HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-01-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-.. •• •9. • -
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I. I a1n u .e ·
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·•ry n 'ets '· P oO r Tenants_. .)
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In Conll:tywide
Vi~e~ Game Q .ing
Vo~ to Fight
Mesa Eviction . .
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DAILY PILOT
FRIDAY AFTERNOO N, JANUARY 24, 1969 ; VO\. •tr llloO. JI, 4 SICTIONS. .. PA•RI
She!)s Laguna Lady
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Scientist at~ Lagu,na Lady
Dr. Rainer Berger of UCLA discusses human skull be· says Is 17,150
years old (plus, or minus, 1,UO years). Harold Wilsoq found skull in
Laguna Beach in 1933. Until recent .advent ot ad'equate measuring
instruments, scientists were unable to determine its age, I?r. Berger
also bas determined that skull , first thought to be male>-is !~ale.
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'An other Wet W eekeud:
5 More Rai ny Dar.s
Southern Cali fornians' spirits were as
damp as the elements tod8y as they
braced themlielves for another wet,
wl!:ary .weekend of llaViN l b •
weal.beman !Oek it to them ..
"Recurrt!nt rain" through Sunday -
and possibly stretching through Wed-
nesday -was the prediction" f<M:: the
Orange Coast and snost of. the ~state.
Thia in the wake of last wetkeod'1
devastating storm that left Loi Angeles
and San Luis Obispo counties ~
areas.
With the promised rain came~the.J1tw
threat. of floods and landslides rafter
lltntington Beach, but In Fountain Valley
a section or Edinger Avenue was tem-
porarily closed by heaVJ (lpodlni..
But the worst is yet •to come.. -
Weath6tnen said 1he curre11t. storm
will dLnilp twe to thtee inches on the
-Southland by Sat11rday. and fro~ lhree
to six inches on coastal mountain slopes.
With saturated ground, considerable
runoff and local street flooding is ex-
pected in low-lying areas.
The new storm, spawned by a sub-
(S. RAIN, Pace !)
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* * * Gr~«!Jury
In : Vice Ring
Seven penoris charged In a county.'wide
ptostituUon, gambllnc and obscene movie
ring were indicted Thursday by the .
Orange County Grand Jury.
The 19-membel" panel's approval of
"""plalnt. 'placetl before them by dls-
trict attorney'• investigators wound up a
three-month probe that involved police
and aberlU's deputies in seven county commwl.iues lncludlng Newport BeaCh.
Named In the indictment were ' 8-e
Yvoane Kelly, 44, ol Fullerton; Marlene
Sue Goodin, 21, of Loo Ange!EI!; J...te
De ADia Placentia, 3%, of Anaheim;
Douglas C. Comwolf, 28, ·and Donel F. Gorman. 21, of Garden Grove; Felix B. Dllriian. 38, ol Orange and Larry Brldg·
es, 21, ,of Garden Grove.
Six of the seven defendants were at•
rested last Jan. 10, at 2182 W. Catalpa
SL, Anaheim. the home was described
by investigators u the headquarters of
a county-wide ring that furnished, at
a price, proaUlltes, g>rnlng facllitiea
and obscene movies and literature.
Brldgea was arm;ted at a later date.
All seven defendants are free on $1,000
ball.
Investigators said the operation was
,known by Its organizers and its patrons:
.. ••EQtettahiind;t •. unlllnited" and
.. Qrange · COlihty Bua!neumen's Club."
Tbey conflscated reels of obacene fllm,
gdmbli.nf equipment and fllea found at
the Catalpa Street addJ'elL
Jleart Surgery Aids
I . 1:my P~mature Baby
STAMF0RD•()\P)..;. Snrgeons at 'S!ab-
ford Unlveraftr llkl' joday a 21-ounee
prema-bai>J air! Is doing well 1fltr
open heart lllr(Off.
Llze!a Guerrero, da~ter of.Mr. and
Mn. ltaac aii..,....L"'' born Doc. :n and operated m 11 ..,., t.ter.
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By 1110~µ8 FORTVNE
Of lie 0.llJ '"" Stiff
UC. Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrkb
Jr. •doel not flt the atereotype of an
S. I. Hayakawa who stand• UR to and
does not comproDlise with student
dwl!lent..
He bad a rough go because o[ it
'l'hurSday nlg)lt lo answerlna questions
put to bl/n by membera of Mesa Ve,de
Homeowners-A~laUon.
Aldrich spoke on "Education of a Chan4
cellor,'' telling how he actually bad learn-
ed from black Btudenta and what be
called tht hippie cult oo campua. . ·
The revelation did nqt sit well with
certain of the n0rthwest COsta Mesa
an:a homeowners. Most of the quesUons
asked of the chancellor had hostile
overtones.
Those asking quesUons, however, may
not have been representaUve or all 125
perlOOS present; when Aldrich las
finished he w.U spoataneously applauded.
The UCI chancell6r was asked what
he would do·if the Black Student Union
toot over the administration building,
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the nerve center of campus. Would he
negoUate or throw the studentl out?
•11 don't say black," answered Aldrich,
11but the possibility exists every day
that a m!norify of students, of whatever
ailor, will block enlcy to a building.
U university policies and pr~ces that ,
Jed ·to the takeover ha\7e been a mllerable
failure then there are all sorts ol
possibilities for negoUaUon.
"I have walked one mile. I have walked
two miles. I have walked 10 miles.
And I have said I will walk 100 miles
to do my best ,to understand why W&
(the adlnlnlttraUon) obould .do what the
students want.
"I buy 100 percent what Eldridge.
Cleaver said on our campus: 'WlUtey,
I've 1ot problellll. But If you beat me
I'm going to beat you back.' II the
students .push rne and go beyond Ute
roles and re1U.latlons ,of the campus,
or of the C<1mmunity, I'm going to puah
back ."
In angry response to Aldrich'• com-
ments, a man said :
Bucher Tells Top Secret
Details of Pueblo Case
CORONADO, Calif. (UPI) Cmdr.
UO)'<I M. S.cher went bellind c!OM>d
doors ' today to tell a Naval Court of
Inquiry top aecnt details about the cap-
ture of the USS j'IJ<bb . ., · , .. ·
l\uch,er w1,11 joined 1n the exec1ltlve
seulon before the five.admiral court by
two. Na'f)' captall'll from .Japan Wt\o
Wtfe on ' dti.ty when pie lnteingence ahip
w'al• -off Nortlt Korea a )"fl'
ago.
·Appe111ng grim and aolemn, although . ' '
with , hJa composure reatored after
'1111.U"lday'a emotional .ordeal. B\lcher ,
moved into a conference room guarded
by Marines at I 1.m. PST. A short ' Ume l•o/ the .twe eap!ahis
went 'Jnlo'• the room, 'nley were Capt.'
Thomas L. Dwyer, at the .time uststant
chief of aWf for intelllgenoe, Naval
Forces Japan, and Capt. Fomst Ptase,
cldef ol. staff for commander. U.S. Naval '
Forces Japan.
:M llt. SM-Uilf Yr.
15 '15 7,11
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··we're P:oor.-Not ~ippies'
Bucher was expected to. ' l'elUme
1¢imony at the outlet. He will ta.It
about just what clalJslfted lntejllgence
document. were captund by the com.
niunist.s, how much electronic ~nd wh~t \ype .... not completel1 . ed
and other .. llnlltmi' mitten.
·W'nll• tlie ~ ojJtalned .....
U.S. secrtt. trom ·Uie lnldligence ship,
-· ;v~..;;~m· .. -.s~·e· ·~ ·!JenantB P rotesi Mesa · Evic tion Th reat ::'u.cr1.:i:~ ·:.i~: r l'f.Gl;U'(-' lfl ~ ·~·· ,.,, , , ,, ... iiecutily~tbeUnlted·Stlb.. ·
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only a J.{..hout breather in aome ...._
Hard.t hit rrom the last !tlrm ....
G~a, where eight inches' of raln
trlggoi'.ed the destn>cUon ol 45 h0mes
and damaged 131 others.
Alone the Orange Coasl, conditions
were reported quiet and almost nonnal.
In fad. Newport Beach police said tiJeM!
were ltls traffic accidents than on a
normal dry day.
No D1i1Jor problems were reported in
Jly ARrfltllt L ~ ot .. o.i. .......
'ftll bor tho•··-Colla -flmD1'a -·-4>0YiJIC'hpme
Is '1r.m. arid -livlne on edllnlf'iltlfm
assistance In ~. ~ U. •city wants
demo1!1hed ai pari r:A a Shanty town
-she'll tell you thot'• nko. ·
lie&! n!Ce.
She Is Peggi Jette, of .. 'Vld«li
St., """ W 185 •vqy, two weeka to help 111PJ10r1 oparklHyarl Jo Ann. II,
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• .. . ·~·· ' ·_,_b•.L •••. ~~.xrw.i.-..1~-loirheadid.Jlobert, 13" and ·bouooy Lar, ·tlon .of 'tl!e . .....,.,,. haa ·-~ """"' rnana.r iri !Ina! Forces ln J'l'lll at · =-~~:,xi always tell>,... ~:.lo~~I:,.~ = ~~al:i:':a~~wm..~,
-........... of the p-operlla at be deartd. . P'rldq;Sl.tunlaJ' 11111 ~· J.....,. Ill arid 9 'Vldorla St., ,..... to nlSil ,c..µ.. Me11 111'1 have . advanced i. 1"ieotly -.ndailt !!lb N'anl
beside landlord Paul Ganin« 111 • baille ....,_ plants, lovelr.,tract bous!r!J, Dlstrlel, ,SeaUe. Wiab. · · ·
to conduct his al!aln without city hill • huce alloppln1 comp and I public A Na'J publlc ~ olll.,.,.·will
llltrualooi. . ' ' Coll ....,.., blll tbe mms ol literature 1K In oe tl!e -and brio! aww-.
"A Olla dalh, It 1' Y--·t fibig_ '9lbUrdulle cliJ _.,.. ....,. after the. -"' -W!lona of
need than at ltllll lafe dtte," he 11J1. 111entloo tl!e -· lettlmoOJ wbl<:b can be made pu1illc.
Gardner roces a Colla M ... QIJ Olun-:nieJ ,loo, mllll Uve -••. the llucber told tl!e arlmlr'ala Tbunda1 ell burllll Fib. 11 oa -Ible dedora-; '\Ill TINAN'l1, l'lfe I) (loo PUDLO, .... I)
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''OUl" colleges are a totltfallure. W
you're part of the· iesjromlbuttt with
your Cleaven." ·
0 All right, Ulil is your· view," said
the chan«llor. . .
. •1m•t·[aking ---ol pubilc pro,
perty, a er~ 'ad ln' I~,_ a man
asked. . · I ' · ' ' . ''Die problem,·~ ·A.ldrii:h-..wl, 41
deciding whit la taklrw • poasesalon. ·X.
it· studentl sitting. ·Gown ,1 ia . a . ~
they're: in every day? 1 ·· • ,
•Our .prfttnt' 1rt>pa11·.la1r doo:ori'l l'f!>'
vide w: with the tool w.e ·need in .Jb1t
Situation. 'The students·~ ~~beet
two minutes, later; 'lllat 111 wbr the
university is aponeorinf new treapau
legialaUoo."
A man wlio said ·ht ll 15 J'Ufl1 old.
a~ Irrevocably on the other aide · cl
the generation gap. remarbd "that he
was alarmed at a newspaper stary-.about
radicalll: at 1rv1ne.. • • ·
Aldrich said the reportet· did a good·
Job or trying to •"'!ualnt the public
with the sources of activism, but did
not say It represented' only a llUll
8f'OUP of students •. 4'He did I thanuclt
job; about all ol our 1cllvllt ...,....,
were'llatetl." ·
Another man ·utea: "Why do ·yoa
l•t·-'studY onlr ·tbe humanltiea?
You can't live on that." ·
"Society ii ·made . up of an a'!lul lot
ol people .. --... need beJid .. professionals,' Alrlrlcll said. '
He was ~ '1fblt,t£e, llack 1tudents &ee ~liJaf,.'hp !)
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J DAil Y PILOT s
Pickets Hold
t SF State
1A!i PRANCISCO -A bmllul ol
.... ..-pld>ls -lhelr =Tilil -SU Francl9co Slate ..-r shile many ol the ..
for .. iDopl niu, ..... lrJtas
lo ,..a bail
IJ midlDan>h>( -ball ol --SI t in I ttree-bour-long~ .,..,, -------..... •, band« their .... ~· A _. p«ted each or the striken
as hi Ill\ the RID. of Jultk:e after
-Siii bond .... mingled with raln-ioakal QIDP.tbiia on lbe bulJding'a
slept. n.e militants, nept, up In lhe largest
........... In lhe ell)>'• ......,., laced
alTOlpment on diujos ol lolhn to
d'--wlul lllllinbll' llld -'"ft :!':. t:"t1a-1 baul alntt a otudlnl
strike spearbeided by about 2 o o
dwuknts and supported by %50 striking
teacben, bqan Nov. 6 at the 18,000
student camplis. Abaat JOO policemen moved in after
the crowd refused to heed warninp
to dlspent. given over a loudspeaker
atop lhe -tratlon buiJdlni.
At a news conference later, Dr. S.
I. J11¥Uawa, called the ....U, "an oCI
ol delpualloo" by nilUlanla. Re pralo<d pollco lor a~-·-·
}Ob ol crowd _ .. Aal:ad tt ~
would bl more inm l!Tlltl, be Aid
••there ts no reuon for mass arrests
!WO JIMA FLAG-RAISING? NOPE -SF STATE
Athlatn Win Battle Wlih Di11idant1 ,_ Old Glory
U there aren't any masses."
Among lhose arrested were 1 ~
American Federation of Teachers union
picke~luding some froot Fresno
State e. and Nathan Hale, a Negro
inab«liil """" ....... lo head a black
•tudlel departDwll, created lo placate
atriktrL--n.e lllilldden DOOll rally -the lint
since ltudenll returned from the
Chriltmu break -was announced Tues-
da, bJ Ille Third World Liboralkm Front,
comprlaed ol llOl>N..,. mlnertly ·-· From Page l
PUEBLO ...
he did not break with a pistol at his
head bul when the Nortb Koreana con-
vinced blm they WV< about to aboot
his men one by one be siped a con-
f eaioo that the Putblo was a spy &bfp.
lliB voice breaking, his body trembling,
the Pueblo skipper told a hushed Court
ol Inquiry Tbunday lbal he c:oold not
take the ''mlatll tGrtun" even cm day
alter lbe Pueblo'• capture.
With his wife, Rose, sitting 1 few
feet away and crying, Bucher told the
COll1I !bat be knttt on a prison Door
a year .;o today and repeated over
and over again :
"I love you, Rose.'•
It brought him through two minutes
af qony of expected death. Then be
WU -.a llaulh K01W; atrapped
to a wan witb an eye 1ouced aut.
He ,... &eatm llllOOll!cloul. n... the
Comm..,Jata cal1'd lor his youngest
mirmember to be broulhl and lhol ancl--· ""' lbe llnt lime, the 41-yeaNlld
commander lost control In the courtroom.
Ht caald acan>e)J ltanci FinallJ>, be
could not opeat.
'""" be -"' lo BaY that be lliDed Ilea lblt lhf lnt<lllgtco ahlp WU In
Nartll ~ l<nilorlal walen, !bat
he wu paid "1 the Ctntral lntelllience
"-and lbat the Unll<ld States WU
an "qerellive, imperialist naUon."
Buc:hu lalllled prevloull1 lbal he
radlo<d delpintdy lor help and that
Jobnaon'• COllUIWld did not &Iv. it lo
him when the Pueblo wu surroundtd bJ Rel sunboots oll the North Korean
lhcn.
Alao to be heanl ....... the 1kippe<
ol the Pueblo'• sllter lntelll1ence llhip,
USS Bulner, Cmdr. Olarlea II. Cl1rk,
and a Navy capt.ai.n from the com-rmmlcationl center in Japan wbo was
~ roadlnl the SOS m-es
lnim the Pueblo.
DAILY PILOT .... ,.,,.... " ............ ~ L....-..... ,........,....., e--.
CAU.OINIA
Jlt9trt N. Wtti
Pret!Rftt ..,. ""'IJMt
J•< .. C:..l1y
V~ Pn1tM'tl'il .,.. o.,wr .. .v.-.r1
T~-11 tCtt•'f ....
"""''' A. Mtrlllif11• MtflHIN 1111 ....
P•tl Niu•• .... ,,_,w.,. ---c.i. -..: m .. ., .,, '""' ......... ltMcfl• 1"1 ~ .............. u.-..... , "' ,..,.... ,,.,...
iiwlffr .......... : • ,,.. """
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Nixon:'s
Coast in Running as· S~mnt~r R~t,reat -..
(Special to Ille DAILY PILOT) -cooalder«I ~ .. -llllMler
WASffiNGTON -Newport Bach, ~:.i:~~·roporled to be acouting
Lqmi.a Beach and the San Dteco araa'• 111 tine Soutblrn. Caltfornll areas to M.lssion Bay today appear stlD in the
running as possible locations far a Sum-flDd a Summer White Hou!e.
mer White House West. Aides have suggested that the Pre&!·
President Nixon ia upecttd to locate
summer White Hoose aperattons bath
in Califarnia and Key Biscayne, Fla ..
where he has purchased two ,127 ,000
homes.
Durinc the e1111paign, Nbon mlde tt
clear he ii pmial to nn, surf and
sand as far as vacation retreats are
concerned.
N'11.oo aides recenUy were reported
ta have invetligated Lacuna's historic
14-room PyllO CUtle on Hlllcre!I Drive
for a potenUal summer White House.
Today. however, sources close to Nixan
discounted the caaUe as a poss.Ible site.
Nilan in the Plat has also stayed at
a home ln J..a«una'1 lrvlne Cave.
Newpmt: Beach Is all() in the running
for Ule summer White House site in
that Nixon bu stayed In the Cameo
Shores sectian af Corona · del Mar In
the put and hu many Iona-lime lrienda
and llUpporlm In Newport.
Immediately alW' Nimn'I nomlnaUon
by the GOP lut Aqust, he retreated
to the Mission Bay area of San Dtego
dent iJ likely ta buy seaside property
if he finds what he wants.
Several Southern California c i v i c
sroups, hoWever, hive offertd ta make
a ,home availabJe to him simply for
the adverttalng value of hiving the sum-
mer White HOUie in their community.
MeanwbDe. the Nlmnl are at.tempting
to find a buyer for their 12-room apart-
ment in New York City, recently valued
at '135,000.
Former presidents have varied their
summer rotruta all lhe way from Hyon•
nilJIClrt. Mass., to Palm Sprlnp.
The last Republican president, Dwight
D. Eisenhower. liked mountains and
desert, while Lynden B. Johnson rested
at his ranch in the Texas hlU country.
John F. Kennedy had a variety af
Wftkend and vacatlon retreata ran1in1
lrom Hyanni!port, and Newport, II.I.,
to Mkldlebur&, Va .. Palm Beach, Fll..,
ind Palm Springs, Calif. He awned some
al t.h:ese retreats, leased ~ther1 and,
in Palm Beach and Palm SprJ.no, oc-
cupied boo.w1 bom>wed from lrlendl
Including singer Bing Crosby.
l'rem Page l
TENANTS VOW FIGHT. • •
Jand1ord say!.
A calarfully e1~aive: rellred can-
strucllon man, Gardner -and lenants
who admire him u ane who knows
that every bank ICCOUDt bu I bottom
to it -told It like they aay it ia
Thuraday.
"l know my apartmenl.5 are cheap,
not fancy, but yoo can't roll oot the
red carpet for $70 a month ," said
Gardner, who !Iv~ at 3025 Dannybrook.
Lane, Costjl Mesa.
"But that's not what the city is beefing
about,'' he conUnued. "They just don't
like the class af people that I have
here.''
"I don't mind if they call me an
lndian," &ternly chimed in Peggy Jette,
"'because that'• what l am. Bufl raent
being called a hippie."
"Just because we're poor don't mean
we're hippies," added Sharon Sawx:lers,
who bccupie1 anather of the 11 units
oo the Garner property.
POLITE EXPRESSION
"Hippie is Just a pO)lle way to call
somebody a bum. Vie aren't," com·
mented pretty Jo Ann Jette, \\'ho will
gnduate i..m hlfh ochool next yelU'. Miu JeUe 1a1d anly two hooses on
the land are al the hippie commune
type, whileihe rest are rented by peraom
forced for one reason or another to live
oa limited incomu.
''They'r< friendly. They •peat lo you,"
she Yid ol the lonHlaired iYt>U who
a1ao unt from GardDer, "but t&ey keep
pretty mudl to lhemlelvea."
City olficlals Monday crltldled the
appearanco ol lhe Gardner property,
Goldber~ Praise11
Ex-Senator Kuchel
BmvERLY llILl3 (AP) -P'onner
U.N, Ambaa-Al1hur J, Goldberf
1ay1 Calllointalll '" lumlnfl -illomu H. Kucbel out ol olllct lo!I "a croaUve
lll!dator who WU alwaya w1lllnc to
make compl'Clrll!aeo for lhe common iood 119\ nevv •IDlnl to compn>mtso bl1 principles .•
,'1~ b a coorqflOUI ldv00.lt1 at
JUltlCe," who W<l1 unquoatlonod rupect
from fellow ten3tors, Goldberg told a
teltlmOnlal dinner ~red by the
American Jewish Commf\tee.
u well u Jta: averace ZO to 25 occupant.I,
who were respcmaible in ooe, recent
Il-mantb period far &ome IO separate
palice cue reporta.
Deputy BulldiDf lnspeclor Dean lllmJ
outlined the case qainlt Gardner's
holdinp, bought belore the present city
structure even uilted, documenting
complaint.! with photagraphs al the
dilapidated sect.ion.
Gardner, absent from the ariginally·
sthedul~ nuisance hearblg due to nu
and laryngitis, cleared his throat Thur>
day and did tome talking too.
FEElS CONFIDENT
"That Dorris is just a stooge, but
they a:ot him sneakln' around with a
camera Ind btlf.tn' me in the back,"
said GardlH!r wha feels confident about
the case, based an hi! current legal
COWlSCl's advice •
"Donit gets up ln an 1partment hick
Ibero behind the pniperty with a apy·
gtus and when two cars show up, he
call• the poliee lo check what kind ol
coffee tht people are drinkin'.'' tbe laod-
lord charted.
Gardner wu philosophical about put
police problems.
"That's what we lu:payers are pt.yin'
them for," he said, "to maintain peace
and arder. ••
Fire DepartmeDt inlpee:ton have also
found basis to crlUclze I.he property,
whi ch i! Gardner's ooly source of income
-and rather unsteady at that, bec:aua
he Is oympthetlc to the poor.
"5ametimes be don"t get what's comlD.&
to him." II.Id me tenant 'l'hlnday •
"I don 't know wbo that fireman Is
who came! around with Dorris," said
Gardner, "he iu't man enoup to in--
troctuca hboaelf and 111 'Good MornlDC'
when he seta foot on the property.'' -
"If the city bad tbe same ratia al
firu wt"vt bad ~ lbere wouldD"t
be I flrt department." be clw'led.
"WbJ donl Ibey takt plctora ol lhe
other cheaplo dumpo &Ion& lhil m..t,"
ho aahd ID bewlldermen~ ''lbey'r< no
better than mint."
NJllBUNG AC'l10N
'lllen, he complatnad ol take-tak•tale
nlbb1Jng af city gavernment.
"I &ave them ll lee\ oll the front
of my land to widen VJcl«ia Sino~"
he said, "made"m a present and
arter that .J had . o pay $1 ,IOO to help
with the COil for nice pavement."
Road · Deserting Ol('d:
t
1 Cou~ty Counsel Says Salt Cree'/c "Move Legal
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,.,. controver1lal alllndonmeni ol lht lllt aectk>n ar Salt Creek raad to the ~ Niguel Corp. bad the legal bl,.., hil. ol C.U.ty Counsel Adrlln Kuilier.
•ii a leial opinion IOUllilo by Alton Alen , filth diltrlcl .............. Xloyplr' blld !bat the Man:h . •• ltll, ..,,. ~nt waa not invalid -as ~
c:lijlend -because ii "" DOI llnl = lo Ille coont7 Plamdng Com-
Tbe matter ot .ba'rinJ (lUbllc -
t to , publlc Udell:ndl 1eemed far from
sellltd, however •
'J'M>.aJUW
Laguna Beacll •tlornty W l l l l a m
Wllco:ien, who ba1 boon critical o1 tho
~ -action. JD-dlcated loda, .... poailble -ol r.c:Uoo :
-"I thlal(,lba wiU .bt a ault flied,•
Aid w-!lo declined lo 111 "' whom at lhla ataae. lltll added, "I'm ,..uy ..,.. tl)ore will be Utflaiton."
'-~Abo~ ... poulbll-111 ll1lt Ibo county P""""" COaimlatoo
coold pin pqbllc access to the tideland!
by requiring dedication af street eodJ
Medical (.enter
Patient Holds
Nurse Hostage
A mail Jailed on marijuana po-">ii
charges tooc an Orange Caunty Medical
Center nurse hostage in an escape at'
tempt gthursday, sheriff1s de pities
repgrted today. _
(. Gerald Granaolol, ~11, ol.San.>J;-
w~· recaptured nur the bolpital u
llO attempted to scali a alx~ooi hlP
d1¥> line fence topped by bilted --
GrlDad08, a recenU,. dlicbuted men-~tlent nrom a narthent Califon)la
tian, grabbed clLlef nune Jewell
B. Griffin, 4 , of or..,., and lltruten
her with a dau~le edged razor blade.
He forced her to unk>cc the mental
health w1rd door an the first floor on
lhe haspital.
g The suspect was ariginally arrested
WedMlday a& a Santa Ana motel on
East Jst Strtet when the tnanqer Cllltd
police and reparted be was breaking
windaws.
g When palloe arrived, Granados stripp
off his bell, wappod I """"" hil &t
and oflered t.o take to the otOctn.
Police subdued him and baoced him
an usplcioo m marijuana possession.
He wu taken to the medical center
for treatment ol WOWMta BUllered wbllo
reataUDI rreal g An off~uty Garden Grove policeman
tried la grab Granados at the hospital
aa be ""1>ed through the lobby with
the nurse. But Granados plceed up a
board and threatened the officer.
w1* 1-Ntpot mu a tract map
far tbe area. •u the planntng commlulon c1ea1rts
lo lmpooe a.condlUon ol dedlcal<ld acceSI,
Ibey coWd do II ...i bavo -,lbal
.. loatlonct In the put,. Aid~
The tideland lnvolvtd, ocunward of
the mean blgh tide line, ls about two
mil.. runnlni. '-Three Arth . Bo1
lo Dana Palat. Tba uu la alaled lot
dev...,_4 u (11(1 ol Liaw>• Nliuel'•
....... plu "" ........ that naiaents.
PART AllANDONED
Id Cleell -...,. Ibo -ol Coast Highway, was turned ovtr &o the
county in 1911. PorlJonl or u wen abal>-
dooad la -.... 1111 ._, lllt --nlMnl to r'ns "• cm• ,~.-.~
Tba -·-·1aot -...... rn1• to lllt Plannlll commlaloo.
Tba --aailtoo ol the rood !lid a .._ "",'•the county
·-· ·-• lee! lraal Ille -b!Ptlda.... . ' Wllomlt tlibtb Ille o1111~ might h(Ve )!em ............ ~ tho
pot>llilllty !bat the rold might have
F"'" P.,e I
ALDRICH • • •
rully want.
NaT UNREASONABLE
"Tbe Blact 54udenl Union on our """
pus, and all tbe bl•ck students are
in it, bu not prueoted to me demaads
that are UlllUIODlble," Aldr1dl Aid.
"f woolol BaY Ibey '"' IOli --Thia II bilporlant, Tiiey can ba •tlllled.
Tile lnaaUllllo ooea teop puablng and
pualiJnr,
"Tbey'ro not here to dealroy ... They
WBDI . dNperatdy lo be a port. 'llley
don't Wllll lo tear down the oatahllah-ment. Tbay want lo abare In 11," Aldrlth
said.
.. But what do you thlnt m tbtlr
ulterior motlvu?" the q u t 1 t I o n e r
pentaled.
'<Ona ol tho thlnp they Mid to me,"
Aldrich remarked, 1'wu 'ln tenm of
aur numhen, oo campus and ID the
surrouncfiDa eommunltf, we realize there
wonl ba much opporltmHy let aoclal
life. We'd like lo aptlld the lime 11111
white aludents apead on lhil doin( eon-
slrucllve lblnp -like lutorlng ID Ibo
ghettos. But wa dool ban the -or the lranap«tatlGll. can JOU help 111!'
"'l'bal to IDI, WU a -~ didDl-o11111.-motr.e.•
Paris Students Routed
PAlllS (UPI) -Jl'rtnclt riot poUce
todoy atormed Into the Vlncoo1• cam-
Piil ol lhe U.-.ity o1· Porta and
lordbly · •lfcted -llO -
metllna lo jilan -protaata.
lntenecl<ld the public lands at '°j point.
The attorney disagreed with the County
Counsel's opinion a1IO and said, "I wouldt
feel the lfflalalurt did not intend the;
type ()f altuatlan we haYe here for awn
mary abandooment"
'!be abandonment was brought Into! ~harp public facUI Jut month when ltf
WU prolated durJn& a hearing In\
Nel!]IOrl Beach ol the Allmebly Sub-conimittee an Buches ind Conservation.
Committee Chalnnan A).a.n Sieroty (0-
BIYw.tr HWI), llkl la!e6(11t'1 tbl tirlt
time I've seen a caunty give up acctss
like lbal
"Ollllr -·--..... lolllla .. lboJWul-.-,.--
but ~ ... , ---Alld hen we'W cot a COUPtT ~t pv~ CD1 up." .
• ~ baB --that lbe .•beJI. -ol public pN>peJ'lf oOuld ...,
... jllllllldl tt lhe!e ..... -· ~ ar ~olrllllla ~ • .....,.
ed ...,. . to t1i0 tldolandl, a .1a,.,ue ~ ~. by ...... ~ dedieatad street en& lo the Ucfelands.
Sons of Italy
Planning Dance
The Sorul af Italy A.P. Giannini
Chapter, will hold ill lint dinn""1ance
Saturday at the Costa M.,. Goll and
Country Club.
The eveot, which begins with a social
hour at 7 p.m., is apen to tbi public.
Dinner, at fl.SO per person, will be
served al I p.m.
Tick.ti may be purchuect 1t the door, or lhrougb·-chapter President Ralph
Peca, telephone Ml-1900. Peca said any
orange Coast ruldent of Itallan ex-
lraclloo ls eli&lbl• to join the or1anlza.
lloo.
From P .. e l
RAIN •••
tropical air maa In the mld-Pacllic,
aent flood caotrol warken scurrylng to
critical areu. Waler WU ttleaaod from
the federal 1ovmunent'1 lD majcr dsms
to 5oulberu Calllornla lo maka room
let the nmoll .ol. rain water.
A spnteann for the Weather Bureau
Aid the -lllCtm .c:oold be "poulbly
the ame type" u the earlier ane.
"We are teeplng an eye out for heavy rains, 11 be ldded.
So were cltlzena throughout the
SoQthland who were: maiin1 plam for
the weekend with one eye an U>e bea•-
DIUXIl WORICTAllE, '"1· $139 SAL! $1ff
1-.....CS-' 11"•21" o,.. 70"Jf40 ..
CONTINUES
FINAL WW
• • • •• ... ,....,., .. 1..
A~• inc:krcl.d ere la"'f''•
P.ldurM and ac,cM1ori91.
"'"• .,.. ' ..... " .. ...., ,,..... "'
tl iopl•y R•• •I ... tt,.;Rf'•
\
R09 . $179. SALi $14'
UQ.USMI lllA&.1115 FOlb Half--0..XIL-HHITMll
NIWPOITllACM
1117 ........ Dr ..... .. __., .. , Prcl111llMI •ALW
Da•la 1 •
A..,,1t'1 AID MID
LAOUl!A lllACll
MS -C:.. ""'' 4M a'1 .. ,.., ,. '
,._ M .... ._Ill .... ....,. l•t•
I , I
I
I
11
I
! :
,
I
I
I
, . • . ,.
N.Y. SC• !!Ir•
* YOL 62, NO. 21, 4 S~IONS, ~I PAGES
,. I ' ' ..
Beach Student Drug Users Get Second Chance
•'
Br 'MW\Y COVUJ.E
Of .. Olltr ,.... Hiii
TWwnty ... ven otudenll IUlpellded from_
llCboQI 10< ciiug use IJllY let • sec:ood
clu\M• under "' ezperlmental Jll0tlf8Dl
being tried by tbe lluntinP>O Beach
Ualbo lllgh SCbool lllstrlcL
'l1>e suspended ltudenl! can rejoin thelr
clumnates . Monday whea Jocal high
achoola begin their teCOnd semell'let.
Pa.It district policy made' it 'ntarly
flnpooaible for a d"'I user to get bact
in IChool unUI he'd been out at l~t
a you.
''The crowinl Ust Of suspensions for
drugs bu auted an educaUonal pro-
blem that needs new aoluUoru ," says
Owen Miller, assistant principal of
Marina H1gb. , · t
"ll'he lllltPct haa ·cle¢ded to lly .and
get I 6 e se ·kids b«k In IChool' al a faster 1ate," he eiplained. •
•
l1f .........
!WO JJIM FLAG-RAISING? NOPE•..:.· SF · st ATE
AthletM' Win llOttlo With Dluklent1 for Old Glory
• • ' Arrested 449 ·Seek Bail
' '
As Pickets··Resume:·Jl~gil . ·
From Wirt Servku
SAN FRANCISCO -A handful of
rain-drenched pickets resumed their
strike vigil outside San Francia:co State
College today :while many of ·the 449
arrested for an illegal rally were trying
to make bail.
BJ midmorni~ about half of those
arrested In a -UireA'OUr·long police
operaUon_ Thursday ~ gone lrec o.n
bond or their own recogniiance. ·
A cheer greeted each of the strikers
as be lert the Hall of Justice after
posting $315 bond and mingled with rain~
aoaked sympathiiers on lhe building's
aleps.
The militants, swept up in the largest
mau arrest in the dty's hi.story, faced
arraignment on charges of failure to
disperse, unlawful assembly and distlqbo
ing the peace. .
It wu the biggest haul ainoe a ltudent
1trlte, spearheaded by about II~
di..idenll and support<d by lit llrlklq
teachers, began NOY. I at lbe 19.000
,. ' stu~c-. ·
About 300 policemen moved in after
the crowd refuled lo heed · warnings
tQ ~ •llven ·over ·• lood!peaker
al<ip llie admlDiltntlon lxilldjng.
At a DNL conference later,. Dr. S.
I. Hayakawa, called the rally "an ad
of desperation" by militants.
He praised police for a "magnificent
job at. 'crowd control." Asked if there
would be more mus arrests, be aa.td
"there is no reason far mass arrests
if there aren't any maaes."
Among those arrested were 15
American F~eratlon of Teachers union
p!:okets~ includlna tome from Fresno
State College, and Nathan Hale, a :Negro
instructor newly named to "8ad a blKi:
studies departmmi, created lo plat:ate
striker•.
The forbidden noon rlll.ly -the ftrst
tince students retu~ fron1 t b e
Christmaa break -waa announced Tues-
day by tbe'Tbird World Liberation Front,
comprisied of' ·non-Negro m i n o r i l y
student.a.· ·
Beach -Traffic Victim
Remains Unconscious
A YDlllll Huntington beach boy enlertd
his I.Ith day toda7 · wttllout ,.,a1n1ng
conlCioulnell after suffering severe in-
juriea ID in auto tccidei.t llA. 12 on
llEW YORX (AP )-'lbe-llllrbt
"'' Irregular al the cloee todl7 aft'er
~•tine from an early gain. Trading
wu fairly active.. (See quotations, Pases
U-lJ). ,
Volume "*' 11.sz million .ahm'a cont-pared with lS.14 mlUloa "Itundor. 1'be
Dow Jones lndu!trl.11 aYerqe dtcllned
I.II to llUI alt<r backing away bun
.. earfi me.
Pacific Coast Highway near Surfside.
lllcban! AIU!n'e, t5, of 17341 Chapparli!
Lane, rfemainl under inttnsive care at
Loi Alomlloo c-raI HOipllal, o!Dclala uld toda • . ·~ ~Um ha Wwn DD change," 1ild hOlplW Adinlnlstnltor Bryee ·Rooe.
"We've done 111 we can for him
medically. lt'a juil a malller of waiting
to ... wblt ~ mw." .
Mdm Yll'.m}Qted ~a P•• r
In !lie ear ol bis brothir A-
They ...... = oala paclllc Coast Highway frdm ~, Drtve when they
collided with a cor .driveo by Edith
T. Codi of Maoletty P~ Anniodo Aplm,' 17, aod Mia Qide
both llllffettd la<fnotl<n and' hc:tuhl
l!t'lhe """1del. n.., ---from tbe hospital
t
MJller pointed out that all of lbe 27
student.I inay ~ be alloWfd to return.
"111.111 only repruentl JID t.Ugibllity 11Jt,'1
he aald.
"l&'s a porbationary program," Miller
added, "and each student m u 11 t
demonstrate a willlniness to re~ter
school and abo attend a conference
with ~admlnistratort1 lnd his parents."
The ellglbjllty llsl Is comprlled only
of students from lhe dlstrict':a Win-
tersbw'1 Continuation HJib School.
~tany suspended students never go
to Wintersburg. They trans(er diatri<:ta,
enteT privale schools or simply droP'<Ut
entirely.
All the Wlnleraburg otudents are not
eligible either. Lut semester 37 1tudenta
were enroll~ at Wlnterabur& beclule
of drug violations.
Miller explained a new a t at e law
which requlrea arre1Ung authorities to
report all juvenUe cases to achoo1
authorities.
,,,. Calllomla Ulcallonll ·Codt ..
~-automaUc --tor a m,., vlolatton at lbe lime ol lnJll'
Re-lnata"1nenl In •choal.11 illlpoalblo
untll lbe otueenl's ..,. hai _..bllan
a-<ollrl or acbool boanl actlGa ~ bial taken. o ' L ~
Thll 7ear' lbe dlotrtcl la IUlnl Ille cue. -11y...,. ,...i trytnc to-aet u...
students -Into lbe aarmal • IQlllne .. lul u paulble.
More Rain Due on Coast:
New Storm May Stretch Through Wednesday
Southern Californians' spirits were as
Clamp as the elements today u they
braced themselves for another wet,
weary weekend of having t b e
weatherman sock it to them.
"Hecurnn!.raln" throuib Sunday -
Ud po&Sibly stretching through w.ed-
nesday -was the prediction for the .
Orange Coast and most of the 1lllte.
This in tbe wake. U: last weekend's
Narco Raid
dev~ stonn that left Loa Anples
and S... Lui> Obispo comrtlel dlsaaler
area..
With the promised rain came the new
threat of floods and 1aodalldta after
Huntington !leaeh, but In FDlllltaln Valley
·a Rcilon of Edinger Avenue'Wu tem-
porarily cl&sed by heavy floodtna.
But the worst is yet to come.
Weathennen said the current storm
will dwnp two to three 1nches m the
Southland by Satunlay and from Uno
to six lnchel DI! coastal maimlaln slopea.
With saturated ground, conalderable
runoff . and local street Ooodhlg is a.~
peeled In -lying attn
The oew atorm,--ipawned by a au~
tropical air mass in the mkl·Pacific,
sent flood control workera. acurryina; to
criUcal areas. Water wu released from
the federal government's 10 major daml
Grim, -Solemn
in Southern Calilornla to make nlDlll
for the nmoff" rain water.
A IPDk ..... for Ille Weattier Bmuu
aald tbe .... storm c:au1d he "-'bb'
the ..... type" .. Ille .-..u.r -"We' are &epmg an eye out-for bu'Y.
rains," be added.
So were citizens throupout the
Soathland wba we"' matini p1an1-ror
the weekend with Diii\ '111 .., the
heavena
Paperwork
C0,ntiniw~
Bucher Begins
. ' . .. '
1· .,, . ~·· f .• .... }; 1'•1 ~·,, LONG BEACH -Detectivu tod07 .
contlooecl to clean •e dotaill aod Jlaodla a _,..,._ 1olmne Ii tiopemrt In Ille ·
wate ,,_,... i;.e111 narcoticl roulidup
l~ city_ hiito~, wltli more than 17,IOO
In coo&abUci se\illl; IO perSDllS Jl!iled
..C more ~ghL ' .
, .·.Sect~t Testlm&hy
Twna tC 411 pollcf officers began the
vast, coordinated raid system 'l'hurlday
night, armed with secret Grand Jury
iridictmenta issued after a four-montb
Investigation.
one officer on the force just two weeks
made oa separate narcotics purchases
alone to help aet up the arrests, which
may climb to u high as 90 before
all the wanted suspects ire caught.
Police LL Jim Miller said charges
Included suspicion of possession and sale or heroin, marijuana, LSD and assorted
other dange.roWI drug!.
Not the sort of hippJe-type 11.1spects
~ associated with the narcotics \tfJfic, investigalora said, the people
rounded up Thursday and today are
suspected nonetheless of belng major
Southland suppliers.
Plalnclothesm,n and uniformed patrol
officers alike parUcipated in the raids
Thursday, covering North Long Beach
like a blanket and sweeping the
downtown area and partytown Belmont
Shore.
During the roundup, which netted Long
Beach residents from late teens to early
lhirUes, police arrested 19 juveniles ind
&ix women.
Seven Indicted
In Countywide
Yice Ring Probe
Sev_en pertOM f!haraed In a coonty-wtde
prolUtUUOn, rambUnl: mi obscene movie
ring were fndlcted-'nmrsday by the
Oraoge· County Grand Jury.
The lknlmber panel's approval of
complalnll placed . before them by 4i.s--
U1ct attornq11 iovtltlgators woo.nd up a
three-month probe that involved pollce
and sheriffs depulles ln seven COUJl ty
communities 1.1nc1uc11n1 Newport Beach.
Named in me tndk:ttnent were : Renee
Y•omie Kelly, II, of l\illertoo; Marlene
Sil< Goodin. n . of Los Angelm ; Jeaie
...,_
Seriously lll? . . ·
Commuili.t Chine•• Chairman
Mao TsMunJ Is reported to be
serioosly' ill in undlJi:ldsed city
in interior o( China by Hong
Kong's .antt·Communist news-
paper. Dally Truth. Chinese
leader reportedly collapsed
during late 1968 tour and has
bl]On,too,ill to return to Peking.
Huntington· 'Gets
Copteron·Monday
Hu~s Toot Co. will deliver a po1ice
patro1 helicopter to the city of Huntington
Beach at noon Monday, according to
a spokesman for the firm.
The city ardered the chopper, expected
to be joined later by a second, lo patrol
the city and beach areas. TWo officer•
from the poUce department now are
in training to operate the machine.
c:ost of the heUcopter and cperation
Is expected to top $100,000 per. year,
but city officials say tbey will be able
to 1ave some money by not adding
u many additiooaJ automobile patrol!:
as had been expected.
The helleopter 11 to be In full operation
by April, IC«ltding to police.
-
CORl!NADo, calll. CUP!) ~ Cmdt.
Lloyd M. llucber went behind c1*d
~-today to lell a Na•al Court ol
Inquiry top ..,,,,t detailo -lbe eap-
ture of tbe USS Pueblo.
Bucher was joined in the uecutlve
seaaion before the flvNdnllral court hf
two Na¥)' captalnl Crom Ja11111 who
were on duty wbtn the ioteWgence ah1p
waa ae.lzed· ofi North Korea a year
ago.
Appeat1n( grim sod aolemn, allhou&ll
with b1a CQmpoaure rutertd after
Tiiursday'a emotional ordeal. Bucher
moved into a cooference. room &UU'ded
by Marines at 9 a.m. PST.
A short time later the: two captaint
went into the room. They were c.pt.
~ L. Dwyer, at the time uslJtant
chi<f al ataff for lnlelJljeDce, Nrral
Foroea Japan, and C&jll. '0irml PMie.
chief of staff ID< commaoder, U.S. Naval
Forces Japan. ·
Bucher was eipectrd to reaume
tesUmony at the outaet. He will talk
about just what clu&ifi~ .Jntellllence
docwnenta were captured by the Com-
munists, how much electrorUc gear and
What type was not completely destroyed
_ ahd other "sensiUve' matters.
While the Communists obLalned IOlnt
U.S. secrets from the lntettlgence ship,
other cnucaJ · materllr was destroyed.
But that capturtd could endaugu the
security of the United States.
Rear Adm. Frank L. Johnson, com-.
mander of Nava! Forces in Japan at
the time, also was here and will tesUfy
during the thrtf: day• of cloted lm\onl
Friday, Saturday and Moaday. Jolllllon
i1 preaenUy commandant 13th NaTll
District, Seatle, Wash.
'Hiroshima' Banned
Pulitzer Prize Winner
• •
Taken Off Library List
De Alba Plac<ntla, 32. of Anaheim; "Hir.,hiina," tbe boolt by Pulltlur of tbe schoolt to ,.. that lludenll mo
Douglas C. Cornwolf, 21, and Donel F. Prltt author John Heraey, wu ooe of given more than one viewpoint ol an
Gorman. 21, or Guden Grove: Felix B. two books banned 11runday by Oranp h{atortc event.
Dlplan, 39. DI-orange and Larry Brldi· County Boonl of Educatloa memllm llaUlaoo, however, m1lntalned that Ille
.., 2t, ol Gardtn Grove. from die lllncy ol a oew C011Dty· boot pvea aupport to ban the bomb
Six ol. the seven defend&nts were· ar· opetated ~ . ftlOVetnentl.
.......i 1u1 Jan. 10, a1 1111 .w. Catalpa Dr. Dale E. llallloon. Sama Au .,.. •we lia .. -by .P'-lh .
st. An>helm. tbe -. was deicrlbed list cliqed .jbat ''lllnlllllltll" ~ta · · *-' l" ' MW 'allowed, 114 . 'l!l"!1 '
by lnv.stlptop • the ~ ol • ~ ~~,-., tN5 ~~ nla!aUI'" ·ihia' lbid •lli """ utndii."
a coun.t:f·wld• Ting thal fumls~ 1 E"' '~ , •cttt. ~ """'. 'he ilecW1d. , '
• priCt ,notitjtes, ·-. . idi' tflt,bottarl hfll ""-~~'lo-deitte and ~ """"' iii! .llt.efafuro! ' .... .......,. jJle 'bftf>Ol'ttol 1 fllcl l t11at ttie .mt ··ate Cbli>P--
Brldps wai amsted at a later ' i.. thousaolls'lll Amlrlcaft lmla......, •ftd • rnpt...,. ' , .-111t•'· b 1
All .... defendanll m !tte on •Olli! , by rnaklftJ a coetlJ military Int-~ Lew1I Allen, pub¥*! In lllS.
ball. un_,, ' R;:p.1oon aald tlia bOok l(nplla • that lnvatlptors aald the operation iwu • In• Ills llpot, ~ riipn1a on the ud •°"""111111m an DOI the
known by till crgsolzen and Ill..-aftermaU. ol the! bomlltnc • ... -..,,....._ ·
u .. _ U111lmlted';...1.~od tllrou&lle!:tllf' "'Ibo J,,.-)lopll ,,,. --...... Ult 114 ,., Illa' "~ COOhtY ~·· ~-b.· ....... ' .· . . l~•ol Ula -Rlo•Coatlloo y-
They ""'° ...... -ol -Jllm. -~· , ... ..,, --. -.. Clalfr, hl&h tlllloal' to . -gambll1111 equlpmenl aod fllel ltlllid II dllil~ wttlf other _.._,,, F4'J...:'llle -·• fcr 'jmmllel..,
the Catalpo Slrtol oddml. ' M,Yllii Iii ~ ti II Ille ..,.,"'blJ!ty probation.
Valley Jaycees
'Young Man'
Award Slated
The Dlllslaodlng younc man Ii 11111
wlll he .-MoilllaY nlc!it at the
Founlaln Valley Junior. Obamber or (:om-
merce annual Dllllngulahed Service
Award Banquet. " Tho J.,..e ·banquerwtll"he-ai tbe
Seaclllt Caunirl' Club, IOOO Palm Ave., lluntl!>ltan Beach. . Fer !he put two ween • eommlttea
headed by Bernie Suolstod bu .boon
canvuatng churches, budDP11111 clubs
and ql,ll!zaUDlll to find .• -batwffn
the agea Ii Zl..!5 who --lbe most to FOWJlaln Valley In llU.
Judges for the Jaycee contest are
Leonard Shaoe, prealdent. of Moreury
Savtnga; Dr. FAward Be au b I• r,
Superinleodent or tbe Huntlniton Scbool
Dlstrtct, and Chuck Dixon, manapr of
the. Crocker Cllizenl Natkmal Bank ln
Fountain Valley.
Mayor Robert SChwerdtleget ol foun-
tain Valley tteelvod lbe Jayoee -
!Jut year.
Thll year'a wlMer will he eUslble
for the It.ate Jaycea alactloo, ud ti
lllHTled one Ii the top 10 1n .. Collfornta,
1 chance at natlonal ftoDbn.
•
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-I
-.. ---~
. } Shiint
Tor1iado's Deadly Trail
Tornado which touched down in Hazlehurst ,Miss., Wednesday cul
this swath through the tiny town. In all, tornadoes in South this week
killed 29 persons, left hundreds homeles!. Emergency crews are still
mopping up (See •tory Page 6).
Mrs. Faber New President
Of Golden West Homes
Lor raine Faber, who reaigned recenUy
from the HunUnaton Beach Recreation
and par ks Commission, will be tnstaned
Saturday night as president of the Golden
West Homeowners Association.
The annual "Fourth of July party
In January," alao k09wn JS the "Hlring
and Firing party," will be held at Mrs.
Faber's home, 15271 Nottingham Lane.
Beach Exchange
Student 3rd in
•
Speech Contest
For the firrt. ,time in · tbe hlstciry or··
Hunti ngton Beach a foreign. exchange
student entered the Am erican Legioi;i.
oratorical contest and e'f'en managed
to plac:t.
Au dun Tvedten ol Norway, an exchange
student at HunUn«ton Beach High School,
captured third place in the Post 133
aiponaored coolest Jan. 16.
First place winner was Don Naranjo,
secood place was Valleria How and
fourth went to Tim Kincy.
Naranjo will be eligibl6 to compete
1n !late and naUonal contests, trying
for scholarship money.
Judges in the constest were Judge
Celia Baker; Dr. Donald Shipley, a city
councilman; George McCracken. a city
t."OOncilman, and Mrs. Norma Gibbs, a
parka and recreation com.missioner.
The tellers were past commanders
Dr. P. E. Sheehan, Mike Nichols and
Joseph Coleswortl>y.
Philip McCiM served u timer and
put commander Orlan • Sowers wu
chairman of the event.
Theme of the coot.eat wu the ConaUtu·
tion of the Unitfd states.
OAllY PllOI
O"•JI(;[ (OAif PU!Ll~'llJIG COMl'•JIY
•obo•I N. 'W1td
J•ck •• c •• i.y
Vicf Prt>•ll",.I .... ~.i Ml"•~•r
Tht,.,11 1Ct1wi1
""" l 'lit t"l f A, M11•111.;,, • ........... 1~. i: •• ,.,
Al•••I W. l1t1• Wiiii•'" lt11d ,.,-.,.tf ... Mn!1 ... IC!I' llff<"
f dll9r (ily l!t !tw
H•t11tt ..... • t-tt Offke
JOf Ith Si•ttl
M1ili1141 "''••11: r.o. ••• 190, '''~'
o .... ""'"' Nt-'1 aw~": :1111 WH! log,o. kMll•l•IJ
C•lt Miu: Jllf Wt1' lltf ltrftl
R0&alie Rehling is first \lice president,
John McRill second vice presldent, Nancy
Weed en secretary and Maurice Nelson
treasurer.
Theme or the annual installation will
be red, whlte and blue and will be
carrJed out "'courtesy. of Blatt Panther
Fireworks" satd Mrs. Faber.
She said the event is planned '° that
new and old members of the Golden
West area in northern Huntington Beacll
can get together and to marl tbe com·
J>letio!l of the community service pro--
gram financed by fireworks sales.
Two scholarshlps were donated in 1988
to Golden West College, and books went
to Gill School and the Marina Library
annex.
'The group al!O bought a tent for
Ui!: Girl Scauts and charcoal brUier1
fdr Greer Park.
AJso to be honored are outgoing offlcers
Jack Maltby, Janellyn Ripley, Sandy
Widdlck and Bill and Ruth Bruney.
A special award will go to John McRlll,
fifeworks chairman. ·
Infonnatlon on the Installation dinner
reservations may be obtained by calllril
897-1069.
Mr. Milicevic
Rites Tonight
"Rosary for George Mllicev ic, victim
of an auto accident Wednesday, will
be reci ted at 7:30 o'clock tonight and
services wUI be held at 1 p.m. Saturday,
both at Smith's Mortuary Chapel, Hun-
tington Beach.
'Mr. Mllicevlc, 53. was dead on arrival
at Los Alamitos General Hospital after
the auto in which he was riding skidded
out of control on the San Diego Freeway,
according lo the California Highway
Patrol.
A re&idenl of Hwitington Beach for
the past, six years, Mr. Mllicevic, a
bricklayer, is .survl\led by hlJ wile,
Blanche, or the home, 5701 CUtlt DriYe,
Huntington Beach; a son, Richard &erv·
Ing in the U.S. Marine Corps; two
brothers, Mike and J ames; a aia&.tr,
Violet Kcs.ic,
Intermen\ will b e at Westminster
Memorial Park.
Ski Conditions
Boosted by Storm
By United Press lntenaUonaJ
Sklin& conditions in Southern California
were reported good to exoellent today
after tlle recent storm depaslltd from
ciaht to 36 inches of snow. The lnOW
level was 7 ,000 feet and au ret«ta
were operating. '11ley Included:
Blue Horizon. 12 to 16 inchel, oper1Unc
daily ; Blue Rldp e'8hl to 10 lncbel,
Salunlay and Sunday ; a-Vallty IO
to II Inches, Saturday and SUnday; U.U:
day Jilli, 111 to 20 i.nchel, dally; Moon Rid&•. eiibt lo 10 !ncbea. Solurday and
SuMay; ML Baldy, IO to » lncbol,
d1i[y.
ML Pinol, eigbl to 10 lncl1ol, tobol ....
nln& Saturday and Sunda1; M t ,
Waterman, Ill lnclles, Saturdq Ind Sun:-
diy; flebe1 Rldp, 11 IO II IQchel, dolly:
~ aumm!t, II to 14 lncha. dally;
s-, Valley, 10 IO II lncbal, dally;
Table Mountain, two to eight lnchel,
Saturday and Sunday.
The best skiing was in the Sierra
with June Mou ntain report.Ins 14 fett~
of snow and Mammotl. wi~ 1J reet
• ~-. Tell her the overqe Coola M<J&
family's tllective annual buyln& lncoriie
11110,J'li, and -llvlntl ., -...u ...
assistance 1n a house t.he city wants
demolished ., port ol a shanty town
-sbe'll tell you lhlt'• nlce.
Real nice. -.
Sbe II Pear Jelle, ol .. Vldor1a
St., who gets '6$ e"ery two web to
help support sparile-eyed Jo Aftn, 17,
towheaded Robert, IS, and bouncy Lor-
raine, who is 11 and always tells )'OU
her eucl blrthclate.
Some residents of the propertiel 1t
211 and 281 Vlctorla SL, vow to fiabt
beside landlord Paul Gardnor In a batile
to cooduct bll alfalrl without dty hall
lnlrulloo.
·~A man dohig It II years dotsll't
need them at th.is late date." be 1111.
Gordner lacea a Colla M-City CoouJo.
cil bearinl Feb. IJ on _.bto decJanl.
lion of the land he Jiu Ownec\ llnce
1952 to be a public nuisance, hippie
haYen and trouble center which should
be cleared.
Costa Mesa may have advanced
From P.,e l
PUEBLO •..
testimony which can be made public.
Bucher told the admirals Thursday
he did not break with a pistol at his
head but wbea the North Kortans con-
vinced him they were about to shoot
his men one by one he signed a COD·
fe1sloa. that the Pueblo wu a IP)' ship.
Hi> voloe breaking, hia body trembling,
the Pueblo skipper told a hushed Court
of Inquiry Thursday that he could not
take the "mental torture'' even one day
after the Pueblo'• c..,wre. ·
With h1I wife, Role, litttnc a few
feel-away and ceyJ111, Buche< told the
court that be knelt oo. a priaon floor
a year ago today &Dd repeated. over
and over again:
''I love you, Rose."
lt brought him through two minutes
of agony of expected death. Then he
was ahown a South Korear. at.rapped
to a wall wJth an eye gouged out.
He WU beaten uncomcloul. Then the Communlsta called for hla YOUDleA
crewmembu to be l>rvuiht and -
and Bucher broke.
For the firlt time, the 4l'fW"Old
e<>mmander loll coatrol In the courtroom.
He ""1ld ocarc<ly atand. Finally, be
could DOI speak.
Then be went on to 1111 thal lie al&ned
lies that the inteUJcece ahtp wu 1n
North Korean territorlal waten, that
he WU paid by the C.Otni Intollipn<e
A£ency and that the-United ~WU
an ''aggr'elllve, lmpetlalllt nation.1'
Bucher latlJlod .prorioallJ thal be
radioed deaperaiely for help and that
Johnlon'• command did llM lfve lt to
him When the Puebln WU lllln'OUlldod
by Red gunboal> off the Nortl> Korean
shore.
Ai60 to be heard-were the skipper ·
of the Pueblo'• slater tnteru.cence ship,
USS Banner, Cmdr. Charla R.· Clark,
and a Navy caplain from the com-
munications center in Jlpan wbo wu
pusonally reading the SOS meuaps
from the Pueblo.
Freak Accidents
Kill Sergeant,
Trash Collector
A Marine Corps sergeant died Thurs-
day when his car hurtled off a military
post rood and plUDled JO feet Into a
muddy drainage dJtch, where retcue
workers took a half-day to haul lt back
out.
A lleCOnd county traffic fatality w11
logged 'J'hmlday when a trash collector
(ell beneath the wbeela of bis moving
truck on a Fullerton elementary acbool
campus.
Dead are Gy/Sgl Frank E. llikol•
jaal<, 40, wbo Um on the 5anla Ana
Morine COrpo AJr Facwty bale wben the
accident occurred, and Alfred Anmhula,
42, of 417.i,.s Truslow Ave., Fullerton.
The body ol Sgt. MlkoltJcW -who
died of injuries suffered in the ditch
acc ident, rather than by drowning -
wu not dlacovered for nearly ti&ht boon
after the OnKar wreck.
Coroner'• dtp.rties Uid the l!el'leant
was driYlng along Moffelt Road about
.f a.m. Thund"Y when the car bmtled into the gulch, but tt WU only found at' 11 :15 a.m. by passersby.
Arambula was riding on the front
loadin& bin of a trash truck at Beechwood
School, 780 Beediwood Ave., Fullerton
when be fell oft about I a.m. 'I'bunday.
Coroner's deputies said the victim land·
ed In front of the big mcvtnc vehicle
and was crushed by the wheels.
Persons Sought
For Park Board
.Applicatn from -who ... lnlemted In ....t111 on the Rocnoilon
and Park Oommlaalon In Hunu..,ton
Buch are bollll llOIJl)ll todaJ bJ the
Clly Council.
'f'bere 11 a vacancy on the II-member
-!ollowlnc the rMlpation ol Lorraine Faber.
The cornmialon advbeo the council
1n park acqul.llUon. devetopmml, and
malnteoance IDd re c rt at Ion a I pro.
tr•mlna mattln.
Joey clltlm II ellilbie and applicailon1
are 1v11l1ble from the CI t y
Administrator, Sixth Strttt and Pecan
Avenue, or by callln~$3USSI ext. 213.
I
Not Hippies~
Evi.c~ion Atte!"pt By Costa Mesa
like th< clw tf JIOOl>le thal I haft
here." "
"[ don1 mind u they call nit u
Indian," llernly chlmod in haJ Jotlt,
"because that'• what l am. Bu1-J rae:nt
being called a hippie."
"Juat because we're poor don't mNn
we'ro hijlplel(' ~ ~ Sauodon,
who CICCllploa ooolber Cl( the II Wiiia
00 Ille oar. -"'·
POUTE EXPRESSION
"Hipple is just a polite way to call
somebody a bum. We are:o'tt'' COUl-
mented pretty Jo Alln Jette, who will
gTaduate from high school nm ytai:.
Miu Jette &aid only two hou1e1 on
the land ... ol the hippie ........
type, while the rest are rented by penoo1
forced for one ruson or another to live
on limited IJ>;omes.
''Ttley're friendly . Tbe_x 'peu to ~ou."
Ille tald cl the long-hllred eypo1 who
.... -from Gordner, "but ""' keep
pretty mueb to themaelves."
City olJlclaJs Mooday crilicllo4 tile
--.. the GordDlf property, u wtll u Its aver.,0 IO to 25 ocaipaid..,
who wwe respontlb)e In one, recent
12-monlh period for some 90 separate
police cee reports.
Deputy BuiHllll IJllpector Dean Dorris
outlined the cue against Gardner's
holdlnp, boughi _lief ore the present cHy
sttocture nen emted, documenting
com[ilalnb wilh photographs of the
dllapldaled aeclion.
Boy Charged in Slaying
Held in Psychiatric Unit
Gardner, ahaent from the originally·
ICbeduJed .nuilance bear1n& due to Ou
and lar>nlltll. clwed hia throat Thurs-
day and did ..,,. talklntr too.
FEELI CONJ'IDENT
"That Dorris is jUBt a stoo1e, but
they eot him meakin' around with a
camera and tnlfln' me in the back,"
aa!d Gardner who feels confident about
the cue, based on bis current legaJ
COUDlel'• advice.
A Seal Beach youth accuatd of tbe
murder of an Anaheim -man is tireiog
held in the psycblatrlc unit <If <>range
County Medical Center Pending a hearing
scheduled for Feb. 11 in Juvenile Court.
Hospital evaluations of William L.
Fillgerald, 17, of 1006 Ocean Ave .. may
be refeired to a.nd used as evidence
at the hearing, a Medical Center
spokesman said Thursday.
Fitzgerald Js accused of gunning down
Seal Beach Teen
Gets Detention
For Joy Ride
A JS.year-old Seal Beach girl who
drove a stolen sporl5 car a\ 1peeds
up to 110 mll~ an hour through four
Orange County communities has been
ordered to runaln in Juvenile Hall under
detention for a 1kla.Y pertod.
That ruHng was ditennined at a hear·
ing in which charies of driving without
a valid driver's license and violation
of curfew were rued aaainlt tbe minor.
On completion of the dttentlon period
the gill will be released to the custody
of her mother, court officlala said.
Awaiting court action at the adult
level ii Patrick D. Phelan, 11, of LOil&
Beach, Aid by police to be • _ ...
In the atolen auto last Jon. 1. Pbelan
and the IPrl wtre ~ ofter a wild, "Kejstone Kops" pursuit in which Buena
Part, Cyjftll, La Palma and Seal Beach
pollco joined. aheriff'• unila from Los
Anlel" and Oral>&• Coonilea.
The two were grabbed when tbeY came
off the San Diego Freeway at Le. Ala·
mitol Boulevard.
~ ...
,119
Vincent R. Otleman, 2%, In a fnlcas
last Jan. 2 In the parking iol ol a Fullerton medical complu. Fullerton
police Wd a quarrel between the two
men ovu Otteman'• former girl frlel\d,
Mrs. Manuel ~rvantes, 28, of the Ocean
Av111ue a~. aparked the llllootin&-
Mn. cervpte• told -that ""· Fitzgerald, aDd her YOlllll IOlt were con-t rooted by tbe infuriated Otteman u
they. parked their car at tha medieal butldlnr. Sbe Aid Ille heatll the two
mm lltplillr and lhlo heard Ottemu
8Cl"elDl ~No no" u abe wu w•™•• I . -. away.
Flbpfald ta .-ol flrlnl -shots from a .Ja.callber Wupon inti ·
oti.man who dled olpioirt tmmedl•teQ-.
O!ftcon Aid the --yoolh WU lllalldlnl
b<afde the boily when 111<y arrim II·
the scene.
Firm F .. ce8 Suit
For Sewer Project
A Hunllniloo B<ach pipeline company
hu been oomad u def-I In a
Superior Court IUlt wll1cb clWfu Ille
firm w1111 ntua1n1 1o pay tho m.eoo
balance owinc ... a -1111e projoct. -Saddlebacl Pipeline Inc. ., 5anla Ana
clalJlll ti .... ~ by the Sanitary
Pipeline Co., ~si.a-. to pmlde labGr,
materiala and eq!Jlpmllll for COllllructlon
o1 the Clio Cltok Tl'Uok Sower between
Sept. 16, 1111 and Jane Ill, 1111. SanlllrJ'
Plpe!IJie bu paid llO,O'll.ll ol lbe total
cost ot•m.au9, the COIQplaiht addl.
SaddlebAdl: -tbat ll camOd-GUI the wtrk on the basis of an oral ai!'ff"
ment executed Dec. 1$, 1917, belweeu
th< i-.o firms.
"Dorris 1eta up io an apartment back
there behind the property with a spy· alu• and when two can show up, he
calls the police to check what kind of
coffee the people are drinkin'," the land·
lord charged.
Gardner was philosophlcal about past
police probiem1.
"Tbat'1 what we taxpayers are payin'
them for," be said, "to maintain peaet
IJ'ld order."
Fire Department inapector1 have al!o
· found balil to crlUclto the property,
which lJ Gardner's only 1ource ol income
-and rather amteady at that, becaUJe
be is sympthetlc to the poor. '
"Sametimes be don't get what'& coming
to him," llid one tenant Thm'ld17.
"I don't tnow who that fireman Is
who comes around wllb DorrlJ," A.id
Gardner, "he bn1 ·man enough .lo"" In-
troduce hlmMU and uy 'Good Momin&'
When be aets foot Oil the property."
''If the city bad the same r.:Uo of
fires we've had here, there WtlUldn't
be a tire departrnellt," he charged.
"Why d<lo'I tbeJ take plctuna of th<
-«lier cbeaple dwnpo aJoog thla street,"
be uked in bewilderment, .. tbly're no
beUer tbab mlDe. "·
NDBUNG ACl'ION
Tben, be cornplalnod " IUHabolUe nJl>lllllll of clty permneoL
'1 .... -11 fed olf the -of my land la widen Victoria Slreel,"
he said, "made them a pruent ai;id
alter that I bad to pay •1,1111 to help
wttb the cOn fer th1I Dice paVt:ment."
"BUI wben they were · baullDi dirt
oil to Ille d1lmp and I Wed for' a
couple of loads to flD up cbu~!es
In . back," be continued, ''you bet they
woo1dn 't even 1lve lt back to me. u 111 ,.,. tu• on about •t.a01Cl0t worth
of property 1n Costa Mesa." Gard!ier
~, "I.hat doesn't make me • tine -bUt I'm not 1 bum.'1
DUIOl WOlKTAll.E, ,.., '11' IALI $1n
s;. a.". 1r.10• o,.. 11"ri0"" ,
CONTINUES
FINAL WllK
• , • of out 9e1tetOI ••
Also i"cluded .,.. leMpt.,
P..I~ aftd ·~"'sorie1~
\
JliHt -I ftwe/tfrle llllNJ,.... ti
,, •• , -.. Wt ...,, .... hf. •1n, SALi $14'
lllW*T llAOI
1m w ... o1111 Dr. -....... ,.,..,,
.
Pref11dt Ill t I ..
D 1plft
~HAO! --C..""'· ....... , .... AA •¥1 AID I A•
.............. fl ............
l
L
. ----------·--------
ELDERLY EXERCISERS JOG ALONG IN use RESEARCH PROGRAM AT LEISURE WORLD
Younger Man at Left Cent.er Is L•rry Sh1nnum, USC Gr•dYat1, Who L1•ds Ex1rcist In Routlnet
Running Back the Clock
Exercis e Helps Elderly, But It Must Be Controlled
1'-1en In their seve nties can
regain much of the vigor and
physical £unction of their
forties through carefully plari·
ned exercise, a University of
Southern Calliontia research
study shows.
But don't rush out and run
a mile.
Exercise should be presc rib-
ed for individuals with the
same care and certainty a
J>hysicilin uses in cboos1ng
drugs for patients, according
to . tJ~'s Dr. Herbert ~
de Vries of South Laguna , an
authority· on the phy siology or exercise.
DeVries, working unde r
auspices or USC's Gerontology
Center, is studying the effects
or' exercise on a group of
ni.en, aged 50 to 87, who live
in and around Laguna Hills
Leisure World.
At this point, after more
than a year of study, the
USC researcher reports these
dramatic resulis in group
averages among men who are
participating in his carefully
controlled program of ex-
ercise:
-Diastolic blood pressur~
has been Unproved by 6 per-
cent. 1
-Body fat has decreased
by 4.8 percent.
-1'-faximum oxygen con-
EUmption, the best single
measure of an individual's
vigor, increased by 9.2 per·
cent.
-0Iygen pulse, a measure
of cardio-vascular function,
improved by 8.4 percent.
-Alm strength increased
by 7.2 percent.
-Other indicators of work-
ing capacity showed a 7 to
9 percent improvement.
TENSION DROP
One ol •11\e greatest and
most significant change1 that
occurred in the men as the
result of the exercise program
is a drop in nervous tension
level, Or. deVrles reports.
"In our 41 experimental su~
jects who have participated
in the exercise program, there
has been a reduction at rest
of 14 to 15 percent in nervous
tension," says the U S C
educator.
"This is compared to the
control group of n on -e x-
ercisers, who uperienced a
slight qicrease in nervous
tension.
"Reduction of n e r v a u s
tension bas been a neglected
area in physical education,
and this is serious because
o! the significance of tension
as a potentia1 threat to good
health. particularly in the
middle-aged and elderly," he
adds.
It has been deVries' con-
·e1c;vc~E· PROVl'DES PHYSIOLOGl~AL DATA
R•y~ HalldorMN?, 68, Pff•ls for Dr. DeVries
I
Russian View
tenlion ' that some portion · of
the physical decllae that ac-
companies old a·ge is due at
least in part to physical in-
activity and is therefore un·
necessary.
'PHARMOCOPOEIA'
His research is proving the
accuracy of ihat hypothesis.
A major goal in addition
lo measuring the results of
exerc~ itself_ is developing
a "pharmacopoeia" of ex-
ercise -a -body of knowledge
on which to base individual
prescriptions for exercise . as
Is available to any physician
in prescribing dru_gs.
"If, at the end of the
research, we have developed
at least a beginning or our
'pharmacopoeia of exercise.'
we will have accomplished
what we set out to do," Dr.
deVries says.
The importance of being
able to prescribe exercise is
pointed up in the har.ards that
exist in it for some perso~.
he says.
The presence of some level
or arterial sclerosis, incipient
heart disease, or other ailment
unknown to the person can
make bursts of unsupervised
exercise a potential killer.
Dr. deVries cited as
evidence for this observation
a number of deaths from jog-
ging during recent months in
Orange County.
Each s~bject in his rtsearch
project was screened and
tested for several months
before the exercise portion or
the program began. Tests in-
clude a com pre hens iv e
physical, and a battery or
tests administered by deVries
and his staff.
ROUTINE
Subjects in the program
work out for one hour three
days a week. Their routine
includes calisthenics, jogging,
static: stretching, and swim-
ming. They are tested at the
beginning, and at intervals of
six, 18 and (2 week!!! for im-
provement.
DeVries s a ys th e
participants are particularly
enthusiastic when, for ex-
ample, he ts able lo tell a
man in his seventies that his
tests show that his cardiac
outpu t, blood_pressurt, oxygen
romumption, nervous tension
level or other parameters art
Cilmparable to the nonn for
a 46-year-old.
Because his goals
neceS81tate pioneerbJi ef!IWIS,
deVries has found it essential
to develop bis own mieasure-
ment tests and new measure-
ment equipment for b i s
.....rch.
An example of this is what
b e calls the P EP
( P h y s iological Efficiency
Profile) Test, which h e
developed in association with
an assistant, Dr. Kenneth
Lersten. Facton measured by
the PEP Tea Include blood
pressure, oxygen consumption,
body cOmposition. nervoos
-tension and musde toile.
f:le· has also developed a
device which me a s u r e s
nervous tension levels electro-
myograpbict.lly. That ls, it
determines the electrical ac·
tivity of the muscles to mark
the extent of nervous tension
the subject is experiencing.
MOBILE LAB
This equipment and other
instrumentaUon is housed In
a Specially-designed mobUe
laboratory located at preaent
at the Laguna Hills site.
DeVries' research project is
funded by a grant from the
U.S. Department of He'1th,
EducaUon and Welfare's
Administration on Aging.
DeVrles ls --e professor tn
USC's Department o~ P~yalcal
Edu'caUon in addition to his
duties as 'head of physiology
of exercise research at USC's
Gerontology Center.
Gerontology is the branch
of science dealing with aging.
He earned the bachelor's
degree at Pennsylvania State
College, his ma.!ter's at the
University of Texas, and his
PhD at USC.
He lives at 32194 Vista de
la Luna , South Laguna.
EXERCISERS
NEEDED
Dr. deVrles ls seeking ad-
ditional male volunteers. 50
or older, for an experimenlal
group of exercisers for the
final phase of his physiology
of exercise program a t
La~una Hills Leisure World.
The onJy expense f o r
participants is the cost or a
preliminary m e d t c a l ex-
amination. ApplicatioM wfll be "vV1'Y
accepted for a limited period
of time.
Further information can be
oblalned by cootactlng deVrl.,
at his mobile rese a rch
laboratory, telephone -·
Reanimation Medicine's 'Next Goal \
FLORENCE, Italy I AP) -
Reanimation, t h e ·bringing
back to life of someone who
under present criteria might
be presumed dead , has a big
future in medicine, says a
Soviet expert.
V, A: Negovsky, director of
I.he Moscow Academy of
Stience1' Re animation
Institute, said in an interview,
"The struggle against death
is an old aspiration among
men. part icu larly the
RUMians."
The Soviet scientist, said the
study or reanimation has
hurdled many obstacles. He
added : "Reanimation win be
the preemlnent branch of
medicine In the future."
Ne1ov1ky said that in the
cases of sudden death, Hfe
Is not completely Jost untiJ
, the brain stops functioning.
"We know well that the ar-
rest.of ctrcuiation and respira-
Uon signiF"y a ceSsatlon or life,
but we also know lhlt not
all organs and not all tissues
die in the same moment,"
he ad~.
~e ner vo us system in
particu1ar has a briel afterlife
which, unUI a few years ago,
waa calculated at f o u r
minutes, but whi ch is certain·
ly more."
This bodily tyll.em, he said,
could sometimea live up to
ha.If an hour after other vital
functions tmd halted. He in-
dicated lhat ln some cases tblt
half hoor coold make tho dil-
ferenct between a COfP." and
a reanimated person.
"Circulation and respiration
can be actively maintained
through the use of artificial
hearts and lungs," s a I d
Negovsky.
He recommended that dot-
ton working on rtanimaUoo
concentrate on heart caaea,
because heart dileQle 19 such
a fequent cause of sudden
deaths.
Dr. , I. E. UlnCllna , ft'om
lhe Pavlov Institute In Len-
ingrad, said her work showed
that good weather helped
reanimate the vi rtuany dead.
Failures in attvnpta to
reanimate, sbe added, trip!ed
during days of & I o o m y
weather compared w i t h
result! on pleasant daYJ.
_Compromise
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The Board ol S..peniMn has
approved a compromise plan
to end yean of dilputing
-· the state lllglrway Comm1Mion and the city over
a nlllle for part ol the
Junlpero SerTl Jl'reew1y, s.. FrMdlCO bad p-
state plllftl lb build the road
a long lhe etyst.&i Sl>tlnJ-s
Retervolr, which hOldl the
city'• water aoppfy. l>oeilble
conlamlna~ wu claimed.
Dr. V. Schrire of so u t h
Africa, director of the card.Jae
clinic at Cape Town's Groote
Schuur boopital·llte ol the flnt
human b e a r t tramptant.-
stated that D10ll deatba ol
intema1 C8UAel occ:ur at night.
And m"'I ol theoe, be Aid,
occar "precilely between mid-nlibt and J I.DI."
Plan OK'd
The hlclnr1¥ -had contended tbat the route
the cl!y pr1lpOled over •
nearby rldp would be mort
expenalve, but flbllly qree<
to It all<r lhe federal roverr
ment tbruttoed to wtthdra1
fundl for the projecl
Tlleou~-Moo
day to auaranl<le ]>ftmalMlr
scenk and rterea~I u'
d J.1,0001 ecres of wlferfthc
land In e~ fer approv11
of the rid&' roole.
\,
I -
f'r1d17, JlllU'f 24, l'IM DAILY PILQ)' J3
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•
ROBINSON'S BRIDE TO R,EMEM BER ~ .. -
Her most perfect momerit is captured in
the beauty of a silk organza gown. So
romantic with a n empire bOdice, jewel
neckline, the daintiest of' daisies in a
rondelet of appliques. Jn all white, pink
or blue over white. 176. 00. cathedral
mantilla, 150,00 from Millinery Salon.
If you're a b r ide-to-be •• ,you are Invited
to attend a Bridal Fashion Show, presented
by Roblnson1s a nd B r ide's f\lagazine in
The U do Buffet, Robinson's Newport,
F riday, J anuary 31 , at 7 :00 p.m.
Complimentary tickets for you a nd a .
guest may be obtained In-our B r idal Sa.Ion.
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JOI IS 'Ai'rlNG -Slullent Chuck Oostdyk, of ea.ta Mesa, learns data pro-
ctHlng from Oranie CO.at College Instructor 1Uclw4 Reynolds. College's
new IBM MO computer (backgrouod left) opens new doors of opportunity for
data-processing trainee• Who will be in high demand .
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Awesome An·teaters Blitz UCD, 99-89
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
·Meyer Gets
Sullivan Nod:
Toomey Third
.. Super· Joe
Considering
Retirement
NEW YORK (AP) -Only Joe Namath
could top Joe Namath wben it comes
to startling the pro football world, and
Broadway. Joe has in mind an encore
for his Super Bowl triumph with the
New Yori!: Je:ts.
Namath, pro football's glamour boy
at the tender age of 25, is lalll:ing
about retiring. Don't laugh. Remember
Sandy Koufu and Jimmy Brown!
Although be is the sport'• No. 1 slat
with a bushel ~ull of money and maybe more Super Bowli' ahead of him, he NEW YORK (AP) -Debbie Meyer listed some pretty good reasons for get·
ol Sacramento, the first swimmer in ti .... out now, while he still is on top.
Olympic history ever to win three gold ~ legs are the main problem,"
medal! in individual eventa, won the he said. reatfimUng a simple off-hand James E. Sullivan Award today as the out.standing amateur athlete of 1968. comment Wednesday that· he is con--
Mlss Meyer accumulated l,237 points siderlng the possibility.of reliring. And there have been several very In the voting by sports writers, attractive business and entertain1nent of·
sportcuttn, A.~U officials and amateur fers that followed his direction of the sportsmen, edging two members of the men's Olympic track team _ Al Oerter Jets to their stunning Super Bowl upset
and Laguna Beach's Bill Toomey. over the Baltimore Colts that made
Mlsa Meyer, in winning the award him the most attractive personality in
bestowed by the Amateur Athletic Union, sports.
became only the fourth female winner Namath's retiring thoughts put a
io the 39-year history of the award. damper on any ttlebralion Weeb Ewbank
Holder of all standard world freestyle might have considered after signing a
records from 200 to J ,500 meters, the new· contract earlier Tbunday as coach
Moot·?, 116-pound teen-ager won the 200, and general manager or the Jets.
400 and 800-meter freestyle races at There bad been some speculation that ~ JM: Medco Qty OlymprCl!I and earned the ll·year-old mentor might give up
-the Sullivan Award · in the closesr vote -the eoaching·relps, but thal would have ·-~"-"on JJI. ht.•tory. _ been nothing compared to any idea that ~· -Nalll'ltli ml"'t tetlfe. Oerter, of West Islip, N.Y .. won his &-' • fourth CQl\SeCUtive Olympic discus title Brown, Cleveland's great running back,
in Mexico City and finished sec<1nd in shocked the sports world by retiring
the voting and Toomey was thit~ ~ith before the the 1966 season for a movie
1,110 points for his efforts In winning career. Koufa.i, baseball's superstar,
the Olympic decathlon gold medal. alter pitching ·Los Angeles to the pennant
None of the other 12 nominees was in 1966, retired because of a painful
close to the top three, who gained 73 elbow ailment. percent of the total vote. "You have to make it while you 're
Miss Meyer, in beCOmlng only the on top befon you get destroyed," said
fourth distaff winner, also became on1y Namath, who bas been bothered by knee
the thlrd swimmer to receive the award. trouble in both leg1 since his college
Ann CUrtis was the first swimmer lo days at Alabama He bas undergone
win in 19'4 and 20 years passed before tbrff operations on them and st.Ill play1
Don Schollander won in 1964. in pain.
The award is given in the memory "It's been a Jong seaaon and with
«James E. Sullivan, one of the founders rest they might be better," Namath
of the AAU. It is awarded to the said. "But the way J feel now, retirement
"amateur athlete who by performance, is something that bas to be considered.
eumpte and good influence did the most "I know I couJdn't have played in
lo advance the cause of g o o d the second half of the All-Star g a m e
sportsmanship during the year." at Jacksonville if I had to."
1'be other athletes nominated were: He denied that retirement talk might
Track and field -Bob Seagren, George: be a means toward getting a better
-young, Ron Laird, Wyomia 1'ywl and cooict from the Jets. "If I can't play ,
Madeline Manning. I ca 't play. I'll just be pbyaically not
. .Boxing -George Foreman and Ro~ capab . The doctor will have to decide
Harris. 't . he iiaid.
Speal stating -Diane Holum. One thing Namath will consider is
Swimming and diving -Sue Gossick his teammates.
and Doug Russe11. "There would be a sense of letting
Baaketball -Jo.Jo White. them down if I quit," he e.iplainecl.
Debatable Selection
McLain Athlete of Year?
How About O.J., Oerter?
A pro baseball player as thf: USA's
znsle athlete of the year for 19611?
There must be a mistake or some
k.ind in Associated Press' announcement
Ytal Detroit pitcher Denny McLain was
chosen for that honor by supposedly
t;nowledgeable men -sport.s writers.
Entertainer of the year? Perhaps.
Bll!inessman of the year! Possibly.
9"aftsman of the year! Maybe.
·But ATHLETE OF THE YEAR? Now
that's certainly a matter left open for
debate.
,, How ·can a pro baseball player be
any more of an athlete thaJJ a bowler,
' GLANM '*"IT•
WHITE
WASH
goller, 1in rummy player. Jockey or
banjo player . He might be called a craftsman,
because certain technical skills art ~
wived in hi! tndeavor.
But to this corner. an ATHLETE or
the year would be IOmeone who has
tome forth with a great sports ao-
camplilhment by Went. dHlro Ind
followl.n.il of rip'ow traiNng rults.
Tbe latter stipulation would eeem t.o
rtmO'Vt pro bueblll pl•yers from cm-
ttnlloo, generally speak.Ing.
Havtn& tr•veled with pro ~baD
ptqel'.l l can usure you that tbt idea
ol lralnlnl certainly conlll<ts "'lb. what ~ ATHLETES would contider
rllor«» dltctpllne. • Take boDll fide athletes like USC's
O.J. Stmpoon or Ille great Olympic ditc111
lhrowerAIOerW. You caa be sure they weren't seen
In "'1 bin dllrmg their ,.....,._ And
JlllU cin lie equally certain that tlley
_.,,,,, lie tllppln& out liehlnd Ill•
ti'rs ••rs for a drq Ol' two on • weed bdlre pl-.cuci, c:ompttltion, lunch or
•
anything else.
The dormant men who casl their
ballots for a pro baseball player as
ATHLETE of the year must have forgol·
ten about O.J. or that event held last
October in Mexico City called the Olyrn-
pic Games.
0f!rtf!r ll' as Beat
Simpson'• 8CC1>mpUsbmeata on the
football Held ud Ills Hmble personaJity
would 1Urtly b1ve made bim 1 solid
r I ' 1 I t. tbt m• for whom I voted
Ille --°""'· If ever 1 mu personifies wllat 1
male A'l1IIEl'F.8 ti dtie :rur ahould be,
It II Albert OerteT.
He WOii u Olympic sold medal for
throwiDJ iK dllc:as I fOClrth ltrlfghl
time, •1ab:i crackiDI Ute Olympic rtCOtd.
ADd t. di • tie bid Mi stay In
r:r1ck pby•nl CHdlUon for nearly a
year, bid le overcome 1 lut-minu~
...... la)lll'J ill Me-City. bod lo
beat lite world reterd h<lldtr -a man
wbo ltad tkrtw1 1'7 fed l1r1ber lhu ...
You don't find maay J!.year-okl Olym.
pie &r1ct chlmpklu.
And l4 add I pentnll toucll 11 Al"s
favor, be n• Ute py wbt ••kl he
dkla't duerve &be '°9of' If carrying
I.he AmuiC'U fill Im ()pe.alq: Ceremonla
... It •• offtttd ldm.
Althoaall tie lllid .... dN Olympic
lold medoJs la \Ill, Jt9 • I d JIM.
be feU tha& U. fencer, Juke Romary
Ytrk. WU more deHrvt.f beea•• •be
•h m lier ~ Olympl..i.
JDddentalJ)', Mn. Vtrk 11.• .ever
placed lmOll lhe top ~ In the
Games.
A ......., Organul
So Mcl.aln, perh11ps the top organ
player al. the year, gels an award which
was perhap11 m<n suited for someone
else -1t least undtr Ill tsiltlng title.
To me, beina an A TJU..E'I'!: means
a8C!'lfklt. dtdicaUon, observing 0 r
tralttlnc rule! ind perfection in tM sport .,..,-.
Do you think MclAlin deaerves tht.
nod over O. J. and Oerter under lhosr
tiualificaliOOI?
'
BIG DECISION -UCI 's Steve Sabins seems unde-
cided whether to shoot or not during Thursday
night's UCI·UC Davis encounter. Sabins shot
PAIL Y •ILOT l'lllt'I llo1 •lcllenll KNll .. r
enough to score 16 points and helped lead Irvine to
a 99-89 victory. Davis players are Bob Guild (34)
and Frank Stonebarger (10). ·
Sports in Brief
Rig OK After Heart Scare
MONTEREY, Calif. -Bill rugney,
inanager of the California Angels'
baseball club was listed in stable CQn-
dllion today after being hospitalized when
he saii:l he felt faint while playing in
the Bing Crosby Pro-Amateur Gof
Tournament.
Dr. Donald Scanlon at Monterey
Hospital said the SO-year-0ld manager's
heart was being monitored but em·
ph38ized that rugney had suffered no
heart damage and had been kept
overnight strictly as a precautionary
measure.
Rigney, paired with professional Paul
Harney in the tournament at nearby
Pebble Beach, complained of feeling faint
midway in Thursday's round.
Scanlon said Rigney never Jost con-
sciousness and added be may be able
to resume playing in the toornamt!nt.
Last Ch•11re for Crosb11
PEBBLE BEACH -They try again
today to play the first round of the
$150,000 Bing Crosby National prD-an1
and U the rain washes it out a second
time, there ts a strong possibility the
whole tourney may go down the drain
as did the very first Crosby clambake
back in 1937.
A steady drizzle greeted early starter15
Thursday and by the time lhe later
starters had reached the first tee the
weather had deteriorated into a near
slorm.
Jack Tuthill, PGA tournament
chainnan, indicated that if another day
is IGSt in the Crosby be will order
the whole thing off.
v.s. Skw• Sharp
SAINT GERVAIS, Fr~ -The young
United States 911uad SC<lf'ed the best
ever cup team performance in a special
slalom race Thursday by placing seven
skiers in the top 15.
But Ingrid Lafforgue and Annie
Famose scored a double triumph for
France.
Ingrid, 20, grabbed her first big victory
of the season with a total time of
79.31 seconds for hte two parallel legs
Bucs Must Contain Lee
To Halt Tribe Quintet
The Eastern Conference basketball
race hasn't reached the hallway point
yet, but already coaches like Orange
Coast's Bob Wetz.el are marting to call
every ga.mr a "big game."
Normally a contest like tonight's
between the Piratei and San Bernardino
in the latter's gym would just be another
game. After all it pits a team tied
for third place against an outfit that's
mired in 10th place.
But with Fullerton threatening to makt
a runaway of the EC race. every game
is important to a team trying to make
up Jost ground. Right now Orange Coast
is 21h: games behind the Horn ets with
a 3-2 record.
57 points were the fewest a Pirate team
has given up since the l!l&HS season
wbe:n Orange Coast trimmed Mt. SAC.
74-56.
Wetiel said he planned to st.art the
S41Tle five men who worked effecUvely
against Santa Ana -center Rich
SticUlmaier, forwards Steve Jacobsen
and Pbil Jordan aod guards Jim Kindel.on
and Tim Salyer.
Kindelon has given the Pirates a big
liU in the backcourl the last two games,
scoring 43 points.
Joining Lee in San Bernardino'!
starling lineup will be forward Sam
Christian , center Sam Cash and guardl!i
Luke Harrison and Charlie Hayes.
of the slalom.
Veteran Olympic bronze medalist An·
nie Famose, 25, was right behind in
79.58.
Then came a stream of U.S. talent
in five of the first 10 placings.
Judy Nagel. 17, Enumclaw Wash., was
third in 79.93, less than one tenth of
a second in front of her elder si!t.et
Cathy, 20, in 80.02.
Barbara Cochran, 18, Richmond, Vt.,
was fifth in 80.25, Kiki Cutter, 19, Bend,
Ore., seventh in 80.58, and Erica Slinger,
18, Stowe, Vt., lOlb in 81.10.
1'1aramcla Lead1
NEW YORK -Pete Maravich didn't
play last week but Ille Lou~illna State
star still held a huge lead among the
major college ba!l~etball scoren.
Maravlcb had an average of 45.S per
game for 11 games through Jan.. 18.
Cal Murphy of Nlagara waa second
al 35.9 followed by Purdue's Rick Mowit,
32.3, Detroit's Spencer Haywood, 31.7,
and George Washlngton's Bob Tallent,
30.%.
A11d11'• /\'et" Engine
LOS ANGELES -Anthony ''Andy"
Granatelli. who won a few battles but
lost the war with car racing authorities
over his turbine-powered machines, a~
nounced a new venture Thursday.
He will use a Plym<1ulh passenger
car 318 cubic inch engine in two In·
dlanapolis racen, perbapa this year.
He will also rlct the cara competiUvely
tn road races. something never attempt·
ed with this model qine .
There is no room at Indianapolis for
exotic engines, sucb u the big turbine
he developed in the past two years,
Granatelli told 1 new• conference.
"We don 't think we will 10 to lo--
dianapolis and win the firat yur," he
said, "but we hope to have an engine
there and in three years we expect
to compete with the finest racing engines
in the world."
King• l'•ll, 3.1
NEW YORR -Rod Gilbert scored
twice and Vic Hadfield and Jean Ratelle
had a hand in 111 three New York
goals as the Rangers dropped the Los
Angeles Kings 3-1 in a National Hockey
Leagut aame ThW"sday night
Little Barnes .
Is Big Her.o
For Winners
By EARL GUSTKEY
OI ,.. Dtlty ,._, Siltt
SliD llhetl·shocked from UCl'1 bluing
9N9 victory over hi.a team Tburaday
nJpt, UC Davis b&ketball coach Bo b
Hamilton wu pressed for a commenl
''We just didn't bring our brains with
us tonight," he remarked.
Brains wouJdn't have been enough to
beat the Anteaters Thursday evening.
If the Aggies had brought their pitch·
forks, it might have :slowed Irvine
down.
It was incredlble. In all probability,
the 1,408 6pectators in Crawford Hall
saw the most sensational display of
baaketban ever performed by the
Anteaters.
During an ejght-minute strelch in the
second ball UCI looked like the
Philadelphia 7Gers.
"I think that during that stretch we
played perfect basketball," Irvine Q>ach
Dick Davis commented afterward.
"We were scoring everytime we
brought the ball down court. We had
them atooultely befuddled. It was
beautiful to behold .'"
Tbe man or the hour was the shortest
athlete in the gym, junior Mike Barnes.
The >IO dynamo from Riverside broke
the school reCQrd with 13 assists and
when be was lifted by Davis with 1:32
lo play, he was accorded a standing
ovation.
It was a lan's game. They went crazy
when incomparable Jeff Cunningham
scored on a mind-boggling layup with
7:30 to 10 in the action. He was fouled
·and-made it a three-point play for an
8>-65 lead.
The final margin was 10 but It really
wasn't that close. UCI was working on
a 20i>Pint cushion for most of the second
baU.
The score began to mount in Irvine's
favor five minutes into the second hal!
when UCI"s fast break was working,
as Davis said, to perfection. Steve Sabins,
Nick Sanden, Cunningham. Dames and
Jim Farley were piercing UCD's COfh
fused defense time and again. '
UCD was oo slouch. The Aggte.11 arrived
with a 9-3 record and most observers ex-,
pected a cl06e one. But UCI beat their:\
brains out.
UCI 1"1 UC Otvll C"I
fl fl •I t. ~-1 5 0 If S'-b&rlle!'
S«>de!I ' I 2 lJ l•r•IU Hedc""" t 1 I lt ~ohnllorl a.r.... 5 t J 10 Stwd
Slbll'lt 1 2 • 1, Ltf'llln G11vll'IO'llcll .-o J I Guild
IHf'I I ' 0 ' Wood
Ferler 2 2 e ' CUPP$ F-en 1 2 l O Dob<'•nlky
FOl'llka G 2 2 2
Ze<ll 1012 Tolall •! 17 U t9 To!al1
Hllfll!IW K~: UCI ... UCO «I.
GWC Hosts
"" .... H 2 J 24.
J • 3 ' ' 3 2 21 l • a. 1
l I 2! J
J 7 2 11
• l 2 ' 1 • ) 2 2 I J $
311512'9
Ball-Control
Foe Tonight
Cypress College's basketball team, an
outfit that would rather pass the ball
than shoot it, invades Orange College'•
gymnasium tonight for an Eastern
Conference game with run and gun
Golden West.
Tipoff is scheduled for a o'clock.
The two clubs are among five teams
who currenUy share third place in the'
conference slandings with 3-2 reCQrds
and each needs a victory badly to stay
within striking distance of undefeated
Fullerton (6-0).
Cypress coach Don Johnson is a
believer in a ball control offense and
it has worked on occasion to great .
success.
Against ruverside, the highest sc4ring .
team in the conference. Cypress con.
trolled the tempo of the game, outscorln(
lhe Tilers, 17-74.
Prior lo that game, Riverside was
avtraging almost 95 poinb a game.
Golden West is most effective as a..
free.wheeling fast-break team, but coach
Dick stricklin is still looking for more
consistency in his scoring attack.
Reserve guard Mark Miller is the
only Rustler who has managed to score
in double figures in Golden West's last
four games.
Stricklin will go with his normal lineup
against Cypress. That means a fron-
line ol Dave Prather at center. and
Brian Ambro1.ich and Allan Robinson
at the forwards .
Ollie Martin and Mark Csm pbell wiU
get the call at the guard spots with·
Miller and Randy Olso n ready to spell1
them.
Tipoff for tonight's clash Is I o'clock
and Wet.W's biggest concern is shutting
off San Bernardino"s Howard Lee, the
conference's leading SCQf"i!r with a 25.3
1verage.
"We'rt going lo go with our man·to-
man defense again and just try to keep
the ball away rrom Lee. If they manage
to work Ute ban to him, we"ll try to
make him give it up without getting
A shot off.
Bruins Battle Northwestern·
"Ont man wlll be on Let, btrt we'll
sait anothtr m11in to help out when ht
Jilet..9 UM: bill. If the m11n defcnre won't
work, we'll shift into a rone. We'll do
anything to beat t.ht'm." Wetz.el said.
Orange Coast's man defense has tight-
ened up considerably since the start or
conference play. L3st week asainst 8'.nbt
Ana. the Pirates fielded just 57 points
In 1 aame Wetie called the best job
<1f man defense in his two-plus season!!
Ill occ.
It was even better than that. Thosr
By Ullleel ..,_ lnl<n-.i
UCLA's brilliant b&.1ketball team in-.
\lades Chicago again tonight.
It looU like the only thtng that Clln
sto p the Bruins is another snowstorm.
Two yurs ago when coach John
Woodea's Bn:iins went to C'hlca,o for
a weekend doubleheader, tht area was
hit by one of tht worst Sfl0'1"11torms
In memory.
The storm made trnvel so difficult
thal UCLA '• Friday night game hRd
to be postponed until Sunday afternoon
-and UCLA beat lllinoi~ lf.0..81. The
Bruins had taken Loyola &2~7 S11turd;jy
•
night
Only ll'IOW fl~ are predicted for
thls weekend ln Chicago when the Bruins
play Northwtsttm toni1ht and Loyola
Satllrdoy nlg'1l
Marquette meets Loyola in tonight'•
first game ol the Chica:go Stadium
doubleheader wblle Notre Dame meeta
Jlllnoii in the llr.t contest Saturday.
TM: Bruins, already 12-4 this season
and favored to win an unprecedented
thlrd straight n111Uonal crown. 5tem to
be worried rnore about the ~:e11thtr than
about the.ir opponent! this weekend.
'rftuTlday nl&ht wu a light schedu~
(
ln collegiate: basketball with fourth -rank·
eel Davidson the only top power in action.'
Tbe Wlldcata turned back Princeton 71-54
as Mike O'Neill scored 22 points.
Drake beat Bradley 9J..88, Arizona Stale
topped Utah 9U8. Arizona be at Brigham
Young, 76-70, Balylor routed Tarleton
State, 103-57, and Georgia Tech litopped
ruce, 'lS-66.
O'Neill rtplaced Jerry Kroll , who was
injured Saturday against V~tl . and
helped tum the game l'l.to a rout
in U'le eecond half aft.er Princeton lrtlled
by only • M-29 margin at hAl!thnCL
Kroll WU •vtraglng 18.8 points I gamt!
~ort he was tnjurtd.
1·
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'Joday'• J'lee! .
WOl. 62, NO. 21, -4 SECTION$, 48 PAGES FRIDAY: JANUARY 2.f, '1969 JEN CENT$
Beach Stude·nt Drug Users Get Second Chance
By TERRY COVIIJ.E
Of tM Dtollt P'ltillf Matt
Twenty-seven students IUSpended from
IChool far drui UR may get a second
chance under an experim~tal program
belng tried by the Huntington Beach
Unl<n lll8)I School Dlstricl.
Tbe suspended students c&n rejoin lheit
claumala Monday when local high
schools begin their second semester.
Past district policy made it nearly
lmpo0~ble tor a drug .,., lo get back
in sct.ool until-he'd been out at lust
a year.
"The grOwing list oI suspensions for
druifil has created an educational pro-
blem that netda new solutions,.. says
Owen Miller, assistant principal of
Marina High.
"The District baa decided to try and
get the 1 e lids back in sciM:>ol it a
faster rife,"• be explained.
• , , ,PIT ......
, . 1Wo JIW, Fll\G-RAISiNG? NO~!\ ~ ~F $TAT!'
Atlil-·Wln Bottle With DiHident1 for Oki Glory
Arrested 449 Seek Bail
' .
As Pickets Resume Vigil
. .
From Wire Services student ciampus.
SAN FRANCISCO -A handful of <the Abo:: :~me::. ~ ~~~:
rain-drenched pickets resumed their to ~<li5pene, given over a kiud.speaier ~ vigil outsi~ San Francisco State atop the admin1Gralion ballding.
College today while many of the 449 ' At a news conference later, Dr. S.
arrested for an illegli rally were trying t. Hayakawa. called the rally "an act
to make bail. of desperation" by mllitanta.
BJ midmorning about half of those He praised police fOT 1 "magnificent
arrested in a three-hour-long police job of crowd control." ~ked if there
operation Thursday had gone free on would be more mass arrests, he said
bond or their own recognizance. "there ill no reason for mass arrests
A. cheer greeted each or the strikers if there t.ren't any masses."
as be left lhe Hall of Justice after Among those arruted were •. _ .115
posting $315 bond and mingled with rain-American Feder~ of :or"·
30aJl:td sympathizers on the building's ··pickets, ~g IOlne ,-~ 1
steps. · ·~le Cclltge; aad Nlll111 IJ&ld, a ·
'I'be militants, swept up In the largest 1nsu;ictor newly named to head a black
mass arrest in the city's history, faced stu~es department. created to placate
arralgrunent on charges of failure to strikers. .
disperse unlawful assembly and diltutb-The forbidden noon ratty -the first bur the 'peace. aince students returned front th e
It was I.he biggest hauJ since a st.udeht , Christmas break -was announced Tues--
rtrike spearheaded by about 110 day by the Third World LlberaU:on Front. dissid~nll and supported by 250 stritlJIC comprised or non-Negro m I n or i t y
teacbera, began Nov. I at &he 18,000 atudenls.
•
Beach Traffic Victim
Remains Unconscious
A young Huntington beech boy entered
his 13th day today without regalnlng
conldoumess 1fter iuffertna severe. ln-
jurlel in an ..1uto accident Jan. 11 on
Stock Marken
NEW YORK (AP I -The llock nllll•l
wu irregular 11t !he close todaJ thtr
ret.ruting from an early gain. Trading
... fairly active. <See quotatln, Pages
IHS). v~ wu U.52 mlnlon •hares com-omcl wllh 11.H mUUon Tbunday. Tho bow J,... lndustrlll ....... declined
1.11 to ISB.51 alter backlnl away from
.. Mrll-
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Pacific Coast Highway near Surfside.
Richard Aguirre, IS, of 173'l Chapparal
Lane, rfemaW under Intensive cal"e at
Los Allmitol General Hospital, officials
.. Id lodq. -
"Kii condition bu thown no chute1"
..id bolpllal Admin1'tntor: 11ey .. -1'We've done all we can for him
medically. ll'• JUI! a J111110r o( waltillfl
&o see what bapptOI atw." ... _11$nd 1tbUe I er In~ ol bli bl'Olher AoJ:l:.~
They 'Wm lumial <nlo Pldlle Cooll
Highway from -... Drtve when ll>ty colllded wtlh 1 <at dri9JD by Ec1Jth
T. Cude ol MOOW.,·Park.
. Annlndo Aguirre, 17, IOd -Cude both auffmd -.U.O."Pi! -.
In lha l<ddent. 'lbe7 hive been rt1N1N
"""' lllo ~ .. , ..
Miller poinUd out that all ol. the 27
1tudeJJll inay not be aUowed to return.
•1'hil ooty repreaenll an eligibility list,''
be said. ' "It's a porbationa.ry program," Mlller
added, "and each student mu s t
demonatrete 1 wWtncnea:s to reel.er
school and also attend a conference
wilh admlniatrat.ora i.nd his parenla."
The eUgibillty list ia comprised only
of students from the district's Wln-
lersbur& Colltinuallon High School.
'
1ttany suspended sludetlls ne'er go
to Wintersburg . They lran&fer districts,
enter private school! u simply drop-out
entirely.
All the Wlntersburg students are not
eligible either. Laat semester 37 stud~nta:
were .enrolled at Wintersburg because
of drug vlotaUons.
Miller explained a new s t a t e law
which requires arresting authortUes to
report all juvenile cases to school
authorities.
The Callfornla. Educational Code re-
<;uire1 autom1Uc IU!pemion for a dru.c
vtolaUon at the time of arreM.
Re-Instatement in school la lmposslble
unW the 1tudtnt'1 case h'u come before
a court ot IChool board IC1loa bu been
lal<en.
Thll yaar lbe dlJlrtct la taklni lbe
, ........ by .... and tryinr lo get lbe
studenta back tnto the normal rouUne
as fast as possible.
More Rain Due on Coast
•
-New Storm May Stretch Through Wednesday
Southern Californians' spirits were as
damp as the elementa today u they
braced themselves for another wet,
weary weekend or havina: t b e
wutharman soct ll to them.
0 Recurrent rain" through Sunday -
and pooslbly strelching through Wed·
oesda)' --wu the pfediction for the
Orange Coast and most of the state.
This la the wake of last. weekend's
Narco Raid
devastating stonn that left Loa Angeles
and San Luis Obispo counties d.isaater
areas.
With the promised rain came the new
threat of 'flooda and laodslldes aller
HunUqgton Beach, but in Fowitain Valley
a sectfon of Ediriger Avenue w.as tem•
porarily closed by heavy Ooodlng.
But the worst la yet to come.
Weathermen said the current storm
will dump two to three Inches on the
Southland by Salur<lay and from lhr<e
to atx inches on coastaJ mountain alopes.
With saturated ground, considerable
runoff and local street flooding ii U·
jlOCl«l in i-!Yinl .,....
The new storm, apawned by a aub-
troJ>ical air mass In the mld·Paclfic. &ent flood control workers ICUn'ying to
criUcal 11US-Water waa released from
the federal a:overnmeut's 10 major dama:
Grim, Solemn
In Southern clurornia to make room
for the runotf oi.raJn water.
A spokesman for the Weather Bureau
said the n•w linnD could be ''poulbly
the same .type" as !be wUu one.
"W• .,.., fteplq ID "I"' oat •fit beat)'.
rains," be added.
So were citizens .tJtrouabout Ute-
Sautbland who ...,.. making planl for
the weeUnd with ODI eye OD tbt
heavens.
Paperwork
Contin.ues . ' l ' \..-~I J • ~ ' f '")· I ·
!:.ONG l!EACR -'ne~ ·'"'"7 ·=·,....... "P-ill:lollFOIDd-· • • ve voluint ol paperirort In 11* •
Bucher Begins
Seer.et. T.estimony
wm' GI !lit l>lflsest lllrCOtiCI roundu~ in clty hls!ort. w1tl! ,.,... thaa '7,lOO
Ih «>1>lrali1Dd sel&id, 50 peno111 Jailed
"°9 -· 110UgbL Twns of to pollCe officers began the
vast, coordinated raid gyst'em Thursday
night, ann~ with secret Grand Jury
indictmenta: ~ alter a four-month
investigation.
