Nplir 1; ttpltcl tff Jftlr.,. reclt111Jc,al ,.f'hl fot
JO d1y1 or 1000 ,..u,,, Whlchev1r co111\1-fir1t. Whit
YIM',. ,t•tti.119 11 • cir th1t net only looh 11111-..t 11-.
• It r1111 th1t w1y1 too, .,. ~-_;,.., , .~ .........
,#'e111l11t, ff~111mlallon, rt1r 1J1l1, "front 1xl1 11M111 .. ll ...
ltr1Q sylf-..i, tlectrlc1I 1Jtt.111. •• ,
• 75 •
USED YW1 ,. ' -
.5299. TO _ $1999
• · POlSCHES •
. I
" .I 161 PORSCHE 911 AUTO,, '62 PORSCHE S-714 SPD 066 PORSCHE t 111 SPD '67 PORSCHE 912 I SPD 'll"PORSCfiE SPST 4 SfD , 166 PORSCHE 912 I $po · 59 PORSCHE CPE 4 Sl'D
'64 PORSCHE SPR 90 4 ' '62 PORSCHE· SUI' 8 4
SPD SPD
I Ca111pen • Tran~poi'ten • Panek I
'61 V.W. 9 PASS IUS
.'61 V.W. IUS ,
'64 V.W. ltiS SUNRQOF 067 V.W. OLX't PA$$ IUS
'64 V.W. CAMPER "
'6' V.W. DLX
9 PASS IUS
'67 V.W. C MPER
Cu1t-tep, m•1 wh"l1, •reel
•hew 1topp•r •
$1999
673-1190 549·0303
1970· Harb!ir llvcl,, COiia .M-
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3lllO w~eout Hwl • * "-• Yo!Yos. * ~!im -~.:T .:::161 .• ~~~ ~
&l2-94lli ·' . ~"" 196' vw Herti Friedlinlcler .. Authoil>ed lllG Dooler ' •, , • r, . • , • •
A .. s ..., . 13'1\IO -Bh•t· <...,, 2 > -'6Z c.._ v.a ._, s LE ·•· . un . ' 2 ·bib So. G.G. Fwy. .,. ... . ~lo,. HHlor '; .891-'IS66 . !i37-; ~ ·( •
'61 Alpine, Jlu!illll red 'WI'!' 1~ ~7J:S'o_ndltlon R C . ·R·;~ • 9620 l'opu!fr l/4f0p. .... Cr/J· w/ wire~ Lictlma .. · ~ ace lrt,. 1111111• 'tact. "AIR COND.," PIG,
Kelly. l!li.e..-.... IZIJS ' 613-1\132 RACE ~ H PJOO. pwr.loteorlbrta'., etc. -·°"' -EllO-IPrlce£$1&116 111 vw. '*· ,,. old. '!lo• Sprite s.c.c.k ._i. see. u._,r ,;-;.."= """:
. , Condttlod:_ •in • (!Ut!,92,000 * ~ · * :_: ... IGv.Jl . ney "
ml. $12Zl •• C8ll 13T--3885 ;aft : • . ' ' ... ~. ~-· ' · .Maroru. ~ g Pit, -alt 9 AM : A · ' $995 'I
TOYOTA ~_;· ...... vw, nowv ,.l>dlt -· .... W•-t71IO i.t c.r '°!_ .. ™--Bhjl.
. Ph. 839-l1tl0 -now;comp. ·,.uow •, "WE 'PlY .C.UH JOHNSON It SON ~ ---.. 1'-· -.... ~' ~ FOii . YOUR CAlt ,. -L!Jlooln.~ 1 ' . . ~·-' -. ILUE CHIP ' Coltl .. ...., Broneh ' " ., TOYOTA • ' 19'5 "!' !IUI· Sunroof. AUT'O 'S·•n•5 19'1-BM. 1141,'ltllO
1 , a.uo; ~ o w.n er, lllt.5 ,62 CHEV Impala SS. lll(pb,
TOYOTA?· $1llll. -~ 0111~!"" =·eonv•'*'~am
w. 11ove..,.. \\in 'Iii vw Sedan, "'"'· "": 642,SlOO ·-·· · :
SEEUS.JSi'ORLASI'-·llbnm.OOO ~=~rood· •-w111 a-'S60...2drSed.3•-8tir SEJC. US! 1 •\ • ' ' ~· $225. '58 Cad f l dr Dlvml • 'l '59 VW with chrome rlml . power $21S er lklt ._.
