HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-01-17 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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DAILY PILOT
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11; "1969 I
YOL. 6J, NO. U. 4 JICT~S. a rAO~I
oo Mnch .Vi~kie? . . . I . ,
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. . . l)~etor~ .. S,~P.,~t
Wa'tr~.~ . ·11e,port
On .. .JFK .._.Beath
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U.S. .-PullOnt
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, . ' -• . ' · TOPL1'SS ·ViCKIE' BUSTED
From C.mpu• to Joli
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Viekie · •tndeeent!'
Col$tion
Government 3 · cosmonauts ' ~. ' . '
' . ' . .Beach Slaying Suspects
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LA Miri:i-Judge Levels Charges . ..
Topless dancer Vickie Drake, 1968 cam-"[ think my dancing is ln no-way
palgner for student body president at ' lewd," she added, "and as far a14ndecent
Slanford University, has been charged eiposure -. well -I don't think*' the human boey Is indecent." with indecent .exposure by a woman Miu Drlke last spring won the hearts
judge famed for presiding in minlSirts. of maQJ .Stanford students and, although
North Hollywood Police Department herioplell e1111pa!gn for tbe top atudent
vice investigators arrested the 22--ye,,,"• 80vermr;ent ipOt went bust, she" nearly
old bouffant blonde at the BocHl•1<6<> wm, a '"-larilf of their ballols too.
nijbtclub and booked her on a W'll1tDL Her nude campaign posters ll.lble--
S!&ned by Los Angeles Municipal <iurt qU8llly becalile collecfAl<'s !-·' 11114
Judge Joan Dempsey lllein,. the 4Dcu-slx>ck .,...,.1 tprUd ~ di&, iiltticl
meat charges' Miss Drake witll bqth campu&' ~le out over ~nD!nr
lewd conduct and indeceot •IJIOllft· _, "''-into the hlgbe8t cirdel she wss released oo im..boll and ., Academe. . •-ed to return before the bench Tues-Bir bold .ulement !hat -\ody daj to enter a plea in "the .t~ge&, ~ t1 a far« WU' ;nn
which she immidlatdy crlliciud dµrlog nl!j>OllSible f~ ~ pbock, perllapl, lhu
an interview. ~ ber:bareApp:olctiidcunpus"'*".
'1t's ridiculous," the CW"Yaceoul ~ .. , Joi:fge10eit; wbo·Js,med the CNUlll:dsA·
er cSeclar.ed at her Hollywood apartment. NllJlitig' :-~· e&me 1ltller' lillne . ' . . . ~~ ,.. i1Utyear cluO·• ....
Kin W'd . R . . ·rniniUdrtl : ltrt r,ctart m.t -..-'•· g 1 ow m ome· Jlh'81Cat · aell-<ll!eme edacalloa 1cr
women. ... - '
ROME (AP) -Tbe Widow of Dr: '. ~In, bJ lllo Wllf, dio-
Martin Luther King arrived in IW, fnUCb '~to' i mlnbtlf't~~ ~to receive an award and meet tbln Jto.. '\ibd,:v"nW11,;aal:IM
Pope Paul VI. r.obel.
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Also Asked
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Me.di cal FhidirigS :. Ba£·k
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Land Safely ...
· M~)l'.~)~'rbteeoi~~
IJn\lli!I'~ orbltli>g .cosmooaipa c;Oaie
tjowa • .., lllo ·windswept, ~
~ ul S-•vkbstan tpdv and clll'lblit,
'-; tbe!r s0)'11Z ,, """""all mw; ti:
depft> ~ ~· weal!l<f, ,
· Vlllaprs rul>ed u~ to !hem wiUi
ov=oata.lo prvtecl-,tliom froni f!ae1ley
blut ol: the ."!'ind .about . IAOO, milOI,
aoutheast of MO)ICOWr: i . •
•1.How· are you feelin'g, deai bofs!" ..,. vlllaROr (Sl;ed. • --• ·-
' "No wct;U, ~ _, 11." repUecl
t<>S~'Yel!My"I ~Vory ll&dl ~~lu(lpj~ 1"; • I
SoJUZ I llrilb ~k'tl.V
" (llee QIAIONAlll'lll .Ppip;S~ ; .. ,
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' ••• D.\11.Y .uT s frtdl\r,.,_11,1'69
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ConM•'• bachelor Prime MiDister Pierre EJliolt Trudeau trips light
-c wllll Felicity Devoo8blre at champagne 111pper following
ivyal charity premiere ol film "Funny Gill" ID London. Trudeau was
In town fur Commoawealtb Prime Milllaten Contenmce.
'.Pro• P .. e 1
COSMONAUTS ••
mnalned In orbil
Tbe comncmaut.s 1D the two spacecraft
performed the world'• fln;t manned dock·
lq lo space and crew b\osfer.
Tbe mission ........ here and abroad
as opening the WIJ to pennan<ftt space
-and -bl;y"' orbilal pla~
fomll far -and .... lnterpiaDelary
travoi.
Yellseyev and Yevgeoy Khnmov bad
the oo far unique <lperfence cl landing
Jn a different spacecraft from the one
In which they""" launched Wednesday. Toeetber with Vladimir Sbatalc>v they
rode Soyui t lo a ir...t laodlng point
....... P .. el
PARIS TALKS ..
to setUe their own problems."
Communist """"'"' said the North Ymnameae and Viet Con& c1e1,.ationa
will .... the allldal label "' the plbertng
be the "Paril cooference on Vietnam."
They declined lo say WI>)' It would not
be referred lo•• "peace conf~"
Nam Aid the OJmmunlll lllde -1d
pr....t a Dve-point agenda beaded by
the demand for an American witbdrawal
'!be other poinls are thooe alrwfy
adopted and made public by Ibo Viet
Cong -.ip tbroogb 1111 poUUcal arm,
the National Uberatlon Fronl 'nils calls
for the estabUshment of a broadly baaed
cabtnet In Saigon (c:oallUoo), !rte eJeo.
tiona lo the south, guaranteed neutrality
of the -haH of the C<Onby and gradual r..,nilkatlon with the north
thlw&I> peacdul meam.
DAILY PILOT .............. " .............. i..w--.... .._.,....,. ..... -CAU'°INIA
OllAHOI COAIT ,.U,\.llHINf COMP'ANY
"•'-•rt H. W11i
p,.~1 ...., P"W!ill'ltr
J,,,. l . Cwl•y
T~'"''' lt'••<ri1 "~ ... 11t•••t A. M11r,hl•• ~f•Ulot'
r1tl Hin•• ..... ""'"'-\ Dil'f<""
about 25 miles nc>rtbwest of Karaganda,
a steel-making city.
A recovery hellcopter spotted the Sc>yuz
ship even before it landed, the official
oews agency T~ reported.
The fourth counooaut, Volynov, CClt·
tinued orbiting throqgb the d11Y In Soy\11
S and wu DOI ..peeled to land before
Saturda)' DID~ wlleo Illa orbit paltam
would bring l!lm ov..-the same landing
area.
The Soviet press hailed the docking
c>f Soyuz 4 and Soyuz 5 and the crew
transfer as a big step toward assembly .
of permanent space platforms c>r
laboratories. Newspapera. stressed the
sclenttftc advantages of I c> n g-term
celestial and terreslrial observation and
sclenttflc work ln the vacwm of space.
Engineer Yurt Zenov, writing In Prav-
da, pictured future space platfonrui as
way stations for interplanetary flights.
Heft futun! 1pace tr•velert could train
in space coodiliom and get acclimatized
fc>r long space trips.
Forei.llJUI here pointed oul the
milila!y advaolage cl a pennaneot space
staUoo, bath fc>r sky4pYing and even
as a base for launching bombs.
And sc>me saw lhe Soyuz missions
as step toward 1 manned moon flight.s.
"The Soviet Union ii dellnltely sUU
interested in the moon race," a Western
diplomat said. "But lhey are doing it
µie hard way."
He said the assembly of a space plat·
form and development of spaceships to
fly !rom there to the moon woold be
an ertremely complex aperadc>n m..
volving mutiple launcblnp In contrast
to the single launcll technique of the
U.S. Apello program.
From So)'lll & In space Volynov
111U!!aged coogratulaUons lo his three
tamrades on their sale landing.
Tass reported be c:onUnued wllh ?Us
c>wn program oC tesll·aod observations,
noting lhe rtSUlt.s ln a logbook.
In a televisioo broadcast he told
viewers on earth, "everylhing is spic
and span oa bc>ard my ship. I feel
fine. I am engqed in reaearcb and
the Oigbt continues."
From Page 1
JANE DOE ...
involving a car taken without Ute owner's
knowledge.
DetecUve Sgt. Monty McKennon laid
loday !bat he had noth\1111 ofllclsl to
report ·on hi1 attempt kl lint Sianez:
and Hargrave to the mywt.ery cf Jane
Doe.
The 20 to i>year<ild woman was IU·
u.,Uy molested last ~h JI and left
to bleed to death th""'lb a r ...... ute
oot in the throat, aft.Ir being dumped
lnlo a moddy dl\ch. •
C.pt. Earle Robltalllo said 'lllllnday
that the 1\Hh\1111 death "' Mn. Man....,
a tlndly grandrnotber who wu uvqely
mutilated before Ille died, bean a mark·
eel limllarlty to the Jane Dot~ ~t. .. illt'"'81ional -v1a ~oj>lls and finlerprlnta malled lo ~~theU.S.,Mu
lco and Conada, Jaoe Dot nmaln& ..-a.v. 0. Rlllsell Shaw, putor of the
Finl Methodist Oiarcb of Huntington
Beach, w.u ICIM!ng over hts eource
ol mole!W Ibis momlllfl, prior to Jaoe
Doe's brief, I p.m. !bneral.
Composing the sennon was not euy.
· . uspec,ts Face Court Date·
In 8rutal Hunting.ton Murder
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' Sianez, 2S, cl 311 C!iy 91., an ollddd
""'ker; and Edward Roy ~vo, II,
.of 17392 Marten I...ane, an unemployed
laborer.
ArT<sted earlier ud -c1eored ol
any lnvo!V<mtot In the <rime -
Norman Coatney, ct, a Newport Beach
.........,. expert; and lllarpnla Dina ....
31, a waltreu.
Sianez' aparlmellt Is only Ill blocks
from the Dinger aparlmellL
'!be body of !In. -· 16, of llClll OUve AVe., wn --, lo a pool cl blood aloof lide bet ear en 17tll
Streel.
Detective Capt. Earle Rabltallle ...
ftQmlCed 'lbunday the releaae ltld
dlllnWal of charges aplnJt CoallJOJ
and Mias Dinger fpllowed armit eorlJ
lbat mornln& cl the -two suapeda. Bolh Coatney and Miis Dinger _,,
nleued by z p.m. 'llwnday.
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Two Senators
Support Bolsa
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Robitaille aald tbe police "have a atai.
meot and have physical evklence'~ ~
volving Slane% and Hargrave. Included
In the ~cal evidence Is a knlle bellev·
ed. to be the murder weapon.
Couple Free Again The accused were arrated afW' ID-
...ifgation of the llf4rJ cl a taii cab
driver that be bad plcked up a bloodJ
man early Monday morning afttt the
munler ud dn>ve him to m Clay st.
from 8th street and Orange Avmue.
about two miles from the murder ICtne
and about the aame distance from where Scientist, Girl Charged, Cleared Desalt Plant .• By~R.VINBEL
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<. 11o1sa h1aDd -1desalttng p1an~ .\ -nicl<et -..., his plaMed far .. arll8elll !siaocl 1o be abJWbe•> blonde lltl lrlond, .-ring
l!o!ill <4'111e -"' llantiogtoo B<iidJ. -Plldl ..., • faint, but lnquent
lliit tbl pmnlae cl ~ today from :':. ~:!17 = :~.::;. ,.lhe stale'a•two -llK n •• ~ ____.__Ylber" ,
. 1be Island plO)oel "'"' ~ by u..-.._. .. -
-Abu era-.. """ .aid thal be Today, tbeJ llaff been cleared. and Sen. George Murphy piaoned to Onoo llJIOll a lime, some detecllvos
wort together in an effort to breathe didn"t wort 1c> bard ta clear up coo-
new life into the salt water reclamaUc>n fllctlllg stories by atTeSted suspects,
project. when they had such solid circurutantial
Productian of about 50 million pllons evidence.
per day Qf Wilted .. water 11 .)~ Inn+• 1 1• people have betn jerked into
present gvol cl Illa Metrupulltaa w.,... elornllJ on a rougbWDWll rope with
Distrkt (llWD) trlltch bu aonounced a tree at Ibo Giber eod, er faced 1-l;y
plans to hive a plant In ·operaUoo In yurs lo prlaln with Just their bltltr
the ~ Is'-~ •-the_.._ --ledp: I dldn, do IL p.,,,_.. -w _,, t .. ~. '1!111 la tbe .. _ cl -t hap......, Key to the projoct Is -,, moo1 _, ,.........
all involved-or wllo haYe been lnvG!Yod In IWO _..,. .peoplt caught up lo
;n the projeet ._. J!'Allmaiu of the • -a!Plmare.
coil hovered U'OUlld ~ milllon .mtJic ~ =i;'::'.';;,.,.. ,
the planning stagtl far the 40-acre island J~e Walter W. Charamza toot Jess which was tc> house nuclear generating · f nna1 -~•-equipment capable of prodnclng elec· than ive minutes to give c> uuw.;c tricity. of issuance of camplaints and set
When costs--'·-·' to -..... m·iru·oo ·~ =!nary hearings durlng the West "'"'""' .. ~ u~ e County Judicial Court pr .. Southern Calilornia · Edison co., Bon Cftdlni. · " ·
Diego Gas aod Electric Co. ad La& N-Coatney, ct, of !2Sll FOiier
Angelos Departmeot cl Water and Power Roa~· La&· Alamllol, and lilarprela
dropped out of the prvjed leaving MWD Dlntllr, II;. cl :am Delante Streel,
alooe with the promlae cl oi>me federal lfmilmitoo ·Be.ocb; '""'"-ordered nJmn.
help. ed to -·Monday al t a.m. to eate<
MWD direct.on were lllOCellful Jn wi.D-~· lliDg ao exteosion Gf thl federal would have pleaded innocent government's assistance with aome flJ to ·the ,._ bllt marder cl Mn.
m1DJon until March St. but directors JfeNr S. ¥ar:kee. ~ ol lmB Olive Ave.,
would lite greater participation and ex· Huntington .Beach, since they consistent. Jy denied a.ay involvement tension c>! the aid over a period !<mg Aqd they were not involved, directly,
enc>lJlb to do advance plaruting. po!!Ce ~
Cranston said he will join those who 'Ibe graf-baired optometrist's recep-
are trylnc to get the project back on flonbt waa backed and slashed by stab
the tracts in some form, pointing oot wounda too numerous to count accu·
his belief that "desalting sea water c>f. rately _and left bleeding into a gutter
fe.red hope far alltviatlng water m 17th strM aear Palm Avenue Jut
1ho~ In mu such u Southern ~=nlpL~.._ a••··•-•
Callfornli." ~ --... --. ·-He jolal Reps. craJg Hosmer (II-Long er, scold! •kiri and 1111"11toctinp
Beach) and Richan! T. Hanna CD-rumpled and sagging bel.,. the ilnets-
Westminster) in pushing fc>r fUtl federal was led into court sborUy after 2 p.m. · · u · th !er · Wedntsday by a woman marshal. paruc1pa on Jn e wa proJect. The lone female defendant in the
Although costs will be high, Cranston prisoner's dock on t.he rigbt side oC the
observed that "in the Jcmg run it wauld Diviaion Three courtroom, she smiled
make a great deal or sen!fl. lt mJ&ht across at Coatney, then toward the
be cbea_per to desalt water than· to pair's attorney, Don McCl.rtln. of Costa
go tc> tJae Paclflc Northweat to divert Mesa.
Coatuq, ~ wtllla lldrt ad the abandooed car iued by the munlera'
C" 1rO:-~-~hide...: -~':ili, ..J6 Iba! )Ila Dln&<r .and
moved fmD a pOddy ..._. Into b-Coatney bad -armtod ....._Ibey
men! boldlng cells, sat with f'"11' otha: could not aplaln bow ber b1ood1 'llld
male .,.is-rs. · &lighUy damaged car happened to be
Judp Claramr.ll ran thlw&I> the "'"' missin( fmn ber gara1e oo the lll&ht
t.QIPU"J A!'IV!UJ)C'l!l'Dl ol CWendaDtl' "' the murder. 1
' ~·. dPb aqd --. . He apJalned Iba! Ibo bad told piilloe de p:.-Wt\11 bis ~ · Ibo ~ to the Pfve Polntl flllolililar
. Tia lint two --"" ..... Center -bor -at .. ~
---lrCll ...,._. • st. and -·-• p.m. l1oa, ao JDdge. Chara!oza delayed their Coatney arrived sooo therufttt and
caw and eontimied on wltb tbe Coatney parked his car oo the driveway apron and Dinger arraignmenls. hind . h McCartin asked that they be set Jan. directly be hers m sue a manner
20 and Judie C1anmza Ued &hat Depu-a.s tc> apparenUy prevent her car from
ty DIJttk:t Attorney Joho Krolllo bad being mnoved.
'asked that oo bail be set fc>t tbc two It appears nc>w that Sianez coukl ban defeodant.s. had a spare set of keys to Miss Dmpr'1
"We'ft dlacuued It," MeCartin repli<d, car and .had oaed the vehicle -
at wlltcb time Ibo Judi• agreed lo the b..-permlsafoo before.
d.Lstrict attorney's request that the pair It appears that he and Haruave ca
be kept in DlH>all custody, at least the night or the murder caretufiy rolled
1111UI tbeJr pn1Jm1narJ boar1n1-Cootney'1 car oot ol the drlvcn1 and
Grtmadnc. the -Ooalnel toot Miss Dinger'• blue ledan ud tbeo
llhoot 1111 -In •-1ift-. · polllod Coatney'• car back Into Ibo
Mia ~ aat on In the -UIMD driveway.
for a -·-llme,--Wft .tbt-lllllrm---The accused..Jbeo droYe·Mla lllnpr's
finally led ber back dowmlaln lo awall car toward 17th Street and Main -
the roturn ride lo Oranp Com!ly Jail. where It collided with the wblte ledan
She mnDed occulc>nally, once when driven by Mrs. Markee as she Mumed
a Youth. ..,. attmllng ~ p!'Oballoo home from the lauodromat at Five
meet!np, uted for lenleney on a new Pc>lnta.
criminal cbarJe, 111 be coo teep worldl!g 1be &liJht tramc accldeot evldllllly
and -bis junior""°"" -tlm. led dlroctly lo the -· '!be two Staodlng beside bis attaniey, be can touched briefly and there wu a
bluablnaly admitted Iba! -.ct· with pursuit doWIJ 17th Street and Mn.
his pro6itloo officer bad 1umed bis own Markee appareoUy aot out ol. her car,
career intermJ into that .area of IOcial or was draged oul
work:. She probably threatened to call pc>Uce
Coatney mn•lned in ~-~ with because of the accident and the tiller
other men. munJllllill occasionally tc> began tc> atab at her with a tnl!e poa;iblJ.
a romxl..faced. wa-.,-balred youth 5itting a pocket knife. ·
bellde blm, alao awaWq ao ~ A llalh by the killer ealJlbl the ._,
before Judge CbarllJma. U<lli&t al the Jelt ear and alJced --~~ ~u;:.abod~ ber -and -the blade Id! tbe
-If • beyOOd -an..y ... the Jelt side "' bar '** ctmim:f".n11a1 """"'°e 'Inked Coatner. the blood spurted betvlly fl'let tbe tlBlr.
and Mlll Dinger to the brutal crime. · For a """"""" the killer llood ..,
Ooe prime theor7 bnolvea a dl!puto 17th Street walchlng Mn. lla!toe reel
aver a su,ht. fender-bender auto ac--away bun him and back toward her
cident, lnvolvlng Mia Dinger's stolen car wlllch at1ll had the motor nmnlna
car. and beadlilh!s burning.
The reddlsh·halrod waltma' late model She twisted In a aeml<ircular paltem,
car wu found, blood-tterod and aban-blood lpurting In bu1e dropleta lrml
doned, ellhl blocta &WllY In a lonely ber throaL She fell a few lncbeo from
olllield area at llll Street and Ollve the !root bump..-cl her •llPUY damqod
A venue. car.
water to'-caJifornia." -------------------------------------
From Page 1
JFK AUTOPSY •.
of Ille oeck on the r;gbt -without
strltlng bone and the other of which
~entered the skull from behind and ex·
ploded its right side.
"The photographs and x-rays dlscus&ed
herein IUpporl the aboV9<!U0ted portion
of tho original auioply and the above-
quc>ted medical conclusions of the Warren
Cornmis&c>n Report ...
The original auioply wu performed
by a three-man team of naval surgeon•
headed by Dr. James J . HU!llel, theo
cmimander of the Navy Medical Corpe,
the night Kennedy wa1 tilled.
Tbe report cootlnued:
"Ooe bullet &truck the beet ol the
decedent'• bead well above the occlpltal
protuberance (ha .. of the aktlil), Baaed
upon the observation that be wu leaning
forward with his head -obliquely
to the left when this bullet struck, the
~p\18 and z.rays lndkato !bat tt
came from a site abc>ve aod alightly
le> his rigbL 'Ibis bullet fragmented after
entering the cranfum, c>De majar piece
of lls puslng lonrard and lat.nl17 to
pnxhl<e an ezploslve fracture of the
right side or the skull a.s it emerged
from the head"
l'rom P .. e 1
KIDNAPING. • •
of Mia Wrllh~ "'" c:1o1inC the restaurant when Black grabbed ber and
Ued ber up. He 1lole $110 !rem the
c..ti ttglster.
Miss Jamertc>n laid Black tc>ld her
he wu waiting fc>r a friend but whea
Miss Wright drove up, he went lo t h t
car, ~her wtth 1 kn!fe and
loOI: of!.
Miss Wrilht's -pe in San Frandaco
was disclORd by James Sheffler who
owns a house where the tn girls livt..
He said lbe pbooed him I r o m the
San Franclsoo Airport and be told ber
to Rtt oo a pl-for Onnae County.
She wu w..nnt poJamu and a red
hoooecoat wi>en il>ducted.
Stanton pnllce met her at the Ioctl al!J>ort. She wu then W!aring a whlto
awea!shlrt and ....., jeans.
Black 11 an u~vlct who wu .,,..
tenoed May 10, 11116 lo stato prlaon
for catrying 1 concealed wupon. He
was releued on • court order Dec.
8, 11168.
MID-SEASON
CONTINUES
HENREDON
QUALITY CHAIRS AT A
SPECIAL PRICE • , • •
STARTING AT $199. EACH
HENREDON UPHOLSTERY SALE
15°/o OFF ANY SPECIAL ORDER
SALE ALSO INCLUDES SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL. HENREDON,
HERITAGE, PLUS OTHER FINE LINES. ACCESSORIES, PICTURES & LAMPS INCLUDED.
EXCUISIVE DEALDS FOii: HlllRIDON -DllEXEL -HllUTAGE
90 DAYS NO !KnREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVID CUDIT
Nl!WPOIT BEACH
1121 w ... d1ff o.. 642.211SO
OfWll fl:IDAY "llL t
INl&IOlS
,,.,11rf1nal ........ LAot.nfA llAOI o.i..... M$ -c-Hwy. Anflabl1 , ID-NSID OIWI NIOAT 'Tl. t
... '" ........ " ...... c.., .... 1 ..
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N.y. Steeb-•
TEN 'CENTS
• • •
2 Arraigned , · Then,-Released-·in Beach De.a.th ·
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of._ Dalty Plllt Staff
A, morose rocket researcher and hia
strawberry blonde girl friend, wearing
twin pigtails and a faint, but frequent
smile, were formally charged Wednesday
in the throat-slash murder of a Hun-
lin8ton Beach grandl)IOlher.
Today, they have been cleared.
Once upon a ti.me, .some detectives
didA!t work so hard to clear up con.-
fll~ stories-by arrested suspects, -
-.
when they bad such oolld cJrcumstlllllal ·--l""ple have beeo jerktd Into,
eternity' on a rougbwove.n ,rope with
a tree at lbe other end, or fac<d lonelr
yean In prison with just their bitter
knowledge: I didn't do it.
This ls lhe story of whal happened
to two innocent people caught up in
a four-day nightmare.
Read-their names.·
Thea substitute )'Oll?S.
• <
'' Judge Walt« W.-a\aramr.a taok lea
than n~· mJm~ to l(va for/nal , DQtice of lalulni>t ol <lOlllplifllll · and aet
prellmJnary bearlnp· cllrin« 111e w .. 1
Orange . Cocmtir JUiltclll' · l:6urt , prO-
ceedlag. ' ' •
Norman Q>alnf)I, (!, <>I ..U..l FOiier
Read, Los Alainlloo, and ·lhr areta
Dinger, a, ol lll02 .. Delawa<e f1ne1, Hunllngtoe Beacll. wtre onfFed returo-
ed to COUJI Mon&y al.I a:ni,. to enl<r
their plea" ' , -Both would have . pleadocli: 111110\1ent
-·-
to the 1avag&-knl!e murder · of Mra:
lfester ·s. Mar:be;l5,1of 150B·Olive Ave.,
HunUngtoe Beach, slnc:e tbey eoll9lstent-
ly denied any involvement.
And they "'"' not' Involved, dlrectly, pollce conceded.
"You don't reallte '80methblg like that
can happen to you;' but lt sure can," the
petite, Belgian-born Miss Pinger satd,
aft.er achieving the near-miracle of free-
dom. ,
"~ P'!'Ple just did thei{ job," •he
* * *
ooatlnued, ·~ntly not bitter u Ille,
shaking exeperteace and planning no ..,
tallatory action against police.
"t:m'a very forgiving pef'IOD," abe u -
plained.
'lbe green.eyed waltress wu allowed~
'Illursday to see the two men for whom
she and Coatney ....,. lland-lns, dllrlilg
a bad dream which luted some ao boun.
"I looked at that teenaged kid and felt
sorry for him.'' she said. '~Wouldn't
you?"
* *
The gray-balred optomflrlll'l l'Ocep-·
tiooJst WU -backed and liashod bJ, olab
wounds too 1UUllel'Olll to count aceq..
rately and Jell bleedinf' Jato a, gutter
on 17th Street deaf Palm A-.last
Sunday night. .,
MW Dlllger-wearlag a black. neat·
er, scotch plald d:lrt anil-eyloa lllocJdnp·
rumpled and saggJag below the mees-
was led Jato court sbortly after I p.m.
(Seo JIELEABED, Page I)
* ·* *
Jane Doe Lead?
Beach Knifing Suspects . Qaestionefl,
DetecUves today\uestioned two men
charged with one knife murder about
the po.Wbillty they were also involved
In the March, 1968 throat-cultlog of the
woman .mown only as Jane Doe.
Ironically, long-delayed fun er a I
servicea •or . Jane Doe were being held
al the iame time, ju.st two blocks away
from police headqlfarters, in the Smith's
MorluBry Chapel.
. Keeping a tight hood on whatever
leads tbey may have, investigators said
to:day that, a .v~y; defiQite CQM.eQ:tion
exi!ts. between the Swidpy olgh! slaylhg
and the Htmtington Beach Jane :ooe-
iil!iiig3110iyfllg0.--· . --
A cab driver's tip Jed polic·e to arrest
Henry L. Sian:-z, 25, of 312 Clay si .. ,
*
Huntington Beach, and Edward R. Into a muddy ditch.
Hargrave, 18, of 17.m Marken Lane, Capt. Earle RobitaJUe said Tbunlday
Hwitlngton Beach, on Thursday. that lhe alasblng death of· Mn. Markee, They are suspected of tbe ruthleu· -slashing murder of . Mrs. Hester S. a kindly gran'1mother who was. .savagely:
Markee, 55, of 1508 Olive Ave., a~ mutilated before she died, bean a mark--
pareoUy over a minor traffic accidr.nt ed similarity to the Jane Doe cale.
involving a car taken without the owner'•· Despite an international · aearch vla
knowledge. photographs a!ld fingerprl!lts mailed .to
. Detective Sgt. Monty McKerµion said. law agencies 'throtighOuf tbe U. S.1 Mex·
today that be bad nothiq official t.Q; ico and Canada, Jane Doe remalns
report on his a'tempt to link Sianez untno"wn.
and Hargrave to the ID)'stery of Jano · Rev. G. Russell Shaw, paalor-. of the Doi. · • First Methodlat Cbrii'Ch ol Huntlngtoii
The 1.0 to 2>,year--Old woman YiaS sex-. Beach, wail scanning over bis ·lo!p'ee'
ufillY'l!IOl,.ted·lasrMareh· 1r-an<1-1e1~-!Jf·mat¢at this momlng, priot to'..Jene-_ __,
to bleed . W death through a razor-like Doe'• brief, 1 p.m. funeral. ·
cut· in the throat, after being dumped ComposinJ: the sermon wu not eaiy.
* * * * * 2 Face Murder Ch,arges
T(ilhing Things Over "" """'" . By wii.uAM REED about'two mll..,lrem •the murdl!I"....., miH~~her garBJ• on the 'Jilg11t
'' ; I It ·:i ':',· }\ . r-Ot '..,., .. l!flt•ff . . \Blldiabol&~e-llDlldlsUnce.tramwbete Mthe. lirder.1
'. I.
r-v•rnor Ro. ~-'d, R'eag' an ·'-• Acting ..... "'d•nt 's. : . ' ,.,,:.: .,, . ;'t•<i ;.:,;·1 .;:.,~<•;111._r/M!!M li.t-1 ,,,,i~ . , .. ~ bk>41i~lor; il!\!t-t""f-1•...t iO.itW~. ,.,1'HO . , . lbal d Md 1olil pellee ~ ' = ~ ,.,.., ..,. mot {Dr ti!• tint tlnle. "tl ·ns.,..~e cofi:., ~--. .,.~iii • waa tiiODC!r'''"~--~cv; • .,.,, ibe ib\;YO <ti! lhO rtfe Polnls Shopping
!. Hayakawa of San Francisco State College meet taining wards from a 1966 camt>af111r ~O<!Ch by . 1<~11<4' . ~.,lodali '!' •' ~;-Ylll .?llfnger'-l!ld ~-ber lioait ac 2IG6 Delaware
with newsmen Thursday in Sacramento after they Governor Reagan (see story.., page 4'}. · . fomW mur•• tM•cges·ln Wj;a' <>range ~Ooatney'lild~ ~ 1*sUae they SL~ re~ about I p.m. --------'---------'--....:..:====:...:.:.:.:...::.:::::::.;~-:!:..:·::._-.,.___ COUlllJ Munlclpai Court. could nOt explain bow her 'llloc>dt aild ~tne1 ,arrived ""°" tbereafter arid
Officers Seek
W estminsterite
In Charloff Case
Sheriffs officers today are seeking
a Westminster man whose name figured
prominently in the embezzlement trial
of former deputy public administrator
Arthur Charloff.
But the warrant issued for the arrest
of Richard Mathieu, 24. of 9432
Ambassador Drive, "has no bearing"
on the thefts of cash -and valuables
to which Charl off, 33, sucei!ssfully plead~
ed irmocent, Gapt. James Broadbelt said.
"Our warrant cifes Mathieu as being
responsible for forgeries which involved
the use of credit cards," Broadbelt said.
"We have no comment to make on
bis possible implication in thefts involved
in a case which is sWl open to pro--
secuUOn."
Mathieu was employed as a
warehouseman during the time that
Charloff took over the post vacated by
Louis T. V anscourt who is now serving
a 1 to 10 years sentence in state prison.
Vanscourt was convicted of embezzling
more than $14,000 in cash and valuables
from county estates.
Charges that Charloff, a fonner FBI
man, embezzled $239.67 in a similar
manner were abandoned with the ruling
of Superioe Court Judge H ow a r d
Cameron that there was not sufficient
evidence to proceed against him .
•
Two County Gls
Die in Viet War
Two Orange County GlJ are listed
among 28 serv icemen who recently died
in Vi~tnam, accordi ng to a roster reJeu.
ed by the Defense Oeprtment Thursday.
Armp Spec/4 Philip C. Erickson, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Erickson,
of 12782 Lucille Ave .. Garden Grove,
had been missing, but is now known
to have been killcit in combat.
Army Pfc. Tommy C. Donovan ti,
son d Mr. and Mrs. Tommy C. Donovan,
of 905 S. Western Ave., Anaheim, illed
of non-hostile causes, g o v e r nm en t
sources said.
Stock iUarkets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed irregularly lower today as profits
were taken on the advance earlier this
week. (Set quotations, Pages 18-19).
AcouBed m the Sunday murder •f sllgbtly damaged car happtliOd .,lo be , (Seo MURDER SUSPECl'S, Pare I)
Hester s. Markee are Henry Lopez · ·
State Senators to Support
Island Desalting Proposal
Sianez, 25, of 312 Clay St., an oilfield
worker; and Edward Roy Hargrave; 18,
ot 1'1192 Marten Lane, an unemployed
l&bortr. . 3 Sooiet Cosmonauts
Arrested earlier and now cleared~of
any involvement· in the crizpe. are Norman COatney; ·u, a Newpart Beach
aerospace expert; and Margareta Dinger 1 38, a walttes1. Back Home From Orbit
Bolsa Island nuclear desalting plant,
planned for an artificial island -to be
built off the coast of Huntington Beach,
got the promise of support today from
the state's two senators.
The island project was boosted by
Sen. Alan Cranston who said that he
and Sen. George Murphy planned to
work together in an effort to breathe
new life into the salt water reclamation
project.
Production of about 50 million gallons
per day of desalted sea water is the
present goal or the Metropolitan Water
District (MWD) which bas announced
plans to have a plant in operation in
the proposed island in the early 1970s.
Key to the project is money, most
all involved or who have been involved
in the project agree. Estimates of the
cost hovered around $44f million during
the planning stages for the 40-acre island
which wu to house nuclear generating
equipment capable of producing elec·
tricity.
When costs soared ·to $785 million the
Southern California Edison Co., San
Diego Gas and Electric Co. and Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power
dropped out of the project leaving Ml!'D
alone .with the plWli&e of some federal
help.
MWD directors were 'aueceuful in win·
Ding an ellenslon ·Of the · federal
government's asslstanct with' some f12
million until March 31, but directors
would like greater parUclpation and ex-
tension of the aid over a period loog
enough to do advance plannlng.
Cranston said he will join those who
are trying to get the project back on
the tracks in some fonn, pointing out
his belief that "desahlng sea water of-
fered hope for alleviating w a t er
shortages in areas !llCh as Southern
California. H
Slanel" aparlmant ls oaly 21>-blockl
from 'lhe Dinger apartment.
The'body of Mrs.' Markee, SS, of 1508 ,
Olive Ave., was' found Sundaytin a pool ·
of blood along aide her car on 17th
Street. .
Detective capt. Ef!:le Robitaille ...
nounced T!wnday \he re~ l!ld
dlomlasal of charges aglllnst Coatney
and Miss Dlllger followed arreat early
that morning of the second two SUJpeCls.
Beth QlatQey and Miss Dinger were
released by 2 p.m. Thursday.
Bobitallie 1aid the police "have a state-
ment and have phWcal evld~" in-
volving Sianez and Hargrave. Included
in the tibY!lcal evidence l.s a knife believ-
ed to be the murder weapon.
The accused were arreSted after in-
vestigation of the atory of a taxi cab
driver that be ,bad picked up a bloody ·
mall early Monday morning aftet. the
murder· and drove him to 312 Clay SL
from Ith Street and Orange Avenue,
MOSCOW (AP,) -'lbree of the Soviet
Uniqn's four or.biting ClOjmlonautl came
down· on the. windswept, mow-covered
ateppea of Kazakbatlm today and climbed
from their Soynz t -alt Into II·
degree beWir zero weather;
Wlager1 rushed up to them with
ovei<oats to protect-them from the Icy
blast of the wind aboul I~ miles
sootheaat of Moscow.
"How are you feeling, dear boys?"
one villager asked. ·
· "No words can eipresa; tt, 11 replied
coemonaut Aleief Y ellaeyev. "Very 1lad.
Eltr8mely happy.'· .
Soynz S with 00mpooaul Borf.! Volynov
remained In orbit.
The cotmoaauts Ill u.. ,two -aft
performed thew~ first manned dock·
lag Jn opace aild tramler.
~ mlssj_on '!_U ~ ~ IJ!ta-d aa opening the Way to _, _.
· laboralortel and aaaembly aUrbltal plat,
forms for lunar and even lllterpWietary
iavel.
Blind Boy to Get Help Yellseyev and Yevgeny Khnmov had
·the '"' far wilque ~'of landln1 ' J__ •
Knights Templar Eye Group .. to Pay Qperation: Cosu Huntington M~
can be rettored, The KnigbtJ Templar received waa lrom the lllmllngtoa Beach F~J.es $2 Million , By TERRY COVll.LE
Of ftlt D•f.IJ l"I• l..it
A plea for help to aid a blind Hun·
tlngton Beach boy was answered today
by the Knights Templar Eye Foundation,
Inc.
11te story of Felli GiJtierrez, publlsh,ed
In Tbunday's DAILY PIWI', turned
up a bright hope this' momlng, when
a member of the Knighls ·Templar, Com·
mandery No. 36, Santa Ana, said the
Foundation would pay all upense1 for
an eye operation on young FeUx il. the
specialist's report shows bis eyesight
can be restored.
Felix was to be-eiamlned at 11 a.m. todlY by-...... oplltbalmoloiJal Dr. JllCk
Golcfilldo of Los Alamilol. nr. Goldst.ia wlU try ' lo determine
ti medical ltteotlon can restore Felix'
vision. The boy now has ooe-quarter
vision in ooe eye. The other •ls completely
bUnd.
The KnigbtJ Templar member, who
l"'eferred ·lo remaiD unldeotllled, said
lf Dr. Goldstelll finds that Feliz• eye~ghl
Eye Fomtdatloo wiil pay 100 percont Union· High Schoel District which plac<d
of the standard surgical fee, hosp11a1 him bi a -1n Orang• 1o 1eam • Stn't fi..=er r..'-a· sh expenses, and expenses for glaues if Brallle. -.~ \!Y ~
needed to further correct his vision. A few days 1go a ~p of clthen1 • ' ;
The Foundation ii a national charity Jn the Cowicll for Conuminity Projects A Hunllngtilll. Beach· mall bu IUed
organization with headquarten 1n New baaed in westmtnster teamed ot FeliJ:• the City of Westmlnater Ud a truck
York. It has ao eye 'bani: and Iwilles lll>latloe. 11rtwr lor "mtllloll In a SupOrlor COOr1
many cases tuCb u Feliz wbere 'an They contacted Mn, Alice Medina, cemplslnt wlilcb cbarleo Ille defendants
indivldUal needs attention, but cannot directof ot the Huntington Beach Com-with jolnt respoMtbtlltyi for the death
afford the heavy eipenses. znunU1 Center, a neighbor of the Cutler· ol hil wife. \ • "
·The only requiremeots ire that a res fimtly, wbo explained the boy's pro-Robert A. MacMeeldn, lllll -
Knlghls Templar member sponsor the b1"". SL, atalel In Ille petition that his wlle,
indlvklual and 'that !Ill eye lpeclinst, Members of the oouncll maoaged to Soola, died 1111 Sepl. ff-Wben ber
Ill this cue Dr. Goldstein, c61ify ·that acquire the aervlCles a1· Dr. !loldstelll, auto colllded with 1 'lnlek drlvae by
villoo can be restored. wllboul chart{". They dfdn1 know what def~ VJnceel D. Joyce at the Jn.
Id' this polllt It la not known wbat the nm mp '!ould be, hut were lel'lleCtlm al llulbard ml Bola Slleets,
medlcaJ attention will be required .Jor determined to get the baU rolling. Westminster.
tS.yeaM>ld Felli<. He baa never beoo No .,... la the GuUerre1 family speakJ MacMeekia, who llals hll. cltlldren,
examined before by an eye specialilt English, '° Mrs. Medina and Dr. Jack Alan, Gary and JIU u joint plalntlllt,
Felli eyesight be(an fadjng when be Keol, pr .. Jdeat of the projects council, claims that traffic llghls at the &>
was ae.ven-yeara-oht: "Tliree yean qo have been esplAininc eventa to the fami· tenectioo were not funcUoalna correctly
hia famOy moved to •Runli.P,. Beech Jy. at the time al the crash. lie alleges
lrom Mmlen'ey, Meileo, '° Ille !lither Now, tbankl to the~Templar, care!.....,. on the part of ,lhO city
could Und better w~Jr . ' . " the~i>,k ~~'4, . ·"'&.~ \,~ Joyc~"~l9 II!' wlf•'• fatal · UJ>loilow Ille , ilii W e1ii1 ~ ~toclaJ 1 " "1r1Mo. . .. • , , <. "''~W'°•\ .,•'"' .... C~,-._.,,;(.J.,,,.~c .• , <I ' ' • I •.. ~l t..S-1• • '• ,. '"' ·" ' ' i • ·' •• --·--·-,,, . •tr'\J ... "1 .. .. ' • • • • ~ ' • • .. ..-... , :1· i , .. ·~·"(. . !-. .. · ~-~ .. ,,,,..!.. }''. -. i-r > r (.,!. •· ~~ .. ·\~vCi . r (· . -, 1~~ ·r !t. -~ ~ .• .. ~ ?\ • , :.., r • ~--·~ I, ~,.·\ 11 !.f '·~
. .J . ,. i;,, ~ ·' (
"':';""'· • '·' iJ·
In a different apacec;raft from -the one
Jn which they were launched Wednelllay.'
Together with Vladimir Sbatalov ·they
rode Soynz t to a' preset landing point
about 25 miles northwest of Karaglnd~, a sleel-maldng city.
A recovery helicopter spotted the l!<>ynz
ship even before It landed, the ofliclal
news agency TJSS reported •.
The fourth CMmonaut, Volynov, COD·
tlaued orb!Ung through the day In SOynz
5 and waa: not expected to land })e!ore
Saturday JD<Jl'nlng wben his orbit pattern
would bring bitn over the same. Jandlria:
area.
The Soviet press balled the docking
ol Soynz 4 and Sciynz s and the crew
transfer as a big etep toward aaaembly
of permanent OJ>OCO platforms or
laboratorles,_Newspapen...ll<tssed the"
scientific ~es of. Ion g-tenn
celestial arid temsiria1 obsen'ation and
scientific work in the vacuum of space.
Oraage
Weadler
' Depending on whether you
are an optimist·oria pessµnist,
it'll either be pertly sunny or
partly cloudy over tlie week•
end, with temperatures rang-
ing from 50' to 62 along the
coast. • INSmE-TODAY
Tht ke11 . matttr of life -
enzi,om<>-h<iw bern artijicially
produced' b11~ four tci(ntiris, in
... t1f th< r.•'"' •t •cit-""""'Plish ....... Pogo 18.
-b ~ .i:
"-"' D (,.......,.' II --. -. .ti .......... ' 1''-l+.IS ..... CMa • -. ---. -. -I . '
-·-1
.. ----_---....l~ • ~'i •• ,. .x_ ,/
\'•j\l ' .. ' • -4• • . r ·" ' ~f • · t .,.,
··--·--, __ ...:,_~~.:!.......!.__ •. ~!.
.. ----•• ' ,~)}, • • at
.• . . • pending Per S.tudent uuO&IO,m ·In .,;J"4 .... • ,
" ·: . BJ ,~ ::~;i!1NE · or.,,,. Coul Junior O>Uege Dlltrlcl : tW sunk lo a new tow -just about
· the lowest In Iha lla!Ao -la ipendlng
; DIOll')' 1111 atuden\J. ·
' J .... ~ Ila~ """'' )ljat ill . per . pup,ll eq>endllort the dJllrici last
· ff"!• r!l 82lld ool al Ill Calllornla JtdtJrCO e0)'8leml. , ,
• The cl ranked equally 11 low
-6Znd -tn a measure of teacher
. -ud cJasa ajzea. It .~~ • ~ aUght lmprovoment lrot1I the Jiit
. befote when the dlatrlct WU deed lul
in teacber pal' per d1yllm• ~ ·
The . aJannint, llOlf.l>odoin nnlt1np
-out in a llallsliclll r<pOrt • ~ • Orange Coul tn..iAoes WedpeedO)' nlgbt.
Whether T&llldlliS hove clW<&ed lw the ' currenl yw woo1 he !mown tmW dalto
.
.. a aw:r:--
Other -• ·Iha reporl """'
the dlstrlcl b.u, 'In' the •-ol Supt.
!(orman "-"steadily ......., tarpr while pl\IDltnl iower and lower oo the
xale d vtluel."
Tiit two wnpua -Or-Coast and
Qollltn .1\'lit ·-dlatrkl rlnkl u the
ninth llrleot · In the stale in da)'tlme enrollmetil. o{Wllh 'ovlllliotl enrollmen~
it rankl oeoond only ·to Loo Angelea.)
The SUMI)' abows the district has
1teadilf dec:IJ~ in the melllur~ al spen·
cllng on 'lludenta! -yean •So II nnkod lllh and eech year alnce bu
madly dropped unW ti ta aow and.
Tiit · .u.irlcl .\aat year spent on the
average $585 to educate each 1tudtnt.
Only lour dlalrtcll in · the 11111 apent
leu.
01atrict'• e1oaesl matdtinl Orange
Qlllfl.a11r111 .. • ...
followl : Perallto -... Ito; Pauilena -'718; Footh!JI -$717 ; Contra Colla -The other Important measuno to which
the district ranked so low refiecltl both
instructor . N1ar1u and class alzes. It
. Indicates the' dJ*1ct 1w ... of the
-COlllblnattGao In Uta '•!olo ol la. . saiariea and l'fOried cJuou. (Tbe lour
districtl that rank below it are all amall
districts ln agricultural« desert areaa.)
Oranae Coast.'1 lowest ranking was
in actmtntatraUve eosti ... ~ el. the
tlf Junior college dJa!rjcla. Tbe dlaUlcl
rlflked l&b Ito COii al "'l'PllU ud
lll!th in cost ol plant oper.Uon. ·
'Tbe c:ompai-btm were prel>lf"d by Dean al Research Franli l!opklni uainl
information, from Iha 1tato Bureau of
EdUCl~ IWcarcb.
. .
Prom Page l
RELEASED •• ·
Wednelday by a woman manhal 1
The lone female defendant lo s Uie
prllooor'1 ~ oo Ille riCJ>I 1lde ~~
!JI.-,_ *"'-Ibo ~
l<1'0lll al Coatne)', then lowlrd 1 th•
pair's attoroe7, J5on NcCartin. of c;o.,ta
Meaa. ' Coatney, wearing a white ahirt tand
"""" overcoaf wblcb he med lo hldt his
fa<:e from photographers wh11e tfeing
q1;oved from a paddy w1gon Into liue-
menl boldiDc celll, aat •Ith lour .-h<r
male prisoners. •
Judie Charamza ran thrOUl!h th<!~
tomary announcement of defendants'
constitutional rights and guarantee:!,
lhen proceeded with his caseload.
'The first two men called out were
uncertain about Uielr legal representa·
lion, so Judge Charamza deleyed their
cue1 and contlnued on wlth the CoatneY.
and Dinger arraignments.
McCartln asked that they be ae1· J8".
20 and Judge Charamza noted that Depu-
ty District Attorney John Kronin had
asked that no ball be 1et for tbo two
Beach Traffic ~=".il..:u....i ii," McCartln r<plled.
MURDER SUSPECTS at which time the judge agreed to the
• • • district attorney's request that the pair · Stud R buff be kept in no-bail custody, at least
parted bll car on the driveway apron
direcUy behind, berl 1n 111ch It. manner
aa to apparenu,. proveol her car from
beln1 removed. Jt appean now that Sianez could have
had a spare set or keys to Miss Dlnger's
car and had used the vehicle without
her permi.salon before.
It ~~ that be mi lfar&rlVI on
Ill< n1gbl ol the murder carelully roUed
Coatney's car out of the driveway and
~ Miss Dinger's blue sedan and then
Bandiu' News
pulbed Coatney's car back Into the y e 8 until their preliminary hearin&-
drlveway. Grimacing, the unshaven c.o8tney.
The accUHd then drove Mlu DiJlger's H ' ' · G" TOPLESS VICKI! BUSTED Obook his head in a negaUve manner. arh·our roup l'rom Compul to Jlill Miss Dinger sat on in the courtroom car toward 17th Stroet end Main street . for a ailort Ume, belbre the matron
where Jt collided with the white sedan finally led her back downstalrl to await
driven by Mrs. Markee as she returned v e k e ·•• d ' the return ride to Orange County Jail. ho fro ••· 1 d Fl Results of a trarnc survey of lhe ' t me m -~ aun romal al ve : .... 1e . D e .. en . . She milled occulonaily, once when Pointa. Huntington Harbour area will btl given • ._, ..._ a youth, now attending weetJy probaUon
The al1ght traffic accident evidently to the city council Monday, but residents meetings, asked for leniency OJl a new
led directly to the murder. Tbe two who complained of tratnc problema may criminal charge, BO be can keep working
csrs touched briefly and there was a not he happy with it. LA Min :-Judge Levels' Charges and conUnue h1a junior college eduolllon. pursuit down 17th Street and Mrs. V' Standing beside bis attcmey• be Markee apparently got out of her car, Councilmen meet at 4:30 p.m. ln coun· blushinily admJtted that copt'.ad with
or waa draued out. ell chambers of Memorial Hall, ~th Street Topleu dancer Vlct1e Drake, tMI ca.to-human body Is Indecent." bis probltlon offictr had turned h1I own
She probably threltened to call police and Pecan Avenue. paJgner for lbutent body prtaldent at Ml.sa DrUe lut aprlna: wen tbe hearts career interests JJJ,to that area of IOclal
because of. the accident and the killer Parents aaied the council for traffic Slantord. Unlvenity, bu been charged of many Stanford lludenta and, although work. ,,.
Bad-began to atab at her with a tnife posalbly controls, sidewalk.I, crosawalkl and with Indecent UPoJUre by a woman ber topleu campaJgn for the top student Coatney remained in the dock wtUi
Really a pocket knife. Judie lamed lar.preaidln1 in mJalUJr1a. other men, murmuring occulonaily lo
A ala.ah by the tiller cauaht the rectp-cro!!.l.ng guards to help clilldrea on their North Holly'Wbod Police Department government spot went bust, lhe nearly a round·faced, wavy-halrtd youth alttlng
Uontst at the Jelt ear and aUctd across way to Harbour. View School after a vice inveati&ators am.sled the 2f.year. won, a majcrlty of their baDota too. . beside him, also awaiting an appearance
$120 W th her throat and when the b!ada hit the child was ~lled in a. ~afflc accident. old bouf!aut blonde at the Boo-Ga-Loo Her nude campalgri posters tubae-before Judge Charamza. . OT arj.ery on the left &Ide of her neck The . traffic study ~ that four-way niahtclub ancf booted her on a warrant. quenUy became collector'1 Items and Huntington Beach detectlvea had re-
the blood spwted heavily over the killer. stop SJgns hav_e been wtalled at some !lgned by Loa Angeles Municipal Court shock waves apre~ from the rustle ·mained essentiallf_. tlgbt Upped about
Two armed robbers told a Westminster For a moment, the killer ltood on of the lntersechOlll near Davenpoi:t Drive Judge Jou Dempse)' Klein, the docu· campu1' quadrangle OUt over' &be .rolllng what -if 11\Yllllnl beyood toown
barmaid today they had "had ...,,., 17th Street wa!chlng Mn. Markee reel ::::idl SO)'hrook Line, bul that 't¢11c meal cbOllOI Mlaa Drlko with boUI woodsy envlronl into the h!peal clrclea clrcwnstantlal evidence-linked CololneY.
. f her than ooeedod to take $120 from away from him and back towarc her ea ahow that the lnteraec:Uon ot lewd conduct ... Jndecent exposure. d Academe. and .Ml&s Dinger to the brutal c:r1me. ~ ~fl ci: "'~t.e.r ._ --·--car--whleh-IUJl-had-the mot~,ter ~~~ soar& -~venpW\1li Drty~ -_abe_wu nluMf;l_on -.balLmf __ Her .l:x>Jd .alltemmt . .thaLltwlnt..bo _ _(}Jie .Prime theory lnY,olvu I ~-rea-· and headll hts bumln 1!1ee es1 UU:1.n percentOfl e na· ordered to return before the bench Tues-governmenl ls a .farce wu . more over a slight, fender-bender auto ac-
Nancy Murphy, an employee of the She tw~ lD 1 aer!i-elrcular pattern tionally accepted warrant. for a four day to enter a plea in the twin charges, re1p<>nsible for the shock, perhaps, than cident, involving Miss Dinger'• 1tolen
Circle In, 14091 Beach Blvd.1 &old poUce blood spurtln 1n hu e dro lets fro~ way stop. which lhe lmmecUately criticized during her bare approach to campus poUUcs. car.
two men peeked in the bar about 1:08 her throat s:e fell 1 g f · p h f "A no par~in~ zone along Saybrook an Interview. Judge Klein, who haued the complaint The reddi.sh-hllred waitress' late model . · ew inc es rom Lane is not 1uslilled and would be an "It'• ridiculous " ~e curvaceous danc· naming Vlclde came under some car was found, blood-spattered and aban-
tb1s mormn,r, then left. the front bumper of her slightly damaged extreme hardshlp on future residents er declared at bei-Hollywood apartment. criUcilln herself' Jut year due to wearing doned, eight blocks away in a lonely
Three minutes later they returned, car· . . of houses on that street. "I think my dancing ls in no way miniskirta in court and advocailng o!Uitld area at 21st Street and Olive
sat down and drank a couple of beers DingThe , killer jandumped bedackalfin~o ~~~ "Additional crosswalk• will be in1ta1led lewd," ahe added, "and as far as indecent physical sell-defeme educaUon for Avenue.
and chatted with her. er 1 car roar . mto l,UC on Saybrook at Davenport and on Daven· erposure -well -I don't think the women. A foot search by police located the nJght, finally parting the vehicle at 21st port and Edgewater at that Intersection. vehicle after Donald Carr, of 201 Loyola Then one aald, "do you tblnk Jt's
about time?"
The other turned to Miss Murphy and
aald, "I've got bad news for you."
'lbe men displayed two small plltals,
one posalbly 1 double barreled derringer.
and !old her lo Illy in Ill< mtroom
for five minutel. They left. with $120
or the bar's mpoty,
Tbe robben we.re described u in their
early J"J11. No vehicle wu observed Or
heard in the area.
Public. Def ender
May Be Alone
In Ray Trial
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -Ctlmlhsl
Collrl Judge W. Prelton Battle, laking
note of Per<y Foreman's conUnulng JI.
1neaa. todoy· onlered ShelbJ County
PubUc net.oder Hugh Slatllon Sr. to
prepare to defend James Earl Ray by
hlmaeJ( u Reoemcy.
In a five-mlnute CXl1rt aeaslort, Battle
commented that he had been notified
by a doctor treaUnJ Foreman, Ray's
chltl C!atnael, that the fained crlmlnai attorney was 1Il with influem.a and
pneumonia.
BatUt then ulted Stanton what
preparations had been made to bring
Ray to trill for the murder of Dr.
Marlin Luther King Jr. on March 3.
DAILY PI LOT
O«.f.HOI COAST l'Ull.llMtMG C.OMP'AN't
loloerl N. WeeJ
P'n110rtol •"" P'ubll""'
J.ck l. c~rley
Vl(t l'rHIClftll.,.,. CkMrel""""""
lh•111•1 ICe••il
(Ill""
Tito,,.11 A. Mti•l'~i""
IMM-"'ti i611W
Allterf W. let11 Willi•"' 11,,4
A&IOdelt H""'""''°" lra<I\ •dllW (Uy ltl!IW
H•ll ........... Offl.-
lOt II~ Street
M.111,., "°''''''1 r.o. ••• 1to, ti•••
0 .... -,.,.,... a.1<11: :n11 wttl .. lbf.e ........... ,.
COlll Mft1: »O Weil l1y S""I
--····· -· ... -r
Street and Olive Avenue in a deserted Crosswa.lb along Saybrook wUl be mort Road, Costa Mesa, found Mra. Markee'•
area of oll tanks. . clearly marked. c Th f J "ls M • body lying on ill aide in the beams
. Wednesday a ~ab driver told Hun· "The appropriate speed on Davenport ar e t ai arine of her car'a headlightJ. Unglon Beach police he had picked up Is 35 miles per houc. Lowering th~ · Tbe vkUm, described by heremployor,
a bloody fare who claimed he had been speed limit cannot be justified. Since Dr. Lo~ ~· Haselleld, as having a
1n a fight. He tooi him to a spot Saybrook Lane ls now beginning '° be A teenaged Camp Pendleton Marine Huntington Beach, had reported his 1966 to~ w~ way, was lnvolvecf in
just J'ia blocks from the townhouse apart. 8 realdenUal street as homes are built wbo apparenUy was get'ting a ride back convertible stolen from outside Kona a r ace! nt at nearby l7th and
ment of Miss Dlq:er. towering the speed limit to 25 mph to the hue from a Huntington Beach Lanes, 2699 Harbor Blvd., W'ly Wed· Main atreets ju& before the kllllni· Police worked through the ni&ht. ar· ts reeomended. !thou th 1 ~he waa not the type herself to argue. reatJn& both of the current auapects "Wanants fall far short of beini met man -w t e alter'• pennlsslon nesday. She is -was, I mean -absolutely
about 11:30 a.m. Tburaday at their homea. at any location for the city to hire W;~8!;~ted by Laguni Beach police p~~~~ c::i ~~h~y :e Tri:Jins\.e~~ one of the loveliest wom~n I know,''
Capt. Robitaille 11ld that Sianez ls an adult crossing patrol. Schoolboy patrol Pvt. Lee V. Hampton, 17, was then . So th La ··'d he !so 'ed :;aid the. operato.r of a Huntington Beach married and has: at least one child. Is recommended in u guna aru a carri secre~ar1al service whose daught.el! was
-_....:..::::.::...:::...:::...:=:...:::...:::::::_ _ _::...:=::::::::::::.:::·~------picked up by Costa Mesa police and credit cards and identification which a patient of Dr. Haselield.
E•lutn9e Club Helps
Tom 'Bulhard (1tandlng), Huntington Beach parkl 1upervlaor, and
Bob Terry, pasl president of Huntington Beach ExcbfDi• Club, dis·
play plaquu commemoraUng club's efforta In ralstnc !Umls for new
playground equipment at Wardlow and LeBanl Parlts. City officials
gave club large "thank you" Thursday. Plaques will ba placed In
parks.
tranlferred to Orange County Juvenile didn't fit him . "It's just 110 unbelievable, 11 1he con·
Hall, Olli a charge of grand theft of Military police placed a hold on the tinued, "that woman wa!I detoutly
an automobile. swpect, pending action by juvenile religious, a wonderful person who
Tom Foster, of '19912 Piccadilly Lane, authorities. literally bad a halo of goodnen."
~.--.-iiz_....---.-.._._ •• ..-i: ...... ._ • ..,._.....,~
I '
-..I
MID-SEASON
CONTINUES
HENREDON
QUALITY CHAIRS AT A
SPECIAL PRICE • • • .
STARTING AT $199. EACH
HENREDON UPHOLSTERY SALE
15°/o Off ANY SPECIAL ORDER
SALE AL.SO INCLUDES SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL, HENREDON
HERITAGE. PLUS OTHER FINE LINES. ACCESSORIES, PICTURES I IAMPS lNCtUDED.
EXCl.UIM D!ALZRl l'Oll: H•NRIDON-DRIXEL-HIRITAO•
to DAYS NO INTaREST-LONGlll TlllMS AYAILAaLll ON APPROVED UIO!T
lllWPOaT UACH
1727 W-.llff Dr. 641"2mO
W.IUMY,._t
""'•sel-.1 I I•"'
DllftMra
A\tal1a•la AtD NM> ..... , ....................... ..
\ I
1
• •
• ; th•
~ l the
;osta
I
•and
ibis ~ing
laJe-
;hor
were
enta-
lbelr
1tneY,
Jan.
>epu-
had
two
illed,
' the pair
least
atney,
IOOI!\
Itron
1wait
IL
when
otlnn -'king
lion.
h• with own
oclal
with
r~ ance
lre-
ibout
IOWD
ilneY.
~--..,.
tolen
IOdel
then.
... 1y
lllve
the
iyola .....
:ams
>ytr,
1~ end
"· rtely
rJ'lll,''
each
was
COii·
>11Uy
who
Alamitos Bay Giv~n
Top World Trophy
' '
Alaml!Oe Bay Yacht Club, Long Beach, has become the
first American yacht club to
win the annual St. P.,..
burg, Fla. Yacht Club trophy
for outstanding regatta n::um-
agement.
ABYC won the award In
11161 fnr ti. handling ol the
lour-sided U.S. National Snipe
chainplon!hlpe last Aug\111.
1be trOPllY b donated by the Florida · yachl club wltb
the North American Yachl
Activity Picking Up
On Yachting Front
Activity on the yachUng
front increases in Southern
California th.is weekend witb
some nine events scheduled
from San Diego to Santa
Barbara.
In Newport Harbor the in-
tertt centers on Balboa
Ya Club's Winter Regatta
for ll classes and the· con-
tinuance of Lido Isle Yacht
Club's Adult Sabot Series.
In the Long Beach-Los
Angeles area Long Beach
Yacht Club is sponsoring its
first event of the new year
with the New Year Regatta
for Ocean Racing, Midget
Ocean Racing and Pacific
Handicap b o a t s. Cabrillo
Beach Yacht Club otages the
third race of its Winter Series
on SJ,mday.
Del Rey Yacht Club will
play host to the Lido-Ifs In
it.s Intra.Qub Regatta, and
Windjammer Yacht Club will
stage the second race or Us
Winter Serles for all classes
on Sunday.
Santa Barbara Yacht Club
features one of tt.s Triangle
Races on Sunday, and the
Sierra Sailing Association will
stage an lnYitational Regatta
on Lake Isabella.
Southwestern Yacht Club at
San Diego is hosting the San
Diege> Handicap Fleet Sunday
in the Fiore Series.
New Soling Class Sets
Weekend Appearance
I First formal Newport, scheduled in Balboa Yacht
1 Harbor appearance of the new Club's Winter Regatta Satur-
,1. Soling Class sailboats is day and Sunday, according to
~ . Roger Melsinger, Importer of
U -AllooffKeeps -t11:;-'"':;n:~; :"'°,,;..1 as
] • eight boats may be on the I Boatmg Post outside starting line. I The Soling Class w a s
LONG BEACH -Jim Ab-recently selected by the In·
bott of Long Beach, a soft-ternational Yacht Racing
spoken man who has had to Union to replace the 5.5 Meter
1 stand up nose-to-nose against some of the most rugged men as an official Olympic class •
in sports, agreed this week Also tnvited to participate
to continue as chief technical in the BYC Regatta ta the
inspector for the Pacific Pacific Catamaran (P-cat),
Offshore Power Boat Racing one of the fastest of the twin-
Assn. bull ho Abbott, whose Naples Island ats. Tbe P-cats will
home is on b o at -f i J I e d also race on outside courses.
Alamitos Bay and w h o The BYC regatta w t 11
personally owns a r a c e -feature more than 24 classes
qualified 23-foot F o r m u 1 a with small boats racing Wide power boat, will be serving
the POPBRA in the important the bay and larger vessels
position for the fifth con-in the ocean off the Balboa
secutive year. Pier.
Marathon Race Set
PR Careers
Class Topic
Thinking of a career In
public relations? Orange Coast
College is to offer an In-
troductory course in the even-
ing that will get you ac-
Argentina Race.
$ ... _.. ...
.... fl,11 ,.._ El.
~.~ ... Jtll
tat 21111 WllCllw•ll
quainted with the profession. "
The course will m e e t
For Marine Stadium
Hot boat race fans will have fuel capacity. They are from Wednesdays from 1 to 10 p.m.
an opportunity to v le w 14 to 16..feet. Hulls are design. in Room No. 217 at Corona
marathon-style races virtually ed in greater variety than del Mar High SChool. Fee for
in their backyards this spring any other type of boat racing the course is $5.
with ehe advent of the first ~ deep Vs, f 0 u r. p 0 int Students should know how
World Invitational Marathon hydroplanes and the new tun-to type before they take the
Championships at Long Beach net type pioneered by Renzo course.
M;;:e Sm· ta8duiguun;·al e•ent ls Molinari of Italy. ni:~ c~~t'c w~ i':~'f 0 ~= Marathon boats are capable di scheduled April 2&.27 and is of speeds up to 100 m1ies vislons, techniques and bow
sponsored by the Los Angeles per hour, depending on fuel to set up a public relations
Speedboat Association and loads. program. StudentJ will learn
sanctioned by the American to write releases, how to st.age Preliminary t I c k e t In-hli"""' h nd ho Power Boat Association. formation for the event will pu .... ~,. p otos a w to
It will be the first such be available soon by wrltlng stage publicity photos and event to be held in a M tho how to work successfully with ara n, 666 E. Ocean Blvd., n., P'"' metropolitan area. Others are Suite 1108, Long Beach, 90802. '·"' ·
held in such isolated bodiesr-~~~~~~~~~~~Re~g~~!tr!a~ti~on~ls~und!~er~w:•Y::·~ll of water as Parker Dam, CLIP & SAVE
Arizona, and the Salton Sea,
requiring dri"rs and •pee-BRAD'S T.V.
tators to dri" long diStances. 2816 E. Coast Highway
The two-day event at Long C Beach will feature a three-Orona del Mor • 675-2212
hour race for outboards on
Saturday and another three-' s2so OFF hour contest for inboards on .
Sunday.
The Long Beach Marine WITH THIS COUPON
Stadlum course will be very ON 'NY T y
demanding on dri""• re-,,~~~~~..,~~~·~· ~SE~R~V~IC~E~C~A~LL~~~ quiring tllem to make light
turns at high speeds in the _
"lanky lagoon."
"We'll have to concentrate
Ule entire distance," said bot·
boat race star Bill Cooper
of Marina del Rey who has
indicated he might enter both
I See by Today's
Want Ads
the inboard and outboard • Uke fish 1 Start your own
marathons. Aquarium with this &h
The Long Beach course will tank, 25 gallon pump, m.
require drivers to make turrp ter, lite I: beattt, at a low
each three-quarters of a mile. low price.
On three and four mile • "Baby 1t1 coJd Outaide"t
courses drivers have wide Replace that worn o u 1
open water in case of trouble heatl!r' with this Holly Gu
on the turn.a. Wall Huter. thermo con-
-W --the -~---of the sport -will be permit· • Now ts the time to ~
ted in each day's race, ac-. thal pllmo and 1f&rt thole
cording ot Mel Zikes, ract kNML Bu;y this Upri&ht
director. Piano, antlque1 blue, with
Added excitement will come beDCb for $9$.
from a LeMans-type st.art e Like the Rlvlen. '!' Travtl
from the launching beach on in style tn ttUs '68. all
the 900th shore of Marine pol'm', air, vtn)'I top, at
Stadium. AU boats will be re-••top" low price.
quired to make at lea.~t one • The "Optn J-loa.INl Section" pit stop.
Marathon boata differ from bu out done lt.::U with
clo.sed-eour&e runabout or ski-aome B&AUTIFUL HOM-
type boat. In both olu and1-----------&S---~-·-·.· __ _
..a.n.nr.
~AUTO-CHARGE
no _, """""'
f1>M1t/g to ,,..,
·~ca.-fcr __ ...
.e ...... ..,.. ---.....
•UlrHigllke -.. '•$685
"' ....
• ------h llARTY....,. ._cool.,,.._. .......... ...,.. blo•alitll
.~ ........................... ,.... ......... -_... ......... ...
·•lea tcd t 'S a .... JOll ••ts:• ...... ---••••• h ............ ow ......... .................
• J CHECK YOUR TIR£ SIZE
V CHECK YOUR SALE PRICE .. -. __,,., ... ~ ---
,...,..-. -·---
WHEEL AIJGMll!NT
ADDS SAFE MIU8 i
Sc#I I 1 Mll'ld
C91111r, CMl'lber, .....
to.out to )ICM' Cllt -· ill*l .......
~-.... ___ _
COAST
GENERAL TIRE
585 West 19tfl St., Costa Mesa
646-Soll 540-5710
IWLY ."1LOT J3 l
. 1
• •
•
, I
" • Oi&ll 'I l!lOl • < ••
'14 frlcll7, JllJWI 17, 1969 IW!.Y P!UIT JH)
' GRAff!T1 by LNry R'ural Poverty: Subject
For Study~ But Little AUl
AbKus 1.111 4llb 11 LHi·i
.l.CP lfld 1-• At;rntCI l.llit At:lf>t Mkl .. .l.cllml! l.:h "1.~~lt .ii
Aim'3 IA
LEGAL NOTICE
MOTICI: 01" SALi
In 1«0n:lll'C9 wilt! "'"' -lalonl I.II "" c111tor"l1 Un......., C-Ulll Code,
1nu1 bel,.. --uo.tld '"""' lor wflkft "'"' Don M.1rft11 Moving 111111
s"""'· 1:uo Lot111 Awnue, (Mii Mff.I. C.ilfor1111. i1 enlltltd lo I llfll It
Wt r-Hm.n Oii lhl ~ M<.ina""'
4tt.e•l'*l tnd 111.11 nolk• /Wl¥11\f bffll ,1--.n to 1>1rti.. known lo cllln't lft
ln!e<nl IMrtln 1114 tlle 11,,.. SHClflecl
111 111<11 nollc. tor pal'Tf1111I ot 1udl
111'¥1,.. tqofred, l'IOlltt h iwrMw tl,,_..
""' 1t1tM tOOdl W1H bl IOld It Nik:
oucflon 1r WIM~'• Aucfkln '''"· 707M ~,..,_., llOult¥1nl, CttT of Collt Meu,
coun,.,. ol O•-•· 51•!• of Ct!llCW'nllo,
-IM ""' .S.• of J1rw1rv, tfff. 11 1 :II o'clock P.M. :Thi to!-\111 11.i 11 • brief oewl•lfon
cif IM ProH<-"' Ill llt Mild:
Loi NuMbet )90, H.nry F. llllamfltld,
OWl!tl'. •mount dUtl l50CIOO. l>Clf' Mtrtln Movlno ,,.,,, Slor18t
Merger Okayed
SAGrNAW, Mich. (UPI) -
Wides Corp., ooe o.f I.he ru;a-
tion's largest bu 11 d Ing
materials dlatributors e n d
producers, has agtted in prin-
ciple to buy Ritz.Craft. fnc ..
of Argos, Ind., a maker of
moblle homes, camp trailers
and pre-lab cottages with an·
nual sales of about $16 million,
ror about 400,000 shares of
Wickes common.
By SYLVIA PORTER
Meet one of your nelghbors:
The family Includes eight
children. from prt--schoole1'9' to
poat-Oelinquenl.s, lives at the
t!nd of a dirt road, well out
of sight of Its more alOuent
neighbors. The family's home
is nestled among assorted
junk cars, old ice boxes, rusty
bicycles. There is no Indoor
plumblina , and, therefore, lit-
tle opportunlty for baths. The
heating consi!ts of one small
wood·burning stove although
lhe weather may faU below
zero.
There is a used car which
has been bought on credit but
which is inoperable because
the family has no money for
repairs. The family bread~·in
ner does have a part-time
job, but he usually doesn't
lurn up for work because h1.!i
work place: is miles away and
hls car won't run.
Dlltd 11 Cotl1 Mt.11. C1tlforT1le, 1----,.,,..,..,.,,-.,.,:C:=::::---
J•tl<llN •• Ifft. LEGAL NOTICE
TllERE rs a TV set and
a fairly generou.s supply of
whiskey for the adulls. Fre-
quently, the children do not
go to school either because l"llbllM'lld Ore""e Co.11 01llr Piiot.
•-J!Mt ct:1T11'1c.1.T• ol' •us1N•ss they do not have suitable
l'ICTITIOUS KA.M• I lh bee lh th
J ...... ,.,. 10, u, ltff Q-4,
LEGAL NOTICE n.. 1.1r.Mr•i.ne<1 -certlfV 1w 11 co es or ause e wea er
Pl·W ~IJ(flnt • 1M1 ... 11 11 eo111 ,,,..., is too bad for them lo walk
1u,11uo11: cou•T ol' TH• '•111om1•· -""'fldttioon 11"" "'"" the miles to the nearest school sTATI! 0" CALll'OllU.I. l'Olt ol "CHEM-TROl'UC SYSTEMS CO." Ind
111tt 1o1111 """ 11 com-.:1 of "" b"• sJop THI COUNTY 01' 01.1.NGI: fol-i-~'""'' wMM ,..,...., 111 t\ltl "'"" • N .. .l.-'lr11 "• Y . hbo ' NOTKI 01' Hl!AllNG 01' PITITIOlll e!>ll DI.a"' rnletnct i. II foltows: our Ile.Jg r .
1101. ••OU.Tl 01' WILL AMO 1'01. , ... ,'" Llv11\. :!OD .. INrk Dflvt. lo all probability, yes, u L11n11s 0.. AOMINllTl.ATKIM-c~r. /Mu, C1llfoo'"I•
WITtt-THf-WILL-AMNIXID 0.ICIG ;. ...... ,.., s. ,,.. you live in the eiurbs, in •• , • ~ , , , .,,-,... CNorlltl L1¥l11 1-~ I · he .... • ... •• -"' '"' s1111 of tallfom11, 0r .... ee.. .. ,.,., a ......... any rura area 1n t
million -live ln rural areas.
f\105l of the reductions in our
poverty population refer to the
urban, not rural, poor.
-The average income of the
U.S. farm worker in 1968 was
less than •1 .800 and of the
migrant farm worker, ~u
below even this sub-poverty
level. Except for workers on
big commercial farms, farm
workers have neither col-
lective bargaining rights nor
1ninimum wage law coverage.
-For American Indians and
Eskimos, poverty is a
universal fact of life.
-RURAL ArtiERICA con-
tinues to offer grossly in-
adequate educational • voca-
t!onal opporwnJP" to Its
yow>fjlt<n and 1by1mllly low
S1lll'le1 to leachen. Only
about one in five tralneea: in
ledUIJ job training and uli-
poverty programs comes from
rural areas. ,
-And almost unbelievably,
some 60 percent of the rural
youth who are enrolled in
rural vocaUoo.a.l ~4techn.icaJ
.schools are studyin1
agriculture -wherti there are
probably the feweit decent job
opportunities for them In the
foreseeable future.
AMONG THE fascinating
proposals ot the Ru.rat Poverty
Commission Is lor a na-
tionwide system of rural
"deveJopmtnt dlatricta," each
with Its own e.t:l.stlng or poten-
Bc nk Ea:eeutf.,e
Ronald L. !lodgers o!
Corona del A-1ar, has
been elected ExecuUve
Vice Pr~ident of New·
port National Ban1c,
wbicb be has served
since its organization
tial hub of industry, culture more than five years and education. The dlstrlctJ
I ago. wou d pool resources, talent -----------
and money.
:-M. '?., ~, .. :~ "·-·'· A~IU
1t111 Aft11' Miu 1.11 Al I Ct.. .2111t
ll1,:1:a li ~n ~ ·I • l " tlldt;. 1.:z :m~ ifP'~ ~~",~·-AlcOll .llO ,_,~ ·~ olMllA ·'° ......... • 1.10 AmrE1 "'2 60 ... '"-... "' , AA!tFI';(; .IO ~~ ~;t,11er''9 ~~.:11.J "~ ~ l:l! :12.J1':" 1:Jf ~~c;t,"1 ~s~11n l:fl ...;;,or~Q1 . .io. A~ ~111IVn1 Among President-elect Nii·
on's pledges is that he would
give high priority to the pro.
blems of the invisible poor
in rural America and that
he will seek ways to attract
industries to the rural areas.
1m?1,.:4·f'.1 P II 0 ''"I' '·1:3 n man ut ~~·EI ,. Ain~.fl
THE TWO points mesh and
the vital aspect is that they
demand not huge infus.ions of
money but instead ample
allotments of imaginalion, in·
novation and ingenuity. Surelr
It is time for acUon.
Of Sleeping .l.mlnvtt I.I~ .l.rnlll~ PIJ,IS ~~1 ~l·,; AMi'I Cl .90
""' Motor• AmN~lG•t 1
Car B o Am N•w1 1 usm ess ~:r~~ .~· olm Seti I
.1.m s..rr " A Smel J.U
D~~E IS HEl.E•Y GIVEN TM! °" JlllUIN s. lt6t, ~· ""· • U.S. or even in some suburbs. ,..,rl E Tilbot ""'' 11'9d Mt-tlft 1 Not•rv l"ubllc 111 encl tvo' 111d sr.11.
""'111a11 ·'°" l'robll• "' wrn ,114 .., "91'M1Nllr _,.,, o.rin Ll¥lfl llnoWft My description (of an actual t..111~,. of Adm!11b1r111on-w1~n..-wu ....... ~ ~~ :"~1ni°:mi:.~ fami ly living within a fe\\' ;:,xldh..ni:-'~1cu'r. ... :"":.":. ~1"":;: •nd 1c1i-ltdllec1"" uKVtM the Mll'll. miles of thousands of well-to--Business Trends
CH IC AC 0 (UPI) -!:;:ft',.,'',,;~
Railroad sleeping c a r s ~srud p)4 1s
operated far 110 years by the ~s1,,,H1 ~
Pullman Co., are now in the !"~/i · ·"
hands of the l4 r1ilroads "~ Tob t~
\Vhich still pull them. :~~· ,~
Am Zinc On New Year's Da y, Amtr.ii; 1a
Pullman ceased providing con-~~act': .i~
ductors, porters, linens and :~~ncc~
maintenance service for the Amt1..r 2.411 11m1 Ind •llCI .. M111 ... In. .. ,,,. OFFICIAL $EAL do cilizensl may not p,-,·sely "'' been Mt 1or FION1rv 1, INt. Josep/I E... 01¥1• "'-
I t t :lO 1.m .. 1n '"' C011mo-of Nol•rv P'IJbUc -C.llfDrlll• rit your neighbor living rn D-"'"*'' No, J "' Mkl coun. •I Prll\CIHI Offln In ., Tiie-Asloellt.11 ,.,.., * w"t Eltlhlll s1net. 111 .,. Cll"I' °'1"" eounw rural poverty but it's close Americans are expected to
11 s.m1 .1.r11, c111fornr1. M'f Commission EXJ"lrn enough o1iw Jin1.11rv 15 "'' JUM 21. '"" • spend '106 billion on food this w E sr 10HN 'counrv c1tr11. Publill\fll 0 •-• coen °11"' "11ot· 1.., T~E ~OINT is that ~!u~ year -$5 billion more than ~~~~., • Jtnu.rv '· io. i1. 2i. '"' _family_ lS .....almost certainly --tn 1968
L•• """*· c111flf111111 t1111 LEGAL NOTICE there, only a few miles from Food Engineering reports 1'11: ltlll 411'47U h A d ""-' ,.,. •tt111e_. •·nut your ome. n you are not that ·'under presaure of the
PwD111"1C1 Or11>1t• c°"•' ot1i, P1io1. cE•T1,.1CAT1 o" •u11Nl!11 aware of its ez..istence because inflated costs of growing, pro-J•nu.rv 1'-17, ,,, ltff 1S-ff l"lc!Hlwl ,._
Ttlt-w"*•ll•lllll c1on nr11fV 1 11m its members do not even cesslng and distrlbuUon, food LEGAL NOTICE co..oudi,.. 1 Miflttt •1 2'1l NtWPOrl displa '"-I t th · _____ ,110u1t¥tn:1. Newi>0'1 8.,c11, c.11totnte. Y u.ic:mse ves o e1r prices may rise J percent by
--,c,c,c,c,c,.c,c-:"0 "=11.T 0 , 'TH• under ""' rid1t1N;1 11rm ntm• :o1 not too distant neighbors and the end or 1969."
•••
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•• ,, ••• ,. ••• MARINER YACHT5 Ind lhet Mid rrrrr. lh e ha hee J hn h ~ 1, co~ "' "" 1o&1owln9 ..,_, re a n no o T e magazine said food
THI COUNTT 01' OR.1.NGa .......... ~·-'' ''"•~•I.a llf m111+1<1 St ' be k ' !hi t ,. .. A-'ltlll i;'';"',,;~, e1n c 1n s era o manufacturers planned to in-
NDT•c• 01' Hl!..1.1.INO 0, PSTITIDN Ectwn A. Wtllt., 2lll S.nl1 AM publicize their plight. vest about $1.'i billion this 1'01 .. IOI.I.Tl 01' WILL AND 1'01 A¥lfl!le, con1 ,,.,..., C.l1tv11i. On N LEnE•s T•sTAM•NT.._.., "' e year ago, a ational yea r "to improve efficiency E1l•i. o1 c,.,.,~ l1roldl, 111.o k-Di~ J 1""""' l. 1 Ad · C · ·
"'
E11w1n1 A. w11111 v1sory omm1ss1on on and nllnimize the cff""'t of 11 C111rlt1 D1t1iel ltrolcll, I known STATE OF CALIFOINlol, '"'-
_, cn•rlt s o. l1roldl •nll •• c. o. ORANGE COUNTY: Rural Poverty declared lhi!l rising costs on prices. The
e1ro1111, Otc.ulld. On Jirw&rv J. 1Mt before me • bl " I · I NOTICE 1s He1u:11v GIVEN Thllt NotitY Public In 11111 ·..,. Nkl siitc, pro em a n a Jon a manufacturers will expect to
Tomm• 111rold1 •nd LM •••oldl "'" ",,_1., ~1>nrld Ecl\ll011"d A. Wltit.. disgrace." Since then, there spend 12 percent more for
flltod lltrll11 • Ptllrlon for Pro!Mll't llf ~ fO ,,,. 19 lit !fie --1vhDM h be II of d" w111 1r.d tor 1 ..... nc, of L•""" 11.,,.... 1, tUtt.ctlbed "" ""' w1111111 lh-as en a ow stu 1es better plants and equipment
Teo11m ... 11,., 10 P"1".,,,.''· ~~ stnirN<'ll ,,,. 1u-l90lllld 111 ued.lteci and seminars on ru ral pover-th:in they did in 1968." lo wnldl Is mtdt tor f1rr!Mr •1r1lcullrs.. Ille lllN!
Miii 111.t! 111e nm. 1nd .. i.coi o1 11t1r1111 tOffJcli ! ~i•i ty. But little has been done
•tie , • ..,. "'' ble<i •' for J111u1rv JOWjjll E. 01¥11 d th I ts · 31, 1N,, 11 t :JO 1.m .. in 11w: cour1room ,.011"' l"..cr u, _ ,,111,,,.,. an e ac remain :
ot o'''"''""M t+o. J o1 111<1 c.ourt. Pr1nc...,1 Offlot 111 -WIULE OUR r u r d 1 ~f JOQ WISI Eltlltll SI••••· In '~ or1,_ Counl'I IA • I
C•l'I "' S.1111 ....... c111torn11. M¥ CammlHlon EAll••• popuwhon is ess than 30 pcr-
Dlled J1nu•rv '· lfff. Ju"" 11 1110 cent of our total 4fi percent W. IE. ST JOHN, Ctuftl~ Cllrk. PublQ.Md Orino'e Coitt ·0 111' l"llol, ' 'l!."llM:~T ...... ,_ J•"u•rv 3, io, i1. l,, 1"' ,..., of the nation's poor -19
LEGAL NOTICE ... ...--.-.. ....
The soft drink industry had
an estimated $3.95 billion 1n
wholesale sales in 1968, or
I 1.3 percent hig her than the
pre\'ious year, and "the lrend
to higher consumption of soft
drinks ls expected to con·
linue," according to Standard
& Poor',~ Corfh-
lt said that while the 1968
gains "reflect in part an l!:J.·
ceplionally warm summer
throughout the U.S., sales
should continue to make
above-average progress i n
1969 . , , reflecting increasing
leisure time and general
population growth."
One reason many observers
reel the United States has lo
break loose soon on a housing
boom is the worsening
shortage of rental housing.
During the third quarter,
the Commerce Department
says. the vacancy rate for
rental units fell to S.4 percent,
a low for the 1960s. The situa·
lion was tightest 1n lhe
Northeast, 3.4 percent.
• ,..., 11111 l'lowlr '""' .. llflfwtr, Ctlllorlllt NJ'N
1'11< (111) W.INI
"""""'·· ,., •1tll11Nn. .. ubllW.'11 Orlrllilt CN 1!
J111111ry 10, 11, ll, Ifft
O•ltr Pl .. 1. -LEGAL NOTICE
California Legisla ture in Action
. •
-'""cand 7.50 cars. AnchHo 1.60
The change won't be too :=1·~20
noticeable t o passengers, :_ ~~tt
though. Conductors a n d :~fi'l!t~S~·~ _
portus ..J}'il _be J¥_e_!_r i n :~:~ ·r
railroad uniforms instead of :...,., ..... ~ 1.~
Pullman attire, but few road s A~;:::',r',~
will dlaconUnue sleeping car :~~~~bPfl:lJ
service. :~1~ ~d ·~
And on at I e a s t two 1:~11 ~~e!·:io
railroads, the change will ::~~.P.,0 1,i,:
bring cheaper f~s. The A11dTr111 .«1 , d Ohi d Auocrnw l .'fl Balllmore an o a n ,-r::"ison 1.1,,
""'' DI JI> Chesapeake and Ohlo plan lo ,1.•ll"1vr:1 1.:io
f' I f AICl!YEI I". scrap irsl c ass ares A•1 11 ;~" '° ' I ha ed ' lh All RlcllfO WI previous y c rg or e "''"~" ..r.i 1s
sleepers and sell tickets for ~~R~" ;'w~
the same price as a coach ::t:: 't';.n.!IO
seat plus a room charge. All•• CD o1 , Auror~PI .» A """kesman said most of A1111 Nlcn .60 ~!"" ARA Inc t-4 the 300 Pullman conductors, o\uts!*I, .oa. r olwk>ml11 Ind who average 61 years o age, Awo CB , :io
will retire and receive about ::~~. ~·2~,
$10,IXX> in severance pay. The!~~:: '::f1_~0
railroads w!U hire about 800 ""°" Po 1.60
of Pullman's 1.100 porters, he
said.
Mesan Named
Assistant VP
'
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0ia.1t1i.u.a..c .... r-----------,
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'''""· """"' 17, l'M (HI
Complete York Stock Exchange List
:..::" 2' -1~ ,,._,,
11" t ~
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JC . DAl~Y 'ILOT '•Idol ...... ..., )7, 1'69
~tlflclal ~nzyine
Scieitce ·Creates
' ' Key to Man~ind
'
By ALTONll. LAlmUU
NEW volll (AP) :.. Sdeo-
llslo have artlllctallY ...ale<!
the tty chemical that conu.li
all ci lite -ao enzyme. The
fut /ultllls 11n old dream of
chemists and biologists.
Without enzymes, nothi~
can live. They control all the
biochemical reactions of all
living thlngs -man, genns,
trees, fish . Digestion,
breathing, heart p u m p J n g ,
nerve impulses, fm'IDatioD oC
body tissues, energy to move
muscles, '\ll depend o n
emymes.
A single body cell contains
up to 100,000 enzyqies, each
directing a specllic reaUon,
each coming into play at the
right lime and place.
Laboratory creation of an
enzyme in the laboratory
opens exciting prospects,
1eientists said Thursday. More
can be learned about how
eruym.es do their fantastic
work, in o:i.ly thousandths of
• second. Special enzymes
might be man-made to do new
chemical tasks.
Enzymes might be fashioned
into potent new drugs. AlreAdy
one enzyme shows promise
in treating some cases of
, leukemia ·in children. Another
• shows signs of being able to
prevent tooth decay.
Succes.!I in making a n
USING PLASTIC
Drs. Merrifield and Gutte
of Rockefeller made their
enzyme, whose structure had
been determined earlier by
other scientl!ts, by using a
bead of a plastic material
to act as an anchor on wb!ch
units were added, one by one,
to rorm the complete chain.
The bead was later removed.
A 1pecial machine
Coming January 18
Family weekly
How the Power of the
Presidency Is Passed On
By ALLEN DRURY
You'll want to reod this famous outhor•1 inspir·
ing comments on the socred Inaugural ceremony
and ih historical significance to our democratic
way of life.
ALSO
e DANNY KAYE AT HOME-A dougth"
affectionately tells the story of one of
America's :r1nie1t men
e REUNION IN HAWAII-The bitterswMI
picture story of a· Vl1tn1m Gl's 5-day
leave with hi• wife and Infant son
e FAMILY WEEKLY COOKBOOK -A '°"C kettle supper that ktynotn con.-
"" enCfi
Saturday in The Weekend
I DAILY PILOT I
I
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humklrtJ T'led ••$ ... crisplr. ldjudable RMI .-ec:si $38995
.... _ ..... , ...... ....., .. "'"
....... h' a I ... , 111:• Fl ,. JIMlhloll"'·"·-·
Gallery
Sets First
Art Show
t ~~ • • ' • I • •
STEREO SENSATION!
The colorful sound of
Orange County Music ....
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• • "·-----
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.Fouuiain Valley
• • I
ED II ION • '
ORAN6E COUNt'\', CAUl'Oltf:llA , ml CENTS
~ Arraigned ..... ·, Then R~Ieased-fu. Beach Death
By AR111UR I( VINSEL
Of lie ~ ,II., Steff
A morose rocket researcher and bis
-wherry bloode girl frleod, wearing
-pigtalb and a !aln~ but !requenJ smlle, ...,. formally charged Wed ...... y
in•the -murder of • llW>
·• n Beacb &r~otber.
ay, lhey have beeo cleared.
upon a time, some detectives
dJ4p 't work so hard to clear up Cle&
f1li'ling !tori,. by arrpled """°""'·
wbtn tbty bad such oolld clttuJnllantlal
eridence..
Dulooent Pf'lllle have been jerked inl<I
etemltf OD a rougbwov• rope witb
a tree at the otber end, or lllOed lonely
years in prison wilh jUst their bitter
knowllidie: I -~ do IL 'f!!la ia the .111.aa of w~t bappeoecl
to two -..t people CJugbt up In
a (fior.daY niahtmare. ..
Bead tbeh' DM'Qel. a
'!bell ~It' )'OlltS. : • •
..
f:alking Things Over
Governor Ronald Reagan .anll Acting President S.
I. Hayakawa of San Francisco State College meet
. with newsmen Thursday, in, Sacramento after they
mot for the !int time.' At lower rlgbt i& plaqu~ oon-,
tainlng words fl'OOl a 1966 · campaign speech .by
Governor Reagan (see story, pe.geA).
Officers Seek
W estminsterite
In Chari off Case
Sheriff's officers today are seeking
a Westminster man whose name figured
prominenily in the embezzlement trial ·
of fonner deputy public administrator
ArthlD' Charloff.
But the warrant issued for the arrest
of ·Richard Mathieu, 14, of 943'1:
Ambassador Drive, "has no b!!aring"
on the thefts of Clllih and valuables
to which Charloff, 33, successfully plead·
ed Innocent, Capt. James Broadbelt said.
"Our warrant ciies ~thieu as being
responsible for forgeries which involved
th'e use of credit cards," Broadbelt said.
"We have no comment to make ,on .
his pCl6Sible implication in thefts involved
in a case which is still open to pro-
secution." Mathieu was employed as a
warehouseman during the time that
Cbarloff toot over the post vacated by
Louil T. Vanscourt who ta DOW 8elVinc
a 1 to 10 years: sentence in state priaoo.
VanJCOUrl was convk:ted of -emhm:line
m<ri than $14,000 in cash and vafuables
from county estates.
ClW-ges that Oulrloff, a former FBI
man,• embezzled $239.67 in a idmilar
manner were abandoned with""the ruling
of Superior Court Judge 11 ow a rd
camtton that there was not sufficient
evJ~e to proceed against him.
State Senators to Support
Island Desalting Proposal
Bolsa Island nuclear desalting plant,
planned for an artificial b2and to be
built o(f the coast of Huntington Beach,
got the promise or support today [rom
the·state's two senators. .
The island project was boosted by
Sen. Alan Cranston who said that he
and Sen. George Murphy planned to
work together in an effort to breathE
neW Ufe into the salt water reclamatiou
project.
Production of about 50 mill.Ion gallons
per day of desalted sea wi.ter ls l:JJe
present goal of the Metroeolitan Watf:r ..
District (MWD) which his announced
plans to have a plant in operaUoo in
the prqpoaed Ulland in the: early 19708.
Key to the project is money, most
all involved or who have been involved
in the prdject agree. Estimates of the
cost bow1'd·arGlllld 14«-mlllioo during
the1)!amdllc llagea !or !he 40-acre Island
which WIS to bouae nuclear eeoeratine
equipment capable of producing elec-
tricity.
When C<1Sls soared to $786 million !he
Southern California EdllOn Co., s.n
Diego Gu and Electric Co. and Loi
Angeles Department of Water and Power
dropped Olli of !he proj<ct leaving MWD
alone wilh the promise of 10D1e federal
help.
MWii directors were successful in win-
ning . an extenJion of. the federal
government's assistance with some f72
million until Mart)l 31, but director•
. would Ute greater pa.rticipatiOn and n:-
ltnalon ol the aid aver a period lq
inough lo do odvance planning.
Cr/lnslon said lie Will• join !hose who
are lryfug to get !he proj<ct back on
the tracks 1n some form, ·polnt.lna ·out
his belief Iha! "d..a~ waltr•ol·
fend hope ff6 . water
llldrtagee in-areu tncl> ·aa Soulhl!m
Cdfarnla.-" ;
Blind Boy to
to the nva,e knife murder of Mn.
Hester s. Mar·kee, ~ of DOI Oliva Ave.,
HtmlinJh>o Beach, &ince Ibey cooMent·
ly denied any Involvement.
And !hey ,..... not involved, dlrectly,
police conceded. '
"You clm't rUllze ranelhina lll<e ~
can happen to you; but it-sure ean,0 the
pelllt, Be~ Miss Dinger said,
after achieving the near-miracle of free·
dorn. . ...
'"l'h ... )NOilie jusl did !heir job,.. she
* * *
·ane
eoatipued. appar<DIJ:y not bitter u the
abakinll enperitpce and pWming no ,.
laiiatory action qainlt police.
"'I'm~a very fOrglvhlc penc:m," she ez.
plained.
'ftlie green-eyed waitress ·was allowed
Th'unday to see the two men for whom
llbt a.a C.0.tney """ llaocl.lns, dilrlng a bad dream which luted aotne IO bo.Jn.
"I looked at that teenaged kid and felt
Son')' for him,'' she said. "Wouldn't you?" ..,
?be ...,,haired optomelrlal'• .....,.
tiooJlt WU bacbd and aiaahed by al>!>
wouoda loo -to count 1<1111-
raltiy and Jell blaedin( Into •. ptltr
oo 17th -·~ Palm A"ll"' Iut SUndai nl&bt. ,.4 , .
Miss~. black·-
er, ll<Otcb plald lklrt 'ind n,ylcil ..........
rumpled and ~ below !he --
wu led ~ oamt lbcrtil'. after 2 p.m.
: (lea ULl:ASED, ..... Z)
* * *
Doe Lead?
Beach K~ifing Suspects Questioned
DettcuVes -today quesbdned two men Huntlni!on Beach, and Edward R. lnlo a muddy dltcll.
charpd with one knife murder-i:about Hargrave, 1&. of 1738J: Maren Lane, Capt. Earle Robitaille Wd Tlllrlday
!he. possibility !hey were al3o Involved· Hunlingioo Beach, 00 Tlllraday. . . !hat the IWlilnil dealh 0{ Mn. Ill!'!*.
In the March, 1168 throat-cutting. of the They are suspected of tbe ruthlea 1 'k!n";r., -andmoth~ who ·waa .. ~•Alu woman.knownon.'yuJaoeDoe. ~ murder of Mn., Heater S. .... ~""" • ........,
lr<rllcal!y, long-delayed fun er a I Markee, 5>, o! llOf. ou,,. A,..., ap. mutilated before she died, .bean a~-~ 1., Jane Doe were bein,g held parently over a ioJnor· tnl!J<: accident ed similarity lo the Jane Doe We.
at ·lbe ...., lime, Just two. blocki. away lnvolvinl .. car labn Wilhoul li)eewner'4 Despite an intfmallanal ·-\>fa
• fnlln j>Ollce bWquirtets, ln'llle Smllh's tnowledie. · · pbofoeraphs and fll,idJliiJU .~ .i.
. Motluary Q\apel, -.. Deltdlve. Sgt . ..14~...McKomm.said...... law _qend" .thmll"MI Jllo..11. L Ma,
Keeping a tight hood on whatever foda:f .... t he hid nothing official to ico and Canada, Jane Doe remaina
leads they may have, lnvestlgaton said reJ)«t on his attempt to link Sianez unknown.
loif.BY !hat a very definite connection ud· Har&rave to th< mystery· of Jane Rev. G. Russell Shaw, pastor of tl!e
exists between the Sunday ~t slaying Doe. F,irst MC!thpdist. Church or Hurttlaltim
and the Huntington Beach Jane Doe n.. ~ to i>year-old woman , wu se.14 1 Beach, 'Was scannlitg over hll IOUrCe
~llllng 311 days ago. Uany ·molested lut March 14 and left of material this moming, prior to Jane
A ·cab driver's tip led police to arrest to bleed to death through a ramr-llke Doe'1 brief, 1 p.m. funeraJ.
Henry L. Siaoei, 25, of 312 Clay St, cut in the Ulroat, al~ bein& dumped• COmposin& the RnDOD was not euy.
3. S'!!}U:t Cosmonauts
• Back Home From Orbit
..
In JI dlflp'ent apacecraft from !he ...
ID 0wbidl,'11ey·were iaimcbed'Weclllelday.
Toptber wilh Vladlmlr Sbaial>• lheJ'
rode ~yuz 4 to a pmet laodln& polnl
about 25 miles ooi'tbwest o! Karaganda,
a·rteel-maling city.
A recovery btllcdpter spotted !he Soyus
:!.-:~~°!':. ~=· the omdal
Tbe fourjh cosmonaut, Volynov, ~
tiriued orbitlng,lhroogh !he day In Soyus
5 and was not expected· to land before
Saturday morning when his orbit = would bring .him Over the aame
area.
· The Soviet prea bailed lbt docklq
of So)>ai: f and Soyuz 5 and !he crew
truafer as I big step toward •gemhty
of pemwient 1pace platfonu er
laboratories. Newapapera -.eel !he
1elentiflc ..i...-of Ion g.term
-and ltrreidrlal oi-vatJon and aclentifie work in tbt vacuum ol lplCB.
Two County Gis
Die in Viet War
KniglitS T emplnr Eye Group to Pay Ope~ati.on C'!&ts Huniingto~-:Man
Files $2' Million Weadter
Two Orange County Gii art listed am~ JI servicemen who recently died
in VJetnam, accordinl ta a roster releu-
ed 1J7 the Defe.,. Deprtment Tbunday.
A . p Spec/4 Philip C. Ericison, SOii
of ~. and Mra. John W. Erickson,
of 12712 Lucffie Ave., Garden Gnttt,
had been mi111ing, but is DOW tnown
10 ba,ve been killed in combat.
Army P{c. Tommy C. OooO't'an Il,
son ol Mr. and Mrs. Tommy C. Donovan.
of 805 S. Western Ave., Anaheimt died
of non-hostile causes. 1 o v er n m e n t
IJOQttel said.
Stock lllcrkeu
~ YORK (AP) -The stock market
clOlllf lrrqularly lower today aa Jnlib were taken 00 the advance: earlier thiJ,
week. (See quotations, Parei 11:-tt).
•
-. By TERRY COVILLE °'' ....... '"'' ,, ...
· A plea for ~lp to aid a bUnd Hun-
tln#!M'·lleadl ""1' ""' answered today
by lhe.Knigldl. Tm1>iar·EJO>F'oomdatlon.
Inc. .
The st«y of Felb: Gtill<!T'•, pubii..hi.r
In 1burlday's DAILY PILOT, turned
up a br!Pt hojla thb momlng, when
a lllflUer of lhe .Jtniehll .Templor, C<im·
maodery No. 31, Sanla Ana, said the
Foundation · woWd PQ' all expenaes for
.. eye -•tioa on JOUJ!i Felix U the
specialist'• report shows his •yeslgh!
can be restored. •
Fells: wu to be uamb>ed at 11 a.m.
today by nan opillhalm•loflal Dr: lad<
Goldllelo of Loa Alamlfoo.
Dr. Goldsltin wlD try to deltrmlne
U medical •-can l'elton Fell" via.ion. The boy oow has me-quarter
vision In one eye. Tbt at1fl!r 11 oorilpleltly
blind.
?be KniPll Ttinpjar -...... •ho
prefeaed -to -Ii\ ~eel, .. id u Dr.' Gcild'si.lft -tlial _. .,.iilht
. '
Silt Over Crash
i
DfllM!Ddillg on wbether you
are ari optlml!t or a pessimilt,
It'll either be pertly sunny or
partly, clolidy over the wee! ..
end, with ~tuns rang·
Ing from ilO to 62 along tbe
coast.
INSmE TODAY
Til< k<J !llGIWr of Uft -
-· IMiw b<I!' mi/idollf f'>:odloe<d •'br•f .. , ultolisll i•
otie of IM ,,,..WI of ~
G«Oinpllih111111li. l'agr 18. . . . ....... •. ~· .r ---.. =.,r:. .. : .......i•• I -=--~ 1 .. 1: -" _._ . -. . ~ .
I'
!
I
~J ~y Pll.OT &
f ·0.CJC
: ? . •
• !-1 -1 • . ~Spending Per St~~·Neit•-~GJwm in .State
--• ::•....... ~ a.&'1 ...... -..... ,.rt:. Olill< oit!IMb In ·Ille · _,, lollOft: l'<ralta -f-,140; Pudq• -
Ille dlltrict bu, '111 Ille of Sap!. fl!I; Foolhlll -fll'/; OOolra O>oi& ~~~~=· !'f:! ~other Important meuure In wbk:ll oeoJo <ii ·nlueis/' -Ille dlltrict ranked .. low ren.ct. bolh 'l1ie two campus -~ Cboot and '· Instructor lllarl• and cloa llzes. It ~ -.-\lloll1ct rub • tbe ' lndlcot.eo Ibo dlllrid .... -of Ibo =~ la Ille -.. dl1tlme --blne-Ill· ... -of low (Wllll •veoll!c -~ • ularies and c:mrded cl ....... ('nio"laur
It ranks~ Qllly to Loo Aqelol.} dlolrlc1a that ronk below tt are an 8lllall
'!be survey tbows Ille dlolrlcl bu dlmic1a In liflcullural or deaeri ar .... )
I~ deelJQO!i ln Ille meuute of -Ol'lllJe eoa.t'a loweol TankJn& WU dlni Ob ·-IL Elmo.,.,.,. llO ·11 In odmlniolraUvo _,--· llrd of the
ranked 11111 ...i bcb tear olnce bu I& illDlor eollege dlllrlcll. 1l>e • d!l(rlcl
oteadJy dlOPlflCI until It lo DOW Clnd. ranbd 4llb In . coal o! •uppllea and
-'ilio · dl!tikt lut year opeot on Ille 51111 In cool o! plant -•Uon.
av""re 1685 to educate Ucb -L Tbe "'rnparllOnl wm pnpared by
Only lout dlolrlc1a In the llale -I Dean of llMearcb Frank Hoptllls ualng
teaa. lol~ -tho lllle !uruu ol Oillrlcl'• cloeest inal<hl111 onng, J!l<I .... ~ -. ' .
FroiltP ·1 ~ Beach Traffic
Study Rebuffs
. MURDER SUSPECTS I I I
· parked his car on the driveway apron
· directly bOhind bin In IUCb • manner!
.. lo appar<nU, prev.m ber car from
being removed.
It appears now that Sianez could have
had a spare set of keys to Miss Dlnger'a
car and had used the vehicle without
her -permission before.
It appears tha1 be and. Hargrave <n
Ille n!gbt of the murder c:arofu1ly rolled
Coatney's car out of the driveway and
toot Mlss Dinger'• blue sedan and then
Bandits' News
Really Bad:-
~ $126-Worth
Two armed robbers told a Westminster
· barmaid today lhey had "bad news''
for her, lhen proceeded to taU 1120 from
the bar'• cash "ii'*U· .
Nancy Murphy, ao empinyee ol the
C~cle In, 14091 Beach Bl•d., told police
two men peeked In the bar about !:OS
this morning. lhen left.
Thnle mlnula later Ibey relumed,
r.at dawn and drank a couple of been
and chatted with ber.
Then ooe said, "do you think It's
about time?"
The other turned to Mi.. Murphy and
said, "I've got bad news fot you."
The men displayed two ~ ptstolt;
one po8Sibly 1 double Iiarreled derrlnier,
and !old ber to ..., In tho -
for five mlnut.eL 'Ibey left wtth fUO
of the bar's money.
The robben were described u in their
early 30'& No.. vehlde wu ohlerved or
beard in the area.
Public Def ender ·
May Be Alone
In Ray Trial
MEMPHIS,, Tam. (UPI) -Criminal
Court J~ 'W. --. !akin& note of pt;.ey . F...,...., coollnolng U-
lnea, ·!od111 · ordered 6beJhy County
Public Defendel: Hugb Slanton Sr. to
prepare to de!end J amea Earl Ray by
hhMelf ii necessary.
In a me-minute comt ....ton, ·Battle
commented that be had been notified
by a doctor t.rtating ForeQlian. Ray's
ch2'f coumel, that the famed criminal
alt<roey was W with tnnuema ud
pneumonia.
BaUle then l!ked Slanton wbal
preparalionJ bad been made to bring
Ray to trial for the murder ol Dr.
MarUn Lother King Jr. on March I.
DAI LY PILOT
OllAfrfOI CO.-.ST f'UM.'5HIHG COMf'oUIY
Robert N. Wt•~
f't n liltftf •lld l'vbl i\IOlr
J•<• R. C•rl•v
Vke l'rtsloenl -Gftwt .. M1.,.vtt
n ...... 11: ••• ;1
lid!lor n ..... ~ ;... MY11,~;ft .
~ll>llE~
All11rt W. 11!11 WiLli1M Rttd
~swtl••• H""'•iftl'kloo •MC:h £,;1or City hllOr
H .............. .,,...
JOt St~ Sfff•t
M1ifi,.9 AIU'11'U P.O. I•• ltO, t2641 --..__. leitdl: t7fl ............ 1eu ..... .,.
c.11 ~: »t west llr Sfrtllt
-'polbed Coalney's car back Into ihe
i1r1 .... ay.
The ac~used tbe:n drove Milla Dincer·s
car toward 17th Street and Main Strett
where it collided with the white .sedan
driven by Mrs. Markee as she returned
home from the laundromat at Five
Points.
The .U,bl traffic accident evldenUy
led directly to the murder. Tho two
cars touched brte!Jy and there wu a
pursuit down 17th Street and ·Mrs.
Markee apparenUy got out of her car,
or wu draggr.d out.
She probably lllreslaled lo call police
becauae ol Ille aocldonl and the lllD<r
begeo to Blab al ber with a bllle poilllbly
.. ~
Harbour Group
Results of a traffic survey of the
HunUngton Harbour area will be given
lo tho city council Moodq, bul realdenl!
wbo complained ol lrafllc Jlnlblema may
not be happy with 1L
Coundlmeo meet al 4:30 p.m. In coun-
cil chambers ol Memorial Hall, &lb Street
IDd Pecan Avenue.
Pamila asked the council for lra!Uc
controls, 'sldewllkl, mmwalb and a pocket knife. · O~.~. !'!. thelellll!Derandca~_'!l,e ._. -~ w::..1o = = ~~
UllllM • wm ear auceu. acrou child wu killed In a traffic accldtnt. Jitr .throaLand """'-the bladec .blt.lbe. -The-·-~-~ -·~·~~ 1-artery on the left side of her neck . "'!"ll"' .,,......, S1U11 '-'1.. our-way
the blood !lptirted heavily over the killer. stop slgna have been inlta.lled at some
For a moment the kiUer stood on ol the tntersecUons near Davenport Driye
17th Street walcblng Mn Markee reel and Saybrook Lane, but ~tra!Jlc . -studle.s lbow 11111 the In on of away from him and back tow~~ her Edgewater i..ne and Davenport Drive
car wb1~ still hJd the motor nmning meets less than 50 percent of the na:
ana bt.adlighta burning. lionally accepted warrants for a four She lwlsled In a semi-<lrcular pattern. way atop. ·
blood epurllng In huge dn>plels from "A no parking r.one along Saybrook
her throat. Sbe fell a few Inches from Lane ts not justified and would be an
the front bumper of her slightly damaged extreme hardship on future resldenta
car· . of houses on that streeL ·
The , tiller jumped back into M1u "AddiUonal crosswalks will be lnstall.t.
Dinger s car and roared off into the on Saybrook at Davenport and on Daven.
nigh!, llnally parking Ille vehicle al 21st port and Edgewater al that tntmecUoo.
Street end Ollve Avenue In a --. erosswiolls-.ion, Sayjllwk will be mon
area of od tanks. . clea11y marked. ·
. Wednesday a_ ~ab driver told Hun· "'Ibe appropriate speed on Davenport
, tington Beach police he had picked up 14 35 miles per hoor. Lowtting this
a bloody fare wbo claimed be had been. speed limit cannot be Justified. Slnca
In a llPL He look· hlnl lo a .pol Saybrook ~ IS oow--beglnitlng to be
just 111 blocb !tom the lo<mbou!e apart-a residential atreel as homes are built
ment of Mi.. Dinger. lowering the speed limit to Z5 mph
Polk:e worked through the nlib~ ar-I! recamended.
resting bolll of Ille current iruspects "Warran!! fall far short of being met
about 5:30 a.m. Thursday at tbelr homes. al any location for the city to hire
Capt. RobJtallle aald that SJanez is an adult crossing patrol Schoolboy patrol
marrl.td and has at least one child. ll!I reeommended.
E;relumge €lt1fJ Helps -D.t.IL.Y ,ft.OT'""',..
Tom Bushard (1laD4lllal, HunUngtan Beach parks supervisor, ind
Bob Teny. past p""1deat of Huntington Beach E•c:llange Club, di>
pla,y ploquea commemorating club's elforts tn nllslng fUndJ for new
playground equipment at Wlnllow and LeBanl Parks. City oftlclals
gave club large .. thank you" Tbursday. Plaques will be placed Jn
parks.
(
---~-----------------------------------
•
.. ~ --. . . ·-..-
From P~e J
RELEASED. I I
WedneldaJ by 1 woman manhal.
'!be Jone female defendan< In tho
prisonor'I clock <!II, Ille riehl .i<ie of tho
Dlrtatoa Three -llwm, .... lllliled
acroa al Coatoey,• Ihm toward Iha
palr'1 alloroe)', Don McCartln, of Cosll
Mesa. ·,
Coatney, wWihg a · "1>lte shirt and
_., o•ercoat' which be used to hide his
biot from jlliotograpbers wblle belnr
moved from a paddy wagon into base-
ment boldlnr cells, !al wllll lour other
male prliooers.
Jadge Cbaranua ran through the ·.,.._
tomary announcement of defendant.'
eomtitutiooal rights and guarantees,
lhen proettded with his caseload.
The first two men called out were
uncertain about their legaJ repraenta-
tion, so Judge Charamza delayed their
cases and continued. on with the Coatney;
and Dinger arraignments.
Mc:Carlln asked that they be set Jan.
20 and Judge Charam:.a noted tlult Depu-o
ty District Attorney John Kroo1n had
uked that no ball be set for tbe two
ddendanl!.
"We've di9cuased it," McCartin replied,
al wbicb lime the judge qned to Ille
district attorney's request that the pair
be kept in no-bail custody, at least
unto their preliminary bearing.
TOPLESS VICKIE BUSTED
From C•mP\11 to Jatl .
Grimacing, the unshaven C.-y
abook h!s head ln a negative manner .
Miss Dinger sat on in the courtroom
for a short time, belore the matron
finally led her back downstairs to await
the return ride to Orange County Jail.
•• ' Viekie •Jndeeent' She smiled occasionally, once when
a youth, now attending weekJJ proballon
meetings, asked for leniency on a new
criminal charJle, BO be CID keep working
and continue his junkll' college ecb,,..tion
. .