Ooe officer oo the force just two weeks
made t8 separate narcoUca purchases
alone to help set up the arrests, which
may climb to as bJ~ as 90 before
all lh< wanted suspeCl.o are caught.
Police Lt. Jim Miller said charges
lncluded SWiplclon of possession and aale
of berobl, marijuana, L.ID and assc'1ed
other· d1ngerou1 drugs.
Not tbt sort of hippie-type suspects
normally associated with the narcotics
traffic, investigators said, the people
rounded up Thursday and today are
suspected nonetheless of being major
Southland suppliers.
Plainclothesmen and uniformed patrol
oUlcera alike participated in the raid!
11\.W"sday, covering North Long Beactt
like a blanket and sweeping the
downtown area and partytown Belmont
Shore.
During the roundup, which netted l..Oflg
Beach residents from late teens to early
thirties, police arre:ited 19 juvenile.a and
six women.
Seven Indicted . . .
In C.Ountywide
Vice Ring Probe
Seven ptrlOOI charged In a county-wide
prMituUon, &unbling and obscene movie
ring were Indicted 'nlursday by the
Orange Counly Grand Jury.
The It.member papel's approval of
complalnla placed before them by clls-
trlct attorqe7'1 lmeltlgators wound up a
lbtee-monlh probe lhll Involved pollc.
and lheriff'a deputies In seven county
communttiet lncludinc Newport Beach.
Named ln the lndk:tm"1t were : Renee
Yvonne Kelly, 44, « Fullerton; Marlene
s~ Goodin. 21, of Loe Angeles ; Jessie
De Alb• Placentia, 32, of Anaheim;
DCl.lglu C. Comwolf. a, and Do~l .F.
Gorman, it, of Garden Grove ; Feh:r B.
DI&man, 3', o( Orange and Larry Brlq-es. 21, « Garden Grove.
Sb: of the seven defendants were ar·
rested lut Jan. 10, at 21111 W. Cal.llpa
SL, AnahefVl. the home WIS de!Cribed
by lnYdtfPlon &I the beadqur1m o(
a a>anty-w\dt ring that fumllhecf, It
a price, PROlll!tea, 1aminc fadllU..
and oblctnt movie.a and literature. Brld&et wu arTtlted at a later dete.
AU lt'Vlll defendant. are free on fl.GOO
boll.
lnvallpl«I aaid the oPtflllon wu
!mown by IU organhen Ind IU polroM
11 '1Ehttrtalnment unllmlt.ed'' and
-~ .C4JW 111111-~ Club." 'l'liif fuilWil'id mil al Oliiiw 11lm,
pmbllrif iqulpm<IJI and flla IOUlld 11
lilt Cltalpa --
.Smousl11 n1r WIT......_
· Ooilimunlst Chinese Chlllnnan
. Mao Tse-tung Is reportl>il to be
seriously !U in undisdosed city
in interior of China by Hong
KOrlg's anti-Communist news-
paper, Daily Truth. Chinese
leader reportedly collapsed
during late 1968 lour and bas
beep .!of? W lo return lo Peking.
Huntington Gets
Copter on Monday
Hughes Toot Co. will deliver a police
patrol helicopter to the city of Huntington
Beach at noon Monday, according to
a spokemnan for the firm.
The city ordered the _chopper, expected
t.J be joined later by a second, to patrol
the city and beach areas. Two offJcers
from the police department now are
in tralnlng to operate lhe machine.
Cost of the helicopter and operation
Is expected to top $100,000 per year,
but city officials say they will be able
to save some money by not adding
as many addlllonal automobile patrols
u had been expected.
The helicopter is to be in full operaUon
by April, according lo police.
CORONADO, Calli. (UPI) -Cmdr.
Lloyd M. Dueber ..... 1 behind clOffd
c!oora today to tell • Naval Court of
Inquiry Lop ""1<!I detaJll abOGI the cap.
lure of the USS Pueblo.
Bucher wu joined In the necuUve
sesslon be.lore the five-admiral court by
two Navy captains from Japan who
were on duty when the intelligence 11hJp
waa seized off North Korea a year
ago.
Appearing grim and IOlemn, allbou(ti
w1th h1I composure restored after
Thur"1ay's emollonal onleal, Bucber
J1'!0ved into • conference romn IU4fded
by Marines at t a.m. PS1.
A abort time lat.er the two eaptalnl
went into the room. They ftl'e Capt.
Thomas L. Dwyer, at the time auistant
chief of lta!f for.' intel.Ugenct, Naval
Forces Japan, and Capt. Form! hue,
chief of staff for commander, U.S. 'Naval
Forces Japan.
Bucher was expected to resume
testimony at the outset. He wlD talk
about just what clualfled Intelligence
documents were captured by the Com·
munlsl!, bow much electronic gear and
what type was not completely destroyed
and other "sensitive• matten.
While the Communists obtained aome
U.S. secrets from the intelligence s!llp,
other critical material wu destroyed.
But that capt.nred could endanger lbe
security of the United Stal.el.
Rear Adm. Frank L. Jotmacn. com-
mander of Naval Forces In Japan at
the time, also wu here and will test.lfy
during the three c!Qa of closed seaionJ
Friday, Saturday and Monday. Johnlon
is presently commandant 13th Naval
Diltrlct, SeaUe, Wash.
'Hiroshima' Banned
Pulitzer Prize Winner
Taken Off Library Li.st
"Hiroshima," the book by P\J.Uliier or the schools to lff that 1ludent.s are
Prize author John Heney, was one of given mere than one viewpOlul of an
two book&: banned Thunday by Orange hlMoric event.
Counly Boan! of Educalloo members Ralllaoo, however, maintained !bit lhe
from lbe library ol 1 new <Willy· boot gtvea auppon lo ban the bomb
operated tchool. movementa. ·
Dr, Dale E. Rallison, SIJ1la Ana -"We have demonat?ltloal by pucenlka
Ust, cbarpd that "HlrOsbtma" prellDtl becauee we have aUowed 10 modl
1 onHlded '1ew ol the IHI 1lom born-l11llmal ol Ulla tlnd In °"' llbrariel,"
bing ol, the Japal1<" city. H• &aid lbo he. declared. .
boolt t.na ooly of, lbe bomJr Ind lalfl Trualoel voled uJllDlmoully lb cltlele
to menllon !be lmporilnl facl that lbe llOC.'Olld boot. "Blfl Cblop -America thounnda of American llvea wer .. 11.ved Transforms l&;Rlf, JIQ0.1•," by
by making 1 cOstly mllilary lnvulon Friidarict L<wla Allon," publbhed In 1~
unneceaaary, l\lll1aoo aa14 lho boolr.· lmpUeo' lhll
In b11 boot, H.....,. repor1' oo lho Rualle· and ~'"nri-q n Ml Iba
aflmnalh ol the bombinl Iii ~ ""'th!eit .,_.. · . '
lf""'Ch lbo qa al °' ~.. TR ~ ' '!» bilill -~tbo lfll 'loo 0..
111.Jllt......,. " • ·~· · : 11-,. ·91 the -~:Ytillb TnlMe DP.I! J~' in' a'toft. GuldlJloe 'Cmf« • lo opeo du.,r..il 'lillll othit' ~ Feb. ~ 'llilo .dool' ,1111..a. .-Ml'lor bo -.... It ll Ull _....'l pnjbllloo'.. • '
I·
, . '
' ; • I 'i, :,.~1 JI
A Nll'y public lnl<lnna1lon olllctr "1D
sit In on lhe court and brllf """"""
after the 1e8Slon on lbose portiolll of
(See PUEBLO, Pip I),
Valley Jaycees
'Young Man'
Award Slated
Tbe OUlalandlng young man GI . 1"11
wlll be lllU10UDCed Monday nJPl at lbo
Founlain Valley Junior Chamber GI C<mo
merce annual Dlsttngulabed Service
Awud BuqueL
The J.,.,.. banquet will be 11 the
Seaclilf Country Club, aootl Pain> Ave.,
llunllnglon BeAch.
For the past two weeks 1 commlllet
beaded by Bernie Sualstad bu been
canvasstng churches, buslnessea, ctubl
and organization.s to find a man between
lhe ages of ll.JS who contributed the
most to FOW1taln Valle7 la 1968.
Judges for the Jaycee contest are
Leonard Sbaue, president of Mercury
Savings; Dr. Edward Be au b I 1 r.
Superintenderit of the Huntington SChool
Dlslrlct, and Chuck Dlaon, manager o(
the Crocker Citizens National Bank la
Fountain Valley.
Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger of Foun-
taJn Valley received the Ja,cee honor
last year.
Tbls year's winner will be eHglble
for the slale J17cee aalocllon, and tt
named one of the top 10 Jn Clllfamia,
a chance at naUona.1 hoocn.
f
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Tornado's Deadly Trail
Tornado which touched down in Hazlehurst ,Mis11., Wednesday cut
this 1wath through the tiny town . In all, tornadoes in South this week
killed 29 pe~Qns, Jett hundreds homeless. Emergency crews are still
mopping up (See story Page SJ.
" Mrs. Faner-New-President
Of Golden West Homes
Lorraine Faber, who reslined recently
from the HunUnaton Beach Recre.aUon
and Parks Commis!ion, will be installed
Saturday night as president of the Golden
West Homeowners Association.
The annual "Fourth of July Party
In January,'' also known u the "Hiring
and Firlq put,y," will be held 11 Mli.
Faber'• home, IS271 Nottingham Lane.
Beach Exchange
Student 3rd in
Speech. Contest
For the flnt time in the· hlst.orf or .
Huntington Beach a foreign exchange
1>ludent entered the American Legion.
nratorical contest and even manaaed
to place.
Audun Tvedten of Norway, an exchange
fitudent et Hunlln(ton Beach High School,
captured tblnl place Jn the Post 133
6J>Onaored contest Jan. 16 .
First place winner was Don Naranjo,
second place was Valleri1 How and
fourth went to Tim Kincy.
Naranjo will be eli&lble to compete
In state and naUonaJ contests, trying
for scholarship money.
Judges In the coostest were Judge
Celia Baker; Dr. Donald Shipley, a city
councilman; George McCracken, a city
councilman, and Mrs. Norma Gibbs, a
parks and recreation commissloner.
The tellers were past commanders
Dr. P. E. Sheehan, Mike Nichols and
Joseph Coluworthy.
Philip McGinn 1uved as timer and past commander Orlan Sowers was
chairman of the event.
Theme of the contest was the Constitu·
tion of the UrUttd States.
DAllY PllOI
o ..... HGI co.i.iT flUILl~~INC. (OMl'A~l'
••h••t N, Woe4
l'ru.,.nl aM flllllll•i..r
Jae• I, C.dty
\"itr '°"""'ftl ..,. o.Mrel ""'"'..,
Tltf'!l•t ktt,il ....
lltt•tt A. M..,..,.lriint
M-11111 E•l '«
Allttrf W. l1t1t WilU1111 1111
#l•tototlt tl11flhflotlflfl ._.
Ettl« (.!y t:•ltw
" .............. Oft'••
Jiit ltli Str11t
M1 ili"f All4r1111 r.O. 111 7,0, tJ•~I
-°""" H, .......... IMCll; ttU wttt .. .,.. ""'"""'0
C"lt Mtta: IJf Wt•! 11' I'""!
-
Rosalie Rehllng Is first vlct president,
John McRill second vice president, Nancy
Weeden secretary and Maurice Nelson
treasurer.
Theme or the annual installation will
be red, wbite and blue and will be
-carried out "courte,,y of Black Panther
Fireworks" said Mrs. Faber.
She said the event Is planned so that
new and old members of the Golden
West area in northern Huntington Beach
can get together and to mark the com·
pletion of the community service pr~
gram financed by fireworks sa1e1.
Two scholarthipl!I were donated In 1951
to Golden West College, and books went
to Gill School and lhe Marina Library
annex.
The group also bought a tent for
lhe Girl Scouts and charcoal brazier•
for Greer Park.
Also to be honored are outgoing offlcen
Jack Maltby, Janellyn Rlpley, Sandy
Widdick and BUI and Ruth Brazney.
A. special award will &o to John McRlll,
fireworks Chairman.
lnfonnation on the Installation dinner
reservations may be obtained by callln1
897·7069.
Mr. Milicevic
Rites Tonight
Rosary for George Mlllcevic, victim
of an auto accident Wednesday, will
be recited at 7:30 o'clock tonight and
services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday,
both at Smith's Mortuary Chapel, Hun-
tington Beach.
Mr. Mlllctvic, 63, was dead on arrlval
at Los Alamitol!I General HotpJtal after
the auto in wbJch he waa riding akidded
out of control on the San Diego Freeway,
according to the Caillornia Highway
Patrol.
A resident of HunUngton Beach for
the past six years, Mr. MiUcevic, a
brlck1ayer1 is aurvlved by hla wife,
Blanche, or the homt, 5701 CuUe Drive,
Huntington Beach ; a son, Richard serv-
ing in the U.S. Marine Corps ; two
brothers, Mike and James; a sister,
Violet Kesic.
Interment will b e at Westmirutcr
Memorial Park.
Ski Con,ditions
Boosted by Storm
By United Press International
Skllng conditions in Southern Callfomla
were reparted good to ucellent today
after the recent stonn depoalted from
eight to S6 Jnchet of anow. The snow
level WU 7,000 feet and all resorts
were operating. They included :
Blue -U to 15 Inches, opor1Ung dai!JI ; Blue Rldp s!Jlht to 10 lnchol,
'Soim,llJ llld Sunc111; Green Vollly, 10
to 11 lnclle.I, Solurday Ind Sundq; Ho)l.
day lllJI, 11 to :II lncha, ditty ; Moon
Ridp, eliht to 10 -·· Sllurdly Ind SUnday; Ml Baldy, liO to 30 lncha,
dally.
ML Plnos, e1ibt to 10 Inches, tobog1n·
nlng Satttrday and Swnday; M t •
Watennan, ~8 inche1, Saturday and Sun·
day; Rebel Ridge, II toll lncha, dally;
Snow Summit, 11 to :4 lncheo, dally:
Snow V1Dey1 10 lo 18 Inches, dally;
T.a1'1e Mountain, two to elaht lncbts,
Slturd1Y Ind Sunday.
The best skilng was In the Sierra
with June Mountain repa{Ung 14 feet
o1 mow and Mammotl. with U ft<!.
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•we':me· Poor~ ·Not Hippies~
' ' ' .I
.Shtinty. Reai.dints· to 'fight Eviciion Attempt Sy Costa MeMl
., Aanvi .. ,mlm. .
qi fMi DtW. '"" ~ • Tell her the average Costa M ..
family's effective annual buying Jncome
Is IIO,l1S, and -llvin1 on c:ount1 welim
.assistance in a house the city want.a
demoliahed u part of a shanty town
-she'll tell you that'• nice.
llUl nlct.
She h Peay Jett( of la Vlctorle
St., who gets 115 ov.,Y two weeia lo
help support sparkle-eyed Jo AM, 17,
towheoded Robert, 13, and bouncy Lor·
raine, wbo ii 11 and alw~a tella )'OU
her uact blrthdlte.
Somo l'llld<ntl ol the proptrllo1 at
28& and S88 Victoria St., vow to f1abt
bulde llndlord P1ul Gll'lloer In I blftle
to conduct . hiJ lllaln without city ball
Intrusion.
"A man doing It 11 yura doesn'I
need thorn at thla !tie dlte," he ,_,.,
GuWler ll!'el I Colll Mua City OOUI)..
ell beufnl P'eb. U OA poulbla c1ec1ar ..
tlon of the land he hu owned alnce
1952 to be a public nul5ance, hippie
haven and trouble center which should
be cleared. .
Costa Mesa may have advanced
From P .. e l
PUEBLO ••• ,.
rnnl"t ...... ~ly tract houslnf, • ~ lbOoDlni . .. and • public
· aott ...n.;i..rt11t n11 o111i.r1ture
fro¥>. ll>lbullutlc clly -... ., menUoo the poor.
They too. must live somewhere, Ul6
land!Ord ..,a.
A co1Gi'full1 -Ullvo Mlttd ..,,._. ~ man, G--1114.temni. who adlidte btm as oot wb6 know•
!hot evtry bult account bu a bottom
lo It -told I\ Uke tbey say it is
Tlru'9d11.
"I li:now 1111 -"11< .,. cholp, not fanc)I, but ,ou can't roll ou& Ult
ttd wpll fat 119 I llllJlllh," llfcf
Girdner, who u ... II 3llZ5 Donc,ylm>ol;
Lant, co.ta Mea
"But ~·1 DOI whll the city Is boef1na
abou$.," he cooUauecl. "They fust don 'L
like the clUI el -II lhlt I blift
here."
"r don't mind II they Cllt me 111
lndi1n," eterni, clllmed In "-Jelle, "becau.ae that'• whit J am. sUt-1 rtSent
being cllled 1 hippie.''
"Jut because we'n _poor don't mean
we'to blj)pln," --So ......
wbo' ~ -G(' the 11 linlll on tbe Garner paope1ty. ..
POIJTE EXPllEmlON "Hi= ii JllSI I polite "If to clll
IOmt a bum. We arta1t.'' eom-
monled prttty Jo Am> Jetlt, wbo will
1'1dU1te from high -nut yw. Miss Jette u1d only two bousel on
the land are of the bippte commune
typo, whlle the rut 1ro -Id by_
forced tor one reuoa « IDOtber to llw
Boy Charged in Slaying
Held in Psychiatric Unit
on limlted lnCocnes.
''They'n friendly. TbOJ 1peo~ to you,"
abe u1d of the Jong.haJrid ' t)'pes who
also rut from Gardner, "but they keep
pretty much to themselves."
City olllciAls Monday criUcbed the
ap~ ol .thl GIJ'dnlr prnplrly,
u W.U 11 ita aftrqe 10 to • occuputa,
who wtre mponaib!e In one, recent
12-mooth period for some 90 separate
police case reports.
Deputy Bulldlnc inJpoctor Dean Dorris
outllDtd the cue a,ainJt Gardner 's
holdlnp, boullht before the pro5tlll city
slructw't even elilted. documt.ntinc
complalntl with pbotol'•phs or th1
dJlapldated section.
Gardner, 1blont from tho originally.
acheduJed nuilance hearing due to Ou
Ind luyngiUI, cleared h1I throat Thlll'I·
d1y Ind did ..... talklni too.
FEELS CONFIDENT
"That Dorris is ju1t a 8looge, but
they aot him sneakin' around with a
camera and tnlfln' me in the back,"
uld <llrdnor who feels coolldent 1bout
the cue, baled on b1a current Jegal
coumel'1 advice.
A Siil 811ch yoa1ll -ot the Vincent R. Ottllll&n, U, lo a fr1cu "llorrta pl.I up In ID 1pll'tment hlcli d of ·--~·-. bdn lot there bohlnd the property with I •PY· mur er an --..iu man i1 g laat Jan. J tn the Pl.rtinc of a Slua and when two can ahow up, he
held In the pqdtlatrle Unll (If Ora.,. 1'11llll'lon mldlW complex. Fullerton callt the pollce to check whit kli1cl of
County Medical Center pending a hearing poUct nJd a quanl bitWMD the two coffee the people art drlnkln'," the land· testimony which can be made public. • scheduled for Feb. 11 in Juvenile Court. :i:!' over ottemu.'1 fonntl' atrl fr1IDd, lord clwfed.
Bucher told the admira!J Tbursday Ho.!pltal evaluations Of William L. u--uel "'-· •--.. J •"-....... __ o-~-he did not brealr with 1 plltol at ta · Df.&1.1 ""'an._, •· w ~ ~ &rW1er w11 phllotophlcal about past head but when the North Koreans con-. Jl'lt.qeraJd, 17> ol llXll Ocean A-.e., may Avenue addreu, tparked tha-abootini· police pt0blf:llll.
vinced him they were about to shoot be ttfmed to and Uled as evidence Mn. Cervantes told ofDctrl that lht, '1'bat'1 what we ta1pa:yer1 are pa:yin'
h . ..... at the hearing, a Medical Center Wllit-·erakl, and her vt111R• IOI\ were COJP them for," he laid, "to maJn•·•-~•co his men one by one e ilP"" -a con-k id Tb··-.. ...,...,. .. --.. ~ r-fesslon that the Pueblo wu a spy ablp. spo estnaa. aa ""-•T· fr«ited by the lnturiated Ottlmlll. u and order." · Hi• voice breaJdni, h11 body trembllnf, Fllqer11d la ICCUled of lwuUni down 1111)' pukld their cor it the med!Cll Flr1 Deportment ln1poctora hive •lso
the Pueblo skipper told a hushed Cow1 bulldlq, Shi 1114 lho beard thl nro found baaia to crltlclJe the property,
of inq·"-Tburld1y lhll be could not men arlUfoc ud thin beard Otttm1D which la Gll'lloer'1 only source of Income
tW th;f'mental tortureneven one .s., Sea, J Beach Toon -=."No, no"•""' wu •alk!N -Ind r1ther utllteldJ 1t lhlt, becluse
after tbe Pueblor1 cap&ute, •••Y• • be II 11DtPtbetfc to the poor.
With h1I wtte, RDle,. 1f111na a few · rtlzamld la -eC ·11r1oa lliM · "-•hi don't 1et Whit'• coming
feet away .11!!1 Cl'J'll!l •. J!uchtt.Jold . tlle • ·Gets Detenti"on· ------• .1k1Ubv -....--1o·hlm;" Aid CJlll1enant"l'lllrta1r.----court th.at he knett on a prbon fioor ottoman Who dlld IJmoll lmmldlataf11 :•1 don~ know Who that llnmln Is
a year ago today and repeated ovtr Ott1ctr,I A1d the youth wu ltandlnl who coma around with Dorrl1/I Rid
and over again : For Joy Ride buldo.tlle bod,y wlten they ll'l'lved 11 Gardner, "he Isn't m111 "'°""' to In-"l love you, Rou." ~ acene. troduce hhnleU and 117 1Good Mornlng' It brought him through two minutes •.hen he let.I foot on the property."
of aa:ony bl expected death. Then he A 1&-:c1N1ld 8eaJ Beach girl who "If the city bad the aame raUo of
WU lllown I SO\lth Kor .. r, llrlpped drove a llOlen _.. Cir al •poid• Firm Faces Suit f1ru ...... bid here, there wouldn 't
Lo 1 wall with an eye 1ouged out. up to 110 miles an hour through rour be a fire department," ne cbaraed.
He wu beaten unconaclOUJ, Then the c "ti h bee ' "WhJ don't they toe pJcturu of the
Communilta called for his youqeat ~:dae~~ 10 C::.~~~e'n: Hail~ F S · p • l other cbeapte durnpt alon, thla street,"
crowmemw to he broolf>t and lllot detention 1or a 15<1ay period. or ewer ro JCC . 11e uted 1o bnlldorment, "t11ey're no and Bucher broke. That ruling wu determined at a hear~ better than m1nt."
For the flnt lime, the il1'ur-old Ing In which charges ol driving without A Huntln,too Btadl pipeline compuy NDlllJNG ACl'ION
commander !oat control In the -a valid driv1r'1 licenle and violarton bu -Dlmld 11 dlfmllnt In a Then, be complalned of tua.tal!Mlie
He could ocarcely ltlnd, Flnallf, be of curfew won llled 1111n1t the minor. Superi<r Ceart lull wlllch ~ tbe lllbl>llof of city l""""'enl
could DOI opeU. On completlon of Ibo dotentioo period flrm wilh nf\lllal to PIY the 172,llOD "I pva lliem 11 feet oil thl front•
Then be went on to llY that he allJ>ed the tPIJ will be nlelSed to 1be Gllltody bafa11ot owto, cm a SIWV llDo ... J«I. ol my Jllld to widen Vlctar!a Slnet,"
i;,. !bit the lntelfllece ~u In ol her mother, court oll1clalJ said. $tddlebock PiplllM Jnc. If Slllt. Ana ho Mid, ''mode · thlm a -Ind North Korun territorial n that Anlttng court llCtloo al the 1dutt clalml'll wu ~ by tbe Banllley Iller thlt I bid to PIY ll,!00 to help he w11 paid by the Central In enee level ti P1trick I). Phelan, 1~ of Lona ~Cd.,,.8-,to~1llbor, wtlhthlCOlllorth11nlcef>1_,.
Agency and thal the United Stlllu wu Boach, uld· by police to he • ........,. miterlala llld lqld-l lor-.., "Bui when they ...,.. hlullnl dirt
an "1ggrealva, lmperlallat n1tlon.'' In the llOlen auto Jut Jan. l Phelan of the Olo ~ '1'1'111111 Sewar -ten oil to lbe -p Ind I uted for a
Bucher tatlllld pnvtoualy u..& be and the girl "'"' uiosted lftor 1 wtld, sept " 111'1 ud J IO 1-. •··•·-couple ol loldl to 1111 up chuciholes
radioed do1pen1tely for help IDd thal "Koyr!ooo Kopa" punuit In which BUeno Plpelln";° bu lllld e':,111:11 eC ~ hi back," be coollnued, "you bet they
Johnlon'• commlnd did not give It to Pork, Cypreu, LI Palma and seal Beach COit o11m,auo, tbe complJ!nl addl. wouldn't mn -'volt hact to ma.'" him when the Pueblo waa 1urrounded police joined lherlfr1 unlta from Los ..
by Red gunboats off lhe North Kortan An1ele1 and Orqe Countlu. Saddlebict dates that tt carried out 111 pay tuea on about fllOlA>O worth ~bore The two were grabbed. when they came the work on \1-baW oC an oral lll'ff" of property in Cotta Mua," Gardner ~ to be heard were the skipper off the San Diego Fretway at Loi Ala-ment executer! Dec. ti, 1117, betWeen conUnued, 0 that doesn't make me 11
of the P\leblo'a sister lntelli&e:nce iblp, -:m:::l::toa:..:llou::::le:.•::lll'll.:;: _________ 111e_1_w_o_r_1rm_s. __________ •_1n-'1_-_bul_I_'m_no_1_1_bum __ :• ___ _
USS Banner, Cmdr. Charles R. Clari,
and a Navy captain from the corn·
munlcaUons center in Japan who was
personally readln& the SOS me1aaaes
from the Pueblo.
Freak Accidents
Kill Sergeant,
Trash Collector
A Marine Corps sergeant died Thur•·
day when his car hurtled off a military
post road and plunged 20 feet into a
muddy drainage ditch, where rucue
workers took a ball-day to haul lt back
out.
A second county traffic fatality was
logged Thursday when a trash collector
feU beneath the wheela of his movin1
truck on a Fullerton elementary athool
campus.
De1d m Gy/Sgt. Fronk E. Mlkol1·
jciak, 40, who lived on the Santa Ana
Marino Corps Air Facillty baJe where !he
accident occurred, and Alfred Arambula,
42, or 417\1 Truslow Avo.1 Fullerton.
The body of Sgt. Miko ajcuk -who
died of injuries suffered in the ditch
accident, rathrr than by drownln& -
WU ... dllcovored IO< nurly eliht "°"" after the OllMll' wreck.
Coroner's deputies said the sergeant
was driving along Moffett Road about
4 1.m. Thtll'ldlf when thl car hurtled
tnto the gulch, but It wu om, found
at 11 :15 a.m. by passersby .
Arambula was riding on the front
loading bin of a trash truck at Beecbwooct
School, 780 Beechwood Ave., Fullerton
when he fell olf about I a.m. lbunda.y.
Coroner's deputies said the victim land-
ed in front of the big moving vehicle
and wu crushed b7 the wbeell.
Persons Sought
For Park Board
Applications !run penona wflo 110
ln-ed In senlnC .., the ltecnaUon
Ind P Irk Commll!Ion In Huntfnrton
Be1ch Ito befn& IOlllf1I today by the
City Council.
There 11 a vacancy oo tht 11-tnember
commlJ&lon lollo1'fnJ tho mtsnltlon eC Lorraine Faber.
The commission advlses the council
in park: acquisition, developmlftt. and
m111fntenance and r • c r e a t Io n a J pro-
gramlnc matten.
Any ctUzen Is ollgiblo and 1ppllc1tlons
are available from the: CI l y
Administrator, SirthjBtreet and Ptcan
Aven ue, or by callinc~l est. 212.
R"9.
lilt
n ... .,. • kw .I fk 91•RY l'i-•t
1U.,i.., -.. Wt .........
-~ WOIU All.E, "'9• •2l9 SAi.i $1 n
a.--ci.-1 1r1110" o,.. 11"ri0"' •
CONTINUES
PINAL WllK
••• of our ,...,.,.1 .. t..
Aho iMlud.d .,.. l.mpt.,
p_ishittt a..d -..~-·.,;...
Re9. 1 179. SALi $14'
.. a.vs MO IWl'WS1'-Ulll• I .. AYMA"' OM~ cumr
'Zr/.,
NIWl'OllT llAOI
1"7 w-Dr. M2·-
...... T"f11. t
--,, ............ .....
D ..... " ....... AK> NllD
LM1U11A llAOI ___ ....,. ...... , .... ..... ,.. ........ .,-.._._ ........
(,
---------------·---------··
I
' '
1 I
---...... ... -
Lag~na·: Beaeh
EQ,ITION
YOt. 62, NO. 21.' ~ S~TIONS, '48 PAGES
•
•
• "
-·· . . •
.• .
Today'll Flnal
N.Y. St.oeks
TEN CENTS
Lagu.i:ia Still Eyed for Summer White House
!Spedal to Ille D.W.Y Pll;()TI
WMllINGTON -Newport Bw:b,
Lag1ina ~ and·the :;an Olcgo aru's
M'mlon Ray today appear sllll In the
rwmlsii~as 'llOSSlbJe 1ocau·om -for 1 Sum-
mer White House West.
""8ldli1t N-Is expected lo locate
summer WbJte H...,. operatlona botb
in Ca1llor$ .and Key · B~ Fla.,
where he ~ purdlaseif t~o ,l127,000
hpmes.
Durtnc Ille -palgn, Nlxoo made Jt
cleat ba l< ,j>liitlal lo llUll, ""' and ~~ u ~&caUon retreats . are
Nixon aides reqenUy ...,. repoMI
lo have lnvatiplod .. 1-'• ~ M-room Pyne Calde on Hlllcrelt Drive
for a potenttal summer WbJte House.
Today, however, aourcu close to Nlzon
dllcounted the castle .. a poalbl< lit..
< ·~ • ,.. • ' . .. .. -...... . •
I ' . '
Seimtf1t 'attd LagtiHfi Lady
-: ..
Dr. Rainer Berger of UCLA discusses human skull be says is 17,150
years old (pl'!', or minlll l,470 yeaJCS). Harold WiJ59n \•und skull in
Lagµna Beach' in 1933. tfntn recent advent ot Sdequa e measuring
irutfruments, scientists were unable to detemtine its age. Dr. Berger
alSo has deterrµined that skull, first thought to be male, is lemale.
Laguna CouneU:&~wd
To Back ·Harbor .Breakup
Laguna Beach councilmen at their Feb.
5 meeting will probably join the
bandwagon of cities thumping for di ssolu·
tion or ·the Orange 'County Harbor
l>islfict.
This was the substanct of remarks
at an infonnal study session of the
council Wednesday.
"I 'feel that the situati90 lias gone
IO far that U's goihg lb go through,"
l8id Mayor Glenn Vedder who has kept
poeted on the issue.
The Orange County division of the
Ca~ia League of Cities has prepared
a t:Unetabli! for proposed dissolution of ·
the district which would then became
• cOOnty· funct\on.
Vedder said League president, Mayor
Dean E. Shull ot La Habra hu called
a. study session f~ eounrtJmen of the
various cities to.dllaJU the 1lsue ,Jan.'
30 at Friedemann Hall in Orange.
"The consenBUI of most CJ( the ciUea
1n Orange County 11 that the harbor
district ·should be abandonetl and that
&he •hole thing should be pUt out in
the open in a department lhat includes
Pickets Slated
At Court Hearing
I Members or the Cith:eM O>mmtttee
to Dmnd Joe Zahrt plan to-ptcket
the Oourthouse at San Clemente when
Zlhrt goes to court Mondar.
Members of the long-baited lfOOP aay
Lbe 'action Is lo draw atte'htJon to their
dairn.s that Zabrt was arm;ted illegally.
Tbe committee had won a post~
ment of the trial whlJe they n.i$ed
ftmdll to hire criminal lawyer George
Olulao a~ in druguaa.
Zabrt, JO, wu arrested Jan. S. when
a LallJM Beach officer claimed he found
an LSD Cljlllllo where Zahri and a
lrl<od ..... llUldlnl·
'
representatives of the clUes.., Vedder
said, I
He said procedures have been _worked
out that , should make such a transition
a smooth ope.ration. Vedder said he hoped
the new department.-would give more
COMideration to the regiob.al aspect o/.
Laguna's beacba.
: Other C:<ll011~lmen ~ted\t¥f would
probably aupport tbe illssoluiloo move.
Oemente Seeks
Standard Name
San ·ctetnente planning connulssioners
wou1d like to enft some confusion about
that big highway • that runs tbroygh the
middle or their town.
Alternately known as Highway 101,
Old Highway 1, Pacific Coast Highway,
Coast Highway and El Camlno Real,
the thoroughfare is as confused as those
u1;ing it, planners u.id.
The commlasion asked the county
street naminc committee lo make it
El Camino Ru! (the Kinp Highway)
for the entire county link.
In other action planoen noted a piece
of park land oUertd for ule by the:
St.ate Depatment of Hilhwaya WIS not
oil It appeand.-'llley urpd councllmen
not to buy beca.,. tbo' pmol II too
steep "" playpo.od ·-~
NBll YPRK W» -Tl!e aiclCI< market
was '"""1at 11. lhe c'9ee today afUr
retresUng frt!itt an· eatly pin. Trading
WU fairly 1ctlvt.. (See quotationl, P&(t.S
14-11).
Volume WIS 111.$2· mllllon shara com-
pored w1tb JI.If nlilllon Tll1-y. The Dow Jonn ln<lnatrlat _.,. doclined
Lil to Ill.It alter backlq nay from
an aorl)r rllt.
NiZon in the past bas also stayed at
a home in Laguna's Irvine Cove.
Newport Bw:h ii also la the nmnin&
for the IJ,J.DlllW' Wbl.&e Home ait.e in
!bat Nuon baa stayed in the Cameo
Shores secttoo of Corona del Mar tn
tbe put and bu many long·tlme friends
and supporters in Newport.
Immediately after Nixon's nomination
by the GOP last August, he retreated
to '\be Mliiioo Bay area of !lan Die80
ue
-conaJdered today as another sununtr
retreat posgibLU.ty.
Nixon aides are reported to be acoutlng
all three Southern CaWomia areas to
find a 8ll01Dltr White House.
Alde1 have suggerted that the. Prtsi·
dent ls likely to buy seaside property Ir he ftoo.,, what he wants.
Several Southern California c I v i c
groups, bo•ever, have ofiered to make
a home available to him limply for
o's
• e a1 s
the adVertlslnc value of having the awn-
mer Whlte HOUie In Uielr community.
Meanwhile, the Ni.saos are attemptmc
to flad,a boyer for their -a~
meat ln New York City, recoally valued
at ,135,0IXI. •
Fonner pruSdenta have varied ~
summer rtlreata tll the way from Hyan-
nllport, Mus., to Palm ~
'l'be laat R<publlcan pr...ident, DwlJhl
D. Elaenho;wer, liked mountains and
It Won't Go Away
Rain May Last Through W edne.sday
. ~ ~;,,pirilf )lllf9~ . ·-1' .Dolil,~.!_Ofk~ ~-~ din'!P "'u the elementi today u · they ·cr1UC11'1tt.U! llWI' •• nM:--t0ffai:I
braced themselves for .another wet. the federal government'• 10 ~.daml
. j~ Sttllhen1 Callfornlo lo mu. ..... ~eary ; w .. kend of havmg t h • I~ 11!&.".'!'ll"! o( rain water •-lock It lo them. ~ ........ lor Ibo 'If~ ltlreau
"llecumnt 'rain" through Sunday -,.Id the ""' lllorm could be ''poOllbq
and possibly stretcblng through Wed·
!!" ~ IYP<" ~ J!lt ~,.,... 'Wa are birping ID ~ .. ouf>,li l'ltlY)I
rains," he. added.
.. were cl~·~ tbo
SOU*bland who w"t ~ pLqf rot Iii -...._ .. 1111 ... ...,. . .... tlle
Ilea-.
neaday -was the predjcUon Jor the
Qringe Coast and most of the state.
Thll Jn the wake or last weekend's
d~vastaUng storm that Jeft Los Angeles
and San Lui! Obispo counties disaster
areas.
Bickel Finally Sworn In;
With the promised rain came the new
threat of floods and landslides after
Huntlnrton Beacb, but In Fountain Valley
a section of Edinger Avenue was tem-
porarily closed by heavy flooding.
But the worst is yet to come.
Weathermen said the current storm
will dump two to three lncher on the
Soutblaod by Saturday and from three
to six lnches on coastal mountain slopes.
WUb sa.turated ground, cmsiderable
runoff and local ·street flooding is ex·
peeled in low-lying areas.
The new storm , spawned by a sub·
tropical air mass in the mid-Pacific,
'Sgt. Sunshine'
Gets 9 Months
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Fonner
Police Sgt. Richard R. Bergess was
sentenced to nine months ln county jail
today for smoking a marijuana cigarette
on the steps of the Hall of Justice
last Easter.
Bergess, known as ''Sergeant
Sunshine" among his hJpple friends, was
found guilty of posswlon of marijuana
after a jury trial for bis well-publiciud
pol·pu!!Jni ln unllorm. Bergess' smol<-
ing, announced in advance, was a protest
of anti-null1juana laws.
He ,,.. di1mlsaed from the force after
tbe Incident.
·superior Court Judie Robert J. Drewes
senteoced him to jail after telling
Bergeu: ·''I am 51D'e you understaftd
you must be punilbed .•
Drew-ea IUapeoded one day of the nine·
month sentence .to rtlain jurisdiction
of the C8". The jlldae declined to order
probation, u recommended by Bergess'
probation report.
'Last, But First': Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Walter J.
Hickel was sworn Into the Nixon cabinet
today and was welcomed by the new
President with 'Ille declaration, "the last
sball be Orsi aa far u Ibis ~Uoo
ts coocernem"
Hickel took hi1 oath as Jnterior
secretary· frop1• Chief Juatlce Earl War·
ren at the White Hoose before an audi ..
ence that included his 11 cabinet
colleagues who were sworn in two days
ago. The former Alaska governor won
belated Senate confirmation Thursday
by a . '73-16 vote.
As tpe 49-year~ld 11etf-made millionaire
prepiu:ed to take the oath Ni1on made
good humored reference to his trouble1
iri obtaining confirmation. The other
cabinet officers were conllrmed qul~kly.
At one polnt Nllon commented that
lf>e delay on H1ckel had not given the
administration any concern. "We're not
interested in coaflrmaUon for con·
UnnaUon's sake."
Th.is was a jocular parap)lrase of one
of Hlckel's controvenill remarks that
he was not "interested in conservation
for conservaUon's sake."
At another point Nlxon remarked with
a smile that bis interior secretary bad
"already rendered 1ervice far beyond
th< ~all of duty." .
"He, not I, was the subject of a
Herbk>ck cartoon of the first five days
of our administraUon."
Herblock is the way Herbert Block,
Washington Poat political cartoonist,
sign! his work . He has been critical
of Nixon over the years. A cartoou In
Thursday's -edltions depicted Hickel's
troubles.
Nixon alsc observed that 'there hive
been previous controversial Interior
secrttariu, including Harold lckea in
the Fr'lllltlin D. RoooeVelt cabinet who
"""" referred to colwnol<tr u "PtJblia
enemies number one."
"Secretary Hickel, I'm sure, won't do
that." Nlzon u.ld witb a·mille.
In winding tsp his informal ranark11,
N-said, "and to quote from the
Scriptures, tbe Jut ahall be lirat u
far as this administration is concerned."
Conservationists oppo11ed Hlckel's ap-
poiJ}tment and allhougta he .won con-
firmation easily, lhey were boasting
about the educa.Uon they bad given him
-and gains they got for their cause.
March of Diines
Planned Monday
Laguna Beach. mo\hen· win b 1
marching atarttog Monday for tbe March
or Dimes' fight against birth defects.
Volunteers are 1llll needed t o
participate in the money raising tffort,
e.speclally in the north end of Laguna,
Chairman .Mr11. EmJe Quigley s-,id.
Each marker volunteen to collect
funds from neighbors·tn ber blQck, Mn.
~gley said. The money b u!ed by
the natiooal March or Dimes to cOmbat
the nation 's aecoml biggest klUer -
birth detecta. · ·
Mother• wilhiog to help may ruch
the chalrman at UHll07.
Aldrich Put on Hot Spot
UC/ C1uutcelU>r Fielcls ·Hostih Questiom ··
r ' I j • , • • • . ' j , , , . , .
B,t TllOM,\! l'O,llTUNE Aldrtch '"°"'"' "f:<IU<:allon of I Chan-. fipllh'l!f.he Wll '"""~ aPi>laudtd; "' ..,. -"II' ceUor, '.' toll!og bow ht ictually'haa, ltam-The 'UCI chanceilo\' •11. ~ wJllll
UC mine thancellor Daniel G. Aldrl<h ed from black atv<fenlr Ind what he bo would do JI Ibo. Black $ltld111t Ualoo
Jr. dOQ not fit tloe stereotype of 'an cilled. lbe blppl< cult "' campao. took """' tbo admWtlr9llan ~. s. I. Hayauwa who atand• up to and The renliUoo did not ill 'weD ·wltb tbe. .,.... '*Illar of C!DJl1*o. WiMjl be . cett.Olh ol tbe nortbwell Coila M... negotlalo or lllnnr tbt otd<llntr oot!
dot1 not COIDl>fGllllae with •t~t am homeowners. llloo! of a., qlJ<Sllooa "I doa't~y bla k,~ aoswered Aldl1ch.
dlJaldents. , lfi'ed "' lllf' chlnceflof l1iMI ~ •!>!rt Ille , -...,.,. lll1
He had a rooglt If llccauso pl It °'ei~· · ' ·' : ·~·· ' ~a nil 11 qr ~·ol •~tmr
Thunday night In 11111Werlng ~ihi :llJqae ~ =· ~ ll>t1 · :~u .bloct <ii\W lb . a :IMllldlog. put lo him by members o( Mtia Verde nM haVo been Iailvt ti ·•a W ~11 iloUcla and practices Ula(
-. -~ J1UIOOI pre~I; wben Aldrlcl1 lu (lloa Aull\ICll, Pqa II
I
desert, while Lyndoq B. J~ rested
at hil ranch in Ibo T ... bill cptlDley.
Joh!\ F. ~ bod ·• varlll)r of
--and • ...u.n ninaia riD&lnc from Hyannlsport, and Newport, R.J.,
to ,Mlddlebure. Va., Plkt Biach, Fla.,
a(ld Palm Spr(Jlia, OOI!. lie owned -• ol tbeae rebuts, leaoed "Otbei:t and,
In Palm Beach and POinl Sprinp; oc·
cupl<d bowel bor-. Im friends
indudini linger lllq Crolb)'.
,.
ure
Buclier's
TestimonY;
In Secret
CORONADO, CallC. (\1l'n ,.., Qndr,
j.IQJd "· ~ ... i..iiW dooed doon today to tall a NaftrCourt of
lnqulry lop ...,.., d•laJ!a alloul tbe -
lure GI tbe USS Pueblo.
.Dueber wu JolQecL ln. the ueaaUve ..aloti before the llvHdlilfr6I ollarl by
two Navy <aptainl from Japan wbo
were on duty when the lntelllaenco ablp wu seized off North ..Korea a year
Ii•· Appear(Jli grim and IOlemn, altbooP
with his comp<>sure restored after
'lburadAy'• emotlaaal Gf!leal. Bucher
moved Into a _.....,.. ioom ...,Ued
by Marines al 9 a.m. PST.
A abort time later the two captalna
went into the room. 'l1le)' were Capt.
'lbomu L. Dwyer, at the time Ullltant
cbJef of staff for Jntelllgence. Naval
F:orces Japan, and Capt. Forrest Ptue,
clllef of staff for eommander, U.S. Naval
Furces Japan.
Bucher WU expected to ......
i..tlmony at Ill• oollet. He will ialk abou\ juat · wllat ~ lnleUlceneo
dbcljmonta Were. captured by the CoJn.
n1unllts, how mucb ~c gear and
what type wu not completely de91royad
and other "aenlJ.Uve' matters.
Whlle the Communlsta obtained 10me
U.S. aeeret.s ·Imm the lnlelllg<nce ablp,
other crtUcal material was destroyed.
But that captured could endanger the
security of the United statea.
Rear Ajlm. Fran~ L. Jobnaon, com-
mander Of Naval Fon:e1 in Japan at
the Ume:, aJao WU here and will telUfy
during tbe three daya of closed ""'°"" Friday, Saturday and Monday. JohnJO<I
b ptt1ently commandant 13th Naval
District, 5ealle, Wash.
A Navy publlc information officer will
sit In on the court and brief newsmen allef the aesslon on those portions of
testimony which can be made public.
Bucher told tbe admirall Thursday
he did not b<u~ wltb a pislol at his
head but wben the North K.....,. con·
vlnced him they wen. about" to &boot
(See PUEBLO, Pace I)
Coan
It you Uteri last wttkend'a
weather, you'll •be downright
ecstatic about tbe next rew days.
'111• foreculer calls lot recurring
rain from now tllrouflh w-..
day, heavy al -Noah, where
are you now tllat .,. need you t
INSmE , ''l'ODAY
A USC r11tatch Cta:m and a
QrOl<p o/ ool""ttft( •-• an provfng 1"ft t. \heir "°""'"
· tin ..,. ,..,,,. tllo-o!Qvr of IMir
fQrtita 10!111 ~IV ~•cribcd t~tr'dlt. Str r. JO.. • ,~ . . ·-" ............ ,.
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IWO JIMA FLAG-RAISING? NOPE -SF STATE
AthletH Win &.Ille With Diuidenh for Old Glory
Arrested 449 Seek Bail
From Wiri Suvkes
SAN FRANCISCO - A handful of
rain~encbed pickets resumed their
1trike vigil outside San Francisco State
College today while many of the 449
arrested for an illegal rally were trying
to make bail.
By midmorning about half of those
arrested in a three-hour-long police
operaUon Thursday had gone free on
bond or the~ own recogni.zanoe.
A cheer greeted each of the strikers
as he left the HaU of Ju.stice alter
posting $315 bond and mingled with raJn-
soak<d sympathllers on the building'•
steps.
Syf an Gets Joh
Of Supervising
Boys' Club Work
B. F. Syfan Corp. today was awarded
the aasipment of coordination and
supervision of construction of the new
Soys' Cllb or Laguna Beach facility •
to be erected at· Broadway and Woo land.
ln a unanimOUI action of the Boys'
Club board, meeting in emergency
seS&ion, the project. was assigned to
Syfan ·upon the recommendaUon of the
bl,tllding committee, which had in-
vestigated the quallficaUons and recom·
mendations of local firms. Reporting
in writing for the committee wu board
member and CM'lmlttee chairman Ray·
mood L. Miller. Other committee
membus wen Thomas W. McCoriell
and Don Schoenleber.
Formal bids were not sought ror the
project. The boa.rd eipeci.s various types
61 labor and materials may be donated
or offered at reduced prices. Construct.iot;
will be completed by modular stages
u funds and materials are available.
Syfan, himself a board member, is
familiar with the: building project.
DAILY PILOI
J •• ~ It. c~.1 • .,
\'<ct l'•n•dt"I • ...., Cf.,.,., "'""'~"
'J~o ... 11 ICtt•il ··~ f),o,..•1 A. Mu•p),;,.,
Ml-tft•IOr
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(fly l'•l10t
P1•I Ni11t11
ld'<tt!l\IAt Ol•K• ..
L.,. .. h.c• Of/let
121 F1•11I A~•.
Mtili~t Add•111 : P.O. 111 •••. •261Z
.,.... --COlll ......,.,. lJO Wnl l1w ltrHI
ffl-t! lt~c"· Ul I """' ltlt>Mo ......... ,. Hllfllifl9IOll k""°, »f llll 11tM1
.A.
The militants, swept up In the largest
mass arrest in the city's history, faced
arraignment on charges of failure to
disperse., unlawful assembly and disturb·
ing the peace.
It was the biggest haul since a student
strike, spearheaded by about 2 o O
dissidents and supported by 250 striking
teachers, began Nov. g at the 18,000
student campus.
About 300 policemen moved in after
the crpwd refused to heed warnings
to disperse, ·given over a loudspeaker
alop the administration building.
At a news c9nference later, Dr. S.
I. H'\Y~aw~ •. cal\<d the rally "an act
of desperatioh" by mllilants.
He praised police for a "magnificent
job of crowd control." Asked if there
would be more mass arrests, he said
"lhere is no ruaon foi:: mass arresLs
if there aren't any masaes."
Among those arrested were JS
American Federation of Teachers union
pickets, including some from Fresno
State Collece, and Nathan Hale, a Nqro
iru;tructor newly named to head • biack
studies department, created to placate
strikers.
.The forbidden poon rally -Vtt first
since students returned fron1 t h e
Christmas break -was announced Tues-
day by the Third World Liberation Front
comprised of non-Negro m i n o r i t .Y
student&:.
El Toro Airport
Topic of Meeting
Possible future conversion of the El
Toro Marine Air Station to a commercial
jet airport will be the topic;: of discussion
at the Monday meeting of the Capistrano
Highlands Homeowners A.ssoclaUon.
The meeting begins at a p.m. in the
Royal Savings and Loan. at Toro Center
in El Toro. •
Robert Bresnahan, direttor of Orange
County Airport, and Col. Robert Limberg,
Marine Corps planning and programs
officer at El Toro will speak.
Mrs. Williams
Funeral Held
Funeral 1ervices were held today for
Mn. Alberta White: Wllllam1, operator or a Laguna Beach dress shop for 25
yean who died Wednesday in Laguna.
She Wll 13.
1'rs. Williams and her sister, Olive
wffite, operated the WhJtehall Dress Shop
prior to Mrs. White's death two years
ago.
Mrs . Williams. wbo made her Laguna
home at 520 Cliff Drive, had been a
resident of Oran1e County for more
than 30 years.
Rites we.re held today at 3 p.m. in
Lagun.1 Beach Mortuary's chapel. Burial
lollo1!<d II Pacific View Memorial Pat~
Corona deJ Mar.
Mrs. wuuams fa ll1D'Vl•ed by 11 nnt
COll!lnl, two <t wham lift in Lquna
HIIIJ. TMJ"are Clemmenl Garfield IDd
Mrs. P. W. Dtcklon.
3 Killed in Pakistan
DACCA, Paklstan (AF) -n....
pmoN wer• roport<d ldll<d and ti
WQllllded when pollce openM llrt on
deqionatratora who burned d ow n
newspaper ofrlca and attacked • -mSlf bulldlng durtn& • dudent·led
1elier11 Wike today. i
--•
Poor~ Not· Hippies'
'
Slifin_ty Residenu to J'.ight E"?iction At~mpt By Cos~ Mesa
117 ~ l.1111 re, .... dims et'llllo f.te dale," hf '4ys. "I know my epertmen(J are cheap, 'mont<d p<dty Jo Alla Jdte, who will
........ ~... -I Ol:rdna' raca a co.ta Mesa City Coon-not fancy I but )'OU can't roD oul the graduate from high ICbooJ neit year.
Toll her the avor111 Coota M• •'di hwlnl Peb. U 1111 ~ docJara. ....i carpet !0< 110 a moatb, • al~ · 1111a Jelle seld •oo!t two bou~ oa ·
family's •ffectlve llUlual buying Income tllm of ·tile land he bu· ......i llDce Gardner, who uv .. at 30l5 IJoooybiOOk the ""'1 are o1 '!be hippie commune b 110,l'IS, and -llvtng on counly wtllare 1162 to be a (lllblle nulaance hippie Lano Costa lfw. -· · -
assiltanee in a house the city wants haven and trouble center which should "BUt that'• not what the city ts beeDng type, wbUe the rtSl are rented by persons
demolished as put• of a lhJnty towo be cleared. 1 about," be cooUNted. ''They j\lll &.t't forced ror ooe reason or another to Uve
-she'll tell you lhat·1 nice. Costa Mesa may have advanced like· the class ol. people altiat 1 have on limited lncornes.
Real nice. rosear<b plants, kwely tract botlslna. here." ' • '"llley're lr"'1dly. Tboy speall to yoo,•
She It Pelll)' Jette, of • Victoria I huge lllloppinJ complex and • (lllbllc •·J dooi mind If they call mo an ahe said <t the loog·baind t'yptS wile
St., who gets $85 every two ll'ttb to golf course, but the reams of literature Jndian," sternly' chimed ln Peggy Jette, allO rent from Gantner "but they keep
help support sparkle-eyed Jo Ann, 17, from enthusiastic city boosters never "because that 's what I am. But I resent ' " towheaded Robert, 13, and bouncy Lor· mention the poor. being called a hlppie." prett~ much to themselves.
raine, who is 11 and always teJl.1 you They too, mwit 1Ive somewhere, the "Ju,,t becauae we're J>OQr don't mean City OUlcif.ls Monday crltlcized the
her uact birthdate. . landlord says. we're hippies," added Sbafon Saunders, appearlnef: of the Gardner property,
Some ttal~ts of the properties. at A colorfully ezpreulv" retired con-who """""'Pl. ea: another of the 11 uni'· as weQ u ill aver-.ge 20 to #5 occupams 28& and 288 Victoria SL, vow to fight slnldion man, Gardner _ and tenants .......... ~ . •
beside landlord Paul Gardner in a battle wbo admire him u one who tnows on the Gamer property. ·rl \Vho were responsible m one, recent
to conduct hls affairs without dty ball that every bank account bas a bottom POUTE EXPllESSION 12·montb period for &Ollle 90 1tpar1tc
intrualon. to it -told it Ute they aay it is "HiPpie Js Juit a P'Jllte .,,. to call police cue reports.
''A man doin1 it 11 years doesn't Thursday. ' some60dy a bum.. We artn'I," com-Depaty BuUdin& llllpector Dean Dcrrls
Fro• Pqe 1
•I
ALDRICH •..
led lo the takeover have been a miaerable
failure then there are all sorta of
possibillUes for negotiaUoo.
"l have walked one mUe. t have walked
twc miles. I have walked 10 milea.
And I have said I will walk 100 miles
to do my best to understand why we
(the administratior1 ) should do what the
students want.
"I buy 100 percent what Eldridge
Cleaver said on our campw: 'Whitey,
I've got problems. But if you beat me
I'm gol.ag to bat you back.' If the
.sludentl push me and go be,oDd the
.rules and regulations of the campus,
or of the community, I'm going to p~
back."
In angry response to Aldrich's com•
men ts, a man said:
"Our colleges are a total failure. And
you're part of the responalblUty -
your Cleavers."
"All right, this Is your view," ~aid
the chancellor.
"Isn't taking possession of public pro-
perty 3. criminal act in itself?" a man
asked.
"The problem," Aldrich said, "is
deciding what is taking possession. Is
it students sitting down in a building
they're in every day?
"Our present trespau law doesn't pro-
vide us with the tool we need in this
situation. The students come right back
two minutes later. That is why the
university is sponsoring new trespass
JegislaUon."
A man who said he is as years old
and irrevocably ort the other side of
the generaUon gap remarked that be
was alarmed at a newspaper story aboi1t
radicals: at Irvine.
Aldrich said the reporter did a good
job of trying to acqua.int the public
with the aourcts of activiam, but did
not say it represented only a small
group of students ... He did a thorough
job; about all of our acUvlst students
were listed."
~lher man asked: "Why do )'OO
let 1tudent1: study only the humanities?
You can·t live on that."
"Society is made up of an awful lot
of people whose services we need besides
professional!," Aldrich" said.
He was aaked what the black studellls
really want.
Nerf VNREASONABLE
"The Black Student Union on our cam-
pus, and all the black students are
in it, has not presented to me demands
that art unreasonable," Aldrich 1aid.
.. r would aay they are goal oriented. nus is importanl They can be 11.ti.sfied.
'I11e insatiable ones keep pushing and
pushing.
"They're not here to destroy us. They
want desperately to be a part. They
don't want to tear down the establish·
ment. They want to Iha.re in it," Aldrich
said.
"But what do you think are their
ulterior moUvts?" the questioner
persisted.
"One of lhe things they said to me,"
Aldrich remarked, "was 'In turns ol.
our numbers, on campus and in the
surroundinl community, we real.l&e tbtre
won't be much Ol)portunity for social
life. We'd like to spend the Ume that
\Vhlte students 1pend on this dolnJ con..
structivll! things -like tutoring m the
ghettos. But we don't have the resources
or the transporlallon. Can you help us?'
"That, to me, was a concern th.al
didn't smact ot any ulterior motive."
.From Pa9e I
PUEBLO •••
his men one by one he signed 1 con-
fession that the Pueblo •was a spy ship.
His voice breaking. his body lttmbllnl'..
the Pueblo nipper told a huabed Court
of Inquiry 'ltlursdey that· he could not
like the "mental tortun!" even one day
after the Pueblo's capture.
With his wile, -· lllWn( a '"' feol ... ~ ud Ct1lni. -joJd the court tliot he l<nelt Oil • ]lriaOa l1oOr
1 y .. r qo today aod r<peated over
and over qain:
"I love~ Role. ..
It brou&h\ him throuih lllO mloutu
o! agony <t -d .. lb. 'l1lfn be
Wll lbcnm a lioutll f<onln atnpped
to a wan with an eye IOlllfd ouL
He WU bf.Ito uncon.tdWI. Then tbfl
Commun!J1a called for biJ youngost
crewmember to be brouibt and abot
aod Bucher broke. ,
For the first time, the 4l·year-o1d
<'Ommander lost control In the courtroom.
H• coold acar~ly atand. f'tnlllr, he
couJd noi •ptiak. I
Newport's Carpenter
Certain for GOP Post
outllnM the case a1ainst Gardner's
holdlnp, boogbt before the iresart city
structuie even eiisted, documeutlng
complalniJ with pbotocraphs ol ·the
dijaptdat<d IOC\iOD.
Gardner, ~ from the odg1Jlally·
scb<dul<d nulunce hwlng due to flu
and laeyngllb, cleared 0hls throat Tbun·
dsy and did ..... talking too.
SACRAMENTO -Republican State
Central Committee sources today said
it is a "lead pipe cinch" that Newport
Beach attorney Dennis Carpenter will
be elected GOP state chairman Sunday.
Carpenter, a 40-year-old former F.BI
agent, was one of the principal architects
of the Republican "Cal Plan," whlcb
Newport Attorney
Heads County
' Bar Association
Newport Beach aUorney James F. Pen-
ney is the new prealdent of the Orange
County Bar Alloclation. ~
Penney, who3e offices are at 3416 Via
Lido, was sworn in Thursday night at
installation ceremonies held al the Santa
Ana Elks Club. Also taking the oath
o( office was attorney Galvin R. Keene,
414 N. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach,
,named ooe of eight directors in the
county lawyers' organitation.
Penney took the gavel from Superior
Court Presiding Judge Samuel Dreizen,
one of aeveraf1 jllllfles honored by the
bar at a dinner meeting which ill-'
corpor•ted the group's annual Judges
Niglit.
Specially hooo....t at the medrlig was
ret~ secrelary·treasurer George A.
Parker who has held the county bar
ei:~ve office for the past 41 years.
P~r was showered with gifts in
a prolonged tribute by his fellow at-
torneys for a record of service that
is believed to be unequalled anywhere
in the United Satates.
was 1 credited with upseUlng t h e
Democratic1 tlegblaUve majority Jut
November.
He Is not expected to have any op-
poajUon for Uie top centra! committee poet.
He was named vlce-clla.innan of the
state unit two years ago. Previou.Jly,
he served u chairman of the Or1D1e
County GOP Central Conimittee.
, Under the "Cal Plan,'1 GOP fund.I
•IM! "'P'rl pollUcal Countel were gtvon
Republican candldatea in s p e c i f i c
Assembly ,...._ where Democratle ln-
cumboniJ were Iott to be particularly
Ylllnerabfe. .
The "Cal Plan'a" breU with tradiU1p11
Is that In the past, all GOP ·candl<latb
had shared about oqually In · party
resources, whatever their chances.
·WhlJe no battJe is anticipated Sunday
for lhe Central Committee chairmanahip,
a three-way fight ii alited for the vice
chairmanship Carpenter is vacating.
Conservatives are backing Frank
Adams, of Piedmont, • California
Republican Auembly (CRA) l•ador.
Llbuals are supporting Put n a m
Livermort, San Francisco GOP cbalnnn
and a ooe-time campalp aide· of Sen.
Thomas KucheJ. A third candidate is
Karl VOii Cbrillllenoo, Salinas County
RepubllcaD cbairman con.aidered neither
strongly CODllI'Vatlve nor liberal.
Two Orange County resident! are
among lour seeldJli the job of party ,
•ecretary. They ire Dr. Tino d;i Junco,,
Huntington .Beadl .CRA clialrmln; jUICl
Mrs. Low.e ' Hutton. past clialrmln of
the Federated Republican Women. other
Candidates .,re Paul Berte. Go v.
Reagan's apPolntmentJ secretary, and
Maynard Nelson, who uosuccessflilly
sought an Assembly seat Jut November.
fie is a resident of Sacramento.
FEELS CONFIDENT
"That Dorris is just • stooa•. but
they 1ot b!m sneatin' around with a
camera and lmifin' me in the bact,"
said Gardner who feels confident about
the case, baled on his current lea:al
counsel's advice.
"Dorris 1et1 up ln an apartment back
there boblnd the prop<rty with 1 apy·
glass and· when two cars show up, be
calll the police to check what kind of
coffM the people art drinkin' ,•• the land·
lord clw(<d.
Gardne<. WU philOIOpblcal •bout past
pollce probltma.
.. Tbal'I what we tupQen are payln'
thtm for," he aald, "to maintain peace
and ordtr." ·
Fire Department inspectors have also '.
found buta to crlUdze the property,:
which is Gardner's only :source of Income
-and rather unsteady at that. because
he is symptbetic to the poor.
"Sometimes he don't get what' a coming
to him," said one tenant Thursday.
"I don't tnow who that flre:ma11 Is
who comes around with Dorris," 1aid
Gardner, "he Isn't man enough to ln·
troduce hfmlell and say 'Good Momin&'
when be aeta foot on the property."
"ll tbe city bad the Ame raUo or
firee we've had here, there wouldn't
be • lire ckparlmon~" be charg<d.
"Why don't they tak• pidur" of the
other cheapie dwnps along this meet, •1
he uke4 ID bewilderment, "they're no
better ~ mine... '
NIBBLING AcrtON
Then, be complained of take-take-take
nlbbllni ol city govmmenL
u1 pve them 11 feet off the front
of my land to widen Victoria Street,"
he said, "made them a present and
after thal I had to pay 11,lllO to belp
with the coat for this mce pavement."
' ' \
DROOi: WORKTAILE. ••I· $239 SAii Sitt.
l i-ciMM 70"al0" O,.. 10''140,.
CONTINUES
FINAL WllK
• I I ef Mtl' ttoner•I .. le.
Also iMlucl.d .,. la"'1",
P.lctvr .. eM ~-....
tktt ''' I f-ef ~ ••"'I' ,i•t•1 •II
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NIWl'OllT BIAat
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DAILY PILOT Iliff l'llt ..
FAMILIARIZATION 'FLIGHT' -Gina Hernandez (left) and Judy
Geyer, Orange Coast College ilewardess students, get acquainted
with Dataspeed machines which "talk to each other" coast to coast
daily to bring stock market reports into DAILY PILOT plant from
Wall Street. They'll be be>Stesses at CommuniCarnival where DAILY
PILOT display will show bow machines work .
OCC Makes .Going Easy .....
• •
For Airline Stewardesses
The pert stewardess In the crisp red-
white-And·blue ururorm has 160 hour!
in her logbook. But they're not flying
hours.
They represent a lot of lime spent
behind a reception desk, offering "coffee,
tea or milk" to convention delegates
and serving dJMers to dignitaries at-
tending awards banquets at Orange Coast
College.
These are the strange, landlocked kind
of duti's performed by students of the
nation's only fully accredited and
uniformed stewardes$ lrainUW; course
operated by a college. Tuey help ,Orange ·
Coast College's non-flyio& stewarde:is
trainees earn their wings.
The hours are voluntary. usually
devoted to some community project <lr
notK:ommercial venture and invarivibly
are designed to bring the stadent face-to-
face with the: public.
The hours are required -at least
some of them -by Mrs. Dolores Ja'mes-
·valencia, director of the stewardess
training program at OCC. But even she
didn't foresee the record-breaking 160
hours one of her students wOuld log
in community service in her first th.ree
semesters of the course. <.Most sludent.s
average 25 hours per semester in extra·
curricular duties.)
The:;e "public" hours coupled with lec-
tures and field trips covering such sub-
·jccts as meteorology , theory of CUgbt,
na vigation, the psychology of the
passenger, grooming, self development
and others are the building blocks from
which Mrs. James-Valencia comtruc:ts
stewardesses. Her girls are ready to
go "on the line" with most major airlines
by the Ume they reach the age when
airlines are just willing to take &lrl.!
to begin their training.
The OCC students don t h e i r
"stewardess" uniforms at age 18 {or
just below) and are ready to graduate
into airline "short courses" just prior
to actually becoming stewardeuts by
the time they are 20..going-on-21.
Proof of the success of the program
is indicated in these facts: OCC started
the course four years ago; today there
are 9! sttldcnts atterxl.ing it. Some of
the studeilts Came froM U . tar · away
as Hawaii, ?i.fontreal, Belgium and Peru
ju.st to attend the course.
Sixteen of OCC'a stewardes! students
will be logging their off~ampus hours
next week as hoste~ ai the DAILY
PILOT-Pacific Telephone Co. Com-
muniCarnival to be held Thursday, Fri.-
day and Saturday (Jan. 30 through Feb.
lJ at Soulh Coast Plaza in Co5ta Mesa.
Working in teams of two, the students
wW be oo· hand, al lbe ·D!,ll;Y PILOT
exhibit from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Thurs·
day and Friday and from 1 p.m. to 6
6 p.m. on Saturday.
E.iwn.~een-year-old girls who can un-
derSW>d lhe th<ory 91 flight and
· Southarn California'• m e t e o r D 1 o & y
are• not e x 'p~e ct e d lo ha've much
dilOcul\y °'plalolni to vlsitott bow lhe.
DAILY,.PIWI' prodll£01 I~'• final
sWCk mll{ket reports in to d a y ' s
neW9R1per er ait>wing viJitcra some cf
the other feat\ll1!1 cf lhe new1paper.
• 'Hiroshima' Banned:
Pulitzer Prize Winner
Taken Off Library List
"Hiios!Uma," the book by Pulltiur
Pri1e author John Hersey, was one of
two boob banned ;rhllr!day by OrlllP
County Board of . Education membin
I from lhe library of a new oount)'·
operated achoo!. ·
Dr. Dale & RalUJon, Santa Ana den·
I U•l cbar1ed thal "Hlroshlma"· J!l"'!O!lll
book tolls only el the bott<lr Ind fails
to menUon the lmp(rta:nt flct that
thousands ol Amer1cah Um WeN aaYed
I !iY making a coally milltary lnvulon unneceasary.
In hll book, Heney r<ports on the
aftermath of the ~ bombma u seen lbrouib the eys ol lbe Jo-people
a onHlded view of the lMS 1.1.0fn boin:"
blni ol the Japanese city .• He said the
Ski Conditions ·
Bposted by Storm
By .United Pr• lnternadonal
Skiing conditions in Southern Callfomla
were reported good to excelleat toclay
after the recent slomt deposited from
eight to 36 inches of IDOw. Tbe .snow
level wu 7 ,000 feet and all resorts
...... -•Ung. They Included :
Blue Horizon, U to ts lncheo,·operallng
dally; Blue Ridge eJchl to 10 lndJts, ·
Saturday and Sunday; Gr<en Vailey, ID
to 14 t.ches, Slturday and Sunday; Holl·
day Hill. 11 to 20 inches, daily; Moon Jlldie, eJihl to ID Inches, SatublaJ Ind
Sunday ; Mt. Baldy, 211 to..a, lnchll,
dally.
on the llfOUnd. · ·
Trustee Don Jordan of Garden Grove,
disagreed wtth , other board member!,
· 1ayll!( he belleYOI II iJ Ille mponaibllity
of the IChoola to eee that ltudtntl are
cfven more than one viewpoint of an
historic event.
Ralllson, however , maintained that the
book gives support to ban the bomb
movements.
"We have demonstrations by peaceniks
bec.ause we haYe allowed so much
material of thi.!I kind In our Ubrarles,"
he declared. Trustees Yoted unanlmou1ly to dt.lete
lbe """'1d boot, "Big Change -America
Trllllfcrma Illell, 1900-ttllO," b y
Froderlck Lnll Allen, publlabed In 1112.
. Rallllilo laid [he book lmplteo that
Ruala and Communism are not the
eoemSN anymore.
'Ille boob wee on tbe list lor the
t llbrstrf of tbe "!" ,Rlo ContliUO Y oulh ~ -Oeolll'· ltifh oclleof to open
Feb.· 1. Tito -Ts lor juvenll11 on
probation. Ml Plnos, ei.&bt to 10 Inches, tobogan· nine Satunlay and Sunday: ~ft.
Waterman. 11 ·Inches, Saturday and Sun-Sunken ""-!1 Secti" ._0 day: Rebel Ridge, ti to 2S tnchu, dally: •KU u
Snow Summit, 18 to 24 Inches, dally: R R
Snow Volley, 10 lo II lncllel, dally ; CCOVery lo esume
Table Mawtain, two to eight inches, LOS ANGE~ (UPI) -EffoN to
S.lunll)' and Su11411Y, Taia tbe llU!lk.,,,tail section of I Scan-
'J'be bell skllnc was In lhe Sierra dinavian Airlines jeUtntr rtMne satur-
with Junfl Mountaln reportjng 14 fetl day with an attempt to alt.ch a lline
of t.r!Jw and MammoU with U feet. 19 1L "'-
• <LI llAI~ y •llOT 3 •
Nixon eadying
Legislative Plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmldenl Nilt-
on bopea to a1art sending "a o1pUl!canl
leglalaUn l)lOln!D" to Coapaa wllbln
Narco Raid
Paperwork
Continues
....,al Wetks, accornJns to 'I h I
Pre!ldenl'1 newly named chle! Whjle
House. altff member,
The atatement tram Arthur F. Burris
gave add~ substance lo atber indicaUans
that Nixon . Intends to pmenl the
DemocraUc 9Ist Congess with an am·
bltious legialaUve program as SOOD u
po<aible, perhap$ by March.
Burns, an economist and ••1onaUme
friend and trusted advisor" was named
by Nixon 'nluraday u councilor to lhe
Pres.ident with cabinet rank, the only
White House staff member wilh that
gtatll.!.
BurOJ, whQse chief responsibility will
LONG BEACH -Detectives today be devel~t al Jomestlc ppllcle1 Jnd
continued to clean up deta.Us and handle program!, said he already hu submitted
a mmlve valume of pap!;!rWOl'k in the two reports to Nixon on potenUal
wa.lr:e of the bluest narc0tie1 roundup legislaUve proposals or execuUve acUons.
In city l\lstory, wttb more than 17,500 A declaloa ye! to be reached ls how
in contraband sehed, 50 persons jailed and u:acUy lJheo Nixon will make ~is
ana more sought. legislative proposals. 11 the Prtsident Te.amt be ,tQ Police oHicers began the decides on a special State or the Union
vast, coordinated raid aystem Thursday mesaage It problbly will come within
nitht, armed with aecret Grand Jury 30 or 40 days, Burns said.
indictments issued after a four-month The alternative woulJ be a series of
invesUgaUon. special rnes11ages.
One offictr on the force just two weeks The other indications that Nixon wants
made 98 separate l)lrcotlcs purchases to get his proposals to Congresa as
alone to help set up lhe arrests, which soon u po&lble included his creation
may climb to as hl&h as 90 before al nlne special panels within the Council
all the wanted SU!pecl! are cauiht. cf Urban Allain to submit rteom•
PoUce LI. Jim Miller aald charges mendations on what be called "near
included suspicion of possession and sale term" i&auea requtring quick action.
cf heroin. marijuana, LSD and assorted So far, Nixon's JegtalaUve intenUons
other dangeroui drugs. have been dellned only In broad tenm,
Nol Ille · sort el hlppl .. type suspects e!Sellllally by subject beadings.
normally usoclated with tbe narcoUe1 BW'lll' reports, for inalance, covered
Lraffic, inveJUgators said, the people 18 major ~. including federal ex ..
rounded up Thursday and today are pend!tures, . government ~t10n,
suapecled 11111elbe!eu ol beln( ma)Ot debl,.lcleoce and technology, educat!ort,
Southland auppllera. bw.lnea rqulatJon, resources and en·
_ _pJalnclolheam .... aod untfonned1"1re~·hea!th-<att.-m-and
affJcera alike partlclpated In the raids electoral n:fonn. ~burlday, covering North Long Beach In addiUOn, Budget Director Robert
like • blankf:t and rweeping lhe P. Mayo haa dlacloaed that the p,e,1dent
downtown area and partytown Belmont will RDd to Congress recommended
Shore. cbangea In the '115.3 bUllon budget lllb-
During the roundup, which netted Long mitted by former Prtlldent Johnaon. ~ach m:ldentl from late teens to early Another likely propo~l will be 1
thirties, police arreated 19 Juveniles and recommendation for at lent a parUa.I
sli: women. ' d~tlfn& cf the Office of Ecoooqijc
Opportunity, Ille qency chl.0, reoponsl-
Spain Declares
Martial Law in .
Wake of Protest&,
ble for the Wu on Poverty.
Daniel P. Moynihan, Nbon'o ullstant
for urban• affairs, Ald ''Ttiere clearly
has arisen a predlapollllon In favor or
localing In esllblllbed deparlmelill thooe
functions developed by !he OEO wblch
have proven successful."
UPIT ........
Serloual" IU1
Communist Chinese Cbalrman
Mao Tse-tung is reported to be
seriow:ly ill in undfscloaod city
in interior of China by Hong
Kong's anti-Communist news-
paper, Dally Truth. Cbine.se
leader reportedly collapsed
during late 19G8 tour and has
been too ill lo ntum lo Pekinf.
Freak Accidents
'
Kill Sergeant,
Trash Collector
A Marine Corps l<fleanl died 'nnJrt.
day when his car hurtled off a military
post road and pl11111ed 211 letl Into 1
muddy drainq:e ditch. where felCUe
workers took a balf~y to haul It back:
oul
A second county traffic fatality wu
logjied Thundif ~ • trull .. ~,
loll beneath Iha whu!J ol bli moving
!Ht 1r Comity Trolfte --ell-IHt u
truck on 1 Fullerton elementary IChool
camp111.
Dead are Gy/Sgt. Fronk E. Mikola·
JC2all, 4-0, who lived oo lhe 8anla All.a Marine Corps Air Faclllty bue where lhe accidenl occurred, and Allred Arambulo,
42, of 417'h Trullow Ave., J!'ullerton.
The body ol Sgt. Mll<olajcuk -who
died of injuries suffered Jn the dltcb
accident, rather than by drowning -
wu not discovered for nearly e1ib1 houri
after the one-car wreck.
Coroner's deputies said the sergeant
was driYing along Moffett Road about
4 a.m. Thursday when tM car hurtled
Into the gulch, but II WU ooly IOWJd
at 11:15 a.m. by pultrlby.
Arambula was r1dinC an the front
loading bin of a trasf! truck ac Beechwood
School, 7111 Beecllwood Ave., Fullerton
when he fell off about I a.m. Thuraday.
Grand Jury
·Indicts 7
In Vice Ring
· Sevea-chalpdllla_,_
~pmblfncud-rlllt ,..,. Indicted '11tanday by the
-Oranp County Grand Jury,
'Ille If.member panel'• IPJl'V•al. •I
complalnta p)a«d btlore them by dll-
trJct atlonley'1 lnvelllillora '"'l"'d up a
thr,..monlb probe that Involved polloo
add sberlfrs deputies in MteD couniy
cdmmunlUes Including 1!e"F1 Buch.
Named In Ille lndlc11!1et1t ...,., -
YvOl!De Kelly, «, or ~; lolarlfne sae Goodin, 21, or Loo Anltlea: J-.
Di Alba Placenlla, II, el . Ana!Jelm: Douitas c. eomwo11, 21. 1114 •Donel r.
Gorman, II, ol Gardin.Grove; ll'all1 B •.
Digman, SI, ol Oranp Ind j.any Brtdi·
es, 21, ot Garden Gf'O\Je1 .,.
Sii.of the seven def-....... at-
rt1led Jul Jan. ie1.i:.:o "S . St., Anaheim. tbt I ..... ,.
by lnvesllptan el the ~ di\
• COW>ly.wide ~ 111e1 111m1 ;A;-111!'
• price, prollltHu, ,...... ~
and --ond li-•• Brid.pl wu ma&Dd at • 1* .-.·
All ,. ... deleadlnll are Im err~
ball, . . ~ ....
fnvallaaton llld. the. operallon' •
k-. by Ila ... -Ind Ila ~'
as' ... ~ unllmJted" Ind
"0r&JllO COW.I)' -·· Club..
Critienton Home ' .
toses Petition
'l'be-c-Flonnee Cri-HomO lot
Unwed lllalben II 1111\ wllboul I place
to bulld-todly·lollowlng llte-unalllloeu•
r.Jectlon Wedntldl)' ol . .,......itig poll-
tibn before lhe Orange County PllMJill ,
~rnn>lMiM. •
The home had boped to cwtruct a
bulldlng on lhe rur of p1 operty owned
by the El Modena Frienda Cban:b at
the southeast corner of S a n t J 1 I o
Boulevard and Bond A venue ln. nOrUmn
El Modena.
The ~ .. --lot small estates Ind Ille chun:b aoked lot a
change to llfn&le family ruldenUal.
Altomey Rodia' Howell r._itnr
an adjoining property owner arl\lld lbel
the change would amount to spot IOllfnJ,
His protest WU joined by a opoUanon
for Ille Santlqo Helcbto -
Aslll. ~ Ill propaV ........
in the-area.
' ·' '
MADRID (UPI) -The aovernment
Imposed modified martial law on Spain
tonight to end uminority a c t I e n a
1yslem11ically directed al dillurblng lhe
peace of Spain and il! public order."
In addlUon to announcla the ap-
po!nfment el But111 to lhe neWIY cnllid
councllot' Wot, Miiln'thura<IO' 'Ctltilerttd
wllh Tluaur)' SecretVry Dovhl M. Ken-
nedy, ChaJrman Paul W. McCradcen of
Ille Cowldl'o1£coiiomlc AdVllan, Mayo
aod WDlltm 1,lcOaeaney M a r t I n ,
chairman of tlle ll'eclaal llelene Board.
Coroner'• dep.1Ues u1d the: victim laJxJ..
ed In fronl ol the blc movtq velllcle
and w .. cruahed by Ille wbells.
Coaimlialon IJlalnnan Du Folly .....
ed for a ohow of binds fl'oin the audi,...
in Ille c:r<lried bearing ......_ Votu
wn diflded about eveol)' .., the U....
The ,_ ilU deolod tn the lpol ·-·-.. -lllul. . ' '
The decision by Generaliasimo Fran-
cisco Franco's cabinet, a n no u n c e d
tonight, &Ives police and the armed
forces sweeping powen. Under the order,
tenned a "state of exception,''
authorities can search and arrest. anyone
and can detain suapects indefinitely.
The crackdown began anly boun after
belequored scllool olllclols ~ the
huge University al Madrid, a hotbed
of .student protesta against the govern-
ment. Barcelona University, the coun-
try's ether major school, wa,s shut down Jast week because Of s1mllar agitaUon.
It wu the first time a rtate of ex-
copUoo had been applied lhrougbout lhe
crontry and marked a serious c:r1sta
for the .7~year~ld Frmco. HlJ regime
has been in power lfnce the end al
the SpanJah civil war In 1939. ·
A state of exception bu been In force'."
•lnoe last August in the Basque provincel
where the government bu been fighting:
separatlltl and other dissidents since
mld·1968.
1be cabinet's decree Immediately
suspended five articles al the Spanish
bW el rlghls, whlch aald :
-Every Spaniard may freely ezprea1
his ideu u long u they do not 110
qalnst lhe fundamental principles ol
the state. .
-.'ipaniard1 bave the rigbt to live
wbeftver Ibey Ute wllbln the noltooal
territory. (SUJpenSloo ol this arllcl<
allow• the a;overnment to ulle Spaniard•
lo polnll far from lbeJr homes, which
hu been Ille pll!llsbment for 1boul llO
Buques.) .
-No ..,. 11111 ml<r Ille home ol
I . 5pllllanl witllout Illa -~ Of wltboU\ a warran&.
-SpanllnU may ..,1 aod wodato
freely f'"'~"!.i)iurpow. -No 8 11111 be detained eicept
in the manner let by II•. All detato.u
mull, within ft boun. tie fHed or lunled
~er to judicial aulllorltl.,.
Sirhan Defense
OKs Jury Again,
But 1 Challenged
L06 ANGELES (UPI) -I'« the ,.
cond Ume . this ...,k the defense Id
lhe murder) 1rta1 of Sirhan 8. S~hod
"""'l'ted I Jur1 toda1 bul the ~Oii
decllne4.to -Ind the sel«lloo .,..,. 1lnued. .
Chlll Dtl.,,,. COuMel Gronl B. Coopel
alter acc<plll!( Albert N. Frederico In
lhe No. S Jury oeat told Superlor Courl
Judie llerlteri V. Walktt. "the delen,.
ls allofled wlUl Ille Jur1 u --.Utut.ed. It
Alst-1 ...-.tor !livid F 1111
however, l'OH and iaued the tlate11
aivenlh ptrtmplory cih1llen11, m:uatn1
juror No. t , l!miy Mllltr, a clvtllan
omptoyo o1 tho Loni &lfb N19al
Shlpyonf. '
llET ALL TRfiE
EX1IAI AT .. lllr Pll:E
°"'* .. lllW ~ Dtft~ ......... Ci.citNptemlThl ...... ~prbhWM ------tDOf. ........... . b ,.,, .., ..... ..,.typ9 ................ -.
.......................... iMMll'• ... _ .....
BEACH CIW DODGE
16555 BUOt BLVD. (Hwy. 39)
HUNTINGTqJI BUCH -847-9631 h
.
HARBOR DODGE
2888 HARBOR BLVD.'
COSTA MESA i 540.1111
l
. • . -
"
I '
• ' f
• t
E . • . • . • . • • . . • I .
• .
4 .DAILY PILOT
' Th~ Calhollc chaplln at Logan 1 International Airport in Boston Is
cl.Siiig lhe chapel promptly at 5
· p.m. from now on because s~e
; young people have been using his ~ confessionals for amorous adven-
~ tures during noctural hours. 0 0n
• Monday, Tuesday and Friday night
la.st week, I caught couples love-
making in lhe chapel," lh~ RT.
Rev. Joseph E. Havey said.
. .
• •
These color portraits of · former
Premttnt and Mrs. Johmon wilL be
• h'"'9 in t~ Whit< HOUK. 7""11 tD<r<
pal'llted by Madam Efizabeth Shouma·
---. ..tojJ.of~Locu<l-V.Uy,.J..ooglllaod,N.Y~
· The President i$ wearing a charcool
gre11 iuit and white .shirt with deep
. maroon and dark blve striped tie . Mra.
: Johnson is toearing a .soft 11ellow chi/·
· fon goion.
. •
•
Palach Girlfriend Commits Suicide? • , '
·Prague Radio Reports Death as Tlw~ands Pqy T.,ribute t~·Sfiuk~t·
PRAGUE (UPI) -Prague Radio loday
re'*"'l lbal • lllrl lllMd al Jan Palacb.
the lludonl Wbo 1"lnlad hhllltH lo duth
to pru4o\ So\'lel' domlnaU..' o I ·
CzecboolovU!a, llod comm1ttad IUlclde.
But inlormod ........ llald the report w• lalR llld bad been d!atriJ>uted . by "~vocateurs'.. lo mtnlmlze Palach's
deed.
The girl had been idenUOed as . Eva
Bednarlkova, a !rltnd . of Paloch. wbo
died of seH·infllcted burns In Prague
on Jan. 11, and became a political
martyr.
The student llOUl'CeS aaid Miss Bed·
Blizzard Hits
North Plains,
MUI.west U.S •
By Ualtod Press Iater .. uonal
A blizzard, the latest severe weather
to strike the nation the past few days,
drove aCl'OIM the Northern Plains and
upper Midwest today.
An Arctic cold wave responsible for
the b I lz z a r d plummeted tempera-
tures more than 30 degrees within
1 hour in many parts of the nation'!
midsection, including readings into the
20s early today In northern Louisiana.
The cold wave was moving fast and
was erpected ·to be on the AUantic
coast by Saturday morning.
It came on the heel! of a violent
dawn tornado Thursday that tuJtd at
least 29 persons and injured hundreds
at Hazlehurst, Miss. It was 11 bellwether
for several tornado and hmnel cloud
r epoi ts farther·north later hrthe day. --
Much of eastern Sooth Dakota 1vas
isolated today. The only open roads wre
reported in the area of .\berdeen .
"Everything here h8' stopped" reported
a rad.Jo station at Oakes, N. C., · as
the eastern third of the state was snowed.
in. Southeastern ¥irfnesola also was bog-
ged down.
City bus service was canceled at
Fargo, N. D., and Moorhead, Minn.,
today because of street condltions. Rural
schools In the !Itta were not expected
to open.
narikova, IS. .... sllJl alive, Iba!' she
had not commlttad IUidde by ,.. u
ttported. They also denied she WU 011e
of the Iii-members '!f a lltudelll ring
wbo bed pl"1Pf In die IOI' pollllcal
refanns.
1be reM given lo tha Czechollovak
pms lnclu<led a "llllclde note" that
said Miss Bednarikova Was to be "human
toreh No. %" in the qti&viet protett
death pad, but 1ack.ed' the courage to
kill berseU by U.. u Palacb did.
The report said the girl committed
suicide oo Tuesday. The info~
sources Baid she was seen alive hs
Life • Ill
' ' .
! -• •
!ale • -1 lllp~ ' . ~ •bid -'*"' tile talllals of Tiie ~ Wlili!oOie lilver . crest of The llOUn:el said lbe"'IWd" duth • 1W01 bat Cle<baflont ~· Cborlea Ualvtl'illt' on Its top, rested
note also menllooed ._tern esplooage hla k!entl&if her l'l'l•atel1"' Eva J!ed. beljetlji lbO-itel\i pze of a -of
BgOQtl" .. loallptlllJ·her ~ Tiie -• ./11>1!1¥> tbe rtliil""' JllUlyr who bum-
appal'el!I w.nt of tlle.labe stocy, Ibey .. ,,,.... ..... al woeplllc Clocboslovab ed at the ~;ln.J115 for btresJI
Sail!. WU lo ~ Palacb's polillf:ll ,_ put the .u .... ......-caWt and 1lllls -~hero .
deed. al 'Potadi In ~ today, leav!Df ~ Palacb Ml ~ oo lire Jan. 16
Mia Bednarlkova was one of two girl dNda al -1111 pllad In ttlbute to ... ~w.....ias. · f!quare, . symbol ~ f
friends of Palach'r who appearod on bis .-Jf-"8ce !Gr polUlcal relonnl. ...litanco to Ille 'Russian invaders, m
televislolr earlier Jn · the week to talk MIR lbaa I.Giii -waited In , a~ agalnat ~.domlnattqn.
about the young student's duth by fir.. line oo .1be-dart. overout !loy oulllde ~ In Pr~ ·~oeles of Palach
Tbe "gasslng suicide" was reported the !QO.~ Golblc ~Unum HaU ·w Ibo posilioo or tile casket ben<ath
In a -ttne obituary in the ....,._, of Charles Unlvenl\1 to spend a · lew the Hd! ltalUt declared the dee d s or
Zeme Delsb Novlny and other morning -by the calafalque bearing lhe' the ~ Jans wm the same.
papen and also by Prague Radio. Tbe burned boCIY of tile ll·y~ sjU~ The 'Ioai Jlne .. ol citlz.ens !rodding • narrow ~'between beaps of'floral
and ,.... ..,..tbs locluded ,l>otb youn11
and; okL MoSt c:i the women, and many
1, .
N. Korean Prison or U. 1MO, wept. -some elderly women
collapted crying into, the arm. of -ud bad lo be helped from the ' care-' Unum. .
Typhoid, Scurvy Rampant, Bucher Te'Us Court * *' * Vatican Praise alRONADO, Calif. (AP) -From his
lonely prison room in North Korea, U.S.
Navy Cmdr. Lloyd M. ai.i,cher could
hear little girls laughing.
Children went by outside singing a
marcliing SOQll.
Things were lmprovtng. A few days
before, on Marcll 5, 1968, Bucher and
his 81 men from the USS Pueblo had
been moved to the prison in the coun-
tryside.
It was si:r. or seven miles from
Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea,
Bucher told a court of inquiry Thursday.
The court of five admirals is in-
vestigating capture of his intelligence ship. '
At this new prison there were no
blinds on the windows, and Bucher said
be could see cooperaUve farms sur-
rounded by milllnry lmtallaUons and
ml..Ue batteries.
A parade of . tanka went by on a
nearby road -,...kly, be said. "'We were treated much more hwnane-
Jy," Bucher said1 comparing this 9flson
. to -!be~..,here·he...00. his men
were taken when they were captured
three months before. At th.at compound.
Bucher said, be and his men had suffered
severe beaUngs and Bucher underwent
chillins mental torture.
"There was aJways an aura or terror,"
he said. "But now the men had daily
sick call except for Saturdays and when
doctors were not available.
0 Nurses were always available and
their professional qualifications were
comparable to the nurses at home. But
not their loob. Their looks didn't quite
come up to standards," Bucher said
with a grin •
"I'm '""' that -because of this eeveral
of, us contacted hepatitis. I was one
"·those.
0 At one time I bad lost approximately
100 pouni!J." Bucher said he was given
a half a pack of cigarettes every day
and he and his men were getting tooth
brushes and tooth paste. During 15-to
20-minute exercise periods in the sum-
mertime, Bucher said, he and h1s men
were sent out to cut the grass around
the prison building.
"They bad not invented lawnmowers
yet," he said, "and we cut it with
a pen knife."
The men got to write home -but
Interpreters translated the letters into
Korean and they were changed by of-
ficers in charge of the capUvity, Bucher
said. . l { -
Then, he said: the men got their Jetters
-baclrand were-orderect1o recopy -them,·
adding the North Korean cbaogtS'.
The North Koreans tried to pro-
pagandize his men with socialistlc,movles
every Friday night and booklets and
brochures about the ''tremendous
number of atrocities by American troops
during the Korean war.
"They gave us absolutely ridiculous
accounts of the war and the way things
were in the world," Bucher said. "They
gave us news in a way that tried. only
to demoralize us.
''They told us Robert Kennedy had
been killed by the President of the
Unlted. States."
For Burnings
Confirmed
YATICAN CITY (AP) -A Vatican
radJo broadcast praising the Czech
youth! who set themselves on fire to
protest Soviet control was made at the
direction of Pope Paul Vi's Secretariat
of State. .
This was confirmed today by well.plac-
ed sources in the Vatican press otdc:.e ~
and. in Vatican radio.
Tbe broadcast Thursday-<auaed shoe~ •
not only in Vatican circles and the
-Italian-press but-at-Vatican rl\dio-it:seU.-
The influential daily La Stampa of
Turin summed up the sense of shock
by calling the broadcast commentary
"in contrast with the traditional Catholic
doctrine that condemns suicide in all
fonns."
The broadcast compared the fire-bum·
ings, including the suic!de of Czech stu·
dent Jan Palacb, to the sacrifices or
the early Christian martyrs and said
the protest acls Hdeserved the gratitude"
of the world.
There was some speculation that \be
broadcast had not been cleared with •
higher Vatican authorities. But this was
denied by Sources in Vatican radio.
, Reds Shoot Down
U.S. Red Cross
Copter; 7 Die
'' l 'm sure I came close to death on
a couple of occasions because of illnesses.
There was typhoid, and scurvy was r~
pant from a laet of vitamins. Mysterious
holes started appearing in our skin. 4 Die as Flames
Sweep Apartment
They ei:plained that the· normal prac--
tice ii for any news commentary of '·
any importance broadcast by the Jesuit· , 'I'
run radio station to be-cleared by of-
ficials in the Secretariat of State.
"
;
"
•• ..
,Pat Boyle hnd carefully put
-Y $384 of his .. llillgr· •nd<r
a board in Ille fl<droom of his
"""1< I• Cloremarm .. Ireland.
Whtn ht went to dip into his •no• 'f"ec.ently he found the '.""""11 Qont and called 1he po-Gce. Policemen ripped up th<
flaorboardl and foilnd a ft1D tiny
J>kcer of Ille pound'Mtes. lying
there and the bloa!td body of a
mouse mar bu to~' Md feaakd
hi1 last meol on Pat's sm:ifngs.
• Frank Ward, 38, of Cleveland
made a mistake wb"en be told his
wife be bad bought a televiliioll sel
and a winter coat ·for his sister
"who bas six children to support
and a no-good rotten bnsbaod. ''
Mrs, Ward told pollce court •be
visited her hwband's ''sister"· and
found she wu really his wile, too.
SAIGON (UPI) -Communists sbot
down a c1eaiv 'marked ·u.s .. helloopter
.ambolllnce 'cO)Tyin soldlen -In blllle, ~ ~ seven men aboard,
mllitarJ ·~ aald today. . 1ber. said the UHi bellcopler, p&ted, with arge red crooses, fell lo' guerrilla
fire Thursday ni•bt In the central ;hlgb-
lands and WU~ 1199\h American' Chop.
per ,doWnad by the Commllnlsta In Ille
Vietnam war. It held thrtie men wounded
in combat plus four crewmen.. Observers. said it was the fir:lt such
lncldont •ince lh• United states halted
the ·l>omblllg of Norll1 Vlelnam Nov .. !,
On Oct. I guerrillas &bot down two red-
croased niedical bellcoptm lnrt no one
was reP<l1ed killed.
The UHi crashed and burned 1!11 mn .. nodb of here after btlng hit while
evaa1at1ng the three wtuDded men from a )latUelleld 2J miles nortbwest of the
city of Plelku. Two of ·the crewmen
were medics also trained to U.. the
helicopter's twin .30 caliber machine
gum......bat they were under orders not
to U.. unless lint fll'ed upon. •
The chopper bore red croaes on each
side and on the nose. A. U.S. spokes-
man said the rules ol war laid down
by the Geneva conventions hold such cratt are not to be flrfll upon. But in
Vietnam the Communists have not
obeyed the world law, the spokesman
said.
'AURA OF TERROR'
Bucher 1 .. 1111 ..
"'Ibey were the typeJ: of sores you
see In the ~'ble In plctttres of Lot.
By and large I thought their medical
treatment, considering all things, was
barely adequate. In some cases, though,
it Wal just short of miraculous.
''They did have peniclllln. But their
sterilliation and cleanliness standards
were far below those at home.
Big Red Replies
329102 Wins War With Computer
PEARL HARBOR (UPI) -Navy LI.
Cmdr. Bob Baril boasts a n ac--
compllmment few-men can dalin -
be II the victor in a hand-to-band batile
with a computer.
And in doing so, he has played cupid
in a love affair between the electronic
brain and a if s. Navy warship.
It began last May when Baril was
transferred from the USS Walker to
the destroyer USS Haverfield off the
coast of Vietnam.
"You see, I have a checking account
with the Fort Worth National Bank ln
Texas," Baril said. "Before we sailed
from Pearl Harbor for Vietnam, I wrote
to Fort Worth to have the address chang· ed." .
But his bank strtements kept arriving
aboard the Walker, Baril said, and
severfl). attempts to. get -the matter
straightened out did no good.
"I thought about Jt a lot,0 be · said.
"How can you get through to a com·
puter?"
Finally he decided to write to the
machine llself.
The Jetter began, "Dear computer.
"Having tried several times unsuc.
cessfully to get your human 'masters'
to correct my address for all cor ..
respondence and OOaHngs with the bank,
I now turn to you for assistance."
He signed the letter, HWith fondest
personal regards I remain very truly
yours 329102. ''
Hjalmer Freezes at Kulm
Within two weeb, a reply came back
from Ille computer who signed himself
"big red."
£•0ear 329102," the Jetler began.
"Please do not think me presumptuous
U I should call you by your self-check
digi~ VIZ, DEAD I. How delighted I
was to receive yoor thougbtlul letter •.. "
Family of Five Asphyxiated in Helena Trailer Park
r-JN!Nt•..,.
MltllUwl'!'K. " ~ " • " 4
" .. , "' " " .. " " " .. " n " .. ,
" " " " .. " .. " " .. ... ... " " " " .. • .. .. .. " " ,. ... • .. • " :i " .. " • • • .. • .. .. • • ..
" " ' ... .. " " " .. " .. " " .. • " .. .. .. .. .. " ,. " ' ' " " •1 ..
"' "' "' . ..
"' .n ... ...
"'
.. ...
"'
·" ... ... ... ... ..
... "' ... ... ...
"' ••
••
The Jetter 1ln!lll on to apologb.e for
the mi.xup and signed ltseH, "lnfalli·
$-VKP? ..• CANCELL. .• "lnlallfbly, Big
Red, SYS 360-30."
:niat was the , tnd of Ba:ri1'1 battle
With the computer, but the start of
the tecboologlcal romance. Because in
his first letter, Baril had lnclnsed a
photo of the Haverfield (DER 393).
"Say, 39S really twns me on," tbe
computer wrote. "I am recefvi.Dg signals
from her superstructurt SXS. Also my
partner, Old Blue. wooden il she had
a friend, ma,ybe 3M?"
Baril answer.d:
"You lndicated that your felJow com-
puter, Old Blue, mlflbl be lnteres1ed
in a blind date with a friend of the
Haverfield. How about oor sister ship
USS Crmp (DER251)! While she may
be a litUe older; and perllaps not quite
as good lookln& or ... 11 bullt topa1de,
Bbe bas a wonderful penDW.Jty."
And while love blossomed betWftn the
computers and the wanlllps, a fUrtber
element was added to the long dittance
dr11ma .
Included In the photo Big Red sent
of blmaelf ...,. lour lovely )'lllll!ll Ildles .
And the crewmen of the Raftrfleld
haw UPI euecl 11 much bltemt tn tht
four ladles as Big Red did in their
ship.
They have sent olf a lett.tt asking
for thtf1( own set of st.atlstlcat in-
formation.
CJDCAGO (UPI) -FOllr persons were
killed and 18 were Injured today when
fire swept through the upper stories
of a bigb·rise apartment building on
Chicago's swank N. Lake Share Drive,
Hundreds Ded in panic..
Chief Fire Marshal CUrtis Yolkamer
said the fire apparenUy ,vas caused
by carele54 smoking in a 36tb Door
apartment
Among the tn~ were e 1 g ht
policemen who rusl>ed to ~ fG.story
building to rescue ~idents feared trap-
ped by dense smote.
It was further explained that In this
case the commentary was not only
cleared but that the ldea for it originated I
in the secretariat and that the draft
of the commentary was edited and cor·
rected lhere.
Israel Invites LBJ
JERUSALEM (UPI) -Former Prtsl·
dent Johnson has been invited to visit
Israel, ll was officiallf announc:ed today.
The offidal announcement said President
Zalman Shazar issued the invitation in
a Jetter to Johnson wishing him "bltss-
lngs far the new phase of your Ufe."
(;hnged Milld, Saved L•Je
Mn. Marloo..Jennlngs ~lier airline ticket folder containing hor
Ucl<el on Unlled Air Lines lliJ,ht 266, which crashed into lhe Pacific
Ocean •bortly allor takeoff, killing 37 pusengers, The Aurora, Colo.,
woman didn't boanl fllgbl 266 because of heavy rain -she didn•t
lJ&nt to mess her hair and e new fur coot. Instead, she changed her
!ilght to 372, which departed late'r -and made It. ~
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of
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16
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Tornadoes Kill 29
-It Wasn't Dream:
ff '!We Was Flying
HAZl.EilURsT, M!JI. (111'1)
-11<111 Gll!ocn lboulbl Jbe
WU drumina. It felt like her
-.... ll:rlng lhroUlh lhe e'. Siie coulc!A\ 1et out ol
"8ometbln1 Just kept hilling
me ln the face," she Slid
later. '"!be room wu moving
ind wouldn't let me up."
Suddenly, r.:e fell to the
growld and discovered to her
horror that tt wun't •dream.
Her house 1"U airboine, spill·
Ing her ""'1hen and sisters
.. the '""""' .. It floaled downhill In a mill pond.
stretch or rollina hill country
in his st1te as • diu.ster aru.
"It's 1 terrible tragedy, botb
in lives and propert y ,''
Williams 1 1 l d after an in-
spection t o u r of SimP-'00.
Copiah aod Smith counUe.!1
Thursday.
The harde:it·hil locality was
a predominantly Negro seetion
ol Hazlehurst, where 20 holMd
were demolished and 35 othen
heavily damaged .
Whites moved ln to help
blacks in the stricken uua
in the wake of the twllters;
women maMed switchboards
and helped Red er... 1wns
and men worked in rtJCUe
and salvage work.
Hospitals were overloaded,
and Dr, Lam1r Puryear said
about one·third of the p1Uents
U,I Te ......
Dandy Parfeing Joh
Men in st. Louis were probably gnunbling "woman driver" when the~ spot·
led this automobile backed through J store window. But L!llian Ma, McCfel·
land e.1plained that she was just attempting to park when the gas pedal stuck
and the car went out of control. No one was injured.
-OAllV '11.0T r;
N. Irelmid
Minister
Resign s
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
(AP) -Another mombtr or
Prime Mlnbttr T e r e n c •
O'Nelll's government. Com·
merce Minister 8 r i a n
Faulkner, retianed lOd.ty in
a row over O'Neill'• handling
ol the Roman Catholic civil
right.I movement.
Northern Ireland wu plung·
ed into Political c r I s i 1. Polillcal inlonnanll said an
election for, • new leliJlative
assembly mlcht ht necessary.
Boy, Oh Boy!
Alice De Rivera, 13, relaxes in her Brooklyn home
Thursday after completing qualifying examinations
that should get her into all·male Stuyvesant High
School in lower Manhalan, if the courts rule in her
favor. Board of Edacation has asked Alice to drop
her court action and seek entrance to th e Bronx
High School of Science, a coed school for exception-
al students. But Alice says that attending the Bronx
school wouJd reqqir~ too much traveling.
Betty, 11, and the 15 other
occupants of the four-room
frame bouJe wei:-e amq the
lucky· ones Thursday when
tornadoeJ struck t b r e e
loliullllppl cowiues, tilllna al
least 11 perllOllS and injuring
bundr"11 of others.
Aoothtt tornado struck later
Thuraday near Dover, Tenn.,
aloha the K~ntucky border,
lnjurin&: oOe person a n d
deslroying four houses and
several barns.
he treated had "serious in--------------------
juries." Volunteers helped him
Faulkner's ralgm.Uon wu
lhe ll10ll -cballenge !d
far by rlghl-wlng e-
dissatW1ed w l t b O'Nelll'1
moderate leadership and hi!
conceulon! lo lbe C&lhofic
O\U>Ority. Unlill the rest or
Ireland, Northern Ireland has
a P"""'lant majorily and ;,,
a part of the United Kinldom.
I fOI THI "NITI PI0"-1" ...
J.flftn • wntr. 011r!nt J111u1n, 1J6f,
Coflet S'-' onty. from .Y.ldnl'9 1mtll
.1 4:00 '·'"· w
' ' f THI IOUNTtPUL lllAJCfASTI ,
$111111 Or111~1 J..,;,,
Two E9,1 '
Haslt lfown1
• l1co11 Of 51111191
~To11t l Jim
I 59c 1 I > Coff11
"
· C1Mptet. a ... t leef Dllltl9!'
' G"'°'" S11tc!. CtM>lu ol Orelll!'ISI "o.tl Sit111i., ol !«I' •Y lu•
... n--1 ..... ·-. $ l '' r1t.te
• Jell·O ... SMtMt r H•t C•ffee .t TM
~ <Sl!•~ed nf""ly, t:JO ~m. unlll \~pm.)
I,
c
~KONA LANES • ~ COffEE SHO~
2699 H1rbor Blvd.
otta Mo .. -50-1112 •
Gov. John BeU \Villiams of
Mississippi asked President
Ni%orl to declare 1 4G-mile
through th!! medical crisis, he
said.
"The people have been
ove rwhelming in I b e i r
eooperalion," he said. "The
cooperation bet ween the races
has been just fantastic."
The first tornado struck at
dawn , s k i pp i ng from
Hazlehurst to Harrisville and
Disease Germs Found
In California Milk
spawning two other twisters
that dipped into smaller com·
munitiea and fann areas.
Most residents still were
asleep when the tornado whirl·
ed In at daybreak, but Lell
Fenter, a Hazleh u rst
BERKELEY (AP ) -Germs
causing serJoug disease are
._.ied to have been · found
in samplel'1of 11 or the state's
29 Certified and Grade A raw
milk produCi!rs.
Jn a telephone inlervi ew
from the State Department
of Health Th ursday, Dr. Ben
Dean confirmed that samples
were tested for germs tl1at
cause salmonella and Q fever.
the latter a serious and
sometimes fatal respi ratory
disease.
But health officials said
there is no danger I n
Pasteurized milk, the major
portion of milk sold in
California.
The (lwner of an Altadena
dairy, Los An1eles County's
largest raw milk producer,
called th e contamlnalion
report "an injustlei!" and con·
tended "someone ill trying to
get rid of raw milk."