. ... ----.S'/3 y:" yon...::::;;: 540-)253 alt 5'30.
alter 5 p.m. C,. ~ 'cin Ra!~ 1961 EL CAMINO. Aulo; -
'ta, VW VIII. NIW 1liOO en-673•1 J 90 bralcH; new -; -ame, ~ panelled. • Lo mllet. Just timed.' $111).
. fOYOTA'VOL)!O $1000. • ~· • r IMPORTS WANl'ED -tielore & pm. '
119111' ~. cJ,r, -llll! VW, oti1!Jia1 owner, xbrt °"""' qonntiH '63 IMPAJ+ • "°'" Jilnl ~ 'l'OYOTA. Und-<lWel'---* 8">-1548 * TOP I BUYER top, )Jke ~L-33,000 -
-..., 22,DeD mlln. 12,150 PLACE"°"' """' Id ""'"° llILLutl'.::!l ~arA ml. Atr, Kltl pol' lira.
er Beat. Otter. ts.1&-~7& n5 tti1eJ ~.~ ;_D~Y H. Be&ch. -'Ph. 8C7-& S11fiO. 64S-8740
A. Calllomia Sl•J!J! _ PILOT ~ ~·· , 'Ill Ql&VY.EI Cimino, olr,
. '
. . , . .,.....,u~c' -. .._ 'PWr 1rb a-· xlat ~-~· --~-=~-----.. ---.-.w--·---· . ' . Beat clfer! .....
iiili QIEVY • CJ. -Geed-1311!1, " \s 1.15-WO
"'OIEYY ~ ._
-llJlllL --
·.'"OUR · I 11 ·--· THANKl09YING SPICIAL''.·
lni~_y · yo~r · · i.Cci'r · 1
I PllL •
Ono Cor, On. Price,' 3 Plys Only, Prl. •.Sit, • Sult • ... .. .,.... .. •.' 11 ~:.'::·· -~ ....
' "·l ' I
'
lrand Niew
'61 Javelin
co..-r
'II Q)llE'> CALIENTll:
' lllD • ...,.. d!S">t r,. _ ....... -_...,, ... -· ---eotmNENTAL1 ""' _. •II -~=t-~· .......... -----~
_ ..
Ill
COIYAll -
I •SALE • Nlw c.; ..... .. , ... -''2 c:Mw. Moua
1N9 1• awl 8lli w..._ Au• • _,....._..,. -""""-Lit-OAJllt, '1111
Hmi••r •••· . $691 -ELMORE • "IDNI -642-6023 ' .... '
--·-____ ... __ . --·--·-· --·-· -· ·-·---··------~----·~·---....................... ___ .............. -......... -.. --~···-·------· --~-·--~-·----------.... .,.. .
•
SPECIAL LOW PRICES ON EACH AND EVERY CAR, HIGHEST TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES, EXCELLENT SELECTION. -\ .
---OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM-. ---.
1968 COUPE DE Vitt~ ,
. •
Thl1 Cadillac motorcar 11 fini1hed tn Grecian white $
with Royal blue padded tor. and the interior i1 in ele·
gant blue decor cloth and eather. Fully equipped with
all of C.dillac:'1 fine1t feature11 inc:ludin9 power steer-
n;, pow., brakes, power 1eat1, power windo~f. 1in9el
1ffkin9 ,..dio, and of coun•, Cadillac's automatic: air
~onditionln9. 4929
'65 CADILLAC
DeVllle Convertible. A •tunnin&: Roman red
exterior with a brand new white top lind ~
full le21ther ln~r. Hu all the popular Cad~
Ulac power features includlni brakes. 1tftr. tna:. aeat, wlndowB, and ot ooune factory alr
condltlonlnc. This corieoua automobl.le baa been driven only a few careful mllea and 11
1n outatandlng condition. (SBF763)
SALE PRICED
'67 CONTINENTAL
A. beautlful turquoise 4 door with turquo1ae
leather interior. All the popular pcywer U&ilta
Including power steering • bn.ku, ~.