'LA Mini-Judge Levels Charges SlandiJ!g beside his attorney, ho
bllllbingly adm1Ued thal -with Tljllm a-Vlckle DrUe.1111 cam-~ fer llodent body pnlldenl al
Slalord lllllTtri!ty, bu been ·cbarged ·
wllb Indecent expoeure by a WOllllD
lu"8• lamed for prasldlng In minlUlrfL
Hrii 114!lYwood. PoUoe 'De~
--ln•<ilfptora ilirrelled the IS-year-• old' .bJulfanLbloe<I< aLibe Boo.Ga-Loo ~ltib IDd booted her' on a warrant.
_ ~ by Loa .Angeles Municipal Court
J~e Joan Dempoey Klein, the docu·
mail cbaria Mi.. · Drake with both
lewd conduct and lnd1<enl erpQIUI'<.
!lie WU reJeaaed <ii $625 ball and
orderoc! to mum be/ore the bench Tues-
day to enter a pie~ ln the twin charges,
wblcb she lmmedlllely crillclied during
an lnlen!ew.
.. It'• ridlc:ulous, •• 1be cutvaceous danc-
er declared at her Hollywood apartment
.. I think my dancing ls In no way
lewd," llbe added, "and u far as indecent
uposure -well -I don 't think the
hDman bo6J lo._" his probaUoo olflcer hall tmned blo own
Mia llral<e lool ljlf!q wm Ille bearla ..,_ inlerestl Into Illa! area of IOdaJ
of many Slaalanl ....,.,.. and, aJlbougb work.
ber tOplem .._..,. far tho top llludeot Coalney remained In the docll: wttli
1
-other men, ~ -llJ lo IOftlnmenl 111!'1 wail i..t.Jbe nearly a roand-laced wa\'f-liatred youth llllt!nC
-. a JMJ«ily of !heir ballall too. lioslde blm, ai,. awalllng ao appearaiica ~ nude_ campalp!_ l>Otlm. ----btlore Judge Charamaa~ --quent!y became collec.tor'• lteim: and Huntington Beach detectives bad n-
shock wam spread from the rustle mained e5senlially tight Upped about 1
campua' quadrangle out over the rolling what -if anylhing beyond known
woodJY environs Into tbe hlgbest clrcles circumstantial evidence-linked Coatney
ol Academe. and Miss Dinger to the brutal crime. f
Her bold olalement that oludent bocly One prime. theory lnvclves a dlspate
eovmuneot Is a farce wu more over a slight, feoder-bender auto lie'*
reaponsjble for the llhock, perbapa, thao cldeo~ Involving Mi.. Dinger'• llolen
ber bare appnllcb lo C'!JllJIUS poltitcl. car.
Judge Klein. wbo losued the complaint The reddill>-bal1'd waitress' We model
naming Vlct1e, came · under aome car wu found, blood-spattered and abtn-
criliclllll hersell laat year due to wearing doned, eigbl blocb away In 1 lonely
mlnllkb1a in court and advocating oilfield area at 21st Street and Oliva
phyl1cal self~efeme education for Avenue.
women. A foot search by police located the
• vehicle after Donald Carr, of %.01 LoJola
Car Theft Jails Marine
Road, Costa Mesa, found Mrs. Martllle'1
bo<iy l3ing OD lb side in Ille beoma \
ol ber car'• beadligbts. I The victim, described by her employer,
Dr. Louis F. Hase.1Ie1d. as having a
totally winnbu!' way, was Involved In A 1e'21aged Camp Pendletoo Marine
wbo apparently wu gei1ing a ride back
to the baae from 1 Huntlqton Beach
man -without the latter's perml.Jsioa
-was arrested by Laguna Beach police
Wedneslay.
Pvt Lee V. Hampton, 17, was then
picked up by Costa ~iesa police and
lnmlferred to Orange County Juvenile
J{aU, on a charge or grand theft of
an automobUe.
Tom Foster, or 1991.2 Piccadilly Lane.
I a
HIDllinglon Beach, bad reported hi• 1966
converllble rtolen from outside Kona
Lanes, 21181 Harbor Blvd., early Wed·
ne!day.
Police who .topped the Marine on
Pacific Coast Highway at Third Street
in South Laguna said he also carried
credit cards and identification which
didn't fit him.
Mllllary pollce placed a bold on the
suspect, pending action by juvenile
autborltiea.
I 4
'•
a minor acciclent at nearby J'ltb 'and
Main streets just before tbe kUlJng. I
She was not the type berself to argue.
"She is -was. I mean -absolut.ely •.
one of the loveliest women I know.''
said the operator of a Huntington Beach
secretarial service whose daughter wu
a patient of Dr. Haselfeld.
"It's just ao unbelievable," ahe con-
tinued, "that woman wM devoutly
religious, a wonderful person wbo
literally had a halo of goodness."
2
MID-SEASON
CONTINUES
HENREDON
QUALITY CHAIRS AT A
SPECIAL PRICE • • • •
STARTING AT $199. EACH
HENUDON UPHOLSTERY SALE I
15°/o OFF ANY SPECIAL ORDU _
I
I
SALE ALSO INCLUDES SEl.ECTEO llROUPS FltOM DREXB._ HENREDON,
HEttlTA&E, PLUS OlliER ANE LINES. ACCESSORIES, PIClURES I LAMPS INClUDED.
IXCLUSIVll !>EALIU-. HZNUOON-DllEXll.-HIRITAOE
90 DAYS NO INTllUST-l-.,_ AVAii.AiLi ON Al'PROVED c:aEDf1'
_,.HACH
1127 ·-Dr. ta.111111 ...... , •. ....... 111IW1111 I I kw
D1sfc •• A:1 I ••• AID l&ib
LAGUNA IEAOI
:MS -c.-Hwy. •4 115'1 .... ...,.. ...
I • '
l
I
--
•
I the
>I the
mDed
' the
C:O.la
aod
le his
being
base-
other
' ,.,,..
!ants'
llet3,
were
1enta-
their
atneY,
Jan.
Jepu-
bad
I twO
31ied',
l the
pair
I !
least
lllley ·•
room I 11n>n
1wait u.
•hen
aUon
new.
·king
lion.
ht
with ...
oc:laJ
wtlli ~/-~r lne)'.
pute I ..,.
olen
ode!
boll-
neJy
lllv1
the
ioia I ....
""" \ I
i
yer,
f i!
'and
e.
lely
w" • ach ...
:on-
rtly
•ho
I
1'
I
I
'
• •I
•
I I
• 'r•w'• n.
•
N.'f.· SW•
' . VOC. 62, NO. ·1 s, 4 SECTIONS, l9 'PAGES.
. ' ' ..-... '
,•· 1'«101''(.., ~,,,"'{Q'~~Y,'1,7 •. :'"' ' ' ,
I , t • 1 "'.J I ,, • .,. , JEN l!'An.C 1 J -:11'""1-...
Town .Center· Pushed ,,. as L~gµ~a · t~r~ry · $ite
• • •
The presence of a new Laguna Beach
tibrary In the town ceoter woaJd acid
to the vitaUty aod idenlillcation ol the
area u the · ceoter fli the i.111...,,
cultural aod governmental· Ille et the
-.iunity.
This ls tbe opinion of general plan
eonsuJtant.s, Daniel, Mann, Jobmoo &
mlisloo, -board. -of the
Library and Oilier --ot illd!vlduoll.
·11>' pl••hil eoaoullllii1 --J!Mlllllad---BJ.erder ef ...... ce,thqare:
....,,,,. pipe yml of ~ 1-·lletch
COUnl7 w-Dlltrld -<11·'11ill'd
. -.... . " .r... _ .. _ . t
I' .
U.S., Viets C09fe:fring,
On ' Possible c ,ea·se-f ire
I
Again ·for Units
Fram~s Vit
.
t.aguna. mdtti .owner Lortn Haneline
will be 111¢t' before-the pliruling com·
mission Monday in an effort to Win
apJ1'V"al ~ I~ addillo\lal ·unita at bis
thriwcre fieU,Vbl!On .Vtllqe com·
pie<.
·~·----t.,:~@111 . : . . l .
1.114 :.. • • M1~1...W:11' merclil) ~ ' -.".11 ., 1 __, .... , '~·-:
=-~·,.,~ .. ~ lo ,..1 JS ... ~
rOOWldl • ind ·1n;,"*" loOI
by a u 1-a • .p111:, He ntediil •lour
votes to ovemile planninf commission
Steel frameWork of 230-seat puppet theater under construction at
Festival of Arts grounds is outlined ·against winter sky. New theater
adjacent to Festival restaurant will have display and storage Space
and will be available for community use ·during the off-season.
cleniaJ. ,
At a study 1teSSion this week, City
PlanRer Al 1-ub"y said HaneUne bas
exceeded the denai.ty allowed under the
present opllt llllllng" bis property •
Medical Exper.ts Support
Commission JFK Findings
How.Ver, Iii Aid, II the pr'oposed com:
men::lil-botel (CH) r.one is adopted. a
density ol ...... ilJan, ll!O· units 'lfOl!ld
he allowed. Autiy i&l~ the ..isttng ll2
parting ,_ .... ~ .
Jn other NmDMI, tbe commlsslon will:
-Again take ap lhe prec;,. plan for
extension of. Canyon Acres Drive referred
-;bJl '<lllll -·,wbi:b indicated it lnlended to approve the iotalfallpment
despite planners recommendatloit that
approval be given only a portion of
the allgnmenl WASHINGTON (AP ) - A panel of
rQedical experts which met in secret
1st year says the autopsy findings on
President John F. Kennedy were correct
as detailed in the Warren COmmisslon
Report and prove he was shot twice
from behind.
The report was made public by the
Justice Department Thursday night on
the eve of court proceedings on a petition.
by New Orleans Dist. Atty. Jtm Garrilon
to gain possession. of autopsy photographs
and 1:-rays in -the hope of proving the
President was hit by one bullet fired
from in front ol him, aod another fired
at his back.
Garrison subpoenaed the materi~l u ·
evidence in the trial of Clay L. Shaw,
retired SS-year old New 0 r I e a n s
Canine Kingdom
Set for Laguna
Rabies CJinic
Laguna's canine kingdom will be out
fn force Tuesday night -big ·dogs,
little dof!S, friendly dogs and IDOOly
doflS.
busin~man charged wiUt conspiring to
murder Kennedy.
Garrison claims he can use Ute
photographs and x-rays to prove at least
one of lhe bullets which struck Kennedy
in Dallas five years ago was fired from
hia front.
Thia would show that a conspiracj
was involved, whereas the Warren Com-
mission concluded Kennedy wu lhot
by one man, Lee Harvey Oswald, actJni
alone.
-Hold 1 first public hearing on several
new amm:lments to the zoning ordibance
(21111).
. -Consider a variance appllcatiob by
South cout Ford, 30.1 Broadway, to
PTA to Discuss
Laguna Ov~rride
The photographs aod •-tayt,..... pJao. A ·llkenl Liem>&, 11.i.)ICbool tu
ed''ln'the care of the National An:h!Vta overrlde,'1111 for-_......,...llion'April
in,11811 hr.Kennedy'• widow, Mn. ArJsto. · IS, will . be the topic ol discUlllpo at
tie >Onusis, and his brother, the late an -meeting ol the Unllled Pl'A Sen: Robert F. Kennedy. council Tbunday at 7,30 •p.m. at Top
Thia: was done by letter agreement of the. World Elementart School.
that the material would not be made Dr. William Ullom. district superin--
pubfic lor five years, and then only -~ win opeak al>oul h~ dillrlct's
to government investigators, to prevent growth end financial stritcture.
"undignified·,or sensational" USe of them. Following the , bullnea meeting, the •
Their report said, "'Examination of Chorale Readers from Laguna Beach
lhe clothing and of the photographs and High· School and Tburstm Intermediate
x-rays taken at the autopsy reveal that , School choral'*"" wtn·perronn. ~
President Kennedy was struck by two
bullets fired from above and behind
him, one of which traversed the base
of the neck on the right side without
striking bone aod the other ol which
enterel the llkulI from behind aod es-
ploded· Its riibt tide.
NEW YORK ·(AP) -'l1Jo stock market '
-1m&ullrlY -today .. profits --taaG .. Ille -earlier this Week. (llel qualalla; Paga IJ.H). •
Now It's Mond~y
( ' . . '
That San · Die~o
Freeway to O}>en
Re-scheduled several Umes, 'then re-
scheduled again for today,, the opening
of the' new, 8.8-mi)e, rmal Jee, of the
San Diego Freeway .ha! now been re-set,
hopefully for Monpy.
"It looks pretty good now," said a
spokesman for District. Seven of the
California Diviaion of Highway&, which
dedicated the tmportaJ)t link wly last
month. · ·• '
Rainy days were blamed for the latest
delay in completlm ol the jmllllmilllon
dollar &at!ic' artery, which will connect
tbe San Diego Freeway from the
SepolvOda Gap near Encino through to
the Irvine --. The 7kllle _,,,y will ~.with
the Sinta· Aita:Freeway at 'sand Canyon
in ~them Orange· County; and' ii ei:.-Pected fo ~e a heavy tralfic bu!den
off· the busy Inland l'.OUle.
Delay Jn delivery of a varl~ty of steel
signs and guardrails prevented the
freewsy fl'Oll\ 'going Into service ·just
arter ChrbtniaJ' u planned. '
· 50fne ramp strlninl. curbing and J!Uller
constructlon BM other 'fih8:l work, in-
cluding tr1nsfohner ln!tallation and ll(ht
system testing wali · also ' required at
that time. ~
Stale ~ said todsy t h at only
minor ~ aod cltanup wort remolDI
to be done cm tlie tneway ' ner the .. ~ . .. . . It will he the eighth annual rabies
dinlc CMJ>OllSOred by the Laguns B<ach
l.Jms Club and the Southern California
Vetennary Association.
The production line of preventive dog
medicine will take place from 7 p.m.
to 8:30 p.m. at fire department head-
quarters, 501 Forest Ave.
Aliso . Pier to Start '"in · Fall
Owners may have their dogs in·
oculated against' rabies for $1 .50.
At the same time, said Ray Schnei der,
1ocaJ SPCA manager, they may obtain
dog licenses for $5. Spayed females
licensing is $2.50. However, ownera of
the altered fema1es must show a
veterinarian's certificate ol sterilization.
Veterinarians donating their services
will Include Dr. E. Douglas Tlgnoc, . M·
W. Loge, G. R. Ek<berg and Robert
C. McCord. "'Ibis ii an ideal opportnnlty ,'' said
City Manager James D. Wheaton, .. to
bring doc ownen, rable.s vaccine and
licenses ial'tber."
I
Aliso Beach's watery denbens hllve
about 10 mooths left belore their domain
is invaded b)' an manner d coosU'uction
paraph""1jll~ .placing 'pllinp far a .IJah.
Ing pier. .
i. that I*lod before ·-be-
gins at the South Lapna beach, landside
planners and dndlmlen-wtll be working
ClUI the shape, 111\d ·P ~ ol
the pier based CID ~ ~ now un-
der WIJ' at tbe SooU! Lli8l!nl ~ The pier is doe fer comjileUon In Im.
It will ... f4IO,lllO -fqlally bJI .
the !)ran@ C«mty -Dlltr1ct aod the -nm mid Game~
I
Pfff'.t~Jt .. I
Thi•. porlnlil ®1iret1idani..&ect
Ricllanl Mi .Nilr<ii Is _. ~·
able I<> public. It is litbograph
of opll!nal. oil. .by· New York
aztis~ Gloria Sch"."'8"'.11'8\!\llis
on 12 by 16-tnCh art paper
packaged in parclunent folio.
Checks for $2.00 sbo\tld · lie
made out to Inaugural Com-
. hliltee, 440 "G'~St.1 NW,-Wash-ington, o.c:, 2(m5.
• •• . ' t
S dll·i:'..Jl= ··-. . -. m · uson.
F A'l:·11· _(}~· C,'Oll • .ll, (M'J ~ U.S. Ami.IN~
~:'": :; °:Hi:-=
1*alldlr In VI-,~ 16¥1 witb ~ NMtft' Vp ~ • U.S. tloep ............ ..... pooll,ble-=-~ i\11 ~ In .. ):
:Ila --toolt lilaco leis lltlll I! ~-•·announcement~ Paris tlill lbt';IJ'nlted Sii~ North Vle!naln,
SOUth W!nam aa4 ~ Viet Coo(• w ..
U..W l..!6eratioo Fron! will hesJil f<lur.
way talb Saturday.
Earlier, the U.S. Air Foroe diaclooed
It ls reviewing Its contingency planl
for: a troop withdrawal or a cease-fire.
One source said the meeting wu "pret-
ty high level stuff," alaJ attended by
Vice .President Nguyen Cao Ky aod
Foreign Mlnl!ter Tran Chanh Tbalib.
The Informant l8l!f the leaden dllc:uaied
(llee~Pqel)
Bloodmobile · Due
I~ La~.lJeiµili
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will he
In !Aguna Beach Feb. 3 lnml Z:'IO p.m.
to 7 p.m. at the Community Prabyteria!l
Church, 415 Forest Ave. -
· Mrs. John Downer, local Bloodmobile
chalnnan, urged prospective donon: to
caU the local Red Cross office at 49H6117 .•
to make appoinbnents.
There ii an utreme ahortage of blood
available to local county boopltala
becaat< of whi_.ad inctdenll ol the
Hong Kong flu, Mrs. Downer said.
. She noted that penons not infected
with the flu, or having recovered from
the -for two weeks prior to tbe
Feb. s dale are etiglhle to doDale.
Story Time Scheduled
Laguna Beach Library will start Ila
spring preschool llory time tor chllcjren
between· 3 anil 5 teirt of age Feb.
I at 9:30' a.m. al the library, 3113 Oten-
neyre St.
Orange
-·--·-·-·
1
I 1 • '
. '
I I
... --..... . -- ------.--
L
·-----..... . . ...
j , % llAJl.Y PILOT
·hen .·lteleased-in Beach· Death .. '
New Pait Held in Brutal Huntington Slaying
8y WILLIAM REED
Qt -.,..... , ... ""'
TWO now .._is In tbe bloody w.;,lnc
ol a Huntlngt<>o Beach gran<tmolber·are
scheduled for arraignment today on
formal murder charges in West Orange
County Munici(ll!I Court.
• ~used in the Sunday murder of
Hester S. Mllme ara · Henry L0per ·
Sianez, 25, of m: Clay St .• an oiltleld
worker; and Edward Roy Hargrave, IS.
of 17392 Ma.nm Lane, an unemployed • laborer... . .
~ Arrested iearHtr and now cleared of
any Jnvolvement in the crime are
Norman Coatney, fl, a Newport Buch ~aper!; and lllrpnta Diapr,
31; I · wlitras. .
Slanei' aputmoot II oo17 11' blDcb
from the Dinger apartment.
Tbe body ol Mra. Marltet, 55, ol UGI
OUve Ave., waJ found Sunday in a pool
ol lilood along aide her car oo 17th Sitoet. . .
oete..ilve C&pl. Elrle RobltaJlle an-
nounced 'Jburtdly tilt Nieue and
dJ1;mlssaJ or <:hlrau agalnJt Cbatney
IJ\d ·Mill Dlnglr ·foJloftd. am!SI early
thlt momin1 of the 1eCOnd two suSpectl.
Both Coatney and Miu Dinger wtre
rtleuld by I p.m. 'lllurldV·
lloblllllle lald the. police ''bave a llaJ&.
ment ond have J1b1a1ea1 nldeoct" In-
volving Siana and Hargrave. lllcludtd
In the pbysloal evidence Lt a klllfe beJltY•
ed to be tbe murder wupoft.
The -..... -· -IJ>o ftlllgaUon ol tbe story al a tu! ca)
driver that be bad plaked up a blooclJ
man early Moncll1 morning alter the
murder and drove blm .lo 311 Clay SI.
from 8th Street and Oran.at Avenue,
about two miles from the murder scene
and about the same distance from where
the abaadoned car used by the mW'dertr
W81 found.
; Slwrt Stretch of Road . Robllallle lllld that Mill Dini ... and
Coalney bad --1*:a11• Ibey coold 1111 eoplatn bow her bloody and aJlll>tl:Y damqed Cl!' happened lo be mJa&lni from her garage oo tbe Dlgbl
d the murder. ••
:Helps in Moon Landing He QPlallled !bat Ille bad told police
!be dnm lo the live -~
Center from her -"' -Delllware SI. and -about I 9.m. ·.·
A three-mlle stretch of San Clemente ·:road Ol"iled this week wfil make tb!liP
·.f.Uia' fqr men ~\~men nriinc_on
. ., . Coatney --·--. ~-·· -~ will parked· bis ...... Illa ilt1YIW111 ._ z:' ti~ ond r-.l:i dlroclly beldDd hen Ill -• -Pl ll''te~· · ~.~!~Uy pnveol ber car from · l1:ma. Pico, now ulellded ln1o the -.. ·-··-
'
hlllterlandl between the san ·Clemente It appears oow that Siana could have
Coaat ·ind Ille inounlalnl, -· _.r had a spart Ml of kJYa lo Miii Ilingtr'• wftli a hoopla not UIUally accGrded 0 car and bad lllld Iha veblcle wllboul
bumble two lllle rood. her pennllliOll bel<n.
a.mty lklperv1ao< Alton E. Allen, II apPtlrl that be and Hargrave oo
Allemblyman Robert E. Badllam, San the nlihl o1 the murder care!ully rolled
Clemente Mll)'llt Wade , JI'. 1'n!F . and Coatney'1 . car out ol tbe dr!T..,111 and
State $m. Jolm, G. Sdlmlla u well took Mlll Dlapr'1 bl1a ledan ud tbeD
u ,.e.ldei!tl ol local ""ll!lblrot ·ill ...,. ..,-eo.tDIJ'• car back Into the
men:e md encullte1 ol 'l'llW -~• dritnq,
Ille. a-tbe -Cldlloa 11\n'll)'. 1ba ..c.-i tbell dme Mlll Jllll(er'• Emi>i<>1" at the 'QIW '_ lodll!1 al car Iowan! 17th stnet and Ma1Q Stroot :l: ~ olF: = ~a: s: wbtre II collided wttll tbe white ledan Clem-ud al>oul IO per.-et Ibo e..--~ ICl'IU,. 14,1~~ ~
2IO worken .do, II cu1a Ill mllea from Polntl.
ll)elr dally drlftl: -. Tbo lllibl ltlfflc accident mtentty l'Ttie TJIW ..... II 'l!lll!J tbo,,..-.i J.!4. ~ .. lo l!ie -·~er ~ ~ 'englile 'wtdal 1llD Mlolid , Apolo ~ bddi, -~ . ·-••• .-Oil Ibo ibocm II being ·~ ' ' Pii1t -1711> :..i ~ ~
Bact Ill UD, Alie San Clemflii.;: M.1rbe appar1111Uy iot out o1 her Cll1'\
CIQICU, -lo ·_.i '81.00I U cl' WU lfriQcAI GUL
Illian Iii bul1dlll,( tlie rood. 'l1M:it II -Sbo !"Oblb!J -~ lo Call police
....i.re. lw>l'IM d the accldenl and Ibo killer
Moyor Lowor noted that public ....UOO becl'I to llllb al her 1llth a klllft polllbll
WU a bit adverle 1ben, bat DOW the a pocft1 knlle
money, _,,. well llPtllL Total dty A llub by the lllller Cl'Jllil tba recep-
lnwlvement gmo lo $ll0,000. Uori151 • t1ie left ur llld aJ1cod acruu ~m>I• plw fer proper~ lier tllfoit and when 1111 blade bit Ole .• •· ~ by the n>ld lllcludt a artery Oil the left aide ol her neck
. Oil' a »«ie Ille giYa lo the the bloncf oportecf beaT!I:)' 0"1' the killer,
.. ,_ T ,...., ·--Calt Cclnmunlly Hoepllal of Soalb Jl'Gt ' iJ lent tbe ~--. LEAD$ KIWANIANS"' · .J 'Lagull&.by the O'Neil RanCIL 1 J0111>, ~ on ' Residential and COllUllf!l'dll deftlop-171b Street walcblng Mra. Marbe reel
Proald .. t Joyce ment 00 the land ol the -llancb awl)' lr1llJ! '1lm and bad< lonnf her
Laguna Kiwanis
Officqs Named
N.., ofllcerl for the Laguna Beach
K!wanbl Club were IUlllOUllCtd loday by
.,,...Uy Jnstallod Club Praldent Robert
Joyce.
Robert J . Shepard Is tbe new v\c9-
pralden~ Arthur R. Boag, ltClllld vtce.
JJ™ldent; Guy W. Male, ...,..1ary; and
Dr. Donald c. Dunbar, ir.uurer.
Joyce, a sb:-ytar member of the
Kiwanis II the resident manqor ond
tu-consulian<-11 Hupp and Com_..
Laguna Beacll· ollloe.
The club's officen •ere ln,,lalled this
wed by Kiwanis Lt. Gov. Joe earthy. -.•.. " , .
DAllY PILOT
OllAJiCH! CO.UT PIJILISHINCO COMl>AfrfY .. ~ . . .
•olio•I f'I, Wool "'""''*"' _. ""'4Wlilr
J1cJ l . Cwd1y
\'b hn....., '"" G"""r .. ~ ..... ,
n."''' 11: ••• a ·-Tl1111111 A. M1,,1i;,.,
M111""'9 l!tlller
lticl11rd P. Nofl P11I Nittlll
&..""'.,. .. m . """"'"'"' Cl!¥ flllW Dirt<• -
~ ....... om..
111 , ••••• -1.., ••
M1 lli•t Alol••u.!'P.0. Sol 4t6! •1•12
°""" -C-11 ¥tu: SJf Wnf • .., ff ....
......., hocll: tt\I #f\I 11""9 ~ ....... --~ .. Kh!_Wl, ......
and bl& Vllbeel< llwll II alao plamed car ~ liill bad Iba motor IUlllllbg ud 1'Mlllbla burnllll-
Laguna High's
'Nautilus'
Y earhook on Sale
Tbf. NauUlus, yearbook of Laguna
Buc.b High School, ls on aale now
througb Jan. H at the high ochool
auditorium wlMow.
Reoeriatiolll for copies of the lt!Mt
yearbook, to be rtleued at tbe end of school '~. IDIY be made before and afler acbOol and at lunch hour.
The ntpap book costs 18.~ for
stud .. 11 with a ltudeol body card and
17 fer._ 111-.
The tiook'• centnl theme tbll year
la · ''Min ud Natma." lo be oanled.
oul In three aeuooal dltlllan& 11111!1o
the book.
A 1111ri111 llUppim.t ol adlvltlol talt·
Ing ,i-· -prut-Ume Ill< the '"'
book will be malled lo -d1Jr!n& ·Ibo .,_.... G~ lalAI sport1,
and --will be lncl8det
Herbert Bryant ..
Rites Saturday
Funelal iti rb. fer H~ COOpio
Btyanl ol Lqlula Hila IAilAa't World
will bt · lleld~S llatm<lq a
St. Gecil'W• ~ ICI Two.
Mr. BIJltll, A...WO lllajor<a, diod n.taY. He ... IS.. -
wUl "" it ~El Two OlmUrT --ol1--111111•1· A _.-artrcrld 'll'lr 1, Mr. 11rJ0111
WU I 'f ..... rice Jnlltml ...
,_ for Wllhl""'°" IMW SaTlop
Jlant.
SWvlVOll lnclallo hll -· Dorotlly;
I daqlMr, l(rw. -111111 ol !law or-..; a-.-. <Jo!qeHatcr o1a....mv.,am1~..-
W.age Booat Backed
. WAlllJNG'IQ( W°) ..., w. Wiilard
Wlrll, outaollll ~ ol labot.:: 1111· hdnI mlDtmn ..... ......
lbauJd .. tncr•••d ,,.. fl.II ... beur
lo $1. and, "Noboc!J wllo -llbould be left out.•• '
~ ~ In • ilmklttuJar patt<m,
1 ~ ID Imp dropleto from
ber tllroal She fell • 1 ... -Imm
tbe -bumper ol ber IUPll1 damqed car.
1ba kllJer: Jumped back Into Miia
Dlopr'a car ud . roared off Into the
nlgbL flnaJty partlq the veblde at 1111
Street and Olift Avenue lll a deterted area ol QI! tub.
' Prom P .. e 1
VIE1'NAM •••
"• •bole QllCtrum ol thinp" for aearJy two houri.
Topics Included:
-WIUldrawaJ alAnmbn "--bow
IDIJ\Yudbow-.
-~. truce, wbld1 could 1DM11 a Iola]
.....:nr., • parlllJ -or • "oeue-fire In pl8ct.'.' .1bl tatter means
all b1>0po wooJd almplJ lloy wben Ibey
an, witbout mounUoc 1111 new <>P"•
lions or CUIUmdn( 1111 old -.
-!low lo rotallato lf tbe -abould
•llack SaJp d1Jr!n& the -...,u.. lions. "In other word.a." Aid tbe 10UrCe.
'"would tbll mean an aautomaUe resum.p-
llon of bombing North Vietnam!" and
tbedemllllariJed...,.,
Ky, aupenoltor of -Vle!nam'1 Paris ~allon, II ICbldulod lo mum
1o t!:urope oorty nut -· u. Alem Johnm, wxltnecietary of
Ital< for poUUoal alfaln In the 1J-.1ng
Nlzon aclmlnlmatlon, canceled a
~ed ~ wttll 'l1lleu later ... lllJ, A opokamae for the U.S. Mluloo
Nld be bad a bad.CllO ol nu.
-bu .-CCllllorrlng 111UI lop ----ofllclUi -w-.,. Ho la ......... la
haft for WUlllnalon Satanla;J lo report
bis flndq, lo ~ Nlzon,
but the apot......, Aid bis depariun
...,. be dellJod by bll -Wblle Anm1 II qllnot -winl lll1----bof ... lllld.Jl117, -Aid be bu r<Jilctootly ~ Ibo !Id 11111 ..... troop
111tbilnnrall w111 be made rolatlvely -.
Wannanto -lo Tbfeu lald tbe lftlu.t irhb<ltanl -l could
lpedfJ lnm 111,GllO lo IO,GllO'men wltbaul
aumllable. ·
0q 'lbundljo, PnmlerTnn Van HU0111
... quoted by • .-.. llYtnr
be ballovOl lbl u-8talOI could becln a wltbdranl ol. 101000 mea • mooth
111tbaul com~ the war effort.
'
------------------------~ -
3 Cosmonauts
Land Safely
Mter Switch
MOSCOW (AP) -Three of the Soviet
Union's four orbiting cosmonauts came
down on the windswept, snow-covtrtd
aleppes ol Kazakhstan tod"3' and climbed
from their Soyuz 4 llpllcteraft Into 21·
degree below zero weather.
Vlllagers rushed up to them with
overcoat. to protect them from the Icy
blast of the wind about 1,500 miles
southeast of Moscow..
"How are you feeling, dear boys?"
one villager uked.
"No words can express tt,0 replied
cosmonaut Alexei Yeliseyev. "Very glad. !
Extremely happy." I Soyuz 5 with cosmonaut Boris Volynov
remained In orbit. I
Tbo .,.,_,_ 1n the two _.it I
performed the world'• first mantwd dock· 1
tog in spice and crew trw!er. I
Tbe m1ssion wu seen bere and abroed
U opening tbe WIJ lo permanent l!JlllCO
labcntorlel and auambly of orbital plat·
, forms for lunar and even tnterplanetarJ:
travel. ..
TOPLESS VICKIE BUSTED
· From C1mpu1 to Jall
Yeli5eye• and Vevgeny Khrunov had ·
the 10 far wl!que esperience of landing
In a different spacecraft: from the ooe
in which they were launched Wednesday.
Together wilh Vladlmlr Shatalov they
rode Soyuz 4 to a preset landing point
about 25 miles northwest of Karaganda,
a steel..JD.aldng city. Vi~kie •Jnde~ent!'
LA Mini-Judge Leveu Charges
A recovery helicopter spotted the Soyuz
ship even before Jt landed, the otflc:ial
news agency Tass reported. \
Tbe fourth cosmona~ Volynov, con·
tlnued orbitln( through the day lll Soyuz \ 5 and wu not apecled lo lnlld before
Satunlay morning when bis orbll pattern
would bring him over the aame landing Topleu dancer Vickie llrake, 1111111 cam-
palper for -body praldenl at Staafonl Unhmlly, bu been cbarpd
1llth -apciUO by a WOIDall j1ldge famed for presldlni In mlnllJdrta.
North Jlollywood Pollco Department
vice· fo•estlplort llm!lled tbe n.,ur.
old bouf&nl blonde at the Jloo.Ga·Loo
nlgbldub and booked her OD a wammL
Slgiled by Loi Angeles Munlcipal COurt
Judge Joan Dempsey K1ein. the docu-
ment charges Miss Drake with both
lewd conduct and indecent eiposure.
Sbe WU releued Oil $62i ball and
onltr<d lo return before the bellcb ru ...
day lo enter a plea lll the -charges, wblch lhe lmmMialely crltlclRd during .. -......
"It'a rldlcul~," the curvaceous danc--
tr declared at her Hollywood aparlmenL
I
''I th1nl: my d.lrx:ing la ID no way
lewd," she added, "'and II far II indectnt
tlJl'ISlft -well -I doll1 1111nt tbe
_.., body la lndeeent."
Miii Drake lut oprtng won the bearta
of many Stlllfonl llodenll and, allbouP
her loplesa campaign for !be lop student
government spot went bust, she nearly
won, a majority of their ballots too.
Her nude campaign posters subse-
quently became collector's itema: and
shock waves spread from the rustic
campus' quadrangle out over UJe rolling
woodsy envirom lnto the highest circles
ol AcOdeme.
Her bold statement that student body
government is a farce was more
respomjble for the shock, perhaps, than
her bare approocb lo campus polilicL
4
area · ·
The Soviet press bailed tbe docking I
of Soyuz 4 and Soyuz 5 ond tbe cr.w
transfer u a tq dep toward 1wmbly
of permanent space plalforma ,pr
laboratori". Newspapers stressed the
scienlilic advantages or I on g-term
celestial and terrestrial observation and
scientific work in the vacuum of space.
Engineer Yuri Zenov, writing in Prav·
da, pictured future space platfonm as
way stations for interplanetary rugbts.
Here future space travelers could train
in space conditions and get acclimaUzed
for long space trips.
Foreigners here pointed out the
military advantage of a permanent space
station, both for sky-spying and even
as a base for launching bombs •
I
MID-SEASON
CONTINUES
HENREDON
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15°4 Off' ANY SP!CIAL ORDER •
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HERITA$E, PLUS OTHElt RNE LINES. AC:CESSOIUES, PICTURES I LAMPS INClUDEO,
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Cong Want Coalition
Statement Points Collision With Allies
PARIS (UPI) -1be Vl<t Corl& said
today , OID prottdutaJ mat1en a.rt out.
ol the ~ they wm op.On <llacusslona
oa peace; In Vietnam with the . .demand
for withdrawal of an u. s. troope from
SOUth Vietnam and "tablbhDnt of a
Radarman Hurt
In Jet Crash
Changes Hospital
First Lt. Edmund A. Kinsella, 24, of
Tustin, Morino COrpl radar olllcer wbo
WU Injured Monday -a Pbanlom
jel from El Toro Marine COrpl Air
Sutlon eruhed about !ID miles from
the air """ ..... transl!<red lo Sao
Diego Nay&! Hoopllal 'l'llllmay,
MariM authoritiet taJd be wu remov-
ed to San Dlet:o becau.se he ma,y need
an artificial kidney machine.
coaUtlon • ........-In Saigon_
1be .. tement of.the Viet °"'J pooltlon
meant a heodon coUiaion with the Unlled
States and the SaJ&on .......... 1 wllich
w<re conferring In bolb Paris ml Sal&on
on IUCh problems u a. po?lfat Amul<an
troop withdrawal and ways of ~ing
''Communist aggruaion" qainst tbe
Sajp a:ovenunent.
The conference beginl at 10:~ a.m.
Saturday at the fonner Hotel .M1Jestic
with a preliminary di~ion of pro.
cedural n11tters. Then they dilcusa the
agenda, the topics to be taken up by
the conference. Jt took the two sides
77 days of bickering lo de<ide to meet
•• • 1'lUlld table and dlplomato said
• -... the agendo could take manthL
"We want a total withdrawal ol
Amtrlcan troopl," Tran Hoe.I. Nam. a
lop memm ol the Viet Cooc deloptloll,
•
told a ---.,,,. ---..... tile -people"Ullo lo ..u!e their own problaN."
<:daununlll -said the North
V.....,._ and Viet Corl& e will the offldal label ol Ille' be ~"Paris oonfflftMI on V "
Tbey declined lo 10Y will' U would not
be referred to u a "peace coofereoce."
Nam said the Commtm.111 aide would
present a five-point agenda headed by
the demand for an American witbdrawal.
The other points are tbo6e ~
adopted and made pubUc by the ~et
Cong leodenblp through lu polltlcal arm,
the Natlollal Uhenlion Front. 'Il>la can.
for the elllbllnnenl " • broadly hued cabinet In Saigon (coalltloo), !roe dee>
tloOI In the 80Utb, guoranteed neutralltY
of the IOUtbem hllf of the COlllllry
and grodual rtlllllflcatlon wllh the ncrth
thl1lU(ll peacdUI .......
Anaheim Girl, 18, Escapes
Whicla Twita Is Which?
Kinsel1I was plcted up T\Juday af·
temoon about eight miles from. where
the wreckage of the jet w·u found
Wednesday afternoon east or Ortega
Hlgbway.
The injured. flyer was taken to St.
Kidnaper in San Francisco
Until a fev; days ago when a dot of red nail polish
washed off of Terry's big toe, Mrs. Dennis Bruce
of Detroit , ~1ich., had no trouble telling her inden-
tical, six-month-old twins, Terry and Tracy, apart.
Parents are having palmprints made to compare
with hospital palmprints taken at birth to solve the
problem.
Joseph Hospital in Orange w be re he
was reported ln fair condition IUffering
from a fractured shoulder, dialocated
knee and ruptured leg artery whlcll c&U>-
ed blm lo .... cooslderable blood.
An ·11-ytaMJd Anaheim cirl who was she managed to Id away.
kidnaped: at tnlfepoint dJirlnl the holdup PoUce said Black and a waitttM,
of a Stan&on rataurant We.dneldar night Barbara Ann Jamenon. a roommate
-·ped ~ •--~--~-· -.:....... of Miss Wright, were claoln& the
.......... lllaUl ui::c-~ ... """~ restaurant when Black gabbed her and
Student Groups
To Demonstrate
Against Rege1its
BERKELEY (UPI) -A coalition of
seven student groups called for a mass·
ive demonstration when the University
of California board of regen ts meets
today.
The students planned to pi cket and
den1onstrate outside University Halt
prior to an open afternoon regents' ses-
sion.
Jn a handbill distributed this week on
campus, they said their main purpose
was to sho""' support for the strike at
San Francisco State College.
Jn addition, the demonstrators said
they would call for defeat of legislation
proposed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to
'control campus disturbances; general
amnesty for demonstrators oo all cam-
puses, including dropping of all criminal
and academic punishments ; and an end
to alleged intereference by the regents
in academic affairs in order to suppress
radical vie"·s.
The 24-man board met Thursday in
private committee meetings. A beefed
up squad of police guarded all entrances
to the meeting room, bul there were no
demonstrators and no incidents.
Two County Gls
Die in Viet War
Two Orange County Gls are listed
among 28 servicemen who recenlly died
in Vietnam , according to a roster releas-
ed by the Defense Deprtment Thursday.
Armp Spec/4 Philip C. Erickson, son
of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Erickson.
of 12782 Lucille Ave.. Garden Grove,
had been missing, but is now kno"·n
to have been killed in combat.
Army Pfc. Tommy C. Donovan 11,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy C. Donovan.
of 905 S. Western Ave ., Anaheim, died
of non-hostile ca uses, govern men t
sources said.
Panama Ship Sinks
CAGLIARI, Sardinia (AP} - A
Panamanian-flag freighter with 21 men
aboard sank in a storm today 40 miles
off Sardinia ·s southwest coast and naval
authorities reported four men dead and
si.J. missing . ~
In dow.-a Sm Fnmcllco and mmned lied her up. He stole $110 lnm the
by plane lo Orance Oouaty Airport. cosb register.
Suzie's Operation Success;
Viet Girl Goes Home Soon
,,,. body of pilot Maj. Cbarl'" L.
''Chili" Rodgen, 36, o1 et Moonbln
Ave., WguD& Beach, was found in the
plane.
·Memorial oervlcm fer Major RodgU1
will be held Monday 11 10 a.m. In
the El Toro Slltlon O>apel lntmn<nt
wUI lollow w.dnesdl)' · at FL Sam
Homtou Nafioall Cemetery, Sin Antonio,
Tuu.
u.~ w~ .... at 1711 W -._ __ A Mia Jamenon said Blaclt fold. lier
-•-·-. • ~-· .._, ho wu wailing for • friend !Jul iben wu ~ -IO:» p.m_. ·Wedo Min Wrtpt drove up, ho -lo I h •
neodoy lnm Carl'• Jr. Jluriers, Ulm car, threateoed her with a llnife and
Beach Blvd. 'l1>e IUsped la • man who look oil.
hod bee a employed a a coot ot lb 1 Mia Wrtpt'1 e1e1pe In Sa.Flaadaco
ale. WU dbcfooed by James Sbdfler .who
Pollce ldentlfled tho! 11mpect. who la OW111 a houae where 1he two girls lift.
still at large, u Harlan Lee Black, He said she phoned him. 'f r om the
By TOri.t BARLEY
01 I ... D•llY Pit.I $1111
'·Suzie can go home .··
Those were 1he doctors orders today
al Child rens Hospital as jubilant surgeons
pronounced their open heart operation
on little Nguyen Thi Thanh Phuong tu
be "a complete success."
Two-year-old Suzie, however, won 't be
returning to her Da Nang home just
yet. Wbat the surgeons have in mind
is a spell of "fairly active'' convales·
L'ence in Orange County and another
member of the hospital staff has fitepped
forward to fill the breach.
Suzle will go to the home o[ Dr.
Albert Goh in Orange on Monday. And
with her will go her mother, Li Thi
Lan and interpeter Doan Mong Ooalmh.
"They'll be guests of Dr. Goh until
it is felt that Suzie is well enough
to return lo Vietnam." a hospital
spokesman said. "It isn 't known just
• 2%, of 10580 Beach Blvd., Stanton. San Francilco Alrport and he told' her
17 Id B F d. The girl told police Black made her to get on a plane for Orange Coanty. \Yhen lhat will be but at Suzie's present •yCar•O oy OUD drive her OWD car which was used in She WAI weariDJ. pajamu and a red
rate of progress il can't be too far the abducUon. houlecoat when. abducted.
away." Guilty of SFV Arson Miss Wright weot through. traumatic Stanton poUce md her al the local Suzie underwent the delicate five-hour experience in Bakersfield wbert she was airport. She wu then wearin& a white sur~ery a week ago . Her recovery from LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -A 17-year~ld stopped by a traffic officer. 1.3; the swNtlhirt and green jeans.
an operation that practically rebuilt her member of the Black Student Union officer wu writing the Uckel, she told · Blact is an ex-convict who wu Jen.
ailing heart has been "phenomenal'', has been found guilty of arson by a police, Blaclr. held a tnife at her back. tented May 10, 1965 to date prilon
lier physicians state. juvenile court rtfetee in connection with The girl escaped during the noon hour fOr carrying a concta1ed weapon. Be
The deci sion to release the rapidly a $100,000 fire at San Funando Valley rush near the Hilton Hotel in San Fr81r wu rtleased on a court order Dec.
improving child on Monday has caused Slate College. cl3CO. Police have not Indicated bow a, ua a temporary setback to plans for a ...::=::..::=:::::. _________ _:_~_:__:_.:.._.:.... ________ .:._ __________ _
victory party for Suzie's constant com·
panions. It was to have been held at
noon Tuesday at the Balboa Bay Club.
Verda Mackey, public relations director
at Childrens Hospital. today was trying
to arrange a new date with the Newport
Beach club. "We'll still have the party,"
she said, "its just a matter of arranging
a new time."
The celebrants, who will include Suzie's
mother and inlerpeter, will be guesU
of the bayfront restaurant.
State Senators to Suppo1·t
lsla11d Desalting Proposal.
a new life •Ill• .....
with your own beac:ld
CROft VRLLEY
HIGHIB~DS*t
Bolsa. Island nuclear desalting plant,
planned for an artificial island to be
bu.ilt off the co.ast of Huntington Beach,
got the promise of support today from
the slale's two senators.
The island project was boosted by
Sen. Alan Cranston who said that he
and Sen. George Murphy planned to
work toge ther in an effort lo breathe
new life into the salt water reclamation
project.
Production of about SO milllon gallons
per day of desalted sea water is the
present goal of the J\.1etropolitan Water
District (MWD) whi ch has announced
plans to have a plant in operation in
the proposed islaod in the early 1970s.
Key to the project is money, most
all involved or who have been involved
in the project agree. Estimates of the
cost hovered around $44.f million during
the planning st.ages for the fO.acre island
which was to house nuclear ·generating
equipment capable or producing elec·
tricity.
When costs soared to $765 million lhe
Southern California Edison Co., ~
Diego Gas and Electric C.O. and Loi
Angeles Department of Water and Power
dropped out of the project leaving MWD
alone with the promise of some federal
help.
MWD directors were successful in win·
ning an extension of the federal
government's assistance with some $72
million untll March 31, but directors
""'ould like greater participation and e:J:·
tension o! the aid over a period long
enough to do advance planning.
Crarui:ton said be wlll join tbost who
are trying to get the project back on
the tracks in some form, pointi.nj: out
his belief that "desalting sea water of·
fered hope for alleviating w a t e r
shortages In areas such as Southern
CalifonUa ."
.. •• , llgml"' .. s.11111
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.. A .. ._. .... ._a.-.llf __ O..._.,
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$23,000-md you own._ lnll
................ tllaf ......... •----........ _..._ ............... _ ... _ .............. -. ... ..,~-· ..... ... '-..... .,.,.. ............ ....... ....................... --. ....... ... ................ ,..._ ....... _ _,...., ...... -........ _ ... .....___...._ .................. m UGlJNA NGJl!LCXID'tSAIDI
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Blind Boy to Get Help
Kniglits Te1nplar Eye Group to Pay Operation Costs
By TERRY COVILLE
CH tM 0.llY ~lilt Siii!
A plea for he lp to aid a blind Hun·
tington Beach boy 'was answered today
by the Knights Templar Eye Foundation,
lnc.
The story or Felix Gutierrez:, published
In Thursday's DAILY PILOT, turned
up a bright hope th.is morning, when
a member of the Knights Templar, Com-
mandery No. 36. Santa Ana, .said the
Foundation would pay all f'll:penses for
an eye operalion on young Felill'. if the
specialist's re port sllows his eyesight
can be re!;f.orcd.
Felix ""'as to be Pxan1incd <1l JI a.m.
today by neuro ophlbalmologist Dr. Jack
Crlltdstein of Lo! Alamit~.
Dr. Goldstein will try lo determine
if medica l attention c.an restore telix'
Vi!lkJn The boy OOW ha~ e>ne--qUarter
vi.sk>n in one eye. The other I~ completely
blind.
The Knlgtilo; Templar men1ber, who
preferred to re1naln unidentirled, said
If Dr. Goldstein rinds th.at Felix' eyuight
can be restored, The Knights Tenplar
Eye Foundation will pay 100 percent
of the standard surgjcal fet. hospital
expenses, and upenses ror glasses if
needed to further correct bis vision.
The Ji"oundaUon i.!I a naUooal charity
organfzaUon wit.b headquarten in New
York. It has an eye bank and baodles
many cases such u Felb: where an
individual needs attention. but cannot
afford the heavy expenaea.
The only requirements are that a
Knights Te.mplar member sponsor the
individual and that an eye specialist.
in this case Dr. Gokt.slein, certify that
vision can be restored.
At this point It is not known what
medical auentlon "'Ill be requ.ired for
l~year~ld Fells:. He has never been
examined before by an eye specialist.
Feltll'. eyesight began fading when he
was aeven-yean-otd. Three yeani ago
his family moved to HunUngton Beach
from Monterrey, Mexico, so the father
could rind better work.
Up-ta.now the only attention f'elir
received was from the Huntington Beach
Union lligb School District whicb ptaced
him in a school in Orange to ·1earn
Braille.
A few days ago a group d. ciUlenl
In the Council for Community Pn>jectl
based in Westminster learned of Feliz.'
sltuaUon.
They contacted Mrs. Alice Medln&,
director of the HIDlllngt<rl Beach Com-
m11nlty Center. a neighbor of the Gutl«-
rez famUy, who explained the boy'• pro-
blem .
~lemben: or the council manaaed to
acquire the services of Dr. Gola1tetn.
without charge. They didn't know what
the next step wouJd be, but wen
determined to get the ball rolling.
No one in the Gutierrez f~y speak•
English. so Mrs. Medina a Dr. Jack
Kent. president ol the prnj council,
have been erplainina: eveota the famf..
ly.
Now, thanks to the Knigbta Templar,
the next stop la ochleved. II only awaits
the results ot today'• eumln.aUon.
I A Sp,cial ·Preview Party
FOR SOUTH COAST FAMIL•ES ONLYI
, Sat., Jan. 18 From 2 to 6 p.m., the striking new homes of
CROWN VALLEY HIGHLANDS wll be Offend for s.l1J
First Come, First Choice-Reh nllments will be SIMJd I
' \ I
•
r
I
,
•
DAILY f!lOT rrldlJ, -11, 196'
Agnew .N ameo Liaison
Will Deal With 'State, Lqcal Governments
(~ ., ...... , ... ,....,
The one-1 i o e advertisement
asked: "Are you interested in
~ex?" JI took two hours of dialillg
lo get through lo the telephone
number listed and the caller was
greeted by a recorded male voice
saying: "One of the lint rules ol
the Communist Revolution is to
corrupt the morals of the youth
primarily by sex or a breakdown
in the moral code .•.. 0 The tele-
phone number was the Amarillo
Tex. Freedom Information Center. • •
1 • A former gangi;ttr who kttttQ
t Bonnie and Clyde rtttlrn1d to
his home city. Montreal, afttr
33 years in prison and ont of
the tilings ht plam to do U see
the movit about tht 'notoriotU
pair. Alvin Karpis, 61, ccrltader
of the Karpis-'-fa Barker gang
says ht knew Bonnie and Clyde
4' "a couple of fun-loving kida."
• When the youth dashed past
Mrs. Edn• Jonoo, 66, of Detroit and
grabbed her purse, sbe just kept
walking, boarded her bus and went to work. It was the 1b:th time in
Ille past two years Mn. Jones'
p~ bas been snatched. Thi.J lime
she carried her money elsewhere
and the pul"'e held her }uncll -a
piece -of chicken;-cookies· and -a--
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -PrtsJ.
deoklec:t Rlcban! M. Nlion dOlllsnaled
Vkt Pr.alijent-elecl Spiro T. Aanew ..
his .ddel llallon wll!i .iai. and local ao•·
ernmerits loil'1 and charged him with mUJnc lht lederll machinery "recep-tive" to their Dlflds,1 ,
ln a statemtlit WUed from hiJ vaca·
tion headquarter., Nil:on said Aa;new
"will encourage aod assist In £1cllitatlng'
maximum cooperation between the var-
ious federal agenclM: and date and local
governments.''
"ll will be his "'POflB!bllity to ~
the federal machl.U, .... a1uve, roctp-
Uve Ind rapoaatfe tO tbett T1tw1.'•
Nixon also ._aid Agnew , would work
clooely wttb lbe Advlaory Coaunlaslon
on lntu-pemmenlal Relatlool and en-
courage Its wor). . ,
"Absolutely .,..nUal to my admlnl-
straUon Is a more pracUcal and tu~
tional role for state and local iovem-
ment olfidals i.D tbe • fom!Jlilltm ind
execution or feder1I policies, profr11ma:,
goals and priori.tie!," l'fli:OJ'I l&k!.
"Our state and local olfideljl )lave the
dll!lcult Job of mesbir!g leclerel ""1st·
UPI Ttftphot.
' cupcake. • RUSKS DEPART -Mrs. Dean Rusk sheds a tear during the playing
A burglar· looted the home of
Dorothy Kennedy Brooks this week
and b au!ed off the presents that
were still µnder the Christmas
tree. The take included a ,1,000
diamond watpl. Mn. Brooks of
Houston said she and her 16-year-
cld daughter sometimes leave the
tree up until March because tbey
ljke to look at ii.
of "Auld r.,.ng Syne" as State Department employes say goodbye to
her and Secretary Rusk at a reception in the department's auditor-
ium Thursday night.
Senate Bids President
• A Sentimental Farewell
Hoto doe• U /tel to lfam that: Lovtd
ant IOill M coming h07M ofUr uarJ11
18 ytara? Mrs. Morton Sobtll and her
mother..in·hno Mrr. Rose SobtU •how
sharp C()ntrasti m tmotiorL ofUr they
learmd that huabcnd-aon Morton So-
bel!, who WCl8 impriaomd in a con·
spiracy to gtvt Ru.!sia atomic bomb
secrets, had won his rtlta&e from
feckral prison. · • A pair of bandits held up a drive·
In grocery in Dallas taking all of
the cash. Before they left, they
told the night manager to do 1211
pushups. The next night, the same
pair held up the same store again
and took the cash from the same
night manager. They also took his
wallet but then Ibey relented. This
tjme, they said, he only had to do
105 pusbups.
WASHJNGroN (UPI) -The Sen.le
paid tribute to President Johnson today
in a warm farewell that joined political
friends and f0<$.
Sen. Mike Mansfield, who succeeded
Johnson as Sena le Democratic leader,
Lodge Promises
Every Effort
For Viet Peace
W ASHlllGTON (UPI) -Ambassador Remy Cabot Lodge pledged today that
as Pm.ide~-elect Richard M. Nixon's
chief negotiator in Pari5, he will do
eftrythtng tn his power to achieve sue·
ass in tbe Vietnam pea~ talks.
After a cl~ meeting with the Sen·
ate Fortign Relations Committee, Lodge
told newsmen that he considers the ne·
gotiations a malter of "greatest urgency
and supreme importance." ·
He also described himse1£ as a '"real·
!st" on Vietnam, and is neitller a dove
nor a hawk.
Chainnan J. William Fulbright , (0-
Ark.), said Lodge "gave me the lmpres·
sion he is amious to get these negofla-
ti005 under way " and bring the war to
a close. Fulbright said he felt a cease·
fire should be the first order of business
in Paris.
said the President "kept alive the pro--
mise of liberty and justice for all."
Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona , the
Republican who lost the presidency to
John.son in the 1964 landslide, said the
outgoing chier executive had served
"with credit and honor."
Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen
or Il linois intoned: "Hail and farewell
and godspeed."
Later in the day, Johnson arranged
to make a valedictory appearance before
the Washington news corps by attending
the annual membership meeting of the
National Press Club.
At the Senate cercmoay, Goldwater
jested that he views Johnson "with mixed
emotions."
He praised Johnsorl°s "s uperb
performance" in the days following the
a5135sinatiOn ()f the late President John
F. Kennedy iri 1963. Then the former
GOP candidate cracked lhal in the 1964
election he "singlehandedly conferred
upon him the title or landslide Johnson."
t\1ansfield said in the perspecti\le of
history, "Lyndon Johnson will have been
seen to have linked the past with the
present."
"When Lyndon Baines Johnson leaves
the naUon's capital, we shall miss him,''
Dirksen said. "He shall also rnJss us."
The President was bowing out on a
note of achievemeot -the latest being
the breakthrough in the P1tis talks on
possible peace in Vietnam.
Dense Fog Blankets U.S.
Gulf Warm Front Lifts Lake Erie Temperatures
~
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anco wltb tbelr needl, and I leel d).,,,
11 no group In • better JlOllUon te ad-
vise the federal government. on how to
Improve domallc JllOllTam> than O-men and women who have the ulUmlte
responsl blllty for c'!Tflnc them out."
Nllon Aid tbe lederll depu1menl&
and qencl• ll&o would lool< to Aln<W
as hll penonal repreaentaUve to snlooth
out ""'Ill -In thtlr relaUons with
state and" local eovernments.
"We want to mene the sltuaUon
wherein &late and loci! olDclall mere\Y
get the wont from Wuhlngton," Nino
said.
"Rather we want the federal govem--
ment to &et tbe word from the state and
local pemmenta on bow Ibey view
peodlng !eden! dedalom, wbal their
pdorttlel m" how Ibey feel federll aid
can be structurff so u to be more btlp-1 ul to them, where tbe delecta In our
grantHl-atd ingram are, all of wbk:h
will bett"er enable us to better respond to
the many criUcal problems amfronting
()Ur state and local governments."
Nixon luued the 1tatement as he end·
ed a four-day working vacation at his
bayalde home and prepared t() fly back
to New Y()rk.
Czech Youth
Burns Self
As Sacrifice
PRAGUE (UPI) -A young student
who set hilnsdf aflame Jn Wenceslu
Squ!re Thursday was one or JS student!
who have vowed lo sacrifice themselvts
Ufl'I T1lt1""'
HAYAKAWA NEARLY BOMBED IN SAN FRANCISCO
Polic1 Sgt. Frank GrHr Exemines Device Found Near Office
Bo11ib Found at SF
San Jose State President
Lists 25 'Resignatio~s'
one at a time every three days until By UnUed Presa International (,1ark said he planned l<> ~end 2S
sludent-demandfl for-polltieaJ-reform!""·· ~ -Prt:!ldent-Robtrt-€1-aric-of Sarr.Jo..~--to-80 more natices-of-reslgnattun to
are met, student sources said today. Slate Co!lege announced the "automatic striking San Jo~e teachers in the next
The student. Jan Palach, 21. was said resi{;niilions" of 25 striking unicn facu lty few days. But. he asked the Academic
by the Ministry of Education to be mcn1bers Thursday, including the head Council to establish procedures for
in "extraordinarily grave" condition in of the American Federation of Teachers' "'reinstalcmcnt of faculty on an in·
a hospital with third degree buras cover-statewide college division . dividual basis, once the strike is con·
ing S5 percent or his bclcly.._ They were the first to be ousted under eluded."
Palach, a history and p 0 J 1 tic a 1 a provision of the state education code He said he felt th~ stale law was
economics student, could not be ques-which says teachers wtv> stay away "unnecessarily punitive," that it Jii
f ed · edl 1 from chw for five con.secutive days "abnost impo.'ISible to hire qualified ion imm ate Y as to exacUy why without auth()rization are considered to faculty members" at this time of the he doused himself with gasoline near a fountain at the head <>I. the square have resigned automatically. year, and that many of the strikers
and then ran covered with flames into There wu no immediate lndication "are valued teachers who would be
the street. Dr. Jidzila Dolezalova of what action would be taken by the difficult to replace at any time."
the clinic ()f plastic surg""' at LegeroV~ AFi, which hu warned that invocation Among those dismissed Thursday wu -~ of the law would result in sympathy John Sperling, head of the AFT at the
Hospital said visitors had been turned strikes at the state's 18 colleges and state colleges. He scoffed at lhe proposal"
away from the lx>spital because he must mass action by unions generally. he and others could seek reinstatement
be isolated Crom infection. A student-teacher strike at San Jose on an individual basis.
The student sources said the IO.point State, now In its eighth day, ls .in sym·· "When the strike is over. we're: going
list of demands was the same as that pathy with strikes which have resulted to niarch back into our regular status,'!
adopted during a massive student sit-in in 11 weeks of turmoil at San Francisco Sperling told a rally of l.500 cheering
strike in November. It included requests State College, where a bomb was found supporters. "You don't go out on strike
for personal liberties, press freedom and Thursday near the office of Acting Presi· to come back begging."
for_ o~servance of principles of soverign-dent S.I. Hayakawa. Among others addressin.g the rally wu
ty Ul 1ntematlonal relations. The list did Hayakawa has announced similar ac· Timothy Le8ry, the former Harvard pro-
not specifically menlion the in ... asion or lion against striking teachers on his lessor who turned psychedelic guru. He
the Soviet Union. campus, where the AFT represents 350 gave the strikers his "blessings'' and
Palach struck a mat.ch to his soaked ()f the school's 1,300 faculty members. predicted San Jose State "will inevitably
clothing Thursday in rront of tlle NaUonal However, he has announced no specific become a place to learn to make love
Museum, still scarred by thousands of "resignations." better."
Soviet machine gun bullets rrom the
Aug. 21 invasion.
Woman Opposes
Death, Dismissed
As Sirhan Juror
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -A prospective
woman juror who said she could not
possibly bring i n th e death penalty
against Sirhan B. Si rhan was dismissed
today Crom service in the trial by Judge
Herbert F. Walker.
Walker ruled that legal precedent was
such that Mrs. Alvina Alvidrez: could
bt! excluded ror cause because of her
statement that she could not bring in
a verdict ()£ death "under a n y
ciraunstances."
The ruling was not expected, however,
to bar persons who have general feelings
against capital purUshmenl It seemed
likely they would be permitted l<> serve
<"t least on that part of the trial which
decides on Sirhan's guilt or innocence
in the slaying of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
\Valker made his ruling at the. opening
session of the trial today in which ten
jurors -five women and five men
-already have been sealed.
Three prospective jurors, two men and
the wife of an undertaker, were seated
Thursday.
One is Benjamin Glick. owner of a
retail clothinc: outlet in West Los Angeles.
In hi5 first question to the Jewish juror
chief defen!le counsel Grant B. Cooper
said the Arab-Israeli stiualion was sure
to come op during the trial.
Hickel Grilled
By Interior Unit
W.\siijNGroN CAPI -Aluka Gov .
Walter J. Hickel , Preildenl•lect NiJon's
cho~ u ltttttlf)' of interior. pledged
todl.y ht wUJ nol overturn 1 «1ntroversia.I
fl!deral order halting Alask1'1 tlkeover
of federal lands.
Chllrman Henry M. J1ckson co.
Wash.), of the Senate Interior CommJtt.ee
drew the assurance from Hlcktl after
50me prelOnln•'/ !pining duriog the
governor'• thlr day ()f committee
scrutiny.
Two other Senate committees
me1nwhllt were grapp]Jna with tbe ques-
t • ' nf tiow far thty should eo in f«clng
aovernment offld.alJ to dtspo.,e ()f
.,Cl'liOnal financial holdings.
* * * * * * Hayakawa Tells Business
Of Turmoil: 'You're Next'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Dr. S. I.
Hayakawa says the problems at San
Francisco State College may come from
some faculty members who formed "a
kind of kamikaze squadron, a group
of middl e-aged adolescents bored with
their work, trying to get a little ex-
citement stirred up." .
Hayakawa acting pre8ident 0£ San
Francisco State, said Thursday that
student unrest and attacks from left.wing
groups threaten higher education today,
but not as much as diS.!ident faculty
members.
He made the observations in a speech
before lhe aMual meeting of the
California State Chamber of Commerce,
\Yhere he warned business leaders that
"it's your tum ne.xt'' to experience
pressures of student unresL
Hayakawa later met with Gov. Reagan
for :10 minutes, and both said at a
news conrere.nce lhat they agree on the
basic policies the college administration
is following to ke:p the San Francisco .
campwi open. ....,.
Hayakawa, In his speech. predicted
that black men will be able to assert
themselves economically and socially
some day and lhe turmoil will end.
Reagan, at the news conrerence. in-
dicated he does not believe blacks alone
are: behind the troubles.
.. The time is approaching."' he said.
"when the Black Students Union is going
to have to realize that they in a fiense'
have been victims of the Students for
a Democratic Society."
The SOS. the governor said. '"hasn't
the slightest interest in the world that
tlley -the BSU -are achieving any
ethnic studies success or any of their
goals or alms."
He said the SOS •·has an aim of
using the campus, or any camptJJ, as
a launching pad for insurrtction."
Hayakawa told the business leadeni
al the hmcheon that they represent what
blacks regard as the "white power struc--
ture."
"It is a commentary on your neclect
over the Ja~t SO years lhat lhere art1
an whites and so damned few blacks
here.'"
The problen1s of studenl unrest. hf!
said. "will catch up with you in a
few years in business and industry and
government. These kid~ are graduating
in the neJt couple of years. They"ll
come to you."
Spa~e. Ra~e Pa~e
Russ Could Overtake U.S., Says LBJ
WASHJNG'!IJN (UPI) -Pnlident
Johnson told CoqrMI tod11 the Rusa11111
.are "°" launeblng mor• ~ than
the Uniled St~tfl ari:t ''o>Wd overtate
and pc>Mlbly aurpua \be U. S."
The presldtnt'1 annual report on U.
S. space ICtlviUea llld tbe Apollo 8
flight around the moon and blck "&really
enhanced the pregtlge of tho United
States a.s tM le1dhl1 spaet-farin& DI·
lion."
But Johnson ~rt to Presldent-t:lec:t
Rlch1rd M. Nixon declslona on Inf areat
new progr.tm1 to follow projed Apollo.
Johnson 's report credit~ tbe UnJled
Stites with a wide lead over Russia
in praelical appllcatkm ot 1paoe ex-
ploraUon, auch u weal be r, com-
munlcaUOM •nd navf&aUon aatelllie&i
and in C'Ofltribullons to aclence.
Tht report dJacloeed that 1ince space
-------
Oia}lt be11n some 11 ytars ago the
Ublted Statts has launched 60S sp,aceo'"aft
compored to m by Russi•. At tho
end of' iiSI the United States had am111-
ed 3,214 man-boun in space, Ruula
631.
But last year the Ru!lians lofted II
spactc'ralt compnrM to 64 by Lhc United
State&. In a section or the rtp()rt
ptepared by the National AeronauUcs
and Space Council, It \\".IS noted that
a~ this rate the Russiflns could go into
the lt&d.
1'le report. v.·as prepared beron: the
docltina and crew tran~rer achievements
or lht llUSflan Soyuz 4 and 5 spacecran u._ s. obstrver:s •ppralsed the Soyui
m1aslon u an important SJlep in Soviet
plana to go to the moon or buil d manned
staUons in earUt orbit.
I '
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GOP Ge ts
Glowing
' Report
WASH!NJlTON (UPI) -
Republican National Chalrmao
J1a1 C. BU.. pve lbe GOP
a aJowiq: report loday on ttie
party's prollrtS! olnco lbe 1914
el,,,,Uon dilut.er but 11id
ca~l })lanning aWI was vital
for future elections.
Bliss. chainnan s.ioce April
I, 1965,·tubmJllad hh report
to the first meeting of the
Jlepublican NaUonal Com-
mittee 1ince Rlcbard M. Nb·
on 's victory in the t•'
prealdenllal election.
Wllh cllarta and maps to
Illustrate ll<publlcu 1alnl, be aaid: -
"Since 1984 we moved fram
17 to 31 IO•ornonh!PI. • lbe
hipe!lt number since 1920;
from 32 to 0 seata in the
U.S. Stnale, the mOll since
l!M; from lto lo 192 seall
in the U.S. House, high mark
since 1966, and from c;ontrol
or seven to 20 state
legislatures, the most sinl:e
1954."
ileroes Line llp
President Lyndnn Johnson poses with four U.S.
servicemen, two of them from the same s1nall town
in Georgia, after presenting each with the Jl;Jedal
of Honor for heroism in Vietnam. Receiving awards
were (from left ) Navy Lt. Clyde E. Lassen, FL
Myers. Fla.; Marine Maj. Stephen W. Pless, Ne,v·
nan. Ga .; Air Force Lt . Col. Joe M. Jackson, also
fro1n Newnan, and Army S1Sgt. Drew D. Dix,
Pueblo, Colo. In the same period, he said,
lhe GOP gained 648 state
legi!laUve seats, i,420 county -------------------------------------------
offices and nearly 100 mayors.
"However impressive that
record may be, we must plan
care.fully and intelligently for
the future," Bliss added. "I
believe we have an excellent
opportunity to win control of
Congres!: in 1'10 and, with
Richard Nixon 111 our presi-
dent, I believe we are on
oor way to becoming the ma·
jorlty party once agaJn."
Ttle GOP must defy history
to win control of Congress
in the electiorui ·next yei.r.
The administration p a r t y
J"lormallyiost's ·watnin clec·
t ions in the middle 0 r
presidential tcrn1s.
After a conference with Nix-
on last week, Bliss announced
that he had been as ked to
slay in the job indeFlnilcly.
Even some of his admirers
in the national organization
believed that "indefinitely"
meant no longer than six
months. others felt that he
could stay u long as be
wanted the job.
Before the Nixon-Bliss con-
ference, there were reports
that Nixon -or some or
his staff aides -wanted a
more handsome, articulate
apokesman in the
chairmanship instead of an
organizational "nuts a n d
bolts" craftsman like Bliss.
A F Retaliation·Memo
Revealed by Senator
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. servant I have seen in the
William Proxmire (D-Wb.), 11 years 1 have been in the
coaxed :an Air Force official Sen.ate."
inlo insisting that no retaJla-Proxmire said it "directly
tion was planned against an co'ntradicttd" pl ttiges by Air
efficiency expert who revealed Force officia1s tt.at no action
a S2 billion Pentagon error would be taken .aaainst the
in cSlim"1lling:-1he~ coSl -or a-crncleiic:Ye xpcrl. A-: r:Fncst~
new plc:r.e, then dran1atica\ly :r!tzgerald, who di sclosed the
read inlo the record a secret $2 bil!lon overrun in earlier
memo detailing three ways tcs,imony before the sub·
to fire the man. committee.
The senator. chairman of The incident o c cur red
the J.o int Economy . sub-Thursday during a sub·
co.~mittee and a persistent committee hearing w i t h
critic of Defense Department Robert H. Charles. assistant
procurement practices, called secretary !or installatiora and
the memo '"the most shocking logistics in the witness chair
retaliation against a public Charles,' unrufned, said th~
Wire Guild
Strike Ends
NE\V YORK fUPl) -\\'ire
Servi c e Guild (WSG)
members returned to work to-
day in Associated P r e s s
bureaus across the country,
their eight·day strike against
the news agency ended by
memo merely outlined
"various things that coold
happen under certain ron·
ditions.'1
President
Puzzler Ii, two-to-one membership ac-
ceptance of a management
contract proposal.
AP offered the union a
three-year pact, wiUl top-scale
At issue is the cost of the
Cflr\, a giant jct transport
plane built for the Air Force
by Lockheed Corp. Fitzgerald,
deputy for management
systems to the a ss istant
secretary for fin a n c i a I
management, testified before
the Proxmire subcommmittee
last November that develop+
ment of the plane had cost
$2 billion more than the Pen·
tagon had bargained for.
Nonetheless, the Pentagon
demonstrated its satisfaction
Thursday with the airplane,
if not the bargain.
-;;-:'~
1 . ,
salaries for newsmen rising
to $250 a week during its
last year. The guild had urged
members lo reject the pro-
posal.
The Air Foree announced,
\\'hlle Assistant S e c r e 1 a r y
Charles \YI! on the stand. that
it would buy 23 more planes.
Opposition
Inaugural
~~~G~~~~-e!
government has finally agreed
to allow antiwar demonstra-
tors to erect a big. multlcol·
ored lent in downto"·n \V<1Sh·
ingt on for th ei r "counterinau·
gural " ball Sunday night.
The demonstrators. who
plan a "counterinaugural" pa·
rade down Pennsylvania Ave·
nue Sunday, the day before
President-elect Nixon's inau-
gural parade. will also use
the tent as a staging area.
Harry R. Van Cleve of the
General Services Administra·
tion. the government spokes-
man dea1ing with the prote!t·
ers, announce:d Thursday aft.
er days o( haggling that t h e
tent had the government1s
okay. The parade permit had
already been issued.
_i\irlines Get
OK to Raise
Fares 3.8%
WAS\llNGTON (AP) -Thell
Civil Aeronautics Board has
tentatively agreed lo a 3.8
~rcent increase in domestic
-aWiae,..puienger-lar.es..--·--
The CAB said final approval
()f the increases, which pro-
bably would go into effect
March I, will be made after
a "careful analysis of tariffs"
to be filed by the airlines.
Six major airlines had aJ>
plied for fare increases of
five to seven percent. A CAB
spokesman said Thursday in-
creases that large are "not
warranted al this time."
The m were American,
Braniff. Eastern, Northeast,
Trans World and United.
The iacrease tentatively ap-
proved would have this effect
on ticket buyers:
-Each first-class fare for
a trip of "any distance" would
go up '3 one way.
-Certain first-class fares
for East·Wesl trips of 800
miles or more in Jpecific
markets where farea
heretofore have been lower
than industry nornui would be
increased by Sl to S7 depen·
ding on the distance.
-Coach fares for flights up
to 500 miles would be In-
creased by $2 ooe way. For
flighLI of 500 to 1,800 miles
they would be increa&ed by
$1 one way. 'J'bey \il(OUkl not
be .irycreued for flights above
1,800 miles .
fOclly, JMUllJ 17, 196, DAILV '1LOT I
-1 Britain Leads Opposttfoii:
Allies Balk at Def l}nse Hike -1
BRUSSELS (UPI) -West conventional weapons to gain NATO'a own press M"lca.-
Eurooean alllel balked loday the United si.i.s more time replied wllb filurea pro•l!nl It
at Amtrlcan calla fot an before haviog to mate the II •DClldlaa ~9' four lriMI
i.ncrtUI In defense spendln& declalon io use nucltar wu~ 11 iruidf for. ~~nse-rtell'IY to '*1Dte.r Rus.!ia's superior· 0111 in case of conflict. '.po l>Wlon-thln all her. U·
, lty lo manpower and · non· The United Stales-lbrouC)I Euro-elllel combined.
JWdear'"irms. 1;;;;;i;iii;;;ii;iiiiiioiiiiiio;i;;~;;;iii;;;;;iiiii;;ii;i~~iiiii;:iiiiiiiiii;i;;;"i : '!lie Europeans at a de·
• fense ministers' conference
of tbe NOrth Atlantlc Treaty
Organization (NATO) Thun-
day all a~ to increase
their contr1butloos--oo paper.
But ·they balked at de~
by U.S. Deputy Defense Sec-
retary Paul Nilze that lhey
step up 11pending to enable the
West to· match the SovieLs in
nowwclear weaponry a n d
manpower. The pan history of
NATO commitments is one of
unlullllled goals.
'!be apposition ill being led
by Britain, still in Rrious
economic dlfnculUea.
Brttiah Def en 1 e Minister
IJennla Healer told the NAT0 1 , conference h111 government I
felt it was economically im-
. possible for the Europeans to 1
match the Warsaw Pact In 1
conventional weaponry.
He urged new guidelines be
set for ' lhe use of nuclear'
weapons in the event o! a So-
viet attack, implying limits
should be silt to nonnuclear
spending.
Healey has reportedly gain-1
ed the approval of other Euro-
pean ministers and or the
Supmne Allied Commander
in Europe, American Gen.
Lyman L. Lemnitzer. for
early use of nuclear weap-
onry. s..ne EurnpeaM ... !he
United States as wanting them
to root the additional bill for
Old World
Mediterranean
Spanish Furniture
Rec:tlvtd canctll,t lon of $22,000.DO
Spanish ind Mediterr•Maft Furniture
A.HNewT.,0....lr-'..._
Dec1r...,'1 DreNI H ... 0. ..,..,
Items as follows: GioraeoUJ 8 ft. custom
qullted ·sora with separate loose ~illows with
heavy oak trim decor and matching chair, 3
matching oat occanonal tablea. (2) 58" tall
decorator lamps, banging chain swag lamps
in wrought iron, an 8 piece king size muter
bedroom suite in pecan panelled Mediterran·
ean style with top quality 15 yr. warranty
king size mattress & box springs. Spanish
decor dinin.e: set. etc.
Wkk kldefal WIH N t lllW S1 5Jl.00
::~~~~RIFl~E ·················· $698.00
Any PiKt i:;n 8• Purchased lndlvldually
Terms Available -Newce1mer1 to Callf.
Credit Appre1vecl Immediate ly
f / J /] Furnit•re
At Harbor Blvd.
11844 Newport llYd. c:.ta M1• LJ .. ~
Evwy nlgllt 'tit 9 -~ed. Sat. & S-. 'Ill 6.i
•
Sat., Jan. 18 11 a.m. 'til sold out
I 33f Warehouse Road -Coste Mesi
block aest of Harbor -I block south of Bokor
MODEL HOME FURNtTURE .
ACCESSORIES & ECj)UIPlt1'£NT .. f.. ... ..
Desig ner collections of furniture & ·decor a for ·
pieces fro m one of the largest hom e bu ilders ·
in O range County.
Chairs
Sofas
Cheats
0,..1.erl
Dining Room
Sewing Maichln11
Bedroom Sa ts
Rece1rd Player
T apt Recorderi
Banquet Tables
Conference Cha irs
Elactrlc Flxturff
Occ1tlon1I T1b l11
Occ11lonil 'Ch1lr1
Ber,
Bar Stools
Plctum
T1l1vlllort
71/J' Child'• Spetd loat -100'1 of e1thtr items too numere1u1 fg mention
-INSl'ECTION 9 A.M. DAY OF SALE -
l
;
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' " I .Y
I ' .
J'
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I Jetliner in Near Collision
LOS ANG ELES (AP) -A involved ont "coming off " the Stewardesses Karen Anderson,
United Air Lines jetliner tanker plane. Lindy Mendolia and Pam
swerved sharply lo miss a The Federal .4.vialion Agen· McGovern. of San Francisco,
Navy jct in the air north cy will i n vest i g a t e to and Lorraine Gause, of Los
?f_ San Diego late Thursday, determine which plane was An~eles were shaken up.
m1urlng 6 of the 57 persons in the proper lane. an FAA fl was the third aerial In·
aboard. spokesman said. The Miramar cident over California th.la
LARGE 23'' COLOR
_The plane, Oying from San spokesman said the incident week.
Diego to San Francisco, made occured in an area 35 miles A Scandinavian A Ir 11 n es
By WILUAM MANSFIELD an unscheduled stop here for north of San Diego where System plane crashed In the
t. Tbt.re was only one Pres I-=~~i:t as omr ,·nlheor. injuries, military operations normally Pacific near 1..A)S Angeles Mon-
d I ho ed · he u 'led are conducted. day night, killing 15 of the en w serv In t ru The Miramar Naval Air Sta-11-Unor cuts and bruises were 45 persons aboard. 0 n States HOUMI o( Representa-lion at San Dt'ego said three rr I f I t. aft h' I p · SU ered by two pas.senaers. Wednesday, a Pac c 1ves er IS errn as res1 · of F8 P-'"antom i·ets we-. ·~ d t · ed 11~ h ' 4!J • <= Patrick Williams . 41. Salem. Southwest jet carryl.nc 22 en ezpir · ·uo wa.s e . practicing aerial refuel>'n•, Or d Dr p I b heel li h •·-· a) John Quincy Adams : b) nd the ~ e., an . at enc e persons rus a g t puuR;
'Vi II iam H. Harrison ; c) Ruth.1-• ___ n_•_•_r _co_ll_ls_io:.:".:P'.:ro.:ba=b:::IY~.:N::oec=i::e::r._4::•:..· ..:._P•:l:•U:' ":::'::.· _:11:::1._o:v::•::.r ,::Sa:n::.:.Fr:.:•::nc:•::' sco:::_B:::•::Y::· __
erforrl B. Hayes.
2. ''All ol' Oregon. a\1 nf
Texas and 54 ° 40' or fight '•
\Vas the campai~n slogan of
which President?
a) James K. Polk: b) John
Tyler: c) 11-1artin Van Buren.
3. This President was the
nnly one who served in th e
Confederate House of Repr,e-
sentatives after his term as
U.S. President was over.
a) John Tyler; b) ADClrew
Jack!M: c) James Bachanan.
4. Who was the smallest of
the American Presidents?
1) James Madison: b) Calvin
Coolidge; c) William McKin-
ley.
s ... ,.. typical uniform for
him anlsted of ba117 cot·
ICll flOllll, a plain coat b••n'
ing no Insignia and • farmer's
wide brtmmed straw hat. He
rtriewtd hlJ troop. seated
~drnys on 1'1.J war hone."
Who Is this President!
1) Ztchary Taylor : b) Ahr•·
hAm Llncoln; c) George Wub-
lnaton.
ANSWERS
, : ,(ploij put ~lno11
PIO·• P"~N 't '9
·spunod 001 J»ql1aM.
"U W ,,t ,I poo\I OQM '1' 't .. ·c
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'I 'l
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MAINTAINING $500 SAVINGS ACCOUNT.
Hours: 9:30 1.m. to 9:30 p.m.; 5.1t. 10 1.m. tfil 6 p.m.,
,ltWolHJIW
PllCE INCLUDU:
I Y ••r P1rt1 W 1rr1nty
2 Ye1 r Picture Tuba
W 1rT1nty
t o 01y Home Service
Fun Zenith Qv•r.ty
throug~ •nJ through!
Beeutiful color.
Conlem poro ry slyleil
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spe1ker. Bu~t os only
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AUTHORIZEl>c
ZENITH
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SD Via
STOIE HOURS DAll.Y t TO t SAT t TO '· ' I
HAllOI CENTEI ·-m HAllOl ILVt; '
•
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._..
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!
·---·-
.;.· I DAR y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Meeting a Rea_l Need
A 167-acre regional park and lake could have its
beginnings this year in the Laguna Niguel area.
Fruition ol lbe exciUng project that woul4 be
Jocated near the new Autonetlcs plant is apparently de.
pendent on tri-party agreemc?nt.
The Laguna Niguel Corp. has ollered to donate 122
acres of land. Moulton-liiguel Water District has a 47·
acre lake it would relinquish , probably on a long-term
lease-purchase arrangement.
And the county, which has given the project a top
priority because of its water orientation, is now study-
ing the details in its parks, real estate and flood con·
trol departments.
indications are that the facility will li.keJy become
a reality. Remaining to be worked out are fuajor and
finite details.
One of these will relate to quality of water in the
lake. Will it be fresh water or reclaimed water given
either secondary or tertiary treatment?
The lake would include boating and fishing. It al ..
ready has bass. With proper quality water, it could also
include swimming. '
Initial plans, according to the proponents, include
367 picnic units, 10 fire rings, a boat house, a nature
study area, several miles or riding trails, and tufted
playing fields .
It wouJd be located a mile north of Crown Valley
Parkway and just south. of the Autonetics complex un·
der construction.
Plans also include a hall-acre island at the south
end of the lake as a habitat for shore birds and a feed-
ing sanctuary for migratory birds.
Because of its size and water orientation the proj·
ect already has earned tentative state approval of a
$26,000 matching fund grant for development of site and
construction plans and specifications.
·Teachers of
Deficient_
Need Faith
r:y·
ti Everyday ,
Pr~biem~, .. ·~,
By NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
Teachers blame the dismal conditions
of ghetto areas for the poor perfonnance
of most students in predominantly Negro
and Mexican-American schoQla! They
faull the nation and the cities for failing
to du.I with the slwns, rather than
search for newer methods of reaching
and teaching these youngsters,
Since April, 1965, the nation's schools
bave been given substantial federal funds
under the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act, with the goal of helping
disadvantaged children overcome their
educational handicaps. The assumption
has been that the deficiencies are all
in the child and In the environment
from which he comes. So far , the overall
results from many millions of dollars
spent on remedial instruclion and
cultural enrichment hav e not been en·
couraging.
THERE IS increasing evidence that
a diJadvantaged child's shorlcomings
at.em more from the kacher's response
to his ethnic, cu1tura1 and economic
background, rather than from his
background, per se.
If 12 students in a psychology
laboratory are each given five laboratory
Tat! of the same strain, there will be
an accelerated performance by half ol
the rats in learning to run the maze
when the six students assigned to teach
them are told their animals have been
bred Cor brightness in running a maze.
The other six students, wher. told their
rats probably will be poor at running
a maze because of genetic reasons.
usually respond with less interest and
enthusiasm than those assigned to the
"bright" group. Their rats may not even
budge fro m the starting position for
their "teacl)ers" usually have a bopelei;.,,
•'what'• the use" attitude to begin with
and ofier little incentive to learn.
SIMILAR EXPERIMENTS have been
reported when publi c school teachers
were led to believe al the beginning
of a school year that previous tem
point to the probability of considerable
Dear
Gloom;y-
Gus:
Arc our local drivers such ratalists
that they thii:ik they can't change
the statistical forecast that one of
every four drivers will be killed
or injured in the next IO years?
It appears they couldn'tccare less
about the Golden Rule.
-0 . R. L.
f~ll h •IW"' "'HK'-~· VltwS .,.,
lleC.H..rlty lllOM ef '"-.._,,.M r. S.H
.,... Mt '""' i. Gllltm., Gn,. D1llr .. llilol.
academic \ml)fovement In c e 1 la i n
students. !Sen tli:M.Jgh· the dtlldren JabeJ-
ed as potential "spurters" were chosen at
rapdom and not on the basis of testing
their academic achievement during th~
year was considerably above the rest
of. the class. For . the teachers, con-
sciously and unconsciously, spurred them
on to greater heights.
Carl J . Dolce, superintendent of schools
in New Orleans, said recen tly: "A com-
mon notion among ghetto teachers is
that achievement levels are low com-
pared to middle-class children. So wh y
expect them to achieve very much ?''
Consequently most of them don't. Ghetto
schools usually are older, overcro\vded,
and operate oo a far rower budget when
compared to schools in middle class
suburbs, More important, most of the
teachers are novices, unable lo cope
with lbe frustrations and disappointment.!
of teaching in ghetto schools. .
CERTAINLY, dramatic changes, both
in the selection of tt:achers and in their
training and attitudes. will be necessary
if disadvantaged children are to get
all they possibly can from their school·
ing.
One successlul Negro principal in a
Harlem school' sponsored by the New
York Urban League and Carbolic
ManhaUanville College, attributes his
school's outstanding record with blacks,
most of them dropouts with criminal
records, more to his t e a c h e r s '
"unshakable faith that the students can
make It" than to anything else.. His
teachers teach, but more important, they
encourage, talk, plead, scold and mold,
and they gel results.
Far mere important than wbal the
teacher learns in colle~ are her
personality structure, her biases and
prejudiei!S, her zeal and expectations
if she i or he) is to work successfully
with disadvantaged children.
Strike V otes in Secret
In Britain, where labor strife has
undercut efforts to make the economy
more productive, the government has
come up wilh a proposal to curb strikes.
At 1el.tl one~ of t.he plan should
bt w«tb conli tion in lhe U .s.
A pn)bkm oommon to both countries
lt &bat Itri.ta: sometimes arc declared
by 1fOUP1 of union officials on lbe.lr
mm. In many cases where union
members do volt on strikes, only •
anaD P'f" " the membership
particlplttt., ud frequently then only
in open meeUnp by a show of hands
-to that d....,.,.,ts can easily be ~ingled
<111t lor unlcn .,._..,,
B RI T AI N'S GOVERN '1ENT (lrtmcaJb', '1 lt ol courst a "Labor"
go;& mneul) pn:ipoi11e1 that all ~•orker1
be cl"ftlJ •n opportunity lo vote on a
11r11<e by -ballal. Tho """"""" rf&bt to ttrib ,..ould not hr infringed,
bul Jf tbe ftDPlo1!I opposed a walkout
U. .,.um ""1(f protect their riRht .. -.... a Rike vOLe fl taken, both
tlao ........ Ille ompio7ft' obould be
Guest Ec.Utorial
ar!orded ample and equal opportunity
to lay their arguments belore the
workers. In any declsloo eo vlt.11 LO
a worm'• livolihood, be llUrely llhould
ba.. ..,.,., chanc< lo ponder .u Ibo
lads.
PROBABLY MANY strim woold be
approved anyway, but our suspk:kln ll
that the number would dlmlnsh. Certainly
this an'lngemenl would be no pl1!.&eea
for labor--m1nagement 111.s. in lhis coun-
Uy or In Britain.
In every strike, lhou&hi a majority
of the workers woo.kt haw declded that
a walkout was in tMtr best lnttttst.
That aeconts witll dC!mocracy, a prlndple
lht!: unlrms Cirmly endol'!t. It would be
tnterestlng to tee If they could practice
.. hat lh<y preach.
....... IMrll!l J..,. ..
I
The regional park will certainly be needed as South
Orange Co1111ty begins td llve up to Its .promise. The
comment of Carl Kymla, waler dirtrict manager had it
right when he said'
"It isn't every day that you 're able to receive 122
acres as a gift. I think the county and water district
owe it to tbt people lo energetically pursue this thing."
P11blic Has Right to Know
Soulb Laguna physician Dr. Anthony Orlandella lbis
week was SY!'Om as a trustee of the Laguna Beach Uni·
tied School Distrtct.
-Despite bis comment to the press that long meet·
ings "are the bane of my existence," his first board
session Tuesday lasted nearly four hours. And that
isn't unusual for this board.
Dr. OrJandella should serve bis community well in
the important new responsibility. He has a record of
businesslike service and involvement including 31.h
years service on lbe hoaro of South Coast County Water
District.
Another asset is a good sense of humor. It will come
in handy during the tedium of crowded agendas.
Only one element marred the choice of Dr. Orlan-
della by fellow trustees and that was not related to his
willingness to serve.
Having directed that applicants for the post apply
to Dr. Norman Browne. board president, at his offices,
the board has so far declined to make public the names.
The e(fort to encourage \vide participation in seek·
Ing the post was good. But the board should make pub-
lic the applicants just as in an election. The public, too,
has a right to weigh and consider.
I
(l )
BlaC'k·White Encounter at Barbor High
Complex -Reasons Behi-nd-Attitudes ·
To lhe Ed.ilor :
Congratulations are due lo Newport
Harbor High School for having arranged
the encounter between our Harbor Area
students and the st udents from Dorsey
High School in Los Angeles. I trust
that the school is carrying through to
help those of our students , and their
families, realize that:
-There are complex but un-
derstandable reasons for the militant
attitudes on the part of some black
&tu dents.
-Frank encounters of this sort can
lead to greater understanding on the
1part of bot.h blacks and whites.
-INDIVIDUAL students at Harbor
High need feel no "personal guilt" over
past injustices to minority groups if
indeed they are not now helping to
perpetuate these injustices by their at·
titudes and actions.
-"Black is beautiful" and "Black
Power" in the constructive sense are
good ; these concepts are really a
necessary step leadirig to minority
f
\ Mailbox •
Letters frorn readers art welco111e.
Normally writers should convey tlie ir
message in 300 words or less. The
right to cundtnse letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
letters must include signature and
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on request if sufficient rea·
son is apparent.
participation in the American dream .
-It is up to us, as one young black
student reportedly stated, to look inlo
our own attitudes as whites, and those
of our neighborhood, "to blow prejudice
out of white communities. . . to cast
out the beam in our own eyes even
as we behold the beam in our brother's",
HARBOR AREA students and their
families are urged to look into the
various organizations in Orange County
in v.'hich blacks, whites and Mexican
Americans are seeking a common ground
in working together for community bet·
terment. Men of good will do abound
among all races, and are now beginning
to work together for our common good.
For example, The Orange County Fair
Housing Council is working to help uphold
state and federal laws by assisting
families and individuals to rent or buy
hou~ and apartments according to their
preferences and pocketbooks regardless
of their race, creed or color.
A NUM BER OF other organizations
are now active and would welcome in·
creased community support. 'The DAILY
PILOT would do us a· service by ex·
ploring the various organizations such
as NAACP, JOlN HANDS, the various
human relations groups, and the church
social concern committees. etc., so that
citizens who wish to help achieve racial
and community harmony may know
where and how Lhey can help.
CONSTANCE F. KRAUSE
'11'a11t 11f De e e t1ey'
To the Editor ;
To the Harbor ~ligh teachers, .r.frs.
Jean Foutts and Mr. James Newkirk,
who prompted the invitation to the black
students, I ask two questions. What now?
Do we continue the dialogue between
the I-I.arbor High-Estancia students and
the out-0!-town belligerents: from Dorsey?
According to press quotes in the DAI·
LY PILOT or the vts:itors, I can only 1
think of lhe Earl of Roscommon's
memorable lines :
"Immodest words admit of no defence
For want of decency is want of sense."
There must be a weakness in Dorsey
High School's teaching st r u ct u re
regarding civility and respect. Our
visitors lacked both "decency and sense".
C. JAMES PRICE
Future Events Will ' Judge Johnson
\\'ASHINGTON -Presidents do not
leave office in a blaze of glory and
Lyndon B. Johnson is no exception. In
any perspective, however, Johnson has
as good or better chance than most
of his recent predecessors to be justified
and purified by time.
Time and pers~tive rehabilitated
Herbert Hoover, w"llo had left office
\\'ilhout much love frorn his countrymen.
Franklin Roosevelt , bitterly hated by
a minority. approached sanctification
after his death . Harry S. Truman's
virtues loomed far larger in retrospect
than during his scandal·ridden ad·
ministration. N06talgia for the con·
tentment and progress of lhe Eisenhower
years has replaced contempt for what
was called his do-nothing administration.
John F. Kennedy lives in legend afler
the disappointment.! of his brief term.
JOHNSON'S FIVE yean plus has a
beginning and an eod, a certain form
which will make it! impact on American
life measurable and distinct. As some
see that fonn now, the Johnson years
were a classic tragedy. An ad·
ministration that rose in raith and hope
from the nation's mourning of a slain
YOUOG hero ended in a tragedy of denied
expectations and unpopular war in "'hich
the hero ·s successor was destroyt>rl
But this is scarcely a fair n1easure
of an adminislration wh1cl1 advanced
the cau.se of civil rights far abov<' its
previous hi ghest levels, began the con·
quest of poverty, expanded support for
the nation's educaUonal resources beyond
any previous dreams, created a system
of medica l care. tried to beautify
America and recreale its clUes and
cleanse and preserve its air, water and
soil. Hopes and aspirations of 30 years
were fullllled for the 111me libera.1 5 who
neverthelea tame to detest Lyndon
Johnson for two ff.UOM. The first reason
was that although Jom-i accomplished
far more than John F. Kennl'dy he
Jacked Kennedy's ar11 ce. He WR.'i, in
hll crlUcs' eyes, devious, fulsome, crude.
The second ttason was Johnson's stub·
bom insistence that, In Dean Rusk '11
won1$, "The security of Southeast Asia
Is vital to Lhe United States. . .and
what happens in Soolheut Asia 1s vital
lo the general pence of tht world.··
' TEN BETTER-KNOWN history pro
fessors polled by Newsweek. magazinl'
rate President Johnson from ''eo00·· lo
''areo.t " on dome.~tic ~ffain bul 1~ lhtlr
mthusia.m. ln Judglne Johnson on his
(
record in foreign affairs. Only two of
them, though , regard Johnson's foreign
affairs record as "poor." These are
two of the most dedicated opponents
of the Vietnam War , Prof. ~!ans
Morgenlhau of the University oC Chicago
and Prof. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr .. of
the City University of New York, who
have devoted much of their intellectual
energy in UlC past several years to
blackening the name of the Johnson
administration.
Neither the history professors nor the
least educaled opponent of the Vietnam
War yet has any basis for judging the
Jong-range effect of the American in-
tervention in Vietnam. They can both
accurately judge the war to lack popular
support. Events will be the judge of
whether or not the intervention even-
tuaUy will have succeeded in stabilizing
Southeast Asia and the peace of the
world. If that condition does result some
of the history professors will have to
revise their judgments.
lilSTORV MAV NOT Jong remember
lhe qualities of Lyndon Johnson that
so readily brought the \1-"ord cornponc
to critical lips, anymore than history
remembers much of Herbert ~loover's
high collars or Eisenhower's uncertain
diction.
What history will weigh is the er-
fectiveness of the most expansive social
program in 30 years, the liming of
arousing among racial groups ex·
pectations which could not quickJy be
fullfllled, the wisdom of an international
intervention which became a critical test
of strength affecting the power and ~
status of the nation for years to come. I
PRF.slDENT JOHNSON brought hi~
administration to a close as if he were
writing the last chapter in a prospectus
\\'hich he handed lo his successor com-
plete. The programs he initiated were
all there, to be expanded, retracted or
replaced. The war he undertook had
been placed on a course toward set·
tlement. He left government's books in
balance. He made every facility of the
old administration avai ltible to the new
in the smoothest transition in history
from one administration to the next.
Not until that next administration is
well along, however, will it be Jeen
how well Johnson succeeded or bow
much he failed .
Machine Not Our Ultimate Enemy
Thoughts at Largt:
Our ultimate enemy is not "the
Machine" -or technology. in any of
its aspects -but our inappropriate and
obsolete ideas that will prevent us from
using technol ogy for the full est hun1an
purposes, but rather will condemn u~
to reshape the person to fit the demands
of technology.
• • •
Perhaps the most tragic contradiction
o( our age (speaking of technology)
is that jull as scientific hardware ls
outmodins the whole concept of the
"eovcrelgn naUon, •· and maldng some
fonn ol g-lmptrallve for our
survival, al the same ti.me there is ·
a -UJllU!'P of natlonallam evecywhere In the ...,ld -which Is
Uke putUng a nuclear pow!r-pack on
the bad of a aabre-loolhed lig<r.
• • • ••
When we talk about "education," we
almost always mean hard-cart lcarnlna:
or racts and system!; but what is really
essenlial today Is I.be rt-cdut•Uon af
the feellar•, so that the tot.al per90nallty
will waat to do what the trained mind
knows ls right to do : otherwise, the
facts we IC!arn run lhe. serk>us risk
of being misapplied or non-applied . • • •
Those officially in'o'Olved in •·poverty
programs'' bl\lfl a vested interest In
the perpetuation of poverty, not in it$
I
" o.i ~-;-.,....i,·· . -
JSY,dney ~flldi •
iibo1lllon ; "·hlch ls why the poor
then1selves must begin to be treated
a:i agentli. not clle.11'6. • •
I llave never mel a penon who was..
against obscenity or p or n o g r a p b y
because they oxrupt ot inflame t.be
passions. who admitted that llll pullkm
were corrupted or inflamed by U-
medla -It la alwayi -peopte· wbo
are lhoughl lo be oo Dllllol>le that Ibey
-J>IOI""""' • • •
"What does tt matter If we know
what tbt cosmos ls lite?"' ub e ruder,
in response LO a recent column. "Doesn't
It matter more that we undflrstand our
perSonal Uves here on earth?" That
question wu amwered 2.000 yeaes ago.
by Marcua Auttlilll, wbt:o he wrote :
"The ma.n who doesn't know what the
unlverte ll like doesn't know where he
lives." • • •
TOO only em..ise tor work (apart from
hs productive vaJue) is that It must
be ~,...U. for the lndlvldual workor '
lhllt la, tl must i:rovlde an oulltt for
rttllngs unuUsfitd in oc.hel' 1rtes of
life, 8Jld charge up the psychic battery,
rather than running it down : using this
crucial standard, how many jobs in
modem society fulfill th is basic need! • • •
One of lhe best an1\ briefest mots
I've heard in political philosophy wa:ii:
given by lhe Viennese lecturer who told
hls classes: "Capitalism is the exploit a-
tion « man by n1an : communism is the revera.··
--~--
Friday, January 17. 1969
TM edftorial pags of tM Dauw
Pilot Itek! to inform and stim-
ulate rradtrs by p-rescnliria thl1
ntw$paJ>tr's opi'nions arid com.
mtnto.ry on topici ot interes&
and significance, biJ pro1•1d111g 4 forum for the ezprtssion of
our read,rs op1111ous, 011d b~
prc1e-ntino the diverse view-
point! of iflfornzed. observtrs
and tp0~smet1 on !opics of tht
dof.
Robert N, \Vecd . i>ublisher
-
.USE
,
Mrs.
kirk,
Jlack
now?
ween
and
-sey?
DAI-
only 1 :ion's
?nee
"tSe."
lfsey
u" Our
1se".
t!CE
l
ional
test
and
e.
hi•
were
?ctus
:om-
•ere
d .,
had
set-
s in
tho
oew
:tory
n is
seen MW
ery,
thi:i.
' m
1
not!I
.,.a~
told
>!ta-
the
•
'
'
t
J
'
•
'
-
. .
,
• '6Cl<iJ
,,...,, ~ U, 1HJ L .... f
JEAN COX, 494-9466
Ebells Become
Entrepreneurs
Thwarted bargain hunters ill find an outlet for their !rustraUDnl In
Laguna Beach Woman's Clubhouse Friday, Jan. 31, and Saturday, Feb. 1,
when Laglina Beach Ebell Club sponsors its annual spring rummage sale.
Hours for the sale bonanza wiU be Crom 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday
and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday.
Values for all include new and used merchandise featured in all de-
partments, according to Mrs. Edward Nell, chairman, and Mrs. Stanley
Eichstaedt, co-chairman.
Committee members and other clubwomen will be on hand to help
shoppers unearth treasures from toasters to trinkets. Available will be
bonnets, books , new or scarcely used wearing apparel, art, toys , gifts,
kitchen ware, furniture and luggage.
Prize values will be discovered in Mrs. Douglas Kenaston's jewelry
bazaar, and household items and bric-a-brac for every room will be heaped
on Mrs. Gordon Brown's table.
Mrs. William Hinwood will welcome shoppers looking for furniture,
draperies and linens, while Mrs. Alfred Kress will tnanage men's wear.
Mrs. Wallace Scott and Mrs. Rudolph Steward are in charge of women's
wear, and sportswear will be supervised by Mrs. Robert Kellogg.. •
Other saleswomen will include Mrs. Adt1enne 'Agnew, who will dis-.
----play-ff.ew-item&-in -child r.eH--wear ,-and-Mrs, Glarence-Car.son;-Wbo-will
manage accessories and foot wear. Toys will be waiting with Mrs. William
Longfield, and an array of books and records may be found at Mrs. Ber-
nard Anderson's t8ble.
•
CASH COVETED.:_ Laguna Belich Ebell Club .will
raise fund s"for itS many philantbropic proj~ with
an annual spring rummage sale which will tale
place Friday aod Saturday, Jao. ?I· Feb. I. Dipping
into the treasure chest of values to be offered afe nett to right) the Mmes. Gordon Brown, Stanley
Eichstaedt and William Hinwood.
Area merchants donating merchandise for the ·sale include Rene'
Boutique, Pottery Shack, Niguel Shop for Girls, Fashion Gallery and the
Showroom.
The rummage sale is one of two fund-raising events staged by Ebells
annually. Proceeds from both their sales and annual benefit ball enable
the club to carry on its many philanthropies.
' '· ' . • '· • '"' r ,
i'
Group Sets Store
•
In Thrifty Venture
Ther.e is one store in Laguna Beach which does not claim to have
In Its inerc:bandlse the most elegant and latest fashions.
The electrical devices and household ggdgets it offers do not
shine back at the customer, tempting him as he passes the counter.
Baby clothes, toys and games are not cuMingly displayed. In
fact, in this particular store, the customer might well have to dig and
hunt for what he wants.
Nevertheless, this store bas been in business since 1948 when it
was first opened iri the old tent city section of the Art Colony. Since,
it has moved several times and now is found at 355 Broadway.
What accounts for the longevity of this store? Perhaps it is its
name -the Thrift Shop -suggesting to buyers· that this is the place
where bargains are found. Then again it could be the backing of the
Soroptimist Club of Laguna Beach which owns the shop.
Expenses are low, since all the merchandise is donated to the
shop for resale, and there are no salaries to pay since all the sales-
women are volunteers.
Profits from the shop go directly into the service fund of the
organization and in turn is spent on projects to benefit Laguna Beach.
l\1rs. Cyril J. Nugent, shop chairman, is assisted by the Mmes.
l\fonte Warr, Cherye Johnson, Harold Wire, Clifford E. Loucks, Wil-
liam Eschbach and Miss Myra Patterson.
\Vhile collecting, sorting and pricing is the responsibility of
clubwomen, volunteers help wi~ the selling.
Under the direction of Mrs. Mabel Richardson, some of the
women who donate their time are the Mmes. Inna Danaher, Harry
Graham, Eunice Reeves, John Harold, Alice Baker, Jack Hartman,
Charles Gavlock, Virginia Tomlinson, and Edna Cannichael.
"These women are the backbone of the slaH," commented Mrs .
Nugent. "The slore would not be able to remain open Thursday
through Saturday if we did not have their assistance, since club mem-
bers are all working women."
'· ' ..
SOROPTIMISTS' SHOP-The Soroptlmist Club of Laguna
Beach opened !!& Thrift Shop · 21 year1 ago and since then
have been running it with the important help of volunteer
saleswomen. Mrs. John Harold' (right), one of the volun-
leers, Inspects a dress while clubwomen (left to right) the
Mmes. Clifford E. Loucks, William Eschbacb and Cyril
Nugent sort and price some of the merchandise.
Don't Complete Negotiations Before Contract Is Signed
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' l wu brolqbt
up by old.fashioned pamita and I guess
you'd be justllled In calling me IQllE'<-
l'm a college ~-and Ille ooly girl on the floor of lhll donn wbo
Is a virgin. t gr.-. up believing l should
11ve myself for the man l marry. but
UJe9e past few wee.kl hive c1Ulled me
to reconsider.
The big quest.ion , now that I have
ra.J.len in love, ii' this: 11 jt unrtaliJtic
to ei:pect 1 young man to suffer the
1nxieUes oC frustration becaUR his
flancee happens to be~eve as I do?
Furtht'rmore, will my Tigidjly co& me
a wonderful husband ?
Jack aay1 the divorce rate 9CAttt
him to death. He uys he loves me
but he'1 afraid we might not be !Wlally
ANN LANDERS ~
coinpaUble. Re feell we lhoWd find
out before we marry. He atao bu 11!1·
gested that l ' nt1'I be fl1cld : Lut
night he · added another · barb wheri he
oak(, "A 1Irl who 1...., ll .. dlltlc
and immature." .
You seem to hive an anner for
everything. Piute fe:O me how ·to 11y
IR> lo a au uteaman wl,lh whoto I
baPfl"n to be In IOve. -N!;;ED YOU
DEAR NEED1 Here'• ,.,_, auwer:
''My body beloap to m< ud I 4,.·t
ne yoa aperlmm&al prtviJqe11 or u
~ rtlteirwt" "'-t .. ,,.., to ,..Ir body 11 YOUR
rea-"8111 ull It aloe ll YOUll ,,...
ble• u -.w.r dapl.....t ~ ...
cw. Jact'1 *-t IHI b II mitl to
try ~ eat lo "' V' tky won be!,..
)'OI "bly" k r1bblH. A 11le1mu onct
•old me a Tiiclmm cleaner tltli worked
beoadl•Qr dori•I the JMa7 trial. For
..... DIJ•lwi ...... u , .. •parl
'1r> :1111 llfler I beqlll 11.
D£AJI AliN LANDERS' Yeotenloy Ille
.~ nol4oor had a terrific argument.
We eould lleat them acrumlng at eacll
otller aHboaP ..,,. boules .,. too loll
apart. M1 bulband and l went to the rront door 1o mvatll•te.
Qulclt u • l!ub, thelr 1-yw-old boy ..... dublnl oul the fl'OOI .i-and
ran Into' tllt otreet. direelly lo the palh
or an oncomln,g car. Fortunately, the
driver wu r.tert and stopped In Umt.
The clllla • lather didn't 11y ... word
to him. .JnslA!ad he ~ell~ -some
01>1<en11i..,u the driver . (Re ohoulcl
have ble.ed htm!) Ttie driver just shook
hi• head II tht father shouted, "You
rotten ............... , • child ahilayl
baa the rigt>t.......,I"
Lal yw a traOor hit my car. I
... clrlvln( aiowly and carelldly. ,...
contln( to t¥ police, I bid the r!gbkl-
way. Biii ...-tltlle llfl ll dud, and
•he WN ~ .. bid. '!bat •ICl>Mr'•· boy could l>Aft been dead, i.., ret
be bll:bblll •bout "rfabki""'l1·"
Every ~ preochoolen wllo lhould
not bl out alone .,. killed Irr cm.
They doll\ know 111)'1lilng ·-"rllhl-of·w1y." Where are parents' val0t1!
What coold be more Important lhan
the Ute ol • child? Plea• irtnt lhll
for partnta wrio. children are rUll aUve.
-GRIEVING MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER• I appndato yqur
............ ttwill __ _
ti ,.,..u te ,.... f• a m-..& ... -........ ., ... _.,.,_
... ~·lkn. v .... M'ftr ....
tie .... ,.. .... -"7 wnllq. TUU,_,
Je DAl\.Y PILOT F~dq. JinUll)' 17, 1969
Gardens Coming Up Rosey
The subject is roses for the first meeting 0£ the Huntington View Garden
Club, branch of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, and
marking the red-letter day are (left to right) Mrs. Paul Conaway , Mrs. Al
Manire and Mrs. Richard Edmonson. Mrs. John Mahoney, president. 1s in-
viting area women interested in gardening to attend the meeting and hear
Clyde Wompler, authority on gardenia g, flower arranging and crafts. The
group wUI meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 20, in Marina High School. Mrs.
William Roberts: will serve as hostess.
Focus Put
On Initiate
Officers' Wives Hear Costa Mesa Nuptlafs
Combat . Artist's Views , Leanne Peterson Weds
A apecial kbid ol -WUl )lepartment, the White House,
be lbe &""'\ •t>OU!< al lbe 1111 U.S. Naval Academy, tho
January lundleon meellq Ill U.S. -CGr}lo Jload.
the Ofrtcen Wlveo Club 91; -· U.S. embualel and
El Toro. • the Hrde Port eollectlbn.
Arthur Beawnool, Naval He ts llJted In "Wbo'• Who
and Marine combat ortlll and In Aln<rica" · (art) and lbe
raconteur will be weJcomid "Book ol Ar&" and the
at the Tuesday, Jan. 11 11Encyc)opecu. Brlt.annlcL"
luncheon in the Balboa Bay He received from the Navy
Club. Social hour •Ill bestn ·!he Merltorloul Public Serv·
at 11 :30 a.m. with luncheon Ice CttaUon for his "con-
at I p.m. tribu:Uon to deplctinJ: Navy
The guest has been in ecenet accurately, by
Califomia since 190I and baa lldlJIUI Pllntln& and •k"'"
been selected u one of the cblng." The artlst eejoyl teJJ.
50 best watercolor artlltl ln Ing people that be must paint
the U.S. He ls beat la10wn hlJ ahlpo with aboolute ac-
as a Naval, Marine e>mblt C!Jt1C1 for be has "1.500 ••
artist and because ol bll pain-crltl<;S, the. men al the 11•'1·"
tings of the preWorld War The Juncbeon 11 lpoolOj'ed
II, the World Wu U, the by lbe 8rd MAW Stall Wives
Korean Conrtlct and t h e and the planning committee
Nuclear fleets. · .11 com~ of the Mmes.
He aceompanled an u:-Arthur H. Adams, Robert W.
pediilon to the AiilarctJc and Teller, Dean Wilker, amlel
In recogniUon for hla w<>l'kt B. 'Sevier, H: p. stoct and
the U.S. govenuneul named Stanley V. 'J'llterud.
an island at the South Pole F« raervailoos caU Mn.
after him, Beaumont Butte. Robert Jeppeon at; Mt •te«
Many of hill paintlnJI hang Mn. WilUllJJl Luhdln at Mf.
in the Pentagon, tbe Navy 7180,
City of Hope
Chapter Forming?
Anyone lnterealeii In fonnJiig";. City of
Hope chapter In Costa Mesa II lnvi~ ~ ·ap
informative meelln' at 8 p.m. Tbunday,
Jan. 23, in tl>e califomla Fedei'al Savlnga
and Loan building, _ .
st. Joachim'• Catholic
Cb\!tth, Colla 14 ...... tbe
aetllnC for the· -rilW -~IDlnlali =,~ .... ~
'Ille Rev. Gerald McHuJlr
performed lbe auPP•l• lor the ilaqbler ol Mn. ll1lllua T.
EYllll Ill Colla -and 1111 ... al Ill'. and Mn. llan1 Eubanka ., Scheller, ID.
• Givan lo Qlal1:lile by ~
11epllll1er the bride ...... •
cb&ntllly {..; over wblte sat.-
lngowu, faahlooell -•• boullaol •kiri that mended Into a cathedral length train. A fabric flower, edpd llllh
seed pearls and c:ryita1 .....
droJ>', bold bor flve-llered
llltlllm ..U. Formlnl her bou-
q\ld ..... yellow and wblte carnallalll. , Weartaa a cranberry red "1vet ,.... and careylng
red and -carnallom -Mn. 11Gbert Petenoo, the
bride'I dstef.ln·law and na-
tron ol honor.
Gowns In' Amerlcail beauty
red and Identical bouquete
were selected for the brides-
maids, the Misses OebbJe
Peterson, lhe bride'• 1ister,
Dawn Marie Evans and Quis
Anderson. Kimberl)' Am Pe-
terson, the bride's niece and
flower girl, wore a white ft'ock
with red velvet trim. Attending as best man was
WIUWn AIUlng, wlllle uah·
en w.ro Larry !!)'8h1 Larry
illlla and Henry >l'ellC!L Billy
8eyoo Evans WU the ring
beeftr.