Harold Stueve of the Alta·
dena Dairy said he Is opposed I
to Pasteuriiation ~ause ii
causes milk to "loge almost!
all the enzymes. Q ft:ver isl
an airbome disease. You can't
get it by drlnklng milk," he'I
said. stating that there w a s I
only one case of Q fever in
the county last year.
But, Dr. Dean said. there
are "quite a fe,v" documented
cases in wh ich Q fever has
been associated with drinking
milk.
Lo.1 Angtlcs County Health
bus inessman , was an early
Department officials 11 a id riser.
thtrt 11'1 no plqll to prohibit "I stood in the door of my
the sale o1 raw 1 thnk until restaurant and watched it. It
he t f I was not good daylight. and. t -coon Y counse • ru e! on it sounded like four freight
the matter. trains coming through town."
Dean said the lest~ \\'Cre Fenter said. "The air was
C<1nducted at the Natio nal fill ed with debris and the wind
I ns t it u l cs of Health was really blowing." Trees toppled. utility poles Laboratory, Hamilton, Mont.. snapped , ga s and water ma ins
and U1e Com m u n i c ab l t: burst, cars spun crazily like
Disease Center in Atlanta. toys. houses collapsed.
-~ -1
INCOME TAX
KEEP YOUR COOl
let us prepare your
r eturn now ••• for an
early refund •.. or for
the time needed to
budget eny add itionol
eic penie.
WE'RE HERE 12 MONTHS
OF THE YEAR
Newport Business Services
-OUR NEW OFFICE LOCATION-
2209 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Bch.
!Between Forgits Hardware and the
Daily Pilot Office.)
•I ' ' ' 'I
IS COMING SOON
Legendary Gem Sale
Bririgs Rival Claim
LAUSANNE, Switzerland She had a Geneva jeweler,
(AP) -An examination today Maret! Sadek, C<1me here
showed a pearl owned by 1 Thursday to make a study.
queen of Spain II larger than Sadek said the pearl owned
one sold 1t a New York auc· by the queen weighed 223.8
lion Thursday night but it grains. The one sold In New railed lo determine which gem is the legendary jewt:I known York weighed 203.M grains.
as La Peregrina. There have been suggestiot11
An anonymous bidder J>!id .... t h a t ~re are. two authentic
$37.000 in New York for what ..-Peregnnas which originally
Parke-Bemet Galleries said were a pair. Sadek maintained
was La Peregrina -The Wan~ that .t~ Queen's peiyl is "~~i·
derer .....;. so calla;' because que 1n 11.& form and quality.
ii passed for centu ries from He said he therefore could
n1onarch to monarch . not estimate its value, 1
Ex-Queen Victoria Eugenia, Peregrint: Pollen, Pa nke
through her chamberlain the aernet's president, said that
Duke of Alba. insisted lod11y he has confirmed the authen·
that the real Peregrina Is in ticity of the jewel he sold
he r posses11ion, in a bank vault "to our complete satis:f•e·
here. ti on."
~ • "•• NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS •iJ•• FO~ THE SPRING SIMISTEI : ill " ~ Emlnt ,,...,....
~ .,.,. • · COMMINCING JAN. 27tt., 1969
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\DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE t
Pop Concert Question
. " I " The • questton , ol an 11:,111r w~ j>op concert Ill
Irvine BoWI wenl over with c:trtam memllers ol 'lbt
Feslival ol Arts board about like the music Itself ml1hL
Wllb the spectre ol. Ibo CGll& Mesa pop marathon
atill lingering, some directors were empha~ op-
posed lo the request of the South Orange Cliun\y Youth
Council. + •
William D. Martin, board presldan~ said, ~'lf Ive
go into thi s "'e ought to have our head• examined."
oouthera freeWll)' eotr--. 1Dherlt8d !rum the days b"'
fOn>' incl>rJ»l'ltlol>. AnOther has jlllt lletn-cleered for
c0ns1ruc110ll. SW! other al'P)taruonk are pending.
Sm Juan CaplstraM lW a populaUon of aboul 3,000 now, but I D""1ber Cf ecoOomtc and physic'al events 1ucli aa the locollon oearby'of a-pace plants, Dana
Polltt Hatllot and Jll!lqn) alb'llct.loq ol ,l!Je beeutiful val·
ley portend mucb for the area.
· The polnt ii tbl.s : San Juan Capistrano can have
development on its own temu. It ls a young clly wilh a
bright future. To real\ze that future, adequale planning
I
Director Paul Griem, on the other band, said, ';I
don't think we can set ourselves up as judges of the
taste and morality of young people. If it's a good group,
l 'm lor it JOO percent."
Director •lelen Keeley called for an investjgation
of the ctreumstances surrounding the proposed musical
event rat.her than cutU'gg the youngsters off without a
steps must be taken now, lest these saddest words
"could have beep'' be spoken over San Juan Capistrano:'-.. '
~ -L
full hearing. .'
Ttiat's hOw it stands. The 1natter is tabled pending
mdre i.nfmrrilltioil on tht! scope of and controls over the
l>qp cohcert. .
Jt wouJd seem the board or its representab\.e shpufd,
spell out all the information needed , whethet it relates
to security, length of the program or whatever. It
"'ould be up to the youngsters then to supply that in-
fonnation.
Concern Is Justified
;
San Juan Capistrano'$' city~ c:iiunci1fner(are Wprried','
about a surge of applications . .tfum."trailer p8rk .de'l_elop-'
ers wanting to build in the city. The ~ue·call.s lbr~cara
fuI stud'y lest irrevocable damage be'adne.
Ordinarily, the interest of land developers is wel~
corned within a growing community. However, both the
City Cou1.1cil ·and the planning commission view with
&ome trepidation the project of becoming a trailer-park
to\Vn. Their concern is justified.
The city has one e~tablished trailer park above its
A Pier for AmoBeach
The proposed. pier to be constructed at South La·
guna's Aliso Beach will be a valuable new recreation
laci#tr 19~ the burgeooing South Coast, o'ne that s~ould
enjoy mt~se use. . . ~epily? lb~ conce~sionl\ will . include live bait. As .. a!\J.j;111ll&. pier angler know1,.it's pretty tricky to enttce
' a flllli;ky hall~ut ·~ take !hal'major step liorn ~andy
boll om to tell:igeNltor w~b the ai<t o( ~· hovt The Aliso Beach.di y,e an e•tiiDalei! 0 mooths
left ~Of!,µteir domain i ioVaded ~y cO :tiOn par•
<>P~tnaliaJo build the pier. Due for, comp e.tion in 1970,
it will co~t-j $400.000, financed equalJY by the Orange.
County HaJbor District and the State Fish and Game
· Departfnent.
Std.dies of the sba pe and currehls of the ocean floor
are being me4e by a San Diego engineerihg firm for a
.March· Ploiei?t r•J>O<t. .
With jts 'Purchase of four bea cb acres tn 1967 Jor
$600.000. the coHnty now has 15 park $Cte,s in the ar~a
and wilt b&ve· landscaped. parking for •. ~· ~an'.
Although it's not big by regional, ~t'k standards.
the new facility should have an excellent . quotient of
recreational use per .square foot. (L)
sEa@J\RY
()1'1H£
'IlNTElRlIOR
W.J. Hl(KEL
KISrTZER>
'
We Need
·i ' Dear
Gloom)·
Gus:
CTA ~seCU.tive Clarifies Strike Po•ition
~he Courage
To Be Known
t.~ ...
By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON
1'111nister
The Nelgltborhood
Congregational Church
Laguoa Beac•
Paul Tillich wrot.e. ii book, .. 'l'he
Courage to Be. >t I think his book "'as
s clarion call to individuals to be
themselves, to accepl themselves for
what they are. ~In order lo do this
one has to have U1e courage to be
ktown, lo disclose himseU as a genuine,
real, authentic person.
The Delphic Ora f.'le said, "Know
thyself." I would prefe r to SfJ.Y, "M~ke
thyself known, and then thou wllt know
thyself."
Shakespea re said, .. And this above all,
to lhine Oll'D self be true, and . . .
thOI cansl not then be fal5e to
any man." Again J would prefer, "And
this above all, IJ any other man be.
true, and thou canst not then be false
to thyself." And n1<s takes courage to
disclose our real feelings.
' -l'ltOST OF US WEA:R masks, v.·c play
roles~ We try to live up to something
that we are not and we become stuffed
shirts -not the real thing. Some of
us al lhis late date· don't even know
""ho we are. We haven't dete.nnined
\Yha t is lhe real "l''. We have all
incl people who hide behind the mask
of goodness. Oh, they are so sweet
and nice. never hreak.ing any of the
laws of eliquette but underneath they
are hellions!
There are two areas where people
completely disclose themselves. ln a good
marriage relationahip there is complete
openness, honeaty and dJ.sclosure. In a
counsellng situalion there must be com-
plete. exposure oo the part of the patient
lilnd the therapist, in turn, musr. ha ve
empathy. Beyond these two artas there
are varyinJ degrees of seU·revelation.
Lagunaw who would put an "ovet·
kill" on surfing regulations, deny·
ing a fair shart of surf use to de-
votees or this fine sport, belong
back in the horse-and-buggy era.
Surfing has never hurt Waikiki,
for instance; just the contrary.
And Newport is being fair. Why
can't we?
....j;, D. L.
fh~ .. m,.. rettt<:11 rultt'r ""--fl-Mrlly ,..... el !IHI "-1'9r. S.•
·-NI -• 01-f Gu&. 0•11f ,.1111,
A ~T SCIENTlf'rc study has
revealed I.bat 'tften 'do not djsclose. a!
much about \betnselves as women; that
v.·hile female s disclose most to mother
and girl friind· and least to father and
boy friend ; tbclt white malts confide
about equally to both parents and male
friend and significantly less to fem&le
friend. It is interesting to note that
Negro males: disclose most to their
mothers and UWe U at all, to father,
male friend or female friend.
In general terms we · can say that
people disclose more t.o their family
than to non-family members, more to
their own sex than to the opposite sex;
and they disclose more to tbeiE., age
peers than to their e1deif"' o r
those younger. Man hides much of his
real self behind an iron curtain but
there is evidenc~ to the effect that
this iron curtain melts like wax when
it is exposed to the warm breath of
Jove.
DO YOU KNOW who you are? Have
you courage to be known? Are you
playing a game of masquerade? Are
you authentic, genuine, real ?
You recall the guitar-player who, daily,
for 20 years, sat with a one-string &WW,
holding the same fret, plucking the same
sound. One day his wife .said, wtth
surprise. "Dear, I noticed on TV today
that a man was playing a guitar, but
it had six sltiilgs, and the man kept
moving his haods around, and making
lots of different sounds -not like yoo.''
Her hush.and said. "Don't worry about
him, dear. He's 1tlll huntin' the. right
note, and I have already found it."
Have you fOUlld the right note? Have
you the courage to be known?
Beauty and the Beast
Ande1 with Semantics:
I resigned for reasons of policy. quit
because of a disagreement : he was fired
for poor judgment.
Beauty and the Beast. A "beast'' Ii;
any man whose wife is suing him for
divorce : a "beauty" is any woman who
consoles him during this period.
Tbe difference between a "'dope sheet''
and an "investment guide" ii; •bout
SSO a copy,
I "over-indulged'' last nigh!: you .. tip-
pled too much": he "got gassed."'
A "G-Ou nritET" ill usua lly little more
than a glu1ton festooned with charge
canls.
Frank t<.1oore Colby once defined "a
gentleman of the old !!Chc>ol" • .. a
man who hasn't made love to bis wire
in fife years, and is prepared to shoot
·' any flher m,n who tries~:· il...-... ~~l.
: '.; I _ 'm "ltrlous .. , YOU..~ ·-~'s, ~t ha ~"grim." .,_ ~ ·~ ~ ·, "llak te&pt\.al'' i~ capliaJinvest.ed ~·
, : eU ~k har ~ minimized in '}wt
~ ,· ~~ lc":i'I lnd'exlrl!·kgaJ way. I • . P[Ened ,,......... mtglot. do ~t!K•
if il ano~;me I.hat dWn'I tiWltd '°' llke ~ng marh1r relaL\ons
t11to i form of annual in ventory
LllCEWl&S. "tducahonal Lelevision"
c ;;nnot nourish until It finds a 08n\C
!
• r z 1
for itself that is Jess redolent o! In·
.-;tituLional dullness.
The C1>1lbOtadon or some words often
lilrns into the opposjte of their denota-
Uoa ; as an example, "edible" denotes
whatever is r11 to be eaten, but it
connotes that wbich iS bardJ rlt to
be eaten. and to call a Certain food
"edible" la to mark down ·Ill gu"8tory value.
"Genealogy" 11 a perverse inoc·
cupalion or thole who • ,sttk to
dell\Ofl8trate lhal their forDears were
better people than they are.
A / person todly· ti
ho • ben wile)\ "••y" • ' ~· w . • :rrr ... ' • ·, ;;{,~.~ "~·~"""' the ;;.-a.~11 ls : tilll\. ... ... in.: llqc;trlne ·: • )'4)<11t "' • it "" y Ole practJi!t ol P"'leC!ln&
our C"U~mers ~ our COl'Ql!Jtitora.
My favorite &<manUc m1lil of t!ncy
for the month come! from the 'lth-IJ'ader
wDo defined the fi'rench pbrue "pal
de deu1" 15 "the rlilther of lwiJtiJ. ••
-t
~~·Many Sc~ooi District~-Break~ ·Law'
To lhe Editor:
Your recent editorial Dec. 30 con-
cerning a change of CfA policy on
teachers' strikes bas been caU~ to my
attention.
I am enclosing an editorial from our
Southern Section newspaper, 'Ille Record
(Nov. 1963 issue ), which ,may clarify
our position. You will note that CTA
does oot like., ,and does not recommend,
teachers' strikes. It suggests sevel'!li·
procedures wb;eh are more effective ii\
the ,,'m=..lor. tiiwasse, and wlµc,h, Wloiila· .m;*u'\ilnecessary.
Since the ~f qf tbe Winton Act,
CajifM1lia ~1 1~..;,ication have been ~,..t-:~· peaotiltit'·f("meet and con·
(tr") wJib ~~ives of employe
orgarlltaUOm •. Thi~· Jaw is being brokCn
io many Southern California school
districts.
Letten lrvm rffdt<1 •f'I ..-Nom>•ll'll wrll t,.
&llovld '°"¥91 ttlelr '""'"' 1n 300 """"1tl or IU&. Thi rltllt to eoMtnW: lelfltrl ta flt -.et or 1llml·
fllle libel Is rese..,,ed. All ltltfrl mtJ51 lnc\udt
.i,,..1v,.. alld meUlng -ms, bvl ..._ may bt
wiltillei.I Oii reci..,.., il 141Hk~ ·-II ·-·~~I.
··~,a slrike to solve a problem: but it
'Will cons1der the use of:fJUs "weapon"
to insure adherence to a legally-man-
dated process of problem solving.
J\nd you may be assured l1lat this ,,.
organization will alw.1ys be motivated
primarily by the interests of the students
and the public it serves.
RI CHARD D. BATCHELDER
Executive Secretary
California Teachers Association
Southern Section . . , Editor's Note ._.;.The DATLY PILOT
tditotial was critical of the Califoruia
Teachers Association (CTAJ for adoµ.
ting a policy thq.t teachers may be
-:;; §u.rtifitid m striking 1/ thtlJ can't i·1t
'· GJher ways win l.htir point with the.
of · 1ch.ool board. It noted thbt always be·
TEACIIBRS, RELUCTANT to withhold
their sefvlces u~r ciny circumstances
_..: and committed to professional conduct
-cannot and will nol accept the prin·
ciple that, when ao impasse develops,
they must always assume the role of
losers. This ll'ould render the entire
negotiations process meaningless. er A does not advocate the use ·' •..
fore CTA hod put nre we?fate nf
chiliirtn htfore everything elat.
-Editor
.
Lot19•halred Pollre?
To the Editor:
T have a positive suggestion lor im·
proving community-police re 1 a t i o n s .
Allow some of the officers to grow
' longer hair~ 1n~ this way , many or the
~bellious )'outb will reel a ~ew bond
witb tbe law eptcircement agencies.
Much al the-"i.ft-eolic1! ~ei;tment .is
caused by the tame•lttM of generaµZ:B ·
lion that the businessmen make wlien
they prejudge a youthful and . hopeful
employe because· of bis long locks, name·
ly. the lumpl.ng of policemen into the
category of , pJgs by youth with un-
favorable eonlact with the law.
THE WHOLE IDEA of police is to
protect the rights and lives of the
citizens. Since everyone is a citizen in
practice, these f'tghts ar~ relative prD-
ted.ion ruin crbninal deviation rro.m
the norm. •
Police that look like the. citizens they
represent present no stereotyped Image
of misuse of lhc \a\Y by any particular
grouP. And yet these feelings of misuse
exist and constitute a real dilficulty
in law enforcement.
THE PURPOSE of this letter ls to
urge the public, all of us, to accept
a policeman a:1 a man working on the
side of people and not on the side
of repression. I see no reason why an
officer should not have reasonably long
hair if he so desires. Policemen allowed
the same range of personal appearance
as the rest of the citizenry cease to
represent to any group , influential or
not. any stereotype.
AND YET I have never seen a local
officer who bas long hair, or even who
has more than a crewcut. 1 know many
qualified people who would desire to
eriter police work yet balk at the symbol
of the crewcut as being a repressive
sign. Allow policemen to look. like ~
people than Marine recruits and you
will get better community response from
the younger groups. Tolerance, Chris·
ti ans.
CllRIS GAUTSCH!
··~
Lodge Likely to Be a Hard-liner
The new team In Paris and the old
have much in common. Indication s are
that Henry Cabot Lodge as chief U.S.
negotiator in the Vietnam ~IM:e talks
will follow at 1east as hard a line as
hi! predecessor . Ambassador W. Averell
Harriman. Lodge, 66, is still deepl y in-
volved in the Vietnam war, though his
most recent assigruneqt iw been as
Ambassador to West · Germany.
Cabot· Lodge served as AmbasSador
to Saigon under Presidents K~nnedy and
Johnson in 1963-64. and 196S-67. On Dec.
I, 1966, he was quot.ed as anticij>ating
a gradual fading away of the war:
.. There's no treaty, there's no headlin es:
they (the enemy) don't even admit lhey
-.·ere in a war, let alone admit they
got defeated at it."
IN A STATDtENT on Vletnam sub-
mitted to the Republican National
Convenlion'a committee on resolutions
la:st Aug, I, Nixon declated : '"If the war. is sul! going on neJi::t J anuary,
it can best be ended by a new ad·
min.lstraLioo that has given no hostages
io lhe mistakes of the past ; an ad·
rilinistratloo neither defendlng old errors
nor bound by the old record ." Lodge
in accepting the appointment from
President-elect Nixon on Jan. $.. sounded
• ditfertnt note. "The commitment~ of
the put run deep," be said. "Each
pif'b' to the conflict has formed them
in mort than a decade of war. They
have been sanctioned in the blood of
miny." · .
ti was Jutt a year a&o &bat Norf.b
VletnameH loreip minlstu NIU)'en Du7
Trinh let. Jl be known Informally that
North Vietnam was deflnilely "'Hing
to hold talb wltb the: United States
Bir G~rge
. Dur George:
a· s
Wl*l II the ~test distanc<'
evf!t'tr~,_by a 101.-d pa&S? •
r. , , FOR TllB llSCORD Dear ,,. ,;,. Rectro . Ii/I Jlllr!t •• I ean dttermlnc. •
JI mu ... 'i1ll """ laOOeoi "" top
ol the _, bua """ lbe ''""' W'ILI dtlayfd ...lltllU tt mlde the
round trip. However, II was one
of lhe greatest hllllime ~hows you
tver gaw.
after a halt to the bombing of North
Vietnam. But Hanoi did not actually
accept bids for talka until April 3, 1988
-three days after President Johnson
annoilnC!d he WOUid not-run fdt reelec.
lion and that Ute U..S. wai halting' bom--
bing raids over tbne-quarten of North
Vietnam.
ON ' MAY II, Ambassador Harriman
araj Zllan Tbuy, be~ ol Hanoi'• delega·
tioa,, held ·their lint plenary ..,.io.
In the lntemationel Conference Center
in Paris, once_ the elegant Hotel Majestic.
Al a second meeting on May 17 Hanoi
showed interest in U.S. willlngness to
accommodate Coinrhunisls in Sottth Viet·
nam's political life, but still insisted
that a complete bombing halt precede
any progress .
Hanoi and Washington in July and
August agreed to a limited exchange
of war prisoners. By theo U.S. troop
strength jn \'.iet.nam bad climbed to
534,000. On ~· 31 Prtsid~ Johnson
announced the end of bomtilng tn the
north.
The National Libe.raUoo Front -Viet
COng -on -Nov. J' a~ t.enns for
the Parla !alb. Presldellt Tbleu of South
Vietnam on ~ov. 17 pkted Vice Presi·
dent K1 to OVU3Ce .•a newly ehosen
•
neiotiating team to go to Paris.
SINCE EARLY llecember the four
parties have been sparring over the
:.ihape of the negotiating table and other
procedural details. Peace table seating
is a tired old game. It goes back to
the Congress of Vienna in 1814 anC
the Big Four conference in Geneva in
1959. Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief U.N .
Command negotiator during most of thP.
sesaioos that brought on the Korean
truce, tells how the Korean Communisb
maneuvered on sealing. "At the first
meeting of delegates," He reports, "1
seated myself at the conference table
and almost sank out of sight. The Com-
munisll had provided a chair for ~
whJch was considerably shorter than t.
standard chair."
-Opportunities lor Welfare Reform
The Nixon administration has an op.
portunlty to make great iJ{lprovements
in the nation's public weKare system.
Recfnt experiments &lmed 11t reducin(~
poverty have rtvealed both workable
and unworkable approachel.. There ii -
more awareness than ever befo"' of
the need to give consttuct.ive help to
-and troubled dUsens. and there
is widespre.ad crtUcisro of outmoded
welfare programs.
Amon& ma"7 ~ for weUare
rt.form. pertµi,ps most ltgn.ll,lcant now
art tho8e of Preakteot-elect Ni!bn'1 own
LW: force. TtU lf'OUP would lmJ>c>6e
· natlonal minh:num Jtand.arda t« weUare
.. P<YDIOl1ll. 111-u.Jly raw.,. benellll
lo recipients livtn& tn ttatel now at
lhe: low end o( tht scale. II would
shift more or the rtnancW burden lo
the federal level. lowerinc state cosLs.
It "9\lki capitalize on the Model Cities
czperience by greetly extendi'ng this
coordinated approach of agtn<:k!s and
oraa.niu.tionl opttalfn& al the loca l level .
1'llB TA.\K ,.. fi'OllC& recomruends
se vera1 major edminMtraUvt changes.
II "ould move to other agcncie!I, or
di~llnut, many ~tvitin of lhc em·
battled Offl« of Economic Opporlunity,
reducin1 its scope to a few community-
action and cmnmuni\.yodeYelopment fUI)('·
{ions. It would establish a strong
coordinalina: agency wUhiD the eecutive
ollioe of · tbe Pn:sideJit to ci..t with
federal &i'an1.l>'Witlt more authority than
the anUpoWt!J -ever bid. FD<
the , ....... ""' -,...,. ._ -!kleratlon <Ii llJcb.pWll IS I ~
ln<Om&, nla•tiv~ -tu 11111 cblldren's allowancet. · -. ~ · • < . ' THSRll ARE OOP-RlJL ..... lo ...,
of Iha< ideas -K tbe1 ,... no.ill
In more eq11Uable and hUmanl !"'t\IJI!~
to the poor, more recognllioi,, Ol the
complex circumstances wbidl mate peo-
ple poor. and better lyat'-ms of Jn-
centives, guidance and l.tainin& to he.Ip
people become. ipdependtnL There is
a dlfllef 0..t IOlllC.' progRIJIS which
hve be<n dllllcult but importalll, lllCh
as the Job Corps, may bec.'ome ln-
eJfectire, or evtn oonedstenl. in the
reorganfiation. A'hd unless restlictl\'8
regulatlon8 whic h hamper weUare ad-
minl.1lration at evtty level can be
modernized, red tape and inconsistencies
will conUnue.
This is a time for broad , progres!ive
changes in public welfare. Will the new
administration be able to accomplish
nt«led reforms~
The Ml•neapolla Tribunt
--.. --
Friday, January 24 , 1969
Thi irdiimial page Of thf Datly
Ptlo& aeeks to tn.fonn. ond stim-
ttlatf rtod.ers b11 prt.!'entino thU
uwspoptr'1 opi'nion.t a.nd com-
mt ntcry on topica of intertst
and >igldfi<anc:•. by J>N>Oidlllg 0
Jonim /Of UW nprearion of
011r re-adtrs' opinions. and by
pt"e1e11Ung tht dtverat in.'°'
potttra c/ tn/omu:d obserwr1
t tmd 1pok«Mntfl 01t topics o/ the
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
•
;
t i
Ml
' J
iage
ular
suse
:ully
I lo
tepl
th•
side
an
iong
wed
mcc
· to
or
ical
who
any
lo
<bol
dve ....
you
-om
ris·
;m
JW'
Ute ,.,
ing
"' me
in
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• --. . ' . . . . . •
C. . ' • . . •
N~Wjo' .·B-~r·
; ., ED tflOIN . · ·
VOL 62, NO. 21, 4 SECTIONS, ~ .PAGES . . ...
IWO JIMA FLAG-RAISING? NOPE -SF STATE
Athl1f11 Win Bittle With Dis1ident1 for Old Glory
Arrested 449 Seek .Bail
As Pwkets Resume Vigil .. :
,.,... wite Sentftt
SA]( Fl\ANCISCG - A handful ol
tajn-drfnctied plcketa resumed. their
otrlke vigil oulaide San Francisco Slate
College today while many of the 449
arrested for an illegal rally were trylng
to make bail.
By midmorning about hill ol those
arrested in a three-hour-long police
operation Thursday bad tone free on
bond or their own recognizance.
A cheet greeted each of the strikers
as be left the Hall of Justice after
posting $315 bond and mingled with rain·
soaked sympathizers on the bullding's
1tepa. The militants, swept up in the largest
mua arrest in the city's history, faced
arraignment on charges of failure to
disperse, unlaw!u1 assembly and disturb-
Sto"k Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
was irregular at the close today after
retreating from an early gain. Trading
was fairly active. (See quotations, Pages
I 4-15/,. • Vo ume was 12.52 million shares com·
l)8r9d with 13.14' million Thursday. The bow" Jones industrial average declined
J.51 to 3311.59 after backing away from
an early rise.
Ing lb< ..
It waa ~jggeat haul since a student
gtrike, spearheaded by about 2 0 0
di.ssidenta and supported by Z50 •triking
teachers, began Nov. 6 at the 18,000
student campus.
About 300 pollcemen moved in alter
the crowd refused to beed warnings
to disperse, given over a loudspeaker
atvp the ·admmlstratlon building.
At a news conference tater, Dr. S.
I. Hayakawa, called the rally "an act
of desperJtion" by militants.
He praised p>liGe for • "rrucnificent
job of crowd control" Asktd if there
would be more mass arrests, be said
''there. if no ruson' for mua arcesta
· U there.. aren't any masseJ.,.
Among those arrested were 15
American Federation or Teachers union
plcketa, including some from Fresno
State College, and Nathan Hale, a Negro
instructor newly named to .head a black
studies department, created to placate
strikers.
The forbidden noon rally -the first
since students returned (ron1 th e
Christmas break -waa announced Tues-
day by the Third Workt LiberaUonl'root,
comprised of non.Ntgto m l n o r l t y
students.
Newport Attorney Penney
Heads County's Bar Group
Newport Beach attorney Jame.a F. hit-•
ncy Is lhe new president or the Or.np'
County Bar Association. ~
Penney, whose offices are at ~· Vi.a
Lido. was sworn In Thursday ~ •t
installation ceremonies he.Id at the Santa
Ana Elks Club. Also taking the oath
of o(fice was attorney Galvin R. Keene,
414 N. Newport Blvd., Newport ~ch,
named one of eight dinctors in the
county la"Y""' orglllhallon.
Penney toolt the gavel from Superior
Coud Presiding Judge samuel Dretzen. -
ooe ol several jlJd&ol itonoftd b7 Ila
bar at a dinner meeUng which ln-
corpor-..ted the group"r; 8MUal Jud.la
Nl&l>l
Specially honored at._ the -tinc WlS
ttllrtng te<retary-treuurer Geotgt A.
Parflet who lw held I.he county bar
ei:eanlve office for tie past 4.1 years.
Parter was showertd "ilh glfta in
a poolonced trlOOle by bil rtftow at.
torneyt for a record of service that
ls belitftd to be unequalled anywhere
in lhl United llllal<iL
llA.,.:s,.::· LEADER.· .,. . ..,. ·~
ORANGE ~~. CAUF'ORNIJ.'.
' '-. -' , , '. . '
It Won't Go Aw~y
-.
Rain May Last Through Wednesday
' Southern CaUl<rnlam' oplrill were "
damp u the elementl today u they
braced themJelva for another wet,
weary . weekend ol having t h e
weatherman sock It to them. .
"Recurrent rain" through &lnday -
ml )IOOlibly otretchlng Uu.dgh Wed-
neaday -wu the prediction for the
Orange Coast and most -Of tha olate.
Tbll. 1n the wake of last weekend's
tfevastatiq storm that left Los Angeles
and San Luis Obispo counties disaster .... ~
With the promised rain came the new
threat of flood• and lanti:sUdes after
Hlmllnglon B<ach, but In Fountain Vllley
• section of Edln&er At•enue wu Wn--
porarlly clooed by heavy flooding.
But the worat ill yet to come.
Weatblrmen said the current storm
will dun-p two to three l6chel on the
Southlaml by S1tunlay ml from three
to six lnchel on coastal mountain slopes.
With saturated sround.• conaiderable
runoff and ' local street flood1Ill is e1:~
peeled in '""·lying areu
The new stOrm, spawned by a sub-
lropical alr mm in Uie mid-Pacific,
N ewpo_rt' s Carpenter
Certain for GOP Post
SACRAMENTO -Republicon State
<;_entral CommJttee sourcea ·today aald
it is" a "lead ·~.pe cinch" that Newport
Beach-attorney -Dennis -€a:rpenter-will
be elected ·GOP ilate chairman Sunday.
Carpenter, a to-year-<1ld former FBI
agent, was one of the principal architects
of the Republican "Cal Plan," which
was credited wiUt upsetting t h e
Democratic legislative majority la.st
November.
He ia not expected to have any op-
position for Ute top centra! committee
post.
He . was named vice-chalrman ol the
state unit two years ,aao. Prevlou".sly,
tie strved "as chairmaQ of, the Orange
Co<;nty GOP Central Committee.
Under the '!~I Plap;" i:;<JP fwids
•n<l. PP¥! oollijcal ~ wp-e llvm Re~·~Cantticfatu 11' s P• em:c!
Assemb~ ra.Ces, where Democratic in-cumt,.~ were fell to be particularly
~Plan's" break with tr1d1Uon
Is that bi the put. all GOP cmlldates
had -ed about equally In party
resoqn:es, whatever their cbancts.
While no batUe is anUclpated Sunday
for the Central Committee chairmanship,
a three-way fight Ls slated for the vice
chairmanship Carpenter Is vacatlna.
Conservatives are backing Frank
Adams , of Piedmont, a California
Republican Alsembly (CRA) leader.
Liberals are supporttnj p u t n a m
(See CARPENTER, Page %)
DAILY I'll.OT ltln .. ..,.
'LEAD PIPE CINCH'
GOP Ltader C•rpenttr
City to Act on Harbor
Dissolution Cost Threat
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Of IM Oeltr Plltf Stllff
Newport Beach isn't much interested
In picking up the entire tab for patrolling
a n d maintaining county-administered
tidelands in the harbor and Upper
Newport Bay.
City couocilmen wjll make that position
clear Monday in 1. resolution directed
to the Orange County League of Cities,
·which is pushing for dilsotuUon of the
(:oomly Harbor District.
• Newport officials fear that if the
dl.strlct Is abandoned, many of Its
re-llbllllles wtll be dumped In the
city'• tap.
Vice Mayor Undlley Parsou, the
city's representative on a League ccm-
mitlee stuctytiic di8solulion, today put
it this way:
"'!be clly """1dn't be expected to
serve county terrU..,-at no cost to
tha county. It lan't llaely that we would
do IO, ml.It proballly iln't legal, either."
RBSOWTION POINTS
'!be reoolatlon, which I! expected lo wl~ IWlft and llllllllmOm appr,.al, poinll
oul that:
-More thlD baU1 the area or Newport
Harbor is mad& up of tidelands granted
by the state to the county.
-The harbor prtsently serves the
recreaUonaJ Deed! ''of. peopJei from the
entire County of Otange'' and will 'pro-
vide su}>stantially more regiotµll recrea-
ti()lll.] benefits on compl~tion .of tipper
Bay developmen~
ParlOnl, who Wls lnatrurnt:t01 in the
flrald.ng of Ul! teaoluUon. noted that
85 percent of the vessels now u.slng_
tho harbor are owned by noo-reslde:n\a:
of Newport.
The proposed resolution declare.. that
Jn the event of dissoluUon, the city
would be willing to assume responsibility
lot enforcement -Of boatlnc rqulallon1,
fire protecUon, . harbor cleaning and
sanitaUon services now provided by the
district.
RECEIVE ASSISTANCE
But, the atatement. of policy em-
plluius, "it ill reasonable to expect
the city to receJ ve financial usl.iance
from· Ora111e County for ei:penditurei
directly attributable to tha , reglonal
aspect.a fl the harbor."
One esUmate of these annual eapensea
(See HARBOR, P11e II
Summer White Bouse
...
,.., flood control worken """1ing to
crttkal areu. W1tlr WU reJ6liled from
tha fetleril government~ to maJ« dams
in Southern Cltlfornia to ~ room
for the runoff ot'rain water.· .
A spokesman for the Weather Burtau
said the new .storm could be 11possibly
the same typt" u the earlier one.
"We are teeplng an eye out for heaVJ
rains," be fdd.O. ,
So were cftizens t!'lrUChout the
Southlml who were maklnc plus !or
the wee.kend with one .,e on the
heavens.
Bucher Gives
Secret Details
About Capture
CORONADO, caJll.-(UPI) -Cmdr.
Lloyd M. Bucher 'went-behind clooed
doors today to tell a NavaJ Court of
Inquiry top secret delails about the cap-
ture or the USS Pueblo.
Bucher was joined in the e:a:ecuUve
session before lbe five-admiral court by
two Navy ca.pt.aln5 from Japan who
were on duty when the intelligence ahlp
was , aeiled oH .North. Korea a year ....
...... srim ml "'1emn. althongh wlll!,-'.1\¥. com~ rQlored afler
~· anollonal ordeal. Bucher
J09V'11 .In~ 1. con!~. roqm auanled ~A~t: ~;t.11·~· capl.i,;; ,.,., bllo Ille ,_,-,,.1 ...,. ~
')'bomQ L. Dwyer, m;;tlmo ...... dllil, GI llafl IQf Kava!
Ftree1 Japan, and Capt, r• cble! ol llalf for commander, U .• Naval
Foret1 Japan.
Bucher was expteted to reltDD&
testimony at tha outoel. lie will talk
about just what cl1!!!!lnet1 lntelllgelce
documenta were captured by the Com ..
mun.Lita. bow much electronic gear and
what type wu not completely dt.attoyed
and other ''sensiUve' matters.
Wblle the CommlDllstl obtained IOllle
U.S. aecreta from the intdllgence lb.Ip,
other . critical mat.ertal wu destroyed.
But that captured couJd eocfanler the
aecurit) -0! lbe United States.
Rear Adm. Frank L. JohnlOR. com-
mander of Naval Forces in Japan at
the time, also wu here and will testify
durinl the three dayl "' doled oeu!OIJS
Friday, satuntay and llonday. Johmon
is presenUy commandant 13th Naval
District, SeaUe, Wash.
A Navy public lnlorma!kln officer .wfll
ai( in on the court and brief newsmm
after the session on those portions of
testimony which can be made public.
Bucher told the admirals Thursday
he did not break with a pistol at bis
b"e:ad but when the North Kortan1 con~
vi.need him they were about to shoot
his men one by one he signed a con-
fession that the Pueblo waa a spy ship.
Bia voice br<Uing, bil body tnmbling,
• the Pueblo slc!pper !old a busbod Court
or" Inquiry Thursday that he could not
take the "mental tortun" even one day
after the Pueblo's capture.
· With bil wile, RDoe, llU!ng a few
feet away and c:rytng, Bucher-told the
court that he tnett on a prison Ooor
a year ago today and repeated over
and over again:
"I love you, Rose ...
It brought him through two minutes
of agony of upected death. nien he
wu shown a South Korur. strapped
to a wall with an eye gouged out.
He wu beaten unconscious. Then the
Communists called for his youngest
crewmembel' to be brought anct. lhot
and Bucher broke. .
For the litst time, the U·yeaMld
eom:tnander Jost control in tbe cvunroom.
He could ecari:ely atand. Fina.Uyf be
coold not opeak.
Nixon Stiµ .. E.yes ·Newport
(lpeclal to llle DAILY PILOT)
WASHINGTON -Newport Beach,
Lagwia Beocb ml the. San Diego a,..·,
-a., today appear still In the
running u poalble Jocatlans for a ~
mer White House West.
Pnlld"1I Nisoo-lo apocl«I lo loc•te ......... While -.._.Uona llOth
in Calllomla and ~Iat:ayiie, Fla .. where he hu -pur two •12ffl»
11om ...
Durina the campalp, Nlun mw u
door 1-II parUal to IOll, llllf .,i
' . I ~ I
• '
. . • . '
.1 • • ,..
.e~1 :ft1
l'Dday'• ......
'
. N.Y. S'teek•
Oo\ft.Y PILOT ... !If .. ~ .........
REFLECTING Qll RAIN
OCC'1 Diano · Lv<!wl9 . . . ' .
Aircraft. Noise ' . . ' . .
Re ort'1Rea.died p 1·•·j\I·.·· I. •
CGunty aupmllorl"wil•bW-a· 1'Dtlrl
Feb. I~ on ~ ·""*5 and . their eU'°". on reoldellilal --.ln ·Newpotl.
Beach alld Coola' M ..... lloberl J. 8-
nahan,. county dlraclnr ol •vlAtlon, said
Thun<lay. .
The report ii 11\e mull of a study by
Bolt, Beranek and Nelvman Inc. of
Cambri(lge, Mus. 11 was Initiated. late
In November w:llh f11IOO in c:otzni1:
funds. ·
Included will be a · forecut on the
noise problem if the current number of
jet landing& and take offs triple, Bres--
nahan .said. lie added that no IUch
expah&IOn 1a: planbed, . but the airport
OOllllnlsllon · wanle<Hhe lnlorma!kln for
(ul\lf• ,1>1ann1n1. . . ni, r..ta ...... ipade Pfinw'lly bt the
Upper ,N'fl'porl· Bay .,.., Resldenll ol
that area have·~ aircraft noise
and filed 11111! lolalllng more than $10
million agalMt ·the caunty.
"We want lo ~ U jet nol!es 11e
bad enough lo ln!luoilCt ~ valu .. and U ll>ey're.,not.llaw ~ .;aUtc ,..
could handle ''belcre ~ did," Bre5*
nahan said, 1
or .. ge
I
\ .. -
..
' ~·· ~
'· , I
i
-1 '
'· t • ~~ J
CABLEVISION BRASS 'ON CAMERA' IN NEWPORT
N•wton Mlnow {left), Louis E. Scott
'Meaningful Programs'
P~omi,sed on Cablevi,si~n
NewPort Cablevision, which eventually receive a tremendous boost from cable
wlll serve television viewers in the systems, which insure golXI reception.
Harbor Area with 20 snowless channels "Cable will be a tremendous asset
of viewing, received an official sendoff to the UllF stations whi~h now aren't
in Newport Beach Thursday. viewed by enough people sunply because
Amid promises of "meaningful" pro-receptio~ with ~nventional antennas is
grammlng on a locally baaed station so poor, he satd. •
and interference-free rectpUon via the The local station, spokesmen said,
cable syatem, oft1clals from the parent would include programs dealing with
firm of FCB Televi!ion, a division of city government, community acUvities
Foote Ccrte and Belding advertising and school issues, including special agenc). welcomed viaitors to the new screening of Encyclopedi'!-Britannica
Newport offices. educational film.5.
Principal spokesman for the firm al Starting date for the new charwel,
the event was Cablevision director which subscribers could find .on a
Newton Minow, former dlrector of the presently blank channel, such as 3, "wi!J
Federal Commt.mlcl:Uons Commisaion. start ~ sooo as we have enough
He stresled. tbe importance to the com-subsO'ibe(~ to warrant it," aceord.i.ng
rmmtty of the tocany originating staUon to Louis Scott, senior vice president:
on wblch viewer& wW view locally Both the general offices and a new
originated programs. two-<:amera color studio are located at
Mlnow ~ dwtlled on his pet upect 2624 W. Pacific Coast Highway.
of tekvWon, educaUonal and non· The studio can be used for live broad-
commerdal television. He said it would cub, such as interviews wilb political
. l'ro.• Pflfle I
NIXON ...
U he finds what he wantt.
several Southern Callfomia c I v i c
groups, howtvtr, have offered to make
a borne available to him simply for
the advettising value of having tbe IUII}-
me-Whitt House in their community.
Meanwhllt, the Nixons are attemptitlg
to find a buyer for their 12-room apart-
ment tn New York Clty, recently "Yalued
• at 1135,000.
l'ormer presidents have varied their
5Utnmer retreats all the way from H;yan-
nlsport, Mass., to Palm Springs.
The last Republican president, Dwight
D. Ei!enhower, liked mountaiM and
desert, while Lyndon B. Johnson ruled
at bis ranch in the Texas hill country.
candidates and city officials.
The staUon · aleo has a remote color
van to cover outside Jocal evenb.
While cable in se'veral areas of the
city ate already in, officials forecast
108 miles of cable will be installed when
the SZ..million system is complete.· 1be
cable will serve 18,toO homes.
The first areu to be hooked up to
the cable transml.s.sion will be in the
Bayshore.and later in the Dover ·Shores .......
After those installaUoos the first phase
of the total project will be installed in
Newport Heights, Cliff Haven, Wpt.cliff
and Harbor Highlands.
Total service to the complete area,
including Corona del Mar, should be
complete by this fall.
Sales representatives In the next few
•eeks are expected to contact potenUal
subscribers in the homes affected by
the Hnt phase.
-. > .......... .
HARBOR •. •
came *" 'montlnil :riw. tb COtill>J t1e1 Mir Qwmbof. ol A letlor
lrim d>llllllr ......... &ii,:.'* IL 'l, ~ C\!: ·"'* •
Cllomber -U ~·N lilo !limo la butd on Worm"loit (rom tbi ma.
It la a IW11 that woWd i<qW.. • 17..iM
boost in lbe mw:Ucipal tu rate, now
11.215.
Semple ~g~ that the city take "an
aggressive counter-oUenaille'' against
c1Wclutioo of tbi dlltrlct nn1... tbue
are auuranc~ Newpart w°''t be atuct
with an future coata: of operaUng the
harbor.
He suggested that the county, In the
event of abandonment of the Harbor
District, should turn over all of the
district's capital ouUay •equipment -
boa.U, fireboat.s, rtdio gear -to the
city at no coat. Abo, a land·based facllity
from which to operate should be provided
the city "without a large capital outlay."
Viet Mayor ParllOlll!I aaid he agrees
with the position tatu by the Corona
de! Mar chamber. He indicated ditall'ff·
ment, however, with Semple'a propoaed
"aggressive" approach.
"We're now attempting to aet what
we need through negotiation, no t
fighting," he said.
He said, through ihe League, it might
be posaible to have the city serve as
a "contracting agency" to carry out
the county's regional respon!l.blllties in
the harbor.
He said it would be Impossible to
expect the city to take care or its
own tidelands and the county -through
an expanded County Parks Department
-to take care of its Udelaods in the
same harbor. "You ean't draw any lines
of ju:isdiction in bay.''
J\tAKES POINT
The resolution to be. confidered by
the aiuncil Monday mates a point of
commending the League of CitJet "for
its efforts to provide an integrated ap-
proach to regional recreaUanal facilities
and services."
The vast majority of the county'• <I~••
have long colittnded that not enoa<
harbor district· tax funds are ~ ~o
aid -fuland -reSiClenls~ The district's
county-wide tax rate is now about eight
cents.
A more equitable spread of this recrea·
tiona1 revenue would be achieved by
diuolvina: the harbor district as a
separate taxing agency, aceordl.ng to
most nlembera of the League.
l'rom r..,,e l
CARPENTER • • •
Livermore, San Francisco GOP chairmn
and a one-time campaign aide of Sen.
Thomas Kuchel. A third candkl1te ls
Karl von ChrfsUerson, Salinas County
Republican chairman coosidettd neither
strongly conservaUve oor liberal.
Two Orange COUnty residents are
among four seeking the job of party
secretary. They are Dr. Tlrso de1 Junai.
Huntington Beach CRA chairman; and
Mrs. Louise Hutton, -past. chairman of
the Federated Republican Women. Other
candidates are Paul Herle. Go v •
Reagan'a appointments eecretary, ·and
Maynard Nelson, who unauccusfully
sought an Assembly ~eat Jut November.
He ls a mldent of Sacrame11to,
Hungarian Student
Burns Self to Death
BUDAPEST (UPI) -Sandor Bautr,
17, who set himself on fire near where
the first shots or the 1956 Hungarian
uprising were fired, died today of bums
covering 60 perctnt of his body.
His death came four days after he
splashed a flammable liquid over himself
and struck a match. It coincided with
the lying in state in Prague of Jan
Palach, 21, who died of self·inflicted
burns in a protest against the Soviet
occupation oI Czecbo,,lovakia.
JGhn F. Kennedy had a variety of
wtekend and vacat.ion retreats ranging
from HyanniJport. and Newport, RI.,
to Middleburg, Va., Palm Buch, Fla.,
and Palm Springs., Calif. He owned aome
of these retreats, leased others and,
in Palm Beach and Palm Springs, oc-
cupied hou!<a bom>wtd from friends
includlni: singer Bing Crosby.
Badllam Heads Assembly
DAILY PILOT
D•.t.HOE (OA~T l'Ulll~NIN(; (C)MPAN"I'
l•li••I N. Weil
""'~>dtl\1 '"" Publlt~I'
'Tli•1r"' l'••vif ldi ....
'T}i .... ,. A. MY1,1rii~·
~E~IOI' J,,,,,,, f:. c,tti111 1tul Ni11111
~hM" ... ...,.,1., ....
(lh 1!:11,_ Oltll't"" .....,.,. ..... C>Mc•
2 J 11 'Wttl ltlllot• 11~1,.,,,,
M1 iH11t A44•111: P.O. I•• 111S, ,, •• 1 _ .......
(flit ~~ i)I Wnl ..... 'ltrtf
L-ktdl~m ~· •-.._,,""'..,. lftCli: .. Jt11 \ll'kl
Commerce, Utilities Unit
Newport Beach Republican Assem-.
blyman Robert E. Badham is the
new clUef of the Assembly Commerce
and Pnblic UUliUes Committee, afteJ'I
th GOP takeover of 15 of the 11 com-
mittee chairmanships this week.
Among the 15 named Tuesday,
Ironically, was Assemblyman Eugene
Chlppil (R.Cooll who rather !oat his
coot recently over mini-skirt.II in the
staid balll of the State Legislature.
Not.blni much came of the man from
Cool's heated objections, but he may
have another chance to impoR more
modest attire, since he now heads the
Assembly Rules Committee.
Salaries of top COP aides are
handsome by ordinary standards, but
they are pointedly being kept below
the level paid by Democrats.
The bard realities ol the 41-39
Republican majority In the lowtr bouae
securiid last Nov. 5 was brought h<rne
when the losing Democrats were tonnally
trict.e.d from a number of committee
obalra Oe1d when1bay were tbi majority.
Auembly Spcaker ltobarl T. Monagan,
R-Traey, who has 10le power of naming
tht chairman and committee members,
cave Dtmocrat.s fewer than they bad
hoped for.
Lat HUion. they held II
chalrman>hips while the GOP had nine.
or :r percent This year, with Monagan
elltnlnaUnc four committ .... the mlnori· t' petty roeolved '29 percent of tbe
poa!Uons.
The 1un in<mbership of each com·
mlttee wlll be announced Mm>day. The
811 Ot!:mocrats awarded cha!rmanahJps
all were among Lhe I~ of their party
who voted for Monagan u 1peaker
eirller this month.
At the u.rne Ume be revealed the
chairmen, Monagan made public the pay
of his key aides. They 1enerally will
recei ve smaller paychecks t b a n
Democrats, under the leadership of
former Speaker Jease M. Unruh allowed
thelr chief assistants.
However, the aides to the legblative
leadership sUll conUnue In most cases
to make more -often much more
-than their bosses, who get $11,000
annually plus expmses.
Jerry Simpson, a 31-ye&r-old former
newsman, was named assistant to
Monagan at $20,400 a ytar. His
predecessor was paid $26,400 and the
range of the job is from $16,llOO to
$28.l!OO.
Monagan choee 47-year-old Mautl~
Shean, another former reporter, u lilt
· SOulhem California fltkf· repmentatm,
with pay of $tl,IOO. Unruh pa.id $11,000
for the &amf!: post, which has a ran1e
ol !IJ,000to111,llOll. .
A 27-year-old 18wyer. Dlnll Wokf,
ha tl.bbcd 11 Monapn'1 fl*lal Qlb:-
tant, drawing 111,iOt c:ompued lo the
11~000 Dmlo<rat.a paid. Thi ranp la
111,l!OO lo 111,IOll.
I John J1dJens, H, " Monapn'• ad-
mtnlstratJve uslltant at fl!JOO a year,
tht tame paid P"l~ry. The range for
this job ~ lll,llOll to ltl,OOll.
The Ml<!nbly Rulff Commlttl, now
Republlcan-conltoUtd, voted• '20.400 an-
nual Wary for Ill chief admtnistratJ•e
officer, V. G. Nlelren. Democrlll had
paid thtir man $22.IOO, in 1 post of·
!<ring from 11s,111110 $28,800.
on tine
Chanc~lli,r D~aws flosiitil Q~stions
ay •moMAS'ron~ °' .. .._ ,.. .....
UC Irvloe Cbanctllor Daniel G. Aldrich
Jr. does not fit thf atereotyP;e o! ID
S. I. Hayli<awa w!lo ·standl up lo llld
dots not compromise with atucteot
dil!ldtot&.
He had a rough go because of it
Thursday night in aoswering questions
put to him by members of Mesa Verde
Homeowners Association.
Aldric'h spoi:t on "EttucliUon of a Chan-
ce.llor," telling how he actually had !Wn-
ed from black students and wbat !le
called the hippie cult on campus.
Tbe rtvelation did not gJt mn with
ctrtain of the nort.bweat Costa Mesa
area bomeownera. Most of the questions
aated oI the chancellor had hostile
overtones.
Thole Uki.ni quesUons, however, may
not hive been representative of all lts
peraona preaent; when Aldrich las
!iniahed he wu spontaneously applauded.
The UCI chancellor was asked what
he would do if the Black Studtnt Union
toot over the admlniltration building,
the nerve center or campus. Would he
negotlate or throw the 11tudents out!
''I don't say black," answered Aldrich,
"but the possibility ezists every day
. ..... ·""' that •'mlllQl'lty of student.a, ol wbohiwr
color. "ID block eiiliy to a 1'11Ji!lq.
u anlvenl\r pollcla ape! pn<llcta. tbal
led to tbe-tal:eover 11 ... boei> • -.hie
lailln lboG !bore are all st.a of
poailblllUea 10< negotlalloo.
"l ha:•e wilted one mne. 1 have watnd
twc mUea. I hive walbd 11 milll.
And I bave "'1d I wlU walk lilt' m1lu
lo do my but to uodenlalld U,' 11•
(tlie ~nlatrauonr should do whit lba-
11uc1eota want.
"I bit.? 100 ,percent whit Eldrli!P ·
Cleaver said on our campus: 'Whitef,
I've got pnliltnu. But U )'Oii beat p ,
I'm iolor lo boot )'Oil bock.' u ·Ula
l!Udenu 1)11111' me llld ge , bay<llld tbi .
rtllcl -and regulillom ol the campa,
or ol tbi commWlltf, I'm lolor lo plllb
baCt." .
. In .....,. .._ lo Aldrldl'• c:om-
mmli, 1 Dt1DJlld:
"QUr !'OiJtc!s art a toW failure. Alld
you're puj. af· the retponaiblllty wlut
)'om' Clea'fel'I."
"All flgh" this 11 your view," sald
the chlnct\llif.
'"'Isn't taklrig possenioo of pUblic pro.
pert,Y 3. crlrnlnaJ act in It.sell?" a man med.
•"fht problem,'' Aldrich a aid, "is
' deelillnl whlt Is taking po!IOt1ien. Is
It lludmt& dttlng down In a bQildlng
tbe)''re in ,very day?
''Olar pttae:Dt trespNS law doesn't pro-
vide us wlth the tool we need in this
atllllloa. The student& come rl&bt back
two n:ilnutea later. That ls why the
unlven.lty is apomorinJ new trespass
legislatkln."
A man· who uld he Is as years old
1 and irrevocably on the otber side of
the generaUon gap rtmarked that he
wu alarmed at a newspaper atory about
radicals at Irvine.
Aldrlclt 11id the reporter did • good
Job of Jrytng lo acq118int tbe public
wllb the sourca of activism, but did
not aay it rtpreaented only a small
group of •tudeot&. "He did a thoro<lgh
job; about all of our activist 1tudeats
were lilted."
Another man asked: "Wby do you
Jet studtnU study only the humanities?
Yoo can't live on that."
"Society is made up of ID awitil lot
ol. people whose aervlct.a we need besides
prbteulonall," Aldrich said. .
He was asked what the black students
really want.
Nar UNREASONABLE
.Hickel Finally Sworn In;
"the Black student Union on our cim-
pus, and all the . blact studehb are
in it, has not presented to me demands
that are unreuon.ible," Aldrich aaid.
"I woWd uy they are goal oriented.
Thia la Important. They CU be Atlafitd,
The in.saUable ooea k0<p puahln( and 'Last, But First': Nixon
puabin1 ~ .
WASIIlNGTON -(UPI) -Walter J.
Hickel .wu · s.wom.Jnto the...Nixon-cabinet
today and was welcomed by the new
President with the declaration, uthe last
shall be ftrst as far as this tkhnioistratlon
is concerned."
Hickel took his oath as interior
secretary from Chief Justice Earl War-
ren at the White House before an audi-
ence that included his l l cabinet
colleagues who were sworn in two days
ago. The former Alaska ~overnor won
belated Senate confirmation Thursday
by a 73-11 vote •
As the 49-year-old self-made millionaire
prepared to take the oath Nixon made
good humored rtference to his troubles
in obtaining confirmation. The other
cabinet officers were confirmed quickly.
At ooe poinL Nixon commeirted tliat
the delay on Hickel had not given the
admlnistraUon any concern. "We're not
interested in confinnation for con-
firmation's sake."
This was a jocular paraphrase of ooe
of Hickel'a controversial remarks that
he was not "interested in conservation
for conservation's sake."
At another point Nixon remarked with
R ...
ltll
'"l'bey'r< not her< lo destroy us. They
a amll~ that bla tnt<rtor aemtary had want dbperately to be a part. They
"~Jlx _rendWJL~ far beyoM--don't---.1111-lo tear down the 'eotablioh-ihe can o( dqty." . -l They w1111t to lhare In it," Aldrich
"He, not 1 •. was the subject of a a&Jd.
Herblock cartoon of the fint five days 11But what do you think are their
of our adJnb;ltilration." ulterior moUvea?" the q u ts ti oner
Her_bloci: ts the wa~ . Herbert Bl~k, persisted. 'Yashin~n POiit political c~11t, "Ol'le of the things they said to me,"
signs: his work. He h.as been crltic~I Aldri h remarked "wu 'In terms of or Nixon over the years. A cartoon 1n c ' d · th Thursday's editions depicted Hickel's our n~bers, on C'.lfflPUS an . in e t bl surrounding community, we realize there ro~ix::· also obaerved that there have ~on't be mucb opportunity f~r social life. We'd like to spend the tlme that
white 1tudents spend on this doing con.;
structiv,. thing$ -llke tutoring in the
ghettos. But we don't have the resources
or the transportation. can you help us?'
been previous controversial interior
secretaries, including Harold Icke. io
the Franklin D. Roosevelt cabinet who
once referred to columnists as "public
enemies nu~r one."
,;Secretary ffjckel, l'm aure, won't do
that," Nixon said with a smile.
In winding up his informal remarks,
Ni1on said, "and to quote from the
Scriptures, the last shall be first as
far as this administraUon b concerned."
Colllel'Vationisb oppo&ed Hickel'• ap-
pointment and although he woo con-
firmation easily, they were bouting
about tbe education tbey bad lfven him
-and gains they got for their cauae.
"That, to me, was a concern that
didn 't smack ef any uUtrior moUve."
3 Killed in Pakistan
DACCA. Pakistan (AP) -Three
persons were repcrted killed and 15
wounded when police opened fire on
demonatrat.ora who burned d o w n
newspaper office.s and attacked a govern-
ment building during a JStudent-led
general strike today.
• DllEXIL WOU:TAIU, ,... Ill! SAU $19t
Si........cl..H 1t"1tr Oi-10"rir'
CONTINUES
FINAL WllK
••• •f our ,.,...,.1 ••~
AIM io<lud... '" i-,t. P.I~ 1otl occoooori&
Jh11t 111 1 f1w 1f tN • .., ,iec .. •II
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~' lllAC!t "" -ell" u.. -.-.-.r .. t
i
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D Is ..
Ao1I'' AID I&
UW'IMA .. -__ c.-...,. .. _., .. , ..... ,. .............. -. .......
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'
-..
1. ls
'.ding
pro-
this
back
the
pa"
old
? of
: he
bout
!ood
1blic
did
mall
ough
.. ts
you
its?
lot
ides
!lits
am-
are
uds
aid.
led.
led.
and
bey
bey
~h-
·tch
1eir
er
e .. • or
the
ere
!lat
bat
on;
the
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ii.al
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••• 15
on
'n· ,,_
ed
I'
I
11
'
Boy,' Oh Boy!
Allee De Rivera, 13, relaxes in h~ Brooklyn home
Thursday after completing qualifying examinations ·
that should get her into all-male Stuyvesant High
School in lower Manhatan, if the courts rul e in her
favor. Board of Education has asked Alice to drop
her court action and seek entrance to the Bronx
High School of Science, a coed school for exception-.
al students. But Alice says that attending the Bronx ·
school would,.require too much traveline.
Tornadoes KUI 29
It Wasn't Dream:
Ho«Se Was Flying
I
HAZLEHURST, Ml11. (UPI)
-B•Uf Gllmm tllouihl .>he
"" driimlq. II feb Un her
-., •• flyln( lllroolll tht air. She couldn't 1et out ol
bed.
"'Somejl!lni JUJt kept hllt)ng
me 1n I.he face," she uid
later. ''Thi reom wu movin1
and wouldn't let me up."
Sudileoq, ""' £•ll lo the cround And diJcovered to her
hom>r Illa! ll ·-~ • drum. Her bowie wu &lrbomc, spJ.U.
ll>( ber -· and lialen lo the .,....i u . ll Ooalod
downhlll In • mill pood.
stretch of rolliq hill country
In his state. as 1 diluter •rea.
"It's a terrible lrqedy, both
in lives and property ,''
Williams s a I d after an In-
spection t o u r of Simpson,
Copiah and SmJth countie,,
Thursday.
The hardest-hit locality WIS
1 predominantly NeJl'O section
of Hazlehunt, wbert ZO homa
were demolished aod l5 otben
heavily damqed.
wruteS~ moved ln 10 btlp
blacks in the stricken areas
in the wake of the twisters;
women manned switchboards
and helped Red Crl)SS teams
and men worked in rescue
and salvage work.
Hospitals were overloaded,
and Dr. Lamar Puryear said
about one.third of the patients
Ul'IT ......
Dandy Parking .Job Bdty, LI, and the lj other -ta of the four-room frame hoUle were amon.a the
Iucty onea Tburlday when
tom.does 1truck t h r e e
Mlaliaalppl COWIUH, killing al least It pertooa and Injuring
hundredl of Olhert .
Another tornado 1lruck later be treated had "serious in·-------------------juries." Volunteer1 helped him
through the medical cri1ls, he
Men in St. Louis were probably grumbling "woman driver" when they spot-
ted this automolllle backed through a store window. But UDlan Mae McClel-
land explained that she was just attempting to park when the gas pedal stuck
and the car went out of control. No one was injured.
· Thw'lday ntar Dover, Tenn.,
aloni the Kentucky border,
injuring one person 1 n d
destroyin& four houses and
several barns.
Gov. John BeU Williams of
Mississippi 11ked Preaident
Nixon to declare a 40-milc
said.
"The people have been
overwhelming in t h e i r
cooperation," he said. "The
cooperation between the races
bas been just fanta stic."
The first tornado atruck al
Legendary Gem Sale
Bri1igs Rival Claim
dawn, ski PP in g from LAUSANNE, Swit.icrland She had 1 Geneva jeweler,
Minister
Resigns
BELFAST, Northern lrtland I ' (AP) -Another member of
Prime Min.later 'I'. e r e n c t
O'Nelll's government, Com-
merce Minister B r i a n
Faulkner, reticncd today In
a row over O'Neill's handling ·
of the Roman CalhoUc civil
rights movement.
Northern lrtl1ncl was Plunt·
td into poUUoal c r i 1 i 1. PollUcal lnformanll said an
election for 1 new ltgis1aUve assembly mlgbt be necessary.
P:aulkner'a resianalloo w11
the DlOll -cballtlllf IO far by rl&ht.wlnc' elemenll
dW.tllfted w It b O'Nelll's
moderate leadmblp and his
concesa:ioGI to the Catholic
minority. Unlike the. reel of
Ireland, Northern Ireland haa
· a Proltllant majority and I•
a pan bf the Unlted JCtnadom.
Disease Germs Found
In California Milk
Hazlehurst to Harrisville and In · 1~. Marcel Sadek. l'ome here spawning two other twisters (A P) -An exam ahon VWJ.Y
that dipped into smaller com-showed a pearl owned by a Thursday to make a study.
munitles and farm areas. queen of Spain is lareer th&n Sadek said the pearl owned
Most reslAnts still were one sold at a New York auc-by the queen weighed 223.8
asleep when the tomado whirl-Hon Thursday night b u t it grains. The one sold in New
ed in al daybreak, but Lell falled to determine ,.,.hich gem York weighed 203_84 grains. Fenter, a Ha z I eh u r 1 t is the legendary jewel known
COLLEGE OF LAW
BERKELEY (AP) -Germs
causing se~ 6-e are
'°'ported to have been found
in samples of 11 of the state's
-!9 0ertified and Grade A raw
·.. '" '' , . · milk producers. ~~-1 ~j fr:~ ~h,''~i,~neDe;~::;. ~ .~ .:> , • .' . ~ of Health Thursday, Dr. Ben
•• :1. • \ '< · · 4J Dean confirmed that samples :$),~ ': 1( ·'"'t'tit-&i ~ ~~ were tested for germs that ~l" ·~"'..-.•~~:t;'I ·1.:.~ ~,i~ ~J cause salmonella and Q fever. '~-ft> ~· '.'J';i; .,:",t. "l"J.~ .. :;;i the latter a seriou s and ~-... ~~Jr 4',t' .,_tw·"'~' ~!I sometimes falal respiratory ~t!~-'-(;,1r"';.\ , /(,:... ;..~':< disease.
?'.I.I' ~.~,t\11' W'T ~ .. ) ~.;t\\J But health officials said
"'""" !i~{""!i~ t ..... A,.· ; ~-1 there is no danger tn
'• -· · ( ' Pasteurized milk, the major "\~~:: ~ .(,~ ... ~t~rlf,.._.~·> portion of milk sold iq
· ·' California . _\
•
. I POI THI "HITI PIOPLI" •.• ~ 7-n111s t Wttk durln1 J1nu1rv, 1'6f, ~ COffM Sl'lop nnly. 1rom Mklnri. unlll
0 4:00 I .I'll,
' ' THI IOUHTIFUL lll.t.XflASTI
. Sm1U 0 1•nt• Juic1 ~
¥Two Ettl I H11h l r1wn1
'
J l1con or S1u11q• 59C
To11t I Jim
Coff11
}
J c-•-••-~ Grttn 5.1114, Cholet Ill Drtal~t I •:r-•tt. LHft ,, ..... S.11c.e . le·-88" Jell.0 •r SNMt •
t H•l~91'Tt•
, C.""""9 IMd 8"f DllHIW
G""'n "lfd. ("°kl Ill DteMlnt Rout SlrlOln of ht! I U ID1 l ........
f
$1" ••• = an.o ., DtfW
Hit C1"" ef ft. !~rv .. nfl .. Y, ''XI fm. U!!lll It o/tl.l
KONALANES
!
The owner of an Altadena
dairy. Loi! Angeles County's
largest raw milk productr,
called t h e contamination
report "an injustice" and con-
tended "someone is tryin1 to
get rid of raw mllk."
Harold Stueve of the Alta·
dena Dairy said he is op~
to Pasteurization . because ' Jt1 causes milk. to "lose almost
all the enzymes. Q fever is
an airborne disease .. You can't
get it by drinking milk," he
said, stating that there w a s
only one case of Q fever in
the county last year.
But. Dr. Dean said, there
are "quite a few " documented
ca.!cs in which Q fever has
been associated with drinking
milk.
Los Angeles County Health
Vincent S. Dalsimer, Deon . (
I Department officials 1 a i d
tbtrt ani no pl1D1 t(t prohibit
the sate or raw milk untll
the-county counse~ rules on-
thc matter.
businessman, was an early as La Peregrina. There have been suae.stiona
riser. An anonymous bidder paid that there are two authentic 4 l&M. 0...... .........,.. I.alt-• ..._-. $ ......... ~ I •
"I stood in the door of my S37,0IO In New York for what Pertgrinu which orlg:lntlly
restaurant and watched IL It Parke-Bernet Galleries ujd were a pair. Sadek maintained
wu-. not good-dayUght antL wa1 La P-ere1rin1~ The-Wan-that the Queen's pearl Ja "u!\1-
it sounded like rour freight derer -so call~ bec~use que in il! form and quality."
.. S·±~~....-.-~ ....... ~c..... 1.
-[..,,....' .......... .., lb~ ai-w ... .
trains coming through town,'' it µassed for centuries from He said he therefore could
Fentcr said. "The air was n1onarch lo monarch. • not estimate its value,
filled with debrl1 and the wind Ex-Queen Victoria Eugenia. Peregrine Pollen, Parke
was really blowing." throu gh her chamberlain the Bemet's president , said that
,_,_,...,.. .. ,.....
i-•1 .. ""JJI. un 0....1 0..-
(11! "¥1111 "'' .... , .. (7141531.IJll
12345 WISTMINSTll AYUM, SAllTA AHA Dean said the tests v.•ere
conducted at the National
Institutes of Health
Laboratory, Hamilton, Mont..
and the Communicable
Disea!le Center in Atlanta.
Trett toppled, utility poles Duke or Alba . insisted todRy he has confirmed lhe aulhen-
snapped, gas and water mains that the real Peregrina is in ticity of the jewel he sold
burst. cars spun crazily like her possession , in a bank v.3.ult "to our complete 11li!f1c-
toys, houses collapsed. _::h•::r::'· _________ t::io::n_ ... _______ _;_ __________________ _
INCOME TAX
KEEP YOUR COOL
Let us prepare your ·
rtturn now .•• for 1n
early refund ... or fer
the time needed to
budget eny •ddition•I
expense.
WE'RE HERE I 2 MONTHS
OF THE YEAR
Newport Business Services
-OUR NEW OFFICE LOCATION-
2209 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Bch .
{Between For9its H1rdw1re and the
Deily Pilot Office.)
Side-by-side refrigerator
with Custom Dispenser.
New from General Electric!
Antomaileally
fills }Unr glass
ftithieeor
cldlled water
ata toueh!
Instant water, instant ice -
without opening the doors!
Just prtts glN against ice c:rldlt. Ice turriblM out. 1wv
cvba al a timt until atdlt isrttee.d. Forwater, ptt51
glass aga insi: thl water atdle. Aelta911 lo stop. You CA1'1
tven u• both di'Ptn9"S at the wme time!
23.5 cu. ft. Amerie1n1 Refrigerator-Freezer
L•thlnthr11f11twid1! And no defrosting-twr!
Automatic lcemaker stores 10 lbs., about 260 cubes.
• Freezer holds up to 295 lbs. •Tempered glass shelves,
3 slide out, 1 adjustable •Convertible meat pan, keeps meat
fresh up to 7 days-flip lever for extra wgetable storage.
• Six full -width door shelve!, 4 adjustable • Buttar Con·
ditioner with temperature control • Cheese Keeper
• Rolls out on wheels for easy cleaning • 35%" wide
66" hiqh e Harve<t . Avoc;otfn . ,,., ....... ort r-nii "'White.
Come in and see it today!
TV and APPLIANCE CENTER • •
' . ·~ .
' I :
r I
' • .
l
• .
COFFIE SHOP
2699 Ha•bo• Blvd.
Cotta Mo,.-545-1112 IS COMING SOON HAlllOR CENTER e Nt -l'tpt.i
23o0 Harbor llvd.-eo.to Mfta • u, .. H M-,. ,..,
Houos, w .. ....,, • •·•· •• • ,... l'!Mne 540-7131 e $5.00 Wffli -s....,. t tl,llt, N I ,. ... -
•
' ' . ,.
•
• ~ • i
G j l»AIL y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE I
• They Try, Try Again
' Who sayo b1'tory enn locll llilto1"1-cloem'l,..
peatiuell! I
A headline in the Jan. 5, 00, edition of thU now ..
paper r~ad :
"Jack-in-Box Nailed Shut.0
A headline in the Jan. 14, 1961, edition, read:
"'Newport Slams Lid on Proposed 'Jack' R~u-
rant."
One would presume that the owners of the .Jack-IJto
the-Box chain would by now have go~len the message.
Jn scarce\)!,more than a year's lime they twice have
~·9 told iii'~ is no r®m QIY' .\!l.e crowded Newport ~lfsula roll: one ·:iif_ ~r u~gener,tlng drive-'l'f o
.... t.htougJt.restajr.ant&;-;._t.._· ~I.. ~~. • .J .. '·
·=, : Citr ~meft,, ~ the "'Ja.W'r'bac:kus• ,~n(i~.
·· ~l tlit•ftret.ifeliip,1 laot Janua.,1~as..iajacted)0y \Jio
Planning Comml51ion)~'unanlmouSIJ. voledoag~ e<>il-
struction of th.e restaurant at 20th -.Sfreet' ·and B81boa
Boulevard. · ,)
The principal evidence they accepted was the wn ..
bur Smith report on the city's traffic needs. i;>ellvered
to the council last May, the $30,000 study by the San
Francisco consulting firm told the city that its penin·
1ula traffic situation is a mess . and fitows no signs of
getting better. · ~
The Smith report urge4Ji~:i~orsenli\g .ol, th~ Wob-
lem and recommended a van~; .itOI\ltions, iq~foiiing <i·
the sincMl.iscarded; controvefs~a ·~~frpnl tQa'd;vay -,\ I q -r-.. • proposa. ·· !
Last week, Wilbur Smilh representatives were
again be!ore the council. They spoke this time as con·
sultants to Jack-io-tbe-Box. They said the traffic situa-
tion along Balboa Boulevard was not such a mess as to
preclude the resta~ranl.
•
Councllmen, bl cour .. , tOot ,lhelr advice -ol last M_,. . .
nJack'a" ppertl bad ~ed that a.s a result ol
the re<14unnt9peratlon then would be traffic backups
on BaJboa Boulevard .. on rar~lfions," but contend·
ed the backups wouldn't be serious.
, Councilman Donald A. Mclnn.11 said in response:
"'M!y backup would be seriow."
Th.ere 1s no arglllng that the estimated 30-car-an-
hour "Jack" restaurant, "u specially designed for Ney,•.
port, would have been physically more attractive than
the beer bar now on the property. But the beer bar
clearly represents an under-use of the site. It won't be
there long.
"'Traffic projections inaicated thal a Jack-in-the-Box
t}"pe ·~OI· operation would represent a.a over-use of the
same)ite. ' •
'• !¥,don't bet lba.t ':Ja<$;'. won't pop up ~ain. ... '. -' ' -I • , •. ; ,
"Summer White House?
' Laguna Beac~ or Corona.%l Ma~? . .. .. 1 That, according to ch1tC&at among the Ha·rbor
Area's -85-~mber delegation at the-Inaugufcition, i5
President Richard f\'l. Nixon's "Swnmer White 1-lousc
. West" quandary. ~ ~, He f!O"'~ mo~~ lj_kely -his aides are co.nsider.ing-
l>oth Wsuna's ~:Stort~ Pyne Castle or a 'homei 1r;i oameo
ShoreS as, a~ P.~e· to get away from Washlngt9'rrand
Key Biseayne.'Fla . " · · •
Whete er .On' the Orange Coast the President -an?
his family -might light, he will be among many, many.
friends. And his presence will_be ample caiise for some
button-busting provincial pride.
-
.,
' '
N KISlTZER>
We Need
r .
CT A E~ecutive Clari fies Strike Position _
The Co«-rage
To Be Known
Dear
Gloomy
Gus: 'M~ny Scb·ool llistricfs-B-re-ak-La.w'
,.,,,,;
~~
By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON
l\11nlster
The Neighborhood
CoogregaUonal Church
Lq:un,' Beach
Pa'ul Tillich wriite a book, "The
Courage to Be.'' I think his book was
a clarion call to individuals to be
them.selves, to acaept themselves ror
what they are. ln ardtr to do this
one has lo have Uie courage to be
ki,own, to disclose himseU as a genuine,
real, authenlic person.
The Delpruc Oracle said. "Know
thyself." I would prefer to say, "Make
thyself known, and then thou will know
thyHlf."
Shakespeare said, "And this above all,
to thine 01rn self be true, and . • .
thou cansl not then be false to
any nian." Again J would prefer, "And
this above all, tJ any other man be
true, and thou canst nol. then be false
to thy111eU." And c1n; takes courige to
disclose our real feeJing.!I.
!\10ST OF US WEAR masks, we play
roles! \Ve try to live up to something
thal we are'not and we become stuffed
11hirl!i -OOt the real thing. SQme of
us at this late date don't even know
who \1•c are. We haven 't detennined
v.·hat is the real "I". We have .all
mel people who hide behiDd the mask
of goodness. Oh , they . are $0 sweet
and nice. never llreak.ing any ol the
la'>''S of etiquette but underneath they
are hellions~
There are . two areas where people
completely disclo11e. ~Ives. In a good
marriage relatiOQShtp 'lhere is complete
opencess, hone&y and discloaure. In 1
counseling situation there must be com·
plete exposure on the part of Lhe patient
and the thC!tapi!t, in turn, must have
em~y. Beyond these lwo areas thert
are varyica dqree.s of sell·rtvelation.
For almost two years that power
pole has been leaning against an·
other power pole in front of Fash·
ion Island along the highway.
Isn't it about lime the utllitf •com:
pany pole crew or somebody
propped it up? It looks terrible.
-Mrs. R. McF.
A l\llCENT , IMifENTIFIC study has
reYeifed tba< tmt!n do not disclose as
much about tbem!flves as women; thal
white females disclose most to mother
and girl friend. and least to father and
boy friend; that white riiales confide
about equally to. both parents and male
friend and significanUy less to fema1e
friend. It is ·in~stlng to note that
Negro male! diiclose most to their
tnothers and UtOI If at all, to father,
male friend or feWle friend.
In general terms we can say that
people disclose more to their family
than to non-family members, more to
their O"-'O ses than to the opposite ses;
and they disclose more -to -thelr age
-peers than to their elders o r
those younger. Man bides much of his
rea l self behind an iron curtain but
there is evidence to the effect that
this iron curtain melts like wax when
it is exposed to the warm breath of
love.
DO YOU KNOW who you are! Have
you courage to be known? Are you
playing a game of masquerade? Are
you authentic, genuine, real?
You recall the gultar-player who, daily,
for 20 years. sat with 1 one-string guitar,
holding the same fret, plucking. the Jame
sound. One day bis wife siid, -with
11urprise, "Dear, I noticed on TV today
thal a man v.'as playing a guitar, but
it had six strings., and the man kept
moving bis haods around, and making
Jots of different sounds -not like you."
Ht:r husband said, "Don't worry about
him, dear. He's atilt bontin' the right
note, and J have already found it."
Have you found lhe rl&ht note? Haw
you the courage to be known?
Beauty and the Beast
Ant.kl wU.h Semantics:
I resigned for reasons of policy; quit
because or a disagreement: he was fired
for poor Judgment.
Beauty and the Beast : A "beast" Is
any man whose wilr is suing him rGI'
divorct : a "beauty" is any woman who for iWlf that is less redolent of in-
CQnso)es him during th.is period. atitutional dullness.
The differel'ICt between a "dopt shed'' The COOttOtaliOD ot some words often
and an "investment guide" is about turns into the oppoaite ·of thtir duota-
' ' To the Edit8r:
Your recwit editorial Dec. 30 con-
~rniilg a change or CT A policy on
teachers' strikeS has been called to my
attention.
I am encl~ an editorial from our
Southern Section newspaper, The Record
(Nov. 1968 issue), which may clarify
our poslt~i"-".Y()u will note that CTA
doe1 . .mt ~;;;;d does not recommend, teac~·~· .It $Uggests several procedlfr .-: a.re mqre effective. in
the retiolut1oa , iJtlpjls&e, and which
should make strikes unnecessary.
~mie tihe. ~e~ of~ \Jl<: Winton Act,
Ca'Ufqtnt;l b<>atili Ol e6UCat1on have bten
required , t9 ,qeg!>Uate t"meel and con·
fer '') with tt~sentatives of emplo}'e
organizations. 'Ml.is law is being broken
in many Souu\ern California school
districts.
TEACH~RS, RELUCTANT lo wilhhold
their services under any circumstances
-and committed to professional conduct
-cannot and wjll not accept the prin-
ciple that, when an impasse develops,
they must 'always assume the role of
losers. This would render the entire
negotiations process ml!aningless.
CTA does not advocate the use of
a strike to solve a problem; but it
will consider the use of this "weapon"
to insure adherence to a legally·man·
dated pr~s of problem solving.
And you may be assured that this
organization '>''ill always be motivated
primarily by the interests of the studenls
and the public it serves.
RICHARD 0 . BATCHELDER
Executive Secretary
California Teachers Association
Southern Section
Editor's Note -1'he DAlLY\PlLOT
editorial was critical of the Califontia
Teachers Association (CTAJ for adop·
ting n policy tllat teaa.\1f1!·may br.
jwtijted i'1t ,striking if thty caK't ;,t
other ways win their poi11& wfih tf\c
school board. It nottd that always be·
fore CT A hod put lhe welfare. of
'children before everything tlse.
-Editor
Check Facts Flr•I
To the Editor ~
Why do people rush to forin negative
opinions when they have only a tiny frac·
tion of the facts?
?.ty proposal for "Newport Marina''
Is an example. As a concerned ·resident
of West Newport. I offered the City
Council some complex thoughts, based
on simple objective observation and an
ioterpretalion of the publishtd racts
related to beach erosion. property ~aJbe5,
harbor problems in the lower bay,
availability .of public facilitie!, and the
economic health or the city. 1 Proposed
a ~e range of recreational~ (lnancia1.
and aesthetic opportunities lo the 1people
of Newport Beach and Oranp CouOty.
$50 a copy. IJ01 ; u a11 example, "edi~" dtnotes
I "over-indulged '' last night : you "tip-whatever Is flt to be ealql. but. it AT THE FIRST abbreviated an·
pied too much"; he "got gassed." connotes ' that whlch is 1 Jtirtly fit to nouncements lhat such tboughts 'b·ad oc·
A .. GOUR~I Ei" is usually little more be e.te:o. and to call • certain lood ~ to 90meone, a hue .00 'i'Y. went
than a glutton lc.'itooned with charge "edible" ls to mart down .its ,ptitory up from aeveral vocal beathfri>nt pro-
cards. valut. pa1y owners. 1 have been l~lbly
"Geoeatogy'' i1 a perverse preoc-accusied in print of "desectatint" · the Frank ~1oore Colby once defined "• U ol ••-.. who seek t 0 ~•ch·, of ~ing • .. ..........,.._.,~ ., .... -t genUeman of the old school" IS "a cupa on \u1.o:ie , .,., .,., t''v ... v..... 11.11 -....~
man who haM 'I made love to htJ wlfe demollltrate that their forbears were profit motives ; of being tneensitlve to
• tn five d 1 ed 1a ..,....,. bttttt people than thq m . beauty and to public needs; of destroying .., Yf'.&rs, ,an s pr13par ""'"\". -· · ) our n1itm'al taOlll't't:I-aod one objector
" any Gihtr mlK-who tries ~1 ..-• · r • , ~......... '" ...t.... 1-· 11n•~ ~·· t nthi. · k bl • I om· ., __ __J,__.._... ~ •• , • . A ~UMJ. non t~. ~ evm -me w 1o11 u n a e ,..,.._ . you · ~nro n ....._ h b .. id' b ..,...... · ......... crim ~ ,,, .. .., ·~ IJI~ wen ;w t101an---:"t"·· _,. ~ --·~ ~ 1'" . 11 :~.• ...._ .,.~811" .. · ; ' · Why do Jbtiie 9Wll"' .....,. that .. -~ capn111 11 cap1~a nvUMat ... ..,. , Wh • ~ .... )lea~Wben West NewJi:irt .. ~ woukf become
:;j ~ h'5 _been . mm1mJ""•"' ~ tho do ll ~ -"" ~ ',.,."oily,..,..,...,.., An Bolboo loland lcga~"!i::;:.1eg11~ ....1.~ ·Ult . DQcll1nl:" wti-"" <lo • or N~~ ll)ifl. Wllol "domoge"
enolher ,.,.. th~~= , it -. •the')lrMill<o ·~ hH l/OlUng 'rllliclef"' ~ "'"''
h l'k 1 · . 1 1 · our cullomtrl from our competi!Gn. ta Newport Harbor . • ~ m 1 e urn1f1.G mar1t1 re auons MJ favorite mnartio mpt ot fancy
mlo 1 tunn of annua l l11vrntory. for the month comes from the 7th-vader
WtS'l~S, c<l11te1llon<1I teJcvialon" who defined the F'rtnch phrue "pas
cannot fJouri5h unt1J ii finds a name de deus" as "the f1ther of tWlns."
f/ ' 1
a t a • t , TX T ST I ' T r '153 =i' J f ? :>? ' 2 'I' 1 l
IS A PUHUC nlarina NOT a pubhc
f;acility ~ A narrow beach, notorlOUI for
costly and danaerous beach erosion pro-
•) • Pet ;4 ,,~ r= av ~
L1tter1 fl'OfTI readen ••• •.-eo<ne. Horm1tly wr!le'11 lholtld c.orwiw ltwfr mt~ In J:IO wanf1 or lt"-
TIM r19Flt to conclente Inners ta flt -.a or nllml-
MI• 11bet II res.rnoed. Alt ltlten mu9I IN:...,.
1i.n1111,. 11'rd m1Hlnt llCklreu, but nsmn moY Do
wlthl>eld on •lt'lliffl If Mlfl~lllll re-~ -•Nnl.
ble1ns -fronted only with private home~
-with severely limlted vehicular a<:eess,
and exactly one parking area al one
end of a two=mile strip -ca n this
r_efllistically be called a public {pcitlty?
And if so. is it not , subject to public
review as to its "highest and b e s t
use" for the public need?
Not one of the complainers has ever
seen the alternate breakwater sug·
gestions that I have detailed. The
smallest of these would retain tw~thirds
o( lhe existing surfing beach, widen
the beach, provide adequ~te public park·
ing. scenjc viewpoints. public parks, and
fiShing areas -still could solve a dozen
s'eiioua_ community problems (W wldch
no other workable solution has been
Qftered) -and provide over 2,700 badly·
needed boat clips in the bargain. ,
THERE ARE AS many alternates
available as there are intelligent people
willing to think objectiv.~ly about
Newpori's "future in terms of the broad
public inte~t -along with their private
ones.
I have nol suggested that the city
spend one dime in behalf of this idea.
What· I requested -and what the tax·
payers are enUtled to -is a preliminary
Investigation of the racts by qualified
people. But let's not toss a constructi ve
idea to t h e winds on a wave of unin·
formed antagonism.
STEPHEN C. AULD
'
Flr1t /Uor1e Jlfe1aage
To the FA!ltor:
To say that I was subject to various
emotions wheri I readi Ult article in
your January 11 Uisue,. "131 Years Ago
Morse began 'Al•' " Iron> Unlt..s Prw lntemalional, Is poltinf K · mltilly. At
first it wu one of amusMneot and
I iluibed at !be quote In tho secoiJd
pa'afitaph wblcb ,.Id that the,
first messaae c1fdked, over "" wtre was, "A P:i.tle.nl ,waiter t& no Josef... Then;
as I 'pondered over that. whlie ii may
be a true tdage, yet it WU NOT lhe
first mesaage over the ~telegrtph ,wtre
as I hlld.beard and remembtred it.
•~ROM' 1117' to 1949 t was au employe
of Wea:tem Union TeJ~graph Company
and prior to that t worked for Postal
Telegraph. Tliooe of Ult otd !thoot wtll
know lhat Postal merged with Western
Union many years ago. In all those
years. and to thJs day, 1 have nrver
helfd about the "ptUent waiter." All
through the yean we were reminded.
by our company and our IC}KlOl h_\stoM~s
that Samuel P'. B. Mone tapped out,
"What hath God wrought'!"
, Perllaps Utla 11 mty ont of the ways
th11 communism 11 trying to , 'change
and distort our hlAtoc~ and ltamp out
Ille name ol God. cc! I do .pnitest
vigorously.
I A~t SURPRISED that the ,11rticle
could gti all the way offr lhe wires
from t.torristown, Ntw Jt:rM:y I o
California without a challenge.
I hold a ran! from Western Unron
for "$0 ye•n oi raiUtful se"ice" and
you can set 'tbat I am stW faithf ul
lo lbe COJllpan.J aa wefi u to God.
v.·ho ~lped me tltroush the many irials
and lrlbulatlons ln the •many year~ o(_
IN'.rvlet and since then as wt:ll.
EVA L. MILLER
Dll9raceful Alley•
We thoroughly agree with the Jillie
ll-year-0ld girl who wrote the city con·
cerning the alleys in Newport Heighl.!I.
Thet are really a disgrace.
There are a few Jot owners who try
to keep lbe alleys clean, as well as
their f~t lawns,. but there arc some
w&o ev idently do;~not care.
1 am a senior cftizen and own property
wi.th a garage on ·the alley, unfortun.tely.
Two different Sl!Jlday mornings, when
I 9ime f~. cbuich, J have had to
get out and" T~Vf: .debr\s before [
could got , tii my ~•;}' • ~ .
' ' THERE IS ALSO another problem that
concerns us since the undergrolmd qible'
Was RUI in the alleys. The prorn,iers-
covered the cable,. but lhef came along
with a sweeper and took l lot o( 'soil,
leaving low spots where water and ~IT!ud
accumulate and each time we crrive
futo our garage we tak e in more mud
lhan we can shovel out.
Why can't. we have j(lffit kind of
hard surface put on so the water ' Will
run .off? •
NAME WITIUIELD
Lo119·halred Pollce1
To the Editor :
I have a positivt: suggestion for i1n-
proving community-po Ii~ r e I a I i o n & ·•
Allow some of the officers to grow
longer hair. In this way. many of the
rebellious youth will feel a new bond
~·ith the l<t)V enforcement agencies.
Much of the anti-police sentiment Is
caused by the s'ame ·kind of generaliu·
lion that the businessmen make when
they prejudge a youthful and hopeful
employe because of his king Jocks, name-
ly the lumping or policemen into the
category or pigs by youth with un·
favo rable contact with the law.
THE \\'HOLE IDEA ol police I! to
protect the rigbls and live• of Ult
citizens. Since everyone ls. a citizen in
practJce, these rights are ntative pro-
tecUon f~ criminal ,.dn$AUon from
the norm. · ' · '
Police U>at look lib 1111, ~ Ibey
repma1t·pment no ~ Image
ol ml,... ol !be law 11,)o. inf porticutar
group. And yet --~llll@!Cll """""
exist and oonstitulc a ,..1, difficulty
in Jaw enforcement.
THE PIJIU'OSE of this letter is to
urge lhe pubDC, all or us.. lo_ accept
a policeman as ·a man workina OD· the
side of people and not on &be aide
ot repression.' I see no renoo why; an
officer should not have reuor\lblJ long
hair it tw 90 desires. ~lieemtn aJ~wed
the same range of pet90nl.1 appearance
IS the rest of the citbenry CUM to
represent to Ill!. lf'OUP, lnfluenUal or
not, any otmot;ype.
AND YET I have newt MU a loc1i
olftctr q, hu kvti hoir • .,. ... ,. wllo
h•s more than 1 ~· I bltrw many
qualified people who ~ ·~ to
"1ter police Mrtl yet balk M 0,.. """'*
of the crewcut u belna: • ~ eMYt
1ign. Allow policemen to look llte more
people than Marine recruits and -you
will Jet better community ru~ from
th• -IJ'O\IPS. Toletano., Chris-tians.
CRl\IS GAUTSCH!
BelplNf DeNcb
To the Editor :
l'd like to OpreM 1 publk thank
you to the car~ o( 1etn-agt:d boys,
aod to the Necro man who .topped
a Ultle later, lo offer their help when
n1y car \\·as pulled off the roa::I with
a flat tire.
Sunday noon at Palisades and Jam-
boree Roads is a busy and impersonal
place. I was lucky enough to ,have hel~
on the way already, but I _find .1t
heartwarming that our community still
cootains those who will offer their time
and their help to a stranger who may
need it.
MRS. ROBERT J. VINSON
1llbunderstood Area
To tbe Editor:
for each new world crisis we must.,
as Lincoln said, think anew, for uch
problem i111 different and deserve.!I ar;:
well as demands an entirely new method
of solving each problem. We mU8t not
always consider war as a way of 10lving
these problems. A:i a nation we need
not always take sides in an international
problem .
When we do, however, It is hoped
that we have the decency to support
a nation or national leader for the reason
of helping that · nation and the people
of that nation. not to help our nation.
THE rtflODLE EAST is the most
misunderstoo;1 area by the West. The
Ainerican policies in that area have
never been made clear -each loosely
assembled, poorly backed and have been
short lived.
The Eisenhower Doctrine which treats
the Middle East as an American provinct
was ineffective to the then immediate
crises of Gna and Aqaba and remainll
so on the long·range issues of Communist
subversion, arms traffic, boundaries and
the Arab-Israeli di$putes.
THE MAIN problem is understandint
the forces and needs of the rqioo.
and developing a farsighted and effective
American policy. Our mistak.es art
mistakes of attitude. Their nationalism,
economic growth, and political 00.Ulltits
are nol being considered (the same i5
true in Vietnam ). Instead we acl wl!olely
in our own battle against internationaJ
cOmmunism.
I am not saying communism isn't
their greatest enemy. What I am saying
Is we were wrong to think we could
convince them that it is.
WHAT IS CLEAR to us may not
be to other people· of other nations
wHh different problems than ours. For
instance, they have a much lower 1tan-
d1Td of living, a great pride of ntutrallly
enhlflCCd by recent foreign expk>Jtation.
The, Arabs know they have not been
occupied by the Soviet troops -but
they have been occupied by Western
troops, To discard nationalism and
ntUVality lo a pro-Western stance jun
isn't likely ...
VAN MCIUNZIE
---W-
Frid a y, January 24, 1969
Th• ~liOrial PCIOI Of lh• l>ailfl
f>tl.ot fftk.i to infOTm and ltfrn.
ulptc rradtn b~ pr1snttKg thU
M'IDlpaptr's optnJons mad com,..
rntnto:'V on ropit.r ot Int.rest
'and aiQm/irmu:c. b¥ prbvidmg a
forum fM Ute t%J)rurioft of
oar readers· opit1ton.s, and btt
f>N!'nUno tile dlveNc ofi.
points of tnJ"""'11 °"""-•
end JPOkenntn on topic.s of th1 da,.
Robert N. Weed, Publlsbu
'
,~
\
·'
when
with
Jam-
sonal
help
id it
still
tim•
may
ISON
a
nust.
each ...
'thod
t not
lving
need
iorial
ope<!
~port
"""' eople
most
Th•
ha" >Sely
be<n
·ul!
•inct
llato
"'"" mist
and
din& pon,
~Ve
art
ism,
ities
e is
1lely
D!lal
ian't
ying
oold
not
lom
For
tan-
1lity
ion. ....
but
em
and iwt
l1E
'
1:
Costa Mesa Today'• l't.I
·I '
EDITl'ON N.Y. SCoeb
:VOt:. 62, NO. 2 I, 4 SECTIONS, '48 PAGES 01!.ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' . FRIDAY, J;t.NUARY 24, 1969 TEN CENTS
' T·h.reatened Tenants D·isclaim Hippie Label
By AllTllU!I 11. VINSEL
Of .. 0...,. ..... Sl.W
Tell her the aYerq;e Cmt.a Mesa
lamilJ'• effective annual tluyinf Income
" 110,m, and -living .. COlll1ly .. .u ...
•aillanoe in a house the city wanta demolished a part ol a shanty town
-she'll tell you lbat's nice.
Rea1 nice.
Sbt ii P!UY Jette, of Z88 Victoria
tst., who geb $65 every two wee.ks to
Grim, Solemn
help 111pport 1j>ukle-eyed Jo Ann, 17,
towhelded ~ IS, and bowxy Lor·
ralne, who la II pl alWllYI tell! you
her enct birthdate. Some re1kleota of the properties at
211 .and m Vldmia s~. vow to .fight
b<slde landlord Paul Gardner In a hallie
to c:ooduct bis allaln without city hall
intru&ion.
"A man doing it 11 years doesn't
~ them at thll late date," he :saya.
GardrJer faces a Cost& Mua City Coull-
Bucher Begins
Secret Testimony
CORONADO, Cali!. (UPI) -Cmdr. Appearing grim and oolemn, allhouah
Uoyd M. Bucher went behind cloaed with his composure restored aft.er
Coors today to tell a Naval Court of 'Thursday's emotional ordeal. Buoba
Inquiry top secret ·details about. the cap. moved into a cooferau:e rocln panled
lure ol. the USS Pueblo. ' by Marines at 9 a.~ PsT.' '
_ -Bucl*--wai joioed in the U!Cl'Uv.e....__~ sl_lort time. later ~.!.W~ eaP!a.l!is_
session before the tive-admiral court by went into the room. The>: were C"ap(
two Navy captains from Japan who Th_omas L. Dwyer, a~ the time autstant
'Weft on duty when the intelligence ship chief of 1taff for mtelligeoce, Naval
was aelzed off North Korea a year Forces Japan, and Capt. Forrest Pease,
chief ol staff for commander, U.S. Naval
ago. Forces Japan.
Homeowners
Grill Irvine
Chancellt# ·· .
By THOlolAI FOJmlN!; ........ ,,... .....
UC:'lrvlne Cbancelitir Dlllltl G. Aldllch
Jr. does not fit the stereotype or an
S. I. Hayakawa wbei stands up to and
dOfl not comprothlse with Jtudent
dissidents.
He bad 1 rou1h go because of It
Thursday night in answerln1 questions
~t to hhn by members of Mesa Verde
HOmeowners AssociaUon.
Aldrich spoke on "Education of a Cban-
c:ellor," telling how be 4ctually bad ~earn
ed from black otudefttl and wb&t be
called the hippie cult on campus.
The revelation did not sit well with
«rt.am of the northwest Costa Mesa
area homeowners. Most of the questions
uted of tbe chanti!llOr had hostile
avl!iones.
Tho.se asking questions, however, may
not have been representative or all 1J5
pel'IOnl present; when Aldrich las
tlnllhed be was spontaneously applauded.
The UCI chancellor was asked what
be would do if the Black Student Union toot over the administration bullding,
the nerve center of campus. Would he
oefOllate or throw the students out?
"l don't say black," answered Aldrich,
M'but the possibility exists every day
that a minority of students, of whatever
color, will block entry to a building.
U university policies and practices that
led to the takeover have been a miserable
failure then there are all sorts or
poaslbilltlu for negotiation.
"l have walked one mile. 1 have walked
two miles. l have walked 10 miles.
And I have said I will walk 100 miles
to do my best to understand why we
(S.. ALDRICH, Po1e l)
Bucher was i:xpected to resume.
testimony at lhe outseL He will talk
about just what classified lnl<lllgence
documents were captured by the Com-
munists, bow much electronic JUl ~ what type was not completely deltrOyed
and other "sensitive' matters.
While the Communla\I obtained -U.S. oecreta from the ~ llhip,
other Crlllc&l Nlerlal .... clt&tr"l'<d. Jlolojha\....,... ..... ,..._ Qlo
...,.rit, ol Ifie U¢tio\1 Stetel.
Rear Adm. Fnml: L. J-Q)l!l-
mander o1 N•nl F..,,.. !II, Japan al
lbtollmt, a(ao. --·f'l!l lrlll tezµfy dur!Qg tho lllr,. d9j'I ol efoad smlons
Friday, Saturday ml M<i~. Johnloo
is presently cmmnandant 13th Nav.al
District, Seatle, WUh.
A Navy public Information officer will
sit in on the court and brief newsmen
after the sesaion m Utoae portions of
testimony which can be ,made public.
Boozing Burgla1·
Boots Break-in
Demon rum ind other spirits ap-
Jll!'lltlY partially broolht _to oau~ht el·
IOI» by aomeone who l>lrgtariud a
Qllta Meu. residence, where police
'l'bllnday -• WOl>l>ly troll ol loot.
print& leadin& away In the mud .
Whoever broke Into lbe Nelson G.
Brandon heme at ts7 Pre.skilo Drive,
ga-up mor< lhn laMI In worted
jneb'y, thm. "Went to the kltche:n for
• pick-me-up. . .
There, aald Officer John While, he
drank.
He drank a bottle of gin.
He drank a botlle of rum .
He drank a bottle of brandy.
Unable to conquer a fourth botUe of
bourbon -whlch be took along -the
intruder, or maybe intruders, wandered_
out ol the house with tight polrs ol
cufnlnks worth $1CO, police aaid.
He left two 1ot1otten rlnp worth l'l1IO
lyin& wb.,. he bad placed t b e m, ln-
vesUgators Slid.
Public May Listen But
Not Speak at Route Meet
Jqtt Ilk< any-otller Coot. ,.. ... Clly
Council study -Ion, membOrl ol the
public may definitely attend a meeUng
next. Wednesday on possJble klntnn1e
ma.Uclpal erfecta of four prvposed
Newport Freeway routes.
C]Uzen observers who care to attend
the ·1:30 p.m. lt8lion in city eounclJ
thllnbm ru.,-do to, but questioning or state hipay aperta will be coofmed
to councilmen and city staff rnemben.
Illy Attome)' Roy Jun< c:bected into
lop! up<dl Ii the -. -~
by one blllnray oll1dal to be Mid u
a mni-f>rivate one -but found tt mUlt
bt rqulai.d by laws llJVernlnf aD ----1111 Hublmoto. aaslJtant d h Ir I c I onp-lot Dillrict SeTen. Slate
Ill-Ii 1Dpay1, had auggeated the
limUed audltnoe u a method of avoidJng
a long, drawrHJUt progrm1t.
l'J\o<n ii thi• wrold be poaible, ft
wmld epporently be no ha!' to Calla
Maal who want to heve a voloe In
• .-lttdll!I up to final chol<c ol
a N...,..t rmw., nJU1e lhroup Ille
"
city.
"The public ii atill 1•in& to ret lhT<e
Jhota at lhil," June commented today,
"they wlD certainly be ~ven a chance to be beard .••
The State. DlviaJon of Wgtiwayt'
District Seven bu 1Ch!duled a Feb.
II public bearing on the lour propooed -.s, to be held at tilt Orange Coonty
Fairgroundl In Colla M ....
Maps, cbarU and dlqmnl ol the
pr._t alf111u1t1da .,. now .., ~ ht the ~ ~ 1lll Colla ·M... CITI<
-· Id " P'alr Drl'ft, u-• -ol Ibo -and Rlgbways Code, 1uno conlfnued, Colla
M ... ollldala -aloo bol!I 1 luWn public ~ • tbt __ ., route
ltlectloe ~
The publlc wW -Id • third op-
portunity' Wilm Ille llala m,tzway Com-
miMlon ochedules Ila ..... -.. ...
tilt !toot< II chob, ptior IO mWnf
• dellnltt .. -So far tilt dty bu not taltcn an
o!llcial ~nd .., whlcll route ""11d be
(ht FRUW.t.Y, Pqo II
•
cil.bearlna Feb. 13 on pos!ible declara-
11911 ol tM land be has owned since
195l to be a pUbuc rurlsa.nce, hippie
haveo and trouble center which should
he clear<d,
Costa Meia may have advanced
research plants, lovely tract hoo.slng,
a bu.at sbopplna complex and a public
golf course, but the reai:ns of literaturt
from enthwlastlc city boosters never
menllon the poor.
They too, must live somewhere, the
landlord aays.
A colorfully exptess;~ retlred con-
struction man, Gardner -and tenants
who admire him as one who knows
that every bant account bu a bottom
to it -told · it llie they say it ia
Thursday.
"I kho" my apartmenll are cheap,
not fancy, but you can't roll out the
red carpet for flO a month," said
Gardner, who Jives at $J25 Donnybrook
Lane, Costa Mesa.
"But that'1 not whot Ille city ii beefing
about," he continued. '1Tbey just dOCl't
like the class of people that I bate
here."
'-'1 don't mi nd if they call me an
Indian," sternly chimed In Peuy Jette,
''because that's what I Im. Bal I raeat
being called a hlppie."
.. Just because we're poor don1t mun
we're hippies," added stiaron Sauqdtrs,
who occupies another or the 11 uoill
on the Garner property.. • •
\
"ID,PPle la JUI\ a polite way to call
somebody a bum •. We artti'f," com-
mented pretty Jo AJln Jette, wbo will
graduate from high acbool next year.
Miss Jette said Inly two houses est
Lbe land art1 of the bJpple commune
type, while the rest are rented by per*>nl
forced for one reason or anot.btr to llve
on limited incomes.
''They're friendly . They speak lo you,"
she sald of the long_~f!aired types who
(S.. TENANTS, Pap I)
It Won't Go Away
Rain May LaSt Through Wednesday
...
Southern Californians' spirits were as threat of floods and tand!lides after
damp as the ~;unents today as thty Huntington Beach, but ln Fountain Valley
braced themselves for another wet, a sectlo.n of Edinger Avenue was tetn-
weary weekend of having t b e porarlly closed by heavy flooding.
weatherman sock it to them. But the worst Is yet to come.
"Recurrent rain" through Sunday -Weathermen said the current llonn
and p«llbly strelcbing through Wed· wW dump two to tbret lnchu "' the
aent flood COlllrol wonm acurrylnf to
critical arua. Water wu rUeued from
the federal gove.nament'1 11 major dams
iir Southem CalUcrnia to make room
for the nmoff of rain water.
A spoke{mlll fqt the Wea~ Bureau
said Ille· .... llnrarlC<lald bt • ~
·· neaday -.w.u the prediction for the SOu!hJand bf' ~J' ~ from thr~e
--Orango..Coast. and-..mo.l-41 -lbe &lato.-~to.&lfindleo.o,n·..a.o.l·niNilaln-<l--1·,.,')'J't This in the wai.111 of ' last weekend's With satura.ted . .irouQd, ~ble
the &&me type" u the dl'lier· one.
"We aro-Aeping-an-oye ..Wor-l>aa"1--
rainl," he added.
• ~ . ,,. · ;..i • devastating storm that left Los Angeles runoff and local ltrett flooding is et.-
• ~·•r1 '1', ,,-, · and San Luis Obispo counties disuter peeled in low-lying areas.
"j '• • !"' 'f areas. The new storm, spawned by a !Uh-•~~·:·~~.or With the promi.5ed rain came the new tropical air mw in the. mid-Pacific,
tt._'f'/.;.t, '
~ ..... !!:. .• "'
DAILY ,ILOT '""'bf •klMlrf K .... lft REFLECTING ON RAIN
OCC'a Di•n• Ludwig
Burglar Miffed,
Burm Doctor's
Medical Records
Evidently angf:rtd when be found no
money, a Rburglat · who broke Into a
°*la-Mesa phyilot:an'1 office Thurlday pJl,4 11(1 eat fblderi coolJ\nlng pa<ieiita'
-.i rnecllcal ftCOl'd• and bllroed \IM!mloubet.,
nte ~ at Dr. Nathaniel
N. Cohen'• otfice at 1731 Sarita Ana
Ave., was+,diloovered Thursday night
by a wotkman, Vlnce L. Lerman, of
Ganlen'Grove.
Detectlve John stoneback aaid lhe in·
truder pried open a sliding glasa door
with 1 tile iron to gain entry, bul
there was nothing of value to steal. ·
The pey.Jclan told police hio emplciy.,
normally take the money home to avo id
just IUCb a burgltry loas.
lnveatlpton did not Ay whether the
!Ilea Ii paperwork de.lroyed by the
bla11ar could be duplicated or repllCed
In tllo anoa committed with ellllu !NI-... dpntle lighter.
NEW YORK (AP ) -The a1A>ck market
,,_ lrtfaular ot the cloae today al!u
r<lnatin& from on early gain. 'l'rdl!I
wu fairly active. (See quotations. Pqa
1~11).
~-.,. 1Ut miWOll a.ires com· pared w1111-u.11 llllllillll"l11Undal'• ,,,.