'Reta, factory a1r conditioning. Th1I car b ab-
solutely EOl'&'.eou&. (TQM771)
SALi $3777 PllCID
.,. '67 CADILLAC
Coope de \TUle. Beauutul Monterey Green f:ln-
bh with Black vinyl roof and full leather in-
terior. Full Cadillac power lncludin&: power
vent window. and or cow.. factor7 ak cen-dltloalD(. (9246)
' 'W,. $4222 PllCI
'67 CHEVROLET
Bel-Air Station Wqon. 'nu. lovel,y Sudan
help 1tation wqon ll fuUy eq~ with
automatic trarwnluon, power 1 , power
bra.bl, radio and beater, whit. w.fk,
'65 SEDAN DE VILLE
rtnlabed bl • beautiful Baroque Gold with
belie padded t.op and beige leather Jntcior ·
Powtt 1teerina, power brakes. power win-
dowa, power door loclu, power vmt windows,
Wt and tell!SCO(Jic 1tttring wheel, AM -FM
radio and Cadillac Factory Air Conditioner.
(SJM172)
SALi $2666 PRICI
'65 PONTIAC
Grand Prlx. Automatic transmlasloD, power
11.ffrtna:, power brakes, radio and heat@?', buc-
ket aeata, center console, tachometer, white
~ walU!Ht. COSX'753)
. , SALi $1333 PRICI
166 CADILLAC
Coupe 4e Ville. Solld rreen flnhh with ll'ftn
leathet and nylon interior. Full Cadillac poW-
er equipment plw factory air condltionin1,
Ult·1teerlng wheel, power door locks. 6 way
seat &nd many other ot the extru offered by
CadPIM! (TAX395) .
~ ,$3333 ,;;~.·-
'61 CADILLAC
I -'
$
NABERS
·CADILLAC
HAS THE LARGEST SELECTION
OF LA TE MODEL, PREVIOUSLY
OWNED CADILLACS IN ALL
OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
THESE CADILLACS ARE ALL
SPECIALLY P R I CED RIGHT
NOW DURING THIS HUGE
SALE!
4 a Dorldos
21 '68 (pe, & Sed. De VIII es
16 '67 Cpe. & Seti. l>e Vllles
8 '66 Cpe. & Seti. De Vi lies
9 '65 Cpe. & Seel. De VIII es
6 '64 (pt. & Sed. De Vllles
n. •• ,.., pep11l•r El D•r•cl•. Flnhhed In t.1~11• 10IJ wftli
P it• p•clcfH r••' •ntl .. !cl lflhrier. Tiit wti.•I. p•w•r ....,._
lllf. power br••••• p•w•r win.I-•, power tMt, ,_., ""'*
wlnclow•, p•w•r hi111k llcl rel•••• •ncl 111•11J 111~ l11ory ,....
•r f••f11N1 l•cl11clli11 C..llll1c fiCt.,., •Ir 1Wlff•11l11t ......
hr t•t here fl,,t •n tfiis h111ty. VTLJ67
166 CONTINENTAL
GouPe. 'I'MN two bee.utlful autombllet both ,
have all el the J>OPU].ar power features and
1actary air condltloiilng. Both have all leather
interior an4 u-e in excellent condltlorL Take
your pick of theM outstandin&: can at a price
)'OU won't believe. (RPG930J
SALE PRICED
'65 THUNDERBIRD
Landau. A beautiful powder blue T-Blrd with
the white landau root all vteyl lnterlor. Full
power equi~ent lncludlna: power brake• -
pawer •teert.n& -power windows. lXJWer seat
and of coune factory air cond1Uonln1-11tia 11
an outatandlns-car at outatand.ln&' savinp.