A reception for 200 guests ~ ll: = /:it MRS. DENNIS F. EUBANKS
was Mrs. James Dun1ap, and Exchanpt Vf1Wt, Rings • usilllNI at the receptlon--------'-----------
weril llln. Rlcbard Hemmin-
ger and Mn. Olarlt.t · Fun< .
Detective
Addresses
Night Owls
--Newport Beacb p-o fl ct
Department Detedlve Dave
Elliott will dl5cuJ5 Today's
Youth and Their Problems
before memben of. the Night
Owls of the N.,.port Beach
Hoot 'n Holler Roost ne:zt ~
day at 2 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs . Arthur Stead,
worthy -patron <ind -matron, -
will preside over the initiation
At that tiine, Gellfd Rubeo, area c:ocmll-
nator, will show color slides of the hospital
and_answer_any questions_ pertaining Lo-it
\vhich is a free, nonsectarian hospital en-
gaged in a day-to-day battle with killer dis-
nell. Q( -Specllll -Jll"ll aU.odllig-~ Chapters of DAR were the br1degroom'1 PJrents
and his sister, Mrs. Phyllis ~~~~~1~~11il2"1~;:~ Meeting · in San Diego
The Senior Citizens Recrea-
lion Center, Newport Beach,
will be ·the meeting setilng.
Mn. Gertrude Knorpp of
Costa Mesa will augment the -am with plaoo l<lectlOlll. llooaUona to a L I V I n g
Memorial Fund !n memory
ol the late Mrs. Elllel !Ikard,
secret.ary-t.reasurtr, are being
accepted by Mrs. George L.
Stewart, president. At a later
date mtmberl and lrienda wtD
visit the Cllf al Hope, Medical
Research c.nter In illlarte
where a memorial dedlcaUon
ceremony wtD lab place In
her honor.
Cello Concert
To Entertain
A cellist ..m provide en-
lertaimnent for members of
the UC! Ton and Gown
MuaJc Group at tbeJr neit
meeting, Tuesday, Jan. 11.
Dr. Frieda Be 11 n fan t e,
founder and flrll C<>nductor
of the Ol'qe County
Phllharmonlc Orchestra, wilt
be the pest ortlll at the
l1l1lOling to begin at 10 a.m.
In the COruna del Mar home
of Mn. F.dwlrd F. Lethen.
Coffee wW be served.
Cactus Society
Orange Coonlf Cactlll and
Succulent SOclety meell the
first Wednellfay at noon In
Odd Fellon Hall, Colla Mesa.
Mn. Roy Joo .. at MH086
can be contacted fc:r addWonat
lnformaUoa.
PENNY FAVOUR
E11111ged
Collegians
To Marry
A July wedding date baa
been &elected by P e n n J
Favour, daughter of Mr. and Mr•. John W. Favour of
Laguna Beach. and John Clif.
ford Moore n, son of Mr.
and Mn. John C. Monro of
Huntington Beach.
The bride.elect and her
fiance are both students at
California State College at
Long Beach. She I.I a nurai.n1
major and he will earn h1a
bachelor's degree thll month.
Miss Favour ii a Cflldutte
of Laguna Beach 11111> School
T h e brldqroon>elect a
member al Slpna All*'
Epsllcm lntenlllf, II an ......
m11 of Wtllmlnlter ll!P
School
The ....,....m wurenal-
ed durlne a lamll)' dinner por-
lf holtecf by Mr. and Mn.
F1vour.
First io Visit Italian Cruise Ship
A poop ol area resldenti were among the firll to
.tall the lieW llallan crulH lhip. Prlnceu Carlo
when It docked at Los Alltel• Harbor las! weekend
for the fJnt Ume. Esaml•lnt one of the two swim·
I I
of a new member into Laguna
Beach chapter. Order of the
Eastern Star al 8 tonight in
Laguna Beach Masonic Hall.
A Hawaiian theme has been
selected for this evening·s
festivities which will be
eases. ~
In charge of arranging the session is
J\1rs. \Villiam Savage. Queries about the
meeting and new organization may be mailed
to her at 652 Surf St., Costa Mesa.
and Mme1. W. R. Evans of
Calimesa, W. B. Evans of
Carmel, Ror P. Evans of Yu·
caipa, David Pegueros, San
Bruno and William Yedd of
Portland, Ore. higbllghted by films shown by Pierre Mardus and his sister,~-----------------~ Following a trip up the
coast to Carmel, the bridal
couple are at home in Long
Beach. Tbe bride is a grad-
uate of Costa Mesa High
School and attended Orange
Coast College, Her husband
is a adu.ate of Sessar High
Schoof and Logan College, St.
Louis Mo.
Next Tuesday at 10 a.m.
representaUves from Southern .
California chapters of National
Society Daughters of the
American Revolution w i I I
gather in Bahia Motor Hotel,
Shelter Island, San Diego.
members attending from nine
Orange County chapters will
be Miss Ina Cerrilt, regent
Aliso Canyon chapter, Laguna
Hills ; Mrs. Selah Reber,
regent Col. William Cabell
chapter, Newport Beach: Mrs.
Edwin B. Marks, regeol Pa~
Uence Wright chapter, Laguna
Beach; Mrs. Joseph R.
Cavanagh, regenl R i c h a r d
Miss Antoniette Mardus.
The Star Club, Order of the
Eastern Star, will resume its
series of monthly card parties
Horoscope
with a game in the Masonic
Hall Friday, Jan. 24, at 7:30
p.m. when dessert will be
served. Leo: Overcome
Among those offeriq annual
reports wilt be Mrs. Albin
M. Wethe of Laguna Beach,
DAR museum and California
room. Bayldon chapter, Seal Beach,
Featured speaker at the lun· and Mrs. Lloyd Fair, regent
cheon will be Maj. Gen. Lowell San Clemente chapter.
Ticket.a for the card parties,
chaired by Mrs. Ben:tice
Franke, are ''· Reservations may be obtained by calling
Mn. John William.I, t!IW686.
Gavel
Signals
Auction
Going once . , . going twice
• •. sold.
Thll will be the familiar
cal.I when members of
Stephens College A I u m n a e
Club ol Orange County host
an auction on Jan. 21 at I
p.m. In Guaranty Cbevrolet
Co., Sonia All.1.
!In. Geor1t Palmer ..m be
the aucUooeer and M r 1 •
Wllllam Meyer and Mn. Leo
Andmn wtD boot. Memben
an uDd to brine wblte
elephants to the Bale.
Further lnlonnaUon may be
received by calling Mn. G.
L.-at-.
SATURDAY
JANUARY 18
By SYDNEY OMARR
"The wise man controls his
desUny ... Aslrology points the
way."
ARIES (March 21 -A pr 11
19): Accent on participation
In social groups. Be in contact
with friends. Express vJews.
Let othen knol! of your
creaUve abilities, desires. Ac-
cent and extend lnvitaUons.
TAURUS (Aprll 21).May IO):
New point of view i s
necessary. Don't expect otbert
to provide financial answers.
You will have to apply Jeuom:
teamed. Protect as&etl. Be a
good listener -but reserve
final judgment.
GEMINI (May 11.June 20)'
Some close lo you express
unusual opinions. Key Is lo
be tolerant Realiu family
member may require special
attenUon. Short journey could
be cm qendL Money problem ..m be eased.
CANCER (June 21.July 11):
Accent on Joint financll!ll. Best
to leave mcmey declalons to
mate, partner. Diversify e(·
for t s ; be Oulble. Excellent:
evening for toelal acUvity.
Vislton are on the way.
min& pool areas aboard the liner are (left to rlghl)
Lagunanl, Mr. and Mrs. McClellan Cole and Verner
Beel<, vi~ presldenl of the Festival of Arts board,
along with Mrs . Paul German of Newporl Beach.
LOCAL E. E n g I i sh , Commandant, This is the last Southern
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): No oth•• n•wip•fl•r hl1• yo1,1 Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Council meeling preceding the
Don't argue over legal pro-'"0•1, .... ery ~..,, ebo11t """•''• San Diego, whose topic will annual State Conference of the
cedure. Tendency to gel in toing on in the G•••t•• Or1n9e be Vietnam. California Society on March
deep waters should be Coist then th• DAILY PILOT. Among regents and 4.7 in Fresno.
overcome. Means stick with les""""""""""""""""""""""""'°=__;.~~__;..;..:;.~.;.;.--::~..;..;_;;..;.;.;.;;:;~====•
what yoll know. Don't be
tempted by one who claims
everything is easy. Be
posltlve.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)'
Depe nden.ts , pels grab
1poWgbt of your attenUon. Get
buic chores out of way early.
Later rt1u: -bot remember
resolution concerning diet. A
chan&:e is due; could Involve
writing or travel.
IJBllA (Sep!. 2Wct. 22)'
Discover new outlets for
creative energies. U n I q u e
form of recreation I s
spoWghted. Children ne e d
your attenUon. RomanUc in·
terlude eould make this a night
lo remember.
SCORPIO (Oct. 25-Nov. 21):
Gain cooperation of family for
home, property improvement.
Be aware of basic issues.
Check detai1s -be thorough .
Best lo stick close to home
base.
SAGITrARIUS .(Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Make contacts; test
lheorles, ideas. Write, catch
up on correspondence. Past
respoMlblllty comes to fore.
Fulfill obllgaUons. One who
owes money could repay to-
day. CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Wan.
19): You can fmd genuine
bargaln. Fine for adding to
possessions. Open lines o I
commWlicalion. Income poten-
tial Js accented. Galn shown
if you are a self-starter.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 10-Feh.
18): Deal personally with peo-
ple important to your welfare.
Take initiative. Obtain hint
from CAPRICORN message.
Stress originality, ln·
dependence. Fine for begin·
ning a project.
PISCES {Feb. l!l·March 20):
Handle private, confldential
affairs. Visit individual who
bas 1 p e c I a I lnformatioa.
Throw off fears. Excellent for
11Uendlng theater. dining oul
Shakeup in plans is indicated.
Demonstration
Will Flower
Cr<aUng pluttc n .... ,.. will
be clema11trated by . a
representative of I.he Garden
Grove Parts and Recreation
Department.
The projfam will b •
presented before the Women'•
Au.tillary ol the lnltrnallonal
Brotherhood o I Electrical
Workers, Local <ti al I p.m.
Tuesday, Jan.11, in the Uo¥>o
liall, Santa Ana.
ey Gals!
BRING LITTLE MONEY
AND
LOTS OF COURAGE
to our
50<>/o to 75<>/o OFF
SALE STARTS SATURDAY 18
Ue l,ool.r
ORANGE COUNTY SHOPS ONLY
33 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH
2500 & NUTWOOD FULLERTON
Acrou the Street from -cal State Fullerton
I
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Newport. Harhor . · ·
' EDITION
'
' VOL 62, NO. 15, ~ SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, (l.(LlfORNIA , ' ' .
0 -' I • • .!1RIDAY, JA~Y :1-1, '11169 -· .
I • • : l • f ~ ~ ' • ' ; ' ~· ' 1 \ I :· 1 ~: --
8 ·MQi-;e 'Airlines Seek COU;nty
•
' ' DA°'1ii.ll.#I"' ...... w-.lt111wq
EBB TIDE WATCH -Tom Marlin~ 19, .Costa ?ii~· ~land$ silh~uel
ted against sun-sparkled sea, contemplating softly lapping. surl -
bardcy a challenge. for man and snrfboanl. Surf, w!llch , ha,d been
running lhree to four feet, dropped •lo almost nothing late.'L'hursday
at Newport Beach, .which bas tieen. experieilcing exlre:mes of tidal
cha.ftges in r~nt days. ' · · . . '
High Tide Sweeps Streets,
'
Followed by Lowest Tide
. ..._ . .
--Ci~y Fret,s Over Pacific -NtrArthw~t .ll;QUte .Bids·
' By JEROME F, COi.LiNS
Of .. DilffJ. PW!M ....
Braniff, Cootinellla~ Delta, Alaaka. Northwes~ Natiooal, Western and United
airlines all have asked the Clvll
Aeronautics Board for permission to fly
out of Orange County Airport, it was
learned today.
They are competing with Air We.st
and Air C8lilorni>. already operating
at the county facility, for a share of
a potentially lucraU ve run between
Marina Plan
'Dandy,' Says
Harbor Aith·
A 3,900-boat, breakwater-enclosed
marina off West Newport may be neither
an imposslble oor an ·unwanted dream,
in the oPlnion of Newport Beach ctly
Harbor Coordinator Georg• Dawes.
"Subject to its engineering feasibility ,"
said the retired Marine_ Colonel today,
"J think it's a dandy plan."
Dawes suggested that advertising ex.
ecuUve Stephen C. Auld's ambitious pro.
posal -, tabled for further study by
city councilmen earlier £his week -
could accomplish a great deal for the
city.
"It would save a lot o( time and
effort on beach erosion. problems, would
generally upgrade the (West Newport)
area and would provide .a lot of needed
~I ~ recreaUooal ~J*:e," .be llid In·--~··... . .
CAtJ'l'IOUll fi'I' AND .
The •i-year.\Jld dlY aide, charged with
oveH.eeiJJ&, .. ~ d~'s ,harbor
respooslblll5es, etuUous\y reir.lned from
ra~: ?f'PJeCt . an unequivocal en·
"There are a lot of thin'gs that have
to be studied be.fot'e we can know for
eelrain what the marina could do," he
said. '4But I must say, Mr. Auld has
dcine a remarkable job on the concept."
. D1Jwes worked with U.S. Navy
engineers in developing a marina tor ~ San Diego S~.i Club pl-ior to
joining the Newport municipal staff lasl.
AtJgust, and before reUring from the
Marine Corps bad worked on numerous
military engineering projects.
Southern Ca!tfomla and the Pacific Northwest. .
The CAB will ""1duct a heal'ini~' Jnv.,Ugate the need" for the . t
service to' Portlaad ilnd SeatUe on
25 in Washi~n, D.C.
Newport Beach mwlici~1 authOrtUes
are VankJy uneasy about the proposed
exptnsJon of county airport use.
Mayor Doreen ·Mar.!h~ll says the flights
to the north ''would far exceed" the
Perelta Alr MaSter Plan's recom·
Portrait
This portrait of Presldent'9lect
Richard M. Nixon:is now avail·
able to public. It is lithograph
of original oil by New ' York
artist Gloria· Schumann ~'!, is
on . 12 by 16linch aft', P'IP.er
packaged in €~i(n! folio. · Checks 10, .' .00 sh01ild . be
made out lo · ugu;3I 'Co111-
fnittee, 440 "G':' St., NW, Wash·
ingt<ln, D.C., 20025.
mendlUon thtt County Ah'\>Orl ma!Dtatn
·a melroport llltus.
A· me~ by Pereira "· Afsoeiatei' definition, ii ooe whose comtnF<la111.1"'1 • .,. U,Ol!fd 't.>, • lOO-mjle ~ .
"Se¥tJe aDd Portland ale" W ~ that " notes Mra. ~-
' dis~ces In ltr miles trom1 the
are, "i'l'""Uve\y, llSl and 1!f1 m0ei;· ·
Newport City Attorney 1'\}11 S<yplour
•"1ieW0 thtl .Oe ol the princlpal ........
so DWl)' •• alrllnea lllve applied for Ibo ·
Talks Break Ctted
lJ .'S., South Viets
. . . ' ' -
Discuss Tru.ce
-.. : • 1-~ ·-·.;.. ..... J;;,;;.t' !;.. ~ .... ..zw ,. . ., ,. •
SA.IGO/'I -(AP) -U.S. Am~
EllJwortb Bunker and Gen.. · trelahlo!I
W •. Ai>rlDU, the U.S. JDlll\arl ·com-
mander In Vietnam, conlerred today with
Pre!ldent Nguyen Van Thltu on U.,S.
troop withdrawals and · 1 'POli,ib1e ~
fire Jn U~ht Ii the break In the P"I"
talks deadlock. · . ·
The meetlhg look place t.,. thin 1'
hours alter an announcement 1rorf\ .farls
that the Unlla<I States, North 'ilelnam.
South Vietnam anl! the Viet 'Corli'• !!a·
Uonal IJberallO\I Front . wtU be&ln !OOr-
way' talu ~ay. 1
' • ~ !t~~· -~ia~M~,.JC.-, ,J;(~p lat~ . qµ;; wu;'\IO}ild th< m • · 1;'~""1 .lluff~"' ' VlcO ~ N .
Forelin J1iJri181er ' nt iinrmut:lllkl tM Jeidert:dllifl111!~ •-a wboll! speotrwn 111 lblnp!' f<r-IY
two f1oun· '
Toplc;t ~: . . . ' .
. ·.,.-Withdr1wal of Amerif'p h'l><>Jll,,bpw manY and bow 100n. ' 1 ·
-A truce, which CjlU}d , MIJ~' 1!, total cease.ru.~ a patUaf ~ er ·a
0 eeue-llre in place.""l'he lattef rhdni an. tni<Jpa. woµJd simply tdaf. ~ thet are, wllbqul J!\!IWlUng any ' ll!IW.'_.,.
tJnng 91' .alntlnufNI aay did .. .,. ' . '
-!!Pl' ·!O retall&te U l\lt ~·a!J\iUld
...
Medical · Exper~s. Sµpp«>~,
'
•
•
The lower bay rose (Iver bulkheads
¥d bubbled up stonn drains, flooding
several low-lying Newport Beach streets
this morning.
damage to homes or stores, ft was
reported.
City aides said the flooding was not
as extensive as a month ago.
Auld'• breakwater, be &aid, might con·
ceivably serve as a "'beck of a good
fishing place." He also pointed out lhat
the breakwater, wbcich would extend
from the Santa Ana River jetty to the
Newport Pier area, might provlde a
base for a "perched beach." A causeway,
be said, could run along the breakwater.
Dawe1 turtber noted that Auld'11 pro-
posal lo the cooncll Included a channel
for small bolltll llnkin'g the marina area
with the lower bay. Tbe channel wouJd
be cut through lo Newport Island
between 36th and 31th streets.
Airport ~ejects
Fog Dispersal
A propo5') to experiment with for
dispersal at Orange County Alrp:n1 h8I
been abandoned, County Aviation Direc-
tor Robert J. Bresothan reported today.
CommissionJFKFilldirigs
The briny surge caused no major
~
Cosmonaut Trio
Back to Earth
After 'Switch'
MOSCOW (AP) -Three of the SoViet
Union's four orbiting cosmonauts came
dtJ"llm on tht wlndnvept, sncnKovertd
Bteppes of Kazakhstan today and climbed
ftom their Soyuz 4 spacecraft into 31·
degree below zero weather.
Villagers rushed up to them with
overcoats lo protect them from ~ Icy
blast of tht wind about 1,500 miles
southeast or Moscow.
"How are you feeling, dear boys!"
one villager asked.
••No words can express it," replied
cosmonaut Alexei Yellseyev. "Very glad.
Extremely happy ." . •
Soyui 5 with cosmonaut Boris Volynov
Hlllalned in orbit.
The cosmonauts in the two spacecraft
performed the world's first manned dock·
h1g In space and crew transfer. •
The mission was seen here and abroad
es opening the way lo permanent space
laboratories and assembly of orbi~ plat-
ftrTM for lunar and even interpianetaey
travel.
Yeliaeyev and Yevgcmy Khrunov bad
the IO far unique uperleoce' of landing ,
In a dilferent BpaCeCnlft from · the one
In which Ibey...,.. launched 'lt'ednesday.
TO(ether with Vladimir Shalalov the1 :
l'Ode SoyuJ 4 lo a preset landing point
about 2li miles northwest Ii Karapnda,
• 11ee1-rnakln1 city.
A recovery helicopter spotted the Soyuz
tblp even before it landed, the official
news •iency Tass reported. ·
The fourth cosmonaut, Votynav, con.
tlnued ..-b!Uns lhrollgh·the d91·la Sclyln
I aDd WU not expected to land before
Sa~y morning when his orbit pattern
wouJa brine him ovor the 111m1 laaoQr>c
~rea.
\
Today's high tide peaked &hortly before
8 a.m. at 7.1 feet above the mean
low level tide. The lo#est Ude In a
year -minus two feet -was also
logged at 3:12 p.m. today.
, City crews this morniog sandbagged
several street ends in the Newport Waild
area o( the peninsula. Major arterials,
however, were unaffected by the bay
backup. ·
Balboa Island experienced some minor
Ooodlng along the bayfronl.
Another 7.1-foot tide is expected Satur·
day at 8:30 a.m. Sunday's high tide
level will dJp to 6.8 feel at 9:24 a.rn.
In mid-December, S.foot plus · Udea
washed through scores of residences and
some business establishment&.
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The !lock lllllrket
closed in'egularly lower today as profits
were taken on the advance earlier this
week. (See qµota'Uons, Paaes 1&-11). •
IMPROVE FLOW
''That would certainly Jmprove the now or boat traffic and water in that
comer of the harbor," be said. "Even u· only smaller boata could set through,
it would still prOvide ocean acce.u to
a lot of people who now have to make
the Jons trip tbrou&b the harbor jetty."
Strong objectloos lo the plan already
have been rectived at City Hall. Several
leaden ol the West Newport Improve-
ment Assoctation on Monday crWcized
it before the coonclL They said they
didn't want their IUl'fin& beach 11ruined''
by the cmtempw.d breakwater, ·which
Auld contends can be gruUy revised.
But othen have supported the project,
lncluding at least two memben cl. the
same bomeotrQen' group, who told coun-
cllmen. by letter and in person that
(See MARINA, P11e Z)
Bresnahan' rejected 'the proposal cf
1 Santa Ana weather forecasting firm
for two reason.t:
I. The project was not developed suf·
ficiently bl;yond 'the 1erperimenta! stage
to be llfarJlllteed effective.
2. He •ouldn't want to~ e.p end upon
the effective-Ii a fog. di!llpalioo
progmn•without landing approacb iliht&
and an Jnatrument landing oylleui . at
the airport. \ .
RecenUy he said an lnstnnnent laodlng
system wu two yean: away.
The Santa Ana flnn, Weatber·Ceutnls
Inc. have developed a ·ground tl).IChiot
lo shoot chemkals Into cloud ·layers,
transforming fog to rain. They want
115,000 lo do the job for :IO to Z5 day•
between February and May.
Mesaris in · Reroute Row .. .
Councilman, Mayor, Staff Slww No United FrQn.t
• ' ' I I'
· By TllOMAS KEEVIL involved Jn the five po1anua1 rG11a1 1o s1x mollthl ago," SL cta1r aifd healadly,
ot .. o.ur '""'!' st~ make a defWUve ltand polllble t& thia "and the CitJ.I dXmdl haf oey~ hid F'relbml!>~lfesaCityCouncllman llrM.. • a ~.iii-u.m. By~l lN'fe
William L.. SL Cfalr clasbed ~ w!tll "I con~ ft1 :loday wbli:h Ii Iba ftve got lo _, -eya. 11ie opr.,. an
the mayor and the~ ~ns stall 1ln<9 I J!O!!t ~ l dcln' ~ all -· _l " •· • • ' _ · · · 'lbursday over -llim a stand to'lalui · Ii the lnformatloa. Yet r,. 11 dlroctJy , st. ·Clair.· wWi the twki"I, o1 !Cm.'": ao what r<lllle for U.,ftibft NeQorl lnvlllved u ._..,. Plnll!'l'· a downlown.m!fdiaola, fl ptr&Uad'~' -1 u...p ~ Colla lieu dowlltown. dnJUlsl, made a '11D1ntad the iraterm.-'Of ult five . '
loN""POl'l'Beocb. ' relerencetoSLClairwbetllluald: toulal wilt, In IM1oi>g nm, belt-
llls camt>OIP left oolne doobt that "A freen,y route fl nOI the ,.,,....1 the lolaroitll .e·11ro clt\I. .WbiJe ·Pl>llnl'
the city will bO able lo present 1 united clJolce Ii a eouncflman,;l>ut bow aooct ' thal tt ....,. more a_,, ,lo•oaldl lblt.
froot when,,.,. hlgilw1y englneen hold therouteltforthecft111-t1'bolo." '~ """""°,wwJ4;~~ Iba -COii
their lirst public hearing on the rouu.8 Ills voice edgy witlf ob.•ll*rl ~ ' tr•~· :· 1 ; .. " ' •• • • ,
in the next two months. ' ment, St. 'Clair' retorted that modi data f · ~ Ill >rt Ml.Cl;;; i:llaJt;lJt lo~ ~or A.L. Pinkley told m.,.ber, or is already lo the llandl''ol lllt cltJ Phitl01, M NJdf:-'""'• ., ,f''t', ' :
CHAllT (Committee Harbor Are 1 ltafl and the city cauncll ud lhll little "If anyone can't debar. on U.. inapt·
Roewch Team) at a breaklut ,.aloD ldloll bad liiln lalm. that lllvo '"*1 u~· for six 'mooflll. it
that too many lnconcluslve factors ate "These (acts were s!ven to the elty (See FR!EWAY. P• &l . \
•
WASHINGTON (AP) -A pone! Ii
medical experta which met ·In -et
lat 10'1' IJYI the 1ulojtoy fimfln4a Oli
Pr"ldent John F. Kennec\y ,.... correct
as detailed In the Wlll'ltn ~on
Report and prove he wu ll>oL J,wJce
from bebiod. • , •
The report wl1 made PuJiuc ·by. the
Justlce Deparlmenl ~ nl&bl "'
the eve of court i:roceerlhfll an a petUkm
by New Orieanl Dlll.cAlly! Jlm'OtrriaOo
lo gain pc111elilldn ,,,_~
and X"'"JI In 1ho ·~ ai'lri"liil "the ~ WU t\ll by -.·borlJel find
from la front Ii him, and .-ftrod
at hll bact.
Garrison 111bpoonaed the material u
evl<knce In the trial ol Clay L. 8111•;
retired Si-year old ; 'NtW 0 r I e a 11 t
--chtrP!I willr ciiiiiirlnr' to murder Kennedy: " Gtrrison clalml be ean • .,. the
pbolo!P'•l>lll·and 1'<1J1 lo inw111·-
one Ii the J,lu1leta willch -1'anoed1
In DaD11 '11Ve i'elri"•1 ~·llltil•h'om hlsfro~' ' I I• '
'1'111• woold 11iow· tliat -... · ~
wu involved, wheuu the 1r1.11t11 Como
milaion -1uded Kaltt""1 WU 11\0t
b'y "" lllln, Lee ~ Onaltl, •cllnf alone. ' 1 ..
The pbolog.pb;i 'and !i'"!l'! :w=:; ed ln the cor1 ol the N1ijiliar In 1911 "-'K-...._1 -lfn. ·•.w.: rq, .. ._, .. , ,!"_ ..... ~~ .. .
, : •• •• r .;.., '.I_:
Sti':rie ''l'bt..:.1..1.0.....:= "' ••. IA! . r , -~&e;q9 " i
• , ·: '" 1 • • ,,.. I'! : ,; • , !.i r , U .Si R11H-.:.:.l91 : , t I : ·
• -~·~'""' ii ~ :i • "
ASHJNOfl'Olf" lllmUilro --" a ~iii hltltclb *" .., .•
the ~">!.-dttft ..........
featherbeddln(. • • · . o111c1o11· ~,,.re ... ~tll'<lt-11_
eflortl mediate Ille dbpltet
tho ' r>l-...,. ,tho . B!•lraod· pl
1-notiVlt ~·~ ~. ... tilt "'*>1• detP41111 ibolt:iii1iiiiU·
be aaatined lo elcll clluiei ~a.
)
0r..,.
· .. -....
-~t.lilll''
Depeildi.n'g · on· wheth~r you
ara u optJm!Jt or a pes,ll'list,
it'U el.tbar be .paltl.y ·•tlll!l1 or
parUy c1~ ~~ !h• ....
·ent1, .'llillt leinpeR~S !:&Jlll-
iD( from • IO !If C llonc Ibo
CO&lJt:"° ~ ' •
INSID TODAY
The ~-..~•I UJ• -~--.....~ ~d1.~ ~ tclilllfiliJ' fit f!llC•f'."" '~ ··t·!'l"-~-~ 16.: . . .. .. .. ........ ' '•...... " ·==: ~ =.....:=.:
C...lf ...... ----• ~-·Jt· ~'I'll .... *"" .. ... .... '' ..... '""' . ,... ---~· l'W • ~· .. ....... " . .,.....,. .... .. \1111111'1 • • ........ t .. ~ • ! ........ ..
....... • ..... J '* •
I
I
I
-=---==,... ---" -=====,----=-:=,....,,-=-=:"""',.,..,=======-----..=,.....-----....,..,..,~=--==--=:i1111
•
--I !WU lll~T • ,_, -"'· l'llt
.(}CC Sci~11.6s< B0ttom~ ;of Siudeni Fun,d _Barite1
' • .. -
2 Face Murder Charges
• New Pair Arraigned in· Brutal lluritmgwn Slaying
I)> WILLIAM llEll:D
ot .. ..-w .... ""'
,,.. -IUIJ*ll 111 tbe bJoodi' ~
ol a B-Beacb If&-.,. -led kr arraliJlme!ll tedo1 ...
lonnal mlJ!dlr cbar&• In West Oranc•
Coanly 1111111clpal ~ •
(. A<cqoed ' Jn 1"' BUDday lllUl1ler W
Hester S. Markee are H""l' Lopez
Sianez, 15, of Ill Cloy St, ao olllteld -km": and E4nnl llDy IW'lfl!va, II,
-ol 17191 Marten Lane, an unemployed
~ W>inr.. '
• ~ earlier and now cleared or
any involvement ln the crime are * * * ·-t:: * h ' -~Beach Slaying Suspect,s
:~Quizzed on 'Jane Doe'
\
Fun Breakfast
Revived in CdM
An ol4 .-.., of lbe °""""' del -
Qmnlwr al Q)mmm:e bu bet D
-. cbcnber pnoldeDI JollD s.m,i..
anDOllllCOdloday.
He aid a "tun breakfast" will be
bold each Wech...iq, bt.glnnlnc ·-week, at 3 a.m.. U tber Snack Sllop,
2llXI E. Cout lllgbway.
"We11 adjourn promptly at I 1..m.,"
he pnxnlaed. "Wbot WI Willi to dO
" to .lull plbs tocelber and talk oltoul
ouyihlog ol -There'• nolhq
formal -It, at an. EY<rycme'1 ln-
vlled, lllllllben, -and ,_ ..
DAil! PllOT
OU.NG( COA•T Pl.lktaM.,_ cblt#ANT
l•Mrt N. WeM
Pnti....t ..... """i.i.r
J.~ 1. e-..1,.,
Vb ,,..,..,,. ""' kftfl'el """""
n...tlH..U ·-.n.-. A. Mw.M.e -·""' Jt,.... F. c.rn.. P111I ..:, .. ._ ........,.... ,,._,1111'19
City ~...... Olto<IV .....,.. ... ,O""*
IJll Wttt l1lllH a..l111r4
MtlLt ""4,_ P.O. I•• lt11. tJ"J --a-..,....., *"'*":;.t''-. i......-....i m' ,,........,
........ , INdu -JI &"'"'
-.. _ .... Slmdly nllbt ollyjng
and tbe lluntmgton -J.... Doe klllillg iii 4.tya qo.
.. .J. cah.drlvtr'a.Up.led . ..UC. to anut
ff""l' L. SJ-. ·25, <I IJJ Clay St,
Huntlogt<ln Bead!, and Edwud R.
Hargrave, II, ol 17312 -Lue, Huntl!!gtoa Bead!, OD 'Jllunday,
They ... ·upected ol tbe -.t1abtna murder of Mn. Bester S.
Marlee, 11, ol ID Olive Ave., ap. pmnt!J ..., I minor trafllc accldmt
lnvalviog a..,~ w1llloul lbe own<r'•
lmowledp;
llUcllve 8cl. Monty McKennon llid todlJ 11111 be had nothing olfidal to
nporl "" 1111 aUempt to llnl Sianez
and Hargra" to tbe m)'lluy ol J ant
Doe.
The 20 lo •1~1d woman was ....
ually -tut Mal<h 14 and !ell
to bl"4 to -Ihn>ap a ra:oNI¥ cut ID 1be Unit. an.r lfelq dumpid
lnlo I llllllldi, "Ci • I .
Capl El!il•llle aald .,,,...,
tbal lbe ,,,...., dtolh at Mn. Marne,
a tindly .,_ ·-a&Hgely
mutllaled before Ibo died, bean a mark·
ed limilarity to !be Jane Doe we.
Derplte an lntematlonal search via
pbo11>1rapha and llncerprlnll malled to
law q:encle1 tbro1Jibout tbe U. S.1 Mex-
ico ... Canada, J... Doe remalnl
unknown.
. Rev. G. Ruaell Sbaw, pUtor ol tbe
Pini . -Ciurdl ol ll1mlh>clon Bead!, .................. 1111 ......
ol mttmal lhb lllOl1llni. prior to Jill•
Doe'• br1ef, I p.m. funeral.
COmpootoi tbe llUlllOll waa not easy.
Newport Bank
Okays Creating .
Holding Firm
Diredon ol Newport National Banl
todlJ allDCllDCed approval, In ~~· f.'lf plans io form a one-tiank I
co=cb would aoqulre cootrol o1 · , wllh Ila ....,, o1nca, an
loea!Od ~· County. Tbe ho company, directon llid,
would be able to In-In
llnaJldalb'relaled -ent.rprtaea ;,t'1di " nol lllonble under tbe ...,..m . cbllttt. Tbe.boldlilj _.,. -be
•-Nl'tlport National Corporation. Allhqli lllW detalla .,.. lncompleto,
II la planned !hat tbe holding company
will · ocquln an outstanding a11area or
the biint purillarlt to 1 plan of
reot'potu1•11 under wbicb the preMnt
-ol tbe -would excbng• tbelr ~ · blnlt stocl: fer stoc1: In
tbe ..... ltoldlnl --... bull ol
two -ol boldlng --ttoct fer eodl abare ol bant otoct. Tbe holdlng
company w.ld Ml .-tbe pmont
---er .,..._..i ol tbe )>ant .. Dir-. oald three major beDollta
that wlll be ..,.,eel by . lbe -
-Ihrongh !be boldlq com-pany cootn>I:
-The -to dlvtrll(y Into oihor prolllaille ~led flelcta.
-The ~ty to ~ -and dlvtnlDed managerial Qllls. .
--l'lalbl1lly Ill cajlilal -ament
wltll addlllonal ~ID tbe n1 .. me o1 C&l'ita1 and 1n hnjlroflns -....
· Tbe holding oompany plan II 11Ublect
lo tbe o.......,.i ol tbe Complniler ol
lbe °"""'7· A ....U., wDI be-~
ed al wblcb -wDI allo be
-to a-lbe .,... 'l1lo bent wOl-a ..... !romU.WtmollMlal
""-·-.. mah poolfblo tbe ep he .. ., ..... cl the new bold1ac -··--
King Widow in Rome
~ (Al') -,,,. -ol Dr.
-LdlMI' Khlf -.. Italy
locfaf to ........... -11111 -Pope 1'1111 VL
•
relwed by I p.m. Tllllrtdty.
Robitaille said the poUce "have a state-
ment and ha-Ye ph)'$lcal evidence" ~
YO!YIDC 8lanez and Harsrave. Included
In lbe pbyUcal evidence l.! a "1lle bell••·
ed to be the~urder we.agon.
Tbe accused were arrested afttr in-
veatlpUon of the 1tory of a tlxl cab
drfvor that he bad picked up a blooclj'
man early Monday morning after tbe
l1lllnler and drove him to 112 Clay St
from ttb Street and Orange A venue.
about two milea from the murder scene
and about the wne diltance from where
the abandoned car nMd by the murderer
waa found.
Robllallle llid !hat Miii Dlnller and
Coolno1 hN ---... they could Ml explain how her bloody and alJcbtl1 damaged car ··bappeoed to be
mlaalng !ran her prage on tbe nlgbt
oftbemmder.
lie explaJned !hat abe had told pollce
Ibo dme to tbe Five Point. SboppiJlg
Center mm ber home at -Dobnnre Sl and nlunled about I p.m. ' :
CoolDey arrived .... -and parted hla car on the dri-1 ..,. dlrecllJ belllocf tiin In Rdl a__,.
u to a)lpll'tDlly prevent her car from
beln& -ecL - --It appears now that Siana could'bave
bad a IJlllO aet ol keya to Mia Dlllger'a
car ud had uaed the vel!Jcle wllltout ber penmm.., before.
It appem that be and llaqraft on
tbe nIPt of lbe munler carafully nilled
Coolney'1 ..,. out ol Iha dri•••i11 and
toot Mia l:>Jnpr'a blut aedan and •then
puabed Coollley'1 ear . back Into !he
drtmray. ·
Tbe -then -· Mlaa DID(er'• car towanl 1'11h -and Main Street
where It colllded with Iha white sedan
driven by Mn. Markee u Ibo returned
home lilllJi lbe liQjldromat at Five PolnlL ·
Tbe ll1'lit lralllc accldent ev!d111ily
led dJndbo to !hi murder. Tbe two
can !OQOllecl brJ"11 and lhera na a
purlull down 1'11h -and Mrs. Markee _..u, .got out ol h1r car,
or WU draued ouL .
Sbe i:rol>A6fy thieatonec! to call police
becaUR · ol the accident and UJe tiller
begao to llab at her with a tnile poalbly
a pocket lmUe.
A llub by the tlJier caupt the '""'P-
tiMlst at tbe lefl ear and lllced a"°"
her lhi'oit and wben the blade bit tbe
artery on tbe lefl 1Idi of her neck
the blood Clported heavily over tbe killer.
For a moment. the tiller stood on
17Ih Slm!t walchlng Mra. Markee ....i
away from him and bact toward her
ctr wbJch sUll had the motor running
aocl beadlight. burning.
She twi3t.ed In a ~ml·drcular pattt.m,
blood spurting in huge droplets from
her tbroaL ~, fell a few lnchea: from
the front bumper ol her au,htly damaged
cu.
Th< killer jumped blcl Into Mils
Dinger'• car and romd oil Into tbe nigh~ Dnally parking the veblcle al llst
Street and Olive Avenue Jn a deserted '
area al oU tanb.
Front Page J
FLIGHTS ...
fo. tbe pcrUon ol tbelr fllihla betweon
tJlia area and San FranclJco."
Al the CAB bearing, tbe City ol
Newport !leach ls expected to protost
lllroogiy tbe propooed .... fll&bta Imm
lbe COO!lly, whose airport 11 only one
ol a hall-d..,. In Southern Calllorula
being considered by the CAB as poalble
terminal& for the service.
"We must objtct to any plan to utond
Oranae C.U.ly AJrport beyond !be
melroport ..,.pt,.. ..,. CouncJlman
P1ul J .. Grul>er. "Olhenrllt, we'n 1olng
1n have a fulJ.fledged Intentate airport
here."
CouncJlman Robert Sbel1nn .. ,. tbe
city "at the ·ftrJ leut" lhoald ruerve
an opporlunlty before tbe CAB to be
beard oo tbe subject.
'!be City's Air Tnllli: Advisory CO...
mlttee II DOW laklof 11J> !be mattor.
It b expected to ._i beck 10 tbe
council wllh • ~ation Ill about
a month.
Newport Cadet
May Get Honor
West Polllt Cadet Ma~ Bcyelar,
II, IOI! ol Nnport llach -t
--1 aenlcta dl/odOr Wada S.
lllyfler, la ....., caodldalel !er tbe
Color Guan! al -.wiect llldlanl
M. Nbon'1 1""""'"1 Pvade.
Yoonc Beyeler, Ill honor sndualo of
Mira Colla !DP School In 11'.anbaltan
Buel!, la oompl•tlnc bis Ona! _....,
at tbe Acadlnlj'.
Illa family u .. al -Giiiman -Ill UnMnlq Part.
Frem P .. e J
FREEWAY •..
II a pratty dam bad situation."
'!be meeflng, UTlllled by CHART vlct
preiident James Wood, was billed as
a debate on the freeway routing issue,
but Mayor Pint1ey said in hill opening
remarks that there would be no debate
"since you can't debate &0mething
wjlltout facl.! and ... ba ... 't got an
the facts."
Tempers were on edge In aQOlber
part of !he ....... when St. Clair uld,
"f know !hat Mayor Pinkley here nms
the town, he's in the driver's uat and
tbe city m1111ger doea -t he aays
and the city staff doea wbat the city
manager aaya ..• "
City manager Arthur R. Mc.Kt.nzie,
seated nearby, interrupted heatedly and
finally overrode SL CJair's remarks with
!hi! angry declaration:
"Mr. SL Clair, JOU kuow u well
u l do that I tate my onlen from
the city aiuncll, not from the mayor.''
Now It's Monday
That San Diego
Freeway t? Open
RHcheduled ..... a1 -. then ~
l!Oheduled again for today, tbe oP<ninlf
ol the new, a.&-mlle, final leg of the
S&D Diego Freeway bu oow been re-eet,
hopefUDy for Monday.
"It looks pretty good now." said a
!p(ltesman for Dirtrtct Seven of the
Calllornla Dlv!slon of HJshwaya, which
dedicatod tbe hnportant llnl early last
month.
Rainy days were blamed for the latest
delay in compleUon of the multimillion
dollar traffic artery, which will connect
the San Diego Freeway from the
Sepulveda Gap neer Encino through to
the Irvine area.
The ~-tr.eway will -with the Santa Ana Freeway It Sand Canyon
in southern Orange County, and 11 O:•
pecied: to takt a heavy traffic burden
off lbe busy lnlancl route.
Delay In c1o11..,, of a variety ol 11td
algna and guardrails pno•enled tbe
freeway mm going toto oerv!ce just
after Chrl.!lm.U .. planned.
Some ramp atrlolnl, curbing and gutter
conatructinn ancf other final work, in-
cludlng trllllformer instillation and light .,mm testing wu al8o required at
Ihal time.
State o!Ddalll uld today t b • t only
mi-detail Ind cleanup wort remains
to be done on the freeway over the ...........
I a
Parking Law Advanced
As Cook, Planner Clash
ll)ey d1xagreed wllh tbe lllatomenta ol
lbe---Auld, Ill MIDnhic hla plan before the
preg,_ oblerved that only 14$ homea
are on the waterfrmt In West Newp:>rt.
while then are many hundreds more
In !be anoa -owners would not object .. alralJciusb', u al an.
'In any event, a pol1Ucal dedalon
ls required ol tbe council before tbe
pllll , ... anywhere," be aaJd.
Moyor Doreen Manhall baa yet to
set a dtte on wlUcb tbe COUDCil is
to recomlder tbe propoaal. JVhJcb Includes
a 9CJO.bome "Genoa Bay•• inland marina
community on BannJnc properties north
ol W. Cout lllgbway.
Auld, a Newport Shores 1'aldenl, baa
lnsllted In all ol hla ..-.-lhal
the project II llrictly • ~ altow.
"'I am Jn this aJone," be Aid. 111 flnt
thoqbl ol tbe plan during laal )'ear'•
eroolon crllla."
Al ..... --at hla -. be allowed newameu a cocktail napkin
bearing the first al<elches ol lbe proposal,
drawn laal lllmllltf. lie haa l1nc:e greatly
detailed lbe ctr.am and lranlferred It
to elaborate layouts and rtnderfna:s.
He said h1I ont'y intenst In the project
is that of a concerned clUzen. "U the
cooncl1 w11111 to forget It," he uld,
••that'll be the end d JL"
Some council action ts required before
further studies can take place because
tbe city holds tbe lidtlanda In Inat.
I 4
141' lilsn 1-uoe of am.n Iola and
aoariql lud valutL
Tbe banheat '"""' ol Iha betrtag,
however, came durfoa an eict>qe
-..., Commllalootr Jobil S. Wallon
and former Newport Com>cllman Dee
Cook, l<prmntlng !be °""""' del M.lr Cllamber of COmmarce. .
Coot'• nx:ommend1Ucns en ordiMnce
revlalool and poaalble mlocr chaops
were met with, "But you atm etlD\e
back Wore WI every time with more
chan(el • • I Ihlnt you came up bett Just to !alt," llid Wallon.
Alla' tomperiog commenll mm tbe
chair, Cool nplled coolly, "I can tate
care ol "'11111 • • • he haa badgered
me and harUsed me before, but he
iUll can1 make me angry."
'Mle ordinance would cover a 11
buJioeuea under the same restrlcticna
with fcrmulaa Including a ratio ol one
"'""" for each 250 square feet ol floor
l(lllCt ln reiall and o!Dct busln ......
Plannera agmd thet most ol tbe older
-llul1dlnp could not comply and
-be noncoalormlng ..... but Iha JrOblem eoald be comidered • hanlab1p
and tbe owner eoald l'ecelve a variance U bft . IPPW'fid before the c<!"'mfaalon
aeeklng approval of a cooditlonal uae
permll
'fbe porting mlltonx, whlclJ,. In
.......,. ""' airoa<ly Ill effect u an
emer1ency measure explrlng soon, W<ll
the appoval of tbe Newport Harbor
Cllamber ol Commerce and tbe Board
o!RWI<n.
The ordinance nut will come befm-e
tbe city cooncl1 for public hearing and
possible adQptloo.
Pre~hoolers
Program Slated
Cbildrm ""' being IClllglll to portidpola
In the clty.tpoooored 11th -Park pre-.chool rter'8Uon program offend
each week a day from Sl;30 to 11 a.m.
The school la open lo children between
! and 5 years old under tbe 8JlOll'Ol"hip
of the Newport Beach Parks Department.
·RegistraUon fee for the 10.weet period
Jg 15 per child.
Mothers sending children will work
one day a weet for each child enrolled.
Further information L!: available by calJ.
Ing the membenhip chairman at m<Xll6 .
MID-SEASON
CONTINUES
HENREDON
QUALITY CHAIRS AT A
SPECIAL PRICE , •••
STARTING AT $199. EACH
HENUDON i.HOLSTERY SALE
15°/o OFF ANY SPECIAL ORDER
0 I
SALE ALSO INClUOES SEUCTIO 61tOUPS RIOM DREXfl. HENREOON
HEJUTA6E, PLUS OTHEtl ANE LINES. ACCESSoRIES, PICTURES I !AMPS INCtUOED.
IXCILUllYlf DUL_,_ ---DUXll.-llllUTAH to DAYS NO INTEUST-• a11• ,_ A.YAP_.••• 1 OM APPllOVID cama
....., ' ... 1111 11w LAGUNA IUCM
D nlen I• NI ........ Cflllt ....,,
A ... 1h'1 AID ... Clf9I .-iAT ._ t ~· -. ........ "' ._. .., ......
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f
GOP.Gets
Glowing
Report
WASHINGTON CUP!)
Republlcan NatiooaJ Chairman
~ C. Bliss ftve the GOP
a &lowing report tod~y on the
party's progreu since the lMf
election diauter but said
carefUJ planning still wes vital
for future elecliona.
Bliss, chairman since April
1, 1965, 1ubmltted his report
to the first 'meeting of the
Republican National Com·
mittee since Richard M. Nb·
on' s victory In the 1968
presidenUal election.
With charta and map. to
Illustrate Republican gajns, he
aaid:
"Since 1964 we moved from
17 to 31 governorshipa, the
highest number since 1920;
from 32 to 43 seat.ii tn the
U.S. Senate, the most aince ..
1956: rrom 140 to 192 seats B oes Li"ne Vp in the U.S. House, high mark er
since 1956, and from control President Lyndo.o Johnson poses with four U.S. Qf seven to 20 state legislatures, the most since servicemen, two of them from the· same small town
1954." in Georgia, after presenting each with the Medal
Myers. Fla.: Marine Maj. Stephen W. Pless, New-
nan, Ga .;· Air Force Lt. Col. Joe M. Jackson, also
from Newnan, and Anny S/Sgt. Drew D. Dix,
Pueblo, Colo.
ftllloj, JIJ>ilrJ 11. 1969 • DAILY PILOT IS
Britain Leads Ouosldon.
Allies Balk at Defense Hike
BRUSSEJ..S (UPI). -West conventional weap0ns io aaln NAT01$ oiirn preu servtce-
European alliea balked today the United Slate! mMe time replltd with fiturt1 proving ~
at Amirican calls for an before having to make the is spending lltll'ly four tlmet
increaae in defense spending decision to use nuclear wqp-11 niucb for defense-nearty
tt> counter Russia's superior· ons in cue of cooflict. '80 billlon-UIAn all her U:
tty in manpowe.-and non· ••Th;;;;•;;U;;nl;;;t;::edi;;;;Si;itaiitu-throu~;;;;:;gbi;;;;;iE;;iuii;roi;ipeii· an;;.•;;;';;;lleJ~c;on~1iibii;inedi;;;;.;;;; nuclear arm1. 11 The Europeans at a de-
fense mirust.era' conference
of the North Atlantic Treaty
OrP11lsatlon (NATO) Thurs·
day au agreed to increase their coDtr1butions-on paper.
; But they balked at demands
by U.S. Deputy Defense Sec·
retary Paul Nitze that they
step up spending to enal:ile the I
West to match the Soviets in
nonnuclear weaponry a n d
manpower. The past history of
NATO commitments is one of unfullilled goab.
The opposition is being led
by Britain, still in serious
economic difficulties.
British. D e f e n s e Minister
Dennis Healey told .the NATO
conference his government
felt · it was economically im·
possible for the Europe.ans to I
match the Warsaw Pact in '
conventional weaponry.
Old World
Mediterranean
Spanish Furniture
Received canctllatlon of $22,000.00
Spanish aind · Mtdlterr•neain Furniture
All N.w T., 9Mllty .,_. ...... Dec_.., D,._ H ... Oa D,.iQ
Items as follows: Geora:eous 8 ft. custom
quilted sofa with separate loose pillows with
heavy oak trim decor and matching chair, 3
matching oak occasional tables. (2) 58" tall
decorator lamps, banging chain swag lamps
in wrought iron. an 8 piece king size master
bedroom S\lite in pecan panelled Mediterran-
ean style \vith ·top quality 15. yr. warra~ty
king· size mattress & box spnngs. Spanish
decor dininJ!' set. etc.
Wltokl ......,., •• r.t11W $1SZl:Ot
::~~~~~.1.F.1:': ........•..•...•. $698.00 In the same period, he said, of Honor for heroism in Vietnam. Receiving awards
the GOP sained 648 state wer~ (from left) Navy Lt. Clyde E. Lassen, Ft.
legialative seats, 1,420 county __ ,;..._..;._ _____ _;;_ __ --'-------------------------------
He urged new guidelines be I
se t for the use of nuclear
weapons in the event of a So-
viet attack, implying limits
should be set to nonnuclear
spending.
Healey 'has reportedly gain-
ed the approval of other Jµiro-
pean ministers , and' of the
Supreme Allied Commander
in Europe, American Gen.
Any Piece Cain Be Purchaiatd lnclivlduailly
Terms AvailaibJe -Newcomen to C1llf.
Credit .Approwed Immediately offices and nearly 100 mayors.
"However impressive that
record may be, we must plan
carefully and intelligently for
the future," Bliss added. "I
believe we have an excellent
opportunity to win control of
Congresll in 1970 and, with
Richard Nixon as our presi-
dent, I believe V.'e are on
our way to becoming the ma-
jority party once again."
The GOP must defy history
to win control of Congt"eM
In the .elections next year.
The administration p a r t 'I
normally loses seats in, elec-
tions in the middle-of
presidential terms.
After a conference with Nix-
an last week. Bliss announced
that he had been asked to
stay in the job indefinitely.
Even some of his admirers
in the national organization
believed that "indefinitely"
meant no longer than six
months. Others felt that he
could stay u long a! he
wanted the job.
Before the Nixon-Bliss con-
ference, there were reports
that Nixon -or some of
his staff aides -wanted a
more handsome, articulate
spokesman in the
chairmanship instead of an
organizational "nuts a n d
bolt.!1 .. crafi!inan like Bliss.
President
Puzzler
AF Retaliation Memo
Revealed by Senator
'VASH)NGTON (AP ) -Sen. servant I have seen in the
William Proxmire (D-Wis.), 11 year.i I have been in the
coaxed an Air Force official Senate."
into insisting tbat no reialia-Proxmire said it "directly
tion was planned against. a~ contradicted" ple<ig~ by Air
effic:iency expert-who revealed ~ Force offldals that no action
a '2 . b,Ullon J?eotagon error would bi taken against the
in estimating the cost of a · elficiency expert, A. Ernest
new plallC, thfn dramatically Fitzgerald, who disclosed the
read into the record a secret $2 bllllon ovtrrun In earlier
memo detailing three ways testimony before the sub-
to fire the man. commitlee.
The senator. chairman of The Incident o cc urred
the J_o int Economy . sub-Thursday during a sub-
co!l:m1tlce and a persistent commlUee hearing \v i t h
cr1t1c vf Defense Department Robert H. Charles, assistant
procurement practices, called secretary for installations and
the memo "the most shocking logistics in the witness chair.
retaliation against a public Charles,' unruffled, said the
Wire Guild
Strike Ends
NEW YORK IUPI) -Wire
Service Guild (WSG)
members returned to work to-
day in Associated Press
bureaus across the country,
their eight-day strike against
the news agency ended by
t .... ·o-to-.one membership ac-
ceptance of a management
contract proposal.
AP offered the union a
Utree-year pact, with top.scale
salaries for ne .... ·smen rising
to $250 a Week . during its
last year. The guild had urged
members to reject the pro-
posal.
memo merely outlined
"various things that could
happen under certain con·
ditions."'
At issue is the cost of the
C6A, a giant jet transport
plane built for the Air Force
by Lockheed Corp. Fitzgerald,
deputy for management
systems to the assistant
secretary for fin a n c i a I
management, testified before
the Proxmire subcommmittee
last November that develop-,
ment of the plane had cost
$2 billion more than the Pen-
tagon had bargained for.
Nonetheless, the Pentagon
demoruitrated ils satisfaction
Thursday with the airplane,
if not the bargain.
The Air Force announced,
\\'hile Assistant S e c r e t a r y
Charles was on the stand, that
it would buy 23 more planes.
Opposition
Inaugural
Ball Okayed
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
g'\Verftinent 'has finally agreed
to l allow antiwar demonstra·
tors to erect a big, multicol·
ored tent in downto'vn Wash-
ington for their "counterina.u-
gural" ball Sunday night.
The demonstrators, who
plan a "counterinaugural" pa-
rade down Pennsylvania Av~
nue Stinday, the day before
President-elect Nixon's inau-
gural parade, will also use
the tent as a staging area.
Harry R. Van Cleve of the
General Services Administra·
tion, the gove:nment spokes·
man dealing with the protest·
ers, announced Thursday aft·
er days of haggling that th e
tent had the government's
okay. The parade pennit had
already been issued.
Jetliner in Near Collision ' .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A involved one "coming off" the Stewardesses Karen Andf:rJOn,
United Air Lines jetliner tanker plane. Lindy Mendolia and Pam
swerved sharply to miss a The Federal Aviation Agen-McGovern, of San FranciJco,
Navy jet in the air north cy will inv.estigate to and 'Lotraine Gause, of Los ?f. S~n Diego late Thursday, determine which plane was Angeles were shaken up.
mJurtng fi of the 57 persons in the proper Jane, an FAA It was the third aerial Jn.
aboard. spokesman said. The Miramar cident over Cilifornia thia
The plane, flying from San spokesman said the incident "·eek.
Diego to Siln Francisco, made occured in an art.a 35 miles A Scandinavian A Ir 11 n es
By WILLIAM MANSFIELD an unscheduled stop here for north of San Diego where System plane crashed in the
treatf!lent of the injuries, military operations normally PaciflC near Los Angelea Mon· 1. There was only one Presi-described as minor . are cooducted. day night. killing 15 of the
dent who served in the United The Miramar Naval Air Sta-Minqr cuts and bruises were 45 persons aboe.rd. On
States House of Representa· tlon at San Diego saKJ three suffered by two passengers, Wednesday, a Pac l f 1 c
tives after his term as Presi· of F~·. Pahantom jet.s were Patrick Williams. 41 , Salem, Southwest jet carrying 22
dent expired . Who was he? prac11cing aerial refueli"ng, Or d Dr p t I -· ~ .•••• a light plan< al John Quincy Adams : b) a d the 11· e., an . a enc e ,,__.._ u.-ua.i1a.1
'Villiam H. Harrison; c) Ruih·1 __ n ___ ""_a_r_c_0 _•.::si.::on.:..:::pro:.::ha:b::ly'.......:N.::oec=k::er:.:_, _•::9::,•_:_P.::•:l•:::tin:e::•_..:1::11.:.....:•.::-:.:Son=.:"'.:.:•nc=llCO::.:Bay::!:':...._
erford B. Hayes.
2. "All of Oregon. all of
Texas and 54 ° 40' or fight"
\\'IS the campaign slogan of
which President?
a) James K. Polk ; b) John
Tyler; c) Martin Van Buren.
3. This · President was the
I l'.lnly one who served in the
Confederate House ol Repre·
sentalivea alter his term as
U.S. President was over.
•) John Tyler: b) Andrew
Jacbon; c) James Buchanan.
4. Who was the smallest of
I.he American Presidents?
111) James Madison ; b) Calvin
(',ool.idge; c) William McKin-
ley.
5 ... A typical uniform f o r
him consisted of. baggy cot-
ton JMU1b:1 1 plain coat bear-
ing no insignia and a farmer's
wide brimmed rtraw hat. He
reviewed his troops seated
sideways an his war hone."
Who Is this Pr<Sldtnt'
a) Zachary T1ytor: b) Abra-
ham Lincoln; e) Geora• Waal>
lngton.
ANSWEIIS
.: .<p'l•l! pue '!Inoa
I O.. p>IU1"'1'1N ·w ·g
·spor<d 001 (>O\ll•O.•
u • "' .~ J>OOlll oq .... , .,,
'I 't
·~ffty uey«&nll JO .<Jw.,unoq
•io 01 pa.u.lp.I ,Qt> .H ., ·z .• •t
FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX FOR
MAINTAINING $500 SAVINGS ACCOUNT.
Houro: 9:30 a.m. to 9:20 p.m.; Sot. 10 o.m. 19. 6 f •lll-
Airlines Get r /I ]] Furniture
Lyman L. Lernnitzcr, for Q K to Raise early use of nuclear weap-I onry. At I/arbor Blvd.
Son1e Europeans see the, Fa1·es 3 8% United States as wanting then1 1
•
1
~foot the ~~~~':.'...
l 344 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa only
Evtry ni!,liit 'Iii 9 -Wed., Sitt. & Sun. 'til 6.
\\1ASHINGTON (AP) -The
Civil Aeronautics Board has !
tentatively agreed lo a 3.8
~t ,tnereasei in domesUc
airline pas:renger rares.
-The CAB said final approval
of the increases, which pro-
bably would go into effect
March I, will be made afler
a "careful analysis of tar!Us" 1
to be filed by the airlines. 1 Six major airlines had ap·
plied for fare increases of
five to seven percent. A CAB
spokesman said Thursday in·
creases that large are "oot
warranted at this time."
The six were American,
Braniff, Eastern, Northeast,
Trans World arid United.
The increase tentatively ap·
proved would have this effect
on ticket buyers:
-Each first-.class fare for
a trip or "any distance" wouid
go up $3 oiie way.
-Certain first-class fares
for East-West trips of 800
miles or more in · specific
markets when fare
heretofore have been lower
than industry norms would be
increase~ by $1 to $7 depen·
ding on the distance.
-Coach fares for flights up
to 500 mllea would be in-
creased by $t one way. For
flights of 500 to 1,800 miles
they would be increased by
$1 one way. They would not
be increued for flights above
I ,IOO miles. ,
L
Slit., JG~. 18 11 a.m. 'til 1old out
1331 Warehouse Road -Costa Mesa
block ... 1 of Harbor -I block south of Boker
MODEL HOME FURNITUR·E
ACCESSORIES & E9UIPMJ.NT
Design~r collections of furniture &''de~orator
pieces from one of the largest home buiklers
rn Oran9e County.
Cheirs
Sofas
Che1t1
Dre11er1
Dining Room
Sewing Machines
Bedroom Sets
Record Player
Taipe· Recorders
Banquet T1ble1
Conference Chai~
Electric Fixtures
Occaisional Tabl••
Occ1slonal Chair•
.~r
Bair Stoel1.
Pidures
Televl11on
71/2' Child's Speed Boat -100'1 of other items too numerous to mention
-INSPECTION 9 A.M. DAY OF SALE -
LARGE 23'' COLOR
, MMll 2'11W
PRICE INCLUDU:
I Ytar Parts Wi1rr1nty
2 Year Picture Tubt
Warranty
~O Day. Home Service
Full Zenith Qu•lity
through end through!
Beautiful color.
Contemporary styloCI
compact console. 611
oval twin6'one.
speokor. Built •• only
Zenith would
build ill
s4500o
AUTHORizEDt
mmt .
FA a ORY
SERVICE '
' STORE HOURS DAil Y 9 TO 9 SAT 9 TO 6
HARBOR CENTER --m BARBOR ILVI. '
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I 8 . I DAIL y PO..OT EDITORIAL P AGE J
For the Overall ·Good
All 12 city councilmen in Newport Beach and Costa
MHa agree that Newport-Mesa Unified's school bond
request this time makes sense ..
They say the Feb. ll bond issue for $15.9 million
makes sense because lhe economic well being of the
cities is dependent on good schools .
In unprecedented endorsements of a school finance
measure, city councilmen are puttinf their reputations
as tax watchdogs on the line. Obviously, they consider
there is very good reason to do this.
It is the realization that second·rate school systems
generally are found in deteriorating communities while
top notch schools usually are found where communities
are healthy that caused them to rally to the s'chool dis·
trict's aid.
Councilmen say it is apparent to them new industry
is attracted where children of employes will attend the
best schools.
Businesses \vant employes with the most intelli·
gence and best character they can find and these tend
to be persons who want the best for their children. Dou·
ble sessions that shorten the length of the school day
are anathema to sound education, and employers know
H.
Jn the past. councilmen usually have steered clear
of involvement with the schools in the belief that school
business is outside their responsibility. And, generally
speaking, non-intervention is still a good general policy
for school and city government to follow.
But this ti.me the school board invited city council·
men to take a stand because, they said, of the urgency
of the situation. Jt is urgent because the communities'
spirit, economy and quality of living is being threatened
by a school housing crisis.
City councilmen know well that they and the school-
men are asking for tax revenues from the same con-
stituents. But with a new political maturity for repre-
Teachers of
Deficient
Need Faith
,~Ev~yd11y
Prob1emi
•
By NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
Teachers blame the dismal conditions
of ghetto areas for the poor performance
ol. most students in predominantly Negro
and Mexican·American scboob. They
fault the nation and the cities for failing
to deal with the slums, rather than
search for newer methods of reaching
and teaching these youngsters.
Since April, 1965, the natior, ·s schools
have been given substantial federal funds
under the Elemenlary and Secondary
EducaUon Act, with the goal of helping
disadvantaged children overcome their
educational handicaps. The asswnption
has been that the deficiencies are all
In the cblld and in the environment
from which he comes. So far, the overall
resu1ts from many millions of dollars
spent on remedia.1 instruction and
cultural enrichmenl have not been en-
couraging.
THERE IS increasing evidence that
a disadvantaged child's shortcomings
item more from the teacher's response
W bis ethnic, cultural and economic
background, rather than from his
background, per se.
U 12 students in a psychology
laboratory are each given five laboratory
rats of the same strain, there will be
an accelerated perfonnance by half of
the rats in learning to run the maze
when the six students assigned W teach
them are told their anflnals have been
bred for brightness in running a maze.
The other six students, wher. told I.heir
rats probably will be poor at running
a maze because of genetic reasons,
usually respond with less interest and
enthu&asm than those assigned to the
"bright" group. Their rats may not even
budge from the slarting position for
lhtir "teachers" usually have a hopeless.
"what's the use" attitude to begin with
and offer llttle inctntive to learn.
SDULAR EXPERIMENTS have been
reported when public school teachers
were led to believe at the beginning
of a school year that previous• tests
point to the probabilily of considerable
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Are our local drivers such fatalist.a
that they think they can't change
the statistical forecast that one of
every four drivers will be killed
or injured in the next to years?
It appears they couldn't care less
about the Golden Rule.
-D. R. L.
r~i. ftthln nl'IKft ,_... vu.. ""
-11r .... -' "" .......,.,..,, kM ,.w Mt ._ M G'-Y 8ft. O.llY l"u.t.
academic improvement In c e r t 1 I n
students. Even though the children label-
ed as potenlial "spurters" were chosen at
random and not on the basis of testing,
lheir academic achievement during the
year was considerably above the rest
of the class. F'or the teachers, con-
sciously and unconsciously, spurred them
on to greater heighls.
Carl J. Dolce, superintendent 0£ schools
in New Orleans, said recently : "A com·
mon notion among ghetto teachers i~
that achievement levels are low com-
pared to midd1e-class children. So why
expect th em to achieve very much ?"
Consequently most or them don't. Ghetto
schools usually are older, overcrowded,
and operate on a far 1ower budget when
compared to schools in middle class
suburbs. More important, most of the
teachers are novices, unable lo cope
with the frustrations and disappolnlmenll
of teaching in ghetto schools.
CERTAINLY, dramatic changes, both
In the selection of teachers and Jn their
training and attitudes, will be necessary
if di!advant.aged children are to get
an they possibly can from their achool-
ing.
One successful Negro principal in a
Harlem school sponsored by the New
York Urban League and Catholic
Manhattanville College, attributes his
school's outstanding record with blacks,
most of them dropouts with criminal
records, more to his t e a c h e r s '
"unshakable faith that the students can
make it" than to anything else. His
teacben teach, but more import.ant, they
encourage, talk, plead, scold and mold,
and they get result&.
Far more important than what tbt
teacher learns in college are her
personality strudlll't:, her biases and
prejudices, her :ital and expectatiom
if she (or he) ill to work successfully
with disadvantaeed children.
Strike Votes in Secret
ln Britain, where labor strife ha~
undercut effort.I to make the economy
more productive, the government has
come up with a proposal to curb stri):es.
At least one part of the plan should
be worth consideration in the U.S.
A problem common to both countries
Is that tdriket aometima are declared
by aroups of union officials on ~
own. Ir, many caJeS where unlorl
mem,bM1I do vote GO ltriUs, only I
small part ol the membership
palldpola, ...S lttlquently then only
ta ..,.. moelinp by • show or bands
-.. um-· can ...Uy be singled
cd far -prmure.
l l l T AI N'I G O VERNMENT
(Jnoolcally, li ii of eoune I "Labor"
..,.,...,,t) ~ !hot an -tcrs
be cfYen an opportunity to vote on a
-"" ,,,,.,,... bollol. The 1<><1lled rlllll to atrlte woold not be Infringed.
but Jf U'8 f.mployes oppoaed a w aliout
tho qlCOm would protocl their ri,,.
lo •orll.
8""ft I strite -Is laUn, botJ1
the .... and Ibo ~"' abauld be
afforded ample and equal opportunity
to lay their argumenta before the
worten. In llY declalon IO vital to
a worktr's livelihood, be IW'dy should
h.avt every chance to ponder 11! the r .....
PROBABLY MANY llritel would be
1pproved anyw1y, but our IUlplclco Is
that the number woold dlmln& Certainly
lhia 11Tangt.mtnt woWd be no palllCU
for labor-management His. In this coun-
try or in Britain.
ln every llrlJc:e., though, 1 majority
of the workers tFOU1d hl\'f!: dtddfld that
a wallrout wa!I In tMir best lqterest.
That accords with democracy. a prlndple
the unJont!' firmly endorse. It would be
interaUnc to see ll they could practlct
what the)' prnch.
Wall S&reet J..,.al
sentatives or this area, they ~o see the larger picture,
that the overall good of \be community should be their overall concern.
The coilncils shouldn't try to -or be expecled lo -
take a haod in runnlng the scbool dlslrici, and there is
no indication thal they Sffk lo. This week's action Is
nol seen as establ14blng a policy by either the councils
or the school trustees. _
But the new evidence of cooperation between the
schools and the cities, and·be~ween the two city govern--
ments, is heartening. It iJ a real credit to our elected
representatives. And It bold! exc!Ung promise for the
future progress of our communities.
In the Highest Tradition
You're a cop.
You see a panel truck whip through a red lighl. You
chase after it, flag it down.
The driver leaps out. "You ..• I'm going to kill
you!" be shrieks. He races to tbe rear of the truck,
turns his back to you and thrusts his hands into a suit-
case.
You draw your service revolver. You order the man
to back away from the truck, slowly. He pays no atten-
tion. You cock your pistol.
The man finally wheels around, shouts again, •·J'l l
kill you!" Then collapses to his knees, his hands empty,
and weeps.
Newport Beach police officer James Bradley, 26,
was confronted with this situation a week ago Monday.
Both he and the mentally ill traffic violator emerged
from it alive.
Such cool poise and professional reaction is in the
highest tradition of law enforcement. In this case, it
prevented tragedy.
N OVERL.OAI>
Blcrek·White Encounter at Harbor High \
Complex Reasons Behind Attitudes ·
To the Editor :
Congratulations arc due to Newport
Harbor High School for having arranged
the encounter between our Harbor Area
students and the students from Dorsey
High School in Los Angeles. I trust
tbat the school is carrying through to
help those of our students, and their
families, realize that:
-There are campier. b u t un·
derstandable reasons for the militant
attitudes on the part of some black
studenls.
-Frank encounters of this sort can
lead to greater understanding on the
part of both blacks and whites.
-INOlVIDUAl. students at Harbor
High need feel no "personal guilt" over
past injustices to minority groups if
indeed they are not now helping to
perpetuate these injustices by their at-
titudes and action s.
-"Black is beautiful " and "Black
Power" in the conslructive sense are
good ; these concepts are really a
necessary step leading to minority
Lettns from reader1 are welcome.
Normall11 toriteTs should t:onvey their
message in 300 words or Less. The
right to condense letter.t to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. AU
letters must int:lude signatur• and
mailing addre ss, but names ma11 be
withheld 'on request if sufficient rea-
son U apparent.
participation in the American dream .
-It is up to us, as one young black
student reporledly stated, to look inlo
our own attitudes as whites, and those
of our neighborhood, "to blow prejudice
out of white communities. • . to cast
out the beam in our own eyes even
as we be'old the beam in our brother's".
HARBOR AREA students and their
families are urged' to look into the
various organizatioru1 ~n Orange County
in which blacks, whit.es and Mexican
Americens are seeking a common ground
in Ylorklng together for comn\unity bet·
terment. Men of good will do abound
among all races, and are now beginning
to work together for our common good.
For example, The Orange County Fair
Housing Council is working to help uphold
state and federal laws by assisting
families arxl individuals to rent or buy
houses and apartments according to their
preferences and pocketbooks regardless
of their race, creed or color.
A NU!\.fBER OF other organizations
are now active and would welcome in·
creased community support. The DAILY
PILOT would do us a service by ex·
ploring the various organizations such
as 'NAACP, JOIN ~!ANDS, the various
human relations groups. and the church
social concern committees, etc., so that
citizens who wish to help achieve racial
and community harmony may know
where and how they can help.
CONSTANCE F. KRAUSE
'Want of De ce ncy'
To the Editor: ,
To the Harbor High teachers, Mrs.
Jean Foutts and Mr. James Newkirk,
who prompted the invitation to the black
studenls, I ask two questions. What now?
Do we continue the dialogue between
the Harbor High-Estancia students and
the out-of-town belligerenls from Dorsey?
According to press quotes in the DAI·
LY PILOT of the vtsltors, 1 can only
think of the Earl of Roscommon's
memorable lines:
"Immodest wo rds admit of no defence
For want of decency is want of sense."
There must be a weakness in Dorsey
High School's teacl)ing & tr u c t u r e
regarding civility and respect. Our
visitors lacked both "decency and sense".
C. JAMES PRICE
Future Events Will Judge Johnson
\VASHlNGTON -Presidenls do not
leave office in a blaze of glory and
Lyndon B. Johnson is no exception. In
any perspective, however, Johnson has
as good or better chance than most
of his recent predecessors to be justified
and purified by time.
Time and perspective rehabilitated
Herbert Hoover, who had left office
without much love h'om his countrymen.
Franklin Roosevelt, bitterly hated by
a minority , approached sanctlficalion
after his death. Harry S. Truman's
virtues loomed far larger in retrospect
than during hls scandal-ridden ad-
ministration. Nostalgia for the con-
tentment and progress of the Eisenhower
years has replaced contempt for what
was called his d~nolhing administration.
John fi'. Kennedy lives in legend after
the disappointments of his brief term.
JOHNSON'S nY£ years plus has a
beginning and an _ end, a certain form
whk::b will make its impact on American
life measurable and distinct. As some
see that form now, the Johnson years
were a classic tragedy. An aa·
ministration Uiat rose in faith and hope
from the nation's mourning of a slain
YOW\£ hero ended in a tragedy of denied
expectations and unpopular war in which
the hero 's successor was destroyed.
But lhis is scarcely a fair measure or an administration which advanced
the cause of civil rights far above its
previous highest levels, began the con-
quest of poverty, expanded support for
the nation's educational resources beyond
any previous dreams. created a system
of n1edical care, tried to beautify
America and recreate its cities and
cleanse and preserve its ai r, water and
soil. Hopes and aspirations of 30 years
were fuHilled for the same liberals who
nevertheless came. to detest Lyndon
Johnson for two rtUOol. The firl\l reason
was that although Johnson accomplished
far more than John F. Kennedy he
licked Ktnoedy's grace. He was, in
his c:rlUcs' eyes, devious, fulsome, crude.
The second reason was Johnaon'1 stub·
born insistence that, In Dean Rusk's
words, "The security ol Southeast Asia
la vital to the United States. • .and
what happens in Southeast. Asia is vital
to the. general peace of the world."
TEN BETTER·KNOWN history pro-
fessors polled by Newsweek magniinf'.
rate President Johnson from "good " to •·wear• on domc9tic alfalrs but lll'!e their
enthusiasm in }udJin& Johnson on h1.!1
record in foreign affairs. Only two or
them , thou gh, regard Johnson's foreign
affairs record as "poor." These are
two of the most dedicated opponenls
of the Vietnam War, Prof. Hans
Morgenthau of the University of Chicago
and Prof. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., of
the City University of New York, who
have devoted much of their intellectual
energy in the past several years to
blackening the name of the Johnson
administration.
Neither the history professors nor the
least educated opponent of the Vietnam
War yet has any basis for judging the
long-range effect of the American in-
terve ntion in Vielnam. They can both
accurately 1udge the war to lack popular
support. Evenls will be the judge of
whelher or not the intervention even-
tually will have succeeded in stabilizing
Southeast Asia and lhe peace of the
world. If that condition does re sult some
of the history professors will have to
revise their judgments.
HISTORY MAY NOT long remember
the qualities of Lyndon Johnson that
so readily brought the word cornpone
to critical lips, anymore than history
remembers much of Herbert Hoover's
high collars or Eisenhower's uncerlain
diction.
What history will weigh is the ef-
fectiveness of the most expansive social
program in 30 years, lhe liming of
arousing among racial groups ex-
pectations which could not quietly be
fullfilled, the wisdom ol an international
intervention which became a critical Wt
of strength affecting the power and
status of the nation for years to come.
PRESIDENT JOHNSON brought his
administration to a close as if he were
writing the last chapter in a prospectus
which he handed to his successor com.
plete. The programs he initiated were
all there, lo be expanded, retracted or
replaced. The war he undertook had
been placed on a course toward set-
tlement. He left government's books in
balance. He made every facility of the
old administration available to the new
in the smoolhe&t transition in history
from one administration to the next.
Not until that next administration J~
well along, however, wiTI it be seen
how well Johnson succeeded or hew
much be faJJed .
Machine Not Our Ultimate Enemy
1bougbb al Large:
Our ultimate enemy is not "the
Machine'' -or t~hnology, in any of
its aspects -but our inappropriate and
*°lete ideas that will prevent us from
uslng technology for the fullest human
purposes, but rather will condemn us
to reshape the person to Cit the demands
of technology. • • •
Perhaps the most lragic contradiction
of our age (speaking of technology)
Is that just as scientific hardware is
outmoding the whole concept of the
"sovert.tsn nation,' and making some
ronn of globtilsm lmpera.Uve ror our
survival, at the same time there is
a tremendous upsurge of naUOnallsm
c•aywhete in the world -whk:h is
lite putllns • nuclear pcnfer-pact on
the bo<t ol I sabre-toothed Ugtt.
• • •
When we talk •bout "education," we
almoet JIW8J'3 mean harck!ore lean1B1 or racta anc1 -: but •hit ii r<a11y e8.'e0Ual today is the n-ed1ctlJoo el
tbt fetUnp, so that the total pent0nallty
will w11t lo do what the trained mind
knows la rtgllt to do: otht1 wist, the
facts we learn run the serious rlsk
of being mlsappllt<i or non-.i1pplied. • • •
Thl>IM! officially involved in 1'poverly
programs'' have a vested interest jn
the perpetuation of poverty, not In tu
abolition; which ts why tbe poor
themselves must begio to be treated
u a.gents, not clh!all.
• • •
J have ntver met a penon wbo was
againn obscenity or p or n o g r a p b y
because they corrupt: or inflame the
passlOCls, who admitted that lie: passions
were corrupted or inflamed by these
, media -It ts always otber people who
.,.. ~hi lo be .. wvitablt that Ibey
nt<!d pn>lectlon. • • •
"W!W -ll m111Ur H ft tncnr
what the COlmOl b llnT"·ub • rcadtr,
in tupOMI to I rwceat column. ••.Doesn't
11 matl<r 1110Ac tliat we undentand our
penoneJ U-hen on tlribf" Thal
qtMlltkJn WU lntWtS'ed 1,000 years ICO•
by MarcUJ AurellU.!1, when be wrote:
"The man who doesn't know what the
universe \a: like d«>Hn't know where he
lives." • • •
The only e1aise for work (apart rrom
lta productive value) Is that It must
be lherape.olk for the Individual worker;
that is, It mWll provide an ouUet for r .. 110p U1W1Uslted In olh<r • ....., of
life, and charge up the p;ychic battery,
rather than running it down ; using uns
-audal standard, how many jobs 1n
modern society fulfi11 this basic need! • • •
One ol the best and brier..i DIGb
l've beard in pollUcal philosophy was
given by the Viennese lecturer who told
Ida classes: "Capltallsm ls the exploiUI·
Um ol man by man : communism is the
reverse.."
-----~
Friday, January 17, 1969
TM cdllortal V"O< Of th4 Doilr
Pilot tta'/u to inform end Jfim..
KlaU rroder1 by presenting th.it
netalJ)Ctpfr't ophUoni and com-
mnta:ry Oft topic, of fnttre1i
and dgntficanc~. bfl providing a
forvm for the erprt.t:ion of °"' rellders' opfniorni. and b~
prc1mting the drverse view-
poiftU of tnfonncd observtr•
and .rpoke1mtn on topics of tht daw.
Robert N, Weed . Publisher
•
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ck,
<k
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:ey
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tur
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"f,
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In
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•
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BEA ANDERSON, Editor
For New Members
Party Mood
'Adopted'
11Adopting" a formula for welcoming new members
into their organization is easy for members of the Adop-
tion Guild of Southern Orange County.
For what better way is there to say "glad to have
you" than by having a party?
The 0 just for fun " cocktail party will take place
Saturday, Jan. 25, in the Irvine Terrace home of Mrs .
Lewis Dunmire .
Attending with their husbands will be the li1mes.
Harry S. Rinker, James Culler, Keith Dinsmoor and
Edward W. Schumacher. As new members they will be
asked to assist in the guild 's fund·raising activities, a
junior and senior tennis tournament and a dinner dance
culminating th• two ldumaments, according to party
chainnari, Mrs. Ma1k Soden.
HOSPITABLE SERVE -Serving tennl! balls Is wha t the
Adoption Guild of Southern Oran~e County is most familiar
with. But serving refreshments will be 1n order on Saturday,
Jan. 25, when new members are welcomed during a cocktail
party in the home of Mrs. Lewis DID;llllifC', Perfecti.ng her
Instructing them in their duties will be Mrs. Ken-
neth Nelson, first vice president. Other officers serv ..
ing this y ea r are the Mmes. Rex ~eno, president;
Ward Chamberlin, second vice president; Donald Peck,
treasurer; Robert Alleborn, corresponding secretary;
Raymond Carpenter, recoi;ding secretary, and Frank
L. Williams, publicity. The 'Mmes. Randall Presley and
David Cunptngham are chairmen of the tournaments
and Mrs. Edward Rolleti is ball chairman.
"serve" is Mrs. Dunmire (right) while Mrs. Harry Rinker
and Mr's. James CuUer (left to right) enjoy the fruits of her
labor.
·· Double Feature
·• · Billed for tlub
"Lights, ca1nera, action."
With that directive members of the Wed-
nesday Morning Club of Costa Mesa are approach-
ing the last two weeks of January, which have sev-
eral 0 productions" vying for members' attention.
Billed as a "double feature" will be the pro--
gram on Wednesday, Jan. 22. Members will gather
et 10:45 a.m. in the Balboa Bay Club for their
monthly brunch which is a special in itself since it
will honor all past presidents of the organization.
Headlining the double bill during the entertain-
ment portion will be Dr. Dixe Sturgis who will lee-.
lure on Balanced Living Through Personality De-
velopment.
Taking the stage during the second half will be
members of the Drama Section who have prepared
an original play "Spreading the News" for the
occasion.
Starring in the presentation "'ill be the ?i.1mes.
?vtarshall B. Stamper, A. Forrest Dugger, B. L.
Gibbs, Harold S. Jencks, I-I. J. Lowery, Richard
P. LyUe, Arden Mead, and Winfield Bjornson.
The play, written and directed by Mrs. Fred
\V. Johnson, will tell about life in a small college
town, "Coffee Pot, Miss ."
Reservations for the brunch may be made by
calling Mrs . James Morris at 546-8354.
Globetrotters, tbe travel section of the Wed-
nesday Morning Clut will be placing their bets and
P.njoying the excitement of racing at Santa Anita
Thursday, Jan. 23. They will leave on chartered
buses at 10 a.m. and return around 7 p.m. Reserva-
tions for the day-long activity may be made by
calling Mrs. Dale Lydic! at 837-4947.
'
GRAPEVINE IN ACTION -"Frostoria Smith"
portrayed by Mrs. A. Forrest Dugger (right) inter·
pret.s a call received by ° Fannie Mae Levender"
played by Mrs. Marshall B. Stamper and upsets the
equilibrium of the small college town of Coffee Pot,
Miss. during an orig!nal play, "Spreading the
News" which will be part of the program presented
by the Orama Section for the full membership of
the Wednesday Morning Club on Jan. 22 in the Bal-
boa Bay Club.
Charity Ball
'Buys Dream'
The latest goal of Damas de Caridad is no pipe
dream.
Pledging the purchase of a Linear Accelerator
for St. Jude Hospital, which presenUy costs $110-
000, may seem like a fantasy, but the Ladies of
Charity find no< goal too lofty.
Based on past performance, the prediction is
that the group will meet this challenge and provide
reality for cancer patients whose dream is a longer
and more healthful life.
Damas' annual fund·raising event is the floral
masked ball, and this year the theme is most appro-
priate for Bal Masque Pour Reveurs (Masked Ball
for Dreamers) .has been selected. .
The ball, which will be presented Feb. 8 in Ana·
heim Convention Center, is highlighted by a parade
of mannequins modeling fresh floral headpieces.
The masks are created by Southland florists
and compete for prizes. Entering from the Harbor
Area is Party Pleazers, Costa Mesa and mannequin
is Mrs. Walter J. Pray of Fullerton.
The Clinac 4 Linear Accelerator Ls a successor
to the cobalt units and is considered superior both
technically and therapeutically.
This unit uses four million eleclron volts, yet
this tremendous power can be concentrated on an
area as small as 3 mm in diameter with minimum
damage to surrounding tissue and bone.
The length of exposure is reduced to one min-
ute, as compared to 3 to 10 minutes with prevloua
treatment. Because of the decrea1e in exposure
time, undesirable side effects also are reduced.
Until recenUy the uni~ because of Its cost plus
the added expenditure 01 building a fortrell&·like
room to house it, ha.s been prohibitive for all but
the largest high·budgeled hospitals. Now, with the
use of transistors, the size and cost have been J'&o'
dueed to the point where they are feasible for UJO
In larger and better equipped community hospitals.
Don't Complete Negotiations Before Contract Is Signed
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l was brought
up by okl-fashloned parent! and I guess
you'd be justilied In calling me square.
I'm a college sophomore and the only
girl on the floor of thia dorm who
11 a virgin. J grew up believing t should
save myself for the man I marry, but
these past few weeks have caused me
lo reconsider.
The big question, now that I have
fallen Jn love, Js this: la it unrealistic
to expect a young man to suffer tbe
anxieties of frustration because bis
llancee happens to believe as I do?
Furthermore, will l"l}Y rigidity co.st me
a wonderful hud>and T
Jack llilYS tbe divorce rate xares
him to death. He uy1 he kJvtJ me
but be'I afraid we might not be sexuall7
compab1ile. Ht feels we Mould find
out befon we many. He also hu su1-
gested that I mJ&l>t be lrlald-La.rt
night he tldded IUIGl1'er barb when he
said, "A girl who tea sea is udi.stJc
and immature."
You teem to hate ID .to$wer ror
everything. Please teU' me oo• to aay
no to a. sex aa~an·. ,wtth whom I
happen lo be In Jove . ....i NEED YOU
DEAR NEEDi Here's J'O'lf 1A1Wer:
''My bldJ beloag1 to me and I don't
owe 7oa eiptrlmental pr1vOece1 or ••·
a""81 rebeanaJ,"
Wltat kl-lo yov holly b YOUR.
....,...11bWty tutd It alH b YOU& ,..
btem H Hmelldq aplaoaed sltoakl ,..
arr.· Jack'• Ute1rJ tut t& ll tmut to
fr) llllnp •I lo '" • tHy ..... ..,,..
you "bn)''"il nbbbll. A 1alt11mu teee,
1old me a vuaum dtaner dJ•t worked
beutllully dartnJ tilt ~11 trial. For
IODll ID)'i&trloul reuo8 H fell apart
I'" a11 -I Mllpl I~
DEAR ANN LAND,ERS : YeaterdaJ the
couple next door Iiad a terrific lf1IUl1t<lll.
We could hear lltem ocreamiJC al ud1
other •IUtoaatt our ~ ""' two l<lla apart. My llulband 'llld I went lo the
Jront door lo Invesllga!Ao.
Quiet u a fl.uh, "\heir I-year-old . boy ca"" dalhlntl out tbe frutl docw and
rao Into the .....t. dltecil)' In the path
ol an nnc:omlng car. For1ullaldy, the
driver was alert and 1topped ln Ume.
The chlld'1 father didn't aay one word
to him. Instead he yelled IOme
oblcenitiet ·at lhe ·driver. (He lhoWd
have blessed him! ) The driver jUlt abook
~ held. N Iha latber aboulad, "Y'"'
rotten ............... , a child alway1
bas the right..<Jf-wl)'I"
Last year a trailer bit my w. I
wu driving -ly llld ca..Colly. Al:-
cudlni lo Ille pollce, I bid tho rl&ftl-ol-WaJ. Doi out 1ltlle pr! b dead, and
the wu all we bid. Tbal """'hdr' ..
lioy COllld have --. loo, yd
he babbl<l al>out "r!Pkf....,." rd.~ ..r c!:1""-·"' ~
'l'be1 ilon~ -anythlnf -''rllht-of·W8Y .11 Where are parents' valuelT
Whal conld be more trapoNnt than
the We of a chlldT Pleue print thb
lnr PJ""'lt -chlklr"1 art llllU allft.
-GRIEVING MOTHER
DEAR MOTllER1 I appreclaw ,,.,.,
hlUer' ad bow ll wW caM t11111ud1
" ,.._ lo ,._ '"' • -...
-"' terms " Ille IOlllJ " -on prad,looltn. V• w1D-H'fll' ....
Ille ..... ,.. Uve -,, 'lrl'tllq. naa,...
UlllUl'll of youroell on dotnT Wbal'1
rlchlT What's """'Ill Sbould you!
-1 youT 8ead for Ann Landen'
~ "Dltlng Doi llld Don't.," -
Ing W1tlt your ~ • cents Ill coin
tutd • loog, .. u-. lllampld
envelope.
Ann Landers wW be aJad lo help
yoo with yoor probl<m•. -them
lo her in care of Ille DAILY PILOT 1 encl01lq a te!l-addteoled, lllampea
envelope.
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Frldlr, """"" 17, 1969
Gardens Coming Up Rosey
The subject is roses for the first meeting of the Huntington View Garden
Club branch of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, and
marking the red-letter day are (left to right) Mrs. Paul Conawar. Mrs. .AI
Manire and Mrs. Richard Edmonson. Mrs. John Mahoney, president. 1s tn·
viti.ng area women interested in gardening to attend the meeting and hear
Clyde Wompler, authority on gardenin'"g, flower arranging and crafts. The
group will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 20, in Marina High School. Mrs.
William Roberts will serve as hostess.
Detective
Addresses
Night Owls
Newport Beach P o I i c e
Department Detective Dave
Ellloll will discuss Today's
Youth and Their Problems
befoni members of the Night
Owls ·or the Newport Beach
Hoot 'n Holler Roost nut Sun-
day at Z p.m.
Focus Put
On Initiate
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stead.
worthy pal.ran and matron,
will preslde over the initlalion
of a new member intt;i Laguna
Beach chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star at 8 tonight in
Laguna Beach Masonic lfall.
A Hawaiian theme has been
selected for this evening's
fesUvlUes which will be
Officers' Wives Hear
Combat Artist's Views
A opedal kind of artlal will
be Ille -1 opeaker al the
JaJIW'Y hmc:hton meellq c(
lhe Olllcen Wlvu Club of
El Toro. ,
Arthur Beaumonl, Naval
and Marine combat arllal and
racontair "'11· be wel<omed
at the Tuead_,, Jan.· 21
luncheon In Ille Balboa' Bay
Club. Social hour will begin
al U:IO a.ill. with luncheon
at I p.m.
The gum baa been In
California llnee !IOI and hu
been ae1ected. 11· one of the
50 best waten:olor artists In
the U.S. He Is best known
as a Naval, Marine combat
arlbt and becauoe of his paln-
tinp of the preWorld War
11, the World War II, the
Korean ConDlct and th e
Nuclear fleets.
He accompanied an e1:·
peditlon lo Ille Antarcilc and
in recognlUoo for hll work.
the U.S. government named
an bland at the South Pole
after him, Beaumont Butte.
Many of his polntlnp hang
in the Pentaaon, the Navy
'.
llepulmenl, Iii, While -· Ille U.S. Naval Academy, Ille
U.S. Marine COrpl Hiid·
~en, U.S. embuala and
Illa H)do Park colleotloa.
He II lilted in ''Wbe11 Who
In America" (ut) and Ille
"Book ol Art" and the'
• ·~ta BrJtannlca.••
He received lrom the Navy
the MerlloriOUJ Public Serv·
Ice Citation ftJr hlo "con-
tribution In deplc:llnr Navy
scenes ace.iratel)\ by
llkllllul polnllng and oket· chins·" The utlsl enjoys ten..
lbg people thal be must ,u.t his ohlps wilh ahoohrte ..,.
curacy for he hu "1,100,0llO
crlUca, the men of the NaVJ."
The luncheon Is lpOlllOred
by the 3rd MAW Slaff Wives
and the plannln( c:ommlltee
II -prlaed o1 1be Mmes.
Arthur H. Adami, Robert W.
Teller, Dou Wilker, Qwles
B. Sevier, H. D. Sloe! and
Slanley V. 'ntlmld.
For mervadons caJJ Mn.
Robert JeppJOD at MU940 or
Mrs. Wllllam Lundin at M4-
71llO.
City of Hope
Chapter Forming?
Anyone interested in forming a City of
Hope chapter in C<Mlta Mesa is invited to an
informative meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday,
Jan. 23, in the California Federal Savings
and Loan building.
At that time, Gerald Ruben, area coordi-
nator, will ahow colOI' 11lde1 of the hospital
and answer any questions pertaininf. to it
which is a free, nonsectarian h~i 1 en~
gaged in, a day-to.day battle with killer dis·
eases.
In charge of arranging the session Is
Mrs. William Savage. Queries about the
meeting and new organization may be mailed
lo her at 652 Surf St., Costa Mesa.
'
Costa Mesa Nuptials
Leanne Peterson Weds
SI. Joadllm'a Cat·hollc
,Churtb, Coel* -WU the
selling ,.,. the -rln( c.rom001 onlllnr In mtrrlac• Leanne Mary l'etanoo aDd
0enn11 r. Eul>anlu.
The, Rev. Gerald M<>Nulty per!ormocl the nupllall for Ille
daughter .of Mrs. William T.
EVIW ol Coata lo! ... and the
... ol Mr. Ind Mrs. Harry Eubarib cf Scheller, UL
Given In manta.Ir• by her stepfalhet1 lbe brfcle won a
dwlUlly mce. over white aat.-
ln gown, luhloned with a
bouffanl oklrt thal ulended
into a catbedra1 lqth train.
A fabric flower, edged with
seed peatb and crystal tear-
drops, held her five-tlerocl
illualnn veil Forming her bou-
quet were yellow and white camallons.
Wwlng a cranberry red -velvet gown and c:arrylna
red and while camailona WU Mrs. Robert P.W-, the
bride11 atster-1.Q..Jaw and ma-
tron c( bonor.
Gowns In American beauly
red Ind Identical bouquet&
were Hlected <for the bride> .
maids, lbe MJsaa Debbie
Peteraon, the" bride's ailter, ·
Dawn Marie Evans and Chril
Anderson. Kimberly Ann Pe-
terson, .the brlde'a niece and
flower girl. ware a white frock
with red velvet trim.
Altendlng U best man WU
WWlam AllHng, while uab-
ers were Larry Ryals, Larry
Dula llDd Henry French. Billy
Bryon Evana WU the ring
beanr.
A reception for 200 guests
followed in the parbh haJI. Circulating the guesl hook MRS. DENNIS F. EUBANKS
was Mrs. James Dunlap, and Exchanges Vows, Rings aMi!tln.a' at the reception ________ ....::, ____ __;;, _____ _
were Mn. Richard Hemm.In-
ger and Mrs. O:larles Fun-
ilell.
Special guests attending
were the bridegroom's parents
and bhl sbte.r, Mrs. PhyUi1
Pauley of lllinoi.a. Out-of-town
guests included the Messrs.
and Mmes. W. R. Evana: of ,
Calimesa W. B. Evans of
Carmel, !toy P. Evans o[ Yu·
caipa, David Pegueros, San
Bruno and William Yedd of
Portland, Ore.
OC Chapters of DAR
Meeting • San Diego
The Senior Citizem Recrea-
tion Center, Newport Beach,
will be the meeting setting.
Mrs. Gertrude Knorpp or
Costa Mesa will augment the
program with piano selections.
highlighted by filn1s shown by Pierre Mardus and his sister,~-------------------Following a trip up the
coast to Carmel, the bridal
couple are at home in Long
Beach. The bride is a grad·
uate of Coota Mesa High
School and attended Orange
Coast College. Her hll!band
is • graduate ol SesJar Hlllh
School and Lops Co11e1e, St.
Louis Mo.
Next Tuesday at 10 a.m. members attendln~ from nine
representatives from Southern Orange County chapters will
California chapters of Nalional be Miss Ina Gerritt, regent
Society Daughters of the Aliso canyon chapter, Laguna
American Revolution w i I I Hills; Mrs. Selah Reber,
gather in Bahia Motor Hotel, regent Col. Will iam Cabell
Shelter Island, San Diego. chapter, Newport Beach; Mrs.
DonaUom to a Living
Memorial Fund in memory
of the late Mrs. Ethel Ricard,
secretary.-treuurer, are being
accepted by Mrs. George L.
Stewart, president. At a later
date members and friends will
visit the City of Hope, Medical
Research Center in Duarte
where a memorial dedication
ceremony will take place in
her honor.
Cello Concert
To Entertain
A celli.5t will provide en-
tertainment for members of
the UCJ Town and Gown
MU!ic Group al their next
meeUng, Tuesday, Jan. 21.
Dr.Frieda Be Jj nf ante,
founder and first conductor
oC the Orange County
Philharmonic Orchestra, will
be the guest artist at the
meeting to beg1n at 10 a.m.
tn the Corona del Mar home
of Mn. Edward F. Lethen.
CoUee will be served.
Cactus Society
Orange County Cactus and
Succulent Society meets the
first Wedne.!day at noon in
Odd Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Roy Jonell •l 543-6065
can be ccmt.cted fer additional
lnformallon.
PENNY FAVOUR
Eng1god
Collegians
To Marry
• A July wedding dale has
been seiecled by P e n n y
Favour, daugbt.er of Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Favour of
Laguna Beach, and John cur.
ford Moore 11, son o( Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Moore of
Huntinglon Beach.
The bride-elect and her
flance are both students at
California Stale College at
Long Beach. She is a nursing
major and he will earn his
bachelor's degree this month.
Miss Favour i11 a graduate
of Laguna Beach High School.
T b e bridegroo~ect. a
member of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon fraternity, is an alum·
nus of Westminster High
School.
The engagement was reveal·
ed during a family diMer par·
ty hosted by Mr. aod Mrs.
Favour.
First to Visit Italian Cruise Ship
A croup of area retidenta were among the fint to
vWt the new Italian crul1e ship. Princess Carla,
when it docked at Los Angeles Harbor last w .. kend
!or the fint Ume. Examinlng one or the two swim·
Miss Antoniette Mardus.
The Star Club, Order of the
Eastern Star, will resume its
aeries of monthly card parties
Horoscope
with a game in the Masonic
Hall Friday, Jan. U. at 7:30
p.m.. when dessert will be
oerved. Leo: Overcome
Among those offering annual Edwin B. Marks, regent Pa·
reports will be Mrs. Albin tience \Vright chapter, Laguna
M. Wethe of Laguna Beach, Beach ; Mrs. Joseph R.
DAR museum and California Cavanagh, regent Richard
room . Bayldon ch.apter, Seal Beach,
Featured speaker a1 the lun· and Mrs. Lloyd Fair, regent
cheon will be Maj. Gen. Lowell San Clemente chapter.
'ncbls !or the card pariles,
chaired by Mrs. Bernice
Franke, are •t Reservatlom
may be obtained by calling
Mn. John Williams, 4H-0686.
Gavel
Signals
Auction
Going onct ••• 1oing twice
...IOld.
This will be the fomlllar
cali when members o f
Stephens Collqe A I u m n a e
Club of Oraqe Counly host
an auction on Jan. Sl at I
p.m. tn Guaranty Chevrolet
Co., Santa Alu.
Mn. Geor1e Palmer will be
the aucUoneer and M r 1 •
WWlam Meyer and Mrs. Lee
Andr<ws will hoot. Members
are uked lo bring white
elephants to the sale.
Further lnfonnalinn may be
r<eelved by calling Mn. G.
L. Dirka<n at -·
SATURDAY
JANUARY 18
By SYDNEY QMARR
11The wise man controls his
destiny ... Aatrology pointa the
way."
ARIES (March 21·Apr11
19): Ac:<:ent on partlclpollon
in social groups. Be in contact
with friend.a. Express view1.
Let others know of your
creative abilities, deaire1. Ac-
ccl and ulend lnvltaUnn!.
TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20):
New point of. view i s
ntceSSary. Don't erpect othe.n
to provide financial answers.
You will have to apply lessona
learned. Protect uaels. lie a
good llatOner -but r<aerv•
final judgmenl
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Some close to yro eipreu
unusual oplnion1. Key ii to
be tolerant Realise family
member may require speclaJ
allenUon. Short journey could
be on agenda. Money problem
will be eased.
CANCER (June 21.July 221:
Accent m joint finances. Best
to leave money dechlklns lo
mate, partner. Dlvenlly er-
f or t 1 ; be Oulble. EJ:cellent
evening for social acUvlly.
Vlaltora are on tbe way.
ming pool areas aboard the liner are (lelt to right)
Llgun1n1, Mr. and Mn. McClellan Cole and Verner
Beck, vice president of the Festival of Art• board,
along with Mrs. Paul Garman of Newport Beach.
LOCAL E. E n g I i s h , Commandant, This is the last Southern
LEO (July ~Aug. 22): N• other 11•w•peptt" t.111 y•111 Marine Corps Recruit Depol. Council meeting preceding the
Don't argue over legal pro-mono, e•ery cl1y, •lieut whet'• San Dleeo, whose topic will annual State Con(erence of the
cedure. Tendency to get in ••'"' •11 i11 th• Gre•t•r Or•11t• be Vietnam. California Society on March
d le h Id b Cu1t the11 the DAILY PILOT. eep wa rs s ou e Among regents and 4.7 in Fresno. overcom~ Means stick withi:="""""""""'"""'""""'""'--..;,."--~·:O-~---"'-_._ ___ ..._~~~.:."--:..-~~~-~-;,,.-~~-~·--~=~== what you know. Don't be
tempted by one who claim!
everything la easy. Be
poo!Uve.
Vll\GO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Depe ndenta , peta grab
apoWibt ol yoar aUenUoa. Gel
buJc chores out of way early.
t.ter relu -but remember
resoluUon concernJng diet. A
change ii due; could involve
wriUng or travel
LIBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22):
Discover new outlets for
creative energies. U n I q u e
form of recreation i s
tpOW.ghted. Children ne e d
your attention. Romantic in·
terlude could make this a night
to remember.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Gain cooperation of family for
home, property improvement.
Be aware of basic issues.
Check detailll -be thorough.
Best to stick close to home
base.
SAGrrTARIUS .(Nov. 22·
Dee. 21): Make conlacb; test
theories, ideas. Wrlte. catch
up oo correspondence. Past
responsibility comes to fort.
Fulfill obligations. One who
owes money could repay to-
day.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
lt): You can find genuine
bargain. Fine foe adding lo
possessions. Open lines of
commurllcation. Income poten-
tial Is accented. Gain shown
if you are a sell-starter.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb.
18): Deal personally with peo-
ple Important to your welfare.
Take initiative. Obtain hint
from CAPRICORN message.
Stress originality, in·
dependence. Fine for begin·
ning a project.
PISCES {Feb. 19-March 20):
Handle private, confidential
afrain. Vl1it individual who
has s p e c i I I Information.
Throw off fears. E1cellent for
attending theater, dining out.
Shakeup in plans Is indicated.
Demonstration
Will Flower
CreaUng plastic flowers will
be demonstrated by a
representative of the Garden
Gron Parks aod RecruUon
Deportment
The pnll1'am will be
presented before the Women'a
Au"Klllary of the International
Brotherhood o f Electrical
Worken, Local 441 at 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Jan. 111 in the Union
Jlall, Santa Ana.
ey.Gals!
BRING LITTLE MONEY
AND
LOTS OF COURAGE
to our
SO°!o to 75o/o OFF
SALE STARTS SATURDAY 18
ORANGE COUNTY SHOPS ONLY
33 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH
2500 & NUTWOOD FULLERTON
Acron the Street from Cal State Fullerton
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' ' ---Mesa
•
• . ·-
, . • ' I • , . Ebb 'tide ·watcJa.
.. . . ' ' . ' .,
NILY'lt"Of ~ "'· ...._ .....,_
' . . .
Tom Martin, 19, Costa Mesa,..,,tahds · oilhoiletle'd against swi·sparkled .
..,., cont,emplating softly lapping surf ~·l(aidly a challenge for'rilan
and fltlliboard. Surf, w!Uch bad been rupnlng· three to. follt" f!?Ot.
dropped to almost not!Ung late Thuriday at Newport 'Beach,. which
has ~ experiencing extremes :of Iida! changes In :recent days.
3 Soviet Cosnwnauts
Back Home From Orbit
MOSCOW (AP) -ntree of the Soviet
Union's four orbiting cosmonauts came
down on the win~pt, s~vered
steppes of Kazakhstan today and climbed
from their Soyuz 4 spacecraft into· 31,-
degree below zero weather.
Villagers rushed up to them with
overcoats to protect them from the icy
blast of the wind about '1,500 inlles
southeast of Moscow.
$15,000 Blaze
Evicts, Splits Up
Mesa Family
Darrin Vanyur was one month ·old
'11nifl!d.ay, too young to understand that
his tamily has no home.
Ronald Vanyur, 946 Coronado Drive,
Costa Mesa, his wife Mona Lisa and
their five children are now divided up
among two neighbor ramllle!, due to
a disastrous fire Tuesday .
... How are you feeling, dear boys'!"
one villager asked.
"No words can express it," replied
cosmonaut Alexei Yellseyev. "Very glad.
E~emeJy happy."
Soyuz-5 w:ith cosmonaut Boris Vo1ynov
remained in orbit.
The C08monauts in the two spacecraft
performed the world's first manned dock·
ing in space and crew transfer.
The mlss1on was seen here and abroad
u opening the way to permanent space
laboratories and assembly of orbital plat.-
fmna for lunar and even Interplanetary
travel.
.YtllJeytv ud Yevgeny Khrunov had
the eo far unique experience of. landing
in a dlHerent apacecraft from the one
in wblcb Oley wete launched Wednesday.
Tog.-with Vladimir Shatalo• they
rode SOyu% 4 to a preoet landlnc point
about 25 mDet northwest of. Karaaanda,
a siee.I-making city.
A recovery helicopter spotted the SOyuz-
ship even before it landed, the o(flclal
news agency Tass reported .
Thi! fourth cosmonaut, Volynov, con-
tinued orbiting through the day In Soyuz
5 and wu not expected to hmd before
Saturday momhig when his orbit pa~
woakl bring him over the aame landing
"""'
Teliw'• l'l••f :
,,
Newport Frets Over Pacific Northwest ·R.oute B~
By JEROME F. t'OLLINS
Of ... .,..., l'lllf ....
Bnniff, eooUnentaI, Delta, Alana,
N.,nlnral, National, WNltrn and Unlled
alrllnel all !lave Wed the Civil
AerooapUcs Board for permission to fly
out of 0r8'lge County: _Airport, it wa11
learned today.
They are competing with Air West
and Air California, already operaUng
at the county facility, for a share of
a potentially lucraUve run between
Jane Doe Death
Linked to New
~each Slaying?
Detectives today questioned hr. men
charged with one knife murder aliolll
the possibility ~y .,.,. al9o lnwlved
In the March, 1968 throat-cutUn1 ol the
woman known only u Jane Doe.
Ironically, long-delayed f u n e r a I
services for Jane Doe were being held
at the same Ume, just two blocks away
from police headquarters, in lhe Smith's
Mortuary Chapel.
Keeping a tight hood on whatever
leads they may have. investigators said
today that a very definite connection
Uist.s between Ille Suoday nigh( .alayln(
and the l!u111Jna1'1>.lltach J Jlpt
ltil1in& 311 dlJI .... ,,\~·~"".l ! ft
1 '<Oa!i ~· 11fWI J'O~ I' ~ Hm1 L. ~;:zs, o1 .Sl2 C!17 It.,
llu!lllngton Boch, apd Edwaid ·~ Har""'~ .~:i'(>7llS lllarbn· Lane,
Huntington ileMii, on ThundRJ<.
Tbey are auspected o1 the ruthle"
11uhing murder of Mn. Hester s.
Markee, 55, of 18 Ollve Ave., ap-
parently over a minor traffic accident
involving a car taken without the owner's
knowledge:
OetecU,ve Sgt. MOPty McKennon said
today that he had notb1ng official to
report on ·his attempt to link Sianez
and Hargrave to the rnfstery of Jane
Doe ..
The 20 to 25-yeaNlld woman wu sex-
ually molested laat March 14 and left
to bleed to death through a razor-like
cut in the throat, after being dumped
into a muddy ditch.
Capt. Earle Robitaille aaid Thunday
that the aJashlng death of Mrs. Ml{ktt,
a kindly grandmother who was aavqely
mutilated before she died, bear1 a mart-
ed similarity to the Jane Doe case.
Dellptte an International search via
photographs ud fingerprints mailed to
law qenclet througbout the U. S., Mex-
ico and C&nada., Jane Doe remains
Wlknown.
* * * New Lead Del.ays
Jane Doe Burial
JUI! u ftnal oervlctl for Huntlngt<m
Beach'• Jane Doe murder vicUm were
to be performed today, a woman in
Long Btach contacted autboritla and
tald J!>e thouihl she lme!r the dead
woman.
'lbe woman identified only as Jackie
Smay called a newspaper and said she
thooght she recognhed a picture prlnred
this morning rl. the woman who wu •
Huntington lkacb murder victlm Ht
months ago.
The coroner's office said servlcts
would be held today as planned, but
burial p:IStponed until the lead can be
checked out.
Huntlngtoo 1"ach police were to go
to Long Beach this affmloon to Qlt_tsllon
the Smay woman.
8outhem Call(amla and the Pactflc
Nortbwest.
Tbe CAB ,wlll ~uct a~ -1to
lnVellfgale the need" (or the l1lpt
....U:. to Portland and SeatUe OI> March
25 lmWasl\lngtoa, D.C. · .
. Newport Beach ·municipal aullloriu ..
aro lranldy UDeUJ about the proposed
upalllloa al county airport use.
MaytD' Doreen Marshall says the flights
to &he north "would far uceed" the
Pereira Air Master Plan's recom-
meodatloa thet C«mty Airport mallllaln
a motropcrl tlalut.
A mettoport. by Pmlrl 6.-
dtllnltloa, ii .... -commeidal....,.
... llmltocl to a --"Seattle and Porlland ·-IV ~that,• -• ~ Jl4'nbalL Their
dlslanca Jn ·air mlla from the c..mty
are, reapecUvtly, Ill and m ·m11e1,
Newport City Attorney Tull, Sepnoor
suggests thal one of the principal na.Qriil
so man)' alr!iou !lave appllod I« tile
Talks Break Cited
U.S., South Viets
·rortr"ft
Thia portrait of Presldenwled
Richard M. Nixon ls now avail·
able to public. It is lithograph
of' original oil by New York
artist Gloria Schumann aiid is
on 12 by 16-inch 'art· pa~r
packaged in parchment folio.
Checks ftir · $2.00 sliou!<i be
D\8de o~t to Inaugural Com-
mittee, '40 "G'' St., NW, Wash·
ington, D.C., 20025.
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Ambaaador
Ellsworth Bunker and Gen. cr.ipton
W. Abram.s, the U.S. military C<llD-
mander in Vietnam , conferred today with
President Nguyen Van Thieu on U.S.
troop withdrawals and a possible ca.
fire Ill Ught of the bre~ Jn lbe .puce
talks deadlock:.
The meeting took p1ace le111 'than IC
hours after an aMouncement from Paria
that the Unltod Statea, North Vietnam,
South Vietnam Ind the Viet Coog'a Na-
tlon~I · lion Froot will begin '°""' war' .~turday.
, the U.S. Air 1'=~
tt is reviewtlg ita --". for • lluol' ..ithdrl.al .. . • °"""""""llldtbe7'~ Ir "''mi''""'"' . Villlo ·N-· Forelen1 Mb 'rttr Tran Qauih
The .lalonnant tald the lead<n, ditcuAed
1'a whole spectrum al tbtnp» '1r nurl:f
two houri.
Toplca included: .
.... Wll.hdn.wal of American. troopl, boW
many and how liOOn.
-A truce, which could rmun a ' total
ceaiHire, a parUal ceue-ftre· ·or a
"ce~flre In place." The latter meini
all' ttcops would simply atar where· they
are, without mounting any ntw opera-
tiorui ·or c:oottnutni any old one1..
-How to retaliate if the enemy lhould
attack Salgoo durinl tbe -~
tions. ~in other words,.., aald the IOUl'Ct,
Medical Experts Support ·
Commission JFI{ Findings
WASHINGTON (Ar) -A panel of
med1cal uperta which met in secret
1st year aays the autopsy findings on
President :JOhn F. Kennedy were Correct
as detailed in the Warren Cornmlalllon
Report and prove he wu sbol twice
from behind.
The repbrt was made public by the
JUl)lce Departm<ol Thundi' night on
the eve of <ourt·prOCeedliip cn•a·!ldlllon
by N.,.•Orleans' Dlsl. Atty. Jlm Garrlion
to gain positsalon ol •utoi>sY pbot.egra/>hl
Ind •-<a)'I Ill the hope ol ' pmtng· the
Proaldent WU hit by ooe bullet fired
from In frool al him, and another fired
at his back.
GarrtJon subpoenaed the material as
evidence In the trial of ·c1ay L. Sh.aw,
nUred 55-year old New 0 r I e a n 1
businessman charged with ·consplrtng to
murder Kennedy.