Dow Jmn: lndum1al averaie • didhwd
I.II to ISUt tlt<r backing IW'1 from
u 1111J-,
Newport's Carpenter
Certain for GOP Post
"
SACRAMENTO Republioa• Stale
Central Commlttll IOQrCtl toda~= it lJ a "lead ~ cinch'' thai '
Beach attorney DtMis Carpentor will
be elected OOP &!alt chaln!!>n Sunday,
Carpenter, a 4G-year~ld former FBI
agent, waa one of lbe principal ai'chltecll
of the Re.publican l'Cal Plan," which
was credited with upsetting t b e
~mocratie lejislative majority last
November.
He ls not expected to have any cp-
posltlon for the top ctntra!1 committee.
post.
He was named vice-chairman of the
state unit two years ago. Previously,
he aerved as chalnnan of the Orance
Coi.nty GOP Central Committee.
U.qder the "Cal Plan." GOP fundl
anC expert political counsel were g1\len
Republican candidates In s p e c l f i c
Assembly race!, where Democratic i~
cumbents were f::t to be particularly
vulnerable.
The "Cai Plan's" break with tradition
Is that In the put, all GOP candidates
had shared about equally in party
resources, whatever their chances.
While no battle is anUclpated Sunday
for the Central Committee chainnanahip,
a three-way fight is slated for the vice
chairmanship Carpenter is vacating.
Conservatives are backing Frank
Adams, of Piedmont, a Calliomia
Republican Assembly (CHAI leader.
LlberalJ are aupporUng Pu t n a m
Livermore, San Francisco GOP chairmn
and a one-time campaign aide of Sen.
Thomas Ku chel. A third candidate ls
Karl von Cbristlerson, Sallnu County
Republican chalnnan considered neither
strongly conservative nor liberal.
Two Orange County residents are
among four seeking the job of party
secretary. They are Dr. Tirao del Junco,
Huntington Beach CRA chairman; and
~")~~.r ·1 ~ • I 1'l , ..
, DAILY 'ILOT lt9ft ,.
'LEAD PIPE CINCH'
GOP Lt•der C1rpenttr
Mrs. Louise Hutton, past chainnall of
Lhe Federated Republican Women. Other
candidates are Paul Herle, G o v •
Reagan's appolntmenta aecretar,v, and
Maynard Nelaon, who unmcceat!ully
aought an A&1embly eeat tut November.
He is a realdeat of Sacramento.
Incumbent Trustee Files
First in Harbor Election
Jncu1nbent Lloyd Blanpied Jr. ts the
first to file paper• of candidacy for"
Newport..Me.u Unified School Dirtrlot'1
April 1$ trustee election.
His ls one or four sea ts on the Hven-
me.mbu board up tlliJ year.
-Mn. Elizabeth Ltlly, llOderlck
MacMillan and Dooald Strama 1111 .. ""
yet stated tbdr lntentioos with rupee!
to the C<IQling election.
'nltr and any challengera have unU1
Feb. :le lo Ole with the Cowily Scboola
Olllce.
Blanp(ed reir-Ja the C..-de!
Mar, Eutbhdf, Irvine Te:rraea. Beacoo
Bay area ol Newport Beach. He wu
appolnled to the boon! m tlll IO """'
pl<te the -ol Donal DuaCaa'' term when Duncan moved from Ille
area.
Blanpled, 41 yun old. la an attorney,
He lo 1 put pmldent Ii Milrlntra
S ~ho o I Parent.FICO!ty Orpnl'"Uoo
(!'POI.
.ffe, his wife, Orr:llla, 1 ktnderprlen
teacher in Laguna Beach, and children,
Carol and John, both honor ltudents
at Corona del Mar Wgb, live at z:m
Aile Vlata Drive, Eutblul!.
Blanpied said he ii nmnln1 for tlec:U.n
beca111e be ia lnlere&ted In <OGtlnuit1
Ii .achoo! proarama.
There la no COit, !or filing eandldacy
papers. ttowever, oandktatea Ull1 Ole
a atatemtnt Ii quolllk,olloo I« dlslrlbu-
Ucn with ban.ta, whlcl>, In the Newporl-
"'"' Dl&trtct will cod' 1411. lllanpled bu not -...
Paris Students Routed
• PARIS (\JPl) -Fnncb rlol polb
todaf -Into the VlllC<llllia ·caol· pua of the UolVenity ol Part& and
IO«ibly ajocted about 2lO atudenla
meelq IO pill new proteota,
So were cltlmu throoghoul tilt
Southland who were matin& plJUJI for
the we:ekend with one eye on the
beaverus.
Aircraft Noise
Report Readied
For SllP.enis9nt
' " ~-··· 'Wtll bur • ropcwt f " t6: 11 (m alrc:ratt no1aes and their
-00 reatdeaUa1 ...,,. .. Nl!n>orl
Beich 1nc1 Colla·"""" &bttt J. a .... nabaD. <o.mty dlr<dilr Ii aviation, Aid
~y.
11ie !'1"'11 <a w nou1t or a at~d>' by
Boll, -and -·· Inc. al Cambridge, Mw. II ..., lnltlated late
1n· November with 17,000 In COWlty
fund&. .
Included will l>e a lbncut on tllo
nol!e problem II tJie curnnt number ol
jet landlnp and take olll triple, Brea-
naban said. lie added that DO """' expansion la pianood,. but · Iha airport
commlJalon wiirtal the !olormaUoo lo< lutureDlannln.<. '
' The faca ..... made prlniarllf In the
Uppei: Newport ,Bay artL Raldenb al
that art& have =· almall i1otM and l1led lulta more lhill flO
mll1lon qalnir· the' ciiwity.
"We want lo mow II Jel noloes are
bad enouib to lnlluepce property values
alfd 11 1he7're not how 'much ltallie we
coold handle before they did," Breo-
nahan said.
Senate Investigation
Predicted for Pueblo
WASlllllGTON (uPI) -Sen a Io
Democ:ratlo Leader Mite Mansfield aJd
today the Senate Armed Serv1Ceo and
Foreign Relations committee& probably
will lnvestl3at< the Pueble incident titer
the Navy c:ompletea Ila Inquiry.
A oource clou to the Houae Amled
Servic" Commltee Aid the Pueblo imlo
also WU cirt'.ain to come up for dbcus.
alon titer that -1 lo orpolled next
week, and '1'm auro therii wfil be •
demand !or tllo -to· 10 Into the whole t!Wr." ·
Wea&laer
If you liked Jut WMbnd11
weather, you'll bl dcnmrl&bt
ecatatlc aboot the 'ha\ ltw day-.
The lorecaater WI& '!or .-U.r
rain from now tbrooah W-
day, heavy at times. Noah, where
are you now &ha& we. Deed you!
INSmE TODA 'Y
A USC .,,..,.h t<am mid a
oroup of ooluntttr f::rtrcinn
art proo(ng nl41L. ia their non-
tit1 can f'tQain tk noor of thdr
fort~• with propirlj prt1cribtd
r.:r:erdls. St• Poa1 10.
• • ..... .. -.. --' ....... ,.,. .. __ ft ... ,..... .....
" .. C* i ~ 1, =--: -.
j
-.. ~"::. ~ o;;;;-,_ ' ·--..,,... ,..,,., M
.......... ,.11 ~-·ltli .......... l" --.. 'W, Pr tNi
I
I
I
11
\
I
I
I
I
•
' • ~ •
f
-
I DAU.Y Pl'°T t
Pre• r ... 1
TENANTS .•.
abo n11I ll'Clm Gan!ner. "but lhe7 k"P
inlll' mlldl lo lhenllelvu."
QV allld... ,..,,.., crtllcbod lbe
appelrll>Ct o1 1be Gan!ner PNf'1111,
u well u its aven.ce JO to 2$ occupants.
wbo Wd'e raponalble ln one. ncent
u......u. period roe some to ,.paralA>
pollco cue npO<la.
Deputy Bulld!Jll Inspector Dean Dorris
outllDed the c&M 11alnst Gardner's
holdms1, bough! before Ille pnaent cit)'
1trueew'9 ewn eillted. documenting
COl11jllalnls with pllolOp'apba " the
dilapidated section.
Gardner, ahknt from the originally·
o<:boduled nulwlct hearin& due IO OU
and r..,ng!til, cleand hll lhtoat Thurt·
dll' and did IOOI• talkln& too.
FEEL8 CONFIDENT
"Thal Dorrlt is just a atoa1e, but
they &ot !Um sne.akin' around with a
camera and knifin' me la the back,"
said Gardner who feels confident about
the cue, ba.std on his current ltpl
counstl'• advice.
"Dorris gets up in an apertmeot back
there behind the property with a •PY·
glass and when two cars show up. he
calls the police to check what kind of
coffee the people lll'f: drl.nkin','' the land-
lord charged.
Ganloer waa philooophlcal about put
polkt prohleblJ.
"That'a what we tupayer1 ate payin'
them tor," he said, "lo maintain peace
and order."
Fire Department inspectors have also
found basis to criticize the property,
which ii Gardotr't ~lJ IOUl'Ct of income
-and rather unsteady it that, because
be is symplhetic to the poor.
"SbmeUme! be don't a:et what's coming
to him," aald one lenant Thuteday.
"I don\ lmow who that llmnu 11
who cornea araund with llm'ril," 11id
Gardner, "be isn't man eoouch. to in·
troduce hlmoell ud uy 'Good Mornlq'
when be s«.s foot on tbe prupa t,." ·u 111t cl!J hid 1111 -raUo o1
lino WI.... bad ll<n, then -·t he-a fire departmen~" becharpd.-·-
"Wiiy don't they take pldurea or th•
olher Cbeaple dumps along thiJ ltreet,"
be uk~ In bewildmnent, "the1're no
better than mine ...
NIBBLING ACl'ION
Then, be complained of take-take-take
nibbling of city government.
"I gave them 11 feet off the front
of my lud to widen Vlct<tia Slreet,"
he said, "made them a present and
after that I bad IO pey $1,900 IO help
with tbe COit for tblt nice pavement.!'
"But wl>en they were baullnc dirt
off to U>e dump and l Wed for a
couple ol loadl IO llll up ehuckholea
In hack," he coetlnued, ''yea bet they
wouldn't even give it back to me."
"I pey tuea on about Jll0,000 worth
of property in ~ Mflll," Gardnir
conthmed, .. that dMln't mate me a
kin& -but I'm not a bum."
"Why, an " • -. ... Ibey lr)'inl to put me on Ute rock& now at my
barvtll time?" added Gardner, who bu
had the land ud Ill 25-yur,.Jd hulldlJ!i•
on the mamt !or.,... than noe yeer.
"Why doo't Ibey build IOIDell>Jnc !or
people wbo C811't lf!onl 10 pey $IOI
a month ...rt before w ' !Ur . ....,.
dowo -If that'• their Idea'" he ulood. "II tha city cooncll wanll thl• land
eo had, why doo\ Ibey buy It ll'Clm
Mr. Gardner?'" added Mn. Jette, whole
forebeart, alter all, 1ot a taw 1ind
deal alto once ., the While Man mond
acrou America.
. "If they Just 1<1 oU my hack another
m: rpont&a, l'll ICUttle. my own
buildlnp," ,.Id the unbapPy lan®im .. ,
"! ha•en't jUJt been alttblL oc my llll au th1a time."
"!'ID with !hem. I lmow _.uii.,
elM abould be built.," be went on, ,.but
J've got to wait till the right lb'rie."
"You can buy land," be concluded,
c•but you can't ju.st buy a buyer."
Clothes, Stereo Gear
Burglarized in Laguna
ClolhlOI ud atom ~·pment of undetermined value be to two
TOOlftlllaiel wu 1 t o 1 e n undQ' In Laauna B<acll lmn a mid-at tlOI
S. Coast ffillnny while lbe men ...,.
at'wort.
DMIY 1'1101
01111,NGf CCMST l'UI LISMlNO COM•.t.N't'
R•t.••I N. w,,4 .... 1""'' to'llll ,. .. 1111.,,~,
J••• a. c.,1 • ..,
VICll ,.,.,.-.... ..., ~fl Me<lttier
Th•••• 1Cttti1 ....
Tl.•1111• A. M1r1lo+.,,
Ml .............
'••' )11111• ~°""'"' c .... .._Oflke
JJO W11t 1 • ., Str11f
),(,;11 .. , ... ,,,,,,1 ,,0 .••• 11•0. t1616
•
IWO JIMA FLAG-RAISING? NOPE -SF STATE
Athl1t11 Win Battle With Di11id1nt1 for Old Glory
Arreswd 449 Seek Bail
----
' 1 C~ty 01\:.s~·. 3 "Variances
•
Zoning .Changes Granted lor Multiple Units
~ . . . . ) ...
Zoning vat'larice.s anowll1( lliree muhl·
p~ untt projects In areu· of lower
general density have been granted three
Costa Mesa landawnen, but a fourth
project is temporarily delayed and a
lllth reject.a complelely.
DespllA> ..... ol>Jectlon by n~
Newport Beach hullder Ronald !!:. Goll
is going ahead with a all.-un.it apartment
development at 1818 Pomona Ave., two
Jess than the original eiJbt units he
asked.
The proprty II joinUy owned by three
minor children, who inherited it from
their grandmother -one child han·
dicapped -and whose economic futuru
vo'ill be insured by the rental income.
Goll said.
The city council Monday agreed to
the reduced unit density.
"But I can't see any reason for hightt
dens.Uy in a block all developed lt·l.''
said Arnold Mttchell, at im Pomona
Ave., who expect.a parking problems.
"I'm worried about nooding con·
diUoos. N aid Jim McNlab, of • W.
18th st., "I have nve pieces of prope:ity
draln.lng oo me now. But I pert' near
have to 10 along 1"tb what YoU fellows
say," he added.
Dralnage requlrmenll !or the ·nearby
Warrant Issued
For Suspected
Theft Ringleader
Superior Court Judie Roherl Gardner
todAJ l,oloed . • .$10,000 bench warrant
' • \,. .l"I r Goll project thould eolve this, city ol· tollll<llmen denied 1 · varllilce allmrll1(
ftcllll h:plalnfd. Albert -Vmbr, !:aeondlilo, to bolld a
"lt teems Uke evuy t1mt wt bulld pair ol twHtory, flve-wtft buildinp at
units/' ~ Mari<t,Duranle, ol 113S I-E.1111 St, tolalllng IS aparlmeotl
Poraona Ate .• •'tbat'tre crOwd ii'ur ltrflttl in ai1old duplex IOOt. , wl\h f"'Ud cm, ~t'i 111t.'On'1 Clii·. • "r,-.n1 I~ l•Jiato ito , ~them clown.
corn.' . 1'\11 ·we'l'o ·•ttllfs .~ slums
Undtt ~t zonlnf, Gob "'"Id bolld •llh -• plOlll," ~ OiwJ.
five wiltl instead of ah:, without a cllmtn WWiam L. St. Clair.
permit. The Varrin project had ~ bt:ld over
Harokt L. Van de Walker, or 539 , until 1 l1*t wp compiled Jl)owin1 other
Hap\ijton St., was sraQted a variance prior van.nee. sranted 'In the area,
to add tbree Ufti~ to ~ property. at now under study for· a PoSSiblt sweeping
$41 Hamilton St., lwo more lhan the multiple unit ...... cllange. zonina: allows. · • A tW"C>-week delay was 1et ln hearing
Barbara A. Crush.a. of !4.11. O(art(ce Jamea S. S1makia' varlloce requeat for
Ave., ""'8 gran~ a varlanc:t: 1o.1'oml a flve-unJt apartment project at 143
a ne" tiome at the trbnt ·or her t,000-Melody Lane, also now an R·2 duplu
square-foot lot, leavlnc a small house zone.
in the rear aa a rental property. Realtor Roy McCardle asked tht con.
Mrs. Crual!J, repre!Ol!ted by Jim Knoll, tinuance, 51ying the project an:hlr.ct
of_ StQJlco Buikll!'fl lr>c., Garden Grove, was schkluled ,to explain why five units
wu widowed last year rn -a tragic knife would work better on the lite than
accident and has twc small children the four 11Uggested by the planning com·
to raise and support. m.Wion.
Knoll lost a round, however, when The ardlit.ect did net abow up MoadJ1. •
From Page 1 -ALDRICH ON LINE •.• ..
(the administratiori) should do what the
students want.
"I buy 100 percent what Eldrid&e
Cleaver aald on our campus: 'Whitey,
I've cot 'problems. But tf you btat me ·
I'm going to be3.t you back.' If the
students push me and go beyond the
rules and regulations ot the campus,
<1r ot the commu.nlty, l 'm 101.ng to plllh
back."
job: about all of our activist studen~
were listed."
AJJother man allked : "Why do you
let atudenb :study only the humanities~
You can 't llve on that."
"Society is made up of an awiul lot
of people whose services we need besides
profeaslonals," Aldrich 1ald.
He was uked what the black 1tudent1
reall1 wut.
In angry rupome to Aldrich'• --for the ll1'at ol a man-aocuaed of ments, a· man uid: NOi' UNJtllASONABLI'!
As Pickets Resume Vigil --being the -rJnrlddOl'or&-liiirl1ii'Y--,~ cOller••.,. a total !allure. AOd-
r1ng which included *wo Cc>1ta Mua you're part of , tbe re1ponaibiUty with
"Tbe Blact StudiMlJnfil oil: t)IJl" ctlD-"
pus, and an the black ltudentll art
in It, hu not presented to me demands
that are unreuonable," Aldrich aaid.
"I would uy they '" 1oal oriented.
This is important. Tl-.ty can be satisfied,
The insatiable ones keep pushing and
pushing.
From Wirt Services
SAN FRANCISCO - A handful of
rain-drenched pickets resumed their
strike vigil autslde San Francisco State
College today while many of the «I
arrested for an illegal rally were trying
to make bail.
By midmorning about haU of those
anesled in a Uuft..hour-lon1 police
operation Thursday had 10f1t frte OD
bond or their own ~zance.
A cheer greeted each of the strikers
aa he left the Hall ol Juatlce Iller POellila pis l>Oliif. iilid Jnlngled with rlJn. ;.,.yelf ·~thfien en tho hulldlnf'•
'tlepo.
'lbe mllitanb, Poept up In the largest
mut amst In the ell)''• hllWy, laced
arralpment "' char1es of !allure IO dlt-unlawful uaemhly ud dlatur!J.
lng tllt peace.
11-the .t haul llnce a student
. strlb, --by •bout 200
dluldtnll ud llJPpol'led by 2IO alrikin&
teacllen, be111n Nov. I at the 11,000
student campus.
Aboot 300 policemen moved In alter
the cnnrd AIUled to heed warnlnp
to dllperse, SiW:n over a loudspeaker
•IOp lhe -lnillr•llon hulldJn& •
At a ne•• conference lattr, Dr. S.
I. Hayakawa, called the rally "an act
of d-Uno" by mllltents.
He praloed police !or a "magnl!lcent
job G crowd control." Asied 1f there
would be mtn mua arreats, he 11id
''tbrre ii no nllOD for mau arrests
U then aren't any m111e1."
Amot11 thooe amsled were II
American Fede:raUcn of Teachera union
pickels. including some from Fresno
State College, and Nathan Hale, a Negro
instructor newly named to head a black
studies department, created to placate
1trikers.
The forbidden noon rally -the first
since students returned from t h e
Christmas break -was announced Tues·
day by the Third World Liberation Front,
comprlaed of non-Negro m i n o r It y
students.
From Page 1
FREEWAY • • •
best, but both Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach agreed to a rt'openlng or the
quel!ltion.
Newport Beach officials have made
a finn commi1ment to the concept, of
rouUng the ,NewPort fr~eway iP!t . west
of Superior Avenue, but lea\i'e COlltl
Mesa's probable best route unspecified.
~n in 1944, the longtime propoHd
Newport Fretway route 1ies 1tral1ht
doWn the exilling Newport Boule\Vd
through tht: heaJ!t of Cogta Me&a.
Same downtown buKinemnen want It
laid out elsewhere to 11.ve Newport
Boulevard u ao intercity traffic tmk,
but not all merchants share tl1iJ: view.
Costa Mesa City Councilman Wlllilm
L. SL Cl1ir has been particularly vocal
on the l11sue and staunchly opposea the
19« route, deaignated while much of
the city wu only pasture.
He had propa1ed that the pubUe be
invited. but Huhlmoto'11 reluctance led
to can11lderatlon of an invitation-only talk.
Badham Heads Assembly
Commerce, Utilities Unit
Newport Be1ch Republican A11tm-
hl)'mlll Robert E. lladbam I.I tho
ntw chief of the Auembly Commerce
and Public UtiUties Committee, after
th GOP takeover of 15 of the 21 com·
mittee chainnarllhlPI this week.
Amon& the 15 namst Tue 1d a y,
lronlcally, ,... Aasemblyman Eagone
Cb•ppit (R-Coo1) who rather )Oil his
cool recently over mini-skirts in the
staid ha1l11 of the"St.at.e Legl'1atute.
Notblnc much came ol the man from
Coot's heated objectlon1, but he m1y
have another chance to impose,..more
modest 1ttire, since he now beads the
Auembly Rulei Committee.
Salariu ol top GOP aldee are
haDdlome by ordinary ataodard!, but
they are pointedly being kept below
the level 'paid by Omlocrat.s.
The bard muu.. of the 41.n
Republk:an m•joril)' In the lower house
aecured la.t Nov. I wa1 btoUi'tt home
when lbe ~nc Oeniocrats were !arm1lly
e<rlctod lroin • oomher cl eommlttH
chain IMld """' lhe1 ...,. lbe majcrtty •
Mlemhly speaker lllllltrt T. Monapn,
JI-Tracy, who baa IJOle I"""' ol namlOI
the cbalnnln and cominlttef members,
11ve Democratl fewer than they bad
hoped for. bu\ ....... they hold· II
chaJnnoliiNpa wllfle tha GOP bad nine,
or n ~ 'J'hJ1 ye•r, with Mona1•1\
ellmtnallni tour committees, tha mlnorl·
ty l'"'11 rictlved 19 pme!lt " the
pclllllolll. The run mt111henblp of uch com-
m1u .. wtll he announced Monday. Tl>e
Ill Dtrnocr•t.I awarded chllrmanahlps
111 • .,. imoai 1be II ( !heir party
who voted for Monagan as 1peaier
eartler thl1 month.
At the 1ame time he revet.led the
chairmen, Monagan made public the pay
of his key aides. They generally will
receive smaller paychecks than
Dwlocnll, under the leadership of
former Speller Jesse M. Unruh allorid
their chief assistants.
However 1 the aides to the legislative
Jeaderahip 1UD continue in most cuta
to makt moft -olten much more
-than their b<>lses, who get •1e.ooo
annually ptus expenses.
Jerry Simpson, a 3l:YW~ld former
newsman, wu named 1s1istant to
Mona1an at $20,400 a year. His
pred!cesllor wa~ paid '2$,400 and lhe
range of the job is from •11.aoo to
128.IOO.
Monagan chose 47.ywr-old Maurin
Shean, another former reporter, u hls
Soulbern Calllornl• !lefd repneentau ... ·
with pay of 111.900. Unruh paid 111,000
for the ume post, which hu a range
ol IU,Ollll IA> ltl,Ofll. •
A ll·:roll'<>ld la"l"I', Den'yl Wold,
wu tabbed u Mj)nll&n's apeclal aaata·
tant, dr•wtni llt,!00 compare! to the
111,000 Deinocnll peld. The nnp 11
11!.IOO lo 119,IOO. Jottd Jachens, H, le Mcmapn'1 ad-
mlnl>tnlU\'t Wlltant at ltl.IOO • year,
the 1ame paid preTioualy. 'lbt ranae for
lhi• job 11112,000 .. 111,000.
The Awmbly Rules Commltte, now
Republlcan-controlled voted a Pl,400 In·
nu•I ul•f'J' for Its chiet admtnlatraUv1
officer, V. G. Nltl&tn. Democrats hid
paid lhtir min t=,aoo_, in a post of·
fcring from fl!,900 I. JZ!,900.
youth!. your Cleavers."
John A. Paytosh, 22. Valinda, known "All ri&ht, thi.a 1J your view,'' n&id
to. law enforcem~t officers 11 "Falin,'' the chancellor.
fa.tied to appear in court on burglary ,;Isn't taking posatssion of public pro-
char1es. perty a criminal act in itseU?" a man
Payt011h la char1ed with Jeadln1 two asked.
~osta Me11 boys, agea 15 and II, and
a 17-year~ld youth from Ohio in at
least seven burglaries or homts in the
Santa ADI lltlghl.I ma. All three
juveniles an awalUn& court action in
Juvienlle Hall.
Officers uaert th1t Paytosh planned
and led all the bursllrlu and was
respcm!hle !or tha dlalribuUno ol pro.
ceed1 to members of the ring.
\
3 Killed in Pakistan
DACCA, Paklltaa. (AP) -Three
perlOOI were reported killed and 15
wounded when police opened fire m
demonatrator1 who burned d ow n
newspaper offictl and attacked a govern·
ment bulJdJn& durll1( a student-led
generll alr1U today,
"The problem," Aldrich said, "ill
deciding what is takifti Possession. ls
it atudentl sitt.lng down in a bulldina:
they're in every day?
"Our present trapau law doesn't pro.
vide us with the tool we need in thJa
situation. Tbe atudeoll come riaht back
two minutes later. 'Jbat ii why the
univeraJty lt apoDICll'ine new trupul
legislation."
A man wbo llid be la 1$ years old
and lrrtvocablY o'n tbe other lidt ot
the s:eneraUon. pp remarked that he
was alarmed at a newspaper story about
radical.I at Irvine.
Aldrich said the reporter did a good
job or trying to acquaint the public
with the aources of activism, but did
not say ft repreaented on1y a small
group of l!tudenll. ••ffe dld a thoroua:b
"They're not hen to dqtroy us. The)'
want desperately to be • part. they
don't want to tear down the establish·
ment. They want to share in it," Aldricb
said. · ;
"But what do you think are thelT
ulterior motives?" the quest i o Der
persisted.
"Ont of the thinp tbe1 uid to mt,"
Aldrich remarked, "was 'In terms or
our nwnber11 on campua and in the
surrounding community, wt reaUu there
won't he much opportunity !or aocial
life. We'd llh to ljpOnd tho lime !hat
white 1tudenla 1penft on lhil doin1 con-
structlv" tblng1 -llke tutoring in the
ghettos. But we don't have the resourcts
(If' tht truaport.atieo. Can you help us?'
''That. to me, wu a coocem tllll
didn't 1111&ct of any ulterior mati\le."
Dl.El(i( WOllltTAIU, ,... •nt SALi Jlft
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CONTINUES
FINAL WEIK ... •* our ,....,.1 uit...
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DCU-DMLllli l'Oai 1="111-=L--AM ti DAYS NO an&IST-LOt•ft . A'f••C.. lilPtlOU'ID CdFIT
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Ul'I T ...........
Tornadoes Kill 29
It Wasn 't Dream:
•
House Was Flying
IIAZLEH\1!IST, Miu. (\JP()
-Betty G-thought she
wu dream!nc. It felt Uk• her
houle WU flyln~ throql\ lhe
Jlr. She couldn I 1et out of
bed.
'1Somelhing just kept hitting
me in the f~." &be nld
later. "The room wu movina:
and wouldn't let me up."
Suddenly, ~:e (fill to the
ground lDd. diacovered to her
horror that it wun't a dream.
Her house was airborne, spill-
• Jnc her brothen and sisters
to the ground as it f!01tcd
downbilJ in I mill pond.
stret<h of rolling hill country
in his state as a disaster are1.
"trs a terrible tr11edy, both in'. lives and property ,••
Williams s 1 f d after an in-
spection t o u r of Simpgon,
Copiah and Smllh counties
Thursday.
The hardest-hit locality wu
a predominantly Negro section
of Hazlehurst, where !O homes
were demolished and 35 others
heavily damaged.
Whites moved in to help
blacks in the stricken areas
in the wake or the twisters;
women manned switchboards
and helped Red Cross teams
and men worked in rescue
and salvage work.
. Hospitals wen overloaded,
and Dr. Lamar Puryear said
about one-lhird ol the patient!
Datady Parking Job
Mfn in St. Louis were probably grumbling "woman driver" when they spot·
led this automobUe backed through a store window. But UlliM Mae McClel-
land explained that she Vy"IS just at tempting to park when the gas pedal stuck
and the car went out of. control. No one was injured.
N. lre~d
M. . 1n1ster
Re sign s
BJ!:LFAST, Northom Inland
(AP) -Anotber llllDlber ol
Ptin\e M.lnister Terence
O'Nelll'1 ,.....,...1, Coln-IP'
merce Minllter B r l 1 n
Faulkner, r..i,iiec1 today In
1 ro11r over O'Ntll1'1 handling
of lhe Roman Catholic dvll
righta movepie,nt.
Northern lmand was plunQ·
ed lnto palltical c r I 1 l 1.
Political Informants said ..
election for a new legislative
alSODlbly mlibt be necessary.
Boy, Oh. Boy!
Alice De Rivera, 13, relaxes in her Brooklyn home
Thurad11y after completing quallfy1.ng examinations
that should get her into all-mal e Stuyvesant High
School in lower Manhatan, if the courts rule in her
favor. Board of Education has asked Alice to drop
her -court action and seek entrance to the Bronx
~Hgh School of Science, a coed school for exception·
al students. But Alice says that attending the Bronx
5Chool would require too much triveling.
Betty, 15, and the 16 olher
occupants of the foor-room
frame house We"e a?DODJ the
lucky ones Thursday when
tofn1does atruck th r e e
Mlsa:iuippi countiea, killlng at
leaat 29 pmooa and injuring
bu-of olhen.
Another tornado struck later
Thuraday near Dover, Tenn.,
along the Kentucky border,
injuring one person a n d
destroyini four houses and
several barn!.
he treated had "serious in·-------------------juries." Volunteers helped him
Faulkner's rulpation was
the most serious challenae so
far by right-wing elements
di11atlafitd w l t h O'Ne.lll's
modei'ate leadtnbip and his
concesalona to the Catholic:
minority. Unll.ke the rat of
Ireland, Nortbem Ireland h"'
a Pro!eslet majority and Is
a part ol the Untied Kingdmn.
•¥'
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I fOl THI "NITI PIO~ .....
7·nl1e1 • 'll'ffk durl119 J1n11•rY· 1t6f,
cottte S"°Ct Ol'lly. 1rom M!Onllt unlll l ''~ 1.m.
• THI IOUNTlfUL llU.KP:ASTI I s'".n Or1111• Juic• f
Twe Egg1
H1,h l r1wn1 §lfM
l acon er 5111•9• ~~ ~, To11I I Jim
i CoH11
C1111,1 ....... , IMf DlltMf
G...,.n "91ff. Chelu 11 tl!"!!Mll'ltl
llNlt l lrlllll •f htf 111 lw , ....... . ...... $1" lelt lull• w.o ... s .......
HetC ....... TM
KONALANES
COFFIE SHOP
2699 Horbor ll•d.
' Costa Me11 -545-11 12
Gov. John Bell Williams of
~1ississippi asked President
Nixon to declare a 4G-mlle
through the medical crisis, he
said.
"The people have been
overwhelming in t h e i r
cooperation," he said. "The
cooperation between the races
has been just fantastic."
Disease Germs Found
In California Milk
The first tornado struck at
rlawn, s kipping from
Hazlehurst to HanisviUe and
spawning two other twisters
th at dipped into smaller coin·
munitics and farin areas.
Most residents still were
~sleep w~n the tornado 'i''hirl-
ed in at daybreak, but Lell
F'enter. a Hazlehurst
businessman, was an early
riser. BERKELEY (AP) -Germs
causing serious disuse are
reported to have been found
in 1am plea of Jl'of the state's
%9 Cerlilied and Grade A raw
milk producers.
In a telephone inlerview
from the State Department
of Health Thursday. Or. Ben
Dean confirmed that samples
¥re tested for germs that
use salmonella and Q fever.
e latter a serious and
melimes fatal respiratory
disease .
But health officials said
there is no dangefo i n
Pasteurized milk. the major
portion of milk sold in
California.
The owner of an Altairena
dairy, Los Angeles County'sl
Jargest raw milk producer,
called t h c contamination
report "an injustice" and con·
tended "someone is trying to
get rid of raw milk."
Harold Stueve of the Alta·i
dena Dairy said he Is opposed·[
lo Pasteurization because it
causes milk to "lose almost I
all the enzymes. Q fever is
an airborne disease. You can't
get ii by drinking milk." he
said. stating that there wa s
only one case of Q fever in
the county last year.
But, Dr. Dean said, there
are "quite a few" documented
ca.se.s in which Q fever has
been associated with drinkina
milk.
Los Angeles County Health
Department officials 1 a i d
there are no plans to prohibit
the sale of raw milk until
the county counsel rules on
the matter.
Dean said the tests were
conducted at th e National
Institutes o( Health
Laboratory, Hamilton, Mont.,
and the Communicable
Disease Center in Atlanta .
"I stood in the door of 1ny
restaurant arid watched it. lt
'vas not good daylight and
lt sounded like four freight
trains coming through lown,"
Fenlcr snid. "The air wa.~
filled with debris and the wind
was really blowing."
Trees toppled , utility poles
snapped, gas and water ma ins
burst. cars spun crazily like
toys. houses collapsed .
INCOME TAX
KEEP YOUR COOL
Let us prepare your
return now .•• for •n
early refund ••. or for
the time needed to
budget any 1dditional
expense.
W E'RE HERE 12 MONTHS
OF THE YEAR
Newport Business Services
-OUR NEW OFFICE LOCATION-
2209 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Bch.
(Between Forgits Hudware ind the
Daily.Pilot Office.)
IS COMING SOON
Legendary Gem Sale
· Bri1igs Rival Clciim
LAUSANNE, Switzerland
(AP) -An e1amination today
showed a pearl owned by 11
queen of Spain is larger than
one sold at a New York auc·
lion Thursday nighl b u l ii
failed to determine which gem
is the lege ndary jewel kno1vn
as La Peregrina.
An anonymous bidder paid
S37~000 in New York for what.
Parke-Behiet Galleries said
was La Peregrina -The Wan·
derer -so calleG because
it passed for centuries from
monarch to monarch;·
Ex-Queen Victoria Eugenia,
through her chamberlain the
Duke of Alba, insisted today
that the real Peregrina is in
her possession, in a bank vaul t
here.
She had a Ge ne va jeweler,
Marcel Sadek, come here
Thursday to make a study.
Sadek said the pearl owned
by the queen weighed 223.1
grains. The one sold in New
York weighed 203.84 grains.
There have been suggestions
I h a t there are two authentic
Peregrinal which ori.&fnaily
were a pair. Sadek maintained
that the Queen's pearl i! "uni·
que in its form and quality."
He sa id he therefore could
not estimate its value.
Pertgrine Pollen, P a r k e
Bernet 's president, said that
he has confirmed the 1uthen-
tlcity of the jewel he sold
"to our complete satiaf1c-
tion."
~ '"'•~ NOW ACQPTING APPLICATIONS
• .,.. FO~ THE SPRING SEMEmt
: t. "" -:: """"" ,,..... .. 0 • COMMENCING JAN. 27th, 1969
. ,, '".":::':.!"t. ~~.:J•"' 1 '6 ORANGE UN I VERS I TY
COLLEGE OF LAW
Vincent S. Do lsimer, Dean
lo .... Qoiw .. "-"""' 1-toli.• ,..,..... ...,._ .... a. ~
... ....... 1,. .... , ik.U.11 -~· ....._ fa.i.,I u....
or lnnu.t • 1....-i-t ~ •• Cal.II•,... S..•• 1 .. .
-.,_,_, ..... 0 .---
i...ioe ,. J~. 11.., ........ ......
C1H "ri•lt tho""''"' (714) Ul-1.111 123'5 WISTMINSnl AYENUI, SANTA ANA
New from General Electric!
Side-by·side refrigerator
with Custom Dispenser.
Automadeally
fllls your glass
with lee or
cldlled water
at a touch!
Instant water, instant ice -
without opening the doors!
Jusl press glass ai>ilinst ice cradle. lea lumblts out. l"'V
cubts 111 time un1il ctadle is:r1l.-:t. f orw1tlr', Pfnl
9ISM again5t the w111r aa<U•. A11NM to ~op. Yoo an
even use both dispenser s at the same time!
23.5 cu. ft. Anwica111 Rlfrigel'ltor · Freezer
L• tfmn thrN feet wide! And no defrosting -_,
Autom1tic lcemaker stores 10 lbs., about 260 cubes.
• Freezer holds up to 295 lbs. •Tempered glass shelves,
3 slide out, 1 ad justable •Convertible meet pan, keeps meat
fresh up to 7 days-flip lever for e~tra vegetab le storage.
• Six full· width doo r shelves, 4 adjustable • Butter Con
ditioner wilh lemperature control • Cheese Keeper
• Rolls out on wheels for easy cleaning • 35'%" wide
66" hiah • Har~r . Avor;::irl,.. r ...... .,,.trr,. "r 'Nhit,.
Come in and see it today!
TV and APPLIANCE CENTER
HARlqR CENTIR e Ne -,.,111..,
2300 Harbor llYd.-Costa M-• u, .. H M .......
'"' HOU RS, w ...... ' ...... ' .... Phone 540-71 ~, • n.oo Woeli -sotw11., ' ...... ' , .•. -
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~~l:' PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I
An Important ~ Big Step
'
Just about everyone wbo wani. to will have • u:t
on the issue or ·the tieeway 1hroaih downtown Cost.a
){e!ia on Feb. 18. .
This won't be the bearing Iha\ delennin .. lh& route.
Rather it will be a session with .stat& eng!qeen and local
people -each seeking out tile olh«'• feellnp·and each
trying to derive some education tram the exchance.
The m<eting will be Important. •What the state en-
gineers learn and what they ultJmately recommend lo
lhe California Highway Commission undoubtedly will
have great weight.
It has ~en assumed for ipa~F that lhe New·
port f'reeewzy -when it was ly built -would
follow the afignmelU, of Newixart Boulevard through
doWntoWn Co!=la Mesa ·and into Newport oter the ~rches.
Th.is is the rouJe lhal w..as adopted many ye1r5 ago and
unfit recently jt WU ''just assumed."~ thaJ the decision had been made. ... ,l«" ... • • ., ,
But people of various motivations have-·bJen S#k-, ing serious study of some alternatives.
Some downtown Costa 1.tesa business people fecJ
that adhering to the adopted rout~g will spell the end
of their business district and they see o'ther freeway
plans as possible salvations to the slipping downtown
economy.
Newport Beach interests also seem to welcome a
change in the routing. ~ ~
Some, like .the downtown CoSt.a:'ryt:esans, wanl"New.
port Boulevard kept open as a local'fial(ic ;u1ery. Otb~rs
want the Coast Ftee\\•ay.Newp.ort Freewey, interchange
n1oved fa1th£r away from Hoag Hospital and the Arches.
And still others see a new Newport Freeway routing
ris a foot in the door to possibly switch the much debat·
ed route for the Pacific Coast Freeway.
All .of the aJlernale Pn:iposaJs -there are four in
all ·-would move the 'N'~rt l'teeway west of New·
port Boulevard and al\11 it bi tl>e (6neral dtrectlon down
Superior ·Avenue. These alt,erna~ rouwa vary widely In
ecol, ln the •.umber ol bualneuoo they would remove
and in Ille number of11omea 1hat would be caught In the
right of wsy. Each also pn!senta lie own problems wllh
internal trallic flow in Coata Mesa -the pattern of
what happens on surface atreeta when freeway ramps
are shilled in this dlrecUon and that direction.
The financial question, as alw•y•, is a very pressing
one. State engineers start talking in terms or tens o!
million.$ of dollars when they discuss cost differenceJ
_ ;._ among the various routes. Sometimes overlooked by the
public is the fact that the city treasury itself can be
sorely. affected by what changes Costa A-1~6.i must make
to ac:eornod~te traffic .u.oder the var.ious alternative
•. ~.)Jans .... :. i .. *"' 7 .. !.:··'1i "'. ·,·
' 11 ' , .. / .... i~ H_~ra. .f, SMakl~ ~ ev~one would Jlke to move
,. ure "'-'-~11.~·"!51 of 1tS presept-adopted rOUte. But, as '· J!'°Y~r fAlvth..J:: Pinkley bas.pointed out on numerous
occasions, Jus~ )lecaus~ an.id"" ll>oks goOd doesn't ·mean
1t can be afforded -ln lllO}\ey or in disruption or ·e1u.
zens. All the factors, 3:s the·· fu}.yor pointed· otif. inust be Wilighell. • .
There wjµ be ample opportunity ror . these facton
to be brougt1l out at the Feb. 18 n1eeting. The state en.
gineers have data that the people of CQSta M~a do not
have and the people of Costa Mesa have s,ome people-
fictors and dolJar.faetors that the engineers . may not
. h0ave considered. 1 U yOU ire One '9f those citizens involved -or i!
you hive sbn'le ligbl to shed on the complex decision.-
communicate_')fitlr one C!f your city councilmen or ei:t
ready to present your Vlews personally at the hearing.
It \vill be an important big:step in Costa Mesa's future.
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W.J. Hl(KEL
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ICI Kl S.ITlERS'
We Need CT A Exec11tive Clari fies Strike Position
The Courage
Dear
Gloomy
.1 Gus: To -Be -J( h"'o-=w="'n"""-' su~gesti.., --rr;;:-:-p::;t-~
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By ELLSWORTH L RICHARDSON
r.t1aJ1ter
The Nelgbborbood
Congregational Cbureb
Lopu Bucio
Paul Tillich tmite a book. "The
COIJl"age to Be." l think his book wa.,
II clarion can to individuals to ~
lht'tnseh•es, to accept themselves for
~·hat they are. In order to do tbis
one has to have the courage t1 be
kLo"·n, to disclose himself as a genuine,
real, aulhentic person.
The Delphic Oracle said, "Know
lhyself." I would prefer JO aay .. "Mike
lhyself known, a.nd then thou wUt know thy1eU."
Shakespeare sa.i(:I, "And this above all,
to thine own self be true, and • . •
thou canst not then be false to
any man." Agaln I would prefer; "And
ihis above all, tJ any other man be
true. and thou canst not then be false
to lhyseU." And thJS takes courage to
disclose our real feelings.
l\10ST OF US WEAR masks, we pl&J.
roles~ We try to live up to .something
lhat we are not and we become stuffed
l'>hirts -not the real thing. Some ot
Ull al this late date don 't even know
v.·ho ~·e are.. We haven't detenn.ined
'~·hat is the real "I". We have all
mel people who hide behind the mask
of goodness. Oh, they are so sweet
<and nice , never breaking any of the
lav.•s of etiquette but underneath they
are hellions!
There are two areas where people
completely disclose themselves. ln a good
marriage relationship there is complete
openness, honesty and disclosure. In a
counseling situation there must be com-
plete exposure on the part of the patient
a.nd the therapist, in turn, must have
empathy. Beyond t.hese two areas there
are \larying degreeis or :self.revelation.
taxis school children in bad
weather: Tholle VIPs of the Costa
l\fesa Street I>epartmenl should• be
required to drive back and forth
along Arlington Drive every rainy
school-day morning between 7:45
and 8:30,
-N. H.
fllot "h.,m retltua .....,... ..iewt Mt ... u.swrllr tt.11 at tM .......,._, !1t1•
rtw "' _.,,. • •MMlr GA o.flr .. llet.
A RECENT SCIENTlFIC study has
revealed that men do not discloM: as
much about thtm.Selve11 as women; that
white females disclose most to mother
and girl frit(ld and least to father and
boY friend:' that '"hite males confide
about eqwilly to both parents and male
friend and .significantly less to female
friend. It is interuling to note that
Negro males disclose most to their
mothers and little H al all, to father,
male friend or female friend .
In general terms we can say that
people disclose more to their family
than to non-family members, more to
their own se1 than to the oppo1>ite se1;
and they disclose mare to tbeir age
peers than to their elders o r
th~ younger. Man bides much of his
real self behind an iron curtain but
there is evidence to the effect that
this iron curtain melts like wax when
it is exposed to the warm breath of
love.
00 YOU KNOW who you are? ~lave
you courage to be known? Are you
playing a game of masquerade? Are
you authentic, genuine, real?
You recall the guitar.player who, daily,
for 20 years, sat with a one...slrin1 guitar.
holding the same fret, plucklnl the same
sound. One day his wife said, with
surprise, "Dear, I noticed on TV today
tha l a man was playing a guitar, but
il had six strings, and the man kept
moving his hands around, and malting
lots of different ~unds -not like you."
Her husband said, ·~J)on 't worry about
him, dear. He's sUI'I' tiunlin' the right
note, and I have aJready found it."
Have you found the right note·! Have
you the courqe to bt known!
Beauty and 'the Beast
Antics with Semantics;
I resigned for reasons of policy; quit
because of a disagreement : he was fired
for poor judgment
Beauty and the Bea st. A "beasl'" Is
~ny man whose wire is suing him for
rhvorce; a "beauty'' is any woman who
1:onsole~ him during this period.
The <hrrerentt between a ·'dope .sheet''
11nd an '"tnvestment guide" is about
~j(l a ropy ,
I "over-indulgrd" last night: you ••tip·
pied loo much'·, ht' "got gassed."
A "GOUtti\tET" is usually little more
lhan a glullon feo;tooned with charge
cards.
Frank tilwrt' Colby 01K.'e defined "a
genUeman of the old school" as "a
man who hasn ·1 made love to hi! wife
in fJve years, and 1s prepared 1G sbQot
•1~ nMm who tries llp." ... "' "
J lain "Mious"; yon ~ ... aoitzm''"; : he t "grim." · ·
" ~W" is capital lnvealed • ~ hu """' lnlnJiulMsl " -1 i.,al'Ol!ld "lr•·l<Ul 1111· ' t "" Plllllllbood" mlCft do lll!l!P: ~ If a pl anolJw:r .. me thot didn't """
tit ipach Jib: turning marital relation~
lnco 'a bm ol annmt Inventory.
l.l&innlE, "education"'I television ''
cannot Oourilll unUJ H finds a naJm'
ror itself that ill less redolent ol in·
slilulional dullness.
The coaaotatloa of liOITle words often
turns into the opposite of their cknoLa·
tloe; as an etample, "edible" d1note1
v.•hatever is fit to be eaten, but Jt
coo~ that whiCh is Nrtty fit to
be eattn, and lG can I certain (ood
"edible" is to mark down ita custatory
value.
.. Genealogy" i3 a perverse preoc-
cupation ol those who Sttk t o
demonstrate thlt their forbear$ were
better people thin they are.
A 'iiumu:.AG&D t ~ todl,y la
someD ~~ r eriletnben when ~ay" meant .,.merry," . ..., •
Wb ~my...,,.,.,~,~~ ..
. the ' do 11 'II ""'<olJ I ""' '~ ~~· . ... ..•
It -l!tinOly, the ilrictk. or• )ll'oteietl!ig
our customen ft'om our eomPelltori. • ·
M)I favOrlte aernandc flight of fancy
for the month comes from the 7th-grader
who dcfttlfld lhe French phraK "p.111;
de dcux" 1.s "the father of twins."
To the Editor:
Your recent editoriaJ Dec. 30 con-
cerning a change of CTA policy on
teachers' strikes has been called to my
attention.
I am enclos.ing an editorial fron1 our
Soulhern Section newspaper, The Record
~Nov. 1963 issuel, which may clarify
our position. You will note that CTA
does not like, a.nd does not recommell-l .
teachers' strikes. It , suggests several
prooedu.{O_ which · are more effective· in
the respliJ~ ~ ~se, and which
.should inake stj!!k_~essary.
SUK:e the paakagr, ot~e Winton Act,
CaliforDia boards·.Olied.ufation have been
required to negoUiu t•·meet and <.'00·
fer " J with retftse'otative.s of employe
organizations, 'nliS Jaw is being broken
in n1any Southern Calirornia school
districts. .
TEACHERS, RELUCTANT to wlthhold
their services under any circumstance.~
-a11d commilted to professional conduct
-cannot and will not accept the prin-
ciple that, when an impasse develops.
they must al\vays assume the role of
losers. This 1\·ould render the. entire
negotiations process meaningless.
CT A does not ~dvooate the use of
a strike to solve a Jtroble1n: but it
will consider the use of this ··weapon"
to insure adherence to a legally·1nan·
dated process of problem solving.
And you may be assured that this
organization 1vill always be motivated
primarily by the interests ef the sludenL'
and the public it serves.
RICHARD D. BATCHELDER
Executive Secretary
Califllrnia Teachers Association
Southern Section
Editor's Note -The DAILY PILOT
editorial was critical of the California
Teachers Asi1ociation (CTA-J for adop-
ting a policy that teac,her4 , n1ay be
justified ht striki11g if they can't i11
otlter way!. win their .point with th.c
school board. It noted that always br·
fore CTA had put t~e welfare of
childre·n before c1.1t.r11thina else.
-Edi tor
LOltfl•haired Police:'
To the Editor :
t ha\•e a positive suggestion fo r im·
Bu Geor1e ---.
Dear George :
What is the greatest distance
ever traveled by a forward pass!
FOR THE RECORD
Dear For The Record :
A.s nearly as 1 can dctennlnc ,
26 miles. Th• ball landed on top
of the crosstown bus and the iamc
was delayed until it Jlladc the
round trip. However. It was one
of the greatest halftime shOwe: yon
ever saw.
Dear George :
rm "sick of my son dressing
like a hippie. Do you UUnl if
T came. to the table In btad.4; and
all that he woukl rtall:r.c .How r!Jl y
he looks!
TOM <.:.
Dear Tom:
PouiblJ. Oo th< Ollltt hand.
there's a dangft' htfe. The \.1.'.11
father 1 adNod:.ff: dO lbal cre1v
a beard1 .. ''tlouatrt ·Ulonl und&ls, wore~~ 1 &ti ltaraed jltt talk
The , 'IO)lflodY '\l'•r<l,r.f him
h< o Nrr)'tOr "' pia,ot •lgn
ill Berkeley. •.,
!Don 't worry about problen1~·
\Vrile t.o George! The:l you'll worry
about his ans.,,,·trs to probltm:ii. \
'
Le"e" from ''*'"" ••• wtKOme. Normll" wttters ihould c.w.,. lhl-lr mus.-In JOO wonls or ll:D. n. rltflt 19 ~ ltnMi ti! rt1 WKS 91'" •llm!•
,,."' libfol 11 rtset"ftCI. .,!I let~r3 rnYst f"c:lude
Mg,,.111 .. Ind .....i1~ .-ld1.SS, bu! !!arJ>es ""'' be wlllln11d "" r9QWU ii IVffldenl rN-b -1'9111.
provrng camn1unity-policc re I at ion s ,
Allow some of the officer-s to .1n:i1v
longer hair. In this way, many of the
rebelliou s youth will feel a :new t>ond
With. the law enforcement agencies.
· Much of the anti-police senli1nent is
caused by the saffic kiiid of generaliza-
tion that the businessmen make when
they prejudge a youthful and hopeful
e:mploye because of his long Jocks, name·
Jy the lumping of policemen into the
category of pigs by youth with un-
favorable contact witl'I the law.
THE WHOLE lDEA of police is to
protect the. rights and ·lives of the
eitizea&. Since everyone is a citizen in
practice, these rights are relative pro-
'tection from criminal deviation from
the norm.
Police that look like the citizens they
represent present no stereotyped image
of misuse of the law by any particular
group. And yet these feelings of misuse
exist and constitute a real difficulty
in law enrorcement.
THE PURPOSE of this letter is to
urge the public, all of us, to accept
a pollceman as a man working on the
side of people and not on the side
of repression. l see no reason why an
nfricer should not have reasonably long
hair if he so desires. Policemen allowed
the same range of personal appearance
as the rest of the-citizenry cease to
represent to any group, influential or
not. any stereotype,
AND YET I have never seen a local
officer who has long hair, cir even who
has n1ore than a crev.·cut. I know many
qualified people who 'vould desire to
ecter police wort yet balk at the symbol
of the crewcul as belnil: ill repressive
,;Jgn, Allow poll~en ta.J~k like more
people than Marine recru1 l8 and you
"1i!J ·g~ bftter community response from
the younrer ~ps. Tolerance, Chris-
tiani;. f
CHRI! GAUTSCH{':
8 elpln9 Uat~ds
To the Editor: " "
'I'd like to express a public thank
you to the carload of tecn ·aged boys,
and to the Negro man who stopped
a little later , to offer their help when
my car was pulled off the road with
a nat tire.
Sunday noon at Palisadeli and Ja~
bor,ee Roads is a busy and impersonal
place. I was lucky enough to ,have help
on the way already, but J find it
heartwarming that our community still
contains those who will offer their time
and their help to a stranger who may
need it.
MRS. ROBERT J. VINSON
1Uisunderstood Are•
To the Editor :
For each new world crisis we must,
as Lincoln said, think anew, for each
problem is different and deserves all
well as demands an entirely new method
of solving each problem. We must not
always consider war as a way of solving
these problems. As a nation we Deed
not alwa}'ll take sides in an internatiOnal
problem.
When we do, however, it ls hoped
that v.·e have the decency to support
a nation or national leader for the reason
of helping that · nation and the people
of that nation. not to help our nalion.
1·HE J\llDDLE EAST is the mmt
misunderstood area by the West. The
American policies in that area have
never been made clear -each loosely
assembled, poorly backed and ~ve been
short lived.
The Eisenhower Doctrine which treat!
the Middle East as an American province
was ineffective to tht then immediate
crises of Gau and Aqaba and remai.na
so on the Jong·range issues of Communist
subversion, arms traffic, boundaries and
the Arab-Israeli disputes.
THE MAIN problem is understsnding t
the forces and needs of the , region,
and developing a farsighted and effective
American policy. Our mistakes are
mistakes of attitude. Their nationalism,
economic growth, and political hostilities
are not being considered (the same it
lrue in Vietnam). Instead we act wholely
in our own battle against international
communism.
I am not saying communism isn"t
their greatest enemy. What T am saying
is we were wrong to think we could
convince them that it is.
\\11AT IS CLEAR to us may not
be to other people of other nations
y,·ith different problems than ours. For
instance, they have a much lower stan· r
dard of living, a great pride of neutrality
enhanced by recent foreign erplollation.
The Arabs know they have not been
occupied by ihe Soviet troops -but
they have been occupied by Western
troops. To discard nationallsm and
neutrality to a pro-Western stance just
isn't likely , ..
V 'N McKINZIE
Opportunities f Qr Welfare Reform
The NJxon· admlllistration-lw ari oi>-
portunit,y lo .make great Improvements
1n the oaUoo"I public welfare system.
Receot ~aimed at r<ducln(.
poverty have revoaled bolh """"1>1•
•nd unworbllle ~ The!< i• more awartnea than e\"l!I' befort of
the need to give COMtructlve help to
-and troubled citiiens, . ""' trim is widt!pread criticism of outmbded
welfare programs.
Among many propo5als for weltare
reform. perhai» most significant now
Quotes
Viratn!a \\'oolr. speaklnA many year1
ap •bowl Ute cinema btl applicable
DOW to TV -"Whilt ap tht other
arts were born naked. tbls. U'IC youngest ,
has been born hilly clothed. It can
say everythln« before tt ha! anything
to uy, It i1 u If a sava.ge tribe had
found, tcatlfrlng along the seashore.
fiddles, nules, SAX.ophonC.S., trumpeL'i,
grand pian08 by Erard aod Btchstein,
111ld ~d begun with incredible tncrgy,
without knowing 8 note of music. to
hammer and thump upon tllfm all al
the same lime.'·
Pa Vetiwn bi Vaata Star FT'ff Prt11
-'''Mlen1'1 ~ tn 'br. trnsion
between tellcbers and 1 c h o o I art-
minill1.r1ton ibete days, but in thr Vellcy
Oalt5 diitrict, Thot.l33nd Oaks: !hr
teachers hi:i ve gone to bat lo try lo
get the principals a raist."
f ..
\ ., ;
are those or Prestd~ l'Clron'a own
task force . nilii group WbUkt Impose
national minimum standards Tor welfare
paymentll, substantially raisinc benefits
to recipi~ts living in states now at
the low end of the ecale1 ft WOUid
Nhift m<n of the finlJlclal burden lp
the federal level, lowering ltale Costs.
It ~·ould capitallte on lhe M~tt ·clues
rxpi;:riencc by greatly at.ending this
coordinaled approach of agencies and
org11nizations operalina al the local level.
TllS TASK FORCE recommends
sev eral major adintni$htlve chJn&es.
It would move to otblr agtnctts, or
di9COntinue, many 11CUY1Uet of lb& em".
baUled Office of :£conomi< ()pportmdt1, ~ ita acope to a few aimnimft7·
action Ind communl(J<kvelopmeoi fW><>
tioos. It woukt eltabll!b. a ~
C"OOrdinating agency wilhin the aecwtl\l.e
o(fk:c al lhe President to du1 ...wltb
federal grants, with more 1utboril7 than
the antipoverty agt:ncy ever had. For
the rut11.rt. UMl task fore@ ur;cs coo-
:'lideratloo of !\!Ch plans a.' a guaranteed
int01nc, ne1alive incmm tax and
chl\dren's allow"nces.
THERf. ARE HOPEFUL signs In many
of the# lde:as -if they cu result
fn rn.on!" equltlble ant'I humane assistance
lo the poor, nlore recognition of the
cotn pltx c:lrcurnslancelli which make poo-
p!e ,poor, ttnd betlr:r systems oI in·
centives. guidance and training ta help
people become independent. There it
a danger that some program whlcb
have been difficult but important, such
as the Job Corps, may become in-
effective, or even nonexistent, in the
reorganiu.tion. And unless restrictive
. regulations which hamper weUare ad·
ministration at every levtl can be
modernized , red tape and inconsistencies
will continue.
This is a Lime ror broad, proa:ressive
changes in pubUc Welfare. Will the new
administration be able to accomplish
needed reforms!
The rtflnneapollil Tribuat
----Friday, January 24, 1969
The tditonaL purJt of the OcUD'
Pilol ateka to inforM and stim.
utoi. rtadera b~ preaenting thi1
~W;fpelpc:r's 01.rinhms and con.-
mentaru on topics of tntere.st
ofld stgPtfHconce. by Pf'mlidtng a '°""" tor U&i e:rpreutcm ol
011'" f"tnderi opirnon!, end b~
prese-,.ting the dtvertt vie•
points of 111formed otnervett
and .spok~smcn an lopic:3 of th.
doy.
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
I
'1
I .
ped
;iort
1son
Jple
1ost
The
1ave
sely
... n
eall
Ince
iate
•In•
nist
and
iing
;ion,
tive
are
ism,
ltie!'I
e is
1iely
l)nal
isn't
ying
oold
no\
Jons
For
tan-
1lity
jon. ....
but
tern
and
jU>t
ZIE
ielp
iJ
licit
uch
in-
the
Uv•
ad-
be
rics
Jive ,. ..
lish
I
-
'
r
•
DAILY PILOT,
BY
WILLIAM
REED
Navy Fee,ling Pinch
Spiraling Costs Threaten Nixon Pledge
Reeds •••
In the Wind
There's no doubt that Dale Dunn,
manager or the Chamber of Com·
merce in Huntington Beach, has
taken a few lumps in the past
few years.
He inherited the post as the
chamber's top employe from the
well known and spectacular
showman William "Bill" "Et
Generalissimo" Galllenne who died
in office after some 30 years of
introducing show after show to the
Orange Coast and to Southern
California.
Dale is very nearly the opposite
of the colorful El Generalissimo
yet the chamber bas made many
s trides since Dale came from
Oregon to go to work in one of
the state's most problem ridden
cities.
* Bill Gallienne conducted most of
WASl!INGTON (AP) -Solrinl shlp-
bulldlng "'!811 ore !hreatenlnt tbe Nuon
admlnistratica'• abWty to redeem a cam.
palp pledge to "restore the aoaI of
a Navy second to none."
'!be Johnson delense bodget sent to
eoa,resr lut week contained a rwmber
of ahip projectll, 10me COMidered urgent,
whtch had been reshaped because of·
sharply rising prices.
The Nixon people could restpre cuts
In the !hJpbutldJng and convenloo P">-
gram, but it would mean spending
bUUons mOre than anUclpated.
The budpt pinpointed· a spectacular
12-htlllon rile In the etttmated cost of
a major program to build advanced
conventional and nuclear-powered escort
vessels. . •
"Much ol this· tncreue," the Pentagon
said,-"ls baalcally the result of two
factors -a continuing rise in fPe price
of labor and materials and more realistic
estimates based on later contract in·
formation."
Better management could bring better
cost calculation. QI.It recent history sOOws
no way for the new adminlJtration to
'avoid the penalties of Inflation whjch
have added some $16 billion to the price
of U.S. military strenl!lh since 1161.
Beaides thJs, a!' the armed ae"ices
bave projed.a thty consider impl)rtant
and will be pressing them with the
new secretary of defemt, Melvin R.
Laird.
Thll WU pointed up 'J'u<sday When
the House Armed Service• subcomnlluee
heard Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chiel
of naval epuatioM, teltify that the U.S.
fleet ls deteriorating while the Soviet
Union's iJ growing.
Moorer said 51 percent of U.S. naval
vessels art at least 20 yean old while
Ute Russian navy hs fewer than one
percent of its surface ships and sub-
marines in that age bracket.
unie continuing deterioraUon of our
older lhlps and the limited building pro-
grams of recent years now require an
expanded sh.ip acquisition program for
the years ahead, if the Navy is to
be capable of performing ill foreseeable
t.aJks/' Moorer said. A3 a result of the huge jump In
the anticipated cost or the new destroyers
and frigates, the Penta~on reduced its
objective from 68 to 62 new ships of ·
the advanced l'!lasses.
The modernization of five older
destroyEl"S has been cancelled because.
the Pentagon said, "the increased
capabUlty is not worth the added cost."
No figures were given in this case.
The Pentagon said it also had cancelled
plans to modernize the carrier Franklin
the chamber's business in h1I bead
and took most of the record of
how the chamber was operated to
the grave with him.
It has taken Dale and the
chamber executive board quite a
while to get things really going.
Right away a change in phi1010pby
was noted when the chamber
changed from putting on ex-
travaganzas to trying to attract
business and industry.
Eying Stars? Sorry, Trip
Would Take 1,000 Years ,
Financial survival bas been a
real problem. Membership comes
and goes and the city's con-
tributions to the welfare of its chief
promotional agency have been
questionable until now.
* It is difficult sometimes for a
man to come into the office of
a spectacular personality and to
emerge unscathed as an individual
unless one has a personality to
beat the pred'ecessor and it's
doubtful that anyone could outdo
Bill Gallienne.
All in all Dale has done a pmty
good job. Survival has not been
easy and Monday Dale begins what
could be a rou~h year for him.
Monday new officers are installed
and by now all expect the problema
<lf the past to have been solved.
Actually it does not look too bad.
The chamber has a new office in
the heart of the busine.ss action
on Beach Boulevard. It recenUy
hired an economic development
coordinator to do some of the pr°"'
motional and public relations work
Dale has had to do in addition.
to his other duties.
* We expect big things from the
chamber this year and with the
new help, new executive board and
new source of funds we think we
will get those big things from Dale
Dunn and Co.
4 Students Fined
For Ballot Box
Stuffing at OCC
Four Orange Coast College student&
bave been asked t'o publicly apo1oglie,
fined $8 each and placed on probation
after they pleaded guilty to charges
of stuffing the ballot box in Jut week's
campus election.
LONDON (UPI) -Man bu hts eyea
on the st.an but he will never reach
them, .in the opinion of one of Britain's
moot dlJtlngulsbed scientiJll.
Sir Martin Ryle, professor of radio
utronomy at Cambridge, see! man Jan·
ding on some of the planetll in the
nert generaUon or so -if the fantastic
resources this will require are made
available.
But the daunting problems of reaching
even the most promising ol the planets,
Man:, are rpinute compared to those
involved in ~ving the solar .system .
T11e-nearest !ililr hr three light years
away or, iD round numbers, 17,610,000,000
miles.
This is more than 35,000 limes lhe
distance the Apollo 9 astronaut.I trave1led
in their moon rotmdtrip. It woWd take
about 1,000 years at the same speed.
Even the trip to Mars will take month!,
Ryle pointed out, and will present vast
problems of weight, food and fuel.
"You cannot expect people to live
in an utterly hostile environment,'" he
said, stressing that it took about 10,000
people to back up three people on a
men si.J:-day space voyage.
Pebaltles wen Imposed Tuuday by
the 1tudent judtclal board, whtch also
called a repeat dectloo for Feb. It and IO •.
'I1>e folD' students were klenUfled u
Bob Nuttman, Linda O'Brien. George~
Newland and Greg David.son. A fifth
acculfld student. Dave Muse, dkt not
appear before the judicial board Tuudliy.
' "PAMILIARIZATION 'FLIGHT' -Gina Hernandez (left) and Judy
Geyer, Orange Coast Collea:e stewarde6s students, get acquainted
with Dataspeed machines which "talk to ~ach other" coast to coast
dally to bring stock market repons into DAILY PILOT plant from
Wall Strffl. They'll .be b06tesses at CommuniCarnival where DAILY
PILOT display will abow bow machines ·work.
occ Makes Going Easy
Course Cl,ears Students for Stewardess Jobs
Tbe pert stewardeu In the criJp red-dtdn1 fomee the r«enl-brutlng 160
white-and-blue urumrm hu 180 hours houri one of her ltudel'ltl would log
In ber logbook. But they're not Qylng In OOllllllllnlly oervlce In ber Ont three
boun. -.... ol the onune. (MOii lludenta
Tbey repretenl a lot of time open! a....,. • boun per oemater In utr•
behind a reception de1k, ottertna "coffee, Clbtlciils Gtla.)
tea or milk" to convenUon dtteplall ~ '~" boun coapled with Jee.
and Ml'Vinl dtnnen to dtpltarl,. at--.,. llolll 11'11>1 amrtnc ouch mb-ten<Unc owards~at~O>ut •!Ml a~. 11-) ol flllht,
College. · oa.i,.uo.. the poydloJoa of the
Theae are the m1111•, landlocked kind -· "°°"""'' oeif development of dutleo performed by lludenta ol the fllll ollion ue the bulldlna bloclco Imm
natioo'• only fully occndttod and -· lfnL. J.._Valeocla --unifonnod otewardea Ir~ ....... __ , Ile i1tta ... mdy to
operated hY a college. 'll>ey belp Oranp p "on ti. UM" with moot mojor otrllnff
eout ecn.,.·, non-ll)'ln1 otewardla bJ tht ·tlmt tlioJ nacb the .,. when
tral-eorn their wtnp. air--jilll wlllln( to tab &lrla
'!be boun are nhm!arl', lllUaily to bqJn tt>rtr lraillJnl,
<!<voted to IOme COllll1llJJliy pn>ject .r 'l1w OCC II-tlon t h e I r non-commercial vtnture and Invariably 1'1tew1rdeu'' unlfotm1 at qt 11 (or
.... delllned to bring the lludtnt f-juot below) and ... ""41 to lfadu•t•
face wlfli the public. Into otrltM "lhort counu" juot prior
~ hllalt 11't nqulnd .,-IL~ IJ~:~ ate_,cil<l""bJ
sonle ol them -by M". Doloreo Jo"!'"" Ji the tfine they an ~ .... 21.·
Vatencia, director or the stewardtia Proof of the ltlcctat of the program
traJnini program at OCC. But even 11he 11 lndlcated In Utae. fada:: OCC started
the cour1e four years aco: today there
are n 11tudent.1 attending it. Some of
tbe &tudenta ca.me from u far away
as Hawaii, Montreal. Belgium and Peru
just to attend the courae.
Sixteen of OCC'1 stewardeu student!
will be !cuing tbclr oil-campus houn
nest week u holteases at the DAILY
PILOT-Paclllc Telephone Cc. Com-
munlCarnival to be beld Thur,.tay. Fil-
dly and Sltuntay (Jon. IO thiougb. Feb.
I) at Sou!b Ccut Plaza In c..ta Mesa.
Worttns In le&Ull of two, the llfudenta
wtD be on hand al the DAILY PILOT
Hhlblt from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. cm Thun-
day anti Friday and from I p.m. to g
I e_._m. OD Sa~)'. ~ sirta who con nn-
dentand the u_,, of night and
Southern Callfoml1'1 rn et e o r o I o a y
are not espected to h1v1 much
cUlflculty ai>lalnlng to viJfloro 11<JW the
· DAiuY Pllm ~ "'l'•Y'• final
stock n1al'ket revOrts In. 'o day• s
newrp1l)er or ahowlns visit~ 80mC of
tht other ftature.s of the newspaper.
D. Roosevelt In the bookkeeping ye.ar
starting. 3 uly 1.
nliJ dl'dlion WU reached becauae the
upgrading of the Roosewelt't slster &hlp.
the 'Midway, ii taking 48 months and •
costing $178 million ...:.. twice as long
and about twice as expenfilve as bad
been expected,
Wark on a revolutionary quiet sub-
marine will be pushed ahead even though
it.s estimated cost has rocketed from
11.00 million to about 119 mlllloo, and
may go as high aa $200 million.
~ Pentagon said It believes the
turbine electric-drive submarine will be
worth the co.st because It will provide
"unique and valuable operational and
test experience wilh this new type of
propulsion plant and other important
quieting features comiderably earlier
than could otherwise bl achieved."
The hope ot. the Marines for an up.to-
date fleet or major amphibious veSM!IS
also has been set back by price problems.
* * * Group Demands
PueblQ Return,
I nvestigatio1t
W~HINGTON (AP) The
Remember the Pueblo Committee mark·
ed th9 fint anniversary of the sel.ture
of the U.S. Intelligence lhlp Thursday by
demanding a congressional invenlgation,
return of ttie Y-1 and _.. of
indemnity by North Korea.
__ TM ·-~· ~aul D. l..indstrom_ of
Prospect Heights, Ill., failed in an effort
to me.et with Secretary of State Wllllam
P. Rogers.
Lind11trom. chairman of the private
committee, told an informal news con-
ference outside the State Depertment
that the group' favored a mlUtary atrike ·
lo destroy the Pueblo U it I! not released.
'lbe committee sei:ved notti:e It Intends
to continue ill acUviUea although tl)e
82 IW'Vlving crew memberl have ~
returnecl to the United States.
Referring to the Navy h9ard of Inquiry
now under way, with Cmdr. Lloyd Bucher
testifying, ~•m uld, "Tboae to
be court-martlaled ohool4 be those of-
ficial! In Wu!>ing1hn who ·denled tbe
Pueblo its self-destruct mechanism.''
He qenoun«Q former ~ of
State Dean :Rhst for agree.log to a
fraudulent apoW&r in order to aecure
the release of Ole men.
Ltndstrom aald !hat whlle the can-
mittee wu ham tbe men had been
released, "We deplore the S t a t e
Department'• vacillation in the negotia-
tlon11 and the shameful final ltttlement
which ill humlliatfn& to all Ame:rlcsn1."
Steaming Out of Pat · "''T_....
N0<talgia, one of last steam locomotives In the country and one of
largest still running, puffs coal smoke and squirts s~ as it stops 1
brieCy at Rocky ruver, Ohio. Old No. 2102, 101 feet long and weighing
400 tons, will be used to haUI rail fans on n0<talgic trips out of
Cleveland.
Organizers of Freak Fait
--
Praying-for Sun Saturday
Organizers of the bi&: Radio KTBT
Chr~t.inas Festival and Freak Fair
scheduled at the Orange County Jnterna·
lional Raceway Saturday appealed to
a higher power for help today.
"We'rt praying to the Sun Goel," com·
mented a spokesman for the Garden
Grove FM station as weathermen
forecast a new Soulhland stonn bringing
rains Lhrough Saturday.
The festival featuring 36 amateur acid
rock bands wa.s originally set for Dec.
29 at the Orange CtWlty Fairgrounds,
bu1 was cantelled dye to lack of! interest
by the city council:
The Jan. 25 noon-ti>-midnight festival
hosted by KTBT, known al Underground
94 to its Ustener!, ls still on at this
juncture, bit' the new stonn could create
big problems.
Bands are scheduled to play at three
•
raceway ground!! locations, w 11 I t •
craftsmen and artisans will have booth!
set up to display their wares.
Sailor's Good
News Multipli.ed
CHICAGO (UPl)-For Vletnlm-llomld
seaman 3C Rlymond H. Dally. tbe call
of hil name over tbt public addrm
s)'31em at O'llan Intemau..a! Airport
'l'handl1;iftll DO ·uprW.
Dally bad jusi left hll ~ wife, IJorlt Jeon, In Medina, 11111• ho ·
sUQIOded ho WU beJni Dll9d a eafl
thal -tell htm be liid". -blbJ.
1le--bytbree.
Wben Dally '"" to the taiephaoe ba . was -told tiy htl !fiber tlltll hta wife hid
given blrtb to ~
r
BEACH CITY DODGE . ' \ HARBOR DODGE
2888 HA~ 9LYD. 16555 BUOi BLVD. (Hwy. 39) A
HUNTINGTGti BEAOI -847-9631 ' COSTA MESA -s•~aaaa
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~ ............ _
The Calhollc cbaplln at Lopn·
JolemaUooal Ahl>ort ln -ls
c:Joolng the chapel promptly at 5
p.m. from now on becaUH aome
.)'OUDf .people have been UJIDg bis
"'11!{essionala for amoroua advm-
tum duriilg noctmal boun. "On
MGnday,"l'llesday aDd Frldq night
last week, l caught couples Jove. -ttnr ln .the clulpel," Ibo RT.
Rn • .loo1ph E. 11.1.., ..id. •
·Palach Girlfriend Commits :·:· Suicide?
Thousands . Pay .Tribute to Student . .. \
Prague Radio Reports Death as
PllAGll8 (UPI) -..._ ltldlo 14day
..,.n.d·lbot a pt fr1e>d al Jao Palach, u.-•--to-.. ..-Sovlel ~of
Cloclalovakla, bid --oufclde. Bui lalormod ...,..... uld· lbe report
-lalM aod bid 1-1 dl8lrlbuted "' ~' to minimize Palacb's
deed.
'l'bo pt bid 1-1 ldenUfled u Eva
-. .. a ll1eod al Palacb. who
died al lllf.lnfllctod bums In Prque
00 Jin. 11, aod bee.we • pollllcal
martyr.
..,,. -....... uld Miss Beel-
Blizzard Hits
North Plains,
Midwest V.S.
By Uafto.I Pr.u Jamu-
..A bllzurd, tbe l.atat severe weather
to strike the nation the past few days.
drove ocroa lbe Northern Plains ond
upper Midwest today.
An Arctic cold wave responsible for
the b I ii 1 a r d plummeted tempera-
tures more than 30 degrees within
1 hour in many parts of the nalion'!
mldsectloo, lnclOOing readings Into the
20s early today fn northern LouiJiana.
1be cold wave wu moving fa.st and
was apeded to be oo the Atlantfc
coast by Saturday morning .
nartkov1, 11, was llill all.., tbot Ille
bid not -oulc:ldo "' gu .. reponed. TbeJ alla denJod abe WU 000
al the lk>emben ., • -rtor who bod pledged to dle for polillcal
reforma.•
1be report given to the Csecbollova.k
preu included a ••adclde note" that
sald Miu BednaritoYa was to be ''hum.an
torch No. S" In Ibo anti-Soviet prvi.st
death pact, but laobd the courage to
kill beroelf by" fire as Palllch did.
The roporl said the girl committed
suicide on n.e.day. Tbe Wormed
llOU1'CeS said she wu seen alive u ••
late u 'lburadaJ nllh~
1be aourtf:I Kid tbe "fabdtt deltb
-alao mentioned ·-aploaago ......... tqstlptmf lier aoldde. 'Ibo
app8rent lnteol al Ibo falae atory, Ibey
said, WU to dJacredit Paladi'a po!Mbl
deed.
Mm Bednarikova was one of. two sitl
friends of Palacb'a who appeared. on
television earlier fn the -to talii;
about the young lllucfenl'• death by fire.
The "gus!ng sulcide" .... rcpon.d
In a one-Une obl111ary fn the newspaper
Zeme Delske Novlny aod other morning
papen and alao by Prague Radio. ..,,.
I .
-.bid lllOd only Ibo lnlllals al
her -bull Caedlollo¥lk )ournlllsb
bid -lied bor•prlvately u Eva Becl-
lllrlkovL
'flm!anda al "'""*" c.ecboole .... ll1<d put Ibo ~ caskel
al Plladl In Prque tod<y, leavinl buJ>.
-al ~ piled In tribute to Illa oelf..acrifice for politlcaJ reforma.
More tllao l.OOI penom waited In
line oo Ibo dart. oven:ost day outside
Ibo fOO.year..td Oothlc c...n-Hall
of Charles University to spend a . few
-~y Ibo catafalque burlng Ibo
-bo<IY al Ibo II-year-old sludeDl.
Life • Ill N. Korean Prison
Typhoid, Scurvy Rampant, Buclie.r Tells Court
CORONADO, Calif. (AP) -From his
lonely prlsoo room in North Kena, U.S.
Navy Cmdr. Lloyd M. -could
hear llltle _girls laughing.
Children went by outside 1inging a
marchfng "°"'" . 11llngs were hnproving. A few days
before, on Mareb 5, 1"'8, Bucher ond
Illa 11 men from tile USS Pueblo had
been moved to Ibo prison fn the coun-
tryside.
It wu six or seven miles from
Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea,
Bucher told a court of inquiry Thursday.
The court of five admirals ii .in-
vestigating capture of hJs intelligence
!hip.
"I'm """ that beca.,. ol lhla aeveral
ot UI contacted bepatltil. J WU cme
ollhooe.
"At ..,. time I bod.lool opprmhutoly
!OD pounds." Bucbor aald be WU p,..
a ball o pack ol cigarettes OVfrf day
and be and his men were getting tooth
bruslles and tooth paste. During ~
20-minute uerci.se periods in the auin-
mertime, Bucher said, he and b(I men
were sent oot to cut lbe grass 1 around
the pri>oo building.
"They bad not invenled lawnmowers
yet," be said, "and we cut lt with
a pen knife."
Tbe coffin. with ..the silver creat o1
Qlarles lllll .... lty 00 Ila ..... ...led
beoeath tbe atoro gue ol a Niue ol
JuHus, Ibo re!lfious martyr who """"
od al Ibo -la !ill, for hettl1.
and tilll bee.we • qtlooafhero.
Palach ad -H oo fire Jan. II
on Wenceslas Square, tYmllol o f
resiatance to the Russian invaders, in
a prOtest against Rualan domfnat1on.
Pollen In Prague,' eulogies of Palach
and the pooitlon ol the casket beneath
the Hua atatue declared the d e e d s or
the tWo Jans were the same.
'!be lolli line of cilluns trocldlng • nanow Paualt between beapi ol. Doral
aod green wrealha Included boll> yCX111g
and· old. Moll. of ibe women, aod many
al the meo, wept. Some elderly ....,..
1 collapsed crying Into the arms of friends
{and bad to be belped from the Caro-
linum.
* * * Vatican Praise
For Burnings
Confirmed
VATICAN CITY (AP) - A Vatican
radio . broadcast praising the Czech
youths who eet themselves on fire to
prot.en Soviet control was made at the
directloo. of Pope Paul Vi's Secretariat
cl State.
• 7'heu c:olor portruita of f...,..,. • II came oo 'the heels cl a violent
dawn tornado 1buraday that killed at
least 2t penons aod injured hundreds
at Hazleburst, Mia. It was e bellwether
for several tornado and funnel cloud
reports farther nor1h lat..-In the day .
At this neW prison there were no
blinds on the windows, aod Bucher said
be could see cooperative fanna lllU'o
rounded "' military fnst.allallons ond mlasile batteria.
A parade al fJuW went tiY Oii a
nearby road almost weekly, he said.
Tbe men got to write home -but
lnterpreten translated the letUn into
Kenan and they were changed by of-
ficers in charge oC Ibo capUvity, Bucher
satd.
'....'NO'--.mod today by well-pllo-
ed aourres in the Vatican pre3S office
and In Vatican radio. r .PTeMent and Mr1. John.son will be
. • • ' •
' •
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hung in tM Whik Hotue. TM11 wre
pami;d bv Madcim Elizabeth Shau'"""
toff of Loclut Vally, Long llland, N.Y.
TM President ii wearing a charcoal
f}TtJI IUit and tohi~ &hirt with dttp
maroon and dark bl1't' 1triptd tie. Mrs.
Johnson is waring a 10/t ~flow chit·
fcm Q01Dn.
••
Pat Boyle had C<infuU~ put
-~14 of h4 acn>lnQ< Ulldcr
" -.. ti!< .,..,_ '1/ hil . "°""' ... ClaF.......V, lf•lond. .,'WJaos,."'8.·cont to .dip. into hil
-.,. nomlifl . .., fpund ti!<
-·--coU<d ·~po-• Ike. P-.... ripptd "P the
~and.1-11tew'tiny
•pl«<& ·qJ ti!< pobc!·noter lrloQ ·
the• and ti!< blaat<d bodv of a
moue neorbJI who had /ecikd
his last fMal °" Pat's savings,
• Fronk· Word, 38, of Cleveland
made a miStalr:e when he told bis
wife he had bought a television set
and a· winter coat for his sister
"who has llh: children to support
and a no-good rolten hns!Jand."
Mrs. Ward told police court she
visited her husband's ''lister'' and
found lhe wu really bis wife, too.
Much ol ea5tem South Dakota WU
t..olaled today. Tbe Clllly open rooda .....
rcpon.d fn the ..... ., ~-.
"Everytbfng here bu lll<lpped" rcpon.d
a radio ltltlon It Oates, N. C., &.!I
Ibo eastern tblrd cf Ibo mote WU .....ml
in. Sootbeastun Mlnnelota alao was hoc·
ged down.
City bus service was canceled at
Fargo, N. D., and Moorhead, Minn.,
today becaa11t of llrttt tOnditlons. Rural
schools In tbt aru were not eipected
to open.
Reds Shoot Down
U.S. Red Cross
f.opter; 7 Die
SAIGON (UPI) -Communists lhol
-a dearly marUd U.S. btllcoptu mnlm'-» camlnl IO!dlen 1"lUllded
Jn ~ ldlllni al! .., .. men alloanl,
mDitaiT ~ said today. w~ .:-.=...~·= fire 'lb1111idoY nl&lrt In Ibo central hlgb-
lmdl .... -lbe -Americu dlop-P.O' -by the Communlsta fn the Vletmim-. llbeld-meowoonded In eodibol·plul four......,..,;
~ -aald It WU the llnt such Incident lllnce the U.u.d Stales halted
the ~ al Norlh Vleloam Nov. L o.. Oct. s· ii-rm-i11o1 clown two rec1-
cniaed medical belicot>len but no ooe
--tilled. ..,,. tnn cralbed aod burned 250
miles north al hon after belna bit while
eY"''l"OI tbe tine wCllDded men from a baWtlleld D mllel nonlnmt ol the
city <ii Pleh Two oC lbe cmnnen
...... -alao trained to fire the bellcol'W'• twin .JO ealiber machine
gu»-but they ...... under Ohlen oot to fire llJllea ~ fired upon.
..,,. chopper bore red ........ 00 each
side ond oo the nooe. A. U.S. apok,._
man aid the rules ol war laid down
by lbe GeooYI -bold such .cnfl .... not to be fired upon. But fn
Vietnam the Communists ... oot
:red the world law, tile spomman
'AURA OF TERROR'
Buc:hor T oatlfl ..
"We were treated much more humane-.
ly," Bucher said, comparing this prison
to the compound where be and his men
were taken when they were captured
three months before. At that cmnpound,
lludier said, be ond Illa men bid suffered
...... beatinp and -underwent
chilling mental ~
'"Ibere was alnys an aura of tem>r."
be said. "But now the men had dally
sick call except for Saturdays and when
doctcrs were oot available.
"Nurses were always available and
their professional qualifications were
comparable to the nurses at home. But
not the.Ir looks. Their looks didn't quJte
come up to 1tandards," Bucher aaid
With 8 grin.
''I'm IUJ"e I came close to death on
• c:ouple of occaakm because ol i1Jnesaes..
There WU typhoid, m:l sear"VJ ft8 ram-
pant from a lack of vitamins M)'lttrloul
bolel started appearing fn oor llkln.
'"Ibey were the types ol ..a yoa
... in the llfble In ~ ., Lot.
By and large I lhougbt their lllfdlcal
treatment, consldertng an things, ns
barely· adequate. In llOllle ...... though,
It WU just abcri of mlnctiJoos.
"TbeJ did ba•e penlclllfn. But their
sterruzatlon and cltanlinea atandards
were W' below lhooe at homo.
Big Bed R~plies . .
329102 Wins War With Computer
l'EAllL·HARBOR (UPI) -Navy LI.
Cmdr. Bob Baril boast& a D ac-
complishment few men can claim -
be la Ibo .ictor.ln a band-lo-band baWe
with • computer.
And fn doing ao, be bas played cupid
in 1 love affair between the electronic
brain and a U.S. Navy warship.
It began last May when Baril wu
tramferred from the: USS Walker to
the destroyer USS Haverfield off the
coast of Vietnam.
"You see, I have a checking account
with the Fort Worth National Bank in
Texas," Baril said. "Before we sailed
from Pearl Harbol' for Vietnam. I wrote
to Fort Worth to have the address dumg·
ed."
Bui bls bani: lllalemtnls kept arrivtnc
alloard the Wa!W, Baril slid, ond
aeverol attempts to get lbe matter lllntchtened GUI did no good. .
"I tbau&bt about it a lot," be said.
''How can JOU get through to a com--
puter?"
Finally be decided to write to the
machine flself.
'l'bo letler began, "Dear computer. "Bavtna: tried aeveral times unsuc--
casfully to get yoor human 'muton'
to correct my address for an cor~
respoodenre and dealin&' witb the bank,
J DOW turn to you for U3istance."
He signed the leUer, "With fondest
personal regards I remain Vfrf lnlly yours UIUll."
Hjalmer Freezes at Kulm
Wilhio two fttb, a reply came back
from the computer who slgoed hbmdl
"big red."
"Dear 329102,'' the Jetter bepn.
"Please do not thlnk me pr!Sl.anptuous
il I abould call Y'"' by your ael(-d>edc
digit, VIZ, DEAD ~ B"" deli8bted I
was to receive your tbougbtful letter ••. "'
Family of Five Asphyxiated in Helena Trailer Park Tbe lelW" went on to apologhe for
the miiup and slgoed ilself, "Walli-
$-VKP! ..• CANCELL... "Jnfaliibl,y, Btc
Red, SYS Jl0.30." c.iu...a.
llLOW 1110
c-t.1 Owll'aillt .... • _.., ....
.. ...,,Ah*'· ...... ma:a1 ..,.tt••..U.T.....,..M6.M ..... ,. .... ,... ........... t•t11••• flow. ................. .. ............. ,...._ ... ... 1'lllt .... ,., ...... •A• -. s-. -~,,..
• -.... T ..... ,._. • ... t iw ..,,._ t.• ,.... w . r:• "'"" 1.1 • IATVltlotiT
""" l\lflt ••" ••• ....... l :JJ I.Mo .. , ~ht "9 ............... 11114 e.l'l'I. I.I
...-Mllil ••.....•.... •1st"""·'" ...... ..... ... . ......... ,,
IUllOAT ~ Mltl ···••··•······ l !JJ l.nt. .. . '""" ... . ....•••.•.•.. 11 :• ....... .
...., Miii ..••........ ·~" MO!. ... ~·-•JI --..... ·-••
r-..er.t•ra That WU the end cf Baril"I llattle
with the computu, but the lllrt ol
the teclmologlcal romance. 11eca... In
his ftnt teller, Baril bad ioo-t a
photo cl the Haverfield (DER 391) •
·--·-... _. .......... -.... "-c•llWlllll ~ .. --... _ ...... ·-"" _,,, ·----KIMM (tty ..... _
L• ....... ._
MIMll h«ll Ml-Nlh• $ 111\e. --_y .. .,,._ ..... --............ -·-.......
...... CltJ' ....... -lllMllNll"' St. l.Wfli ........
.. II L .... City =~ ..... ~ ...... ---w .... --
---" " .. • • .. .. .. • ... .. " .. " D " " " " • .. • .. .. n " M " .. " " .. ... .,,
" " " " " • .. .. a " " " M • .. • .. .. .. " .. " •• • • .. .. " M • • " " " • .. .
M ..
" ..
" " ~ " " M .. " .. " M .. • ~ .. " • • " " .. ..
·" ,.
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.n
"Say, S93 rt.ally turm me on," the
comput..-wrote. "I am rocoMng olgnals
from her llUperllrocture w . Abo DI)'
partner. otd Blue. wmders ti abe bad
• friend, maybe :Ill?"
Barilannrered:
"YOU lndicat.ed thal your fellow com-
putu, Old Blue, mllht be Interested In • blind date wtlh • friend ., the
: Haverfield. How about our a1lter ibJp
.., USS Camp (DEmSl)! While lhe may
be a llltle older, and petllapo not quite
u good looting or well built lopalde,
..,. bas • WODlfer1ul pmooalily." ·" .. ·" .. ..
... .n
JO ... ...
·" ,.
••
Aod while 1o .. blouomed between tho
computen and the -ps. a fllrtber
element was ldded to lhe loq dlslanco
drama.
Included In the photo Bl( Red -
al h1-lf were four lowly """" ladlea,
And the crewmtr1 of the Haverfield
have expnoaed u much lntemt In Ibo
f...,. ladles 11 Bl( Red did In tllelr
slllp. ~
TbeJ have ...,1 off • lelter uklng
fo< lhelr own ad ol mtlstlcal ln-
fonnaUon.
Then, he said, the men got their letten
back and were ordered to recopy them,
adding the North Korean .change&
Tbe North Koreans tried to pro-
pagandize bi!: men with IOclali.!tlc moyjes
e•trt Friday night and l>ookl<ts aod
brochures about the ' ' t r e m e n d o u s
number of atrociliea by American troops
during the K<nan war.
"'llley P" us aboolutely ridiculous
accounts of the war and the way things
were In the world," Bucher said. ''111ey
gave us news in a way that tried only
to demoralize us.
"They told us Robert Kennedy had
-ldllec[ by Ibo Praideol or the
Uolted Stalel."
4 Die as Flames
Sweep Aparbnent
CJUCAGO (UPI) -Four-penons were
killed aod 11 ,..... lnjurad today when
fin awept lhnugb the upper lllories
of· a blgbrille 1)llriment building on
Cblcaco'• l1nlll: ~. Lake Shore Drive.
-fled fn ponlc. Qld Fire -.bal cUrtia Volbmer
uld Ibo fire ll(lpmntly ... Clmed
by careless lllllOkln& In a 3Mh Door
apartment.
AmonJ the Injured were e l g·b t
poUoonen who ruabed to the 46-otAry
bufldfng to rescue raldtnla fwe<l·trap-
pocl by clenoe smote.
The broadcast Thursday caused shoct
not only in Vatican circles and the
Italian press but at Vatican radio itself.
The influential daily La Slampa of
Turin summed up the sense of sboct
by calling the broadcast commentary
"in contrast with the tradltiooal catholic
doctrine that condemns suicide in all
forms.'"
Tbe broadcast compared the fire.burn-
ings, Including the suicide of Czech stu-
dent Jan Palach, to the sacrifices ol
the early ChrisUan martyrs and ta.id
the protest act.s "des;rved the gratitude"
of the world. ./
There was some speculation that the
broadcast had not been cleared "1th
higher Vatican authorities. But this was
denied by soarces in Vatican radio.
They ezplaioed that the normal prac-
Uce ii for any news commentary of
aey importance broadcast by the Jesuit·
run radio atatioo to be cleared by of.
ficiall in the Secretariat of State.
It was further uplained that in this
case. the commentary was not only
cleared but that Uie idea for it originated
in the leO'dariat and that the draft
of the commentcµ'y was edited and cor·
reeled tbt.re.
Israel Invites LBJ
JERUSALEM (UPI) -Former Presi-
dent Johnsoo has been invited to visit
Israel, it was o!ficlally announced today.
Tbe official announcement said President
Zalman Shazar issued the invitation in
a leUer to Johrulon wishing bhn "blt.M-
inp for the new phase of your tile.''
€Jumgeil Hl•d, Saved nt~
Mn. Marlon Jennlnga bolds her alrllno Ucket folder containing her
tjcket on United Air Llnea fllgbt 266, which crashed into the Pacific
6ii:ean shortly allor tak~ tlini(; Tl passengers. Tile Aurora, Colo.,
womao didn't board fllghl 266 ~use of heavy rain -she didn't
want to mess her hair and 1 new !Ur coal loslead, she changed her
fiigbt to 372, which departed later -and made it.
.,,.
isit
ay.
ent
in
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'
... -_,\_,_
Tornadoes Kill 29
It Wasn't D I
-·
.~.
; .qowe "{ras Flyi~g
• • I
• ~· Mlll,.(llP.I) --lhoual>t ..,. .... lflolt·llbh<r
house I tlyinf lla'Galh the
air •. Sbe _coulcm't pt ;GUt· of
bed . '
. "~ jUst keplOluUig
. me 'bJ \be: face.'' she ·. aid
. later •. ..,,. room was moving
and ~·t let me up ...
• ~. ""' l•ll to the grounll ml ~end to her
homO tblt k Wl!ll\ a drum .
Her hooae'~ aftbOme, 1p1U-
iq her ·hrnthen ml Billen
to tbe ground u · tt floated
downblll ln • mill pond.
Betty, 15, and the 15 other
occu~ of the four-room
frame house were a.mona the
stretch of rolllng hill country '
in his state 11 a diaalter....._
"It's a terrlblt lragedy, both
in lives and property,''
Williams s a i d after , an ift.o
spection t o U r of Slmpeors, .,
Copiah and Smith counties
Thursday.
The bardesl·hit locality was
a predominantly Negro section
of Huleburst, wbere 20 homes
were demolilbed ;and as ~ f
heavily damaged.
Whltu moved In lo bell>
blacks in the stric;ken areas
in the wake of the lwistera i
women manned switchboards
and helped jl..i CrOM teonis
and men worked 1n rescue
and salvage wort.
•
Dand9 Parking Job
DAil Y PllOT ti
N. Ireland"
~.Minister
Resigns
BELFAST: N-rn Inland
(AP) -Aiioth<r, member of
Primt ~ Terence
O'Nelll's go-.nt, Com-
merce Minister B r i • n Faulkner, resigned today In
a row over O'Neill's handling
of the Roman Catholic civil
rights movement.
Northern Ireland was plung.
ed into political c r I 1 i 1 •
Political lnformaDts 1aid an
election for a new legilllatlve
assembly might be nt<:<SWY.
Faulkner's resignation WU
Bo9, Oh Boy!
· lucky one1 Thursday when
tornadoes struck l h r e e
Mia8lsalppi COW>lles, killing It
least II peraoos and Injuring
bundreds of others.
Hospitals were overloaded,
and Dr. Lamar Puryear aaid
about onHhird of the patients
Men in St. ·Louis were probably grumbling .. woman driver" when they spot--
ted' this automobile backed through a store window. But Lillian Mae McClel·
land exp18,tned that she · was just ~tern pting to park when the gas pedal stuck
and the car went out of control. N!) one was injured. be treated had "serious in-__________________ _
the molt seriout challenge ao
lar by right-wing elements
dissal.islied w i t h O'Neill'I
moderate leaderahip and hla
concessions to the Catholic
minority. Unlike the rest of
Ireland, Northern Ireland has
a Proteitant. majority and is
a part 'ol the Unlled Kingdom.
Al,i~e De Rivera, 13, relaxes in her Brooklr.n iaome
Thursday after completing q~eiaminaUons
!bat should get her into all·n\ale Stayv..sant lllgb
School in lovler Manbatan, if 'the coul'la rule in .hei:,
favor. Board of "Educaiion has asked Ali<;:e ·to drop
her court action and seek ~ntrance to the Bronx
High Scl!ool of Science,'. a coest schopJ·for~ception
al students. But Alic~ saY,s tba~attendlng'tlje E!ri>ilx ..
school would require 19<> much. 'trav'11iag. ~ · "· .
Another tornado struck later
Tbundly :near Dover, Tenn., al'!'J. °"' Ken!Ucq bonier, i~· Clie person a n d
destroymc .four: bouaes and
severaJ barns.
Gov. John Bell Williams: of
Missisaippi asked President
Nixon to d~ a fi.mile
Disease Germs Found .
In .~alifumia .Milk . _,_;
juries." Votunteera helped him
throogb the medical crisis, he
said,
"The people have been
overwhelming in t be i r
cooperation," he said. "The
cooperation between the race!
, has been juat fantastic." ·
Legendary Gem Sale
Brings Rival Claim
The first tornado struck ~
dawn, I t I PP I n 1' tram LAUSANNE, Switzerland She had a Geneva jeweler,
Hazlehurst to Harrlsvllle •and (AP) -An enrnjnation .00.Y Marcel Sadek, cnme beno apawnlng two other twilters
that dipped into smaller com-showed a pearl owned by a Thursday to make a ltudy.
munltles and farm areas. queen of Spain la larger than Sadet sBid the_ pearl owned
Most residents still were . one -sold at; a New York auc--by -tlte'~queen weighed m.a
asleep when the tornado whirl-lion Thursday night but it grains. The one sold in New
ed in.at dayb~ea~. but Lell J ~ailed to detennin~ which gem y k .. ; .. ....., -· ·~ . Ji'ti.tei';'t'19'-P..fff-Z!leiur1.t .i.l8lheJegendary 1ewel known · ar _w~--c:ra1ru1: _
businessman, was an early as La Peregrina. There have been suggesti°" B~RKEL~Y (AP) -Germs . Department officials s a Id riser. An anonymous bidder paid that ~here are. two a~~c
causing serious , dilease are there are no plam to prohibit ~ "I s~ In tqe door 9f' iny $37.;000 in New York for What ,t!~Peregr1na~ which o~1gJnally
report.¢ to-have been fOWld the" sale of raw mllk until b restaur'Jnt and iwMcbed;it..., I\ . Parke-Bemfl ~aUeries 1fid1t wire a pall'. Sadek nwnta.lned
in samplei of 11 of the state!s ' . \Vas Dot ··goOci daf!Jcht and· wu La PeRgriOa-The wan... that the Queen 's pearl is "uni-
29 Certified aild Grade A raw the county counsel rules on it sounded like four freight derer -so calfa: because que in its fonn and quality.'~
milk producers. the matter· trains coming through town," it passed fti centuries from He uid be therefore could
In a telephone interview Dean said the tests were F~ter said. "The air was monarch to monarch. not esUmate il! value.·
from the State Department conducted at the National filled with debri1.and the wind Ex-Queen Victoria Eugenia, Peregrine Pollen. Parke
of Health _Thursday, Dr. Ben Institutes of Health wasttallyblowlng." through her chamberlain the Bemet's president. sakl that
Dean confirmed that samples Trees toppled, utility poles Duke of Alba,' tnalsted today he has conflrmed the authen-
., •II•~ · NOW ACQPTING Al'PllCATIONS +iJ•• Fo.I THE SPRING SEMESTfR : lalll ~ _..,,_..,
~ "' • COMMENONG JAN. 27th, 1969
,. lttht1111w ..... nr.i a 24111
, ,_,, o RANG ;··ti~ 'iv.lli1 rv
COLlEGE OF LAW
~i;ic!nt S. Daisi!!~,~~ _
" ... ~ "'"""''""'' IMilh•lio• ,,_;,.,... 51•'-..... ~
Id 1..i&-...... C.-or+,, ti•••••• -i,.,. o Mi•'-"• ,p...i..,.i l:•...i.
-1: • .mi-' ......... ~· 4:1~'" s .......... ,_,_......, .. .....,_
t..4i.. ... 1.o. uno..r.1 ...,_
c.t1 ""'11 flll camp11 t7l4) ~1-1511
12345 YllST/lllNSTll lVEllUE.'.~l lllA
were tested for germs that Laboratory. Hamilton, Mont., snapped; gas and water mains that the real Peregrina i1 in ti city of the jewel be BOid
cause salmonella and Q fever. and the Commun i cab I e bur!t, car1 spun crazily like -~he~r~"°"'::::=""=·=on=·=in=•=-=han=k=•=•u=lt~~"lo~~oor=-=c=om=p=l=ete::_="=tlll::::•=c-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::~~~~~ the latter a serious and toys, houses collapsed . here. tioo."
sometimes falal respiratory --==~
I FOi THI "NIH PIO,,,I".,. •
7-nltu 1 wttk d11rl1111 J1n111rY, lttt,
(Offff Shop 010ly, mm Mlonlle 1111111 •
1 4:00 1.m. J
H THE IOUNTIFUL IREAKFAST!
· Small Or•n91 Juic1 1 Two E99•
Haili Brown1
B•con or S11u19e.
To11I l Jam
'• Coff1•
l<ONA LANiS
disease.
But health officials said
there is no danger i n
Pasteurized milk. tbe major
portion of milk sold in
California.
The owner of an Altadena
dairy, Los Angeles County'a
18.rgest raw milt producer,
called t h e contamination
report "an injustice" and con-
tended "someone is trying to
get rid or raw milk."
Harold Stueve of the Alta-
. dena Dairy said he ls opposed
to Pasteurization because it
causes milk to "lose almost
all the enzymes. Q fever is
an airborne ,disease. You can't
get it by drinking milk," be
said, stating that there w a s
cnly one case of Q fever in
the county Jast·year.
But, Dr. Dean said, there
are "quite a few" documented
cases in which. Q fever has
~n associated· with drinking milk'. • . .
Los Angeles Coonty Heaith
INCOME TAX
KEEP YOUR COOL
let us prepare your
return now • • • for •n
early refund • • . or for
the time needed to
budget any additional
expense.
WE'RE HERE 12 MONTHS
OF THE YEAR
Newport Business Services
-OUR NEW OFFICE LOCATION-
2209 W. Balboo Blvd., Newport Bch.
(Between Forgi,!s Hardware and th•
Doily Pilot 0/(1CeJ '
•
New from General Electric!
Side-by-side refrigerator
with Custom Dispenser. c.
Autolllalieally
ftlls -your glass
wlthic,e or
ddlledwater
ata toucll!
Instant wat•, instant ice·
without oiiening the !loon!
Just press 9la.1gainst ice Cf tel ... lot tumb1tso.e.,1wv '
ClJbtS at"a time until crad .. ii,.....,. Forwttll',p,9'" / ~ ",
vtns1D1inM ttllMtercudlt. "-'-lo stop. You tin
....,.. l.1't both di9p¥1•s1t thts.mttlme!
Model TFF·24RE
HodlS: WweW.rt t ..a. .. t , .•. -s••· t ...... '··--' ~ .
23,5cu. ft.A .. i!*ll Rmiger•tor·F,.....
1,m1hlnthrleiftetwidtl And no defrosting--!
Autometic lcemaker store< 1 O lbs .. about 260 cubeS.
• Freez.-holds up to 295 lbs. •Tempered glassslielves,
3 :slide out, 1 adjustable a Convertible meat pan, keeps ri\eat
frdl up to 7 days-; flip lwe< for extra vegetable storage.
• Six full· width door >helves, 4 adjustable • Butter Con-
diti~ Wltli temperature control •Cheese Keeper
·• Ri>llsi>uion.whoelsforeasyclmning • 35%"wide
66'' hfgh •. Haf'VM.t . Avor~ri r,.. ...... orlf'l"\O ,..,r Whit~-
Come in and see' it today!
TV, an~11·APPLIANCE CENTER
HAlllOlt'CINTIR : e "" 11owt1"" ,,.
-nooJtffil'lllr ••· -c .. ,. M..-· • u., .. ,. M-.. ,..,
"*'ne 540-7l~1 e $1.00 WNl
"
•
. l ._
-=--=
.. ••
~
' ' '. ' . ' .
•
I
[DAILY PILOT ·~~ ~A.G~j
New eivic .. Center ... NOW·
I • ~ ~ • • . '
A bold new ~ b' ,...mi tJit· ll~, · , It' \lllU'llltea<IY be :loo 1'!0' 1'> '"vent ~ mote
Beacll CIV!c-Ceai.t'illi Qi<t-~ ~'lliib '»rli'llil-i,. " .. lnveslp'.loat· Gii the,~.~ Civic. eentef. Thl '
ed to the City COUncil. Tiie ld8', " ~ w~· . cll)r, ~-.a J>io811~ a lift' 420,000bolir.dtni and
GIQ'o' fndlcat!ll a JS00,000 aa~l OVef \lit ~ .< • • DO,W the l\l'~cliid fal(I 1Jli cannot le&ally operate
deSlpatod jJ(O) . , 1 . " . " • wWIOl!t a new 189 ~ fldltl!u. ., .. : : ·
· No ~ter how lh'd·COUDcll·lftls,about ·lbli•latesl -• CllJ Admlnlslnlol"-Il"1» lll1le( IJ •1aldng.a 11n>n1
Idea, or on conlinujn& to !mist, ,t111 )lie •lilo at •Mabr. and lwd llnt OJl\,.UU.C dia dvlo ~tor, ~ect aolnl
Street and MBDBlon Avenue, UleA 'll!Ull be :no del~ la i.nd'he II 'to be eeoj41iJ]Alad fllr, vft<>MUJ!Y figbthlt
building a new cl~ cent.er. ; ; ~-•, "' , •. ' • , t0<aP"11tcthelnfw11J,..._Jqnnedlalely.·
The plan currently under cliaCusslon calls •for .Ole 'Counclbnen·may or. may~ eonUnue to squabble
Municipal Parklnr Authority to buy ·a strip ot'.lllnd over when the' center sbdakl fo~ oqnabble ·or not,
from 5th Street to just south of Lake SU...\ one to !W~ thecltfmuitc41,thecellterbull · . .
blocks deep and converl it tnto a ~kin& '.IOI for be8c;k ' • • ·
users, dqwntown merchants, tenant. Of JIOir .bull~ ,
.• on the •at,Re,. a .civic ahdito •. and "perhaps cfty'.0111-· · S ' t Bea h A ' ti' on
. pbzyes in" new,I?-~~-,;>. • . . :.3,, . ~ . c . nnexa .