~tter hurry on lh1I one. CMPPl.21)
$1888
'65 CHEVROLET
Impala Coupe. Sllver blue with black vleyl
trim. Economical 283 V8, power 1teerln&o
radio, h!!~...-!""hlte wall tiru. Exoeptlonal value; (n....,..,J.. " ·
SALi $1333 PllCI
'66 THUNDERBIRD
'63 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille. Beautttplly ftnllbed in a l1znl
.,... -with m&tdllni ...... cloth an4 leather lnt.erior. Powtt 1teerlb1o pcnWr'
brakes, power windows, power Hat. power ..
vent windowt, Cadillac'• famowi factory Ur
condltionlng. You must tee lh1I one to reaD;r
appreciate what a beautiful automobile lt a.
CJWF019J
SALi $1333 PllCI
'66 CADILLAC
sman nevme. Sudan belie in color wltb. ·
belp leather Interior. Hu power 1teerl.nl. -.. -. ----~ power vent wlndowl:, and IJl-N radio. J'M>
tory air condltlonlna: Eld much, much merer.
'ndl one won't bl· hen 1onc at th1I price. • (SQl!mJ
$3333
16~ CADILLAC
Sedan DeVUle. A lhimmeriq S..tin lllftr a..
tmor 'With cloth and leather interior. Pcnnr
•teerina-braktl--w:&nddwMeat and factclr7 air
""""'-'4 -1.oiot!J.-n -,., -.t· (,,.,,.,,) ~~ ~-
uU· $888 PllCI
'66 CHRYSLER
lua:pae i::ack. power rear window. ~ptlon· al car. (TRKl.10)
SALi $1999 PllCI
Thll little jey.>ei is ab&olutely 1rnmaculate. A. Coupe 0. VllJ ........ fully equipped With
automatic tra.namjulon, power lf:e-ering, powtt brakes, radio and heater. Hu a beautiful
cloth. and ltather interior. LocaD;y drtven ......,.PQft. CllFP267l
The 1PortY 2 door hardtop fully equipped with
power ltel!.rln&. ~r bn.Jcu1 power win-
dOWI, power lel.t ed J'ord'I DUnOUI factory
air condltion1n1. A. beautiful Ntin lllwr ex. 6 Oiiier CICIHllCS -.. with -· vinyl lntmo•. cRTl1339J SALE PRICED SA~ $2444 PllCID
Newport 4 door hardtop. CUhnMTe ff'Ol'7 "'1121
black vin,yl top and matchina: black interlcr,
automatic, power 1teerlna. power lnk-. radio and heater, white ~ wall Unm. air
cond!tionlns, 2',000 mUt1. Lacial t owmr car.
Immaculate. (UOF865)) '
SA'LE' PRICED
-------SALES DEPARTMENT ·oPEN-------
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROU6H SUNDAY, DECEMBER I, 1'61
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
YOUR FACTO~Y AUTHORIZED CADII.J.AC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARJJOR AREA .
·N.ABERS
• 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540 .. 9100 ' '
J~rtllP Lll I
• )l11;p ;1,: '
I ) 'l"' -l t. I ~· LI ( I
11 11p11 1 [ o,
-~----· --...__ -----.~~-----~---·--·-..-
,.
• ,
1
•
, ~LY. PU.DT
t
~ --._,~·=-·-·-•~·--· -----·-·~•~•-••w...,+...,•,.=-• .. ,.., .. _, +"> •• ,...,._, •o0--4..,oo""*'"""'"""-L'""' _ _,,_ •. uw=-•~•••,...=--•...,o•w---=•=-••-•oo:w--•-=-• -·-·~---....... -~---.