GarrlJQn claims be can use the
photograph.! and z-rays to prove at Jeast
one of the bulletl whlch struck Kennedy
in Dallas five yeara ago wu fired from
tlla front.
Thia would lhow that a conaplra"
wu involved, whereu the Warnn Com-
rnlsalon aoncluded Kennedy was lhot
by one man, Lee Harvey Oswald, acUna:
alone.
The photographs and 1-rayo..,.. plac-
ed In the caro of the NaUonal .\Jclllvea
fn 1IM I>, Kennedy's widow, ¥"· Arlllo-
Ut1 Onaslil, and 1111 brotbei', tbe 'late
Sen. Robert f, Kennedy.
Thia wu done I>,· !elt.er a'p'eement
that the matuisl would not be maae
public fe< five yun, and theo only
to government invea;tfpton, to prevtilt
"undignified or RnllllonaJ" use of them.
'Mleir report aa.ld, '"'.Eumlnatlon · ot
tho clolhlng and ol·the pholograpba and
x-ra}'I taken at the aqtoply .revut that
President Kennedy wu ltruclt by two
bullet.I fired from· above and behind
him, one ci which travened• the blae
of the neck on the right aide ,.tthoul
atrlking bone and lbe other al wlllch
entered the 1kuD from behind and ti·
plocfed Ila rlibt lido."
Truce -::-~
"would this mean an uutomatlc reaamp.
' tioo al· bombing North Vietnam?" liltl
the demilltarlied zone.
Ky, superviaor of South Vletnam'a
Psril delegation, la scheduled to mum
to Europe. early next weet. u. Aleill Joimlon, unde ...... tary o(
stale fir pallUcal aUaln In the Jncomln&
Nixon ldmlniatrailon, ctnr.led i
ochedul!d' ineetln( with Thliu Iator to.
day. A l]JOiteoman I« the .U.S. -·tald be had a·bod .-,, of flu.
Jo!Qoft~· conferring wilh top Am«!Oao an4 Vletnam!ff offldalt ..... w . ..11o·11. ,,.. Id
!.aft !ir Wailhbialoo Sa~.......,
his fiOtltni• to ~ -..,, jllo; IP'*'tmlit -~ 4-bn --~.,. ... -,1\
. 'hie Alnlna " iPllill ·~·any cooilbal lllilta !nm Vietnam -.. =-·tald be bal-tty, Ille . fact .~ -ttcop ' wlthdrawalo wlD,be Diade relaUVolY -
ln(ofnlanla ~ Iii-'l'fd<u' ialit lha.
lnltiil ~al 'ai1n0ilnl:einln · «llliol
a:pedfy IO,Oor:rta ~;ooe· men wttbciot
• timetable. ,• ,. On Tl)uraday; PreJ11ier Trin Van . .
WU gtfoted by I ipoha:man a
he bellevu the United states coul4
a wfthclrawal of lG,000 men a
wtthocil tompromlahW tbe war ',
Airport·1 Reject&
' Fog Dispersal ' ·
A , pro~ to eirperimenl 'wttli 101
dispersal at Orange Cow!ty Alrporl half
been abandoned, Cowily AvlaUon Dfrac>
tor Robert J. Bresoabtn repor1ed today,
B.....ahan rejected the prvposal ol
a Santa &la weather f......iq liml
for two l'tUOl15:
1. Thi project wu not developed' 1111·
fidenUy beyond the •l!P"lmental llage
to be guaranteed dfedive.
L He .wouldn't -t to.de p e nd,ilpori
the -...... <I a fog dlllllpolion
program ..-.&·landlnf·apprMcli·lisbll and an· fmtnnnml landlnf .,,_, al
the airport. -
Rec..ily be tald .. tn.atrwi><ot landln(
l)'slem Wll two yur1 away. ·
The.Bania Alla nrm,. w~ c..ira11
Inc. bsve ~ a 'arcui' m!IC'btne
to shoot. cbolhlcail Into ·doud !¥,
lramf'<lnnlnc fog to rail!. l'lll)' -'15,oot·to do .the.job,.... II to 15 ~
between February aM'May,. . ·
The $15,000 blaze destroyed . their
belongings and caused heavy darilage
to the resideoce, which they cannot re-oo-
cupy for many weeks, while it is being
repaired.
Meanwhile, they need a. home.
"We're no poverty ,case and tina~
ann't a problem," sald Vanyur, whose
occupaUon involves computer 1 n 4
manufacturing industry admlnlitration.
o·cc .District Funds Fa,11 .to New Low
• ' . ' ' ' . I •
He iaid he has simply been unable
to find suitable quarter11 by bunting
himself and any 11UggesUolllll maJ be.
itlepboned to 54f.1113 or lilt, the cfftee
of Fire Chief John Marshall.
NEW YORK (AP) -1be sloek .,._
cloaed Irregularly 1ow .. today u pnllta.
were taken on the advance earlier this •
week. (See quot.aUons, Pages 1 .. lt). -
In Dntl dealings, loll9CI fin a 11 y
nvercame an advantage held most o(
the day by gains.
•' ' . '
u, ~ 1'0lmJNf; Of.,.......... . ..
Orange Cout Junior College Dlatrict
baa 111nt to a new 'low -just about
the -Jn the llale -In lj)endlng ....,.. .. lluilenta. .
Juat COol(lfled --that Ill pa pupil eipes>dilure the dlllrlct last
year ranA'ed -CRJI of • Callfomit junjor coilqe l)'lttml.
Tht dlllrlcl nlibd equally .. low
-Gnd -in I mUU'e cf I teacher
aa1arie1 and c ... alla' It 1epe1111G1&id
• ~ ilDJ>fVVemeo>I .rro,n,. U,>a; 1ear
bef(lre 'when tlJe dlstrict Wll dead lut
Jn -PIY por ~ poplL Tllo alannlnf, -nnktnp slood out In a lllau.tlcal report ohown
J
-,,~---
oranp Cout -Wedntlday nJi11t.
Whether l'llllkinp have chanpd for the
current yur won1 be -. unW data
ar• compiled again.
Other ltalillkl io the report tbow
the dlttrid .bu, In the worda ol Supt.
Norman Wataon, "lleadll.Y srown larler
while phml!lni low• and low« oo the
acaJei ol •alael." ,
'!'be two -)Jiii -Orange Cout and
Golden Wbt -diltrlct ranb as the
ninth )IJ1tll Jn lbe 1tat.e Ill ..;tim.
enrollmeel. (Wilh eveninl enrollmen~
ft flnl:l ......r ..,1y to Loe Angeles.)
The survey lhow1 the dt.trlct 1'111
•
steadily declined lft•tli! ......,. ol apen.
din& on llud•· ~Iii yeara ago it
ranked 11th ud each nar llnce hu
stutlly dnJt>ped ·until tt la noir Sine!.
1be -last ,.., -t Oii the
aYerage $!!15 'to educat.e each lludenl
Only· f...-dl"1cta ln the atl!• apent
1 ....
Dlatr!ct'• clOHSI matching Orange
Cout'f llll'llllment Jlfl'l11 on llludenta u
ftllOJ9' hr411" ~ ..,i'io; ~ -
1118; Foothill -~; Contra COiia -4751. \
Tht ather lnlpcirtant measure in whtch
tho dlatrlct ranked .. low rtfkda both
= ~and;...dul ... ~u:
wont c:oml!lntt!Olll In tha.aiai. of lqw
salartto and. crowded clw r/hi four
diltrlcta that lanlt bel6lt it .an iD mWI
dbtrlcta1ln ...-...ai ·diae.t-.).J
OrlJlie Collt'I low.r• nntlail WU
In admlnlstraUH colla -Bird ol lhe
• • junfor ... dlltrld.; 'l'IJs 'Clllllict
ranked . Mlh , In -af .aupji!la Ind
65th In coot ·o1 piani opOn.11an.. .
• The -prioii ....... ~ .,.
Dean of -,...... JI~ usln&
fnfonnaUon from the 1111-, ~ ot
Edu<JUonal RaearCh. ' ·
........... --.... ·-••
I I
'
I
I
' )
1
1
I
' I
)
'
•
. •
Signi1ag on Dotted Line
2 Face Mu.rder . Charges ·
New Pair Arraigned in Bruwl H~gl!!.n S.la1,in&
• • BJ wniu11 BBllD ... -dncPd ou1. • lie-banil!f .,_.....,.....,...
• • _.,.....,. -She probably Unltened to e1D pol:lf;9 car. • ,.
-.,.. -"' In the bloocfy llayiq beca.,. of the, IC<ldenl and the tllllr Tbe tiller •JUmpod back lnlo Miss oi a ~ Beach grandmother .,. bqan lo slab al her with a llnlle poalblJ .Dloier'• car ,and roared . off ,Into the
....... a pootet knife. night, llnally parldna the vehlcl< at l!ot ache&~ed f°' arralgarnent ....., on A &laah by lha.klller CIUi)lt the -p. .Stnet and Olive Avenue In a cieauted
fatmal murder cbargea tn West orange Uonist at the Jeft ear and allced ·~ area of oil tanU. ~unlclln ~.c.oori.5..... urd ol her throat and wbm the blade hit the W-scf•x a ca~ <!fiver lold llun·
--~ ~r m "' an.ry on tilt lell lido o1 her n<ek tlngloo Beacb pollce Ile bad ~ up llelltt S. Markee are llenry Lopei the blood opw1ed bert!q ov• the tljlA'. a bloody fare wbo clalmed Ill 1,..s been ~ 25, ol St2 Clay SI., aa .Wl<ld For • moment, Ille ldlltr -• In a llJhL He loot him lo a spot
wort..; and Edward Roy llargm'e, II, l'ltb Strtet watcbJns lln. Markee red jllll lllo blocks from the townboual apart.
of 17182 Marken Lant, ID uoemplOJed away from llhn ...i boet toward her -ment ot Miu Dlqor.
laborer. . car which ltlll had tho mok»r rum1n&: Police worked through the ntlht. ar·
ArrotOO earlier ~nd now c~eared of aoc! headlights burnfna, resting both of the ·CWTent ~
any involvement m the crune are Shfl twisted tn a temk:lrcular pattern, about 5:30 a.m. Thursday at the.Ir homeS. N~n Coatney. 4.1, a Newport ~ch blood apurt.ing in huge drop1eta from Capt. RobitaUle Aid that Sianez i1
aerospace expert; and Margarela Dln&er • her throat. She fell a few inchta ftom married and has at least one child. 38, a waitress.
Sianez' apartment la only 21h blocks
from lhe Dinger apartmenl
The body of Mr&. MJrkee. 55, of 1508
Olive Ave., waa found Sunday in a pool
of bl90'1 along side her car on 17th
Su.et.
Dead Mesa Gas Station
Detective Capt. Earle Robitaille .,..
-Tburaday the -aad dismissal of chargol apimt C..IneJ
and Miu Dinger--followed emst-Nlit
that mornlag ol the second two IWlpects.
Plot to Go to Paint Store
Both Coatney and Mimi: Dinger were Chances are, Costa Mesa will pt far
releued by I p.m. Tbureday. more than the paint 11ore being ...,.
Robitaille said the poll« "have a state-lidmd for a downtown comer now oe-ment and have physical evidence" in-
volving Sianez and Hargrave. Included cupled by a dead service staUon.. if
in the physical evidence is a knife believ· the city finally givea ita approval.
ed to be the murder weapon. 1be question of bow best to fit the
f« fa"'"'ble actlan d'"Plla hll future
nelghbon' oppoaltJon.
"Loot, I want lo be a landlord beeid"
a painhnan," he explained, ''I want
a summer home down here and thia
will give me an alibi."
''I'll join your Chamber of Commerce.
I'll join your Kiwanis," be entreated.
Gathering around Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, Costa
Mesi\ Junior Chamber of Colpmerce officer& Chris
Freed (!nlm left) Rick Raciti and President Bob
Shipley help sign resolution declaring Jan. 18 to 24
as National Jaycee Week. A complime¢ary orien·
lalion breakJast for prospective mem)lers aged 21
to 35 and their wives i• •et Saturdlly, 9 a.m. In Costa
Mesa Park. Mayor Pinkley will speak at the or!.,,..
talion breakfast.
The accused were arrested Jfter in-7,l?Hquare-foot Sinclair Paint Co. outlet
vestlgation of the story of a taxi cab on the lot at 1901 Harbor Blvd., will
dr Iha be atirrod during a planning commlaaioo 1ver t he had picked up a bloody atudy seuioD MoDday. man early Monday morning art.er the murder and drove him to 312 Clay SL Despite opposition by area bnlriJ'lfl!llNl!ll
from ~· who fear partlnc ....,i.Iema. eom-ou1 Street and Orange Avenue, mlMlonen: Jut Monday nlgbt continued
Despite the 20-"°" chain owner's
enthuslum, pl a n n in g commiasionera
voted 4. io o to continue the matter
and Invited Sinclair and hia opponenta
lo -and lnlonnalJy -the """' Monday.
,:Newport Police .Flush
.·· :-2 Mesa Drug Suspects
' 'Ibo long arm of the law aalvqed
ahool one ounce of aopy, ~
morijuana from a nlrllDI c.ata M.,.
toOd bQwt 'llw<1da1, u two -"'
1led a ~~..-1 and I~
-· wtth the thin!. NewPort llead> detective Robert
From P .. e I
FLIGHTS .•.
for the porltoll of their fllghta heh!~
lhla ma and gaa Fralldlco.''
Al the CAB h<orilll, the -i:ify of
NOWJ>Orl Beacb la upected lo ~t
lbuiclY the propooec1 ~w fllghla fnlm
the C01D1ty, wboae alfport ls only one
.,. a ball-In Southern Calllornla
beill( comldored by the CAB u poeslble
U!nDlnala ·for the aervlce.
"We must object to aay plan lo ptend
Oranp Comity Alrpcrt be,.... the
metropcrt cmcepl.," uys CnlDcilman
P111l #. lifaher. •Olhorwlae, ,..,., ~
lo ha .. a fliu-Oedgid Interstale iifrjicir\
here."
Councilman Robert Shelton says the
city "at the very least" abould reserve
an opportunity before the CAB to be bean!·.., the aubject.
The aty's Air Traffic Advl.9ory Com-
mittee ls now lak1ng up the matter.
11 la expected lo report back lo Ille
mmcD with a ncommeodatlon in about.
a month.
Plant Shut Over King
NORTll TARRYTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -
The General Motor& Corp. plant her<
we closed down today when most
employea stayed out to p r o t e 1 t
~ act.loo agalnst workm who
refuaed to wort on the birthday an·
nlvenary of the late Dr. Martin Lulhu
King Jr.
,
DAILY PILOT
OlANM CO.UT PUSl.IYUMG COM .. AH•
l•Mrt N. W••I
'"~"'"'' ..... Publltloef'
J1c.k l. C~1l1y
.,,.. ........... 1"4 ~ .. Ml,..n
ti..., ic ..... ;1
llfilw
Thef!lt• A. Mer,hi111 M.,....int ll!lo<
· P111f Nl11111 .v-tltl< Dltm.r
~ ..... OfflM
JSO W1.t l1y ttt .. t
M1m., J..41,.1•; P.O. I•• 1160, tl626 --....... ~ #11 _. ...... ..........,.. ~ 119edl! In ~II A .... M•ll clM ..... l at ltll llPtft
BrUcoe manqed lo ttlrleve a portion
of the npldly evacuaUOg evidence, altEr
be and lnvestlgalor Walter Spior1 ac·
dd...tally Ombed the -marijuana
auspecla.
Costa Meaa Pollca OUlcer Bandy )'iult
Mid tho beach dly lawmen had gone
to que>tkm Eugene T. Thomas, 20, at
b.ls home, 21071/a Orange Ave., about
a forgery case when the unscheduled
pot b ... t occumd.
Catchlnf a -ol heavy nwijuana amoho afl'homu openid the-· police
laid, -they · -caugbl 'a au-of Edward T. BonhaDI; It, ol.llan Pedro. BonhaM wu on · a faSt run to tht
bathrciom, camlng • tray of what ap-
pelr<d to "" m8rljaaaa. Detective Bri5coe pl15hed .put Thomas
and caught Bonham In the bathroom,
wbere they struggled briefly "'" whetll· j° or ~ would Dash the al·
,;! question waJ decided with a loud
KA-Cl!UGG and gursle, gurgle.
liUaJIWlllle, Tb<xnaa had dsabed out
the front -· followed by Debra E. Barclay~·l!, of 5652 Venturi Drive. who
ran ·from a bedroom and out of the
bouoe, -said. Leaving Booham In cualody of his
partner. Briscoe searched the area and
found Thomas and Miss Barclay walking
up Elden Avenue near 21st Street, here
tlley ,..,.. amsled without lncldenl
All -were booted on ""'!lldon of poesessioo of marijuana, while Thoma•
was Jogged in on additional charge
of 511SP!cion of forgery, involving theft
of cbockl from a ....tee alalion.
Various drlver'1 llcew!es, credit card&,
a selective service card and a check
made out to one person listed on a
ga90llne credit card were seized as
""1den<e, along with smoking pipea and
alleged marijuana residue.
Mesa Police Find
Woman's Watch
Somo woman mlsllDI JI! ~ wristwald> with prol>ible ieatimental
value as wtD inaJ be reunited with her ap~tly stolen timepiece by contact-
ing the Costa Mela POllce Deparlmenl
Dal..tlw set. Goorlt Lorton ls hold-
ing the ~ Wl-r ladle>'
woleh, Which liia a oeriOoial lmcrlp-
Uoo on &bl baa of Uie cue, for any
~Ible dalmanL The watch wu: dilco'Vered beneath
the seat of an umnaried investigaUve
di vision patrol sedan w~. prob-
ably dl'Opped IMre by a crlminal sus-
pect en route to the 1tation for quu-
tioning. ~A..1--1 b
Sgt. Lotion can be '~--Y telephoning headquarters for an appoint·
ment to uamine the watch.
Forgeries Emerge
In Holiday Bills
Now Iba! bllllnp are out after the
fhJrry of holiday aboppln(. at l<aat two
forgery CUM have tumod 1IP InvoMng
a loot or llola "'"'91 conl used al
ac..laM-~ W11Uam N. , of Sean,
Roebutt ' Co., Siii s. st., -
In -lllpo totalling "'1 In lll<pl
porcbaM ... Doc. 14, c.ata -polloe aid today.
.A •111 nldi and •171 ..... _..
...-... • eaN llilled lo Jolin fd<clun. ol 211 Walllll 6l, Newport
Beach, but ddlnltely DOI ....i "1 blm,
Humplltty Mid.
•
Coun Splits
Bonnie,-Clyde ·
Partnership .
about two mile3 from the murder scene action on tbe request tor a vuiance
and aboul the ume -llom where by Al SIQelab:, maJtlve ..ic. ..-.i. =.,~ear Ulfld by the mmdenr of ie =c'i.o. Ancelel hw'•••""n
Robltallle Mid that M1sl Dinger and bombarded the .....,,,.,.._. with p1eu
C001neJ bad been amotecl becauM they and prvmlMo daring the crtlleol pat1ng· coolol not e.plain bow ber bloOc!y ud ~ ~-~ ........ hll brand ~Uy: damaged car happened lo be ~~ "":';';;.;'.;i..
missing-Iron< her garage on the night "I clidl1't rea11ze )'Oii bad 1o go tbroogh
or the murder. all thla to open a~ ... sakt Slacla!r.
Now It's Monday
That San Diego
Freeway to Open H~ e~lained that she bad told police "We have been la buslneaa a1nce 1929
she drove to the Five Point,, Shopping and we've never dcJRd a store, .. be Re-ecbeduled &eftral times, then re.
Center Crom her home at 2fi06 Delaware declared, "we alway• go firat cabin. ICbeduled apln for today, the opening
SL and returned about 8 p.m. It'll be a showplace." ol lhe new, 1.8-m.ile, final leg of the
Coatney arrived aoon thereafter and Rlgbt-of·way dedicatiooa on Harbor San Diego Freeway baJ now been re.et.
A "Boonie and Clyde" partnership that parked b.ls car on the driveway apron Boulevard and West lltb street wlll hopefully for Monday.
began la a Costa Mesa bar last Dec. directly behind hen 1n such a manner eventually nibble tbe praent Mobil on "It loots pretty good now," Aid a
Z3 ended today in Superior Court when as to apparenUy prevent her car from Corp .• atatim alte down to a mar+mnm IJ)Okelman for i:limict Seven of the
the malt ball of Iha bandit -doo "" belnc mnoved. of I.I ..-...,. parttq pl-. for the Calllonda DIYlaloo ol lllgbwayi. wblch
sent lo alata prlloo for a tmn not It appears now that Sianez could have SlnclaJr otore lf t&e deaf -lhrootll>. dedlc41ed the Important link early 1aJt
less than five years. had a spare set of teya lo M1sl Dinger'• 8lnclalr Mid hll l!nn clelll moo11y month.
Judge Robert Gardner allowed a mue car a)!d had """'1 the vehicle without with <ODlractora mt a wbololale -Raley daya we<e blamed for the lai.st
. time for the winding up of the Mort-lived bet j>Ofmis.sloli before. and needs l1tlle -trade parking delay In completion of the mulllmllllon
parlnen!>ip_w)>en he ordued that Eosene ll,'appeara that he and llargrave on ...., hnt ama11er--.1n tbe vldnt· dollar traffic artery, whlcb will connect
Albert Crist, 29, of 141 Newport Blvd., ~ ·• ol the murder canlulJy rolled ty ~~ ~~ -=~-• the San Diego Freeway from tho Coota M..., be allowed "reuonable Coatney' a car out of the driveway and ..---· 'li1a ·-~-Sepulveda Gap near Encino lhroogb lo
time". lo la11c lo hia wile, Carol, 25, look Mimi ~· blue !edan and then np..-blllboarda featurlq -the lnfne .,..._
hefole lllllJ>ment to Chino Stale Prison. pasbed Coalney'• car back Into the are ~ at ~ Sinclair The 7knlle !noway will connect with
The Cr!!t.. pl"lded guilty lo the armed driveway. amwmd abopglng -developer the Santa Ana Freeway at Sand Canyon
robbery ol Ille Royil er.st l.ouage, 1700 The acouaed then drove Ml!s Dinger'• Harvey SomerS;' ti. 1'1119 E. Bay Ave., In soulhern Orange County, and ii ez.
Pl U A M "· In Balboa, with hia advertising philooophy. pected Io tske a heavy traffic burden acen a ve., arcu~.ug 14> the bar ear toward 17th Street and Main Street "We don't use what they call 'schlock' off the bUJy lnland route.
behind a saWed off shot.gun, they tied where It collided with the white' sedan adv ..... ;.,;,..,. ;,. ~per pag••, we use Del · d 1· f up owner M IM -i.th ta dri ... ~ ..... ,_ .. w,.... "'° . ay 1n e 1very o a variety or at.eel arce eerueman ,.., pe vea by Mn. Markee as she returned movie stan," Sinclair said, "the studios mgns and guardrails prevented the and took off with $200 from the cash home from the laundromat at Five all uae our paint -~ ~~•-s, we find f f register p 1n•-.uN ~-reeway rom going into service just · o 14• • it's a lot more clusler that way." alter Chrbtmas as planned. That shotgun has not f.>een found. Costa The llight traffic accident evidenUy He aakl thiJ concept ta called in-Some ramp striping, curbing and gutter
?i.1esa __ police are still ICOW'ing the led d1red1y to the murder, The two sUtuttooaJ advertising. conMructlon and other final work, in·
Westcli(f area of Newport Beach and cart touched brter:ly and there was a Painting a picture ol. a paint store eluding transformer tnstanaUoo and light
have appealed to the public for help pursuit down 17th Street and Mn. with carpeting, terrazzo tile and other system testing was also required at
in locating the wea-pon. Markee apparently got out of her car, non-uWitartan features, Sinclair appealed that time.
Judge Gordner ~ued a probaUon 1-----'----'-=------.:.......c.c.:c=======:..::!::==-=:..:::::::. _______ _
report an Carol Cri5L He wDl study ..... -----------................. . the rtport and sentence her on Feb. I il ...... ....
6. .IT
Newport Bank
Okays Creating
Holding Firm
Directors of Newport National BanJt
today announced approvaJ, in principle.
of phma to form a one-bank holding
company which would acquire control
ol the bant with lb seven offices, all
located in Orange County.
1be boldlna compilny, direct.ors said,
would then be able to invest in
finandally-relaled business enlerprlses
wblcb ls nol allowable under the present
chartu. The boldlng company would be
naJ11ed Newport National Corporallon.
Allboogb_Jlnal details are Incomplete,
It Is plannOd' lhal the boldli)C company
will acquire all outstanding llhares of
the bank pursuant to a plan of
reorgaaiution under which the p-resent
abareholden ol the bant would ad>aage
their present baat -fa< -in the new holding compan,y on a bull of
two sllarea of holding compaey stock
for each share of bank stock. The holding
company would nut affect the present
operations or personnel of the bank.
Dtreclon said three m1jor benefits
that will be enjoyed by the baat
llw<holden Uirou1h Ille holding com-
pany control:
-The opportunity lo dlverslly Into
other profitable finaDdally'"1ated fields.
-ni. opprlnlllty to llllqUln new and
dlvnilled manag<rlal atllls.
-Jl'leilhlllty In capital manqemenl
•Uh .sd!Uona1 opportuatUel In the raia-
lng of eapltal and In lmprov1n( leverage.
The boldlng comPW' plan la subject
to the aP1JM1al ol the Comptroller ol
the CUrrency. A meeting will be lchedul·
ed at whicb llharel1olden will also be
uted to approve tht plan. Tbe bank
will ...t I ruliq irUJI tile lnternaUooal
Rovenue Servi<o lo mate pooslble the
ucbange of lharel ol the new holding
c:ompaey oo a tu.free buts.
King Widow in Rome
ROME (AP) -The widow of Dr •
Martin Lulhu Klag arrived In Italy
tod&J to receive •n award and meet
Pope P1ul VI.
MID-SEASON
CONTINUES
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..
GOP Gets
Glowing
Rep0rt
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Republlcan·Nalional Chainnan
Ray C. Bliss gave the GOP
a '1&wing report today 011 tb6 .
))ll1y's PJWl'CdS since tbe 1"4
elecuon diaaster but. saJd
careful planning sun was vital
for future elections.
Bli!s, chllrman since April
I. 1965, aubmllled lib report
to the first meeting of the
Republicag National CQm-
mittee since Richard M. Nix~
on'a victory ln lhe 1968
preaidential election.
WJth charts and tnaps to
llluatrale Republican gains, he
said:
lleroes Line Vp
"Since i964 we moved from
17 to 31 govemorshipa, the
highe.st number since 1920;
from 32 to 4.1 seats in t,he
U.S. Senate, the most since
1958: from 140 to 192 seats
I~ the U.S. J!ouse, high mart
since 1956, and from control President Lyndon Johnson poses. with four U.S. of seven to 20 sfate
legislatures, the moat sinct servicemen, t\vo o~ them from the same small town
19M." in Georgia, after presenting each with the Medal
In the same period, he said. of Honor for heroism in Vietnam. Receiving awards
,
' ..
Myers. Fla.; Marine Maj. Stephen w, Pless; New·
nan , Ga .. ; Air Force Lt. Col. Joe M. ·Jackson, also' '
from Newnan, and Army StSgt. Drew' D. Dix,
Pueblo, Colo.
the GOP gained 648 state \\'Cr& (from left) Navy Lt. Clyde E. Lassen, Ft.
legislative seaLs, 1,420 county -------------------------------------,~----
offices and nearly 100 mayors.
"However impressive that
record may be, we must plan
carefully and intelligently for
the future," Bliss added. "I
believe we have an excellent
opportunity to win control of
Congress in 1'10 and, with
Richard Nixon as our presi-
dent, I believe we are on
our way to becoming the ma-
jority party once again."
The GOP must defy history
to win control of Congress
in the~ elections .next year. -
The <adinlnlltratiO!I f ar I y
normal_ly loses seats in elec-
tions in the middle o f
presidential terms.
After a conference \Vith Nix-
on last week, Bliss announced
that he had been asked to
stay in the job indefinitely.
Even some of his admirers
in the national organization
believed that "indefinitely"
mtant no longer than six
months. Others felt that he
could stay as long as be
wanted the job.
Before the Nixon-Bliss con-
ference, there were reports
that Nixon -or some of
hi1 staff aides -wanted a
more handsome, articulate
spokesman in the.
chairmanship instead of an
organizational "nuls and
bolts" craftsman like Bli~.
President
Puzzler
AF Retaliation Menio
Revealed by Senator
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen.
William . Proxmfre (D-Wls.),
coaxed an Air Force official
inlo insisting that no retalia·
tion was planned against an
efficiency expert Who re\'i!aled a $2 billion Pentagon error
in estimating lhe cost of a
new plane, then dramalically
read into the record a secret
memo detailing th.rec wa~s
to fire the man.
The senator, chairman of
the J o i n t Economy sub-
committee and a persistent
Critic of Defense Department
procurement practices, called
the memo "the most shocking
retaliation against a public
Wire Guild
Sh·ike Ends
servant I have seen In the
JI yean I have been in the
Senate."
Proxmire said it "direclly
contradicted" pl~dges by Air
Force officials U1at no acUon"-
would be taken against the
.efficiency expert, A. Ernest
Fitzgerald, who disclosed the
$2 billlon overrun in earlier
testimony before the sUb-
committee.
The incident occurred
Thursday during a sub-
committee hearing w i t h
Robert H. Charles; assistant
secretary for imtalla'tions and
Jogistica, in the wttnesa chair.
Cl!arles, udnlffled, !I.id the
memo merely outlined
"various things that could
happen under certain con-
ditioru."
At issue Is the cost of the
C-6A, a giant jet transport
plane built for tbe Air Force
by Lockheed· Corp. Fitzgerald,
NEW YORK (UPI) -\Vire deputy for management
Service Guild (WSG) systems to the assistant
members returned to work to-secretary for fin a n c i a I
day in Associated Pre s s management, testified before
bureaus across the country, the Proxmire subcommmittee
their eight-day strike against last November that develop-
the ne1,1•s agency ended by ment of the plane had cost tw~to-one membership ac-$2 billion more than the Pen-
ceptance of a management tag on had bargained for.
contract proposal. Nonetheless, the Pentagon
AP offered the union a demonstrated its satisfacUon
three-year pact, with lop-scale Thursday with the airplane,
salaries for newsmen rising · if twt the bargain.
to S250 a week daring its The Air Force aMounced,
last year: The guild had urged while Aaaistant Secretary
members to reject the pro· Charles was on the stand, that
posal. · it would buy 23 more ~lanes.
Opposition
Inaugural
Ball Okayed
WASHINGTON (APl-The
government has finally agreid
to allow antiwar demonstra-
tors to erect a big, multicol-
ored tent in downtown \Vash-
ington for their "counterinau-
gural" ball Sunday night.
The demonstrators, who
plan a "counterinaugural" pa·
rade down Pennsylvania Ave-
nue Sunday, the day before
President~lect Nix:on's inau-
gural parade, wi~I also use
the tent as a staging area.
Harry R, Van Cleve of the
General Services Administra-
tion, the government spokes-
man dealing l\•ith the protest·
ers. announced 'Thursday aft-
er days of haggling that t h e
tent had the govel1\ment's
okay. 111e parade permit had
already been bsued.
Airlines Get .
OK to Raise
Fa1·es 3.8%
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Civil Aeronautics Board has
tentaj.ively agreed to a 3.8
percent increase in domestic
airline passenger fare!.
The CAB said final approval 1 of the inc rea ses, which pr~1
bably would co into effect!
March I. vdll be made afterl
11. "careful analysis of tariffs"1[
to be filed by the airlines.
Six major airlinei had ap. I
plied for fare increases _of
five to seven pucent. A CAB
spokesman said Thursday in-
creases that large ire "not
warranted at this time."
The atx were ~erl~,
Braniff, Eastern, Northea.!!,
Tram World aOO United.
The incnase tentatively ap·
proved woold have this effect
on ticket buyers:
-Each first-class fare for
a trip of "11ny dillance" would
go up $3 one way.
--Certain first-class fares
for East-West trips of 800
miles or more in specific
markets where fares
heretofore have been lower
than industry norms would be
increased by $1 to $7 depen-
ding on lhe distance.
-Coach fares for flights up
lo 500 miles would be in-
creased by '2 one way. For
flJghta of ®a to 1,800 miles they would· be increased by
$1 one way. They would not
be incrwed for flights above 1,800 miles. .
r11<1q, .1ono1ty 17, 1969
'ilrltaJn Leads op,O.t'tio~"·::-,
DAILY PILOT I • --. ·, • • • A'llies · Balk at· Def ens Hike l
Old Worl,d
Mediterranean
Spanish Furniture
R1celvitd c1nctll1tJon ef $22.000.00
Sp.•nl1h and Mtdlterftnun Fumitu,. AnNewT.,...,...._,.._.
O.C.Ntor'1 DfM• N .... 0. ~
Items . as fobows: Georieous 8 ft. custom
quilted sOfa with separate loote pillows with
heavy oak triln decor ·and matching chair, 3
matcblng oak occasional tables, (2) 58" tall
decorator lamps, hanging chain swag lamps
in wrought iron, an 8 piece king site .~ter
bearoom sui~ in pecan panelled Meditemn·
ean style will> top quality 15 yr. wmanty
king size mattress & box springs. Spanish
decor dininJZ set. etc.
~ ......., -Nf1ler SllD.lf
~:~~·1~·~ . • $698.00 .
Any Pl.ct Can Be Purch1Nd lndivldu11ly
Terms Av1flabte -Newcomer• to Callf.
(r•dit Approved lmmtdi1tely , JI JJ Furniture
At Harbor Blvd.
1144 Newport Blvd. Coito Mesa only
Ev"Y niaht 'til 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'tll 6;
------
Sat., Jan. 18 11 a.m. 'til sold out
Ill I W orehou•e Rood -Cost• Mes•
block Hsi of Harbor -I block s~ulh of Boker
MODEL HOME FURNl,URE·· ..
ACCESSORIES .& -E9Ulfl~,NT . ~ ~,'l· I
Oe1i9ner c.olltc.tion~ of .furniture &·,dee.orator
pieces from one of the largest home builders
1n Orange County.
Ch1lrs
Sof11
Chests
Dressers
Dining Room
Sewing Machines
Bedroom Sets
Record Player
T1pe Rtco~ders
B1nquet Tablts
Conference Chairs
Electric Flxturt1
Occ11ion1I T1ble1
Occ:11ion•I Ch1lrs
. "'' Bar Stools
Plcturt1.
Televi1ion
71/J' Child'• Speed Bo1t -100's of oth1r items te>0 numerous to mention
-INSPECTION 9 A.M. DAY OP SALE -
-• r ,
..
,.
·.
' ' 1
Jetliner in Near Collision
LOS ANGELES (AP\ -A involved one "coming of!" the Stewardesses Karen Andel'!on,
United Air Lines jetliner tanker plane. Lindy Mendolia and Pam
swer\'ed sharply to m.iss a The Federal Aviation Agen-McGovern, of San Franclsco,
Navy jet in the air north cy will investigate to and Lorraine Gause, of Los ?r . San Diego late Thursday, determine which plane was Angeles were shaken up. 1nJur'ing 6 of the 57 persons in the proper lane, an FAA It was the third aerial Jn-
aboard. spokesman said. 'I1le Miramar cident over California this
LARGE 23'' COLOR
r
}he plane, flying from San spokesman said the incident week.
Diego to San Francisco, made occured in an area 35 miles A Scandinavian Air 11ne1
By WILLIAM MANSFIELD an unscheduled stop here for north of San Diego where System plane crashed in the
treatment of the injuries, military operations normaJly Pacific near.Los Angelea ~on-1. There was on1y one Presi-described as minor. are conducted. day night, killing 15 o( the
dent who served in the United The Miramar Naval Air Sta-Minor cuta and bruises were 45 persons aboard. 0 n
Stal.ts House of Representa-tion at San Diego said three suffered by two passengers, Wednesday, a P • c 1 t I c
tivts after hi! term as Presi-or FS Pahantom J'ets were · • w Ill I th · ·-" ~ dCDt expired. Who was he? pracf . . 1 Patric. I ~ms. 41, Sa em, Sou west Jet c ... ,,..ng .,.
a) John Quincy Adams: b) icing aer1a refueling, Ore., and Dr. Pat I enc e per.sons brushed a light plane
William H. Harrison; c) Ruth-1-•_ll<f_the __ ne_a_r_co_f_Hs_;_on_p:_ro_ba_b_;ly:.__N_oec_k_•_r,:__4_9.:., _P_al_•_lin_e_:,_1_11. __ ov_e_r_s.n __ Fr_ancJSCO __ · _Ba.....;.Y:_· __
erford B. Hayes.
!. "All of Oregon, all nf
Texas and 54• 40' or light"
Vi'l!IS the campaign slogan 0£
which President?
af James K. Polk: b) John
Tf1tr: c) Martin V~n Buren.
3. This President was the
nnly one who served in the
Confederate House of Repre-
sentatives after his term 8!
U.S. Pre:ident was over.
111 ) John Tyler; b) Andrew
Jackson; c) James Buchanan.
4. Who was the smallest of
the American Presidents?
•>James Madison ; b) C1lvin Coolltfl!; c) William McKin-
ley. s. "A typloal uniform for
him canalsttd t1f b1ga cot-
1.ori"patl, a ptain· coat be1r·
tng no insignia and a farmer's
wide brimmed straw hat. He
rmned his troops seated
sideways on hts w1r hone.''
Who lJ this President?
a) %ocbl!'Y Toylor: b) Abrt·
h•m Lincoln ; cl Georae Wasb-
IJ!ilon.
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t ' [DAR Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE l
For the Over.all ·Good
AU 12 city councilmen in Newport Beach and C:O.la
Me .. esree that Newport-Mesa Unilied's school bond
request this time makes sense ..
They say the Feb. 11 bond Issue for $15.9 milllon
mates sense because the economic well being of the
cities iJ dependent oo good schools.
In unprecedented endorsements of a school finance
measure clty coundlmen are putting tbeir reputations
as tu w'atchdogs on the line. Obviously, they consider
there i.s·very good reason to do th.is.
It is the reali.zaUon that second-rate school systems
generally are found in deteriorating communities while
top notch schools usually are found where communities
are healthy that caused the1n to rally to the school dis·
trict's aid.
Councilmen say it is apparent to them new industry
is attracted where children of errlployes will attend the
best schools.
Businesses want employes with the most intelli-
gence and best character they can find and these tend
to be persons who want the best (or their children. Dou·
ble sessions that shorten the length or the school day
are anathema to sound education, and employers know
it.
In the past, councilmen usually have steered clear
or involvement with the schools in the belie( that school
business is outside their responsibility. And, generally
speaking, non·intervention is still a good general policy
for school and city government to follow .
But this time the school board invited city council·
men to take a stand because, they said, of the urgency
of the situation. It is urgent because the communities'
spirit, economy and quality of living is being threatened
by a school housing crisis.
City councilmen know well that they and the school·
men are asking for tax revenues from the same con·
i;tituents. But with a new political maturity for repre--
sentatives of this area, they also see the larger picture,
that the overall good of the community !"hould be their
overall concern.
Tho COWICils ohouldn'l lry lo -or be OJpected lo-.
Ille a band In runninS the school district, and there b .
no lnclicallon lbel Ibey seet ·lo. Thb week's action is
not seen u pbllsbing a policy by either the councils
or the school trusiee..
But the new evidence of cooperation between tile
schools and the cities, and between the two city govern.
menu, is .heartening. It is a real credit to our elected
representatives. And it holds exciting promise for the
future progress of our communities.
Dad in Mothers' March
Don't be surprised if a dad-type wearing a tag de:-
claring that be is, for the moment, a mother, comes
knocking at your door Ja..'l. 28, because that's the cur·
rent plan. •
Campaigners of both sexes will be circulating
throughout the community for the March of Di.mes' An--
nual Mothers' :P..larch. The Costa Mesa men joined the
march as "mothers" just'"tbree years ago and the break
with tradition quickly 1pread nationwide.
No one finds it difficult to proclaim that cbartties
are generally a gOod. thing. Stop and consider, however,
that the March of Dimes originated to fight polio. That
tragic crippler is no)V . virtually licked and countless
normal young lives therefore guaranteed
The March of Dimes is now tackling birth defects.
varied affiictions which are a difficult and continuing
problem in families where a member has been stricken.
Fairview State Hospital is full of examples of problems
too tough and big (or a family to fight alone anymore.
Men who proclaim themselves temporary mothers
during the light·hearted campaign to aid the war on
birth defects will naturally be back to their normal
selves the next day.
For som·e people, however, the word normalcy is
equivaJent to never, but your nickels, dimes and dollars
-marching toward a breakthrough in research -may
still make life easier for children not yet born. (Cl
----
Teachers of Blaek·White Encou11ter at Harbor High
Deficient
Need Faith
f. • ' Ev~d;ty
l?roblew.s
.•
By NOl\1'f.AN NIXON, M.D.
Teacben blame the dismal conditions
of ghetto areas for the poor performance
of most students in predominantly Negro
and Maican-.American schools. They
fault the nation and the cities for falling
to deal with the slums,· rather than
search for newer methods of reaching
and trarhlog tbese youngstrrs.
Since April, 1965, the naUor. 's schools
hive been given substantial federal funds
under the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act. with the goal of helping
dbadvaotaged children overcome their
educational haOOicaps. The assumption
baa been that the deficiencies are all
In the child and in Ute environment
from which he comes. So far, the overall
results from many millions of dollars
.spent on remedial instruction and
cultural enrichment have not been en-
couraging.
THERE JS increasing evidence that
a disadvantaged child's shortcomings
stem mere from the teacher's response
to bis ethnic. cultural and economic
background, rather than from his
background, per se.
lf 11 students in a psychology
laboratory art each given five laboratory
rats of the same strain, there will be
an accelerated. performance by half of
the rats in learning to run the maze
when the six students assigned to teach
them are told their animals have been
bred for brightness in running a maze. .
Tbe oUter sh: students, wher told their
rats probably will be poor al runnlng
a maze because of genelic reasons,
usually respond with less interest and
enthusiasm than those assigned to the
"bright" group. Their rats may not even
budge from the starting posllion for
their 1'teachers" usuaUy have a hopeless,
"what'• the use" attitude to begin with
and offer little incentive to learn.
SIMILAR EXPERIMENTS have been
reported when public school teachers
were led to believe at the beginning
of a 3Cbool year that previous tests
point to the probability of considerable
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Of the 73,000 citizens in Cost.a
Mesa, do you mean to tell me,
once again, not one of them was
recommended by the Superior
Court judges for service on the
county grand jury? Ve-ree in-ter-
es-ting!
-A. M.
'""' ... ,_ _,. _,.. ........ .., _n, ,,_. et n. -.w•r. hoMI
,_ ... -.. .._., ha. O.ltr l'llM.
academic improvement in c e r t a i n
students. Even though the chUdren label·
ed. as potential "sputers" were chosen at
random and not on the basis of testing,
their academic achievemeut during the
year was considerably above the rest
of Ute class. For the teachers, con·
sciously and unconsciously, spurred them
on to greater bejgbts.
Carl J. Dolce, superintendent of school!!!
in New Orleans, said recenUy : "A com·
mon noUon among gbeUo teachers is
that achievement levels are low com·
pared to middle-class children. So why
expect them to achieve very much ?"
Consequently most of them don't. Ghetto
schools usually are older, overcro\vded,
and operate on a far 1ower budget when
compared to schools in middle class
suburbs. More important, moot of the
teachers are novices, unable to cope
with the frustrations and disappointments
of teaching in ghetto schools.
CERTAINLY, dramatic changes, botll
in the aelection oI teacber1 and in their
training and attitudes, will bl! necessary
if disadvantaged children are to get
all they possibly can from the.ir school·
ing.
One successfu) Negro principal in a
Harlem school sponsored by the New
York Urban League and Catholic
Manhattanville College, attributes his
school's outstanding record wiUt blacks,.
most of them dropouts with criminal
records, more to his l e a c h e r s '
·•unshakable faith that the students can
make it" than to anything else. His
teachers teach, bul more important, they
encourage, talk, plead, scold and mold,
and they get results.
Far more important than what the
teacher learns in mllege are hl!r
personality structure, her blue!! and
prejudices, her zeal and expectations
il she (or he) ls to wort ruecesafully
with disadvantaged children.
S trike V otes in Secret
Jn Britain, where labor strife has
undercut efforts to make tbt economy
mott prodoct.ive, the government has
come up with a proposal to curb strikes .
Al leut ooe part of lhc plan shoold
be wortio cmllderatloa In the U.S.
A problem common to both coont.ries
l:a that ltrltet aometimell are declared
by groupa o{ union officials on their
own. Jr. many cases where union
membera do vote on ltriku, only a
amaJ1 part « the membership
partldpolrl, 11111 frequenUy then only
In opm tnffllnis by a •how of h>nds
-IO that •Ult'11er!js can euUy .bf singled
out r.r union preaure.
lll l T AI N'I GOVERNMENT
(inxlically, K la ol courae • "Labor·•
,....,.,,..,.) II-th>t all workers
be S1ftn a oppartunlty to vote on a
-bJ -ballot. 11lt l<KaU<d rill& to -would not be lnfring<d.
bul I IW employs ..,,,...i a waliout
lblt ~ woo.Id prntect thtir rl(ht
to-t. Belen a atriU vote ii talo<n. both
tbe ua1oa and tbe ~ ... Id be
J
Gu~t Edi\qrial ..
afforded ample and equal opportunity
to lay their arguments before the
workers. In any decilion so vilal to
1 wurker'• livelihood, M surely should
ha\'e every chance to ponder all the rocta.
PROBABL y MANY strim would be
approved anyway, but our auspiclon ls
thal the number would ilJmJnlh. Certainly
this arrangement would be DO panaeta
lor labor-management Ills, ln tills coun·
try or in Britain.
In .. .,., llril<e, lhoo&h. 1 majorily
of the worken: would have decided that
a walkout was In thetr bat lnteresl.
That accords with democracy. a principle
the unions ftnnly endone. It would be
int.enstm& to see If they could pracUce
what they preach.
Wall Stred J...,.al
,
Complex Reasons B·ehind Attitudes
To the Editor·:
Congratulations are due to Newport
Harbor High School for having arranged
the encounter between our Harbor Area
students and the students from Dorsey
High School in Los Angeles. l trust
that the school is carrying through to
help those of our student!, and their
families, realize that :
-There are complex: but un-
der~1andable reasons for the militant
.ittitudes on the part or some black
students.
-Frank encounters of this sort can
lLad to greater understanding oo the
part of both blacks ,and whites.
-INDMDUAL students at Harbor
High need feel no "personal guilt" over
past injustices to minority groups if
indeed they are not now helping to
perpetuate these injustices by their at-
titudes and actions.
-"Black is beautiful" aod "Black
Power" in the constructive sense are
good ; these concepts are really a
necessary step leading to minority
parlicipation in the American dream.
-It is up lo us, as one young black
student reportedly stated, lo look inlo
our O\\'n attitudes as whites. and those
of our neighborhood, ''to blow prejudice
out of white communities. . . to cast
out the beam Jn our own eyes even
as we behold the be.am in our brother's".
llARBOR AREA students and their
families are urged to look into the
various orgaoizations tn Orange C:OUnty
in which blacks, whites and Mexican
Americans are seeking a common ground
in working together for community bet·
terment. Men of good will do abound
among all races, and are now beginning
to work together for our common good.
For example, The Orange County Fair
Housing Council is working to help uphold
state and federal laws by assisting
families and individuals to rent or buy
houses and apartments according lo thei r
preferences and pocketbooks regardless
of their racf:, creed or color.
A NUMBER. OF other organizations
are now active and would welcome in·
creased community support. lhe DAILY
PILOT would do us a servl~ by ex·
ploring the various organizations such
as NAACP, JOIN HANDS, the various
human relationa groups, and the church
social concern committees. etc., so that
dthens who wish to help achieve racial
and community harmony ~ know
where llJld bow they can help.
CONSTANCE F. KRAUSE
'Want of De.,et1c11'
To the Editor ·
To the Harbor HJgh teachers. ~1rs.
Jean Foutts and P.1r. James Newkirk.
who prompted the invitation to the black
students, I ask two questions. What noy,··~
Do we continue the dialogue between
the Harbor High·F.mancia students and
t~ out-of-town ~ligerents from Dorsey?
According to press quotes in the DAI·
LY PILOT of the vtsltors, J can only
think of the Earl of Roscommon 's
01emorable lines :
"lmmodest words admit or no defenct
For want of decency 1s want of sense."
TheN! must be a weakness in Dorsey
High School's teachln1 structur e
regarding civility end respect. °"'
visitors lacked both "dl!CellCY and sense".
C. JAMES Pl\JCE
The Arab SMU
To the Editor:
In rebultal to Mr. RanJ B. McDonald
Jr. 's idter (Ma,Ubox, Jan. 10), I feel
it is only fair to prt!Rnt the other
side or lbt coin. There are many qu<-s·
lions wi: must In all falrne.'!s ask
ourselve111 before wt melt out c:rltJci!ITTl
for either side in the que.stion ol the
,
Letters frcrm readers are welcome.
Normallv writers should convey their
message in 300 words or less. The
right to cundense letters to fit space
or eliminaU libel is reserved. All
letters must include .rignaturc and
niaihng address, but names may be
withheld on request if sufficient tea·
son is apparent.
Middle Ea.st.
I think the most important question
at this time and I feel the crux or
the Arab feeling i.s, did we have a
MORAL right to evict people from their
lands t.o establish the state or Israel?
Mr. McDonald in his letter said that
the Israeli nation was set up so that
members of Judaism would once again
have a homeland. P.1ost of these people
were from Europe and because of the
purge of Hitler were deprived of their
homes , etc.. but their homeland was
Europe, not Palestine.
llA VE WE NOT done the same things
to the Arabs of Palestine? Have we
not removed them fro1n their homes?
Lands that have belonged to their fathers
and forefathers for centuries. Do we
have the divine right to choose who
must go and who may stay? If this
is the principle for establishing the right
of the people of Judaism to return to
Palestine and take the lands of other
people as theirs, then the Mexicans have
the same right to California, the RUS3ians
to Alaska and the lndiallb to Manhattan.
As we can see, the premise that
Palestine should belong to the Israeli's
because their descendants lived there
2,000 years ago is not a justifiable reason
to uproot the population th<:lt has lived
there as long or longer.
1 KNOW I \VOULD fight as long as
necessary (or my home before I y,·ould
let any nation decide that it belonged
to Mexico because P.1exicans lived here
200 years ago.
His next assumption was that Ute
Arabs did not utilize the land to its
potential. I agree with this but one
must realize that the Arabs as a whole,
uolil the last 20 or 30 years, were
an iUiterate people, eking out a Uving
to the best of their abWty and lrainit11
of the last several centuries.
The Zionists who came to the land
were highly educated people, scientisl.$,
engineers, architects, etc. The land was
improved not because those who worked
it were Moslems, Christiarui, or Jews,
but because the people were westerners
using modem western lechnlques and
know how. Then, of CQurse, it is
noteworthy to remember that some $3
billion have been poured into Israel.
SINCE OIL HAS httn discovered and
monies art pouring into the Arab coun-
tries, the establishing of m o d e r n
buildings, hospitals, clinics, schools and
universities is quickly bringing into these
countries a generation of technologists
that the Arab countries have never had
the opportunity to produce be.lore. On
th~ young men's shoulders sits the
productive future of the Arab countries.
Remember that in comparison to
England, our mother country, we were
considered rawboned and illiterate to
Englanders.. But we bad a lush country
lull of natural resources that was there
for the adventurous to develop into the
great country we now have. It is not
quite so (or much of the Arab world.
WE AS Artf.ERICANS and our freedom
for self determination. pride and our
love of our country would never allow
any portion of our great nation to be
allotted to any other people without our
consent, or protest and war. Can we
as a nation that professes justice for
all expect tht Arabs lo do less?
S. ROBERTS
'l'ou'1'e Got a Proble tn'
To the Editor :
This Christmas. my husband and I
paid $315 for two Bonanza Mini·aikes
for oor two IS.year-old sons. We had
no problem purchasing these ; our cash
was accepted readily.
Since Christmas. our boys have been
warned repeatedly by the police that
the bikes cannot be ridden on the public
streets. must be registered (they cannot
be licensed because they are only 3
horse-power). and the only place they
can be ridden is on private property.
with the owner's permission.
Now J ask, is there, in this large
community of ours, a place oWlled by
a private property owner, that mlni-bikea
can be ridden upon with the owner'•
permis.9on? We, a1 pam:its wooki gladly
relinquish In writing any claims for in-
jury, etc., to the pro~ owner who,
out of the kindness of his heart, would
offer such a chance to kids of this
cdtnmunity.
I REALIZE the.rt is a mini--bite ctub.
Our Ultimate Enemy
TboaglaU al Lar&t :
Ol,tr ultimaje enl!my is not "the
Maeblne" -or technology, in any of
ill aspecb -but our inappropriate &fld
obsolete idea.$ that will prevent WI t.rom
uslog i.chnotOi!Y for tbe fullest hu""'n
purposes, but rat.bet wlD COOOemn us
to -.pe tbe peraon to fit the dema!W
ol trdmolol)'.
• • •
Perhaps the most tragic contradiction
of our age (speaking of tec.h.nology)
ill that just as eclenUfic hardware is
outmoding the whole concept of the
'·$0verclgn nation ,' and makinJr: some
form of globalism imperative Tor our
survival, •t the same Ume thtrt is
• trtmtndou1 upsurge ol oaUonalilm
everywhere lo the workt -which ~
Ilk• putting • 1illcleor power-pod< on
tbe l>aek!or • aabre-toolhed tiger .
When we lalt about "educa\ion," wt
almo:!Jt always mean b'ard-core learaiD&
Qf racts and l)'&tcm.s: but what ls really
e~'\ential today is the re-edocatloa el
.Ille feellop, SO that !be lolli .,.,_.uty
will wut to do wblt the tnlned mJnd
knows ii" rtP< to do; --· the ft1cta we lea ran &be serlous rtak
or belllll miuppll<d or llOlhllP\)ilod. • • •
,._ ofllciallJ Involved in "poverty
programs" haw a ftlled lnterfllt Jn
the petpeluatloo of poverty, not In ill
abolition; •hich b •"1 tho -themlelYU must bqjn to be truted .. ..-.not-• • •
Ooe o( the best and --.... heard in political pllllolopl\y WU
given by the Vl.,._ loclurer wbo told
bis dastu: ''Capitalltm II the aploita-
Uoo of DWI b)' man; ClllllllUlailm II the
rtvtne."
\
This doesn't have too much appeal, when
you take into consideration that the boys
would have to wear crash helmets (one
of the requirements) .•. these cost
a minimwn oC $14 each. Also the kid!!!
would have to wear ankle boots, and
their mini·bikes would have to be
transported to the Harbor Area Boys
Club by automobile. This is a good
trick if you don't happen to own a
station wagon, and when you have two
boys that stand s reet 9 inches tall
and weigh 150 lbs. each, thl!y're not
apt to want to aSSCX'iate with kids from
B years old to 15 years old. Okay,
so as one Costa Mesa police officer
told me by phone, "Lady, you've got
a problem ."
t TIDNK WE ALL have a problem.
The main reason for purchasing these
bikes for our two boys, was to keep
them out of the pool halls, off the
pin ball machines, out of stores where
shoplifting can be tempting, and from
standing on street cormrs idling away
their free Lime. just waiting for trouble
to catch up with them.
I agree. all boys do not need to
be watched closely. but then again, who
knows. some of the nicest boys have
turned uo murderers, which we all read
about in the papers. T h e s e two
particular kids hn,·e been very busy,
since Christmas. riding their bikes, ,,,wk-
ing on Utem, shining them up, and in
general, bl!ing occupied. I believe any
psychologist would agree, that idleness
is the first step towards delinquency.
SO WE'RE BA.cit lo my problem.
What do we do about ll? A!. parents,
we feel that we and our Irids must
obey Ute laws, but what kind of laws
allow a vehicle to be S-Old in the public
st.ores, but prohibits Utis same vehicle
to be ridden on the city streets? As
property owners, we pay some prttty
fair taxes for the privilege or using
these cilv streets.
Also if this vehicle is not allO'ftd
on the public streets, why is it mandatory
to have this vehicle registered? The
police department informed me Ui:!1t
mini-bikes are dangerous. So, what isn't?
Just walking on the sidewalk nowadai,s
seems to be a danger in itself. Eai:h
day that we leave our he.mes for obr
daily activity, we take our lives tnlo
our hands. '
LET'S FACE IT, kids are kids, and
boys will be boys (do I sound like
your Mother?). But how can we let
kid~ bl! kids, when thl! law prohibib 1 their attempt at kid activity, pushe..r;
them off mini-bikes into the poo1 halts.
fines the kids (which comes out or
the partnts' pockets into the clty
treasurvl and then throws up their hand!l
and tens the mothf'r. "Lady, you'vt
got • problem ? ..
MRS. JOAN G. LENNERT
-----Friday, January 17, 1969
TM fdjtonaJ page of tilt t>aar
PUoc 1ttk1 to inform and itim..
lllatt tto<Urs bv prutnti110 thit
rtnnpaptr'1 opinton.s and com-
Nftfatt1 on topfct of interest
tmd Jignificonct. b11 protridi110 a
fonmt for lilt fl'prl!'IJiOfl Of
ow rcoden' ophtiofi1, and by
J)ttlftti11g Che dttttrst Ditto-'°"'" of fnfonned obie-rwr1
:::. tp0kt1mt11 on topic1 of tht
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
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BY
WILLIAM
REED
Reeds •••
In the Wind
Bob B u r k e I R-Huntlngton
Beach) who toils in the jungles
of Sacramento for the people Of
West Orange County, at least for
those in the 70th Assembly District,
has been a busy boy with the start
of the 1969 season in· lawmaker
land.
He wasn't first , but he did
manage to dump No. 5 into the
hopper. AB 5 is a measure which
could continue the requirement
Utat override taxes be voted on
by local taxpayers.
Slipped into the hopper also is
AB 31 which if passes would reduce
the "area wide tax" for non·unified
school districts from $1 to 60 cents.
There are a couple of others. but
I'm sure Bob is still writing more.
* Kathy Mcintyre, an Orange Cost
College student. will twirl her
baton during the pro bowl game
Sunday. She was a baton twirler
at OCC during the football season
and has been a Ramette for two
years.
Also twirling will be Sherrill, her
14-year old sister. Sherrill attends
D\vyer Intermediate School and
this is her first year as a Ramelte.
The girls, who auditioned for the R a m e t t e positions, ·ate the
daughters or Kay Mcintyre, 8402
Heron Circle.
* The second Community Congtess
for IIuntington Beach has been
scheduled for March 22 by the
chamber of commerce. It is under
direction of R. Dudley Boyce,
president of Golden West College.
Working with him are Mrs.
Elizabeth Casey, Mayor Alvin M.
Coen. Dale Dunn, Paul Frizzell,
Dr. Max Forney, Jack Froggatt,
Dr. Clarence Hall, Jack Higley.
Pete Horton, Ralph C. Kiser, Ben
Londeree, Mrs. Kennety Marytn.
Howard C. Matheny, Thomas
Overton. Ken Reynolds B i I I
Schweikert, Mrs. Joan 'warner,
Howard Whittaker and Bill Woods.
Hopefully. the event will be a
step toward solving some of the
serious problems facing Hun·
tington Beach.
Man Admits Guilt
In Armed Heist
Two Hunlingt-On Beach men accused
of taking $50 at gunpoint from the Five
Points Shell station in that city pleaded
guilty to amended charges Wednesday
io Superior Court.
Judge Robert Gardner ordered Jerry
~nn Clanton, 22, to serve six months
iil county jail on the second degree
robbery count. Jeffrey Harris, 19, who
lives with Clanton at 1913'l Huntington
Drive, was committed to the California
Youth Authority (CY . .\) for an indefinite
term.
Both men. who were accompanied by
a juvenile, were arrested by HWJtington
Beach police last Nov. S shortly after
the robbery of the Five Points service
station. Their 17-year-old companion was
committed to Juvenile Hall for a Is.day
detention period.
Trikes Gathered
'
By Harbor Elks
Christmas all year for bike and trike.
less youngsters in t h e Harbor Area is
an idea being rostered by the Newport
Harbor Elks Lodge.
Lodge members are collecting used
tricycles and bicycles, reconditioning
them, and giving them free of charge
to children in need.
.Stan Panek, Box 384, Huntington
Btach, is asking all residents who have
such it e m s gathering dust tn th e i r
garages or store rooms to clear their
space by donating them to this cause.
Either drOp him a line or pbone him
at 536-0431.
1'7-year-old Boy Found
Guilty of SFV Arson
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A 17·year .. ld
member of lbe Black Student Union
has been found gilllty of al"!On by a
JuvenJle court referee in conneclk>n wllh
a $100,000 fire at San Fernando Vallty
St;te College.
Eugene J. King, o freshman at Valley
Slate, was remanded to the California
Youth Authority Wednesday by referee
Phillip Smith.
Building Plam
'
Police Chief Says
Need Action Now
By WIWAM, REED
Of .. Dloll\t • ..,. .....
lluntlngton Beach Police Chief John
Seltzer aaya that , plans to build a new
police facility land a new civic center
are fine, but oe needs more space to
houJe his IO<Ce right now.
On Jao. I the dty council ordered
the adminlslratlon to take Immediate
stepa toward aetting a new civic center
financed and desl3nec1.
1be civlc center action came after
Chief Seltf<r pl<4J!ed for CODStrUction
of a oew annex to the present police
facilities on 5th Street. A building of
~.ooo square feet is needed oow for
holding and booking operations, iden-
tificatibn bureau . and mugging and
fingerprinting rooms, be said.
''It appears that even if we start
working now, in earnest, on the civic
center project. the most optimistic pro-
jection will not provide for completion
of the new police facilities for at least
36 months.
"Our needs are such that we feel
that is no way to avoid the construction
of the requested 3,000 feet of additional
annex buildings," said the chief.
The current jail facility was built in
1927 to serve a city of 2,500 persons.
During the past year, nearly three times
that number were p~ through
the police station.
Chief Seltzer said that during this
OCC Students
Turn Down Bid
For SDS Group.
An attempt to form a Students for
a Democratic Society (SOS) chapter on
the Orange Coast College campus has
at the very least been sidetracked.
The Inter.Club Council voted 23 to
6 with one abstention Tuesday against
SOS petitioners. The council, made up
of presidents of campus clubs, recom-
mends on approval of new student
organizations,
The half dozen students wanting to
form a SDS chapter contended their
goals are different from the national
group, which, in the words of Dean
of Student Activ-ities Joseph Kroll, "seeks
to disrupt the educational process."
An observer to the voting said club
presidents took the attitude "lf they
adopt the SOS name they are affiliating.''
Since the vote went against them,
the SOS petitioners have not indicated
what their plans are. Two apparent <1p-
~~~s t~~e =~~al t~ ~~t~i:nt c~bun~~t
use a different name.
Earlier, Inter-Club Council advisor
Marie Howes wrote to each club
president:
"The (SDS) movement expresses a
deep hatred for American society today
and a lack: of faith in the democratic
procedure .•. The national Students for
a Democratic Society sees itself as a
revolutionary group, manipulating into
situations of confrontation with authority
using force and anarchistic methods."
Barry Weinberg, spokesmen for the
petitioners, reportedly replied:
"The right to organize is the basic
right of all Americans. If Mrs. Howes
caMot recognize the right of free speech,
then she has the hatred of American
society, for this is the foundation of
the democratic process."
past summer "we have fOW'ld the exJsting
facility was totaUy inadequate. On each
weekend it was necessary to trwport
large groups or prisoners to Orange
County jaU.
"Because of serJous overcrowding it
was neee.ssary to bandcuff prisoners to
doorknobs, desks and other locaUon.s in
view of the p.ibHc," explained the chief.
Presenily the old building Is being
remodeled, but Chief Seltzer pointed out
that the job has actually reduced the
capacity of the jail in order to meet
fire codes.
In 1961, 6,873 persons were p~
through the poUce facilities. Of these
4,74& wel'f: juveniles and 2,127 adults.
Three years ago. in 1965. the total was
2,491 through the same facilities.
Three Years from now -in 1971 -
the estimated total will be about 13,424
processed through the jail, according
to Chief Seltzer.
Biggest need is for short term holding
of juveniles amd those who will be
freed on bail, he explained.
The detective annex was built in 1962
to bouse nine persons. In addition, the
temporary building was expected to last
only two years so it has no permanent
foundation and has no plumbing.
.C.UrrenUy 19 persons use the building,
g1vmg 62 square feet of office space
per man. The building code requires
a minimum of 100 square feet per person
in an office.
The detective division needs 2,000
square feet of the proposed additional
annex. The space would house detectives,
polygraph, photo equipment a n d
darkroom, laboratory and interview
rooms. ,
The identification bureau preaentlY"
boasts 41 square feet for the five persons
~ing ~ space daily and more @ace
1s required immediately, said the cNet.
Cost of building a new annex has
been estimated by the city engineers
as about $20,000 depending on wbeth.er
it is built by city crews or contractors.
The city presently is building a new
annex to the administration building to
house the city attorney and his staff.
In the meantime the staff presumably
is going ahead with plans for a new
civic center on Main Street at Mansion
Avenue ac ross from Huntington Beacb
High School, a site still opposed by
three members oI Ule COWlcil. ·
Chief Sellzer says he cannot wail (or
the new facilities and the administration
and council say they do not want to
pour more tax dollars into the present
outmoded buildings.
Little League
Signups Continue
Response to the announcement of
registration for the Ocean View Little
League was so great the last weekend
that some or the boys signing up for
the 1969 baseball season may have
to be placed on a wailing list.
Signups for the league are scheduled
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
from noon lo 4 p.m. Sunday. Registration
must be on a first come, first served
basis, said league of(icers.
Boys returning to the baseball wars
after last season must register before
4 p.m. Sunday or they will have to
take their chances with the waiting liSt.
Questions on the signups or the league
may be directed to Jlm Glfford at 847·
8416.
Support Pledged
OCC Students Urge Bond Election
Unexpected urging by four students
caused Orange Coast Junior College
District trustees Wednesday night to give
more thought to holding another bond
election.
Connie Pfister. Heiko Pischel. Charles
Conway and Bob Seymour, all active
in Orange Coast College student affairs,
promised widespread student support in
another bond election try.
They said students would make presen-
tations to local civic groups, man in-
formation booths at shopping centers,
and canvass house-to-house for votes.
Board members asked them to in-
formally poU other students on campus
to see if perhaps lhey really could muster
a large number of student workers.
The students' enthusiasm had its effect.
Trustee Robert Humphreys, of Costa
Mesa, said be has not previously been
in favor of another bond election. but
if students Would actively support one
so would he.
He said he felt previous district failures
to gain support for financial measures
had been due in part to popular reaction
against student unrest on other campuses
in the stale. '
··we (board members) as adults cannot
change the po?.'1ar concepUon of the
student," he said, .. but you u ttudtnts
certainty coold. U JOO actively support
a bond election, \htn to wUI I."
Trustee J, O'Hara Smith, of Corona
del Mar, also expressed interest in .a
bond election backed by students.
The four students said they m
particularly c on c e r n e d at the
overcrowding and need for new buildings.
ft was not discussed wbethtr a similar
student effort could be started on lhe
Colden West campus aerving tbe West
County area where district finance
I
measures traditionally have gone down
to defeat.
In the $7.25 million bond vote last
September the issue carried handily in
Costa Mesa, got almost exactly the re-
quisite two-thirds approval in Newport
Beach and HunUngton Beach but failed
in Westminster, Midway Citf and Seal
Beach.
Since then, trustees have discussed
at ahnost every meeting whether to
hold another bond election or to levy
a tax override of as much as 25 cents
when a new law makes· that possible
in July. Still no dedaion bas been reach-
ed.
Wednesday night, Supt. N o r m a n
Walson suggested four possible bond
election dates -AprU 29, May 20, June
10 aod June 24 -but said he didn't
want the board to make a decllion
yet beca113e -"we owe you addiUcmal
information."
Llhrary Offers
Film on Grizzly
"Grizzly," a 52-minute color film pro.
duced by the National G<osr•ohic Socl ..
ty, is the loolght's offering ot the Hun-
tington Beach Public Library Film
Forum.
During the 7:30 p.m. r ... -rung
viewen will see the work of two brother
sclcntists, Frank and John Craighead,
who roam Yellowstone National Part
armod wllh dnJ&-fllled darta and el«>
tronlc trackinc gear to 1atber in·
formation on grizzly bean.
----------------
'"da" J_,. 17, 19&1 s
UPIT__,.
Leading Assembly Majority
This trio of Republican lawmakers makes up key
portion o! leadership in 1969 Assembly controlled by
the GOP. From left are Frank Lanterman of Pasa-
dena, chairman of the influential Ways and Means
Committee; Assembly Speaker Robert Monagan ~f
Tracy, and W. Craig Biddle of Riverside, Majority
Floor Leader. Lanterman is a land developer,
Monagan an insurance agent, Biddle an attorney.
Valley Slates 2 Tourneys
..... Deadline for registration In the third
a!lllual Fountain VaJley "All City" tennis
tournament is Monday.
Registration will be open in five·
divisions, men's singles. men's doubles,
women's singles, boys under 18 singles
and girls under 18 singles.
Players can sign-up at the Fountain
Vallry City Hall cashier's office, 10200
Slater Ave. The fees are $2.50 for adult
singles, $3.50 for adult doubleS' and $1 .50
for youth singles. Tournament play will be Jan. ZS and
-
26 and Feb. 1 and 2 on the Fountain
Valley High School tennis courts. Starting
time for the first matches will be 9
a.m.
The tournament is ro.sponsored by
the Fountain Valley Parks and Re<:rea·
tion Department and the Fountain Valley
Tennis Club.
Trophies will be given in winners and
consolation brackets of all divisions.
Potential table tennis champions can
register now through Jan. 22 for the
seconcf ·annual Founialn Valley ·Parks
and Recreation Department's "City
Table Tennis Championships."
All players 18 and over who live ar
work in Fountain Valley may register
at the Founain Valley City Hall cashier's
office.
Registration fees are 't,50 for singles
and $3 for doubles.
The tournament will be held at 7
p.m,. Jar.. 27 and SI, in the Fountain
Valley High SChool Gymnasium.
2 new !ife style •••
~it!h lfOW' own beach!
CROWN_ VRLLEY
HIGHUl~DS*t
al LIJn fiaual IJr 1111 Seisin I
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.. " ..... lillA ,.._c....,,,.-190.. .....
..,C.,._t..n.i
$23,000-111d you own the lanfl
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.......... .,_ ... ..., ........ J ..... .....
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.......... Cll!Woa. .. 1-
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A Special Preview Party
FOR SOUTH COAST FAMILIES ONLYI
Sat., Jan. 18 From 2 to 5 p.m., tha striking new homes of
CROWN VALLEY HIGHLANDS will be Offered for Saler
First Come, First Choice-Refreshments will be Served I
--
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' llAll. V .f!LOT
Agnew N a111ed Liaison
Will Deal With State, Local Governnients
~. ~ .. -o.itr .,. ......
The : one-1 in e adverU1ement
aaked: • "Are you interested in
sex!" lt look two hours of dialing to ·get through to the telephone
number lilted and the caller was
greeted by a recorded male votce
saying: "One of the first nlles of
the Communist Revolution is to
corrupt the morals of the youth
primarily by sex or a breakdown
in the moral code .... " The tele-
phOne number was the Amarillo
Tex. Freedom Information Center. •
A formtr gang1ter who knew
Bonnit and Clydt returned to
W. his homt. city, Montreal, afttr
~~ 33 11t0rs in pris'on and one o/ P. the thing1 he plam to do ii set ~ the movie about the notorious
'
, pair. Alvin Karpis, 61, co-leader
of the Karpis-Ma Barker gang
says ht knew Bonnie and Clydt
~1 as "a couple. o/ ju11·loving kids."
• When the youth dashed past
Mrs. Edne Jones, 66, of Detroit and
grabbed her purse, she just kept
walking, boarded her bus and went
to work. It was the sixth time in
the past two years Mrs. Jones'
purse has been s~atcb~4· This time
'S he carried her money elsewhere
and the/urse held her lllll<:h -a
piece o chicken. cookies"" and a
cupcake. • A burglar looted the home •I
Dorothy Kennedy Brooks this week
and hauled off the presents that
were still under the Christmas
tree. The take included a $1,000
dlamond watch. Mrs. Brooks of
Houston said she and her l~year
old daughter sometimes leave the
tree up until March because they
like lo look at it. •
flow does it fetl to learn that loved
one wiU be com.ing home after nearlt1
18 yeara? Mrs. Morton SobeU and her
mother-in-law Mrs. Rost Sobel! show
~rp contrast& m emotion after they
learned that husband-son Mortoii So-
Qelf, who WM impri$on.ed in a con·
spiracy to give Rua!ia atomic bomb
secrets, had won his release from
f~deral prison. • A pair of bandits held up a drive-
in grocery io Dallas taking all ol
U1e cash. Before they left, they
Ibid the night manager to do 120
pusbups. The next night, the same
Pair held up the same store again
and took the cash from the same
riight manager. They also took his
wallet but then they relented. This
time, they said, he ooly had to do
105 pushups.
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. <UPI) -Pmi-
dtnt.-eled: Richard M. Nixon deilg111ted
Vice Preoldent.elect Spiro T. A&new as
bis chief llalaon wlih state and Ioctl gov-
emnwita today and charged him with mollni !lie fed<rll macblnery "recep-
tlve0 to their needs.
In a ILatfment Issued from his ,vaca·
Uoe beadquarl<n, Nixon 1ald A&n•w
"wfll eneoorage and wist In faeilitating
muimum cooperation between the var-
IOUI federal qeocleo and slate and Ioctl
govemmenta."
"It wUI be hi>' mpons!billty to make
tlie federal machinery sena!Uve, ttcOp-
tive and ~sponsJve to their view1/'
Nixon also said Agnew would work
closely with the Advlaory COmmlsslon
on Inter-governmental Relatiooa and en·
courage Its work. ,
"Absolutely ...0.Ull to my admlill-~auon is a more pra<:Ucal ·and· funo-
\ional role for 8tlte and klcal pvern-
ment olllctals In U.. fonnulatlonl and
execution of federal policies, P'Qll'&mS,
goals and priorities," Nlxotl said.
"Our slate and !QCal olflcllla have the
dilli<ult job of meshing lederll asai1t-
RUSKS DEPART -Mrs. Dean Rusk sheds a tear during the playing
of "Auld Lang Syne" as State Department employes say goodbye to
her and Secretary Rusk at a reception in the department's auditor·
ium Thursday night.
Senate Bids President
A Sentimental Farewell
WASHINGTON !UPO -'The Senate
paid tribute to President Johnson today
in a warm farewell that joined political
friends and foes .
Sen. Mite Mansfield, who succeeded
Johnson as Senate Democratic leader,
Lodge Promises
Every Effort
For Viet Peace
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ambassador
Henry Cabot Lodge pledged today that
as President-elect Richard M. Nixon's
chief negotiator in Paris, he will do
everything in his power to achieve sue·
cess in the Vietnam peace talks.
After a closed meeting with the Sen·
ate Foreign Relations Committee, Lodge
told newsmen that he considers the ne·
gotlaUons a matter of "greatest urgency
and supreme importance." ·
He also described himself as a "real-
ist'' on Vietnam, and is neither a dove
nor a hawk.
Chairman J. William Fulbright. ( D--
Ark.), said Lodge "gave me the impres-
sion be is anxious to get these negolia-
tlons under way" and bring the war to
a close. Fulbright said he felt a cease-
fire should be the first order of business
in Paris.
s;iid the President "kepl alive the pro-
mise of liberty and justice for all."
Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the
Republican who lost the presidency to
Johnson in the 1964. landslide., said the
outgoing chief executive had served
"with credit and honor."
Republican leader Everctl M. Dirksen
of Illinois intoned: •·Hail and farewell
and godspeed .''
Later in the day, Johnson arranged
t.o make a valedictory appearance before
the Washington news corps by attending
the annual membership meeting of the
National Press Club.
At the Senate cereniony, Gold~·ater
jested that he views Johnson "with mixed
emotions.''
He praised Johnson's "superb
performance'' in the days following the
assassination of the late President John
F. Kennedy in 1963. Then the former
GOP candidate cracked that in the 1964
election he· "singlehandedly conferred
upon him the title of landslide Johnson."
Mansfield said in the perspective of
hi story, "Lyndon Johnson will have been
seen to have linked the past with the
present."
"When Lyndon Baines Johnson leaves
the nation's capital, we shall ntiss him,"
Dirksen said. "He shall also miss us."
The President was bo1ving out on a
nole of achievement -the latest being
the breakthrough in the Paris talks on
possible peace in Vietna1n.
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aoce with llJdr ~. and I !eel there
is n.o group tn a better position 'to ad-
vise the rederal government on how to
improve domestic programs than these
men and women who have the ultimate
respomibllity for carrying them ouL"
Nixon sa..id the federal departments
and agencies al.go would look to Agnew
as his personal representative to smooth
out rough spots in their relaUoos with
state and local government.s.
"We want lo reverse the &tu.e.tion
wherein slate and local officials merely
get the word from Wdtlngton," NtzOn
said.
"Rather we want the federal govern·
ment to get the word from the state and
local governments on how they view
pending federal decisions, what their
priorities are, how they feel feder:al aid
ca.n be structured so as to be more help-
ful to \hem, where the defects in our
grants-in-aid program are, all of which
will belier enable us to better respond to
the many critical problems confronting
our state and loca1 governments."
Nixon issued the statement as he end·
eel a four-day working vacation at his
bayside home and prepared to Oy back
to New York.
Czech Youth
Burns Self
As Sacrifice
PRAGUE (UPI) -A young student
·who set. himself aflame in Wenceslas
Square Thursday was one of 15 students
who have vowed to sacrifice themselves
one at a time every three days until
student demand! for political reforms
are mef, student sources said today.'
The student, Jai'I Palach, 21, was said
by the Ministry of Education to be
in "extraordinarily grave" condition in
a hospital with third degree burns cover·
ing 85 percent or hls body.
Palarh, a history and po Ii ti c a I
economics student, could not be ques,
tioned immediately as to exactly why
he doused himself with gasoline near
a fountain at the head 0£ the square
and then ran covered with flames into
the street. Dr. Jidzila Dolezalova of
the clinic or plastic surgery at Legerova
Ho.!lpital said visitors had been turned
away from the hospital because he must
be isolated Crom infettion.
The student sources said the JO-point
llst of demands was the same as that
adopted during a massive student sit-in
strike in November. It included requests
for personal liberties. press freedom and
for .ob_servanc~ of principles of soverign-
ty 1n 1nternat1onal relalions. The list did
not specifically mention the invasion or
the Soviet Union.
Palach struck a match to his soaked
clothing Thursday in front of the National
!i.1useum, still scarred by thousands of
Soviet machine gun bullets from the
Aug. 21 invasion.
Woman Opposes
Death, Dismissed
As Sirhan Juror
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A prospective
woman juror who said she could not
pos~bly _bring in . the dealh penalty
against Sirhan B. Sirhan was dismissed
today from service in the trial by Judge
Herbert F, Walker.
Walker ruled that legal precedent was
such that Mrs. Alvina Alvidre z could
be excluded for cause because of her
statement that she could not bring in
a verdict of death "under any
circumstances."
The ruling was not expected, however,
to bar persons who have general feelings
against capital punishment. It seemed
likely they would be permitted to serve
at least on that part of tbe trial which
decides on Slrhan's guilt or innocence
in the slaying of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
\Valker made his ruling al the opening
session of the trial today in which ten
jurors -five women and five men
-already have been seated.
Three prospective jurors, two men and
the wife of an undertaker, were seated
Thursday.
One is Benjamin Glick, owner of a
retail clothing outlet in West Los Angeles.
In his first question to the Jewish juror
chief defense counsel Grant B. Cooper
said the Arab-Israeli stiualion was sure
Lo come up during the trial.
Hick~I Grilled
By Interior Unit
WASHlNGTON (AP) -Alaska Gov.
\Valter J. Hickel, Presidenl~tec:t Nixon's
cholct as secrttary of int.eri~, pledged
today he will not overturn a cont'roversial
federal order halting Alaska's takeover
of federal lands.
Chairman Henry M. Jackton (().
Waah.). ol lhe Senate lntcrlor Committee
drtw the a55UrRnce from Hickel after
some preliminary l'>parring during the
govtmor's third day of committee
~1liny.
Two othtr Stnate commtttees
meanwhile were grappUng with the. que!i·
1 • ,,r hnv.• far they should go tn forcing
government offlclals to dispose of
,..l:rsvnttl financial holdings.
HAYAKAWA NEARLY BOMBED IN SAN FRANCISCO
P~lice $ft. Frenk GrMr Ex1min1s Dev ice Found Near Office
Bomb Found Qt SF
San Jose State President
Lists 25 'Resignations'
By United Preis lnternatlooal
President Robert Clark of San Jose
State College announced the "automatic
resignations" of 15 striking union faculty
members Thursday, including the head
of the American Federation of Teachers'
statewide college division.
They were the first to be ousted under
a provision of the state education code
which says teachers who stay away
from class for five consecutive days
without authorization are considered to
have resigned automatically.
There was no immediate indication
v.·hat action would be taken by the
AFT, which has warned that invocation
of the Jaw would result in sympathy
strikes at the state's 18 colleges and
mass action by unions generally.
A student-teacher strike at San Jose
State. now in its eighth day, ~in sym·
pathy with $trikes which have resulted
in 11 weeks of turmoil at San Francisco
State College, where a bomb was found
Thursday near the office of Aeling Presi-
dent SJ. Hayakawa.
Hayakawa has announced similar ac-
tion against striking teachers on his
campus, where the AFT represents 350
of the school's 1,300 faculty men1bers.
Ho~·ever, he has announced no specific
"resignativns."
Clark said he· planned to send 25
to 30 more notices of resignation to
striking San Jose teachers in the next
few days. But, he asked the AcadeJ?1.iC
Council to establish procedures for
"reinstatement of faculty on an in·
dividual basis. once the strike is con-
cluded.''
He said he felt the state Jaw was
"unnecessarily punitive," that it is
"almost impossible to hire qualified
faculty members" al this time of the
year, and that many of the strikers
"are valued teachers who would be
difficult to replace at any time."
Among those dismissed Thursday was
John 'Sperling, head of the AFT at Ure
state colleges. He scoffed at the proposal
he and others could seek reinstatement
on an individual basis. ·
"When the strike is over, we·~ going
to march back into our regular status,''
Sperling told a rally of 1,500 cheering
supporters. "You don't go out on strike
to come back begging."
Among others addressing the rally was
Timothy Leary, the former Harvard pro-
fessor who turned psychedelic guru. He
gave the strikers his "blessings" and
predicted San Jose State "will inevilahly
become a place to learn to make love
better."
* * * * * * Hayakawa Tells Business
Of Turmoil:' You're Next'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Dr. S. 1.
Hayakawa says the problems at San
Francisco State College may come from
some faculty members wbo fortned "a
kind of kamikaze squadron. a group
of middle-aged adolescents bored with
their work, trying to get a little ex-
citement stirred up."
Hayakawa acting president of San
Francisco State, said Thursday that
student unrest and attacks from left-wing
groups threaten higher education today.
but not as much as dissident faculty
members.
He made the observations in a speech
before the annual meeting of the
California State Chamber of Commerce,
where he warned business leaders that
"it's your tum next" to experience
pressures of student unrest.
Hayakawa later met with Gov. Reaaan
for 30 minutes, and both said at a.
news conference that they agree on the
basic policies the college administration
is following to k~p the San Francisco
campus open.
Hayakawa, in his speech, predicted
that black men will be able to assert
themselves economically and socially
some day and tbe turmoil will end.
Reagan, at the. r.ews conference, in-
dicated he does not believe blacks alone
are behind the Lroubles.
"The time is approaching,'' he said,
"when the Black Studfnts Union is going
to have to realize that they in a sense
have been victims of the Students for
a Democratic Society."
The SOS. the governor said. "hasn't
the slightest interest in the world that
they -the BSU -are achieving any
ethnic studies success or any of their
goals or aims."
He said the SOS "has an aim of
using thi? campus, or any campus, as
a launching pad for insurrection."
Hayakawa told the business leaders
at the luncheon that they represent what
blacks regard as the "white power struc-
ture."
"It is a commentary on you r neglect
over tbe last SO years that the.re art
all whhes and so damned few blacks
here."
The problems of student unrest, he
said, "will catch up with you in a
few years in business and industry and
government. These kids are graduatinG
in the next couple of years. They'll
come to you.''
Spa~e Ra~e Pa~e
Russ Could Overtake U.S., Says LBJ
WASHINGTON !UPI) -President
Johnson told Congress tod,ay the Russians
are now launching more a:pacteraft than
lhe Uni.led Slates and "could overtake
and possibly surpass the U. S."
The president's annual report on U. s. space activities said the Apollo I
flight around the moon and back "greatly
enhanctd the prtsti&e _of lhe United
Slates 11s lhe leading spact-faring na·
lion."
But Johnson left to Pre!ldent-t1td
Richard M. Nixon decisions Ofl any areat
new programs lo follow project Apollo.
JohnlOn's rtport credited the Unltad
Stat.es wUb a wide lead ovtr Ru.s.111i1
in prac11cal appllcatlmn of spat:e ex-
ploration,, such as "eat her, com·
municallons and oavlgaUon satelUtes,
and In contributions to sclentt.
The report dlStlosed that since space
\
--------
flight began sonle 11 years ago the
United States has launched 606 spacecraft
compared to 3.')8 by Russia. At tht
end of 1968 the United Slates had ama~
ed 3,214 man -hours in space, Russia
631.
But lasl year the Russians Jofttd 81
spacecraft compared to 64 by the Unlted
Slate!. In a section or the report
prepared by the National Aeron1utie11
and Space Council, it was nottd that
at this rate the Ru!!ians could go Into
U.. lead.
The report was prel)llred before the
docking and crew transfer achievemeoll
of the Russian Soyuz 4 and $ spacecraft.
U. S. observers appraised lhe So)'UI
miialon as an important step in Soviet
plan,, to RO to the moon or build mannfd
stations in earth orbit.
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GOP Gets
Glowing
Report
'WASHINGTON !UPI)
~blican National Chairman
Rot C. BU.. ftve U,. GOP
a1;towi.na: report today on the
party'• progress 11.nce the 1914
eJeetlon di.wter but said
caref\ll planning still was villl
for future eltct.ions.
llliss, chairman since Apcil"
I, 1985, submllled hiJ report
to the first meeting of the
Republican National Com-
mittee since Rlchard M. Nix·
on's victory in the 11168
presldenUal election.
With charts and maps lo
Illustrate RepubllUn g.W, he
•aid:
"Since 1964 we moved from .
17 to 31 governorships, tPe
highest number since 19ZO;
from 32 to 43 seats in the
U.S. Senate, the most alnce
19$; from 140 to 191 seats
lo the U.S. Hou.se, high mark
since 19116. and from control
of seven to 20 state
legislatures, the most since
1954."
In the same period, he said.
the GOP gained M8 state
Heroes Line (Jp
President Lyndon Johnson poses with four 11.S.:
servicemen, two of them from the same small town
in Georgia, after presenting each with the Medal
of Honor for heroism in Vietnam. Receiving awards
were (from Jell) Navy Lt. Clyde E. Lassen, Ft.
Myers. Fla.; Marine Maj. Steph~n W. Pless, New.
nan, Ga.; Air Force Lt. Col. Joe M. Jackson, also
from Newnan, and Army SISgt. Drew D. Dix,
Pueblo, Colo.
legialative seaUJ, 1,420 county----..,,..--------------------------------------
offices and nearly 100 mayors.
"However impressive that
record may be, we must pla!l
carefully and intelligently for
the futurt,'' Bliss added. "I
believe we have an excellent
opportunity to win control of
Congress in 1970 and, with
Richard Nixon as our presi·
dent, I believe \\'e are on
our way to becoming the ma·
jority party once again."
AF Retaliation Memo
Revealed by Senator
The GOP must defy history
to win control of Congress
in the electiods next yea r.
The idministraUon p a r t y
normally· loses seats in elec-
tions in the midd1e o I
presidential terrils.
After a conference with Nix-
on last week, Bliss announced
that he had been asked to
stay in the job inde£initely.
Even some of his admirers
in the national organization
believed that "indefinitely"
meant no longer than six
months. Others felt that he
could stay as long as he
wanted the job.
Before the Nixon-Bliss con-
ference, there were reports
that Nixon -or some of
his staff aides -wanted a
more handsome, articulate
spokesman in the
chainnanship instead of an
organizational "nuts and
bolts" craftsman like Bliss.
\VASHlNGTON (AP) -Sen.
William Proxmire (~Wis.),
coaxed an Air Force official
into insisting lhat no retalia-
tion was planned against an
efficiency expert w1Jo;r6'1_ealed a $2. b1llion Pentagon error
in estimating the cost of a
new plane, then dramatically
read into the record a_ secret
memo detailing three ways
to fire the man.
The senator, chairman ot
the J o i n t Economy sub-
committee and a persistent
critic of Defense Department
procurement practices, called
the memo "the most shocking
retaliation against a public
Wire Guild
Strike Ends
NEW YORK (UPI) -Wire
Service Guild (WSG)
members returned to work to-
day in Associated P r e s s
bureaus across the country,
their eight-day strike against
the news agency ended by President
Puzzler
R, two-to-one membership ac-t! cept.ance of a management
~ contract proposal.
t} AP offered the ugion a
i,i three-year pact, with top-scale
salaries fot: newsmen ... risin&
to $l$O a week during its
last year. The guild had urged
members to reject the pro·
posal.
servant I have seen in the
11 years I have been in the
Senate."
Proxmire said it "directly
ccntradicted" ph:ages by Air
Force ofli,clals tl'.at ~ aCtl9n ~
would be taken against the
efficiency expert, A. Ernest
Fitzgerald, "'·ho disclosed the
$2 bililon overrun in earlier
testimony before the sub-
committee.
The incident occurred
Thursday during a sub-
committee hearing w i t h
Robert H. Charles. assistant
secretary for installat!ons and
logistics, in the witness chair.
Charles, unruffled. said the
memo merely outlined
"various things that could
happen under certain con-
ditions."
At issue is the cost of the
C'\SA, a giant jet transport
plane built for the Air Force
by Lockheed Corp. Filzgerald.
deputy for management
systems to the assistant
secretary for fin a n c i a I
mana~ement, testified before
the Proxmire subcommmittee
last November that develop:
ment of the plane had cost
$2 billion more than .the Pen-
tagon had ba rgained for.
Nonetheless, the Pentagon
demonstrated its satisfaction
Thursday with the airplane,
if oot the bargain.
The Air Force announced,
while Assistant Secretary
Charles was on the stand , that
it would buy 23 more planes.
Opposition
Inaugural
Ball Okayed
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government has finally agreed
to allo\v antiwar demonstra-
tors to ereet a big. multicol-
ored tent in downtown Wash·
ington for their "counterinau-
gural" ball Sunday night
The demonstrators. who
plan a "counterinaugural" pa·
rade down Pennsylvania Ave-
nue Silndav, the day before
. Prestdent-eiect Nixon's inau·
gural parade. will also use
the tent as a staging area.
Harry R. Van Cleve of the
Gener<il Services Administra-
tion. the government spokes·
man dealing with the protest-
ers announced Thursday aft·
er davs of haga:ling that t h e
tent ·had the government's
okay. The parade permit had
already been issued.
Airlines Get
OK to Raise
Fares 3.8%
WASHINGTON (AP) -The\
Civil Aeronautics Board has!
tenta tively agreed to a 3.8
percent1 iqcAate iii do~c
airline pas>:enger fares.
The CAB said final approval
()f the increases, which pro-
bably would go into effect
March I, will be made after
a "careful analysis of tariffs"
to be filed by the airlines.
Six major airlines had ap· I
plied for fare increases 0£
five to seveo percent. A CAB
spokesman said Thursday in·
creases that large are "not
warranted at this time."
The six wer~ .American,
Braniff, Eastern, Northeast,
Trans World and United.
The increase tentatively ap-
proved would have this effect
on ticket buyers:
-Each first.-class fare for
a trip of "any distance" wou1d
go up $3 one way.
--Certain first-class fares
for Easl·West trips of 800
miles or more in specific
markets where fares
heretofore have been lower
than industry norms would be
increased by $1 to $7 depen-
ding on the distance.
-Coach f\j.res for flights up
to 500 miles would be in--
creased by $1 one way. Fot
flights of 500 to 1,800 miles
they would be increased by
$1 one way. They would not
be increased for flights above
1,800 miles.
flldll, J .. Ul/Y 17, 1'169 DAILY PILOT IS
Britain Leads Opposition
Allies Balk at Delense Hike
e!:USSE~1~u:~~ ~~ ~v~~~°e':lfil.::°:':or~ ft:!~ ~~~s w~nn:r:: ~
at Cican cal~ for an before having to make the la sDtDdln.11: nearly fcur times increase In defense spending decision 10 use nuclear weap-u inuch Jor defense-nearly
to counter Russia's superior• ons In case ot eonfllct. $80 billion-than •ll her 12
Uy fu manpower and non-•;;;Th~e;;U~n~iliied;i,;Sla~tes-i;;;;i;lhr;;;;Oll;:gliii;;;;;Eu~roii" ~-all1es coinbloed. nucltar arms. II
The Europeans al a de-
feMe ministers' conference
of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) Thurs·
day all af!:reed lo increase
· their contributions-on paper.
But they balked at demands
by U.S. Deputy Def.,,.. Sec-
retary Paul Nitze. that lhey
step up spending to enable the
• West to match the Soviets in
nomluclear weaponry a n d
manpower. The past history of
NATO commibnenls is one of
unfulfilled goals.
The opposition is being led
by Britain, still in serious
economic difficulties.
Briti3h D e f e n s e Minister
Dennis Heale,y told the NATO
conlerence his government
felt it \Vas ecooornlcally im·
posglble for the Europeans: to
match the Warsaw Pact in
conventional weaponry.
He urged new gllidelines be
set for the use oi nuclear
weapons in lhe event of a So-
viet attack. implying lirnits1
should be set to noMuclear
spending.
Healey has reportedly gain·
ed the approval of other Euro-
pean ministers and of the
Supreme Allied Commander
in Europe, American Gen.
Lyman L. Lemnitzer, for
early use of nuclear weap-
onry.
Some Europeans see the 1 United States as wanting them I
to foot lhe additional bill £or
Old World
Mediterranean
Spanish Furniture
Received un .. tlatlon of $22,000.00
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quilted sofa wilh separate loose pillows with
heavy oak trim decor and matching chair, 3
mat.citing oak occasional tables, (2) 58" tall
decorator lamps, banging chain swag lamps
in wrought iron, an 8 piece king size master
bedroom suite in pecan panelled M.edlterran·
ean style with top quality 15 yr. warranty
king size mattress & box springs. Spanish
decor dinin2.set. etc.
w~ M...t•I ... ,...,,.., s1s21.oa
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Any Piece Can Be Purchased Individually
Terrm.Av1il1bl1 -Newcomers to Calif.
:Cr9dlt Approved Immediately
f /I /) Furniture
At Harbor Blvd.
1844 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa only
Every night 'til 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'til 6.
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Sat., Jan. 18 11 a.m. 'til sold out
1331 Warehouse Road -Costa Mesi
block east of Harboc -I block south of Beker
MODEL HOME FURNIT'JIRi~·~
ACCESSORIES & EQUIPMENT "'· '
Oesi9r:ier collections of furniture &; · Cllcorator
pieces from one of the largest home builders
Ch1lr1
Sofas
Chtsts
Dressers
Dining Rioom
Sewing Machines
1n Orange County.
Btdroom Sets
Record Player
Tape Recorder$
81nqu.t Tablas
Conference Chairs
Electric Fixtures
Occa1ton1I TeblH
Occttion1I 1Ch1lr1
Bar '
Bar Stools
Pictures
T elevislo'n
•
7'/2' Child's SPffd Boat -100'1 of other iMms too numerous to mention
-INSPECTION 9 A,M. DAY OF SALE -
' •
] etliner in N edr Collision
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A involved one "coming off" the Stewardesses Karen Anderson,
United Air Lines jelliner tanker plane. Lindy Mendolia and Pam
swerved sharply to misB a The Federal Aviation Ag en-McGovern, of San Francisco,
Navy jet in the air north cy will invest i gale to and Lorraine Gause, of Los ?f. S~n Diego late Thursday, determine which plane was Angeles w~re shaken up.
1nJur1ng 6 of the 57 persons in the proper lane, an FAA It was the third aerial In·
aboard. sj>okesman said. The Miramar cident over California this
LARGE 23'' COL~R
'.fhe plane, flying from San spokesman said the incident week.
Diego to San Francisco, made occu red in an area 35 miles A Scandinavian A i r 11 n es
By WJWAM MANSFIELD 11n unscheduled slop here for north of San Diego where 'System plane crashed in the
treat'!'ent of the injuries, military operations normally Pacific near Los Angeles Mon-
t. There was Dnly one Presi· described as minor. are conducted. day night, killing IS of the
dent who served in the United The Miramar Naval Air Sta-Minor cuts and bruises were 45 persons aboard. 0 n
States House of Representa-tion at San Diego said three suffered by two passengers, Wednesday, a Pac If i c tives after his term as Presi-of F8 Pah•nlom i'ets we•e I · 22
d ,_, Wh h ., · Patrick Wiliams. 41 , Salem, Southwest jet carrying ent eicpueu. O was e. practicing aerial refueJ;ng, Ore .. and D•. Pat 1' enc e b h d JI ht I a) John Quincy Adams: b) and the II' . • persons rus e a g p ane
\Villiam H. Harrison; c) Ruth-,----"-'_ar_c_o_'"-•_n_:p_co~ba::::b:::IY_:_N::°'::'::k::":.:·_:'.::9._:P:..•::l•::t::m::e:., ..::_11:;,L_:o::'.:":..::S•::n:..F:..'::':::"::ci::sc::o:..B::•:::Y:_· __
errord B. Hayes.
2. "All nf Oregon, all of.
Texas and $4° 40' or fight''
y,·as the campaign slogan of
which President?
a) James K. Polk; b) John
Tyler: c) Martin Van Buren.
3. This President was the
only one who served in the
Confederate House of Repre-
sentatives after his term as
U.S. President was over.
a) John Tyler ; b) Andrew
Jackson; c) James Buchanan.
4. Who was the smallest of
the American Presidents!
al James Madison: b) Calvln
Coolidge; c) William McKin-
le y.
s. "A typical uniform r o r
him conaisted of bapy col·
ton pants. a plain coat bear-
ing no insignia and a farmer·a
y,·ide brimmed straw hat. Ht
reviewed his troops seated
sideways on hls war hone."
Who i! thls President?
a) Zachary Taylor; b) Abra·
ham Lincoln: c) George Wuh-
lnflon.
ANSWEllS
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P I O.. l""'""'l"IN ·1 ·g
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HARBOR CENTER --231 HARIOl ILVD.
--
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• fDAILY PJLOj EDITORIAL PAG~
Bond Issue Postpo~ed
Trustees of Huntington Beach Union High School
Dlslrict wisely have decided to bold ofi a school con-
ltruction bond Issue proposition witil the Call. II won't
be put oo the April 15 ballot along with the trustee
eleclion.
Proposed had !>ten a $12 mlU!oo bond issue to bulld
one new school, boy an addlUonal school site, build
add.Jtiooal classrooms at Westminster High School, im·
prove the district headquarters arid. to provide a fund
to pay for repairs which might be needed at Hunting·
ton Beach High School.
The decision to postpone the election was unani·
mous, a marked contrast to the debate on what kind of
a bond proposition should be offered to the voters of
the 5i-square-mile dilltrict.
Trustee Matthew Weyttker said be thought that $8
million would be more palatable to the voters who have
shown no great tendency lately to approve any bond
issues.
Despite his backing of the $8 million figure, Weyu-
ker said he still felt that the $12 million amount was
needed to keep the district building progran1 going pro-
perly for three years.
Trustee Joseph Riha! said be did not feel the
amount was the key factor in a decision on the bond
proposal, but that timing was more important and that
there were other questions to be answered.
Ribal called for more time to study the matter be-
fore going to the voters again for school construction
money. His thought prevailed.
Board President John Bently ottered the best rea·
son for not beginning a bond campaign now. He point-
ed out that the board was not united behind the pro-
position, nor does it appear that the public is ready
to consider carefully the high school needs.
Perhaps just as important is the fact that three ot
the trustees must face the electorate on April 15 to bold
their seats. The actions of the board over the past
couple of years have left the voter confused enough to
Teachers of
Deficient
Need Faith
-'l''f
,Ev,fll'.yday,
Problems
" ' ,. •.. ~ •Yf ~
By NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
Teachers blame th9 dismal condiUons
of ghetto are.as for the poor performance
of DlOlt students in predominantly Negro
and Mexican-American schools. They
fault the nation and the cities for failing
to deal with the slum.a, rather than
aearch for newer methods of re.aching
and teaching these youngsters.
Since April, 1965, the nation's schools
have been given substantial federal funds
under the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act, wllh the goal of helping
disadVaotaged children overcome their
educational handicaps. The assumption
hu been that the deficiencies are all
In the child and in the environment
from which he comes. So far, the overall
results from many millions of dollars
apent on remedial instruction and
cultural enrichment have not been en·
couraging.
THERE IS increasing evidence that
a diaadvantaged child's shortcomings
st.em more from the teacher's mponse
to hi! ethnic, cu1tural and economic
background, rather than from his
background, per se.
U 12 students in a psychology
laboratory are each given five laboratory
rats or the same strain, there will be
an aceelerated perfonnance by half of
the rats in learning to run the maze
when the si:J: !tudents assigned to teach
them are told their animals have been
bred for brightness in running a maze.
The other all students, wher: told their
rats probably will be poor at running
a maze because of genetic reasons,
Ulll8.lly respond with less interest and
enthusiasm than those assigned to the
"brig.ht" group. Their rats may not even
budge from the starting position for
their ''teachers" usually have a hopeless,
"what's tbe use" attitude to begin with
and offer liWe incentive to learn.
SIMILAR EXPERIMENTS have been
reported when public school teachers
were kd to believe at the beginning
ol a ecbool year that previous tests
point to the probability of considerable
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Are our local drivers such fatalists
that they think they can't change
the statistical forecast that one of
every four drivers will be killed
or injured in the next 10 years?
Jt appears they couldn't care less
about the Golden Ru1e.
-D. R. L.
fftl• n11u,.. nflK" ,......,.,. v-. llOt
MU'IUl'lly IMM ef the -·-· S-,_ "' '"YI .. G•-· -... O.ll'r "1191.
academic improvement In c e r t a I n
stu~ts. Even though the children label-
ed as potential "spurten:" were chosen at
random and not on the basis of testing,
their academic achievement during the
year was considerably above the rest
of the class. For the teachers, con-
sciously and unconsciously, spurred them
on to greater heights.
Carl J. Dolce, superintendent of schools
in New Orleans, said recently : "A com·
mon notion among ghetto teachers is
that achievement levels are low com-
pared to middle-class children. So why
expect them to achieve very much ?"
Consequently most of them don't. Ghetto
schools usually are older, overcrowded,
and operate on a far rower budget when
compared to schools in middle class
suburbs. More important, most of the
teachers are novices, unable to cope
with the frustrations and disappointments
of teaching in ghetto schools.
CERTAINLY, dramatic changes, both
in the selection of teachers and in their
training and attitudes, will be necessary.
if disadvant.a,ged children are to get
all lhey possibly can from their school·
ing.
One successful Negro principal in a
Harlem school sponsored by the New
York Urban League and Catholic
Manhattanville College, attributes hi s
school's outstanding record with blacks,
most of tlH!m dropouts with criminal
records. more to his teachers '
"unshakable faith that the students can
make it" than to anything else. Hia
teachers teach, but more important, they
encoorage, talk, plead, scold and mold,
and they get results.
Far more important than what the
teacher learns in college are her
penionality structure, her biases and
prejudices, her zeal and expectations
if she. (or he) is to work successfully
with disadvantaged children .
Strike Votes in Secret
In Britain, where labor iitrife has
undercut efforts to make the economy
morw productive, the government has
come ap wt.th a proposaJ to curb strikes.
Ai ~ One part · ol th< plan should
be "!!!11i <Olllldor1tion In th< U.S.
A problem common 1.o both countries
ta that Itri.Us sometimes are declared
by IJ1IUPI or union officials on their
own. ID many cases where union
rwesnbln do vote on strikes. only .a
mtaD pst ol the membership
pertidpMea. and frequently lht!ll only
lti ..,.,, -If> by a show ol hands -'° tbld dbddenta an eul.ly be tingled
41111 I« -.,._.,.,
•alTAIN'S GOVlllNMENf
a;.:lclllJ, U ii d coune. a "Llbor"
pta womt) pvpolCI that all workert
Ill 11-• ~nlty lb "°"' on a
-by -bollot. Th< -..lied
rilN .. --not be lnlrln8'd. 1U 11 tbe ......,. .. -a walkout ... l1llan would prolt('l their right
"wwk. u.... • -•ole hr .. \.... both
I.be udlm and the em~ should be
'
afforded ample and equal opportunity
to lay lheir arguments before the
workers. In any decision so vital to
a worker'!! livelihood, be surely should
have every chanct to ponder all tht
racta.
PROBABLY MANY lllrikes would be
approved anyway, but our tuspicion la
that the number would diminlh. Cuainly
Ulll arrangement would be no panatea
for labor-manqement ills, in thls coun-
try or in Britain.
ln every Wike, lhotJgb, a majorily
or the workers would ba.ve decided that
;i walkoul was in thtlr bf:ll interest.
That accords with democracy, a prlnclple
the unloos finnly endorse. It would be
tnltresUnc to see µ they coold practice
wtt.t they preach.
W.U Street Jovrn.a
raise doubla in the minds of some ot the abUlty
of tho trustees to determlna the needi of the dl1ttlcl
With ~ther the old laces returned to the board
with a new mandate from t.be voters, or new faces on
the governing board, there will be much more of a
chance that trustees wUJ have the strength and back·
ing to detennine what reall~s to be done and
then lo do it.
The district has lost considerable p,...tige over the
past year and the govemlng board must gain voter
confidence to give the district the solid backing at the
polls the district once enjoyed.
A Good Example for .All
Huntington Beach Ell.change Club members were
shown two 'plaques Thursday which will be af&ed to
Wardlow Park and lo LeBard ·Park in Huntington
Beach.
They are to mark equipment donated to the two
parks from funds raised through the Halloween Carni-
val held the past two years by members of the civic or·
ganizations.
All together the club has been responsible for some
$4,000 in donations and part of that money was given by
people outside the city when they heard of the ettons
of the Exchange members to raise mo n e y for play
equipment.
Last year the club raised $900 for Murdy Park
equipment and already the club is planning a similar
event for Halloween 1969.
Place of the benefit is yet to be determined, accor-
ding to president Bill Terzenbacb, but it will be a park
needing play equipment as soon as possible.
This club is one of many which bas come to the aid
of the city park programs. lts members have set a good
example for all of the people of the community. (5) OVERL..oAt>
Blaek·White Encounter at Harbor Digit
Complex Reasons Behind Attitudes
To the Editor:
Congratulations are due to Newport
Harbor High School for having arranged
the encoonter between our Harbor Area
students and the students from Dorsey
High School in Los Angeles. I trust
that the school is carrying through to
help those of our students, and their
families, realize that :
-1bere are complex b u t un-
derstandable reasons for the militant
altitudes on the part of some black
students.
-Frank encounters of this sort can
k:ad to greater understanding on the
part of both blacks and whites.
-INDMDU"1. students at Harbor
High need feel no "personal guilt" over
past injusticei> to minority groups if
indeed they are not now helping to
perpetuate these injustices by their at·
titudes and act.ions.
-"Black is beautiful" and "Black
Power" in the constructive sense are
good ; these concepts are really a
necessary step leading t.o minority
Letters jTmn rtalUTS are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messagt in 300 words OT less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
letters must include signature and
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on request if sufficient rea-
son is apparent.
participation in the American dream.
-It is up to us, as one young black
student reportedly stated, to look into
our own attitudes as wb.ites, and those
of our neighborhood, "to blow prejudice
out of white communities. . . to cast
out the beam in our own eyes even
as we. behold the. beam in our brother's".
HARBOR AREA 1tudents and their
families are urged to look into the
various organizations in Orange County
In which blacks, whites and Mexican
AmericaM are seeking a common ground
in working together for community bet·
tenneot. Men of good will do abound
among all races, and are now beginning
to work together for our common good.
For example, The Orange Connty Fair
Jiousing Council is working to help uphold
state and federal laws by assisting
families and individuals to ~nt or buy
houses and apartments according to their
preferences and pocketbooks regardless
of their race, creed or color.
A NUMBER OF other organizations
are now active and woold welcome in-
creased community support. The DAILY
Pll.OT would do us a service by ex-
ploring the various organizations such
as NAACP, JOIN HANDS, the various
human relations groups, and the church
social concern committees, etc., so that
citizens who wish to help achieve racial
and community harmony may know
where and how they can help.
CONSTANCE F. KRAUSE
'Wa11t of Deceucy'
To the Editor:
To the. Harbor High teachers, P..1rs.
Jean Foutts and l\1r. James Newkirk,
v.·ho prompted the invitation to the black
students, I ask two questions. What now?
Do we continue the dialogue between
the Harbor High-Estancia students and
the out--Of·town belligerents from Dorsey?
According to press quotes in the DAI~
LY PILOT of the vtsltors, I can only
think of the Earl of Roscommoo·s
memorable. lines:
"Immodest words admit of no defence
For want of deancy is want of sense."
There must be a weakness in Dorsey
High School's teaching s t r u c tu r e.
regarding civility and respcci. Our
visitors lacked both "decency and sense".
C. JAMES PRICE
Future Events Will Judge Johnson
WASHINGTON -Presidents do not
leave office in a blaze of glory and
Lyndon B. Johnson is no exception. ln
any perspective, however, Johnson has
as good or better chance than most
of his rect!nt predecessors to be justified
and purified by time.
Time and perspective rehabilitated
Herbert Hoover, who had left office
without much love rrom his countrymen.
Franklin Roosevelt, bitterly bated by
a minority, approached sanctification
after his death. Harry S. Truman's
virtues loomed far larger in retrospect
than during his scandal-ridden ad-
ministration. Nostalgia for the. con-
tentment and progress of the Eisenhower
years has replaced contempt for what
was called his d<H1othing administration.
John F. Kennedy lives in legend after
the disappointments of his brief term.
J OHNSON'S FIVE years plus has a
beginning and an end, a certain form
which will make its impact on American
life measurable and distinct. As some
see that fonn now, the Johnson years
were a classic tragedy. An ad·
minlstraUon that rose in faith and hope
from the nation's mourning ol a &.lain
young hero ended in a tragedy of denied
expectations and unpopular war in whkh
lhe hero's successor was destroyed.
But this is scarcely a fair mea sure
of an administration which advanced
the cause of civil rights far above ils
previous highest levels, began the con·
quest of poverty, expanded support for
the nation's educational resources beyond
any pre vious dreams, created a sy11tem
of medical care, tried to beautify
America and recreate its cities and
cleanse and preserve its air, water and
soil. Hopes and aspirations: of 30 years
were fulfilled fer the same liberal! who
neverthea.. came to de.test Lyndon
Johnsoo for tft reason.oi. The first reason
was that allhough Johnson accomplished
far more than John F. Kennedy be
lacked Kennedy'• grace. He was, in
his critics' eyes, dev\ous, fullomt, crude.
The seeond rwJOD was Johnson's stub·
born ln!lstence !hi~ In Dean Rusk 's
words, "'lbe security of Soulheut Asi a
is vital lo the Unltod Slota. , .llld
wh~t happens in Southeast Alia is vital
to the general peace ol the world."
TEN Bl!:'ITEJl.KNOWN hlsiory pro-
fcs."W>rs polJed by Newswttk maga1.ine
rate Pres.ident Johnson from "good" to
"great" on domestic affairs but lose thtir
enthu!iiasm in judiing John.son on his
' 'I
record in foreign affairs. Only two of
~. though, regard Johnson's foreign
afiairs record as "poor." These are
two of the most dedicated opponenl.s
of the Vietnam War, Prof. Hans
Morgenthau of the University of Chicago
and ProL Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., of
the City University of New York, who
have devoted much of their intellectual
energy in lhe past several years to
blackening the name of the Johnson
administration.