•
. . 1..J:•~,al~~~· ~:::·=~~':: . .;; ,.:Die long range fiote of residents .~ Sunset Beach
. · : .. ~ J,t.IL~all4it'~!t2f. re~i~~ tli: thr~n~ .Ot. . is pilder •!.udY now b; the Hunlln,Jlon ~ch Pl;wfu!C ' ·
"• ·fet.'irilhotWlthdUf'Cl~vic'c~•~·"·1 _, ''·!~ ~~" ~. :· \:. \· ... ~ ".\·
Cost of the center on the wat~~t ;;,;.i. ~bci'IJ. ., .; '.-_. '.SuiiS.·.Bea~.lellileuilave asked Hl!Dllhgton -~ .. ~.ooo per year, maklng a :ZS.year total .Os't%1 ;ooo •: ,, ;'·'14~4it~ tewljil ~ation of·thi,~p to-the ~111) ".:
by the cheapest plan under discussion .. Th• city ·wo)l]d ' li~ ,.~1~ . · 1~ ... I ~!:\r.!f.c:e~~"'~ ~ ~ '. ·
pay $107,000. fw the Siie. . . ' ~ '. ' ~ev~op u,':;', e i y, · ~wf~h!Ya)l·~ali ~-~ >·. . ;,
The Mam Street and Mansion ~venur•~te would · &reaof'.theifbwn. "r· ,~,,~·) ''.~ \.'•''!'"''' .. ,. ~ 1,i ~1 ~
cost. about $62,000 yearly, or a loll!! in 25 Yoars .?t $!.~ .. · · · 3 ' · •·"" """ ., .. ' I -' ' .. million say the planners. The cost-,rtaures are·~ubj~t . TherlS.U.ve been hard feelings-~~. ,,_,,,...rata.,,.... , •. ,,, . ,,
to que;tion at this early po\nl in th<; planntnii .. but the "" tnfin U..'l\11•1 between the two~ fl'es, but ttrt~ .... .,,. ; ~\ \ :
po<sibility of substantial ~avilles .. )o. lhe .~'!YOr•. •!>'· things ~ be put out o( the nunds of tliose on """' ., .. : , pears to exist. .. ', · . .:.-; ·. · . •, ~ slde.s y~g·on the maater plan. 1 • , · -, .• · •. -~ ~: ..
The saVings might no! !>O'#_~ ..... of tiie.pos,_ · ' • ·J(""pean·t)!l\1 the tiny_ blan<l .ol ~oW1)y ~rtjtory .. ,
1ible economic beriefi! of luvinf;-tlie •waterfront. to , r : . C81\1).0t ·,1,ury!Y~ 'foi'<long urunco'110J'llted ~ .i.l IS too
pnvate development and the two s!!Os under discusslo• • .. m~IUI!,~ alone. . · J:... .
certainly are not equal in size. · M'!Oifll<i!>'IO~e city of Hunlhlaton', ..,.ch «i'!1~
Much study is needed on the economic aspects, but have·~~Jlll benellt to reS1dents o!·bOIU(cltje_s,. ·
the decision .. on where ljle center will go. has m th• pest Reiidttiri of Sunset. Beach m mjn .and wom~·l'f .
been _]IQl!ti~al, ~ ~· It appears _that aD,Y ·clWfge • inilependent th<Mlg!rt and. tlllildnd of tliin!<ini h!i• 104 \o in lb~ '!Ocalion """1d . .,.me about· only as a .p0llll<lol · a unlljue-Way '<>f .llft' iii ~ .Wacli: community. Ann•"!'-
dectsion. ., • . .. tiGn neatJIOt d05tmythb•opportunity. ·1~1
. • ..
SEQ_lgfARY
. l<·~OR U~lk . • (. l .• W .J.· Hl<KEL
·-'
!. . • . . J •• • 't ~ . '
l:TA ·E~ectltlv~ ClaritU••St~'P.>ijii01a We Need
' . "
The Coura,ge ·
To Be Known
By W.SWORnt L JUCllUl)60N
l\llaJ•tar
'nt Nelpbdow eo.,... .. ~.-.... i..p;t ·-··
Paul Tillich wrote a book, "'l\e
Courage to Be." I thlnk his boot wu
a clarion call to ·Jndjviduala to be
themselves, to accept ijl~es for
lvhat they ~ In order to do ,_ijlls
one has to )\ive ta. ceeqe. te 'be
kl;fwa, ~ di.le~ himleU ~ a ~uine. real, authentic .per90n. ' 1 The lletpblC Oracle said, "Know
thysell." I would Jrefer '9 111. "Make"
thyself laiown, 'and· then·~ wilt ......
thyself."
Shakespeare said, "And \his above all,
to thine own self be true, and • • ,
thou canst not then be false to
any man." Again l wOuid preftf, "And
this above aU, to any othtr man be
ltue, and lbou caMI ·not then be false
lo tliyKU." And DI.II tabs couraa:e to
disclose our real feelings.
MOST OF US WEAR muts., we play
roles! We try to li•e up to 10q1.el:hing
that we are not and we become stuffed
shirts -not the real thin&. Some of
us at this late date don't ••u know
who voe a~. We hlven't determined
what is the J'i!aL "I". We have all
met people who bide behind Uie mask
or goodnesa. Oh, they are so sweet
and nice, never breaking uy o( the
laws of eliqaelte .but ~lb they
are helliom ! . .'
There are two areu where people
complet.ely dlaclose themselves. In a 1ood
·marriage relatkinshlp the.re ii complete
openness, honesty and dh1clOlure. Ill •
counsellng situation there must be com-
plete nposuro oo tho part GI tbe P'li<Dt
and the tbtraplst., jn turn. mm& have
•mpathy. ileyood tbeoe two· areas lllere
are varytnc.degrees ofaeU-revel&tion.
-·Dear
Gloom.y
Gwi:· ·. .. '
..,. ~ .(:.. . -- . ---~-r·---.::. _. ....... ·~ ..... i...~~ .• • • .. •.. -
'Many School Districts Break Law'
Why isq'l the .~ance on puttin. · ool anii .tuln('ln trU!t -contalnera ·: To the Edilot:
enforced .tn Jillnl!ntton ·Beaclif · -}'O<U' recent edil,orial Dec. :!!' c:on-
in Padflc 'S..da lllOj IODldlrnes · c:ernln& a dlani• GI CfA poliey on
stay'.tn-thlc ... lrom oaec:olJeo. teachers' llrfk .. hu him calkd ·tO my
tion 1o uti!iiest -. ...r that'a ll1IJ> a11enuon .. -.
pooed !O; be a "prid<ful beauty ·1 am encloiini an editorial from our
area." · Southern Secticn MWIJ>IPU. 11'le Record
-E. E. F. (Nov. 11161 issue}, which may clarity
-'
"
our pos!llon. You will note that Cl'A
does not like, and does not recommend,
teacl\e111' lliikU. JI, susgests at.V~al
procedurtts.~wbldi•W more effective .iii
tloe,• -1u!loo, .' of.~. and wjllcli '""'•14 ri\llii'jl>I... . . -.,rt' . i"'~~essary · · " · · ' Since the~d the Winton Act, f. . ~ · llCll'lNTltlc •llldy has Call!Mnia.'boardl olJ:i'~ca~on have been reveUI thlt men c:\O not dlBclose as ~"~ negotiate/ ("meet and ctn-much ~Hout themaelve.s as women; that fCJ'.") with --ft~ti.tives or em,pl~e
white: fflnale'.s disclose most to mother , orcantzatlons., 'nrla, Jaw i! beine bro~ and~~ and least to father and • ""-"""~ Calif · hool boY.~~· ~t 1'htte ·ma~ !CG~de !nstr~:.1 uuu"'..::m orma sc oboul~ to bojll )>areots;ai!~ mil• . . •
friA:nd•alid a\plf!Cf1JUY i .. 1o lema!e . ' TEACHERS, RELUCTANT ·lo withhold ,
fr1ml.• It Is lotereilbli to -.. tha~ . their wv!"' .under any .c!reumstanees
Netro mal~ dilclose ~ost to· their .!. and committed to professional conduct
mothen· and udla.I · it •D, ~ father, -·cannot and will not accept the prln-male~« 1'm• fl'1e~ ,.: ciple that, when an impuse develo113,
In general tsma wl·· can ~Y that they mllst always ' assume the role of
people disclose mwe · to their family I~. This would re.nder the entire ~ to non-famUy members. more to negotiations process meaninatesa.
lhell' own sei than to ~~cp~ite su; c:rA doeS not advocate .the· use of
and they disclose, ._ .. ~ a1•
· • strike ._to .'iOlve . a prob!~; .,,but it
· will cOnaider the Use of 1hi! ''Weapon"
to insure adherence to I' 'lega)}j-man-
dated process or problem 80lving.
And you may be assured that thfs
-9rganiza.Uon will: always .be motivated
· »rlmartly by theJnterests of Ille sludenlo,
snd the public Jt1serves. '
RICllAllD D. BATCHELDER
. Executive Secretary
California· Teacbers Assoclittion
. Southern 1Sectlon
Editor'• Note·-TM DAILY PILO.T
tdit0!1al ......... lita! pf 1~< California
Teachers Atsociction.1CTAJ for odop.
• ting a pqliq/ thpt . teachers ma11 be
,jU&tlflf<l'.ffl slriki)1g' if 'thtJj -~ in
othir loa1,1s. win tbt!ir. point with the
: ,chool board. It nok<I that alwaf/I ·be· '. ' . . . . .
·: ! ' . fM~ <1T1'-fJ!l4 put th• ·tlJ<lfer< of
children btforf etitr!/thtngi ellt.
·· -Editor
f.on9•1aalreol Polfce1
To 'the Edit«:
t have • posjtive suggestion for im-
pioving communit)'·policer.e-1.a t i·o n s.
i Allow '\'!11>~ .Qf,;-)!t~.'!!!!,c>rs · to grow
100ger 'hair. r.:;\hii wl],' =ina.JV of the
N>flt~)~~B.·1~·•.,11.ew borid
with thtO~ ~nel1\ill&OllCl8S.
· Much' of tbe-.•ntl·poll« seltlinitnt is
caused by. the ~ ~-or generaliza·
tion that the · ~essmen ·make when
they prejudge,: a: yoUlbful . and '.bopeful
employe becauie ot hii long Jocks, name..
ly the lumpina of . policemen intof· the
category ot pip by y~ wi~ ."~·
favorable contact with the law. \
THE WHOLE IDEA of police 14 to
protect the rights· and lives of the
citlzem. Since everyone i!' a ciUzen in
pracUce, ll)ese. rlebts are rdailve" ~
tection [rem criminal deviation' from t.be nonn. .
Police that look like-the citiiell.i' they
repn..,.t present no stereOtyped Ima&•
of nDause ol the ·iaw by any pattiCular
group. And yet these feelings oL mime
.mt and constljute a !Jal difficulty
in law enforcerilenl . .~ '
' " THE PURPOSE of t!P'.' letler is to
urge the public, all '!-·.'.'15• . tG acctpl
a policeman as • mal'.I' Wotking on the
lide · of people and ..r ·on Ille lide
of· repression. I see no rt.Ison why lft'
ofiicer shoul<l not· have nll}Onlbly lone
halt if he so dealr~. Pollcem&\ allowed
the ·aiine range of ptrBOnal 1ppei.rance
as the rest of the cltlunl'y ceue lo
represent lo any groUp, . influential ()r
riot, any stereotype.
.AND YET I have l'le'Vt:r a~n a local
officer who bas long hair, or even who
has more than a. crewcut. f bow-many
qualUied people Who ·woold OOJ,lre to
enter police work )"I ballt al the._ Symbol
of · the crtwcut u bdng 1 · nprustve
sign. Allow policemen to loot lilie more
people. than Marine recruJfl :-you
will eel better community r~ ~
the younger eroupa. T~leranet,,' Chri&-
tians.
peers · than to lhf.ir elders o r
those YOU!lill'· Ma hides much of his
real self behlJ\d an iron curllln but
there is evidence· to $he . effect that
thiJ iron curtain melta .like wu when
it is esposed to ~ warm breath . of ·
love.
Lodge Lik~ly to · Be a Hard-fine·r
11\e new learn In Pltia and Ule old DO YOU KNOW who :you are? Have hi.ve much in common. lndlcatJons are
you couraae 1o be known? Art you .that Henry Cabot Lodge as chief U.S.
playing • pme ~ masque!'ade! Are negotiator in .lhe ·Vl~arp pqce talks
you iluthentlc, 1en$e, real!· lflll follow at least as. ~ a line as
YOU recall· the ,Wt&r·player who, daily, his predecessor, Ambassador W. Averell
for 20 years,· Sat. w:lth a onNtrln&·p.il&r, Harriman .. Lodge, 66, is sWI deeply ln-
floldlng theume.ftet, pluctlntthe '~ volvtd in the Vietnam, war, lhouah ·his
IOUlld. On•. day his wile Aid, with moot ·recent ~ bu bftn as
surprise, "Dear, I no<lced Ob TV today Ambassador to West Germioy.
that a man wu playinc a ,Wtar. but . .Catlot Lodge served u Ambmador
11 had· 111 lllrinp, and Ille m&n kept · 1o Salgoo U1Kfer Prtsldenll ~ and niaV!ni hf; hand1 ~. and making Johnson ·in.196H4 and 1""7. On Dec.
Iota o1 dlUerent .~ ~not. like you." f, ·1•. he was quoted u 111Ucl91Wi.g
Her husband said,: DOn't. "Worry about : a cradual fadinc away of tbe war:
him, dear. He's still huntin' the rf&ht ·"'There's no ~aty, tbeWt no ~a; ~ md l have already fourid iL" they (tbe enemy) don't even admil lhty
Have yoU bu\d 'the richl note? Have Wf.te in a war, let alone admH: they
you-Ille courqe'lo·be'tnown! got defeated al it."
after a halt to the bombing of North
Vlebwn. But Hanoi did not actually
accept ·bids for talks unW April I, 1168 -\!>'00 days after President Johnson annOwictd be woald not run kl< rieltc-
U.. and uiat 'the U.S. was haJlinl born·
bln1 rlllds over ~ GI North Vlebwn. .
ON MA 1' 11.. AmbfslOdor llarrimul
and z... 'l'IMIY.·-el -· delep. ..... i\i!ld. tbi:lr a.. pi_, ....r.o
in lhe lnternaUOnal ~fence c.enter
in Pllria, 01"1! the elegent ~·M~.
Al 1 seed~ rffetltlg On. M" 17 Hanoi
'1towed lnteitst 1¥ 11.s. wlUlllpeas to
accommodate ~mmtmfJta in,Sotilli Viet-
nam's political' life, but · itiU ~!Ml
that a complete bomhinl hall pnced•
any~. .
Hanoi and Washin&fjin io July and
August agreed to a llm!ttd uehai1a<
of war prisone(>. By then U.S. troop
str<nilb in V!etomn had climbed to
534,000. On Oct. 3l Prftl<lent Jollnson
announced the end of bomilfn( in the north. : •
The Nailooal ~-"'1nt -Viel
Cooi -on. Nov ~terms kl< the J>arie 1aib. Pf' · of South
Vietnam-m lift, • .~ Viet Preli·
dent Ky ,to ......... ~ .-!;y cbooen ' '
ft!!CO!i•linl team to go to Par!&
SINCE EABL Y Dec•mbeo Ille foar
parfles have been sparring o'er lhe
abatie GI the negotlatlni table encl oth<r
procedural details. Peace \able ee•Un&
Ls a tired old game. It 1oes bad: to
the COngr<ss of Vienna in 1111 end
the Sig Four conf"°ence in Geneva In
1969. Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief U.N,.
Command negotiator during most of the
sessions \hat bnluihl on the Korun
truce, tells how lhe Konan Communists
maneuvered on . seating. "At the-fiM
· meeilng ol delq:alea," fie ,nPorts. "I
seated Dl)'.aelf at. the confatnce l&blt
and almoot .aanl: out of alibi-The· c.m,
munista had provide(! a chair for me
whk:h wu C«L&iderably shorter than a
standard chair.''
Beauty and the Beast IN A STATEMENT on Vlelnam sub-
mitted to the Republican Natlooal
Conventtoa's committee· .oa resolutions
WI ...... 1, Nlton declared ; "If tho
war is IUD golnJ on nm J aouary,
it can best be ended by • new ad·
minJstralion thal bas eivea no hostqes
to. the mistakes of the past; ·ID ad ·
minlllralioo neither defendlnC old errors
nor' bMtd by the old ..-.I." Lode•
in at:c.pt!JJI Ille appolntmillll !rem
Pres1den1..rec1 Nltoa ... Jan. s. IOUnded
1a different note. ''Thi commitments cf
the past nm Hip." ba· said. "Each
partY to the conflid hu formed th•m
m more · than • decade ..of ·.war. They have been s-tioned in the 'blood of
many."
. ··OftPortunities for ::W elf are Reform
Antkt wl~ Stmutk1:
I resigned for reasons fll policy; qait
because of• disagreement; he was fnd
Cor poor judgment.
Beauty and the Beast: A "beast" is
any man whose wife is suine him for
divorce ; a "beauty" is any woman who conooles him durill( lh1I pu!od.
The dHference between a "dope »heel"
afld an "lnvestment fUide"' ia atiout
l50 i copy.
I "over.Jodulged" last nij:ht; you "tip-
pled too much"; he "1ot 1•""'1·"
' . .
·. ,.) •. :'.. . '
n WU jus& a year qo tbal North
V-fontp mfnlstar NljllltD Diil'
Trinh let it be' -ln"1nf1all1 that
North Vlttnam wu deilnlttfy w!llitlc
to hold lalb with the llnitei! States
The Nlton admlnlltratioo bu !'" ~
"""""1ty lo make . ptl1 tmproyemaiu
ii the nltion'I. pabllc welfare systeni.
Recent uperiaall aimed .at nduclft&
poverty have revuJed both workable
and unworkable approaches. Then: ls
more awareneu than ever before ~
the need to lf•e constructive help &o
poar and ltoQbled dlizens. and thett
It wfdHpread erilicbm of --wel!oft P'°IP'MI'· Arnone many ~ for welfare
rolorm, perhapo' D106I llgniflcanl now
are Ol098 ol Presldent.aeci Nixon'• own
lasl force. T!1il ~ would Impose
n.Uonal m1nlroun\ atandltds fof welfare
paym"11!, IOlbstanlJa!ly raising benefits
lo reclpienlo llv!q in stales now at
the tow ...i GI Ille ocale. It would
llhlft more of the f11110cfaJ burden to
Ille fec!enl !eve!, 1.....n111 atatt cooto.
It would ~Ille on the Model C!tlu
ape:Mence Dy cre1Uy extending this
coordinated approach of agencies and
or1anlz.atlona prattna al UM local level.
THI! T4Slt ' FOR(lli recommend8
Be\'tral niajor· Rdmlnlltraitve chaf11U.
It woold move' to other agencies, or
discontinue, mlJl,Y tctlvlUea of the em-
battled Of{lce of Economic Opportunity,
redudftl Ml k'Opl &o I few famMUnily-
F~,· 0 , ·~·":.i.•*' •.;,;, ~ ".I , ,, • . • '"". -~ ..• '. ~ '..1 ~. ,,.. .,,
~.. r ~
<I ; ' • ' , • ) f!' \;i,.:l;;t'; ..,,; _,. ~" . ..ir
actioo and communl~ funo.
lion!. It wau!d --a ....,.. coordinalln. aa"""1' 1!'1thfn the -uve
ofDce of u.. Prtoldent lo deal wftb
federal ....... -"'""' .uthor!ly than tb•o utipoftrl7 _, .-had. for
mOdemiud, red .tape and inconsistencies
will continue.
Thia ii 1 time for broad, proarelslve
~" in '"1bllc wdfare WW the -..imtn1a!railon be able to '1CtOlnplia!I
-ref01'11111 n.-......-
the futbrt, the 1111<, -...... """ . ' --W--sideralfoo GI -pla b a....,_
income, neclllve ~· tu. , llilli du1dttn'a allowances. .r ~
•••
Friday, January M, 18et
TllEllE ARB llOI'D'IJL llpa ill,-The cdltonai "'1Q1 Of U..· Dm!r
of th.,. ideas -H thq C< fUUlt Nol fftk< to inf°"" end --In more equitable and bumw aasblliice ul4lt '""'1'l bv 111'•-li!IQ IAit to the poor, more recop!UllD of · the ....,._,.., opl!ltooa . ....S .-
oompla clrcumstanc&wb!cb mike pe<> .....W, °" ,l<lplc:1 of _.,. ·
pie poor, and betler oylleml of lo-aftd aiQlll~ bv j>l-llfl •
centive1, guidance and tralnlni to help ,.,,,,,, f"' U.. e%p1Waion or
peoplo become indtpenden~ There b our r<adm' eplnioftf,, an4 br
a , d..,.... tb11t IOmil> "'*""8 Villlch pret••«ng · IM dlllm• of.,..
havt bftn difficult but bnportan~ sucb , point. •t infomted obHn>rn
u tht Job C0rps, -betom• In-ond IJIOM.Tm.,. on topkJ of-U.. errectJve. or even nonatstent, in the . • dau. • .
reocpnlution. And unlese re.Wictlve
repjat!OM which hamper w•lfar• od· I Robert N. Weed, Publiallell
mlnlatr1Uon It every level can be
-
.. e
dlly
. tO
:ept
the
lido ... ..,,
•ed nee
' lo or
JCal
who
1111)'
to
lbol
!lve -you
""' .; ..
·oar
the
lier
tine
. to
111\d
' In 1.N,.
the
tall
dsts
'in'.
"I
11>1• ..,.
me
n •
d"' .... -llllt -
I .
' • • • I ' • ,
r • • •
. ' ... -. . -I '··--______ ...__. ·-• -
' . ' ' . '
' ' .
' ' I :
' ' ' ' . '
' . '
' ·-·
••
CHECKING·
•UP•
-:Gitls With : ~ . .
Long Legs . . •' . ' '· ..... _, ..
: Ati:Smariet. . ·;'
' .• · i •• • • DYL k JIOYD . -· .. ''
BUSINl'!SS ,WMl!nSTRA·
'TION ·gadualtS · '111 h ytar
.·Q~-:, can _Oped_ to •·recelv~ ~~,· . avera,e ,~'laalarles ,.Q( .
-"'· 115$· • _t, : .::.,, ·~ ,, ~~ ; ' ~ L\>,NG. """" lllJ' • '•· ·l ".tilljy lll<ll' .mtelllJenl,, . ..,""; .cri;_ &borl-~ .fwiaIQ, :-~.·~ ·
!!.,., •• t• '·~ bui •. tbey're ._gen"er~y .
!'1,,. ,, 1 more beautiful," ~ed Utat
"" . • ;; showman .ot yesteryear Mr.
Billy Rooe •••• A TU VEl.Elt
reporta the barteDden ' in
~ Scotland now ~t on-pouring
11 drinU Irom. a . flflh of
~Q-•'#]'llAT ~-.
C""""· lctV... ·'. "il:8biib 0
0( '..
. Houitoo's fnewQ 'fll<m.,~ ;
.known far and ,,-ee u . we
"!pOgheW bowl," 'ii<!'! ~ .
• .. , SCIENTISTS .00 midY
the. animals, cats aiid catt~
and even such is thee and .
me, contend tbe fe.malea ate fir more apt to start all fami-
ly fights.
~ .. ,,.,., IF .;,y tavtrn ;ver-~n lbe~-~u ce1i drlfti!' 1or re given ·
was onti""iich spot year• a10
in Los·. Angeles. Price was
7s.··9d1ts, when-:,~ wu.,a
dllTie, and 'fbe time limit wall ~ • · one-"°"'· A Clislomor~I th' <11alfenie pald bis ~ ~its ,..,,
,,.... ... endol<)ol< a ljn) .. lllam~ <'l"I·
Ey.etVitrieases said .~ wied
to-: get <a ~ fuMy -~ !-\~'.;..' ·, tha~ place aboUt·lO p.m. .
·; .. •. < .. CllSTOMER. SEl!ViCE:: Cl·
• .r • "ISN'T there any Yl&f to \DOW ~'.:-. --... whethei-. ~-'r~ .ureally . ~ n
love?" A ... llOy, umt ·questl _:;:~·· ';, · comes ·:up Oftener ~ ~ ·
quirles · aboUt the ·romiftlie
profensiU.. 1>f ';trio cAlll:d
Mary-: Well, our Lo'letlnd War
•ro man has . studied the matter.
~s ~= ••tf you teOO to forget
1. : • t ' Y'wrselt h1 your concern for
somebody else, that's l°''e."
. . . Q. ''l'llAT SECRET
SERVICE MAN who threw
himself actoa(jobn r . .Ken-1 • • f"' ' aiicl biC1!lf'i; al tlie ~ ';. ; ' .. ~ ~ la'.te Pr'e'IJdeat'll • • • ·
assassination -wbat'I he
doing now'?" A. Clint Hill? "'· .. , ~·-""--s lnl ......... ~ p -~~-1 . •
3 1 •• '~f-' THOSE ~ who ~ ··the PJpullr!IJ •; •4 !1~' ~: 1: television. .!hoW'I OQlbt •to-taJk · to the people ,,..,..,rll,1«
,.. • · ,,. the telepbooe campa-'ll>eY
know. The men popular the
TV !how, tho f..,er the
telephone callL Am. told the
·--.-natfonil le1eprai8 ~161 , ,
tho SUJIOf
. bad; lo the
. ~ Unll1 ,_._ I::
........ ~ i\pbor1e
be~een 7 aod 7:15 p.m. weei
nights in thole places where
~-'! · · 1trnoe and Andy were on the
• \V · air 1l Ulat time. .
· 'Joi' ot.fll NE.'tt Chief
~ .·--.of PJ'Q&DOfjle;aklr ~ p r e d I c t I :..r .. Mllia,.._ tu~ort· In 11p-
. ' ~ ~ "" .itu· Iii ,;nq "' wtlf lri ~, °"""*'Y·
... :d Ttµni . of 'bU:., ~ :~"' "" ' . • •"'-Y Yl'1lll"tqxc1tiottf attd com-
' .. ;, '!1••11 ~~~.,: ~ wtu b<..., r,,...
ribll .in •c1i<cki09 lip.'' ,...,. 'Add'r<u . mail to t . Ill. f
-BOIA.-(• ~&th<_DA/j,
1'1WT, B°" 1815, N<IDJ>O'I
' .. -
' .
•
•
•• .. . ; . ~'~ ..c-
' .• ,,~ I ' ...
·'
' ,
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--j __ , .......... -~.;1
\' ,.
I
" . ' ' .,
. I ••
' •
.. . ' ..
• '
. Fer people.., ant
• 8ei1t~11e11ta1 abcltlt lllCll"'1t -. Pilri~ Deafer8 ant
roti11 'beck iilfcee on.
~·models tb calaal9
' . Jm' liOlh AmlYersary.
.•. . ....
•
' •
•J f' ~· .. ,,. I < • •
• 1 ._...,,,.., • . • • . _,,,,. ·~.
'fl'll'" t ~-,.··' l .!J '. ' ~
"l ' , ·-a Ill-
.... ____ '"""'.Baell,__,_ -·~JNl:::.--..1. ........ ._ .... ________________________________ ~------------------~~~--~:....:.c.c__~--•
J
I
I
8 DAILY PILOT Frida)', J•nuar)' 24, 1969
You An Invited To Hoar
WINSTON EVANS
NOTED WRITER AND LECTUAU •I M.l.T. •od
other colleges throu9hout the country.
Saturday, 8 P,M., Jon. 25 at Baha 'i Center
985 Victoria St~ ~ l\ofosi
[ Qa;k trese ~ bN 3Jday tire sale pres]
fu/1 .4-p/y nylon cord, . -
G~~er81 Sa .Jet:
u•eG_,a/'s
conVB11ientAUTO-CHARGE
no 11JOr.11Yf doW11
montlutopey
$ :95
FOil COlff'M:T CMS ..... IUl ,.,,., la.
Tn .. ,al•l.IO• lJ
"''·····~
...................... ..., .. a.vm-....,.
.................. , 01-111:2 Is
........... .., .. 0 .., ... ... ......... __. ......... .....
•• '§7. Os ..... ,.. I C'a:I _ ...... ---• 7 A ,._.......,Allis .... , ..... ..... ,, .........
• J CHECICYOUR11RE SIZE '
V CHECK YOUR SALE PRICE .. _
., O.,f\~ --
.,._,,..,..,
IMaallllilll'
WHEEL ALIONllENT
ADDS SAFE lllU!8 I.:
-"'"'*---·-·-10t-out to,_. .. =·· .. ·~...... ~odjuol--...,
'-
COAST ~VERY
GENERAL GENERAL TIRE
Tiil----ERVICE
16941 Beach Blvd.
I I HtcJ. B•c:ll -84 7 -5850
515 W. 19111 St.
Co1ta Mf--646°5033
----------------------------------
GI Mutiny
Gtse Slated
SAlf FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The Aflny, will begin its at-
tempt Tuesday to prove that
17 · stockade prisoners were CUJ1ty of mutiny when they
beld a sit-dOwn strike to pro-
test the fatal shooting of an
escapl,Dg prisoner.
Six of the soldiers in the
San Francisco P re s i d i o
Stockade have been ordered
to trial beginning Jan. 28. The
rtmalnlng 21 are e:rpected to
-be ordered kl trial later.
The alleged mutiny occurred
Oct. 14 when the prisoners
refused to respond to an order
to go to their work detail8
and were advised they were
in mutiny. 11le ind.dent lasted
less than 1 haU hour.
The soldiers claim they
were protesting th& shooting
or Pvt. Richard Bunch. 19,
of Detroit, Mich., on OcL 11,
1968, by a cuard. Bunch's
fellow prisonm felt be had
been killed in cold blood when
he trl~ to nm away during a work detail.
There's Only One
No. 1-The Daily Pilot
M~ayHeld
In Concealed
Gun Charge
SAN MATEO (UPI) -
Black Panther George · Mur·
ray, a' pivotal figure 1n the
turmoil at San Francisco
State, was jailed early today
on suspicion of carrying a
concealed weapon. ·
Police said Murray and
some companions were stop-
ped by lbe California H.igbway
Patrol and that Murray wu
arrested after he was found
to be carrying the gun,
Murray, minister of educa·
tion for the militant organiza·
tion, was fired from his posi--
tlon u .. English lnstruclor
by the Stale Board of Trustees
after be made a speech
allegedly advocating t h at
black students at the campus
arm tbemaelves.
His reinstatement to a
teaching' position is one of
15 demaDdl of m 11 lt a n t
stodenh who llrllck the CIJl1: pus a few dV• aller Murray's
~
ACLU Enters
Yorty Suit
7
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
The Amerkan Civil Liberties
Union bas taken the side of
the LOs Angeles Times in
Mayor Sam Yorty's $2 million
libel suit against t he
newaplper.
Y orly charged In lho suit
that an edltorW ctrloon
drawn by PauJ Conrad
maliclOUJly implied the mayor
was unfit to be secretary of
defense and was mentally id
for believing himlelf' to be
so quallfled.
In a friend ol the court
brief filed Tbunday, the
ACLU aupported tbe
newspaper's motlcRI to dllm1u
the sulL
Old Wortd
Mediterranean
Spani&h Furniture
Roc•ivecl cancell1tlon of $22.000.DD
Sp•nl1h incl Mldlterr1nNn Fumltvr. ...... ,.,~ ..... ..-. a.. ..... Dw .._ Oii.....,
Items as follows: Geor~eOU& 8 fl custom
quilted soil with separate IOO<e pillows with
heavy oak trim decor and matching chair; 8
matching oak occasional tables, (2) 58" tall
decorator lamP1, hanging chain swag lamps
in· wrought iron, an 8 piece king slU muter
bedroom suite In pecan panelled Mediterran-
ean style with top quallt)I 15 yr. WllTlnl:J
king me mattresa & boz sprino. Spanish
decor dlnln1 set. etc . ww. ................ ,,IJUI
~:~~~;-IPIC;I """""'"' $698.00
Ally Ploc• Can Bo Purch11ecl lndlvldu1lly
Y•rm1 Avall••lo -N1WCOm1ra to C.llf.
Credit Approvod lmmecll•t•lf , If/] F......itwe
At Harbor Blvd.
I a4' Newport Blvd. Costa ~ Ollly
E•..-y night 'Ill f -Wod., S•t. I Suo. 'Ill 6.
2300 Harbor Blvd. •,
•. ''COLOR-MINDER,.
Reference Controls
• Automatic Firie Tunini'
• ILLUMINATED CHAANEL
SELECTOR
• Re<:tangular ULTRA·
COLOR Picture Tube
••. 295 sq. In, Picture
• BEAUTIFUL
CONTEMPORARY STYLING
• BUILT·IN BONUS
FEATU~EI
This Ml Is equlpt>Od wfth
a ooell'ill 1.;t9nna ..._,
and tnnstbnner
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
TV & AP.PLIANCE
CENTER
HARBOR CfNJER
Pli• 540-7131 Costa Mesa
BIG 23" (295 sq. in.1
'41 95
1 YIAR PICTURE WARRANTY
2 Year Picture Tube Warranty
90 DAY HOME $ElVICE
\ '
2300 Harbor B.lvd.
-1 ~ t)fonteney ·
QIO'nC OONIWM. ............
Modtl MbiEPN
·~~==· ., ..
• EJGOtiO Condnlf'ltll ~
• AFC ••• .utOfftlldo h ....... _
• tNSTACOLOR •• ~ and IOOl'ld.,. Mnolt
Im-
• Slide rule tvnlng-4.Jt-ftr
• Co""""-nt COl'IOM!ed .......
• Buln.art co0i.t ent9nN1
ttnnlnll md er..tonntr
• Ocllcr_.,teanlll
TV & APPLIANCE
CENTER
HARBOR Cf:ITER
~
l'h. 540-7131
-
' For the . Record Lawyers'
Seminar
l .
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OJ\ I-HSI
Co1ta Mesa Ml 1-Z.CC
BELL BROADWAY
. MORTUARY
110' Broadway, Ce1t1 Men
u l-S4U
' DlLDAY BROTHERS
' Runtlngto• Valley
•
Mortuary
17111 Beacll Bml.
Huntlllsto• 8eaU
IU·'ml
, PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PW
~meleq • M•-1'1
' Chapel isl. PacUJc View Drtvt
Ne ... rl Be1cll, COlllorlll
W-!711
PEEK PAMILY
LONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'7801 Boba Ave.
Whtmlnller lltS-SSIS
;
<frrm•s MORTUARY T"U, Mill SI.
'aunllllsto• Be1d • LE MAI •
WElrfl.IFP MORTUARY
171h St., Com Mesa •••• J
'•
Scheduled
•
'bug is · ··ng around ,,, 1n.
•
'< • •
•
We've got it.
Visit us and ·you're pretty sure to get it.
NEWPORT IEA~
Chick lvorson, Inc.
2116 N.•wport ll•d.
17i41 •71-09'0
SAN JUAN CA"SlRANO . ' .. 8i Yates, Inc.·
l!&S2 .~lie _11. .. (
4"lfu1
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Horbour Volbwagon
117 II INch le•levord
1714) 1421f5
,.
DAILY l'ILOT 8
GroundetJ . • . ~uniC.rn\l111 ~
County Planning . IS COMING SOON
Sawllite Center
Bi JAClt CllAPPl!LL .... °""' .........
LAGUNA NIGUEL -While
the u .s. end Rl!Jllo ... llllln(
Ibo 1lr wllh 'lltellllel, Orange
Coun\r .... J .... ,.. • dll-
ferml at 11teDlte -one
' that wcm't tftll leave the _,... .-.. ...,._.
IC1 1 COWlly -civic
-'-., • """' al 1111!< ....... counlY -1 being built
In Ibo Leauna Nlcuei uoa .., Cn!n Valley PanwlY and
MoultoilPutwly.
At .,.....,i, only a lino lta-
llM end sradocf comlructloo
podl occupy the ..... but by !If, aeoardblc to the CGWlty'• mlatet plan, . two e o u r t
bulldln&I. • nv. alory ..... ty
STEREO SENSATION!
The colorful.sound of
Orange county Music ....
RADIG. KOCM .. 103.1 FM ~
From-Fashion lslai:id,..Newport Beach
..
·HURRY •· HURRY · HURRY ·• HURRY
6 DAYS REMAINING OF OUR
OIGANTIC ONCE·A· V:EAR
' '
. J • •
I •
'• , I . . .! . "
. .
. )
SAVINGS FROM 50% to 70% ,:::.
ON ALL OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FAMOu'S
IMPORTED and DOMESTIC
• .C"fANDELIERS • HANGING LAMPS
•·WALL' FIXTU.RES e· SCONCES
•FINE TABLE LAMPS
NOTHING HELD BACK. YOU · SIMPLY CANNOT
AFFORD TO MISS THE EXCITING AND INTRIGUING
VALUES YOU WILL FIND
' '
SALE INDS • • JANUARY. 31st
ELECTRIC &-LIGHTING
m Victqri1 Street, ~st1 Mesa
<Aot;oa from hneryl11 )
'
l
Specie! Courtesy to
1 · I 646.3737: luildera & Int· ·or Oe.coretora
-1
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10 DAILY PILOT Friday, Januaty 24, 1%9
ALISON NOBU:
·To Join Brides
Former Harborite
To Marry in June
Mr. and Mrs. H. Morgan Noble of Bel·
ved.ere, former Newport Beach residents for
19 years, have announced the engagement of
their daughter, Alison Noble to Donald Craig
Hartman.
The couple plan to marry In the Belve-
dere Congregational Church in early June.
Miss Noble, a junior at the University of
Nevada, is a grady@t~. of Newport Harbor
High School. She was presented to society in
1966 as a Children's Home Society debutante
and was the 1967 homecoming queen at
Nevada.
Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Hartman of Los .Altos, is a graduate of Fre-
moot High School and will graduate from the
Uo!N in September. He is affiliated with
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
New First Lady Has
Quiet Styles Down Pat
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
woman who designed Mra.
Richard M'. Nixon's inaugural
ball gown sees the new First
Lldy'a fublon tnnuenct as
a "quiet" tather than a flam-
boyant one.
"She will wear what she
likes to wear," says designer
Karen Stark. So far, what
she Ui:es does not include the
pants fad, Mrs. Stark added.
And the man whose
aeamstreues made t h e
historic ba11 gown sees Mrs.
Nizon as "number one in
fuhion," anyway you count
It, because ahe's the nation's
number one woman. Th.is is
Harvey Berln speaking, Mrs.
stark's brother-in-law, as he
counts off the 265 hours alone
that the seamstresses put in
on the gold buWon embroidery
of the mimosa yellow silk
satin that went into the slim,
jscketed dress.
Whatever Mrs. Nixon's in-
nuence ln what other women
will wear remains to be seen.
But it ta certain that the
fashion slogan for the new
administration ls "Bring Us
America" to go with the
political "Bring Us Together."
Familiar designer names
from New York and Los
Angeles are the labels in the
wardrobes of the leading
ladles of the Ni:s:on ad-
ministration. Not a lingle
French or Italian couturier
ii mentioned.
Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew's In-
augural gown of shell pink
corded silk ia the creation
of Helen Rose, veteran
Hollywood dealper w b o
created the br1dal dress MGM
gave Grace Kelly for her mar-
riage to Prince Rainier of
Monaco. Mrs. Nixon has West
Coast tastes too; one of her
favorite designers is Ruth
Matthews of Los Angeles.
Mignon, another longtime
firm in New York, did many
of the inaugural clothes for
the Nixon women including
the high-wallt<d. semlfitted
coats with fur trim that the
girls,· Julie (Mrs. D 1 v' i d
Eisenhower) and Pat r I c J a
selected for I.be swearing-in
ceremonies for their dad. Em.-
me, a New Yor)t milliner,
coordinated the hat.s for the
Nixon girls.
The Nixon inaugural gown
Is the first for such occasions
that the Berin..Stark combo
has created In his nearly 47
years as a manufacturer, hers
io 27 years as the firm's chief
designer. But they've dressed
prominent Washingtonians for
years and have more clothes
already in the works for early
spring for Mrs. Nl:s:on. said
Berin, whose firm has copped
evrry major fashion award.
The Nizon gown ls lo be
worn once; like all others.
lt now goes into the Smithso-
nian Institution's exhibit of
First Ladles' inaugural co.
tum es.
"It'll be nice for my
grandchildren to see later,"
said Mrs. Stark, a bit wistful
that all that handiwork should
enhance a First Lady only one
time.
Horoscope
Taurus:. Avoid
SATURDAY
JANUARY 25
Bj SYDNEY OMAIUI
Moody ·
President T al<es Seat '
<
Donald L. Banfield has ~n dinner in Heory•a m&aurlllll,
lnslallod lhe ~·president of Sallta Ana. Mn. Jack Bro'"'
lhe ·Ftctlonir)4a, au · Or;ing~ el Costa Mesa Is secrel·
County profes,,lonal writer's treasurer.
club. • The group meeb the
19): You ·can express special e1perience. Be recepUve. famililtwlthf,11 l8cetlof your MtJ.-"1~.Rosj.o, outgoing and third ~ (lf eadh
IJ:llenU:. Shake oU emotional PISC& (Feb. 1t.M:arc6 20): charaCter. Your convk:tions president, prf:$ented ~vel . ~ ~ ... Perq_a.l magnetism Stress on bow you behave are stroog -, YOU · are' ;:of=olli::ice=d::;ur::;ln;g::;the=""==tio::. ::;n=mon=lh=. ======:::; alhCJ,i oppcJJffe· sex, Give when circum!tances change, dedfcated to pr Jn c J'P J e s'.11
"The wise man control! his• aJ)d .)'OU .also receive. Avoid Key JJ..,. ver.tillty, Dilplay Change of residence may be .ava.m· uni· Cllrlli'181 destiny •• , Astrology points petty people. .actkl~ sense oL ··tiwnor w Ith on borlwn.
lhe way." AqUARIUS · (lan: 20-Feb. nelghbon, relatives. Don't try GENER,U. TE!WENciEs:
ARIES (March 21-April 19): 18)t Domestic: affairs ac-to be ev~e at once. Cyc"le high for TAURUS, f.
Check .,......, budiet. Know c<nted. Plan ahead. Sludy One lhing al a time! GEMINI, CmCER. ·special IS COM.ING SOON what's coming tn, going out. fioancial aspects of home IP TODAY 18 YOUR word to CAPRICORN: express • , , ,
Avoid extravagance. Genuine b~Yin&. improvement. Older BIRTHDAY -you lend to be true feelings •• , then you pave
bargain is available. B e 1..:iildl;;;;v!;d:u;al;;:oU::;cn:::be;::•d=il•~of~~in~lr~oo~pec~llv~e.~F~ew~pe;rso~ns~are;;,_w;a~y'.:f'.'.:or~ul:'.'.llma~t:::_e.'!g:aln:,:_1pr~6H~it:... !:,=;=====;:::;::===========j;' analytical, persisle.Q.t. Don't be I
sold bill ..,f goods.
,I ..
TAURUS (April 20-May !D):
Take advantage of inside in-
formation. Be there in person.
Accent personality, ap-
pearance . Stress in-
• depeftdence, origlnalily. Shake
. oU tendency to he moody.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Protect confidential affairs.
Not wise to do too much con-
fl~. Others tend to
mlsbiterpret motives. Time
.aperit by yourself today is
valuable. · Look behind the
&eenes.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
New contacts prove beneficial.
Eir:citement of romance is
featured. Don 't offend old
friend!. Realize some have ez-
cess of pride. Show aJ>-
preclatlon for past favors.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Live
up to obligations. Overtime .
assignment could cause minor
irritation. But you feel better
once task is completed. Share
knowledge learn by
teaching.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Keep communication I i n e s
open. Check travel plans. Be
sure of instructions, direc-
tiorui. One close to you comes
up wilh money-making idea.
Prepare :orrnat.
LIBRA (~pl. 2.Wcl. 22),
Feelings are intense. Nothing
halfway. Avoid playing with
emotional fire . Dig deep for
information. Protect
possessions. Study c u r r e n t
routine. Revision is in order.
Learn rules before breaking
them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Permit one close to you to
h11-ve spotlight. You can play
more signifiCN!t role i n
background . Check
partner s hip plans ,
possibilities. Study written
material Read between the
Jines.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. II): If pet bas been
ailing -oeelt proper aid. Be
aware of. needs of dependents.
Take nothing for granted. Ad-
jusbnent ln b om e may be
necessary. You receive news
of one who changes residence.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan.
Bum Mob
Expected ·
In Gallery
An unruly looking group,
dressed in tattered rags and
patched-up shoes, will press
enthusiastically in the Laguna
Beach Art Association Gallery
tonlght. •
However, there is no cause
to sound the alarm. The group
comes not to steal but to
celebrate the Affiliates of
Laguna Beach Art Associa-
tion 's annual Hard Times
Hobo Party.
Dressed 8l!I milk ma Ids,
tram~ and traveling
salesmen, the disreputable
bunch will gather r 0 r
festivities 1 at 7 p.m. -
providing each participant csn
scrape together the $2 ad-
mission charge.
The evening will offer band
music and a simple dinner
which party-goers will bring
in a basket or knapsack.
Mn. Murat Boyle is in
charge of the evenL Assisting
her are com1nittee members
the 1'fmes. Zacharyl T.
Malaby. Hovey Cox. Robert
Cotterell, William Glescben
and F.R. Atcheson.
A highlight of the evening
will be awarding of p~s
to some ol the "J!est Dressed
Bums."
, CHOICE
/ of your lavorite·r ' I decorator colors:
I edged avocado,
I edged copper
or white.
\ NO EXTRA
\, CHARGE! ........... ___ ," •89
Whirlpool
PERMANENT PRESS PAIR
Quality Whirlpool automatic washer features new super
SURGILATOR agilator. 5 cycle selections and 2 speeds,
Magic Clean self-cleaning filter and automatic bleach
dispenser. Matching 5.cycle, 5-heat selection dryer
has Tumble Press Control and diY;ng rackforSWMters
and SIU!BkS. Both hlM sPeclai ~ octiciil ·
for~·f'nia.~
Washer LTA-8800 Dryer LTE'8800
"\Vhirlpool
FREE!
UMITED nllE
ONLY!
Ha-141lt. .
mrl~bowl11111-
""" sot with pun:hueof
Ice Magic"
EST·l5PM only.
Regrigerator·Freezer With lceMagic9
15.1 cu. ft. of frost-free storage space with half·width
adjustable shelves, large storage door, mucil morel
Includes eutomatlc lceMaglc" ice maker,
porcelain twin crlspen and meet pan.
.At .•.
TOVATT'S
~
Whirlpool
LAUNDRY SPECIALS
Automatic Washer, has 3.
cycle selections, 2 ·speeds,
super SURGILATOR ..
agitator, exclusive Magic
Mix filter. Matching 5·cycle
dryer has 3 drying heats,
fast drying system
and extra large drum. Both
have special cool·down
care for Permanent Press .
fabrics .. Buy now and save!
Whirlpool
Supreme Slim-look
Automatic Dishwasher
Automatic pushbutton control
with 4 cycles, automatic
rinse-condrtioner dispenser.
dual swing.Up raclcsforeasy
·loading. Special water flow
feature for normal fauait use
while dishwasher Is running.
''Never Touch It" self cleaning
filter. Rated highest by
consumer magazines. Help
Stamp Out Mala dishwashers •
But Mrs. Lyndon B. JohnS1>n
bought American too -from
the 11.kes or Molt!e Parnis,
Adele Slmp!Oll and GeOrge
Stavropoulos. The fQl'Dler Mrs.
John F. Kennedy started out
aD-Amerkan too, with Oleg
Casan1 doing her inaugural
wardrobe, but eventually the
French and Italian labels
crept in.
Luncheon Set
A • ........, II being planned
by the Women'• Society of
CJri1tiaD Strvice., First United
lklbod'll Oluttb cl Coota
-nut Wedueoday al nooo ID,,.,.,,_. Ball.
Club
With
Marks
Dinner,
Birthday
Speaker
Alw111 tno insUIJation on Whh1pool lcelll&k" Refrtcti lb II
FREE DELIVERY AND NORMAL INSTALLATION ON ALL WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES
Clean up on Whirlpool -work-saving71ppliances at ..•
Retervatlam IDiy be made
with Mn. Gecq"e Perley,
cbalrman. 5'1~
,laguna Group
~· ~ Aullllary
"' UpJo -··~ ,t I P"I'-Ibo '°"""" and l-'111oind111 lo Ibo~ 11111.
•
The Rev. Dr. Whitcomb
Brougher, pastor of First Bap-
tist Omttb. Glendale, wiil
speak at the Ullrd aonu1I
birthday dinner ol the 147 Club
in Laguna Beach Community
Presbyteriall Church al 1:30
p.m. Thursday, Feb. t.
Dr. Brougher t. ch,a)!iain of
the Loo An&eles Breakfast
Club and last year served as
chaplain of Al Ma1aibll Shrine
Temple.
ln addition he was general
irand chapW. of lhe Royf
and Select Master Masons of
the UnHed States of America.
Tbe club is a 50cial men
and women's club which at·
tracts Its membership from
the Laguna Buch area.
Dlnner tk:kets are $S.50 per
person and proceeds will go
to Laguna Beach Masonic
building fund . Reservation11
may be obtained by calling
the Mmes. Marie Smith, 494-
1748: Loretta Harris, 496-1050;
Marie Kreig, 837-5439,
Brock Brewer, 645-1522.
TOVATT ' 5
401 MAIN STREET DOWNTOWN
HUNTINllTON , IEACH
536-7561
Also •• ~
Springdale & Edlng•r
892-4463
. _ ..... ----
I
KE
40
STORES ~':lllil TO
SERVE
YOU
"Why walk a mite?
Park close to our doors
and shop with a
sinile"
Harw Center -~ el DAILY PILOT -Frkf•y, Jauuary 24, 1"9-1
HARBOR CENTER'S FIRST BIG SALE :of 19-9
Saturday, January . .251h -
. . .
ONE DAY ONLY!
150 tables loaded with thousands oJ spectacular bargains out-
side on our mall for this one day only.
COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION!
.
Perfect time to shop for wedding gifts, baby gifts, birthda.ys or
anniversari~. Bring the whole I a miry for a ~ay of fun!.
-
IS THIS THE ·WAY TO RUN A SALE?
YOU BET IT IS!
' HEY KIDS!. .-
. P 0 I Y R I D E s:. • • • • • .. ~~111 10¢
Saturday, January 25th 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
;
.
KEEP THIS SECTION! IN CASE OF RAIN, SALE Will RUN FOLLOWING SATURDAY . . . -
f •
j
{
.
1
. . ·
2-Harttor Cenhl' .-hfp)ement .al D41l V. Pll.OT -P.rWay, January ff, 1fft
to develop an amphitheater on
the 250-acre Clark -estate.
DeveJoper Hal A n d e r 1 o n
proposed to officials 0 f
Hillsborough and San Mateo
last month pucrlwing the
estate for a luxury housing
development.
The pledit announced Mon-
day by Mrs. Robert Homans.
chairman of I lfOllP dedScated
to preserving the 46-foom
Tudor mansion on the estate.
would be used to develop a
natural bowl for use in sum-
mer concerts .
WINDSOR SHOP
SIDEW·ALK SALE!
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS . • • BELOW COST
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS INSIDE
SALE AS WELL AS ON THE SIDEWALK SALE!!
DRESSES Re9. to 16.~0 .. ' 700
WHILE THEY LAST HOAG'S WILLIAM HUDSON, DONOR BURNS (Ri9f\t) CHECK EQUIPME
Corona dtl Mar Couple Gives Patlef!_t M~itol'ing Sy•*" to Hospital
-lloag Gets MoniiOr -Equipmen DRESSES--!81.LE~H~2~ . -9" .
· DRESSES !-::ti.e1~~6~ 12°0
·
DRESSES !-::ti.E'~~s~: 15°0
ONE TABLE OF SKIR·TS
JACKETS, CA,RIS $.
BLOUSES
Reg. to 15.00.
CAPRIS
.CAPRIS . . .
SKIRTS
Reg. lo 9.00 400·
SALE PRICE .......... .
~~· :c~ ~-~~ ..... 500
::(I· :c:~~ ....... 4~
SKIRTS ··Reg.to 13.00 500
SALE t!RICE . . . . . . . . . . . · . . . SKIRTS Reg.•~9•00 4°0
SALE PRICE .......... .
SWEATERS ~~-,~~c: ~~~. . . . . 5°~
· SWEATERS ~~· ..!~c:~:~ .... 1200
or ••• OUR OWN WINDSOR CHARGE
HARBOR CENTER
2300 Harbor llvd., Costa Mesa
546-2622
special!
8-plece
S.l1d Serving
Set
So nice to own •••
ptrltot for gift giving.
law. .... ..,_..,...
tortw..-
'" altaml~ Orlgl111t ftogtrl
l llverplate pelrtd
with h. ft1Md .,.., 0,,.... uuc.
Nwf Md 1t•
lllad llowt.
NOW s311 ONLY
~ THI IHT£1U~ATIONAL llLV U COM,ANY
LIMIT I Piii (\JST0/.1!11
• CtMrge Accounts Welcom~
e 90-Piy Char,. or take up to one full yen
HAHOft CENTER
2JOO Hubor ll~d.
C"ta MtN
Electronic monitoring e
ment similar to that u
Apollo astronauts has
given t o Hoag Me
Hospital by a Corona del
couple to help &ave liv
the Intensive Care Unit.
The d e v l c e, which
$16,000, was given by Mr.
Mrs. Donald S. Burns.
The patient m o n j t o r
system provides a
television screen at
bedside which relays th
tient's heart rate. The d
also has a recorder
stores Ule heart rate
formation for possible f
use.
An alarm system is incl
in the device.
The heart waves appe
on the televlsloo screen
also transmitted to an exi
central receiving station.
The Intensive Care U ·
operation at the hospital
19M, handles critically ·
injured patien!s. It, too,
paid for by . iif ts from
Burns family Foundation
Burns, th~ father of
owns the Don Burns,
. Volkswagen agency in G
Grove. He also is cha'
. of the board of Newpor
tional Bank .
Lucrative
DETROIT (AP) -Im
Woodward Avenue,
main drag, paved twice
with dollar bills, curb-l
eight miles Inland fro
Detroit River -with a
bucb left over for cab f
Got the picture? That
cording to a playful
statistician, is what
ventloneers left bebln
Detroit during 1968 -
million.
The D e t r o i t Conve
Bureau say1 the future
even better. More than
conventions are booked,
II Houn-M0tt.•Tllun.·Fri. ~ pared with 355 meetln f :30 to t p.m. Detroit last year.
T•n.-Wed.·Sot. matt rge •--------t:l~:9~8~.m. • • Kids Like to
As~ Andy .
•
. D.\IL Y PILOT ...... lllY 1Ud11'11 KMllltt Kiwanians Choose Top~Man
Dr. Tom Nelson (left) has ~een_nam~.~'.'.Kiwanian_oLthe Y~' J>y the Costa
Mes·a Kiwaiiis-·crul>~ Dr. Nelson was selected for honor by committee. made up
ot past recipients of award, which went to the Costa Mesa optometrist on the
basis of bis service to the club and to the community. Presenting award is
Dave Leighton of Costa Mesa Planninf Department, winner of the honor last year.
Black Box Helps Sleeping
But No Orie K·nows Just How
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ~ irregular sleep.
litUe black box that aeems Dr. Jaco))son sai4 tesl.l! so
lo make people sleep better . far indicate that . d .a t-1 y . . . . . treatmenta ot a to 80 nuootea is under investigation here by ,result lo better sleep for 19me
a team of doctors who can't insomnia patients. .
explain how it works. "It doesn't make Plem
The device, dubbed a "sleep
machlne" f cit lack of a better
name, w a s demonstrated
Tuesday at the opening of
a clinic billed as the. natiqn's
first "sleep center0 at Cedars-
Sinai Medical Center.
Dr. Allan Jacobson, director'
of the sleep center, said the
electro-therapy ·unit "shows
promise" of inducing normal
sleep In insomnia victims
sleepy right away," he said,
"but 1t does seem to make
them sleep better at night."
At the new sleep center,
the -device will be used
primarUy ·1n .treatment of in·
somnia. and hypertenslon.
I~
Similar devices have beeb
used for years in Russia and
other countries, he said,
reportedly with much success ,
in treating i n s o m n la ,
hypertension an4 o t h t r
ailments. The method 11 still
under investigation in the
United States and results are
RESTAURANT AND C.OCKT AIL
LOUNGE
HARIOR SHOPPING CENTER
so encouraging it will be used ,.
in some cases at Cedars.Sinai.
The device sends a low·in-
Breakfast S·erved All Day
temity current through the LUNCHEON
brain between electrode.! over " IUCCANEIR SPICIAI..
thhe ehyesd andD aJt theob back °'td .. l/J Frelh Go11nct leef Served 'on Toasted Se11me t e ea . r. ac son sa . l s t I D I S d 1t ha~ no measurable effect B~n with T om•_to, 1e~,~c•d• >pee 1 S r1e•d• n9,h • erv• f
th t. t h'· braln with French Fr1ei m•lf• Green • • , C 01ce o on · e pa 1en or aa •
waves "but it seems to work." Oreo1n9
DINNIR Dr. Anthony Kales, director
of U1e Sleep Laboratory at
UCLA and a consultant at
the new center, said un-
<:onf irmed theories about the
way the device works include :
Captains Choice -Top Sirloin Steak
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
JOHN GETTLE •t the Piano Bir
-That lt may stimulate
the brain to produce hormones
l>OSsibly lacking ln some sleep
disorders. 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
Harlw Center -Supplement .r DAILY PILOT -f'rfct.y, January 24, 1Nt-2 . . .
Gem Show Pla~ned On Feb~ .i-2
Jade carvtnas and plum
agates wm Plumb JIUJl the
Junior ExhlbU ·~ at the
Oi:bie.Couni)' .. ~alrl!Wnds in Costa Me~ aoon.
nual Gem .and Mineral Show
Ftb,. 1 and I. O{ ... Htrold H. Snook and
~ HoJdlt.cb, acoordin& to
aoct.etY, officlals. Hours are 10 a.m. to 10
p.01. o~ Sa~y arl4j 10 a.m.
to I p.m. on Sunday. Tbejf specialties range from
vast liollections of gems and
~rala. to plum a g a t e
material, lapidary techniques
and collections of arrowheads.
The occasion is the free
Or~gt Coast Mineral and
Lapidary Society's 22nd An-
Particular interest is e1.
pected to be drawn by Otto
Schroeder, Mable Grouard,
-ennea·-1
ALwAV8 FIRST OUAJ,ITV--
--;:----..
HARBOR CBn'ER .
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
.
SIDEWALK. .SALE!
SATURtAY, -JAN. 25th ..... -
H'-RY-SAVE....aARGAINS ·
BIG SAYINGS-FINAL CLEARANCE
Many More Cfearanct Items Not AdvtrtiMCI
Panties
We••'t NylM Trlc.t , .... .,w.... ,,... Mee
Hoses
2;100
We••'• C.trece
s.ft 2/1 22
· JIWILIY CUAAANCI
IAlllN•S, PINI
NICn.ACIS, etc.
44c .. 122
Sweaters . w ...... C11f41te1 St~le w .......
~ 5"
Women's Sportswear
WOMIN'I lfionswt11 CUAUNCI 1 " JAMAICAI, INll PANTS .
• INIT TOPS CLIAUNCI
WOMIN'I ANKLI PANTS. SHILLS
...ATllS Ii ILOUSIS.
CLIAUNCI PIUCI
Ankle Pants
........ ltNtclt httl• Ault ,.,... .........
IH11-4 Te c.._
Knit ·P.J.s
3"
3so
22•
SOc
eMt' ....... IMKd 222 '-YC...
SPOrtswear •t~LI' IPOITIWIAI. 1 ll 1 " IWIATIU, INIT TOPS, &
ILOUHt; JAMAICA IHOITS
Sport Shirts
hys• ... lletwe4
Pl.W•. lei'*
lffKe4
Dress Shirts a.ra· ,.... . ., ....... h•• c.n. .... ~ c..,. ... Pnc.
Jacket ,... ....... ••rs' &Jtllitvi•l9" w .......
lt4Ke4 Te Cle•
Shirts
Met!'• l•lt Twtlt ,._ ....,, .......
lely C..,.._11tl1.-.•1C1-4N
Robes
.... •• 10 •• ,. .......... ................
o.ft• "·" "••
Polo Shir.ts ...... ,.....,.. ..................
CNw MCk-Ollly
Dress Shirts ...... '""""" ~~-·
,., "" cert '
Sofa Pillows
,,,., ..... l.,e\ NW
S,.C.h!! ... ,
'
Curtains
CWliNCl-SefW., Mntt ......... w .....
Area Rugs
1''
3"
8"
1"
s.114 C•Jer ll:et . 344 .. 9"
2300 Hal ILYD.
HARBOR CMER
Costa Mesa
-That it may 9l'f ect
brainwave patternt assoctatec1IL ________________ _jll.1•
1
•,· •• • •• --•\ .•, •• • •• •• •.•\ _..-,,.,· •• -•• ~\ \~:-.~-.~\ ... ~\~ ... ~ •• ~ .. ~ ... ~\ .~.'-·."'.!~, \~ .• ~ ..... ~ •• ~ ..... ~~~ ... -. ~ .• ~ .• ~.-~ •. ~ .. -.~. :-:'.:.'.:"·.-_-:'. ·-·~-·'
4--Harbor Centa -Supplement of DAILY PILOT -F riday, January 24, 196t
Eating Doesn't Hurt. Baby
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -doctor's Olden may not be
Pregnant women who give io doing lbemtelv~ or their baby
to temptation and cain aa any harm, 1 San Francisco
much as 30 pounds despite obstreUclan says.
SIDEWALK SALE
SPECIALS
Lucky Girl capris, plaid & solid
6-16 regularly $8-11.00
now 3.99 & 4.99
V.l.P.
Jamaicas, Pants, Tops, Shirts and
Tank Tops Regularly $7-11.00
now 2.99
Other Specials include
dreues up to .......• 25°/ooff
caprrs-up to . . . . . . . • . 40°/ooff
sweaters up to . . . . . . 40°/o off
See Our New Spring Line
COSTA
2300 HAltlOI ILYD.
OH THE MALL
MESA
546-2462
Dr. Howard N. Jacobson.
an IWOClate professor at the
. University of C a l 1f o r n l a
Medical Center, sald mothers-
to-be may actually be on a
medically sound tract by ·
gaining plenty of welgbt l!
they want a full-sized, healthy t
child.
Jacobson said recent studies
indicated women who gain
from 24 to 30 pounds during
pregnancy give birth to far
fewer abnormally small in·
fants than women who keep
tbe1r ftlgbt gain down. Babies
who weigh less than u pounds
at blrlh have a higher In-
cidence ol detth, physical and
mental handicaps, be said.
Jacobson's V i e 1' WU
disputed by Dr. W i 11 1 a m
Silverman. a pediatrician at
Cb.il4fen's Hospital. He said
excessive weight gain could
mean a shorter life span for
the child and a greater
susceptibility to disease.
Animal e x p e r l m e n ts ,
Silverman said, showed that
overweight mothers produce
babies who reach sexual
maturity at an earlier age
and who die earlier.
FDA Science
Chief Retiring
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Dr.
William H. Summenon, a
specialist in chemical warfare,
will retire Saturday as direc-
tor or the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) Bureau
of Science.
Summerson jolned the FDA
in 1964. He was chief scientist
ol the Army Chemical Corps'
Research and Development
llii§§~~-~-§§~~~~~~~~~~~~~Co~m~m~a~nd~fr~om~l960~to~l~9'3'.:_.
SIDEWALK SALE
JANUARY 25 T 0 YW 0 R L D SAT. 9:3U~
TABLE & CHAIR SET
R9iJ. Sale TWO CHAIRS
Stnic. Hutch 10.95 7.88 Re41. 14.11 .21.88 SALE .
Vanity 10.95 7.81
Tea Set .ff .77 lllKE ZAP-
crown Bean 8 19 Game 2.91 . 1.69 Rec). $20.88 A-BUBllE
Frantic Frog Game 5.95 3.66 SALE Reg. $2.tl
The Family Game 4..95 2.49 s13•a SALE
Light Up Mirror Set 6.88 4.29 $149
Bissell Housekeeping Kit 8.95 5.18
Blue Angel Ironing Set S.98 3.99 TABLE & CHAIRS
Musical M.rching Band 9.95 6.H 4 FOLDING CHAIRS
RtcJ. 26.tl .... 17.88 SALi . . ..
Creepy Peopf• Maker-Pak Reg. 499 Sate 3.44
F~ight Factory Reg. 8.66 Sale 6.88Tinker Tools Reg. 2.29 Sale 1.88
Tinker Tools Reg. 3.49 Sale 2.88Bath Time Tray Reg. 2.29 Sal• .99
2300 Harbor Blvd.
' .
master , 11.i:cf . . ~ -~ •
Costa Mesa
NO
RETURNS
Ul'ITt181Mtt
Tin Goose Still Aloft
The ungainly appearing Ford Tri-Motor was born when the Model T was king
of the road and was still fuing when Apollo 8 returned from the moon. At top is
the tri-motor Adm. Richard Byrd flew over the South Pole in 1929. At bottom
ls one of the two currently in use by Island Airlines of Port Clinton, Ohio.
COSTA MESA
HABOR SHOPPING CENTER
2300 HARBOR BOULEVARD
Starts SATURDAY, JAN. 25th
Remnant Sale!
DURING OUR
SIDEWALK SALE!
REMNANTS 50% OFF
ALL GOOD USEAILE LENGTHS-1 to 5 Yards
Cottons, Wools, Silks, Synthetics
Wool Skirt Lengths
Values to 4.98 to 2.98
Now
'2'• to s1s'
II Harbor Center Store Only ffi
...
g
s
n
I ,
I
I ·I ·
l.1.J
.. -
Mexico Nudges Cuba
Cmtro Ur ged to R eturn Some Hijack ers ., .,..... ,.,.. lft....,....
Mmco la putting pressure
on Castro CUba to dlacoW'agt
would-be hijackers of 1Chedul-
ed airliners.
The Mexicans have aated
the CUbana to return two ac-
cused a1rplane bljactm to
face prosecution in Mexico.
The Mexicans belie.e tbat
stiff jail sentences ol up to
40 yean might detu furtba'
such · actioa by those wiablnl
for one reuon or anotlier to
escape to Havana.
line to Havana for several
reasons. Mexican tradition
views breat1nc of cliplom.atlc
reJatloM U AD UDWunnt.ed
Interference Jn th& Jnteroal af.
fa.ln of aootber sovereign na·
tion. Malntenance of relations
with the Cuban Qommunlsta
allO la used u a aop to Ma·
fco•a own leftlatl.
It also keeps 1 channel open
for DOD-Oommunlst nations,
such u obt•lnfq the releue
of American citizens held
prisoner bl Cuba 1n wblcb Me6:9 timid a prominent
role a year IJO.
Mexico's unique position
mates It possible also tor the
Mexicans to apply certaJn
pressum on the Cubans.
It could create problems for
travelen from Cuba or leav·
Ing for Cuba, for Cuban ahfps loadJna to Mexican ports, for
the Cuban government aJrllne
fllahta to Mexico City, for
Cuba'a use of. Mexico City
u a way atatlon for trainff
aubvenlves ftom other Latin
American nations, and u a
relay point fqr Castro pro.
Nanda to other L I t l n
American countria.
Muko Ja the ooe Latia
American nation still haviJJ&
diplomatic relations w Hb.i================= ~~~~=-~ ~o·~uNGLA.ND 1925 still is CU1Sldaed valid. ~I;:
4": CONCERN - - --
The Mexicans thus are tak· s I D E w A L K lng over a leading role in .
bringing to a halt a &ituation
which also has caused ll10U&
ting concern among major SAL U.S. airlines, notably thole • E flying to Miami or other
Florida points less than 100
miles from Havana.
Knut Hammarskjold, direc-
tor-general of the more than
100-airllne International Air
Transport Association, called
on the United Nations to
declare hijacking comparable
to piracy and genocide.
Other represtntat.ioos have
been made to the U.S. State
Department.
So far the Mexican request
to Cuba bas met only silence.
Mexico is said to run second
only to the United States in
the numbers of airplanes hi·
jacked to Havana.
Strong pressures are being
brought on the M e 1 i c a n
government by the Mexican
Pilots Union. The pilots say
they are afraid that sooner
or later there is going to be
violence aboard a hijacked
plane.
President Gustavo Di a z
Ordaz also is reported deeply
interested in calling a halt
to the hijackings.
OPEN IJNE
Mexico repeatedly has made
it clear it has little sympathy
with the Castro regime.
But it has kept open the
Andrews
Keeps Post
Victor C. Andrews, o f
Emerald Bay, Laguna Be~h,
has been re-elected .chairman
of the board of trustee3 of
Chapman College, in Orange,
for 1969. A citrus grower and
SATUR·DAY, JAN. 25
9:38 -& P.M.
UP
TO
SAV'E
75
EVERY ITEM IN THE
STORE REDUCED·
FOR ;THIS EVENT !
marketer, Andrews i3 presi-*ANK·.a u.rRICAR'D dent of AQdrews Brothers of • ~
California, Inc. aqd a past u A rm cu A .. ·GE' president of the Emerafcl Bay ~ """"
Community Association. OR EVEN PAY CASH RHlected t o tht~year . , •
terms as trustees wen Robert
Guggenheim, of N e w Port 5 4 5 • I 4 4 0
Beach, retired busmess ex-
of Corona de! Mar. president
...
• Sidewalk Sale!
SA1URDAY, JAN. 25th-9:30·6 PM
25 SUITS ONLY
OT AU. SIDS
lftAND NAME
LON6 SLllYIS
IURTLI NECKS
ALL
1/2 PRICE.
IOSTONIAN LOAFll
SHOES
Sbes 7 ••• l '!J Only
1/2 PRICE
DRESS SLACKS
SELECTED GROUP
Sbl.21 •Jt•Jl•J1 _,.
VALUE TO
525 s760
SHOIT SUIVIS
TURTLE NECKS
SIH M•dh1111 Only-Color ll"lr
BERMUDAS
VAL., TO $7
s3ao·
ASSORTED SHIRTS -MOCK &
TURTLE NECKS SHORT SLEEVES
VALUES TO $12
s3 -s4 -s5
ALL MEICHANDISI FIOM ~UI H GULAI STOCK
Many More Items at Great Reductions
McGREGOR
ANft·FRIE.ZE
McGREGOR
RAM-Jns . HG.
520 s15
SOME ITEMS IN LIMITED QUANTITIES ..
Harf»r Center
2300 Harbor llYd.
Costa Mesa
Phone 540· 1500 ecutive, and Walter B. Mellott YOUNGLAND
of the South Coast 'ton·
-;i n1ction Company. 1--=-=~=--=--=--=-=~:_.:_: ____ J •••••••••••••••••••••••••.. _
-. .................. __ ... _____________________ ~~~
I
~
G....H.rbor C..nt9t -.,,pl1Ment ef DAILY PILOT -flt>lday, JetMMry 24, 1Mt
,,.._ '
u
·poor Dilda, Sfae'• Sad
Kitten at Orange County Animal Shelter has little sympathy for sad-faced blood-
hound, Hilda, who has just learned the "No Dogs Allowed" had gone up for a
big cat show recently at Anaheim Convention Center. Nearly 500 cats from sev-
en states were in competition.
HARBOR CENTER
SIDEWALK
SALE
ONE DAY ONLY
SATURDAY, JANUARY 25th _..,_._ ______________ ..,... ______ __
NAME BRAND SWEATERS
PULLOVIH -TUlTU Nl!CIS -CARDIGANS
NOW 1 /2 PRICE
FAMOUS NAME IRAND
JEANS .
now s300 POPULAR
COLORS
WASH & WEAR SLACKS
ALL SIDS, sm1s, AND COLORS
now s416 ......... 12.00
ASSORTED SHIRTS
Now $3.39, 3 for $10
now
l191tlar te $7. H
JACKETS
ALL WEATHllt
ZIP OUT LINING
s 1 ooo ......... 10.00
Two Mesa
Optometrists
Get .ijonors
A pair ot Costa Mesa op-
tometrists and their wives
have been appointed t o
organizational posts for the
70th Annual Congress of the
California o p t o m e t r i c
Association in Anaheim next
month.
Dr. Ronald Craig is general
promotion and society liaison
chairman for the Feb. 19 to
22 convention, expected to
draw more than 1,300 op-
tometrists to Orange County.
Dr. Martin P. Dales is
education . program a n d
h ospitality . chairman, cur·
rently serving as education
department 'director for the
Orange CoUnty Optometric
Society. !
Dr. Craig'• wife Is in charge
of the children's program and
babysitting arrangement for
the three-day assembly, while
Dr. Dales' wife will head local
society auxiliary events for
the convention.
Dr. etaJg iB immediate past
president of the Orange Coun-
ty Optometric Society and his
wife IA past treasurer of their
women's auxiliary.
Mrs. Dales Is the auxillary's
past presklent.
Laird Appoints
Logistics Aide
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird has named Thomas D.
Morris, 48, of Dayton, Ohio,
assistant secretary of the
Navy for logistics since April,
as assistant defense secretary
tor Installations and logist ics.
".1 • .
Steamers Return New HOpe
To Acne
Victims
Hilly EiTing . Risky
Urged by Group Engineer Able to Predict 'Hap-pening
LOS ANGELES -A way "He can stabilize the IOil
of predictma if not preventin1 by injection of llme or similar
WASHINGTON (AP}-Six· ecooomy. one of the uninsurable risks methods. He can forget the
ty year~ al.tel' it chueJed off Unlike Its an~tors of the PHILADELPHIA (tIPI) -of living on hillsides -that whole idea. Or be can build
into eblfvton, the· steam. early 1900s, !Jle. new steamer A signJ.tlcant breaktbrouah of waking up one morning bis home for an anticipated ~rt(l automobile may be would have ~o .b ~ 1 v y , was claimed by the University to find your house has slid life expectancy as we now ~ up for a comeback. dangerous boiler, coUJd make of Pennsylvania hospital today into a neighbor's yard -wag do for dams and cars."
If the counttY gets really · a cold l(art in 30. seconds, in the treatment of acne, the re~ed by a University of Dr. Singh developed his
serious about li<.lling.air pollu· and wouldn't have to stop scourge of the teen-age set. Calkornia at Los Angeles soils scale by making soU tests tion_,,,say~1 for the every· balf~our to take on Dr. Alber\ M. Kliftlan· said engineer. in the Pacific l?alisades and
Futute, ~.,.it mtgbt tate water. dermatology studies ahowed ,Dr. Atwar Singh, using the Portuguese Bend areas of Los
a loot at~ay versions The absence of clutch or vitamin A acid had proved wandering fences and tilted Angeles, where creeping and
of tJle Stanle,y $teamer,. the Y transmission would mean -less to be subs~tially -6Uperior homes on creeping coastal sliding of land has caused
Wh_!te and the~obile. cost, less weight,_lower rfpair to all other t~ical preparation slopes as his laboratory, has millions of dollars worth of
From all standpoints of bills. And because the steam used by more than 200 develop'ed a scale to pre-damage in recent years. He
technology, "an ~ceptable engine can give t Q st ant adolesce'nts in several modes determine the degree of says the scale is applicable
steam }>Oweted auf.Om6bile reverse acceleration, brakes of ireatment: landslide risk for any g.Wen to terrain anywbere.
could ·be put -OP the roads would be needed onJy for park· Seventy-two percent of those plot of ground. He bas found the riskiest
in a very few rears," said ing. wbo applied dally a lotion con· The scale, be said in a study type of sou, usually shale,
a special study published in And-it would discharge taining vitamin A acid to their released by the school, "will is that which weakens under
RFF's annual report. virtually none of t b e con-faced showed good to excellent allow builders to predict the prolonged pressure of the
Electric autos also would taminants which make autos · results after three to four mathematically the eventual dead weight of a structure. ·
help the smog· problem, the and trucks the p r 1 n c i p a I months. chances for landslides ac-SomeUmes the t a n d sllp-
report said, but would need source of-air pollutioa., ac--Kligman-flllphasized-t b-a-t cording to the ~il-types of -page's caused by poor drain-
"a decade or so" of develop-cording to the findings of the length of elfectiveness was the area. age or water seepage but
ment to become h i g b physicist Robert U. Ayres. of particular importance since "If the scale shows that Singh says some relaUvely
performance v«:hicles mat-Under a grant from RFF studies showed Utat a n y the soil on a planned building dry soil can be weakened by
cblng gasoline-fueled internal to determine whether there preparation used tO treat acne site is. likely to deform from the weight of a house over a
combustion engines. are practical alternatives to -even one containing no ac· the weight of the structure period -of years.
The steam car, by contrast, .the .intern a r combustion tive lngredien~ whatsoever -built on it in a certain number· "MankUld as a whole ae-
be says, "because from .ur
earliest clvillzatons we have
always settled in valleys. But
now the migration to thUM1Jt
is irrestible and we had better
learn how to live there safe-
ly .''
UCI Picks
Lihra1·ian
Miss Cynthia Buller baa
been appointed in charge o!
the College of Medicine library
at UC Irvine, Llbrarian·.ithn
E. Smith announced today.
Mias BuUer formerly W8I
In charge of readers' services
.at the Anabebn Public Librart
and-hu--sel'\'ed -as a -speeW---
librarian at Hughes Aircraft
Company In Fullerton and at
General A~mic in San DiqQ.
Smith said the library of
Cafif ornia College of Mediclnt wm be moved from its loca. tkln In Los Angeles to mint
next summer.
could quite rapidly b e engme, Ayres performed the will be effective for a short of years, the builder has three tually has very little ex·
d e v e 1 o p e d in a fully. research at Hudson Institute, time. But vitamin A acid has choices. · perience with hillside living,"
powered, long range vehicle Croton On Hudson, N.Y. proved to be the first wbich,;iiilililililmmm.l.lmmmmm.l.lmmmmmmmmmmilmmmmmmmmmmm;mmmm•--•9' equivalent to today'& ordinary lronically, it was gas-buggy poin~ to a way o f 11111
motor cars in response, ac· profits that supported the in-permanentit controlling the
celeratlon, power and fuel qulry. disease.
LBJ's Popularity Went Up
NEW YORK (UPI) -When
President Johnson left office
Monday, nearly two out of
three Americans of voting age
thought he bad done a good
job, according to the Sindl·
inger Poll., .
Sindlinger & Co. Inc., a
market research firm based
in Norwood, , P~., released
Wednesdl\J the· results of a
nationwide survey it con·
SAJ.
ONlY
Jan. 25
I
ducted from Jan. 12 to.20.
The poll showed Johnson
reached be peak of this
populari~ since he announced
March 31 be would not run
again.
Samplings of voter opinion
taken two d~ys b e f o r e
Johnson's State of the Union
address showed 4U percent
of the public thought he bad
done a good jobn 22.e per~nt
bad mixed reactibns and 22
LADIES. NYLONS
1Just 480 Pafrs) 22c -,R. VALUE .·
percent thought lie had done
a bad job. The remalnlng 11.1
percent expressed no opinion.
After the address, Johnson's
rating jumped 10 points, with
64.5 percent expressing ap-
proval ·~ hla administration
and only lU percent said they
thought be bad done a bad
job. Thirteen percent had mix·
ed f eellnga about h i s
performance and 7.9 percent
had 'no oplalon.
H1rlMr·
Center
2300
Htrbor Blvd.
Cotta Mesa
LADIES· T ·SHIRTS·
incl ,.,. 1hlrt1 SI OO EA. VALUE S2'9
•.
' ~ALL COATS
51499 REG. S2f»O
CHARGE IT
Anita Charge -B1nkAmeric1rd -M11terch1rge
FIELD'S SHOES
HAR·BOR SHOPfll.NG CENT-ER
2300 HARBOR BOULEVARD (Only) COSTA MESA
Sl .. DEW:ALK SA.LE
SATURDAY, JAN. 25th
SELECTED SELECTED
'HEELS FLATS
VALUES TO $20.00 VALUES TO $11.00
'7'° I '1400 '4"
On• Peir Two P•lt
.. . .
I
HEELS .MEN'S
VALUES TO UMO R.ORSHEIMS '9'0 -'13'0 VALUH TO UUI
NOW •17ao
-,,
"' ~
• llO CHARGES te s • NO IAYAWAYS
$HOES • llO EICHAllGES
• llO R&UNDS -
j • •
I
I ... . .
.. . , , .: r
._..•rbor Cent• -SuppltMnent .. DAILY PILOT -·Frklay.,. January 24, 1Ht
lh,,1•~ any tld ul'ldtrcounltf' diltlwuher h•~lnt mlnlm~m
01mtNiM& Of J4\')" 111111, 24" Wiik, end 2"' Ott», fOt'
OM tow prlC9 ef onty m OL Prl~ <*t net lncllldt -ceblMI "'OOiflc•I'-tilt, flt rtmodthnt, Exl~hng lnUll-
ltllool """' "'"' ltctl codt 1'141ufremtnll,
TV and APPlWKE
C~R
Harbor Center
EASY FRONT LOADING
"BIG FAMILY" CAPACITY
with I THOROt)WA.SH.,
• C[ £XClUSlvt sorr FOOD WAm tlS·
PGSU ands old fashioned llllld rlnsln& 114 mp1,_i
. I • PO'l£I MM .. ,n TOWB tun " to provldt the most thorou&fl •lhil'rl rrom all llde1l
1 • AUTOMATIC DffiRQOO DISPDISO adds deterseal to t~ie wuh cycle at exactly lht rlelrt time for sparklin& clean dishe$ Ind
ail\'mart.
• lflDCIWllWI.£ f10lff PMllS ltt Jiii! Mtolnlz• '/Oii( ~ ti blend wila
Yotr kltthen ~
CLEARANCE ON ALL BIG 23" (295 sq. in.)
G.E.-RCA-ZEN ITH-COLOR TY
CONSOLES-PRICES AS LOW AS
PRICE INCLUDES:
• 2 yr. Picture Tube warranty
• 1 yr. All P1rt1 wur1nty
• 90 Oi)'s Home Service s419.95
. :
SID E·WA LK. SALE!
. SATURDAY ONLY ••• JAN.· ·25th
MODEL
WA 700U
TWO·SPEED AUTOMATIC WASHERS
11ap1, totach a ktr ud tum a dial
ud th• wuber b nacly to lauder $ fually Ille loacla tnal)' cl11&
Two wuh cycle• • Turbo type
pump • Unbalance load control •
Heavy duty motor • Porcelain en·
amel cover, lid, tub and basket •
Positive water fill • Spiral Activa•
tor•, provides vigorous 3-z:one
washlna action.
SPECIAL!
PRICES!
ON ALL-
REFRIGERATORS
WASHERS
RANGES
DISHWASHERS
COLOR and
B&W TELEVISION
STEREO
~''
"'NO£WO
COLOR·TV
IN BEAUTIFUL
COICTEllPORARY mUNI
H11 295 eq, fnch .::'..1. e-. NO ....... fir ...
llOClllltl tunl• encl In~ fllrui. lW almolt kllMdlltt .,.
bn Ind lllalld. WM lflfn pt1nt
"" lllrdYIOod Cllblnet.
SALES-SERVICE
No Fr~ Refrigerator
Giant trMzer hold• up to 156 lb1,.
haa Jet frteJt Ice eon.-rtment.
Covered mut pen. '* e1bintt lhelvu, One ldJUatablt, Ont slid .. eut. Roll• out on wi.1 ..
HOURS:
DAILY
9:00 to f:OO
SATURDAY
9:00 to 6:00
S:~~~~ HAR,BOR CENTER-2• HARBOR BLVD.
•
•
,
,;....;....;...;;.;. ............. ...; .. ~!'"'i i ·rime Marche-s =Fowat~cd Mus-ic ,FaocJ
• • • •,,,(• . '~( ·.
The tlckinl of tile cjoit;,..,.,. a reminder ~I Februaey_ ls fast .
approad!inJ. , ',. ! • J
Needlng oo renWlifen.&l'e mlllilberi<C>f Ille 23 Phl1harmooie Women'•
Committees wbo will .bO workl\'C ll'toUlid~ clock come Feb. I.
• , ·• J • • I • • '
For it'1 ''time to insure m'us!col,eic,Uenc:e,'l ~ ~~~ter wa~
to do so than by cootr!butlnJ•to the ~~,ay)!~Soclety'• •
ann\181 ~uapct "W'4 Drtvt: ;·,~~;, .1·11 ':· • ·.\. •·•
, Freadlng . the countywlde c .. ln·. jil.' ... ll'FI' of ·Ille soclety.'s 16th
.....,. for 111118-70 .ii JohD A. Viberf,J!~t vtce: P,re\~eut ol the society and
drive cbalnnan. . , · • · · · ·
Ills committee coosists of the follt7Wing 'Cllr.ectors of the society, An·
drew 1>96sett, J. DOna!d .Fergiispn, C!iff9i'd H"11e5. arid Dl\na . L&tham.
ServlDg u cb.Jmian of the c;o'\,th:nia-•FtPid. lor the Women" cQm-
" mittOe fs Mrs, ~,Baker, i_s~\e1l by··Mn:. JObn 'Stor~. 'l)ey will: lie. ·
•~"hundreds .of v~ ;.nt~r.'tlufu~,Eeboiary .lo,.eegt"l't' sub-"
, sc~*".~·flln!I. ~ ~~6tles~e ddllbr to~WFllllip' '
.1Jl ~~tty._ ., ' ,._ .~l' l'.., ~ _ ·• ,I 1 '
•. . • . t ·•·~·~·e . . .· .
SHAl!JI$ ~IH~~ltiTIES " . , .
. ,
'
'' Campjlip~,.,; tr'llll ~~if Ille ~~.,·\~I*' ~?the r I
,Mmes. i>u!J. X.:UO, jOlln En(llsll.,.~)Qlii!ellSIIlith, Jack'F,'Early, R.
, Kell!> ,Illr(sm<M!r, Ira· Sinilh,~~ell, ~~~.11, ,P~o!JI, J. • '
.i l\qbert .Eg81l;,WU!j~ c.'¢ Sampson indt Ri>bert .E, 'Watson'. . . . ,, ' \ .· ; Qthers .are thi. Mil)es. 'AlaJt ~el;;L~B.,lletz._}Wy WeUes,,,\Vallfc•
• Olson, C. R. Pa!°"•. Walter ~.,Penner, .Jobil'L. UHin. Jr••:Jamea R.·(;uUer, ./'
D. G. Rosell!Jtl,.Jerry.'.Butera,.Er1c L. Nelson, Vlttof'F. MalZahl),.James~· Watson~and C. R.' M1ller.· · 1
• : • _,;·_ ,/
A successful drive enables the society to continue to pre~'6( coli-·
certs by the world's finest orcbestra~i't'T<asonable prices, llljd·to pre1.enl
• free P.ops Concert. , ·~·
The Jund also helps underwrite the society's-ann~"{enes of tree
youth concert& p)ayed by the Lor4'Dgeles Philbarmomc Orcbeslra, the
Deliut Orchestra ' of the Yoong Mus'Jd'ans• FOljlldatlon and the California
Chamber Symphony lor all Orange C~.cbildren.
AID TO ~i:NTS :. · ' ,
Another function of tile llU>(it:l-.o:'iiPJ>o~-1!>•. ~ety;i g~;ihts:in;,aie
program wblch. gives ~ lo &ifte!!.teuior, •JUdeol4.,IX'*1~".!' • ,·.
ing in music at UCI and C>Cp.'
Plans for the 1969-70 c$~cerf i~ason· indude six concerts by the Lo<'
Angeles Philbarmonic Orcbostra WiUJ, Zubin Mehta, music directot, and · ·
guest conductorS Dl!Diel Barj!Dboiiit, '.~el . Fruh_beck de Burgos, Hans ·
Schmldt-Isser&tedt, and a ~rt ,by;t)le'O~cbestrae _de Pam wltltjGeorgo .
Solti, conductor. Among lhe;soloists·will ·M Byron Jami ind Xildrt Walls, • '
•
pianists. . . ~ · · ·
For further inlormatlcin regarding ' membership In . the society ·
through a contribution to the .Contin""!!C~ fund, contact .the Ormlge'Oount1_
Philharmonic Society office;"2lll w,, ~st' _Highway, N.,-Polt ' -Beach,
64M411. ' ' ' : ' ...
i ; I • :
Musical~
.1. j ' •
·PrevJ-ewed -
, '
COUNTI~G THE':i.1'ui1ur~$ ; At the sound of 'tlte gong
announcing the . arrtVal, of. Februarx, the annual Continu-
ance Fund Driye· for the Otange _County Philllannonic
· .Sociely-will &et .under way. C911nting ·the minutes untif ttle
' .
TUN.ING UP FOR PROGRAM -Making sure they
won't need a ''tline up" when it coma to musical
knowledge.are three member& of the Onnge County
·Pbilharmoolc Socletr wbo will be attending the pr&-
view :meeting Wednesday, Jan. 29. Going over
scores and perusing record• are (left to right) the
Mmes. Ralph B. Conn, AJan•V. ·Andrews and Rich·
ard Brockmeyer.
drive begins are (left to right) Mmes. Harry Baker, drive
chairman for the Women's Pbllham;loolc . Committees,
. .Jerry Butera and Ri>bert Egan. The slogan for the fund
'drive lllls year is Time to Insure Musical E>:WlflX'•'. ,
. , .l
Pierre Boul.~(
Leads Concert
. , ' .
The great and greatly controversial condtictor,
pianist, seriallst composer and critic, Pierre Boulez
will be . coocjuctilig when the third. «!"Cert ~ ~ ~
rent seeson will' be presented by the (>range <loaat1
Pbilha.rmonlc Society.
Memben"of the Los Angeles Pbilbarmonlc erd!M-
tra will aasemble oo the stage in the Orange Cout Col·
lege auditorium for the 8:30 p.m. concert Sunday, fell.
~ ' '
Tbe program will include Anton VOii Webeni'I ~85-
sacaglJa, Debus&y's Atternooo of a Faun, Alban Berg's
Three Orchestral Pieces, Op. 6 and Schumann's $ym-
pltony No. 3 In E F1at Major ("Rhenish"), .
Ticket& for the live remaining concert& are '21 with
single tickets at $4 and stndent tickets at '1.'15, Tld:eta
are on sale at the Orange County PhilhllrmQDI<: Sod!!IY
office at 2111 w .. coast liigbway, Newport llCaCJi, 926IO,
telephone -11. . ·
Pierre Boulez, ,dark, intense, fast .. moWng Ind .blunt
has been, deBcrit;ed as ''the militant . of ne'W' muaic."
For 20 years he has been coosldiored eoe 'of 'lh~ most
significant creative personalities of 01.it thntr,.' 'Olle ··of
the half-dozen Or ao compoSers. w.hose work h8s 'e.zerted
genninal< intluence. on avabt-garde developmelijs In
mwic.
The conductor was born.'42 years ago in·Moillbrilon,
Loire and left iii• non-musical mrroundlngs· af 16,'for
the Faria· Conservatory where be studied tho Scliool of
Vienna, which was Ille work of Schoenberg and . bil
disciples. He is one of a generation of comPC¥en who
turned to 12 tone music because it aeemed to.of!et' jlJotn
greater freedom in terms of lr8JlslormaUon and: varla·
tion in musical material, than did tonal· IDU5ic. ·
lllB return to the United states this season will find
him leading 1lle orchestra, of New York, Bos1i!n, CJii.
cago, Los Aniele& and Cl.Vela¢. In the lait ~
bis gifts as conductor ol the entire orchestral
have been recopized and be has come lnto w'orlciwtde
demand ·for J>Odlum appearanctS.
I
It Raises His Dander
ANN LANDtl!S: l read wltll
the !<lier ""'" Ibo WUDID wbo •
bled OV~ two Vf!rf clo<e ~u...
· the backyllnl -her huol>ond IDCI
sister. They -· loct:eil In '""* and the time w11 l LDL
our advice was •1forglve and forpt witbaut warninl his wHe In advance
Ind then forget what you IOl'l(a ... " • obe can clear tbe ~ oul
'
phrasing, Ann, but euier Aid thaa Our _ _...._ wu· a .... -. or
And now I om wrillnl lo uk. ·-·-:. ..-ahwld 1 btiabond do -be IO I ll>o11pt. we have line tmlflc
6leo over hll ..U. ---• lildl ---lo --and two Yf!rf own llv!nr ,_, -llleep, In collep. 1111 -· -'t .... t a
bolh of them, oo the oolo ot I dh<no ml' -'do I. Siie <llllma
.? Mr. x ....... her home from • puty
, I wu not espected until tho 1DC1 camo In foe a nliblaP and llHi)'
in1 day, btit K~ a lino H6w-bad too Dm!J, ·
·been wbtn 1 man can't p borne My ~ fotg1¥t me for 1 ll"l• offalr ·-~I ,
U... years qo and -lhl BIYI tt's
m,r turn lo be nobll IDCI comP.Wiooalt.
Somehow I • thbtk a man ii entitled
to an occall<Nl indiJcretiOn but a wffe
lbould live ~ a different tel of rWes.
M11be I'm old-lllbloned 1bui this ii the
WI)' t tee It. PJeue·baCt me up. Thlnb.
-SHAFTED ,
DEAR ljiuFi rum ror wbt? You
an·llotltt I• Apporl for a weat.,...
-... , ..... raltkd the """'' .. , •• I
Bob. M) adYlce .. tbt ·~'loa.bo'nd
II t1i11 w edvlce '.!'-" $o tft wife
"" •u ·-c!oeate.L .. -.fGrllvo _. 1wp1, ~ ,.. \11 ....,gll to forrtt _.,..·Joraiovo. .
D!AR ANN i>ANDERS : Last qlgjrt
my ~ and I went to · a movie.
It wu nol odvertlood, ·~ on ~
IJJm boll I lhocld h~•• boon. ' ·
Ft'io nllnolel alter Ute movie ·~
I ! • CBme in .JiUt' tWo children, Tbl e girl was abpt4 10 and the h9f,.. DO< older than1 ~. The p:ateitt.t
aat.;ln tl)e mJddle and ttl! children sat
(Jn either lide. The boy Wll llited nm to me.
' '
IL-~------
.
A CflJNTLE RIMINDIR -Mrs. W. E. Langston
(~I chalrmlD of the Orange County exhibit at
Ille ·CIJu;;nla Hoopltal Aasoclatton cooventlon Feb..
&,7 Ill l'ilm Springs, remind& Mrs. Harry Slge1te
(i:tilter), pree!deut of the Westmln.rter Community
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
Hoopltal Auxiliary to brl!lc her dlaplaJ' to the meet-
ing o1 ·tlie Counly ·Comlcll: of AU%illarle1 -1 Mon-
day. ·Remembering her.part of the dlSplay is Mrs.
Gertnlde Carroll, president of the South Coast.<loin-
mwilty Hospital Auilliary.
Hospital ·Auxiliaries
Convene in Newport
Political Womer.
Court s·upport .,
' . ·~· P,rlce, l\IW IOCCllll!,. vice p r u I 4 e n I ;
on VlfiD 'll>Om_, C01ro1 and Geora•
Federatid. Heuneman, ,.....,ung and cor-
.. ~P coll~ fttf)ondlng aecretarles, and '"m•.t ~ eu1a home at Paw RJcw, trea1uttr. ~Po ll<>ad from · CbafnDen .appOlntad. lnclllde
' 11 • ' lo 1 ?. Tuetd17, tbe .Mmea. lloberl RedeD, J.ao.' a ' , Amerlcanl!lll: Cbarlei Hag. 11--..i In joining gard, bospltallly; Theodore
', .the ·.w. ... lnvlted lo altencl ·CoQper, logialaUon; Richard th/! """111• !Int meeting of Cole, pubUcity; Ra In a r
I ta -,-, .,.i all membenl Engelfttaen, budget a n d • 'tolnl ..... lo bring pn>-. finaDce; Wamn W I I 1 on ,
--'!ri u gu..... precinct, and Alan McMIDan, ~ Jin. J>rice during i>artfainentari. ~ yur w\11 be the Tbe fnM1P meets regularly
• -~ Collins. first the. fwrlb Tuelday of OYery .ict-e:eildol'!,; David Wellein, month.
. '
Hillary Amanda Hutson .
To Wep in FebruaEy
Mr: and 'Mn. Clenient Lang Califomla where Bh'e •ii ma•
Hinch •n no an c e d the joring.in arcbleology. She and
betrothal . of Hillary Amanda her fiance were present wbeo
Hutson to Bruce Alan Pedy studenll and profes80rS from the univenity toured lsrael
durlng 1 small family party and its archaeological 1ites.
In ·tbelr Harbor I.stand home Miss Hutson, tbe grand-
before departlna for the daughter ol. Mr. and Mn.
Inaugural ceremonies i n Robert Lee Hill of Pasadena
· W.,blngloa, D.C. and Newport l!eacb, was
Mia Hutson b the daughter enrolled at Santa Catalina
of. Mn. Hlrsc::b and the late Scbck>l in Monterey and was
Mr. Hugh Hot.son. T h e graduated from Marymount
bmedict-elect'1 parents are School in France.
Mr. and Mn. Edgar A. Pody Tbe bcidegroom-to.be Is stu-
of Redwood City. dying at stanford University.
The future bride, who was The betrothed will be mar·
MRS. TIMOTHY H. O'NEIL
Huntington Be11ch Homt
Cynthia Fellhoelter
Becomes Mrs. O'Neil
Home 1n Huntington Beach
~ Timothy Harry O'Neil and
bis bride. \he former CynUtia
Anne Fellboelter, both of Hun-
tlng!on Beach.
train. A lace headpiece held
her illusion veil, and she car·
ried white carnations and
orchids.
-. -~
To help Jill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avall-
abla In all of 'the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by SocW
Nots stlf! memben Ii &4Z43Zl ar tM 8'88 •.
Holi Memorial Hoopital, -~confer'ence.
remalruter ol. the program will
be dln!cted by Mn. W. E.
Langston, pmldent ol Ho a I
Auxiliary and prealdellt .. Iect
of the councll.
presented before C a rd I n a I ried in Our Lady Queen of
Mcintyre in 1117, is attending Angels Church ln Newport
tbe University_ of Southern Beacb on Feb. 15.
Dtrectlng the vow and ring
exchlfll' In Jteera ramily
Chapel, WestmlJlster-·"Was the
Rev. Harley J. Murray of the
Western Avenue Baptist
Chllrcb, Anabelm.
Mrs, Robert Franck, matron
o( honor, wore a red velvet
gown and malchln& beacfptece.
PepptTlllint carnations formed
her cascade.
To avoid dbappolnbnent; . juulpei:uve
brldeo ore reminded to 11.Ue .tJielr Wj!Cldlng
storieo 'With black and wl!lta 'llcilio' '!lhoto-
' srlPhl to the DAILY PILOT :SodelJ Deplrt-ment prlbr to or within one week afler tbe
-weddl,DJ. .
For engagement aiinou11cementa It Is mgg~ thlt tlie . story; ai.o accompanied
by a black ~nd willte ·glossy p I c tu r e. be
submitted early. If the betrothal announce-
ment and wedding date are Ill weeks or less
apart, . Ol\11 tbe. '11{eddlnf pboto will be ac·
cepted.
'
Two . CM Art League
Members Show Works
New location
For OC Council
Library, Newport Beach. Her
art In mllced media II clulli-
fled as folk art. dlsplaying
llgura In Blllllartazi niotlf;
large plate., blrdl and flow.
en.
She studied in Budapest
and Naw Yorlt. Mencl Schon-tai bu exblblled at Haq
Memortal liooi>ltaJ, Pmbyte· tan; Ballock'1 Yuhloo Square,
and Colla M,.. and United
California banlla.
Clipped Wings
Plan luncheon
El Fortin Bandido in
Anahejm will be the meeting
'place for TWA Clipped Wlnp,
Orange County chapter,' nut
Tuelday.
Cocktail bour will begin at
11: 30 a.m. wtt.b a luncbeoo
following.
Newcomers are welcome
and may telephone Mra. Roa
l!uahllwaen at '46-7408 for
further lnformaUon.
Wills Discussed
C<nler will be the aeWajl for
the next meeting ol. the
Orange County Council ol
J!oopltaJ Auslllarlel.
'J1' IDOlllnl ,wlll convene at Ii &JD. llmldi!Y· Jan, rt. ~ 8ll'Olcl Bf!lddwl, -~ c1e111.wm-... •...,.mm,
~'fte.B-o•p 1 ta l Volunteer'•
SIJDoll .for ~"and tbe
' . . ' ,,
Mn. James Walwoi-\b wijl
review the procedure for a
Matmllly Tea, while Mn.
Wllllam Scbworu will dlseuJs
the procedure of aa1 .. ol baby
photos.
Afterward a brief exchange
of ideal and procedures for
pediatric ln«rvlce will lak<
place. Concluding the session
will be a tour o( the pediatric
pavilion an'd a lunch in the
center.
, Tbe newly formed Auxiliary
to Costa Mesa Memorial
Hoopltal wUI be "'P"""nled
for the first time at a ctMJDCll
.-Ing.
WENDY HOWELL
Entattd
Betrothal
Revealed .
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Howell
of Newport Beach announced
the engagement of t h e 1 r
daughi.r, Wandy Joyce Howell
o( Costa Mesa, and James
Lee Serrano of Newport
Beach, son or Mr. and Mrs.
Jack H. Serrano of
Bakersfield.
Breakfast
Prepared
Delldoul breakfast served
with a amlle will be offered
when · glrll from Dnrema
..-., Tbela Rbo CI u b
-the fund-<aiain( .... t Sunday, Jan. 28.
Serving wUI begin at 7:30
a.m. in ,the Odd Fellows Hall,
Hunllngtoo Beach.
TlcteLI for the breakfast
will be JI, and tbe public
ia lnvited to attend. .
SupeniJ!ng the e-will
be Mn. Agnes W. Matthew,
club advisor, who may be co~
tacted at ~1 tcr id-
ditlonal lnformaUon.
Britons Called
Mn. Herbert Jennings of
Lquna Beach wUl boot a
mee.Ung for Westward Ho
Chapter. Daughters ol the
Brtltah Empire at ll:30 p.m.
next Monday.
Women of British am:eslr)'
art invited to attend and may
obtain further lnformaUon by
calling Mn. John HaNld, ,,..
9518.
The bride.to-be ii a graduate
of Corona de.! Mar High School
and ls attendinc Orange Coot
College, where ahe ii majoring
in commerclal art. She hopes
to attend the IM Angeles Art
Jmtilute upon compleUon of
her cun<nt studles.
Her fianc<!, a graduate of Book Group
South High School i n
· Camp · Fite Girls -.
· Lea.ders Feted
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. John H. Fellhoelter
of Huntington Beach, was
Riven in marriage by her
father. She wore a gown of
chantilly lace with a chapel
The bridegroom, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry O'Neil, also
of Huntington B<acb, asked
Tbomu Rilnmer to be his
best man. Daniel Francis and
Dennis Chappa! served as
ushers.
A reception for 125 guests
Honoring their own will be the presentation. Narratlnc followed in Meadowlark Coun-
Camp Fire Glrls who are giv· will be Miss Molly Brecht oi T • f try Club. A.s.mting were Mrs.
Ing recognition to volunleu Newpori B<acb. Op IC OCUSeS Donald Trower and Mrs. Jack
leaders nert Monday ~uring Among leaders honored Dotson. MUs Alice O'Neil , the
the aonual dinner meeting of with five-year awards will be On Methodists brid<~oom's smer, presided
the Orange Count Council in the Mmes. Richard Venard of at lll: guest book.
the Santa Ana E Club. Costa Mesa; William Gode-What's New With Methodist 1be bride is a -aduat.e of
One of the~· bonon, . iobo of Newport Beach, and W th · f •· the Silver will be Fred Peckham and Jobn wq. omen will be e topic o Huntington Beach High School
presented to Mn. Jenn D. ner of WMhnimter. 11r1. Bubert Wilk.en during a · and a beauty college. Her hu s--
Colllm of Garden Grove. In CertlBatel ci aPlftCiltlm iw11n1 of the Women's Socie-band is an alurnnm o( Mtr1na
-54 volunlftn will will be ..-.ii ifit -· ty, a.rtstian Service of the High School. i-eceive Leaden' Report ·ucu-Paul BU( m::1 ,..,,,.1tr Price. Lagmll. Beach M e t b o d i s tlp;;;;i;;;;;;;;----;;;.,;;;;;;;;;;;; ...
or Cenlfl:atea. . . of Colla -: Jobi> Carter, Oiurdl next Tw!sday. NOW
A blgbllilrt <if tbe ·meeting George ~and Cbar!OI A _, luncbeoo wUI be
will be a JlllllfcaJ _... ~ of Beach; bomd"by Mrs. G. M. Vance .....__ Im 'bl wblcb wUJ delcrtbe In llOl1ll Tl'e,.. Davis Codelolm with tbe help of her committee 1"'" polSI e wt IUllllDOr'• Horlmo Club of N<wporl·Beacb, and 11'111-niemben the Mmes. Ralph Years"
conference. M I 11 Patrlda i.r Robenon ol Wmmtnater., Davenport, Alex Baker and
Glidden ol Westmlmter "!> Eleclloo ol Ibo execatfv• Earle llllpper.
reRnted the council at the board and offlcen will tab Mn. Allen Bailey, spiritual
confab and wU1 take part In l'!:.,. ~ ~ Die ~an, will &ive. the
aec:retary Is Mn. Davis ..rhlle -· Churcb members ·James A. Flag of Coota llesa and frieacb .,. Invited lo a~ (s-. ¥
The Funnlftt
Comtdy Yot
MESA TllATRE
COSTA MESA Skaters
To Waltz
A . Al .... ~~op.. Every Ni•"' Monday 11t._i, s..1u~
l'enMNJ -.
Flmrnes and frieDdl ..., ~ __.. ...,-..,,y •
vlted lo join an Ice lbitng
party planned be-S:311
and 7: !O p. m. tomorrow. by
the Fountain Valley
Cloverdale&. n.. 4-H group aclivlly wiD
take place at Glader Falls,
Anllbefm.
Parenti are Invited to attend
tM parents' ntgbt: meeUn1
·which will take place at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4, in the
Community Metbodl!t Church,
Hunllnglon B<adl.