Wed.....,, -V 1 1968
"64 CHEVROLET
Monz:a. Radio •nd Heet•r, 4 speed
trensmis1ion. IEMC978) 20%. down
'65 MUSTANG
va, 4 speed tren1mission, r•dio end
heater, .1NOM507l 20 i' •. dn. or trede.
'64 CHEVROLET
Melib1.1 2 Or HT. VS, euto., pwr. steer.,
R&H , WSW, factory eir. ,IVZU709l
20 j'. down or tr1de,
'63 CHEVROLET
Nov• 4 Dr. 6 pass wagon. 6 cyl., auto.,
radio, heater, white wells. IJMH745)
20 "· down or trade,
114 Pll MO, ,I. 24 MO.
$37 Pll MO, 24 MO.
$777.:::
$34 Pll MO, 24 MO,
'24 PH MO. 24 WO .
. . . I ·-' ....... ""
' . •
Here It Is • , • Our Bre11k11w11y Price on 11 ·New
1969 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
:This beautiful limelite green haidt.op .coupe
is equipped with Hydra m11tic, FM-AM radio,
power steering, power disc brakes, air condition-
ing, dlx seat belts, headrests, visor .mll'Tors, soft.
ray glass, power wihdows, fron.t floor mats, re-
mote control outside mirror, hidden windshield
wipers, hidden-in-the-windshield 11ntanna, "400 cubic
inch engine ( 350 hp, that is), an.d .all •the
standard deluxe Grand Prix accessories •
• •
'67 BUfCK $46' .,_7 +. !~ Slr.yl•rk convert .. vs, .auto~ pwr, 1teer. . I lg _ r .
Rud;o, hHhr, WSW, l2llAAI. 20.% ·J •53 PU ,llO,
JI MO.
down or tred•.
'66 CHEVROLET
lmp•le 2 Dr. H.T. VS, •uto., power
st•erin9, redio, he•ter, WSW. IRQH.;
5 78 l 20 i' •. down or trede.
'63 CADILLAC
El Ooredo convert. Hydrem~tic, power
1teerin9, R&H, WSW, fee. a ir, ,(OOf..
347) 20i'. down or frede.
'65 BONNEVILLE
Coupe. VS, euto., power steer., r1dio,
heater, WSW, factory air..,JPIW7411
I
.. ·s1577 T _" ~ ti:
'58 PP. l".0. JI WO.
57.77 +Too .....
'34 l'QMO, 24 WO.
~477t~ ·$5··3 PllMO.· ' -11--..0 •. ~ ------. 20 % down or tr•de.
'65 CHEVROLET
lmp•l• 2 Dr. H.T. VI, 4 speed, power
steerin9, radio, heater, IXSRl 11 l
20 i'. down or trade.
'36 Pll MO. JO MO.
'66 GRAND PRIX
Hydra m•fic, power 1teer. & brelr:es,
R&:H, wsw, fact, eir,. power, windowi.
I UZG 194 I 201". down or tr~•· ! .
0 ' ...
• •
'65 FoRD
Custom 4 Dr, seden, VI, automatic,
radio, heater, wfiite wells.. INMK527)
20 %: down or lrodo.
'65 FORD XL
Convertible. VI, eutometie., power
steering, WSW, R&:H, fectory eir.
IXEX406) lOY •. down or trad ..
'64 CADILLAC
Saden DeVille, Full power end fectory
•ir conditioning. ,(Pl36BI 20%; down
or: tracl ..
'66 PONTIAC
Bonneville 4 Dr h•rdtop. Automatic,
PS, Pl, RIH, fact, elr, brou9hem int.
ISBW296) 20 %. down or trede,
'66 FORD
Cc.istom 2 Dr. herdtop. va, •utom1tic,
pwr steer, r•dio, heater, WSW, (SJY.
' 9111 20%. down or trede.
,
5S77 t::
'37 -:::·
146 Pll MO, 21 WO.
5157.7 t~~
'58 Pll MO, • JO WO.
5187.71~
'58 Pit MO. J6 MO.