Neither the history professors nor the
least educated opponent of I.he Vietnam
War yet has any basis for judging the
long-range effect of the. American irr
tervention in Vietnam. They <:an both
accurately judge the war to lack popular
support. Events will be the. judge of
whether or not the intervention even-
tually will have succeeded in stabilizing
Southeast Asia and the peace of the
world. If that condition does result some
of the history professors will have to
revise their judgments.
IDSTORY MAY N<rr long remember
the qualities of Lyndon Johnson that
so readily brought the word cornpone
to critical Ups, anymore. than history
remembers much of Herbert Hoover's
high collars or Eisenhower's uncertain
diction.
What history will weigh is the ef-
fectiveness of the most expansive social
program in 30 years. the Urning of
arousing among racial groups ex·
pectations which could not quickly be
fullfilled, the wisdom of an international
intervention which became a critical test
of strength affecting lhe po\Ver and
status of the nation for years to come.
PRF.SIDENT JOHNSON brought his
administration to a close as if he v.·ere
writing the last chapter in a prospectus
which he handed to his successor com-
plete. The programs he initiated were
all there, to be. expanded, retracted or
replaced. The war he Wldertook had
been placed on a course toward set·
tlement. He left government's books il"
balance. He made every facility of the
old administration available to the ne\•
in the smoothest transition in history
£rom one administration to the next.
Not until that next administration I~
well along, however, will it be seen
how well Johnson succeeded or hdw
much he failed .
Machine Not Our Ultimate Enemy
1bougbls at Large:
Our ultimate enemy is not "the
Machine" -or technology, in any of
its aspects -but our inappropriate and
obsolete ideas that will prevent us from
using technology for the fullest human
purposes, but rather will condemn us
to mhape the person to fit lbe demands
ol technology. • • •
Perhaps the. mo5l tragic contradiction
of our age (speaking of technology)
ls that just as scientific hardware h1
outmoding the whole concept of the
··sovttttgn nation,' and making some
form d. eJobalbm lmperatlvt fer otir
survival, at the same time the.re ls
a tremendous upsurge of natton.Jism
e:vuywbe.re in lbe world -•hich It
like putUna: a nuclear power-pack on
the back ol a saln-toothed tiger .
• • •
Wbto wt talk about "education," we
almost always mean hard~ ltan.ln&
of facts and 1ystems; but what is rea1JJ
euentlal today it the re-eneau. ef
... feallop, .. that the tolaJ perlOllllity
will wot to do what-the trained mind
knows iJ rt1ht to do; otbtJwlse, lbt
I acts we learn run the serioul rt.a
ol belr\I mlsapplled or non-appUecl. • • •
Tbo.v. officially involved. in "Poverty
i>roar•ms" Ni~ 1 mted intemt In
lhc pt.rpetusUon of poverty, not In Its
abolition; which ts why the poor
themselves must begin to be treated
u agents, not clients.
• • •
I have never met • penon wbo was
againm obscenity or po r a o gr a p by
because they comrpt or ln!lame tbe
passk>M, who admitted that 'ii pasalooa
were corrupted OI' inflamed by tbe9e
media -it ii always edm' people •00
... thougllt lo be .. unstable !hit Ibey
need protection. . • • •
"Whal dot.a it matter tr we koolV
what lbe cosmos ls Utet" uu a ruder,
In resporlle to a recenL column. "DoeSll't
it matter more \bat we underttand our
penciW lives here on orth?" Thie
question ... -1,000 1"I" .... bl' Nar<us Airellul, when he ..,...,
"ll>e man wlio doosn' !mow wl>lt lhl
unlftrie ll Ute doan1. know whrre be
livea. H • • •
'Jbt. only exCUlt for work (apart from
its producUYe value} I.I that ll must
be .....,..u. f1lr lhl hldlvldual worker :
tMt 11, lt must proYkle 1n outlet for
fetllnp unsatlsflld In other an!as of
life, aOO charge up the psychic batteey,
rather than running it down; using this
crucial standard, how many jobs in
modern society fulfill this basic need? • • •
One of the best and briefest mtts
I've beard in political philosophy was
given by the .Viennese lecturer who told
his classes : "Capitalism i.s the explolta·
tion fl man by man ; communism is lbe
revtrM.''
--~--
Friday, Jaauary 17, 1969
ft• tdit.orla' page of the Dailv
Pilot .tetks to inform and 1tim.-
"'4U tta!Un by pre.tenting thil'
rtttOJpCJ>tT '• opmion.s and com-
1Mftt.ary on topica of intere11
ad ~gnfµcance. by providing o
fontm fOT tht e.rprt1sion of
our rtader1· opfnion.t. and b11
prnmthtg the dtver.te vino-
poilr&ts of fnform~d observers
and tpokesmtn on topics of 1~·
d4r.
Robert N. Weed , Publisher
• ,
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.rs.
rk,
1ck
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~CHE . ~KlNd . . p .•.
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E~~~ .Tri~d Givin~~~
'· C'Olkges'
. Unit · OKs
~
• • ; : ' • 1
.P~yposa~ ..
,,. __ ..
MR.·MUM
1
j-...___:..---f
1 t 4" • • ;J !
Meat Brandy :~s?
,'I.as' 'ANGEt:F.1 (inltl -
lil a"preceC!eot '.~ step,
tj>ei rA>:ldemlc $<$to of t:~~
Clallliinla"Stabt eon,... .bas s:
~ iwl · rec0ra· fivdring' cot·
locllvo bal'tilnlng !O Ostabllsll =.,!~• incl working
·~!uH.-BOYD "WBA-TOOvooitilbkofTil1)' 'Ille AcatJemlc •S.nato aiao
AM A UAINTED WITH-lflmT" A. RtNIY ~ol-'l'!l!Y . put tueJli.into the•compelitlon
an am ur ~ wbo usea Tlri>. now• thal y<11 i -.llorl to bo. _named tho baJ'Plnlng
a veterinarlaD's bypodennic to it. ',Will ·"'do '"1 at .the:~nm a~ 1ftir the state, college
inoculate his rolled roasts with coupJe ot stopQbt1;~evt1:. sYsteJ.n • t.500 tull i ,i me cognac. • . • AVERAG!;'"'1n Otdef ·w;;glllie 'I.Ji« leaching employes.
FARM and all its equipment report. jn '~ JUd iiJV. I'd Riv1la iiready In the· field
it? this country is now said guess he'll never be~ldent are the Aasoclatlon 0 r
' •
l
I to ·bfl -abiiul't'IS,GOO •• Of tho 1J<ilit.1QI• Ainerioa. • C&Uleplia Stole ,i]olleg• , .• tr Ilt 'f\'PIC.U.. Of girls · Q , •(Wi!iin "'l(E l'rolesootB a,ac! tliO ~10
Cllled At!Olie, "YI <Ur Name : .IWu>iilir'fob you ever balil" ·= • · l"',"<n~on . 0 f
G..,. man, lo buy for ll10fe A. S)\oklag biarded baileY. "'•te 'iopqe lruStees have
.,.i.tup than= iv.,-use, 'lbooght I _told you thal. of, · a'lir.'i•·• to bargalli col·~:::::'.~~~========:..::====~
I. • .. : •• ~ ...... ,_ .. _ ~L~, dla I !•Y digging •pudt; wen, leclive'• · with 11 ca It y e1111~ ----... -,. ooe or the other . ,:!., . ta1ni .-.< .1 shows the Swedes are me· •IA MAN KNOWS -a ~~·· main ng -,dl I world's · leading newspaper . 1 him , ls fQrbldden by law. 'J)e , ; woman oves , : , e v en trusteu:.say they are required
readers • • · · 'l1IIS ~R without bearing her .aay so. only ~ "meet and confer in
claims a newborn baby s liver But she must have ~ say ood !ii\Jt' \~<If· mak~ up -~ olle.tbir~ ot tjm be loves her di) after faculty cone8rn~ ~
its ftlgbt. I don t ~eve 1t. day. and year after yeir,, She The Acadeinlc sen a·t ' s
sixTY PBRCEJl!I' of. the does not wan! him to ,.... declsloi; 1o enw • t\ e '
mm in ~ forties: art et~ wllh bet •or ; assist with sarge: bargalningi field: was iD.ade by
bald or pariia1ly so. That " dllHculty, bnl, simply lo •ilJ ~ ••le. Four, members of
what a raearcber h a • be adores her. ¥or him this • lhe 4,'1-maD-body were abltDL dl5covered. He says men solves nothlng. BUt,..for her • , · "
evidently tend to get bald if it solves everything." So says .'. ,
30 Hour Walk
Downed ·PiJo~ 34,
Wanders to Safety
they have too liiUe !arty tissue that Love and War authority ·sos Tact1"cs
between scalp and skult When named Hunt. SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -11 miles east of Santa
the scalp draws tight, which A FORT LEWIS SOLDIER His blood,,oaked clothing in Barbara.
It does as men grow older, in basic training says the D OO tatters, a student pilot_ who From Wednesday afternoon
be says, the hair grows thin. typical night of a recruit can eDOllDC wandered 30 boors lo the San-unW Thlll'8day evening he
Interesting. He has something be described as follows: HTurn ta Ynez Mountains after a picked hiJ way through the
else to say about men who in, tum over, and tum out." At· Stanford plane cruh ,itw:obled into a rugged Lu Padres NaUOJ\ll ntver lose their hair, but he ... A MAN OF TSE CLOTH rural home 'Ibtll'1(fay night. Forest, often forced to crawl
uses the term "fatty heads," suggests Genesis 1:21 answers J. L. Yates, 34, of Canoga through tbe thick bruah. He
and that does not seem quite that ancient query,_ "Which STANFORD (UPI) _ The Park, Calif., waa nuibed to had nothing to eat, and drank
apt. . ,,, ,camt first, ~e ducken ·or , tacUcs of disruption used by Cottage Hospital in Santa water from storm-swollen
"A MAN OUGHT to !i"1 the egg?" .. , -..-AM :J'Olil> ~debt mllltanta rectn11,y at Barbara. He !'¥ reported In IDOlllllaJn '"""'""· •
Ylth a woman like a bar or YOUc:!nf1gurt:_a~~'lcl a · meeting of Stanford satllfactory «atijlcm .m·tbe ·-Yatts~ordeal C;All\t ·to·air
soap In a sbower. First thing boy will be tWJce his height University Trustees were de-hospital's intensive care·un1t end when he ,.aw the porch
be-'s got to do Ls get control." and five limes-bis Weight b1-notmced Thursday on two early today. lJ&bt of the Greg Stinner
OUr Love and War man made age 18 .•.. AN OCEANSD?E. ·fronts. A hospital spokesman said residence in Toro Canyon near ~ up. It is what be calls CALIF., READ~ says She The student legislature Yates , suffered mu It l'p I e the community of Sum-
hls third martini epigram. No was .named Kempa after her voted 4%-21 lo reject violent l•ceraUont 1'bon bl8 -.t merland batween CarplnteriJt
doubt, no doubt. ... THAT father who was named de m 0 n strations as oa,n. C4mna 10 llalled and crubed and Santa Barbara. Stinner
JUDAS ISCARIOT had red. Kemper after an ln'1lrance Uthetlcal lo the proceeses of on 4,084 foot Nom Pell In nWled Yates to the boopital.
Frld1Y, .!MU"' 17, 1969 ' DAflY PlLOf 'l
Civil War Predicted . -·
Miliiants Rap 'Hdmburger America'
BERKELEY (UPI)
'fJtamburger Am.eriea'' was
plclllred aa decaying and ripe
for civil war Thursday by
militant speakers at a "com.
mluloo of inquiry" Into the
Vietnam War and alleged
polltlcal repre.ssion.
Frank 'Bardacke, one of
seven men now on trial for =·rn:: ~~~p. ~~ ~·~
October, 1967, declared
"racist, welfare, I i be r a I
capitalism ts beginning to
die." •
He pr~icted great change
in the next 1$ 1o 20 years
and aald there may even be
a civil war.
Roger Alvarado, a leader ol
llrlklng Tbll".t Wcrld Studlnt.f
at San Francllco S t 1 t e
Colle,., ,.Id ihere must be
"a Vietnam here in thia couo-
lr)I." The ultimate 1oal, ha
1 'aald, would be Ole overthrow.
of the capitaDst racist powe(
structure."
AlvaradO predicted tho 5ad
Francl5co strike would be
going oo "for a loog IOQJI
time.''
The audience gave thunder ..
ous applause lo William Ben-
nett, the maverick liberal and
fonnir member of the state
Public UUllUes Commissio11t they can't have the1r desires when he urged p u b 1 j c
satisfied -we saw that in ownership of big uUUUes and
Chicago." tbe. repeal of "UBelesa" anU..
The "commis&ioo ' of i~ trust laws .
"But hamburger America is
dying -it's on it's death bed.
ll'1 a revoluUona.ry sl.tuaton
when million.s of people know quiry" was convened at the Uthe utllities were privatel1 &wned, he said, conswner1 University of Califomla cam~ bills would be cut in half,
pus to point oat the alleged air and water pollution could Baby Seller poliUcal repression at the be ended. and minociUes
Oakland trial of Bardacke and would get better treatment Oil
the others. jobs. Due in Court ir==========;
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
An 18-ytar-old girl charged
with selling her four-month-old
son for f100 to buy a motorcy·
cle for her Hell's Angels
boyfriend will appear in court
Feb. 5 on a motion to dismiss
the case.
Mrs. Sarah Jane Stewart
and Dore Anthony Demadona,
29, were being held in lieu
or $6,250 bail and their child,
Anthony Lee Stewart, .was in
the protective custody of the
county.
Demadooa pl<aded Innocent
Jan. 9 and will stand trial
March 13.
1be couple was arrested
Dee. 18 after Mr. and Mrs.
Wllllam Daljan of Glendale,
Calif., said they paid for the
baby.
The childless Daljan•
reoorled I b e purclwe to
poiice alter the couple return·
First Church of Christ Scientist,
Costa Mesa
2810 M•s• Verde Drive
cordially invitel you
to rejoice with us
at the Formal OpeninCJ of our
"!ew Sunday Schoof Wing
" . Two Services
will be held 1t our new location
on Sunday, January 19,1969
11:00 e.m. 4:00 p.m.
CHILD CARE WILL IE PROVIDED AT IOTH SERVICES
North of' Adam• o" M••• V1rJ1 Drive l•tl hair is not widely known. company. • •• VOLTAIRE reasoned and construcUve ~e Los Padres National
H1storlans rarely mention it. theorized that love was . the discll88ions which are the F~ aboul 1 p.m. Wed-
Red-balred men resent it. strongest of all passions. hallmark of the · university nbday. He WU on the return
They say, "Why do you have "Because," said he, "lt at~ conununJty." leg of a BOio flight from Smrta
to tell things like that'! Who tracts at once the b~ad, the Earlier in the day the tac· nat'bara to V~ Nuya.
Draft Reject-~ed.:::to~seet~mo::::re~m::one:::Y·~..c!===~=====;:::;:;::r=:==":;::=!
cares!" Or words to that ft· heart and the body." . tics or the Students for a EltrlcaUng himself from the
feet. Your question.! and com-Democratic Society were de~ wreckag~ aftl?f' the crash, Shoots Self
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. ments are welcome~ !ird-nounced in petitions circulated Yates set out to walk to SAUGUS, Calif. (UPI) -
"RA VE you ever been to will be used whtr1W1r ~ on ~ campus. Carpinteria, Qn.tbe coast about Despondent over being re.
Toast, N. C. !" A. Never have. sible in "CMckift9 Up:" The petitions condemned tbe jected for mili~ wnice, a
Never made it to Two Egg, Address mail to L. II. dilrupUve methods as "ir· R R ? 20-yur.Old )IOliua a~
FIL, or Blocui~ Ky., either, B"l/d, in care of the DAILY respoosible" and having "no eagan eron. shot bimsell to du in a
bat hope to do so al tome "PILOT,.Bo::i: 1875, NetDpOrt plice in the academic en-lonely canyon Q , ,
c!l!lanl luiun dale .• , • Q. Btach, Coli/, 92663 vlnmmeot." SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The body l)f MDa
· Tbe petition effort was Look for 'Gov. Ronald Reagan of South Gate, Clllf., waa
Just Kidding
Cuba Jokes Not for Air
organized by John Munger, of CaHlornia lo run !or a found Thursday by a bllcer.
senior political science major second term tn 1970. Beside it lay a rtfJe and a
from Tucson, Ariz. Signatures The Republican governor note Indicating Matbiaon'1
were sought during a noon said Thursday night that it disappointment over not being
rally called by SOS to mobilize would be "politically the able to enter the armed
suPp<!r1 for Its demands that wron~ thing" to ~nounce h1I forces.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
An airline passenger thought
it would be a funny gag to
notify the pilot that bis plane
was being hijacked lo Cuba.
the · univers.ity "hall a 11 candidacy for reelecUon at South Gate police said
economic and military opera.. this time, but then .strongly Mathi.5on's tamiJy reported
Stewardess Patti Faust !!s°: =l'i!fa.~ hinted he would again be a him misaing early Thursday
1au·gbed it cff the first time, ,------·-r~ ____ .,.._dldllle __ ·~· --~----monung. __ · -------!
But the pilot didn't think
It was very fuMy and neither
dicJ the passenger when be
was seized Thursday and
questioned by federal agents.
A spokesman for Pacific
3outhwest Airlines said the
man, ideDtUled cnly as a
' J:>ustnessman from San Diego, I lold the stewardess on Flight
: !121 from San Diego lo San
Francisco:
"This ls a gag, but go tell
the captain I've got a gun
and I want to go to Cuba."
but when the Pl"\O stopped
her agaih and repeated his
"gag" she reported it to the
pilot, Dick Sattro.
When the plane landed here
a few minutes later, the
businessman was hwtled off
a n d queStioneij ·by airport
police and federal aviation
agency officials.
The "])aSSenger was lat.er
released after the U.S. at·
tomey's office declined to
press charges, but the airline
says be now has a better
understanding of instructions
to pilots that nothing is a
"gag" in~ air.
Easy to do .•• just call otcome in. ..-, ....... "*
;;a; 4 ""'"'";-MUTUAL SAVINGS
AHO L,OA. ... A••OCIATION
• 2857 &st~ Hisl>WIY • eor.. Dot Mor, C.I~. 92625
Totophono 67S·5010 -lf'ICI·-·"' r. t«OMDO II.wt. • HiVoDlllA. CAUf'. 91 '
A All Penney SI-Open E...,. Nltlif Moodoy '!lwwv~ Salw""'
lenna.•1~
AIJNAY8 FIAIT GU~... . ~
SATURDAl LAS I DAYI
All our famous Fashion'
Manor sheets reduced!
SAVE NOW AT OUR llOGEST ~Hm EVENT OF 1HE YEAR
WHITE, FASMION COLORS, STllPES, PRINTSI
Our ___ .,,_..,..
ecanomy, pr1• s...rthmt .wrt
s.llllk ........... , .............. ,....
....,,,.,_,.~ . ..., .................. .. ....... ..., ..... _, ' ........... ,.._ .. r. -'lid.,_,.._ ......... .., ... .......
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
IH•rbor Shoppin9 Ctr.) I Huntin9tol\ Cent•r I I Ftithion l1t.n.i)
1 •
HOURS:
W11kd1ys 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m. tit 6 p.m.
EAS'I' FROHI' l.OADIN&
"BIG FAMIL'Y" WNSrf
IDitll
TV and APPLrANCE
CENTER
Harbor Center
2300 Hmior llYd. -Costa Mesa
Phone 540-7131
)
' '
·I
\ I
\-1
1
1
J
I
J
I
(
I
·------
. I DAILY P1UIT frldu, JanllirJ 17, 1%Cf
For The
~ .. : -.Jl~i-nrd
Countians Appeaf
Bookie Conviction
. \" r -, ______ ..,
f'ire CaUs
IU!WPOn' SU.CM
11:3' p.m. w~v. oYetnffted '°""' 314 Aml!1'flnt ,.....,,, 1120 dama ...
!::JO "·""· w.dnesd1v, O>O'g.efl lirtl
•id. Dll ~us "-"'· l .........
4:07 11.m. T.....,_v, ar erl!l lne fire.
'2t Part Ave. ·--11:3' p.m. rrwnoa.,, rescve, wesl-
mlnstw Hi911 $d'IOOI
t :Of P.m ... ~' 'MlO L1rltsPut . """ ...... ~ l1:02'' ... In. TINndQ", itrvclul"I fl,.,
~I Mir v1111 on...., •:st 11.m., med!Clll aid, lUll •Ills.
Chica Ito.cl
,,15 p.m., fir• 1ftftlt!NllDll. •""*· hunt ancll ,... • .,...
1:5' p.m~ ~re fire, 11552 R.cruim.
f :O:S p.m .. en 1eok. 20901 Cat-rtn
"~ 1:50 1.m. Frld9.,, medk.11 11d, .. ,
ltth $1. C•t. Mel
n :Ol 1.m. Trourtd1r, restU<I. 1S41 • "m 11 :~ 1 .m .. 1lruC1ur~ fire, *' JollMQll 6;Dl p.m .. lllYriOrv fire, 1n E. 11'11 st.
Pilot Visitors
Child AhtlSC
Confe1·ence
On Saturday
TOI.I~ tft ~ Mondm · •I'd FrWtn tot sctqt ciliues o1 tltttl . ORANGE -A conference .,. """' • .,., •flo" °' ott.f" or. on ·child abuse -.:n be held Hlllnttonl ol •1 IMlt """ .,.. In-.,......
.... .,_,.. -mw 1;all •· Saturday at "0range County '
""'""' ltlett. "°'°"· Eirt. 211.' Medical C en t e r under
• sponsorsblp of UC Extension
Co D and UCI College of Medicine. unty UC DI:. Justin ca 11; chief of
child psychology on the UCI
S ti · · .,-medical school staff, said he et em en t will try to •hatter the public
· image of the child beater as SANTA ANA -. The cOuhty of Orange and two ~of its sub-a monstrous .ogre..
diviaioos will receive $31,994 He'll point out that very
tn-·trebl9 llamaam: .-etU~ .olten child beaters are "nice
tn a-·Wtte1 -pljJe; price fixing . jjeople., unable 'ta cope with
suit. primitive emollons stirred by The case Involving munici~ , CqtQtV°• ~nd 5~ the business ot being a parent.
gov ern m en t agencies Another cOOference partici-
lhraugbou{ tn.·western Sfllta ·pant; Dre ·wnnam F. Taylor, -
saw Anterican Pipe a n d chief of ~-cllrucal pediatric
Co11811:11c$10o Qi-9Jilee to PfY service at th~unty h05pila~
$5.5 riiHiioil ta ilett!einent f~ !._S'S ~~ "beaten, ~ j waleriora ~ct No. t i!oilally lli!illi!red, sufferiol,
will get $17,000: the county from :ma l nut r it Ill n ~ "I
Fklod Control District, $14,000 sometimes all three._ a r. e
and the county $99i. brought in al the rate of srx
·, a ~onth."
DEATS NOTICES . "
Five perceo·t of th e s e
children die and another 25
to 30 perceent suffer pennanent
injuries, according to Dr.
Taylor.
The conference will last
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. For
informaUon telephone 833-54.15.
GOP County'··. . "'3.Ct Val•• ........ lttlo
Give the United Way
BAL'l'Z MOll11JARIES
Cft<U del Mar OR l-M5'
Colla M... llU S-UU
BELL BMADWAY
MOR11JARY
lit Bn1dwa7, Costa Meu
u~
DWlAY BllOTBERS
B--VaDey
Morturr
-1'1111 Bea Blvd.
Bullilito-·Beach
8fMT71
PACIFIC VIEW
lldEMORIAL PARK
Oomolel7 e Mortaary" •. a.aper
• •.Paellfe ow Drtv•
Newport Beacll, Ca1Hornl1
lti-2'1•
PEEK·l'AMILY
COOONIAL FUNERAL BOME
'1111 -A ...
'lf'AihD* •''' as s.m .... "
Aide Slates " . · '"'"m'""•11r• """"'"'""°' ,66 llftl.e f'" doll
Feb. 2 Talk ·--;. ~~!~
Dennis Carpen t'e r of :,.~-~·!;::-::·::::::-Newport &ach, chairman of •.. , • ~ '
the Calilomia Republican Ceo-..---\
tral Committee, is schedu1ect
to speak Feb. 2 at the ii>
augural meeting of the newly " '
formed Saddlebac·k
Republican Forum.
Carpenter's topic will be the
inauguration of P r e s i de n t
Richard M. Nil.on and the
future statewide plans of the
RepubUcan Party. The no-host
cocktail meeting will be held -
at the; Mission Viejo Inn from-
5 p.m. to 7 p.m. ·
The recently organized GOP
group is open to all residents
jn lhe Mission Viejo, Laguna
Hills aJ\d El Toro areas, its
organizers slate. Members of
its founding steering com-
mittee Include Timothy L.
Strader and William Hickey
of Mission .Viejo, Michael
Callins of Capi s trano
Highlands. McKay Mitchell of
Leisure World and Gratian
Bidart from El Toro.
• Appointee
Knows Last
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI)
-Robert C. Seamans Jr.,
•ho baa been "-'•antad Air
Forte iecrelai')' Jh"111e Nixon
cabinet, Is a* SQVtmment ap-
pointee wf1o evl~tly dJd not
.know very far in advance that
be hod been chooen.
Oldr•ab· 2 F, i on e d
cre1m1 OR ru. d 1e.
Cbocoi.te nllt, PM11u1 w
YIDilh aut llatort.
I
....mra MOllTU.\llY ·
' . \ .,, Mala St. 18'..,..,..• Beae• u;-
Seamw, lVho had been
Working u the No. 2 man
ln the National Aeronautics
and Spa<:I! i\dmini&lratton,
planned to return thi!I month to hil rqular job .. • pro-
f easor at the MWIChuoettJ
I wr.rrcun' llORTUARY
Of·&. 1'111 Ill., Co1ta Meu ......
. ' ' : • "I ·1#
•~95 If' pelft'ct . . .
F .1.-'M~ .. 8"9•« therm••
Ladles'
CuloHe
New nalred
JeJ. DaullQ; colon iD O'fel".,
all priatl. · Ill lCIO'f. Qtoa trio
eot.S, .. L.
...... 1.11
, ............ 1.ll
' ...... .... ............ 1.7'"
5&Jio.Dft _ .
......... ................ . ......... ......... ti.a
----63 ·98• Mentholatum--c
'Pt111f1r
T..clt ..., ....
~~ 99c ...... ,5-oeh1 • .., 4rt --
•• r-... .-.
Ca ...... , ·--~ $8''
C••r••· '••• ••77c .... , Jet---•1.11-
JPlice
. a..ls.t
r1~:.:;1n __ ,.
'll!i!ll' .
• .$1.3' Y.UUI , • .5Yr.~
:··Ug~t l•lbr 6 ... .:•101
CbOlce ot • or Joo ntt . lluvelite lilbt bulbl •••
tblf'll -balb mattbin(.
•3,91 Yal•i
New An.
22x40nhgs -...... ....... ..,. $2'8 con. dlltt ia ............ ahJe. Go wl~ ..,.,_,
lmtltutomTedmololJ-!-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-
., ' 't I
l ' • ' ----Jll!
-I
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-----------------------·-.,,--____________________________ """" _________ !"""'.,
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,.,..,, ,,.....,, 1r. 111# t "'" '
JODEAH HASTINGS, '41-4321
Fashionable
Reflections
Reflections of History Through the Looking Glass will be pre-
sented when the Monday Morning Club of Huntington Beach meets
Monday, Jan. :W In the Sheraton-Beach Inn.
Following a social hour at 10:30 a.m. and an 11:30 a.m. bullet,
Mrs. Russell Reilly, first vice president and program chairman, will
introduce Miss Marjorie Leland Lyte.
Miss Lyte will open the history pages for an examination of
fashion, beauty and femininity thro~gh the ages -presenting. a fl>
cinating story of the often-bizarre and wondertul world of faahions.
Mrs. Edward Howard , president, will conduct a business meet·
ing following the program.
Miss Lyte will bring to her audience a wide experience in the
field of modeling, fashion coordinating and commentating. She also Is
associated with the Huntington Art Gallery and Costume Council ol
Los Angeles County Museum.
Membership in the group is openi tq all area women, and addl·
Ilona! information may be obtained by calling Mrs. WllUam Brue,,
membership chairman, 536-8291. ~. · •
Oilier activities planned by the clubc-!nclnde a trip fu lfollyW6od •
_ on W¢nesday, Jan. 22. M~bera of the Prowlers ~on will view
"Funny Girl," and additional Information may be obtained by calling
Mrs. Martin Oeery, chairman .
.1
HISTORICALLY FEMIN!Nli' -Member& and· guests of the Mon-
day Morning Club of Huntington Beach will travel through the
looking glass to view fashions, beauty-and femininity through the
pages ol history when they meet at 10:30 a.m. Jan. 20 in the
Sheraton-Beach Inn. Taking a backward look at History Through
the Looking Gia" are (left to right) Mrs. Russell J. Reilly, pro-
gram ch~an ; Mrs. She'rwood Olson, and Mrs. Norman Mehl ,
. The Gou,!met Cooking Section attended a demonstration In. low
calorie cooking yesterday In the Southern California Edison Co.
Electric Living Center. Mrs. Donald Snyder is cbalrman of tbl• section.
Other sections of the club Include a bridge group which meets
the first Monday of each month, crafts and bobbles, also meetinJ on
Mondays, and the golf section which meeta each Tuesday.
Surf Sounds
lnau·guration
In Spotlight
By JODEAN HABTINGS
0t ,,.. o.llr I'll• Stlft
JOINING TIIE h a pp y
thronp attending t be
Inaugural Ball h o n o r i n g
President and ~1rs. Richard
M. NiJ:on nezt ~1onday will
be Richard and Barbara
Frost, new residenl.J of Hun-
tington Beach.
The son and daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Frost,
Huntington Harbour
residents, also plan to attend
the All·American Gala, con-
cert and parade. From
Washington they will go to
New York (or a few days
before they return to Hun·
tington Beach.
ALSO PLANNING to be
on band for the ball and
other acUvities is Mrs.
Richard Davies, third vice
president of the Huntington
Harbour Republ ica n
Women 's Club.
THE ART of mosaic and
tile design will comprise a
five-week p r o j e c t for
members of the Huntington
Bay Arts and Crafts Club
in the Hunllngton Bay con·
domlolums. Mrs . J u d d
Rowland, president of the
group, has announced that
members plan to undertake
more such projects in the
future.
ANCHORAGE, ALASKA,
will be the new home ·
Mr. and Mrs. SlanJey Cook
and child!'en, Judith Anne
and David, formerly of Hu.
tington Beach.
The Cooks recently were
honored al a surprise dinner
and farewell party atteoded
by 25 couples, all long-time
friends, and Fay also was
honored at a recent luncheon
in the Balboa Bay Club by
her Trl Delt sorority si.rters.
She served as president
of the Newport Harbor Area
Alumnae group last year,
and was an active member
of the PEO Chapter, HX,
of Hwitington Beach.
Cook, a petroleum
engineer for Standard Oil
Co., has been transferr«I
to the Anchoriae office.
OFF TO PARADISE
(California, that Is) are Flo
and Ralph Nielsen of Hun·
tlnglon Beach. The trip lo
the pine country is Flo's
Christmas present, and the
couple are enchanted wlth
the old mining and gambling
town whole name la •
derivative of "Pair of Dk:e.'.'
The 1'ielsem • re fn.
vestigating the community
adjacent to the Feather
River as a possible retire-
ment site.
Oi\IL V PILOT ...... llJ Let 1'9'1111 ~
are Miss Donna Marini (left), Anchor Club chair-
man, and Miss .Cheri Pratte, president. Open to all
Marina High students, the dance will take place at
8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 18, In the school.
Marina High Hopping
Cases Built ·
From Funds
Marina High School service cluba in
going •way out to raise funds for case& to
house the school's trophies.
A Rocldng Out Dance is planned for to.
morrow, in the school's gymnasium. accord-
ing to Miss Cheri Pratte, pre1ident of Iba
Anchor Club.
Playing for the sock h"P., taking place
between 8 and 11 : SO p.m., will be the Ii rut
Western Reclamation. In addition there will
be a show by the Light Lightening which bu
performed with such groups u the Chamborl
Brothers and the Canned Heat.
'rickets will be $1 for holders of student
body cards and $1.50 for 1tudents without
cards.
The Anchor Club ls comprised of senior
girls who have records of outstanding acade-
mic achievement, high leadership qualities
i!nd parUclpaUon In many outside commun-
ity projects.
Club members serve the commtmlty
through the Huntington Beach ~ead Staft
Agency and Seal Beach Volunteen1 wh<> ~.,.
nate many hours of 1ervlce to the Long Beach
Veterans' Hospital.
Also cooperating with arrangements for
the dance ls the Key Club, ll)>QllJlored 117
Kiwanis Club of Huntington Beach.
The International service club for boys
also is active In many community and civic
projects. Headed by president Bob Childs,
the youth group has selected Influence
Through Example a1 this year's motto.
The youth organizations sponsored a
Christmas p a r t y for underprivileged chll·
dren, assisted with fund-raising projects for
the Huntington Beach Boys' Club, and raised
$250 to donate to a fund for muacular dJs.
trophy.
Don't Complete Negotiations Before Contract Is Signed
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was brought
up by old-fashioned parents and 1 guess
you'd be justified in calling me square.
I'm a college sophon'ION! and lbe only
1irl on the Ooor of Uilil dorm who
b I virgin. I ptW up believing I should
eave myself for tht man I marry, but
these past few weeks have caused me
to J'f:COOlider.
The big queslloo. now that I have
falttn· In love, ii UM : U: it unreaUltic
to erpect 1 young man to suUft-the
•rWeties of fruaU'allon becauae his
tl•nete happens to believe u I do?
FurthenMn, wlll my rlgldily COii ·me
i wonderful busband?
Jack saya the dJvorce rate IC8l'fll
him to death . He says he loves me
but he'a afraid we might not be sexually
•
ANN LANDERS
compatlble. lie feels we lhoWd find
out befon: n marry. He alao bu SUI·
gestal that l mjpl be frlOd. i.ot
nlghl "" llddod •notber barb when be
said, ''A strl wbo teuu la ud18tic
and lmmabn."
You eeem to MW 1n annrer for
everylhlnl. Pleue tell me how lo say
no to 1 sex Alelrnln wtth whom J
happen to be In to... -NEED YOU
DEAR NEEDr Hen'1 your auwer:
''My boc(J belotp lo .,. ood 1 dol'I
owe yoa ~W pdrile1e1 er u
adret• rehean&l ...
W\11 "'-IO ,_ body Is YOUR m-™1111 ud II Ille It YOUR .,._
blem B-., .. -.-... aar: Jld:'a· attieory et.at It II ... rt 't.
try ~p ood to ... B diq-IMIW.
1V1 "bay"' k l"lbblU. A• lllM8U .-.
sold me a vacuam cleaner that •~
beautifully darinl !be IM•y trio!. Jl'o<
-.. ..,. ....... ......, u· 1.u •pert
In ... ,. "'"' , ....,.. tl
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' Yf!lta'day the
.. couple next doer bid • terrific argumenL
We could hear them screamlng at each
otJ><r ollhoagh our houses are two klll
oport. 111 hUlband 'and I went lo lbe
lrool -lo lmletUpte. Quiet U I lluh, thelt J.~ boy
came duhlng out the fnlnl -and
ran Into the .u..t, dlrecUY In !be path
ot an """""""' car. Fortunately, the
driver waa alert and llopped In time.
Tht chlld'• father dktn't aay one wvrd
to him. Instead be ~ some ollocentaes 11 U.. driver. (lie ·lho<ild
have blew<! him!) Tiie driver just -
hll head as the falher aholtted, "You
rotten ............... , a child alw.,.. leUer ud Dew It will -... ll 1 11tr
bu tbe rlght-oC-w•y!" tf ,.,... &a pew r. • mrrM• •
Lui -"-bit I Wok ho ..... II tlw llllC>' II -yur ·• tr_-my car. ... pnld1dll1n. v .. d ..,.. ...
WU drM111 -ly and cartlully. Al> ~~,. .... -., ...... oordln& lo tbe poUc:e, I bad lbe rialrt-<f· ,_
Wlf· Bill ...,. Utile pl Is dead, and
lbe .... all ... bad. Tbal .....,,,..... u..-. "' l"'"iielt Ill dotes1 _ ..
boy cao1d bevt been -. loo, ,. r!Pl! "1>11 s """"' Sboa1d ,..,
ho bobbloo -"rt#<>loft1." ........ 1 ,.., -!Gt Am Laoolln' ~ ...,,~ ----·DstqDoaaadDoo'll,"-nel be ool · .,. killed ~ Clll. i., wllb ,... -a ems Is ..
,,,., don't -anythJnc about ''rilbt-aad 1 Joor, tell.-med, .......,
or.w1y." Where an parentt' vaJuest envelope. •
Whal could be mon lmporlanl than , Ann 1.-w wtD be l)ad i. bolp
the U{e of I .child! Plulo print this you 'Ith your probleml. Send, -
lot pat.irti -children &nl lllill tllvt. lo her In care ol tJie DAILY !'1L9T,
-GlUEVlllG M0'1111!R <11Clollng a oet..iar.-1, .........
DEAi\ MOTllBR: I SPll"Clala ,_ , envelope. .
\ \
•
1,
•
.-•
Officers' Wives Hear
Combat Artist's Views
Costa Meta Nuptials
Leann~ Peterson Weds
Gardens Coming Up Rasey
The subject ls roses for the first meeting of the Huntington View Garden
Club branch of the Woman's Natiooal Farm and Garden Association, and
markmJ the red-letter day are (left to right) Mrs. Paul Conaway, Mrs. Al
Manire and Mrs. Richard Edmonson. Mrs. John Mahoney, president, is in-
viting area women interested in gardening to attend tJ:ie meeting and hear
Clyde Wampler, authority on gardening, flower anangmg ~d crafts. The
group wlli meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 20, In Marina High Scbooi. Mrs.
William Roberts will serve aa hostess.
Detective
Addresses
Night Owls
Newport 8!lf" P o 11 c •
-Department neteetlve-Dave--
Elliott will discuss Today's
VOutb and Their Problems
before meoiben ol the Nlgbt
Owls o1 the Newport Beach
Hool 'n Holler Roost next Sun-
day at 2 p.m.
Focus Put
On Initiate
Mr. and Mn. Arthur Stead,
worthy patron and matron,
__ willpreaide over the lniUaUon
of a new mtmber into Laguna
Beach chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star at 8 tonight in
Laguno Beach Muon!c Hall.
A Hawaiian theme baa bef:'n
seJected for lhls evening's
fesUvili.es whlch will b e
A ~ lllDd ol artllt wtll ' DlporU-, Ille lflllto-.
be the ..,..i opubr II Ibo Ibo U.8. Nnol Acldoal.Y. Ibo SI. 'Olddm'1 Ca I b 111 c
JmwJ •• -. ~ o1 u.a. -°"" i-. Cllurdl, Colla --1tot
the Olllctn Wives Club ol q<mton, U.1. -· nl 77 md aellfn( 1or tb1 -r1Jl( Et Toro. tllelfJdel'lrtcolleclllll ... .._lldllollDlllllTlqil
Artbilt BH.11mmt1 Naval Ill II \Wed la •lWbo'I Wht Lella Man ~ and
llld 11ar1ne com1>11 lri1lt 111&1 1o "-""" <oit> u11 111e Denn11 r . ........,
,_ wtll bo -''j!oolt " Ari" ud Ille s:S:?':~~~ at the 'l'ueldq. Jaa. 11 • '.F..DeJdopedl.a Britannka." ... ~ ---
-ID lbe Balbot Ba7 He -1vod from the N1yY ol ill" -T.
Club. Social hour "10 · bqln the -Public !lerY--ol Colla ..... -.. ·at II:» LDL wUh •...-Ice Wtlon for bis .. .,... aoo ol llr. ~ Mn. llllTJ
111 p.m. I trlllutlaD In -Novy -ol S...lloe, J11. •
Tbc auell bu been ID ....., 1ccuiatel7, by ~lo==~~
Calllornla -U01 11111 ba1 1k1111u1 paldlng and• u.t. '~ ~ ""1r wbJ1o Ml-
-od«ted u .... ol lbe chJna." Tbe -~ tell-ID pn, -wllll I
10 bell wllenlolor ,,_ ID Ing people lbat be 11J1111 palDI boa-Kiri tb1t -
the U.S. He ts bell -hll ahlpa wltJI -.. "" pp.a ~Jalb train.
II I Naval, lllrine --for Jlii lliao "l.Jll,Olf A. fillrlc oo...r1 edPd wUb artllt llld b1c1u1e ol .bll pal& cdU.., 1be """ GI lbe 1'ATY·" -C ,.is ..i c:ry11a1 teo..
llap ol the pn!World War '!'be luncbeon II -Id dropl, 1lold her DvHlcred
Il, the World War ll, Ille "7 tbe lrd MAW staff llh<a llluaton nil. !'arming her beu-
Kortan CoofJld llld I h • llld the plaMlng -qutl ,..,.. yellow llld 'wblta
Nudur ll<eb. b comprised ol !be llmes. ~--red
He accompanied on ... Arthur H. Adami, ftGllert W. ve1.:"" I '::"'~
"""""" to the Aotaretlc llld Teller, Dean Wilker, Ollrieo red -~ c:amotlonl .... In ,.....,.,. .... f« bll wort, B. Sevier, H. D. Stoel aod Mn. llabert Petenon, the
the U.S. government nomed Stanley V. Tltterud. bride's lilter·ln-law llld ma-
on laiand 11 the South Pole For mevllllooa c:a11 Mn. troo ol _._
aftor lnlm. Bcaunwit Butte. 1lobert Je-11 -« Gowns ID Amerlcon be1ul7
Miii)' ol bll polntlnp blJlll Mn. William Lundin al :144-red llld ldentlcal -
ID the P<magoo, the Navy 7tl0. were oelecled for the br>ie.
maids, ihe MlMea Debbie
Peterson, the bride'• atater,
Dawn Marte Enm llld ON
Andenon. Kimberly Ann J>e.
tenon, tho bride'• niece ....
Dower girl, '""" a white ltod: with red velvet trim. · City of Hope
• Chapter Forming?
Attendlnc as best man wu
William Alliio& while uo!> en -. i.rry llJall. Lln7 Dula llld S-,. Jl'imdi. Billy
Bryoo Ev-WU the r1Jl(
bearer. . Anyone interuted In forming a City of
Hope chapter in Colla Mesa II Invited to an
informative meeting at 8 p.m. Tburiday,
Jan, 23, In the CaHfomia Federal Savings
and Loe.u building.
A .....oon for 21111 cue1!1
followed In the perlab hall. s Clmd•tlng the ~ .book MRS. DENNIS F. EUBANK
At that lime, Gerald Ruben, area coordi-
nator, will show color slldea of the hoapital
and ·answer any queol!onl pertnnln!ng to It
which ii a lri!e, D0111ectarian hospllal en-
gaged in a day-to-day beUle with killer dis-
eues.
In charge of arranging the session is
Mrs. William Savage. Queries about the
meeling and new organization may be mailed
)o her at 652 Suri St., Costa lrft1a.
wu Mn. JamtS Dunlap. and Exchanges Vows, Rings :"ere~~~~--.,.------''-----------
ger aod Mn. Charles Jl'un. oelL ~
Special J!lella ~ wm the bridegroom'• parents
and-bil sister., Mfl..-.-PhylUa:
OC Chapters of DAR
-Meeting . in "San· Diego
1be Semor CiUzem Recrea-
tion Cooter, Newport Beadl,
'Will be the meeting setting.
Mn. Gertrude Knorpp of
Qllla Mesa will •upent the
program with piano aelectiom.
hlgbllgbted by filml shown by'------------------' Pierre Mardus and his sister 1
Pauley ol Illloois. Oukf-IOWD
guellS Included the Metm.
llld Mm ... W. R. Evant ol
Callmtaa, W. B. Evans of
Carmel, Roy P. Evons ol Yu·
caipe. David Pegueros, San
Bruno aod William Y edd of
'ortland, Ore.
Following a trip up the
coast to Carmel, the bridal
couple are at home in Long
Beach. 'lbe bride ii a grad-
uate of Costa Mesa High
School and attended Orange
Coast College. Her husband
is a duate of Sessar High ~ llld Losan C.U.gt, St.
Louil Mo.
Next Tuesday at 10 a.m.
representatives from Southern
California chapters of Nationa1
Society Daughter! of the
American Revolution w i 11
gather in Bahia Motor Hotel,
Shelter Island, San Diego.
members attending from nine
Orange County chapters will
be Miss Ina Gtnitt, regent
Aliso Canyon chapter, Lagum
Hills: Mrs. Selah Reber,
regent Col. William Cabell
chapter, Newport Beach; Mrs.
Edwin B. Marki, regent Pa-
tience Wright chapter, Laguna
Beach; Mrs. Joseph R •
Cavanagh, regent R i c b 1 r d
Dooatiom to a L l.v f n g
Memorial Fuod '\a:..mo'Y
ol the late Mn. Efl>ol lllcard,
secretary-tre.surer, are being
accepted by Mn. George L.
Stewart, prelident. At a later
date membera llld friends will
visit the City ol Hupo, Medical
Research Cent.er in Duarte
where a memorial dedication
cea auoo.y wU! lake place in
her honor.
PENNY FAVOu'R
E1191god
Miss Antoniette Mardus.
Tlte Star Club, Order ol the
Eastern Star, will resume its
series ol monthly card parties
with a game in the Masonic
Hall Friday, Jan. 24, at' 7:io
p.m. wben dessert w1ll bt
oerved.
TicUllJor,thot.ro.putleo, ciiolnd "7 Mn. Btmlct
Frlllkt, are IL Rtservattom
may bo ~ned by c:alJJng
Mrs. John Willlama, 41H41111.
Horoscope
Leo: Overcome
Among those offering annual
reports will be Mrs. Albin
M. Wethe of Laguna Beach.
DAR museum and California
room. Bayldon chapter, Seal Beach,
Featured speaker at the Jun- and Mrs. Lloyd Fair, regtn1
cheon will be Maj. Gen. Lowell San Clemente chapter.
SATURDAY
JANUARY 18
By SYDNEY OMAllll
LOCAL E. E n 1 I i 1 b , Commandant, Th~ ~ lhe last Southern
LEO (July ZS.Aug. 21): Ne etler .... ,.,., hn• '" Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Council meeting preceding the
Don't wgue over ltgal pro-111ore, ... ,,., ,..,, eli .. t wh•t'• San Diego, whose topic will annual Slate Conference or the
cedure.. Tendency to 1et in 1•i119 •11 111 tke .,..,.., °''"'' be Vietnam. California Society on March
deep waters ahould bt C..it thon tho DAILY rlLOT. Among regents and 4-7 in Fresno.
overcome. Means sUct witb"5""'""'""'"""""'"""""'""'"--==~..;_~~~====.:..:.:;:;...===== "The wile man controls his ha tno '" destiny •• .A!troloSY point.. lhe w 1 you w. Doo~ be
Cello Concert
To Entertain
A ctlibt will provide en-
lertalmnent for members ol
the UCI Town and Gown
Maalc Group at their next
moeting, 'l'ue>cloy, Jon. 21.
Collegians
To Marry Gavel way.,, tempted by one who claims
everytblng is easy. B e ARIPJI (March 2 1 • A pr i I polltive.
11): Accenl" oo partlclpailon VIRGO (Aug. ZS.S.pl. 12):
in aocial IJ'OUPI· Be in contact D e P.' -D d e D t s • pets grab
S • I with friends. Erpml vt.ws. spotlllJll ol your ottenlkll. Gel
A July wedding dote 11at 1gna S Le• otben 11now of yrur bwo-.. oo1 o1 way eorly.
been selected "7 Pe n n y creative ablliUes, d<stru. Ac-Laltr ralu -but remembtr
Favoor, daugbW ol Mr. llld • ceol and exleod lnvitllloot. .-.., concemln& diet. A
Dey Gals!
Dr. Frieda B t l Infant t .
founder and rint conductm
of tbt Orana:e County
Phlllmmanic Orchestra, wtO
be the guest artm al the
meetlua to begin at 10 a.m.
In tho ec..... del Mar home
ol Mn. Edwin! F. Lelhen.
Colfee will be served.
Mrs. John w. Favour o1 Aucti'on TAURVS <Apr11211-Moy 20>: cblllge i. a1ue ; c:oold 1nvo1ve Laguno Beadl, llld John Clil· New polnl ol view I • writing or lrlvtl.
ford M..... n, son ol Mr. nect!8Ary. Doo't apec:I olbtn IJBRA (Sept. 23-0d. 12): to ~~de financial anawera. ni--·er new ou•'-'· for Uc! Mrs. John C. Moott of · r·" ~~ -~ Huntingtoo Beach. Goln1 ooce .•. going tw\ce You will have to apply ieaonl cruUve energies. U irl q u e
--~-•1~ and ,_ ••• sold. . · learned. Proted ......_ Be 1 form of recreallon i '
fi •• ~.::, :::_IUC"'T'both""'~_. •• .i-•-1R:arl 'lbia will be the familiar good Uateoer -but relUVe IJ)Otll&bted. Children ne td -~· -• ·~~ call wben meviben o I final judgmenL • your ·-Romlllllc In-California Slate College at Stephens College A I um n at GEMINI (M&J 21.Junt ill): terludtteouJd make this a n1gbt
Loog Beach. She is a nursing Club of QrlD!IO County hoot Soo>e .doee to you ._ . to remember.
major and he will tarn his an aucUM on Jan. 21 at I UD115Ual oplniona. Key la tO IOOllPIO (Oct. !.\-Nov. 21):
bachelor's degree lhb month. p.m. In Guaronty Cbtm>ltl be tolerool lleallie family Olin coopet11tlon ol family for
Ml.ss Favour la a graduate Co San 'Ani. member mar require lpedaJ. home, property improvement.
ol Laguno Belch IUgb School. " ta attenUon. Sbort jouroey could Be IWlf' ol bulc issues. C t S • ty The briiie~ect. a Mn. G<orge Palmer will be bo .., agendL 11..,.y problem Chec:t delailt _ bt thoroogh.
ac us OC18 membtr of Sipia Alpha the aucllODltr llld Mrs . will be eased. Best to sUcl: close to homt
Orange County Cactus and Epslloo fraternity, ban alum-William Meyer and Mn. Lee CANCER (Junt 214llly Z2): bue.
Suocu1ent Society meets the nUJ ol Westminster High Andrews wlll host. Members Accent 00 joint finances. Best SAGmA.RIUS . (Nov. n.
first Wedneaday at noon in School are ubd to bring white to leave money declslona to Dec. 21): Make cont&ctll; test
Odd Fellowa Hall, Costa Mesa. The engagement wu reveal-elephants to the aale. mate, partner. Divtnify ef. tbeortts, ideu. Write, catch
Mn. Roy Jones at 54l-&:l6S ed during a family dinner par-Further information may be f o rt s ; be flulble. ElcelJent up on corrupondence. Past
can be contacted for addiiloool ly hooted by Mr. aod Mn. roctlved by c:alJJng Mrs. G. evening for 80clal octlvity. respomiblllty comes to fore.
inlor:matkll. Favour. L. Dbben at....._ Visitors are an tbeway. Fulf1ll obligations. One who --'----------------------------------~ owes money could ~pay to-
day.
CAPRICORN (lltc. !Woo.
19): You CID find cenuine
blrgalo. Floe for oddlng to
pcSll!91i<m. Open llnel 0 f
commwlicaUon. Income poten.
Ual is ICCttlted. Gain sbown
if yoa are a xii-starter.
AQUARIVB (Jon. 211-Ftb.
Ill: Dul pmonally with peo-
ple Important to your welfare.
Take lnltiatlve. Obtain hint
from CAPRICORN m..,oge.
Stress originality, In·
dependence. Flnt for btgin·
ntng a project.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Handle private, coofidential
allalrs. Vlsil Individual who
bu 1 p e c I a I information.
Throw off fears. Excellent for
attendln& ~ter, dining oul
Shakeup in plaN is indicated.
.
Demonstration
Will Flower
Crutlng pl..UC nowen wtll
bo demonstr1ted 1>7 I
rtprt1entatlve or the Garden
Grove Parb and Recreation
Dtputmeol.
, First to Visit Ito/ion Cruise Ship
A ll'O"P ol .,.. ,.Cdenla were among tbe Ont to
fllll Ille -Italian Cl'1llle ship, Princess Caria,
when If docked at Los Aqales Harbor last weekend
ICC' the first lime. Examlnln& one of the two awhn-
ming pool area• aboard the liner ani (left to right)
Lagun11111, Mr. and Mn. McClellan Cole and Verner
Beet, vice president of the Festival of Arts board,
along with Mrs. Paul Garman ol Newport Beach.
Tbe program wtll be
preoeoted before the Women's
AuxillarJ ol the lntematlonal
Brotherhood o f
WorUn, ..... I 441 II I p.m.
Tuesday, Jon. 21, In the Unlcm
111111 Santa Ana.
I ... -----\~-·-• .
•
BRING LITTLE MONEY
AND
LOTS OF COURAGE
to our
50<>/o to 75<>/o OFF
SALE STARTS SATURDAY 18
ORANGE COUNTY SHOPS ONLY
33 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH
2500 & NUTWOOD FULLERTON
Acron the Street from Cal State Fullerton
== -.. -" ' ' ..
OAl~Y 1'11.o:f .JI
Chapman (4-8) Menaces UCI \ (1 0-5) ·Tonight
'!Jig 0 Stops Big E
Oscar Robertson of the Ci ncinati Royals blocks pass
intendE!d for San Diego Rockets' Elvin Hayes dur-
ing second quarter oi Thursday night game played
in San Diego. The Royals \Vltipped San Diego, 120-
109. Cincinnati is in Los Angeles tonight to play the
Lakers.
F o-r Houston Battle
Flu May Sideline Big Lew
By the Associated Press '
History has a strange way of repeating
itself. The last time Lew Alcindor wasn't
feeling up to par, l-louston's Cou.gars
snapped UCLA's 47-game winning streak
before 55,000 fans in the Astrodome.
Now, almost a year to the day, bi g
Lew is a doubtful starter for Saturday
night's game in Pauley Pavilion against
Houston .
· The All-American center has spent
'the last two days in 'bed with the flu
and coach Johnny Wooden won't know
until this afternoon if hi s 7~1 \1 center
will be ready to face the Cougars.
Last year, Alcindor was plagued by
an eye-injury against Houston.
Sports in Brief
The Bruins are on a 27-game streak
at the moment, 16 in the 1968 wirxlup
and 11 this season. Included was the
avenging win over Houston in the
semifinals of the NCAA last March,
101-69.
1n conference play, UCLA and the
\Vashington Huskies are tied at the top,
2.fl, a lofty .Position Washington. has en-
joyed but once in the past 10 years. .
The Huskies hope to extend the string
against Oregon State Saturday night in
Seattle, and again at home Monday night
against Oregon.
Oregon State moves on to Pullman
to play Washington State Monday night.
Oregon has a Saturday afternoon date
v' Tiger Pennant Hopes
Jeopardized by Strike
DETTIOIT -Outfielder Jim Northrup
said Thursday that a possible players
strike would diminlsh the Detroit Tigers'
chances of winnin g lhc Am<:r1can League
pennant thi s year.
"\Vhat I'm rea!Jy afraid of," said
Northrup, "is that a players' st rike will
hurt the Tigers' chances to repeat as
American League chan1pions this year.
"Say even four or five key players
hold oul with the players association.
What if l\1ickey Lolich. Al Kaline. Bill
Freehan and myself. for instance, don't
~o to spring training'.' That could foul
thi ngs up prC'lty good. right?" he said.
(;ond1's lt'ife Jailed
LOS ANGELES -The wife of Bob
Schnelker. <1sslstanl coach of the Green
Bay Packers and a former National Foot-
ball League standout. has been sentenced
to jail until she returns lv>'o children
to the custody of her former husband.
The sen!cnce by Superior Court JndgC
Wiiiiam l\!acFaden against 1\1 rs. Betty
Jane Schne1ker n1ay be difficult to en-
forte, though. She no longer Jives in
California.
Mrs. Schnelker "'as sentenced on a
continuing contempt of court conviction.
She formerl y v:as married to William
N. Rambo. 46.
Rambo told the court ~1rs. SchnelkC'r
reflf!:cd to return the couple's three
children to his lega l custody after a
six-week summer vacation in 1967.
girl Jockey by riding Stoneland in the
fourth race.
But the jockeys refused to con1e out
for the third race _ unless Miss Rubin
was repl~ed.
Kings Wl11, 3.2
LOS ANGELES -A rugged defense
sparked by goaltending of Jerry Des·
jardins powered the Los Angeles Kin gs
lo a 3-2 National Hockey League victory
over the Chicago Black Hawks Thursday
night.
, A crowd of 12,369, second biggest of
the year here, watched the Kings'
powerful defense limit Chicago to only
four shots in the final period while
the Kings were firi ng 17.
Girls Unpopular
ARCADIA -Six name jockeys wer1..
on .record· Thursday in fa vor of letting
girl riders take a try at competitive
thoroughbred racing al Santa Anita. But
some 40 others indicated they dislike
the·idea and might boycott the gals.
The rKlers, most of them members
of the Jockeys Association. which
represents a majority or the weslern
rid~ met in private at the track
Wednesday night.
with Washington State arxl moves back
to Seattle Monday night to mecl the
Huskies.
Southern California's Trojans are idle
for examination week after splitting a
pair of games In Oregon-losing to Ore·
goo State and beating Oregon.
It will be 'California and Stanford-at
Berkeley tonight.
Both Cal and Stanford bowed t()
Washington last week, aod Washington
State defeated Stanford during lbe same
period while losing to California.
Oregon State, Washington State and
Southern Cal are tied in second place
of the Pac-8, each with l·l' records.
Western Team
Banks on Speed
For Pro Bowl
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Speed may
be the key if the West ls to outscore
th e East, in Sunday's National Football
League All-Star game in Memorial
Colliseum.
\\1es t Coach George Allen or the Los
Angeles Rams worked with his several
swift performers Friday as workouts
slacked off for both his squa'd and t h e
East, piloted by Tom Landry of the
Dallas Cowboys.
"We have great speed in the receiving
positions. more so than last year, and
nothing is more important than that
in an all·star game," Allen observed.
He sirlg!ed out for particular attention
Clifton McNeil of the San Francisco
49ers, I.he league's leading pus receiver.
The slender fellow, a Cleveland caslofr,
caught 71 passes for 995 yards and
scored seven touchdowns.
Net Aces Lauded.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Stan Smith
and Bob Lutz of the University of South·
em • California ranked as the world's
best tennis doubles team, today were
named co-athletes or the month for
December by the Helms Athletic Foun-
dalion.
The pair scored a Davls Cup doubles
vic tory over Australia's Ray Ruffel•
and Jade Alexander to help bring back
the trophy to the United States.
Panther Cooch Not Intimidated
Br EARL GUSTKEY "lrflne hu the ume team they bid
tt ._ Oliff ,, .. ._ 1ut yar and pr®a&ty a UtUe better.
Olopman College butelball C<>OCll They play a lollib ochedule and tbey'n
llaYe Wealherlll II bnpusHd wllll bul wett -· Dick Davia hN 'em ...U. by no muns lnUmldated by UC!, Ilia ~lned.''
fo< tooflhl In Irvine's Crawford llilJ.. W.a-DI watched UC! Joee by 11.eo
It's the ftr8t ol two meetlnp -to Cal .~le (Loo\I Beach) In lba llnall
the two Orani• County ...... · lllll ot the lrWie taumamenl
......,, OCI plays Chapman at Qr._ "I ~ thv bid Lons s.acti lllsb nm month. ' beaten. lrrioo II one ol the top 1"' .
Tootglit'a I o'clock same wllf., ~ · -=;n.;(·"
preceded by a lrosh contest ~-wut be the decided -· llJe tW. IChoola at e. qalnll'ucra formldtble outfl~ norlo..\.
"I've seen UC! play and they've -The A-. hive -mded slwply
ta1n1y got a good ball club ho\....,. fromlllelr-)ctaellnth<edlewlier
not atrafd cl them -I think W\ can tbla IMlllh. havlnc bulen W-1,
give them a 1ood game," commented -.111c1,uc Rlvmlde Tuaday, 1111-'!I.
WeatherUI, whose Panthers are 4-1 at UCl'• moll potent olfenatve wapon
the momenl thele cla,t II junior forward Jeff. Cun-
Foyt E a r ns Pole
nllllblm, ""° bu 1 ... U.Pl>hl! ,.,,..,
lhla mmth. lie bail "'1 u qalntt
UCR but pliyed leu -.ii the f4JDO
with foul trouble. •
Chapman's 1altst ~ w• a Six.point
)ou to AJtl.la.Pa.cift I •
Most ccndllellt Panther ~ !a S.10
guard ~ Ecl'ert, the lbarplbOotlng
YOW!i" brother of former ~ star Ned Eckert. .
At center for Chapman wilf. be ex·
Orange Coast performer Bulch Rolllns.
Llntupo :
UC IRVINE
W Omalql&a111 ·F
Wfladen F
M Heclmn C
.. tlllanlt.o G
J.l BQlm G
Posit ion.,
But Gurn ey's Man to Beat
RlVERSlDE -Corona del Mar's Dan
Gurney may win again but he won't
have the pole poslUon in Sunday's Motor
Trend-Riverside "500."
The No. 1 spot will be held by A.
J. Foyt, the Houston veteran who w i 11
drive a 1969 Ford in this year's NASCAR
grand naUonal clrcuJt.
Foyt celebrated his 3tth birthday
Thurodty by turning In the fastest lap
at the Riverside I:ntemalional Raceway.
"It was a good birthday pne:ent.''
the five-Ume USAC l}&tlonal champi911
smJled. "I guess I'm bnprovlog wlffi
age."
.Driving a 1969 Ford, Foyl-averaged
110.366 miles per hour on the 2.7·mile,
eight-turn course on the first of three
days of qualifying.
The fastest 10 drivers qualified Thurs-
day. Five more positions wil l be filled
FridaY with the ff.car field to be conr
pleted Saturday.
Foyt's time was shy of 'the track
record 110.971 set last year in qualifying
by Gurney, But the Texan said be felt
he \Vould have more speed Sunday.
"The car had been missing in practice
and I had only about Ove hot lapo
before quallfylog," be uplalned. ••we're
putting on a new manifold and that
should gtVe ua much more bonepower
and consequenUy more speed."
Lee Roy Y arbroqll ol Columbia, S. c., pined the aecond pos!Uoo In the
front row, aver•glng 109.979 miles per
boor In a 1969 Mercury.
Gurney waa the third fastest qualifier
at 109.385 lo a t9!1 Mercury. Althougli
ha wlll be starting behind Fcyt and
Yarbroulh,.ha lllllll be coa1ldtred the
man to tieat.
Gurney has won the only road race -on the NASCAR grand national circuit, _
five times in the event'• aiJ:-year hlstory.
Richard Petty, Randleman, N: 0.,
qualified fourth, averaging 109.324 in a
1969 Ford and last year's NASCAR grand
national champion, David Peanon of
Spartanburg, S. C., wu fifth tn 109.0D
in another 1969 Ford.
Also qualifying for the 500-mile, ta&-lap
event were AI Unser, Albuquerque. N.
M .• 1969 Dodge, 1111.700; Mari .. Alldrettl,
Nazareth, Pa., 1969 Ford, 108.864; Bobbi
Isaac, Catawba, N. C., 1969 .Dodie..
1111.rn: ljoger McCluoby, Tucaon, Ariz .•
llMll Plymouth, 1111.2'!4, and p.,.,,.m
Jones. Torrance, Calif., 1959 Ford,
tlll.111.
64 Go lfers Bre a k P a r
Lunn's 65 Leads Pack JOHN RAUCH
Shuffloa Off to Buffalo
ln $1 35,000Kaiser0pen· Rauch Gets
Buffalo Po~t, NAPA, ca 11 r. (AP) -The second
day of actJon in the $135,000 Kaiser
International Open Golf Tournament was
launched at Silverado Country Club to-
day with expectations that the $27,000
first priz.e was still very much up f o r
grabs. And many were trying to grab it.
Out of 156 &Olfers in the first rounds
of action Thursday, no less than 64
scored under par and 82 of the total
field h~ par or better.
Leading going into today's action with
a 65, seven under par, was 23-year-<1Jd
Bob Lunn of Sacramento, who seeming·
ly could do no wrong Thursday.
He aUributed his good showing to
his work on the greens, but then he
really didn't have much prob I em
otherwise.
Playing on the north course, he h a d
34 for the first nine and 31 the second.
Jackie Cupit wu cli»e on his heels
with a 66. with U.S. Open champion
Lee Trevino, Miller Barber and Dave
Hill ending lhe first day of play with
68.
Twelve of the players had 69 -John
McMullin, Arnold Palmer, J o h n n y
Stevens, Orville Mo o d y • Jack
Montgomery, Bob McCalllster, Gene Lit-
tler, Tony Jacklin, George Knudson, Dow
Finsterwald, Bruce Devlin and HaroJd
Henning.
Two or Ute dl!:appointed partk:ipants
were Kermit Zlrtey and Charles Sifford.
Zarley Is defending hll Illa Ulle alter
taking the 125,000 il)p prm in the Kai1er
tournament first time around.
Sifford, after winning •.ooo first prize
in the Los Angeles Open last weekend,
had been hoping to get a strong start
toward the '27,000 flrat prize in tbil
tourney. Both are well back in the pack.
Bill Casper, who has been baUUng
the nu bug and a severe cold fpr .several
weeks, had to be satisfied "1th· a 70,
lwo under par. He expresnd ~
ttiat he hadn't taken I01De praetice
rounda over the course prior to the
tournament.
Tb e gol!ers generally were pressing
the Sllverado course, which Monday
reaembled. a minlab.tt'e swamp when a
heavy rain dropped puddles cl water
over much or the area. 1be quallfytng
rounds which were to st.art Monday had
to be delayed a day.
,Sioce then, sties have been generally
clear, althougli near freezing tem-
peratures have posed some urly morn-
ing problems for the golfers.
Both North and South counies were
being used for the tournament again
today, wtlh final round! Saturday and
Sunday lo be held on the North courlie.
LA.KE RS, ROY A.LS
BATTLE AT FORUM
INGLEWOOD (UPI) -The IAo
Angeles Lakers, on the road since the
s t a r t of 1969, play their first g am e
oC the new year at The Forum tooi.&ht
when they meet the Cinclmail Royals.
The game marks the opening of the
second haH of the NBA season. Althou&h
the Lakera are in flrat place in the
Western Division, they have w o a only
two of thelr list six games and hold
only a two 1ame lead over the Atlanta
Hawb:.
Oscar Robertlon, the most .valUJble
player in the recent NBA AJJ..Star 1ame.
lead• the Royals tnto the Forum a n d
Cincinnati lo tr)'lng a aecond ball rally,
to gain an Eastern Divillon playoff berth.
The Laken, however, felt tbelr chances
of a strong ftnilh were brlghttr now
that Jerry West Is rudy to play. West
mis&ed the lut three games 8lld the
All.Star contest beca ... of a palled groin
muscle.
After the tw~ame series with Cin-
cinnati. Los Angeles t.aku to the road
for rour games.
O.J. Simpson
OAKLAND (AP) -Coach John Rauch
aod the Oakland Raiders ~ late
'lbursday night that he has accepted
the head coaching positino with the Buf·
falo Billa. Both team5 are in the
American Football League.
Rauch is going from a team which
he coached into the Super Bowl a year
ago and to the AFL's Western Division
championship in 1968 to t..be AFL'a Jos--
Jngest 1968 member.
At Buffalo, he can expect to have
O.J, Simpson, Southern Calllomia'•
H~an Trophy winning, yard ... tlng
back. Buffalo bu tbe No. 1 draft draw.
Rauch was coach of the year 1967
with the Raiders and bis quarterback
DaryJe Lamonica was AFL Player of
the Year.
With Simpson in the backlie1d, he
can expect to be coach of the year
1969, predict.a the Raiders a:eneral
managing director. Al Davis, ronner
AFL commissiooer.
Rauch, 41 , has been wflh the Raiders
six years, three as assistant and three
as head coach.
Tbe announcement of his switch to
BuHalo was made by telephone to some
aports writers who were giwn his home
telephone number .
But 83Sistant coach Louis Engleberg, I
who will go to Buffalo with Rauch,
read a statement tn which Rauch sakl.
"I have resigned as head coach of the
Oakland Raiders to pursue another op-
portunity In professional football."
He thanked Davis and his players
for "whatever success the RaJden have
had under my tenure." His. final tentence aald, "l have ac·
cep&td a similar poslUoo with the Buffalo ~" .
She lat('r ohtained a \Visconsin court
order ·~iving her cus1ody of the children
-Melinda . 14 : Jeffrey, 13, and Bradley,
9. Olympic Me d alists • Ill LA Tonight
:The Raidm notified only a few 1poN
wr1ttt1, gave them the phone number
to call late at nlgli~ and made poalUve
the news would not leak out UllUI too
late {Cl' morni"8 newspapers.
Tbe Buffalo Courter-Expre!i..'I, however. pubµ.hed tht story In Its Friday morning
odllliln, quoting what the pape< called
1111bo9laUve llOUl«S. Joc/,eys f'l11ed
l\flM11 -Tfopical Park stewards
"nulrsday lined 11 riders who delayed
the s;tart of \Vednesday's lhird race and
whose threatened boycott kept ,Jo Rubin
rron1 being the first girl jockey at a
major thoroughbred track.
1'he 11tewards rlncd <"ach jockey SIOO
••for failing to fulfill his <"ngagemcnt
In the Lhirtl rncc \Vedncsdoy'' nnd refer·
red the n1a1te.r to lht state racing t;Om·
mission for further investigation.
The i;.Jendcr 19-year-cild brunetle was
i;che(h,1led to bct.'Ome the nadon'a lint
LOS ANGELES ~UPI) -A cast of
Olympic games st.ars tonight headline
the 10th annual Los Angeles Invitational
"champions" imloor track meet in which
the I,IXMl-yard baUle between Ralph
Doubell of. Australia and Wade Bell of
Orteon la the feature attraction.
Doubell won the Olympic gokl medal
in the 800-meter event in which Bell
was suPPQSed to be his chief competilor
but failed to qualify for the finals because
of illnell'I. ~pair never have met .
The world indoor record oI 2:06 wJi
s e l at the Sports Attna here ·by f'clu
Snell In 11162. Doubell's ""'"tryman, ~
Clarke, predfctetl tt co u 1 d be bn>kth
by Ooobell tonl&hl
Clarke hlrMtlf faces m1)or compeUtion
in the two-mUe run tn which he competes
ag•inst George YOIU>f cl CUI Grando,
Ariz., one of America'• leading diltance
runners· and holder of the meet record
of 8: 29.4 aet last yeer.
Anothtr outllandlna: evtnt features
Olympic intermediate hurdles champion
David Hemcry of GN!at Britain and
()\ymplc blgh hurdles cham pion Willi•
Davenport or the United States. 'M:tey
meet In a 80-yard hip hurdles race.
The field events draw their chief in-
terest. fn>m tht 1ppearance of Bob
Beamon, who amued the world at Mex·
ico City with his world record loQC
Jump leap ol Jt lee4 211 ~.
CompeUng a1ainst Beamon wlll be
his two Olympic teammatea: tn the event,
R>lph eo..ton and Charley Mays.
T n t h e sprint, three co-holden of
the world Indoor rteord of O.t seconds
compete. They are Chlrlle Gretn, Bllt
C:iaines and John Carlos. CarlOI allO
ls entered In the SOO-yard run 1gainst
Geoff Va-.ioct and Bob l'rty.
Olympic pole vault cllampioc Bob
Seqrtn II tntered In that ~Ol!I ~ deapfta
a recent mneas. Allo In tllli pf>le •ault
are Jtpoo'a Kf1oofll Nhn md S..-'1
Olympic tammatt and n>ommalt, Jclln
Pennel.
Defending moot champion John Rambo
headl the cut lo the hl&h Jump wlllch
includes Ed Caruthers, Otis Bumll, Mn
Lowe and Gr.g lleeL
Olympie .sprinter Barbara Femll
ht.ads the women's competitors In t b 1 -t.
In lllm yeao at Oakland, he tompfled
a U... t reoord, tlle btst in tho. AFI..
He .toot over the Raiders when Davis
became AFL cominillioner.
'l1lero have hetn nunon !hat Davis
hu been ~II( Rauch• 1fnc:e
bl• r<tum to Otkland aa maft111n1
aeneral partoer.
Rauch'• bacqround, both u a player
and a coach, ia with the offense, «ie
of the 81111' (lmin~-·· He coachod at lbe UnivmilY of
Florida, Tulane, G<orgla and West Point
bef0« Joinln& the Raiders.
•
HOW OAD DID 'IT -M~ l!igb Schoo! basket-
ball-star Klpp Baird stu4lM a pholograph of_hi&
tallier, Wally, taken durhlg bis.plllying days at.
MfLY l'tl.OIJ'.! .......... ~ ........ O'D1119111
Holy Cross. The elder Baird p!Byed ·with Boi>
Cousy at Holy Cross. Youn~ a 'oopborilore,
is a promising starter at Marina.
~..;;:. ,. .
~ ..
Son to Be Like D~!J? .. ~Jliston Is
El.Mr Baird Was College Star Selttted
By EARi, GUSTKEY
Of .. Ddl ..........
Lib falhor, like· ...,? One who bofl'O
lbat aphorilm boldl Water Is l,uto Olson,
the Marina lllgb School ba1letbal·coac1L
'!1Je ""' be bu Ill mind .. bis lllartlng rornrc1. IO(lhomcn Kipp Baird, .wboee '
basketball prognia so far l8 at least the
equal of bis father's at a similar stage.
Wally· Baird, naw a sales representative
rcr B.F. Goodrich. was a collegiate star
at Holy Cro.u Untverslty with B.ob CoUlf
nearly 20 years ago.
Already, the ywnger Bain! bas his old
mao ·11cted in the alze department. Kipp,
only a sophomore, is a strapping 8--5, 200-
,,...00.... His dad rises but 6-I.
Young Baird rates as one d. Orange
County's brightest prospects. A starter since
the opening game this season, be'! a depen-
dable acorer and an aggreuive rebounder.
Naturally OL9on is asked to rate Baird's
progress with that of Marl Soderberg, the
M\.2 ex-Marina arem now playing with the
University cf Kentucky freshman team.
"Kipp won't be as tall as Mark but
he'll be more physic.al How good a player
Baird beComes from here oo will depend
OD bow bad he wantl ft. Thal WU the
thing that made Mark so good -be worked
boon and houn OD his own.,.
Just a little over 20 years ago, Wally
Baird was learning the game at St. Ann's
Academy In New York City, The cblef
rival was Power Memorial High, future
t.:ime ol. Lewis Fmiinand Alclndor.
"When I got to Holy Cross as a freshman,
Cousy wu a year ahead of me," Baird
recalls.
"I started as a sophomore• but then
went back to a reserve status. I was team
captain as a senior but bebuse of in.juries
I ooly played half the .........
Lite Soderberg;.Baird says COUl7 knew
whli'hatil lw6rt was abco(~ •1J ,,
.''i:ousy waa not a ~-. bl11t ocbool
star at Jackson High in New York. He
worked hard in college to make himself
the playµ-he was. I remember 't Holy
CrOl!I the coach told him IA>-~ hla
left 'hand more. "
"He worked a solid . ·,two wee'n with
that left hand and peifected Merylhlng·
be Wanted to." ' "·~ .
Holy eross· was to college basketball
what UCLA is today ." Ji.addltton.to Cousy,
Bajrd pltyed with another future pro great,
Togo Palazzi. Also mi·· that Holy ·Cross
club wa!I Joe Mullaney, now head coach '
at Providence.
Kipp was born tn Akron, Ohio, 16 years
ago, just before his dad went to work
for B.F. Goodrich. The .family moved to
WestminSter nine years ago where Baird
quickly grew into a slJ:.fpoter as an elgh~
grader.
His father credits the sound, early
~ching of Stacey Juntoi m~ coach Mike
Gibson for Kipp's early development.
When Wally Baird wa!I a hi~h 15Chool
senior, be was named to the New York
City all.catholic team.
If the old maxim holds true, KJpp Baird
wiU ichieve All.Sunset League status. And
as things stand right now, U'!I not exactly
a kingshot bet. ·
Lion MVP
Westminater High SchQol's
S....... Le. cbtmplon ctoss ·' ~ ,,...,. :.ru 'booor<d
Tfluraday l!lgb! 'it '•the high
sd>ool in the annua1 Fall
Sports Award! program.
. . The Lions copped the Sunset "lfHue, cbaippiomhip for the
!llktb straight· year with an
LUldeleated mark.
Don Di,!ton was named most
vaJuable and John Kilpatrick
was namei:l captain of coach
Jack Hedges' juggernaut.
Football
Froah -David Love, MVP;
Mart Huntley and J oh n
JohDson, team captain"s.
Cee -Ray Davis, MVP;
Kirk Harris, captain.
Bee -Ste"' Martinez,
MVPi Dean Cunningham, cap-
tain.
JV -Bob-Williams, MVP;
Kurt Loff, captain.
Water Polo
Varsity -Chri!I Ohre,
MVP ; Steve Kube!, captain;
GeoU Haber, high point man;
Ken Davis and Jim Haselton.
most improved. and Todd
Brandtman, top scholar (3.96).
Bee -Gary Del.isle, MVP;
Deltnis Plunkett. cap t a J n ;
Chuck Setzer, most in-
spirational, and Gary De.Lisle,
Prep Mat
Summaries
Ce H Id D high point man. rritos 0 s own wC: rhliu°;:. ~-::~·; ~~
SllD8et Action
'!)le VlW " -(f.I) travel to -AM Vallty wb1le Newport'• 14 cmr ts
al wtnJeaa Santa Anll "'"'8ht .. a.
Weslmlnsttt (H) fa at
Western. pos1•DO" of a $0
mart.
'1
TrujUlo, most inspirationa1,
Lead in Cage Ratings =.Jlo:,:1
:_: point
Del-''·• ~-1e champion ., Varsity -. Jdl YOC1J1g, ... _..'6 -Chaffey (1,0. 11) and Santa MVP; Ertc Marquardt, cap-Cerritos College holds down Ana (19), · which plays host lain.
the top spot In the first JC to Orange Coa!I Sawroay Frosh-soph -MIU Br...,..
Sporbwire ratings of junJor night, also art in the top le.in, MVP;, Bob Var I•
college bukeU:lMI t e a m i ~. honorary captain.
which are dominated by 'the ----~----------'-.;_ _ __. __ _
Metropolitan Conference.
Metro teams bold do"1t
three d the top five posts
in the rankings. Along with
Ct!nitoa, Metro t e a m 1
Pasadena and Long Beach Cl·
ty Colleges are rated No. 4
and 5.
'!1Je BlaOOings coold he
jumbled thla week however,
when Cerritos (17-1) travels
LO Lang B<ach (lf.3) tooighL.
.The Vlkinga were one of only
three teams to beat Cerritos
faataeu0n.
Top ranled. Ealtem Con-
,.....,. team ii !<ague-leader
Fullerton, which boldl do"1I
tba No. I aiot.
SOFT SELL SAM By Marvin Myen
-~----rMttX.Lr, I ./'lflb A 9'1Au J.aw m >PJY m
ffCflrT GO!/lf Mf/(/( UL //rf,fEff XX!
Wiim I Rflll!JI TO 11/T ya; ()f ~
A /3()/Yf)L£11
Oilers Battle Anaheim
·Coaches
Criticize
Officials
By ROGER CARlAON
Of .. DflbP .. '""
Irvine League baaletball
coaches put the hlut on
Oraoge County officlala,,....
day afternoon at the annual
pre1._ luncheon at Costa
Mesa Higb School
Alter an earlier discussion
among ~Ches contirmed the
favoritism of Magnolia High
for league laurels, talk turned
to the men in stripes.
While agreclng that baalet
ball officlaUng baa improved
dramaUcally in the county
over the past few yean, the
officlall~ efforts were cast in
the opoeite llghe
UCLA Invades Newport
Soccer Powers Duel
By GLENN WlfJTE
Of .. D61rr NII' Stiff
Two of Southern California'• leading soccer ,.._ mllide
tonight al Newport Harbor
Higb School when the UCLA
Bruins dud the Coast Rangen
In the annual Mhcroll Grand
ChaJlenft Olp.
HOltllfties are scbeduled to
begin al I with lfctN priced
al $1 for adulla and 50 conta
far atudenta. An hour earlier,
two area ~ teama mix
IL up with the YOUlli Trophy
going to the winner.
Television star Alan Young
Is aupposed to ,..,..1 the
cup lo the wtnnlllg side.
UCLA dorms into town with
a classy U.1·1 record, losing
ol!iy to Weatmont (1--0) and
tylnf Cal Poly of San Lu~
Obispo (M).
CoaCh Brian McCaugbey 's
Rangen, leaders of I h e
Podllc League, on f.1-1. They
ware tied by Temple City (1-1)
then dr"l'fled • -to Bellflower (4-2) 18'1 weekend.
Pacini the· Rangen ii
former pro Leif Wemeid, the
platinum·haired flash from
Norway who dazz1es the op-
position with his c r a f t Y.
footwork and quicknes.!I.
He waa, however, shut out
by Bellflower.
Supporting Weroeid are the
old reliables -Harry and
Jackie Ogilvie, Colin West,
Eric Smith, Owen Gorman.
UCLA features an alktar.
cast of players from 11 dif.
ferent nations.
The Bruins lead in the
series, Z..1·2. with the biggest
margin of victory coming in
1967 when they blasted the
Rangers, 8-2.
Irvine Cage Forces SC Cagers
0 Pla T . h Rebound,
c~,. Em1,, .Wheeler of MaP,O:Ul f111ld, ~Jfo:thfng bas
been ~ to u...W.. the or-
pen y onig t E r· 1 ye 1t e fi~'~ · 've. ~told that The Irvine League basket· John Kuser and his band
fo are availtWe to send ball bostirU •A-l,.l.t h bee Sa Cl f d intO· ~ciat1•.:fiiead ofiice 1 ea open Wlllao• ave n seething for a year n emente, a ter rop.
with s ~e for criticism, but with three cruciala on tap -3ince coach Ernie Wheeler ping an opening r o u n d
all st-~•-t a and his M 1· h Crestview League basketball Whal l .....t is that if you've "'i.i.ug a · agno 18. crew ot-. r-test to Mission Viejo, has sudo lost:. Ariy critique 5QUDds like Magnolia ii faced with the footed .it out of town with a denly come into the title pie·
sour grapes. predicament of ttturning to narrow UG verdid ture after its surprising 66-48
"What they need is I man-Fountain Valley to engage the Fo.mtain Valley was denied verdict over Villa Park.
datory ·treport after every Barona wblle Corona de1 Mar a two-shot foul at the con-The win gave the Tritons ga~"· &aid. •1 k I "th M. . ·-~ to ' ---cl··-' of the h the a 1r mar a ong w1 1SSlOl1 J per ot Fountain w:~ ........... =iOQ game w en Both host achoola b.ave been · Viejo and Villa Park, a game ValleJ continued: .. We bustle waiting for this moment fOl' clock ,aPowed no time lefl behind league-leading FoothilL
-why can't they? Everything IOfOe time for RVeral reasons. Fountain Vall9' supporters And with that in mind, the
keeps lmprovin& n~ the At Fountain Valley, coach claimed the foµl occurred with Trftons travel to cellar-<lwell·
officials. , three ---•-to Ing Orange tonight in quest "They d0n't take prlde in ~uuwt go. of win number three and a
their wnrt and they don't do M p On And, at Loara, coach Virgil dale with Foothill the follow·
a very good job on their esa Uls Webb and his Suons have Ing Tuesday evening.
homework. burned for the past year after Mission Viejo will also be
DON'!' KNOW RIJLBS Spaghetti Feed two sllUISblng ,..,., last year. going for its third win of the
and··~~tt~:ons~!e• "The MUilan& Boo!ten Club Corona del Mar laid it on k1~~::°:r:~~n~~i:
-,... ... -of Costa Mesa ffigb School thick last year with 68-38 and Is at Tustin.
Another coach cbbned in: -in be fea•·~-g a apa•'-ILI 73-44 crushers. La Bea h "th 1 • of maa who "m .... w &--gt.ma c , w1 a .,. "I know one .1:--~-t the high ·-•-' Costa Mesa and Estanc'• offlctated .cs 1amp 1 n \UUUQ a M:llUUI -mark, kept it close for three
December. Yoo simply can't cafeteria tbla evening as high schools are featured in quarters before finally falling
uch and do a prelude to the opening Irvioe tbe third match of the night to Foothill Tuesday, Sf.39.
officiate that m Leam» basketball 1 •me with a battle at the former 's F !hill · ed k a Rood job." be •-· M and '!O'-'--: oo 1S expect to eep Said Wheeler: "I'm not tween esa .i;,oMlll\;la court. pace a game ahead of the
aaylng the poor o(ficlatlng ·bas highs. Mesa, after s t r u g g 1 i n g field with an undefeated
been dlrected at me or Prices are $1.25 for adults through a 5-10 mark in record with a test with El
Magnolia_ it's been bad both and 75 cent3 (~ 12) for preleague compeUtion, should Modena at the fonner's court.
Way~ tbe~·5•to .. 7~p •. m •.• aH .. ~.r.,..;;;iiiiiiiiiimabiiiiii;i;l;toogh~~f;or;IEstancii;;;;,;:~~-;;;;;~Allliijiga;m;~;;"•e•a•l;8;o;'c;lo;;;::ck._ 0 1.complained to a _couple --
of refs tblJ Season about their
poor effort.. and then. found
myaell facing the aame two
again later In my own gym.
"They walked in rlPt post
me, up io the oppodne coach,
shook his hand and WUJled
to know when he thought the
game ought to be started."
TRYNEVADASW'l'EM
Wheeler then turned to the
nst of the group, with arms
out, and said, "'What do you
do."
C06la Mesa coach Herb
LivHy didn't officlllly rap any
of the· officlala but pointed
out a unique system used in
Nevada where • rather n.-
tenslve fann is submltied to
every coach after emy plDe
~ mandatory evaluatioa of
the refs to return to the ~
per autborltles Immediately.
Later the coach receives I
copy ci his report efon( with
a copy from the opposing
coach in order to eel the
best out. of the available talent
in officiating ranks.
The Irvine League, in an
attempt to securt ltaelf the
best of the lot from officlala,
ha! reacheduled it! usual
Tuesday games to Wed· · . ....,.,..
SKI REPORT:
3 TO 6 FEET
Skiing coodltioos at Juno
Mountain are reported u·
celJent cm • packed powder·
hue rancinl from three to
aiJ: feet.
A now atonn dumped
eight to 15 lncha of --
and akllN .. w:ell<ol ...
the Swnmlt and -fDD runs.
Late snow reports from
June Mountain and other
California ski are111 ar11
available by dialing (211)
217-1711.
17th' & Irvine
OUR
JANUARY
s
A
STARTS
FRIDAY THE 17th
.i.?J..LID41"· "'. * * * J>
TRADITJONAL Clm HINO
W ntcliff Plaza
I ,
Newport B1tach
·.1
---'-'"---~----~~---~~-~-~~~~~----~~~~~~~~-------------~----
•
Alamitos Jlay Given
Top World Trophy
AlamU.. S., Yldlt Club,
Long Beach, bu become the
first American yacht club 10
win die annual St. Peter>
burg, Flo. Yldlt Club troPhy
for out.slandln, regatla man-
agement.
Activity on the yachlinl
front increases in Southern
Callfomia this weekend with
some nine events ICbeduled
from San Diego · to Santa
Barbara.
In Newport Harbor the in-
terest centers on Balboa
Yacht C1ub's Willter Regatta
for all classes and the con-
tinuance of Udo Isle Yacht
Club's Adult Sabot Serles.
Jn the Long Beach-Los
Angeles area Long Beach
Yacht Club is sponsoring its
first event of the new year
with tile New Year Regatta
f o r Ocean Racing, Midget
Ocean Racing and Pacific
Handicap b o a ts. Cabrillo
ABYC woo the anrd to
llll for Ill bandllcg ol the
louMlded U. S. Natloi1al SOlpa
cbamplombipo Jut AllMI.
1be troohy Is donafed by
the Florida yacht club wUh
the North Amerl<an Yadll
New Soling Class Sets
Weekend Appearance
First form~.N~wp or t
Harbor appearaDC!: of the new
Soling cu..s sailbcall i •
Abbott Keeps
Boating Post
LONG BEACH -Jim Ab-
bott of Long Beach, a soft.
spoken man who has had to
stand up nose-to-nose against
some of the most rugged men
in sports, agreed this week
to continue as chief technical
inspector for the Pacific
Offshore Power Boat Racina:
Assn.
Abbott, whose Naples Island
home is on boat -lille d
A1amitos Bay and w b o
personally owns a r a c e •
qualified 23-foot F o r m u I a
power boat, will be serving
the POPBRA in the important
position for lhe fifth con-
secuUve year.
Marathon Race Set
For Marine Stadium
I See by Today's
Want Ads
Argentina Ra£e
·-----................ ,. ..... ,..... ....... I 1uma11a " ................. ], .., ........ ........... ___ _
• lk fl 1 It told a .... ,_ ••-IM'"'"? ...... ---• 1 :£'11 ,...... .......... -.,-., ..... ..... ,, .........
• J CHECICYOUR TllE SIZE
Y CHECK YOUR SALE PRICE
-a....r.
~AUJO-CHARGE ""-··-· n.oJ11"'9 211 ,,.,,
.IA1DQ-·
GOllllN'.
·-~---. -""""-----....... • Ulre-h1Qfl: 3 -..
........ .,,, ..... .... ,... ............. •*
WHl!i!L ALllll•!hT AllDll~p ~ .,., .....
c ...................
toe-alt '° ,.. .,.
••utMl nr'•
". c'llOltk-.. Md --.... ,..,.ng.
,.
~aso _
COAST
GENERAL TIRE
585West19th St., Costa Mesa
646-5033 540-5710
L
•
' • l • ,
' ~ • ~
I
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.,
• • • . , -:
. •' ' .,
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···-:r ·--·
Rutal P0verty: Subject ·
For Study, But Littk Aid:
LEGAL NOTICE
'.
• B; SYLVIA PORTER
~feet one of your neJ,gbbors;
The family includu eight ·
children. from prwchoolers io
post-delloquenu. Uvts al the
eod of a dirt road. well out
ol sight of Its mDre alOuent
neighbors. The !amity's home
is nestled among all.50rted
junk Cars, old f<:e' bo1es, rusty
bicycles. 'nitre is no Indoor
plwnbllng, and, ~fore, lit·
tie opportunity for baths. The
ht1tinc ~ of one small
wood·burning $love although
the weather may Jail be1ow
zero.
There ls a used car which
haa been bought tN1 credit but
which is inoperable because
,tpe family has no money for
.repairs. The family breadwin-
. ne:r doe& have a part-time
job, but he· usually doesn't
turn up for work because his
.work place is miles.away and
his car woa 't run.
THERE IS a TV . ~et and
a fairly, generous supply or
wlU.skey for the adulU. Jl"re-
quently, Ule children do not
go to school either because
they do not have suitable
clothes or because the weather
is too bad for them lo walk
.the miles to the nearest schoOI
bus stop.
Your neighbor?
million -live In rura1 area!.
Most of the reductions in our
poverty poiiulatioo refer to lhe
urban. not rural, poor.
-The average income ol the
U .S, rann worker in 11168 was
less lhan $1,800 and of the
migrant farm worker. well
below even this sub-poverty
level. Ei:cept for workers on
big commercial fanns, farm
workers have neither col·
lective bargaining rights nor
minimum wage law covera1e.
-For American Indians and
Eskimoa, poverty is . a
universal tact of life.
-RURAL AMERICA con·
tinues to offer grossly in-
adequate educational .. voca-In all probability, yes, if
you live in the exurbs, Jn
almost any rural area in the
U.S. or even in some suburbs.
My description (of an actual
family living within a few
mlles of thousands of well-to-
do citizens) may not precisely
Business Trends
fit your neighbor living in
i'ural !)Overly but it's close
enough.
THE POlNT is that this
family is almost certa1nly
LEGAL NOftCE there, only a few miles from '·l-----= •. =-=-----1 your home.. And you art not
c1aTI1"1qT• o'" au1ui11s1 aware otiti n.lstence because 1"1ctt11w1 .,._ I ·w
TIM ~ • .ienec1 .,.. ttrttt1 1 '""' ts mem s do not even
LEGAL NOTICE ~11'111 • tiu.1-1 •t t:112 ~ display themselves to their '~~-==""'"""'-""'°"'°"-+.'I loulc1/1rt1. ~ llud'I, Cttlf<l'rnl11. IUl"lllOI COUIT llP!TKI J, vnOef' 11\f fldl~us firm N m• " not too distant neighbors and
'
,,,, •• C.t.Lll"OalllU. "o• o\\iltNE,. YACHTS Ind ,,.,., •111 f/l'JfO there has. been DO John
la ·COll'l90Htl d fht fotloWI"' --· TH• cou111TY OI" OIUi•• ~ nune ~ '~" '"° •ta<• ot retlft ic• Steinbect . In this era to H&.A41Bl
HOTICI 01" KIAIUHO 01" l"n"ITIOlf 11 •tJ:!:''A. Wt11tt. 2:llt S111l1 Alll publK:iie'their plight.
j001 PIOIATI' 011' WILL AKO PO• Avlllue. <)111 Men. C1l)tot11llo One y11ar aao, a National Ltl"Tl•I Tl'ITAMIWTA•'r Ditti! Jinu1rv J. lHf '< ll
E•t•hl ·o1 c111r1n ••roldl, 1"° ........,. t~••d A. whit• Advisory Commission on
•• Chtr!es c,.,i.t ••roldl. •111 k-STAT!: DF CALlf'ORllllA. Rura l Poverty d-lared lhL·, '' Ch•rlH 0 . ll1roidl "-' 1• C. D. OltANGf COVWTY: .. ._
••roldf. O.Ce•Mll. On J111U1rv l *'"· belo•• me, • problem a · ' • n a t i o n a I ·• NOTICE 15 H!!llEtY GIVEN '11llt Not,.J"ll ,.llbllc 1~ 1NI tor uld $lite. ' '
·-Tom••w &lf"Olcll ..,. L11 ~kit "'" --•1y •P1>H•et1 e11w1rt " w111111. disgre.Cf!." Since then, there 'fi.., Nirej,. t "'""°" fir .....,. ,., ~ ............. me to tot IN Hf.,;, 'Yllow h ~-fl f t d . • w111 11111 hit l""""llff ., • L'""11 ;;;;:;." 11 tut.crtbttl hi Ille wtt11i11 1,.. as veen a ow o s u 1es
.. Tt&,.l'l'luil1rv hi J'.ttl~ r ~ ""° \ell:_..,,.., M ••1a1ttc1 and Seminars on rural pover-• .. wllktl la midi fir" lvrthlr Nl'tl(Ulfr;s. fllt .. !'Ill D
MCI 1111t 1111 t1m1 .,,. •*-« ""'",. (DmcJ•• S..ii ty . .,ut little has been done
•• llbt' .,,... h•s tittn wt hit .Hnu61"( Jos~ e. 01v1o and the fac•-rema1'n·
· "· ,..,. •I •:Jt 1.m .• In t11t Qllllm...11 I t.iol•..,. l"@blk l Ctllt'Drl'llt ~ •
, '' PIP•""""' No. , tf ukl OM:f, t'rln("""I OHk• 1t1 -"'.JULE OUR r u r a I
• •' M WHf Elt;Mll If_.. !ft tti. O.tntoe ~ntv pulati I I th 30 . c1"' « St..t• AM. c:.11""'i.. #.Y tornmt•lorl e • .ir,1 po . on s ess an per-
Dittc1 J1nu.,., t . '"'· •u~· 11, 1'10 cent ol ou r total " percent W. !:. IT JOHN. (11111ly Clerk. t'ullhil!M ~ (;-• Cotti Otlly ll'llOI. ' °"' . , .... ..:'::'..n.-JanutrY 3. 10, 11, u..1Ht ut of the nation's poor 19
.. ,,. ...... ~ .......
Americans are expec&.ed to
spend Sl06 bil lion on food this
year --$$ billion more than
in 1968.
Food Engineering reports
that "under pressure of the
innated ~osts of growing, pro-
cessi ng and diatrlbuUon, food
prices may rise 3 percent by
the end of 1969."
• The magazine said food
manufacturers planned to in-
vcsl about $1.'l billion this
year "to improve efficiency
anrl minimize the effect of
rising costs on p~icei;. The
n1anufacl1,1rers will Cipect lo
spend 12 percent more for
better plants and equipment
than they did in 1968."
The soft drink industry had
an estimated p .95 billion in
wbolesale sales in 1968, or
11.3 percent higher than the
previous year, and "the trend
to higher consumption of sort
drinks is expected to con·
tinue," according to Standard
& Poor 's Corp.
It said that while lhe 1961
gaiJll "reflect In part an "-I:·
ceptJonally wann swnmu
throu.gbout the U.S., sale!
should continue to make
above-averaie progress I n t•. , , rtfiecUng increasing
leisure time and general
population growth.''
One reason many observers
feeJ the United St.ates has to
break loose 900n on a housing
boom is lbe w orsenin e
shortage of rental housing.
During the third quarter.
the Commerce Department
says, the vacancy rate for
rental units fell to 5.4 percent,
a low for the 1960s. The situa·
lion was tightest in the
Northeast. 3.4 percent.
, 1'!: .. :!: ~ LEGAL~OTICE i'lllZ"'<"'•••o•a••wr .. ••.,••••1•'·,.•• .. _..,._._..:::n:.-. «•t•-----•'L!IK:?""·;t..·-·
• "tll1 lllJI ""'"' , . '"""""'" ..... "1ol~ r l'vllll.sfttd Orl"'9 Cottt • Jt-1'1' II. 11. 17, I ...
OlllY t'ltlll• ....
LEGAL NO'llCE ......
--~
•
California Legislature in Action
., Till AHOClllU ,.,.. ...
TltllrldtJ, J11>. U
GOY 11.~o•n ""' s. 1. H•vllo.1w• of S.n Frt11Cl1to S!tle meel llK till! •n
11our1 toll re11ar!ers 1~ev "'" "" 111e bulc 1>11lltif1 bflno lollowtid In keep..
1"8 San Fr•ncl1co S!•!e <>Pell.
THE ASSEMLY
C-lllMllOMt A .... n.,,..llt
lll!rotlYcH
V•!t -l~ minimum ~ollnv •O•
lrom l1 to 19 Yltfll ACA 10. Dt'ddon,
D·Chutr Vl1!1, au., ,.,...,11(.,.
CMllH1 -Re<iulres probttlan. ,u ..
1>en11on or ekwlU.,. ct "'v 1!tlt to~
leoe 1Tude11I !or 110 lo n rnonth1. In
1ttord•nte wl!n l'oe1•ltto 1>rocfl(lure1.
for dis.orderly conduct; All 1Jl Wik ..
!iekl, 11..Soutn G•te.
1..,..r1vun1nh -ll..,v;,., '"'' lo 01¥ 1ue..1mtnll •<i•inS! •lttt-<1w1Wa
l1!1d vr.N lor publk luncllons; AB
124, ~-
Aftlll• -Au!hnrl1e1 ~ to!• <11>vt•n·
mtn! lo l1unth •""•~•hen orOU!dur•• on Ill OWi!: All 115, ~dd!ll,
TucNf -R""""' eauu!ion ~ otrlment lo tll1llll1ll ...,110"" 1ltl'l-
G1rd1 •ov~lnt ~tcher .1.,...,1 AB
lH. Iliff. G.H1yw11'11. sum--A•rvorlttl"! uoci,ooo lo
fln1nco 111mmer Pf'Oll•am1 for GrDPOUt
•IUdtnll; AB 1)0. IC1r•lll•n, o.Mo..-
le•tY P•rt.
Plrl -A11ti'lofl1M !Ire l\on!lnq •'lot."·
CY 10 Ch•n. Wit Pl"OPOr!V c....,n ""llh
1"'-cotll of l'th!ln• 1 lire when !he
_...,. Mt ~ !IHI At 1]1, B•r~l.
lt·Stn Ole9o. 11111 .,... P,....ldf1 for t•~ll~n"" ol
'""''" IOhCi!fl\Qfl Mltl cor>lrtcr1. AB
U,, """"'""· 0.MonltMllo. t'rW -f'ulJ +M! bo.o~n nf "'°"' on Nie •ltlnlltr In M'lll .. t>c;t c1""1
•t•IMI penal'll -•llotO In 11\s mo<l-lc.ll •Rlkulol\IJ AB 13'. VtYltv, It• ···-· TMI" StMAT•
&UN llll'r"""cM
COMMODITY
SPECIALISTS
,. """ ________ ..,,... .
Johri V. McCarthy ind Comp1ny, Inc.
110 N Fr1nklin Streit, Chicago, lllinoit, 60606
Tak~ Ple1tur1 In Announcing Th• Opening
of Th1ir C1Hfornj• Office 1t Suit• 10~
4630 Campus Drive
Newport B11ach, Ca li fornia 92660
1714) 540.437 t
01aleri In Commoditi•t &. Co mmodity Futures
Sine. 1914
MEMBERS
Chlc1go M1ra1ntile Exch•ng•
Chic190 Board of Tr•d•
New York Cotton Exchan19
Radprot.11 Trtd.lng Arr•ngements With
Other Prlnctpal E.w:ch1ng•1
PRESIDENT
Robert J O'Brlen-Llvettock Specl1lltt
ithllrm•n of 8o.1rd Chlc•go Merc1ntlfe
Exch1ngel
Robert Moor• Leckie,
C1llforni1 Mgr
Gordon Edw1rd ling,
C1lffornl1 Contult•nt
),
Mesan Named
Assistant VP
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Thursday's Closing Prices --_____ ...... ._ _____ . ..... ~a.---
Complete
c ... , ........... ·-SERVING THE
PUIUC
AND
TRADE
~-642-021 2211 w ..... ., ....
Hnport Welt
York
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IC .0.\11.Y PILOT ---· --
November
Deadly on
U~~. Roads
CHICl'.GO (UPI) -The Na-
tional Safety C.Ouncil says last
November was the deadliest
month in lhe nation's traffic
history.
The council said Sunday
5,'40 persons died that month,
15 percent above November,
1967, when 4,730 died in traffic
accidents in the Uruted States.
The council also a·aid the
death toll for the first 11
months of 19&8 waa 50,440,
about 5 percent · above the
47 ,90 for the same period
in 1967. But the councll said
the figlll'e for traffic deaths
per 100 million vehicle miles
waa about 2 percent below
the wne period for 1967.
Frldq, Jonuery 17, 1969
USING PLASTIC
Drs. Merrifield and Gut.te
or Rockefeller made their
enzyme, who6e structure bad
been determined r.arlier by
other scientists, by using a
bead of a plastic material
to act as an anchor on which
units were added, one by one,
to form the complete chain.
The bead was later removed.
A special machine
Coming January 18
Family ~e.kly
How the Power of the
Presidency Is Passed On
By ALLEN DRURY
You'll wont to read this famous author's inspir-
ing comments on the sacred Inaugural ceremony
and its historical significance to our democratic
way of life.
ALSO
e DANNY KAYE AT HOME-A daugtha•
•ffectlon1tely tells th• 1tory of one of
Americ1'1 unlnt men
e REUNION IN HAWAII-Th• bltl•rowffl
picture sto;f of 1 Vl1tn1m Gl's .5-d1y
l11v1 with h11 wife ind lnfent son
e FAMILY WEEKLY COOKBOOK -A
MUp kettle supper th1t ktynott1 con-
venience
SC:lturclay in The Yleekend
I DAILY PILOT I
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Gloat 19.3 CL ft. Cll>OdtJ ,.,,.. __ -
only 32llo· _, NodollOltinC-. hup 226-1.b.
. 1-. llola>oo -· irlClude Jet-Cold -pen, hrrmlcltt--led re 'tblaaisf*', ldJustibte steel
-ec:~ $38995
.. -... h• .,.,. • ...., .. ~
...._.,,_ ...... 1 ••\1 I blliP8 rwf!'W"*'
-.Gallery
S~ts. First · ; i \
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Art'. Show ·
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STEREO SENSATION!
Tiie~ c.olol'ful sound of
Orange County Music ' ' ' .:him RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM
From Fas.hion Island. Newport Beach
Whirlpool ==------4C)'Clos, automatic rinse-ccnditloner dispen•, dual swine·
vp l'ld<sforeasy loodlng. -ftowfeotu,. for
normal U10wtiiledlshn5"erlsnmnln1. "Nner
Toudl It" self cleaning filler. Ratod hlibeot
by c:onwmer mapzinesl
Help Stamp Out Male OishwaWn.
Foron~ $ 20995 S11'~
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~natic washer.has3~ selections,
2 speeds; super si:IRGll.A~ agitator,
exclusive Magic-Mix filter. Matehing !kyr:le
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and extra large drum. Both have special
. cook1own care for Pwmanent Press fabrics.
• Buy now and SMf •
SUpremeAll!ot1mtlcWaslterhas5-cydesetections,-
Magic Cleoll9 self-deaning filter, 3-level water selector.
Matd1ing 2-speed dfY"rfeatures Tumble Press Control. Both .
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Speciahalue-Saweoowl Washer, LSA-7800; Dryer. LSE-7800
FREE DELIVERY AND NORMAL INSTALLATION ON All WHIRLPOOL APPUANcEs
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!behind t .. P•cah H .... I 642•0240
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·Weekend' IDghlights
·•
AILV.uuETY CAT llBOW -Tiie largeot <at •bow d lts kind to
be held ci:l.-the west coast will take pJace this 1J'tekend at the Anaheim
ConyenUon Center. About 508 felines d an lnedl will competo lo the
lhoJf, Jan. 18 and 19 from 11~ a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The Hhnalayan
Spei;altj Show and Household Pel Show. will be lealured events oo
SUn.~ Jail, 19. • •
MARCH OF DIMES BENEFITS -Two ]>enefits will be held lhts
Sund1), Jan. 19 at the Orange County fairCf'OWlds in Costa Mesa to
ral80 lunda fa< the local March of Dimes hltf.h defect proganL ''Cops
·anc1 Cowboys," an aMuaJ program begins with a 7 a.m. breakfast
serV!d by the sheriff's reserve officen and Js followed by a horse
ahow aod gymkhana at 1:30 a.m. In the ev~ square and round
dancing will be 'held from 7 to 11 p.m. far participants and specta-
tors. Donallon for each event is $1.
PREMIERE PSllFO~CE -. The lrvlne Community Chorus
of adult melnben Ot the Orange County area 'will ~t Its ttni
concert, "Elijah," Sun., Jan. 19 at 7:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall at
University of California Jrvinei ~'Elijah" by Felli MendelBBohn will
be performed UD_!l.erlhe1directioo of Miurice Allard. . · • ·
See Gulde le Fa, Pagt. ll
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INTE RMISSION
By TOM '.tiru~ ( .
~j.
Orange County's youngest little theater
group, a toddler approaching a healthy
second birthday, has a set ol proud
parents in Art and Janet Gordon.
The Gordons, a !'I · · ;;;1
pair of Brooklyn ' {. ~
naUve.s wb6 ~ Lo
Mission· Viejo ..., by
way of La Puente a
few years back, are
the inspiration be-
hind the successful
Rancho Community
Players, now in re-it...ft ,
hearsal for their A•T GORDON
ninth production.
record of box office success -al.I .f'f .
their sh~a have made money, wJ.4h
the ~ption of "Thu~ Cant).vaJ;''
which they put on free -last summer
a! a '"Ill'" of _, MiiolOlf Viejci
theatergoers for .UitW.mPrt.· , · . ., ·
IN ADDrnON,.fre' : " -····" worth of llghlloC .. · · ._., •
• ' M , ~'< 1n Janet swords,. a. , . \iid~. f, ..
In fact, she goes Oil,~ Playen have done better f ' . -In two fears ·
than the Gordont' .o group, .the La.
Puente Players, d1d 'in the 10 )rears
they were with t~~i;q... • • , · _
It's clear that' the' Rancho PJayen
have an enthusiasUC following · -but
. this following is ppt a parochial ·one.
Having "di!cOvertd" community theater,
members of the tnJUp • offei\ wiiJ tra.vel
to plays put on br olher-county
playhouses when their own theater is
dark.
"We felt this community could go for
something like this to give it some ident-
ification" explains Janet, whose news-
paper ad set the spark that ignited one
of Uttle theater's most enthusiastic or-
ganiiations. The first ad only drew two comers, ''We encourage tw' members ~ audi· D~ .... and Carol Stanfield, but lhe second lion for other ~''. Janet says. "We
s"-""> Ur cted feel that staying. "1ifh oqe &l'OOP can effort a couple months later a a . become a llUle staiJ,J:a~. a~ you Jearri
almost 30, and the Rancho Commuruty a Mlt by wO(king "'WJth other tbealm:I.
Players were born. Some of us hive · 6elped. Mcb4iie ..at
'l'he1, i;tarted the hard way -from the Llgana l'lly~ and •PIMl"id ilr '
• • • Where go .•••. to •
KNOTrr~~'I'; FIDD~1N' c~~1i,.iwt' IOO -
to tlo • ••
Hollywood
Back Stage
By BOB T!IOMAS
AMKlfl.... l"nM Wtfltr
HOLLYWOOD -Charlton Heston In a
nude klve-maklng scene?
It happen1 in "Pro/' Heaton'• new ~
which concerns professional football bUt
includes some bedroom atbletics u welJ.,
The actor was indulging in aome of the
latter with CHtar Jeulcl. Walker on the
last day of filming. '!be WU ckloeif
to all but necesaary
film worken.
Later I • fully
dressed Heston com-
mented:
"I'm plezied eod
proud at the way
that sei: has been
handJed in this pie--
lure. We've done two
or three erotic seen-CftAl:LTOM MUTOm
es without the baring of one breast. Yet
I think IU~ will fiod tho,_,.. . .,
atimulatlng u U-In which tho -are shown nude. ~
-"Nudlty.oo U...acreen ll like vim-i,_
It can defeat ltS own ends. Too uplictt •
sex scene is distracting, just u too m•
violence destro)'I Ulual.on. ~
"For tmtance,-if a scene lhon a tntle
being stuck Into a body, tlllt la sbocthic
and repugnant~ It is much mare effedJVe
to show the knife being drawn, and then
1how the face of the victim.
"Llkewise, if a picture 'sboWs to much
bareness, the audience la embornutd:
the Ol'llookers are not swept up In tbe
passion of the moment ...
This may ..... u ..... to-of to-
day's rum maken who ..... 'to be plq-
lng saua] brinkmanship lo eJ!>loring ..,.
vistas d screen paasloo. H-la dll-tr<saed by lhlt tnod. . .
•<Yes, l'kncM' there' are scme f1bh mat .. ,..,.. Whi> believe theb: oo1" teopcn!bllUy
1s to film,'' he remarked. "t aon·t be-'
Jieve that. I don't think that film mabh
should be as unrt1tricted n ether crea..
tlve artists. You can't take Ille -
d a painter or a novellsl eod 1pplJ -' to tfJe moviu, • ...
"Film reaches too far eod lnfli-.s
too many people. Completo -fl expression la oot poulble; m-9>1Ui,
blust co wltb It." • ' . ·
Heston. was recenUy elect.d lo .-le
term as president of.the Screen Actoit
Guild. With so many acton and~
helng required lo -nude oowaday!,
does the guild offer any prottctlon to
.!boll! •.mo cloll't(..,._ lo!.
"'lllere'a ~·,. ~1 contnd with ., . ' ' • bw .... ~' -. . -."' . tlllt," ht aid. SEE P~t)it\.:·· ' . 1'11Ji1'1JIU!·~~ "Anec. ·, I\. . . ,, ~ .,..., .. tho ~·"° protect him-
ICl"alch, since very few of the origin.al shows 1n Fullerton al!ld .Anahehn... ,. • ..
memben had ever been on stage. Some . Art Gordon, the ~ prt!lldmt, or
'. 1 • 'r, I ' .. ; ~1·aod fti~i~mmiben to dD I01 ----~.,----~-----~-~-~-------~~-~ ~larlyilio.~;flild"ql -
·'· · • · 1 ~·1tanactOr1ilidettcitateaadDe bad never even seen • live theater the players.· is laying' the groundwork
production. But all wei-e wllllng to lelm, for the group's neil step, moving into
and to work. their own tl)eater. "If we could get
THE OPENING chipter of Rancho's either the land or a building donated ,'"
history was written in Maf, 1967, when he believes, "We could go on our own
15 members of the group mounted the from \here."
stage ~ rMS\ for the first time -Meanwhile the enthusiasm continues
to put on a cutting of "Dark of the -and it aeems to be contagious. Each
Moon" for the Riverside on&-act fe,sti.val. new Rancho production Jnlroducea a new
"It was a very exciting experience." actor or two tp pie stage.