Members in uniforms will
be judged during tbe com-
munity club meeUng, and ad-
dtuonal information may be
obtained by calling Mra.
Roderick Col, m:rm.
Court Stella
_Ostjstlan Buslnesa a. d
Pro/ullonal women·• Council
ol <>nnce County wUI ~·tber tbil moo!h In the Hom o'
Pieaty smorsll!bord In Sal!ta
"Bakersfield, is alt.ending OCC The Book Discualon Group
where he is major1ng in of Newport Beacb Friend! of
Memben ol tbe R<marrled police science and JllYcbology. the Library gather the lasl
Partnen: group will bur a No wedding date has yet Wednesday of the month in
Memben of Court Stella
?iiaris 1441, Catholic
Dauahters ol America meet
each .teCOOd and frurtb Mon-
day at I p.m. lo St. Joachim's
parish hall. Coata Mesa. Ana. .
Vern Lewis, psycbologlst
rih Blofa Collep, will speak
clurtq the dinner meeting
nest Tuesday evmln& at 6:30.
Providing ~mu 1 Jc al en-
tertainment will be Mils
Maraia Hath•-and Mias 5bm1 McQ>oDeJ.
di.scuulon on Wills, Guar-been sel Mariners Library at 10 a.m.
diamhlp and Estate Plumingl_.i;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;o;;;~m;;~=------.1
:::r ~= =t ~11---0PENING MONDAY---School. Slnta AnL
ReeerYaUons may bt made
with Mia Emmalou Wle.le,
141"*71 ar Mra. B!llCC Bailey, 77'+*-
CM Overe1ters
Overtaten Anonymous
gather every Wedne3day al
I p.m. In Bear Sired Sc:booi,
Colla Mesa.
PIANOS• ORGANS
FAMOUS BRANDS
COMl'ITmVE PRICES we'll meet all ricel!)
UNT A PIANO CAllEFULL Y
No Ume UmlC No llECDNDmONED
obllotlon lo buy. • • USID cndit It you do. PIANOS
..._ ANKRUM'S UllD
2064 'S. MAIN -SANTA ANA e 5464IOO
701 S. HAUOR -PULLlltTON e 871~6
11 YDa.I IN IANTA ANA
New Location
CUST YllW CIMTft
WILL OPEN MONDAY, JANUARY 27th
17th & IRVINE
-Kontvcky Fried Chicken
AU: WORK
DONE PERSONNALL Y
Corona dtl Mir
4 CONVENIENT SHOPS
e 1401 E. COAST KWY.
C..... dtl Mor • , • 673-4640
• l4lJ VIA LIDO
Newport le•ch •• , 673-1620
e 74 FASHION ISLAND
N•WPorl Botcll. •.. 644-755 I
tHl1 a ltviM -N•t ft ICtllfvdnl "'ltd Ctildltll e 17th i ll'Ylne e Crestvi.-w
Coste Mei•
CHOOSE
FROM Alt THE
LA TEST STYLES
Re1tyl• your ol.1
1hoe1 to the new
round look.
8rln9 us your
problem and we'TI
9ive your shoes
• new look.
SATURDAY. LAST OAYI
Our own Gaymode, Cantrece®
stretch hosiery!
REG. 3 PRS. 2.95, NOW 3 PllS. 2 .34
e.,.. ~ ......,_.,. .,.. ....... ,..... -,.,,_. ...... ....
..a,1n.. .. , ........ ...w .... ._ ....... ~ ...... .. ...,.,....., ..... -....... -..................... _...,._
.................................. ..,. .. __ r....i. ,.. ... 1W....., .... ..,...,.._. 0-"-.... ....Wt .. ,......,....__,_._A,,C.O
llll"···~m
COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
IH1rl>ef SJt1ppt C.!tferl IH11flfifltf•" Cini I '---~~~~~_...._~~~~~~+-' I ,_,Jii1" l1l1M I
------·----~----~=-------------------------------~
. .. .. . ... . . ··--,.. .. ~.. . .
ELDERLY EXERCISERS JOG ALONG IN USC RESEARCH PROGRAM AT LEISURE WORLD
Younger Man at Left. Center 11 Larry Shennum, USC Graduate, Who Leads Exercise In Routines
_Running Back the Clock
I
Exercise Helps Elderly, But It Must Be Controlled
Men in their seventies can
regain much of the vigor and
physical function of their
forties through carefully plan·
ned exercise, a University cf
Southern California research
study shows.
Bul don't rush out and run
a mile.
Exercise should be prescrib-
ed for individuals with the
same care and certainty a
physician uses in choosing
drugs for patients, according
to USC's Dr. Herbert A.
deVries cf SQuth Laguna, an
authority on the physiology
()f exercise.
De Vries, working under
auspices of USC's Gerontology
Center. is studying the effects
or exercise on a group of
men, aged 50 to 87, who live
in and around Laguna Hills
Leisure World.
At this point. after more
than a year of study, the
USC researcher reports these
dramatiC results in group
averages among men who are
• participating in his carefully
'Cqntrolled program of ex-
ercise:
-Diastolic blood pressure r· has been improved by 6 per-
cent.
-Body fal-has decreased
by 4.8 percent.
-Maximum oxygen con·
r;umption, the best single
measure of an individual 's
vigor, increased by 9.2 per.
cent.
-Oxygen pulse. a measure
of cardi1>-vascular function,
i_mproved by 8.4 percent.
-Arm strength increased
by 7 .2 percent.
-Other indicatars of work·
ing capacity showed -a 7 to
9 percent improvement.
TENSION . DROP
One nf .the greatest and
most significant changes that
occurred in the men as the
result of the exercise program
is a drop in nervous tension
level, Dr. deVries reports.
"In our 41 experimental sub-
jects who have participated
in the exercise program, there
has been a reduction at rest
of 14 to 15 percent in nervous
tension," says the USC
educator.
"This is compared to the
control group of non -e X·
ercisers, who experienced a
slight increase in nervous
tension.
"Reduction of nervous
tension has been a neglected
area in physical education,
and this is serious because
o~ the significance of tension
as a potential threat to good
health, particularly in the
middle-aged and elderly," he
adds.
It has been deVries' con·
'BICYCLE' PROVIDES PHYSIOLOGICAL DATA
R1ymond Helldorson, 611, Pedals for Dr. DeVries
Russian View
tention that soroe port\on cf
the physJcal decline that ac:
companies old ·age is due at
least in .part to physic~.l in-
actiYity and is therefore un·
necessary.
'PRARMOCOPOEIA'
His research is prOving the
accuracy of that hypothesis.
A major goal in addition
to measuring the results of
exercise itseU is developing
a "pharmacopoeia'' Of ex-
ercise -a body of knowledge
on wh.ich to base individual
prescriptions for exercise as
is available to any physician
in prescribing drugs.
"If, at the end of the
research, we have developed
at least a beginning of our
'pharmacopoeia of txercise,'
we will have accomplished
what we set out to do," Dr.
deVries says.
The t rtance of being
able t prescribe exercise is
poin up in the hazards that
exist in it for some persons.
he says.
The presence of some level
of arterial sclerosis, incipient
heart d)sease, or other ailment
unknown to the person can
make bursts of unsupervised
exercise a potential killer.
Dr. deVries cited as
evidertei! for this observation
a number of deaths from jog-
ging during recent months ln
Orange County.
Each subject in his research
project was screened and
tested for .several months
before the exercise portion <>f
the program began. Tests in·
elude a com pre he nsi ve
physical, and a battery of
tests adn1inistered by deVries
and his staff.
ROUTINE
Subjects In tbe program
work out for one hour three
days a week. Their routine
includes calisthenics, jogging.
static strelching, and swim-
ming. They are tested at the
beginning, and at intervals of
six, 18 and 42 weeks for im-
provement.
DeVries says the
participants · are particularly
enthusiastic when, for ex-
ample. he is able to tell a
man in his seventies that his
tests show that his cardiac
ootput, blood pressure, oxygen
consumption, nervous tension
level or other parameters are
comparable to thP: norm for
a 40--year-old.
Because his goals
necessitate pioneering e!forts,
deVries has found h. essenilal
to develop his awn measure-
ment tests and new measure-
ment equipment for h i s
research.
An example cf this is what
he calls ·the . PEP
( P h y s iological Efficiency
Profile I Test, which h e
developed in association with
an assistant, Dr. Kenneth
Lersten. Factors measured by
the PEP Test Include blood
pressure, oxygen consumption,
body composition, nervous
tension and muscle tone.
He has also developed a
device which measures
nervous tension level! electro-
myogtaphically. That is, it
determines the electrical ac-
tivity of the muscles to mark
the ex'tent of nervous tension
the subject ~ experiencing.
MOBILE LAB
This equipment and other
instrumentation is housed in
a specially-designed mabile
laboratory located at present
at the Laguna Hills site.
DeVries' researth project is
funded. by a grant from the
U.S. Department of Health,
Education '1Ki We If are' s
Adm.inisttation on Aging.
DeVries is a professor in
USC's Department of Physical
Education in addition to his
duties as bead cf physiology
of exercise research at USC's
Gerontology Center.
Gerontology is the branch
of science dealing with aging.
He earned the bachelor's
degree at Pennsylvania State
College, bis master's at the
University of Texas, and his
PhD at USC.
He lives at 32194 Vista de
la l.A.tna, South Laguna.
EXERCISERS
NEEDED
.Or. deVries is setking ad-
ditional male volunteers, SO
or older, for an experimental
group <>f exercisers for the
final phase cf his physiology
of exercise program at
Laguna Hills Leisure Wt;irld.
The only expense f o r
participants is the cost of a
preliminary m e d 1 c a 1 ex-
amination. Applications will be .Jv>>'N
accepted for a limited period
of time.
Further infonnation can be
obtained by cont&cting deVrles
at his mobile research
laboratory, telepboM 830-0350.
Reanimation Medicine's Next Goal
FLORENCE, Italy (AP) -
Reanimation, t b e bringing
back to life of someone who
under present criteria might
be presumed dead. has a big
future in medicine •. says a
Soviet expert.
V. A. Negovsky , director of
the M~ow Academy or
Sciences' Reanimation
Tnstitute, said in an interview,
"The struggle against death
is an aid aspiration among
men. particularly tht
Russians."
The Soviet scienlist. said the
study of reanimation has
hurdled many obstacles. lie
added : "Reanimation will be
the preeminent branch of
medicine in the future ...
Negovsky Mid that in the
cases of sudden death, life
Is not completely lost unUJ
the brain stops functioning .
"We know well that the ar-
rest of clrculatiOfl ard respira·
li(ln signify a ceSSAtion of life,
but we •1so know thal not
~
all organs and nol all tissues
die in the same moment."
be added.
'"Mle nervou s system In
particular has a brief afterlife
which. unlil a few years ago.
was calculated at four
minutes, but wh.ich is certain-
ly more ."
This bodily system, he said,
could somettmes live up to
half an hour after olher vital
functions had halted. He in--
dieated that in some cases this
half hour could make tbe dif·
ferenee between a corpse and
a reanimated person.
"Circulation end respiration
can be actively maintained
througb the use of artificial
hearts and lungs." s a i d
Negovsky.
He recommended that doc·
tors worl1ng on reanimation
concentrate on heart cases,
because heart disease is such
a fequenl cause of sudden
deaths,
Dr.1 1. !:. GAntlina, from
the Pavlov Institute In Len·
lngrad, said her work showed
that good weather helped
reanimate the virtually dead.
Failures in attempts to
reanimate, she added, tripled
during days of g I o om y
weather compared w i t h
results on pleasant days.
Compromise
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The Board GI Supervisors has
approved a comJ)l'Omise plan
to eod yean of disp.1ting
between the State Highway
Commisaion and tbe dty over
a route for part ot the
Junipero Serr1 Freeway. san Franci>co bad protested
state plans to build the road
aloog the Cl'ystal Sprtw
Reservoir. which holds the
city's water supply, Pouible
oont.amina(p1 was claimed.
Dr. v. Scbrlre ol 8 0 u l h
Africa, director of the cardiac
clinic at Cape Town's Groote
Schuur boopital-site ol lbe flrot
human b e a r t tl'ansplant&-
•tated that ~ deaths of
internal causes occ:ur at night.
And most ol these, be uid. occur "precisel1 between mJd.
night and 2 a.m."
Plan OK'd
The hi&hWl1 commlufon
bad contended lbat lbe rvute
the city propoaed over , a
oearby ridge would be mon
upeD1lve, btll finally ._
to it after lbe lederal ao-i
ment threatened to wtthdra·
funds for the projectt
The supervisors voted MOI
day to guarantee permanet
scenic and recreational u:
of 23,000 acres of watentlc.
land in eitbange for approvt
of the rida:e niret.
'"""· J....,,. 24, 196'1 DAILY l'!LDT J:l
...... -... _..... .. , r I ·\ • .. ,1·11 .. --.. ? I t l ~· 11 ll
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ROBINSON'S BRIDE TO REMEMBER
Her" most perfect ~oment is captured in
the beauty of a silk organza gown. So
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or blue over white. 176. 00. Cathedral
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If you're a bride-to-be ••• you are invited
to attend a Bridal Fashion Sho.v, presented
by Robinson's and Bride's tv'lagazine in
The Lido Buffet, Robinson's Newport,
Friday, January 31, at 7:00 p.m.
complimentary tickets for you and a
guest may be obtained in our Br"ida! ~lon.
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JOB IS WAITING -Student Chuck Oostdyk, ol Colla Mesa, learns data pro-
c....slng from Orange Coest College instructor Richard Reynolds. College's
new IBM 360 computer (background !en) opens new doors of opportunity fo r
data p'°"""8inC trainees who will be in high demand.
junior eolle1es In tumlnc oul
gradualu capeble of "'"'"""
lhe ' myriad functiOlll "' lhe new macbil'le.
In the United Stalu, tllere
are currently arrly about U
junior colleges wilh -cotn-
parable systems. Erperta 11y
OCC ls one of the few whlch
hu a IYllem capal>le of
boodling ~ =~~"' Iba. CG111pullr .to do two Jobi
alonet.) '
W1lal doeo tllls ..... lo the
student! It -"' q·balofl ltalJlod lo -the equip-ment that ts cumntly revolu-lloobtnC lodultry. II m..,,.
he will have a 1"' Jmnp on
atudOllll · from other achoola
In tmrii ' of jobl and ad-
vancement.
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Mutual Funds ·A·
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DAIL 't PILOT frldly, Jll\llWY 24, 1969
Awesome Anteaters Blitz UCD, 99-89
'"
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor
.
.l\'leyer Gets
Sullivan Nod:
Toomey Third
NEW YORK (APl -Debbie Meyer
ot Sacramento, t h e first swimmer in
Olympic history ever to win three j<>ld
medals in individual events, won the
James E. Sullivan Award today as the
outstanding amateur athlete of 1968.
Miss Meyer accumulated 1,137 points
In the voting by sports writers,
sportcasters. AAU officials and amateur
sportsmen, edging two members of the
men's Olympic track team -A1 Oerter
and Laguna Beach's Bill Toomey.
Miss Meyer, in winning the award
bestowed by the Amateur Athletic Union,
became only the fourth female winner
in the 39-year history of the award.
Holder of all standard work! freestyle
records from 200 to 1.500 meters, the
S.foot-7, 116-pound tttn-ager won the 200,
400 and «Kt-meter freestyle races at
the-Mexico City Olympics and earned
the Sullivan Award in the closest vote
tabulation in history.
Oerter, of West Islip, N.Y., won his
fourth consecutive Olympic discus title
in Me.xico City and finished second in
the voting and Toomey was th.ir~ v.:ith
1,110 point! for his efforts in wmrung
tr.e Olympic decathlon gold medal
Nooe of the other 12 nominees was
close to the top three. who gained 73
percent of the total vote.
· Miss Meyer, In tiecomlng only the
foi.irth distaff winner, also became only
the third swimmer to receive the award.
Ann Curtis was the first swimmer to
'Win in 1944 and 20 years passed before
Don Scbollander won in 1964.
, The award is given in the memory
·cl James E. Sullivan, one of the founders
of the AAU. It is awarded to the
•"amateur athlete who by performance,
example and good influence did Ult most
to advance the cause of goo d
s~ip during the year."
The other athletes nominated were:
·Tract and field -Bob Stagren, George
'Young, Ron Laird, Wyomia Tyus and
'Madeline Manning.
1 "Boxing -George Foreman and Ronnie
Hairis.
, Speed skating -Diane Hoium.
· Sw1mming and diving -Sue Gos.sick
and Doug Russell.
Basketball -Jo-Jo Wb.ite.
Supe17 Joe
Considering
Retirement
NEW YORK (AP) -Only Joe Namath
could top Joe Namath whe11 it comes
lo startling the P"' football world, and
Broadway. Joe bu In mlud an encore
for his super Bo\vl, triumph with the
New Yort Jets.
Namath, P"' lootball'1 glamour boy
al the tender •lfl "-Z, is ·talking
about retiring." Doo't lal18h. Remember
Sandy Koufu: and Jimmy Brown?·
Although be la the sport's No. I star
with a bushel full "-money and maybe
more super Bowls ahead of him, be
listed some pretty good reasons for get~
ting out now, while he still is on top .
"The legs are the main problem.••
he said, reaffinning a simple off-hand
commtnt Wednesday that he is ~
sidering the possibility of retiring.
And there have been several very
attractive business and entertainment of~
fers that followed his direction of the
Jets to their stunning SUper Bowl Up.5el
over the Baltimore Colts that made
him the most attractive personality in
sports.
Namath's retiring thoughts put a
damper on any celebration Weeb Ewbank
might have CO!l!idered after signing a
new contract earlier 'lbunday as coach
and general manager ol the Jets.
There had been some speculation that
the. 61-year-old mentor might give up
the coaching r~gns. but that· would have
been nothing compared to ·any ides -that
Namath might retire.
Brown, Cleveland's great running back,
shocked the sports world by retiring
before the tl)e 1966 seaaon for a movie
career. Koofax, baseball's superstar,
after pitching Los Angeles to the pennant
in 1966, retired because of a painful
elbow ailment.
"You have to make. it while you 're
on top before you get destroyed," said
Namath, who has been bothered by 'Knee
trouble in both legs since his college
days at Alabama. He has undergone
three operations on them and still plays
in pain .
"lt's been a long season and with
rest they might be better,'' Namath
said. "Bui the way I feel now, retirement
is something that has to be considered.
"I know I couldn't have played in
the secmd half of the All·Star g a m e
.at Jacksonville if I had to."
He denied that retirement talk might
be a means toward geWng a better
contract from the Jets. "U I can't play,
1 can't play. I'll just be physically not
capable. The doctor will have to decide
that," he aaid.
One thing Na'math will consider is
his teammates.
"There would be a sense of letting
them down ii I quit," be e1plained.
.Debatable Selection
McLain Athlete of Year?
How About O.J., Oerter?
..
A pro baseball player as the USA's
,.male athlete of the year for 1!168?
.: There must be a mistake or some
''ind in Associ ated Press' announcement
that Detroit pitcher Denny McLain was
'~boeen for that honor by supposedly
knowledgeable men -sports writers.
Entertainer of the year? Perhaps.
Bus.i.nessman of the year? Possibly.
Craftsman or the year'! Maybe.
But ATHLETE OF THE YEAR'! Now
lhat's certainly a matter Jett open for
d<bat..
' How can a pro baseball player be
1ny more of an athlete than a bowler,
WHITE
WASH
goller, gin rummy player, jockey or
banjo player.
He might be called a craftsman.
beca.Ult certain technical skills art ~
valved in bls endeavor.
But to this comer, an A 'l'Hl..ETE or
the year would be someone who bu
come forth with a great sports ac-
oompllallmenl by Wen~ cleslrt and
foUowinl rl rigorous training ruin.
The latter .Upulalioa woold seem to
mnovt pro baleball playen; from con-
tentton, generally speaking.
l!Hing traveled with P"' baseball
playen I can Ulitl.te you lhlt the idea
al tralnlnl ettUinly confllcta with -mmt ATSLE'l'ES woukl con 1 id er
rig..-dladpllne.
Tu. -fide athlete< nu l!r•
O.J. ~at Ult grut Olympic -Unw' ... Al Qertft'.
You ca bt mre they werml llfftl In .,,, ban daring their ......... And
you Clll ... <qually wuln tbal thty
"""1dn, ... allpplq out behind th•
~ kif 1 dra& • two oa a weed
be!'" Pf'llllc<, compdltlonl lunch or
I '
anything else.
The dormant men who cast their
ballots for a: pro baseball player as
ATHLETE of the year must have forgot-
ten about O.J. or that event held last
October in Mexico City ca Ued the Olym-
pic Games.
Ottttt W.. Best
Simpso11•1 11CtOmp1l1bment1 oo lbe
football fleld •lld bit humble personality
woukf 1urtly have made him a solid
r I Y a I &t the man for whom 1 voted
the honor -Oerter.
Ir ever a man personifies what a
male AntLETES of the year should be,
It ii Albert Oerter.
He won u Olympic gold IMdal for
thnwhl& tile dllCUI a fourth straight
Ume, qa!JI ~r.cklng Utt Olympic rtterd.
And to de N bt bad to slay la
er.ck pllJak:al coadUioa for nearly 1
year, blld i.. overcome • la.rt.mloute
gn(o laJ"'f bi M ..... City, bad lo
beat lM •erld record ltaldu -a ma•
who Ud CU-0...a 17 feet f1rthtr I.ban
It<.
You don 't find maay D·year-old Olym.
pk &rack cllampkmt.
Aiid to aid a personal touch ln Al'1
favw, M wu o.t 1111 wbe said he
dida'l daene tile ltoltoc' of carryln1
tbt American Oq ln Open.ha, Ct:rtmonie1
when it was .Uered lttm.
A1tMu11t H had won die Olympic
1Gld medals ~ 11$1, IM a a d 1"4.
he felt lbal Ute ftllett, Janice Romary
Vert, Wat more dtttrvtn1 htt•use siM'
..,.. I• lter sl:rUI Olymplld.
locklenlally, Mn. Vork ha1 ntvtr
plaee4 amon• tk top dlree In the c ......
A 6eocl Orgat1ut
So Mct..ln, perhaps ~ top organ
player o( the year, gm an award which
wa• pa-hips more suited for someoot
eile -at -under Ill W.ting title.
To mt, befnf an AnnEl'E means
ucrillc<. cledlcotJon. oboervlng • r
tralnini rulea and ptrfectlon in the spotl
punued.
Do yoo think Mct..in deserves the
nod over 0. J. and Oerter under thoat
quallOcallons?
BIG DECISION -UCI's Steve Sabins seems unde-
cided whether to· shoot or not during Thursday
night's UCI-UC Davis encounter. Sabins shot
DAILY l'ILOT ....... "' ·~ 1t .... 1'r enough to score 16 points and helped lead Irvine to
a -vic!Ory, Davis players are Bob Guild (34)
and Frank stonebarger (IO).
Sports in Brief
Rig OK After Heart Scare
MONTEREY, Calif. -Bill Rigney,
manager of the California Angels'
baseball club was listed in stable con·
dition tOOay alter being hospitalized when
he said he felt faint while playing in
the Bing Crosby Pro-Amateur Gof
Tournament.
Dr. Donald Scanlon at Monterey
Hospital said the 51}.year-old manager's
heart was being monitored but em·
phasized that Ri gney hBd suffered no
heart dam age and had been kept
overnight strictly as a precautionary
measure.
Rigney , paired with professional Paul
Harney in the tournament at nearby
Pebble Beach, complained of feeling faint
midway in Thursday's round.
Scanlon said Rigney never lost con-
sciousness arw:I added he may be able
lo resume playing in the tournament.
Last Cho11re for Crosby
PEBBLE BEACH -They try again
loday to play the first round of the
$150,000 Bing Crosby National pro-am
and if the rain washes it out a second
time, there ls a strong possibility the
whole tourney may go down the drain
as did the very first Crosby clambake
back in 193'1.
A steady driule greeted early starters
Thursday and by the lime the later
starters bad reached the first tee the
weather had deteriorated Into a near
slonn.
Jack Tutb.ill, PGA lour n am e·n t
chairman, indicated that if another day
is Jost in the Crosby he will order
the whole thing off.
V.S. Skiers Sharp
SAINT GERV ~. France -The young
United States ~uad SC<lred the best
ever cup team performance in a special
slalom race Thursday by placing seven
skiers in the top 15.
But Ingrid Lafforgue and Annie
Famose scored a double triumph for
France.
Ingrid, 20, grabbed her first big victory
of the season with a total time of
79.31 secomh f o r lite two parallel legs
Bucs Must Contain Lee
To Halt Tribe Quintet
The Eastern Confe rence basketball
race hasn 't reached the halfway point
yet. but already coaches like Orange
Coast's Bob Wetzel are starting to call
every game a "big game ...
Normally a contest like tonight's
llctween t.he Pirates and San Be:maroino
In the latter's gym would just be another
game. After all it pits a team lied
for third place against an ouUlt thar1
mired in Ioth place.
But with Fullerton threatening to make
a runaway of the EC race, every game
is important to a team trying to make
up lost ground . Right now Orange Coast
is 2\fi game3 behind the Hornets with
a 3-2 record.
S7 points were the fewest a Pirate team
has give n up sinct the 1964-aS season
when Orange Coast trimmed Mt. SAC,
1H6.
WetzeJ said he planned to start the
same five men wbo worked effectively
against Santa Ana -cenl.e::r Rich
Stickelmaier, forwards Ste•e Jacobsen
and Phtl Jordan and guards Jim Kindelon
and 'Nm Salyer.
Klndelon has given the Pirates • big
lift in the backeourt the last two games.
scoring 43 points.
Joining Lee in San Bernardino's
starUng lineup wiO be forwartl Sam
Christian, center Sam Cash and guards
Luke Harrison and Charlie Hay~.
of the slalom,
Veteran Olympic bronze medalist An-
nie Famose, 25, was right behind in
79.58.
Then came a stream of U.S. talent
in five of the first 10 placings.
Judy Nagel, 17, Enumclaw Wash., was
third in '19.93, less than one tenth of
a second in front of her elder sister
Cathy, 20, in aJ.02.
Barbara Cochran, IS, Richmond, Vt.,
was fifth in 80.25, Kiki Cutter, 19, Bend,
Ore., seventh in 80.58, and Erica Skinger,
la, Stowe, VI., 10th in 81.10.
1Uara1'irh Leads
NEW YORK -Pete Maravich didn't
play last week but the Louisiana State
star still held a huge lead among the
major college basketball scorers.
Maravich had an average of 45.S per
came for 11 games through Jan. 18.
Cal Murphy of Niagara was second
at 35.9 foll owed by Purdue's Rick: Mount,
32.3, Detroit's Spencer Haywood, 31.7,
and George Washington's Bob Tallent,
JO.% .•
""d!I'• New Etlflb1e
LOS ANGELES -Anthon y "Andy"
GranateUi, who won a few batlles but
lost the war with car racing authorities
ove r his turbine.·powered machines, an-
nounced a new venture Thursday.
He will use a Plymouth passenger
car 318 cubic inch engine in two In-
dianapolis racers, perhaps this year.
He will also race the cars competitively
In road races, something never attempt·
ed with thi& model engine.
There is no room at Indianapolis for
exotic engines, such as the big turbine
he developed in the past two years,
Granatelli told a news conference.
"We don't think we will go to In-
dianapolis and win the first year." he
said, "but we hope to have an engine
there and in three years we expect
to compete with tbe finest racing engines
in the: world."
Kings Fall, 3-1
NE\Y YORK -Rod Gilbert scored
twice and Vic Hadfield and Jeaa Ratelle
had a hand in all three :New York
goals as the Rangers dropped the Los
Angeles Kings 3-1 in a National Hockey
Le.ague game Thursday night.
Little Barnes
Is Big H~ro
For Winners
By EARL GIJSTKEY
Of 1loe Del.,,l'I ... Ii.tr
Sllll 1bell-sbocked from UCl's bluing
'"9 victory over bls team 'Ibursday
ni11¢. UC Davis basketball coach Bo b
HMllitoo was pressed for a comment.
"We just didn 't bring our brains with
l1! tonight," he remarked .
Brains wouldn't have been enough to
beat the Anteatm Thursday evening.
I( the Aggies had brought their pitch-
f!fb, lt might have slowed Irvine
down.
It was incredible. fn aJI probability,
the l,~ spectators in Crawford Hall
saw the most sensatkinal display of
ba.sketball ever performed by the
Anteaters.
During an eight·minut~ stretch in the
second half UCJ looked like the
Philadelphia 76ers.
"I think that during that stretch we
played perfect basketball," Irvine coach
Dick Davis coounented afterward,
"We were scoring everytime we
brought the ball down court. We had
them absoultely befuddled . It was
beautiful to behold."
The man of the hour was the .shortest
athlete in the gym, junior ~like Barnes.
The S.10 dynamo from Riverside broke
the school record with 13 assists and
when be was lifled by Davis with 1:32
to play, be was accorded a standing
ovation.
It was a fan's game. They went crazy
when incomparable Jeff Cunningham
scored on a mind-boggling layup with
7~30 to go tn the actlon. He was fouled
and made ii a three-point play for an
as.-65 lead.
The final margin was 10 but it really
wasn't that close. UCI was working on
a 20-point cushion for most of the second
half.
The score began to mount in Trvine's
favor five minutes into the second half
when UCI's fast brtak was working,
as Davis said, to perfection. Steve Sabins.
Nick Sanden, Cunningham, Barnes and
Jim Farley were piercing UCD's con+
fused defense time and again.
UCO was no slouch. The Aggies arrived
with a g..3 record and most observers ex~
peeled a close one. But UC! beat their
brains out.
U(I I") UC 01¥15 tMJ
.. fl•!"' C1t11111nelw,,, 1 5 O 1• Slantti.rver StinCMn 6 1 2 ll 81ranco t-IP....,. f 1 I It Jol'>MIDn
Barnes 5 O J 10 Slftd
SabOM 1 2 I 16 L1rllin Gllvlnovkh I O l I Gul!O a .. n 0•01wooe1
F1rl1V 2 2 O ' c,_, F-11 O 2 1 O Oobr1ni.kv
FOfllllll 0 2 2 2
Zech 10 1 2
Toltl1 '1 17 11 tf T111~1s t-ll!ffl~ Jeort : UCI .,, UCO Cl.
GWC Hosts
Ball-Control
.. ff., "' 112l21
l a 1 ' • 1 2 ,1
l a 2 2 I I 2 ·3 s 1 2 17
t l 2 ' ' 0 ) 1 2 l ] s
Foe Tonight
Cypress College·s baskelball team an
outfit that would rather pass the 'ball
than shoot it, invades Orange College.'1
gymnasium tonight for an Eastern
Conference game with run and gun
Golden West.
Tipoff is scheduled for 8 o'clock.
The two clubs are among five teams
who currently share third place in the
conference standings with 3·2 records
and each needs a victory badly to stay
"A·ithin striking distance of undefeated
Fullerton (&-0).
Cypress coach Don Johnson is •
believer in a ball control offense and
it has work.eel on occasion to great
success. .
Against Riverside, the highest scoring
team in the conference, Cy press con-
trolled the tempo of the game. outscoring
the Tigers, 87-74.
Prior to that game, ruverside was
averaging almost 95 points a game. '
Golden West is most effective as a
free-w heeling (ast·break team, but coacij
Dick Stricklin is still looking for more
consUitency in his scoring attack.
Reserve guartl Mark Miller is the
only RusUer who has managed to score
in double figures in Golden West's last
four games.
Stricklin will go with his normal lineup
agai nst Cypress. That means a front
line of Da\•e Prather at center. and
Brian Ambror.ich and Allan Robinsoo
at the forwards.
Ollie Martin and Mark Campbell will
get the call at the guard spots with
Miller and Randy Olson ready to spell
them .
Tipoff for tonight's clash ls S o'ckK:k
and Welzel's biggest concern is shutting
off San Bernardino's Howard Lee. the
conference's leading scorer with a 26.3
averagt.
"We're going to go with our man-to-
man defense again and just try to keep
the ball away from Lee. U they manage
to work the ball to him, we'll try to
m<1ke him give it up without getting
a shot oU.
Bruins Battle Northwestern
"One man will bl! on Lee. but we'll
sag another man to help out when he
gel'! the ball. If the man defense won 't
work, we'll shift lnt.o a %00e. We'll do
anything to beat them," Wetzel said.
Orangt CoMt's man defeme ha! tight·
ened up considerably since the start of
conference play. La.'lt week against Santa
Ana, the Pirates yielded jum S7 poinlt
in a game '\\'etzel called the best job
of man defense in his two-plus seasons
at OCC.
Tt "Mi'&S evf!n ~ter tha.n that. ThOR
By United Prtu International
UCLA's brilliant ba.ttt:tball team In·
vadt! Chicago qafn tonight.
It look1 Jike the only thing that can
stop the Bruins la another snoW11onn.
Two years ago when coach John
Wooden'1 Bruins went to Oikago fet
a weekend doubleht.Adtt, the area waa
hit by ooe of tbe worst mowstonm
in memory .
The storm made travel so dlHlcull
that UCLA's Friday n\ght Rl'.me had
to be postponed unUI Sund1y an.moon
-and UCLA be.at DUnols lm.t2. The
Bruins ktd f-ken Loyola &MT Saturday
night.
Only snow flurries an: predicted for
this weekend la Chicago when the Bruins
play Nor1hwestem tonight 100 I..oyol1
Saturday night.
Marquette meet.I U>yola in tonight's
first game of the Chicago Stadium
doubJ,hudtr while Notre Dame meets
lllloois in the Ont contest S.turday.
The Bruins, already 12-0 thla teaSOn
and favored to win an unprecedented
third straight national crown, .seem to
be worrl~ more 1boot tht weather than
about Uielr oppoMnU this weekend.
Thuflday night w1u; a light schedule
in collegiate basketba ll with fourth-ran);.
ed Da~idson the only top power in action.
The Wildcats turnttl back Princeton 71-54
&!I Mike O'Neill scored 22 poinls.
Drake beat Bradley 9l-88, Arizona StJ.te
topped Utah 93-18, Arizona beat Brighem
Young, 76-'ro, Balylor routed Tarleton .
SUie, lOJ..57, and Georgia Tech stopped
Ill«. 7$-,IS,
O'Neill f't;fllaced Jerry Kroll. who w11s
ln}ured Saturday against VMI , and
helped turn the game into a rout
in the second half atler Princeton lrRiltd
by Qnly a 34-29 maririn at halftime.
Kroll w~ averaging 18.S po1nl'I a game
tierore he was injured
I
,
t! .. "(', .. 1·. \ .,,
THAT'S NO FAIRI -Saddleback College's Marc
Hardy·!• caught by the camera fouling UC! frosh
player Bill George during Th\U'sday night's game
DAll .. Y PILOT Piiot. ~r ~ kMllllr
between two schools. Randy Lawrence (21) is at
rtgbt. UCI won game, 6444.
Golf Action
Highlights
Sports on TV
If you enjoy goM, lhls I& a big television
weekend. U you don't, it's a long one.
1llere are three golf telecasts on the
lube Saturday and another Sunday. Chan-
nel 2 starts it off today with the CBS
Golf Classic starting at 2:30 p.m.
It's the Bing Crosby tournament. at
3 on Channel 7 and the World of Golf
at 4:30 on Channel 4. Charlie Sifford
plays in that one filmed in Slng1Jipore.
The Crosby affair comes on again
Sunday llt 2.
The PacUic 8 basketball reature Satur-
day is the Washington-Washington State
game at 2:30 on Channel 5. The Utah
State-Arizona game will be beamed at
3 on Channel 13.
Tlollil f
6 11.m. UlT -flA SKET8ALL -LA LlkVI
ff ""'"'' HI""'-CMc:k Ht1m, Rod H11fldlrt courts~ In Gf<M'•l•. 6;)0 11.rn. (CIJT -COMMENTARY -Frtl'f
T•rllllQ""' with clips on currtnl IPOf"ll ewflh.
t 11.m. OlCT -$1CllNG -frt!1><~A.rr..rlc1" Chlllt"9t CUii Rte, •. Jim MclC•r. BOb Be11!l1
11-.1119 11 A1~n. ColO. 11 11.m. CS)C T -l"'SICETB .. LL -UCLA BNI"• 11 Norlllw11llf" Wlldc1ts. Olck Enber11 mlk .. ldo 1t Cll1t1111 S!e<ll11m. $thirdly
1 l'.m. U)CF -OUTOOOfl:S -"$nakt River ''i~~"!:;;.. fl)CT -BOWLING -LI• \'~~· ~" Chrll khtnk!I, Blll'I' Wtl11 mlic•1l!l9 Ill ........
2:~ 11.m. f2lCT -GOLF CL .. 551C -Gro. ,l.rcr»r. l ob Lunn ~1. &or.. Murphv. DIVlt Mtrr. Trim bl1t-IHll QU•rltr-t1n11 rlfmlntllon. J1ck
Whlt1k•r. C.rv Mlcldlecoff nnk1k11 11 Flrt1ton1 CC, A~rOfl. 11 w11ti1.,.1cn S!tlr.
l 11.m. !l/C~-~A GOLF -S\50,000 CrolbY Cltulc. Cllr 1 Mllkll, Biii Flemml.,., Jim MCICl"t', l"t'f"lln NtllOt! I nk1!N ti l'rbbt1 Bt•cl'I, J 11.m. (lllCT -BASKETBALL -\J!1h 5!1tt 11 Arlro.,.. Monlr Mllart, Ptl\ Ptlttll courts\de . . 4:lel 11.m. (f)CL -SA.N ,I. ANITA -130,DO(I San Mira.. H1ndlc111, m!lt 1nd ont-<1u1rttr for tDU<"-l'flr-otd1 •nd uu. Ernlt Mrtu, Httr"f t-Wn!.f.ft lrtc•1ldt In "'rc1al1. S 11.m. !4)CF -WORLD OF GOLF -Doo~ 61nd1rJ, Ctilflt• Sifford, O.vt Th«'"' 11111' Sl"91POf"t 11i.rw:1 cc cwr11 In s1 ... •-•· S 11.m. 15)CF -&OWLING -autcll G11rll1rt, N11nn M.lvtfl vs. Tim H1r•"' TOnl T•ltle 11 •owl1r1m1 L..-.n t" A-r1>11. J 11.m. !71CT -WIOE WOR.LO -H1w1ll1n $Vr11"9 Cl'11mpl111'11lllP ,......, SuMtl...,,.. 1rol Lldlits' o.rnolltlOll Otrtrf !tom l1tlP, NY. 5 11."1. (lt)F -l'UTBOL -lLudll M IUCCllf' * Mt•IQL) J::IO p.rn. CJ)CT -11LL1 .. llDS -Ml"flUClllt F1l1 vs. l>h"t'llll Dlll1r. I 11.m. (lllCT -BOXING -Zara FOi~ .,,, Temmv l'llkb. ,,.,yyw..19hll. Ctwd< Hull. G. L.
Vlt!o rlf191\clt 11 Sllvt r 51111,.., I" L11 V•lll•.
Anteater Netters
To Begin Action
, .........
J J011 m.
1 00 II m,
10C•m.
1:00 .......
'''°""'· l :J111.m.
10·00• m,
11:«1 t "'· 7.lO .......
, •••• 1'\.
'·°'"·"" .f;IWIP.11'1.
J::a:I p,m.
J:Oll 11.m.
J:QD11Jl'I.
10:11111.m. , ......... ,, .. """' t ·0011.ln.
1·0f)1,m.
)OQDm.
1G:to 1 m.
2·to pm.
1.JO """'
Gauchos Fall, 64·44
UCI Frosh in Breeze
UCI's freshman team and Saddlebeck
College played cat·and-mouse with each
other for 10 minutes ,Thursday night
before the Anteaters pulled away and
cruised to a 64--44 basketball victory
at Crawford Hall.
The victory gave Irvine an 8-1 record
going into the Anteaters' home game
with UCLA's frosh Saturday night al
7.
Saddleback is 4.10. The Gauchos play
UC San Diego's frosh tonight in San
Diego.
Once Irvine began its expected
dominance of the defensive board Thurs-
day, Saddleback started fading . When
Jim Helm's bucket made it 17·15 with
9:24 left in the first half. Saddleback
never again saw the lead.
Until that juncture, the lead had
switched three times.
The Anteaters held high-scoring Tom
Noon to seven points". Bill Moore paced
Irvine with 12 counters.
Rick Evans' long bucket at the final
buzzer produced the 20-point margin for
UC!.
VCI Fro111 U•l
W~i!t
l/.ar;rp
Georla
·~ S•getlorn
Slrock
Hflm
Jtck111n Blauer
Ev~n• VI err I
Tcl1/•
It ri at 111 I l l S
s 1 ' n • I J t l 1 I t
l l 1 10
I I 0 2
I 2 I l
1 0 0 •
1 , 1 •
1 1 7 l
C I 1 I
211120 ...
S1ddl11M~k U•I
'"" Lawreric• ""'" Merrill ·-Win/et"
lt fl ,1 I•
I t 4 11
J l , 7 s l 4 1J
1 G 1 1
' J l 1 1 D S •
LEAPIN' LEON -Anabeim's Leen Fitzgeralil leaps off the starting
line during a run at Orange County International Raceway. His 1,500
BILLIARDS PROS
'
TO COMPETE IN LA
fy,·o of lhe world's finest b11liar1\:<1
players. Joe Balsis and Ed Kelly, have
filed entries for U,le 1969 World'1 lnvila·
tional Pocket BiDiards Championships
Jtarting Jan. 31 in Los Angeles.
The Jl.diy tournament will be held
at the Los Angl':le.t Elks Club. 607 Soulh
Parkvicw Ave.
The 15-man field will he vying ror
the 116,000 in prize money. Grimea will
be pl3ycd dally JJt 7·30 p.m. and IY.'O
:ii 9:-ta p.m. Added afternoon matches
will be ~Id oo weekends.
Record
Su1h Matsubara, a Los An&elea-bued
<lragster driver, y,•ill attempt to better
lhe national record in the AA fuel altered
class Sunday a:t.ernon at Oringe County
International Raceway.
Matsubara will make the attempt in
a new car featuripg an 3UlomaUc
transrniMion and a spnmi rur axle.
OCIR general manger Mike Jones 1ay1
if Matsubara ls successru1 ln his f:O•
denvor, his new delign could anUqu1t.e
overnight all existing can in hl1 clus.
Matsubara already hOltt~' the OClR
track record with a 7.89 clocking.
I
' Friday, January 24, 1969 DAILY PILOT J7
Oilers' League Str.eak~
Menaced by W est·e~n r
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ._ Dalf1 P"91 llMf
l:funtlngton Beach H 1 & b ' 1 31..gamc
league wlnnlng hreak and a current
4--0 mark in the Stwet League is at
slake when the Oilers meet up wlth
Western at the Oilers' gym.
Tipoff is set for 8 o'clock.
Western HJgh School's varsity basket-
ball lle&.500 is on the lint toniibt at·
oording. to coach Marv Blemker.
Coacb Elmer Combs' Hunt in Ito n
. quintet i1 ranked eigblh in the CIF
MAA rankings an<! holds the third pole
Jn Orange County rankings behind
Garden Grove and Sunny Hills.
The Oilers (lf.2) are coming off a
~ win over highly--ttgarded Anaheim
and are favorltei .to do the same to
·the Western oulfit. a team the)' have
beaten once ln pre~eague action: by 28
polrits.
Prep Basketball
However, the batUe tonight loorna u
a muCb cloaer Conwt and 10me •
obeerverl give the Invading Plonetn
an outside chance of dolna what no
one ebe has been able to acompUah
since the opening found ol Irvine Lelp
hostWties: in 1967: Beat a Huntington
varsity.
It took Estancia High four overtime
periods to do It, but the Eagles prevailed,
73-70, in the opening test or the 1967 .......
Only Anaheim last wee~ wu able
to utend Combs' 1...,.. lhls year with
the seven-point loss.
The other three victories came
relatively easy.
Western hopefuls cons.Ider the abllity
of the Pioneer1 lo control lhe boards
-offensively and defensively -a1 the
key to an upset.
Mater Dei-Servite Tiff
Tops Tonight's Agenda
Orange Coast area prep basketball
teams swing into action on all fronts
tonight.
Topping the area crucial! is the Mater
Oei-Servile clash in the Angelus Leapie. ·
l)eatdes the ObVlDUS setup between
tTadiUonal "rivals. the Angelus-circuit
te1t will pit ulldefeated Servite (2-0)
again1t the Monarchs (l·I) in a test
that · will either put Mater Del back
into serloUs title contention after losing
its loop opener or drop the Monarchs
two games behind the pace.
Irvine League battles shaping up in·
elude Costa Mesa at Corooa del Mar,
Estancia at Magnolia and Loara at Foun-
tain Valley.
All games lonlghl Up off at 8.
In the Sunset League, Newport Harbor
and Westminster (both with disappointing
1-f loop marks) ta.Dgle at the latter's
gym while Santa Ana and Marina (also
vdth 1-f records) are knocking heads
al Marina.
Laguna ~ach trek.s to MWion Viejo
In Crutview League ct.ion and San
Clemente hosts Tustin to round out the
area picture.
Estancla'1 Irvine League title hopes
took a beating Wednesday afternoon
when the Eagles dropped their second
league game to Loara.
Now with Magnolia facing them, !he
Eagles are definitely with their backs
to the wall. A Joss tonight will drop
them two games behind Magnolia.
Corona del Mar will be attempting
to keep pace with Magnolia (assuming
the Sentinels win) with its Co.sla Mesa
cntest.
The action figures as a defensive duel
with Corona's dominance in the defensive
side of the picture giving the Sea Kings
clear-cut favoritism .
Fountain Valley moves into it& third
straight toagh Irvine game stUI searching
for w\n number one.
Wesbninlter is a slight favorite to
give Newport Harbor ill filth straight
loop IO.!s at the Llons' confines.
N.ewpott. wruch started off with. a
.spectacular win over Marina in opening
league action, has stunned observers with
losses lo Santa Ana, Santa Ana Valley
and wemrn.
Snow Is Falling,
Skiing Excellent
Ski conditions are reported from
good to excellent for the wee.kend
throughout California and more snow
is falling today in m~1_1tain areas ..
Skiers and other visitors to winter
recreation areas are advised t h a t
chains are required In all mountain
areas. The following is a late morning ski
report:
* * * Slt"""'1I Clll .. "'11 $-Si.n!mlt -1\'t-1 !ft! cl MW ll>OW, Ill
IKllllf• In -r1llcn II.WI Rldtl -10 Intl"" of ntw 1ncrw, 1tl I• cltl!ln -retln11
Snow \lalln -IG·11 lricM1, I ll fKlllllH -· 111"9
Holldl"f Hiii -'XI lnclll!s -tnOW, Ulln1 from
IOll cf !!lit mountain T1b11 Moun!eln -New ll>OW, m•v open S1tur· . ,.,
M~ Ridge Ind Snow for11I -°"'"' SDhl111•r 111C1 S11fld1,
Mt, 81ldy -Piiier PO\I 1nd r11P1t low 1rt11
0111n SDlurdo"t' Incl Slltld•Y
C111tr1I Clllklrlll• Jurw Mollflt1ln -¥~ '"' flf oww 11'10w, 1rc1llfnl
1kl1"9 M1mrnolh -N-1now, t~ttMent lkllnt Hlftlltrw Clllflwlll1
Alpl ... t.MldOwt, a.ooer PIH, ~IVtnly V1t1tr.
China P91k, $qu1w Vtlll"f -:a-144 ll'ldleo Ill lllOW btforl Ill! llol'm Ind toad Ullnt
condllloftl;.
horsepower fuel altered machine win be on band at OCIR for Sunday's
drag racing ahow.
Attempt
He'll have compeliUon Sunday . Ron
Hunter ol Nashville, Tenn., II bringing
his "Varmit Ill" with Its best time
of 7.76.
Leon Fitzgerald or Anaheim, WlD.le
Borsch of Loi Angcle1 and Lee LaBaron
or Santa Ana will also be on hand.
Tom Fm1ro (Anaheim) and his 200
mph "Gr6und11hakers Jr.'' machine will
alto 'r. on hRrd.
All will be shooting for tho $l1000
pum.
National rtCOrd holders Walt and Mel
MRrrs Mad I neld of ten 8--gas
I
at OCIR
supercharged cars In Sunday's program.
The day's thlrd attraction will be Clruck
Poole's dual-engined wheelstandtt. tt•n
be hil first appearance in Lbe county
since Poole. won OCIR's wbeel!tanding
championship in September,
Poole has hit 105 mph wllh his front
wheel off the ground for 2,500 feet
Sund11y quallfyinR run1 start at 9:30
a,m. and feature races starting 1t a
p.m.
The second ract In µie All -Pro Cham·
plon11hlp Seriei, rained out luL weekend,
wiU be held Sundey, Feb. t.
•
U the ~alem oq,,.d CID 4'J ihat
and alow down the HuntlJIClon Wt -k o11 ..... it could tum the trick.
Hunllniton, bowtver, bu come a11'e
llnce loalng to Marina lo tounwnenl
acUon.
Tbe Oilers have WOii elpt llralj)>l
and look Uke a new club alter I.ff
Walten bas apparently tak"1 '°""' of
the burden olf Roy Miller under ;f!>e
basftt. '.
Both at 6-2, the Oiler duo w1ecked
the supposed invlnclolllty <t Apahoim's
!toot line with muacle aholl and euellont
rtbourvUng .
Snow at Last
For Southland
Mountains
By ESTHER ilILLINGS
ot .. Dlltt pt ... ""'
Local ski area operaton held their
breath during the week's rain atorm
while mow alternated with ram Finally
the weather decided on snow, and the
operators gave a gasp ol relief.
With ski 1lopes ~pltnilbed there
ollould be skiing in local mountalnl lhls
weemxi -unless the weather does
another about·face. At lut report there
was a neat eight feet down to two
feet reported. The lat.est report ls
availllbel by calling (213) AT 7-97Jt.
With skiing back in local mountain!.
lfiere iS a reason to celebrate' National
Ski Week, which officially endl thiJ Sun-
day.
At Snow Summit near Big Bear Lake
night skiing conUnue.s on Saturday night,
along wl~ other special actlviUe.s.
Holiday Hill n ea r Wrigbtwood Im·
pressed me a lot recenUy with Ule
extensive clearing and 1Jope grooming
I viewed from the new double clWrlift.
There was little snow then, IO the
sleeknesl of the runs wu .appar~.
Covered with the new snow the nms
should be nothing but fm to akl.
· Nearby Table Mountain, having had
to postone the planned "Open HOUie"
for ski shop personnel, now hu mow.
Tbe event ha~ been rescheduled for Feb.
2.
BARREL ST A VE SLALOM
At Snow Valley on the Running Sirtngs
Highway in the San Bern.ard1no Moun·
taiJll the first annual Inter-Club Barrtl
Stave Slalom will be held Feb. t. aQ~
CalaiJ, president ol the Far Wts& ~1
the event, expecta every member club
to serid at least one team of three
racers, with some sending men and
women's learns.
Trophle1 and champagne will 'llc
awarded to the winners based on team
points, with added prizes going to lhc
fastest indivlduals, men and women. ,,.
All Southern Calllomia skiers are in·
vited to attend 8l'ld watch the Contortions
of the racers. I won a magnwn of
champagne on the things -barrel staves
-at Bear Valley last season. The darned
things are now fitted with mf bindings
rather than strinc. That ad.di a lot
to stability, believe me, but not much.
Tbe annual FWSA Far World Ski Club
Fasching Party i1 set Feb. I at the
Switzerland Restaurant, 4057 S. Figueroa
St., Los Angeles. Whether or not to
wear a costume ls your choice, but
tt is fun and prize! will be awarded.
F"°hing ls lhe European pre·Lenteo
celebration wtrlcb beaths as Far Wcirld
members begin arrivli1g in Europe for
charter flight ski trips. ,
Siders from all over S o u the r fl
California who are 1eheduled for tQe
flights, as well as their friends wishing
them hon voyage, annually attend t¥
pre-flight Fasching Party beginning the
celebrations here before leaving.
Tick.ell al $3. 75 per person lncl*
admisalon, danclne, buffet dhmer • .aJ1d
the chance to win prizes. Far World
Ski Club, P. 0 . Box 221, Long Beach.
9(8)1, has further tntormatiOn.
JUNE MOUNTAIN LOADED .
June Mountain received enou&h ano"
In the recent storm ta rtpi:!rt roar lo
14 feet of the stuff. Sti.fng L9 anllable
aU over the hill, includinf the Face:
Mammoth Mountain repc>rl«l eigJJl In·
che.s an hour at one point, and now
reports 11·13 feet.
The Mammoth Mountain Carnival
Week begins this weekend, IO festtvrues
.as well as skiing will be al hili:b pitch.
Buy your Carnival Button fer a dollar,
and you are entitled to the evenll whlch
are planned dally by the ICOl't.
Western Airlines ii annot.melftl a "Jan--
uary White Sale." For a limHed tlrnf:
ita $250 ski Wt ~ cod at 11 raons
is being dJscount.ed to $100.
The pau II a transferable iokl -pin
and enUUes the holder to unlimited Wl
privil~es at Garibaldi, Grouse Mountain,
Sunshine, Norquay, Lake~. cry.&al
Mountain, Alpeni.J, 11mberllne, MOlinl
Hood, Heavenly Valley, Bear Valley,
Brigbkln, Park CitJ, Plll'k Qty Wal,
Sun Valley, Jackson Hole, Vall. ml
AipeD.
Anyone lnlmll<d In • NI 1'n """ cont&d W"""11'1 Sala OIDce 1t (llJ)
m-309il for further lnfonnatlon.
Al Ml Rebll Sid Aru. Bear Valli!,
lhc Arl$loerlt compol!Uom will bl blld
Sunday, pving "rtaUUonal" 'ltktl fl
chance at a n1Uonalty.recoplsed tros:fly'._
Like the Ont Ariatocrat nct1 h.16
al Squaw Valley !all ,._,, the ••
Valley ovenl ls not open to pro!-~
or rtgular racln1 tema memberl
Moreover, 1U entrants win.
I.
I
' l
I
)
------.... -------------------.,....---------·-·-·-· . •
New York Classie
OUkst, Largest
Boat Show Slnred
High Flyer In Action
NEW YORK (UPI)-What
b J>~lf the world's oldesl,
la""eil Ud mQ1! -••ete ,).•, >•.L ' •'" ,, .... ::;.: ... , -• ....,... '"'° "'..,,.. way $atutda1 at tile' New York
Coliseum.
One ol. the biggest surprise>
of tile show b the announoo-
.rnent by Qlrpler's marine dio-
visioo that it ls putting on the inarket & 1S5 bcirsepoWer out·
board engine. the most pow·
erful ever produced for the
competitive market.
Pftvlously tile tops 1n the
outboard field was M~'s
12$ borsepower engine, whi<b
has dominated moot ol. the outboard competitive ,-events
recent1y.
Jerry Stone of East Bluff gives Dorsey Webster .a high s~eed aerj~I vitw from
the Assassin, one of the offshore power boat racmg c~dates being prepp~
for the Long Beach to Catalina race Feb. 8-9. Event is sponsored by the Pac1-
tie Offshore Power Boat Racing Assoc iatioo.
RACING FIELD
Chrysler's announcement of
its new engine indita~ l( is
directed toward the. racing
field rather than for lbe cas-
ual recreational boater.
Men's Concern Brought
Southland Boat Show
Who and what is the Southern California
Marine Association responsible for the Southern
Caillorma Boat Show! / The SCMA evolved from the concern of nine
men who were concerned over the lack of direction
of. boating as a recreation and an industry in South-
ern California. These nine men got together in a meeting. at
Newport Beach in 1956 - a time ¥.'hen tb.e ~~g
Uidustry was bursting into South~m .califo~a m
all directions but .with no orgaruzation, no inde-
pendent boet show, no group or association working
toward legislation and water safety.
Many of those involved in that meeting are
still around. They were Ted Tahl, Thalco Corp.;
Walter McPherson, Bellingham Shipyards.; Vin
Jorgenson, seott Motors; John E. Brown, Glasspar;
Don Graves, Seaboard Equipment; Bob Chesley,
F1eetcraf!; Trader Horn, Wizard Boats, Andy And-
erson, Johnson Motors, and Fred Malig, Evinrude
Motors.
They all saw the need for state legislation in
the best interest of. the boating public, the develop-
ment of new waterways, educational programs to
promote water safety, and the need for an all-in-
dustry boat show.
SCMA was launched with a membership ot
nearly 50 firms. Today, under the leadership of
E.P. (Ed) Nichols, the membership tops 300.
The boat show which SCMA spoo90fed has
gJ'O'Wll to be the second largest all-marine show in
the country.
New British Racing
Catamaran on Exhibit
required. Total car top weight
is less than 150 pounds and
no part ways more than 60
pounds.
IT'S THERE
ANYWAY
LOS ANGEi.ES (UPI)
You've heard about the guy
who built a, boat in his
backyard and then bad to rip
the fence dawn to get it out.
It happened in reverse al
the boat show in the Pan·
Pacific Auditorium.
New Jersey boat builders
trucked a •.ooo yacht across
the eountrY to exhibit. ll was
17 fee:t high from keel to
bridge but the door tq_ tpe
auditorium ·was on1y l>&nd·
one-half fee:t hi&h-
At a cost of several h'undred
dollars, a section of wall was
removed to let the boat in.
Houseboats
Big Feature
Of LA Show
Almost half a million vis-
itors are expeCted to cram
into the Coliseum for the an·
nual show which will run un-
til Feb. 2. nm t:radltional
mid-winter e v e n t presents
one of the best cross-sections
of the newest pleasure boats.
marine engines and acces-
sories. Exhibitors represent all
parts: of the United Slates,
April Date
Of Marathon . '
LA Regatta
More outstanding marathon-
slyle boat racers live in
Southern California t h a n
anywhere else in the wocld
-but not 'until next April
will they race for the first
time in the metropolitan Long
Beach-Los Angeles area.
The first world invitational
marathon championshiPs have
been scheduled at the Long
Beach Marine Stadium April
26-27. They will be 8J>OllSOred
by the Los Angeles Speedboat
One of the features of the Association and sanctioned by
Southern California Boat Show the American Power Boal
at the Pan PaclflC Auditoriwn Association.
are two , houseboats 1'be two day event -a
displayed .a float in a specially three-hour race for outboards
constructed' tank. on Saturday and another
The 39-foot Cat.a-Cruiser will three·hour test for Inboards
be ~ biggest boat ever the following day -will not
floated In a display pool on only mar k California's first
land. It will be joined in the marathon r a c e in a
7G-foot long vinyl pool by metrapollt.an area convenient
Hydro's 22-foot camper boat. to race fan s. but also the
The pool setting w i I I first test of this type of boat
demonstrate the uniqueness of on a course as demanding
the boats which can maneuver as Long Beach's "I an k y
in as litUe as six inches of lagoon."
water yet have stability and More often , marathons are
safety in the open sea. held in such waters as Parker
'The Cata.Cruiser will sleep Dam in Arizona or Salton Sea,
siJ: penons in three separa~ requiring both drivers and
staterooms and is a COOlplete spectators to travel long
Canadi and Wei(.enl Europe. . Tra\lltlooll .......,, are O!I in. i
play And there· .w:e all -'i ol. ..__ ...... (Cl<, -who 111<,"U;-;;;;:;;.... bi the -• aUonal boatlnl field, a sPol'I,
incidentally, &at enticed an
estimated a:.2. million Amer--
leans in 196l
The esttmate came trom a·
join( survey b~ the Na-1
Associatioo of Eugine and
Boal Maoolactun:n and tile
BoatingloduslrJ-.
wbk:h alao caJdilated ~ tbat
these boating eoUu"'W';
spent 13.IS blllion 'In punull
ol tile sport In 1111. .
OFFICIATING 'a Ill the ooenlni " the boll oliolr· 1rlll
be : and lfrl. J-R.
McQue<t1 ol. Lan<.tat2r..._f_I, , . . ~ C: ::~;~·cfliflla, W .. ~-H.eavf,.;fl~;;,;;· ·-" ,. ,.,.
cralt ranges from big auJJl.. v. JI • . · . . aries and motor yac!his··:•Tri!narans are fast but selctom are they airborne. Tb.ls 46-fopter bwlt by Gil 's
through an array ol. crimen, ·C'13mai'an, 143 E. 16th St., Costa Mesa was so Wide~ that its 23-foot beam
·diy ~.,.., open nfilallollti .,..,u1d not clear the building yatd. Tbe eight-ton craft was lifted. over the house
and utilities, canoes, dlnghles, -onto ·an Advapce Boat Moven' truck for hauling to thEi harbor for launching.
prama and rowboata. For _.:......:......:....._.:......:..........:.:.....cc c;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;o;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;~;,;;;;;--;
those who want the Unusual II
there 11 an elbibitioo of l!Ov· DELTA SUPER QUALITY
h:"~'i::.i.~ Jlace Slated Tires Cost Less!
Prlcel .. most bf -craft aren't up toO macb B
rrom a JW' •10. a tribute 1o y Canada the ftY bolting nwwfactur·
ers have cut the cost of pr. duction. 'l'ORONTO {AP)-The Roy-
e COMPLITI LINE AYAl\.ill.I •·
WIDE OVALS -SUl"Ell ,tEMIUlll'I -l"OLTntaJI
llAOIAL $l"OllT$ -SAND •UGGT -CAMPEii
SP'ECIAU -&. ALL $1lE TRUCK TtllU.
U.NlAMIRICAlD MA.STIR CHA.151
BERG'S DEL TA TIR·ES
14i'E. 17th St .• Costa Mesa· 645-2010
Bul il you are inclined to ai ,Canadian Yacht Club of 1
make a purcbue at this Toronte announce<i Wednes-
show. you can start at about day it has revived the Canada
$50 (a canoe) aod r~e up CUP. races in res~ to a
to more than $110~0 (a_ a -cl:i81lenge from the ClfVelan(fil~~~~~~;:o~,;••;"'":;;~··;;;·;llo..~h;•~~~~~~J foot Owens ya~t). . Ohio Yacht Club. '\~ One of Ule big attraction-. . getters this year -:is ~ -The series, dating back to
oom. These luxury products 1895'; l'!. s~le~ . too start
are a far cry from the old Sept. 7 in Lake Ontario;off :r~
scow boats of yesteryear that rooto. The RCYC will 'defend
provided i shelter, most1y, for tl}e . eup lasf~won in 195:4:· .by
welfare recipients on the mud Qave Howard in Venturer. II.
banks of many rivers. The United States dominated
the series fQr 50 years unt il
LUXURY CRAFT the 1954 upset and nO competi-
T o day's houseboats are tions have been held since. twin-0r-tr1ple-hulled c r a f t, with appointments aboard Four yachts now are being
that rivaJ the most luxurious prepared for the RCYC. They
city apartments -freews. conform to the Cruising Club
air-conditioning. electric ov-of America rating of n feet
ens, etc. and will undergo trials this
Just about every conceiv-summer to determine which
able type of sailboat is rep-one will meet the U.S.
resented at this year's show. The first two races Sept. 7-
most of them wit,h. sails lip-8 will be at least 21 niiles.
ping lazily in the air-condi-'Ibey wil1 be followed by a
tioned atmospberet. long-distance cruise Sept. 9
Mast of the new ones art of 150 to 250 miles. twice
designed t'o rate favorably around an enlarged triangu-
under the handicappiJ:tg rules Jar course. counting as t w o
of the various racmg a.ssocia-races. If a final race is need·
tlons, sueb as the Cruising ed it will be ·held Sept. 21. Club of America (CCA) and1...:::..::...::::..:::..::::::..::::c::.::::---------------------
Midget Racing Ocean Club
(MORC).
Actually, for the first time
In the history of the s&-7ear·
old show, the "queen" o this
year's exhibition ls a sailboat,
a 43-foot seafarer fiberglass
auxiliary racing yawL It.,s a
new design by Sparkman and
Stephens with center cockpit
and pacolon wood·grain dee·
orated hull.
HEAD SKI A new British racing
catamaran which i3 easily
dismanUetl into two hulls for
cartage on a ear top will
be uhlhited at the Los
Angeles Boat Show which
opens today at the Pan Pacific
Audit«ium in Los Angeles.
The Felix. which is said
to handle and sail well with
three people can also be raced
single-banded -with a speed
e1ceeding 15 knots.
dwelling and sailing unit. It distances.
will sell far less than $15,000. p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.!
The 224oot eampe.r boat will 11
accommodate four persons
and stlh for Jess than $3,500.
SALE
25%off
From the same Pearson
Bro1. stable as the well-known
Bonito and Finn dinghies, the
Ftlix catamaran, according to
its builders is e a s i I y
transported on top of a ear,
speedily assembled, a n d
launched with ease from any
beach or river bank with
reasonable access to water.
When not in use the Felix
may be stored in the backyard
or slung from the garage roof.
No mainteneoce or extras are
Each hull is divided into
three compartments for safety
and is comtrueted a (
fiberglass w i t b integrally
molded centerboard e a 1 e s
complete wrth rudder and
sruce tiller and extension.·
The craft is 14 Jeet two
inches I on g, ~ feet 9 inch~
beam, 24. inches draft with
centerboard dawn and eight
inches with board up. T h e
boat is cal rigged with l 12
square feet of sail.
Three in Coronado Line
On Display to Visitors
Chris-Craft
Aide Picked
r
these racer-cruises;s have been
sold. The boat sleeps five and
has a modern, effM:lent galley ,
ample storage and features
Outboards
On Sunday
The Western Outboard
Association and the Pacific
Boat Racing Club are joinUy
sponsoring boat races S\ioday
at Mission Bay , Sao Diego.
The event is called Moe
Paulsen Benefit race. All of
the proceeds al the race will
go toward defraying the dom
of hMpital and medical '·n-
penJel for Paulsen who was
serjously injured last Sep-
tember durln& the Grand Pm
at San Diego.
The racing .program st.arts
at 8 a.m. and will nm through
most of the day. Admission
is free aod the public ls in-
vited.
I
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• As.wrted Exotica:
A Vicuna rug, your me-
mento ol South Ametica,
41,1·xs·, lor $500-lhe per·
feet thing for your den
•.• Utua Apeo puppies,
show and pet quality, all
AKC, from champion lirles
. . , Mounted big game
heads, some world rec-
. ords. another · trophy far
your den (I'll never tell
!hat you tJouaht it) •.•
Always wiah you'd kept
that o$d Ford'!' u~·s
your ~ to buy an-
other one, a 1923 Madel
T Roadsttt, make your
oiler now • • • Above the
noise llJ1d smog, you can
get there fast.tr in thll '64
CeSAM 150 Commuter, !IOO
hours TT. Lna than $5,000?
• • • • •
YOU CAN SA VE NOW,
AT THE PEAK OF THE SEASON,
ON OUR 1968 AND 19 6 9 STYLED SKIIS
HEAD STUDARD
Yoo seldml see this low irice oo Utis axle!, knDllQ
M lllfl watd's fllOSI preremd ski. H .50 "9· 11 S.00
HUD:121
NeirlydesitPll fu 1968'69, this is the ideal ski for
the sider ""° bas lllSlered the 'basics ••
IJ4.50 "9· I 4S.OO
HUDm
F« ym Ural waut Ille~ here is a ski falnous for
lieiai Ille liast alkrml ai ever tasted.
1J2.50 roq. 165.00
HUD
Qmnrred. H$d11ea1er
Sporlsam's ~ DolDM Long
Beach, 4mt; Paaxra, 6ZH321;
Nefl!Qf,. 644-2200; La Hain, 694-1.911.
(j
BuffumS'
w....,.1 °""' ,1 "••flhll lt""'f • ''4·2'10I • llbl.,l'llurt.,F'rl. 10:00 tin r.lll °""' bt)'S to:oo nn s-:31
I .,
' .. A. Complete Guide -.. \ '
. .
· , ~-.~~~~e~~: .Qishlights
DOG Cllrr RIDE -Children and adultS' will find a · sP<dlJ ·...m to
lheli ·B~ iliea tl!ey vi~I Fasl!ioo lslJllld Mall. Newport<lleodl. th!.>
Saturday. Stormy, ' magnificent St. Bernard dog from Ala.sU ri1 be
there with his cart from 11 a.m. lo 3 p.m. to help raise mOllfl)', fer the
March of Dimes birth defec Ls program. What child (or ·adutt fer that
matter}, wouldn't love a ride in a dog· cart? The 50 cents danaUon (75c
f« two) which will be dep(ISited in the ~eg around Stormy's neck will
go for a good cause, too.
ROSE PRUNING -A three man panel of experts will, demonstrate roae
pruning and discu.u problems of rose cullure oo Sat., Jan. 25 from I to
5 p.m. in the CommUl).ity Services Center, 8200 Weslminste.r Ave., West·
minster. A question and answer period will follow the panel discW1Sion.
There is co admission charge.
RECREATIONAL VEHICLE SHOW -The combined Southern caJUornia
Sports and Vacation Show 'and Southern California Recreational Vehicle
Show opened today at the Convention Center, DI W. Katella Ave., in
Anaheim. The la~t campers, boats and other recreational vehicles are
on display and special entertainment will be prov1ded1~ Flbruary
2. Hours : Mon. through Fri.,% to ID p.m.; Sat., noon to to p.m. and Sun.
noon to 9 p.m. ~dulls $t.7a, children $1, under sil, free.
See Guide to Fu, Pace ZI
INTERMISSI 0 N
By TOM TITUS
Bob Co~n. the founder and director of
uC Irvine's student repertory thtater
troupt, feel! much like a successful foot-
ball coach wbo's.1<>M UWe of his material
M lflduaU<io.-·1· • _ ...... u~ ~
ed to help the company break away from
the .rnethod-orieated system. .
"This tsn't a major departure," he em·
phasized," just a shift in fOC\ll!, We're mu commJtted to professional perfor-
M8J1Ce at ~ college leYel."
K •
•••• Where : to · g"lf . ··~ What to
" ..
tlo • ••
Hollywood
•
Back Stage
B1 BOB THOMAS
~... ..,.. "'""
HOLLYWOOD -~pposing -
thing on the Apollo 8 mission bad 1me
awry and moonmen Anders, BormaD
and Lovell hadn't been able to return
to earth.
That chilling possibility ii the IUbj«:I
or a new movie called "Marooned," proo
duced by M.J . Frankovich and cru.cted
by John Sturges, an upert in adven-
ture "The Great
Escape," "Ice
Station Zebra".
The scope of the
Colwnbla film ts
so immense that
it is being shot
on MGM stages.
the biggest In
~oily.wood.
·-, ............
~.·. ~ir·· ..
;
'.
' . Sturges de-0•19ftv••<1C
scribes the situation.
"Three astrooauts have been work-
ing in a manned space lab for about. six
moolhs. Their physiotogi<:al and fl'&'-
chological sy1tems begin to deteriorate,
so it seems prudent to return them to
earth. But the routine fuing to ltDCI
them back falls, and they are marooned
in space.
· .. We've got 13 •murnfrig letterynan.' "
CQJien fP'inned. completing t11e inalogy,
as ht talked othis plans for Che new sea-
son. Out of a totaJ complement of 17 mem-
ben, thi! puts tl)e ll'Vine IU!perlory Thea-
ter long oo experience for 1969.
Cohen. who left for the east coast al
the. close of the mr season Jast year took
a sabbatical leave over the first ~es
ter to complete a pair of creative pro-
jects, a book and a play. The book i.!
"Giraudou:r, Three Fares of DestJny "
a ~iography °'· the rreDCh playwright which was published m Chicago last De-cember.
SPORTS SNOW BRINGS DRE:AMS OF SNOW CA'PPl!D MOUNTAINS, FISH FILLED STREAMS.
"The picture describes wbai happens
in the 72 boura that are left for the astro-
nauts. A rescue craft is sent. to save
them. SWrges was directing a scene that
seemed t.errifylngly real. Actcrs J I m
Franciscus and Gene Hackman were
floating unco~trollably In their derdicl
space capsule, the weighUea fUu.dcn
provided by camera bootOJ wblcb they
M Cohen outlined the season's sched-
ule, it became apparent that there'll be
· few idle hours dur-
ing the next, five
months for the UCI
players. The com-
pany will stage five
productions, an in-
crease of two fl'9Jll
its two prevlOUJJ sea-
sons.
"We're in our third ao. COMl!N week and e'llery
body's working hard," Cohen related.
"We want this to be our biggest season
in quality as well as quanti'ty."
The season shapes up as both ambit-
ious and varied. First up will be Samuel .
Beckett's "Waiting for Godot," opening
Feb. 5; then Herbert Machiz who staged
"Dark of the Moon" at UCI last season,
returns to direct an obscure play called
"'nle Ticklish Acrobat" by Robert Hivnor,
which debuts Feb. 19.
Rounding out the year for the reper-
tory company wil1 be a na~ of Dylan
Thomas' "trnder Mllkwood"; an o~inal
by UCI professor Daniel Stein, "Winter
Will Ask," and the popular French play,
'"llie Madwoman of Chaillot." Cohen will
direct. "Godot.'' "Milkwood" and "Chall·
lot" and 'trill appear in tf\e steJn play.
which will be ataged by Clayton Garr!·
son, UCI fl~ arts dean.
"We plan to be more eiperbnental this
year," Cohen promised. "exploring itiffer·
ent kinds of drama. For lnstance, 'Godot'
will be augmented by films and slides
and 'Mllkwood' will be all voi~
s~"
To acbien this effect, Cohen explain-
ed the lrrine Rl!pertary Theater will be w~ki:og in different tirtdl ol. trainin&
and jm~uding acrobatics. . ...... and circus tedmique....alo iu..-~ . ~· with ei:perimenlal acttnc Uercl9e ""'"''ID"
WEEKENDER
INSIDE FEATlJBES
If you want to bear a music man,
a television commentator, a story
teller and a dress designer, all In
t op form, check lhe story on La-
.· guna's T01"n Hall, 'Page 20.
INDEX
World Tram P ... 2t
UVt Tlotat<r Pqe 2t
Gatde I> Fu Pap.•
Lapn• Ton u.n Pap•
Oat 'N' Aboo& Plfh U.U
Movie M,.re II Lqau P ... II
Rqiet..., Ill Mute. C.W .... II
Lqa1 Qomber Male Pap 14
Art-II r..,14 nm n .. a 1a AuMllll P• • · q,, ... 11 P•ll
Com!« P• 11 TV Vltw1 l'qo· 11
Tt-""""
The play, tentanvely lilied "Bu.ap!"
is an extemion of Cohen's one-act '"Th~
Death of Morris Biedermann,,.• fll'St
staged by the UCI repertory company
two years .. o wtth Bob Gunton, the mT's
most impressive product, in the Utle roJe.
"Buap!" Is under oplion for an east
coast production and, Cohen conl'ides,
this time Bledennann doesn't die.
While he's wailing .for the word from
Ne\v York. Bob Cohen won't be sitting
arovnd drumming his fingers on hiJ desk.
The Irvine Repertory Theater will be
taking up too much of his time.
* Like community theaters tbem9elves,
when one actlng workshop dies, two otb-
tts spring up to'takt its place. '
Shortly after Mary Easbnan discontin-
ued her Professional Acton' Worbbop
at the Orange Studio Theater, the Open
End ~trical Workshop made its debut
In N"'!PO'i Beach's old Second Step
Theater, once the home or South coast
IU!pertory.
Now the Westminster Commµpity
~ter ii bitlatlq a woruhop prog,..,;,
geared lo prwlde both beglnrrtiig and ex-
. perienced actors with a background in
~ directlng,'makeup and other 1tage teamiques, .
Directing the woikshop wm be Soodra
Ev1111, wfl9 •tarr:ecl in this writer's ori-
ginal play, 1'Smnmer Ugbtning,'' at the
Westmlnater theater )ast year. Sondra
baa a masll!r of rme art. de&ree In play-
wrlUne from UCl and a wide background
in both amateur and professional theater.
H Y,OU're Interested, Yvonne Tardy
(-) II dlspenaln( further inform•·
lion 00 the project.
Anaheim Outdoor Shows
Merge for Sportsmen
, H. Werner Buck has combined two the famous Flying Arton! trapezt team.
of the shows he produced in OranB.e ~orld champ.ion archer, Bob M~iw?rth
County las.t ye&r into the Southern also wm be ent~ng ~ will Diane . . . ElllJOn Rowe, girl champion Jog roller CiJlforrua Sports Vacation r.nd Recrea-and Tom Wil d and his trained bear
tion!l Vehicle Show which opened today act.
in the Anaheim Convention Center.
The entire Exhibit Hall of the center
Will be packed with all types of recre-
tionat vehicles -campers, van con--
•ersions.. molor homes and various types
ol. travel trailers.
ln the Arena of the Convention Center,
visitors will find fJShlng gear, guns, vaca-
tion and travel displays, camping equip-,
ment and everything related to outdoor
recreation.
An innovation this :Year is a West.em
TraVel Film Festival being held in the 4Jtaheini Room •which seats 2,000
eeraons. Films from all or the western
~le> will he judged today by a Pl""!
of newsp.8;pei-and television travel editors
and the winner will receive the S~
Magazioe first -place award. ne flbns
judged the three best will" be &hown
free daily to visitors to the show.
Entertainment Is scheduled daily at
4 and I p.m. with an eztra show at
2 p.m. on wtekend.1. The events titled
the Parade of Champlona will include
a high dive, from the Arena ctiling
I n t o a sponge mat, by a member or
Other attractions at the show include
• casting pond for anglers to test equip-
ment and ·a ·Huck Finn trout pond where
fresh. Sbaala County trout may be
caught.
For rockbounds there is a special
display by the members of the Delvers
Gem and Mineral Society who will 1how
various types of mineral rpecimens and
handcrafted jewelry.
Products and merchandise from Da·
tional manufacturers are on display in
the giant e.,mllon ha11. Show Yilltor1
can bro"'9e Olrough t20 million worth
of equipment, make vacation plans and
check Uiie variow: Items which help make
a family oUtlng m or e convenient and
e JI j't y abl~ Almott every coocel.vable
type: of recrutiooal vehicle' is displayed
1lde-by...aide for euy compaiiacrn.
The show opens at 2 p.m. on weetdays,
cJoslng st 10:~ p.m., Saturdays from
noon to 10:30 p.m., and Sundays noon
to 9 p.rn. Admi!lllcin la •t.7& for adults.
children I to 1J, •t : un a 11 fry are
admitted free. Parktn1, 50 cents. The
show "°"' Slmdaj, Ftbruory 2.
Weekend Movie Guide
(EdllM'• Not<: Thia movl< guide ii
prepcrtd bu ~ 'filmt committee of
HarbOf" COMncil PT A. Mrs. Robttt S~
""'"" is pr1rid.tnt and Mr1. Hart
Swentw ii commitUe chairman. It U
ifltnded as o nftre;i,ce m detmnin-
fflg Sldtal>k f 11 m r /or «Ttain GI/<
orou.pi and wfU appear wcklr. Your
llMwt arc toUcikd. Hail them to Mo-
vlc G.W., an:r o/ lh< DAILY PILOT.)
&DVL'lll
'lwta.ul!t1.A' (lllA): Girl 4'W'
naut reoo!..t .w.r. lrW Praldent ol
F.ilill,'li 1111 t-40,000, to find 1 .,;..
rlnC Earll! 8denUot. -It a 11e.-poo . """ ... ilestorJ the wwld In lllfl
----.. oddity. J• Fonda ._ I
ne Gr.eluate: Comie Milin! ol • con-
fused , awkward and inQocent. 10Wll
man, Dustin Hoffnian, who bn:akl out
of the materialimc world of bbl ekien
and becomes involved with a neurotic
woman, played by Anne Bancrall. She
bea>mea vindictive when he fa.Us in
love with her daughter.
in which girl ttiet to save her baby from
impeodlnjf devlltrr in lllil sordid and
blaapllemous flhn with Illa FlrtW.
MATIJRE TEENS AND &DVLTS
Budo&en: POlktYU war weGem in
wbfch two outlaw brolben (Jama Stew·
art and Dean Martin) join lorcea with
the lherlll -the -,....,.,. ,.,,._ ud 1>e PW: Impudent. them ii atlacked by 11vqe ¥W<al bari-
lrivolur l!rtlbb farce about the pitlal~ dldoo. RaqUel Waldl a1ro stan ID 1111r
and edvanl"iel ol Ille pill. It peeb Into violent lllm with • backaiwncl ol !Int
the pri•ate llvea m fivt cmples, inc.100-desert IOeflf!rJ.
In( the Hanlcastle1, played by David 1)1 Boo!Go Str11.,.,. CSMA), Thia
Niven and Deboroh Kerr, and turils in-film tracts eYUll lt"4hi& to' the arre111
to a comedy' ol errilrt Which upoell coo-of the p~ Wbo .Im never beoo
venltonal moral 1tlllllClet. · tried le>< Ille mWlalioa ud munlor ol -IWJ'• Bab1 !SMA): Blendill( • U women, and the (lfobo ol I dlloued
ol bormManJ»J and mp da:J' tea1111 0-tl 1,,. .. II
EDYE'WILLIAMS & BOW
straddled out of camera rana:e.
The third member of the apace team,
Richard Crenna, was missing. sturgt!
explained that Crenna had been zapped
by the Hong Kong flu , and added
darkly. •·we lose him on the trip."
The trio never meet their co-star,
Gregory Peck, who directa the rucue
operation from the ground. Ncr do they
have any direct conta'tt with David
Janssen, who pilots the r~ craft.
During the ltmeh brul: dir!ctor Slllr·
ges escorteil • .,. vJalt<r> lo aoolhfr atage
which -llDed • wllh tbinl!• to dtiigbl
the heart of any apace nJi The place
_. bad everything from a three-foot Ru&o
sian apace capsule -yes, the RUSlians
get into the act, too -to a fUJJ.elze rep-
lica of the Apollo I.
''We have full Air F~ and NASA
cooperation," repo,rted StW"gea. "We
showed them the script, and they found.
it to be boneft and credible. They have
given ua all the help we Deed -at no
expense to the tupayer."
The tieip includes films of launchings
from Cape KeQned,y ud acces1 to what·
ever equipment iln't secret. Everything
has an aulbentic air, including the lllits
worn by astronaut& Franciacua, Chona
and Hackman. ~Y ire completely
functional, and the actors• linea are re--
corded by radio within tbe helmeta. To
prote<t the performers from roasting
under the hot lights, their s:uita are
piped wt\b air cooled by carbon dio'llde.
'amily Fun Trip
' ' '•
.You Visit With 5,000 Animal.s
One ot the world'• unique t:OOS, hoos1ng the largelt collection of
wUd animals In tHe workl, 11 within a two.boor drfve fnlm the ~
Coast. It offers an oPPOftUnity for an blterestin1 day the wboJe familJ
will• enjoy. The San Diego Zoo, hooses more than 5,llOO animal> In nllllr-
al leltlnp, wbero the viewer ill reporated from tf\e v1ewed b)' cmlully
~ moata and ridges.
·The beautifnl'1 landxoped IJtl .... ""' mlgbt -be _, !Int Ill' takini • • 40inlnute guided boa tour to gel on overall loot at the port.
One "must" for ll1)' croup wJtb cblldren ii 11te auldrtt'a Zoo, •
special section where edultt ma1 have t6 duck their beads a bl~ but tho
tid1 will feel right at bonie u they pet baby elephanta, feed llamo "'1d
deer and mate lrlendl with a variety of animals.
To re.ch the 100 In Balbol Pvlt tan the San lllqo tr-01, -.
to the Santa Ana Fr<nay lllen -to San Dtqo. Oaco In U..cllr. !Mo lntmtate lllghw1y • e¢ to Cabrll!o llrt ... 'l'IJn ~ tt -dlro<tl1
to the ....
-on to tho aoo ii 4JJ5 for edults, childnn nnc1 .. H oro 111-
mlltod lteo. Charfe for Tl>e Clllldno't Zoo It 2$0 for -over II, Ile
• for cblldnn I lo II ud rz.. I« IOla under I. The main .., -Ill t a.m. daily; Cblldrm'I: Zoo at t :• a.m. '
r
•
-.. --~-~-~·~-....--------------........ ~--·. ~ .
World Travel Laguna Hall Set
... a..----Wotii Sten O.l1plan1 ___ .._., ..
Fa.med Trio Due at 'Town M~etin:g'
' -What'• happentn1. Europe will be jammed with
American studonLs aglln thls year. (Student CO!IS
are low. Father iJ loaded. And Mother, against her
bolter judgment, has said OK.)
Here's a tb1ng or two lo make it easy.
* GO WITH somebody else. Too lonely moving
around alone. While one person gets the bus tickets,
the other ,.,.atcbes the baggage and buys the box
lunch. Write U.S. National Students Association, 265
1'1adison Avenue, New York City. You want an In·
temational Student Identity Card. Free into mu-
seums and many cut-rate excursions.
* From the same people, their paperback "The
1969 Student Trave1er," $1 .95. "Where The Fun ls"
from Pan American World Airways, $2.95. J.S.J.S.,
133· Rue Hotel des Monnaies, Brussels 6, Belgium
specializes in summer jobs in Europe.
* The only cut-rate airline is Icelandic. New
York-Luxembourg round-trip at this oU-seasOn,
$2.15. Eurailpa&s lets you get on and oil trains wittr
out buying tickets and almost unlimited mileage.
Any U.S. travel agent sells it.
* "Wh•r• can I 9at • converter plug to use my
hairdryer in Europe?"
The converter plug doesn't convert the electri-
city. It simply snaps onto your American-style pl\lg
10 you can plug into European outlets. Your dryer
will work in countries that run on 110 volts. It won't
where it's 220 volts. (Britain, Ireland, Greece, Por-
tugal that I can think of.) Plug into these and you
fry.
* It's not worthwhile getting appliances rigged for
British houses unless you are living there. In the
house I had, there were three different size ouUets-
you couldn't run a vacuum cleaner both upstairs
an4 down without rewiring the plugs. Current came
in so weak it wouldn't run a tape rec_order.thougb
the record player: · ·
* .1• ••• where we can 9at something on J•panu•
re1taurant1 and shops and Inns?''
I have a sheet of material from previous col-
umns. It's free. But please put in a stamped envel-
lope addressed to yourself.
* There's a new pocket.size book "International
Businessman's After Hours Guide to Japan" for $1.
Japan Air Lines, P .O. Box 2721, San Francisco, Calif.
They have another dollar guide to London which is:
very good. (However, Japan Air downstairs doesn't
always: know what they are doing upstairs:. And you
may have to argue with somebody who'• nev11 beard
of these. Sorry, sayonara.)
* "I would like to travel around Ireland •nd •• •
hobby record Irish music ... "
I've run Jnto wonderful music festivals in Ire-
land.-In Ennis they were singing in the pubs, sing-
ing 1n the streets. Ran into another at Waterford. a
summer ago, The Irish Tourist Board will send you
a list of festivals.
* T?en there's music every night with lhe mectie.
val dinner in Bunratty Castle, just outside Shannon
Airport. Friend of mine says he's getting very good
fidelity using a pocket-size Sony recorder. The cas-
sette model.
* "Wiii we h•ve trouble with drivina on the left
In En(llland?" ·
. Well, I managed to clip a truck on the left-band
side three blocks from tbe·rental station at the air-
port. And I hit the lelt curb so often I blew a tire a
week: later. But I think it was because the car was
big.
An MG is about the right size for English roads.
You ~an see the left -you aren't used to lilting on ~e right and driving on the left. It's hard to gauge
distant at first. First couple of days on empfy roads
you tend to move over the right side of the road un-
le&s you keep your mind on it.
* . Jo"or driving in Europe, keep in mind they kill
twice as. many people per mile as we do. Our total
is .more impressive because we have more cars and
miles. Ge~ma~y has the highest 'accident rate .. The ~ench dnve like wild men. No speed limits ei:cept
in summer. And they don't pay any attenUon to
those. They have the right-of.way from the right ~d they'll smashJou and themselves to prove ii.
Vive la France -· everybody's Jucky.
. Italy's as bad as Fra!e. Every man is a racing
dr1ver. lreland'.s better. You can't get up too much
apeed on the twisty roads . Spain is best. Fewer cars.
A fa ~ l lllUllc man. a tet'ivl1fon cam·
mental!", 1 1""1.-. -ind 1
1tot1,01Jer are tbo
P.toiiiolltlol..wbo will applar
lo Lquna ~'1 l!HI season
of '1'•"11 11411. ·~ l>r . tho Asshtance Leaguo of
Laguna Beeach.
l{enry Mora:an, late nl&ht
lelevi.iloo ~tor. wW
regale the' audfent:e in a Jah,
%7 program ''Here's
Morgan." In February the
PtO&ram will be K e I t b
· -t, UCLA professor of
~ and moderator of the W)evliion show "Speculation,"
IPeaking on "Tbe Potential il women." .
March's program will be
·racOnteuse, writ.er aod visitor
. S'(fafaway plaeet Em.Uy'Kim-
• brough advising "Lilten While ·,You. Look." In April,
~e Genevieve Antoine
Darlau, author of the faahlon ~ 'tiltl'tnce book "Elegance" ..itni,t ttnner dlrectrice of the
~ house Nina Ricci, will alve ..:."Tips From a Paris
Fllbloo E>pert."
• 'Tile; final program, in May,
'. will be "A Date with ftteredlth
Willtoo'.' who should h a v e · P.traom in the audience tap-
pJnc• 'their feet to selections
TQWN HALL DA'TE
Music Man Wiiison
from "The Music Man," "Tbe
Um:lnkable Molly Brown," and
"Here's Love."
The programs will be held
Monday mornJngs at 1 l in
the Sooth Coast Theater.
Price for the series will be
$15. Tickets will not be sold
for individual speakers.
SUBJECT: WOMEN
Tel1vlslon'1 Berwick
Profits will go lo Assistance
L e a g u e philanthropies, in·
eluding a fund for the care
of emoUonally disturbed
youngsters.
Checks should be made
payable to Assistance League
of Laguna Beach and mailed
lo Mrs. Robert Malone, 60
La.gunita, Laguna Be.ach ~1.
Cart Ride for Charity . .
".stoJ'llly," a large, frie.tully SL Bernard dog, will lie giving chi)dren rides in
~ ~ on Saturday ~11 .a.m. to.3 p.m.,in Fashion Island mall, NeWport Beach; ,
Its all f9f .llm alid. charity .with .the coins dropped into "stormy's" ·keg going
· Dan'l Boone's Boy
Really Whiz /(id
Charly WinE
2 British
Film Awards
to UJ• M.afth of Dimes .. Cai:t dri~er, David DeLoach .of Gar(len Grove,...a the -Darby llinton, who stars as
dog's master. · · Isratl Boone, tht aoo of Ftss ~---------111""··· ------------------Parter, in 20tb Ceo\mi·Fo:r I I Televi!i.on's "Daniel Boone " OCCS~king Guide to Fun · 5r~lli~~:I:..'~
fellow cast meinbers. New Strina While on a production.meat
..... ~ JANUARY .17 -APBIL t from "Judd for the Defenae,"
HORSE RACES -Thorouibbred hor!e racing at Santa Anita star Stephen Younc will ap-PJayers Park, 285 w. Hun~ Dr., Arctdls. Flrot POii time pear 1n the high budget, 20th . Tues. through Sal, U:» p.m. Phone 1·(213) 447-2171. Sat., Cen!J.t,r)'·Fox movie, "Patton
J 25 ~ 000 San M llandi -BlOOd and Guts." S&tlqa players wishing to
become part of the highly sue·
tt11sful Orange Coast College
Conim unl'ty Symphony
Orcbestr1 wm be invited "to
join thll 1prln& In Ume for
the upcomlni conctri series.
Conductor Joseph Pearlman
said that string players are
being accepted for the second
semester. The first rehearsal
of the spring semester is Feb.
4 at 7 p.m. in OCC Music
Building No. 2.
Any interested musician , nol
ju.st string players. is invited
to come to the first meeting
and audJlion, Pearlman said.
Pearlman said ttle group,
which bu played to sellout
hou&M in the 1,200-seat OCC
Aud.lt«ium for the past few
yws, will begin work Im·
mediately for the itarch 2.1
concert.
At tblt tlme. first chair
sololstJ will be Tom Hen-
derson of Casta Mesa. who
will perform the Jo.foz.art
Concert for Oboe a n d
Orchestra, and Mrs. Laurie
Whitcomb of Costa M~a. who
will perform Griffes' "Poem
for Flute and Orchestra."
Balance of the program will
be "Capricclo Espanol" by
Rimaky-Koraakov, and "Night
on Ba 1 d Mountain," by
Mouuorgsky.
an. , -· arcos cap. .
1 JANUARY U
JAZi. CONCERT -The Charles Uoyd jazz combo will per-
form Fri, Jan. U In Crawford Hall at UCI, 7901 Irvine Ave.,
1rviDe ~ p.~ Lloyd, ~bo plays tenor su and Dute, for·
merly Onritd with Cinnonb&U Adderly. Admiasion ii 13
at the door.
TRAVEL FILM -The Newport Harbor Klw~ Ckib pre-
sents .. Canadian Holiday" narrated by Don Cooper on Jan.
!4 at S p.m. Jn the Orange Coast College Auditorlwn, 2'701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Tickets, $1.50 for adults, 75c
for students, at the door. Phone 646--2163.
JANUARY U • 21
ART FILMS -"Tbe Kinedc Art,'' new short art fllim will
be s~own Jan. 24 and 31 at 8:30 p.m. in the Science Lecture
Hall at UCI, 7601 Irvine Ave., Irvine. Admissjon, $1.50.
JANUARY U ·FEBRUARY Z
SPORTS AND RECREATIONAL VElUCLE SHOW -The
combined Southern California Sports and Vacation Show and
the Southern qilifomia Recreational Vehicle Show will be
held Jan. 24 through Feb. 2 in the Arena and Exhibit.ion Hall
of the Anaheim Convention ~enter, 800 W. Katella Ave., Ana·
heim. Hours: Mon. through Fri .. 2 to 10 p.m.; Sat noon to
10 p.m.: Sun. noon to 9 p.m. Tickets, $1.75 for adult!. $1 for
children, 6-12 years old ; (.lots free), on sale at the door,
Phone l.Q.5..5000.
JANUARY :U • FEBRUARY Z
BOAT SHOW ..... The: 13th anuual Southern California Boat
Show will be held Jan. 24 through Feb. 2 at the Pan Paci-
fic Auditorium, ?600 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles. lt is the
largest all-marine exhibition in the west. More than 400
boats will be on display. P~one 1·(213) 938-3456.
JANUARY 25
ROSE PRUNING -The sil.th annual rose pruning demon·
stration, co-sponsore:t by the Orange County Rose Society
and the Westminster Parks and Recreation Department will
be held Sat., Jan. 2li from I to 5 p.m. in the Community
Services Center, 8200 Westminste r Ave., W~ter. There
is no admission charge.
JANUARY 25
The producer of "The Ghost
and Mrs. Muir," Stanley
Rubin, really knows how to
type cast. In an upcoming
episode of the 2'1th Ce.ntury·
Foi: serits, Actress Ali~
Gbostley will appear.
''Lancer" slar Wayne Maun-
der bts completed a script
for his CBS-TV series that
will go into production early
this year. It is JI tendei story
of unrequited love.
Minimoppet, Marc Diego
Copage, who stars as the son
of Diahann .Carroll in 2oth
Cen tury -Fo:r Television's
"Julia," has received. so much
fan mail since the series
started airing on NBC.TV that
he has had to hire an older
woman for a secretary -hls
next door neighbor -who
is IS years of age.
"Land of the Giants" star
Don Matheson has been signed
by a recording company to
Immortalize the poems of
SOUTH SEAS
lROPICAL FISH
Largest Selection of
Tropical Fish &
Suppbes in the area.
Now J LMetleM
211 W, WILION, COSTA MIS.lo
loll F1l,vlew "d., S41·7ff1
tn..O, RIV1!1111dto Dr. -N':'f'"-1 1k.c11
lbilhlnd Ille "Olt Otflct) "4a"'
Emily Dickin.9on on record 11le British film publication,
because of his "romantic" · °Films and Filming," has
voice. given two awards to the Ralph * Nelson film "Charly."
Does the practice o f Clirf Robertson was honored
medicine preclude a doctor as the Best Actor of 1968
from taking medicine for hls for his portrayal of the title
own ailment? Not likely. Or, role.
does the role of an author Ravi Shankar was honored
prevent him from reading ror lhe best musical score
other's eUortl!J? Even less like-or 1968_
ly. And such is the case with This is the second honor
most professions, with the ex· In less than a week for
ception of television acting. Robe.rtson and "Charly. ,, On
Diahann Carroll, starring in Monday, he was named the
the widely viewed and highly Best Actor· of 1!168 for his
successful 3>th Century-Fox performance in "Charly" by
Television series, ''Julia," is the National Board of Review
a frustrated professional. and the love story was named
"What other b u s i n e s :s one of the Ten Best Pictures
restricts a person in it from of the Year by the Board.
enjoying its very existence to "Cbarly," which also stars
the degree televi!ion doe!?'" Claire Bloom, was produced Diahann a1ks. In essence, her frustration and directed by Ralpb Nelson for Selmur Pictures in col· stems from all the exciting laboration w i l h Robertsom
television news coverage of Associates. Selig J. Sellgmin late and the fact that she, as the star of the half-hour was executive producer. The
comedy airing every Tuesday screenplay was written by
night at 8:30 on NBC.TV, is Stirling Silliphant hued on a
so busy filming her "Julia" novel by Daniel Keyes. It Is
role she never has time to distributed by C I n e r a m a
watch television. Releasing CorporaUon.
Believing strongly that there Selmur Pictures ls 11
is a solution to every problem, subsidiary of American Broad-
Diahann brought a mini· casting Companies, Inc.
transistorized television set lo ----'------
"·ork wilb her in hope that
she'd have time to watch snat·
ches of the exciting Bonnan·
Lovell-Anders recent moon-
shot in Apollo 8 and later,
the accolades and tribute paid
the deserving trio by Presi-
dent Johnson iD Washin,ton,
D.C.
*Newport Harbor Cruise*
Daily Cruis•-2 p.m.
. FUN ZONE BOAT ·COMPANY . .
&albo-673-0240 *
The orchestra performs four
times a year in the auditorium
and a1Jo bu concert! in con·
jUDCtion with the Evening
Chorale.
CIDLDREN'S RIDE -Rides for children in a small cart
pulled by a St. Bernard doS will be he.Id from ti a.m. to J
p.m. Sat.. Jan. 25 at Fashim JsJaod, Newport Center Orivt,
Corona del Mar. Donations for the rides will benefit the
?\larch ol Dimes birth defect program .
ATTENTION NEWPORT HARBOR CHAMBER
Registration Is in progress
.at lbe Orange County
Fairgrounds from 5:30 to 8
p.m. according to the first
initial of the sludent's last name.
JANUARY U
PUPPET SHOW -The Bob Baker MarionetW will perfoon I
Sun .. Jan. 26, at Rancho California Plaza, one mile north ol I
Temecula on Highway 395, midway between Riverside and I!
San Diego. The show begins at 1: l~ p.m. There is no admis-
OF COMMERCE . AND BUSINESSMEN!
------·-__ .,..,. ___ _ More Room
For Garns
sion charge.
JANUARY 30 ~';
Thi1 is th• fin•st compliion•nt W. have ..-•r received. A cu1tomM, Mn. Pamel•
O'Conner, w•• vi1itin9 N'ewpOr+ •ncl When she discovered our Produce Merket,
sh• decided to buy and live i_n'Newport so she could etweyt have fr•1h flowers
end produc•. As sh• seys "wit~ the bid feshionecf atmo1ph•r• of ye1t•rd•y end
the fre1hn•11 of tomorrow." Tlt'enlr you Mr1. Pemele O'Ccnner, 1136 W. Belboe
Blvd., N•wport. We're proud of pl•ylng such en importent pert in helping you
decid• where to live. Con9r1tulationsl
LIVE THEATER
"Tiie Star s.,.a11ed Girl" nomination. Fridays 1 n d-Jet traveUers from the West
A new Neil Simon comedy Saturdays, through Feb 9 at Coast wtll have more leg room
of two underground tht Huntin gton Beach on BPAC aircraft. For the
newspapermen and t h e i r Playhouse, 2110 Main st., Hun-airline 11 fitting lids to the
nagwavlng I I r 1 f r I e n d . Ungton Beach. ~aUons _ overhead lug:age racks, which
Wed n e 1 d a y 1 through 847·1'31, up lo now have only been
Saturdays at the Laguna ''The M_..t of J &th.. meant to carry sort Items like
Playhoult, 3111 Ocean Avt., A 11" uuary I coats and travel ling rugs.
Laguna Beach, through Jan. courtroom drama in The clMed-in racks mt.an
2S, RaervatJona: _ 49f.«Mil. which audieace member a that items like cabin bqs ~prise the Jury In a murder and lritfcases, which ~ to •-nae lacrtdlb~ Re1p trlll. Runs Fridays a n d get under your feet can now
Of Klq Uba'' SatW'days ~oogb Feb. I _at be put out or stghi and out
( 'lbt world prtm.iere of 1 lM Westminster c.ommuruty ol mind j rqUme mll!lcal s at Ire Theater, M Westmlnlter Thli i. the second BOAC
,.. employing mh:ed med l a . Ave. 1t Go16en West Streel. lnnovatim In the pas& few l 'fhurwdlyJ throuah Sundays, !.~nster. Re9etvaUons -yean lo &ive more legroom. i throuCh 'reh. t at South Cout __._.. The flrtt was the airline's
Repettary'• Third S t e P '-'Gtlendoa" VCIO It.It -now fitted lo
·Theater, 1127 Newport Blvd., A comedy about the youth· itl '1071 u "'ell. The 1eat
: Colla Mell.. Rewvatlons -qe conf.rantation. Fridays •n is moulded In one piece and
,: 646-IJIS. Sa turdays bun Jan. M to ellminatet: the supporting b1r
: •ine IHt Atafl'' Feb. I at the Cost.a Mesa under lhe rear or the seat
: j. dram1 of po11Ucal intrigue Civic ~: 'lfflt rate of CUJhSon -the bil that slopped
11 pu11. eta.vmtion wher.Oraqe County Faiflrounds. fhtr.people tn the ~au behind
men Md: the inaidenUci,.. Re1ttV1Uons, 134-530.l. -strttchlni out their le1$.
VOCAL RECITAL -Students of voice In the Music Depart·
ment of UCI will perform Jan. 30 at noon in room 178 of the ~
Fine Arts Building at UC!, 7601 Irvine Ave., Irvine. There is ~
no admission charge.
FEBRUARY 1 • 1
HERE'S JOHNNY -Johnny carson wtlh stnier Phyllis Mc-
Guire. dance team Bud and CIC! Robinson and trumpeter
"Doc" Severinsen perform at the Me.lodyland Theatre, 10
Freedman Way, Anaheim on Feb., 1, 2 and S.. Performances :
Sat., Feb. J at 7 and 10 p.m.: Sun. at 5 and 1:30 p.m .. and
Mon. at 1:30 ii.m. Tkkets. $3.50 to $8.50. on sale at the bot·
olfice or Wallichs Music City stcn. Phooe 1-776-7460.
FEBRUARY I .. I
GDI SHOW -·The Oran&e Coast Mineral and Lapkia.ry
Society will hold Its 22nd annual Gem and Mineral Show Feb.
1 ind 2 at the Orange County Fairgrounds, SS Fair Drive,
Carta Mesa. Ont hundred cues of prec.tous and semi-preci·
M cerns and mine:rals plus machinery used for lapidary
work wtn be on dl!pla.y. Eshlbll b ,ppen 10 Lm. to 10 p.m.
Sat. imd 10 a.m. to I p.m. Sun., feb. 2. There Ls no .tmlS&ion
Tllne Mot1ey SaYI .. CoupoM For AM of Our Customers ··----· ........ ·-···-· I TASTY I I SALINAS GROWN I I fRHH·ll.. I IClllRG
I Avocados I I UnUCE I Ii Tomatoes I
I I"" I I I I I I "9EA. I I IOCu. I I IO'LL I
I LIMIT -6 LIMIT -6 WITH THll COUPON
WITH TIUS COUl'ONI lwiTH THIS COUl'ONI I LIMIT-• us. I ·-----· r:.•••••• , _____ ,
COUl'ONS l!XPIRI J"NUART 29
Th•,• re1teur•nt1 demend the fin.st for their c111tom•r1, th•+'l why they e"d
ov•r 200 others buy their product from NIWPOlJ PRODUCE. Wlllt• Hone
ln11, Topper St ... H-.., Tll• ~ wa.th,. 11 ..... r's. Tlte "rates l11tt.
HOW AIOUT YOU CAWNG US?
FEBRUARY I PHONI: NEWPO.RJ uu
CHAJlll!ER MUSIC -The La&UD• B<ach Cjlamber Music p R o·D u c Ir! Newp«t
char11e.
Soclely prmntl the Bonldln Quartet In conettt S\ln., Fob. 2 6 7 3 1715 · 15 llY4.
al the Laguna Beach High Scl>ool Auditorium , GS Park Ave.. • , . on the
U.guna Stach. A conctrl preview will be held at 7~30. per-~ ~ C.W.ly's fttt•t
manoe ti,&iM 1t I p.m. Tickets, l3.50 for ad.nits, D for stu-'-.,~;;;;;;;;:~;;'...-..,a.....;:,;;,;;"";,,;'~': .. ~-:.:°"";:•;:~":""~-.,..'.:::;;'~';"l;.,~olo;::;::;;:;., dents. Phone 494-5262. ·'1 .:•
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Frida)', January 24, 1%9 OAILY Pia.QT JJ.
WEEKENDER OUT '.NI ABOUT By
NORM STANLBl'
ORANGE COUNTY'S REST A URAN T, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE
-...;·
Stuft Shirt Buffet
Fast-moving and tim~limited executives will
assuredly ma.Ke gains on tight schedules by mark·
ing luncheon calendars for the business~en 's buf·
fet currently being served at the Stuft Shirt, 2241 \V,
Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
ln addition to tht advantage of speedy seJ!-
service they'll also eojoy a well-rounded and flav-
orsome' mea.l for the moderate tab of $1.85. Eating
will seem less· hurried too in. the relaxing atmos-
phere Of the Marco Polo Room where the buffet is
available Tuesday through Friday, 11 :30 a.m. to
2:30 'p.m.
THREE HOT j;NTREES
More than a man-sized repast. captains of in-
dustry and merchants alike will never leave hun-
gry after tying into three hot entrees. vegetable.
potato and rice pilaf, a wide variety of salads and
French sour dough bread.
And if one desires that one pick-me-up drink be-
fore the buffet, by all means make you_r choice the
Marco Polo martini. Proffered in a styl ishly design-
ed. and Marco Polo crested tumbler, the capacity
of this glass has to put the martini somewhere in
the king-sized category.
It isn't mandatory to rush through all this
pleasure at the Stuft Shirt. The whole scene•s highly
recommended too for those fortunate enough to
forget the clock.
The Towers
Dining in the sky has become quite the rage
these days. An d the least of it has to do with the
Smorgasbord on a Scandinavian Airlines p o I a r
flight to Copenhagen or the haute cuisine of Air
France.
Reference is rnatle, of course, to the prolifera-
tion of top floor restaurants cro"•ning ne\v high-rise
buildings in every city. J\1aybe it all stems from
our preoccupation \vith man's reach to the stars.
DER BERLINER DELICATESSEN
In Orange County , ••
THE ONLY AUTHENTIC
EUROPEAN DELICATESSEN
We Feature •••
EUROPEAN COLD CUTS
- A Full Line of Imported German Foods -
-~oeoeo•,o----
THIS MONTH'S FEATURE:
POTATO DUMPLING MIX
Enjoy Your Very Own
BAVARIAN KNODEL POTATO DUMPLINGS
at Home Tn SecorKls
--~•oeo•o----
SANDWICHES
Table Service or To-Go
--oeoeoeo----
18582 BEACH BOULEVARD
In the new Town and Country Cent1r
HUNTINGTON BEACH 968~300
JUST OPl!NED
Whatever the cause, Orange County buffs of
high-up eating will have their tallest expectations
surpassed on the first visit to Laguna Beach's just·
opened Towers. As a matter ~ct, it won't be long
before this peerless enterprise bas dedicated fan s
coming from much further afield.
Atop the new addition to Laguna's Surf & Sand
Hotel, 1465 S. Coast Highway, the ninth-floor Tow-
ers bas an illusory magic that tends to give one the
feeling of being something closer to ninety sklries
up. As an easily imagined consequence, the view is
not likely to be exceUed by any restaurant perched
in the wide blue yonder.
Ocean, coastline and hills -the· ingredients or
Laguna's invariable comparison with Europe's
Riviera -spread before the diner's eyes in a pan<r
rama of breath-taking grandeur.
With numerous credits already amassed for
the hotel's celebrated Outrigger Restaurant, Surf &.
Sand President Merrill Johnson will certainly
garner additional laurels with .his latest sensation.
He's spared no detail to come up with a winner.
SEATS SEVENTY
The L-~baped dining room bas a maximum
seating capacity of just over 70. To this intimacy
add decor and place settings that spell nothing short
of creme de la creme elegance.
An aisle separates table seatjng aj, the ceiling
to floor windows and elevated booths against the
walls -all of which leaves every patron an un-
obstructed view. And further means the day prob-
ably isn't far off when reservations will have to be
booked well in advance.
Manager-rnaitre d' is Angelo D'Ercole, a vet-
eran restaurateur of more than 20 years. Prior to
his recent move to California, he owned an Italian
gourmet restaurant in Buffalo, New York for six
years.
BALBOA BAY FRONT DINING
STEAKS -SEAFOOD -RACK OF LAMB
IOA Com ..... .t tH
Piuo ..,, Wff .• s .....
Jimmy Va11 Tri• ,..fvrl"t
Jack Lymle M DrvlM.
Mon. anlll T"""
OPEN DAILY
11 :30 1.m. to 2:00 1.m.
260 I W. Coast Hiw1y, Newport BeKh -541-1166
THE MARINE RESTAURANT * Excellent Menu * Fine Service
LUNCREONS AND DINNERS
from 11 :30 A.M.
Reservations recommended
644-1700, Ext. 445
MUSIC fOlt YOUlt LISTENINC9 AND DANCING. PLEASURE
NIGHTLY, FROM 1:00 P.M. IH
THE UDO UJIJNGE
1107 Jamboree Rd., Newport Beach
---------------------------------------
GRACIOUS OINING
Angelo says bis emphuis at the Towers will be
04an accent on gracious dining, with every cuatom-
er pampered. as a particular guest". In creating the
menu, he's aimed for a balance of Items that repre-
sent an adventure in dining without being "too far
out."
To date, Out 'N' About bas only partaken of a
Towers grand tour and briefing, with the initial
feast sUU to come. From a perusal of the luncheon
and dinner menus, however, it appears there's even
:nore excitement in store here.
' Readers will get that word as soon as it's avail-
able -along with appreciable other comment, no
doubt, in the months ahead. ·
ENTREE SELECTIONS
The dinner entrees Angelo is offering, all serv-
ed with soup, salad and garniture, include such
items as New York prime steak , vegetables, garni,
$6.00; veal Oscar, asparagus tips, crab legs and
sauce Bea~aise, $5.95; chicken Kiev, butter sauce
and ri~e, $4.50 ; rack of lamb bouquetiere, oven
roasted, carved at your table, $13.50 (for two).
One item tested and certified right now is the
cappuccino l' amour,. sub-dubbed "nectar of the
gods". It's an exotic blend of liqueurs, special cof-
fee and spices that bestows a cappuccino like none
you've ever had.
And the cappuccino machine that produces it ,
imported froro Italy, bas to be about the most elab-
orate and ornate piece of machinery devised. Make
a special trip, if necessary, to the end of the bar
and examine its working wonders.
Israeli Thrush
Any outing to Loa Angeles through January 28
should e~brace sufficient time for a visit to the
Cocoanut <rrove· in the Ambassador Hotel. By drop-
ping in you'll catch the California debut o( the inter-
national singing star and television personality
Aliza Kashi.
The Israeli thrush, w ho gained considerable
following in the U.S. via numerous Merv Griffin
show appearances, co-stars with comedian Norm
Crosby.
Possessing a virtually unmatched. multi-lingual
singing ability, Miss Kashi vocalizes in French,
Portuguese, Spanish, Yiddish, English, Italian and
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 ARCHES AND
NEXT DOOR TO VILLA NOVA
642.429t
Friday • Saturday • Sunday
SPENCER STEAK
S..,ws.d $175
eloolu of ,_ ···-······-·---......... _____ _
2'fl N...,... llYd.
C.0.N Mna
l:M -· 11rH '-t -DAILY -........ ,:ff, ..
·~
her native tongue, Hebrew. Since her American
discovery by Griffin, she has been featured on his
nightly show more than 80 times.
The Fisherman '
From the jumping big band sound 9f the 1940'1
to today's relaxing piano music o! Bob Pergrim.
Such is a kind of capsule history of one of the area'a
fi nest restaurants, The Fisherman, 317 Ocean Ave.t
at the pier, Huntington Beach.
Occupying the site of yesteryear's jitterbugging
Huntington Beach Pavalon, this exceedln.gly ai.
tractive dining establisbment ii a far cry from !ta
former existence as a boogie-woogie ballroom. And
the same for other tenants following the c:temiae of
the big band era -western music stompers, ~
er skaters and rock and rollers.
In 1966 a fire totally destroyed the lnterll>r 1Jf
the Pavalon. EventuailY a decision was ma4e to
renovate the building and develop a flnt class
restaurant.
It was a plan expertly executed as anyone can
verify after a visit to The Fisherman, which will
celebrate its first birthday next May 21. Soft lights,
spaciousness, stylishly modem decor and ocean and
pier view unite with exceptional cuisine to more
than fulfill the original concept.
NOT JUST SEAFOOD
Menus here accentuate seafobd dishes, as the
name implies, but it's also possible to obtain such
items. as a New York steak sandwich for lunch or
roast-1.ong Island duckllng and veal cordon bleu at
4J_nner. -. __ --
. Salads on the midday bill of fare range from
shrimp for $1. 75 to avocado stuffed with crabmeat
at $2.25. In addition to sandwiches like pan Jried
abalone, $1. 75, and fried oyster garni, $1.50 one can
choose from six entrees, which include Choice of
soup or salad.
Among these are egg dipped file! of English
sol e amandine, $2.25; French friend jumbo prawns,
Continued on Page 22
OPEN FOR LUNCH
~ 11:30 to 2 p.hl.
DINNERS
~:::._~.. 5.30 to 10 p.m.
S40. 3641 9!:!1!~u!NT
Col'MI' .t luftlpll • .....,, C.... .._
... and kids like Mr Steak, too
One• th•y'v• b••11 th•••, you won't linJ th• 1"'•11 fry
dre99in9 th•ir h••ll wh•n you m•ntlo11 hovlnt Jin11tr I or
lunch ) 1t Mr, Stoolr, Tlt•y'll Jiovo llio!r ow11 1peclol mHll
th1t th1y co11 punch 011! le mtlr• • Mr. Stoolr "'''•· It'•
fun for +h•nt ind th•i• little htlldt will bo buty whllo
thoy'r• woitln9. A c11rio111 thl119, "'ott por•nh loav~ Mr.
SNit lr '••lint tltot their we• '"'' bro119ht tlileM out to toll
ll'lcidf!'lttHy, "'' don't ••••• liquor,
LITTLE JACK HORNER STEAK
Chi1d'1 1i1t 1lotlr 10,.,td with Rt11ch H••H•
Toti+, Frol'lch fri•d pololoo1.
CHICKEN LITTLE
Thr•• pi•C•• of chiclr•11 C • thigh oM two
win9 dr11111tti•1 ), pooch 91r,,lih, R111ch Ho1111
10111, Fr1l'lch fried pototo11.
SNOW WHITE AND THE 3 SHRIMP
lhr•• l••t• Shrimp, R.t11ch Ho11to looll,
Frt11ch fri•d polot.11.
HUMPTY DUMPTY BURGER
Mr. Sttoo• ht111bur91r 1•rv•d with 91l'lore11s
portto" of Fronch frio1 tnd "'"'b"•t•• t•r11ilh.
SPAGHETTI I. MEAT BALL Q,,, M••I boll, 1poth1H1, roll I .. 11ff•r.
1.29
99~
We Serve Portions For Grownups, Tool
OPEN 11 AMto9PM
EVERYDAY
2267 FGirYlew
Costa Mesa
---------------~---~~~
l
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-ft DAit Y PllOT Ffl"'1, Jan""Y 24, 1969
0ill·~wersR• .. rv·~~~~;;~:~s1•
e SUNOAV eRUNClt
IUTAUUNT AND • LATE SUPl"Ell
• COCITAJL LOUNG! DINING
<DlJT 'N, ABOUT
•
' WEEKENDER
• ' '
I South C01st's newest, mOst ele91nt oce1nfront
dining, •top Towers Wint of ~urf and S1nd Hotel
1SSS South Coast Hwy. Lilguna Beach, California
I
Continued from P•s• .21
$1.95; grilled swordfish steak, $2.10; broiled hall·
but steak, $1.95; fisbkaoob ·garnl,'$1>75.
DINNER ENT,REES.
short weeks otuie new operation appear to rule out
such a posslblllty.
--AlreAilr,1t·seemr,-pub1tc 'l'espl>nse-borders on
overwhelming, Well It shoµld, because Mr. Steak's
in,ntormatioo -ill Jjianagemen~ appearance,
service and menu silectlon -virtuaUy commands
frequent family visits. ,
Grand Hotel
. if..~d. ?.l•lodyland fhe<tre, the con!_en· ti on center or sta·d1um-are -tak-1ng-yoa-to-An~1m
in the near future , go early enough to enjoy dinner
first In the Matador Room of the nearby Grand
Hotel. Real
Canlonese food
e1t here or
t1kt home.
ST AG
CHINESE WlllO
ORiolo 3·9560
Like Roa5t Long Island Duck -Tournedos
of Filet Mignon? -V•al Osccir7 -Rainbow
Trout? -Well, who doesn't!!!
These and many other enticing entrees •re
served 1e,,.en nights • week at Bob Burns Re1t.
aurent.
located in Fa1h ion Island, Bob Burn$ is
more than ju1t • "Steak and lobster" restau-
rant. A selection of twenty carefully prepared
entree1 -accompanied by Bob Burns famous
Cream Cae1ar Salad -will satisfy the most
discrim in•ting pl•te.
Open every nigh't, Bob Burns does honor
_felepbone reservations for people "on the 90."
For tho1e of you who are out for a lei1urely
ev•ning, loungt entertainment i5 p r o v i d e d
nightly.
Fisherman dinner entrees practically. run the
gamut of the world's waters, and include &bup, ·
salad and potato. Enticing posslbWUes are Fmlth
fried Louisiana prawns, $3.50; broiled Alaskan
salmon steak, $3.75; select Monterey abalone steak,
amandine, $4.25; pan fried Idaho trout, $3.50.
Still more are egg-<lipped file! of English sole,
saute amandlne, $3.50; pan fried northern halibut
steak, amandine, $3.25; sauted frog legs, Proven-
cale, $4.50 ; broiled Australian lobster tail, $3.75;
stuffed Idaho trout, Mousseline sauce, $4.50.
Outside Neptune's realm there's tournedos· of
beef Rossini , $4.25; ground sirloin steak, mwbroom
sauce, $2.95; brochette of beef tenderloin, sauce
Bordelaise, $4.25; New York steak, $5.50; sauted
tenderloin slices, broiled tomato, steak sauce, $3.25.
OUR CHOICE
Comfortably settled into q ringside ocean vista
seat, your out 'n' abouter's ultimate choice of <fin..
ner entree was stuffed filet of sole, Veronique, $3.95.
Cooked to absolute perfection, the sole's delicacy
was ideally complemented by the crabmeat stuff·
ing and wine sauce with green grapes.
But it doesn't have to be sole Veronique at The
Fisherman to satisfy the soul in search of choice
seafood. Any option is bound to please.
After dinner, move to the lounge for a Wt
libation and a demonstration of Pergrim's artistry
on the keyboard. He's an excellent entertainer
who'll set your fingers ticking and feet tapping.
For The Fa1nily
WIDE Cl!DICE
No matter the d.Jvergence of preference among
househoJd members, the greaUy upanded menu
provides a favorite choice for evorybody, And at
moderate prices will within the range of average
income families· who seek ])laces enabling them to
eat out several Umes each week,
Steaks are the chuck wagon chopped sirloin,
$1.49; frontier, $2.79 (choose between sirloin of beef
and club); Mr. Steak sirloin, $2.99; top sirloin,
$3.29; filet mignon, $3.49; New Y'Ork, $3.99.
All are USDA cbelce, corn fed, and served with
ranch house toast, tossed green salad with choice
of dr .. slng, choice of baked or French fried pota·
toes or side of spaghetti.
VARIETY
other dinner specialties include chili size, $1.35;
honey-dip fried chicken, $1. 75; spaghetti and meat
balls, $1.50 (child's portion, 75c); veal parmesan,
$1.75; fish 'n chips, $1.30; New England clam fry,
Sl.110; deep fried shrimp, $1.99; seafood combo
platter, $1.99.
Mr. Steak operates 117 restailrants throughout
the country. In a controlled experiment stemming
from an extensive market research study, the Costa
That recent face-lifting and image transition at Mesa location, 2267 Fairview, was chosen to intro-
37 FASHION ISLAND Mr. Steak of Costa Mesa has been surveyed by Out duce the major changes in the standard format
NEWPORT CENTER 'N' About, '"ith the resultant impression so favor-Hank Schierhold, Mr. Steak's new owner-man-
a.tw•11 _t.::t:i;~~.,:,.••w• able it's bard to assess in one short report. ager, says he's filled with a deep sense of gratitude
".....,,.11;1"1 IC this one doesn't come up a major contender to patrons for the way they've accepted the innova·
Note the introduction to the menu which reads:
"From the cradfe of Weatern civilitation we inheri ..
led a l~~ of g~at dining pleasure ... " There will ce . . y be DO dlspuUog that the Matador's
bdl of fare is 1tru!y planned to pass along this leg.
acy to the customer.
Five countries contribute unusual dinner dishes
starting at $3.75. The possibifili<s are many but if
it's a Cirst-time visit to the Grand, order Greece's
"amnos,'' roast rack of spring lamb Greek-style with
eggplant and broiled tomato.
~
We Get Letters
From R. W. Katerndahl of Costa Mesa comes
the following missive both humorous and informa ..
tive.
"The Child Bride's 481.b anniversary merited
the best so we turned to the Pilot's Out 'N' About
column and selected the Riviera Restaurant. After
Sunday Mass we motored to South Coast Plaza and
found the doors locked.
"But with 0 'N' A available we then selected
the Newport Grotto. It sounded good and not too
expensive, but we were not told about the excellent
service we would receive.
"We were met at the door and escorted to a
table with a view of the bay. A most charming
young lady, Nancy Patrick, immediately attended
to our wants and\ continued through lunch to meet
our wishes. ·
"The lood was excellent , the decor very nice
and the Child Bride pleased . So that was it until
the 49tb anniversary arrives."
* Sorry, Mr. Katerndahl, it should have be£n noted
that your ftrst choice is closed Sundays. But you select-
ed a great alternate in the Newport Grotto. Tru the
RitMra -next time.
• '44-2030 • {or the area's family trade there has to be some--lions. They, in turn, should thank him for bringing :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,l~t~h~in~g~a~l~it~tl~e~p:ec~u~li~a~r~abo~~u1t_t~loc~al~l~ol~k~. ~B;ut~j~u~st~a~f~e~w;;_~t~he~s~e;,c;onc~ep~ts~t]o~s~uc~h~a:_successlul realization.
IN THE
LIDO LOUNGE
~ GRAND OPEllNG SPECIAL~~
Oh, y1.r. Extend our congratulations to the Child
Bride for aU 48 and take a bow yourself.
i , .
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Continuous music from 5:00 P.M.
BY
The Herb-Joe Trio
and
The Bill McClure .
Ton Lobo Duo
RIVIE.ft.A.
ftESTAUltANT
Continental Cuisine
Cocktails
. ~ SAVE PRESENT THIS AD ~ ~ $1 AND RECEIVE $1.00 OFF ~ <=c: ON ANY ORDER g i $3.00 OR OVER. ~
i G~~~.~A~STAY!~'S I ~ 1500 Adami Avenue + ~ ~ Ce&ta MtMl--ftOM M0-1937 S-..
Senn.ng ~ ~
Luncheon and Dinner ~ GOOD UNTIL FEllUAIY 17, 1t6~ Ma~• a 11i9ht of ii -Din• in 11'11 b1autif~I
MARINE REST AU RANT
644-1700, Ext. 445 for reservations
Monday thraugh Saturdav. II iiiii~~-~rftJ~rftj~l~~'l~!l~l~IJ~!l~:!~l~l~(~l~l~li~Q~iJ~l~I~~~~~~
Closed Sundays Iii
Open for Dining With an Ocean View
SEAFOOD, MAKS AND GOURMET BORW * FROM $2.95 *
Private Parties Only
We •r• located on the
Bristol Stratt 5ide be·
tween Mullen •rtd Bluett
end the M•y Co.
h 3331 s. lriltol 1107 Jamboree Rd., Newport Beac c .... M... "'""" ~~--~~~~
PRESENTS
THE COMPLETE NITE OUT
Dining -Entertainment
Dancing
EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT
DANCE CONTEST
W ookly Winning Couple
Receives $25
And° Becomes Eiigfble For
GRAND FINAl AWARD
OF
'2 50 r.,.!:: h id
Weelcend In
LAS VEGAS
Now Appe1rln9
Wed. thru Sun.
SILER BROS
Velvet Knight Room
9:30 pnt • 1 :30 ant
DRIFTWOOD LOUNGE
BOB FLETCHER
&
VICKY LANO
KBI CERYI TRIO
Entertainment and Dancing Nightly
AT THE PIANO
BOB PERGRIM
8:30 to I :301.m.
BANQUET FACILITIES
AVAILABLE
PHONE 516·2555
J17 OCEAN AVI.
HUNTINCiTON llACH
OVERLOOKING THE PACIFIC OCEAN AT THE PIEk
FAMILY STEAK HOUSES
HUNTINGTON BEACH I COSTA MESA
HILlGlltEN SQUAllle!
TOWN .. COUNTlltY 8EHINO Tl!:XACO STAJION
111U ..... ...... f!U~'11 6*1tnl. lntl .. SMte -
SPECIAL SIZZLER BROCHETTE
!:::oU. !:: :~~1•.••.•.••..•.•..•.•. '1.39
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK .. , , .. $1.39
NEW YORK STEAK ....... $1.59
l11elu4•• 1•••4 .,. Fr•11c.li Fried Pot••tN.· lift A luH•r1
CHILDllN"S PORTION Y2 lfllCI CUMtr 12 y_.1
WAIKI MONDAY NIGHT YOUI JANILY Nl•MT
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK '1 Ot Only
h1c.l11d11 11•.d o• Fr•nc.li Fried l'oltlo11, Roll I lutt1r.
CMILOllN"l POITION Vi PllCI CU..,_ 12 y_..1
~--Luncheon Specials,---..
11:00 A.M. TD 5:00 P.M.
:!.~ ,:!F ..:. ~~.~~~~.1~~ ... 79C
s....i .. s..-1011
-TO GO ORDERS -
I
•
511 S. MAIN, O&ANGE
-:542-3595
(a-d SUnday)
Robin's
Restaurant
2970 West Lincoln
•t Beach, Anaheim
T•lephone 827-7330
• Lunch.on with
Entertainment
, • Dinner & Din• Out
• Cocktails-Hie!
lunches from 11 :30
Dally except Sundey
Dinner from 4:30
Nightly
ENTERTAINMENT
Nightly except Sunday
TONY FLORES
His Songs and Guitar
2607 W, C:-Hlt•way -Newport -646..0201
DINE AND DANCE
FLOOR SHOWS
Live Music From 9 p.111.
TOPS IN FOOD
AND CONTINUOUS
BlllRTAINMENT
WHERE THE ELITE ALL MEET
Pr•••11h
DON LUCAS
COMIDIAN. ACTOI .i WllTll
fe1111le Vtc•ll•t
BOIBY CHARW TRIO
.........
w .......
11o12 , ....
"'· • s.t. 10·11:10 ......
1 ··"
Open 7 Days plus Lunchtan Mon. thrv Friday
BUSY EX.CUTIYE?
BUSINESSMEN'S BUFFET
TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY-11:30 A.M.·2:30 P.M .
IN THE
MARCO POLO ROOM
YARl.-r'f OF HOT ElllTREES AND SALADS
WITH
VEGETABU, POTATO AND RICE PILAF
FRENCH SOUR DOUGH BREAD
s1as
aTuffs~'RT
R•8TAURANT
2141 W. C-t H~ NNpor-1 &acli
it> (114) l~l-11117 l.
. ' '
~.---....
'
Table Service
e DINNER SPECIAL e
c•nd·s
Plate ,._ Sllrin. W w .... ._ P8"',
Prtncll ''"'• $11\11 hlM, Orlllll
Thick Slzzil"'l
TOP SIRLOIN
WHll S..IMI (!Mlq 9f f'tlt!M1, i.rNc .,.....
Ph. 842-6151 LwndMM1 krYM 1l1lla.t11. .. 4,11,,-.
5874 EdinCJer .. • • HunftnftOll hOdi
-Edlnt•r •nd Sprlngd1f1
JULIUS CAESAR -
"Paulum Romanum Duabas Preaciput
Rebus An11on et Spectaculis" "Roman.s
are absorbed by two things, Feast and
Show."
Here at VILLA ROltfA, we reallJI put out a Feast and
we'll show you a di'nner of which Julius Caesar would
have been proud.
Try u.s next time and you'U agree!
-65 delecfuble entrees and we're open from 4 p.m.
daily. Closed Tuesdays,
VILLA ROMA
445 North Newport llYd., Newport ...... 646-4'2'
Minnesota
Repertory
Duein ·LA
With the arrival in Loi
Angeles of Lhe distinguished
Minnesota Theater Company
or the Tyrone Glitlirle 'Mleiter,
another mile.stone bu been
reached in the short hlitory
of Center Theater Group: For
the first lime, the stage of
the Mork Taper F°""" will
house the artists of two •
ce.lebrated productions o f
another major American resl·
dent theater. This theatrical
exchange forecasts a future
for American drama when the
best theater from all over
the country will be available
for engagements in other
cities throughout the naUon.
Two of the most theatrically
stimulating and Bignilicant
productions in the company's
repertoire have been brought
to lhe Mark Taper Forum
for the exclusive five-week
Wegt Coast engagement now
through Feb. 2.1. Theater on
a giant scale comes to life
in Tyrone Guthrie 's staging
of the classic "The House of
Atreus" presenled in an adap-
tation of John Lewin from
"The Orestela" of Aeschylus.
A DRAMATIC a nd
suspenseful evening of savage
and Ironic h u m o r is
represented In B e rt o I t
Brecht's "The Resistible Rise
ol Arturo Ul" as offered in
GARY CONWAY in a scene from the ABC· TV "Land
of the Giants" sho\v which is a popular example of
a special eUects production. It is seen each Sunday
night at 7 on ChBMel 7.
Talent PlU§ Magic
-Equals TV Drama
1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 a dazzling production directed by Edward Payson Call. How do film production
companies create some of
.their seemingly magic ef-
,fects? How do they make
-cyclists ride up the ·side or
buildings and make imaginary
• @.3 • Brecltl's fa.sclnatlnc, parable :. • (j/~-&fitad ~ :. :=or1: :1e~c:r~1~
derWorfd. The two prodllaioiis
• • • • • • • • •
CON N NTAL CUISINE a alternate ln repertory • TI E • For lri"taging of the famed
CARI BE ROOM NIGHTLY "Atreus" trilogy, director • Guthrie uWlze.s the concept
orlgtnated in the ancient
Greek productions of the
drama over 2000 years ago:
all women's roles are played
by men. The actors wear
masks to make them more
abstract, to reduce the ele-
Paul Jones
Kin Plays
Patton • . ·-• rnent of personality, and to
• give the characters a more
universal stature.
Morgan Paull, a direct
descendant of the N1vy'1
greatest hero, John Paul
Jones. plays an Army orncer
in 20t.h Century-Fox's "Pat-
ton: Blood and GuU."
•
-,... .... , pNMfttl -
Hayden Causey Trio
HAYDEN CAUSEY. CHARLES MURCHISON
JOSEPHINE COURREGES
I Form1 rly wilh The 01C1stro Si1t1rsl
ENCHILADA & TACO .......•. $1.30
CHILI RELLENO-ENCHILADA .. $1 .45
'"vt'd wllh rl«, bel!\S, 10,lilldl!Ol •nd '4!lW e COCKTAILS e
9093 E. Adams (11 Magnoli•l Hunt. Bloch 962.7911
THE SPOTUBHTIRS
Havt yu picturl blten
ll'ith I fll¥0rtft t1ltvldon
or nioUon picture per·
sonallty. Tht $1 ch•rt•
IOfS to th• Valley Youth
foundalloe.
JAN. 24. i11 FOi. 2
GREAT WESTERN
EXHIBIT CENTER
Mon..frl. 3 ID II fill\.
Sol -lo 11 )1111
s.n. -to ' "" Allllts $1.75 CMl4m 75<
o. See M-r !klfl & lttert Jpert I. V...._ bt\loilll
• S.. T~ AJl·M-Phhlq T-U. bh!Wlt
• ........... 0-A Hmth!t Eq11p•MI bWWlil
·•i...•c:Mrfuf~·~-..... v...,,_._.~
•
_____ 75 Man11Hllt111
__ VANS TOO CAMPERS
HOMES JRAVEL TRAILERS
DON'T MISS IT
The entire company appears
fn the pri>duction with Doug~
Campbell, Len Carloux,
'!\obert Pastene, ~
Rlchard.5on, Robin Gammell,
and Paul Ballantyne ap-
pearing as Sl.!Ch c I a s s i c
.dramatic figure.s as
Clytemnestra, Orestes,
Aegtsthus, Agamemnon,
Cassandra, A pol I o , and
Athena.
11lE TRILOGY has long
been regarded as lbe foun-
daUon atone of the art ol
drama. Jt is the earliest
maste.rpiea! of d r a m a •
An alumnus of Culver
Military Academy, Morgan
also played a soldier In the
recent production, "Muueka,
at the ~ark Taper Forum.
The young actor leaves ear·
Jy in February for Madr id,
where "Patton" will fllm for
the nei:t three months. Hll
motion ricture debut role Is as
Genera Patton's aide, Lt.
Jensen, one of the film's ma·
, jar characters.
Aeschylus conceived of drama ----------
as a means to awaken thought
and to evoke the powerful
Images of dreaini.ng and deep
meditation.
Think of blah clil!o
.cmrlooldq tho
P•dflc -of beautiful
French prdom
and 901.den beaches.
Thlnk of Victor Huao
Inn-on unfmpttable
Hllllls for
cllll!Jll plouum.
CUI Ddft at eo.t Biiia..,. ._., __ _ _ ...
t-+"' IHlmer. CocJttt!l1
A~ll I Nii&
•
Ted Rotor, director of the
L.A. 's .Gallery Theatre's cur-
rent comedy hit, "Tevya and
His Daughteni," bas just
been signed for an actlng role
In Alfred HitchcoC'k's
.. Topaz," now filming at
Universal • P r o du c e r-dlrector Mel
Shavelaon, whose next film wm be Columbia'• .. Slripment
of Tam," which he allO co-
scrtpled, Is wrltlog the book
for hla firrt Broadway s~w,
"Jimmy,'' a new mualcal bas-
ed on the life of one-time
New York mayor Jimmy
Walker.
The show, scheduled for the
fall of this year, will be pro-
duced b)' Jack L. Warner aa
his !irat stage vent:Jre. Warner
is also paging Shavelson to
direct it.
"Where It's Happe,,lng!"
,-----•-ll_L_M_Ac_IO'INI COOICf.41it l,OUNCJI
UI J. "" CotTA MIU
1111 Martini
Pr-ff TH!
BOSTON
TEA~PARTY
For Yovr D•ndne •nd
1&:fttenlnt Pleuure
..,.. ......
~Y$,2·11,.lil ,,._,.
12NOON\011 '.lil ..........
12HCICIJrit 107 PM.
'Poupees'
j
Premier
In Vegas
Tbo alJ.new 111111 od!Uon of
S!d 11>1. Marty K ro f 11 ' s
fabulOUI "Les Poupees de
Paris" wW preml"" Msrcb
15 In the main ohow room
ol Ibo new Clttus Clttus In
Lu v-. The Kn>lfll .,,..
cludf!d arrangementa th I 1
w;Q wllb Jay s.mo, pral-
dent GI Circus Circus, and a IPOClai Nit II now being __ _
Installed for Ibo t.vlsb puppet
eitravaganza.
The late.I od!Uon ol "Lea
Poupees de Parll" will tn-
'clude over 200 p up p1et
mllDlpulaled by IS J>l'ppdoen.
Movie Guide
- -01'£11$ 11l£S, ft8. c
l lim OllLY
JIMMY DEAN.
WJ" 111E IMPE~IALS
.,_,.,....,, t
THE CLINGERS .
Musical Directot JOHN llAl11ll
... 1"'11., frt. ltl:lO. Sat. •7 & ll • ..... , , l:Jt
Prim $3.SO. $4.50, $5.50, IUO
SEATS NOW
Luncheon • Dinner
DANONG AND
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY
TINY PHIL RIED & JOE-TRIO:
or
Lol>sur Brochette
COMPLETE DINNER
1 BSBZ leach at EIRs .
Huntington Bt11ch (Town & Country) 962-4666~
ose, .s
--~AL-TUREEN-DINNERS
MON-THURS . S TO II PM
MON.. Hern Hoel• witfrl fre1k Lim• l111tt
TUIS. Ko1her Short Rib1 with fr11h w191
t•bl11
WID •• St•wecl Chlc••n P'ortu9ut11 n..n. Corniel 9,,, ' C.bbt91 , ............ ~ ...... , ......... ..
.... "". CWllk 2.95
SUNDAY BRUNCH FROM 11:00 A,~.
2121 E. Coast Highway
Corona del Mar 673-1111
MAIL ORDERS NOW !
' ' •
,•
'
\
.. '' ..... ,., .. , ... , ~-······ ....... , ....... , .. , .. . ' ... . . .
•
-·
BO RODIN QUARTET IN LAGUNA ON FEB. 2.
Big Top Birth
1 Nag Plus Skill
Brought Circus
By JOHN SIMS
Laguna Se t
For Conce1·t
By Russians
I ART EXHIBITS
C.&I. ART I.BAGU!: GAUJ!BY -Sil Ce>ltt St., Colla
Mesa. ~: Sal and Sun. l to I p.m. ConUnuous .eihlbit
ol art work in varlou.t media by Art. Ltague membtn:. No
admlMitm cbarae. .
SECUlllTY FIRST NAT'L BANK -Iii E. 17th Sl.,
Coeta M..,a. Oil painfulgs by Lea Muaerldg•, Inge Llnhardl
and Moody I.yUe are currenUy on exhlbll during regular
businessboun.
UNITED CAIJP. BANK -3029 Harbor Blvd., OU paint-
ings by Manuel De Leon, Lucy Santoni, ilen'dl Riel and
Marian Ries are currently on ubibit during regular bUsi·
..... hours.
005TA MESA U BRAllY -564 Caittt SL, Colla Mesa.
Cwrently on eJhibit durin1 library hours, miniaturo surfers
and space globs .in plastic bf Lee Worman and CivU War
surgical instnpnenf.I owned by Dr. Richard H. H~
OCC: ART GALLERY -Orange Coast College, 2701 F~
view Road, Co$ta Mesa. Hours : 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, 7 lo
10 p.m. wed. eveningi. CUrrenUy on ahibll, a aludent art
show of weaving, sculpture and paintings.
JUNIOR EB ELL EXHIBIT -Mariner's Ubrary, 200$
Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Oil paintings and Portraits
by Lee Turner, Junior Ebell Club's artist of the month, will
be on display during regular library boura.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayaide Drive,
Newport Beach. CUrrently on exhiblt dllJ'ing regular business
hours, mixed media paintings and drawings by John Hack-
f orth.
I
"' LONDON (UPI) -Philip
AsUey left tbe 15lh Light
Horse cavalry division in 1767
with no money but two. im·
portant assets -a horse and
his skill as a horseman.
not much like the Circus or
the ~th centUJjl. lt consisted
only of equestrian and musical
performances designed t o
astonish rather lhan amuse.
The distinguished Borodin
Quartet from the Soviet Un-
ion will present a Shost:ako-
vich, Webern and Brahms
program in Laguna Beach on
Sunday, Feb, 2.
N.B. ART MUSEUM-Balboa Pavilion. 400 Main St., Bal-
boa. Currently on elhibit, ntrospective show of paint-
ings and graphic works by Paul Brach and Miriam Schapiro,
Hours: Wed. through Sun., 1 to 5 p.m.; Mon. 6 to g p.m.
No admission charge.
•
'
• • • • • I • .
• • '
Within a year he had
parlayed those possessions in·
to wealth and fame and,
almost in passin g, had given
the wor ld the first example
of what it now knows as the
circus -an entertainment as
universal as television is now.
Astley's first horse was a
gift from General Elliott, later
Lord Heathfield, in recognition
of his bravery and dislingui.iih·
ed servi<:e in the cavalr y.
With this presentation hor5e
and another boµght at the
Smithfield market he first set
up in business in fields at
HaHpenny Patch near what
is now London's Waterloo Sta-
tion.
The acroba tic Astley soon
discovered one i m p o r t a n t
fact: he could attract and
entertain larger crowds -and
hence coUect more money -
If he performed his equestrian
tricks while rus horse cantered
in a circle.
After his Initial success
Astley decided to open a more
permanent place of exhibition.
In another section of London
he rented a large piece of
land on which he bu ilt the
first sawdust ring. From then
on Astley'11 success was
assured. From contemporary
accoontl, Astley's show was
The Soviet ensemble, mak-
ing its third U.S. tour, will
appear at lhe Laguna Beach
High School audit.orium, 625
Park Ave.
Astley's fame spread to the
continent and he opened a Circ~is 10 Paris _ on the The conctrt will be the . . second of the Laguna Beach
s1,te. of the pr_eent Dr'!1.1t: • Chamber Music Society'11 cur·
d H1ver -and another in rent se a s on. Dr. William
Du blin. Holmes will present a preview
llis son, who followed his in the auditorium at 7:30 p.m.
father into the ring, performed and the performance will fol-
before Lou.is XVI and Marie low a( 8 o'clock.
Antoinette at lhe Palace of The Program will be the
Versailles and was presented Quartet No. 2 in A major of
with a diamond-studded Shostakovich, Five Pieces for
medal. String Quaret (Webern) and
Brahms' A Minor Quartet. Astley himself died in com·
forlable circumstances l n
Paris in 1814 in his 63rd year.
His first horse, Gibraltar,
lived to the remarkable age
of 42. On his death, his hide
was tanned and made into
a •·thunder-drum" for use at
the Circus.
Violinist's Rostislav Dubin-
sky and Yaroslav Alexandrov,
violist Dimitri Shebalin and
cellist Velentin Berlinsky have
perfonned together £or 25
years in more than 2,000 con-
certs.
String players in the tradi·
tion of Heifetz, Rostropovich
and Oistralch, they are Rus-
sia's leading quartet.
Ticket price is $3.50 and
$2.SO for students. Prorated
memberships in tbe Society
L.B. ART AMOCIATION-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach.
AU media membership art show is on exhibit in the Main
Gallery noon to 5 p.m. daily. No admission charge for mem-
bers. Others 50 cents.
SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -171%1 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach. On exhibit during J'tlli]ar business hours,
oil paintings by Barbara Fjeberg.
CHARLf;S BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main SL,
Santa Ana. Hours: Tueii. through Sat., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.;
Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.; Wed and Thurs. evenings, 7 to 9 p.m. No
admission charge. Currently on exhibit, letters and docu-
ments of the American presidents.
CROCKER cmzENS BANK -Harbor Shopping Center,
2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Currently on exhibit dtuing
regular business hours, oil paintings by Pat Ingram, Alice
Block and Vincent Farrell.
UCI GALLE RY -Fine Arts Building, 7601 Irvine Ave.
Irvine. Hours: 1 to 5 p.m. Tues. through Sun., closed Ptfon.
On exhibit beginning Jan. 28, a one-man exhibit of geometric
sculpture constructions by Tony DeLap from 1963 to 1968.
There is no admission charge.
NAVY ART EXHl.Brr -Huntington Center, Tm Edin-
ger Ave., Huntington Beach. The Navy's Combat Art Exhibit,
depicting Navy We and battles during World War ll, Korea
and Vietnam wars, is currenUy on di.splay during regular
business hours. No admission charge.
The great days of the Circus
came in the latter half of
the 19th century, notably with
the "Greatest Show on Earth"
of Barnum and Bailey but
also with the spectacular
shows produced at the London
l{ippodrome and the theater
of the same name in Paris.
sion. Information may be ob-co.-a are also available for admis-ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~V~~V~il tained by phoning 54&-7535,
494-5262 or 675-2153.
In these shows the emphasis
moved away from equestrian
arts to exhibitions of skill,
strength and daring often re·
quiring hundreds or
perfonners and very com'·
pli cated machlnery.
Jud y Okay
As Lena Sub
llt l U1tt DllMY Slt.w
"HORSE In Tlle GREY
FLANNEL SUIT'
p1u1
TONITE AT 6:00 & 9:40 ~ .... _. __ _ . !:leatles '\'dlM' SobillaPile1 ....... -.. '" ""'-'•
Crossword Puzzle
LONDON (UPI) -Sing.r "WINNIE THE POO"
Judy Garland's stand-in ap-C.11ri11son Sert. & S••· 1:30,"'
pearance on a TV show this 1':::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~:11 AND AT 7:45 ONLY
ACROSS
1 Lifesaving
apparatus
5 Splendid:
Scot.
, R1111bJ
ilr111atlon 14 Acidity
15 Thtater
"" 16 Novi Scotia city
17 Pump or
11111 11 18 Among 19 /.. Beatlt
20 Crew ......
t2 Dttlal•td
nolslly 23 P.t of "to be"
24 Chinese .,..ty 2' Dro•e ttuck 2.1 -.. ar Elle t-32 Had tit.It lo
~)Roi•'• wif• 34 Coln of Eu-35 Sto111c1ts
J 6 Orient&!
tnsttu•elll
37 Tl•t of , .. ,
-31 Btfofe
J9 M&dt • rtc0rdln11
40 Having
oflmil.ve -
l2
.. ..
41-Va.lley:
2 .....
43 Goes
swhnmlngi
44 Anony•Ot.1s:
Abbr. 4S What "SOS" m e1ns
46 Rouse Into
action
49 Reputed
soap opera
basis:
2 words
5) Moderate
54 Baseball
lllilfltuVtr SS Fumiture
design
56 Holds des ~7 '"''· posslb .e
conllngm.CJ
58 Standard
of ethlc.t walue
St V.ry slow
lo llOVe 60 Look curiously 61 Aboundtn11
In certain t""
DOIN
l UncauUou.s
2 Hurt J Dtfudt
4 Vibratory
fllOVffltnts
S R~oachl!d
• ICJnd of
holiday
" ..
1 Con: Dial.
8 llarrlM
9 Singular 10 Fawn 11 Ptewee 12 Impel
with vigor
ll OlspJslUoa
21 Sow Z2 Stampede conttstant Z4 Unit la
Grttk philosophy
2S Mi¥1'S ....
26 Conscious Z7 Single za Side: ·Comb. fom
29 Faclal
feature
30 Golfets' Idol
Jl NectssltltS
Jl .Approacll
full
develop111ent
"
"
J.n.41119
36 Take
J!le1strre In 37 rr&ns-
portaUon
m!dlum:
2 wads
39 Most 11lnute
40 A seilSOll
4Z Dog,
usuany
43 Kitchen accessory
45 Oistan l 46 Part of
Indonesia
47 Bia.ck
48 ActUfllUlatt
49 Old alphabet
letter
SO False 90d
51 Agricultural
unit SZ Cowtltd
slatueue 54 Kind of 1111slc
12 IJ
"
week's provoked hundredslf
of calls from viewers w b o
thought she \\'SS ill.
Miss Garland. 46. singing
six nights a week at the Talk
of the Town theater-restau-
rant. appeared on the inde-
pe ndent TV channel's London
Palladiun1 s how as a last-
minute ~ubstitution for Lena
1-lorne. who was indisposed.
Viewers were puzzled when
the orchestra played an ap-
parently overlong introduction
before Miss Garland arrived
on stage. During her perfonn-
ance she missed the words of
her songs several times.
During one song she broke
off halfway bul drew applause
when she said over the foot-
lights: "I'm supposed to be
singing lots of words here. but
Hello Palladiu m and I'm glad
lo be here."
The producer or the show
said later they thought her
perfonnance \\'as "fine''. Miss
Garland who last week was
suffering from influenza, was
not available for CQmment.
prt1t11h
Margaret Cowles "Jun BETWEEN US"
Every Fri., Sit. & Su11,
Till M11ch 2
'Tide.ti Avlllltflll* et
IOI OIHC. er M--' SI..._,,
2915 Ville W1y
N1wport Beed\ 675-11 20
BRIGHT
The DA ILY PILOT m1~11 It.
111w1 cov1re9e li9ht, ti9ht
end bri9ht. Reed yo11r hom••
town 1ditio11 dtily 111tl e11joy
th1 n1w1.
t\1e-rnesa
T1eatre ::t' F1nE 1'j._·\'\.' A: c.: '"'~n. d'..,,
NEWPORT AN O HAR BOR IN ' CO ST A ~~lSA
•
TELEPHONE 541-1552 FOi INFOIMATION
HELD OVER ANOTHER HAPPY WEEK
"THE
IMPOSSIBLE
YEARS "
DAVID
NIVEN
This is 1 picture of the
"·perfect embenlerl
• ::; ............ , ....... ~
Peter Ustinov. Maggie Snith
Kar1 Malden
"Hot Mllllona"
AIM AM
Clrll'l1tht• '*'tori' ._., ,...,._,
TWO FI RST RUN SLEEPERS __ _
1 ... si.. s .... 1 P.M,
C•Ml1t"111 S... "4 S.-. Fre•/ 2 P1M',
, .. ~ .
"PAPER LION"
T"tt'' ~olor .:;; Un111•dilrt1o.;I~
CMtl1111ou s.t. l S1111.
froflf 1 :00
NATIONAt.~~ATION
Fiii °!LU111J.O.!!! ....... n.w, ...... • IM6-1711
OPEN 12:45
DON KNOTTS
'" INCRB>IBLE
MR. UMPIT
IN COLOI
h4 FUTUll
BRIGHTY
Of THE
GRAND CANYON
ALL SEATS 50c
OPEN 6:45 ,,..,., ... _ .....
~' w -...,.,.. ... ·-.. ,,..,..
•t..iJt~ .. ~--~~--
llEBORAll IOI 1111 lllfl
Pdibce• A~ IWXUTOl ·C. br Oii• ------SIU
Anaheim
To Offer
Jim Dean
Contrary to popular belief,
"Blg Bad John" was not born
in a rnine abaft -but in
............... -.......... w,..1
Good King Ubu"
Dy~Tll..-i
l1Jt •.111, -TH/ID tl'I, THlATAE -<OSTA MES4
c.Maf lo1r Offlce-646·1l6J
CKILO*IN'S TH•.tiT•e-·'Ti. EmHfW "'° lt\I H!•hll~a•~"
0111116 .r.u.ry 2' -I _,.. I •·"'·
an airplane! \~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:: Tb1s now classic aong by
Jimmy Dean, who opens a
one-week engagement a l BALBOA NOW SHOWING
Melodyland Tuesday, Feb. <. 673 •048 actually came about as a -t OPEN AT 7:15
SHORT SUIJECTS 7:l0
FEATURE 1:00
-One Showi119 Only-
"hurry-up after-thought" tbal
launched the moderately-suc-
cessful Texas singer int.o a
full-nedged COWltry m u s i c
star.
Dean wu on bis way to
a recording session i n
Nashville and or the 12 songs
he. needed for the albwn, he
had only 11. So, on the plane
down to Music City, Ten-
nessee, be wrote the song that
not only rounded out the
album, but his career, as well.
Since then, there have been
many other hits, among them
"First Thing Every Morning,"
"To A Sleeping Beauty,"
"Hammer And Nalls," but it
was the accidental "Big Bad
John" that started It all
Appearing with Dean Feb.
4-9 al the Anaheim showplace
will be the Imperials, a new
gospel quartet, and the singing
Clinger Sisters. Tickets are
on sale now at the Melodyland
bo.1.office. by mail and at all
agencies.
THE MOTION PICTURE
CODE AND RATING
PROGRAM
The Motion Picture Code 1nd
Reting Adrnini1+.1tion epplie1
the following r1ting1 to films
didribut1d in 1111 U.S.A. Pie·
ture1 r1t1d G, M or R quelify
fo1 th1 Codi Seel. E£llll
Piclure1 rited X do not ,,,,;.,,
e s •• 1. Th• relirtg1 epply lo
pii;hlret r1l•e11d •ft1r Nowem·
lter t, ''~I. Pic.ture1 rele1ted
b.for1 t1'.1t dele ere dt1crib-
ed •1 pr1viou1ly I ~
•ncl/or SMA),
[W-Su9911t1d for GfNflAL
eudi1nc11.
l]--Sug9e1t1d for MATUIE
eudi1nce1 ( P1renlel dii.
o;r1lion edwi11d l.
@-hf'Soa litffr 16 llOt
admlttH. Thi1 e<jle r••
1lrictio11 mey be higher
in '1rf1in 1r1e1. Chi ck
th1etre or tdwerti1ing,
"
t '-',f l·~~'O~I -
·-"""""" ~ Mulhl J-Fondl e COLOR e
''IAIUl lLU"
---!M~lllJ
At!' 1111., .. ,. .. , ... Ill
'"THI IMPOSSllLI
YUH" e COLOR .
hter U.TlllO'I e COL.Oii: e
"HOT MILLIONS "
Or1me Plllf lftHllMI
Alllfl ""''" • COLOll: e '"THE HIAIT IS A
LONELY HUNTER"
Ste..,ert Gr-e COl.Olt •
"THI TIYGON FACTOR"
Jene Fancl• e tol.Oll e
"IAll.t.HU:A.•
Seen CoMerv • COlOlt •
"'SHAU.KO""
···$l
I T!':"l:~ ·~ ::,.,MF•.:. I "THE IOSTON
STIAN&UI'"
Mldwtet C.lnt e COl..011: e
"'DIAOFALl" ----:: --. ... ........
··~····~·············
HELD OV ER 4TH WEEK!
Stlll nm GtftteU Sllow 111 Tow11!
,...,,,...w_"~--"' 6 Acode'"v_•;:•-•_•"------
IT IS LIFE ITSELF
••• RAW BEAUTY
IN ALL ITS
AWAKENI NG!
~"""' ~-
. '
JOSEPH E l.E\IJNE-
TH E GRADUATE ,,_,,
ANNE BANCROFT-DUSTIN HOFFMAN
ALSO
David Niven -Debo ra h Kerr
"PRUDENCE AND THE PILL"
.-ncmcauir PHlllllOll' -WUllJl IRIJS..smll UTI ..
Ste•art Grangn-Robt. Morley
WINNER OF THE
NEW YORK CRITICS
AWARD FOR BEST --&-111111111
PICTURE AND BEST ACTOR -ALAN ARKIN
111. ~'Heart
isa'Lonely
'Huntec-: '· ... and from this man who could nol speak
or hea r, the girl heard many things..
'l'ochnlcolo<. 'Mom'\\func.-.!Jm>.-~ cAtts
HELD OVER 5th AND FINAL WEEK
WU111er of 3 Academy Awards I
~· CJDmwr
-·
0 nCllllCGlll0 Pllllftllllll' -WI UIJI lll0&,4ffil Am "'
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• JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPEllS
QNlity ,,!11tf11e •114 D•!MM•'-1• S•rvlu
f•t f!l•r• tli•ri • O••rkr •f • C.rif•ry·
JJI I WIST IAUOA II.fl. "IWPOIT llACH
MUTT AND JEFF
101 -102.•"
10'1 .. Joi+· ros-10•·
107-•0I-
. 109·
GORDO
MISS PEACH'
l 'LL NOr GNE H1M uP.'! m M'I UR l'YE
WAITED FOR. LOVE .... AMO .L f///ION'T """"°"" IT
By Harold Le Doux
By Ferd Johnson
···!ITU&~ illAT,'
Oil DO 50METHING AllO<JT OLI> ..,.~y
PL.USH9'0TIOM'5
BOILING POINT·
BOl'f IS HE DUMl!.HE
llON'r EVEN KNOW A FLV
-WHEN HE SEES ONE!
By _ Al Smith -·
YOU S"IUPID SHEEP/
I WAS JUST FALLING
ASLEEP!
By Gn Arriola
By Men
~
, .. iv
MEI<..
i
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I I I
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•
DAILY PllOf %/i
QUEENIE &J~lln~i
"St<>p hlllllllWri that Tako mo alprlK j!Dgle ••• •
TELEVISION VIEWS
Lions Chaim
TV Viewers
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - I confess I wasn't much
looking forward to Thursday night's NBC-TV
Special "The Lions Are Free." I think I am a . vie·
tim of network overkill in the area of shows about
animals, -wildlife and nature. M everyone k;ww11,
an hour about .the sex life ol a platypw is rather
-more safe than a-tough, topieal news documentary.
What with "Daktari,'' the National Geographic
specials, "Wild Kingdom" and heaven knows how
many more shows extolling nature -including
this we'.ek's CBS.TV hour about the Galapagos
Islands -I am beginning to yearn for the smell of
pavement dwellers. As a great man once said, if
you've seen ·one tree you've seen the mall. And
why are those senators bothering that nice Wally
Hickel about his views on conservation anyway?
WELL, YOU CAN see what network overkill of
a subject can do to a fellow. And you can perhaps.
understand why I was hardJy thrilled at lhe pro-
spect of watching "The Lions Are Free." What a
surprise it was, then, to be wholly charmed and
delighted by this dilierent kind of program about
animals -in this case, the lions let loose in the
1966 movie 0 Born Free."
In the Thursday night hour, the focus was on
the return of Bill Travers to Kenya for a reunion
with the famous lions he had appeared with in the
film. The NBC-TV program also illuslrated the ad-
justment of the animals to life in the wild.
Most naturally, the chief interest was in wheth-
er the big cats would remember Travers after their
two-year separation, and how they would treat him.
WITH THE documentary being filmed as It
happened, it was quite a thrill -and very touch-
ing -to see the pride of lions obviously respond to
him with trust and aUection.
We have heard a great deal about the _aUection
training of animals, and there has never been a bet·
ter example on television. Nor has there been a
more explicit suggestion of the inherent sadness in
keeping animals behind bars in a zoo, deprived of
the freedom we demand for ourselves.
THE SHOTS of the lions riding, friendly style,
atop the vehicle of Travers and hunter George
Adamson -and picnicking with them, eating and
snoozing like old friends -had to be seen to be
believed. The relationship was almost human. and
that was the whole point, the ·lesson to be Jearned.
Adamson was perhaps the most fascinat1ng
character in the hour. A handsome, bearded man
who is also a game warden, he gave up 0 civilh:ed"
life to live among the famous lions in a rallier
primitive sort of compound where he is mostly
alone except for an African aide. The self-suffici-
ency of Adamson was impressiv,e in a rare way
that was inspiring, and his explanations of the
animal experiment were wholly riveting.
THE MUSIC from "Born Free" was highly ef-
fective again. The photography and editing were
exceptional tn capturing the mood of animal life
on a Kenyan preserve -as well as the uniqueness
()f the Travers reunion with the lions. One scene.
in whJch a Jioness took Adamson to see her new·
born cubs. verged on the r~markable. If you've
seen one lion, you haven't seen them au.' And 1£
you've seen one tree, you haven't seen them all.
And I'll drink to that.
Deianis the Menace
------~------------------•--'--.,;.. ___ ---. ------"
H DAILY PILOT ~. J • ....,., 24, 1969
+ i
:;, . Apricot ~~..:,onr.
~4tc !':~ ,.-,.:.; $) ---
•211 ¥allll '
~
Deodorant ........ '°"
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66' 'Ghei ..... I~
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Hazelll~
'2.11 Value!
c.c-11Phu ' ~ .
:%..."""""" " ..... -:::,=97.~ •• 'IlidfW ....,
~-.
.,,, Pack'Of '500
•-~Filler Paper
.~~,,,
..................
49' ......... ................... ............ 3r .
"'" 0 .......... s• ••. ,. ........ , .. -,.._ ., a~•J1r1 ., ·,
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.:·lunch llti •v~ .....
'I"
,,. Jl" tall ..nJ ,.,. ----....... -iii.
Reg. •10.11 ~I Metal . ' -' f --~-:i. ·'
1 oot-ers
< . '
?:.u::;:! f699 !~·-j.~ --::
/ ' ft t'ioilb. 1--~-• ........ '
'.
Fnilt of the loon,
Furniture Tlirow
-~~~ ....... --.~Gia otGolill
'299 ·Yal..t 4 Foot Long
Record Cabinet
.,
•
!:4.':~218 ••li d ......
••• , •• 41"" ........
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CO.muniC.rDi"1ll IS ~ COMING SOON
'Kai Kan
MIS Ch..ic
Dog'-' Sc:$1
..................... ~ .... ·
'1.25 Dippity Do ••••• 88c .......... . .
59' ec.m Huskel'J •••• 42 .,. __
'IAt ·Score ::: •••••• 78*
................ ~ 31' 43' Sal 11e....-.1ca.... ..... ~ . " ' ........ ,,...... ..... -.... .,., , .....
79' Somlnex •• • • • •
• .. °"""' ....
•1 At Cheracol D • • • ,.,_
1 1.29 Dristan •••••• ·-'l.73Bayer llOftll Of 200 .................
• • • • •
.. .,., """" ...... °""""' 66c •1.os Colgate :: •••
.... ~·'I .......... , 1.,4 ...... ,1.TT
69'-TEI(=-
Discounts for The Homemaker: Thr1fly Household Specials:
$3.95 , .... , Jh24"
Plastic Mats
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) •
Ftldq, J1riuary 24, 1969 DAILY Pit.OT
' HAS 'EM • • • I ...
, •••.
• e "MOTOR TREND"
•·MAGAZINE'S :cAR Qf the
•·YEAR
!ROAD • • :RUNNER
• Light package, automatic tran1missfon, radio with t••r l•et speaker, heater, nylon c.rpetin9, heavy· ••
• cluty braking 1y1tem0 duel 1xhaust system, front arm rest, glove box light, front door courtesy light·
•wi.tches, 1peci<1I beep beep, simulated air hood scoops, heavy duty , suspenSion. energy absc.rbing •
• rleering column, seat belts front and re1r, ~inyl roof, black deluxe wheel ic:oven, white sidewall tires .•
1s319s :~~ .:!!..~-; I ......................................
SAVE! BU Y '68 !
RAY VINES HAS THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE AREA!
SAVE
UP TO
.
'64 MERCURY
Colony Park station wagon, auto-
matic trans, R&H, full power, pw,
factory air conditioning, a rear
beauty. Lie. RBF488.
$1195
'66 MUSTANG
VB, automatic transmission, ra-
dio, heater, power steering, pow·
er brakes. Lie. No. SLE 859.
$1695
'64 T-BIRD
Full pow e r, including radio,
heater, power steering, etc. Lie.
No. QXE 871.
$1395
ON NEW 1968
PL YMOUTHS-CHRYSLERS
'65 PONTIAC '65 IMPERIAL
Lemans, V8, radio & heater, auto-4 door Hardtop. The finest of
luxury, with full and complete matic trans, power steering, pow-power, including radio. Lie. No. er brakes, ww. RDL419. TXF 913.
$1395 Si 49h·
'63 IMPALA '66 CHEVY
Chevrolet 2 Dr. Hardtop. Auto-4-dr sedan, V8, automatic trane, matic transmission, power steer· R&H, pwr steering, pwr brakes, ing, radio, heate';j factory air white sidewalls. Lie. SZU310 conditioned. Lie. J Y-626.
s795 ~11 '(II
~
'65 DODGE '66 T-BIRD
Custom 880, auto trans., radio
and heater, power steering, pow-Landau top, full power, electric
er brakes, white sidewalls. Lie.
SDW-338 seals. Lie. SAA042
s995 $2315
•AIOVI CAllS P'LUl TAX• I.IC.
• • "~~{'fSlER I
~ . •/ 11 I .
Town . & Countr.y Station Wagon
INCtUDD AU THIS 19UIPMINT;
Pow•r llffrin9, p•w•t 41K lii'•kt,, t•il 9•t• 1cuH clt•n, •*•P p•tl, •uto1111•
tic tr•11lminltn. tin~ wl11chhltl'; f•m~ot. ~011frof miiror, h11l1r, Du1I
lir•ki119 •y1t1m. p•tld1' tl•1h, <llu1I rid91 11f•ty rim1, r1•d1id, w1rnint
f111h1r .. ••It l:l1ltt front inti r11r1 11f1ty do!H' lock, 1l1ctric wind1hi•ld
wip1r1 111d w .. h.,., Nckup ll9Jit .. clu•I op1nl119 t1il 91ta, r1alio ind 1.151115
whit• 1id1 will ti,... l1111m1di•ff d1liw1ry. cr45GtCl66016
ONLY $299 DOWN
$134.19 ptr mo. • 36 mos.
O.A.C. , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: ,, , ·1 • , DOWN • CASH . or TRADE WILL : e , . . . DELIVER ANY . NEW CARI e • I PLUS TAX AND LICENSE . •
: • , 1 _ . ON APPROVED CREDIT! •
_.. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•.• ,
'65 Chrysler '380' '64 PONTIAC '57 FORD
2 DOOR HARDTOP. Full power, GRAND PRIX. Automatic trans-Club Coupe: Automatie trans-mission, radio, healer, full and
plus air conditioning. Lie NQW complete power, factory air. Lie. mission, radio, heater. I.Jc. No.
000. No. SPS 529. KGR655.
. . ~99 . ,
~·1,") . I'M ......
'66 FORD Falcon '62 CHRYSLER· '64 CHEVY Impala .
Futura, 2 d o o r Hardtop, VB, 4 door Hardtop. Factory air, 4-door hardtop, full power. !ac-
stick shift, rad 1 o, heater. No. radio, heater, power steering. lory air. Lie. HG664. 5101. Lie. No. FYW 306. -' 11095 • ' C'~J~ J ...
•• 1' ,, • . . . .
'59 Chevrolet Imp. '68 VALIANT '66 FORD
2 d o o r Hardtop. Automatic 4 Door. Automatic transmission, STATION WAGON. VB, standard radio heater, wbit.e walli:. Bal· transmission, p o w e r steering, ance 'of factory warranty. Lie. trans., rad Io, heater. Lie. No.
radio, heater. Lie. No. PMN 218. UHS-904 VAL 922.
-1 $895
4 t ' ) -
19 ~~l~: OPEN 7 DAYS c:i ~
AT THE LAKEWOOD TURNOFF
OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
~ •• ,_......... A WEEK
._, IOACI. 8:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
Stt D•• wtA 41g,. •It ••Y _, .. ,,_, • ., Hp .-..rfe11. . =-
FROM ORANGE COUNTY
543-6663 527-2341 ' 426·7301
t •
RAY VINES
--..4201 WILLOW
LONG BEACH
PACIFIC:
•
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I
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HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOii SALE HOUSES F,011 SALE ~ 1;Go;;:•;•;r;•1;.;;;;;;;;;1 ;000;;;;G;•;•;•r;•;1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;000;;;/;~Gtn~~·~r·~1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim1000~~Gt~n-·r··~· ........ ~lO~IC!Oil'dtoi;-~~~r~•'iii.iiiiiiiii,iiiii1i000iiil~iiiii~~------liiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiil 1000
r. . • •
FINER HOMES
Wt pononllly chost lhe followl119 2 loh for
constrvttloft of thett .,,.,.m...,1 homos.
OCEANFJIONT -Defmitoly lhe finest ocean
front tooatlon In Newport !leach, with(. com-
manding View of lhe Harbor Entran e, and
a panoramic View from Point F«min to Av·
alon. 3 Bedrooms, dining rm, ~d"S rm,
family rm. Wl,>ite wa~ breaking on · the
hooch below -5600 sq fl Priced $250,000.
Shown by appl. only.
PANORAMIC BAY VIEW -A magnificent
5 Bedroom, 6 bath home over 5,000 sq ft.
Lavishly decorated. Priced -$225,000. By
appt only.
LINDA ISLE -One of the best Bayfronl
Buys in Newport Beach. 4 Bedrooms Jor 3 &
•den} plus Jarge activity room. Concrete pier
& slip. A beautiful new 2-story Bay Front.
OPEN SAT & SUN. JOI Linda Isle.
HARBOR ISLAND-The only available home
on beautiful Harbor Island. 3 Bedrooms,
Study, large Living rm. pier & slip. Priced
under cost !or immediate sale-$175,000.
Appl only.
BAYCREST-4 Bedrooms, 31> baths, formal
Dining rm, Family nn, all blt·in ·Kitchen ,
beautiful b,eiltod & filtered swimming pool.
Corner lot with circular drive. Owner trans-
!erred -will consider an offers. Askin' -
$68,750. OPEN SAT & SUN. 1539 Santiago
Drive.
BEACON BAY-A private community beach,
pier, float & tennis court: l Duplex. 42 Bed-
rooms, S87,500: ALSO single family 2 & den
or 3 Bedrooms. One of the finest built homes
in Beacon-Bay -$59;500 or we will consider
leasing this fine property.
iohn macnab
REAL TY COMPANY
181 llovo1' Dr, Svll• 101
Micco Re1fty Co. Bldg. 642-8235
Sales through the Multiple listing
Service of the Newport Harbor
Co•ta Me•a Board of Realtors
totaled $52, 152,897 for the year
of 1968. Lid your property with
a Realtor today.
Open Houses
THIS WEfKEND
KMp thl1 hal'lllr..::Netwy wtttli Y9U thil wMk~
end U pu I• 11 tlulttlnf. All "'9 ftibtiens lilt9d Wow •N deKrlbed In , .... ,.. tlttall by
Hnrtlllnt eluwhere In ... •y'• DAILY PILOT
WANT ADS. P•trenl lhowlnt open hOUMI for
NI• or te; nnt .,. ~ t9 list luch lnferma.
tlon In thll celumn •ch FrW1y,
HOUSES FOR SALE·
[3 Bedroom)
403 Feliz (The Bluffa) Newport Beach
644-0525 (Sat & Sun Aft. 2)
2141 Vista Enlrada (Bluifs) NB
644-2370 !Daily\ * l601 Bonnie Doone (lrvine Terr~) Cdf..t
642·6472, Eves: 673-3468 (Sun all/noon)
1129 Pembroke Lane (W estcliff) NB
548-8281 rsun 1-41
234 Palmer, Costa lo\esa
6424980 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
(l Br. & Family or ·oan)
1604 Wbito Oaks (Mesa Verde) CM
540-0322 . (Sal & Sun)
2043 Calvert Ave. (Mesa Verde) CM
546-3081 !Da~)
2124 E. Ocean Blvd. (Balboa Penn.)
1671).4()31 (Sun 1·4)
1901 Glenwood (Baycresl) NB
~ tSun l -51
*2510 23nl St .. Newport Beach
M&-3255 tSat & Sun 1-51
25251 Mai.Dsail Dr. Dana Point
&U-2823 \Daily 12·2\
*2750 Dralte SI. (Mesa del Mar) CM •
540-1151 !Sal a. Sun 10-5)
14 Bedroom) ·
101 Linda Isle (U.d1 13le) NB
(714) 84l:a2H !Sat & Sun)
(4 Br. & Family or Oen)
441 Windward Lane, Newport Beach
646-1846 !Sat & sun ll-5)
428 62nd St. !Newport Shore1) NB
675-2503. &42-3615 !Sal a. San 1·5\
29lVl'apefThne. Newport ffi!aCll--
642-2637 (Sat & Sun I0-51
11139 Santilgo Dr. !Baycrest) NB
(7 141 642-8235 (Sal" s un)
*1642 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB
648-1550 !De.I ly I 0-5)
! CONDOMINIUM l
(3 Bedroom)
31,~\ Vista Entrlda !Bluffs) NB
1144-2370 ......
..
533-HOME ···
' S Bedroom -3 Baths -3 Car Garage
"
... ·540.,900
-Fumilhed Models-Adams at Albatross
Republic Homes Mell Verde • Pho .. , 546-1 on
EAST SIDE COSTA MESA
NEWPORT HGTS. AREA
ALL THIS AND R2
$25,500
Charming 3 bedroom Ot 2 bedroom & den.
l 'Y.l baths, fireplace, carpets & drapes, built.
ins & forced air heat. This well landscaped
home can be found on a huge R2 lot with a
very large fenced back yard, with room for
a boat, camper, of build a r ental unit! It has
a paved ·alley entrance for easy access. Loca·
t.ion is just about perfect, 1 lh bl.ks to New·
port grade school , and only 2 blks to new city
park. East 17th street and Weslcliff shopping
and two other schools within walking dis·
tance. For appointrnept to set!i write:
Private Paity
Box P612
l>aily Pilot
New Custom Spanish with mission tile
roof. 4 Bedroom, 21h: baths, formal din·
ing room, famil y room, wet bar. Custon1
carpets & spanish tile floo rs. Partially
dfaped. Large lot, oversized garage.
electric opener, etc.
Elegance & Privacy
Fmm the tall S pan i s h
wrOught iron gated e n t r y
one first sees the 28x2l' in-
ner atrium with it'• uniqoc
clectricaJly controlled 14'
J;'Clractable roof lt. &learnirw
Spaniah ~ floor le built-in
wet bar. Then a step be)IOlld
to the dramatically draped
windo111s framing a twinor-
amic view of the Bay &
J-tills. 4 bdrms 31' baths,
family room with fireplace
PLUS 2Ix27' rumP\ll room
for pool. table or ? . This
home bu ill by JV AN WFJ..J...S
jU1t one y('ar ago could not
bt duplk:aled a l UK: uk1llJ
price of $llli00l. O w-11 e-r
ll'an.~en-ed. Ca.JI today to
see this 3400 sq ft luxurious
view home ih DoWr ShOres.
Roy J. Ward Co,
lliaycrest Ollicel
1842 Santiago Dr. 646-1550
COllVENIEHCE PWS
Near COSTA MESA PARK
and SHOPPING is this clean
custom built three bedroom.
two beth plus large family
room home. \\'all to wall
carpets over H/W FUXlRS.
Built.in range and oven ·
plenty cupboard s pa c e.
Nice I y landscaped yard,
,Prinklers and patio. O n I y
$!1,900 E;f.sy terms. Submit
p~ or-G:fi.i>FFER&. !
Two New Exclusives ..
WjlTERPRONT -FEE SIMPLE •
Holl!O with pier & .Up a delightful alrf, 2 slcly 4 bdrm; master bedrm
SOU.. is OD t.he first' floor With slid·
inc. gJiss door ope.Jllnf.l':' boyside
patio -beautlfuUY caped by
Beeson. The 120• of· water frontage
promises an unobs'trueted view of
channel This home is loactod in :P!'lvi)e community with ample pa.rking. .
CUSTOMIZED BAYCREsT-* ,Fropt courtyard entrance with
. lo•ely large trees. * Child-safe pool, enclosed with
wrought iron fence . * 4 bedrooms, 2Y.a gleaming
baths. * Formal dining room. * Large living room with wall-of
glass viewing sparkling pool. * Panelled family room with fire-
place & buil'l-in bar. * Built-in BBQ adjacent to well or·
ganized kitchen.
• • • • •
A CIRCULAR ORtvE will lead you
to this welt aesfgned 3 bdnn home.
Huge dinin; room. Dad will smile
-when1 be-Jp1es-the darkroom/work~
shop designed for him. A great buy
in Baycrest'ti best area.
1901 Glenwood Open Sunday 1.5
ENTERTAINMENT CONSCIOUS?
SpaciOUs 4 Bdrm 3 bath home in
Baycrest. Large family room & lan-
ai. 3 fire;.>laces. Storage galore!
Owner will finance -excellent
terms.
FORMAL POOL enhances this
bright & sunny 4 bdrm 3 bath
home. Choicest BaycrE!it mod.er,
large living room overlooks a
charming well • manicured court
yard. lmm-aculate! Shown by ap·
pointment only.
MOVING UP r ~·,
Although Richard Nixon is· mti\itng up
from a very modest beginn).a& ~· -!lie
most famous haunted house in ~a.
The Wbite House -we are compio"ly
confident Iba! be can handle It wf\b dis· patc~ven Including the dlitiJl(\Wtbed ,
ghosts of Ahrah2m Uncoln, DoUY iMl\di-• I
son and Abigail Adams. .. "" -'· " •
U YOU need to move up, Itt us shew
you some homes -not so famous -
perhaps .__ but with less proble·rns.
·Bay _& Beach Re.alty,.lnc. ~
. 2407 . E. CHU Hlg!lftr
Con1nO: de! Mar 67~·3000
-~ .,... ----"""tC ·~~
will btj all.smile.s when she
sees thill brand new IV AN
'WEU.S ~e 'flith a "for-
ever ~:· m Galaxie Drive
tn Oowr Shotts. 4 bdnna J
baths, family room, 3 car
.iaraee. B p j it around a
1:IieamirW tile iMer atrium
with center planter & built·
in wet bar for infinite var·
let,y & luxurious entertain.
tng. NOT jUlf: anothrr house.
You will agree. Open daily
Come to aee.
Roy J. Ward Co.
(Baycrest Ottiet'I
1842 Santiago Dr. 646-15.'"JO
~TODAY'S MAIN
~SPJ~ i~i
24.l.4 Vista Del Oro .:
Newport Beach 1
live on Easy Slretil
at the carel.ree
elegant Bluffs
Eagle nest View of
terraced tile roof top ,
Bay & Ocean beyond
Presli&e · quality • charqt
in these J BR, 2 be.th homes
popular single level
beautifully decorate<l,., .
with luxurious ~ lti drapes ~
Retrlgerator &: waaher ~
Open HovM Sat & Sun · 1 l ·5
~ 441' Wlndwerd 1.ane"
(NtTr ·22nc1 & Tv1ttn Ave.)
By Builder 646-1846
OFFICE OPEN f . 11 nd ·,;h-~ 3 BR dryer availatMe for $43,SCJJ me we co 1....,,~ or Bay Vlew at $46 750
lack Bay Mansion EAST SIDE (,'OSTA :r.fESA
N£WPORT HGTs. AREA
ALL THIS AND R2
S25.500
Charming 3 bedroom or 2
1605 WESTCLIFF
DRIVE
+ family room home in 644-l l 33 '
Mesa Del Mar. ll.4 baths, = step.saver built-in kitchen, Eves ~~ ~*5
lil!parate laundry room, fire. ~
pla~. w/w carpets & drnp. -
cs. custom shutters. Profes· Uke New
5 bedrooms, 3 baths, Dream
home buDt for a discrimin-
ating executive and his de--
11ervlng family. Dclightlul
decor. Large living roon1,
huge family room. Land-
.scaped with an eye towards
beauty and easy malnten.
anoe. Located on quiet cui.·
de-ac 1treet. U yoo can af·
lard a $36,0t'.IO Dream Home,
You'd better see this today.
GI NO DOWN!!? Submit
your smaller home on ou.r
~tee sale plan.
bedroom & den. l lj;j, baths, Evenings Call 646-7887
fireplace, car-Pets & drapes. , .;;.;;i;;~;~;;;;;;; I
buill·in & forced air heat. MONEY ·MAKERS
'Th.is well landscaped home NEWPORT bear B e a c h,
QI.fl be found on a huge R2 9111'.M ocean view. 3 UNITS.
lot" with a very larp fel'IC-2, 2 BR.ii: & guest apt. Obi.
sional landscaped yard, cov-1
ered patio, room for boat or 4 BR, J be, Fam rm, nix! "'!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!'!!!l!!!!!!J can1per. Price $27,950. FHA/ buch horn(!. new ca~. ~ VA I i1 d sired drape1, paint Vacant • PRIDE OF erms e · ready to go, $35,500 terms..
Newport Beach 642-5200
Open Eves.
ed back yard. with roam for a boat, camptt, or build a car. $34/lOO.
"rental unit! It has a paved
" 0 "
DOWN
alley entrance for easy ac-EASTSIOE C.M., 2 homes
cess. Location is jUt;t about on comer lot, 2 BR & J BR to qualified buyer. l BR
perlect, llAi blks to Newport Live in one, l;'!nt one. SJ2.950 ;:;~s~.allb':u~ lir~:.
grade school, and only 2 blk:I EA.S'rsmE c.M. 8 units 1 BR BBQ. covered patio etc. ~~;:tw ~::J ;;~~ts~~ ea. Exce.Uent rentals. In. ln1mediate possession &
--, 16'0 mo 159 500 terms to suit any bodg· ping , and two other schools '""'• · ' wilhin wal\dllg di!tance. For Ao et. To t a 1 payments W,,, Sl.94.85. W I T H NO
appointment to see, write: ·~-DOWN. Make your ap-
1 -t of the Private Party ......, pointment mw to aee. ~ BoxP612 •tAlTY
Sman Spen.ders Daily Pilot N•nr NB P"" 01<. .,..,." • co: TS
Newport Heights area and
Tb~~~~;~ ~-3B~~stl.!, =-~.!.,
space&: country atmosphett. lt:Sl Baker, C.M. :>46-54.40 S25.500 • terms. i.......
4 bedroom, pane.led recre&· I Caywood Realty 5-18--1~
tlonal room, lower deck and SOCK IT TO , , 6306 \V. Co.a.st Hwy, ~ upperba1conyoverlookcan-·l=~;;;;;;;.,;~;;;,_EM::;:::,·~~~:=:=:=:=;:::=;:::=;::~1
yon. Excellent condition e,.ndll
area. S42.500.
BAYCREST
POOL HOUSE
Over 21'.XXl sq. ft. 4 bedroom
A: family room 37 tt. pool. A
steaJ at $46,500. piuse call for apopintment lD see. Ex·
clusive with
JEAN SMITH
Coldwell, Banker
OFFERS:
Le Reve
c1"" 10 .... ..,.h'""' ,,.., Open DAILY wALLAtE
17th St. '"" W'5tclill ...... MAID'S ROOM REALTORS
ping, all schools and the 613 Pl ( M Plus 4 other bedrooms in this .u6-4141-400 E. 17th SI.
new Costa f.!esa park. 3 Um8J, • , beautilulBaycrest home with fOpen ·Eveninp) Costa Mesa. Calif.
large bedrooms or 2 ftnd a delii;:htful pool. Excellent[~~:'.'.'.~~~~~= iiiiiiil' !i7ml4-64iiiim6-3~2~5!iSiijiim
"The dream" an exquisite French·
Regency, Greek classic home custom de-
signed and decorated. Fine detailing thru4
out. 5 Bedrooms, panoramic view of Bay
& ocean . . . . . .. .. . . . . .. . . . . . $350 .000.
Mrs. Raulston convertnbli:' den. 1"4 balhs. 6 BEDROOMS Anligua Way location. I
forced air heating and a Pot<'niLai res1 home. Single Arnold & Freud B I G Commercial complete buiJt.ifl kitchen. story 00 Jarxe lot. Huae fam-
Deep R·J lot with alley ac-ily room with fireplace + 388 E. 11th SI., C.M. Sleeper
N'M with room for an in. Realtors 64&-T155
l:ome unit or extra _.... dinint< area. Bit • ""· FA '"!!!'!""""""l"'~~~"""' I BONUS ROOM Slral<ikally looalod in La·
Beautiful Bayfront
Private dock for large boot -sandy beach,
good swimming. Lovely 7 yr. old 4 BR each
with own bath. Huge Cam. rm . Has BBQ &
wet bar-will trade for smaller .. $119,000
Walter Haase
· heat, good Cmta Mesa al'ff., I' U 1_... _. n-..1-fayctte Squatt with 2 Jn.
You small spenders, it°s 1 block to shoppin"'. Only nequ• ftl--"I' pegrm only $25,!0! -' . .., $23,7S0-"0$" Downl 20 X 30 extra roon1 compel<'· l'.onu• ··junket'fi", both rent-
( I h & ( S26,500. Good terms. n.... nt 1 G 1 1 1y finished and plumbed for ed. SJQ,000. Zoned C-2. EX· 0 eswort Y . 0. Ritt'. 646-3928 or. G4.Ull~ •. ..,.me · o a •· · or ow bath A: \vet bar. All electric CELLENT TEmtS. *LACHENMYEll low down to oll. 2 """· ho~ • ,. ... new wilh • 19().4 Harbor Blvd. Fonnal dining room. f.tany Bedrooms. Best valu<' al el'tms! 54().1720 CM. 6J.2.77n BEST BUY Balboa, lbw lov1 TARBELL 2955 Harbor $32.9511. · Phone S.'6-2313 or
Open Eves. pril'r $39,500. E. ll» Miehael 646-TITI T~fE REAL EST AT·
RHr 673.-6880 White elephants! Dime-aJine ERS. DUPLEX =G~ •• =.= .. ~l ========,000= Gtno~=r=.=,=======1=000=..l~Gtn==.=,.=1 ========1000=-
DaisY. Fresh
for lprinCJ
Cbannfua: 3 Bedroom. 2 bath
hornfo. Lo v ~I y carpetlnf.:,
\\'OOd paneli11&, :1hutters,.
used brlck Onpla.ce. Plus
Income Apartme1;1t. Alking
SSl.500" • Exclu.llve area.
RmCiRPEI'
lj.EALTY
1G5 \\'. S..lboe Blvd., N.8
675-6000
SUNNY
Oean 6' bright ~ bdrm
!ilf"ll?k: story hurnr. All
•lectri<: lldlctK>n, SJ>l'll'-
ioul atrium entry &
quality l"'arpt'I! &. drn11-
cs tflroughoul. iJrnmacu·
late condition. $34,$jl)
')1 :.-.s.1\ ~ r~\· 'J\cl1t'1,•
546-5990
S~"RJllA--"r..trs·
S~ve a Simple Scru.mblM Word Puzzle for a Chuckle
O Reorrangc littt•rs of th•· .,...-.,
four ICfOmblcd word! be--
b.ol 10 form four si111pl.t words.
ICOYNAR I . I' I' I I I .
IJONIG I
IFYFAT . I
I I I' j J When money grows on "::'.·~~-:;:~.,=·=~ ...... treas, usually thfr.'1 been r aome -oorno on.
(OOMHIN I ,., ... _
'"t ,.1 "'T1 "'T'1 -1 ... • -r.-l ~ n~:::~ ~
e ~:;:R~~BSE~~~RES 11 r r ,. ,. I' I' r J
e ror:~i'. 1m"' I I. [, · I I I I I I
SCRAM·Lm ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000
MESA VERDE
IN
THE
CUSTOM HOME
COMMUNITY
Exceptional Balboa 4-Plex
Each modern studio apt 2 BR. bath and
powder room -always rented with good
spendable income -close 'to Bay & ocean
·absent owner \\-"ill consider vacant . $52,500
Walter Haase
Charmer w/ham Ceiling
Light & airy. 3 BRS, Lg. ponelled den
Ii brary or office. whidl ever you need 2
baths, family room, 2 fireplaces, cov~ed
patio. Westcliff ................ $45 000:'
Mary I.Du Marion ' '
for SJ9.950 • One story 2100
liq. ft . 4 Bedroom, wry
large family room wilb Ure-
pl•<:e and di""" room. AM-Exclusive -Just Offered
Fl\t inlcreom • nice lal'll! Charming Cape Cod. 3 BR. conv. den 2 k>t. 2 car prage • Walk. to ' l\t~ Verde O:Mmtry cub. baths, •fireplace, covered pat 1 o , copper
TilE REAL ESTATERS • plumbing. Fruhly decorated. Excellent
"'6-23ll, 646-nn Weatcliff value ............. $42,500 .. .
-Ent-C-ooto-Mosa--~Lou _M)rion
Nice t I 3 BR homel from
$15,000 to $21 ,500
14.3 ·~ 64U111 Ev ... 642 646-4579
Newport Hgts.-129,500
3 bedrooms. 2 baths •. t::x-
qui.Me\l i-neled .• lbera-
dor all electric kitchen • ,
f'.'rull ~ -~ •""'"'· J eRt p:rqe I • Hurt Wmil"
11hop. 540-lnl
TMlBELL 2955 Horbor
OFFICE OPEN
SATURDAYS
COLDWELL, IANKIR & CO.
2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH
Kl 9-3351
-,----·-.. ~-~~---.-------------....-----------.--:-I i
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HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR S/\LE ::HOU=S:.:E::S_:F_:O:.::R_:S::.A::L.:l~l~H~O~U~S;ES~F;iO~R.;;.SAL;;;;.;.;..;;Ejjji HOUSU l'Olt SALi HOUSU FOR SALIUHT _.,!H!_!o·~~~,-~f~-~!!!!!~ _"!"H'~.,~~!,~u;~U~nfurnltllM~~~~ 1.:.;::..::=;;;...=;;..;=;.;;;..-"""''-'"''"'----~--I Mn. V ,,.. 1111 Mewpert Heltfttt 12)0 i..:;=.;:.;.---""i~"'""'~==== 1000 ° . Hum ........... l400 Rontllo te·SlloN 200t c:.t.• MIN 3100 Corono dol Mar H50
DAILY '11.0T 29
"'aNfAU
H-u""'"""'"'
16th & Tustin -Cott• Mesa
Exc•llent location, near school<, shoP.plllg
and beach Only a few left. Buy now while lD.·
1 terest rates are only -- -
7°4 with 20% down -71h% with 10-/o On..
no 2nd -no points-29 yr1 on balance
BY OWNER: 3 BR..~ • ..1 SEE ..... I. . -=;;....;;.;;.;.,_c.;...._.,..; 5%% LOAll ly. I Bo.I Crp<s, .... ..... '" ~ YOUNG. WGdcillJ loot)> wll $%!5-llO y--.
-bt"'8. $21,500. 3 BR, 2 batbo, dJnhw''nn. ...... I BR ~. apt .... , VIBl\E -..., -· NaWIJ
Pa,ymtntl $143 ma. lnclud~ ~ aft I wkt:\)'a or knotty plDI R.umsq ml pl111 KATELLA w/ftrtpl • maqy dlx. l'IU llKK ndecclatN. I.up )'U'd. all. 4 Larp bedroms. IPBC-wkndL 3 ear pr, and ~ acldld kl.lures. ~. wttb 1 am e. Wal>; to '-di 6 ~
lous lJv. rm.. l*-BA. large t BR. lam I dln rm. frpk, featura $31,!500. Shown "'1· ~aft 1 pm. ~-~~ ~~ Watt't A. prdentT JUI.
fenced yard, Near echoola 2 Ba. w/w cpl.I, d:rpe:, lfllO time. ~ roammalM for cbildmi OK • no peta. $23)/ AdWtl pntand. Ca I I . •So. eout PWa. lmm<dl-., tt. Pan!. <>wnu . ..,..,. Grollam lealty la NOW PAYIN!a _,....,.•BR. --.... ..,._ 5'Mla 113-!055 11ttore u .,. •
ate pouealon. ntA ICJ'. Below mr1rt. Neu H.B. PQst ore. MW4:14 up .. '* Canal. Prtvaf9 dub' A. after $ pm. Arfftt t.TJ.3Ql1.
MARTIN R.E. S4M332 5tS-l15t 80% pool. lblo at tl1IS Qubboult I BEDROOM, twn1ly room, 2 BR. + ~ Guest fQI A Roni laohlrs s BR.. flam, pan/de" C • O · NB. .,.._ ~. built In Id-.., bath. npte, pr. °'""""'
Reposs: 3 BR $18,450, $150 D. Owner. Allume "°" Newprt" ShorM 12:0 WllL abare .bome w/matun nn w/W· carpet eomllietfo, In town. Walk to bcb.
ctn. $151/mo. .... &II. 126.500 -will --Ja<ly. llJIO, -Vld!>llr '" ba ..... ,.11o, -115-1:19!1
5fM122 •·FIWIE,WALKBOI.• Com-=ss1'on -Bacb.-:10.20-..,.,.-1===.:=====1 _,, SfY, J 81', 2 Ba. OD IXHTln'. 1111 ·-....1 double --lllL--·-E I • A t .t BR 2 bl.th. $25,450, ....,., BY OWNER: Mea Verde -GM. ~----. 6 f 2-3 5 f I ROOIOIAT£ wuted.. Gld 23 nu ,, ... "-•--o;• uv. -XC USlft gen I &II ...,....,.. vw1.u· $2Z5 .... ino. No -&a. BIOl J '-'--------dn., $1Jl8 mo. ..,. · Pacsel1er. 3 " F...U,. .,,... Clll 147-1 -to ...... apt wllb ~ I . porated ·~%loon."" 500. " Ilk fw HAL MORR ...... --• BDIUIS. "'"' boat ollp; ' P• a. pa mer 1nc:or Probato' 5"hmil bid~ 3 BRll, :JOU Cal ..... .:.. -NEWPORT SHORES 3 Bd. GIN. (2W5) .. """"' • Ill'. Fl!IE s Bl!. • BA -I batbo, ......... w/bbq .•
33n VIA LIDO l'i': bathl, $lS,500-tmnl. 3 BR. 2 ea. Fam rm. New 2 Be. $27.900 Pf,ul .Stuart .. oa IWboa bland. $82 bt beat am;; DW' wmcun: $4Z Month. 52MlOO
MA • ~•4 Bob oi.on Realtor ........, 1 • 1 R£. ~ -49W9l9 -~.. "'-• ..... ,. • -flam Trod Ph: 540-5113 From L.A. C•ll ~ -F II Rm. crpta. .. ..._ ''' •• er "'°' ·•~ . -.-· -• H ...,_,_ looch a.10D
~~-----~~-
4 Bedrm ~ •m Y .,..,m. Boot opace. $25.ICIO. laycroot 122~ lnYest & letlr9 l NICE Sid ....._ "" w/f):plc. htd yrd. 2 _u._ .... ~,.·--·--...,,-
$2 ,500 54&-2880 ..,. 11111 1111 bodr. & -tblo " abore O>ata -':;:'. =~ ~ 1%11 .,._ FREI RENTAi. IOOK
2 bathl •• EnchanlJnr ftro. AuntENTIC S-Home, lmmoculole 2 6 ""' -1111· -oft 4. RENT °""'In a -
Most Fabulous Location
on California Coast
=: _i:;:::.i:~ ~ tMport 1aoch
1200 :-= =· ~.!;... ..... :: ,...,._ .... ZONIN~ .... ao11 ,...pott ~ 2200 " LEASEi Ol'ftoN Walker & Lee
in ra.na:e. oven " dbhwasber rm for pool. FM limp&.. HA;:•P:DAL It.EAL TY 3 BR aJ9o 4 BR bcne. SJ.10
.. 540-11'0 ~ 1423 Anlllua Way, NJ!. nfil W.,,,.., 1V 3f2.ff05 TINY"°""' • $15 Month. 6125tfmo. 8kr. 5f04m , 1'D ~
TARBELL 2955 Horbor &st '!.!isf' 642-151l2 Slmtwalkmbalb...,•t EASTSIDE fl. 1 ill' mi' -()peo EwlL """"'°
11-1237 -s•r 12.5 :JOl19lbst -m.1793 ... It,._. oo .... p,..., SURFSIDE ~, , BR. Coat• MeN -Unlvanlty Park Vl"UI frably P 1101 ea. 111' s BA. Pool, trPc. blma, OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN
103 and 105 Linda Isle Drive, NB ~~-..,,. 3 BR. Fam rm..· 21,9 bl.. 16'1 Vilcount Dr. zr Adami L .. u~ IMch ~ M11M1la. $160. 6f6....2lil5 ftfrla. otmr casllGm otru.
Luxurious new I-Jomes on Llnda Isle
Piers Slips, protected pa"tios
Homes of rare beauty -from $98,000 up
Shown by appt.
,.,,,.._ realty on end w/ prk In tront • Mapa!!• ' BR. 'l'b1I ii 1 BR. lncl )'f'd. Ocean view. 2 ~ BR. apts, d r p 1. =~Ks3s-ffl: m 0 :
.... PKOPERTlES wr.st A: rur. Partial uJ)lraded an ~te ~. $29,986 1% blk bcb,, d w n t w n, Wlhr/dr)'er Reh ftQ lS9 ..:::.;;;;;;.:;:,:,..;~~""'-
' 2414 V"'° Dd Oro -v t ll D."SLATES, Rltr, n-+ : ... ••-o.r. -· ••13, .;M •H • "PACIFIC SANDS NewportBeacb crpt/ U&IJ!D· acan. new 962-138 -.. ~""'' ~ Meu.Dr,,-.,.,...'7B81 ·&192ManoyDrt\'9
Most-So hi Aft paint " ........ $29,950. 8fl-35Jj ---2 BR., 1% bL; ALSO 3 3 Br. 2 ... ._ COY UG . 8f "6-6511 DRIVEBY:l&mllbolleLano, • BR. 2\1 bL, condo.; pool; bdcl< .. llo.'$115.-
NO DOWN G.J.
Tremendma Value
BOYD REALTY
3629 E. Coo1t Hwy Cdf>I, 675-5930 in lovely East
Costa Mesa home
$24,500 -and you can
assume 5% % FHA loan!
BY Clwner: f BR. 3 BA., Sol vi.to. FHA· toon Ill% Condotnlnh~ 2950 11111 Month A Up. "'°"'289
popular slnele level tamlly rm, Cb an c e 11 or f BR 2 lMt, bl.t.W, cpts/drpe. Q)Ml'ORTABLE ~ ~
· :·An••lita" Home Home. Like new. 134.ICIO. lrpl"'. Inoula"'<i. shake AVAIL ltr 2, 1l)Jle "' -Vonle 3110 plus : im -· Li<
B/B
NEWPORT
SHORES
First nme
Offered!
This 3 bedroom 2 story home
has Jots ol charm with its
colorful kitchen. Lots of
ltome for only -••••. $28.500
645-2000 Ems. 548-5810
ALSO
NEWPORT
SHORES
JUST LISfED • A·lramc, 3
I a. r g 11 bedrooms, dining
room, spacious living room
with stone fireplace. Many extra additions including ad·
dllional roo sq fl • $32,500
?t1ight exchange equity for
larger home in Orange Coun-
ty plus e:ome ca.<:h.
Bay & Beach
Realty, Inc.
901 Do\.•er Dr., NB SUite 221
645-2000 Evoa. 548-6966
Large 900 sq fl units \\'ilh en-
closed gru-dgcs & in excel·
lent condition. Corner loca-
tion near schools & shop-
ping. Owner a.'lking
$24,000
Beautlful I: spacious 2 BR Assume mort.pae. 833-2369 root walled ~ Perfect female. lhare tum cond. erounds. l93ll Beacb Blvd.
2 Bath. ik!st park location BY OWNER 3 mt., 214 oond. VacanL Prict $2$.900. wtplano, ttc. nn. $15 wk. LOVELY hm 3 BR. 2 BA. --~---~-~~
OPEN SUN AFT /NOON
1601 Bonnie Doone,
Excellent condition on in our entire area. 8 A. fam rm. Hu Owna '37~'18 or MT.JllO M6-'266I 2 frplc. carpll, drps. hltns. 3 BR. Small fncd. yd. Sl.40
Near puttq llft:ll I: pool Everythiq"! Priced to Sellf FOR Alie and/m: leue Duplexes FUm. 2975 S2Z JR. SM-0625 yrly. lat A lut. 2 child ~ ~~FoiTtate 83l--Ol04. ~:~~FURN 2 Br, 11,i Ba. ApL N..,.rt IHch mo l~~~~Blv•.::a
Spacious 3 Bedroom, 2 bath. 644-1133 eVU. 64'"'3113 Ea1tbluff 1242 zlnt location to tcboolJ I: many exqs. $lfiO, 5G-37IH 3 BR. tam rm. din rm. e.lect
tree sheltered str-eeL
Irvine Terrace (103-C) ......... In H. e. Call or fm-1350 . I/I kll Newport ...... $225 mo
SPECIAL! ! FINE OFFERING Wolk to 1aoc11 Old Interest Ritt ~ """' 5 " -.. RE~..!~u ..... -·-~· TOWNHOUSE 1ae. Evu962-0!5
VIEW Newer uUna sharp 3 Bedrm .._.... "''wt"-2 Bdmt. 2 Bath 4 BDRM. 2 ba, mw crpta. -POOL & . -UJ (11') 111·11» 2 bathl _ ~ li'"'-room •~ 500 • Br 2" Ba. •17,250 -OWNER Geno I 3000 2 Car ~--IUS-Mo. or will .._ 3 BR. 2 ba, FA, bit-in gas '"' .. ,.. ... ~.,. ~ "-;'!...,_ -· . ;> • -n • bl _,... ,. _;:;-tN•.. I lio ·-~---n-.... .,.-with wood bumllJ& ....... .,...ce On Green Be:lt 3 BR 1'4 be, t-inl, .... _, ........... ontb wop n w "'Y• v1.r. '°" kit seiv porch, dbl gar: par-b *I __ , Oc * -u-~-Dr Adu! ~--q~t fin. Low lease-hold, 30 .Hftpo~, 02W, wall. wall carpetins: • uge mm9U. cup1ncy ~jle pr. --<Cl" . mVINE TERRACE • 2 BR Pooll • ta v..y• W .. tmlfttter 3612
d&J ,.... Small. BUT hM y· VI VI dbla· ...... 6 patio. EZ Bkr A.B. a.vtdt""" · Pacill< suiaL -·-deft. hOlutic View, lay -frltlac:lf-
_ _..,.,., ~.t'J 500 Aprv-oint... 1ew-•W-.. lt'l!IV-tt $26.950. I :==R.=M=el.eod=;:·='=''=a;=i;=-=· I BY owner. cmJ" 3 Br. home bel.uWul condWob • $7M Rulty, Inc. • PRIVACY • eve • .,... · _., · .--Nl!'WU 3 bedroom home on • "'-ti, CUil
menl only. tree lined itreet with 1 f "1UNG.. near bttCh. --r per mo. 901 Dover Drive suite 221 New, large 2 bdrm. with pl'-CURT DOSH R It , a t°"""' dol Mor 1250 dnpea. ----__ """•-54&<966·. age. WO...FencecLyard.wilb I . ea. or virw ol _ocean. M .. ter .... ~SPRING· ·sucxm ·my _-,. BR • ..tin. w ... , paid.
room w•lh prlvale bat~ • -.-.,,,, • • mv Reduc:-_.. $3500 S.nt1 Ano .1620 den. or t Bl!. Commwilly 3 BR, 1% bath condomlniwn 14325 so. OUVE 1730 w. Coo.st Highway dressing room. Palol Verde .._ I ~.L I. sv t>e-..L. ....... tiennil murt e 63' •120 e
· bull in ....... ···-• 000 2 Ill -•~·· • Bl..U. Plua, l26tl mo. Avail -6'12--6472 EVES. 673-3468 fireplace. Fantastic t W ....... ~.-... $41,000 $11, -1 $450permo. now 6"-llll. Eve 6#aiffi -======-==
___ kitchen, cory familY, room Fixer Upper Income Unit CALL: Bob 56-1!H2 1M:t. John ~~~alty Co. Bkr: l.aauna Nl11uel 3707 with enclosed court yard. 2629 H~ Blvd., C.M. Plus 8 yr old S BR,' 2 ha • ~ ,=;;;,.--=:=--::::o--::= "-'-•
Und" 1.15.000. REDUCED $2500 hom•. Plom lncludod '°' Laa""" IMch 1705_ ·--w/-~ N. Tustin 2 BR. """-""'· polio. 3 BR, lam rm, 21' Ba. Frplc. Fantastic View "ring" NEWPORT HEIGHTS W1TII .., "llxln'I. To ... ea11 M>:o ~.:i=:;:..;o;_;;;;;.;..--~ 3 m;-; BA ram. •""" rrom Lido Shop. bll-tna. ,.11o. $250. 213-GA
or Bay & (kean Ja!~ SPRING A TINY OCEAN VIEW---r. Ddancy Real Eo-rm. Part ru.;.. l1BO. Mulls. w.... • ........ pi ._
hath Day &: Night _,.a ._ Large light and airy livina: tate. 673-3770 or mMM Jtet. SU--8944 Eve 54S-51l2. I :RE=N"T"A-:-L~S-----
loum """"~· •tyloo ...... ~11' room. kitohen with &II built· I====== ]. 11111: a BR. 2 ba ....... "'" Newport Hol•hb 3210 Apb. Fumlollod prach\:d.LIY new •• anutime tns. Big, big 3 car a:araie frplc., w/w; children OK. •
j Bedrm, 3 bath home 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. with alley entrance .• Tb! Income Property ....... Brobr 53M9llO 2 BEDROOMS. tittplace, 2 Generel 4000
$93,500 -F~ished MANY years a.go a young Real Eataten 646-nn South .r Hwy .•~• ;:;;;;;;;~;,;:;;";;--;-:-;= car car. bl.t·ins, $175 Scenic
at 1019 Dolphin Tarr1ce carried hil cha.rmi .. a M&-2313. · 2BRborneplus1 BRll.entaL n.&L ·-· 0 $175; 4 BR., 2 i., fncd. Properties 675-5726 RENT • I • T man ~ .... 1.;:;;;;;;~====== all -~ •J"' 900 yd. w/w. ~n &: peU 1n rv1ne err•ce bride into this beautiful 3 SACR!ftnl Walk to MJUl'll• _., --=..-:,,.-OK. Broker 5J4..6980
Call \\'all Hallberg BR home. That era has \,L; e&I)' tenns. • 4M I Wutcllff 3230
Res. 642-4290 gone&: with 3 children later Or1nve Coast Property • In C..te Meta iloo
3 Rooms Fumltvro
$25 Month · ki a -w villa 332 M•...., ... rlte r.i~ 67J.8550 MONARCH BAY • ,_ ,.,_ p" ---------3 BR., dlning rm., family is now see ng . .... . Owner's Custom 3 BR. L.R., -•-' .......... ..... u1111 '""" 2 Ba.. ti close
A true muterp1ece,_ marble D.R. \V/ (rplc, Crpts & drpe. on double vate area, a muterpitce ot a.BAN 4 BR house, Kood ::~;. 1;;p~.; Fncd.
FULL OP'nON TO BUY
(Reftiguaton Available)
No deposit o.a.c. entry, marble ~place, XI.nt cond. Nr Westclill shp'r 2 NICE Hou.el Early Callfonrla deila:n ere-locatlon. $225/rnonth. Avail yd. Water le gardener paid,
walnut paneUed _olfice, ter-& schls. Shake roof, sprink· lot So. of Hwy. 673-4l69 atina'. a ~·ann le ~ Feb. L 540-5113 Lae. $350 Month 60-8839 ~:'rtati.':·eaf~s~~ri::1 1 ~ lers, ac54 •• t82f.ey, ~~7·,,~· 1351 ~~vie~~~~= 1re: .. mr:: ~. ~O Coron• d•I Mar 3250
H.F.R.C.
Furniture Rentala
landscaped. $26,250. apaciouai beamed Jlvina: nn. Vfrrinla PL 56--2771
1169 Augusta St. ~ dinins rm, 4 bednne NEAR new 3 Bdrm, 2 bath.
Retriprator ' stove in.
eluded $300 mo, yr I y.
Sal~bw-y Rlty. 673-6000
DAILY PilD1' WANT ADS
517 w. 19th, CM. 54&-J48t
1568 w. Lncln, Anhm Tlt-.2300
545-9116 Bayfront Duplexu (hu,ae muter suite), den w/
Bayview Condominium SlOO,IXK> -2-thrff BR's FP. 4 batM, heated pool. EASTSIDE
WATERFRONT
NEWPORT SHORES
Owner mO"Ving back to L.A. $115,000. 3 BR&: Two BR'• Golf course, beach clubhouse RUSTIC l BR, 2~ BA, drpd & crptd. with Fireplaces & tennis court available •
Charming custom-built 3 Bed-6%. % Transferable loan. Walker Realty $179,000.
room and dining in plctur-$56,000 Owner 644-2370 3336 Via Lido 615-5200
esque setting. Natural open·~~""""!!!!!~""'~:" beam cellines. hardwood 1 ~ Professionally decorated 4 Doon & u.ed brick fireplace 2180 SQ. Ft. 4 8<1nn. 2 Ba.
BR. 2~2 baths, many extras. $26 500 • F 0 r appointment extra lge llvine rm w/frplc.
$48,500 -make of.fer call TltE REAL ESI'ATERS Dln rm, panelled beamed
OCEAN FRONT APART-
MENT -The 1urf at )IOUt"
front door I Tennis court &
1Wlnunin& pool available, 2
bednns, oonvertible ~. 3 Cheshire Reil Estate 646-nn or 546-2313 fam rm. w/frplc. Oosets
67J..2503 642-3615 galore? Lge master suite ' IMMEDIATE POSS w/pullman & walk In
LIOO REALTY, INC. ::"!::: .. t bar -169,500 !urn-
3400 Via Lido 67J.883tl ·TURNER ASSOCIATES
OPEN SAT/SUN Ownor bailing'"'-Go.-geo"' d.,.t. 13,."1 '""""""""· 7% INT. 16'/. OOWN 3 BR pool home. Name your $37,000 FHA App r a is a L .... 3 BR. h I · Rd Charming • Compa"'· 25271 C amp a1n terms. Fantastic residential ~6'2-~2637;:::;'-===:-:-::>=~ l% BA. Frplc, Iara:e 1unny
Capistrano Highlands area. CALl.. MR. MYHRE IDEAL FAMil.Y HOME patios. Modem kitchen. 45'
4 BR 2 baths, den, dining 540-1151 (open eves) Heri· Near Mariner's Park. 3 Br, Jot. $47,500. Owner will
rm, pool, view. $38.500 tage Real E:&tate extra Jg. 20' x 20' family finance. 675-2643
DAVIDSON Realty nn 11( ... Ex. '"""· F•"" -------546-5460 E 54&.6142 COZY 2 BR home near New-de 'patio. Spac. kitch. bk Huntington Buch I 400 '-ii; .... i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'ii"ii· ;;;;;;;....., port Heights. Cul de Sac p 0 r c h, sep. dble gar.
• street, large R-2 Jot with OWNER $36 500. 191 2 3 UNJTS (•2 BLDG, room '°'"'"tal Unit, $19,000. n.borah. Ln. """"31
Graham Realty French Provlnciol
l!XXI sq ft. 5 years old, f~ll Near N.B. PQst Ole. 646-2414 Large U-shaped Door plan.
price $21,500. Owner ~ill Back Bay cul-de-sac. Please
carry 1st TD @ 11/i% m-EASI'SIDE -BRING YOUR call for appt. 646-«14
terest. PAINT BRUSH. 3 BR home
Newport on quiet street. Needs
tender-loving-care. La r I e
lot &: priced "u is'' $21,'150 . . , .Dtlt• Jlnl £stott
Victoria CALL 54()..115l (open eves) FOR Sak; $10,00J, on
Heitqe Real Ella~ Ba,yfront, attractive 1 BR
646-8811 BY OWNER. Newly redec trtr ' cabana w/new ci'ptg
3 Br. 2 Ba. Pleaaant settled thruout. Refri& & new stove.
MEAOOWS HOME
BeauWul 4 bedroom, 2~~
bath, family room home on
large corner. Built-ins, car-
pelin&", Pakl5 Verde• 1tone
fireplace. Heavy 1hake roof.
$29,950. .
SHARP AND CLEAN
• -2 bath, lamlly
room • kitchen with Ill elec-
tric bulli-hw. <>rl"""< ... .u...,.111,905:1.aw-.
· w.,.tword
, .. 1 ......
682 No. Coast: mvd.
Lquna Beach <ntJ 4M-1177
Hoodymon Spocl1l1
Income Unttl
Loe. on Oceanskte ot Hwy,
150 yds !nm Beach. 4. Ja;e
Apt. unit., needJI: paint Ii:
rood reneral cleanup. ro.