Janet recalls~ '.'~ it set th_e si::u-~ ~tbn't iee:r ttidr neighbors in our
!or pg Into full length ~ucllom: . •bowl,• Janet;.aliila. "aod they lhllli,
The Ont complete play, otaged :··· If 11'91~ d<>ll;why c.ui't I?" Nowhere Mission Viejo High SChool where • is Ille IJlfiJrllJi ljUle theater movemeet
groupihal )!ut Oii '~)la,\· •. ont~ jg, :~~,~-Int thaj!·ln the <quail)' iir-•· ·Wal· ~ .ll•~-... ~1;· pliit ·~ of-on Viejo.
1n ~ came. Gu)'• mm •uuUoll, • ~ .
Wee.kend ·Mo vie Guide . : ...
, finding the mUlllated· .hodjes of , ~
parents Je:ads .: grim relentlesa:· seil'cb .for thf three outlaws.
Bolemary'1 Baby (SMA): Blending of
·bomJl'..flntasy and every day rt.al1ty,
in ·which a girl trJes to save her b.iby
lroln ·Impending deviltry in lhts oordld
and bla!phemous film with Mia Farrow,
bta way through thls film as the held ~f . an oil . well fire control compafty.
The majesty and terror of the f I res,'
and the · fechnical aspect of oil well
fire· control make the story secondary
evfin thouib tenderly romanUc.
fa1I aod he · 1hlnliS-lt'• daugel'WI, he
sboWd decllno to clO It. Llbwlie If • slrl ts· asked to do • nude ""'"" and lho . -·t want to, .11he sboWd oay IO. I cerbioly think tho · auilcl wwld 11UppOll .,... ··-
;But woul&i't 1116 -··the jobf Nt
~·ppened rec.oily ll!~dway'!lii> ltC<plell • rw. .. , ..... play. Wbai
the play wu mnil1en, aht dilcovered
she was required to play..,. scene ~
nude. She declined. and WU fired. • :
"The Man ·It. Ille Doi Suit," :~Crud, · lo-· ·.• , · ·
'.i· hie." "A T!wrh<r Caml!>l'' *""' k)..:L ' -~ • D .. ~uon" . . . wioma ue
(ErlfloT'a Note:. This !ll01li< Qtlid< Is
pupa.red br the filnt.1 . committee of
Harbor Council Pl'A. Mrs. Robt.rt So-
ren.tm is president and~ Mr1 •. Ho.rt
Sweeney U committee· chairman. It U
inteii<Ud as a refermct in .dete"1nin-
ing iuitablt f i l m 1 for certain age
groups and will apptar wteklf. Your
view are solicited. Mail thtm"to Mo-
vie G1Lidt, cart of tht DAILY PILOT.) .
ADULT . Tbe Split (SM.\): Carelull)" plotted '
robbery of L. A. Stadium nceipll whlle '
a pro football game. is in progress '.filth an ending of • violent bloodbath. Jim
Brown, Diahlnn Carroll, Julie Harris.
. Joornej, Co Shiloh: Seven young, naive
a:ien leave, Oallaa in 1862 to join the
Cqofederate forceti in B.ichmood, but one
:•dvenW!r'e aftet1 another ,brine• clislllusioolilent uriqer the c a p t a i n .
Michael Slrrazi.n stars.
"Usually that COUid be 1volded fit
films," said Heston. "U lt11 a lhot In. ¥i
sbe «IUld cover .up wllb a oj>eet or ellt
ask for a cloae allot. II K '• ·• loq 11hel. !he «IUld requeot a double. '111at'1 wlltc
happened in .. War Lord,,. wben Rollh.
lll1l1l' l'on,111 ~' feel lite• -• nude 1CtM ID a strum. And-I Undid!
stand Eilzlheth Taylor did the Nlifo
thing." ;: -.:r: ~~~ w'f':"'.;,:it~..,:i;.;,;_A' ·; Lo-':ria , D h. F:~at~·~M~·t.:=.~"" . t ,.,, ~eac
• ~~,!"':;: .m ... lien R<Y L'Ec!usi illil : 1 •• : Febma~
J1llllehner, • 1ft < ~' • AJ
I
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The Rancho Pia-,.. have an enviaDHI · ... ,
1 • • .1-;· _ ! -~\.aDll H•~mer1te1n 's
· ..;; i • .. ~,. 'be#tns a aeven -
• 4 ., • • ]»4f.titibce, two-weekend run at the WllEKiiNb-· , . • L6l(g ljeach Aodllorlum Coecert Hall
._ ,-L ":'T"~.,. Jeb.I.
INS-E·~ J'E'i(TuBES The· '"""1d production In Long Beach
•D Civic 'Ltgbt Opera11 21st s e a 1 o n ,
Want to find out the best and lea8t
expensive way to tour England?
These and other questlon1 are ·
answered in Stan Delaplane'•
World Travel column which •P"
pears today on Page 11.
INDEX
Wlrl<I Trawl
X.OU'• Gol4 Rusi!
ArlB*Mtl
Uvt '11N:a&t.r
Out 'N' Abeat
Gatch 10 Fu
Lapna P11yhuse
Lipa• Art Aaaoclellon
Vent118c'111
Qaeeaie
Comkl
TV VIAi
Tele-
Papll
Pqt 11
Pqell
Pqell
P .... INl
Pap ll
l'llpll ·
Pop II
~= ~ Page U
Page a
Pq• 11 ,.
"Oklalaoma!" contains IUch memorable
Hodgen and Ramerstein tunes as "Peo-
J)le· Will Say We're Jn Love," "Surrey
With the Fringe on Top," ''Oh, What
l"Bel\ltiful Momin&" and the Utlt IOrlg.
The ~ call ii beaded by Marty
Rolph u Laurie and Steve McAndrew
of ~ Mela u Curley. Ado Annle
aJl1i Will P1rbr an played by Lloday
Jonu ond Wl)'llO Dvorak whlle Diet
Jollllllou parlrtlJl the had llJY, Jud.
Evenln( perfonnanm of "Oklahoma!"
Ill'< 1IChtdul<d for Feb. I, j , &, 14 and
IS at l :JO, Scnilay matinees are at
I p.mJ oo l'ell.1 ¥<! !!.
Tldiell, l!rit'eil rrom II to 15; are
available 1t the CLO bor office, '19
E. 4th St., Loni 8eaoh and 11 Walllch's
W Ith tho f1'riore oo Top," "Oh, What J1!111lc City l)ore. Phone (Ill\ 132-7928
"Oklahorr..al'' wiU be fo wed by
.. Camelot" (May 1-11) and "C.rntval ..
(July Jo.ID).
8u!llJ'e0a (SMA): G'I r I astronaut
receives orders from Presid'eot of Earth
in the year 40,000 A. J;> ... to ftnd a
missing Earth Scientist, invenklt'. of a
weapon that cin destroy the '""'Id in
this blr.arre and tasteless oddity. Jane
F'ood1 lier&.
Cqu'1 Bhlfl (SMA): Aruooa Sheriff,
Clint Eastwood, Is '°"t lo N.Y.C., lo
bring back an escaped killer held by
the police, and gets drawn into group
of drug addicts before he completes
hill mission.
How Swed it h: Magazine
photographer takts his wife and son
to Europe with him on an auigrunent,
and the miudveotures of this amorous
mlddlMiod couple, pllyed by JameJI
Gomer and' Dehllie Reynolds; turn the
Dim into .a broad marital farce.
Tbe L<1eod of Lylob Clare (l!MAJ :
A aon:Ud film oi. tlrange and UR11vory
people practicing groed, lldlom, drug
llddlctlon and leshlanlam when 1 bright
new discovery is made over in the
mold of a legend~ Hollywood star
whom she uncannily resembJea. Kim
Novak and Peter Finch.
Nevld1 Smllb: sadistic eod brutal
westem, 1tatr1n1 · -MoQ.J<tn Ud
Karl Mal<leo, of 1 YOUlll man who 11pt11
MAnJRE TEENS AND ADULTS · .
Dr. ~ .... , Sto<y of young -~· doctOr eod poet caught In his coftnlry's
revolutionary upheaval with which he
eot1kl not. identify because of an intense
belief in the rightl and privileges of
t h e individual. Omar Sharif, Geraldine
Chaplin. ,
Hot MDUOD11 Peter Ustinov, 4s an
amusing crook, -programs computer or
large company to grind Out paymenl'J
to hi! ~t companies, then ei:IU
lo Brazil. Hll lovinl wife, Maggie Smltll.
strf.ngs a few ftnandal surprises of her
own In lhia wtll-acted comedy saUre
with a well~n cast. .
Tbe lmpouil>le Vean (G): David
Niven 1tan as a 'professor of psycbolOI)'
who apeclall... In p!Ohlems 0 r
adoleaoence and dlacoven the confusion
teen-agers C'.'an inflict even oo the m01l
enlightened parents.
Raebel, Racllel (SMA): Jo an n e
Woodward ls a neurotic, t.enae and
rest.le. spinster schoolteacher trapped
in her amaD town world in this aensitlve
movie.
, . tlmjl AND ,Aplll.TS •
HellUpten (0): Joho Wa)'lle roen
Ctndnued Gil Pa1e JZ
.. .
Family Fon Trip
See Bay From Different ·vura
.An lntemtlng altemoon for the whole family can ht the mull of •
tour <n Newport Harbor. Viewing the area from 1 -ventage point -
lht water ~ can be managed easily by boarding a guided tour boat ta
Salim.
·Elegant waterfront homes wltll dockside yacltta, yachl clubl, Plr>
atel' Cove, China Cove, the breakwater and Ketetbof'f Marine Labor•
toriea are all point. of Interest which will be delcrlbed.
Toura leave da1IJ II 2 p.m. from the Fun 7.oi1e Boat Compill1 Docl.:,
between Palm eod Mlio Sireels, next to the Ferry L111>dlng.
To reach the dock llte Balboa Boulennl to Piiia ,_, "blcb
w!Jtbe eaaily recopit<d 6y the large "Ferry l.andlnC" lip. Tunl ritb11
lhe opposite dllOl:tion from the Ferry, to find emple porl:iofJ In 1111 -
side lot off Palm. From lhert It ii only 1 -block nil: -SU. boo 8oulevanl to the llorbor low1 II the tnd ol Pllm.
' . . .erui... ere to-mlnulll and. COOi 11 for .rune mt n for -
utalor 11 ni...11 nocliarpfordilldtta-Jtv..
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JI DA!t.Y 111.01 Frid'1', Jant1aty 17, 196.,
Wo rld Travel ... . ..
....... ..-... ~With $ltn Dolopl.no ----. 911 ~ -nus is a fine vil· ~ . lac• MllJandl •here the River Der-~ -' rial ~. Ille eutern end of Hope Dale.
• Tiit 0..,.. b M tit eoochln& inn. Polished brass
bkr IJGIDRI 114 e '1ulnf coal fire . A room over·
looll!Of the garden goes for '6 with a breakfast of
Derbyshire ham and eggs included.
* I got into this country following Robin Hood.
Though it's far from Sherwood Forest, Littie John
is buried in the churchyard. It's an antique site. The
church is Norman with some Sai:on remains. Dan-
bll Vikings built earth forts on the bill.
CHARLOTT!! BRONTE wrote part of "Jane
Eyre" in the vicarage. The Eyre family is buried
in the church under the finest brasses I ever saw.
The knigbUy brass figures are on crypts, and the
ouUlnes are sharp.
Here's a place for overnight and to make brass
rubbings. If you don't know bow, get a book called
"Monumental Brasses". Probably at Foyle's in
London.
* ''We will have two wffkl in England and don't
want to spend it all in London ..• "
England is the best of driving countries. Thatch-
ed villages and leaded glass window pubs around the
next turn in the lane. You must get oU those free-
way M-ls and A-2s. Pick roads that start with "B"
followed by four numerals. ·
* Now t.o find a wann'pub with rich country soup
and watercress fresh from the river. Here's a run
of about a leisurely hundred miles a day across the
south of England. London to Hawkhurst. You stay
at the 300-year-old Tudor Arms. Good food and fine
cardens.
* Next day to Christchurch. Hampshire. The
Kings Arms is an old (1796 ) coaching inn on the river
Avon. Next to Darlington, Devon and Ye Olde Cott
Inn. Excellent food and a good pub bar. this inn is
the second oldest in England, and I thought one of
the best.
* Next day a"tross wild Dartmoor and Exmoor to
The Crown in Exford. So British that when J asked
for ice in my drink, I could feel the disappro~al of
everybody in the place. WonderfuJ country village
on the river Ex .
From here you can get on a main road and
you're back in Landfn that evening. ~ -, .. ,· * •' ' 4 • ;.,;oi '( "Would wt fl'tiffd rtserv•tions fo r country
;l 'hGttlt ?" .~ : I ,' ·,
i.. These co .... £. .' ... '1aces U6'Ually have only ten to
fifteen rooms~~ pub ..realty exists as a sort of
.: c•ub for the local who drop in for their evening pint.
l.> I'd mate sure of each da)' by having the plac.•1ou
:;, stay~ phone the next place 181\d book ·• room. i '' . . *
I'; ''Wh•t ls the tipping ~stom?" !· .. 'Jbe .Engli$b ii,e 12 percenl of the bill as the.tip. I:· · 1fi1.,-~o \fe 1rse 15 percent!) Tip th.• porter ""•hlll-
1 : '. idg. a bae in and out. Bartenders -olten'llat0m&ids I ~, -. are never Up ped. Ask ber if you can bJlY her a J ;; beer. You ·can. * ~
I:: .-·w.;.·f does ii. cost to r1nt • cer ? How •bout
si•1tline?"
•
•
'
CHIEF willTE EAGLES DANCE S TUMBLEWEE D HARRIS PANS FOR GOLD
Knott's Re.creating 12lst Gold Rush
Pr.ospectors Day, lhe ~iversary af
the dilco-of gold in Cllilomi4, wi(l
ht--celebrated at Knott's Berry, F.arm,
Saturday, Jan. ZS and evel}'.ooe wW
-be in-luch spifits-.S an8 of the ·most -
colorful periods In California history is
recreated. •
Marking the Ulst yeaf since the Gold
Rush the dCy will be filled with exciting
events. A gaJa parade down Grand
Avenue and through the streets of Ghost
Town will· ihclude more units than ever
befcft. Costumed 4.9ers and Ghost Towns
personalities along with marching µruts
and floats will all particll>{lte in the
parade.
Throughout the ·day, 'lively skits will
reenact the wild wool,y ·, Uys or the
early Weat . .Masked bandits will run
wild through .the llreots attempting to
coofilcale ·.-ne gold .for themselves,
not far away two fut •gunmen will
have a shoot oot .. wblle ~over at 1be
Dry Gulch Pack Statton !be prospector
Jeiaurely has a toobut (or a few of.
his friends. •
As you enter "Ghost Town at Knotts
Berry Farm, Buena Park, you will aud-
den1y be transpcirted into time past.
Just like I typical town in CaU:lornia's ·•
Mother Lode country, Knott's is a living
tribute to the ways and the ~pie of
the Oki West. This unique, picturuque You can ride a stage coach, a steam-
town la: complete with atorelr...attnctions boat. visU a ~ shack or erVoy
and ~u.Sements from yeaterday. -an old-time we:sfem melodrama in the
!Jong the .streets with 01:!!_ boanlw~s __ Bird Cage_ 'l'beltJ"e, J.b!:re you c®er..
you'll find such buildinp aa the :Wells
Fargo Office, Silva. Dollar Saloon,
Chinese laundry, jail, blaeilsmlth sbop,
livery stable, Bottle ·House, log cabins,
Little Red School Houu and hotels. True-
to-life sound eUects make the .streets
"come alive" as you wanter through
the town. • •
You can "strike it rich," too. Just
roll up your sleeves, swish the pan
around a little tnd kf.and betnld there's
gold. Stroll through the n_Une and
diJcc?ver gold for yourself. Step up to
lbe sluice box and for a small fee
pfck up a pan from the pr08pectbr and
Ja):e home your awn a;Qld dU1t.
A1You are rulistieally removed from
"the space age to the horse and bu&17,
~e coach era of the wild aod exclUng •est. Each shop yw vis!~ the •n-
tertaininc and educational rid• and ex-
hibits, take you hack· to the thrtlllng
gold rulh period when California was
booming.
Bearded prospectors, Indian Chiefs,
muked bandits and many other western
peraonaliUes are everywhett to talk to
you aod have their picture taken.
the hero, bia the villain and love the
helpless heroine.
In t~e General Merctwkllse Store, the
forerunner of tbe mo d ern-day
supermarkets, yau'll eat bard-rock candy
while sitting aruuod a pot-bellied stove,
swapping storle1 witb the storekeeper
and watching the old·limers play their
game of cbeckef3.
One of the highlights is the Ghost
Town and Calleo Railway, the only nar-
row-gauge paasenjer train ojleraUng on
a daily schedule in the United State!
A real pioneer built in 1881, thbi train
was the first ihat dared to go through
the tortuous chasms of the R.oc:kl.es -
not around them. In 1952, the train
was brought to Knott'• from its aid
route with the Dmver and Rio Grande
in Colorado.
Tod•y this train takes an ad-
venturesome journey around t h e
perimeter of Ghost Town. T b i 1
tramportaUoo rellc ltlll has the arrows
in its sides from the Indian raid.II of
Jong ago. But the thrills and danger•
stiU lurk, as masked bandits frequently
cause alarm as they shoot it up running
tbroogh the cars, sla&ini a holdup.
can visit old ltiacDonald's Farm and
watch 'the antics ol trained farm animlls.
These delighUul performers are housed
in quaint ted..b.ams surroundiDg a_~e
powered merry-go-round that is nearly
100 years aid.
Add to this world of make believe
with a visit to Moll's Miniatures, where
one ol the world's largest collections
af mlnlatures, more than 100,000 in-
dividual items aie on display in siz
scale-model homes. 34 shops, churches,
museums and other slructures. All are
handmade by the Mott family including
a two inch televlalon set that , really
works.
The most ~t addition to Knott'•
Is the stately full·acale replica of In-
dependence Hall This brick·by-brick
reproduction hoalel an uact copy at
the Uberty Bell, wei1hing only five
poond> lw thin the orll)iJW 2,0IQ
poond>.
Guided tours of this historic shrine
are given dally. One of the highlights
is a dramatic stereo-rama sound presen-
t.aUon of the debates whlch led to the
signing of the Declaration of In-
dependence. Costumed Coloolal belles
relate the background of the original
bufiding's hiltory.
1 figured car renl wilh ga;; runs $9 .~ day. You 1 · can rent with gaS'. Without gas. With limit'4 or un-limited mileage. But I tbtnk it all vtorks obi mucb
the sam~. 1 • .rt .... •
* . r ART EXHIBITS CSF Taking
'V irginia'
On the Road
Other transportaUan t.reata include a
real San Francisco Cable Car, miner's
burros, boneless carriages you can
really drive and a merry-go-round with
a variety ol 52-hand-carved animala. One
Knott's is located in Buena Pari: on
Beach Blvd. (Highway 39), just two
miles IOUUI of the Santa Ana Freeway
and is open every day of the week.
Houra are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday; 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Friday and Saturday .
A bandy book to carry is the "Blue Guide".
Boy It in LOndon:· Tells ·you · the history ol each
town. A good . guide to places to stay and eat:
"Egon Ronay-BMC Gu.ide to Hotels, Restaurants,
Pubs and Jons ."
* WHAT'S WRONG \Vitb it? Well, English weath-
er changes by the hour. And often for the ~·orse. Be
prepared for sunny mornings, pouring rain at noon
and maybe freezing cold by night. But I 've had day
after day of blue skies and rolling green country-
side.
C.l\f. ART LEAGUE GALLERY -513 ce'nter .sl., Costa
r-.tesa. Hours : Sat. and Sun. I to 5 p.m."ContinUOUI uhibit
of art work in various media by Art League members. No
admission charge.
SECURITY FIRST NAT'L BANK -196 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa. Oil paintings by Lea Muggeridge, Inge Linhardt
and Moody Lytle are currently on exhibit du ring regular
business hours.
The first major drama pro-
duction of California State
College, Fullerton to go on the
road will be ''Who's Afraid
o[ Virginia Woolf?" There will
be four performances on
Mainstage at the Pasadena
Playhouse College of Theatre
Arts. Jan. 23, 24, 25 and 26.
SOUTH SW
TROPICAl FISH
Largest Selection at
Tropica I Fish &
Su pplies in the area.
N•w J LM.tt.•1 111 w. WILSOM, con A MllA
!off F•i•~ll-w It•.. J.4t.1'oil
tn-G, ll:l'Ytrslde Or. -New~ 9-.cll
(bthll'IO '"' "°'' Otlk •l ~
Oaity Cruiae.-2 p.m.
FUN ·ZONE BOAT ·COMPANY·
* Balboa 673°0240 •
* You won't get a room with bath all the time.
.C.rry a robe and slippers and use the bath down
the hall. (Not so Terrible. You 're just spoiled.)
MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive ,
Costa Mesa. Currently on exhibit during regular library
hours, ail painting landscapes, portraits and still Wes by
Jean Dales.
UNITED CALIF. BANK -3029 Harbor Blvd .. Oil paint·
ings by Manuel De Leon, Lucy Sanford, Berrell Rlea and
Marian Ries are currently on exhibit during regular busi·
11d$ hours.
"Virginia Woolf" was the
most acclaimed and succes!full~iiii:iiiii;iiiii;iiiiii;i~~=============~===== college production at Fullertonjj
last fall. The entire company
* YOU'LL PROBABLY have to clean your own
COSTA P.tESA LIBRARY -:>66 Center St., Costa Mesa .
Currently on exhibit dur ing library hours, miniature sur(ers
and space globs in plastic by Lee Worman and Civil W•r
surgical instruments owned by Dr. Richard H. Hortman .
windshield and check your own tires. English gas
stations sell gas·petrol. They don't see any reason
to spoU the customer. And you may have to buy
maps. The stations have them. But they don't give
them away, mate. 0CC ART GAU.ERV -Orange Coast College, 2701 Fair-
\'iew Road, Costa Mesa. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, 7 lo
't 10 p.m. Wed. evenings. Currently on exhibit. a student art
show of weavina:, sculpture and paintings.
LIVE THEATER
., • :: •
....,.. 8llr Spu1lecl Girl ..
A new Nell Simon comedy
oltwounder grou nd
newiplpermen and t h e i r
DlpaviPI girlfr ie nd ,
w·e d n • 1 da ys through Saturd.,. al Ille Laguna
P1a~. 319 Ocean A\"t .
Lqvna Beach. through Jan. 21, Rftervations -,..,.,.1.
"ne Iacredlbte Relp
Of Kine \Iba"
The world premJett: of a
natJme mu.steal 1 a t i r e
«D.ployin& mired m e d i a .
'nlunday1 lhrou8b Sundays. fl .......,, reb. f II SOUtb COl&t
RoporlorJ'• Tbln! s t • p
,._ Tl >, 1117 NtwpOrl Bml .•
.. c.&a -8-rYatlool -Ml-IJll.
~lalM•" t A draml GI polJ6cal intrlp
II I party conmltioo wt.. r , .. _ .. the ... ~
'
JUNIOR EDELL EXHIBIT ~ Mariner's Library, 20l5
Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Oil paintings and portra!L~
• by Lee Turner, Junior Ebel! Club's artist of the month, w\11
nomination. Fridays and be an display during regular library hours .
Saturdays. through Feb. t .11t
the Hunti ng t on Beach
Pla.ybou.se, ZUO Main St., Hun-
tingtoo Beach. Re&erValiona -
847-ll:lt.
''Tlle Nl(bt af January 11111'"
A courtroom drama in
which audieace m e m be r s
comprile the jury in a murder
trial. Rum Friday& a n d
Saturdays through .Feb. 1 at
the Westminster Communlly
Theater, 1589 Westmlnater
Ave. at Golden West Street.
Westminster. Reservations --.
''Gaerldol"
A comedy 1bout the yoolh-
age confrontaUoo. Frldaya an
Saturdays from Jan. '4 to
Feb. I at the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, west 1at.e of
onmgt CountJ Falrgrounct..
Reeervat.iona, 134-.5303.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Dri ve,
Newport Beach. currently on exhibit during reguJar buslnes.s
hours, mixed media paintings and drawinp by John Hack-
forth .
N.ff. ART MUSEUM-Balboa Pavilion. 400 Ma.in St., Ba1-
boa. On exhibit beginning Jan. 22. retrospective show of paint-
ings and graphic works by Paul Brach and Miriam Schapiro.
Hours: Wed. lhrough Sun . 1 to 5 p.m.: Mon. Ii to 9 p.m.
No adm.is.5ion charge.
L.B. ART ~ATJO~ Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach.
AU media membership show begins Jan. 19. Art works wtll
be uhlbited in lhe Main Gallery noon to 5 p.m. daily. No
adm1$1on charge for members.. Others 50 ttnls.
SO. CALIF. Fl~ NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach Blvd.,
llunlington ee.ch. On exhibit dnring rtguJar business hours,
ail paintings by Barbara Fieberg.
QIARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main Sl.
Santa Ana. Hours ·~-through Sat., 10 1.m. to 4:• p.m.:
Sun. I to 5 p.m.: Yi1ed and Thurs. evenina;s, 7 to 9 p.m. No
admission charge. Currently on exhlbil, lcttef3 and docu·
meoLI ol the American presidenL'i.
l
l
as well as setting and cos-
tumes will come to Pasadena
for the presentation of the
Edward Albee study or truth •
and illusion. '\
Arrangements for the pro-i duction here were made by
Dr. Fairfax Proudtil Walkup,
Dean or the Pasaden a
Playhouse College, and Dt. ,
Ja1nes D. Yoong, drama
department chairman al CaJ
State, Fullerton. "It is our
initial effort," said Dr.
Walkup, "in planning further
offerings al the Playhouse of
some outstanding college ~
ductions in Southern
California.'' "The inv itation,"
Young says, "is a tribute to
the exceptional direction by
Dr. Alvin J . Keller and
remarkable performance!! by
the four players."
Cast in the demanding roles
of George and Martha are
James P. Funk of Riverside
and Naocy Cranford of
Anaheim, while their two
guPsts for an e~ning of "fun
and games" are portrayed by
Jerry Sy of Anaheim and
Carol Wray of Fullerton.
curtain time Is 8:30 'l'trun·
day lhn1 Salurday, Jsn. 2.).2$,
and at 7:30 dn closing nf&bt,
Sunday, Jan .. 26. Tk.kets SS.
$2 and St. are now an Sile
at the Pasadena Playhoule
Box Office (213) 79U171 ot
681·2687), at CSCF Theatre
box office J-170-337 1 and all
~tutual Agencie!I.
..
~ ~--------------------------------
OUR CUSTOMERS DON'T GD
THI HONG KONG FLU!
B•ceus• wh •n th•y 1qu1t1t owr ortnges or gr1pefru it, they're "11 frt1h end
10 full of vit•mins" th1t thoae Hong kon9 flu 9el"fft1 don't 9et • ch•nce t•
pen•trate our cu1tomer1I (Of coune 4 ,of our employet1 for9ot to •~llffle' "•ml
SO START FltJHnllfl NOW WlTlt THDI SAYIN5SI
MooOJ s..i1it ~ ·····-· I LAllOI .. 1111 I
•Grapefruit I
I I
I 3,., 25C I ..... I .......... _ I ·--····
·---·-· I GWIT llH I
1 N•vel I
I Ort1n9es I
110 ... 89'1
I .LIMIT .. Laa. I
wt .. -~ ·-----· c .. ,.. lqllre J .. .,, U
·-·--·· I Avoca•osl I ·oa •; I • ..... "°" ... I IOC... I
I Ltr.llT • °' ... CH I Wl"_c_ ·-·-···
The1• re1teur•nf1 d..,,1ncl tli .. fin t rt for th9ir cuttomers, th1f'1 why they erHI
ov•r 200 oth•n buy their produce frem NlwPotT PIODUCL J •1trs,' VIH1
Rom a, All1y W1•t llunch1s new toe), How1rcl11, Swi11 Chelot.
67J-1715
I
HOW AIOUT YOU CAWNG US 7
NIW.PORT
PRODUCI
• • ·-...
rr1A1, Jarn,11r7 17, 19"
I
'N' ABOUT OUT By
NORM STANLEY WEEKENDER
c 0 ff N'T y I s ' RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE ,.
. ..
' (teiesiiel11?,iping? . · ..• · .
·. J~uary's n~w moon roae at ~1.'J.:13"8..m.
this mornlDs. Few probablj nOiid tile ooc~lon,
11-0wever, pre6ccupled as we bave been wllh.recent ~unar events of considerably srea14!!: m~pltilde.
.,i•· When tt .ttibles. to getting otil , 'n'-11bout, it's
rather dl!Hcult to top the a.chillvemenl ol ,AJ>dol'1, eOrmiift ~dcl.ovell. The tnind l>Og(lu l'lth.all Uie
future bolds thP.Jlks to their coll"81eous and. •Jtill·
ful odyssey 33 years before 2001. A ,
Pbilotl!Phlcal · and scientific speculation is liouli4lt•t .Under the impact of Apollo 8. Since all A"Ullj!:I of QJDjecture are open there's no reason ~ 'llttle liiought shouldn't be given to celestial
e in the life to come.
~· . r. ·.'.Will tomorrow's space travelers and residepta
. ~e of the familiBr Clishes we know today -or
')rill':tbere1>i'.a wholly Dew kind of solar sustenance! . ' j:'·{ " WITH A VIEW , ~ ~~. liwtead of an ocean or mountain view, will ~urants advertise panorama windows with ~
Wlta of Venus, Earth and Mars?
Jn lhe wake of the astronauts' feat, our grand-
children might very well be dining on something
like scampi a la Saturn or interstellar teriyaki at
a place called the Milky Way Inn. .
Meanwhile, mere earthlings as the majority
of -us -are destined to-remain, we can-acknowledge
our lucky stars for the bounty of fine foods and
cafes Lhat will more than suffice for the time be-
ing. '
The immediate future, after all. lies in the days
just ahead so the moment is at hand to sally forth
for the enjoyment of such that is here and now.
THE MARINE RESTAURANT
* Excellent Menu * Fine Service
LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS
from 11 :JO A.M.
Reservations recommended
644· 1700, E.rt. 445
-
MUSIC FOR YOUR LISTENING ANO DANCING 'LEASURE
NIGHTLY, FROM 5:00 ,.M. IN
THE LIDO LOIJiVGE
·1107 Jamboree Newport Beach
'.
General Yen's
Make this week's lir•I terrestrial stop Iha jmt·
opened General Yen's at 1000 Adams Ave. (corner
of Harbor Blvd.), Coata Meoa.
Here's a new Cbiniae restauranl offering a
menu of almost stagJorlng variety. A quiclt count
co¢1nns 1ometbln1 lD the nelshborhood of 113 dif.
ferent items -. excluding 12 family and special
dinner a.
UNIQUE DINNER NAMES
These latter -according to the names they've
been given -provide a kind of Cook's tour of the
na-·s institutions of higher !earning and Orange
County aerospace firms. A unique and unorthodox
method of tagging house specialties, to be sure.
Certainly it's unlikely you'll ever be given an-
other oppOrtunity . to choose between the Massa·
cbusetts Institute of Technology and Princeton
family dinner, or McDonnell Douglas and Aero-
nu~c special' dinners.
OWNERS' BACKOROUND
There's a reason for all this, of course, and it's
centered in the professional and personal back-
ground of Dr. Roger Hsiao, owner of General Yen's.
A ·bolder of degrees from Polytechnic Institute of
Brooklyn as well as a sell-described "lifetime stu-
'dent and scholar", be is himself an aerospace eng-
·ineer while his wife, Dr. Adeline Yen Hsiao, a
specialist in internal medicine, M.R.C.P. from
London Universily, is a practicing pbyslcla.n in
West Anaheim Community Hospital.
Selecting from the academic dinners at ran-
dom, perhaps your family might want to under-
take the one labeled California Institute of Tech-
nology. At $3.95 per person, two people receive 12
disbes which increases to a total of 15 for tho addi·
tion of each person up to five or more.
-·-FIVE OR MORE
If you gather tile full quintet al the table you
will receive won ton soup, barbecued spareribs, tgg
roll, fried shrimp, rumakl, fried rice, lobster. Cair
tonese, chicken oyster sauce, sweet and sour pork,
Yen's special chow mein, sweet and sour chicken ·
steak, ice cream, tea. fortune and almond cookies.
Dining With an Ocean View
SEAFOOD, STEAKS AHD GOURMfT BrlR£ES * FROM $2.95 *
Entertai11111ent and Dandng Nlghtly
AT THE PIANO
BOB PERGRIM
8:30 to I :30 a.m.
BANQUET FACILITIES
AVAILABLE
PHONI IJ6-Jlll
Jl1 OCU.N .t.VI.
HUHnN•TON llACH
OVERLOOKING THE PACIFIC OCEAN AT THE PIER.
Exciting Entertainment
"Supedi•~ ....... • •er.t taJat Wei .•••
-B4llt ..... ~ i.a .,.... ••••
Eri.W•.-t •"" ci..iac .... .,,(-llom''')-111 .. ia .. -.ut.i ....
'-
GRAND HOTEL
Friday • Saturday • Sunday
SPENCER STEAK
*' .. _ s11s Cltolu ef , ___ ............................... ..
•:H •·•· ll:tl ,... .-DAILY-•1ot •·•· •fJlt P·•·
. .
Looks as thoucb anyone setUn& Ull'ousb all that
earns a Cal Tech B.A. without even going to Paaa·
dena. · . ·
In the department of special dinners, order the
Collins Radio and they'll serve -at ... 75 per per·
son -bouae special soup, barbecued pork, egg
roll, fried sbrlmp, ahu ma!, rumakl, cllicken, fried
rice, Yen's •pedal chow mein, boneless almond
duck and bouae special deuert,
Sbould you have other company loyalties, furth·
er poeslbllltles Include the North American Rock·
well at $3.75 per peraon; TRW, ft,~; Hughes, '6.55.
Turning to the a la carte and special Chinese
dishes, a seemingly limitless quantlty of items are
available. One that shouldn't be overlooked is
sizzling go ba, a difficult,..to-prepare course rarely
found in Chinese restaurants.
REAL MASTERPIECE
To come up with this culinary masterpiece, the
cbe:f places a bed of dry rice on a fire-bot steel
plate. ·Over this he pours a combination of diced
barbecued pork with mushrooms, bamboo shoots,
and shrimp with China peas in a delicious sauce,
The resulting cloud of steam bears close re-
semblance to the eruption of a volcano -not to
mention a taste sensation of extraordinary pro-
portions.
One final observation should be made about
General Yen's, though. It isn't necessary to have a
Ph.D. from Berkeley or work with digital comput-
ers to enjoy this fine new spot.
Old English Sunday
Reelly laking bold is that special feature -
Sunday midday fat; -introduced a few weeks back
by the "Five Cii>wils ill Corona de! Mar.---
Their intention was to _recapture the imagina-
tion and appeal of this old British cµstom and the
attempt has met with resounding success. Attesting
to the 12 noon to 4 p.m. event being several notches
above a routine brunch is the ever-growing crowd
turning out each Sunday.
MOST POPULAR
Most popular items among the conUnental
specialties offered at t.be midday faer are the steak
and kidney pie, crepes Veraallles (French pan-
cakes lllled with cream'd chicken), Norfolk om&-
lette accented by chicken livers and mushrooms,
and roasted beef bash crowned with ao egc fried
round.
.~d like all occasions of Five Crowns dining,
the authentic English atmosphere and "bully" serv-
ice greatly enhance the excellent entrees and liba-
tioos served. ..,,
Managing Director John Ondyke and his entire
stall rate a special dip of the Union Jack at the
end of any visit here .
Francois'
Epicurean cuisine of the first order is the
every day bill of fare al Francois' in Huntington
Beach. Tbe beacb city can be justly proud of th!>
de luxe establishment -its like is not too often
found in the country's major metropolitan centers.
PLEASANT SURROUNDINGS
Ingeniously divided into a series of small, in-
timate dining rooms and areas -seven to be euct
-at no table or booth Is ii possible to feel other
than a very private tlnd of comfort. A striklniJy
bandoome Mediterranean decbr lo carried throu&b-
o.ut, with subdued lighting and just the right quan-
tity of .amber paneling completing the cozy effect.
Located al 18151 Bea.cb Blvd. in HuntiJ!Slon
Beach, Francois' opens for luncheon at ll a.m. and
serves dinner from ~ to 11 p.m. The cocktail lo111111e
stays· open until 2:00 a.m. but the Mme ;; dark on
Mondays .. -----LUNCHION MENU
The luncheon menu provides a choice of· nine
sandwiches, three low calorie selections a daily
special, four salads and seven a Ja carte sPect.at~s.
Sandwiches range from bacon and tomato or
breast of turkey at 90 cents to a steak at '$2.25.
Continued on Page 20
iMN~. ~
PAIU\OUI .-W IDT AUIAHT
..., .... l-ev-.... c. c. U--'.......,. DI..._ °"""""'"",.....,. ~ 1.1. Chtof•C ............... I•.._. ............... -.,;~· fmfli. ... lll)
'Ol ....VATIOMI Co\&& P14) .......
• Yw...41t• C... ...,.,. k. "-"
NOW Al'l'EARING
JOHNNY VANELLI
AND THE
JACK LAWRENCE TRIO
Entertainment, D1ncing, Llstenln~7:30.Closlng
CLOSEO SUNDAY 536-1421
21112 OCEAN AVENUE HUNTINOTON BEACH
FAMILY STEAK HOUSES
HUllTIN•TOll llACH ! COSTA MESA MIU.OJtlN IQIJAAIE TOWN &. COUHTltY HHINO nxACO ITATION ,_ ... ....... ,...,,,. .. 11111 & ..... ..... ..,.,.
Sf'ICIAL SIZZLER .BROCHETTE •
!::':o~::: ~~·." ..... ,, ... "" .,, '1J9
TOP Sl!lLOIN STEAK .••.•. $1.39
' NEW YORK STEAK ...•... $1.59
litelff•• a.04 ., French Frl•ll , ... f"'• 1..n a l11Her.
CHILlllN"I POITK!N y, PltCI 1u-:-IJ T ... l
NAU MO ... AT Nl•NT TOUI PAMILT flll-..T
TOI' SIRLOIN STEAK '1" Only
l"cl•ll" l•kM ,, Frtt1d Fri.cl , ... t"•· a.n l l11tt9'.
CHILtllN"I POmON Y2 PllCI CU.., 12 y_,1
.----Lunclleon Specials-""*--.,
11 :00 AM. TO 5:00 P.M.
~2!~~ ~ ..:. ~,,~~~.~~.l~H,,,, 79c
s..... .. s.... ....
-
Support Your United Fund
• '
NOW OPEN
IN NEWPORT'S NEWEST HIGH RISE
LOOKING DOWN ON THE BAY
FEATURING SEA FOOD AND
LIVE MAINE LOBSTER
LUNCH -DINNER
SUNDAY BRUNCH
ACROSS FROM THE AR.CHIS AND
NEXT DOOR TO VILLA NOVA ... , ... ,, .
., l
_i__
"
• '
-...,...._ ... , ....... ... • .i. ..... -.. ........... ~-... -.; .. ~-----'-=•-=~==-::-::or::o..--,~.,,-"-"'~="'-ac-ac~---.,="'""'=.,.,...,..,....,.,..,.,.,..,.--.-..,...,.,......,,..,...=,.,,-..,...,,,. _______________ ,.,,,,..,.,,....,,__..,.. __ _ ·-......,........ ..... ···-· •••• + •• ••• •• • ·~· --~ez:w:ws11 $2$A&WWWMS\C a 5 3 a 2 3 ••• IS 124&$$ s.:;.;" F •
ftMERA
M:&TAUuNr
Continental Cuisine
Cocktail1
Snvingi
LuncMon and Dinnt'f'
Monday through Saturday.
Clo.std Sundayi
Open far
Prioo:te Portie1 Onlu
3'T'fed in the
Grand Manner
. . '
I '
Salad bufu will easily give in to tbe mariner wblch
bas "'1.tmj. -lllld..C.ab meat Qllllbilled with. lottuce
and ""'laine, tben garnished Willi anchoVies,
asparagw,,har4 'boil<jd esg, 19Dlll~ w.edg.S and' a
spocia\ diessing, , -_ ,
A la carte extends from calf's liver or an
omelette it $1. 'I.I to .baked oyslers l9r .'3.00. ·'Ibis
latter i~ a ·delightful comb\Dation qf $.imp and
crabp:ieat, bak~ tog~er wilJl the ,oy1ter in t4t
shell tben topped with Hollandiase sauce and &lazed.
DINNER SELECTIONS
Fifteen table d' bole dinners, all served with
relish tray, sol!P du jour and mi:red green aalad,
run the gamut fl'om fried eastern scallops at '3.50
to $6.25 lor grenad41e of beef, lournedos FrancoL!'
or broiled lobster tail.
· An especially popular oele<tion in tbL! depart·
mentJ priced at .J5'.'25, is Francois' g~unnet entree.
It's COOipriseil of .a tasty combinatioa. of grena-
dine of beef, served with green noodles, and veal
Picatta, lean--Pieces of· veal and Zl1<:<lhinl sauteed
in lemon.,.bµ.tter BD9·.~erved with rjgatoni,
'. We. •re located on +ft•
• Bristol Strei f side b.-
: tween MuH9n and Bluett
: and tfie M•y Co.
•
57 t S. MAIN, ORANGE
I-: S4Z.3S'S .
(a-1-.,)
Four featured dinners ·include filet mignon or
New York steak,· $6.50; double N.,. York, for two ,
$15.00; chateaubriand, 1or two, $IS.DO. Holding the
spotlight here, tbough, is what probably .consti-
tutes Francois' most noted offering -fiaming
duck, !or two, $11.50.
'
I
,
' lunc~.S •. from. 11 t,30
Daily ' •t(:ept Sunday
Dinner from 4:30
N;ghtly
ENfERTAINMENT , .
:r· Nigktly exc•pt Sunday r . J .... • • -
• TO--~FLORES -
·• · Hi~-~~~ •nd Guifar
__ .. -646-4201
'
675-0200
' .
WHOLE DUCK
Order this. gastr6noplical spec.tacu1ar and
you'll receive a whole Long Island :duck, roasted
to a golden brown, then flamed at your table with
selected liquors. The duck is then carved and serv·
ed with candied sweet potatoes, wild rice and an
orange sau~e.
. CHILDREN'S SPECIALS
The youngsters haven't ' been forgotten either
with.a dlildren'a .(under 10 years) dinner for $1.75. .. . .
-··~!re '-it's-: _~i-~ning!"
;
.• ,111.~.MAATlNI f;OC:lfT~IL lOUN&E no .L 17i1' . c~• .,....
·-lhe
"lkimn rea 'l'atty"
-· ' an lihttl«c'-'• .SPAGHET;TI DINNliR
~ T~~ 75~ MIT~ONDAT NIGHT ..
liiLLIARD ROOM
LADIES WELCOME
,
' PitESiNnNc; ,
!f • ' •
HERE ANO ""ow ' --' . THE
S I LE R. B:R 0 S.
"RICK" "BUZZ"
APPEARING IN THE VELVET KNIGHT ROOM
·WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY .
9:00 prn -1 :30 am .
• OU 'f 'N ~ABOUT
•
Tlio ,moppe~ wil). 'ni:ein ai c\iP, ot oqup, a, choice ' . ot entree bi!tween ground nlliljd, filet of sole,
speJbetll and meal ballJ Or' fried chlclten, lee
CreaJQ or sherbet mid milk.
Fiancols' ii bard lo beat for special octa11ionS1
or any time you're merely moved, for lood,Jilu: U· celleilee. ; ...
Sensational Vocalists
out 'n' abouters have only until the early part
of next week lo catch' a sensational singing duo
booked Into the' Villa' Marina for a ·much loo' short
engagement. They're the astounding husband and'
wife team of Bob Fletcher and V!Cky Lano. '
Not to slight their own distinctive styling• ·anil
lechnique, buflt another Steve Lawrence and Edye
Gornie combination is destined to loom on the show
bll: botizon it can only be Bob and·Vicky. Make no
mls141ke, tbL! talented twosome ill 'on the threshold
of g"'8tness.
' ' ORIENT TOUR
Direct from tbeir most recent appearance in the
lounge of Las Vegas' Sands, !lie Villia M;uina-run
is necessarily limited by an upcoming tour of the
Orient. They'll leave Newport ~ !or Tokyo ~to
be followed by a l!leries of engagements at other top
spots in Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan-, Korea, 'Thai-
land, the Philippines, Malaysia and Hawaii.
' BACK TO CDPA ROOM
On Fletcher and Lana's return to the slates a
-giant step will be taken up the ladder to stard.;.,,
when they be<:ome the opening act in the Sands'
lamed Copa ~-It will be a fitting moment loo
~mce Bob, a native of New Mexico, and Vicky, born
m Buffalo, New York, were discovered in Las Vegas
by Sands show producer Jack Entratter.
Before teaming up, Bob sang solo at a number
of the Playboy Clubs, the Balinese Room in Gal-
C011tlnued on P1ge 21
•
. B"';ll 'W. Oberbansll "of London," well
known Harbor Area Chef has pleasure .Jn · ai:inouncing the opening of his
Autbontlc British Pie Shopl
. -. All Foods to Go -Including Sand·
wtcbes, Salads, etc. We alao cater for au occasions.
Canapes, Birthday & Anniversary Cake.! as well as
dinners!"
For Your "TAKE.OUT" Orders • , •
THE . ORIGINAL · 645-2252
OBERH.ANSLl'S
·OP LONDON ~ti E. 17!h SI~ l;lilJgren Squire . nltiilt ..... ....,, c... .....
(l'.1.1 I••_,._..,..-_, ...... •tttWI l"le S .. )
Sheraton Beach Inn
Vocalist Johnny Vanelli, backed by the fine Jack Law·
rence Trio is currently appearing in the Caribe Room
at the Sheraton Beach Jon on the Coast Highway in
Huntington Beach. This group, which up to no:-v has i:iot
appeared in the Harbor Area, is being received with
great enthusiasm and it look s like a long engagement
for the boys. Jack Lawrence is on piano, Alonso Gara-
balcti on drums and Steve Hirsbman is the bassist.
~-GRAND OPENING SPECIAl M\M~
~ SAVE PRESENT THIS AD ~ ~ $1 AND RECEIVE $1.00 OFF ~
~ ON ANY ORDER b
I GENERAL YEN:S
0,~ i I
~ CHiNESE RESTAURANT c::=:io ~ 1500 Adami Avenu. ·+ ! g ~ Coo. .,_,.._. 540-1t)7 . • ~ ~
-,,;;· ~ ~ GOOD UNTIL FEBRUARY 17, 19't "!f? ~fE!!lfil:!•IR1Ji1"1J:l~1~
1045 _ Bayside Dr.
Ne_wport Beach
SURPRISE APPEARANCE!
FOR TWO WEEKS ONLY
DIRECT FROM LAS VEGAS' SANDS ·aoa FLETCHER and VICKY LANO
IN THE DRIFTWOOD L!)UNGE
'
KEN CEHVI TRIO
Tuesday • Sunday 8:30 pm • 1:30 am
ORANGE COAST'S DINING DANCING -·ENTERTAINMENT .CENTER
•
• r ---------- ------------...
.
llA!!BOR CRUISE -lklal. !OOl'I al N<1!J)Orl Harbor's hil-
l<>rical, aites, famous bouoes, fllandl and flOlnlr al ln-
Jeave daily at J p.m. lrom the FUn Zone Doct, betWeen
Pain) and Maio Sts., B81Jioa Ptlllllnsu1a. Tlc:ttta for Ille
90-minutt cruise, adulta, 11, dllldren 6-12, 11, )'Olllltptan
Ullder I, flee. Phooe 513-(QIO.
JANUARY 1' • II
VCI BASKF:l'BAl,L -UC! vs. Chapman C.Uege, Fri., Jsn.
17; U.C. Davis, Thurs., Jan. 2J at 1:15 p.m. 'Ill Crawford lla1l
at UCI, 7'01 IrviM Ave., Irvine. Phooe83M9Sl.
JANUARY 17 • n
ART FWll8 -Tlmlly-oix new short art fllml -in. a
three-part program. '"!be Kinetic Art," lo be held' at ~:30
p.m. Jan. 17, 2t and 31 in the Science Lecture Ball at UCI,
'1801 Irvine Ave., Irvine. Gener:al AdmlaPoo, $1.50. ·
jANUARY· 17"' APRIL I
BORlli!: RACES -~ biroe racing al santa Ao11a ~ Park, 1.15 W. Hundnglan Dr., Arcadia. Finl P..i tin
'l'liea. through Sal., 12:30 p.m. Pbone J.(2U) 44"2171. Sa.~.
Jan.18, $50,000 San Fernandoilaka.
JANUARY U
UCLA BASKETBALL -UCLA vs. Houston Sat., Jan. 18 at
S p.m. In Pauley Pavilion at UCLA, 405 HUgard At e., West
Los Angeles. Phone J.(213)-32S4.'121.
JANUARY II • II
CAT SHOW -Over 400 c:.ats al all varieties att expect<d lo
be shown in the bigest cat show of ita kind Sat., Jan. 18
and Sun., Jan. 19 in the Arena of the Anaheim Convention
Center, 800 W. KAtella Ave., Anaheim. Hours an 11:30 a.m.
lo 7:30 p.m. both !fays. Sull., the lllmabyan Spedalty Show
and the Household Pet Show will be featured evenls. Tidets,
IU5 for adults, lOc f0< juniors, 10 lo II and c:hlldren Ullder
10, free, Pbooe 1"35-5000.
JANUARY II • It .
SYMPHONY CONCERT -The Symphony Orchestra ·
ol Orange County Wider the dlrecLion of Da!UeI Lewis
will present a concert featuring cellist Mary Louise Zeyen
Sat.. Jan. 18 at 8:30 p.m. and Sun., Jan. 19 at 3 p.m.
in the Auditortwn of Cllapman C-Ollege. 333 N. Glasxll,
Orange. Tickets are $3.50 lo 15.50 f0< tbe Sal .performance,
11.75 lo 14.75 oo Sun. They may be pun:hased al the
Symphony Association's <lffice, 717 S. Main St., Suite 124,
Town and Country, Orange, or at the door. Phone 547-41165.
JANUARY It
BENEFIT BREAKFAST, BOMDllOW -The annual
"Cops and Cowboys" program, co-sponsorel bfthe sherilrs
reserve unils and the associated riding clubs or Orange
County, will be held Jan. 111 at the Orange ·County
Fairgrounds, as Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Breakfast will
be served at 7 a.m. by the officers. Riding clubs from
Santa Barbara to San Diego will preserit the horseshow
and gymkhana beginning at 8:30 a.m. All Proceeds from
the $1 donation will go to the March of Dhnes·for support
or the local birth defect program. Tickets available from
the sponsors or at the gate. Phone 646-1631.
'Let's Make Love'
Joel Tropper tries tQ be as repulsive as possible,
but bil advances baye the opposite e!fect on 'l'oni
Shearer in this scene from the Neil Simon ·comedy
"The Star Spangled Girl," now on the Laguna Play-
house stage through Jan. 25.
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Tickets, $1.SO for adults, 75c
for students, at the door. Phone 646-2163.
JANUARY Z< • FEBRUARY I
0 u TI 't'J' ABOUT . . .
Contlnuod f~ p .....
veston, the C<>ntlnental Ho~! )!> Cblct&o Md made
f.U••I appearances on tlie Johnny ear,on, Joey
,r1411, J•1llllf)' 17, 1969 ..
,_ IAAOllh ..... fMM7t
ers
lllshop and Steve Allen Televlslnn lllowL · •
TEAM WORK NOW " " J ..... ~ ...... --~_1 1 ...... , On her' own, Vtcq perfoqDed ID IJlllll dllill ...,_,-~.,,....,__._.1.01 ...
around the countrr then 101!1;d)uor llliallml for a 1w Soutti c.w Hwy., 1,otuna kach, C.Ufamll\ 1
dual career juat over a ytar. ago.. '!lal\lea ber ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~ tiemendous voice, alle lend.I .an aura of sIAijllout to L
'the act that mak••· looklng u plee1Urabje u fls. OPEN FOR ' LUNCH , letll~.yqu fall to hw them ;&! the~~ =:;·.:--.. 11:30 to. 2·p& . JH6 BaY•!!le Drive, N"'POfl Buch, yoil'll have
' only ynutielf to bl..., for mltllna -of tomor-DINNERS
• row's·brfJhlest stars. ;:.,"" $.30 to 10 p,m;
Hayde~ Causey lpo . g .l
Another of the area'• entertatmnent'blgblllhta ' .~14""-
w11 launched last Tuesday .w\th the opening of the ~ II
Ha)'den'Cauiey Trio at Don Jo1eiw.taumit, llOllS FftEHCH RESTAURANT E. Adams (&I .Magnolia), Hunting!on lleacb. Don't 540·3641 _.,1 , ,...-. ,,__
l~t anylhlng keep you from enjoying a night out
for this group.
1 1be trio features 11Josie.'' formerly one of the
De Castro s!slen whose act ranked rigbl at•lbe ~
_with l\IP nation'• audiences for tna111 yean. She 1
also remembered for her loudlyo8pplauded' appear-
~., with Big Tiny Lltlle'• orcbeitra, Lawrence
Welk antl.Hotace Heldt. •
CAUSEY WITH HARRY JAMIS
Before forming the trio, leader Hayden Causey
made his mark in the business during five years
with the Harry James orchestra. A on&-time mem-
ber of the Spike Jones aggregation too, he's al.0 ac-
companied such theatrical notables as Vic Damone,
Dinah Shore and Rosemary Cluny.
The last, but far from least, \.ember of the
Causey triumvirate is pianist Charles Murchison.
FJs background includes writing numerow songs
and·a m•" of special material for motion pictures
and night club acts.
STEAKS -SEAFOOD -RACK OF I.AMI
BUDDY llOHNlll
AT THE PIANO BAR
NIGHTLY
OPEN DAILY
11 :lO A.M. fo z,oo A.M.
2601 W. Coe1t Hiwey, Newport leech -S4a..l 166,
ift'ancots'
CONTINENT·AL CUISIHE
..
SPORTS AND llECREATIONAL VEHICLE SHOW -The
combined Southern Califonlla Sports and VacaUon Show and
the Soatbern California RecreationaJ Vehicle Show will be
held Jan. 24 through Feb. 2 in the Arena and Exhibition Hall
of the Anahe.lm Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave., Ana-
heim. HOUl'll :'Mon. lhroogh Fri., 2 to 10 p.m.: Sat. and Sun., Out .'•' Abouler sollcils comments, criticism FLAMING DUCK
noon to 10 p.m. Tickets;s1.7S for aduus;.,1 for children, on and prai~ about O~ge coa:st restaur.ants--and •·· · r. sale at the door. Phooe 1.a3S-5000. . •• · .()pih rt:OO #.. • ,.-Clo!" IJO'nday night clubs. H you have sometlUnf')IOlt would r~-"A • JANUARYl4', i'Elllll.JilY'.l . like to say, write Out 'n' Abouter, W•end~, Hurul"""TeN IEACH, C).LIFORNIA .
BOAT SHOW -The 13th anuual 8o)llhern California Boal Box 1875, Newport .~c;!i, ~I •. , lllfl 'IEACH ILVD. .' • • . 142-19[t ~w will~ held Jan. R through Feb. 2,)t t}\e PW.~-~iliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""":lli=:iiiiiiliiiiiiiii.:.:l=ii..r:.iiiiiiiiii~~~~·~· iii ,.,.-......... ~ ""'1 ~, · 1
' f. ~·~ ... '
fie Auditorium, J606 Beverly Blvd., Loo Angeles, ",the ~ ·
largest all-nwjrie exbiblUon In th• w/:ll.'Moie1 '.00 TIBER/US-"Ann<t.optilll<ltldbi,.,.. DON JOSE'
boats will be oo display. Phone 1-(213)~. -. ~· ~ i.tsime et trini pratclariotnne1 pro llgton-
. · !l . 1 ibW' 1Mil ..... "TM fiM•t armor, """''' JANUARY 11, · . · , oJ , foodi . mid ehoiu11 _;, for inu If. · -""' --
ROSE PRUNING -The slxµl llOl)ual ·~pruning d._. glom." .. '·' ' Hayden Camey Trio straUon, co-cponsored by the Orange CoUfi.ty Rose, SoC:iety Tiberiua would hatle lowd to COTM to
and the W~ Parks and Recreatiqi:i Department. will tM ViUG Roma, for here we hci>e jait
be held S!tt., Jan. .25 from 1 to S p.m."fu ' the Comniunity what ht. 'heart deriffll Since he can't
Services Center, 8200 We.tmlnster Ave., Wutlninster. Thb-e dine here whv don't Y!!."' "take a paa. o.t,lofihiJ book''
is DO admission charge. and tfJI Villa iwma? 'Yo"'U agree with Tibefjua. We
mo11 not haw tht f1nttt "Armor'' but we iv.re hawe
the rore1t food and choicen 1oi1111 for "0141" legion.a.
Come sec Jar rounclf -65 dtlfetablf "'*''" mid we're open f""7I 4· p.m. dailv •. Closed ll'"'odal/I.
.. _ -·· Vl"A ··ROMA
·~I' N-""""'' -··N..,...-. 64"4nt
HA)'DIN CAUSEY, CHARl.U MURCHISON
JOSEPHINE COURIEGES
BENEFIT DANCE ~ An evening of square and rouod
aaqc1ng will he held S<ii>.;. T~ )9 ftom ':7 lo 11 PJn.
at the Orange County FaJriirouiidi, IS Fair ·Drive, Costa
Mesa. The program for participants and spectaton will
Include refreshments and prizes as part of the fun. Admls.1ion,
by $1 donation, at the door and proceeds will benefit the
March of Dimes' fight against birth defects. Phone 67U838. ' ··Real .:
-canlo~se . ~·
lf•t1Mrfy wit~ Th• D1C.1tr1 Sllt1r1l
ENCHILADA&TACO ......... $1.30 I
CHIU RELLENO-ENCHILADA .. $1 .45 CHORAL CONCERT -The Irvine Community Chorus under
the direction of Maurice Allard will perform "Elijah" on
Sun., Jan. 19 Jn Crawford Hall at UCI, 7601 Irvine Ave., Jr.
vine. Concert begins at 7:30 p.m. 'l;ickels, $1.50, available at
the University Extension Office. Phone &3J.6414.
JANUARYIJ
NOON CONCERT -The Berkeley Improvisation Ensemble
presents a program of modern music, "Their Own Thing."
Thurs., Jan. 23 at noon in room 178 of the Fine Art8 Build·
Ing at UCI, 76!>1 Irvine Ave., Irvine. There is DO admission
charge.
JANUARY Z<
JAZZ CONCERT -The Charles Lloyd jazi combo will per·
form Fri., Jan. 24 in Crawford Hall at UCI, 7801 Irvine Ave.,
Irvine al a p.m. Ll~d, who playa tenor SU and flute, f0r.
merly performed with Cannonball Adderly. Admission .b '3
at the door.
TRAVEL FILM -The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club pre-
sents "Canadian Holiday" narrated by Don Cooper on Jan.
24 at 8 p.m. in the Orange Cout College Auditorium, 2701
AU88ie Signs
HOLL\'WOOD (UPI)
O'Shauglmesly ~iwied for a
Jeading role In "Return of
the Boomerang" at Warner l!ros.
Robin's DINE ANb DANCE
FLOOR SHOWS
Rutaurcmt Uve Music From 9 p.m.
2970 West Lincoln TOPS in FOOD ·
at Beach , Anaheim AND
Telephone 827-7330 ENTERTAINMENT
• Luncheon with WHERE THE ELITE ALL MEET
Entertainment Presents
• Dinner & Dine Out DON LUCAS
• CocHails.-Hic!
COMIDl)Jf. A.CTOI _, WllTll
BOHY CHARLES TRIO
' Open 7 Days plus Luncheoft MOtt. tlll1I Friday
SIMiwtlw . w.w..,.
10.12 ; ...
Jr1. & ht.
10._11;)0 , ....
Io.&
p---------------~ 1 TH' DORYMEN OFFERS· 1 ·
I F R E E· • F R .I E • ·I I '• I I
1
1 BUY ONE ORDER -GET ONE : ·FREE : I
Brand New-Tender a Delicious ~
I ft l W P 0 R· T s T y l £ . ,: 1
1 I c"ICKEN 'N CHIPS 11
I (WITH THIS COUPON) OFFEll GOOD THRU JAN. 3' •1
I SPECIM. BUCKET PRICES II
I CHIX 'N CHIPS .... TMID .................... ONLT !95-I I CHIX 'N CHIPS .... P<>Ul .................... ONL~· .95 · ·1
CHIX 'N CHIPS -..................... " ... ONLT 95 I 2100 Wed Oceah Front n'"'..:..'?.2!: (12 ......... a ... I
L«oltM et the ,_, .t tMw"" Phrf ""'"'°' lwh ir..---------------
•
Ojlt i;, ... ~..,
-talJ..,,._
.. .. , 'rt II . sru•r
. fHlllSE WINO
BUSY' ~CUTIVE?. . .
_BUSINESSM(N'S .BUFFET
TUESDAY THRU FilDA'(.;..,11:30 A.M..z:ip P.M. : . . . ·~;liq
'
' / •
MARCO POLO ROOM
YARIID OF' HOT E~TREES AND SALADS " . WITH. ,.
VEGETABLE, PO'l'.A TO-AND. RICE PILAF ' ' ' FRENCH SOUR .DOUGH l~D • s1as
" &Tuff!~ l·R[.
. R8•TAURANT
ZUIW. CO.Ut Hifhway N•wJNN'l Buclt
• ' ·1~ f7•U) 146-SIJS7
j.
I
s.rvw .u .. rie.. ti.-..... ,HI. .. ..... I e COCKTAILS e
9093 I. All.,,,. (•I Ma9noh1) Hunt. S..Ch 962-7911
IN THE
LIDO LOUNGE
Continuous music from 5:00 P.M.
BY
The Herb-Joe Trio
ancl
The Bill McClvre -
Ton Lobo Duo
Milt. 1 1l9ht of It -Dh11 t1 th1 IM111tlful
MARINE RESTAURANT
644-l~;~xl. 445 for. .......... 1on.
·1107 Jembor.ee
· 4~• a .. ,+. lo•9 .loli...f ou4 .:.... T ...,.Hoo
of-·Fllot M19..,.7 -V"'l O.ctr7 -Rainbow
T....t7 -WoU, who dotio'tlll , .. . .
\ ! n ••• tft~ many ot'ifr •Jflcin9 .nt,. ••• ,.
tervM dYtn· flithtt • -¥k tt lob lums Rfft·
eu;ent. ' '
__ j
-
1,
I
I
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.
Cosby Set
For New
New 'Star' Due
I ·~111"\\;l
Fun Flick ·
" 'BIU Cdti'f will -In ""-Can Walt,"'ihe mo.. tlao plet1lr< • ..,..q i.mu,
-Fnncis Ford ~· will writ• and direcl for
W.amo. Btol.-8evai AN, it•
'QI ·ID'iac~ ,,,. kamttlt
II~ the CC1Dpaay'1 ex· '
ecuttve ~t In
c;hlrge fJ( -pro-~ alt, l t'Hemm ·C. W " a co-~ w I I b Clmpbell-
Sflver.c.by, hie .. w1JI be lb<
first Waruer 'Brol.-Se'fen AN •·
moUoD picture ia wblcb ec.bJ1•
! will 'appear. lllhoop Ille...,,. 'fljlill~
pall)' madt '*The Pidluo Su~" . ::·;~Finney
Coppola dlrecled "Flnlan's ~ R'alnbow," the current wa:rner· ·
Bros.-Seven Arts roadshow
musical, as well u the
lorlhcomlJl( "The l\lin p.,,.
r pie," starTlng Shirley Knight
'.
f and*Jame> c;" *
John McGrath, B r l t i s h
i playwright wboae n e w e s t
' work. "Bakke's Night of
· Fame," ia currently in its f1 first American pre.entatlon at
~ r the newl)'-ttnOv-ted s t a ' e
• Society 'llleltl<, bu also wrt~ t ten extensively for motion pie·
tum.
Judging Trio in Lagdna
Sam Clayl>trger, Otis Art ln•tllute instructor, Arnold Schifren, ol UCLA and
Yosa Yakamur4 who teaches at Whittier Junior College. -(from lefl); are
•hown.wllh lh~painting."'Boundary," by Herb Griswold, Laguna Beach, which
won a cash award in its category at A11 Media Juried the membership Show
of the Laguna Beach Art Association. All award winners will take their places
in the "Winners Circle" on Sdnday at the Gallery; 307 Cliff Drive, L a g u n a
Beach. His most recent acreenplay------------------------------
wu "The Bofors Gun,." bued
on his own play, wbl.ch stars
Nicol Wllllamaoo and David
Warner and is now playing
at the Beverly Canon 'Ibeatre Stack Native Son
.• in Bevel1y Hills. •
McGrath also wrote the
&creeoplay for the Michael
C81ne starrer, "Billion Dollar
Brain."
''Ball:e's Night or Fame,"
whlcb stan Guy Sl<lckwell, ii
the 1ut£or•1 flrll plly to be
prt.iented In the U.S.
* * * Producer • dlrector · writer
Mel Shavelson, who's just
completed tbe screenplay for
"A Sh.lpment of Tarts," which
he will direct this spring for
Columbia Pictures, hu allo '
just ~goed with Prmlli<e-Hall
pub\isbera to wrti.· his llrlt
book. '
To be called "How To Make
A Je.wbb Movie," it ~ detail
his uperiencu direCtlnf. lb<
.Kirk Douelas st.arrer, 'Cut
A Giant Shadow," wbkb WU
the first major American: fUm
to be made on. location in
Israel.
* * * Danielle Rater, curr~nUy co-
starring In Arnold Perl's com-
edy, "Tevya and H l 1
D1uptm," bu been llgned
for a featured rtlle in
"J1l!tine," at 20lh Century.
By VERNON 8CO'M'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -U
tel<vilion '"" fly clllm to
harborlJl( I m<mber of lht
landtd 1mtry, that lndl-11
would be • Robert Stack, a
member of an old and
disttnguiJhed California fami-
ly.
He also iJ one of lhe. stars
· of "The Name of the Game!'
Stack's patrician background .
ls social, economic and cultu--
rll. With It all be ls a hl&IUr
profwlonal actor with the • billlJ to become just one of 'the boys on the set.
He and his wife, former
actress Rosemary Bowe, have
been marrl<d I.I ,..,. and
lhty are lht parenll iii
Charles, 10, and Elizabeth, 12.
both of whom attend private
ICbools.
The Stacu Uve In one ell
the great shoW cUe homea
ol Bel Air;
It la a lalterul atruc:tuni
fJ( ... natoral llooe ml 11111
combinln& oweaptor vllws,
f.rossword Puzzle
ACROSS 5Z c ... Foolo
l Twt -: ~·~'o,'d'tr.
H0<.... 5' MlllY
pl1yer Areti1r11..,
'Jib •'lh lsl1n SOlltthlng S7 Bul'gJllfze
poh•ed "c,,. ... JlOAsJ1n holt CIJl'ICOhl
· man 60Sc:M•t1
modern funtiture and soft Js a champion mark!man at
pastel color! inside. trap and skeet !hooUng. He
tas~lulll_'.< ~-..'.?...llJ'.'."1' Tbr"::, ill teachlng young Charlie lb< ~-__ ,,, ' 111.
servants. ire ~ neC'easary to
keep 1he· homt .nnmtng. In :stack aayg there I.a a world
addlUon to Diankured' gardens ol dUfertnce between sporil
the Stack.II r.njoy a tennis courl 1hootin•and hunting.
Jnd awlmmlng pool on the . :But B-Ob abo b a hunter.
grounds. He owns about• acres north
To say that Bob and o! Sacramento, ._CaW., w)ltre
Rosemary reaa °" good life he shoOts ducks and other
is an undllrstatemen\. game blrds. He inherited the
Their indoor-outdoor home land from his father who
encompaua e,ooo tquare feel , bought the place in 1925.
includingJil: bedrooms. The ac:ruge included an an-
Perhlps the m 0 1 t In· cient farmhouse. Bob and
terest1Ji1 room In the house Ro3emary restored the hou11e
ii Bob's den. In the center and then decorated il with
is a tar• &lu>tomwd table furniture of the 19201. It b
under wll!ch,', ·art°'dilptayed ·a snug hkleaway now for the
dozeaa .ot a'(~ dbbao. and entire fapiil,y,
1 h'o u t d't i 'patches for: Jr=;:::=:::=:::;:::::=;~;=,11 miitlmitiihJp won by Bob
durfng tlie years._
Along the walll of the den
are gun coes tf!>p11ylng 31
fireanm. ' moaUi , lhotgum:,
some of whkb.1 ~ged lo
his graitdfathir -Charles
Wood, wbo was a trap
shooting ei:pert. Stack himself
THI MOTION PICTUll
CODI AND RATING
Pl OGRAM
DATii ... _ ... -
"THE IMPOSSIBLE
YEARS"
I
"HOT MILLIONS".
wltll 11:.t ....._
-7lt L .. -. • .'"' .. __
GUIDE ...
; t" : ' .' ....... ~r.t•:·
~IHI tAlf COMI _,,,.,.,
(01-Oil '""' .,, . ., ..
Phon1 473.6260
E~CLUSIVE AREA
c ENGAGEMENT
1"'99' 1eft the welt
1'MORE DEAD .
TlfAN AUVE"
111111
Si1~~~~a~~i~~
Anne Francis
A.UO PLAYIN•
"TWIST OF SANO" •icw4 .... _,.
H1illf' 11.U-•
NOW SHOWING
onN AT 7:11
SHOIT SUIJICTS 7:JO
PIATUll 1100
1
14 Ghullr Q . Colfuld 15 St1• to fto1t •us
l• lZth c:tn-· 15 Loot
Thi Motl•11 richir• Coclo •ncl
R1H11t A411'M11btr•H•11 .,,ll•t
th• kll1wi11t'jr1tl11'p t• fllm1
dt1trlbutN 111 th1 U.S.A. Pie·
tur11 r•f~ G, M er R qu1Ufy
for tho CM• S.ol. ..
Pi,tvret r1tocl X do not r•CllYI
• S..I, Th• r1tln9J opply to
pichlt•• r1 l101od 1Hor NoY•ll"!·
b1r' I, ,, ••• r ictor.1 rol1111d
bof•r• th1t cl1t1 ''' cl11crib-
•d •• pr1 .. iou1ly I ~
•n4/ot SMAI.
HELD OVER 3RD WEEK!
I ""' .... .. Loot to h 17 Gr1tk letter 67 ICll'ld of
11 Unlnbltll· Mtll chlflt 1/17/i9 tit .. attc 61 KIH of
2 "°* •Wiii 10 Han1 lt C1utlons 120 let •n1 •t E'Sgtit 1111lts ll••lr . 41 lnvl;oralillf 21 Stlowln1 r 111'10I 11 faMd fn1W.. svbstMce lltUt 70 Oftt tl•e •nt •ater 44 lilt: ch111ge pttlOds 12 Stat of Comlt.
r 2Z Df• of n taun or lt•lttaa bll 11,,,or dtllght Coll1111• Cl Lip
t2J Cityal [lftPt lJ R.u"id 49 Flow in 25 Fish 00111 •wn~I a nolsr %7 lost rldff ciurren
."111bl•otn11 l G1,:11 It ~•lnel ll S..1 top• , n 1: :::.. z ~~~d Zl ,.: ... A. 5Z ~=-.. ''
JZOlllCI ellce 24-to P-OCC.-J J C.ttl 2' c.1111111 9 Slllt-11 3'1. H•"" 1t1 •i~ · COii,..,.,. "''' ' ' · -·--en~•-27t..o411f -,.£;-· JI A"frdl MlllJIC · ... 1 ·" I .... 40-SI.. 21 ""'blll II . 5' I>
41 l4lll«IT---5 0."'1s' •-""' -U Tn4t "--
A•· .,,.p: 2t Llctt111 t. ~-· 0 Pl• ,at AMt. t111111i 4 · i _.w ., -'Oii• wltll JI lc<lllt-6Z H-~ .1,..... • .... ...,.11..... . e ...
.. 1 •'to,... 7 R.lm-•t 3' l•Y hli oitt M opl laU
I 11 Tatltr I "Gel• fl00t to ct: .
O•ldt IOY'' -lh• Abbr. fadnll •llar 'J6R_ll_'5!~~
at11tlt« •RtMaltf J7Plrtofa --• , ........ . ....... , ...
'
----
.. S119901t•4 for OIMllAL
111di•nc•1.
11-s11,111W fer MATUll
111cli111u1 l,t,..nftl 411.
c:r•ll111 1d•l11cl I.
~ICTIO -P1r11111
uncl1r 16 11•f '""''-""'· "~'··· ICCllllP•IM" a..., •p1ront .r •clult ,.,.,,..i.
1.11.
~-··..... 11.... This •I• r•·
1trlcfion ft'l•Y he hlth•r
i11 cerf1in ero11, Chick
th11tr1 or ed .. erti1i119,
Versailles
Room
Th• oaiginal compl1t• ro•dshow v1r1ion
of the multi Academ Aw1rd Winner
IT IS LIFE ITSELF
... RAW 11'.!oUTY
IN ALL ITS •
AWAKENING!
~ -
Starlite
Theatre
PHYLUS DILLER JACK CARTER
SHOW FRAN JEFFRIES
HOTEL/SHOW RESERVATIONS • PHONE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
t:hco Spl:t:
-ERNESTllORGNINE
HillM'lllCll' ...........
AND AT 7:11 ONLY.
.,. l ll:lll 1Bli11111r ,
0,IN DAILY 6145 ,
SAT.• SUN. COHTIN. 1:00
11=========11
ltK...,_1111>111 J'W A•111t1!
JO.~"' Woodw1rd e COL.OR •
"lACHIL. IA.CHIL"
1(1~ NDY#; e COLOR e "TMI LllllNO Of
LYU.H cu.ar
-r._ Al C:..... Mll1!
Clllll W1*9r e COLOR e
"lfO•I DIAlt THAN
AUQ"
Rkllard JollnNl'I e COLOR I
'"A TWIST 0' SAND"
-·· -' IC7·1RI
.,. Tile ,_lly , .....
0.llbft Jtt'mO!dt e COLO-. e
"HOW IWUT IT IS"
Alln "''" e COL.OR e
"'PAPll UON"
--·-........ -·-,.,,.. MhltY e COt.Olt e
"lllDU Of ILOOD"
(lwl1lollfltf L" • COL.Oft .
"ILOOD' ,llND" .....................
......... --"11ie lncieclible Reign
of G~ ~ng Obi"
t;M ,.-.-TMllO "'" TMIL\T•l-COITA MIJA
Cntttll ... OMlit -'46-1 J4I
BEST ACTRESS
BEST DIRECTOR
NEW YORK
CRITICS AWARD
'
. .
.rad.Ml
' '' ......
·' • iw•• n• _ ............ ..
PETER (!'TOOLE -ZERO MOSTEL
IN
"THE GREAT CATHERINE"
TWO FIRST RUN FEATURES
11 THE IMPOSSIBLE
YEARS"
l.1'8 Hi»:'lDP~\i Happy!
·-
ALSO ANOTHEI COMIDY
,...,. UltlHY-M .... Slllltlll
"HOT MILLIONS"
In. Sffw 5...,.. 7 p.111. C•llt. Sot .• $11. fre111 Z P·'"·
FOURTH AND
FINAL WEEK!
THE MOST
LOVE
8TORY
BYER~
HAis · ~OGRAVt · NffiO · HtMMiNGS · lfIBlS
l
.... •lll~W.,tllia"ll!'.l.llllLael!Mk-,.WUDfl -. ......., •••• .,.Oltl•MUMDl"ll!'l.ll111flf .
2nd Hit •t ·Cinem•
JUUC Gl:OllGE C.
Cl-lRl5TIE· SCOTT
fttwlla
• . ...................... moNe. _ __...__.....-..
2nd Hit •t Cin1m• West
Peter
Ustinov
Maggie
Smith
JAMES DEBBIE MAURICE GARNER REYNOLDS RONE! ... ...
ALSO
FIRST ORANGE COUNTY RUN
• .._ ·A---2 AL llllCTUlll
-·-· -----------·---,-----------:----.....-------~""""!"'~~~~
e JOB PRllmNG
• PUBUCA TIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Q.•lfti, ,,, .. 1,.. "' O.,.M•~'· s.,..1 ..
hr ..,. ...... ~ ... c..t.f,.
u11 wm IAUOA an.
·.'
'
f_ ----
MISS PEACH
•
·-
~
COLD!
-
By John Miles
__ A\77~
r;~ ..... : \ ..... ',,,,,,. .. ,••··~bO \I I t I .. -~"''---''-,, ,,:,,-=
•
By G1ll Arriola
By_Me~·
'
. QUEINIE
TEtey!SION l'JEWS
King. Okay,
Not 'Bilko'
ly RICK DU l"OW . ' ' HOLLYWOOD (Ill'!) -1'lle , Post of "Sgt,.
Bilko" dltf bud. ll:VI!' 8lnce Plill Slfwr's huge tele-
vision sucaeu aa tbe v;:beeler-4ulwi non com, the
networks . }wive kept ~er lo nlncamate th~ 'fonnula hi one way or •·0 McHaie's Navy
was one offlprtna, And a0w 'we ,baw "The Queen
and !," wblcb aJTITtjl Oll-CBS-~'l'tiltrsday nJgllt.
Tbis lai.Ut fullt.bour.llutlon ~y, b0wever,
deala not with nillltar.Y lervlca, but with the crew
of an aglnlf'octlD llner1llal It-about to'be· sold-for
scrap. As the late.I offtbool ot ~o, there is a
husUlng, me'1Qr puner 'O'ho· la ~ed to save
the ship -Ch!ell,y .to p~ lbe-cteat racket be
has buUt up ln,~.JO~ in wlllj:h ~-~arranged to
have lucrallvi tr!Dge /,t;;eBts, Thi polt&er is played
b} I,.arry Storch. ' • : •
AS THE LAT!ST ollsboot of )lillto's p~
(the commandln& officer playfll), by Paul P'ord), "'
have, on the oceaJ> liner, a auaplcloua llrat oflicer1 portrayed by Billy De Woll!. Allde·from the fact tbll•
Storch and De Wolff are hardy a match for Silv111J1
and P'ord, there I• the added obstocle tliat the script
of "The Queen lilRI I" is entirely witbout"Wlt:-'
There 11, .however, one fellow wbo Oll&bt. to be
singled out because of the remarkably conslajmt
and funny portrayal be turns In no matter w~
urieo be iJ in. Thia iJ Carl Ballantine,-wbo not cial1
was tOpnlgbt in "McHale's Navy," but, In case YIJIJ
didn't know, is the world 's funniesl;bad mag!c!U.
He bas a really marvelous dellvery.
THURSDAY NIGHT also brongbt the lilwaya-
welcome Alan King in an hour NBC-TV ~.ot
cont.mporary comedy via sooga and aketdla. ~
King 11 not only a very funny and wiaa 111111; but
has the good aroce, In a rather ·graceleu q1, to
keep workln1 In •· tuxedo. I don't tblDt we ever ha~e to warry about having him ob°'f up, In' the
latest diJCotbeque apparel. · · • '•
Appearlnf with Kini Tbundq nlJhl; Iii •'.sort
of comedy wembl•'-with no bit, fanC)' illlroduc-
tiol)s -were Tour Randall, Shlftey J-,,I:eslie
Ug«ams, Jade Carter, Ntp~·,iuuell ~
LaVJn, a Vsrf 1ilgb type suppoiilug Cut
mllf very yell be the lllOll oullllndln( ,llJilmPole
supp0rt1n1 com~ in 111• lililvene. ·
UNDElt l'HE guidance of pr<Jelucer Stanley
Prager, one of the real talenta in ahow busi.Dus,
the King special moved very qUickly through its
hour, interspersing some "Laugh-in" style fast bfts
with the other sketchei. Yet the dry, olten pertllltllt
mono1<>1ue1 and commentary by King gaV'I t111 boa?
. Its own definite tone, an adult one.
Re took ol1 alter the alr1lne1 aaaln, t;U' time for that ad In which bustne11men•trytng to &*oat
of town are urged to take their wives alone. Ir, cruel
commercial, that one. And there was a •ktf On ai~ line entertainment · · . · •
There was alao a political platform commlU.0
meeUng In which a Madison Avenue tnie (Randall)
brought in one plank that said "Thou Shall Not
KW," and another said "Thou Shalt Not Commit
Adultery" -which prompUy brought the retort:
"Well, there goes tbe &ullqrb*n vote."
Detanb the Jtf~·
I .. . ~· ••
ll ~
!
• ~
I•
• •
14 ~y "L~T . frldq, ,,...,,, 17, 1'69·
'
~ " "' •
""-
••• " ..
I ~.\ --· I ' I' •••
I o
'' r -" .. , -SILVERPLATED ·STEMWARE -• .,
3. 99· Re9. $5
Elegonl twisted st~mw""-imported Jrom • Spoin.
Water goblets, wines, champagnes, martinis, bran-
dies and liqueurs.
Silveiw•"'· 59
CANNON NO-IRON PRINT SHEETS 3.99 ' :!#1 ... ... J). !l 1 •
R"'·~·.~ nyin 721104"
, .Jlat or f'*d .
Can non's "Feotheilit\." sheets in now fldwers !hot
never need ironing. D~rable cotton muslin and poly.
ester. 5.50· I I .OO"Sizes now 4.99-9.99.
·s1ieo1,, 2 . ' ·' ,
:rso SQ. IN. RCA VICTOR PORTABLE
Compoct color tv •.. perfect set for any room!
Big 18" diegono screen. Front controls, tone bal-
enced speaker. 18.00 monthly 358.88.
;r elevisions, 72
·''
. .. ' ' . '. ··"' .
~-
SAMSONlf.E !ABU:,,'~ CHAIRS
P.t .. 1 for\briilge a!Jij. pprty fun with this 30.30"
table .ond•4 'C6iir set.' ~lures "•11odized aluminum
' I ' legS. re.,. 47.75, 29.99 •.
lipofting-~~ 43
.. ANAHEIM
444 N. Eucr.d H'-1121
M ... thN S.t.
ID 1.m. t,. t:lO p.m.
l
.• ,.,,
Reg. open .todi price 18,.;80~
95-pc. service for 12
Choose from "Ledy Beelrice" ond ~-pther florol
patterns in this ·fine transluce'nt china, our '.own
import from Germany.
China, 11
·-
.: ·•
~,. 1 • .;,r .. . ' " ·~
TEXl'klRED . DRAPERIES
10.91; Reg. $1448x84" sizes ·
w.;~.ble reody-mode draperies with. rich texture.
' Scottsdale in sizes from 48x54", 8.99 to l+!x84",
39.9'1:
1.-., ,.., • .,,. ...
' .. • J l ,·
125 . SQ. IN. RCA VICTOR l"ORTABLE
All chennel reception, ·15" diegonol screen, stetic
f,,.e "golden throe+" sound. UHF/VHF built in e1>-
tennes. T eke it onywhere. 5.00 mo. 98.88.
T elevisions 1 72
ELEGANT SPANISH TABLES
Perque! lops end scrollwork detoil these · tobles
in mellow fru ifwood fin i s h. Mo s I popu-
lar shopes. A. 79.95 poe toble, 18" rdx 21'' high,
69.95; B. 89.95 octagon commode, 26x29",1;79.95;
C. 89.95 door commode, 28x28x28", 79.95; 0.
119.95 cocktail, 58x20xl5", 99.96.
Tobles, 38 '
oD stores except Wilsh ire and We,tcl,;stw
' •
• i
•• f • ..
' "
. .• . . , . .
DACRON®' 6.~l!I . ~":1'1~BU:Ctom ·
10.99 Rog . 12:00 ·'52i!lo''~· :···:' · -1 -·
' ' • j
. "Potricion" .•• a new p¢1yester' ond linery· blend ·
with soil rel~~ and permanent press:-feotv~l:
. Cotton loce trim. By Bardwil i~ whife, gold, green
or ecru. 20.0()-32.00 sizes now 17.'1~29.99
:Linens, 23
•
. . ' . . .. ..
.. ..
1003· NYLON PILE SHAG
6~ 99 . sq .. yd, , insl4lfed
·' ,/ \
•
~9Jiour ~'!!! HQPU,l,r s!.ogs,.i:Jurable an'd lustrous
in solids and tweeds. Price includes instollotiDn.
Floor Covering, 45
KELVINATOR NO FROST
DELUXE 14.1 REFRIGE!t6.TOR
239;88 14.00 .monthly
·.'
11 b lb. freezer, s~cious 'door storage, 2 crispers,
sliding shell, meat keeper Ice eiector too! Wood
grained ponels in sid e. WhitE:1 coppertone, eVocedo.
Maier Applionces, 80
"MADRILLA" 3-PC. BEDROOM SU ITE
299.95 reg. 359,.95 16.00 monthly
Heovy moldings with corved wood panels •nil an·
tiquod bross fittings complement the mellow potino
finish of the Med iterranean heodboord (queen-
size) triple dresser and 'mirror, Three-pike king s'2e
set, 329.95. Nile stand; 69.9$; DO!>r diest, 179.95.
Bedroom Furnitu re, 92
ell stores except Wilshi'9 and We$1chesler
•
<4 7 Fa1hlon l1lencl 644-1212
Mon. thN Fri. 10 a.m. to 9:10 p.m.
s_.1. ID 1.m. le 6 p.m.
I •
. ...
' . ' "
SATIN PILLOW CASES .
•
•
For a comfortable nights sleep ond a slon perfect
coif the .next morning try this IOO~o acetate pillow
cose. No more rollers, pins, nets. reg. 2.50; 1.99.
Notions, 4 ,,
7-PC . DINING GROUP
139.99 Re9. 159.99
4211 octagonal table with walnut grain finish extends
to bb" with two fills. Six choirs with wrought iron
look.
Housewares, 95
FAVORITE SERTA SLEEP S TS
Reg. 109.95 twin or full super finm "Ortho Zone"
with quili,d top and multi-coil insuloted box •pring,
89.95
Reg. 89,95 deluxe "Hotel Motel", choose from 30",
33", 36", 39", 48", 54" in 75" or 80" lengths. 69.95
Reg. '19.95 twin or full "Cushionoiro" with quilted
cover end 837 coils with stobalized bor spring.
79.95
Sleep Shop, 69 -an stores except Wilshire
1711 E!i!lll" /\r•, -· 02-lll I Mon. thtu S1f.
10 e.m. to f :lO p.m.
I
'
•
,_ . .
' ~
• ~ ..
• • ' 'JI . •
w • -----------
RAY VINES HAS THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE AREA!
. ~· ..... , ')
ON NEW 1968 , .. ,.,. .~ SAVE
UP TO "$1·180°0
PL YM.OuntS;r CHRYSUiS
.......... _ ......... '"·'··J·~·· J,..,
'14 MERCURY
Colony Park station wagon, 1ut~
matic trans, ~fun power, pw,
factorj air . <:11ni11tionlng, a real
beauty. Lie. l\8~88,.,.
$ .. , .. ·95· . , ....
. .J. .. I~ . -~ . •I
' .. ,
Lemans, V8, radio&: beater, au~
matic tran5t power steering, pow-
er bl'.Qes, ww. RDIA19. ·
'~ ..
J. 11395 •' •
'63 :tHRYSEElt :,_ ~. , : : '63 IMPALA ..
'
..,, ..
. .
~-"'~ . "
4 '2-Door Hardtop .• Full poWer, fac-Cb.Y,.Jet 2 Dr. Hardtop. Au~
.~matte trarumission power steer-'.
ini, radio, beater' factocy · aJr
c;onditioned. Lie. JOY.ci26.
• • < ; •
41lr oe.dan, •V8,. aatomatic trall6,
'
. IQI')' · air, white sidewalls .. · Lie:
5518.
"
'695 -· .•
'65 FOR·D
·Custom 500, auto. trans, R&H,
power steering, power brakes, air
conditioning, Vo'W. Lie. PCA156
. .
'
.. .
?95
· ~65. DODGE
Ct,lstom· ·880, auto trans., radio'
and .bM'•'SIQWer steering. pow·
·er brakes, white .sidewalls. Lie.
SDW-338
• R&H, pwr -~~g. P"'" braku,
white sid~~.'Lic. SZU310 ,.
$1195 . ~
'66 T-BIRD
I . ' •
Lan.dau top, lull power, electr\c ' . seats. Lie. SAA042
"
..
\
• QAIL'(,PJl.t"" ," -
. .
• '1."1
-.,
-.
' 2' DOOR HARDTOP. Full power, SPECIAL. Automatic transmis· 2-door hardto_p, IartoryAir condl-
plus air cpnditionia •. Un NQW sion, radio, bQater. No~'SBB·969 tj.Q.nillg, aut.Omatic tra1111 ~~.
;000 .• _ ·· 1 .·~ : .• :·;-~. .f'~. ---· 1in~ate -~~u_e,J'S'717
·'··"" . <!: ,,,·:-.. .: o;:;, .... ;-$2951~· -· ·,. ··: :-·s·~-· ., ... -·· .... :·i: .:•,-"'~ .. s < y:p;f,j;. ~!.' : .; .. , . ' . "' ,', ; 1 ., • '"''fit ~l l' 0 Ho ' \, '«'" ~-r.. <! .. ,.;
• i• .'. : • , " ' ~ 'r ' . I I ,'· • ...,. ~· :ii: ,~:·/T,1••,.,1.; "•,. <"< •
.
'63 T-BIRD
. Full power, electric seats. Lie.
No. CSGQ96.
'68 VALIANT
4 Door. Auto~atlc iranb'inlssfon,
radio heat.er,"" whit& walls. :891·
ance 'of factory warranty. Lie.
UHS.904 I
.
'I PLYMOUTH· ' .. . FURY m. Automatic · tralliilnf9.
sion, tadio1-heater, air .condltiQn.
ing, white side. wall tlm;. Lie.
TCM 175 ·. '
• ..
..
·-
'· $ . • .. J-"2·095 · ' .. . -
$ . . .. ·1595·· .. , ~ u-: ,._,
I . I ·r.~~V I ' .,11-; t .. 1.· , .~. . ' ' ~ ,, • ,, ·:I .. .., ....
'. I. I''' ... .:.\ ~ .. :. . .
•
' I
UY VINES,' ;
__,4201 .wJLtow
LONG B~C~ ' .
PACIFIC
. Y'" -· ·y,·':if· . ~ '(' .
' .
,. • •• . -. • AT THE LAKEWOl)D lVINOFF FROM-ORANGE ~OUt:fTY .•
543-6663 S~74341' · 426-7301 OF THE SAN DIEGO IUl'WAY • • •
'
~ __ .,.. .. --, --·-_. ... -r~-----
•
I .
.
' I
! I
!
i
i·
16th & Tuttln -Corti.,......, ,
Exoolmt location, neu ~OOll, · <hopping
and l>each 6nzy a felf Jell Btl1.~;~11ile il1' .
tetesLntes are.only - --~ ,. r f.:..,,. \ · 1% with 20"4' clown-7Yit%·wfth .'1w, 'on:
~-no 2nd -no pOtnta ..L 29 yri .on bl.Ian~
&cluslve Apnt
P• 'a: palmer Jnc:or,.rate~ I
" 3m VIA Llbo
'rod Ph: 540-5t83 . Fr0m 1-.A, 9JI ~ ~~ . ..
f?,te ' 'Barrell f<ea/t'J
, , pre6enb
EXCLUSIVE NEW LISTING -Cus·
tOlfti1.ed Baycrest home cbild-safe
pool enclosed with wrough't iron
fence. 4 bdrms, dining room & fam.
ily room with fireplace & bar, new
lunrious carpeting. freebly painted
& papered. New range, oven & lmb.
washer. Call to ... this. ...
DOVER SHORES. Vtl!W -One of t~e most BRIGHT & SUNNY HOME :!.. Sll(\·
admired vlewllom.S In Dovel' Shores. 2-·· atod on a large tree <haded Corner·
.i'i>Omi, larie panelled deh, openhfg ~to. beau· lol 3 bdnns 2 baths, •pocious fanr· .
tifµl view terr~ce. SpiiCJous garden · room for ily: rooD), living room overlOoks
•
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOlt SALE
10000.neral 1 000 Gonaro I 1000
Most Fabulous Location
on California Coast
Luxurious n~w llomes on Llnda lsle
Piers Slips, protected pati os
Homes of rare beau'ty!
103 •nd 105 Lind• ltle Drive
Shown by appt.
IOYD REALTY
3629 E. Co11t Hwy CdM 675-5930
a/I Something.
Optn This Wffkend
I JN MESA VEJ\DE
1606 Blktr Street
SJw'p 3' + mnily room.
AvaUa.blt! on VA no do\lo·n
ot FJIA tt'rms.
2496 Maul Place
Fabu!OU& 2-level brallll t1<!W
clll'lom • ready for I.he dUi·
crtminating familv.
2970 Java Road
SUnday 1-5 Onl,y
Big ColonW home -I p I f
course area . very impre&-
5.ivt'.
I DEL CERRO HOMES
SUnda,y Only l·S
! .OPf;N S~ T •SUN
· 1421 TUSTIN AVE.
... 1 • -••
IaJ:ge. pool~ PI ans for expansion -only belutif\llly landscaped rear garden.
S$J!_.,9.50. 1000 Santla,go llr .. ,OPJIN SAT & ' l~I Trod-Inds Lone un OCEAN FRONT! Near New· 1126 SANDALWOOD Open Sun. 12-5 port HMbor Yocht Club. OPEN SAJ & SUN t.5 EL~GA!'ff -Exquisite Dover Sh()f<S hol!MI, CHOICE EXTRA • LAROE LIDO Fow: bodroom """'· o"1Y Be<ullful Bayo.•"· fomu1! 3 Bedrooms, farruly rm, Yanai rm, beautiful CORNER-r3 bdrms 3 baths, sUnny elev'et\ ~old. Well built. dlnJi:la' room. s Bclnns, tam-
For Everyone 590 Pierpont Drive
Just listed • Fabulous de<.'Or
in this attractive Z.Jevel with
big family roo1n, wet bar
eh:.
l ·ranoromic" View . out o1 tbe State , . Hills & B!I}' owner m..t ..n ·
1• • BEAtn'IFUL IT'S HARD his lovely 4 bedtoom boihe l DESCRIBE, ]JixurlouS • on qu1et ltrfft tn .
· large bedrooms, oo:zy tam-iexdustve Back Bay ·:atta
room, CUSI'OM OE-tarp: 'play yud phll
GNED PCX>L.. '1locne ~ swimmable ~ pool
flgned &-bunt by Ivip,Wdl& · ~te'famlb' ll>Olli · Tn>e home you'\'t! been Jobk.. A UAL BEA.trr:f~ tig for, the price will pleaBe all ~an and fresh
-O~LY 10% down. Ali ~ ~
AVAILABLE, extra ,lot CUI: Jim .Cobb
with BOAT 110~1-poten.. Res. 6n-18&1
ial for private te~ court. . '
inU:.rtor, extemi"{'ely : landscaped, room fqr priwate pa'tlo, 3 car garage. See this I~ li~Ull' room, uaed.~_:_k Uy room. 2 Palos Verde
pool Sunken. livibg ~I h~e master .~te. by.appointment only. nrce~· Ex~GhHTlrt!e 'id stone..-tireplac:es. Landsca~ • 'Pri.C~ $115,000. OPJ:.f'l SAT ~ SUN. 1383 ter """"room.'"" COOi • rd for easy care. Loads of
'Gal'ai:y Drive. · · ., BA·YCRESt CORNER-With pleas-er lease option. Well priced charm thruout. Pool sized
u. at $67,500. yard. Asking $59,500 • Your . ENORMOUS VIEW -+-For ~ wb~:Can af-u~e we oa.er this charming Coi;rtem-ALSO terms. Widowed owner needs
. 1'td.' the ·b~t. 4 ~ms, den ••d fa-'"' porary 3 bdrm home, huge dining LBO v • ~It..~°' _, uu.i, ro,om, an Unusual work.shop <>r OCEANFRONT . BA A
rm,. baw& er 6, aq..fl..liltae~L A darkroom arrati@menl, •J':'cious PENINSULA POINT. NEW, RED llH'l"-magn!ficedt hon)e. $p5,000. SliOwll' liY ap-"open celling" floor plan with sep-toor """""""' ""' d'". Pom. tinent · Three baths, plus po\l.'der
• • •• • I • • ~ ! ' a rate master bedioom suite. Well room. 2896 square feel oi R E A LT 0 Ra • h. '· ''b ·. pricedat$59,000. luxury llvifW'. Lush carpel· NB lo ft :fllQ~ ing, electric built-in.s, double 2025 \\',6Bal75~!!\'d., · · . · NEWPO•T HARBOit VIEW LOTS ~ ~ f ' ! J.: t .• • " garage with electric operK'r· I '!!!!ll!!!!!i!i!j!iii!ii!!J!!~~ R<AtTYlCDM~ NY Choke Building Sites: Nire patio. Open daily 13>1 I'
881 '.Doior Dr.; $ult. 101 . * 2209 Cliff Dr., Cliff Hoven, NB E. °"'"" Front 198,500. Newport HgtL .$29 •• Sooh
to move,
Mecc~---~Co. Bid•. .. ALSO Lclwly garden patio o t e ~ 5 ~ * 2772 llayshora Drlvo, N.JI. " dining room. 2 baths. Ex-
, RA~~~$. . , ;11;; ~-'fftii@zti:~ !trI'.horet, ~al'f7n1 w~tll ~i~ ~ · =-s:=:~t:';~ :r::.=~~!!",!';::
~E.17th_.. ',94.-, --.,,-,--~·--OFFICE-OPEN--..... ,..(or"""'"""""-------.
•DOYER SHORES! '' ",; ' · ALL TlilS A ~ S1turd1ys & Sundl'fs poinbnent. Extra 1a,.., lot
I • 1 ·,~,~·' '25,SCXI
r
31~.,:S:;:t = .. LikL i.t~ UYE· ' : ., ! ;~: d':"f: i.:'im'. 1605 WESTCLIF,: :'.ti.~ floor plan. A>klng OCEANVIEW
------
I SUNSHlNE HOME
Sunday l-5
839 Joann
ExCC'ptionally clean 3 BR,
ma.ey extras.
546·5180
(nearctlrma l~l
LLEGE RE<Y 1500 Adams attti.tilr,CM.
ND 00 l about Feb, 1st. Shown by ap· TARBELL 2955 H1rbor
14bedroom 3 bath-.,. •BR. ~bl. m00·1>ead> hom<, '. · i ~ptacr. """'" & dniJ>H, ~.. DRIVE Bay & Beach 2 BR,3 Ba. 1 block
large living riiom,~ -~ caijiets, drapes, paint. A UTJLE ' 1tftiffiti t 1 bttilt-1n '&' ~ot'Ctd 1 air heat Realty, Inc. lo beach, $29,500 2Crl5 w. Balboa Blvd., N.B. dining room romple.e. v....,1. ready to go, $.15,500 · : DU IU · ·· Thb """ la>ld"""""' "'?m• Newport Beach 642•5200 Goorgo Willi•mson 675-6000
· ~· Ownier •. J?.J; 'terms. ,• -·. . . , .-,,• i ~-~be1almdon'abuge'R2 • . 901Dovt'TDr.,NBSUite221 ftMltdr "'!!!!ll!~i!ii!ii!~!!ll!!!!'!~I
(!moved a-.:.a' _.., gl\oe trmn'ed. , . ~:. -~ . , AND ' .•. ,. '"t .. ' , with a ve-t•---J!!!!!!!!ll!lli:finl!!ll!!!!!!!~======== 1645-2000 Eves. 548-6966 673-4350 Eves. 673-1564 ""!! ""' "'Ill • ., -e.~ "iii!liiiiill!!!!!!!iiiiii!!!ii!i!i!i!!!i White eleplw.nts! Dime-a-line '""' ..,,.,.,;.. -"'·""· ~ Whistle Clean UVE : ·. ' " ; ... ""'* yard"•ith room for COME SEE 9
546-2313 646-7'7! 3BR.2ba,mo0beaob-o, ' . . ., " •• ""'~ .,.,....,., "'bolld a BOYO'S BEST BUYS
T HE ~EA L 41 ESTATERS ---------
""Y.. v CeU. ~Hon· ii just abbut
63lli W. Coulo~'fY. NB YQQ ca:ii acquire tbrU e short perfect, l\i bl.ks 1o Newport Located In exclusive t!J?~ . . , h
,~ '=-.. S@.mJ A UlTtE lOllGER 1 I =' ~ : :,:"::. . BE CONQUERED {;sri-~
j =====·=:; , e9crow lhll iiublfantli.l J -grade school. and only 2 blks BAY raidential district ii •1
Ch.nnel R .. f . BEACH IAR, .. ;;. &·IN-~ln ~~~~~ Jblil-:oHr ~~ to ,,.,. f'Jy park. Eut 17th W. -three bedroom,...,, .... WM ...... ._ ~. "''V ~l' rind Westtlitt' ~p. bath home with dining room 2414 Vista Del Oro ,: PenthouM.Apt, . MGdem 3, BR. •i ;~ :••A'f' •,1, 'batUiit ~ ·11~ and two otbl!r aellooZI and mbd~m kitchen with Newport Beach
"' s.lo "' Leue at isoo lrame, ... ~ lo; ~ • ,hudwoo4 lll'I, --Within -........... For --Two car ...... • Prime Bay View mo. to ftliable PIU'Utt 125 900. tmns. ,., .. 1 ~ WJtt..roof. lA.rai app01ntment to !ft, write: iejSttaf( Concftte drlw and
nty. °"""'·--· .c1Y,.001ji!lty:·.}41,J.2'6 Loi-.Y~~-~Land. ·PrlvaloParty ~b:boetlhltroilerlO>I' Del'iahlful "E'' Plan ,J\ea1tor,.m.moo ' I ,_~ ... • BoxF612· .. Eltralftta:ecovertdpa•
OPEN HOUSES
SAT & SUN
Nl'"1''1Y decorated 3 Bedrooms
2 bathe; ............ $22.500
586 W. Bay, Costa ~ff.•
Open Houses
. THIS WEEKEND
· ,000 ~-nor··• lftN'lo Ollr rompetitori aa. well a• ~ Dallv Pilot tio, block wall fencing and I JF=n=•:"::1::·::::==='==-==~======-~· our !>wn staic . qree: that TAKE OVER FHA beau~~ptrw.·AB&J'. · tHis' -4 Bdrm. 3~ Bill~ l-f~ . 6., 175 M T t I g~ ti]. todays market at
1l . ·Col.dw,~·.· 1·,· .. 9'.Q. n.·k· ... ·., '.,.: ·.·· ~:0,'"'::"'v;:;::;:,·.;~::~;,.,., ;~,will .:-v.°.~, or R0~i""'tlOll.AAcrLNR00w0M111
* Spac/Llving nn, din/area * 3 King Ne BR, 2% ba
View Poo1 +
Min/Maint.
2 Bedrooms & convert d~n
•.••••••••••••••.•••• $52,000
K•p this handy dll'ktory wtth you ftils wnk·
end .. you go hou__..untlns. All the locatlon•
listed below are descrlMd In grMt•r detail by
adw.rtlllnt elaewMre In today's DAILY ~ILOT
WANT ADS. Patrons showlnt open hoVMI t.r .al• or to rent are •Jflfld to list such Informa-
tion In ttils column Nch Friday.
• area. It is in·•tiP-:toP -ci>hdil • O>llta' li1ese·s CMOl~ITT ntlUl -'flon/ Why not Et1 uar9holw :LOCATION homes with 3
~OFFERS:.
·· ' ;you this pm.Ct youti&.-'1')1;f spacious Bedrooma & 2 Batha We've found '1.~ horn~ for
--i ttt1t!Ve ~home tor orfly1 taa:teiullycarpeted&dl'aped. your PCX>L TABLE and ..
'" Dover Sh!ll'• ... . :,; ..
-"A beautiful watenront home. 2-story .w/-;
• circular stairway aitd entry. haD, 3 . .lldrms;
formal dining rm. Panelled cjen l'!.frplf,
Pier & Fl°'l , ..... , ......•. ,. $155,l>OO
Mrs. Raulston
Emerold Bely. Beac;h Mome.
This 4 BR 4 ba home by the beach.enjoys
a beaut. white water view from the ·L.R +,
F.R. w/frplc in each. Bit-in wet bar, 3 car
' gar,, li.4 lots w/t.ennis cts, swim pools, V
ball els,
· Greg Wohl
Five · Select Bayfronts
All five new or near ·new, 2 stoi:y;w/.pi,u,-
& slips -Lido, Dover Shores, .& Linda ,
,. Isle. All easy to shqw. To see call . .· .
.. Joe Clark~on
-llClyshores • Bayview . .
• 5 Bdrm recenUy rebuilt home vi/great Bay
View from Li\t' rm, master suite ·and Gue31t
Rm. Luxury carpets, drapei,-Wet bar and . t' . "•75•~· r ~:. ka~~Y ...... , .... , .. ; . . . . • •"""'
. ' I "
Corona del Mar • $32.SOO :
$48 750 Thill HEAVY SHAKE ROOF other recrutlona.l need& ', * iir 1i dre&n) home bas all ELEC-LARGE 18 X 24 RU.MPUS '· .40.1 VI. l DOON.. ..TRIC··BlflLT INS, W.. ROOM added to this ...U
1 a ' family dining area and ktpt three bedroom, f~
. • cozy MANTLED FIRE-room, two bath home. Elec-
UDO ISLE PLACE. Ali W. on EXTRA trlc buill·in ki kben, b'"""
OPEN SUNDAY
1-SPJri.
A Quality horn' In a prestige .ioCation. lBedO:>oml + Con:
wrilble Den. The appliances
are netr &: the entire prop-
erty it. in a like.nw condll
tion. An excellent value at
$64;5(K)' and t~ owner wlD
.carry the loon at. reasonable
"rate. ,
.Bay & Beach
Realty. Inc.
240T E. Coa.!t Jlwy., Cdltl
67$-3000
------
·'-''~1~ , SOLD OUT II .1
We've llOl!I evtz7lhlnc
v."e had in stock.
LARGE LOI' wttb sprinld.M'll fut bar, lireplace -Fully
front & rear and invltin& carpeted and draped. Own-
PATIO. er moving East and will
sacrifice at $23,500 Jor a
quiclt sale.
27!K1 Harbor BJvd,
54~9491 Open till 9 PM
L8J.
LoYOlf lljlcl«l•f Jowol
'For people who are selective, I ~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii. Elegant -new 4 bW'rq, 3 balhl•
tt>me on GalaxY Dtive with
a panoramic Back Bay view.
inher atrium. famU, room,
\vet bar. electric kitchen,
Good school diStrict ll pat
neighbors included in the
reasonable price of $73,000,
Excellent fina.ncing avail-
allle. .
Roy J , Ward Co.
IBl.Jcrest OUittt
1842 Santiaio Dr. 646-lSSll
GOOD THINGS
do not always come In
SMALL pack.ages. As an
example, be i;ure & see
this BIG 4 BR 3 bath
home w i th addltlonal
DEN, DINING RQOM le
BREAKFAm" ltOOM +
16x23' livi'l:: room. All
the nice thlrw:s. toO. OnJy
•~• )'eln old le in prime
central localion. 0 n I y
$38,500 & Ifs YOURS.
Can be seen anyl.Jmr.
* lee walnut pan/lam m1 * Ideal fOl' entertaining * Profeaionally decorated * LunrioUI crpls & drapes * Wet Bat, mirrored doors * Load• d CUpl*>artls * Many custom features * Walled patios * Nr. Pool & Cabanas * P,r1ced btlow Market
$53.000 • good terms
644-1133 644-0233 Eves.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
rmmacu1ate 3 bedroom home
latre lot, a-arage, workshop,
bbat entry, range, refriger-
ator, wasl>er included. 5% %
1inaneq" available. COME
QUICK,
MATCHAM~
155 Rocheater CJi.
646-4837
624 H.amona, Irvine Terr.
BOYD
REALTY
3629 E. Coast Hiwa,y , CdM
~
O\VMER'S loss
YOUR GATN! Mafiy extras
are added to this 3 BR lam-
ily room home In Mesa Del
Mar. W/w earpeb!: 1 year
old. water heater 6 months old. sprinkkrs, 2 baths, nice
built-in kitchen with dish-
\\isht'r. Large living room
& f1rt'place. Oos.e to all
schools & shopping. Low
markrl & only $26,950 &
EZ tenns1 --~-1093 Baker. C.M, 546-5440
ENJOY
YOUR \VORK -NEW L0-
4 spacious bedrooms with CAL OFnCE NEEDS LI-
Alonge galore. Sharp Meu, CENSED REAL ESrATE
Del Mar home with lafit' LEAD MAN OR WOMAN,
living room. bright family BROKER OR SALES?.1AN •
room and all built·in kite/l. PLEASE CALL:
en. Spotlrss throughout, tield DAVE GAMBILL, Bkr.
Atone ft.replace. and shake &14-00..lQ
root. No better value at I -;=:=~:::::::;::::: $28,750. Just 10';'~ Dn. t·-------Exe<>ptional 42 ft R·2 on OOOin side of high-
way with very nice 2 BR home -Room lo
ad«l 'a large unit .-80 % financing,
Wt.Jter H~ase · . ·
laycrest • 1Jt nme Offerpci
OPEN HO\JS~ $UN. t · 5,
1601 ·AnH.,. Woy
r.tesa ·Verde Realty Is
a top fiiRhl Wet Of'IU>
iwlion tMt gets results .
fast, Now'& the litqe to
sall . Call for. fut pro.
fcu.iono.1 serviee.
•
co:rs Colesworlhy & Co.
6>12-7777 ~~~ 190! 11.-Blvd., C.M,
Duplex $24, 950
Eastaide Costa r.lesa. Hard-
o;o,·ood floors & double car
garqe scparatlng untta (2
bdnm e. chl. Ex1ra laJ¥e
kitchen area in 1 uni!.
Well•.McC1rdle, Rltrs.
1810 Ne"'1>0rt Blvd,, C.M.
J • ~ Two story Medi!~ 5 generoiu Bil-·
rms plus mllds,qu_altenl, ffi llolhl +·pow:•
der rm. Su nken liyio, .rm, $>~' d1ri ~m
opening out to..sJld,ous'Jatlo W/fountun.
Gourmet krll!ittn ' w/g , Electric bit-in
stove. Breakfast'rm. eating_bar, eqo?1Jnous
utU rm, .S~ car gar, room ' l~r ,IJOal Lge
faJD rm w/flreplace. Alllo iatllec rm, ex/lge
muter BR w/Bayview. Fee~ · Mn. M3r1oq. ~ .......
' OFFICE OPEN -· ' ,. -c
SATURDAYS' .
COLDWELL-, IANKEl It ·Clq.
, 2200 I. (0.UT· HtGffWl<Y ·
I NfWPOltT llEAcH . • .. , ... I
Kl ...USI ' -675-2000
•
', :' .' NO OOWN
$U,500 • 4 lledroom1 '
f>IUJl BIQ 15 X '11 FAMIL'l
.ROOM,' plus DEN, ~
porch, CA.rpt"!A 4 drapes. AU
this od large l~ foot dec>p
lot in p:ccll_tnt nti&hbothood
with towert,.-shade trees.
Not~ dawn to Vtteralli or
$000 Down FHA.
:r190 .....,.,.. Blvd. ~ Ogen tW9PM
Ion luf In• B1lboo
Dup&a nr &.y, 2·2 BR ·1
Furn 4-extns. low prlct 119.000. ' , J:..,R, 'Mic"M.el, RN.ltor IJrl )t. llolboll Bl, 613.Q!!q
WANTID TO BUY 3 or 1
• ~ hoU811 tAkt ave:~
Jou • pavmenllt under
SllS.llJ. HaV'tl c•Ah for equl·
.ty. ~ ~ ..rier 5'30
Pll. , "' ., ,
'
6000 LOCA TIOll
OPENSUNl ·4
2124 E. Ocean Blvd.
Bllboa Peninsula
3 Bedrooms. 3 baths
plu~ 1am.By room
RICHARDSON
RF..ALTY
675-4031
143 Broodw1y 6>1$.0tll
E-642-MSJ ~7'
OIARGB m ..
l .
--5546-4"-'141-1---°"•"•'°"'ii.ii•'--(Opan Evlftingol
~S NO DOWN
4 BR l :!..i bath., large reer
yard, close to lthopping. Call
now.
$21,500
~rt
1t
Vlctorl1
646-Ull
lroedmoor Home
HAUOll VllW HILLS !=Xcllh'c vi...,.,..,. Ooia·
llna • and Us\tl U nlaht
from thi• 4 bedroom. 7~i
hlllth former r.todel lltJme .
J' 1~1"1 $6.1,500.
!JON BIRD, ASSOC.
for 1.1ppnbihMnt
flM'l!Ol !4T-'100 IJ8.4i8l
'•
1 OOr i 300' LOT
Zonf!d lW C.P • .,;th 1400 sq
ft hocaf, $49,51Xl small dO\\'rJ.
Al9o other acttagc $~5.00l
Pf'r acre in d~.
.\,
I
"
PERl=lON
; J , • • ......
548--1729 E\'l!S. 6#0i3f
$19,950
e ~. BR -ne1••ly p1un!rd
• Fc-nC't'd yo.rd t.: patio e $1 4R1mo includes all
Ritr. 6\2-9730 Eves. 54S--0720
• KENNEDY
Unutual 4 bedroom b o m •
with w.., polio l pool v.
cant.
Arnold & Freud
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Br. & Family or Den)
251 8 Via Marina, Ne,,wport Beach
642-3219 (Sat & Sun)
3629,E. Coast Hwy, Corona del Mar
675-5930 (Sat & Sun)
(3 Bedroom)
19381 Newhaven Lane, Huntington Beach
628-2495 (Open Sun)
2264 Federal Ave,, Costa 1'.1esa
546-5460, Eves: 548-8584 (Sal & Sun)
586 Wesl Bay, Costa Mesa
675-5930 (Sat & Sun)
(3 Br. & Family or Den)
* 1680 Maui Circle (M'6a Verde) C~!
546-6421 (Sat & Sun)
1826 Sand alvvood, (Baycrest) NB
673-3663 (Open Sun 1·5)
** 105 Inda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB
675-5930 (Sal & Sun 12·4)
1604 While Oaks (Mesa Verde) CM
540-0322 (Sat & Sun)
219 Jasmine Corona del Mar
646-3928, '545-3483 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1363 Gaiaxy Drive, (Dover Shores) NB
642-8235 (Sa t & Sun)
2124 E. Ocean Blvd ,, Balboa Penn.
673-6900 (Sun 1-4)
2043 Calvert Ave. (Mesa Verde) CM
546..'3081 (Open Daily)
1830 Park St., Huntington Beach
536-4698 (Sat & Sun)
*2256 Fordham Road, Costa Meoa
528·0570 (Sat & Sun)
•2510 23rd SL, Newport Bead!
646..'3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5) * 1727 Trade Wi.nds, Newport Beach
646-3255 (Sun 1·5)
(~ Bedroom)
1000 Westwind (Dover Shorts) NB
(714) 64U235 (Open Daily)
2276 ,,C,omell (College Park) CM
846-2309 (Dally 1-5)
1930 Commodore Road, Newport Beach
848-8676 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
(5 Bedrooms & Maids Quarters)
1801 Antigua Way, (Jlaycrest) NB
675-2000 (Sun 1·5)
(6 Bedroom & Family or Den)
613 Plumer, Colla Meoa
846-3928, 541>8483 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
.. ·-.. -··-------------··--------
rnw . .ia..wy 11, 19" DAILY PILDT ,
J HOUSES FOR SALE ... OU5ES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES POii ~' HOUSIS 1'011 SALi HOIJSIS '<Ill ,! ' \. M,.. . i.,;.,,
J!G~•;•~er:•;' ;:;;;:;;.;:d1ooo:;:Go~n:•r;•~I ;;:;;:;:;::;;21000;;;:~ \ :o:"':'"!;r•:'=· =;;;;;;:!';ooo;;;o.;;no~r;•;I ;;;;;;;;-~1:000;~0.~nor~•~l;iijijiijijiiii'oo~~~Otli~"~r~•~I iii;i-jiiii;T.i'~-~-;:11~~~~t!~'!!~· •;··~·;"'~'~• ~,~· 7DS~, · ~ Pum . I~~~~~~~~ i---;;~ LAST CALL!! ' , '. !!°=~::_; :r-t!.co:it~ ~~I. ~1NT1=MTA.,.
Th at really \\'E'll . pla oned home you've been
\vaiting for. Large famify rnt, separate din-
ing r1n. 2 fireplaces. 4 Bedrooms, S baths,
huge covered patio on large corner lot -
plenty of room for boat & pool.
Owner is moYing east, and has just redeC·
orated for you to move right in . $55.500
howanb Lawson jn.
REALTOR • N•wporl 11•,h e 675.4562
RANCHO LA CUESTA •l Brookhurst & A~
lanta ln HunUniton Beacb bu lull one home
unsold. This 3 bedroom 2 bath home leaturea
a dining room a 2 <rtory high Uving roo m,
built-in electric' range & dtshwasber, carpeted
throughout in luxurious green nylon. Full
p~e only •25,05() & tbal includes shake roof
& ~oncrete driveway. As added incentive to
get tbls l ast home sold we will landscape the
front yllt'd or fence the rear yard. (You mlght
even talk us into doing both!) Immediate pos-
session with 10% down. Temporary sal es of-
fice in the white trailer parked at Brookhurst
& Atlanta. Call 968-1338 anyday Crom 10 to 6.
Soles through the Multlplt li1ti~9 ri:·;:.~~C.: ·~ ~~·sno. ~ NQW·~LAILI ••
Service .o.f the Newport ·Harb6r ~ ~~~..!t'"~ ·"'•'\IAU, ' ·..Jiit-· ! ~ --o.r-He·111 Ufthwwl&Mlll !~--.~--~-· •· Cosio Meso Board of Reoltora TElm4L INCQ¥JC·a. • ~ -w ... ~ , CZElllliG U0.000 j!/Nt/AI, Go-ol 3000 °"''" ...,.... S 1111., 2 ... totoled $52, 152,897 for the year LY.,_ IG.'60.. i=. "fm· ·:
of 1·968. list your property with 'W:S~=~ 1~1 ~id;!.'1'~111.~~ • lifD CARPET ;;
D I d . REALTY ' 11 a "•o tor tci ay. su:F;PE!t ·~ 100 _ 1t '""""'-· 1., ol!I..,., -~
Bmintn rrontao on ~ SUS: '4 iti., ~t% · bathl, 2tt!6' W .. Balboa ·~·""
llvd. 1111'1 p0r frtt Joel '""""' ~: J'rt>I. 'dllldre.o m'6i:i t• \ all,-~ allr. P.O. llox It pe" ,OX. Bllr. -1 .... ~----~·1 EAST SIDE COSTA MESA .meo':"':at .... Top .. '~:.".:..!"v..":'= .,.
EXECUTIVE
MANSION 1 ~c~··~·~·-t.1""·~·~·---~11""001~~~~~~~~~~'!!!!~~~~!;!~~~~1
FANTASTYC 4 8 e d room Newport Beach 1200 Newport a..ch
NEWPORT HGTS. AREA ::~;,,~ ~;nw. 1~;:,"'="': w"",u-"'-.~~'11>--._~ ..
ALL THIS AND R2 L .. una Nt1utl 1707 ball,'-';;:w~
TOWNHOUSE
2 Bdrm, 2 Bath
2 Car Carports • Pll/Moolb 3,200 squ1u·e fl'{'t ol graciOUll
country g1•ntlen1en living. 4
large bedrooms. 3 baths,
family room, du1ing room
and dC"n, 11lus htJgc secluded
lo! \l'llh n1an1n1oth s1l'im
ming pool and plenty of
roon1 ll•fl OVC'r fol' croquet,
badnHn!on, ur 1\'hal have
you? You 11•1!1 likt• the Eai.:t·
e1·n Flnvor or architecture,
the toweru1g !ref's that pro-
vidC' lha1 "l'OUnlry feeling"
all 11 ('U as pr1vaey and se-
clusion. This c.~ceptional
hon1(' Is on land you OWN
in 1hc-4·i1y or Ncwporl
BC'ach. and unustra!ly good
\aiUC' ut unl y $52,000. Sut;.
n1i' yuur small!'r home on
our gua 1·anlN' sale plan.
home in absolutely lni-1 ~~~-~~~~=~~ maculate condition, double I [& •I
fireplace, gurgeoo~ nylon ,!1'>_,..
1200
BLUFFS Condo • 2 BR, 1
BA. split level. fireplace,
v\ew. By owner. 644--0llJl
$25,500 DELUXl: S llr. 2 Bl.: P"> t.ofa -1100 Pooll .' Adult. Onlyl
lay & hac•.
· balty. Inc., Charming 3 bedroom or 2 bedroom & den. tno. lndJCpd. " d"""-'"'i
I 'll baths, llrepl1ce, carpets & dropes, built· 11t .. clus1ve .M'omtth Bof: s.BEDP,001'1, bmlJy....., carpeling, sparkling bJt.ln c.r~tt¥e#hJ#?
kilchen & numicured yard. ~/
Traffic free street. close to fAIJ * BAY VIEW Fee lot 85'
x 19!;' w/ plans. $34,900.
Owner 543-7249, 548-4201
ins & forceci air heat. This well landscaped lowb' cx:ean view; autD. fireplaw, bWl.t 1n kittben,
home can be found on a h;'J.e R2 lot with a "''ter ~Qel' " dee. pr, new wtw catPtt complete,
901 Dover Drive SUlie•
~ . Ewa. sehools. Asking $27.nl • . 1 doon: 1 yr. "'W. ~.500. 1• •• ,., pa••-.. ·tacL ....... Very larg. I.need back yar , with room or .,. -• uu, ...., ,.,.,.
I h v.1th 6% ~ loan. 0woer (1) :IO·X-'20 ~PUI room, .fetdd a boat, camper, or build a rental unit! t as 40IM1SI re:ar l'Ud. double iarqe,
submit. Call 540-1151 (open :,f}IJ.6.···--/•LJ
eves' Heritage Real Eslate ,.,------Newport H9's-1210
College Park Area
2278 CORNELL
4 BR 1 ~ ba, 26. living room,
bit-ins, 11.•/w carpets. drap.
{'s. fe nced. V.'alk to all
schools & shopping. S26,500
646-2309 Agt.
COZY 2 BR home near Ne11 ·
port J-IC'1ghls, Cul de Sac
street, large R-2 lot with
room for rental Unit, $19,900.
21J.J: wEsrcLir.-onrvE ~Graham Realty
Near N.B. Post Of{'. 64&-2~14
646-1711 Opf'n Eves.1 ~"'.'!!~~""""""'""'"""'
Bi' OWNER · E-sidc. 3 Br.
2 Ba. Natural \\1l0d blln
kitchen: utility p o r c h :
crp1 s, drps. Close to schls
& shp'g. $25,5(l(I. 54S--0'244
NE\V 2·sly. 3 BR 2 Ba.
Cptg. ,t, draJX's: $26,950;
S3,0CO Do11.11. Owner 642-9167
DEFEAT RENT!
Just pu! low down payrnenl
& takf' over lugh GI loon at
no eos1, no feC's. no qualify-
ing J'l•qui1"Cd. Spo1less 4 BR
home, 2 baths, newly paint-
ed kitchC'n. buiH-in oven &
rang{', quality t·ustom drap-Mesa Del Mar 1105
es 11•1 1v l'arpcts & fireplace, ----~
11·ell Ja'ntfsf'apt;lll'nceOya:ra. TIXER-Ul5F'ER--:Gl I o w
Paymenrs $189/rno. includ· down. $26,000 value, S BR,
es all -price $24.700. converted ga r; need~ palnt,
1003 ll:1ker, c.r.t
CORONA DEL MAR
R-2 lot __. house. Jl art' al'3il·
ability, high investment po-
len1ial; cl~e lo Ocean 81\'d,
& beach. 3 BR .. l"~ baths;
some v1c11•. Always rented.
'Priced to sell, $37.~.
New part
at
Victoria
646-8811
car!)(' I, S2.1,950. 0 w n er
546-1007
Mesa Verde 1110
3 BR $26,900 FHA
Fantastic lerms on this l\tesa
Verde home. 3 lg B«irms .
2 baths · family roo1n + 2
ri rl!places. Owner has bought
ano!h('r . EZ tern1s -F1-fA-
VA -$2G,900.
l!\s;R·I~G
«""•REALTY
•• "anylime'1
26-."9 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
OPF.N HOUSE SAT&: ~'UN
1880 Maui Circle 0 1
By Owner custom home nenr
goH course'. 3 Br. 2\i Ba,
fam rm. 2 frplC's, pool. r.;;;;;;;;;;; _ _,..,...,.~ I s.19.soo. :i.16-6421 * 4Yi % Interest *
lln) txxly can assun1e this
VA lo1;1n. Payn1ents S.123 per
n10 prinr1plr. interest & tax-
es. 3 1BR I" .. b11. huge fam·
ily 1w1n 1vi1h fil'('place, din-
ing an.'ll. lnuJt.ins, hd11.·d
floor'!', dblc garage', pool·
s ized yard. Asking o n l y
$23,900.
FUtr. 6-16-3921! or :,.J5-3~S3
*LA CHEN MYER
BROADMOOR
llAltBOlt \"!E\\'. 0 1:\I
25 00 Wavecrest Dr .
E::..cr Tri·i.A.'Vl'! ~loclet
5 BF:DROO'.'.t
S69.:l('o'J
Dave Gambill
bl 1·0021!
51/i.% LOAN
Payments S141 n10. ine)u<lC'.~
all. 4 Largr bedroms, spac·
ious liv rn1., l"i BA. la ll!l'
fent'C'd yard. Nrar schools
1& 50. Coa~t Pln ~u. 11nn14•d1·
all' pos~rs~1on
1-IARTI N H E. MS-G,t'\2
LOOK I 4 BEDROOM
$22,500
[)csirablf' al"f'JI at s.uch a
1011· prU'f'' 2 hnlh~. lan1 1ly
1w111. f<:n('han!lni; l1n•pl 1u'('.
Bn1·k 11a l11i 11 1th ,CilJ'. BBQ.
Drt'anl k11r hi'!I 11·1th buill·
ins. ;,.11;.112<1
TARBELL 2955 Harbor -- --OPEN SAT/SUN
25271 Champlain Rd
Capistrano Highlands
4 BR 2 ha1h.~. de n, dini~
l"m. poof. VH'W, $38,500
DAVIDSON Realty
516-5160 ---4 Bedrm -"0$" Down
$23,750!
f or a 1111\:l' ra rn1ly . fun~
f'o1n1;i\ 01n111J: roon1. Car-
l)('!f'rl • rnany <'"<lr11s. !'pol-
ll's~ r•ln.-111ion! ~rrin
TARBELL 29SS Harbor
ARE '"OU 8 1CT ol hue~
,t; morh::as:<' Jlfl)n1ents~ 'iou
clon'I M vr any hC'l"l'. I.1vr
fT'f'{', \\Uh lo1v doll'n .
Eastsidc 3 BR. homr: with
3 l'C'lllal un1l!I, 1'Ul,000 l.t'm-
mrr Rkr. 646-3750
Costa Mesa 1100
'1 BR., fa111 rn1. Din rm.
2 B a . \\'/\\'. Lrg
Pacen1ake1·. Belo11• mrkt.
Q\1•nf'r, assu1np!ion. FHA.
545-87:'4.
3 BR 2 ba!h, fan1ily room,
2 lil"f'places. $3000 dn. 61,~%
Joaa • total p y m nt s
Sl90/n10. OwnC'r S.15-7822
BY Q\VNE R: 3 BR. & Fami-
ly, 2 BA. Crpts. drps lht'U·
out. bltm. $26,500. 540--0.12:1
alt 6 wkdys or wkncls.
3 BR .. fam, pan/den, crpts,
rlr-p~. 01vner. Assume lo
Fiii\ $26,500 · 11·ill lak<' 2nd.
Jill)-4722
BY O\\'NEP.: l\frsa Verde
PaCE"sel1cr. 3 & Family. 6',..l1
loan: ~:>.0.~00. 20t1 calvl'rt
Ave .. 546-3081
3 BR, 2 Ba. new r rpts, bH·
ins, sprinkler systein. boat
spac.1•. $'.!.\900. 546-2880.
Cambridge Highlands
$21,500
As~un11• 51.'1 loan wlflcx.
down pay\. Xln! 1·onll, lrg
J Br, 2 Ba, \rt:l frplcs.
~·an1 rm & near hl'.'\V rrpls
& drps. Total payts SIR6.
l\1o. 546-841\3
GP.EY Barn w/gas lite 3
Br. crpls, drps & shutters,
lq>h·, bit-ins, blk 11.·all, petio
& BluC' Haven poo l
1v/healf"r. Clean. 2 2 5 6
rordh11m Dr, c.~1. :'48--0570
OIARGE IT~
a paved alley entrance for easy access. Loca-, tm per Jno.,No pets. BKR
EAST SIDE COSTA h1ESA tion is just about perfect, l lh blks to New· CenffmlftiUftt. 1tJO SO-t5&i ( t
NE\VPORT HGTS. AREA port grade school, and only 2 blb to11ew city 1.,:;;:;;;::: ___ ;.,..-,--
./ ALL TIUS AND R2 park. East 17th street and Wesldi!I shopping 4 BR. 2• 111 Oondomlnluo> ;.v.ur. lmmod.~ 3
cJ'(;_.,;.
7 $25,500 d th h ls 'thin lklng dis on Fairview, C.M. $22,000. Br. 'ii BL . to I: "'
_A/ Channing 3 bedroom or 2 an two o er ~ 00 WI wa :V w / satm. down. 121. Mt:flL mer. malnt., lltd. poo , Ip. N~"':!!:::C:..~H:•:ilt!'.lito::' ::..:,'.=::::I t!¥Y~ bedroom & den. 1,t. bath.I, ta.ne e. For appointment to see, write: mtown I..tN. 54(M971 ms. ireen ~oft pr1V&te patio. .
t» / firE'plat-e, carpets & drapes, Private .Party It week-ends. 5'~1322 daya. Adult ~"'111Y :"1th 4;'!hildrtn E•U Side Cetta ~' ao-b""'·'" & """"' .,, ...,... 11-or Older; $2111' lolo. leue N-port Hp. li ~ This '''el\ landscaped home Box P612 ~plaxN fer Sa&e 197~ 6d-OSOO o.&rminl 3 · bedroom or
can be found on a huge R2 Daily Pilot roit t&UE _ .Lease lh1s bedroom It ~ 1"1
BALBOA ISLAND lot 11·ith a very large fenc-1::=========7=========INEWP01tT ~u b' l&le. attractive 4 + fal:n'ny ~-lftJ!lace, carpets A LUXURY ed back yard, with room lor1. 200' to bee.ch. Or will trade February 1 10 Stptember built.in. t. forced air
1, Block Jrom Bay a boat. camper, or build • Lido Isle 1351 Huntlntteft equity ·for IDOd Lqun,J 1. ·$2:oo lbcludlila:: ·IU'detier. Well landscaped home
Close to Shopping rental unit! It has •paved 1.:::.:::..,;cc.;.____ Harlteur · 1 1'405 raid~ lot P. O •. Bos CIOR to lhoi>¢ni. 6 11 a very '.larp 1enced~
3 Bdrm, l% baths. alley entrance for easy ac-l'ldO IS Expecting ' 1"23'., ,Huntiqtan B~•e~. scboGLs. Mesa det h1'er. yard.. Location ls Just abO
!\faster BR has own bath. ccss. Location is just about HUNDNGJON (nol) B4&..COCS. Owner COLLEGE .JtEAI.tr~ perfect. 1% bllCI to N
perfect, l~!a blks to Newport -~ .. t.i..... ho , GOLD Med&Won DJplex, S ' .. · srai!e·achool, and Ql\),J"·2 . living rm w/flre placer grudeschool,andonly2blka a ,,_._..,.,,nr:w me.en -' bra: 2Bru.nlts.,1701 W. LEAS~/~ON ·;& BR 2 to new dty park. East 1'
to co~ev:~~it~or to new· cit;y par!:. East 17th 3,000 sq tt ~BR, 3~~ ha, d ' u lMAliR Bi.lboa Blvd, N.B. Call ba1hs. ~ mq-nfce residen-tt:rtet and Wt'lltcll:U ~
slTeC'I and \\'estcllll shop. famnn.dinlng nh,v.·et bar, IUUlDUU Welta Burpa A Alloc. tlal area. I.~medlete ~and two other ·
entertaining. ping and f\\'O other schools 2 lrplcs, sundeck. Lee cor. '4+-0266 . PQ4SU1ion. CALl. M Jt. within walldq dlttanot. roo:~:~u~lr a~~:ional \vithin ivalking distance . For strada street lo •:ztt, NI o'wot. SALES CORI'. RENTA·L.. DLA~ s.&U51 ( o p e n For, de~ write: , ' I
appointn1ent lo set', ,1•1·ite: Select col~rs, carpe II . . •· eves) Herltg, Real Estate . P:.ZyMf Porty
unil -$55,00li Private Party See plans in office. delivery He"'91 Purnlshed 'WESI'S1DE ·3 ·Bi'. ~n; i%. · ·!~_..,. tm' ;
(tlJG.CI Box P612 date approx April'l lt. $92,500 N••r W1terfront Henwt1 ~ ne·wly painted Wide .. .~,. .... rl.1.2· ~· i ~ Daily Pilot WALKER RLTY . uk tor s btdroom, family room, liv-ltentaft ta Shara 200.S w{~A¥iil~DtW -at' J17S lnO . ';Dilllir,...--A . ,l•
PROPERTIES Wl:ST Mn. Nu b G'is.26'l'G Ins rocm, dlnlnl: room, kiteh-fDtu.E J.Oommafe to lhafe "t\tUe, eal1 ift ·19.30 Jim "'J" r_.,
(714) '75-•tll Ba.ycr•st 1223 en, 2 baths. Neu ahopplnc hoWie' Balboa Islabcf ·~ wtelc daya. 5'61311
-10~8 8--'.tt-Dri--FANTAS'J'iC-REDUeTION; Huntl"ttcm-leach-1 =erbe~~l!, m~ma~ ~AYEt-'-n0w~ . 1-iJW"'ifoiiii ffi cour-11::::=i::::::;;;:::::=:::;;;:
-z•• ' ' •. " ... ' 5 rM, '67$--26M ' ,,,,.,... ~·Ii yard. Wt.ter SPAOOUS 4 BR. 3 BA. Newport Beach, C.lif. 926611 Beau! custom 1.ledallion WALK TO BEACH , ,. "-L-• · [""' ""J Baycrest home, was S79,950 . z story, 3 bedroom, family WORKING tirl to lhare turn pd. ht .Ir Jut. mos Nnt Ina, crp...,. -.-. nr .,.;q,'
•• ··• -now S75,950. Below ap.. 2 BR TownhouM. Bull~-m room and den. 2~ bath •• Univuatt:y Park hotM · w/ re.. SUD mo: ·2.W-4 CacU pool.I. '215· See n ,,. WONDERFUL praised value. Like new 4 elect. rana:e •. own. dtsh-..................... $53.IXIO same. D&yl ~. evu. .P::,'·,;C;;.N::·.;,··,-· .---:-:-::-:-::-~ ma&
BR, 3 ba, huge fam rm, washer, e.xpeflSJVe w/w CaIL 133-1S31 ' 2-Bit Priv. car a 1e , c ....... i M ,Mlf WESTCLIFF fully crptd, drpd, brick pets, c~tom drapea, enclos-Split·levtl 3 bedroam, panel-EMPLOYED Y.'DDWI t 0 Wasbu1dryer. Reta. re-
y 'll ----• t ••-~am.... BBQ patio ed patio, double garage. ed family room, dlilnr room, ahare pleasant home -·'"-". · ; , ou nu:uvu a u ic uo: c...1 11.,7 s.' .,, .•• ,· D•. NB,,.., .o')'t;f\ no..-lull price -$136/mo. "' .... .,... ceiling living room & 2 brick ~ " -• .,.,,,,..,,"f" ~ taxes. 2%. bath!, former fumlshed w/same. S50 Mont b. 16' ?.-fen. Dr. $135. 5'1-'7181
(il"eplaces. ?.folher's ki tchen 1 123,-model .............. "9,5&0 5'8-'°1'2 day•. : I..pVU.Y euat!lm built home,
\\i1h all built-ins. 3 Bedroom w .. tcliff 0 $11,000 . hall WILL · Share qiy 2 Br. 2 ~&m·'·Ce.llinp~ '!R{W wblte
and 2 balhs. Carpets and ATTENTION 4 BR 1~ bath, electric built· 24st~=-a~~°IamilY Ba. apt. wJwotklitr rirl or dpf;:, frplc 1n llv ft; kit.
drapes. \Ve believe this lo FIXER-UPPERS in ranee' &t oven, &arbage ....... m, d1 .. 1 .... and n . .i .... lrtud.ent. N., B. Area. s S:r. $2"5. ITIG. 642-1538. be an outstanding buy all • ....,... ....... ..... ~n
because owner is leaving 3 Bdrms & den, l~ Baths. disposal, dUlhwasher, large room, 2% bath!. 2 littplac-NEAT 2 BR t. Den, 1'4
the statf'. _ Ruff but a Real Bargain! pantry, upgraded carpets &t es, heated Ir. filtered pool .• WORKING mother will llhare BA. Qilel street. walk'&
646-7171 546-2313 * 642.7898 • drapes, double prq:e, mm· ...................... $59,500 H.B. home w/collece slrl .afat to all sbo(l,'r. Avail =========I pl'etely fenced. $1500 total or WorklhJ, rnothtt w/O'M n0w;·t150 mo.~
THE~EAL
ESTATERS
_U:.;n..;i.;.v•..;rc:•::.it.!y_P_u_k;_....;.12.:.3:.;7.1 ~o;::ib ofs~~~ :': W1terfront.H•rr-c~ 96l-S2olO Al~. 511.t EJIDE 3 Bf. ~· t150
BY OWNER, 3 Br, 2~1 Ba. lud tax 3 bedrooms, 3 th , story WANT 2 youna liberal mind-Mo. Av .. ll Feb L 220 Monte inc ea es. home. Deck, dock for .boat ed ·bachtlars to ahare nice Vista. , &U-71M Huntl-.....n INch fam room, has everything! $71 ooo • ._ ••
Priced lo sell! 833--0104 IT 1111\~--· 11\M . .. . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . .. . ' 3 Br home, w:a. m..uos l BDRM, IU'oltow. catllttl.
OPEN HOUSE '\6ml'T!!'T'aa!D"' 4 bedroonu, 3 balh, 1 otory 1 NICE itrl -am• to ...... $125; Dtjooolt $60. SAT & SUN 1 • 5 Back B•y 1240 home. Dack, dock for boat ~ Corta Mesa Apt. $60. Older cple pref. ~
1115 Someriwt Lint 3 BR. Hdwd Ors; iv/w crpl'g _O_P_E_N __ S_A_T-. -1-.-5-..................... $U,900 64Z-3SH aft~-t BR, 2 Ba, newly decorated
Beautiful \Vestclill 1-slory · 1· & hall 60. •~o:· FEMALE roommate, 16!.50 30l·Cahrillo St.
'" IV rm . X.a.w 1 '5S2 C•n•·rro lino ... ~ 4 Bel, 3 bath, pan/den, lge lot wJ grass, fruit trees S'l'O Y/POO-L HO"tE 4 bedroom s, 4 ... ...,, cwtom per month; Balboa lsl&nd $20I), M<lllth ·~
!iv rm. Fully iMulated & patio slabs. 20271 Spruce 2 R ., 1 story home. 56 ft. boat Apt 6'1'3-MC6 ffOUS!; In • <!OUl1; 2 Br.,
circular drive. $75,500 (OU Pal' de Rd\ $22 OOO Large separate family room, dock, deck cantilever~r!:! C -GO : qrts '1rt.piior prW: pat.IO.
R. c. GREER. Realty b L";" • ., ;671 o::•o ~' quality carpets, l:i' pool with water ••••••••••• •• • .....,,......, Ott• · • 21 ,· u•A''w. 17"' 91." • .... -3418 Via Lido 673-9300 Y <n1.'!'ler ~ '......-nu.,. filter" heater. GI or FHA ....,.. .,....-"'
I'll E llENTAl ~ 'Drop ln ... Bl'O'lnl t·
' Bedroom. 2 Bath. Garqe. Separe.tion
mital of· this CorpoUS
1115.00 per numth. ,
Option. \
Walker & Le
21 .. SQ
'
•1 4 Bd 2 Ba C d 1 .. _ 1250 terms. Price is ria:bt at 4 bedroom, 3~ bath, 2 story 3 B&DltooMs, like new COb-iibiACULATE 2 Br, prqe, 7W EdirWer
· · rni, · orona • JTI411r 500 home across from Beach Ji; dt&n. Completely fundah. crplt • drpr, bit-ins., Sllt &e4l55 Optn Efte. SIJ.Sl
extra lge living rm \v/bi>lc. I ;;;;;;;;;-.;;;;;;;;;,;:;;:;;:;I 133' ·I J R I Tennis Oub. St ft, on the ed. Adu!tl only or ·~be. 'mo. sfs.-9755 . Din rm, pa nelled beam'd I 1 P•u ane1 ea ty ,
tam rm. w/frptc. Closets BEST BUY 847-1266 E\.1!11. 536-nit waterfront wlth a U.ft. boal one chlld. Swirnmlnc pool, S 'sR. 2 St Weltcliff area: galore~ Lge nlastcr suite CORONA DEL MAR START THE dock t. cantilevered deck. recz:ea~on ffnter at,nl> ex-walll:'fo.'s~bi. A .shop., Cp?°,
k . Small house Plus Furn r..ent-••••••••••••••••• • • • • $99,900 tra charae. S2l5 mo. AIUt ..i~ etc' ~2395 eYe ·
w/pulhnan & 11.'al in al Unit on full size lot. run New Year RIGHT 5"&-Ctl ' ~-::.;,..::,·~~r~;,...-,-..., closet. Beaut landscaped, . $28 750 HURRY ON Above homes are a part at FURN 2 tty, 2 br. 2 be. 2 BDRl!: A oen,. fenced~.
$37,000 f'HA App r a i s I . pn ce, · · Spread out in a o1 to 5 BR. the resale divis.lon'e exclu---... , , __ 1 p•·-, bl""". no pdl, wa~r paid, $150. 642-2637 TlllS. 2 & 3 baths. Start 11~! una.1 ..... ...,., u... M 5".:39iJ
VOGEL COMPANY HAFFDAL REAL TY '"' U.tinp-"" In pri"' n..,.... adtilll only. 51&-"6i .::;'::,·~=:.,,.--=!:-Fr•nch Provincia.I 2667 E. Coast Hwy., QIM 8740 \\' F V 8424405 from ~OXI to $1.A,j,000. 2 Bdnn. House $140
Large U-shaped floor plan. 673--2020 anytime arner, · · · Come in Ind talk to one of Ceffn• tfef Mer 2258 S Bdrm. Howie S160
Back Bay """"~'· Pl"" OPEN SUNDAY 12 5 o"' U lull-time pool•.,lon-. Phono 11:!!:1'113 . call for ap11t. 6•16-4414 CAMEO Shores, 113 acre, . • al sales)-epreaentativea. 2 Mt: 1 Ba., J'le"-'ly ' ciecat. ~ B'Ji, newly 1~ted, patio,
ocean view, key to pvt . · OPEN 10 A.M. 'T1L DUSK Beaut. drapes Ir c pt ._ fnod yd. MW.ta. ·1165/mo.
beach heated pool 4 Br 864.1 VlSC(!Unt Dr, nr Adams 7 DAYS A WEEK Dttontor ~·· Incl. eol~ Rltr. 642-873(, ·
211. Ba f'l'IL b I i -In 1 ' I. Magnolia. 4 BR for the H I H L-TV Priv patio bftns hfih •
Di ... 'Orce' sale.· $ s 9 . o o o: discriminate buyer. S29,99ii untsnf:o( ar-ur tiea'm -ceU ·~an etde ot ~ BDRM, l~ ba, crpts, drw.
BY OWN Elt: price reduced Barbour & Va ndl i ng, R. D. SLATES, Rltr. 21 131 !3~771 tiwy. Cl~ io, everythlnc. :~11a..$223moonlettt.
$150 , Lovely 3 BR. 1~
2 ·~ condo. Crpta, dove, rtfr!g, whr/dyr.
~Uo. Prk'c. Pool. au
Tennill cts. Call co~ 2U/-
from $42,500 lo $37,500. 3 Broken. TI4: 838-5440. S 841-3519 Evea. 962-00 714!'47.2531 !;?5 ~~~hJh-S' e • r J Y • 1 _::::::;•;;· ==::::=:::::::'.I BR. 2 Ba. lfugc !iv. & &. eve 714: 537-6080 BY owner, 3 Br, 2 Ba. crptJI, vi~1.0 ~ J•
lam. rm~.; very Ige. Jot: BY OWNER. e 1 e g an t drps, bit-in ra111e It oven, "!'./ 1 E \v,' 1 u x u ry, '375:: 'Mli!aa Ve~e 3110 ..::::;:::;:,,,~:.;===---1>1
can store boa: or house BROADMOOR, 4 BR, 3 B A. waterfall in lehced back Sunoot •--ch 1 •55 ..,.,. Ad"'ta .,.,,. · N •--· -• d -• mo. • . ~ • ,,_ '1IO MONTI!, waler pold, _L .. uno. ='="::<h:,-_ __;:.:,:i trlr. Cor. of 15th SL & farn rm. Priced for qui ck yard. ew ....... ..re. y ' I Shel!, China eave. ~ ruc.e 3 bdrm. Available F~b. -
Kings Pl. Call : 545-5124 .. R'•! Open Sunday J-5. 1228 establilbed. No qualifying, OCEANFllONT dbl lot 4 BR -._.,,. -FA-Occ·-·, ~-3
BEAUTIFUL &; C ustom .5:xipo1nt 'Vay. 644--2379 owner tn.nslttred, ea 11 houiie and 2 BR hicome l1lllN l11M.. 2355 l~bt=. =-="=~======:: ,.B.~ ~-~--Leua
buil t. Large 2 BR.. & Fam eves., 6n-8930 day!L 828-2495. apt. ™2 Bf,Yl'JtONT 5' BR. tb Juzie ~rt leach 3200 ·Owner 49f...«157
rm. 2~~ ba & room . tor 7 J'lilCE houses on double Huntington Hiiis 1---------11 ltt~ t.125 ar yrty S500 ind · · . . CHARM 2 Br. 2 Ba. Atrt -
addition '1'/ lovely view. lot. So. of Hwy. Reduced Take owr 5%% loan. Hard· Sant• Ana 1620 \lfl!.. ·f73.:6900. Mirtha or 2 ·mt ·fus deb, DltW crpt., cpts,· drpa, view. l'rtv. bci
2:il8 Vi a rtla.rina .• Owner. to ~l.500 Ov.·ner. 673-4169 wood noors. laiye 3 BR. I e•es 8'1s.-57M, ~·Whit& ' Imm•. I . 2 car, pr, ad.ul~ Lie .. $295. 494-6007 Owner
642-3219 13x18 fam. rm, ne1v paint in SP ANISH Charmer. Cua Qe •~ -'2w ~. Uj;;. SU-1290 BF·
ELEGANT. wf'll bit & only 1351 &tout. Sell GI or ,TH.A.. Santiago. 1 yr nu. 3 BR., nuntlnt"" I -. 3 QR. 2 Ba., frp!.,' epts, Du I. U fv
SZ!.900. FlfA or VA. 7.oned I ·!,;;;l;do;;:,l_;;,•l_•.,;;;;;:,;;;;,,;;;;;;:,~1 BRASHEAR. REAL TY 2 b&. Immac! $33,500. Cstm. S BR; 2% ··B,t,, bltne, -crpts, drape1: l~ hllr:9· to beach. ~~ n ;!"::·:...::~H
R2. Large ll\'ing r m ·· I• 847..as..n Evea. 961-1171 ~· ~ drpJ. pool, rec hall. $,t2S' Yearly. ?Q MO.~ 2 BR, Wf\!/ crpt.
firepl., cpls, drps, elec. BAYFRONT FOR sale and/or lease mo. 21211 l'Neport Ln. DAILY PILOl' WAN? ADI ~. blt·lla, .ldUJta, :~; BR., df'n. Owner. sktnc: $115,00'.l DUPLEX with iupm, custom J tidnn 2 1.705 , 213/~ Al....,. a Go-Gel pe&, 38!J'E. 3tth st. C.M.
3 BR, 2 baths up. 2 BR &t 1 ba I: 'den. 'h-1any extr'u,
GREAT BUY BA.dO\v.n, 2 Frplcs, &yfont xlnt location to llChools' It
Beaut. '1 Bd11n , 2~1 Ba. Jgc pal10 w11 h room to e:n1arp. shopping In H B CaU
pool. S53.500. 64G-8676 Walk•r Rt•lty 536-4698 after 5 l · Wet:k· 3336 Via Lirk tiiS-5'.!00 DAil..Y PILOT \YANT ADS! •""'· ?.IOVJNG East -Jo\o"elY
Deane home Pacific SaDdl
tract. 3 BR, 2 ba, fan:I.
rm, prdtn kitchen, carpeta,
drapes ~.&OO-5 3 6 • 1'4 at .....
4 BR. crpta, drp&, bltn.s.
hdl'iil nn, frplc, pan. 2 Ba.
Fncd. cul de sac. Nr schls
&: shp'1. May rtnl w/ opt.
By owner. 64&-6004
Huntington
H•rbour 1405
4 BR. 60' W•terfront home.
40' Dock, Hunllnete n
Harbour. By owner ~40
NOWS THE .
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
• Tl!!!!!!!l
Eion:R:w>' BAY -5-~
Ocun View from each m&·
jar room. Spacioull 5 Bed·
rooms honie...panelled dtD.
flttp\l.ce ln mu ter suite ...
Bathlr J.arae ~ room.
pa.Uo,· . .,., 5 -~;ooo.
MGUEL :rEIUUCE -1
very liV1.ble ol 'bedroom home ,
011 Wye lewl lot attzacti.,._
lr landlClpcd. Bl& famlly
l'OOfll, 3 t.thl. dell&XI ldk:h-'
r\iaWi':'·ASSOCIATIS ;
Ol2' No. l:out Blvd.
""""' ~""' (11~ $111'! ' wut1~ •wmr ,
3 • ' er. Semi Oaotom .....,. ..... ,,., ... _
"""" ''"""'""Jon" '--"' I on Moantltn '""9 Dttn, otl
1')oTol Or!W ,
A.,.l. SA~IS AGINTS
l'ltonl11._TIQ1 .. __ .,..
c .. , •• , ' -~OOCNst•I 2700Cilfflol 27
.. ,.
~
f· -•
•
• .,
' •
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I
I
Fri<J>1, J.,,,.,, 17, 1969
'"NIALS •ENTALS • -REAL ESTATE, llEAL.esTATI
""'"' F ........_u. urnltW G'fliO"I •• • °""'81
H...,11,...... .... !> 440CJ "-1 ~ s2oo R1t1t•lo W......, 1 59" --llontot '°'°
FU RN IS ll 1!: D t6 IJN. Ul<f"MlsmD lf<\;I -~ -....:·, -9 1'00B4I IColl ~ ~ISKD> N~H,:ta.".t u,_xury, w/noc-tllldrea/peta. udlor tar' lot for klue.
2 btdtoom. 2 bl& sti.xno, vf ep. d U,,1lei &J>l., ~ .. ~ "IS p:a J,.ow~t.).J80Jllrbof8lvd.
--1 blodt .. 5 op!Mowl;' •, ~ ,.,,... ~. ~ 'e.M.-ili~~OPn¥ .. Clf ~ llUY Polnb • '"'"'. -tbll:I: ~'IJ"apu, ~.~ •;J!!l>.:..,llfl.l-,m;="'R~l"'JO'"'ll~O"'f~Fr.IC~E~ A..-J --· -....... J. J_an. 25. __ .,ewiiif! .<;Ol!L'f: JMmNGT()N BU.QI . · No-..._~ flrun l13IJ, '1'101 ~ 'Allj ~ ,o/ptr ~."~"" f ?°:'~" 5CS-1l"_ ..,., 1• o..i... on.Booch lll..t. J. H.F.11.C. o. · 9l).t303 "' caD -, · , 1 I I ~__:_.! • , , T~-41u
I "i<~ -lolt 612-283$ llfJ'ER,.lltlplex, 2 .... >$111, QUJl!:T. -KiJI
f'W.'l9di,l!Ji.l"0!J48.3481 UTILITIES PAID 1 >'· leue; _, <IJoplox w1....i..i 1""'11W • pet; c:::.~..: !ii.:7! w. Lndn. AnllrD 714-2800 2 Bdnns. furn. Rid. pool 3 Br • .Jl85.. l )T. lease. desJ.tta permanent home or 100, !'rontaie OwlEr
802 KnoxvUle Apt D Jt.B. Adults; ro prts. Sect bY apl, furn & untum. Approx ~ •
' _.. ~~~~! 0 .._ • 5.16.2.9tc e' app't. only. Miu White SJ.50. Avail Feb. lat or later.
&I ......... ~ ..._!;IUWI "D<U"l°II• ~100 ~ .. CdM ... ;iH0,1i'S
1 Fiim.led~~~ QUIET & BEAUTIFUL 2 BDRMS., 18 ""· to ... ch. iW>t ·~ &e--.. Nr. N ....... Plet
1 No c~o,No peb Adulta .1.._0flly· __ ~ BR. P o.o J Couple pniren-ed. We 11 PLiH'P. ¥iYfie' , to Ci('8iij;. tr.~ mD860
' "'5 """"""' Cli 00-5851 11•'1• uuneron. 841-212>. Newport. 1155 Yrly ""1 Co. -.,C a,u R ~· .. •·--1 ,A70 1 642-SlriO wis~.-,~ H:rt,l _Bjt J bolm.o~:..:;~-:.::::;:~::::..--.:-=
l90; 2 Bdmu, bdwd. fin. Lagun• Booth 4705 ON BAY "~ 1 Br Exoel!ont ~•-;,,.,... Up to• '· •r-• ~.• BE 'CH ~n It pel OJ<. . near ._...,, " $100 .ChT {iir Q:IUed _,.,...""""' """' Broker 5J4...eB1 · MODERN Vttw apt, nartb piWo apt. (or fuml: Newly, t21.3) ~ t •Afr Cendfttoned
SIOO: 2 BIL I ba.. tri le end. 2 story, 2 BR. l~ decor. Boat stort.ie avall-ON roaW1·AVENUE
0 'p.-:......i. Util ...,;.1P x.. Ba. 2 sundecks, gar, 1 blk UBS utiJ ind. 673-6450 LOCAL Ba.nk officer, wile DeU: sp&cet avaflahle Ill ~ r -:~· ~-sboppilv-beach. Vt:rJ plush. Ii 2 children need a dean, neWf:lt ofae. balldhta al '° BrolLllr 5M-GllO sai mo. «M--9982. Newport Hots.. 5210 spactoua l pr, 1 ~ Ba. prtine b2doD tn downtawn
~--•o -4100 'fNTALS -•-·· 2 Br home. ~terably tn Cmma l..a&una Beach. Air ~ -..-I , $1&5. UPPER spa~ , del Mar. 984-7113 tianed, cUJtted.. beQdful
_._ ~ • Apls. Unfurn!sMd l Ba. adulb only.' [rplc., 1 BDRM tnuae ot apt, paneled partitlonlnc. Two . u Gtne I 5000 cor a~l St Andttws, East:&ide Coeta Mesa, must entraneet: Frontap GD A f:1'. ~ rl · . ~ ~ reasonable. 6 4 6 -4 214 Form A-..e:., rear lelldl to
a{ ef.} uere Eut Bluff S242 '""· Mu--.... l50 ~ eoun.,.·, -·"'"' VENDOME Presl1"ge local1"on v::~ ::':" ~""':\" ~ ::.; !:':: ~.U::bO.: EW Adult livilg ccamJ)IH IMMACU' .ATE APTS! snare. NB or CM. area. &mtu bol.zra unerhia;
Custnm film or untum. JMMED. OCCUPANCY 64.'>-179l<6:30pm. service. availa.ble fer SID. •l Bd.mi ... 2 Bdnm At>ULT &: FAMILY For lease, deluxe 1888 sq. fL All utilitln paid except
Olntemporu')' Custom SECTIONS Av'AILABLE 4 BR., 2~ ba. Apl Frplc., EMPLOYED lady wanta 1 U!l~e.
•l..De9Jea .., CIOM to Shopping, Pirie drapes, cupetS, wet bar. BR Unfurn Apt beacb area ' DAILY Pn..O'r ·~ Gardens . 3 8_, 2 8 priv. balconies; dbl garage to $110. Gar or~ nee. 222 FOREST AVDruE
6 "Bubb1b:v spring le bl'OOk • Spe.c)(IU! 'a, a oft kitcb. Dishwa.llbu, dbl. st2-00!6 a.tt/5 LAGUNA BEACH
ti(G• Pool ii: therapy bl.th • 2 BR. widen or ofc. oven, pool. O:lnYt"nient to FAMILY desires 4 Br Jmne, 494-9t66
e Activity room/billiards • Swlm Pool, Put/green shop'g., schools le recrea-Costa Mesa, North of --,=-.,---===--
•Sal.In& Bath • Frpl, lndiv'1ndey ttc'ts tion. Baker. East of Fairview to Deluxe Offices
e Puttinc green 1845 Anaheim Ave. ONLY $325 MONTH S250. ~Ill. Call 54&-681D SU?I'Es or sin&le ~from t~~-~· Cu BBQ. CDSTA >!ES.lo 642-2824 135 AMIGDS WAY • LANDLDRDS • S1'5. Ca>i>ots. air amdl-
prqu le storap Newport Be•ch FRE& REm'AL.sERVlCE me. aecretuial • e: r v 1 c e,
of town • between FOR SALE OR LEASE Mgr. Apt. 9 central location. <>ranp
A Ford/Harbor & New· Channel RMf" Broll:a-~ County 8&ok Bldi:. 230 E.
. Penthouse Apt. Coron• def Mar S2SO BAY or t:iea'chf'ront home 17th St. Of. G0-1485 1'fJll' Pumns.. CM 642-8610 $550 per mo. to reliable par-yearly • .il1 .Newport NEWPOitt CIVIC CENTER
' ~ SEA LARK tie.• only. Chet Salisbury Balboa aNl ~1007 Ottices suitable for Corn-
• ' Re-altor. 61lo$XI ... y UNF. ~ ~· ~ble mercia,l. Medical. Dental. MOTEL $15!1; 2 BR. 2 baths. garage; tl,.: C::::,,. ,:.·:.,... rent. Will-tmp!Vw. Away .Air-c:ond., crpts, elevator
..... WEEKLY Wes w/w, :r ~ I (---/~ from the throng. 548-367r 541·5o.l2F'ro3'R ~2464
, 1 N.wport Blvd., CM -ON TEN .ACR~ Rooms for Rent 5995 EXECUTIVE Office approx
··-• 646-744! .. Cost• MINI 5100 1 & 2 BR. Furn &. Unturn -. . 700 sq, ft. in new md&"· ~'"-: $25 lWk. Up -~ -~::,S _,.~ _ ~~~a:. ~E .:i ":lti~t -8'C A~~e!':i::i A6~
•. *Studio£: Bach apts. Excellent, pa.tk -like. ~r-fsL 9 )lole PutVCrtien. rec/rm Incl, $60 mo. llPfn;;·==;:::;::;;c;;O;::;::::::;.J.I --Utlls & Phone serv. ~ ----67'5-0013--------OFFI€F.&.-~ ·2,-300-+-eq.t --·-·-~ . 900 Sea Lane. CdM !i"-161.i . ea~; street level; Caul ' , · ·)laid Service -TV avail. l.ag ~-" qwet. (MacArftiur nr. Coast Hwyl LARGE room w/pnvate H CdM CalJ· 613-4830 '' 'ftn1 ~It Bar Dfscril?inadve Te:nana bath &. entrancl', suDded:, wy, · ·
' Newport BJvd. scs.97S5 l, 2 &: 3 BDRM: APT& $1GS. 2 BR. Cpts, dps. patio. $15. Mo.. Beacn are a . 1 COMMERC. -300 Sq. tt.
acloutAduft Ll~irig POOM~~i':ft.nRENUE lndry, ll?drer. adulls,. """""' l!N~U~z:'."'·'l
., w/w carpets, d"rap-"' ni:.p Highlands. Eves &. wknds E1JRNISHED room forl-=========
.. ~~As'T·APTS. GARDEN APTS. 613-Cll2 =· ~~;;. Ki<ci>on lndustri1I Prop. 60tO ~~· l8tb Ii ---An C M 4 BR. 21.l Ba., trpL, cpl'>, l., E. 18th. C.t.J. 642-3474 _...... ' · · drps garage bltns $300 $7.0 MO. Separate single \VANTED to buy, 1 acre -Call Mrs. llenderson 646-.1\542 ·• • · I lLJ., new furn, cpts, drapes, trn Sa ta Ana A t 113 CM Month. Call. 540-1234 Ext bgarage-. Cor. 23rd t, indW1trial y zoned property.
lpeti.nt. 2 BR. Beam ceilingJ. n · P ' · · 421 Orange, C.M. 548--052'2 So. Orange Co. Box 3862
),QJ.t-inB. Poot $155. 2'l72 ---SHARP New l BR, i be.th, DELUXE, in Costa. fl.1esa : t'ullerton, Cal. •p1e St. ~556& NEW GARDEN . APTS. fil'Cplace & deck. Available
IDE, Quiet: 2 Br. 1 & 2 BR. A1odem ~lcben w/ rvw. Don v . FT'anklin. Rlty. priv. l'lome, mf'n only. Must lndustri1I Rent1I 6090
& d _.._ __ .__ have car. S15 Wk.~ .~ bltna. patio. Adults on-range OVE'n, l~uw........,r, ~2222
1: ... .361-B~ 642-12911 etc. Enclosed gar. Olympic ,-~B::::R.='-o--,-,~F"°' -..,,.-PVT l'lome, kit priv. phone COSTA uu4 l-~~=-".:..,'--' ~-~"' :si?.e pool B-B-Que & laurdry {or um. irep er. In room. emp.loyed lady * l'KJ * Clean badL apt All fa c. Elec & \\"11.ter pd, Fr-om Near all. fl!i5 mo. 6'lS-3153 p*1erred. ~1393 ~pd. Milts, no pets. $100. $135 mo up. Adults only. : 1q1t 5 pm... • ,,... ·· Now leasin& new industrial
Piacenda 543-2401 2u Wilson, c.M. 642-5401 OCEAN vW luxury dupi.~ Room & 5996 bid&-mo IQ It, otfice Ii
, -Al'TR. l BR •Pt.. 2 ha.. l.ARGE "east!ide 2 bedroom, 3 Br, 3 Ba, Fam rm, 2 Board rest romi..$1$/mo. f/91 carp., drps .. attr. yd. built-in kitchen l)t'W w/w fll>lcs, drpa, czp1s, Pf't.lf: NICE Home-in Fountain R. Nattreo Rltr. 642·l«i
·§!8-3W.: 5«)..-0154: 646-$'22 carpt't comple'te, prtvate !$350. Mo. leue. 675-0636 Valley prefer WOPking lady.l ~~~o;""~""~~!"
IEAtIT. lge. 2 Br. I~ ba. patio, clo...ect garage. Near 28RAptw/91r Homepriv.Reasonablc~SQltwa.rebouaeltoUice
studio, pool., adults. $185 major sh....p•-center. Mr. Forney A.rt. 54().3862 531-7006 + 6000 sq ft paved 6 fmoed San Ana 64!>-2933 'N' -~ yanf. lJl56 Laguna Canyon mo ta Aduib only. No pets. $140 ROOM & board for man onl,y Rd. (TI4) 494-8066 or (TI4}
.:,,NASS.AU PALMS • per mo. Bkr. 642-9555 Huntington Be•ch ~ ~fn private home. ~ar st0-7680
• ~· 1 & 1 BR.. -fool ' Gracious Adult Living 1b!!ac.h. $3() "'·eek. 536-6S57 t-N-PT-. _BC!_l._o.~,-;,.-b-ie-=-tr.
l'l1 E. %lnd SL .
64"'3'45 2 BR, 11\ both, w/w """""· EYCLUSIVE ' olo. & ""w •bop • """'""·
ONE BR. utils 1nc:l, 1 lireplacc. spiral stairease ~ EACH. Income Property 6000 adj_ UPS. Owrrr. 2l3 941-1368
. 1. "" ..... i 961 and poot ON· THE·B
· .JIJll"'°" No. I. 64>-4ll2 Mesa East Apt. . 2 & 3 lledroom Apll. MONEY MAKERS Ranch.. 6150
Apt 1 BR, SUO 145 E. 18th 642-3474 Lltxury 1ivinC to please the NEWPORT near B t' a c h,1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
pool, f<lool !or Bacloclor. ''THE SEVILLE" most dl=imlnatino· N""' some ..,, •• '1ow. 3 UNITS. NORTHEASTERN
\993 Church-S4&-S63l New 2 BR. w/garage nco. available at 2, 2 B~ & g\lt'St apt. Dbl H
STIJD10 ••t.. ig.. ....... <Ad"'"'· Fenced,pnv: """· lbe Hunlinglt1n ..,. SJ<,r.oo. OREGON RANC nn .. just redccor. $95 Per cpta, dJps, bllns, water pd. 250 c.ow unit.a or a 330 steer
mo. 2Ul. Elden Ave., CM 2619-J Santa Ana A~.. , , EASt'SIDE C.M., 2 homes operation: bordf:rirt&: paved
INCL. util.; 1 BR.. tum. • 636-4120 • PatlflC ('Li'5I on comer lot, 2 BR&. 3 BR road· water is plentiflll &
; 1-adult only. NICE 2 Br studio apt. near '1!:J Live in 9fk", rent one. $32,950 trtt.' 1252 Deeded acres &:
'
e S48-95099 OCC. 984 El Camioo, C.M. a NatioW Fotett permit l.ot
• 7 0ce SO. EASI' C.M. 2 tor the ...... ~ A ~ rk '· ~~ CLEAN ~·-cl . $145. 962-5050. Avail Feb 11 an Ave .• H.B lllO cow U1u... .,._., wo •
...... s: .... ,., • ose 1n 1 (7141 S36-l4S1 price of 1. Randi style 2 ing ranch witli buUdings,
l · BR Bae!\, util.ii incl, . BR &: den, 2 baths. PLUS 2 barns, corrals, plus wonder-
;Jlpr, no pets. ~ 2 BR. Mod. Duplx U45. $125 & SI50; 2 & 3 BR. BR rental unit. $36,500 fuJ bunting and fiahlng. Full
llURN ->-1. Cr-pts, drps. N~ dee. Bltnil, Ls. N 1y d price S125,0XJ with xlnl ' • .... __... apt., mature enc patio Gar 2244-A State · •P ew coor.. cpta. EAS'TSIOE CM. 8 units I BR
." adult, sober. $65, Util pd. 642_7472 • · ' & drp,s. mtns. Refrig~ avail ('fl. 'l:"<.~"-~t rentals. In-terms. Fw furthel' infonn.a·
' ' !ie-2557 or 548-4157 2 Children OK. Nr. Beach ~~· tion p I ea 1 e call Glenn ' ' • ~; 2 BR. See to apprec. Blvd. & Main close to come $66011'10. $59,500 Thompaon with
' N rt a. h 4200. Like-r;:w; ~va·cyJ I <yd. iChools & shoppinz_ 847-GOOS ' 9. Qi Ec:khoff & Assoc., Inc:
:'. ~ ~•c ~9 ° Pl' • • 1 • 2 BR: Lg. Like ll('w, upstaln, ·VJ_,, 1818 W. Cllapman Ave.
half bit 10 beach blt-m range, drps, l'\LiS. i.1.1n ~J'1dc. ~. C.Jif_
$190 unfurn Sl65 Stu' 2 BR. Prv patio. Cri>ts, drps.. deck, walk to beach & town. I f .A L r Y 5-11-2621, Eve&-wkndl 537"127
'-K. 12t• 40th st. si..>-3249 Avail Feb 7. 1140. 725-A 222 8th St., IIB. Near NB Post ore. 646-24141 ~~~~~~~~~
. •· M5--021.3 \V, 18th St. 67 5-11127, W t p . ? N I
6
205 ~ 548-00S4 an r1vac:y ew t~OR TIIE CAREFUL IN-Resort Property
• Y\,.,.anftnnt 1 BR, spacious,. , R . ONE BR's NEAR OCEAN VESTOR. lull I -~ ,_ ~nxde--cbildre OK. ~ B unfurn, refrigerator, $127 mo ($142 Furn) prqe y e........., s ..... ., FOR RENT Furn MamcJuth
•';pi .m~ : bit-in stove, rederorated, 202 • lCth. 536-131.9 67J-l7S4 & office bldg on major Mountain Condomlntwn
, new crpts, drps, SUI. 568 highway ln Orange Cnty ol· sleepr; 8. 540-7730 ~ QCEANP'RONT 3 BR. Bltns, Wilson SL C.M: 56-0760 AITRAC 2 BR. All ell'.tJ'as! fl'rtd for sale w/reuonable e FOR Rent Fl.lm. Mam-
• ')ju. $XJO. Util incl. E-slDE l BR. Drps, gar, Pool. $125 mo. Avail Feb tenns to qualified buyer. moth Ytn. Cl>ado. p:d "-
673-4124 back yrcL $90. 252 Walrl.it :t 962-2109 Shows good retllm. approx u.una, sietpl &. 5f0.2'730
St.. CM 54Q...aiOO 2 BR DUPLEX. carpelS, 10 yrs oJd, xlnl comL eau1.=;;:=======-det Mar 4250 drapes. $13)/mo. 1 cbild Agent ~ves or wk.f'nd1 at Mount & O...rt 6210 =.:.:.;:;;_,_.;.;c.;.1NEWLY Redee. 2 -3 BR. OK. 5J6-.46J4 afler 5 PM 8$-7570. •
R 1 bdnn apt, Bltna. cpts, drps. Conv. loc. BEAUTIFUL HI-Desert Tll~ Larks ...... , adulta Sll5 & up, 838-7598 J B_R .. 2 BA, fenced yard. HOME I: JNCOAfE by OWN-..,. ;
....... &iU Lru! crp!s dP'rom $165 ER 10-2 BD. 11, ba. apts. & 5 Ac. W/small atucco hJl.JR • • $125.. mooth + utll. LGE. 2 BR .. lh batfui, w/w 1~,1:8 ~-.. ..:. o;~·H B · 4 Bd. 2 •·-re,. 3 '"'r. Hot & Cold water, elec., ;=::=::=;:::=""':::=;=~-cpts.; drapes, ·~; garb. ,.,.. zwxa....... ., . . old. Pool. !no Sa.nta A~. air cooler. Xlnt ioc. nr. 29
4311 disp. CbDd OK. ='to-.7632 I ,BR. DuJtle:<; SIOVt.', refrig. Cf.t ~1393 Palms. $7500 Furn. 833-2134
:oii;,;;;"-"::;;.----'.;.::;:1NEW-''i:'ii""z's.;:--:;,;:;.,,:i;1d<i•:"'"drp;::;'d 'C~. $125. Adult11 only ~s. or weekmds. ~t..rming 2 Story Gua&c nSo c 1570 ~ S16 Palm 536-8523 6 CLEAN units. E.. llth Sl., :.;,;::;.;:::_ ____ _
. 3 BR 2 bl., frpk, Ave 0L ~ e 2 BR Duplex. private yard. Cf.t. Assume lrg uiltibil---------
Uo. 2 car p!Uidng. A~fl ·• Patio, cariieti1, drapes & l.<it. Lemmer, Sia. 6'6--3150 Exch1ng•, R. E. 6230 1hort tenn or yrJy Jcue. 3 BR..J Ba., -&l111.. clOlled pool Sll5 Ml-15'0
• Adultr onit. As.k for f.ln. ptqe. Adulta. $140 Month · · . I• Grurud~y l27-B CabrWo. S4M691 2 "· J BA.. 2 baths, pr1v.
;:. • p_.. a.rrett R.e11ty .. , 2 BR. Ulf), Stove. disposal Jllltio; bea=I. I • • 642-5'00 • . _ • "'lllL 132 E. Bay, ApllJ ======== • A. 494--11¥') ~ ' I l lboo lalond 4355 PATIO ""' 1 Br 1'0. Soni• An• S620
t Range. R.etng, pa & water VERY clean l Br. 2 Ba. I.,. apt., 1 adult only, pd. N~ ...,......u.:, 644-1~ C rden Apt!. Prv pa.\IO.
terfront, Grand Cann!, _!"?""~ a N" S46-l:a:i ... tie BaL Wand. boat dock : Qllic-t''2 BR-Duplt'X . Pool. Ice atta. '
( ·..,-va1L March 1~1. $1&5 Mo., :IN ero.dway. Sl25.
t;,. tncL util SH "°""' 673-0207 Call aft. ~ ~ Lagun1 Beech 5705 ~ LIKE NEW 2 Br., new cpts ..
llunllng!on Be1ch 4400 d""'. Mt-Im. -: ,.. 100 Cliff DRIVE
pob; •-Sl25.·~ LUXURY "1J'N!l1NFURN t'· ~~:, = ~ 2 BDfiM unfarn. ~. dole YMJ11 ~_: •.~ ~
,. ,'I to ghopplng, St25.. !l1l E. at~ to ._.... -~ .r. nc: room. 11"1ter<om 17th Pl. C.M. ~ Ocee.aviflf from Wf!rJ Apt. • · AIL S36-WT4 from $150 mo ~ ~ast
2· BR bTi .,t. rr bch 2 BR. apt, dean: ntw qlt. .f:94-.1(«9
up. J'fe!t utillU... 0n..,. bulll.Jna. l-f----===---
• !IS-S !IJ6..1.l66 l"2-A CoriaJX!er, CM RfAL ESTAfi:
-"edl .... SPUT-L<vel 3 8', .11' bl. GoMrtl·
l1fll)e _,-adlif odly, $90. "'"· ....... b!tts .. No poll: I-,;;;;. ;.:,:;:;:.:__. __ c. __
1i'lllt q 'c. fMS.2'19 2'l!S Mondou, CAI !l<S.!>171 RontolJ Won,.., 5990
u~ AH OlAL 4lnct I0"5611. Olarlt SU."'EPlNG Jtoon1 or to ind.Pl~.,.~ ......... , -. ..i. ...... '" ""*111"'1 wro1 .. ,-1D*>• with ~ liM' ..,...a,.1 ~ itqt lftla.11!. "°!i:.
•
Businiu Proptirty 6050 3 BR. Jam rm. ~ · · lUlls • trAde ror similar
M·l JfEAJtT o( Garden home Lido, Newport .
Grove business. 4 0 x 2 4 0 . $44,00D. $22,0XJ eq. 213-0L
$7,950. Sf&-1942 e-ves.. 4--0088
Busineu Rental 6060 BUSINESS ind'
Mt'SA Vmk Med ical "-FINANCIAL
ProfestrioM.l Building up to II I 6300
'4,(X)) sq. ft no~· available, ua. Opportunlt •
Wiii mnodf'I all or part ATIR.ACTIVE Beau!)' salon,
m suit tl!'nant O>ntact Bob reuonabl.e !»'it'f':, c a 11
I.Aw at 28SO M~ Verdt 962-Tm uk for Gloria.
Orivt. Coma Mesa. 5fS.-0395
CORONA Ml Mar Beaut)' nlE SUN NEVm SEl'S on
Sbop In bul)' location. Caulfted'a action powrr.
Former beauty &hop movtd ror u ad to teU lrOUDd
to ~ quarlers , the cloct_ dleJ 60$1!.
Reuonabk! rent C a I l
Hutchms. Tl4: 83S-6Sll rrs Beam twa. ame. Bia-,,..,;==-.:.;...:::.:..;,=~. -1 ~ll 1411'cdoa e-...rl S.. tbe
St.IALL RM90nably priced DAILY PU.O'l' OuldM>d
Store BWldi.np In b\lay K'C11on NOW!
Corona del M~r IO((l,lion.1---------
C.ll llutchcll5., 714 : ~ WATOt pot~ ·iv .,.,.. on
ObDO. !JOXJOO, In ooartOr th~ ~1 you find ID I.ht
dow'ntnwn Costa. i\fey Oa5..'!ified Adi. ~ lheni
!"J43..3401; ~ J-.:vrs. now: ....;.,,;;... ______ ,
,.
..
I.
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers?
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DA-llY--PlL-Ol--------
W ANT -AD
1. Stove
2. Gult1r
3. lloby Crib
4. Electric S.W
5. C1mera
6. Woaher
7. Outboerd Motor a. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Cl11rinet
11 . Refrig1r1tor
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing Machine
14. Surfbo1rd
1 S. Machine T 0011
16. Dishwasher
17. Puppy
11. Cabin CruiHr
19. Goll Cort
20. Barometer
21. Stamp Collection
22. Dinette Set
23. Play Pon
24. Bowling Ball
25. W1ter Skis
26. Freezer
27. Suitc1te
21. Clock
Will Sell Fast!
29. Bicycle
30. Typewriter
31. Bir Stools
32. 'encyclopodi•
33. V1cuum Cleaner
34. Tropic:1I Fish
35. Hot Rod Equipm't
36. Fiio Cabinet
37. Goll Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mirror
40. Bedroom Set
41 . Slide Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool Tablo
44. Tires
45. Pi1no
46. Fur Coat
47. Dr1pes
48. linens
49. Horse
SO. Airplane
51 . Organ
52. Exercycle
53. Rare Books
54. Ski Booto
SS. High Ch1ir
56. Colna
57. Electric Tr1in
51. Kitten
59. Classic ~uto
60. Coffoo T.oble
61. Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV Sot
65. Workbonch
66. DiamOnd Witch
67. ~~·"
68. lioMr '
69. c.mping Tr1iler
70. Antique Furniture
71. T•pe Recorder
72. Solfbo•I
73. Sports Car
74. Mattress, Box Spgs
7S. Inboard 5peodboot
76. Shotgun
71. S1ddlo
78. Dart G1me
79. Punching 819
80. Biby Carrlogo
11. Drums
82. Rlll1
83. O..k
14. SCUBA Goar
Th11S• or any other extra things around the house may
be turned into cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so ...
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
(YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD)
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
WILL WORK FOR YOU!
Get In On The Action Today!
:
• •
···--------. ·-----·---------------------------------------------""!-"!'!"'"""!
• NO MAnER
WHAT
IT IS •••
I
,,.,.......,l7,l'69
IUSINISS ind --IUSINESS and T::Y"· ANNOUNCEMINTS -·-r-.,r-mi~--,-~r-·it~~t!~~~~ '1NAllKl.U. ' PINAN(IAL . ind NOTICIS I*
ltii. ~ NOOlua. ~itM1-UGO C-ory Lo1t Mii
PAOP'IC V1ew Mem. Part,
OWN A l'ftOFITAILI BUSINESS choice -" burial plot.
RUN IT IN Yp Ull SPARE TIME S:-v~l;-CTOltY
YOU CAN EARN $7110.00 A MONTH Oil
MORE IN JUST A FEW HOURS IVIJtY WEEK ldysittl111 65$0
~your 9 lo 5,Job pula~·cWlng on your eorn·
!rip and llp111& your 1bllltlea, here i.! an op-
portunity tailor mldo for you.
""" We ore looltillg for dlstributors lo represent
National Pizza Company, the largest, moot
SUCC<$$ful llld fastest growing company of
iltl kind.
BABYSIT 1 or ;, childttn
awr 2 yrs. 017 home. Us
Inc.I yN. play equ!J;, TLC.
Vlc Adamf; &: Bushard HB.
968-2'4!
BABYSrr lla:ya, my home.
Mort-Fri, U !!Kii &: up. Vk
44tb It Seaahott, N.B. ..........
Whldcly1 Wint? Whllltlya Gett
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOil
Nothlnc to sell Service company secured ••·
counts. One time minimum investment of
$2,390 to ${,360. We turnisb all ad~ertiling,
meTChandiling and support material
NATURAL llOllN SWAPPERS
Spodol lloh * · 1 HOT£!.
SALES MANAGER IELLMAN MATURE. Mlddl. aged lady,
lovn chlldre.n, lives in
town,. H.B., no tranaporta·
tion, 536-8609
$ Ll--5 tltMl -S bu<lto
•Ut.11 -AD MUIT ll>tCLUDt: REAL Es:T ATE ~--~· · isouiii:!f ._.,,,Mt "" ... .,,.. ... .,..., .....,..,... ,... . '""' '" ...... ,_'l'O!Jlt .,_. M/11-......_ ._. lf11; .. Mvwtltllll. -Roalty ......... ~L~•...: N
1-HOTMtMO l'Oll I.ALI! -TltAOU Ot«.Vl PHONE 642-.5671
apln opened No. 4 ott1ce LY NECESSARY. APPL
on Hubar Blvd., C o 1 t a IN PERSON ONLY. 1,tl If YoU are at the crossroads of your career
and are looking for 1 money-making oppor·
tunity investigate how you can run your own
business in your spare time. Write Toda}'. In·
elude name, address and telephone number.
cciinplete deacriptive material will follow.
WILL Babysit my home. 1
or 2 chldm from aae 1 %1
on. Fnced )'1'd, &OOd IMala.
By wk only. ii45-2l8'1
To Pl1C:1 Your Trltd1r'1 ParldlM Ad Meea, need ~ "1
"'al Esta" Sal" .....,.,. N!WPOltTElt INN ''
NATIONAL PIZZA COMPANY
10407 Liberty
. Bo• 69
Sl. Louis, Missouri 63132
Aru Code 114-423-llOQ
ASK FOR MR. JAY
DON'T JUSI' WISH tor
IOmetblna to fllmilh your
BAYBSITtING by nunery home ..•. find Cl'ffl buys
school teacher, my borne hi tDdays Ou.siaed Adi.
Fri • Sat. days .. ~bl$. 10 Wiila W1hnincton $200.
Aau U . 6t2-3'lU aft_!__ oet ptt mo. inoome. Tnde
BABYsrrrING "'eek days in T.D. 'a, land, or '! AienV
m,y home. Experienced, .1 owner. 646-'6'8 or 213-
children at home. 54ifi..&48 Uf..695r9.
iiABYSI'ITING My home. 1 '114a~Ol~Ha~warl~---.,-.,-.,-w
Reuonab1e. Collt!I" Prk bome $69,500. tree &; clear.
area. (C>O:!) SfG-7090 . ~ for l or 4 BR home
~~~~"'"'!"'"'""'""'"~!'!!i~~!'l'l'~~"""IDEPENDABl.E day c a re, Corona del Mar Higb School BUSINESS end ANNOUNCEMENTS Pm. wkly ..,.. of M ,..... dl•I S.U.bury Rlty ~
FINANCIAL """ NOTICES Uc. 8""! Baker. 540-IS39 ""'300 lot tn., clear. 23&2
. • F Ads 6COQ BABYSmING, my home, Santa Ana Ave. Trade tor
Bus. Opportvn1t111 6300 Found ( ,.. J ca.ta Mesa area. Tender, home « units. Owner, H.
Investment C1pit1I FOUND.in Mesi. Verde, about lovina: care. 646-4185 Redfmi, 449 W. Manchest·
WA!ttED Jan 3rd. Brownish cat WOULD like child J :Yl'I « er, l~lewood. Cal.
N tionaJ. Saleafltlarketirc ~ ~198Z older to care for my home Haw: 120 M . dear in Callt. • ,_ . ,.__ "'---• .._ M--..,. . _.,-.... $300 per &. Want: New-pn .... lion ,...., excepU01HU MALE puppy, dark .,.uwn ~n. o;io,,,..1"~· port Beach ineo
evning opportunity avAil· puppy with light paws. Vic WilL babysil lN YOUR home or Palm ~~°:
able for il'ldividual with Wallace St, C.M. ~ HOME any hour $1.25 hr.; Matcham Realty 646-4831
Venture capita!. Tboroulh 24 hr rates. stS-4389 I "'=;;;rr.~::;,.:::_;:::c....
test marketing in the 1tate lost 6401 · 10 Unit Motel
ol Calli. ~ haw acquired • Brick Maaonry etc. Sl'.000 equity tor T0'1,
product with sowxl invest· AUSTRALIAN Silky male, I ' ' 6560 Lr.lid, Apts, etc.
ment potential. Med. 5 fi&:· Mos. black &. c re a m . Boyd Realty 67>5.930
utts poaible, $2500 in\.-est-Answers to "Bully." Vic. eun.n, Remodel, Repair Newport Dupiex, _. to
ment. 675-5983 Newport Rivien, C . M • Brick. block, co n c re t e , bNch. Will trade equity
FRIGIDAIRE ......,1 al1er l P 1d • ....,..,,, no job too .....U. to. eood Lqana rclld..,.
Trllde My Blue Boole
Stampt for Your Gr•n
Stemps. 536-3249
Tri&> 20 .. avlculJunl
land, fiOO ft. on ma.in hwy.
6 nii to nNrUt tm town nr
who could qualify tor ma> nar Jamboree Rold· I
aaement PQGUon to lead an Newport Beach !?1
aaresslve ales ataU. For l --0:--==~~-.::} :':"'~.:::;:: e COOK e . t
phere, phone or lend raumt
to Mr. Gatdntt. au intcr-
matloa held' in strieteet eoo-MlTm' BE 13 OR OV!lt.
546-2200 ---Realty -! ~M~od=20~ac~ ..... '--.....,-,b,.....,.!ul.,..· I Xl9 Harbor Blvd. 541MS24 e APPLY IN PER$lrl ~ "'"°·
l,y dev tr track, 2 y,·ella, S .J
h""'" 11 ·-· w n bun *CARPENTERS* Snack Shop '#, 'jr.1 $95,000, ;56.000 eq • For 3446 E. Caul Hwy., O:IM" ~
comm'l or ! Own 615-Q5.9, ~ With mobile borne expert. HONESI', st.hie )'OW!&
Trade 17 ft Perfonner out· anc:e. Excellent benefits. tor Gl'OCft'y deliveriea'. "°""'· (fi-) w lull Apply ln -· -· Tnlnln& A . or part Jll,)'ment Gii carpet, opportuntties. .. •
drapes, landteaptrw, feno-Apply in penon ii! 1nr or " -an 1 pm EXPLORER Mr . ......,, , ,
HAVE• 5 two BR unlm, MOTORHOME Coon Super Mlrbf':
prqes, $33.000 equity. 3347 E. tllUt Hwy, C
WANT: to exchanp for 10 •OOO Cimpua Dr. e INSTRUCTORS -
to 16 units. N •-· h or/and ....... ttme. Neat~ Bob 01 Rl ..... _ owport -• ~· "
BOn, tr. ~ pe&l'UliCe. M:uat be ab141,
Beaut wooded bld& lots, fr. meet and deal with
on yr.round river, pYd rds. * pubUc, aood figure. App!t
.... La"' Su""'"" Port"' DAY '" .....,., -llQJ ville aret.1Trade !or' place Spa, 2300 Harbor Blvd,.
allt>W... A,."1 t;llc5'9' DISHWASHER C.M. '.
S&.n Clemente Income 2
storu • 2 lotl J oftica 2
Aptl · WU! takr TD'1 or
1mal.ler property. Make oil· 6 DAY WEEK Lil"'~w~ardi'ii.uiiii::eiiiiii::iiiiik!;u.;;;eon;;;~"";· _,;;;:;;:=::=:~;; tiaJ iot P·O. eox 1w. JET ACTION "··• ~,., Honlington S..cl>. C714l .._ __ _,,_ _____ ~'-ufillll___,......_,. ~-~m .,.......,,.......---..... ; °""'· ----ii DO;tl ......... .,._ 9.1litt plutic collar. StraJiied • ,........ '"• _, .. ·ffo.~ ... ~ -IEIJBllT" .
YOU CAN
SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
.
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
\
' CHARGE IT!
-
28 w.,,,.n, 11 ,,,,_ 20 lb. .,.,. 229 Coeta Mosa St. HA VE S T A N L E Y
wam,,. $1!,000 y,. ""'" Call 543-m< •• 64&-3728 CARPENTRY COUPONS TO TRADE
Have luxury 1-at;y, condo
1 on Upper Bay, N'pt Beach.
l BR., 2 ha 12<.000 F.qulty.
Want aeaaoned T .D. 's.
Chmer (nl) 9'1·1368
151 E. Coast Highway 1,M;;Oi;Di;E"L:.•,....,P"lu_c_build,...,,.~.,.....:
inc. Find out how easy it ii Reward for any Wo. FOR BLUE OR GREEN to own! MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Newport Beach flberrlu 1: wood with •
C • 0 Mati. LOST: Between Newport I: Too Small. cabinet ln av-STAMP BOOKS. 0111• • c c.. h •. 54°3672 Harbor on Victoria St, -Pl• ap1 I: a t er ca 1neta. o--===*-==.,.,--I in bolts 1 cam.pen ..
EXPERIMENJAl :;·:: '::""" =~eu;,t-i Et1uipment, Inc. Lab Retriever, S mo, fem.Ile, 568175, U no a.na\W!r leave 1 ,l.uc<,....--oc.b~;-n~B~;,,~s.~.,-.,..-,
23.14%. W. Valencia blk, silver, choke chain, mq: at 646-2372. H. 0. 4 . 30 ft lots. value $14,000
Deluxe Villa 53 M, F/C.
WANT waferfront home;
l.arie Arrowhead home, ns.ooo equity WANT 0r-
afl&t Co. prope~ or boat.
Davlfl Rlty. SU.7CXXI
l\. Dr. Co.ta Mesa. ~"I
Fullerton TI4: SZ>-7833 reward. 642-6520 Andenon Trade $9,000 equity tor de~ MACHOOSTS SERV. STA. ATTENDANT'
Full time, gd. saJ ' Going Into Business? BLACK Fem Poodle puppy ert home or local lot or !
Golden oppol'tUidt:y in beach 6 mo., Vic of caegar'g Plua A·l ~ RltD. No production Une. Di-benefils. Neat.
versified experience requir-over 21. None other area. Phlllips 66 Service on 'Bois& Chico &; \Varntr, Carpentry, any ~ize job! 17' Gla.s.sline Boat & trailer
Station for lease; 1101 Bay-H.B. Reward. S 9 2 -5 3 14 Call Gordon 841--6745 165 hp Interceptor, Ealon
Home in Meaa Verde J BR
+family, 1%. bat~. \VANT
local Unill. Equity $8,000. side !: Marine Dr., Newport Eve.11. 638-8029 REPAIR.S, .ALTERATIONS dMve. used 6 times, like
ed, S yr. mlnlmmn. Attrac-apply. Stt Clyde. :tieo
tlve wa1e11 and benefita. Newport Blvd. C.M. 4''1
Advanced Kinetics, Inc. CUSTODAN WORK. s I Beach. Contact: GOLD charm brace 1 et. CABINETS. Ally size job. 11(!\V. Trade for 2'l' trailer,
CHUCK CROWDER Between Marina H\ih &: t; yrs. exper. S4l-iT1l 3 br house or '.' 548-0246
AgenVowner .,..,,.,. 1231 Victoria, CM men capable of deaninli TI4; m.ruo TI4.: TI4-1M3
BEAUTY SALON
EatabltsMi, 6 Units, fine'st
Lqune location. Best eqUip-
ment. .... ,,,, Eves. 4S4-8619
SMALL investment neL'ded
lrorn working partner. With
e:icperience i.n lht> \VOrld ot
charn1 & modeling. Eves,
wttkends call 962-5935
WaJ1let Aw. H.B. Reward. C.rptntr:y Work
~ wanted. ~-150."1 * * * * * * BEIGE Female Cockapoo 7 MASTER carpenter, $4 per
weeks old. Lost Vic . hour.Remodeling-Repairs . .:i -'-""·-u 1..-'-•UkY SERVICE: DlltECl'ORY
Bayshorcs, NB 66-l.2S9 642-6409 or 536--3900 -E-le-,-,.-;,""l,-1----664--0l.;;.;P1;.;po.;.;.r;.;h•;:n;..9;;.ln.;;9;;.o.;;,;.;:;:.:;.;_
LOST S mo old Dobennan.. p I I ,.,. ~. Vic. Buchan! I: Adams, Cement, Concrete 6600 FLAG Electric, gen'! elec--•-"-'-"'~----~-
HB Re1vard. 962-4ll6 trlclans. Comc'l, r e ! . , VET'S~--•·• p a ,. n 1 1 n • CONCRETE work. Bonded J:IUllUC\I I • 1'1aint. Sm jobs \Ve I c . .,..__ ~-l LI
-------··---------
A uaJ~~-... ...., tice buildlna: 1 bank In n eq vn--•,..u..,. leisure hours. Writt
employtt and phone number to
YOUN!'
FRY COOK OR
KITCHEN TRAINEE
M~ Dally Pilot !.>:'
KITCHEN He lp er 11'.J
dishlftAbing. 5 di.)'s. 1~ Over 18 yn old, 11ee
In dell. 495 E. 17th + C.M. ,,..,
RE\VARD? Man's blk v;a.lltl & Licensed. Concrete sawln&' S4S-1045 \ r n:e ...., • c. l: Inaur.
lost 11.t 17th & Orange, C.M. Phllli"" Cement. 54&-6380 , -=========-Small jobs w e I c om e. ' J 20 at 4 PM "" 1· SC--04.27 SERVICE Sta Attndnt.•ixij.
Permanent, Full time job.
Chanct: lot advancement
APPLY IN PERSON
BlJ< t.. Tan i;hcl'p dog. Ans sniaJI, reasonable. Free Days, Union Oil 393 E U 548-
4 • t. · · CEMENT work, no job too G1rd1nlng 6610 e INT _ EXT, ANY SIZE IOI'$ llG IOY nee. Good work. conct~··.
h> Al bert. T11gs. Vic 3500 ·-·-. H. Stulick. "AO OJ!<= ANTHONY'S JOB. Xlnt work, refs, me 154 E. 17th St. c M .
Top Location ih Corona del Marcus. NB. 6T.r3& ~w;EST IN CON= G1rden S.rvice eet. JIM. ~ 142-7528. Costa Mesa ~ ESTATE.. Ji
J\Iar. 6 Chairs, new I y 1 ,LO=sr~.--v-,..-,.-.....,-.--,0-ung Walks. pool~. floors, 646-1941 PAPER ban&ina:. 45 yean -~=====-"' ...
BEAlITY SALON
decorated. 6Tr3420 pam>t; vie. Harbor Sehl., Patios. Phone 642-&514 BUDGET LANDSCAPING l!XpttienDI!. Call Fred! MECHANIC !:'a H~ the ~
1 ?tlAN O p e r at i o n -Fountain Valley 962-3024 Thoeyk Concrete., no job Prune · · · Plant • • • Prepare * MS-4903 * Journeyman mecbaDic, ~· v~ Real Estate 962..uiJ
Food-to-go Sandwich Shop. MAN'S black wallet. Vic 4lst to mWI. Free estimates. Monthly MainWnance PAPER HANGING perienced Foreip or Do-or 54-8103 ,,.
Excel. location, Costa Mesa. s._ on beach area. NB. ID • ~1234 • Exp. Hort1culturist PAINTING mestlc. One or the oldest eWANTEDe ·.~ '
sell or lease. 642--8913 valuable, Re\vard. 646-7300 CONCRETE work, all typti. AL'S Gardening Ser v t c e 6'15-3CK3 Forelp car service depart. Auto Body Ma.n ! •,.
GIFT & Home Decor 1hop, Call Lawn maintenance, 1arden-PAINTING, inter.-exurior ment& tn 0rarip Co. Flat Exp'd Painten bel ...... , ••
mu!t sell. See • Make oiler! Penonels 6405 ~~cks " custom. in&: I: clean upa. 646-3629 State lie. • bonded. Free rate &: warnnty work $8.00 6t&-9534 ,...:
• 548-1914 • :..:;=='------I JAPAN!:SE Gardenine. Prof estimates ~ per hour, pay bbed on SO/ ~-"
LICENSED e CUSfOM PATIOS e Maint. Land tea p Inc ,._ or Ext. p•-"G 50%. Exctllentwo..tn-CM· EXPERQnbr. F i b e r a " BEAUTY Shop in Costa 1 .~-· val 1-1•~.i:.n ........ ~.... • .... ,. lay up ma l l boa Spiritual readinos, advice concre ea. .. ,..-' nmo C1••n.m, 637~1 T,.,.,,...... SERVICE. , a-; dltions Must have own hand • 1 ~ · ~tcsa 4 stations. ~tuet ai!-ll! -.. 180 S..,... State Lie. e Sb-1010 -·¥r ..,.......,,..., .....,.... ,_ 'Call Mr K 11 Laminatar, aurfboards. 1911
ritakeoiler.839-5632 onallmatters. 1:.1. '=========JAPANESE Gardener. ref.FREEest.~1627 too.... · e y, P!acetlaA CM •'• ==~~=~~-Camino Real, San Oemente.1¥ Co pl S . Ex .f.94.9m or 545-0634. n v.. · · "'1 WANTED: Off-Sale liquor .f.9'2.9136.10.0.f-lOPM ChlldC1re 6610 mete erv i ce. • PARTTl!M,dldly,plfthii)
licen!e ror Orange County perienced. Reliable. 642-4389 Pl1st1rinq, Repair 61180 YOUNG MEN "equipment al 1 end U t
Call: 6U-8L'9 ARE you tram Colorado? \Ve YOUNG Mother will Oll'e O!t •Edie Lawn OVER 20 Santa Ana Country CJtb.
-======== have a new club for lomler for yoor child. Fenced yard Maintenance. Llcensed • PAT'S Pluterilla -all 56-'1200 , ,
lnVett. , Winted 6315 Co Io radians. For ~ rot lunches. Magnolia le SCM8ll/645-2310 aft 4 ~!;,~Free estimate. Call lookln&' lor a future with ••====~-~-formation call 548-1458 or Adam! (Glen Mar Tract), ~ quality pie lhop. \Vill train NEWSPAPER de 1 iv e r-t
RETIRED Marketing Expert 53a--6984. anytime. HD 962-5445 CUT • edp lawn mmpl 6l90 for teven day operation, ab: Saturday I SUnday. Ef.rlj-
bored wllh ~will help PACIFIC .SINGLES I WI1.L babysit. my home, r::~.!t:· st&-5261 eve1 Plumbing day1Chedu1e.Manyb4!netit1. A.M. Truck req u lrit~..t
you with your probl.em.s. for attractive single adults S days week. 2045 Anahe.lm PLUMBING ~ hr. lel'V. Apply 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (See 5tlH207 ..;:"t;
s.tS-2507 who want to meet others Ave., CM. 64.2-6452 Genarel S."ic• 6612 Work cuar. Lie., tmur.; Bob!;i~11' Po"• Cott•-SFullERVlttmeCE SExtationp. ~A---who are particular. 54>15.14 remodel, repair, rooter aev., •-'"""
Money to Lon 6320 9 Selective Singles e -HEATING Ii: Air Cond. Serv 531-7566 191E.16th, Costa Mesa ~Station, .
RETIRED COUPLE \\'hat ~ of companion are Centracten 6620 ' repair, a1eo Wuher Ii: PLU14BING REPAIR FOOD It beverqe Mar. at .Edlflaet, H.B. .:-'
ht Ii you seeking? ca.il dr>'tr repair. 24 hr lef\'. No job too ama11 challence fDr exp. man in e FRY CDOK • A pp I· .. , Hu money to lend on 642-967& Noon to g P~1. e ROOMS ADDITIONS e gu..7237 at 8f7-66!1 e 642-3121. e ruort aper a t Ion. 3 l1YilW ButLtr, 3101 N::ptft
2nd mortgqee. Call l...T. Conatructioo HAULING. Clw»Jp p.rqn, re1tauranls, 4 Jounau. plWI Blvd. N.B. 6"B-09Tf __j
Broker 547.1333 ALOOHOLll}) Anonymous Fami11 rooms. kitchen ar odd jot. etc. Fl'ff eel. Jim Remeder-. .. ,,1,, ,,40 b a nquet a. Sales t!Xlt· Dlahwuhu--Wfflt d~.&.te
Phone 5'2-1217 or write to units. Single story or 2; 5.f.1.-.5325, anyt1)ne • dealred. Good lalary plul. J PM Odiff Reatti'.1 Rul E1tltl lo•nt 6340 P.O. Box U23 Coeta Mea. plug cuetom deeipld. For _ IF You need remodtlins, Write or calJ Mr Davia • c
. layout phone ---Call Stardust Hotel. 9fio Hatei 212 E. 11th St., M. ~ , HOME LOAN$ utimai.s • . H1ulln9 1730 ~"';'!. °'1-•• ,......, ~-,, San o,·,... n •·. TAILORS, Fl-A Fo
H.·-90N_ "M-~1n .. at 7" 'l. Announcement• 6410 • M'l~l5ll • uK:L 91.r "" ~ " .., T"' 7fl ......... "'.... ... CLEAN tots. aar-ce1 etc. 298-61n •PPb' Sllverwoodl. No..;·
lntt:reat. Oieck our S.9% ALLEY \•Esr Addltiooa * RanodeU,. .,._ al ~ lid ·~ .~ Fashion t&te NB. • ~ H. ,._..... • •-.. ,..,e r'fQ)OY , .. ,,.lllP, P _,... y.w 11' ., llNI IN A MON'lff tn. ' • prqp-am I. 2nd TD tnmi. ANNOUNCES .-iai ,_..,......., Loi\:. I d '.'.!! -P C od • .! Co I -. -·~ * 549-2170 backhlt, fil • 1 r a e • teretts you •.• 70'1 tntettst 1rt Time Ult '"' SatUtt Ortgqe . nc. Lunches o;i•........u. 962-8745 ALTERATIONS I: CuetDm UL OpfniDC for man owr * ~n47 *
336 E. 171h St. Mond~ thru Saturday ADDfflONS. Rt!rnodellne. l>ftamakinc. Vay t ine 40 In Bnch. Cities .,._ ARCH. oaaFT &fb.21n 5600.l 11 30 dall "-binets -Block Ft.nots. LITE Haulinc I: cleamp. __.. App't .... '""~ """' """"' Evea. m.1865 SC.ll~7 from : >' .... Reuonable. Aey area. C&ll ...,... _ _..,....,. No expt:rleoce r •q ulred Dana Point Offtot
ANNOUNCIMENTS
end NOTICES
Found CPNO Adil 6400
Every Sund1y Flft Ellimatt!s-M2·9'.152 642-2657 Atter1tl1nt-642-5145 Cub bonuae1. A.Jr mall H.l~=~=~==~~I
Bicycle Brunch TRIM ---·-~ ~-Neet, accurate, 20 )TS. exp. E. Pate, Pru.. Tecul·
l,.m 10 AM C1rpot CIMnl.. 6'25 ... ..:.,~ "ffij j;.;): e -.,\!-"°"' ltollneey Corp., Box TU, Ft. Atoncite, W-
""'°' • CAJtPET A FUrn. d"""nr: ** PART Tl1dE •' I
"'""H·na:: ~krt. ftUOnl.ble. ~ Spedal~ma Worth. Texu mm. e KIYPUNCH
Si.al< A En•· ro. I &oy "°""'" a quality HAULING, clean.up...,.: --e CX>OK, wANTEb e OPERATORS ' l
FOUND: ShaUY .bl ••k 210i W. Oceanboot work. call St"'""' ro. malnL; "° Job too TILi, cftllllC1\ "74 -s..dllf -"""""""'· LonC, )'OUftC q ; vie. Rk:hards Nnpoct Beach brithtiwut '642--D RMI. rate .. rw Ewa. Coulilr)' Club term imlc•anenta. ..
Mark!t, I.Jdo hie. Hu Cacroas from Pier le NO Gimb! sm expert cpt *Verne, the> me Man* ~ Loac Beacb area. l're,e:
,.,,11, m-00 chin " no.y """ a rum dnc. at '°"'" HovNclNnlftl 6nS eu... ......_ -a,.,..._ """ "' 0,.. :n ,.... ow. -... it
"""· 8'13-6065 ...._ VIKKI'S """' -run. >'riday pri<:H. """''"'· 64&-%!11 • APr a.EANING * No lo> too imelL Plu1n Could ...... 1a1o 1U11 limo. KELLY SERVICES
CIULD'a Jacket. vie. of J~ 24th ~:M .. ~ .~ WAU. TO WALL carpet Fut I d.c.roup MU.1&& patch. Lealdlw ahawer TV TECH, COLOR 238 E. Srd _
Ocnn Ir, Pop(Jy' Ave., F-. p.mea Y Clcanio1 I: expert WilLlAMS Cleanlrc Snv. nipair. 147-195TIM&-(tl)S Btnch 6 «1taldie. lbjor Co. LonrBtKb.·cat,
Corona del Mar. Call " on tip. "°"" chock ..,. bollttty cle-...mo """""" pUI hoH&oyl, W. (21S) ~ Wl<ntifY m.= ,nc.L 119111 N • w p" t up • , -• pl 6llO JOIS & EMl'LO~ 6 mod. Ina. and alct ...... Equal -11l' ~
. Blw .. C.M. CARPET " lumlllft deu> ~ICI .. CK RD -BLACK Puppy about g mo ""'· -a _... Call SPRINKLERS Job W1ntotl, L..iy 7020 PA A IELL S.. llett1.._ 11, old. Vic. K·M&rt Shoppina Funenil• ... 12 Gtmuard Carpet tc.96!16 117 C.brtllo, o.b. M18a Cent~. CM. Call to identlt)'. l Sod Lawn&. Uc A Bonded ADVERTISING GI r I • YOUNG man 18 or ..,.., m lit If'.
MS-087l * HJ.m.l * m&ftllemt" .. pobUc ftlt:. p&rt time to ~ .tfOI' fOaJ>. : ,1. ,1. A : p
WESTMINSTll Onoffl .. Soni.. 66)7 COMMERCIAL A ... -tio>w -lhefp ""'1 -........ ta1n -A cook. The •-"""' ... ; MJN ~ male: ott white artiilt. 'll'lo.-1-..--.a -"-c.retrnw..l•
-· .,~ tall. No """ MEMORIAL PAik u--·. r~~-· .. a.u <lenkn!nr • ~..._ ~·~--"' eout """ • -· ----.,.. ~ --~ Joe o.nJ 16M164 Miil 1""' P-a. Dolll' Pllol OBI CM W. C. Hw,. ~le C..U Pl., Cid. -_., & c-tery = ~W~ BKPR I re, Sii a -J'ULL --· ~ ...,.11e,;;";';dD;;L ~~~~~ c.m.Mto lu-111 m<!r14. P.O. i114. CdM Piporlllnti.. °""*A -:11,,., o -"° ... llmlL ~r-~ .... -::. '".:",,:; I.-$245 ,.1n11111 6l50 ....... ,,,. -.-i.. No. J ,.._ Hoitt w....... •
-v\c. Meu Dr. C.M. Cemetery.... IS touJl AD IN CLASSl· VINYL wall c overln1 HOUSIX:LEAHING. °'7tdl. hWil. N.8. WtlMll {I..
,.._,.. f..-$150 nIDt S.-wlll .. .,.aan.t • ldL .. bo""-EL M. .. llo. Mia 4 --II)' -•1111 z " ~
DOG -VISl\ity hid-Endowment CITI -tor !I. Dial IGall Mttnill a lebor. Ell In. llM!e -1 PM tde<t•-. Houta 1 "'t. Maid. 1--w.irrrr 4 f'Jar~ . he la Z.tr)1ldaa II .,.. beautltW for quk:k. etnde:DI: ftllU!ta. 84'1-.111'9 LADY hi JD t. 1tv.bt com-Bentnn'1 Oolh ~ 1'IDI S., o.t fl"7 ._ l 1
al H.B. An1mal Shtlt ... C.U ...... """"" .... -OOlf'T JUITWlllll ... _ DAILY Pnm UOIJO>.. .......,,,.., lqwa ...._ p! 9o. Cout HJw,, i.co.. '< -j~
,,,. 111_.., No -,.-._ Wq ., -,_ ...... 1.114a Yoo ---P. O. 1""' t14. 1-llch llOAT lllllklln ..... 11me. HOUSEl!UPER: !15,
l'OUND -!!!!"-Owner -.:~ --W-.... l!lld -1-to... lor )1111 --o ..,. Diii ror Oo1l1 l'llot Wal -~ • ~ -::0-U.::. ':._ tf'1, M'J-1~ ~ dQ'I O•Mfted AcS.. il:Hlm 1>9 toS2I ~ ~ 1IO ... u ... -.....
r 1
~
I
)
l
'
. . ...... ' . .. . ... . .. .. ' ... -. ·---· -. ~-------------------~----------------------"'."'::'.., .. •I 't .. . . ...
IWLY Pll.01 tnolf, ......., 17, 19'9
a O MllNl Y .111111 & IMPLOYMINT
SAi:! AND TRADI SALr AND TU,DI SALE AND TRADE SALi AND ~ SALE AND TRADE MIRCIWIPlll FOi td~DIU POI. MIRCHANDISE FOR MIRCIWjDISI FOii MERCHAHO ISI FOii !No.Can . ' ,...... .....,w....-'• lliii,w-. r~~~-_27~400~ _w-: r ,7¥tO Yi-. . 1a ~ ·--'&:; ,, Furnllv.. -um!...... fOOO Af!li1.-· 110C1 1'10\* & 9rflnf 11311 KOii~---'I !/>.oo& BUICK
EXPERIENCE PREFERRED
nkof Arnorlco NT/SA
11691 Moln St.
Huntl~gton leach
147~S4J 'JCT. 34
"'1--tJ-•
WAlllllSEl
e SEAFOOD e
RESTAURANT
RfUBBI. l Ill
SI E. c .. ,1 Highway
Newport BMch •
HOSTUSES
Full .Time
APPLY IN PERSON
t tn fi P.M.
REUBEN E. lfE
:151 E. c .. 1t Hlghw•y
· Newport BeKh
SECRETARY
: $421. to $54S. __ Xia,_..,.
lhaiP )">I: ... FridlJ,
ec typewrtll!r. shorthand.
~tin 2 yn office exp. Full
fit..
COST A MES A
Alllll.l' llOllS . ~ . ~ ·IWA :!:;::... all l",
1:1111 188d 'hlllr, Na. _rw ____ -<_,,_._OlutJ . ' -~=-=:i-:-i F~l!!i'~LY Y~=~Y ... , Spanish ' · . w... .. 'l'V -· 'SAVI! 1 O"/o 1a '--
M1ditenu1011 -=~ ~ ol -PIANO$ ..... _Ott,OAAS N: .. ~~ ~i"~ ::;--• WHY NOT: I
-•I lu• • ·. t'-tl
WOMEl'S· DEPT. ~ -ID
-
1
, GOOD 30 P1lolt lllO& waW oiiD e ~ e ~ INTERNATIONAL W j ..... ::':".:"'~ .:w•=."':!,:.San)plee ,,..... $1$, ""~ ~ a.:i...;. ~ YARDAGE • STEP : I ___ ID.__
2 cbfldrtn. 1\9 I: ~. Ml.Mt
NICHT •SATURDAY WOR.l( drfw, r..t. qe 25 tD 45.
MUST BE EXPERIENCED SaJ open .... UDl exL 2'Jlli
8' WoOd Cll'Yo4 ~ dl¥•n.. le-1ru1n'J chair ~':°:i;,~ ~40.U.8P~!!!! =:~""· • • or love 1..t. S PC Octll,(!ll>. d,arlt oak' din set ~ • ...., ..... "'" -MA •
w/black or a_-vocado fra:m,(! chaiia;\8 Pc BR t~ ~trql~~tr:.:: Haddorf onole •·••••• '57' rwt • UP TO A : I
set. !klr Mr. & Mrs. il.-esser, Jg mlm>r, 2 $35 6'/S-ef ~ = '" · I: 1 •
THE BROADWAY
llWPORT
No. 47 Courts ol Fuhloa
Newport c.tite,..
MAJOR
CALIFORNIA BANK
seeks ateno/l;)'pist for tl'IJ!t
~pt. Must ~ dictation,
atiNt off I c e:,r , enjoy
c u stomer contact
~nent career ~
portunity for qua l ifi e d
p~rson. Salary com-
memiurate with ability and
experience. Contact R. C.
Athrrto1.
Newpor. Cenlcr Branch
Security Ps,cWc Nat'I. Bank
550 Newpoct ·centtt Dv.
Newport Bea~-
NEB> INCOME !
&311 49f.-Q98 Wk 1tnda.
BUSINESS la CQoaf )~
tnn Ho~ nttd•'iW 2 moni·
makls: JW1 er pet ttme.
Appiy in penon. 2I01 E.
Coul Hwy, CdM" Or c.aD
far app't.
FULL TIME STAFF
LADIES SPA
BALBOA llAY CLUll
1221 W. Coast Hwy., N.8 .
548-2nl Eat. 7llO .
commodes, decorative headbolf<fin Spaniah · -Boldwln 1p1net ....;, ... '"' TABLES' • BRAND • oak deslgn with matching bqx •prinp, mat-Antfquw 8 110 11ammooo1 M-W .. oniY J865 • •
tree...& frame. . Wurlitzer 4070 ...... on'1 S800 New slat!! $195 vat Now $295 •
• 1 Items Sold lndlvldu1lly VI ANTIQUES. Cann c.ori... wel. s.,. ''"' ll Model•., ....... -. IStl • NEW Shop Aroulld -Before you buy -USI SHOW AND SALE GQvld Mutlc C-ny up. ru, 69'l-On, !192.%1m • •
VALUE $109S.9S -FULL PRICt $529.9S '""""'IL IT, Li, 19 204S N. 11!.in. Senta A0& lllRTftft f'•RKS • 1969 • or terrN •low •11 $4.66 per Wffk Thura, Frt, Sat l·lD PM So. of l'ree\n,y, sn.-i nJUI IW All • •
No Down-Use Our stono Cbarn Plan SW&y JU PM "''"' • F>t 'tll 9 Swo "'6 •
No Fancy Front -BUT Quality V.ioes Inside ~~ "="1 ~~ NEW YEAR'S~ a.....'::0!!,~E" Mill : BUICK •
APPRQVED FURNITURE °"'"" Ave. ·llAIOl:;:,g~RGANS -Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 • •
2159 HARBOR, COST,( MESA PRIVATE oollectioo, wuh R'l'.J OJrioon Model .. 11835 p.m. 9'29Baku, Co.ta"'''"· • ~988 • Jobi-Mitt, 'wom. 1.SOO 12 Years same location-came owners =a:~~ •.;:r~ ~1:~1~··· &: NEWPORT Beach Tennis • •
1 NV ~ Dally AJ.9 Canddat.n:, ~t&l, clocb' M:2 Spinet, MaPJe • ::. \t;95 ~~b ~i>:'~ ri::,~~ • • RfAt ESTATE Sundey 10-5 • """" ......... , ....... 311lNlpl .... w-· .... $'50 m•mbersMpo + 1 IOdat .... ' SALESMEN 548-9660 ~ Ana~lm. open Mon It Fri eve11. membership. Prioed wtll .~ •
4 Ice boxes, 2 Roll tops.. HAMMOND below cogt. Days 547~, Invf!sUcat~ the Unique OP-~=~=~~~~~~~~~!~~~ 2 Chopping blocks 2 Bran ih CORONA DEL MAR Eves 6Tl-MJ6 • •
portunities with Newport.'11 'j }:MP 0 MEN beda.. 2624 ~ Blvd., 2854. E. Coast Hwy., m-8930 HU1t1AN Haar rllonde wiglet, • • '
fastest crowirw pru1tukvial J OSS
6
· L y
1 Furnlhire 10QO Costa MH& 1 642-3069 ELF.GANT, old 5' 5" Gnnd new never worn $10. Also •V•, •utom •ti,, , • w • rW ~~~~·Re• SchoofHnatrvction 7600 9• BLUE ""'Ion .,,., ltQt:: VAST stock Arner Ir. Eur Piano, Queen Ann legs, Human Hair R ed-•.stMrln1, t•di•, h•t.l•r, d•·•
-v .....,. fum & cJocka. Larry · ·~au!ifuU.Y hand carved Ir: dlllh-Brown long :fall <tuµ la • wh••I co.,•ra, htt d 1 PROPERTlt!=S WEST The Newport Studio couch, $35. "-ron.... Morpn Anf;fqun. 2 4 21 nfiniabed. uioo. 545-0673 cap). Paid su;i, ee11 tor •••h •nd "'"""' "''"'•
1028 Bayside Drlw School of Buslntts way bed, $25.. Pott. heel-Newpcrt mvd·r, C. M. UPRIGHT PiANO $25. 548-45.17 aft 6 p.m. a"'•~•I 911011 11 • '
. N~ Beada IIAS A GUARANTEED ~~ ttfrie • 9' bu. --·noo.. FISH Tank, :ZS pl, pwftp. • Immediate' Delivery •
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
CURRJOJLUM f'PR S.wine Machinn 1120 u a.ms filter, lite, heater &: • $199 • Sl\CCESS' Offi E I 10 artificial plants. $100. new, • 833 DoYtr Dr., N.B. 1c• qu ~ment 11 '67 SINGER compl with Tt(ft"islon . 1205 sell price $50. 6#-l307, ask • 646-0153 walnut console. TransfftTl!d •
l.ifetlme Gilt. ""'-,.;"""· P1t0FE$SIONAL draft.in& service man fOttH ft'PO· MAGNAVOX Conaal.e 13" tor Sandy • DOWN ..,.,........... ~. new. 3lx42". •dJusb Touch-0-matic, auto z!a-iag, oalol' TV. Remote c:.ootrol. %. YD cem mix. McCb. pc11t • • Oilldren, fl'aDddilldren. OI' to 3 2 x 4 0 ' '. "ARROYO", I "'"-9" --~ • l.lldividually tu. button holrs, blind hems I; 2 )'J'I. old. Walnut. Aho ho e "'66"r• auger, JIJalUI:" •ft11i T• 9114 ~ .. Unsaid -Octet -Lurid -yoorseU6u.m.. 1 meta.I edge, solid basswood, aveream etc. No a ttach Zenith 2l" BJW CDnlale. oH~. ~ma Nova, 3 be •A ;ta•M CrMlt • ..uc• Tbesil -OOUSINS • tottd t lO eaons electrnnica.ll)' lx>nded, &and-needed. $!?~ Cub or ~ scs..31125 mini bike. new da.tch. 6 .; ._. lfftact.,. • LNrn Power Sewing Small boy'• detlm&n or typq IChool. 173 Del Mu, ed SltJPOth. . Strona-steel surne $UO mo. Guar 1uu RENT TV $lO mo old, $80. 646-%115 • •
OPENINGS FOR hote:l: "Where you •tay when CM, 548-2859 tillin&" ara, tilts 'tD any SQOd. Call 526-fJ616 . KIRBY v cl &. •
S w,.ka -'°""" · :ow ain't . .,,, no OOUS!NS In MERCHANJ)ISE FOR •ngl•, 150 •• "'"' oUu. No D•po1U • ,.... dolt-a<.~um ....,. ••••••• I; no ·1ees that town." SALE AND ·TRADE 536-0t02" SINGER Sewlh& Macblnt SU-CM.n OI' m.auo atta.chmerria.. Originally sold •
Class houl'!I 9 to 2:30 PM Experienced An&a-pbooe tor .sllk, stralghl RWft' in nice USED TVa $25 A: up. Reps.in !~~~:»~ ~~ = • JAGUAR • Mon.\p~y Fri. or Furniture IOOO Like new. $250. cabinet $3.5. 642--0272 in !lbop or home. m ~It dept 535-1289 a ll:ADQUAIJW •
9-U 01' 1~ Mon lbru Fri UIH!xperienttd SPANISJI FURN I.tu RE e M.7-Ui59 e -Mu1ical't~. 1125 Harixr Bl, CM. 645-1612 NYU>N Cal'peting SO sq .• -•
CALIFOru(IA $'tATE · • , yard 8 g 0 0 d c 0 n d •Compltjt S•les -Strv-• Call ""2910 or 962-2417, EMPLDYMENT SERVICE • COOK • RE TUR N.E fl ~Ro M Household Good1 .IQ20 BASS Guitar, case &: amp. H1·FJ & Sttreo 1210 Bl~r. tweed. W _ inc! i,!!_ ~nit P•.rfs D•.e.•~-=• --• ~ Lo "--h . ---·+Mro-OD"IE"L"H~MES.~VINGS .xlni-"91 $19S g . -.,..:tr~, • ~~,,-., ~:..:ion-air pad. t nlfor ::JAGUAR1 . • . -~~Locust Ave, !_18~. ---AP-~Y... --am . ~ 'i ' -OXIUU :riuue UUUU.V ""'""'
LYN's
ll lo 7
TOCK CLERK-IN·
RY CONTROL.
room exp., fanilliar
/prod. control procedurH.
typing.
JET INDUSTRIES
S:. Ritchey SL S.A.
547-3908
qpportunilt' c~oyu
:art Time W1itret1
· nee preferred 1n Ital-
food. Wot\: eves. Cl.II "6 2 pm, Ml M9'l9 or ap-Pl.Y In person
,,. VILLA ROMA
; 6l5 N. Newport Blvd,
' Newport Bearii ~ -~-.---.,;---.: Auto Service
. ,. Cashier
' ~ sale& summary, w1r.
:_.·!¥ ttpair orden. M U I t
rKent experience.
61~7098
, <,HOUSEKEEPER
; ]'ull Time -D•y Shift
,__ ·, Apply in Penon
• ffu.ntiJJrton Beach
' --'Convaletcerit HOl!lpital Thm °'Ian.re St. Hunt. Sch
CED Sewing
ine Open.ton. Fcw
~' ~log accepted. -llll1l s. Oak, s. A. 1;»-3:30.
H6UsEKEEPER, Ii v e -In
motherlen home. Newport
·..-mi.. 2 Children, ages 14-16.
undtt 40. 531-1450 ~babys i tter
' led, my bomf', part lime
. Nr Wilson & ~blie,
. ~1569.
- -· · ' · ..,., ' ' ·· b 1 . guitar .w/Vjbrato + amp • tpd, 4 ,.. .. -audio 646-7860 • s" Th• b'itint N1wport H1rbor aotaltloveseat,3~1ivin&: new, ftl')' rea aona e $60 673!Z29 " aKCl"" •
Conval1ac:1nt Hotpltal room tables, 2 liviAt room furniture. Frost free cop.. ayttem in walnut ccnsole. 1WEED Carpet JJS. New • '''' Jo9u•r Tod•y
642.n64 lamps & -fotn~. P'"°"" ,.!ria, 175. JJ"' bl, Sl'EREO tape ""°"'"'" So"" Ldt . on lay • ...,. """ rubber pad S35. Garag• ......... • IM11ltnwtt * ti Prff:klenttJ k i D t ll I r >e · ·ti/steno. Water ·c1rytt atflf ':!KIO with mD • ~ ba.Iabce or $19 cub er Ip-. cablneta U). ;t.amb 'jacket • •
Credlt,Clerk * DRMR$ . """"°"' sui~ trlpk In warr. Lampo.' hwnlmller, Ftnt SL8S ....._ -13 pymn!LW.,.....,.. 535-'1219 $:<1. 61:h1184 • SPECIAL • '··· 1 . No Ex-rl•nce .=.,~-~A •..• lrinc rui.. .>r """"""' mot:!;;; ......... ~. 1130 •••TRACK Storeo earllEA)mFUL bkitld "'' Ul(ITE A'C FORNIA .. --u E Omn °'"""" o,..,,, chiid7J ....... .. .......... """" Ptly.r. mo ~-.......... hand """ oria: .,,.j • TOOA y ONL y •
NK 1 N~ry! ; ~ngKlie ma . & box alide, etc. Many othenJ .• PIANO i: ORGAN e NeVtt uaed..M1.111t RD. $30. $295. 1 Will ~ for Sl5. • •
.. ·Must bave clean c;alf1'ornla jprlnp, 2 lamps, 496-37S7. ·, CLEARANCE * 54G-44.11 * 548-.7tl'l aft S;311i;· • '66 OLDS • 222 Ocean~ •venue drivil'll l'erord. Apply 6 piece s h wrought .-r:vcry instrument.priced WlUJAMIDN Stereo, 100 TWIN Beds wHh frames l • •
Latp1n. Beach YELLOW CAB CO. iron dinicz set. Only $467. ~•r•ge S•le 8022 : . to sell~-watt A ~l /FM . Gar. lftdboards MO complete. TORONADO •
49US,46 18!!_::,,1M6~~ !!':i'=...":.t;ly~~~.':=: GARAGE cu~. Sat & Sun N9 REASONABLE·OFFER ~·See t. apprttiat.. Matching Bathroom ensem-a II • ~ opporhmity employer ........, .. _ -..--· ~~ :-.,.--· REFUSED! ~anytime 548-1447 hlfo. $15. 644-135.2 •Dolw.:• Cowp1. Fw ,_,,,
NURSES AIDES e HAMILTON FURNITURE 11-3,. Irvin! ~err~ c e. Sol'M' typical examjiles: SMA.U. walnut con• o I e 8 f11,tory t.ir '011diti.,.i119 .• WELL Groomed V.'OOWl lor • 5&UWeab1~~-in~ .... ~ v ... ~,;Y• Balll!nette, patic> furn.it~, l.estefl Spinet ......•.•• Sl95 Mqnawx Stereo.. 2 yrs old. v:1N"G-l'urn., hand t~ls, ISVY1112 1. exceptional opportunity with 3 PM to 11 PM ~ UllJJ 11tucho bed ~t. 2 attice WmtifJer Fr. Prov .•. , • $4!15 Lh new! SITS. 548-3825 · thhini,t gear, l.o«t mac 8 •
\tadifw ~tic Co. F1ex and 10 a.m. to 9, ip.m.~ Sal ~....,, ~c DrlP.I ·~ew Cormole~ ........ ~ . ttt;ms.. 504 Avocado Ave.., • $2695 •
bn. No canvasain&;. For llPMto7AM 10 Lin. to 6 p.m .• Sun. Odda. •·11Dds.141J s.l)l J"ntmontGrand~~ .......... Spotll1t9Goods"· asoo CdM. .T . •
Appt call 61!>--0809 12 Jt'.m. to 5 p.m,, _ , tutUa Ten-aoe. 673-6123 Wurlitzer Grud , •• , ••• , $7!16 ~ _ UPHOLSI'ER.1.NG ~ $'1!.50. 2 • •
WOMAN tD care tor &em.i·ifl. ORDERLY CENTURY dlnbtj-set, 41" LAMBRETI'A motA:ir acooter Hammond Orpn ,., ••• $265 SCUBA Outfit, complete; pc. (European craftamtn)
valid woman, light duties
1 ~to Joo PM rnd pedntal btse, 6 chn. mini bike, belly tJoani Tbomal 2 Man Organ •• $295 purchued in 19118. Make ot-Free set, del. pickup, 215 • •
at ni&ht 10 PM to 1 AM , Convalescent ~nkr 2-18" ext lea~, cut pads meta! dlrtector, Hi-Fl. dtv-Wul'lltzer Orpn •••••• $t95 fer173-1821 Main,HB"Berny .. 53&M05 • •
$1.65 per hour. Ba..lboa 466 Flaphlp $2115. lo· Sola, Easheil. in& board, •wim sleJll, bpe Many Mott To Ol009e From "MAUI" Sut1board by NEW complete Stroll-A-OW? • •
laland. ~ . Newport Beach 64U044 quilted, like new $190. CUI reccn:lel' It J lavatm'i@a. e NO DOWN PAYMENT Gree.It. 1' 8", very iood baby fum. set + crib 4 •
lf OU SEK EE PER. child Re•I Estate Sales ~ e ~~e; x ~~;, ~ 3Jl21 Imperial Covt Ln. ti. ~O ~A~ Tn; ~ oondition, $60. 536-040% mattress. Never used. $175. • '67 IUICK llfvltn1 •
Catt. Perm. Pvt rm. ba, ._,,_ & W ~· . d' Dix l · I B. 962-1'l71 · l --6 to • · 0 VOIT apear iWl. $71.50; 308 3Glh St., NB 673--0583 •Full pow•'· f1 ,tory .;,,low
TV. Salary open. MUllt love E'Xpa~n"r agai:~~tt # ;y~:r;~r s17a~ e~:~n COMPLETE set &OU clubs Coast Music Tiltall aluminum tripod $25. VARDEMEN Surfboard 9'7''. •mll••q•. ITHB52 ') • :::~v:r ~J'f~n&: 4 openings avaiJaDle for Edward's t"'tl bed cornr riibt hand 's, men's. Misc 1139 Newport Blvd., CM Both. new. ~5683 Wood tail-~ck $30. Shetland • $3995 •
RECD'TIONIST -Bkkpr. :~;; t .:n7n;: ~~ ~~~Is~~$~. ~blebe: :n~s:~~c!mer:.ls~ 646-0271 Ml1eell1neous 8600 ~::n~~:oo om. a :
med orfitt. Laguna area. Gardner. Sp r Ins Realty, set. nile stands. 9 dNT too1a &: Mile items. 3069 WJ DAYS! ! f ANTIQUE China ch@st SlOO. GOOD 2) gallon _hot water • '61 IUICK Sk~lorlc
8 Nursing not req. State age 540-4824 dre~r. detk, hKdboa.rd, Ceylon Rd (Mesa Verde) Anti dining chain: $15 heater $15. Suitable for •H.T. Cp•, Awto"'ohc, r•d·
I.:. qual. Box M-701, Daily • SALESPEOPLE. Neat, mirror: Spanish Style $175.. CM Sat & SUn. Hi&:hel' prices are comirl& _ A~ pJete SJ) smaller home. 64l-JS25 after •'•• h•ot0t, pow•r 1toorint.•
Pilot good appeuance. Due to 642.-TI87 MA.UNA LOA WMCA C ub but we are atilt diaoountinc eer.m:1·mo;:n and kiln, 5 pm I: weekends. •f•«ory$•1
1
•
2
i,.
9
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5
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HOUSEKEEPER &: child new npaniion HIDE-a-bed never used $100. CllrS.P sale. Sat A: &m, all pianos • arpm in the make otter; dropleaf dlnirw PEMCO Aquari~m 77 pl • •
care, private room &: bll.lh, Holklay Health Sp• 3 Bedroom mets, king. full Jan. 18th & 19th, IO to lad days of the ereat MOY· table .ns. Like.new w/Ooon!scent lightfi. •
T.V · S'n day a ~k. pttm. needs salespeop~. We train, &: twin sizes. 8' Sofa Ir 5, 231 Collon, Newport bl&: Sale. It will COl!lt )"OU re.~tor $100. Bedroom 962-3329 Call 9-5 ,
67
Of'~ •
job I pakl vacation. $3Xl. no exp. nee. Apply in p!r· lo\-e seal. Dl!n turnitur'I!, SbcJrtos. 646-9839. Barpinl money to wa.iL Shop & bu)' che · dn. $15 • s ..
Mo. 546-92.12 """" H-~-Blvd CM cofftt .. end tabla Occas. ··;., __ ,, now al; Its, 4. wer ea. 2 NEW youth bed mattrtsses Spart ,11up•. R11dio. heott r,. 90n, .....,., .. .....,. ·• · · .....,."' ¥any m111cella.nl!Ous ite:ma: 1 k Id •~ h • lnstrudor in Ch•rm cha.in. Many other items. 1 "'~-~-~--= WARD'S BAlDWIN S'I1.JDJO . "·ee 0 • __. eac · 4 'P••d. !UOFIOl I a>UPLE wanted °for kitchl!n ,_1ust 11ell _,_,. .. inc! Only PATIO Sa1e: Recliner, VW 1801 Newport. c.M. 642-3484 1n garage. Came take a * 673-1610 * • $1595 • A ~1odelint; or modeling care at local church. phoM .. ~., • ., .... , lug rack, &lus. bottles, Look' 121 Morristown Lan@
backgroUnd needed. Evts. 646-7l-tl 9 lo :i. 2 monlhA old. All Meditt mlac. Sat &: Sun lO.S. 20I3 e BARGAIN e CM . (Alontict:llo Compll!Xj SLIDING glass dr lo', heavy • • "~kends. Call 962-5935 Very t"l!uonable. 71 4 : 0 1 b 2-Manual Artisan Tbeatrt · quality $59.95. St!ftO amp. •
SCANDANAVIAN or GERMAN Teacher, part 870-1592 = r ., Ba oa . ()rpnw/Ottbe1trabdlalt 540-8970 dualT0,$35.838-7141 •'6S0L05Dywamlcll.
time. Small private school. Fumltura tth.D'nl!d from dJt... temat IOUlld t u HIDE.A-BED never ~ b 1 D HT RIH 'S German cleaning: lady l day 67J..i610 ANTIQUE dt"l!uer, cbeit, ex. sys em: .,. $100. 3 Bedroom ts. kinr. SLATE top Pool ta e •"' r. . . , •wto., , •
per Wttk. Mw;t have 7"'<=i7.::--:=:-::=--:=, play studios, modd homes, ori&inal COit. ~Term!. ulI . te , • 3%xti1n, $200. Home bar 11 ir c:ond. IMOYl461 relen!nces, CdM att•. APT. Mgr. want exp. cpl. decoraton canceDation. hall-tree, miac. 1963 SS Also, lie. ae1ection of orza.n 1 • twin sizes. 8 aof& w/4 stools $95. 897-9420 • $1495 • 0 .. "~•• NOW! New dlx. 60 unit C.M. <:n... .. 1-• • M~"--·-etc· Impala. 21ll D 11: a ca n • o, Id'· ""I" • ·-u A low seaL Den funllture, ::.:.c..::.=::.• ..::.:c.::.:,,:."°"_ I • R .......,..., _.. ,,., • 'C\llu:~•••-.u BluffL ,., co...... • ....... • coHee 1: end tables. Occa!1 STEREO tape: rte0rde1·, Sony •
COMBINATION. Sbup &r l-'"SJOO"==PI="'=·="=· 61>-=,,,'393== RD FURNITURE NEWPORT ORG~ chain. Maey •the• Ii.mo. 500 with mies I< '"'""· •
Maida il Go Go Dancera. Agencies, Men & 1844 Newport llvd.; CM G:r~ po~' trJ.wr& 300 W. ~~wy.. Must sell everything! Only Fir11t $185 bakes. 548-6473 • '66 TEMPEST •
Top waaes $.1.00-$3.50 to Women 7550 everJ night til 9 '· MUtc ===~~~--,,-2 months old. All MedltL H.T. Cowpo. Rtiio, 11.,..,, ·
start. Ph. tor int. 56-00831---Wed ., Sal & Sun. 'til S houaehold turn. "' · HAMM.ONO -~ · Ya· Very reuonable. 714 : Misc. W1ntecl 1610 ••whlrru1fi,. pow•r tl••rillf. • SASSY LASSY, 2901 Harbor, "SERVING FOR 39 YEARS" 842-Q17 . maha -new & uaed pianos 870-159'l -a lSVE6611 •
1
C.M We C•n F ind The QUKK (ASH G~RA.:E ~; ~:;,.cha~ ~ ~l~t"i::.""" In FRENCH divan " chair. W A N T E D • $1695 • HOUSEKEEPER. C hi Id Ri..a..t Spot For You ... ....... beautiful 'MXld needs •
catt, li~in. to loW! 2 •mall Y.'1f·s Not Luck" FOR FURNITURE club5 & etc. lMSl Ba.lla.ntlne ~N~~ oo.. upholsttt1z:la. Quo chains, We nttd quality lno ,funk ,
happy boy1 ain 2 ,1; 4: "It's k now How'' APPLIANCES OR Ln., Hunt Beach Stt-3«2 Santa Ana aize a:» x 14. Men'• ski please>. Fumltutt, co 1 or • 61 THUNDERllllD 8
lowly nn. 5 dflYI wt. Me• 1',0IALE DMSION ANTIQUES. DAY OR MISCELLANEOUS A maple boom, size Wiii to 11, child's TV's, stereos. appliances, • L•ndou. Fttll pwr., ft 1. •ir,•
Verde, 540-0910: 546--E518 Sec., Frtt ............ $GOO NIGHT 636-3620 liv. room furn. 3273 19:11 UPRIG~ Crand., xlllt desk, chUd'11•1 dre•i •r . tools and office equipment. .1 0,000 "'ii••· tXSRllll •
EXPERIENCED
NEEDED: Ell.pe r lence Book.ktt~r .......••... $500 Quallty Kina:-Sti.e Bed, Qilon.do Lane, C.M. Bet. cond.Rtten tuned. Larp dresser A: mirror, & TOP CASH IN 30 Minutes!• $3995 •
Seamatrns. · Call 497-1335. Sales •..•..••..••••••.• $520 beautiful quilted mattress. 2 • 5 p.m. Sat .I: Sun. 962-8097 After 6 PM m1sceJ. Items. I 7 3 -6 5 6 9 , 531·1212 • 8934i55 l~~iiNikto~U.-l!~PPuli<°llo between 11 I: 5 PM h Medical Ole ••...•••••• $400 iplit fowldation, blt-in. SAT _ SUN. Bucket seam. BRAND new Gulbransen come eee on S.t. Jan. Uth e WANTED e J"'--------•
fl . No ~.orllw In an in~. . Gen. Office ••..•..••. , . Sl50 frame. Nevtt UJed. $98. surfboards. typewriter, -.wt ~ Orpn. Sellirv 10 to 4 PM. 411 Heliotrope. F I e Ap II . • '60 CHIYIOUT • ~t. Moo thru Fri. $IXI BAKERY aaleqiri. no phone Maid Trairws •·· •.... $303 Worth $.Z'JO. MU536 suits, etc. 548-6970 ~-Prv prty, 642-77!7 CdM in prap. u rn ture p ~nca •• door ht rdhop. l.&H, •w· •
.. , HB. 9fil....6U7 ca lb. I "I t er v I e w • at Denial Front OUice •••• $500 ~U'°"CEN'nJR,;:;;;;Ciyi"ia.~productlon'::"'""~ GARAGE Sale starts Friday, UPRIGHT Piano, antiqued * AUCTION * Color TVE,TC• Pt•nos .to., PS. I FXXll I I • · ~nee Bak~. 119 19th MALE DfVISION bl 'th benc. $95. • $395
St.C.M.See Mr.Knicht. ~tru~:nr1~·~·= ~~·~~~~ ~~ .. ~WMk. ue.wi847-1061 u:e~~,:1.or:1 Cashl1'/2hour • :
SHAMPOO GIRL. Part time eel ..•.........•.••..•. $390 Down Sora UICI. 644-1679 JAN. 11th I 19th on1y Auctions Frldsy 7:30 p.m. 541..C531 ''4 IUICK SS.Vi.ti: • ::vr Ex~=_w a::-..:: Ship&: Rec. Tm, •.•••• $.l46 1WIN bdrm sel. Rmig • Schwinn bike, 1ott clubt '-FREE TO YOU Windy's Auction Bam BUYING Silver Com. 10% •.., • ._'"'tic, l"w•r ~""'·• llttnae.6'l-al94 =mtiU:~~.::::'~$= ~-~f~~:~:::; =~4 =~~=·.°:n. ORCANIC Fmiliar, ap;t ~UdN=~~ ;e~l'~i&!:~.s0~-n:::r•ili•,h$,. .. 9,,91R51A6191 .
BABYSrITER wanted in my Carpenttt · .•.. ·•··• to S520 ~ Jan 1Btb ti: l9Cb. 5191. hone manlJl'f combined COSTA COINS 837 W. 19th •
home fl'om 1:30 to 5:30 PM.. ''We have many sood job& ====----H.B with wood sbaviDp. Good TV. Z~nitb comole. maple, st., c.M. &t&-1"5 • 'TcJi!ihiiticrffiic-I ' days a WMk Laaws8 Bch waitirw for you" HANDSOME lute brown EdJnonds Ch'tle, • mulch. 833-5332 Cl' 54M9:tl. n" ~; ~ 15 cu. tt., CLEAN ftl1 dlrt, sand • I
'JI area.~ bdtn. U AM. SOME FREE nauph,yde ftcl.lntr. ~ F I A"~"-I025 betw a A: 5 Mon tbru froltlell Coldspol. ltke new Vl!l OK. &31 "'--'"' c.:. • '67 IUICI $q'-k 8
SOME FEE $100. urn fuN '""'""' Fri. 1!n $135; Bar, knotty pine, 3 e .,...,,. ~-·--Spert •••,.. RIH, t wto..,.
1*'-ID 5 cloYI ""-$250 .O:IM-..~1
~.live-in, ps. per wk. . !G-1612
S'l'O(J( lid necdtd NU Umt, 542-9124 upbol. stoola $65; boys ............ ,...., • f1Si. '91r C>M14. ITVUt•I
'",..,......_ i .. • ""'" MERCHAllTS NEWLY UpboU. ~..... AUmON GINGER. -..... -"'"''" -.. ... 1411&. PETS ..... LIVEST~ • s2595 • Apropos, FUNon Island, llOfu, hkle . a . beds. chain, female puppy, &bout J revenfble, $12. 133-ZM • •
Nev.'P(ll't· Bea:eh.. PERSONNR aectionals. 3281 Colorado Sat. Jan 18 . 11 AM TU Sold ~~art 1:e~ be= HOPE aa:sr. Girl aolrw Cata H20 •· • ~..:= :lOU IVmcUU "'"' .:::·:~: ... _ • u.;·;;.~oo::rH~CM ,..._, 1/17 ~w,;:·i:,. ~t'."'w ... "" ... ~ •=E. .~by • ..:!..~. ~ .. 00.!':-1.~~.: ..•
1367 Newport_ 81.vo., CM Lobby Officfo mattreu. Good rondilion. 1 bik. So. ot &Rr SPAYED female Boni'; all $50 Cuh. Call Mar y Russian Blutt' k 1 t t e n.t , I '1, •ir ••rwl. 1T,Uo121 I
UVE-1.N hol.tMll:Mper for Cornet 17th • Irvin. $35. 642.-9679 Model Jlome F\arniturt, Ae-VM.'C. Good faJ'GilT q . 2948 67l-938S after' PM 546.-81158 • $2195 • e&dmy ~ in a t u r • NewJD1 Beach ~ &: Equlpmtnt. O&-E. Cout HiPwaY earor.
• RH'• and LVN '1 ........-pM. eo.ulO Offices in all of KING-Size bed I box sprp. 11cntn CollttUons ot 1'lm-del Mar, 9 to 5 10 AM to 5 PM Daily. "--
1
_, • lium.....-. ~ an!ll. -r·-cu.tom • made, ortbnpedic. 1tutt-6'. Decon.tor PSeceti Garden CDcM. patio f\lrn. -.... •~ • •
.,,. -;;,_, SAl.ESl.ll)Y, Put time. 0..,.. Coun!> Lib""' Sllli '4>-lSU MALE 1 yr. haH Schanauar, •~ cood _,_ 234 l 17th ST f'1iL fbile n.w_ Mi'•. da,va. K.1'.C., i!D So. Cal ...,.,.,..-_:&6mtl'T'"":-.,,=.-~ ~ "7n = hall poodlt, all lh:ltl Jaws nfrta. ~ e1ec '.OOBERMANP l a1cller.t • • • ~-_ -,_...,. Hwy.Locwa-c:.oks mele Oif.,,..le • .. ~ 'f::.': -=--~ C.U.tJ. ~ ~~-u~'. edpr/......,,, SmaD I"""-~!:..""'-·must""-• 548•7765 •
-~ ·-HOusD<EEPER. ... lo· n, °"'"" e.<ufut °"'"" I-"======== 2 =· lap -· ---.. _, -· -• • J!lif'Jlr~' ~~Pllo<iif.~-~~M~.:gz~;' """'J cbld: ..... rm.:..: Soos Qtt!i. 6 ""'11tt. , ,,,, .... "°"'_l,_PM~. --,..---. l lOO Ave. C.M. &k 3 ',~ 0 Quall!> ~ -G,..t Dant-AKC Mon-Fri 1:30 em lflllD .. w. _. .. ceJt Sal. open. N'pt 8da. '°'6174 All r.atatnnt hflp! BOY 'S furniture. walnut •I Appll•l'M* p.m. 1111 btsutlM qullted mltlma,, fti. ~Ip br4ltd. 8 t. 9 pm I
bJll-aldPf.1117 -..· Bllml.....,. Callllonrle,!Ml-T19Ii fonnlot top. ""1<. chtall 9 rr m-. ..._ ... IOMO.male.-.-spilt ......,.!loo. b!Wn 4M!Adlaftll'N • Solunley l ::IOom •
...._ Jlww nsM .W. ~ tao-A.ROUS AGENCIES • hook caw. &l3-6!M7 wtth small ~ 1: ctcxr mlxtd, All 111tota • Qcht tan. trame. Ntttt \Md. $91. RARE h.b'hsm 'l'urifl'. • to ' pm I
-..rt dmt hllp, 09W' n tory ex:ptr. 604l9f N..8. 1161 C Newport Blvd., C.M. 2 PROVINClAL ann chain. lhelf. a.n. $35. '46-tMI 546-3901. Aft. I l'M 1111 worth JZO, IG6536 white, house broken. lows . Su"'*•Yt l :lO •m I p SU "II IAI.Ri>RESnJl Brick red uphol•tery. $C5 1c· Philco ttfricmt.tor SMAU.. n1tud lftitd pup.. 10'' R.ADlAL ARM SAW lkta. 11 mo. 155. 839!1'1't&. • to 6 pm I ' ~ITll CDll!~ ........... 17C.• Schoolfolnstructlon 7600 ..... """"'"'· ......,,. ....... -"""''""""" pin ........ -homo. $15. cau Lou -aft IRISH Settu Pupo. -~ UT"'"' Blitch Blvd., ~Jl .. 142-lllS OAK Bunk °' twhli bed&. Acme Julp!r $30. 541-Tmt ~ Im 5 «' wltn4&. AKC. 1~ Of t I e 1 d • ,, illm, ~OIW JO, i . MANJCUIUST' :m;.th,EIP~l c~ matrrtqea lo box sprirca, WUriNGHOUSE wuhtrc MALE German Shepbl!rd, I Jl8H nel J.,070 9Q: ft iZ. * ~'13 * I w-. ;irt tflne. 11.'ft 1'1'. c Orm de r--. 11414 a.em. 8JalcO ~ pUfect cond. sso. 8'TJ..796l machine. coppartane., W!l') year old. To l'>Od borne 12 volt bait JIWllC> $22. ftFX::JST'tRED Ge rman
I -1-llclt -Blvd Ha 111~1ns Gndrl •U t>). e • p •, ,., Dol11 Piiot Weot -..,.ill...._ l5tl-..._ w/ kl ""'· fl' 'NI l/Jll JJ--""-1&-<2111 slat """° Pointor l'llps 1or
.LL, __ _..1;..._"" __ .... _=_'" _____ .:_1 .... :_·_~_·-__ -___ -__ . .., __ _.._ ______ Dia! __ -___ ;...._~_RG_E_-__ -_ .. _ _._._•_now ___ J _ _..._E_-~_ ... _"'_ .. _=-~:~·-~ ~-.m-~
-
I
---'
F•idl)', hlllwt 17, 1969
TltANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION tRANSPORTATION TAANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TllAHJPORTAT TIIANSPOITA
u...i Cora tfOOu...i Cora ffOOIJ...i Cora ttOOlhod Cora ffOOlhod C1rs _ "90U...I Cora 9900
' •
•
.
"
.<ON.NELL . CHEVROLET'S USED CAR :: CENTER SPECIALS
.
'67 MUSTANG
Hard~ aoupe. V-8 en&tne, floor ahltt. rz;"ci ~-. RAIL Gold w/blaclc trim. No. UO 125 ·
I $1795 .-
-
'66 CHEV. 1/2-Ton
P.lclwO-V-8 en& .. auto. trans., h.etory
air eond., radio • beater, extra nie11.
Lie. No. {)41818
' ~995
' '65 PLYMOUTH . -' ·Sport Ful'J' convertible. VB, automatic,
power steer., radio. heater. (NBV894)
$995
'65 INTERNATIONAL
PICKUP -V.S, standard shift. Uc. No. 531194 . $1195
'65 MALIBU_
Sport.coupe. VS. automatic. POWer· 11tttr-
ing. factory air, radio, heater, low mile-
a&e· CPCS016)
---·--$15.---...095 ~
.'66 DOQGE Sport Van
Auto. trans., radio, beater, air con41·
UOMCL Uc. No. TCR3l~
$1995
, ••••••••••••••
• ORANGE COUNTY'S e
: EL CAMINO :
: HEAD9UARTERS : ======= • '6t CUSTOM • • • 1pd. tnna.. 3"1 V8, RAH. Yellow with • '63 DART G.T. • black vinyl tnt<nor. New wide oval ""'· •
• Faotocy al• cond. Stk. No. 1797 •
Hard.loll. coupe. 6 cylinder, automa.Uc, '2495 radio. beater, medium blue with blue • •
vinyl trim. • . • ,,5 , : '66 CUSTOM :
:
::;,;;;,;;;;:;;:::: • 3"1 V8, A.T .. P.S., Fae'°"' at• cond., • RAH. Bucket IN.ta. ErmiM while with
• ml interi.,.. !Jc.· No. T55o.16 •
''1 •. s·219·5 •. Convtrtlble. •77 V.S eng., 4 apeed trans.,
A.¥-FM ~. low mileaae with factory • • new car warranty. Red with wblte top.
.-ed·inlerlO>'. !Jc. No. UESJ6l • '65 CUSTOM • $3295 • 327 Voll, A.T., P.S, .R&H. T>'opical tu•· •
• quo~• with matcrunr ·;tnyl tnt.rlo•. •
Matched 1et ol new U.S. Royal white-===== :. wallL IJC.$1°' R77403495 :.
''6 RIVIERA
Custom coupe. Full ~ and factory
air conditioning. Radio and beater. : '64 EL CAMINO I
---·$·2_9_-.9 •• 5 ___ ... 1 =:·~495m= i
e '67 CUSTOM : '68 IMPALA
4 Door hardtop. VS. automatic, power
steering, radio, heater.
-~---2595
.
·-
• V-8. A.T .. P.S .. R&ll Willow ..... with •
• black vinyl Interior. New aet of white-• wall Urn. Stk. No. 1763B -: -$239s-·-1 ••••••••••••••••
'6' CHEVY VAN
118 Seriel (l.onr Van), v.a ~ aeats. aide doorl. l'ffl' wl.nilcMil. -mil~, 1tJU und!r MW car warranl;)I'.
Uc. ~'1295
'
166 'OLDS Toronado
11.T. ~ Automatic, P~~· RA:H. uoJH w/bll.ck yl bl •
Special weekend. C36.1Al
$249.5
'651 FO.RD GALAXIE
'100 oi.T, ~· VS. auto., PS, bd017 ~.MIL Ye low with black vinyl ln· &'. IRUC36.1l
' $1495
!&5 THUNDERBIRD
JtT. Coupe. l"ull power, factory 'm con. dlti~ rad.lo. heater, 1peda.l p&lnt Job. (l':Y~ $1395
· '65 RAMBLER 770-
~· VI, automatic, PCl'Wfl' 1teertnr. , heater, white w/arttn trim.
(F,BB511l . ~1~---
-.
CHE
' '67 IMPALA
Sl>Ol'I Coupe 321 Voll, AT, I'& -<O
air eond:ltion, UH. Maroon wftb bllek
interior. Uc. No.> Tt!Xe9
'2195
'63 FALCON
Statson. Waeon. 4-dr. deluxe. Automatic tram., radio and bfftu. Deaert beige wttb
watem vin,yl lnterlol'. Uc. No. FXF530
$695 ======'~ IC.J
'65 THUNDERBIRD
Landau Hardtop Cou~Full power, fac-
t ory air condltiol).lna. uoia with black
vin11 roof. Uc. No. NN l .
$1895
'64 CHRYSLER 300
Hardtop Coupe. Auto. tram., power 1~ ..
tactorJ air cond. J:\!li with parchment in-
~t,
,._, _ N~ 495
::::::::::::::: .. ..
' .. ._..
~tslde Pickup. 6 eylindeT, automatic,
radio, heater, extra cle&n. (752A)
---~5--
~ .. •
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
546-1203 t::'S46-1200:1 ' USED
CARS
P -~E;TS;-1nd_L_1_v_E_ST_OC-;;;K;;l;11oo;;;ts;.;&~Y;oc~h~ts=;;;;::;; I 9010 Mobil• H-9200 Mofo•cyCI•
c 1125 -21.-VIKl--NG-Sloop.--SA-U-CY BAY HAllOR • HONDA ·'""
3 YR OU> FEM.
USE THIS HANDY POSTAGE PAID Dachshund aoocf w/chlldren
,15. DacbahunJ pups 8 wk.a
-male i20, fem. ,15.
&fS..6416 aft 6
EGG HARBOR 37' ~=~ nee~~:.m~. 2 A_: Mobll1 Homn Show ~:
'69Pa•ktMdoldblcablo, ol uil•, exttu. Pouibl< 196910 & 12 WIDE SALE MINI BIKC~
exceptional family yacht. Balboa Isle slip Ideal for 40 ft • al Jt A: 6f rt. ~ 1
EGG HARBOR 43' 2 !haring tamille.. Aakinl'. l Oh. 2 BEDRCJ2MS . 1969 '90" OR .,,.
DAILY PILOT PURE bred Samoyed, genUe
&ood watch cJor, heavy
stock. 5 weeks old. $50.
96&-3290
S!>o•L&he• ~n GM dtla. 11700. wit'""' in ftlpoMI· •• Low.. * $239 * bl< ply. Shown by •~L l llll6 -n -$69.01 Per Mo. , ,
Al Pan Pacific Boll Show. 114<-130! -Incl, tax. u~. d•I. and oel-up HERB FRIEOLAND-E '
TROJAN and 3 years insurance. .J..
WANT AD ORDER BLANK
ANO REA~H THE ORANGE COAST'S BIGGEST MARKET
SNOWBIRD #371 1•~ ·-~-st., at u-~ IJllO IEACH ILVD. ..W: '69 " 25' &. 28' Sea Sk1ffl v.;I U<ll U;& flCUUUl All wood. Dacron lllil. Ex-C:O.ta Mesa n .f SfO.IM'ro 12 l locb So. 6 . &rov• F;i&:J; I
WEIMARANER AKC. Xlnt
show, fitld or pet Clam·
pion line, 3 mos old, female,
sbota. St0-4431
36' SEAVOYAGER.
Gen., fl1 bridge, swim plat.
form, equip rrady to ro!
* USED *
CHRIS CRAFT
ROAMER
GREAT Dane, 9 mo, female,
housebroken, wet f ntall-
nered, BeautUul. $85,
839-1746 '63-30: Alum hull. twin
DACHSHUND Puppies, lone 180 hp Chrslr enc 2 kw aen.
'"llent coodltion. Rudy to SEE the Dual Wide Road-'67 TRIUMl'ff' ·· =~W81.I 1250. 613-~ or liner Pan American, Para-T·lOO c SOO cc. Xlnt
_,.,..=-.=-:-=-I mount. Dite and General Low mlleqe, $825. Pvt. Jlf1! 20 FT Sklop, many extraa. mobile bome1 now at e Sll-8387 e .,,
18'<1. ~ tmna. Tom c.i Dual Wide Sales '~u ' Boats, 2614 Ne w po r t , 1967 SUZUKI, model TC 2IDt 615-2400 Qiapman Mobile Home1 Ioc. 250 CC; 6 speed;· high 520 N-Horbclt', S.A. oew !root ti.. & ndt'. ,_ =~~~.~ 531-8571 flnn:~att &pm:~
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES loci. ;m. Call m 528-<0<9 24x<l 2 BR. 111 Ba. Alumn '68 HONDA 175 SCRii!Wi
awnlng, porch. a Ir Ir It n 1 EXCELLENT CONDrtiON( LIDO 14. No. 1922 W/COVf!r, Lndacpd. Ran c ho-Hu~ * 6'f3.-5928 * 't•..:,
hair, miniature, 8 weeks, radio, auto pilot, depth
AKC. 213-Q)..475.f IOUnder. RelirUlhed. Xlnt
1----r----r----r----r--~-r-....,.--,---.,.-~~-,.--::-~ ~pedigreed male, 2 2 4 J 12 )'1'11 old, tan &: while, aood
TlMU TIMU TIMU TlMU with children. 962-3)24 -AKC Registered IRISH SET·
TERS, 1 Wttkl old, Weblyn
line. ~1738
condition. Only $11,000
TRIMARAN TP . 35
'68 Pivtt de1tin, 35' d&l
awe, llp 9, 2 heads, elec
refrlg, 1ttteo, radio phone
roller ttelil'll main &: jib. $4.50 $6.10 $10.65 SlS.90 ========I Like new cond. Xlnt 1urvey, H.,_ 1130 A Buy at $19,"'10 --------!
trailer, North aaila. Blue ~ &: white. Like new. M7""6356 tington adu1t prk. Call '68 Honda 160
9624i42 or uk for An&ie. like new $350 ·~ 4
LlOO 14, 2 yr new. No. BEAOl 42 X 10 with * ~ .. U34 Full race Bow flot area. ~ Rd tr! $1350. Me-ms awntn&. Air cond., new wall HONDA Scrambier 250;0 ,...
r eve. to wall ahag. New furn il tram Xlnt rwmhlc 6 ~
1'' FIBERGLAS Dinf·Kal -· 6'6-6100 ' '';-1' Gttat day u.ilor, Trailer ins cond. $295. ~ '
$1.21 $1S.10 $20.10
---l----I----6 YR A.Q.H.A. Mare. Prof
$,.76 $15.55 $24 30 trnd tar interm """'·WM'•
$5.10 EGG HARBOR 37'
Exire111, Dy brkf&e, ·aen.
Loaded, Jlke new. Excep.
A: new lllllil. $250. 8'6-5809 Motor Homa 9215 ·~~ = -:=--=
Power Cruiun 9020 OORTE1rYou. 'W'Qll.'t believe pakl. can: Paul -..,ry
' Stahl<, Lac Can,oo Rd, uk
J. ttonal value. $34,0l>
$6.00 25' OWENS Cabin Cru1Rr ffl a '66 -low rnllea&l' ....ii
_ 11 • 1ac air oond -pvt pt, -Auto S.rvlca ..., , ,
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
f'lll:i lhh for •• ,•••• ,,.d1y1, l:io9T1111l119 ••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ,, •••••
Cle11ificotio11 ••••• , • , •• , , •• , , ••• , , , , , , , , , , ••,,,. ••,, , , ••,,,. , , •• •
N•-• • • • • •. •' '' '•' • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• •. •• • .. • •• • • '• • • '' • • •• • • •'' • •
Ad llllr•u , , , , , , , , , , , , •... , • , , , , , , , , , • , , , , , , , , , , • , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,, •
ea., • ••,, , , , , ,, , , , • , , ••• , , •• , , • • 'hon• , , , , , , , • , • , • , •• , •••••• , ,
TO Pl•Ull COST
Put 011ly 011.0 wor4 I• ooch
1p•c• ol:iovo. l11cludo your
eddrou or phone nu111Hr.
Tho coif of your 14 II ot tho
oitil of tho lh10 011 whicll the
lo1t wor4 of your od 11 writ..
ton. Add 12.00 •rlr• If yo•
dollro u10 of DAILY l'I LOT
101 1orvice witti l'loilM , ..
pli•t.
1-------.....,--CUT Hlllll -PASTI ON TOUlll INYILOPI ----------\
'
BUSINE SS REP LY MAolL I
JW ca.. ,_,. H9 IJ, Coilo M-., c.""-'• .
Oron9e Coat DAILY PILOT
P.O. lox 1560
Coste Me•, Celif. 92626
for Nancy. w/._.ey &: he&d. Sleep1 orig O'lllntt. 547-213.1 & Partt !I
· EGG HARBOR 6· si,,.i. ....,. w/JJS bp ==~==== CALIFORNl~LIVING _ YACHT SALES Chcyoltt Mart.,. en r . Mini lllkts 9275 36 H.P. vw culnc, ~ 1
Swimming Pool1 1900 2540 Sheltu Wand °'· ReceoUy overhauled. S/S cond., cbocked by ~
---''--'---ISan Dleao n4: m.7065 radio, ha.It tank. $4.250. MINI bike like ..w, 3 hp, muter A other VW ~
CLOTIIING nearly new . S.-93il O.t $160 a steal $95. 31B 968-5lU evn _ rJ •
Teens & ladiea dreaseA, 28' F/G CalUotnian Expre111 Vilt& Baya, CM. ~7198 £Nt4l
1Ult1, capriJJ, 11k1 rt a, FREE! Crullll!r. xlnl cood. Loaded Motor I• 9300 Triller, Trani AjGj
iwoatel'L Excel condition. Bo1lc Bootln9 Cl11111 '"" !l•hlnc. tunUy ""'""'· eye . CAMPING "" 4x<x2. ;!;
6f.f.-2853 Offered to Public by $13,000. 6C2-8Dt HONDA Late ••; low mi., proof canvu top. -
TRANSPORTATION B•lboa Power Squadron PRICE REDUCED! total rebZt eng.; new o'lh.e tirK. Equip w/ ~
S1artine 7 PM Mon. Jan. 13 25' Meridian. fibera\.u tlm:: ~ oUer S15-32Z er bHt ofter. nt: ~~ BOits &. Yacht1 9000 at Newport HarOOr Yacht cruller. Xlnt c:ond. Fully SOCX IT TO 'EM! OfAR.GE m ·,,,
CUb 120 W. Bay Ave., New-k>aded.. Owner 6*8739 ,.-.,
$5600 port Beach. NO ADVANCE 32' GRAND Bull> _, lm-'911 -9600 lmpomd Autos
28' F/G AUX SLOOP REGISl'RATION NECES-ow.er. fully eqllfpped incl -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ 28" CAL 28 nee •••• $10,500 SARY, ENROLL AT a.ASS radar. 673-.&178 +.T PM r
36' SLOOP loaded , • $12,500 6t6-8422 or 67J.1855 lot moni I ========
40' BOUNTY FIG •• $11.000 .;;hd"'o.'--~==---SpMcl=-Skl Boob 9030
..,. DIESEL """' .... 114,"'10 FREE 6.1' DSL CntB offl!l' •• $44,950 'GS, 15'°'' a..MSIC lkl boat
e PACIFIC YAOIT SALESe Baile lotting Cl..... w/UIJ Mere., bil-·wbl tlir.
3'46 Via Oporto OFFERED TO PUBLIC lOnt -· $ll«J. -Nl!WJIC)T't 6'13-1510 BY
1. FT. a...om .,......., Huntington Bloch Boot Sl!p MMri"I 9036
Racer. Blae and aold. Powe r Scruadron SAIL boat mocnw l:ll' nnt
rr.uer A boat fruhly SWttna Mon., jan. 20, T PM w/ maximum T ft bu.m.
pa 1 n t e d • New white !~':°UiwtonH n Beach Hieb A&t. 67J..'880
naucahyde .Upholater.r .......,...., -... =======
ThrM ~ bp Champion For fu.rthtr info call •1 ft 9100 -O>mplota wttb 14:Z.1227 or l46.2350 ~rcro -
ieWnl tttt1 tub. -.. 47' K__.H l'rl. Piiot c.u... ml .......... See II 2U ,.,.. 11!1 do, $20.11 mo. -
IMl1etta. N...,,... llelcl> 8"11! 1!'D.. ~ ~ A1mo1t -r II l'aloda
u rr. Fab-. -:1::"11owa111mpo1p1111n oi.. Co••'• -DI IDs• m•d•l (al l 1115. 900 Mlle cntilt mmr ,.._or 5M.lllO
t I b • r 1 l a a • ) ouu..w '°""' S2t500 l1nn. -
0-., -.... -· DAVID L PllASIR Molil1t -9200 B1C -till """"'· $1llO phone &G4l) aft.tr 7 pm. Call: Omck Awr, TRAILER. I: Callan& 1 ot
312• Via Opodo. N.a 2 bdrm. lOnt -_,.
USED 13' &hlnc l'WHl.bout m-5Z2 * et.3816 fMI. ORi. 3-'908 t..
;-:,11 :::;~ = roR SKIP.PER OR ooAf I BR. ._,, ·~ Good c;;ftil.
troon l2IS. Scbod< ~II, MAlln'ENANa CAL~ Tolkt a -· $100 cull.
m.lO!O -,.. .. llf-WI
II.MORI MOTOU " ,_.
IUOO llA.CH an. WlmilNSTlll IM-n1t
t53001tidlhd.
W•lnster
m.3322 ~
Ol'IN .7 DAYS • ,._a Golt , .. , ... , TllE QUICKER !OU CALL. THE Qtn&ii YOU CALL. Find·-·-aoll TKE QUICKER !OU SEU. THE~ YOU U:U..~. ---!l!!!!""!!!"""l!!I!--..... -..... ~ I , ·~f ._ ........ ________________________________ __...._ ____ ~--~---·------
J
• •
~-----.-•. ...,_.~~~--•T .. ,..,.,,.,_,~---... ..---·--------.-------------.... -------------------""!'------, .
•• ft DAl•Y 'ILOT rltdO), Jlt!"'7 ,111 1'16' • ~ .. ~ .. b.::~,;.;;.;.;,, ==:::==:'::==='i'"';;;,_=.:rirlWiilii!spPRTATION TRAN!PO~TATION, TRANSf'21lTATION TRANSPORTATION ~~SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION l~iiiiii11iiiii~iiiii~~r•~llel'.s;.~p~a~vo~1=jt~4~2S~ITrvclct · t500 J"" 9510 Cam~" 9520 ouno a""'" 9525 Jm~ Autos 9'00 ENGLISH FORD I · KENIKIU. ......... P• *Sr.YIMINS VAN* 'Q JEEP " Ton Plclnip. NORn!WESr Coach U'. CHAR'l11£11SE D1111tb11g,., ALFA ROMEO
DI LUXE I-Or. S,.,. c..,.
$2488
Ready /or Immediate Deli,,uy!
~11 lac:ION "u1-11! .... •It ,_ H,.IV '"I...,...., ~ Motw Ho. WI.
Ready /or lm.mediale Delivery!
s199 DOWN
'68 DEMO
SALE!
Tlwlre ire 15 low mileage demonslrators and
1.1teculive cars ... Rivieras, Wlldcits, le Sabres,
Sectras, Skylarks and Specials included in the
group. Be early!
Get 'em Now!
!•&1 FALCON RAllCHERO
•Stkt ttolfl. lll'dlo 1flf hNolw • .,.,,n, w.115. LlclflM &AC Jl3. jS31 o •. s31 Mo. ~~. s599 , ___ .lllUI. ___ _
, '81 LINCOLN CONT. '""°"· ~~. F~H -lfw;kidW. Nc:lorl' t ir CDl!llltiomnl. U1tti.r !rim. Wiiii. w1111. $46 Dn. $46 Mo. ;~~" $899
lo!' 74 -·
'63 BUICK SKYLARK
'64 RAMBLER
1 '66 CORTINA OT
Enttllll l'otd. 4-IOM 1,........1~. HMltr. IOJClttf IMlt. ·llunM .... TAI 115. $47 On. $47 Mo. ~~~ $1099
!Or lo "°''""
'&&RIVIERA •re c-. l'ACTOltV Allt CONDITIOHINC .io1 ~UlL W tt lrlcludlnt. W\ftdowt l'ICI ltr$ -ts. Whit. Wiiii. ic.n. NG, llNH »l.
Full $2999 Price
'· W1 Leu• All
...., , ......... ...... c •••• ,
'9lett .......... w ... wt rw r lt•t ........ s.
Diet•......, .. · :'J.f olr11 and Models
• u.w .. _.. 11\d"" .... w; "-" on _.,...... ~d9111t ............... crWfl,
Mt: _.. W1111et • oner ...., ;ti ... 9flldfW ,..,, ""*'· .~J .... Mi.
' . -.
--..
•••• ' ....... 111. , ...... ........, ..
le••• ..... -..... "" -,... ----
71 ,,
I
Mlwll' Slllldord 1bllr * llUCKS * ·--v~~ --.ua~V.f. -.... -............ ~ ~ wUh -. f • ~ ... ~ tllw.. GG!>d ""\o ·"""' -U.., """' ~ -SI ALEA !lo S .... No imla b' f -.., 131 Thotiy "' A I Ho<o At cood. $!*-MMn all laY1 duty equip. No a-mt °"' Xlnt; :!, N t
to1o1 ei ..., ' 1311 .,.. ·'""'T"' Dlacaunb • ,... --5IM853 ..:.'....., ,;;,-~ ew
o..l.C. •--~ lmmed!a c_,.ro' 9520 '""' t -lmpor!M Au1tj1 MOO 1--,0,--~..--'-..;.;..-1 ~ LoytOD ud ,._ ~dell,.,,, ,. Dvno Bvllil" 9525 • Spot"'"" tw Im"°"' A STIN HEAlEY
Rick loldln. 0'1 8 cH CITY · CAllNI CllA,ANCI We ""• """" 1111' ••• tm-'r.& AUSTIN H•ale•, -. ~ of 1t•1 El Der•"•· F•ur ;66 D 8 ......, -... _., " -..... '"" ··-Mobile World eODGE WI"' .. ~OhjriOll e11c:I G.)d· un• UlfY reprdleu of year, 1'lab w/blakc interior, priv/pty, ..... BoacbBl.,JIJl.962-1311 <... no• -Odol• •I $1599. Of condl-1ry"' btf°"' 12.500. 837-:1157
Ill 4--BL, SA 531-11711 llW Bet Sh<! .. fH"l', ") * lie DllCOUNts + Yott ..U. E L M 0 R E
u··ARISTOCRAT Lo Liner, lt\m n Beach An ••• "'"''' ,.i,., ,..,,. ~, MOTORS, 15300 Beach BIYd. CORTINA CGPPft' refric, •tove, queen --s, .. ......_ $ 111 111r Tn1c:lr-Q ~ We.stmlaster. M-m2.
sbe bed, bunk, cai.n.. '65 DATSUN C•ll\RI! Prlc:1t.. ~ '68 CORTl"1A dlx, R & H,
chem t.ollet $895. m-<I057 in Tor pickup, 4 lli>d. dlr, l ·f-11 Ft. MH1li. Ch11sl• o A''"'A ROMEO 11,000 rnl under \\'IUT, S21JO
English Ford
Complete u.les -servloe 100 MPH, 32 ml per gal. J'Wl five iass.-apoa·t.1
1tyliq,
CORTINA * Oelux• 2 Door *
$1883
lmmcdlale Dclivei·y
Over 50 2 doors. 4 doon,
GT1, station wagons in
stoc k. Fully autoinatic
OJ· 4 speed.
TOP TnADE FOR
YOUlt PRESENT CAR ,67 Shull n• •If xlat cond, Driven lacaJ.W al Mff1I&, $1lf Co11t1l111d ~e _,s .,-below book. Xlnt, 0 n e
Newpon Beach. :n,ooo Ml.let U11Hs. An C1m''' A1c:11o ' owner. 644--0141
CODlllned, campy. on IPfedoaneter. Must~ to 1orl•1 111 St.ck. '" '67 _ALPHA THEODORE
·n 17 rr ~ T.T. ~=t.:mJl'ty~·~~ ,:~~11~1~11 . ·~·-~top Coupe. s ·~~i!~~~~:rs1~~ Rob'1ns ford
Sleeps f. riot alt.. $1395. $11.86. Call after ll AM, LQl'IYU: REJITAlS S4t.OJl~7J.11t0 ·~· "'""· IJc TUU533. pty. 9C-570J anytime except
•110& after !i::I> -~or 56-0634 1970 HAllOI IL'f'D. $2499 Sal. 2060 l·lARBOR BLVD.
VERY CI.EAN 2.1' KmU:iJ cy1. S,.u.I ....... ,..._ ..... COltA. MISA. ~ COSTA ?i1ESA [:;: =~~ .~i;~:·:~:: Ro~~;~i~ ff.r~t.~~ o~,~e · ·_,so~ B~;:~~~ ·~r~ ~~~~! '* 192.-~ '* t ~ 1-likle R/H. l H Ow--• b li!U 'ol money, lime il e!Jort. i.ook · .... :;"_ ~-.-,....,~ 060 ARIOR llVD,· * DUNE n .. -., p-~-".. 1\,4 ,..,.,. Y e e man 11 1 ........ ui~ COSTA MESA ooinpleted. ~ ;;;-:_ from Laguna. 4 Spd, dlr, n.-,,"°:;cw.,,.,, .. ::---,------
9500 1980 Jn tional ·u, '42 .. 010 mo. healer, auto. fawn green .BUS.u:;sr m1U"ke1p1ace 1r1
--------low es.$350. SOCKJT T0'1nl! D.,.__IAL ~~~:J~~. ~-S4f·010J...-67i.11to ext., plush black leather town. Th• DAll.Y PlLOT
' C>Yt:rlt'.la.dl: -$400. · SOCKIT'Ip ',EM! your ad, tbtn lit back·and· COST~ WISA will fine p1v t pr1y. 494.9773 money time il effcrt. Loo• 'riB Dodie Pickup, II' bed. * 6~ * -"t Wl=~ """""''o ... ,_. • .., 1971 HA.UOI ILYO. bucket seats. $75 C&h dela. Ousified 11eCl1on. S 1 vt
. e 531-1450e SOCK ro 'EM! s;KX lT TO 'EX? Usten to the phone rtnaf Dial 642-$l8: for RESULTS or 5(5.-0634 now!! 1
81au+1·fut Wlrw~ bh1e fith j.metching
bht• nt1rior. 6 Cylh,.d1r 1n91n1, decor
9roup, push button radio, heat1r, tinted
wlnd1hl1ld, heed r•tfNints, ..Jhite side
woll1. Sodol No. 2l5l79Z6DOS44,
1969
FIRE BIRD
Tht Amtrican sporiscar thet has ta~an the country by storm. This s307 7
cer, ••rial No. 223379L601186 is reedy for you, today! Btautiful
Meyfair Maze with bl•ck interior. Autom•tic tcansmitsion, radio, h1at.
er, decor group, po .. !r $feering , tinted 9l•11, custom trim, head rests
pliu m•ny other ,.ja .. atures. .
-l,.·aRAND -NEW 1969
CUSTOM "S"
HARDTOP COUPE
't}.777
1969-'·PONTIAC 54477 GRAND PR~X
)
•
ALL CARS PLUS LIC . & TAX
'62 CADILLAC
Coup• D• Vlllt. Hydt•111•llc:, powtr
1 .. 1ri11g, radio, h11l•r, whil1 w1ll1,
.IT142A).
'64 DODGE 330
4 dooJ,,1•il•11. "•die '"d ht•l1r, 1ulo·
111•lic Tr•"1111l11l111. IT I 12A I
'65 FORD LTD
4 d11r 11d111. VI , owl111'11tlc. r1di1,
he 1!1r, white 1id1 will tir11. IVETl24l
0
~977
:~. f.~.~.~~.~.~,~ .. ;.~3 577
h11t1r, pow•r 1lt•rin9, w1w. 1,786
111il•1 y•llow wilh bl•c~ vinyl lop. ITT! ]9 !
'68 CHEVROLET $3277
El C1111i110 396 SS. VI 4 •p•ed,
powt r li1•rin9, r•dio, ht•ltr, Rid
Li11• tir11, c1mp•r 1~111, 15,115 mil••·
ISSllOAI
;~~--~~~,~~~~~~ $16 77
milt1, f1tl•ry •i•. l'EZ•l Ol
:~.~'"~·~ !,~.~~!.~ $14 77 rodlo, htelor, 41 ,475 111il11. IRRZ·551ll
I
I
' (
Beautiful Cryst1I Turquoise hardtop coupe is
equipped with Cordovan top, H ydramatic, pus h
button r1dio, power steering, power disc br<!ke~,
power windows1 air conditioning, white sido
well tirei, deluxe seat belts, headrests,
11isor mirror, soft.ray glass, front floor
mats, remote control outsi de mirror, hid-
den windshield antenna , 400 cubic inch
engine [350 hp, that is ), and all the stand·
.,rd delu1re Gra nd Pri1r "ccessories. Num·
ber 276579P200508.
:~~ .• !.~,~.~.~~.~~.~RD $ 6 77
powtr window•, 39,375 mil111
I own••· !OHX426)
'67 AUSTIN HEALEY
'""'"·. ,,,;., ... .,,;,, '"'"· $2977 wir• wh11•l1. 8rili1h R•ci119 9retn.
ll,940 mi!11 . !VDT760 l
:~~,.~!~.!. .. ~~.~ ... "' $14 77
with bl•ck top •nd interior. 28.197 ,,,a,,. tTRT69J ~
'69 PONTIAC G.T.O •
Co•mliblo. VO, 4 'P"'· powu $3377
1t.trl11g, r1dio, h11ltr, rill li111 tlrt1,
1lt••o l1p1. (YNG217 1
' • "
-' '. . _.t __ . ______ ---------,_
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TUNSPOllTATION
fr~. Anulry 17, 1969
TllANSPOllTATION
ESCAPE FROM .THE ORDINARY! • •
ONLY UNIVERSITY OLDS MAKES IT SO EASY ••
•
OPEN EVENINGS
AND SVNDAYS
Brand New 1969 Olds F-85
'•,
u
N
I v
E
R · s
I
T v
FERRARI
FERRARI
Newport Imports Ltd. Or·
at11e Caunl)''• only author-
ized dealer.
SA.LES· SERVICE • PARTS
3100 W. Coast lflvy.
Newport Beach
&t!-940j j•ll).1764
Authorized f\tG Dealer
FIAT
JAGUAR
'59 JAGUAR 3.4 Litn> sedan:
aulo., rf'd lllll"., \\~re \\•his.
S77:i. Xlnl. cond. 838-8564
XKt.: eo·nv. '63. fully telllored
to UC\\'. Blk wired int, nu
tires &. top. 673-8821.
MERCEDES BENZ
Mercedes Bent. 230 S.L.
\\'hilc coupe w/black inter .•
auto lrans, AM/Ft.I Short
\Vavc radio. pow. steer. Lo-
cally owned & reflects mc-
tlculou.s care by previous
owner.
J1 rtu µo11
31inports
MG
LATE '67 f.1G f.lldgel. L.Ollf.
ed. 15.IXXI mi's. Called ln
8eMce.. f2SO • Wm aYe'
pymta. Karl 96S-651J
·63 MG MJ<l&ol;-0,000 ml
good oond. Maat tell b)'
2/1. $MO. 546--64511
·62 MG midget. Xlnt OJnd,
Priced for quick sn.lt> Sff.
Call 5119-l'f.!8 aft 4:JJ P~1
'53 MO TOi oompl11toly re-
conditioned. $1400.
1:.'ves after 6, ~
Completely fectory equipP,•d including eutom•tic tr1n1mi11Ton.
You won 't want to miss out on thi1 on• to shop ••rly and save.
Serltl numb•r ll1779Zl'411.61.
Brand New 1969 Olds ''98''
SPORT COUPE
4 door Town Sedan. Air cond., automatic trlin1mi11ion, power
brakes, /.ower steerin g, deluxe radio with r1er speaker, heeter.
white si ew11l t ires, tinted glass, etc. Seriel number 38'4699Mll2·
582. Specially priced et
. S1le1, Service, Parts
Complete new MG inventory
See the ne" Autin America
Here Now!
J1rluµort
Jhnµorts
J1rlll1JOl'I
31111por1 s
62
FUl:l -PRleE-
'65 VW Convert., $1150
• M'>-7427 •
·AH Models Fr.-t1770 • •· V6l.V'b
1M L1mta VOlVOI
IMPORTS
OYOTA·VOLVO
All Modelo fr. $2695
1966 Harbor; C.M. 646-9303
3100 w. Coast Hwy. '•s7 TOYOTA Landt:rulsei .• flllllmiA
Newport Beach whl drive Pickup.,
3100 W.Cbast }hvy. &42-94-0:i ~1764 w/campe r .Extrasi
Newport Beach Authorized MG Dealer ~2677 , TOTOTA-YOLYO
IMPORTS
642-9405 546-1764 '64 PORSCHE C, deep black lll66 ' C.M. 646-S.l0.1
Auth>rlzed MG Delll<'r lacquer w/blk int. new cng, TRIUMPH * New Volvos *
MGB 65 Rd1tr. trans, clutch, press. plnte, GET A
Ruby red w/bla.ck bucket chr \vhcels, Dunlop SP's,l--,-59_T_R_.J-.-$-52_5__ BETTER DEAL
scat intr .. wire wheels, ra-Bursch exhaust. am/fm, 673-2637
dio, etc. Beautiful condition stereo, .ski rack, stonel :======== Herb Friedlander
in every detail. guards, headrests. This car VAUXHALL 13750 Beach Blvd. <Hwy 39)
J2rluµon
Jll11µor1 ~,
3100 \V. Coast lh\-y .
Nc\\•port Beach
642-94ffi 540-1764
Authorized i fG Dealer
*New MG*
GET A
BETTER DE AL
HERB FRIEDLA NDE R
1 37~0 B ~cch B!•'l !H"'t l?I
]t,l~1~0GGJ."'1
89].J ~~b ~17 liH24
PORSCHE
ls ablolutely sanitary. $3400l-----~----I 2 blks So. G.G. Fwy.
firm. Ow!l('r may accept ,60 Vauxill 4 Dr. 893-f;,66 537.Q24
trade or fin. resp. party. Must Sell! UlO * '68 Volvo 144-s e ·
494-1976 874 DaJTell St., CM Shift. 17,000 ml.
'62 PORSCHE Cpe. Super. 548-2535 S21nl/offer. 494-ll!n
Chrome y,•bef:ls. Nlccj-'========~1-=========:.
thruo"t. 12450. sJ3.6689 .n' VOLKSWAGEN _spo_.i_c_•_r_, ___ 9_6_10
'63 V.W. Bug, compeHHon
---------1 yellow, 3 mo .. new Utta:,
1958 RENAULT Dauph.ine. chrome y,•hJs, rebll eng by
Reblt eng. New rear shocks. prof. w1th 6 mo guar. now
New t i re s • Economical. 7 wD old. New tnnisaxeL
Good trans, car. $125. Xlnt buy at $800. 494-0477
54&--0573 a1t 4 PM · \rw '64 Sedan, beJ&e, R/H,
'63 RENAULT Caravelle. w/'11. Top cond, clean It
Good cond. Two tops. 0Dl' &harp. PrY prtf S 9 5 O .
RENAULT '67 DATSUN I 6 0 0 con-
Wrti.ble, mint condition,
4.100 actual milet11, better
than new at consideral:lle
discount. Williams 494-4351
LOTUS Elite '62, lood cond.
will accept beat ofter. * ,.,._ *
owner, S550. 540-2006 673-155.l Antiques, Cl111lcs 9615
WANTED: Early V\V P.U. SUBARU or panel Cheap! 615-6875 19fO Ford Coupe Delwce -
or P.O. Box 993, Cotta hu 301 chevy eng. holly 4
1969 SUBARU . ?t.te&a. barrel, aluminum high riser,
Por1ehe 66 912 Coupe from $1297; 66 MP~ 1 •. ~61~vw=.-x1~,-,-"'-,,.,-. -Good~ =~.r ~= 1:~. to~
2 to choo&e. One with 5 speed. Cmnpl.ete foreign car service engine, RJH, 4 track 1tereo. rear end ~ rebuilt 3 speed
0ne with 4 speed. Both are Kosta Kustom Kars 56-W33 att s:~. with unkaae. new main s
equip. w/ all Porsche aCCH-1980 Harbor Blvd. 6.f6..54M 1967 V\V Immaculate. Ora: rod tieBrtrvs. tow "'r, new
aoties and both are mint in · owner. Am-Fm radio. Best rinp bucket seats, tinted
every detail. otter . 642-0010 Del A-tontell. pln!glus, chrome window
SUNIEAM '65 vw, low mil ..... good tram•. bl& rubber In "'"· J1rlupon
·311npo1 1~,
tires. excellent condition. total price $3~. Cati Bill
1967 SUNBEAM A1plnc. Muftt SUDO. 549--2819 SJ&.8411 Jl.B. -Sal mornlnc
sacrltlCt'! $1725. 673-9214 ONLY!
wknd1 or aft 4:30 pm. '62 V\V Bu5 $685. 642--2'i87,1936 "=~·F-ord~-.rl~ll-•~"'~.~,----· Hamilton & Meyer , St., .,....., • ... -
3100 W. Cout Hwy. Costa Mesa doors, complete with slasl
N e. h TOY OT & ·=-=""",...,-....,,.=-.,,== I $10 eL One front end, com-., • ., ,...,... e..·port ac 54C)..t"""• ,.., '68 VW Sed. Bltkl AM/FM. plf:te with A-frame &: lti"
-·~ 1---------Coco mats, & headen. Ask-wheels. Idell to rn a k e 1
Aulhorir.ed EM~llDe~er Toycta '69 Executive demon-trw $1150. 642-4147 Aft. 5 trailtf with $20. ·v.w. bl.ii
'67 PORSCH arga, 1trator. This deep blue Cor-•68 vw !low R/H 1tt.tl about 6' Jorw. $25 tor
black, xlnt cond .• $5900. oUa 2 dr. has only 1m5 mH· lthtttte ~~ ~· cond 3 of ttwm. CaU 536-841.1. H.B.
DIL)'ll. 8J.3-.66U.. Eves. es, fully equipped incl. ~at· 119501~ u ~ ·-49f.-.03.l1aft1:30 er. radtu. "'· 9nlls. Ser. No. ...a• o er ... ,..........,
303696 '65 VW, ni.dio, c b r<i me Avtol Wanted
Porsche 67 912 Coupe • •1695 wheels. NV tlrtll, lo mil~. --------
Bahama ~now jewel w/ .,.. clean. $975. ~ WE PAY · · ·
black ;ntor.. AM I FM, BILL MAXEY '68 VW >"utbad<. ""'' ''"" CASH chrome wheels. tint. rfan, l I I · 1 · :~ to"=· thruoul. 0th-ITIOlyJQITIAJ ~t• ~ k •"'Y '""'
• -· '60 VW sunroof. Org owner, 11111 BEACH ILVD. AM·nL Wlw. Xlnt cood
Hunt. Booch 147 .. 155 se!S. Pn prty. 612-.,..
for med can &: trucks just
call U1 fOr &ff tslimale.
GROTII CHEVROLET l1 rlt1p o11
~l 1npnr1<:. 3 mi N. of OJMt l{wy. on Bdl It VW BUS
TOYOTA -""~anll ~~=='°r ~!;.,.°"""' aoo!Z'· HEAflOUAR'TERS '16 VW, '"'1lo, -GOo4 """':~ -
-540ol'/S4 ELMORE --s.i -.11.1· -.:====::r::w===-· Authorimd MO Oealer ~1114 .LW"\JA'Qi _ . .,,, _,
·61 POll9Cii!i lit. LI"'"'"'· t>lm -llhd.. w_1--e"""'•t11""'vw"'."'sm="•-~1 ~.C:
$4400. o.n 6T>-SJJ.1 or .,_ -Xlm MECH. COND. BILL lllAXE'f TOYO'rA
, m.p NEW CAA AJUUVEDt -I ti Ulil Beacb Blvd.
64 Ct Xlnt Cond, cleRn, Ha~ 1i68 TQ)ot&-Jrl'. ~lte '64 VW $4 ~ Jt 8elc:h. . Pb. t47-Ell -·
AM/rM, l ownr. sm. w/ blACk In~ .• apeitdt • Phcne m.al4 • w:iiriit>. Earl¥ vw P.U.
673--9.139 or 61.~ ndlo. Lo mDe1. st'fM. [Mys ·s'f vw' $0. Cr Panel O...,r '1S.:a7S
OAlLY PILOT WANT ADS! 54,;..W.1. Eva. 068-3:!90 m.t126 or P.O. Box 993. Colta Mtta
'
FULL
PRICE
PLUS TAI & UCIHH I
JOHNSON & SON
PREMIUM
TRADE-INS! THE
CONTINENT Al.
INSPIRED
HERE ARE BUT A FEW OF
THE RNEST RE·SALE CARS MARQUIS
IN oµNGE COUNTY-BUY NOW AND SAVE!
'67 *ONTININTAL 4-Dr. SN. s3995 '61 COUGAR s3095 l••11ffhl C•lft•o Gr••n fini11! wfth S•xony yfw, fin, w/bU1. vinyl int., •.
1otin block iftterior, l1nd•11 roof, fr1111., RIH, ,S, 'di1.c I, driv111 only •qlllpp•d ..,;th •II th• lu .. ury ci r 11,000 "'i. ln1rn11c. Lie. VTM516
•ppolntm•nh. PS, Pl, 6 w1y ,,,t, P/W, AM-FM, '"''·
t1rnp. 1ir cond. pow•r door loel1, olc. One own•r
'67 MHCURY Co1ooy Park s2795 tr11IM•ln1d lik• now. l1l1nco of 11•w ,,, .,1rrtnty,
WAfllG4 ' p•11. ltt. wgn. Strkn9 orctlc wht
w/lurq. int., •· h"Hl., R&H, 1ir con.,
'67•CONTINENTAL 53895 PS, Pl, tilttcl will., ctr. fac. lrd 11tl,
11199. r1ek, d11al eel. t•ilt•*•· I ow,.. 4 dr. S.tfo1rn 9r11 fi11., drk 1 ... y e1r, mull 1•1 lo appr1,ialt. l it. UBH 757
91ld Inf,, If. Ivy gold l1ndt11 rooL
Furly lu.-. •quipf. i11c. 111f ttr119 whl.,
tltr•o ftp• 1y1I., full pwl":, I ow11r., '67 COUGAR s2295 b1111f. l'l'l•i11!. TRK424 Mid. bl111 ll'l•ftlic fi11. w/mtcJi. Int.,
•· tr•111., RIH, PS, •le. V•ry cl11 n,
'67 CONTINENTAL H.T. Cpo. s3995 Lie. UDRI I•
Altr•cli'fl trffc 9old flt1l1h with
'67 MHCURY Mont. 4-dr HT $2095 m•lchi119 l1.tJi1r inl1rior, •1111. fr•n1,
RlH, •ir cond ., PS, Pl, PW, 'w1y A1t1c 91ld fl11. w/mlch. Int., •.
pwr. 11•1. IS11ullfully m1i11i•l111d. l1l111c• •f 111w ci r tr1111., R&H. PS, Pl, f•c:. 1ir c:o11d.
w1rr•11ty. TXTllJ Lie:. TUV11•
'H CONTINENTAL C:..vt. 53495 '65 MHCURY Mont. s1895 Strlki119 •1111111'111 r1111el ll'li1t finish 4DSD "lr•111w1y". Arctic: whll1
with m1tc:hi119 interior I bltck lop. with medillll'I hl111 interior. fully f•ct.
Al you would ••ptcl •1110. tr1n1., eq1ipp1cl pl111 •ulo. tr1111. RIH, PS, Pl,
R•dio w/d1r10 t•pe 1y1fem, 111fom1tic limp, ,,, f1ctory •ir c111d., 0111 1wner. hnm•c. concl. VJE4&2
cond., 111+0,.,•lic 1p11cf conlre1, PS, Pl, • w1y 1••*•
P/W, etc. C•r1f11lly m1int1in1cf. 2•,000 •clu1I ,.1.
'H THUNDHllRD H.T. Cpo s2595 SQL220. . lt•ut, ttld bronit ••'· w/confr.
'H CONTINENTAL 4-Dr. SH. s3295 b1/91 iltt., 111•, 1q11ipt. thruout. F11ll
pwr, incl.•· tr1111., RIH, fee. 1ir,
Sil¥t r mid fi11i1h with bltck i11!1ri1r I 1w11., c1r1f11lly driv11. Uc. SIN529
I l•11d 1q roof, All th1 l11•11ry •p·
p•infm1nt1. PS, Pl, PW, • w1y 111t,
'61 MUSTANG 2·Dr. H.T. s2295 RIH •ir cond. Pl111 111fo11'11lic 1p11d c11fl1I, 1tt, J•,-
000 •c:lu1I ,,,;111. RUl997 lrlght turq. ••*· w/ll'l1tchi119 i11!.
F11lly ftc. 11111lpt., 11fta. fr•n1., RIH, ·
'6' CONTINENTAL 4-Dr. SH. 52995 PS, tic. Attr1c. I 1c11101'11. VCKl77
Erll'lit11 white ••lerier with bvrt1111dy
'65 CNIVROLIT 51395 111ther l11t1rior, 111to, lrt111. A~·FM,
RIH, .;., cond., full pwr., 1trn9., St1. W111. lmp1f1, l1rm11d• bl111
lwtkt1,' w1y tt•f, til t .t11rin9 wk11I, tic. SAl4]7. m1t1llt fin. wllllk vi11yl Int., •· lr•111,
RIH, PS, Pl, fee. 1ir. ihowt t 1c1I,
'67 MHCURT Colooy Pn s2995 c1rt . Uc. Wn•l2
Sit . W19. Arcftc white with bl111 'M IUICli'°WildJt 51095 dt ki•• lllftri1r. E111ipptd with 11110.
trt11t., RlrH. tilt it11dn9 wh11I, PS, 4 cir. H,T. lilt• trl. w/ttd.111 Inf.,
Pl, 6 w1y p1w1r 11tf. 11199•9• r11k. 1fc. Sold n•w I fvl.., pwr. 111ulpt., feet. tir, till tlr.
11rvic1d lty Joh111on I So~. TMEt72, itle Pric1J whl., .1 •••I bq. ·iac:T&~i.
t
Job.nson~son
LllCILI cnn11nal.. IAUJI. IEHllY .......
MN NA1101 MUln.._ ctlfA ....
JH•IUI
'
;
YOUR AD REACHES 81,972 HOMES EACH WEEK
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I~
I
= .... ' ......... . -· ..... --~ ... --·--~-' • -·:.-=·=------~~-.'".~.-.. ~_"""._::: __ :::.~ .. =.,: .. ::.: .. ~.:-:.~.=-~~:-:.~.-=.-=·.·.-_ .. _ .. _ ... ·.-.".".-.".'"." .. ~.""..~.""..~."". .. ~." .. ~."'."."'~.~-~==========::'.;'ii
-
TRANSPORTATION • TllANSPOIT~TION
•
Plus
Tm &
Uc:.
NEW · 1968¥2 CORTINA ~7.li C.1.0. 7/ hp •119i11e, fully 1yndlro11~•d " 1p•ed tr1n•1T1iJ·
,;on, 24 montJ1/24,000 111il1 w•rt•nty, di1c ~r1ket, .,;nfl b1,1ck1t
111h, fully, c1•ial1d, 1eroflow "'ntil1tion, h11t1r I da/10111•,,
iftt1rior & ,.,+,rior decor 'J'Oup1, W/S/W .fir11, peddtd dish I _.; .... ·'""s~·1;·7"7i" .. ,.,,.
Plus Tax & Lie. -:: Immediate Delivery
lHAT'S THE ONLY WAY TO. DESCRIBE THINGS AT
D~NTON FORD • . • • BIG. ~E~ECTIOI • .1 • •
BiG QIFALITY AND ·BIG VALUE •.• : . ~ ADD
TO THIS1 OUR· COMMITMENT TO-SEIVE
EACH AJtO IUYER .AS IF . HE ·WERE OUR ONLY
BUYER ~ND YOU . HAVE: AMPtE REASON TO SHOP · c"'""P
DUNTON FORD ••• AND YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!!!!
Plus ·
Tox &
Uc:.
ORDER
NOW
·, ..
Now In Our Sl;st.-
vEAR
SERVING
ORANG IE
COUNTY
Financing
:JN Al"PROVED
CREDIT
. : ' ' .
... -A!L USED CARS ARE SALE PRICED--.
·1'·~-c;ou•A• . s2· 64' 5 -v:lfe·lo~AM/FM ..... .... . ''5i '(fu.. •It con4., ttlt •°"'Mt.
.:-Ltoi ~ UEW llt. · . . . . _
'ftM. RIYllllA 51595 v.1, eut•t• ltlH, fr.111 pwr., f•c.
tit eor1d. Lie, No. WQU IOI .
~.~,.~~~ ...... H.T. V·I, .,,,,:$1695
lt&Ho PS, fee. olr co!ltl., -fir•"
tint.ti 91011. lie. No. TPF 115. ·
~::~ .• ~~~!.~.UH, '5,' 51495 fectory oir condilionln9.
l ie. N•. RSX l 14.
1'66 MHCURY 51895 2-Dt. H.T. ltO, Y·I, •1110., RIH,
PS, Pl, foe. oir c•ni., whito will
flt• ... 111yt '•e· Uc. N •. WXM 602.
itn vw
4 tpe9d redio, 11'.tttr.
Sor. No. 5Zl1751.
HU•/, FORD XL
2-Dr. H.T. ltO. V-1, t11te., RIH.
PS, Pl, whilo well lito1.
lie. No. llJ 349.
ltU.a,t.NIUl
~.,;i-.11 t:fh. $ed1n. 6 Cyl.,
slick sliltt, M•tor, whit• wO:ll
tires.-Uc._H•-OMIC-206.
~ ••• _ SI HAIL\ IS~ANOI.
5695
51095
-.. _ ..
-;••WHERE .THE DEALS ARE!"
ltH CHEYT SS
2•Dr, H.T. Y-1, •uf•., RIH, PS,
whit• w•ll tire•, tlnte4 91•••·
Lie. No. TPH l<tt,
51695
~~:~~~~~~~I•., R&H, PS, $1 995 "" ,,, ....... ~ ..... u """ I
tinl•d 11011. IJe. !'i.!:..UC?K 5)'~~--·----
lt67 GAi.AXii
2-Dr. H.T. V-1. eirto., RIH. PS,
f•e. eir cond., whit. wol/ tiro1,
tlntod tl•1•. lie, No, TUN 201. 51995
1'66 COUNTRY SQUIRi , 3· 95 JO Pe1•on90T. 190, Y-1, eulo.,
R&H, PS, foe. oit eonO., lu99•9•
roclr. lie. No. TIK 609.
1H5 FAIRLANI s1095 2-Dr. H.T. V-1, ellfo., lt&H, ,_,, '
,t.erin9, whit• wtH tlror, tint.d
9l•n. lie. Ne. NQX 615.
lt61 MUSTANG · $2295 2-Dr. H.T. eutomttlc, RIH, ''""''
1toerin9, whit• well tires, tinttd
1le11. lie. No. VHI 411.
196~ DART
4·Dr. Sod1n. 6 C)'li~d1r, 11110·
,,..tic, r•dio, h11!1r,
lie. No. TYL 611.
19.66 MONZA c ... p •• Allt•fl'lltlc, rtdio,
heotor-Uc. No. TFT 1.57.
51495
Ope1 8:30 A.M. • 9 P.M. Mon. ;Fri. Sat. lo 5 P.M:
2240 So. Main at Warner e Santa Ana New cars .. 546-7070 used cars 1 ::;: ~~ND;1~0
·-··--·==== --·-
Autos W1nted . .H • .910Q Used C1rs 9900 --·-----Used C•rs 9900 Ustd Cars • 9900 ---CONTINENTAL COtiTINENTAL CORVAIR CORVAIR CORVAIR '
WE PAY CASH ,
FOR YOUR CAR
CADIUAC CHEVROLET CHEVROLET '62 Conllnental ,'66 CONT. Fact. air. full 61 Corvair Auto. No. LRG693 '65 OORVAih 2 dr. HT. '61 CORVAIR W a&' 0 n :
N '68.CHE.VY· II . '65 Chevrolet needs i;:~1~S::· ssoo · :.:.rsro':·;.::;61~~· T $l!l!IA Fullil bll'ri«U. s Min =~H~Day~~ yellow. Good cond. ?v1ust
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa 1>f~sa !14$-1200
Will Buy
YO!JI" Volkswacen or Por!che
Ir; pay top dollars. Paid for
or DOt. Call Ralpb
673-1190
Auto Le11ing
*AUTO lfASIHG *
. ./ ALL MAKES
./ C0t.1PETETIVE PRICES
Cort Fox Auto Leising
224 \V. Coast High\vay .
Neo1,1rpGrt Beach 642..S440
Usod C.~'::;":_ ___ 9900
JOHNSON & SON'S
BARGAIN BASKET
'59 Lincoln Capi·i CJX' .. $3,qj
h.ir, po\\--er, JPC'i05
'59 Imperial 4 Dr ...... $395
l.d3aron, air, power. OS.1169
·57 Cadillac Cpe ()(> Ville S3S5
Power, 54,946 mi, GM041J
'61 Ford Gal 4 Or ..•. , .$3!l>
Power, GGZ164
·59 Pontiac Cal 2 Dr .... $395
Power, rNBOOO
'58 Rambler 4 dr Custon1 $395
One owner, 37,0'.XI mi JBU~
'61 Pugcot 4 Dr ....... ,$295
4 speed, econ, PLN658
JOHNSON & SON
LINOOLN-MERCURY
642·7050
19-11 Harbor Blvd .. C.M.
TRANSPORTATION
CAR SALE
Credit problem! $('(' us for
instant delivery, low priCt'i;,
easy terms. We dccldo on
10ur credit. Call or come
m today.
540-4J'2
ILUE CHIP
AUTO SALES
21,.5'°,ltarl>or. Costa il1f'sa
WE PAY CASH FdR
YOUR CAR PAID
FOR OR NOT!
IUICK
'62 CAD. Cpe DeVille. Full
power, Factory Air, Good
tires t.1echanical. Ha!! '69
lit'. S1095. Mrs. Cashen Days =· Wec~end & Eves.
.. li1~AO Sed. de Ville. Full
p1\'r. lat. air. Loaded w/pwr.
$500! 879-0088 (Fullertonl
62 SEDAN DeVille .. Im·
maculate! Air Cond. Power
Steering, brakes, seats &
1vindo11·s. A Bargain al
$1100. 548-5508
'68 EL OOR{\00. 13,250 nti.
Loaded! Firemist green,
vi,nyl top. Mr. Merrill ,.,,...,..
'67 or '68 Convertible~. lo\V
nii. on both, air, full pwr,
1''1\t. make offer. O\vner
""""' 1968 CADILL.AC Sedan De
Villti. 12,000 mi. White
w/blur int. Fully equfp.
$5495 Private party. 549-0165
'68 CPE de Ville, loaded.
White on white, must see.
~250. 673--84&t * '49 CAD. Needs engine
overhaul. $20), f i r m .
646--0698 aft Sor wknd!.
'56 CAO. 4 Dr. hdtojl: xlnt
body & inter. Needs valve
job. $95. 548-0019
'60 CAD Conv. Very good
cond. See at Union 76 Sta-
Uon, ·Newport ' Fairvit'W
1963 COUPE De Ville. l
tamily car. FUD p\vr, air.
'1500.~. • .
CAMARO
'67 Cam1 i-o Ai r Cond,
Su~ sport· model w{ e._yecy
conclevable extra. Included
are cust9111 Interior. padded
top, auto trans, full flO\.VCr,
fold down ~ar seat .. l'tc.
20.000 loc'Ol mi~ am still
11ndcr raetory warranty.
Sho1vroon1 condition.
.J1 rtuport
311n pons
3100 W. Coa&t Hwy.
Newport Beach
&12.9405 .i!U-J71).t
Authorl.ied MG Dealer
CHEVROLET
IQ suia< WildCll t 1 Dr,
pwr. .-r. A br1<,., good 1960 CHEVROLET StaOon
t'Olld." fn5.. 6 7 s -2 4 9 2 ; \\'aaon. imtnac. xlnt oond. m4177 orig owner. 5f6-0&l8
ll & CH A J'f IC S Special! '6,'j CONVERTIBLE. likt
Beu&lflll '62 Buick. Ideal nrw, 29,000 nU. $141)1). Eves
~ car whee hxt'd. :1·~1189 De.ya &16-QUO
PJ I ' \II~ \·in)I I ~JANY WQNDdtnn.. OP. ~ .... aond. DllaOt car PORTUN1TO:S bl•• beoD
.. ..---I · 1 d11covr:t'f'd bl ClulJfied Ada. Pi't'i ,...,.. "150 .• ,........ Turn b•<* to ·t~ Op-
01Ii:Y PDDf WAJtlT ADS! pon11n1tkl" NOW!
I
ova senes. Al'.'• a~tomauc SS lnlpala Sport Coup!', a.1----'--~cc.;;,___ erms va I e . . SOCK IT 'I'tl 'EM! sell! $270. Priv. party
tt:ans., power steering, Ra· beautiful gold metallic fin. 1,D::A~IL:;,;Y,;P,;ll;;,;.oT=W;:.AN:;,T;,AD;.1•;i:· ":;':L'CHARG~=~E~Y;::""'~w~a~nt~a~d~n:;ow;·~,,;;5;;15;,;E;;·;,;"';;'·=San=ta=A"oa'=~==':======::-7':'96=Z.=1:'588=====::~ d10, Jicater, + other cxtras. . 1 'ih ddl b olt<t seats I
Low miles. # 243161. ~s · \':'1 5~ e u New C1r1 9800New CirS 9800 New C1n 9800 New C1rs 9800 New C1rs· 9800
$2090 1n!er1or. 4:i.OOO a.ell.I~ local Ii.;~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;~ n1iles, factory air llfith pow· GUARANTY er. Chee!<" this low full p1;cc.
CHEVROLET Lie. NPA ~695
Al ~taEA;;lhF~w•Y JOHNSON & SON
Santa A.na 543--9311 Lincoln-M~rcury
'66 CHEVROLET-1941 1-tarbor Blvd. 642-7ffi0
CAPRICE V.'AGON '64 IMP;ALA
V-8, pv .. r steerifig, radio & Factory .air, radio, heater,
heater. Factory air. $2295. automabc tr~.. Po we r
South Coist Motors :steering. Local car. Very
ford.l\t~rcury clean. VZX 205. ,
303·Broadway, Laguna Beach · $7~
<94-8515 "'~3851 GUARANTY
4 SPEED
SPECIALISTS
H IGH PE RF ORMANCE
C USTOM CARS
LARlJf5T SlLE(TION IN
ORANG~ COUNTY
Selected Auto
Center
1 l0J2 Hod>O• BIHi
~ J 1 ~1>41>
CHEVROLET
711 E. 11th St.
Al Santa. Ana Freeway
Santa Ana 543-93ll
'68 Chev lmpal-,-
SPORT COUPE V..S
Radio &. hl'alel', fact air
rond: p\\'f :sir., aulo trans.
$2395. "
South Coast Motors
Ford-MeITury
303 Broad\\·ay. Laguna Beach
494-8515 ' 549-3851
'_66 E.l CAMINO . 66 CHEVELLE 61:427 eni;:.
V8, Fae. A11·, power stecrrni: . .i sp. 4111>0;i.tra1cion. Sl900.
radio, heater. P. 21527 5-10-8603 I
$1590
GUARANTY
CHEVR9LET
711 .E. 17th St.
Al Santa Ana ·f'l-ecwny
Santa An11 · ~11:\-931 1
'57 CHEVY . Nec d s i
g 1· 11 r.1·;1 tor, eXe>'llcnt I
urholstery. ~150. 891H!M20 1 '67 CAPRICE 2 dr HT. A/C, I
Loaded 1v/xlra~! Xlnt cond. j
$24::.0 ·19!J..427ll 1vknd~ only I '63 CHEVY 2 door Biscaync',
!!lick shift. 6 cylinder, S17:J.
1
642-0116 .
'66 CHEV R,OLET-
tAPR1cr. COUPE ~:"
l27 . Eni;:inc. raido & h~11Ler.
P\l'l' stN'l'ir1z. f'1l'I 11.j_r. S2·1$
South c .. ., Moto rs CHRYSLER
Ford·Mercury _ . , ..,__ i;----
300 Broa.dl\o·a:f. Lai;:urm Beach ,63 Ch I "~O"" 4!14-S515 51~3351 rys er 'f ,,
CHEV '65 Jnipala 2 dr. Spt. Ha'rdtop coupt!: this specialty
Cpe. J27 e11g, Auto trans. ~ar of 1he ~!tr lamlJy r~act. Air. P/S. R.H. Tinted 111 .spollen m •!s ~s?eU gla.~. $1395. Pr. p 1 Y . ":h1le and .matching interior.
673-441!2 factory air, power stttri~.
po"•er brakes. po"'·er "·in·
1967 EL Ca111ino. 4 !!peed .. dows, aulomatk trans. ra·
speci~I suspension • 396. rll(l nnd h~!cr. Lie. NYO.
Blacli, pl'l'SOllUI c-:1r. llCIV 234. Full pritt
tires, 1st clas.~ cond, $~. $1095
,,..""· JOHNSON & SON
'63. BEL Air .4 rloor. 2.10. Lincoln-Mercury
Llk(' l'l('W, or1', 01vncr, 19 1941 Harbor Blvd &12-1(l)() mpg, w/pwr gld. $995. ·
646-1409 '61 NEW Yorker 4 Or. hdtp.
STATION \Va,gon '65 Be) Black; new tires; pwr.
Aitt, Power 8'.B. new ti.res. Perf. com. Best offer
IOQd cond. $1295. 838-TI411 :536-4844iii-=~==::-"""...,.
'$.1 Chevro!et, 6 cylinder,
stick 5hifl S75.
• 642-5790 •
l!r,S CHRYSLER N « 'w
Yorker. Good cotld. P/1,
P/b. air, elc. $275, 646-~
'69 at.EV. IJ: lady's carl---------
"9i), Jl91 Harl~• Blw.. CONTINENTAL
Co&ta ,Mt11. ~
'59 Lincoln, 4 dr hardtop •
New tires. Xlnt rondition.
,...----;-1969 CORVETIES
LARGEST SELECTION IN
ORANGE COUNTY
• CONVERTIBLES • HARDTOPS • FASTBACKS
V 300 H.P., 350 H.P. & ~00 H.P.
V CHOICE OF COLORS
V CHOICE OF MODELS
V CHOICE OF EQUIPMENT
CHEVY TRUCK CENTER
~--
'69 CHEVY 1/• TON
SUBURBAN-· CARRYALL
Turbo Hydr1m1tic. ]SO cc. en9in1, pow1r
lle1rin'jl. pow1r br1U1, t .S0.16 tir•t, 111
h1•wy d11ty 1quipl., cwliom inl1rio1, 1tc.
Ser. No . ••lO. '1 000 Off ..... Dlsc•t111t Stletw ,,lu
=-'69 CHEVY 108 VAN
Y11. F111ly '•clorv •t111ipp1d i11cl11di11'!1
'"'"'f ••tr•1. Si r. No . l&Ot. IMMEOl~TE
OELIV EJIY.
$2595 FULL PRICE
'69 CHEVY t;, TON
I ' FLErTSIDE
Fully f1ctory oq11ipp•lll i11.
eluding mtny e1tre1. s ••.
Ne. 0522.
FREE .. FREE .. fREE
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
50 GALLONS OF GAS
WITH PURCHASE OF ANY NEW CAR OR TRUCK
ON PRESENTATION OF THIS ADV. AT THE TIME OF PURCHASE ·
'68'S AT FANTASTIC SAYINGS
HERE IS YOUR CHANCE TO BUY A 1961 CHEVRDtET
ANO SA'l'E YOURSELF HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS
• DEMONSTRATORS • EXECUTIVE CARS
e IMPALAS e CAPRICES e WAGON e CORVAIRS e CAMAROS
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e '6.1 OlEVY i
BttutU ~I ConcUHonl
$100 •• 6~7321 -$300. Priv prty. 644-0141 '!,,..,...,..,..,..,...,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!lllB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!~
r I T, ~
(' __ L_ I --~--------J-I I
-·-·--------H> ---~-
L _____ _
' •
I
-----··----~-------~-----------·---~--
I •
I CADILLAC 10~ NINETEEN SIX.TY-Nm£
r·
. '
JANUARY -. . ,
I .ALE · . .' '
• ' 1967 CADILLAC .•
T' f•vely. Coupe D• Ville he• ell ,_., e••i•+. l11clocllnf p•w!tr •t•erint,
"'llreli•S. wi11Jow1, 1eet e114 Ca4111ac'1 fa1110V1 fe1terr elr c.e1141tie11i11t1 •ktt• At.C-Fhf, tilt wheal, twill9ht .,nt., "•11du'" D9'1bl• E•tle tiru.
'la•.tlfi.I loc•lly drlv•"4 fi11a •1tt9MMll•. IYAX710) . $
SALE 4333.PRICE
.. 1963 CADILLAC
1966 CONTINENTAL
lea11tif•I S•nd lait• with !»leek •il't'fl top aitd fllll t .. tftar i11t1rier. This
tblVlirHJ a11to1r1obUe i• cem~aly aq1i1ipped with •II tlM pop1i1!•r power tlf!Wlp....W.~ h1cl11dlfltl 1to-r wl~aw1, pow1r 1e•t, AM JM radl• •"' fee•
l to,., air «"4ltie11l11. Tlril1 c•r ii •b1olwtely 1ar9Mu1 •Ml M.t be Criven
fa IM ful., apprecl•t•d. (SIY9'4l) !
SALE $2777 PRICE ..
; !
• 1966 BUICK
CH'to"' lASal»r1 4 Door h1rdfop. s,.Hilin<J toil ~111• with t11•kh~ i11+.r·
f.,.. f•ciery air co11ditio11in<J, awtafftO'tic tre111mlt1i:<ati, .,_., 1toad11,
-p-tl" irekel. r•lllle, ha•tar. etc, Thily • flM~•llf~ ·'ftl9t 111111t IM
'"" .,; driV~ t• ,,.,,.;,,, it• m ISIW'991 . ,, $ . .t'.1
SALE • ~-2 ., PRICE . -'
. . .;J.64,.CAf>~, c .
Tho ,,. ••• popultr Oll'.uPi o."Vm. ff,.,;t. la 1r••S:wfth .. Iii.to ,.,.
decf top •nd hm1rfa1111 w\lft Jaa#iw i•t.,lat-..:· olutely 1 .. 4 ... i.lncludlltf
powlH' 1te.ri11t.tirah1·wfiwl"•·•••t~t wl11-...fn111k 111 Nl.IH, ottf-.
Nnfi11el, Alr.f.fM rtdio i nd much ntore plus 'f.ecto,., •ir ct11ditlo11in9.
IJTEtt21 .
SALE $1999 PRl.CE •
1967 CONTlNENTAL
)I. ba1utilul tttrqual1a 4 door with lurquoi1a full la•ther i11tarlar. All tho
populel' power '"htt i"cl1din9 power •faeri11f, lw•lra1, wllldow1, •Ht.,
f1clary •Ir colldltlt11i•t· Tllh c•r i1.Jblolrdat, fellfHtlc in1ida I •111 •11d
just waiti111 for ffltt porffular 1»11.,.r. ITGM771).
SALE s3333 PRICE
'
• fRUWAY ClOll ~ FIOM AMYW'Nlll ~ NI OIAJMI coum
I 1 MU SOUTtl Of
IANllllOIWT.
HMAllOl llVD.
.
' • •I '
A Masterpiece from ...
• • . The Master Cra~smen
~ ' On Display and Ready;for Delivery Todayl
ORDER YOUR 1969 CADILLAC NOW !
LEASE DIRECf • FAST DELIVERY,
FAST SERVICE
LARGEST SELECTION
OF LATE MODEL PREVIOUSLY OWNED
CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY
1968 EL DORADO"' "" '''''" " °""''· .,,;.u;. ,, ·i..°>!<;• ~· • with balg1 peddff roof 0114 pld l11tarlor. Tnt wli•"-~ tMr1111r
44 p-•r ltr11lre1, powor wl11Cow1, power ,aet, power <rtflt-Tn4ows,
power trunk lld 111le•1i •nd ~•ny m.,.. lu .. ury.~•t f•afoNI $ 64 i11cludi111 C.dillec f•c.fary •ir co11d itlonh1t• l•fjf!r t'tliera firlf
-: ... •" th& .ltewty. fVTU47l ~ 1 <; · • 'J • •-.... , .... \ . ' .. _,,
~-
t ' • ,
''' C•iipe DtVlh) $4999 '
SAW DEPARTMENT OPEN
8:30 A.M. "'9:00 P.M. MONDAY thru FRIDAY
9:00 A.M..to.6:00 f.M. SATURDAY and SUNDAY
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1969
r .· JANU~ARY
.SAtE .. \
.SA~E
1966 THUNDERBIRD
Tiie 1party Z 4oor llerdtop 11 hilly oq11lppff wlflri ,_., 1teerl"" ,..., •
breka1, pa-r wl11dow•, pa-r., .. et ,114 H.4'1 faMMI. fe.tory •Ir Mii•
dltle11!111. A hauflf11I 1•tl11 tl!Wr aderl4r wttt.itil1tla.,,.,.'rir.tarlef. 'Mti•t
ba •••n I tlrlv1n to fully •ptW"ecl•f91 (·RTUJJt I•,
SALE ,222 PRI~!!
196S "THU.NDERllRD ' : j
let14t• h•rdtop. A baeutlful ttpphlra 1»1110 T;ilrd with the white lalMltu
roof, •II vfrryl i11terlor. Full power aq11lpNt1t Incl. power ltrekt1, ,_..,
1fa1ri119, ,ewer whu'•• ... p1war tMf •Ml ftclory tit colldltfOfllilf. Iv!·
ouht•11dil\f ctr at •1ttsf11Mi&fl$ M•I .... (M.PPIZI I
SALE 1666 PRICE
1967 CADIUAC
Flaeht_, lr .. tllem. Mof..tlc1 rettl ti'"' wffli ............ .., 1"4
bl1ck t•pa1try '"' lae~~ .... ~ ,_",'W-'l"h~ t.roblt
wlndow1, .. nt windows. tr•nlf'IHiihrel.._. Ston.irH!., M erJ t.l....,ie
1leeri119 wh1al pl111 factory. eir Mfldi~llf· lllk:'f·JJ.fl_ $ . -
SALE 4166 PRICi ! --.-. --
...
1968 CHEVROLET
c.,n .. c.u,. fi11hhecf hi 1lllt'llllloriltf °'"''"° wAlte wit+t lilae:k .,,..,. ,..,
•114 bl.ck btoc•Ca tlotft l11terlor. F.U, eqelppad with J27 VI •lltl"'
aul011Mtic tra111mlulo11, p.wet 1taarll'lt.. ,._, We••s. power 11•f1, ~
., wllHllo• .. , •• no •!Id ......... y,, wo11't nn.,.. thl1, bu It •• 1,. "·
....... h •• ,_SALE' '"pif fEi)""··
•
'
Your Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Hc'Hbor Area
NABERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd.., Costa Mesa
540-9100 " " ..
_. ____ ..,_
/,
' I
I
I '
•
' .
• • *• --.---...-----·~--... ,.-.... ry-.-.. ..... ..-fT"'IF'lt +1<~1.*r.""'r""r,"" __ ,... _______________ ...,,_ __________________ .,..,. ______________ _
H Do\11.Y PILOT ' .
--, ' '
1969 TEMPEST
SPORT 'COUP.E
•
""'*•· tr•ns., t i11!1d 9l1u, h11d111h, whilo
w1ll1, h11!1r, b1c~-up lit.1, wir11hhi1ld w11h-
1r, d1y-11it1 r11r vi1w mirror, 1m1r91ncy 4
w1y fl1d11r1, 1hould1r ~111 h1rn111, ov•rh11d
c1rn, I JS 11,p. 1n9i11•, und1rco1lin9, WI ltd
lif1lil'l1 lub1ic:1tion, Midnil• 9r11n w-m1tch·
in9 inl1ri0f", 12J3279Z6004S4).
1969 FIREBIRD
400 HARDTOP COUPE
Cordovi top, '400 cu. in. 1n9ln1, hirbo Hy-
dr1m1lic, d1lu•1 wh11I di1c1, d1luK1 if1•r•
ing wh11I, con1ol1, pow1r 1!11 rin9, powr
di1c br1k•1, F71h l4 wide ov1 I rid 1lrlp1
lir11, btck up lites, lteefer, w.1ltield we1her,
dey·ni le •••• vi•w 111il'f'er, •111•rv•ncy 4 wey
fle1her, Ducket ••eh, 11nd1rcoet, w•l, life·
time lubric1tion, 15 t•l1. g11. Midnit• t reen
w·F1wn top. !22l79ll 117641 .
$3477
NEW 1969 '
.GRAND
PRIX
FULLY EQUIPPED!
Equipp•d with -Heater • Buck•t S••ti • Disapp••rlng Windshield w ·ipers •
V-8 Engine • Deluxe Vinyl Interior • Out1ide R • • r View Mirror • Seat Belts.
Also Includes
FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING
'.WE HAYE THE • $
. -:LaRGEST ~EtECTION
.. :_·Qf 1969 'P ~NTIACS
.IN ~ORANGE OUNTY! ---------------.. QUALITY COllTROLLED SAFETY TESTED I
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A FEW LEn!
196~ PONTIACS
·PRICED B!LOW INVOICE!
1968 Catalina
4 door htrdtop. R1dio, h11l1r, powll' 1t1erin9, fi e·
tory eir, EZ·•Y• g1111, white will ti111 . l ie. VFR 129
1968 Firebird "350"
2 door htrdlop. R1dio, he1t1r, f1clory 1ir, 111lom•lic
tr1n1mi11ion, buck1t 1•at1 & con1ol1, pow1d 1le1rin9
I EZ·•Y• gl111 I d1eor trim. No. 22ll71Ul4Sl59
1968 V1 'Jra
2 door htrdlop. Full 1q11ipmen!, induding r1dio, heel-
•r, 1utorn~tic t11111mi1fio11, f•ctory 1ir, cordo .. 1 top.
2 to ch001e. lie. VUT 2?t I UTM 2)9.
1968 Firebird "350"
2 door h1rdlop. R I H, big JSO VI, •11!011'11 tic lr1111 ·
mi11ion, b11ck1t 1eoh, con1ol1, cu1tom trim, PS, PB,
R•Jly wk10J1, wid• 0 .. 11 red li11• tirt1, c111tom color.
VZR 182
I 4 dr h~r!~!1y ~q~!~~~~ .. ~·~ Pl I
windows, t lto. tr1n1., RIH I f1c'lory 1ir condition·
ing, cordo"' lop. l to choose. l ie. No. EDY SOO
& l ie, No. VOW 759.
I 1968 Catalina
2 door hardtop, r1dio, h11i•1. f1ctory ,:,, EZ·•Y•
gl111, d1cor trim, whit• wal ltir11. l ie. URH 257
1968 Le Mans
2 door h1rdtop. Wide hlectlo11 colors. l11rqvol11,
1111roon, blu•, 9old, rid, 1fc., 111 wif!.1 1•m1ining fie.
tory w1rttnly. Moil with f1clory 1ir. 6 to choo,1
f10111. '\ •
*SE HABLA ESPANOL*
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I USED CARS !
I '63 CHEVY NOVA
2 door h1rdtop. 6 cyl. V1ry I cl11 n. lie IXI OOl
'68 CHEVELLE M1libu $2395
2 door h1rdtop. VS R & H. Full ' .
r1m1ining f1clory w1r<1nly, low
ftli111.
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I '65 PONT. Grand Pdx $1795
I R & H. PS, PB. f1c!ory 1ir con·
dilioning, low mil11. Ivory with
bl1ck cordo .. 1 top I melching inl1rior. l ie. I RTX 128
I •45 PONTIAC Ventu•• $1695 2 door h1 rdtop, RI H, PS, 1ir
I co11d itioning. Sil .. 11 gr1y with
bl111 trim. V1ry cl1111, I own1r ci r, lie.
RPC sro " 1--------
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'64 CHEVROLET Imp. $1395
4 door h1rdtop. RI H, VI, PS, '
f1clory 1ir. l .. ory with blue
trim. lie WEA 164
1--
'67 CHEVROLET $1995
I 1/i ton pick up , I ft btd.
Style1id•. VI, turbo hydro..,1t ic,
R & H, d1lu•1 trim, prim tirtl,
I 1l1p bv111p1r, very cl11n,
--------1 '63 VALIANT Signet
2 door h1rdtop. R I H, lvlo·
I m1lic tr1n1mh1io11, buc~el
111h, lie No. KGO 807
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'66 CHEVY lmpol1 $1995 I RI H. ""ll7 VB"', PS, (.,1,,.,
1i1. / .. ory with bl1ck trim. Lie I SYW I ll. .. ______ _
'64 COMET Cyclone $995 I
R I H, VI, 4 speed, buck1t
111h I con1ol•, red with perch·
ment fri111. l ie AXW 586. I ' .
' '62 CHEVRO(ET 'lmpal1 $995
STATION WAGON. R & T, PS,
f1clory 1ir, lm1cul1te in
.i. .•very d1 t1il. Ivory with gold trim, HZF 191.
'64 CHEVROLET $1495 I ~;.pr!~,!~' .~~.'~';."Ps~ ~.~~u. I
blue, m1tehing trim. Blick tr;m
with I cordo"• top. lie FMM 090. I
'66 PONTIAC Cat1lin1 $2395
STATION WAGON. 9 p1ntn·
gtr, RI H, 1ulo tr1n1, PS. PB,
Foctory 1ir, roof 11c~, bu1g1111dy wi!h bl1d1
lop I m1tching interior. Lie. IPS 683.
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'67 FIREBIRD 400 $2995 I 2 door h11dlop. RI H V8~
111!0 lr•n1, PS, EZ·•v• gl1u,
f1etory 1i1, cor~o .. 1 lop, mtg ... he1h, $11110 I
lap1 pl1yer, l ie, UKA 499 , R1m1ining fie ·
tory w1r11nly. I
'67 PONTIAC $3195 I lonn1 .. ill1 l1ovghm. 4 door
h1rdlop, RI H, PS, P wi11dow1
I 1!1ering I brek11. EZI gl111, f1clory 1ir. I
cordowa top. lwory with m1tching inl•rio•.
R•m •ini11g f1ctory w1rr111ly. lie. TXC 418 I ---------
• SALES HOURS • • SERVICE DEPARTMENT •
Mon. 1 1.m. Till 9:00 p.m. Mon. thru Sat., 9:00 A.M. till 9:00 P.M.
Sun. 9:00 A.M. till 6:00 P.M. Tues. tt"u Fri. 7,00 1.m. Tiil 6:00 p.m.
, S.nice Dept. CloMd S•t. and Sun,
ONG PRE
13600 BEACH BLVD.· WESTMINSTER <BEACH BLVD. AT GARDEN GROVE FWY.J -CALL 892-6651 or 636-2500 ·
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• 159 PLYMOUTH Belv.
-.,__Cllf'.lfl(Kml
" T ...... 1 ... CIOCI rnl\ti. '
·'°'". 5 595
'66 CHEVROLET Monza
• ~ '""'' rMJo, iw.i.r. f.ct. 11r. (0""')
5·1188
'67 CHEVROLET
'"'""' 1 OODr MrdtOI> • ..,., 111tlM. "°""" sf99lr'Mo r9dll
·~-· '"s; 688
'63 .GRAND PRIX
• •" •loM p,l ilr CCl!dl'llOnlnl. tKQ1''1ll
1 _,.er, v.a. 1utcim• .... • ~
51188 .. ' ..
'68 ROADRUNNER
• ,,..i,rldltd Mlttf', (VTM• , •2688 ·-
! .
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•63 STUDEBAKER ~ark '
..-fl-*" w.-. V-1, aulo!Mllc. .ic. t~I ..
CaMltlfll. 1IJC 66S).
5788
•66 CHRYSLER 300 ·
• " • , f·--11r. vln'!'I
1
doO< fl ..... f.11111 lfalll·• .,.,,, r ." .._""' ....... ~.'i388
' ' ' •
' PllMO· t . ..! ,:>
•11<111. "'"-11, 1969 D.llL y PILOT _n !
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CASH or TRADE
1'1..US TAX AHO llCNSI
1 DELIVERS
. ' ,. T > ·D .I
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BRAND NEW
1969 VALIANT
2 DOOR SEDAN
DtUv1red In Cotti Miii
. '
ON APPROvED ~
~R.EDIT .. '
I
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0,. 1 fBLING Cul
..• NY's No.. ·1 SELLING CARI
' • •
-AND NOW " ~l~~S ,UST IMPORT BUY!
ORANGE.COUNn'S
l~RGJ:Sl'
INVENTORY
NOW
DISCOUMTf
TO
CLEAR!
DELUXE 2 & 4 DOOR
e 100 MILIS PIA HOUI
' ,e '2 MILD Pll GALLON
• e DllMUKll •
• FULL 5 PASS. SIZE
' I ........ IN 12.• SICONDS
e LUXURY ~UALITY IOTH
IN~IDE AND OUT
•
SPORT CAR
• . .
' NEW 1181 FALCOI Z•IR
• . PRICE INCWPIS 'BLACK SIDEWAW
• ' "ND+sfA'}j_DAAl>'lllll · clPS. ORDER JlidAY.1
' • >• . ' W 1989·FAIRUllE 2 DR..HAUTOP
·" • , .. ~ :" " •' .\:$39,88
' " .
/. . . ' ~ SED~N·s ..
GT 2 & 4 DOOR
FAMILY CAR
BUDGET ~AR • PRICE INClU!>fS BLACK SIDEWAUS .
ANO STANDARD HUB CAP5. ORDER TODAYI
PRICE lllCLUDES ILAC(.SIDIWAUS ·
AND STANO ARD HUB CAPS,1 Oii!!* 'TODA.YI
• ' ~· • • ' ' .1
SEDANS ..
ST4TtoN WA~NS
IN YOUR CHOICE OF
A .S,D. 'or. AUTO, TRANS.
SAVI TODA Y! •
TU~t:.,~MPll
WtTH •6' CHIVIOLIT PICKUP ~ 1, s......,) refrlttr•laf, sllllr. dllllTtll. («3113.I.!. Wll. ~ at <1rldot.
' $17 95 ~~~. '$56::
FULL PRICE 30 Months
'65 rd Golaxie
500 ~ Doll!" K.lrctloP. V.f, IUlolNflc, r~io. "'''''" -r tU•r1"". (VIJ 006), 211"' clown Or lrecle. llkle 8* prlctl SU25.
$895 ~~. $32 :..:
'64 Clievrolet Malibu Wag.
11:..iio. tie.• ....... ....,. (()Ml~· •• dowll Cll' ln<59. ' ,.
$7 95 FULL $29 Pw U ' PltlCl Me.n. . '
'65 SUNBEAM ALPIN~
llKlf,• nd ,.,~ tDp • lnltrkll' w~ wi..tll. CVZU-'51 ), 21)':. dl;Jwn or lr..ie. .
$1 695 ~:t $38~.::..S
'61 For4 F350
Ceb 5695~~ ~ ~s29· :r..:
WINNEll OF OVER
300 'FIRST ,LACES
IN RACES & RALL)'S
IN 25 COUNTRIES!
IEW 1919 IUSTAll 2 180R HARDTOP . -.
•• .. • SAVE ON -• .... ' ...
. ---rR!Ef.-ti!EluOu~~ut:
AND STANDARD IRJI CAPS. Olilll TDOAYI
___ d;
Fbua wtNOS j
~---'.
SCOTSMAN I\
. .
. FAOJOlYc CWRAlOEI SHEW GT COBRAS!
\ 1'l1t '69'1 ..:•w &;..,...~,only authofized Sli1lby Col>it'~;.
1ft ~ill'o:iiui -'ill tii llctor(io clean tho ~sl of thi '68'• 1t'thl gi~lilt
discounts wt'vt ·O on Mwtic.1'1 nln'nber ,ane high performance wl rJ
GT 350's ... ·l¢'s-SOO KR's -1.~POS, AUTO. TRANS., cONv 'l.ES . ' ~
Full ~. •Ir condltlol'llMI. (P'TU10lll a llOwn or .....
l1195'·=· CAA ,., JI .............
'64 Buick Riviera
Fult ,.ow1r, ....... AAr ·(111'111. (RI R 1n1 ~ doWW Of
trio.. . •
$1395 ~.~. $49 :~.:.~.
'62 CHEVROLET 9 Pass •.
Bet Air Wnon. Fully E•ulP!led. (QUDJIJI. '°"' dl:fWll or lraoH.
Transportation Speclols
Now•"''/'"' II c•n per •••k th1t c111
be ret•ll• at whol111I. te the ,ublic.
le1t th• cl••l•r1 '" th•M elcler ••ri. .
SAVE!!
THUNDERBIRD · SALE
7 t• cho"• frolft. 2 4fff •M -4 ~•et
mod•ll, H~rdtop' onl ~•ui. Afl •Ith .
1ir co111litionin9 end full p•w•r. So1J1e
with "•r•o t1p11 '6 4 thr• '67 Mi'•"·
lXAMPLI
'6 7 T ·Bird Landau
R1dio, h•1i-1r, llet•o t1p11 tjltwh•1I, •u·
lol'Hlllq, powtr 1t•1r)n9-t.r•ktt·w111~0w1°
1e•t, •Ir wt1li .. i'tctory w••r••tf:" 1vn.
OSl I. 20 %,. tioWll•Of h 1d1. " · • !'
$2895 .:~~I $78 ';:~O:Hi
$295 ::.~ $18 ~~.J~,
'64 Mere. WCHJOn 10 Pass.
Cololr/' PuL Full JtOWV, 1lt. IJZY r.11). Mo down or trlde. $10 95 ~~. $38 :--...:.
'64 Chevrolet',._ ...
~· Air Gllldltlonlf'lll, (OXO rtSI H down _. tl'ldt.
$695 ~~ $29 t:'.;.:.!
''1 Col'Yette Hardtop
'#11111 wr• ll:lut ltlttrier. IOON Ga)). 1'"'. dDWll air fr..,.. $1095 :~:t $47 ~.:
'67 Ambossador 990 H.T.
Low mu ..... IUU _,, 1lr coodlliol'llh,. fUEX 4ll) :X"" IXlwn or tr.tde. • $189 5 ~.'t. . $49 ~.!!
'66 Ford 7 Utre:
s P'•nenoer Hi,.,... I ll tn•ii. evlo!Nllc, •Ir concll-
tlonlng, -r 11Hrlnl. (SVX '68. 20"4 *"'" or tr-. Blul 84* price ttW.
$1595 ~~~. $48 ~~'
'65, THtlNDhBIRD
""II ...-r, t•tory 1lr. tHPCH'i! ~ ........ or tr811a.
$169 5 ~~1't1 $63 :~~:HS
'64 fORO-SALE
13 TO CHOOSE FROM
2 Doort, 4 Doors. ~. Hal'dlleps, Cmw..-llbln. w_., -w1t1t •h' ..,., -11ter1ne.
EXAMP~E,
''4 FOU GALA.Ill 100 4 DOOi
V"-fil!Ol'Mttc. lulty MUIPP911. CTWR olJ'l). 1"" mwn or trlllt. '
$69 J Full Price. $2 per 30 mot.
USED CAR SALE PRIC!S IFFEc;TIVI 72 HOURS UNLESS PlllVtO!JSL Y SOLD. . . ' • ALL PAYM&NTS FIGURED ON APPROVED C:REDIT . .
on s. .... :011111• W.~ .
/ F·250 PICKUr s3'4·9· 5 ~COJSMAN UMPIR ,' I
.• 1 IOTH IOI , · . .,,. ' ' . . ,•
•• com;ir ,.~ltt~~ll/jlfi !Ct
·jiCX, ''°"· (It.· S,lttpt '! F• pickup his JOO
_!'lg, •me &,on ~9 lb. ,.., "1!i!'aID 'j:Q0id0.5'J.ji ' , UXI helter 1nd
atlfro1ter. etc~ ti ' from 1t This Prie91
I ' ,: .. ,'. ~.I • '
'FORD TlfUO<. CfNTER :.m_ ~ ~ '-"" -.w. c:om;1.,. euttMir'-1 ..... a ...,
FORD PART.S CEN1'ER
111.oDO --,.., --t10ll.tOI ~ " -"""" ,. ... -. --,
GOODYEAR TIRE CENTH
l,lAS£ iRlN.T AL · CENTER
IMflllltr Ford n•llOMt '""" t lln. Aft -ul1r m1kt1.. FR d••I~ re<>'•'• II ll<leln'1 s.vfnn.
FINANCE INSURANCE CENTERS
111111'tfd Ul,llllllan tfw1" ~ !lo Ml• YOU with llnlllClllll 1Mill-
"TROLLEY" TOUR
"•.......,, ·-tlll;'l,t "t1911e¥i"' ... tMfr•blt ~ ... ttweu.11
....... ·~·-..... ctn!
COURTESY BUS SERV1Q
OU!' mD!llrll ~ .. -" 11111 frwn '-wst. ...... .,.I'll Wflll ,_ _. II 1111r1t .....ic..I.
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