TENTlAL INCOME EX.
CEEDING $10,000 ANNUAL-
LY Price $69,950.
MISSION REAL TY .c94-(713I
985 So. Coa1t, Lquna
Laguna Niguel 1707
DELUXE 3 Br. 2 Ba.; pro..
tea. lndlcpd. I: decorated;
ln exclualve MOOU'Ch Ba,y;
kwely ocean view; auto.
water 90ftener 6: e1ec. pr .
doora; 1 yr. new. $59,400.
with R % k1an. Owner (1)
2 BR. Garap. Carpet,
drapes, 1tow. Fenced yard.
Older couple. $125. 646-5729
Fer Dally Pilot Want Ad&.
Dia11424611 BRING~TS!
HOLIDAY PIAZ&
DELUXE. Spaoious t-Bdnn.
Furn. apt $135 Plt111 uW.
Heated pool. Ample parldna
No children.No pets
196.IPomona,CM -
DIME· A· LINE
WANT ADS
Sl'IC:IAL ''PllSON •TO -l'IRSON" WANT ADS
APPHr In Wookond Edition Only
(Dollvorod S.tvrdoysJ
DIME-A·LINE ADS NOT ACCEPTED IY PHONE
DIME-A"-LINE 2 LINES ................ 2 DIMIS •
3 LINES .. • • . .. . .. .. . . • . 3 DIMIS, Et-. * No Item For Sale :o ·ver $25 *
-CASH RA TE -Enclooo your di-, dollors, chock or monoy ordor with
yeurad.
-,., your od lo quollfy tho DIME·A-1.INE roto, you MUST lncludo
prlco In "For S.lo" odo boc.uM Including prlao Inc,..... ...,Its.
-~. COINnorclol flrmo moy not toko -nt• of thll -"1 .-
-You moy nm 11 mony llnoo 11 pu wlllll. H tho ....,... "-not 1m
o""'" -· print .,. typo your od on o pi. of plpir ond moll It, t. ....... with plytMnt In· fvll (Or llrlng It In~ Count 20 lolten ond .,._
::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::::::;j area. FfP!c, nan wood bltn Pri.-beach &: club facilities. ,..,~..,~~~~~~""' kit. Hdwd Jln. Patio. ~-~25!~6~"''.!548-5~~21:;!0~==-[·~~~~~~~~~ (~. -2 Units Entsldo Auume IBA 5'.% -msrro:ss SALE/LEASE GROWING FAMlLYll ~ 2 BR each. F'ift:p2ace, hard-GOOD LOCATION $23,0I. Prine only. 546-9391 Nwpt. Bcb. -l Br. 2 Ba. Hen'• a aoraeous:. 4 bedroom Ocean Front BmM
-le uch lino ond lftCIOM • dlmo fw uch lino. .
Uoo --for Heh lotter, pvnctvlllon morlt or -
No Allllr .. lotlont * -Coplotrono laoch 1725
wood noon, dou.b&e p.nge. 1.ARGE 2 BR. 1% BA con-Frpl. Bltns; % blk. beadli tune, Sbup ttJrou1bout. C BR J BA 1'75.000
1 • Like new •••••••••• $25,500. OPEN SUN 1 • 4 dominium. Full Price Make offer. Owner. 548--8315 Great lfta bell' ICbooll and Jick lbplll Rtllty ~"' 2124 E. Ocean Blvd. SlJ.900. Will caJT)' a aecobd *BAY VJE\V Fee k>t 85' ~~-::u,: Geo. Nubell, AAodate t: Home & Businaa C·l Bilbo. Peninsula for% of t!W-down payment. x 195• w/ plans. $31,900. •-tn•--" •--at 5"~ MlS2 Dobeny Park Road I;' Excellent for accountant, 3 Bedrooms, 3 baths &t6--6fll aft 2 PM Otmtt 543-7249, ~ :;i I.MY~ ;G~ month. Opp. Tbritty Drue Store r-beauty e:alon, antiques, etc. p!UJ !amity room BY OWNER -&«Ide 3 Br. GREAT BUY •--"··.a-, all. "nlil '-ttl ---'OH=.-'Tol.;.;_. --------J-lome inclOOes ·:BR 2.baths. RICHARDSON 2 ~ N&turtl wood bltn ~ ..
'1:. doobi•g ........... $23,500 kitchen; ulility porch: Bcaot. 4Bdnn.2~lp Walker & Lee Dono l'olnt 1730 -l-+-+-+-t-1-i-+-++-+-t--i-t-+-+-+-t-ir-I
• GENCO REALTY .......,, REALTY crptl, ""'-Clooe to ocbla pool. $5.l,500. . OPEN DAILY 12 le 2
!' 628 w. 19th ..... ,. C.M. 675-4031 & ..... IZi 500 5f3.-0244 19D Ed'-
' ' · N-rt Hgts. 1210 ' ••• r I bdrm• •"'· 2 bathl, pool, t: ON THE IEACLC IMMACULATE 3 BR. or 2 ~ ()pin Eomi. 5f0.fil411 15 x 35. $35,cm. :m51. *°' -l-+-+-t-+-t-1-+-t-t-+-+-1-t-+-I-+-+_,..,_ b' n OCEANYIEW ' "'"· Cti>ts. t1rpo, lo,...., EAST SIDE cosr• ME&\ WALK TO BEACH uB "'· -
• i' Exclu.s.lvt! Orllll Cove borne • blk fl!noe. $21,500 er take NEWPORT HGTS. AREA 2 BR TOWftbouM. Bullt·ln ========= -1-+-+-f-+-f-J-+-f-l-t-+-J~t-+-J-f--+-,f-'~ year arowxl Hvtrw • belt 2 BR. 2 Ba. 1 block over F1lA . &clan. $139 mo. ALL THIS AND R2 elect. NJW8 • oven, dlsb-0.llX• fer Sale 1'75
J • Harbor area. 2 BR. 2 Be, to beach, $29,500 S48-96&9 $25,500 Wiiber, exptnltw w/w ~
, prloOO to ..n r..t et • 169.500 George Wllllomaon 1 Bl!. _....,,, tt-2 lo(, quiet Oianntr,r 3 bedroom or 2 poll, -d,._ ..,.... NEW DUPLEX
t By appt mllY 613-4350 RNJ.~. m~ 1t., oeU" 8Chcd.. by owntt, =· ~t., ~'II.~ td pra&, doubls tartP· Dtltoxfl Gold Mec1allion 1>11-
; CORBIN-MARTIN $21.000 . ...._ bullt·ln .. '°"""' alr heol 11Ull0 lllll ..... -1111/-..... ~ 3 BR. ..... jl«Nli'1NT NiO~~~"EJ'I ! REAL TORS Tbla ...ir ,.,,,,...,.,. home ,.....,q, ....._ w/Viow or ocean a 11a1. T%
'( J036E.CoulHWy;CdM 10-UNITS MOol Doi Mor 1105 be loond """ ru • ,,,._ lft•ll<mll.11171 e
'j 675-1!66!2!!~ on 31011. Adjacent to Ocean-2 STORY. s BA. }"onn. din :"with a~ i:.r.:e i~ ~._HD\ """ :..::~Blvd., N.B. Call •
lronL 1155.000. rm. 135,ooo_ Filx: .• van. od bod< )Wd. with room tor t!!Tm'IU JU SURI ywr .,..._ ond/or phone ••mllff oro lntlvdN Jn od1
t
Balboa Rffl Estate Co. Owner. 50-llll~7riG4 a boat, campa-, °" build • .... c .• 1 AU
Daplex $24, 950 100 E. BaJOO. 81"'1 .• Bal1-"'"tat untt! 1t bu • ,..,. WOW! "-Fvm~ OAAAGI SALIS, PATIO SALES, LAWN SALES, ITC.. aro NOT AC.
-Ooota -. Honl· ma · -V-1110 =: = :' i::..:; == r!':, ":::;_ >:".,: Ror.tola to Shoro 2005 Cll'TID 11 thio .-Joi rot-. ALL .. of this typ9 wtll lie .,,....., rogvlor ;:!. ~c1ou: .. ~ ·.~.: ~ ::7""-b; ~ ~..,:., "'::., ':...,~ IV -8'tt bey In'°"" WAN!' -P'I " abore m. ...i puMlohN In tho ,..,... claalflcalMft. I bdrma • da1. Extra Wse --.. -7th at s:n.:q. Onb' moo down J Br Apt. % lib: ... bcb. kl~ .,.. in t untf. lht nn • lunlly ,,._ Hu lb "'" dty parlL Diii I A -IBA -IQ. mio w. Balboa Blvd., bol lmfe .. 0..-.... loft, lie.; for ................. rontoltl, wwlr -· -otonp ,.... lilo,boat, ._, and Wmdlll "'°P' p I -... lty
Wou..McCordlo, Rltrs. ..... bad<,....,,,_ ..., and two -. ot:boo11 .,1.U:," E"''· 5311-;m Baloo. wo•lotrl w hol, wonted ldo WILL NOT II ACCIPTID 1t thl1 -1•1 mo. ~. 18'.IO Nnport mvd., c.N. pt.q alft tor ehUdrtn. Onb-wtthln waUdna dirtanct!. F« UtPLOYU> woman to
""'TID E .... ..._ 2 blka ...., -toey • -"'inMl•t to-· wrto.: Huntln...,.n Hills ...,. pn-ho m • Dffclllno: 3 p.m. Friday l IU ............ i... --n... t p..,. ,i•• w/.ame. 5'0 Month ~ '"!!!l!!!!~'""'".":'~!!l!!!!OI r. ~~"·-c.,,,,. a .. y Tan o"r 5!1% loon. Han!-Huntl""on °IHch olllco boloro 1·30 ~m. Frld•Y = e 5IOJ:>rl e lloxl'(l2 -..odOoon.luplBR, MMlrl'I...... · r v::., ~ 3 BR 1 tie.Ua, l&ml!y ~ Dally PUo1 13xU tam. rm. mw p&lnt in * YNG male >t would like
71J..Poppy 211"'plaonl3000dn-6\\%PUCE ...................... LS.UGlorTIIA. nn.w /bathcr ........ Call *No Uem For Sol• Joan •th a..>tor loon • total p. n t • ""1 .,. ........ -DAILY •RASHEAR REAL TY 14$-11'1 ti' 3,30 pm or bd 'IO
M6-.'tl5.'5 f190/mo. Owrn S.S-7122 PILC7I' c\uiimed tc-5611 UT.en Ews. -.1111 lOam 1-...;------------------------•'
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er$25
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II anyone stijl thinh o woman's only place is in
the kitchen, we probably should tell you that
some of the writers, photographers and news
an!!!lysts whose work we treasure most ere
women.
In fact, the 'Associated Press, one of two
worldwide news services which speed new;;
from around the globe doily to DAILY PILOT,
readers, has 60 feminine "newsmen" who cov ..
er politics, finance, entertainment and fash ·
ions on both the national end the international
scene.
Th.ey make the news more interesting for ou r
readers. Maybe just because they ere women.
That's theit bog.
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Of course . tlie DAILY PILOT iust wouldn't be the DAILY PILOT without a very special group
of women on the local sti!lff -the women who specialize in keeping other women informed.
They write and compile the Social Notes section of the paper. They're specialists at producing
the 11rinted "girl tolk" that keeps women women. And that's important, loo.
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BEA ANDERSON
Soclol Not11 Soction Edihlr
11
JUDY HURST
Alli1tont Soctlon Editor
••
PAMELA HALLAN
Socloty $1111 Wrlttr
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JOOEAN HASTINGS
Hunllntton llMch Sodoty Editor
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JEAN COX
i.., ..... -Society Editor
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RENTALS
Aph. Furnllhtd
Gontrol 4000
IJJO: 1 BR., pool, carport.
Available llQW!
Broker~
$115: 1 BR. available now!
Bab)' O.K.
-~
COlll M... 4100
e lNTRODUCINCi e
Vaf :1:J l.iere
01'1lJlge County's Beautilul
NE\V Adult livinr complex
CUslom fum or unfum.
Slnglea • 1 Bdrm • 2 Bdnnl
• Contemporary Custom
O..Jgn
• Luxurious Gardens
• Bubbling spring & brook
6401
GARAGE BLACK -Poodle l>UPPY OWN A PROFITABLE BUSINESS I mo., '/lcalO.-r'aPIUa
For teue, deluxe 1888 sq. rt. =.:Ft:1:_0~~ RUN IT IN YOUR SPARE TIME on eota O.k:O Ir 'Warner,
4 BR., 21> ba. Apt. F>pk .. :ms Pl ... nU. .... freul YOU CAN EARN $710.!)0 A MONTH OR H.B. RewU.S. 592 ·'31'
Huntl11tton BNch "'°" :::.-;;.,:~·dbl~·~.,~; • 636-4120 • MORE IN JUST A FEW HOUllS EVERY WEEK Eves. G3Ml2ll .
i:,:: oU kite/ Dllhwuhe dbl VIC Avoqt.00 SC. f mo. Shep.. 1'~ u RN 1 s If E o or UN-1· r, WANT Tu rent earage ln If YOW' 9 to~ Job·puts a celling on y~ur earn-HUAk;y pup. White 2/blk
FURNISHED oven. pool. Convenient 10 Balboa. Arta of Bay Island logs and limits your abl11ties, here 1S an op· J)l.tch over righl eye .
2 bedroom, t bath 1tudb, lhop'i·· schools & recrea. or 6th & Bay. 673-4680 portunily ta1lor made for you. Rrwar'li. 369 Avocado, C.M.
,.,, -•Jon 1 block "' 5 ~·N· LY • ...,5 MONTH ========= We are looking for distributors to ref.resent 546.8633 ~ ·• -..i. -Points & town A wun""" 'f"'• Income ProPfftY 6000 JAN 16 Small -•--• r--"-.. ~ .i. stores, theater, 1'9staurant:. 835 AMIGOS WAY National Pizza Company, the larges, moet • n~ Ula.lllS Whtddya WJ11tr Wlmldy1 Got!
trom $130. 1101 EU~. Apt Newport Beach l 0°/o RETURN successful and fastest growing company ol ~tlerin.. Bil< .!.oo """',,;' SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
o. W-8303."' c!lil ownor Mpr. Apt.~9--NET NET NET its kind. Cbolre/flea oollar. Ana NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
642 283:5 F r ltee •--8 N f JI 5 I "Sam" Vic Ba! llL Rewan:I. ~111 Ro~ -Corona dtl Mar 5259 ° care .. ....,me -oth ng to se . erv ce company secured ac-.....--1•
1 BR. Mobile home. Across ilorcs. all lea&ed with 2 to counts. One time minimum investment of 67S-l1"4 5 Linet -5 t1mff -5 buik1
from beach. 1 er 2 Adults. 13 years to expl.tatlon. Tax $2,390 to $4,360. We furnish all advertising, BLACK A aold German l-WMt -...!'.ui,:~r;-•~ ¥Ul~~,u~ ....,., lot .,.., Golf, pool, aauna. Sp 2l4 ~ _ pruteclion clauses. $21,000 b d' ;n• d t •·~·I Shephud. Male w/~e :a-vou1t ~ 111d1e, edclr'ftl. _, •n. of edY41rlilla
Driltwood, 21462 Pacillc C&t ~ .., net return per year, For in-mere an lS...oc an suppor maw.i.ia. chain. Friendly. GoQd ....,.OTMINO 1'<>11: IALe-T1t.&oe1 ONLYI .
Hwy fJB. ~3400 !1,. 11 __ --~ furmalion on this or otbc.r If you are at the crossroads of your career ~ward. 6f5..2198. 491-1512 PHONE 642.5671
• 42' Pool & th.erapy bath
• Actltity room/bllliarda
•Sauna Bath
UTILITIES PAID 'l!!!! ~stmcnts ~udina units and are looking for a money.making oppor· LOST: Siame&e Cal, 6 mos To Piece Your Tr•der's Per•dlM Ad .
2 Bdrtns. furD. H«I. pool ON TEN ACRES tunity investigate how you can run your own old .. vie Balboa Penn. CONTINENTAL, rare 4 dr, Trade 17 ft Performer out·
802 Knoxville, Apt D, 1-1.B. 1 &: 2 BR. Furn & Unlurn Walker & Lee r.JJ·. Levine business in your spare time. Write Today. In· Family dlmaughtt Ca 11 air concl 1964 Conv Sedan. board; (flberalass> for fl.Ill
• Puttin& i'J'e'-R \ • 536-2914 • Frplcs / Prt I Patios I Income Investment Dept, elude name, addrw and telephone number, 6Th-4417 aft 6 pm. Beaut &: welt cared tor or part payment on' carpet.
1 BLOCK front ocean. 1 a: Pools. Tennis • Contnt'l Bk· 545-9451 Complete descriptive material will follow. LOST: Mixed male Terrier, cond. Orig cost $10,500. Trd drape1, J.andacapiJI&:, teno-• Outside Gas BBQs
• Encl. ea.rage• &. storage
CENTER of town • between
Bay & Ford/Harbor & Ne..,.
port
2 BR apta., heated pool :iL :.aho~:''~\t:I'(:('~26ll FOR THE CAREFUL JN. NATIONAL PIZZA COMPANY !~lncaru& "", .. '.,"·,"',·,"". ~ namv,:. -. eq. ln bse. KI S.5050. ing or ?? 642-4980 att '1 pm
blt·ins, rec room. Inter<"Om VESTOR, fully le85ed store ~ ... 66 Scad A Bout · 3 BR 1% ha, Mootleello
music. Agt. 536-88'14 (MacArth\D' nr. Coast Hwyl & oUice bldg on major 104~7 Lt6~rty N'pt. Sch. Pen. fi7l-87'!J.3 trailer, ..ieti:a 2 + ':1t!: Condo, cpts/drpt, blt·lnl. 2
1 & 2 BR .lum apt, nr bch 3 Modem 1 BR Aptfl $140 10 high'A·ay in Orange Cnty of. OX LOST 1/14/69 Silver gr e Y sleeps 4. Stove, sink, ice-J>OOb. $3900 equity, Trade
$125 up. l:'rec utillti.es. fl50 mo. Available almost fered for sale w/reasonable St. Louis, Missouri 63132 Female Poodle vie Jacar&ll· box. Trade for 8' ca.bover !or 3 or 4 BR home, TDt..
Y
SEA LARK SJ6.3TI7, 53S-7282. 53&-1366 immed. Don v. Frankllo, terms to qualified buyer. Area Code 314423-,1100 da & Toucan F.V. Reward. ct.mper. fi.45.2100 aft 4.. car or? Owr./Agt. S46-6680
200" Parsons, Of 642-8670
JU tr, 673·2'l22 Shows good return, approx ASK FOR MR JAY 962-1224 eves/wkends. I-lave level building lot near MOTEL Laguna Beach 47051~==~~=~~~ 10 yrs old, xlnt const Call , VERY Shy Blue Persian ~tt,.dto~h~velnto~~ ... ? BIG BEAR CITY, CAIJF.,
STUDIO Apt. $100, util. incl., Ag t k nd 1,,.,..,.,....., ........................................... : ... ,,,. '""''"' ...,~ ... ,. Sl500 ,__ cl FO" WEEKLY RATES 1 BR, 2 blks to beach. no cooking. Approx. 2 blks en eves ot w-{! s at I! female cat, 2 yn. Vic Mesa C.Ounty's largest read tr&d· u= le ear, n
230l Newport Blvd., CM Reduced rent to June 15:. to heh. 673-258i 835-757Q REAL ESTATE BUSINE.~S •nd Ven:le Pacesetter. 54G-ll44 tng post_ and make a deaJ. ~ used car:-
• 646.7445 e . * 494-5380 * ·30 UNITS Generol FINANCIAL GERMAN Sbephml, b1acic & 5'8--047\! 1-.-.-N-t.cA;_L_>cc.=---Huntington BNch 5400 SALE OR EXCHANGE brown female one raised Corona dcl Mar. Steps 10 Palm. Desert Cond. fum, $25 Wk. u-p Apt1. Unfurnlahed 6,, tln1es gl"OM. Owner need• Industrial Rent•I 6090 Bus. Opportvnftl11 6300 toe. D~ Polni 493-4179 bea?h. 3 BR 2 ba. Vac 15M beaut grow:ids. heated pool,
Ex new larger ta,x ba~. Good eqwcy. Want clear lot or 3C M, trade 20 M -·•tu for
• Studio & Bach apts. CL~SIVE · ·-"I 2 BR ho CM ~-v •Incl Utils &: Phone serv. Gen•r•f 5000 Condition. No children ex. SECURITY· Per'°"'ll 6405 ... ...._ me area. good lot or lots in area. De. e Maid Serv"" ·TV avalL ON-THE• EACH <ellent income history. Only * (QSJA MESA * PRESTIGE·PROFIT 1---'-·----546-3928 Eve. 6'UJ185 Bkr, tails oail 499-23t9.
•New Cale & Bar VEN DOME 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts. UJ5,0CIO. Call now Walker One oi the largest Toy Mfg. WED. SING~ES . H1-de.ert tot or lot&. w/ter-Want Laa:una. Beach prop.
2376 Newport Blvd. 54&.87$ Luxury living to please the ~v!:tmc~· ri:P~~S:~ Now leasing new industrial C.O. in the field haa openinp DATE NIGHT rlfic potential,. J.Z!.' front. = 6F~~~ '•~~~
CHATEAU La POINTE tnost discriminating. No\I' bldr. ll50 sq ft, office " for Dlstributon1. Food % Price 1 to 9 $2fAXI val ea, aU util. Trd/ • ................... ~.-.
Lovely turn. 2 BR apts. Of1· IMMACULATE APTS! available at rest room. $1$/mo. $175 JMr wk part time FRI. Sf NOLES well pl&ctd hs! tr'l.r in C.M. Exclusive are a. near
street parking, cru)>Orts, Hid ~ii~T ~~~~~y n. H f' I n!~t ~~~~~!kM;>~~n~ R. Nattreu Rltr. 642·l-485 $400 per wk full time The Gold Tones & Elaine area. 548-83n schools. churches. 494-78'1
pool, Adults, no pets. $150 SECTIONS AVAILABLE ,lie Un JOg ('0 Trade $50,000 equjty for 3000SQftwarebouse&oUlce *No Selling SAT,URDAY He. 6 It t ft'' 211.. acres Rosamond. Near 1941 POMONA AVE., C.M. *Service comp&ny-establ a.e-Sensatlonal New Orchestra ve un s: wan sm..., A.V. Frwy $3750, value. Will Close to Shopping, P•rk ca.sh, units, house or ? + 6000 sq ft pa~ & fenced counts. Chain auper mrkta, ' DANCERS CORNER house Oi&ta Mesa or Hunt· trade" for Jeep, Truck, Boat,
Gracious Adult Living • SpaciOll!J 3 Br's, 2 Ba Paci'fi"c ~ Box 505 Slll13et Beach yard. 1855 Laguna Canyon ington Besch area. Walker TD or ., ., 1 Bdrm I ts dra • 2 "->--ms ~ phone (213) 678-4721 Rd. cn4) 494-&166 or (n4) chain Drua: stores, major 1438~ N. Main at Edinger & Lee Mr Le lne . • . .•
'I w w carpe ' P' Dl."\.ITTJU Dept. store•. SANTA ANA 542-9300 • ~ Broker, 5464601 e~~~u;· APTS. : ~ i:i~11i;:iJ::~1s .,,,,,",,k....U""!~<n!".,.4l'!'&n.= ... ,...,... I ~7680 * :.e~ pre1o LICENS~:o-. DON'T JUST WJsH tor· SaD Oemente lnolme 2
145 E. 18th, t.M. 642-3474 1845 An1helm Ave. 7lJ ~)° ~~4Sll.tl, 161/2°/o ~ ~ ~ph~t l:. *No e:<pel1enc-e necessary Spiritual ·~. adYlc9 something to fumW>. )'OW" ~~::S. '"imloblmi! ~ 0;
• ~E 2 l~OO~ST!i!i!AIME!;~SA~!!!!!!!!"'i!!!·282;•1 I :~~'j""\;;;;;:i";;::;;;:;:;;: NET RETURN Call collect 213: 78&.sG33 Co '·te Co 1 .... 1 .. ;.,,. •-or: all matters. 180 S. El bo ttnd 1 b ......, , BR. 2 Ba., pool; * mp..: ....... -,. • earn· Real, San O t me··.· grea uys 11maller property. MW olf.
util. paid. $14.5; also Baell. VACANT immed possession Fully occupied 4 plexes In Co. 1upport <f9'l~. 10 AM •1;(,~ e. in todays ClauUled Ads. er. Call -494-3262
$100. Adults 35 or over, no FOR SALE OR LEASE 2 BR 2 baths, w / w center of Huntington Beach. Lota 6100 *Full chain store merchan--.c...=....:.;.;.;.;..c;..;.;.;...1
pets. 2115 Placentia Ave.. Ch•nnel Rfff carpeting, draperies, built· 61-\:% financing, for further I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; dising plan MASSAGE, Spe<:lal, $6, * * * * * '* Cl\-1 548-2407; 646-4292 Penthouse Apt. ins & relrig. $140/mo. details, call Bill Goodall. I 1 * All Co. beni1lta. aroup Ins., Execu_tive Salon
2 B.R. New furn, cpts, drps. ~ pe~ n10, ~~lias!:~sbpar-TRADEWINDS RLTY. ="'=·7=fil=G.="='n=I=. ===o. I IA YCR!ST hospitalization " retire· • Femal~~fu wanted • S;.E;..;R.;.V_l;.Cc:E..::D.;;IR;;.E;.C;.T;.0;.R;;.l.;_ II :5:.:E::;R:.;Y:.:IC;:t:.;D:;l::;RE:;C:;T:.:0:.:R:.;t:._I Beam ceiling, bit-ins, pool. e.-y. ury 842·50ll S.U.5012 536-8065 Unusually large lot, beauti· ment. -
Adults. $1.50. 2772 Maple St. Realtor. 673-6900 Want Priv•cy? New! Business Property 6050 fully located .on quiet Bay-THE MAN OR WOMAN AP-• Selective Singlea • Bebyaittlnt 6550 Gerdenlng
~------
642-4807; 54()-5566 • $145; 2 BR., J ha. 4--plex. ONE BR'• NEAR OCEAN M •-M. crest street, You own the pointed to fW thil position, What type ot companion arel _ _;. __ :;_ ___ _
" -LA.tile wkln Viejo nr. must ha ~lire for 1·-kt CalJ BACHELORS 1 l BR. Bltns., w-w, children O.K. $127 mo ($14.2 Furnl garage A · land. Asldng l28.SOO. ve a _..,e you see ng? WILL babysit My home. ANTHONY'S
II . on y! Bruker 534-69&:) 202 • 14th. 536-1319 673-1784 leuatseo"'o"r"b···"d2-tloOO•ullA~. Roy J. W•rd Co. proflta &: be able to bmst a 642-§676 Noon to 8 PM Fenced yard. fey 20 month G•rdtn S.l"Yl-v rm, kit, dinette, ba, WI -(Baycrest Office\ minlmuxn ALOOHOLl~ Anonymous old daughter needs a com· -=~ shower. .$13 0. Costa Mua 5100 1 BEDROOM APT, private c.zone property. 837--5178 1842 Santiago Dr. 646-1550 $3995 . Phone 542-721T or write to panion. Between 1 and 2~ 646-1948 ,
patlo, frplc, bit-ins. garage, For a personal tnteMew call P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. preferred. Days. Near BUDGET LANDSCAPING
NE\VLY dee l~i BR. apt. . crpts & drps, $125. mo. 8usineu Rent•I 6060 SACRIFICE 100, 65 .,. .. collect, ""l'80!1 to ""'J'IOn: Harbor Shopping "-·•-r. Prune··· Plant··· Prepare Excellenl. park • like sur-&17 7,13 k -• 1 6 x l ' ~ ..... ,... """"'"' Mon'""· "-'·te Like ne\v furn w/ desk. -w -euus or at · James Alex 17141 644--1700, A t 6410 Experienced. 548-1395 ... ...., ,........,, nance
Drps, w/w crpts. $125. 523 ~un=~ ~~~ts requit· 2 & 3 BR., 2 bal!IB, priv, ~:N~n de~us~ar 1!~~~ ~!lat~~~al~~~a. Be~ Fri, Sat, Sun only. nnounwmen • --· "' 'EE><Np. GHorticulturilt
Bernard St. C.!-.1. 548-2711 Discriminative Tenants patio; heated pool. Former beauty shop moved full price • 10% down. VlKKl'S Party Time Frida)' Sri~ MIMnry, etc. ~ 'S nrdening Service
BEAUT. tae. 2 Br. l~ ba.. 962-8994 to larger quarters. Owner'54fr7843 FOR SALE. LONG BEACH, January 24th 7 PM til • 6560 Comp. yard care" cleat).
studio, pool, priv. patio. $185 l~t ~go~~ AVAIL. feb, !st; no Reasonable rent. Ca 11 . DISTRESS SALE l~ Santa Fe. t ~ntl&I Food, pmes \\'ith "Oly" BUII. ·• :r· ~~r. Reliable. Costa 2310 Santa Ana 645-2933 children; 2 BR. mobil home. main eross •tree v• town. on tap. C.Ome check our . D, ~a, Repair esa· P • area. 0 n l y.
ATIR. 3 BR 2 ba MA.RTINICf'UE $100 Mo. 536--4478 Hutchens, TI4: 838-65ll N'pt. Beach lot. 548-8.115 Have Cale (33 seating prices. 1791% New po r I Brick. block, concrete' :w&.2531 or 646-43:13
apt., ·• GARDEN Am. SMALL Reasonably priced 6150 capacity) now leased + l mvd. CM erpnlJ'Y, no job too mnalL AL'S Gardening Ser>1ice ~~~: 8~ 18th ._ Santa Ana 5620 Store Buildings in buay _R:':":ch;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I bedroom apt, + 2 bedroom ' · • • Lie Contr. ~ Lawn rnaintena.noe, Pldeo. • Santa Ana, C.M. Corona de! Mar location. • borne + uphaJt parking F I 6412 ine" cleu ups. 646--3629
EASTSIDE, Quiet; 2 Br. Call Mrs. Hendenion MS-5542 VERY Clean 2 Br. 2 Ba. · Call lfutcbens, n4: 838-6.5ll H D ? area. $55.<XXI. complete • Do un•r• 1 C1..,enttrin9 6590 JAPANESE Garde .. i-, ~
elec. bltns, patio. AdWts on-1Tn Santa. Ana, Apt 113, C.M. Gnrden Apts. Prv patio. OFSeS Or OCJS not dlaturb tenantll. For in-..... r""'
ly. 36l·B Ogle, 642-Im Pool. Nice area. 546-1525 6 DOUBLE stall garages 2 Acres, close-in to Fwy., set formation·-:.~ Jean Van WESTMINSTER Mail!Cloanupl . L631a ~·capt 0 1 ~===~==~-' NEW GARDEN APTS. and/or car lot fnr lease. ...... Bo~ J Sml CARPENTRY -· e NASSAU PALMS e L B h 5705 '. iO H "P to,...,. horse• & dog•. 4 ~• '"'"· •an th MEMORIAL PARK 1 & 2 BR. _Pool 1 & 2 BR. Modern kitc hen w/ agun• eic J.....UW rent. 19 arbor Blvd. BR. older lrame house, bam Realtor. TI4: 646-3255 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job JAPANESE Ga rd en er .
177 E. 22nd st. 642-3645 range & oven, di&hwa.sher. 100 CLIFF DRIVE · C.M. 646-5484 . & 11.4. acre permanent po. FREE Standing bldg. 2 years Mortuary & Ctmetery Too Small. Cabinet in gllJ'o Complete S e r vi c 'e . Ex·
NEW 1 BR. Adults only. etc. Enclosed gar. Olympic LUXURY FURN/UNFURN STORE OR OFFICE ture, Full price $45,<XX>; For old, plus equip, revolving Complett funer•lt age11 & other cabinets. perienced. Reliable, 6U-4389
Encl gar. $!50 mo-to-mo. size poot 8-8-Que & laundry Yearly Lease. 1 & 2 Bdnns. HUNTINGTON BEACH further information,. please sign, big parking lot. C:Ost from $245 545-8175, il no &llSM!r leave Cut&: Edge Lawn
2220 Elden. G45-l25l fac. Elee & water pd, From steps to Shore 11 Shops In Center on Beach mvd. call: Glenn ThomP10n with over $SOM 9e11 for $19M. Cemetery Iott. =er!~ 646-2372, H. O. Maintenance. Licenled
$135 mo up. AdttJ.ts only. Oeeanview from every Apt. 847.all Eckhoff & Assoc., Int. 20 year rround tease on f $l50 MM808/6'5-Z110 aft C 1-B~. $~7u~e~, CarfUrn.; util. 241 Wilson, C.M. 64.2-5401 from $150 mo up. lease !)RESS shop or etc, com· l8ll W. Olapman Ave. 23M sq. ft. High traffic. lncludetr:'oowment care =========: 2~u&rks St.' g~7 LARGE Eastiide 2 bedroom, 494-2449 pletely f u r n i s h e d & Orange, Calif. Costa ~esa ~tion. Fine Everyt.binr fn one beautiful A·l Gentr•I Strvlc:ea 6612 built • in kitchen, new w/w 'R"E"A"L""E~S~T~A=~~---decorated. Newport Shores 541·2611, Eves-wknds 538-67'17 for chain operation or any. la lea coat. Carpentry, any •lze job?
NICE 1 BR duplex. Adults. carpet complete, drapes, '-. Center, $100 Mo. 642-3945 Call Real Ellta.ters 6'6-nn p ce meam Call Gordon 847~745
$97.50 Available Feb. l private patio, closed garage. General SHOPS Acreif9,----·---'-62::.00:.: ask for Van N~~~=..inster REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS
HEATING • Afr Omd. Sin
" repair, alao WNber 1: dryer repair. 24 hr mv.
842-7237 or 847...Q681 549-0833 Near major sh o PP in g Rentels W•nted 5990 Nr. Newport Pier -GE'I'TING MAR.RIED: Will 531·1725 193-2421 CABINETS, Any aize job.
$95: 2 BR., garage, nr. center.11 AdWts only. No 1-----------'-"C.: Rltr. 673-0860 CORONA: 5 Acres, .cloae-in. sell busineu in C.M. for 25 yn:. exper. 548-67U
markets & schools. 1685 :~~ffiss 40 Per mo. Bkr. WANTED Unfurn on East BeautilttJ. view. $7500 Acre. $100! complete pr l c e. SERVICE DIRECTORY MASTER carpenter, $4 per HAULING. Cleanup ganp1,
Tustin Ave .. CM: 833-1142 side C.M. clean 3 or 4 bdr, Office Rental 6070 -==Owne=='=flil="='=·"'='== 540--2106 alt 5 pm wkda,yl. hour. Remodeling. Repatn. odd jobs etc. Free eat. Jim
Gracious Adult Living 2 ba, crptd & draped with LAGUNA;;;.B_E_A_C.::H= R p 6205 anytime wlmd11. Babysitting 6550 642-6411.1 OT 536-3900 =548-5325==,,,·=anytlm=='=== 2 BR, 1~ bath, w/w carpets, bit-in kitch, no yard care esort roperty BEAlITY Shop in Costa
fireplace, spiral staircase for 2 Sr. acllts & hskpr. Air Conditioned FOR.:~-Furn "·--·th Mesa 4 stations. Must sell! MESA Vt-rde area, drop Cement, Concrete 6600 H•ullng 0730 VJE\V, elegantly furnished, and pool. No pets. Up to $275. yrly ON FORES'i AVENUE n&..i~l iouuuu<1 Make offer. 839-6632 yaur little ones ott " eo•1.;;.::.;:.:;;.;,_::.:;::;::.::.:;..:=
fireplace, garage, two beds, Mes• East Apt. lse with. depoBit ok. 646-1400 Desk spaces available tn M 0 u n ta 1 n Condominium shopping. 50c hour, weekly * CONau:rE work. Bonded CLEAN Lota. lll'qel etc.
1 bath: Washer/drier, Split 145 E. J&th 642-3474 EMPLOYED Lady needs 1 newest office bulldbts &t ,d=ee='=P'=8.=54B-==2731l==== WANTED: Off.sale liquor rates alao. Lunches are In-& Licemed. Concrete sawing Tree mniwal, damp, atp
level. $275. 54S..2394 after ~IESA WEST BR unturn Apt, beach area, prime location in downtown llcenseCalJfor -~~ ..... C:Ount.,y duded. Lota of fun, nice Phillips Cement. 54!J..G380 backhoe, till, Ir ad•.
6 p.m. e 1 BR Furn $130 to $ll0. Carport or garage Lagima Beach. Air coodl-Mount. & 0.S.rt 6210 . '"""°u;o home. Call anytime. eCUSTOM PATIOS• 962-8745
YEARLY RENTAL; 2 BR • 2 BR Unfurn, $125 nee. 64z.{l()86 aft/5 p.m. tiooed, carpeted, beautiful 2 ACRES at Yucca Valley Money to loan 6320 * 968-l3S4 * concrete 1111.wing & removal TRIM, Mdge, trees. Gen.
apt on Beach, incl. dishes ....,,. Hamil•-SI t Pl . e LANDLORDS • paneled partitioning. Two above Art Millers Western BABYSITTING in lll-Y home. State Uc. • 842-1010 clean-up, name it! I haul, etc. Inquire 100--tOth St. Apt '""' wn 8 ttcentia tranc Fro reuonable. 64J..t03>
A or B. N.B. 673-7s.11 &13-1929 646-8362 FREE RENTAL SERVJCE ~orest ~~e .• re;~:da ~~ ~18 Full price $6500. RETIRED COUPLE ~ch~~ ~ck oryi~ CEMENT work, no job too
SMALL 1 BR garage apt, CLEAN 2 Br. duplex: cpa,,===B=ro~k~"=5.1~...,.,----Mu.ncipal parking Iota. $50 --------'--IHu money to lend on lat & a week. A.Mother with ex· amall, reuonable. Free LITEHaullnc"cleanup.
w/w carpet A drps. Near drps, stv., patio, gar. $140 RESPECTABLE c 0 up t e lie( month for space. Deak 5 A NR HemeL Xlnt view. 2nd mortgage!. Call perlence. 54.9--0614 eatim. H. Stufilck. 548-8615 Reuo~ble~7area.
2244-A State. Adlts, no pets: wants 2 Br-unf rental yearly and chain: avallablt tor $5. ~· el. Wtr, game. $5500 Broker 54'7·1333 • BEST IN CONCRETE ~ Adult. $100 mo. 642-7472 in Newport/Laguna. 544-4Cill Bnsineu boura aMtrerina: $55dn.tm-mos...1oa.m.qt. -BABYSI'ITING My home. Walla pool decks floors, tl~ HauU111, MS-6490
OCEANFRONT 3 BR. Prplc, AVAIL. Ft-b. 1; 2 Br., nr. or 6J2..4673. service availi.ble lDr $10. BUSINESS. and 1 ~R;:n;:;l:..::E;:lf::lfo::.:...:L::oo:.::;:ns:::...;6::3:.:40::1 ~~=~ ~~ vr::~ _:P::•::ti.:.,;.::·.cPho:..:::.:."'::...;""851.::, ::.:.:.'-'H="==1=0:1 '===6=135=
gar. Avail Feb 7_ June 7• So. Cst. Ptavt; cpts, drps, BAY or beachtront home All •tnltiel paid uoept FINANCIAL HOME LOANS ot Harbor A Baker ~2301 Tboryk Concre.te, oo ;lob . OUMC un "I
Reas! 673-400. ~$1'5 J'i.1r. S m I th yearly lease in Newport tele~.:U,y PILOT BUL Opportunltl• 6300 Ha\.e 90% llnanclng at 7% % BABYSITTING my home 1 to small, Frff nttmatet. * APT. i:LEANING *
2 BR, 1 block to beach $115 =-=-~--~--1~Bai=boa,-,,,~are,,-'-a.~67l-;,.;;...:J00=7--2'l2 FORESJ' AVENUE lntemt. Qeck our 6.99' child, 1~ yrs. or OV'el'. Sz. • 646-1234 e Fast le,~. 6G-816C
yrly lea.se. Newport Beach 2 BR unturn. refri&erator, COLLEGE girl wants back LAGUNA BEACH ln'lestment (•pltal Pl'Ol'rlUJl "2nd TD terma.. wk. Wllaon Sehl. ·2 blb. CONCRETE work, all types,. WU IJAMS Oeanhil: Serv.
Really. 675-!&42 blt·in stove. redecorated, apt or apt to share, Call f91..948S WANTED Sattler ~ C:O. Inc. fK>.ll32 Pool dec:ka 4 cuatom. Call
new crpts, drps, $130. 568 Liz, 64~. :.,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; National Sales/Marketing Oi" ,,...,.,.n336 E. 17th St.,.., ....... WD.L babyllt tn my home 548--1324 lnconie T.. '6740 Sl'EPS To heh, mod 2 Br. \Vi!son St., C.M. 545--0700 •' W.ti has exceptional ,,..._." ~ frplc, bit-ins, adult.I, no peta 2 OR 3 BR. unfurn. hse, Ocean & Bay gan on Eves 673-7865 &ii.ll.57 by the week. Any age group C 66 0 8& A Sa.tid'lel:I Client with $19.S. yrly 642-349'.l 2 BR. iMn a.pt. fpl, cpts. 2 car gar. $l1o mo. C.M. Vi earning opportunity avail· . welcome: Colla Mesa area. -ontractors 2 Harris Tax Service. 9th )T.
drpa, bltns, patio, pool. area. 673--0140 1ews ~:~or ca~~'°'~~ Mor:ta...., T.D.'s 6345 &lz..9008 . Addillona * .Reruodellng locally. Avail. U moa. 3117
Corona def Mar 4250 Adlts. ~ pets. S}.4.5. 546-616.1 Rooms for Rent 5995 OFFICES FOR RENT test marketing in the state CHILD care, my home, vie. Fm! H. Gerw1.cJt. Llc. Ro o 1 e'v ~ l t Wa.Y~ Of.
----------12 BR. apt., clean; new cpt. WW divide to lillite tenanL of Calif we have acquired a 10% DISCOUNT Brookhurst A Yorktown, H. IJ73...6(Ml * 549-2170 "Mack" 54()..2971
\ BR Apt. extra lge BR. ~ built-ins. Inquire COLLEGE or e mp 1 o ye d RED CARn£T product' with toUnd invest· $55()0 1st TD at $55 mo 8. Age• U: days/f!\'fi * 7TII yfil *
Swedish FrplC', belOJll' lliway 1552-A CorWJCJer, CM man. Quiet. private home. • n1 • ment potential. Med. 5 fi&· ind 8% 3 yr dUI!! df.y. 96:W452 Carpet Cleanlnt 6625 A·l STENO
$175 mo. oo lease. 675-2298 '2°'e"1t,._u-.-.,.--.-Cp~i...-'-.u.--~,, NB. $12 wk. 548-J6M until REALTY .ble ·-•-·-t Ocean VJew IAt, rttm .... , ...__ ""' '---· HARBOR SHOP'G Qn'Jt. e\1!S. ··~ noon or eves. ~ noon (30 oUiccs to serve you} ures pclAI. ' .--'"v"" • Laguna Beach "'"........, ._....., "'I '"'UK"• CARPET • Furn. clelntna:· ~~$i'Z~l=ng. 1 Child Iii 6 2025 W. Balboa Blvd .. N.B. ment. 67S-598l Call ~r 497·1210 ;;:;=:-1'1i 0~~;ama,cloaec.: for 1dtY1trvict Ir. qua11b-e!Nv~~nd ~ appt. ~ 1 BR. completely ftJnl apt,
w/gar. Lease. $145 mo.
Adults No peta.. ~123
Be Ibo• 4300 '----'-----
CLEAN Baehelor Apt&.
All util Incl $'7S up
315 E. Balboa Blvd.
BALBOA 67J...9M5
673-3663 FRIGIDAIRE ANNOUNCEMENTS 5'S--Olas wori<, oall Sterll'<t for ""' P··~·-'9'; 2 BR., garagt?, nr. COLI.EGE Or working girl .......... '!"",..."'!""!"!!""'"' nd NOTICES , 'brlgb.tneut 60-85JJ your bome, long km com-
Dlll'ktts &. schools. 168a Ure on Bal Is. Kit. in * Moel Offl JET ACTION I *~ WK. Lowly home NO Girnics! Bat _.....,. c:pt btned, $15. 49t-3«22
Tuatib Avt., CM 833-1142 ttt/rm. Incl.: $55 A:to. up; em Cel Bc11.uU!ul rene\Wd Laundry. (F Ad "'-_._ 0Hd1 tome little com· ,.._.,~ • llOMB SERVICE e
DUPl..EX 2 Br.; 304 with me&.. $12.5. 6"rr>-3613 Single or suites, Air cond· 28 wuhen, ll dryers, 2J lb. Found ,... 1) V'tVU pankm1t fOr my 2 yr old. A fum ci.. a.t 11 FEDERAL 6 STAT&
Broadway $1.lS. Call after ROOM I bolll'd, tndry, gar. ltlonlng, parking, 8(!CJ"(!tarial nsher. $18,000 yr. &l'OSll BLACK poodle ma le Lott ol fun! 9E)S.U84 prt~. 5&--l486. 646-~ 5.11-«0>
5 & Yo-'(ekef¥l .. S31""82:8l H B area. New home: com.pl .ervice, central location. inc. Find out ·how ftlY Jt la • • WALL TO WALL C§upet ~ li·"-Walk bcti$30 c. Robert Natlrecl Realtor to own! medium •lie . v1dn1C)' 11th MATURE Woman wi l l Cleanlo1 " expert " 6755 l BR prdefl apt, utilltln. wk. ~7· to 230 E. l?th Street Cofn·O•Matic bet'fttn Tu.attn A Santa baby-alt Fri, Sat, Sun ftoom ~ cleanl!W 846-31*1 1ronln9 Quret. Mature-adultA. R.ek Costa Meu 642-1485 Ana, C.M. Days 6'2-liO'lO, fj 'P"'I· Call tboBe days. • 1-,_-_,.-"_-_--.. -----1
II-_,, -··e c M IDEAL ,.., ..... ers for e-.. i..... E11ulpment, Inc. E\les 6«2-6007 6TS--10IM own tram • .$1.00 bl\ CARPET.A turnilQt'9 dMt> '"'"'..... rttl • Lido lala 4351 ~· -~·-~ ' . . ed rnan7';1~. ,~E:;d OFFICE SPACE m.... w Vateocta ·"11. 1a>1n1 A Npalr. Coll ,.,...,.,.. 8eed1 ...._ $1.00 1;;;.;::..;;;..;.. _____ 2 BR. f;..slde. Crpts, dtps. Collta Meu aNa. ~""' =-Private alcove. dt'llk &: an-' ruu.. grown llTY lttriped Ball)'littlng, my home. Dt.Ya. Glrouatd Carpet ~ bour. m-erl'4
Charming 2 Story Small yan:I. $120. ..,.,.,.._ swer1ng M!tv Incl. From Fullerton n~: SZ.-'11133 cat wUh "Nhtte Cb.est I: feet. Elqietlenced. fJ) Week. BPI IRONING ~ by bub:t.
Spacious 3 BR 2 ba. trplc, 548-6"111: E:~~.;,!.":'mo:;~$lOWedt. l25 mo. Parkini. JOO N. 8~000 ~) ·~ ~Marinen Ltl:.nry, •in:~:=-Whi~ l!ltctrtcal 6640 Please brlna )O.lr own
patio. 2 car parkin&. Avail. LGE. Untum. bach. bit-in r.A .. 11119 Newport Blvd., NB. Farcl • a · • hangt!n RtN ~
$275/mo abort tenn or $350/ range. cpta, drpl. 549-3524 l789 OotstmonL .,...,. Walker 646-1414 mgr Should clear $10.CXD • TAN A wbU• male cat, found WOUI.D Like child to e&re n.AG Electrlc:. cen'l eleo-· ·
mo yr1,y leue. Adulta only •. !l88~Dr .. Apt.A-1 NEWPORT CIVIC CENTER $12,tn>. Colt SS.000 for !\Kt Jn !ica Venle area. Call for oo Mtkl,y baA1I in my triclatll. Comc'l, rea., l.a~ICIDl"f 6110
Aak for ·.Mn. Grunsky NICE i Br ttvdlo apt; ntar _R_oom_~~-lloa_rd __ 5_99_6 I Offices suitable tar-Com. • Inv (&pp Sl.2.IXX>. $15.000). S645l6 alter g A 'fFttkerJd8 ~. Balt.o.. 675--'1290 Matnto SID jobl wt I c. .. r: •
Poto Be~ Rfflly occ. !184 El Camlno, c.M. NlCE i.:..., F 0 u n t •In mercia1. Medlcol. Dental M. s..tllro. CJ<..3569 "' p. BlJL >,>.....,female Jd'""-DEPENDABLE ..... ca re. 54>-IOtl I SPillNKLIRS
$:145. 90&J5Q. Avail F~b. 1. Vt.Uey, fOT worXtni tacty. /Jr.cood., crptJ. elevator 0· Box 598• Lqutia Deb. Ambll' oollar vie. unJ-... Pt4. wJd, care ol ,_. yn. GardenJ 6680 I:~ 1AWN. Uc• l)QQ.tld:
Hom• privU. a.uonabie ,...,. '1ll EAUTY SALON 11 oldo. _.,._ Uc. H11>r1 Balorr. 5'11-1539 nt MSms *
Newport Beach 5200 ..,_.,..,., Ml,IQ.12 OR 67$.:1464 B M.u.E ,11 .... a...,. """"' BABYSrlTlNG Mf -· MOWl!IG. -odd Jobi collliEficiAL • '""'°!ilil
1 CX>MMEJ(C. -300 Sq. ft. FAtablWwd. 8 Untta. flnM vie Pt>mona Aw._Sd)ool, Reuonable. Collqe Pl1I and lfabt..movlN:. Gt.nMhs !... ~~ I•'
CHOICE 2 A 3 BR Furn
and Ualum from $250 mo.
t-=l.ft=Scl)O===n<k""'fl)-.!58S===-7: I \JPPiJl 'Qllpi•x. 2 .... 110>;
S.lt.o.,l1lond '4355 ~~=-·<'!:/;~ "".,,..
3 UR. 'p.rage a~L I Avail. lttll!I White TD-m0
frb. tl\ti1 June: 14th. $)10 GOU> MC<t.nian 2 Br. 2
n10. plus util. No t1tldvits. BA. Cpta. ~ f:Mlnl. AdJl.I,
t<hildnon or pet.I. 615-2840 no ptla. lM: $16:5. 6l3-2!10;
Arter 4 Pht. 646-3768 --------1
G<i,ot Homot 5991 1 INDUST. -800 oq. IL ,_ .. loc&-Bat -c.11 54&-'l!IJO to ldtntllt'-. art0. <OOC\ 5'11-'IO!IO lll8-«l55 .;,'°";0::())nol=:==:~:':::=::-=,,.....I
WANTED; EI de r J y am· I ~--•-6'S-_2l_lll_e__ :;;, ~ Gi-9b! Diamond •Jtbw BABYSJTl'ING. mJ home. WI' 6 edle lllwn compl ~perMngf;,--
bulatory lady dr.sirns room omen: 2; 300+ Ill· tt. N~ ~h ~ ~ • .,!."'!°-Tt*r. 8eM'iot• ·-···~ $l&-6Z1 eves Ptfntl-"50 ln rest borne or priv. home; caeh; strtctt levtl: Caul NEED $4500 to start pro--...-w ............. ..-. ~ .... , ..... ...
Mbsion V~jo or El 'niro I-fwy, CdM . Call: m-4830 duction; 14' 5 a 11 boat 1. a"'•· To $'115. W-2856 After DA.ll.Y PD.Dl' WANT ADS Parltlcutar. on re q u e 1 l ,
S PM Al~ a Go-Got Wrtte Delly PUot Box M-310
j
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I
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I
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. $1 Dt
P•port.aflli"I
P•l•ll"I
y
e 1NT ... EXT, ANY SIZE JOB.lOnl __ _
rat. Jll4. 60-89. 641-!7•
~-.Cyan
experience. Call FNd! ·-· VET'S.Bondtd Pa l.11 tine.
Free est, lie. iM. Small
johl welcc:wne. 6C.oa7
PAPER HANGING
PAINTING
~
P AINTlNG, lnttt.~
State Uc. • b:aled. Free
ttdmates~
Pl•at•rina, Repair' 6880
• PATS PWterlq • an
Types. Free estimate. Call ,....,.,.
Plumbi"I 6190
PLUMBING 24 hr. ae:rv.
Work .guar. Lie., tnlur.;
rmmdel. repair, rooter aev., Sill--
PLUMBING REPAIR.
No jotf' tOo amall . ....,,..
Remodel., Rep1ir, 69-40
IF YoU need l'HDOdt:ling.
pain~ or repair&. Call
Dick. 642-l'l!T
• -1 • "f "' • • • ""' • •" 1 • .... , .••• ,.y., '»Pi •'<••<; 1••N J cp19 zy ;s ;:sc q o; ,, 411140 ••••• • ·----~··..-..-
.IOllS & liMl'UIY-l • ~ & EMPLOYMINf JOllS I IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMl!HT JOU & IMJILOYMl!NT JOBS & IMPLOY~ JOIS & IMPLOYMIHT.M!IS & l!MPLOYMIHT
H•1• w ...... -7200 It.Ip W•nt..i. -rioo Help w..,,_., M...noo. Hllp w...,..., -7200 Help w-Http we-iw. W-AllM<lol. Min & * • * . w-7400 w--74'0 . w-7400 )V-7"41 c~=R SHIPPING Senior El<PERIENCED Ill's --· .ll1WTIOllS · ~j~= $5~ pot' -Electronic ' FOR .. u~ ... ). ~
CLERK Technician Eng·1neers u::;::;:N~A I~ WOMBfS DEPT. ~i:s :G:NC~ CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
.Eir<ellem -"' "" man witb milllmum al one
• --'"""' lo shop wort or i:ltlltl'&1 mainte-
nance wort. « ~
ih)p tra1ninC Ill carptntry.
Flll>w -J......,. ,.. test JlDUU'Y zr. 1969. :ror
fl.aChtt detailJ ('Ofttad (714)
ma&l3. Ptnanbel <lrtb',
C t t y Hall, 3300 Newport
Blw., N""'°" Beed<, Call!. -Draftsmen
Mi.D.lmum tJvtot-Yt:an n -
perience pre.fund in
amall electro -mech. •
vises. .MUii bl! capable of.
ProcSucirc detail draw---~ -· STACO, INC.
1139 B1kar St.
Cost1 Mnl
5494041
BANK !ail!' C N ....... 81..i., c.M.
r · lmmedlete openlnp NIG!ll' A SATURDAY WORR School .... nttructlon 76iil
Two ~ ope~. 1otinlmum 1 ou r ye.an 625 McArtbm' 1Dvd. for o:per&.nced RN'a.
.. -...i """' by -........... C!miJt ~ who..... N-Baeb full time .... port M.Usr BE EXl'ElllENCED Tho Newpcirt
,,,.... '"" and .a . .,.,. TV .....ir ... ....,,....,. lnitl&te ...,. -.._ t lmo. Wiii trlln Joox-School of lluslnou :;~~-~ --... ml tlm---"""""'""' d.... 540-442-4 pon...c.d, All shill. App(y :in;t. oUiot, l!AS A cu.uwm:m
-........... pie circuit dr&lan. q: conmucuon &ad mUe It 11v11f11ble. Exnllwit CURJUCUUJM FOR rate&. work durftc test. Penn&r.. • SUCCESS!
SPfCIAlTE CO.
• 1640 Moo,...lo Ave.
CoatoMKe
642-2427
J. C. PENNEY 00.
P~NISLAND
NEWPORT BEA.QI
H11 Position
open for
FUU. TIME
NURSERY HELP
in our a:arden lhoe
MAmR
SPWllllfl CO.
1640 Monrovia Awe •
CoateMKI
642·2427
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
POLICE OFFICER
$614-$831 pot mo.
Written test Jan. 29, 1989,
6:30 P .M. ExoelleM oppol'-
tunJty for men ~ ca-
reen iD law enforcement
with proereu:ive, profeaion-
......... --• Equol -llm!ty ·m-~ployOo boooffb. nn: BROADWAY """"' -now div» 1ru; 133 DoYer DI-., N.11.
1on. LVN's an Nu rsint Office 646-0153
Work ill in sta~.lhf>ut
hlcb power electroruc 11)'.-
tetnL Full recoenltioa I.lid
top compensation.
'LEAR Jn
200 I S. Ritchey St.
SANTA ANA. CALIF. mx;
(714) 547-3906
Equal opporhwl.ty employer
llWPOllT IJfetime Gilt. ~-II to 7 Martin Luther (hiJ.,.,,, .,..._ or
N"' convaleocen! -Scheduled to <ipe:ll end ol
Ju. APl>l¥ in penon. 393
Ho8p1tal Rd. comer Nft.
port A lbpltal Rd, N.B.
ICSUUICE GIRL
Ho.p'tal No~ II"°""" of Fuhion younell! lndlvldlWly to. I • lored OUlco&t 10 !.....,. Anaheim Newport Center tnine school. 113 Del Mar,
722·1200 Ext. 272 An .. ual opporbmity CM. 548-""'
emp1oytt bME=R"'CifA=N""D'°"IS""E'°'FO=Ro-
J, C PENNEY a>.
FASHION ISl,A(m
NEWPORT BEAOI
SAC1! AND TRADE
AVI'QM:OTIVE Se r v I c e F ltv IOOO Cubltt with uperlence in, 1 ~•.,.m __ ,_e ____ _
~,<'~ ~"e RtJ'U_RfilED FROM
'::.. -~~ !"' ... ~ . H;, poallloo ~'!'°.=. ",. .~\,.."'= MODEL HOMES
· known Savinp and LDan. OpM'I for Brant at 540-5630 # Fine edtttlon 1rom llIP
Excelle.nt workhlK condj. e Praur/Spotte:r _ ntate • aome okl.
tlonl. Call 646-2600 • Tallol"HI Jobe Men, Wern.. 75001./ ~11kir111 for finance Recent ~ experience co. ~ few; ~pl. ~
==~------1 prmrred. Qimpetative wq: * tub of better tum. ,&.; ~ ~~,...,.. """'-...... "· ..,_ ........ .;. DAY BUS BOY pliano<• • """TV'•. ..., ,&.; .m~ duty for clixfuw profit abarinr-Banks can't deposit tum.
Medk:al Clinic. must haw APPLY IN PERSON They demand caah
car. ll:30 AM to 3:30 PM, li'-• Fri 10 1o 5 "" (Six D•ys A Wool<) n---r1eu o1 km
--FridQ. $1.50 ~ ""' ~--Mediterraneoll
Roofing 6950 sOlos ,ROO.-F1N~G~All--.,.,..,--,...,-Represontatiwo
OutstandlnrbenWU. !'!-... ............................
APPLY IN PERSON
Mon. • Fri. 10 1.m to 5 pm
al --U.S. Otiznlhip: bi school
irad; mm. n yn.; max. JO
w/o e:xperii!nce. up to 36
with experieoce; min. 5'9",
150 lblS., 20/30 vision Ul'ICOl'-
CHAUFFEUR-HELPER
To drive Colp president ol
worlc ill plant. Calif. Drfftf'I
Lie I: must haw been Uoem-
ed at leut 14 yun.. Must
live in NB. area. 17 ,000 min
oalary c.u "' Lane<. <I.,. 213 -5.1'7-1600, D I le I n4-
624-3710
"'· p1u. ru • -o" WAnMrrrr Maple -,..._ -Modom •••·•••Ill« • ...,......... J, L Penney Co. lllWJU Brand name bedrootno. """ CAmDERlilosTEss or any lize box springs ,&.;
est, do cwn work no hi Opening for 199reuiwe
o'bead. Uc. bended. 847-ll36 m•n with excellent fu-
tu,.. & ad'l•ncement
poulbllitiM.
J. C. Penney Co.
N@at appeartrir, 18-t), No 24 Fashion lal•nd lExperien~) mattreaea, custom made
_.... _...._ An equal opportunity. sofa .l low &eats. a fine ;!;"in"'"=.,~· _,,. employer RfUBEN E, LEE selection ol beautiful dininc
BOB'S BIG BOY rooms, table, 6 chairs, chin-rected. Colltact Per.>nnel" Agenci•, Women 7300
Roofing 6950
ROOFING REPAIR,
no Jeak too small!
*968-ZEI*
Sowl(ll ' "" ' -• Dressmaking-Alten.tiom
Special on Hems .........
Alterition.:..-642-5&45
Neat. accurate, 20 yrs. exp.
TILE, Ceramic 6974
* Verne, the Tile Man * ca.st wm:k. Imtall &: repaln.
No job too small. Pluta
patch. Leaking 1 h c we r
repair. M1-1957.f846.<r206
SPANISH Tll.E FLOORS
Entries -patios, custom
work. Reasonable. 4!J6.520l
Upholstery 6990
TOP EARNINGS
Must le
Neat I: WW.U. to work Far interview It appointmetlt
CaD Mr. PQne
539-1106
or 646-7:IOO
MAlll1BWICE
General Maintenance man.
Must have experience in
Ground Maintenancr.
ICM
2727 C•mpus DriYe
lrvloo, Colll.
133.2500, Mr. Coolay
24 FMhlon 1t1l1nd
Newpen a...._ co111.
.. Equol ()ppartwl!ty .,..,..,,..
GITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
FIREMAN
$651 ·$791 por mo,
Written test Sat., Jan. 25, 1969, 8:30 AM. Excellent ca.-
lftr opportuDJ.ties with pro-
-· -do-putment. Rf'quilft U.S. Cit.
Office, Cit;y Hall, 3300 New-
port Blvd., Newport Beach, eaw. ns60 n4 673-fJ633
LINE
MECHANIC
GM experience necHSarY·
Apply:
ALLEN
Oklsmobile-Cadlllac
1l50 So. """" -LagW\a Beach * 494-1m4
Aak for Milre Salliltiy
b.enahip, hi ICbool srad:
min. 21 yrs., max 30 w/o
....,; ..... "' to 35 "'"' PRODUCTION
"""""""' mm. s·r·. "" PLANNER lbs., 20/30 vision uneo~t-
ed Contact Personnel Of-Experienced in planning of
fke, City Hall, 3300 New-printed c i r c u i t board11.
part Blvd., Newport Beach, Thorough knowledge ol all
Ca.. 92660 714 673-6633 PCB prooesse11 including
0 KEYPUNCH e
OPERATORS
Alpha neumm.c.J. Lo n I
term asaigmnenta, days.
Long Btacb. arm. F r e e -· KELLY SERVICES INC.
230 E. aid -~-CalfL (2LI) 4JO.l79l
Equal opportunity e~
FC BookkMpor
with controller ~ aspirations.
Will meet public, so must be
personable, .. ~ and
well a:roomed. $700 • $800.
D.O.E.
Pers!!:fA:ency
833 Dover Dr., N.B.
""'870
SECY/STENO
Huntington Beach area. $4fiO
mo. Xlnt oppty! Call fer Sat.
appt.
™ E. 17th st. 151 E. Coast Hlthw1y as. hutches, guaranteed
Costa Mesa ADVERTISING Newport •--ch frost.free refrigerators, color -TV, late model wuhen and
PERSONABLE, Ambitious --:-=~·==~-1 dryers on sale at saailice
........ 21 ... ,.. "'''"'""' Secretary/ * DRIVERS * •"""· Will .. ..,. ... """ politioo. in Irv apt complex. &llY piece or a housdul. Out :rd. -=.i ~ :':!'. Boo' kkeeper No &flerienc• "'""' cftd!t
0
-''· ...... ......,. ,.. .•. c.u Necessary! AOfC Warehouse
Mmi-Sat ONLY 645--0550 Muat have clean catifomia
T"' INEES R ibl I I driving record. Apply '1722 Garden Grove Blvd . -Kpons '• top ave YELLOW ~ 'B CO. \\ Blo<k w"' of B<a<h Blvd. 1-Cutter p0sltton for sharp, t•k• """'
1 ·-bo h I I M L-186 E. 16th s~ Near G.G. Fwy. --w at curt•ini c •rge g r . u1t ,...,. .. n.... 9 9 Sun. 1 2Z-3S. AppJy in PetlM. excellent 1 k i 11 1 incl. Colla Mesa. vpo:;n a .m.-p.m. 0-6
Johansen &: Christel)l!e.D ahorth•nd; hindle lite IMME 0 I AT E opening SPANISH FURNITURE
898 W. 16th St, N.B. bkkpg; billing. Under Janitorial ~te tn Him-RETURN E 0 F R 0 M
COmer of Monrovia &: 16th 35• C•ll S.rbira. (7l•J tin a: ton Beach area MODEL HOMES. SAVINGS
FULL TIM a:uaranteed !rpme $600 -t TO M%. Spanish quilted
E STAFF 64:=2.:19.:..:..:1;::0_~---"" M~ tor h"'band & ,.;i, .,,. & °""" "'L 3 oak_
LADIES SPA ?t1AJOR no np n e c e 11 ar1 tn'. room tables, 2 livirie room
BALBOA BAY CLUB CALIFORNIA BANK VHlment -A;,_iy lampo A Spanl!b paintlnr.
1221 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. 73U CMoga Ave • Canoga El Pr@sidente k i D g Ii z e
5"18-2211 Ext. 780 seeks steno/typist for trust Park beh\-een 11 'am I: 1 bt-droom suite, oak triple
-.-'w"'A'-=IT=R.cE:::S;::S..:E:::Sc.• __ j dept. P.1\llt take dictation, pm Pilonday thru Friday. dresser &: mirror, king
T i.;"~ llca assist o ( f Ice r, enjoy . headboard, 2 commodes. a ...... '6 app tionl now, for c u is tome r c ontac t Expenenced kingsiz.e mattress &: hos interviews at Fountain Val· or .... ..i .. -:z ·boodo
CZ Y KOSKI• s CUstom SaSesmen multilayer board 1, Xlnt
Upholstery. European • Plumbers growth opportunities. Phone,
Abiliitie1 Unlimited
Agency
ley'a newest, ht class ttSt· Permanent career op. Un-ex~ •l"' .. '6<>t ir lamps, portunity tor q u a I i f i e d 6 piece Spanish wrougbt aurant. inn Broohurst 8 1 '""'"' .u"1 .... ,.. ~·, ·-. p er1on. a ar:y com-• COO .. _. -.. vui .,,.,, HOUSEKEEPER-Live in. mensurate ~th ability and K • pt. down" A: $4.50 weekly,
(2 mos) Take full charge; experience. Contact W. G. APPLY sell eeparately. Easy credit Cr a fl 1 mans bi p. 100% 5 L"' 'TORS • F1nlabed carpenters MULTA cm.CUITS perr.or..
Financing. Fum. boalll &: VUl • ~~~th net dept for appl 87!)..fJ60
488 E . 17th SL, Suite 2M
Colla Mesa 642-1470
auto's. GQ.-1454. 1131 Ext. 265.
81 Eutem Comparlf ~ S ~ Mctor Homes Inc. 1---------2 chldrn, ages 4 yr & 2 Ptessnall. Newport Harbor HAMil.TON FURNl'I'URE
mo. Rds. Irvine a.rt!a, Cony1lescent Hospit•I 5948 .Westminster Av e . , ~2528 Newport Center Branch ~7764 Westmimter. 894-4434 daily Newport vd., C.M. men to place record racb ill 806 E. Washington St. STUCCO WIRE MEN Joas & EMPLOYMENT various locations. The men Santa Ana WCll'k in Columbus. Ohio &:
See Betty Bruce at * EXP'D. TELLER Security Pacific Nat'l. Bank 10 a.m. to 9 p.m .. Sat, 550 Newport Center DY. e Full or P1rt Time e 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.. Sun.
For Savings and Loan, In Newport Beach Salary + comm. + bonus, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
aelected will ttct:ive, after I ·.~m~~=~ucro=~RS~-~~~... lndi&napolic, Ind. putting Job W•nted, lt\tn 7000 ., •• ~ -...... a short training period, $800 or/and part tirni. Neat ap. wire on by the roll. Furnish m,,,,l:xec
EXPERIENCED in Sales, mo. salary + expel'lle aUaw-pearanoe:. Must be able to own tools. Will poy $15, per
·-0 -•--,,,_.._ not --• al roll. \Vire o·-r ~-~. No Management & Merchan-...... ,... ~ ....---'""" meet -..111 de with the ''" """'u
Areocy for Career Girls
-110 w_ Coast Hwy., N. B.
CdM. Phone 675-5010 for'I----'------,
appt. * RECEPTIONIST/ =~:S. ~lea:!~~ork':°' SCRAM-LETS Equal opportunity employer .CLERK TY.PIST * No age Umlt. Apply at
UVE in help needed for F'ront office appearance. THE BROADWAY ANSWERS nea!SSlll')' but helpful Call ..... ~"~ __.. fi ... ,_ A ...1.. line wire or paper, Write, dising. New in area; \\ill -.,......_, &....,... ...,; .... ". Pi"J "'lill , -" travel. Eves. (7141 SU-2'752 for appoiutmnt 9 am.J pm. in penon. HolidQ Health " on u::w1n, 6129 Otlna-
By appoinL 646-3939
OR Ul2tl m 129 Spa. -u.-Blvd beny, Colwnbus, Ohio. 4.l2l3
2 YOUNG men want warir: '!!!!!!!!!!!!...,!!!!!!!!. !!!!!!!!'" I M>l.N ...... -·• on Yacht. exp.; Skipper, _c_.M. ______ _ e COOK e Help W1n<ecf
Women 7400
motherless family young Heavy typing k telephone. S. I M. hi "'-1 Doctor &: 4 ~n, 6 to Exper. nee with heavy dJr.. w ~c ~ ._p •
13 yrs. Must speak English respondancc: load. purchue Newport Beach O'ayon -Jingo -Tatty -
[qir. °""' Hand. .,,._ SALESMAN BOA TS TO OPERATE ~ &: drive. Salary 0 p e n. orders ,&.; filing corrup. $«Xl I --;;c':-i""'7-i=;;=:;--Homing -GRAFTING
a c co u n t t n c machine, 494-8078 day or ""'ht to $450. mo. Reil Estate Sa'91 When money grows on WANTED FOR New company needs expert
Job· Y_lantecl, Udy 7020 SPORTDiG GOODS all around man. Top payina l\fUfil' BE 18 OR OVER
e APPLY IN PERSON e
general office work, lite -~-=~,:::,:-""°'::,•__ VALOR ELECTRONICS Men & Women trees, usually there'• been
typing, filing etc. Paid hosp MATURE WOMAN 3100 Pullman St, C.M. Expanding apin. Office ·# some GRAFTING going on. COMPETENT' -..t.t......-... job with brigbt future. ~t""• Immediate openlnc ln our Fred E. Moore & vac's. Exper. prefened. F~ b!le~ survey, our ~9261 4 openings available for KING SIZE BR. set. 13 Pc
typist, custOmer service ex· Costa Mesa ~ tor an ex-10045 Gould St. Arlington.
erience, sales orlenled, ma-perienced sporthw a:ooda , ~=,,:C>::::::li'c,,· ~O"V~"''-'"""'--~ lure, wants work in Laguna. sa1emnan Permanent · 1• 499-363.l -• pos>-PROFESSIONAL Sales Ca· Snack Shop ~: 9
Apply In person: 188 E. ce. or part time. SECRETARY needed immed Ucensed men &: women. Jn. Medit. Same as pictured in
17th, Suite 1-C, Costa Mesa. Goo:!64fi..~ c;n,.Mrs. Evaru;, for Adv. Age. SH 70 lo stant income .!: _training. Mr Home magazine, Jan 19-69
• 3 Daity. 80 Vo'pm, typing 50. Aft & Gardner. SP r In I' Realty, L.A. times, page 3. PlUll • • tlon. good salary, company ree.r _ Searching for man to
A PA RT M E N T h cu s e benefit&. Excdlent opportuD-)earn our business and hand-
:w.46 E. Coast Hwy., CdM
SECURITY OffKW
PHONE. SOUCITING v.-ell groomed. age Z).38. 54lM824 mattress, ·box 1pring1,
for Nursing Home No experience ne-cesauy. Start $375 to $400. PHONE e CASHIERS frame, 2 lamps. wall pie-
Experienced Holiday Health Spa 2300 615-2742 bet 9-5 pm. e USHERS tun:. Used under 2 moa.
COOK
manager, E x per i e n c e lty tor adva.nceme:nt. le aales executive position.
capable woman, 14 yrs last 1'nlnlll&: income provided. Apply at Harbor, Coeta Mesa BABYSITI'ER ·Needed full e DOORMAN Must sa crifice entire let
poBilion desires good llvinc Apply in pera:n tn tUn mar-Olllege, sales or business condifiobis • & ad e CJ u ate ... _ _,__, .,_ U"I"> .,...l
1:(81 position11, full or part l19un• Buch Nursing PORTRAIT Cnkrist wanted. time 8-6. 5 days wk. APPLY IN PERSON $650. SU-1606 aft 6 pm. dai-~. $1.'15 per hour. Apply Home. 494-8075 Top quality wort. only; in UniVU"llty Prk Ol' Turtle FOX THEATER. ly. satar:Y: t2l3) 396-SZi5 WHITE FRONT STORE ::· nuu~""'-~ . .,.... in rw>rson_ 2.10 E. 17th st., ho ~-"'" -;;;;;-.,.-..,.,-,..----,1 eost;" Mesa, Call 642-7069 for Exp. GIRL FRIDAY YoUl' me. ....,5.U-1 im-Rock area !Irvine) My ...uv S. Bristol HIDE A bed, neVtt med
GENERAL ,...,,.,....,. $2.25 """ Briotol St., C.M. ARCHITECTURAL
tu-. plus transp. References. ENGINEER
appoinbnent. for Heed office Ceaning au.. rnediat.ely. 645--02'2 home or yours $30 wk. Com. Mesa $100. 8" Medt. sofa,. law e WAN ineas. 1':1ust know bkkp'r &: SHAMPCK> GIRL. Part time ~1149 e SALESProPLE. N e a t, seat, coUee, end tables,
64H318, 673-8i6l * TED e gen'l office procedures. 1Dr Exclusive Shop. M111t e WAITRESSES. Will train, a:ood awearance. Due to lamps, 5 pc dinette set, 1~ ~...rnER Mature, 21"28 yrs. oI a&~; Hours flexible. New office by have Calif. cosmetoln<ri•t full or part time. Must be new expansion w 1th mattresses &. box
Domestic Help 7035
George Allen Byland Agency
Employer Paya Fee
1CJ6.B E . .l5th.. SA 54l-0395
• CHINESE .Couple avail
bnmed! f1(ll. Tep OXJk A ...... .....,,..
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
• Bu1boy1 e Room S.rv. Waitars
Experle""' _,,,.,.,, .......
in pencm ortly to WUTeD
o.ntz
.:JL<n>•,... neat, married, a:ood car: saJ. vo-· • ---than 2 r.t<YI'OR HOMES INC. O.C. airport. Apply 54lS883 license. 642--0194 18, attractiw with bubblino Holiday Health Spa spnngs. ...:w mos &r:J, comm., gas allowance. ''TO old. Must 1dl this week!
800 E. Washington St. Will train while ea.mine. I -'M.::"'.::·..:""'=='"'=· ----CARE for Polio lady. No penoaality. 1HE ZOO, 2344 needs salespeople. We train, 539-9046
Santa Ana. Ca1iL Call: 8 AM-10 AM 642-3212. EXPERIENCED co u n t e r smoking live in 1 East Coat H w Y at no exp, nee. Apply in per-~-7'-"--------1
CAMPER &. Motor Home lady, Minion CI ea n er 1 , ..... _ ~' r'lnn mo'"'. HB.ou · McArlhar. CdM mn. DX! Harbor Blvd., CM. Furniture returned from dis-MAN to work p/t.ime in U-,.,....,. .. • .. ......., play tudiol. model homes.
bWlden It auemblen for Haul Rentals yard. Must Murlands Blvd., Mi.mon 962-6427 SEWING Y A C 8 IN E RF.AL ESTATE. Shouldll't 5
all phues. Must be ex-be Viejo. Safeway Shoppinl OPERATORS. Expd. top )'OU be sellina: the hottest decorators cancellation. neat in appearance ,&.; ~ ...,,, 1 ,.a: BAB\ISI'I"IER. DI.)' home ·-a H-•-~T Spe.niab &:: Mediterranean etc perienced If have own tools. have neat handwritiJW. Ap.. -....nter. _......_, alter 6, ~kdtys cnly. 307 E: stitcher of ~. Ap.. .... _,... RD FURNITU Con~ or call Ride at 71.lS pJy l!m Newprt Blvd., &1).03JJ. Edgewater -Balbca. ~ ply; .JAY-MAR CORP. 29J7 V~ Reel Dtam 963-44n RE
Canyon Of., Costa Mesa. C.M. ATI'R.ACTIVE r\rll 18-24, an 4. ' ~ ~ Santa Ana I to or St6-81°:1 1144 Newport Blvd~ CM :difuOIO,llve-lna. °""1b1 l'IEWl'ORTER INN Pe~·--UOI J-Road Far'Dut.Aiency ....,,.., Nowport Beaeh 642-S7S8 CUSI'ODIAN WORK. Steady good figure for prettlae OP HAIR styliltl wanted llOIM f!VttJ ai&ht ti! 9
MODEL &: Plug builders in men capable·ot cleaniJv of-Aquacade. Must be fr'HI to ::n~t t.:!rrt LADIES 18 to 60 lbow Sarah folknrrinc prdened, busy Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'tll I
fiber&}as &: wood with exp flee buUding .l bank tn their travel. Comfortable in the fact tG-1.666 N.B Coventry iprtnc ,&.; a 11 shop. Ent locale. 67>-3385 FACTORY ll?COrxh. renuine in boatJ ol ................ MUllt leisure hours. wrt•· name, water. Contact Nonna or OTY exper. · aeuon )ewelly fashlonl. ,.__. __ , __ ~-...-·-""' Bob M .. --n Mon-Wed. REl.lABLE babylittn-• .,.., at.o1u•a1.. m iavatmen• _.__,__ -I Oua.i ,.......,"t tables. ~ ~-Miln 7100 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Mlnager Traineet
llaw clientl who wtll tnin
carter minded ands in Fin-
ance, 1nB. Factory, Sales. c.u Mt .-..., 548-mG
ARGUS AGENCIES
186'9 C Newport Wvd., C.M.
* COUNSELING
No -Ienco OMdld ........................... cram to k.m.
FUNERAL &
CEMET ERY
COUNSELING
FOR "' INTERVIEW CALL 644<1112
FOR
PRODUCTION
WORKERS
in C..-1mlc industry
Apply
Industrial Oay Products
1S765 nber Glass Rd.
lluntlngton Beach, Calif.
bavt .own took Contact or and phone number to Box ........ ~ ....__A _,. .._ • ..,, ~ ., ,.....,_,_, selection of cocktail. lamp
call Rick at 2135 Canyon _Mc;.Q18.;;;;;;.;Daily~' ~Pi!.;.•.;'=--714 : 6J5-9.5l) ....._., ......, l.•lc:I" 4.. Woe tra.in. M7-IS67 Women 7550 &: end tables. Priced tc liell
Dr. Costa Mesa. 6C-9'l"'J8 PART TlME COMBINATION, Sharp Bar * 549-:nr.6 * INJECTION M OLDING "'SERVINGl'OR.l9YEARS" tut. Far ~-wholrsale
SERV. sr• ATIENDANT RE S'LESu•N Mak1s I: Go Go Dancen. BABYSI'ITIJt for girt 5. open.ton or trainees, for W C Find price ~ Brcwn
no • • '"" """" Top wages $3.IXl-$3.SO to Moo-Fri. 2 to 11:15 PM. midnight to 7:» a.m. lhtft. e lft· The f'umi~ M1.t 111 E. ':Dtfi~·Ne~ :!rt~ w~~ s::? 5+P·~· start. Pb. u int 5C5-89&l Some •~kexi& ~ms Appbt &:30 to • p.m.. l'SO R1t.;1 SJ: ~~ou St, c.K. Ms-7'7s lltb
owr 21. None other need SASSY LAS.5Y. 29QJ. Karbar, MATIJRE BabJ Sinn-, wk. W. 1!th, Q:ista Mesa ''lt'a ~llOW· Ll--A NEAR new 1Jv Rm couch. NEWSPAPER deliver Y CM d borne 2 childftn " nv-tir apPly. See Clyde. 2560 Saturday I: Sunday. Earl1 -. &YI. my • LADY wtth penlion wand FEMALE DIVISION chr, 3 tablet. 2 lamps $150.
Newport Blvd. C.M. A M. -·-• r, q " ,. r e d * SOLDERERS * 89.l-8927 u companion to senU ..... ...__,_. -.i Dbl BR Rt compl, 2 nite · ''""" • Minimum 6 mo's exper. in EXP'D. Open.tors f 0 r cltiun lady. Private room _..., • r11yq • •• • • •• • ••• • ....,.. stand.. dbl dresser $125. MALE: over 18 w/cv.'fl trans 540-6207 1 ~-~ •-6'6-""'~ n .... i.i.-.. ttn11. cable It barness UMmb y. tl~sses. Tep pay. 8 5 3 ol ........ u .... ,.. .w..u Ol' .........-.cl""' • •••••• ••••• _.., Reblt G.E. Rehig $'15.
---------1 1-2 br daily tor Jl!'W&P&per SERVICE mu .so.55 yn to SWISS INDUSTRIES Production PL, NB 646-«U 548-6210 Teller •······•····•• to $400 Table ol 4 ctn SW-2 mo e YOUNG MEN e de:I. in C.M. Good pay. Call &erYice ~t in field. 2930 CQIJege Ave ., C.M. WAITRESSES ...-.A food SARAH awtntry need 1 Mtodical Ofc. •••••••••• $otOO old h11tt $30. 536-46S1 ~ in alel " ottice Nk:k Bartlett s 4 I -6 31 5 • Steady 1a1. gd penonallty stS.4950 ~ lad I.fl Gen. omce ............ S350 ====----, 1
(Gcod fot ooUege rn.de:nt). P. o. Box lfJ234. Santa Ana. --------II: cockWls. Tbe Blue Beec. let of l&H: l'lO exp. Credit C1ert ...... start SD) IUD&A·BED never used. manqnneat. Future for 2ND INCOME! Earn while m.aicM or bJwstnient; 'ft train. Dental Fnmt <>mce •••• $5CXI S1DO. l bdrm &eta. 1dJ:lg. ~pttf~~mt~ ~ e ;~~ n ~ i :1: GARDENER. mowing ol )"OU leani to be • Vanda QUALIFIED Int Dec. far can: S«).Ql96; tc-mt and MALE DMStON full ol twin mes. r mt&
nNt. .......... Ul.l and a.mblU-~wort. ~nd brief ~na-40 hr wk. Steady Bee.uty Coonaleor, "'Th! bas)' nrw b::adob. N.S. 546-7122 tor~ 'I1mt ~ •••••••••• S4l1l I: kJWI 89L De.n fumllun!,
_..... wcri: for right man. 96l-ll:M Belt Friend a hot Ewr S6-9ClJ Ol' 644-0637 WOMAN WAl'n'D> tor motel OJndructbl (cal::ie ins.~ coUtt I: ead tables. Oceu
OU&. Car me. Start $100 tu rnume A re.fl to: Muon net.. between 6 • II PM Had'" v-ort, live ln. Gd wttti ee) , ·••••• ••••••••••••• $390 chain. Many other ltemL
.$600 mo. IMUar)' pl119 Co. O:lr'p. ?, C. 8o1 l88, Balboa EXPER. Fibrq1u men, 546-1715 OR '15-Sl95 RN'i I.ad LYN'i pub&. DANA )(AR IN A Ship ,&.; Rec. Tm. ••··•• $346 Must El t'\lft')'thing! Only
benefltl. Wand CMpper optrator, Booden. PART-TIME EVES Huntircton ee.dt atta. INN. 3flll Coat H1'J. Dana Jnmna! Auditor •••• tu $1000 2 monthl okt. All Medil-
APPLY S:~ ·t11 noon FULL. part time belp Molden: 312> So. Kilmn PbooelromouroWceonBal-=~~.;;Ml,::....:~=---PotnL!n4)49&--U)I) Pt.lntE~ ........ UK Veryl'OJl.714:870-1.592
Wed.-Tbun.-Frl. wanh!d. Tep nae. chantT Dr., Santa Ana. 540-4439 boll Isle, G-g P .>.t RESPONSIBLE A-1 trnn1rw HOUSEKEEPER., x P".. 00we haw many good jobs r Couch. qvilted, l\fOl'7 A LIDO DISTRIBUTORS for adv1.na.-QWll.L & cleani Rdtre.n-waJtf .... f 12'll2 Garoen Grow Bl. G.G·. MEl'RO CAR WASH SE.RV. Sta. Attn. Comm + Ca.11: 615-4510 Few Info. ng woman. ~fer .. -req. Llw-ln. Must "" or you" Gold. l matchine low DI.
--81·~ CM. ..i. Tom Sharp Union Serv. w·~· ·i"--part-ti..... '"·Call m~ like cbildren. Sfi!,.&111 ML SOME FREE 2 JP'ffft quilted dub cbaln ~ vu Z1ll E Cat.. HWJ. c.oM. ""'' 'L>U· -'"" • ...... • RESTAURANT llELP 5 90.ME FEE with matchlrw Ottaman. l
NEED Mature mu u con> OR~ -Mon.. Wed. & Thun.; 2 ...,._ ""--,.,__ '" MDWUlll'Tt' "Hen" dub chair .t ott.-_.._., ~boys. 1 infant. ..... ~ .. uno:. VY'CI" .wwANTED Live-ool Ul\IUUll' ~&kit to e I de r I J g L EC TR 0 N IC Part '-""' home, Back Bay l.lft. CALL sc.s.se&3 -· ... ~ ~ ol GokL $3"0XI rentlrin&n. 5 ~ 8 ID 6. ""J ..,_..,,.,., HA Mr, Ad.ams I Bushard. Alaman. H, W .Wrieht Cb. S4-8175 GIRL FRIDAY. sen ollioe <X>OK P1tOCE FACTOR. Mafl\IAIEI
Can: 9',:2..Ui16 Aft.~ PM 1110 Netli'J*'t 8lYd.., CM. SAWYER HOME n • e d I wttrk. l.ocal 1V attn. 67>UUI -ru.JUl!WtU. MATCH Your Cm1aiD Sblidel
J'"utonn.n mature w o m~n for ~lt56 ... ~·~nu..•-~. l'DGl"D-to Your nr....., 0.00. U~-~·--.port Vltamin~Mla··~.· ......_ ~ ~,. -w-·-~ -,._ ·--...i--.-····"'·.,.:M:> .............. _ '"-·-.......i.-. pr a cl I ca I nnJ. nine Dental ...... -I.,. to 2 PM. Bllboa -a11;111.1 _,.,.. ......., _,.,.....,.. -...... ttme. · mature m:a.n. tem-...,.._,..~--Loltl:ly OGk!t )'OUt' maf.lrial. Fat1arJ .,
pOrary. A(lt)l,y In pft'IOn at For awt. caD 6*-3931 nursing. M6-m6. 2 619 1'1(1 exp nee. ~ ,... lllaDd. m.-8685 -Olrner-l'nb • lntnt Yoa SHADE SllOP. -
Anlrrial St.titer. 20612 BUS boy & ldlchlft helper Oranp Av. C.M. IO Dally P\iQt Box M 552 PART time houitbtper tor Newport 8eldt ' N~ 81.W. m.-«nl
LAguna ~ Rd, Lag B. Jlllr1 llme. Tbe Blue Beel SEWING Machine operator ~ Elq>er, owr ». I MW~. LlclJM a-m. OOkts In ab cl: ~(J Kq-Sblt Bccl. FULit TIME Service Slatkin 673-9904 for am.pies A production. ds/wtc. pm time. n :m hr. 4M-ml Dru.., O:lunCJo beautiful quilted lftl.l1rnl.
rnan wUh mtth&nic•.I 1blU0 WOOL P~ . P/Umc, F.lcpu. Margie Wtbb, Xl9C 4!M-85211..qunl Ddi •VICE STATION ATT. 662110 apllt ~titln. bU-ln
ty. ~ 169'1 PlaCC'nU.. in CdM. • So. Coll Hwy, La.auna fBcb DOG GROOMERS N!itit mu-D17 ma. OY. nm QIJICiii YOU filli: frame. Nevtt UM!d. 1$91.
C.M. m-0310 at" so.nn :D::;AIL=:Y;.;P;.;I;:LOT:..:...;;W.:;ANT:.:.:..;;ADS!;:.;;~ • .:.llel;;;: ... ;;;.,, ... :.;;..;;"""';;;;;;.;·;.;'.;;";.;-= 21. 490 E. 11th., CM. nm QUJCZER. YOO BELL W«th $250. 841&l5
JANITOR
I J
--~-~-------------~ ·--~ . .. ~,,_.~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~-..... ~..-..~~~~-.... ~ ............................................................................. ..
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ME~CHANDISE FOR
SALE ·ANP 'TRADE ,
I
SALE· ANO TRADE SALi ANO TRADI SALE ANO TIU,DI SALE ANO TRADE -------1-~-:::-:--:--;:::I MERCHANO!SE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCWANOISE FOR PETS and LIVESTOCK TllA,NSPORTATION ITR/<NSPORTATI~
&000 _o;..;;;.;;..;.=-"=.:;_,...;;.;=:...;.;.;;,:..._~&600".c::----&600-0.•1 HU Boats ' YKhls 9000 ·u-•11. Homa 9200 Tmltr, T!8"1 MU Miscell•neous 8600 MllClll-..WOU• Misc·trl•neou• • '~ -l~~~.;:jj~;;i;;;;;~~--~~ 1;;;;;;;;;~;:_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::~=:;;:~~~ FREE! Cotta Mua't TENT TllAILlll
• CARPET WAREHOUSE ~u~,~~ A~~~ Pulp~~ Bnic loatlnt Cl••HI Ye1r Rouncf ~~~ Wse.~~,·~---'=: So. Ctlll't Lor9ttl -Modtrh·
' FurnJtuH & Appliance
, .... " P bl" A t"· n 1 .. , .• ,,. u 1c· uc 10 •111 P.M.
OPEN DAILY T.O TllE PUBLIC 9 A..M·9 P.M.
ALSO SUNDAY
1/4 Million $$
Furniture It Applllnce Liquld1t1oh
Repossessions from 150 Major Fi'nance Co's
& Banks. Liquidations', Afart Samples. Fac-
\ory CIOS<H>ut:s, Bankruptcies.
Antiques • Color TV's • Appliances of every
•sort.
Name Brands -Spanish • Mediterranean
• Modern Provincial • Maple • .Contempor· ary .•
MUST SEE 1'.0 BELIEVE I
ALL TOP OUALITY -FINE MERCHANDISE
We Fin1nc1 with 9ood credlt-4110 Master· Charge
AOK COMMISSION GALLERY
7722 Garden Grove Blvd.
V2 Block West of Beach Blvd., of.f GG Frwy.
Rerunu.nllrinda-AoU Enchi quality, flamilton a: Uc.w Offtred. to Putillc by Moblle Home S~w -="'....--, ~. "'°"""'"' ot n~ to choo>< Champion line•. 548-1881 Balboa P41Wot Squadron W'-a1'·2''4<' A 3' wic!n port•lllt Jonil.r-; _..,.
lroml.Some,atO.t&&low, ev Startirw 1 PM Moo. Jan.13 Ji,'rom $6995 oorna:iletely .....,,.: -...
MN: 8:8().4.' p.m'. Mon.Fri., ts. at "Newport Harbor Yacht 12 WIDES -tent. ~~ J.r 1ta
811.t 10-2 p.m. ADORABl.JI.: whit• Samoyed Club 120 W. Bay Ave .• New-40'-4.1'~'-50'-50'.$)'-6f Exet:llent ""-UI•-""ifottnt
11'3 S. Ritchey, Santa Ana .......... AKC, IMw " pet pott 8<adl, NO ADVANCE Fn>m $3995 -O\tlll -at ..
, 541·5"11 qu•llty. male • female 7 R!Xl!STRATION NECES Yoo cio pey ...,.. 051!11 at ... I P.!!J
weeks. set lo apPftcla,te. SARY, ENROLL AT CLASS but )'OU can't buy better ~ con~ I IJt1
POOL
TABtES
962--2536 646-MZl or fl3..l.855 for more Parka avaUablc in all areaa. t1tea.' Hu ~ LUte
BEAGLE Pup, AKC .... -Bay Horw --··th& .. -· ... t r i ·co 1 ore d ma I e ; 17 r.r. Ptrb"mer. lslandet Mobfl1 Ho"'* Show c519-:::..:::187T:;.:,~===~-
house6token. 5 MOii. Needl c e I u x e mode J ca I I 1425 Baker St. 25' TRAILER
yard. 673-1606 fib•rrla sa ) outboar %block.Euto1Harbor81vd. w/ beth. 892-12U
New slAtr-$695 wJ Now $2'l:i Great Due Puppies AKC' Custom snap down cover. on ~r
23 f\.!odels to ehoo9e from $59 reg. Cbamptonsh!p breed· 8lg wheel tilt trailer. $100 C.OSta Mesa Cn4) 540-9470
up. 213: 692-4167. 692-2101 ing. 541-6128 all 6 PM pbOne 60-49I) after 7 pm. '61 BoJ.ta Aero. 35',
PROFESSIONAL drafting LABRADOR Retriever pllps, MJnt eond. $4500.
tab!e, new. 3lx42", adjuats black, AKC. l mos .• ahots. S.llbo.11$ 9010 * 646-3693 *
T ruclts t.500
*SPORTSMEN$ V""* * TRUCKS * Thoy Are All Here Al
Fantutlc. Dr-ftlw
to 32 x 40", "ARROYO", 4~136 16' WINDMILL. FI n e 11 t TRAILER .l Cabana, 1 or
metal edge, did buswood, WIRE Fox Tel'Tier pups. materlal &. finttings. 90~ 2 bedroOms. Xlnt thruout. electro~ bonded, sand-males: champion quality, comp!. Finish work req. Mak.e offer. OR 3-2908
ed smooth. Strong isteel AKC. $8S. 642--0088 Quick sate • make ofter. Ready kit bnmCcliate
tilting a r c 11, tlljs to any &13--086l Motor Homes 9215 deli"'1"f ltv ~ $50 or btost ol!er. WElMARANER Pups, AKC, 9• •CH C 536-0fll2. 8 .,'eeks, $15. 642-4033 alter SNOWBIRD ·And trailer, new BY owner '67, 23' ~lua; ~
. GRAND OPENING 6 or weekends. sail, paint. varnish. . s,ooo mi.; k>aded, ind. DODGE:
......_.. $325 • S4IHi767 pnerator. $8,7:il). j92-3165 ..;. Mon 1127/69 Mardan Foun-Hon1:1 1830 Ul555 Beach Blvd., ,nwy. 39) ,_., __ Thrill •~ 9 -1 00 UDO 14, good oond., must -54l).26EjO
-.uwi ...._. : ..... : eeU! ~1oorina avail. $675. 'Mini ilket 9275 • I I~==~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~.:_Wed, Fri. Be~Ung 6 YEAR old bay Jnlltt', ~ stz.2649~ 548--3438 HunttDgton Beach "'!! ............. C"' .. ~~~~""';"!'-"'-"-~-"-"""'"-"· "'-~-"'o"!!."'!I cnuw'l:'n with ~ diS'-thorou&:bbred 1iS quarter BONANZA Mini-Bike: new 1961 METRO Intnr.tiom.1
Musiul Inst. 1125 Hobby Supplies 8400 abilities. 1871 Park Ave., horse, 16 hand.!I, good con. 1966 TARTAN 21' sloop, in-p&int, chrome fenders. jack van delivery truck. t (!JL, Furniture $000 FREE TO YOU C.M. Near Harbor l 19th. fDnnatlon. $350. 644-2871 brd aux, sleeps S. Fu.Uy lihlft, drum brake. ~2922 fair oood. Priced 'to tell.
MORE CASH
PAID FOR
Furniture
Colored TV'1, Pianos
Appliances, Aritiques
1 Piece or
Houseful!
Is Our Specialty!
636-3620
24 HOUR SERVICE
BUYER ON DUTY 7 DAYS -------
MISCELLANEOUS
MODEL
FURNITURE
Couches, box springs &
mattresses, lamps, etc:.
CASH ONLY
447 161h Place, CM
(between Aliso & Tustin)
9 AM Sat., Jan. 25
No Sale before Sat.
-DEC-ORATOR
FORNITUllE '
Unusually Cine pieces being
sold by owt'IC'I'. ShO\\'n by
appointment only. Queen
Ann sofa, \Vhitc brocade,
niarblc top coffee table, f!nd
tables, lamps. Rare .Au.du·
bon p i c t u r e s, Whirlpool
\Vasher & dzyer. Cold spot
frostfree refrigerator, 14'.
f\.tiscl items, all in xlnl cond.
~.
MAPLE end fables $25 ea.
Coffee table $50. 2 lamps
$10 ea. 8' Gold wing back
couch $125. Xlnt cond. titesa
Verde area. 546-1570
LOVELY 8' MediteJTant;an
or contemporary sofa, olive
&. pale yellow print, 1 yr
old. 96i-.s671.
BLUE i;ofa & matching
uphols chair, $25 both.
Dining table & . 6 chrs
(uphols) $50. 6~3195
TRESTLE Dining r o o m
table, pecan. Oriental ni.gs.
Tape ~rder. Elect. Adler
typewriter. 96&-2844
f\tAPLE bdrm set. Maple
hutch. Dresser, night stand.
rtisc. furn. 2018 Po1nona..
CM
MAHOGANY Drop Jeaf·tab!e
$25: dinette set S30; twm
bed compteic $20. 96&-1920 * COMPLETE !iv rm Sf't;
xlnt cond: in Olive gm "-
gold. ~73
------------------1 642.1850 O...no• .I.. 'pm•nL equipped. rn-2336. CaJ1 1----------1 STEREO tape recorder, Sony A PROFITABLE New J-lobby £ ""J • equi
·SOO with mies &. speakers. for '69 Anglers & Retirees HID£.A·BED never used. $175. LIDO 14 No. 1680 with trailer Motorcyclu 9300 I to 5 p.m. 613-6360 ORGANIC Fertilizel', aged
horse manw'C coo:ibined
with ·\1,w:I shavings.. Cood
mulch. 83S-53.l2 or 546-4931
bel\v 8 & 5 Mon ·thru
Fri. 1/31
3 PUPPIES, 2 males, I
femal{', 6 mo. okl. Good
with children. Mi.'led btted,
can be SC('n at 2321 Santa
Ana Av<!. after 3:30 1-25
· Refriierator
527 Tustin, Newport Sch
494-1.163
V25
MALE, Ger. S.'>ep, &
Wfimarancr 7 mos, all
8hots. Very aHC!<:tionate; ~ before 6 p.m. l/i.i
Little Puppy Friend
3 mOs., blk/brn, part Poodle
&: part? Sec at 1309'~ \V.
Bay Ave. NB anytin1e. J/21
SPAYED female Boxer; all
vacc. Good family dog. 2948
E. Coast Highway Corona
del Mar, 9 to 5
IP' You love animals \11ould
you give a good 'home to
1 of our U cats or kittens.
546-6183 before 3 PM 1124
YEAR old female dog, brown
with some ~hite & black.
Good with children. 545-1671
Santa Ana l·Zl
DOMINO Damsel & Queen
Angel. Must have establish-
ed Salt Water Aqua.t"ium.
536-2170 1123
l .. ADULT cats. 1-male, 2
Fem. Matter of life & death.
Also baby rata. 548-8327 1-Zl
YR old male Germ.an
Shepherd. To good home w/
}rg yrd. 6Th-5049 1117
I-GREY & ~·ht kitty !-Grey
kitten. Both long hair. Good
hse pets. Call 675--0250 1/24
Appliancn 1100
KITOCEN-Aide Port able
dishwasher. Avocado grn,
won on TV show, never
used $200. 645--2569
WATER heater 20 gals. $1 5.
Good tor smaller home or
rental. 642--3526 after S or
weekends.
Kenmore automatic \Vasher
excellent condition $45.
• &47-8115 •
16 CU ft. Upright Deep
~ze. (wht) Perfect cond.
$135. 540-3543
First $18.') takes. ~73 dial t714! 54~2742. htra'.. $100. 3 bdnn sets, king, Call after 6 PM ~ &: cover . .North uil&. $112J. '67 % TON PU, 8 cyl. atd
-· ---·-· Mac" Mlru Worm Faron. lull• .twin ,<lze•. s· oola TRANSPORTATION "7><1A1 • HONDA • trans, cus. cab. •'"
~~ & .C?rgans 8130 The Feed Barn. 2249 l love seat. Den funllture, AMERICAN Marc, 30• ya,vl, sportsman top. $1150.
Newport Blvd, CM """" & •od tablos. Otta. '"""' 6. ""''""" head. MINI BIKES m.'15117 eves. O:"lCF,.A-YE1\fl
ALL FLOOR MODELS
('.Q11J,1 e Wurlitzer e Kn:i.lx!
PIANOS ind ORGANS
'· Q]l{'-Of·<tl°'; ntl"
YOUR CliOICE
to 10°/o off
SliOP EARLYI F'ine Christmas Trade-ins
fTom $388
No dO\vn • Easy term~
• Dcllverv •
Gou.Id Music Company
:Z0.15 N-. MaJn.,.' Sa.nle. Ana
So. of-Free1\·ay, at7-00!l
Mon & Fri 'lil JI.Sun 12-5
chairs. MIUIY other Item. ... BOits & Yechts 9000 $3500. 646-135'•
8600 h1ust sell everything! Only -----'52 CHEV ~ Ton Pic:Jnlp,
2 months old, All Medit-FREE VARALAY Snipe $650, lnnd 1969 '90' OR '6i' p>d. condition. Eves after Miscellaneous
KNITTED FABRICS Very reas. 714: S70-I592 Basi c Boating ClasMS new .. M1.11t 6ell, 636-3950 * $239 * 6 PM $250. M2-Ql9
ENGLISH Dack O>k dln rm OFFERED TO PUBLIC Power Crul.Ors 9020 HERB FRIEDLANDER 1956 FORD P/U. 6 cyl.-00.
suite 9 pcs $300. Frigidaire BY Good titta. Runs eood. $21S.
...,FOR SALE 10 cu ft, nice cond $35. Huntineton Beach '7' HUI.4 new gas & water IJ150 IEACH ILVD. HW. 39 962-4670
Remnants. samples & !\!ill l woo?en bar stools SI?· I Power Squadren ~ ~blL Chry. V-4: 1.2 lloclu So. G, &ro ... Fwy.I, c62=cm:v~'=y~v-.. -,-:zs.=ooo~-mi~ I
enda Sat Only 8 a.m. to 2 :.__, qutlted queen s 1 z e Starting Mon., Jan. 21, 7 I'M Hemi eng. w/oo hrs. See '6", HONDA 305 Scram. New $500. Eng runs xlnt. Must
p.m. 929Baker, Costa r.-1e~a. ucuspread $8. 644-2161 at Huntington Beach wp ott of.14th st .. N'pt Bch. tirell It: pistons. Xlnt cond. sell. 5C8 E. 0-ce a·n tr•n t
1.-IRBY Vat'Uum clea.qer &: Scbool, H.B. 9(58..3452 $350/ 2320 Florida Ave., Balboa. 673--1684 * AUCTION * attachments. Originally sold For further info call 28' F/G Californian Expresa H.B. CHEVY % T PIU. Lnc bed,
11 you wiU sell or buy for owr $300. Take over 842-1227 or 846-2350 Cl'ulee:r • x!nt oond. Loaded '61 Honda 305 Scrambler ·ss. 1st told '66. Stick 6.
give Windy a try sn1aU pymnl!I or $49.60 cash. KETJENBURG 4.l tot' fishing, family crui!lillg. Xlnt rondition. $400 ·59 Ple.tes. $850. 1371 SI.lex
AuctlOM Frlday '''° o.m. Crodlt doet • .,,_7289 $13.000. ~ _ ·. ...._ Ln. NB. 64:1--0'139
Windy's Auction Barn Vicuna Rug~-\ ft x 6 tt' af.,~t r::; ~ux $29.'15 ~ 30' T .. S..Spt Fisher HONDA Late '66; low mi., '66 EL• CAMINO 41'7/C .,.
Behipd Tony's Bldg, fllat'l $500. 830-0286· sell 7 ~ · ~ owner ~l, F. s. D. c. Slp t, loaded. total reb!l eng.; new o'size 4.11 posi. Hdrs. Map; -THEY'R_E_ HERETi:-11-20751~ Newport, CM 646-8681i red~ • e crtncs, m 500 GQj)d cond. $9,500. 84.T-8371 tires; make oUer. 67&-3226 AM!fll, Bkt ¥eat. 61a-U.63
New Craftsman Misc. Wanlod 1610 ... eouni; .. ric:".Vr. '01, :is· FAIRLINER. llylns '" YM!AHA. Twin IOO, "'"' -9520
Ne1v GuJbransen ·Pacemaker
org-ans with rhythm section --speedo, 7 sails + more. lirldge~ fully 1~ip'd., xlnt cond. ';25~00 *C ''°'a"m-'e!'--"'------Table Saw WA NT E D Try .................. $17,&00 ...... ,....,..or&49-0016 & piano .............. $1395
Used l-lammonds, Thomas.
Wurliti.er, Magnavox, Kins-
man starting at •••• •• S 395
• Also Leslil'l Speakers •
New American made piano;S
f.rom .............. _. ••• $ 550
ELECTRIC
ORGAN
ASSOCIATION
333 E. 17th, Costa Mesa .......,,,
{In back o( Pancake Housel
LAST DAYS~ !I
* J.2..INCH * 20' & 30' Newport demos
e $115.00 e We need quality (no junk ePACIFIC YACHT SALESe Marine Equip. 9035
Private Party -531-8387 please). Furniture, c 0 I 0 r 3446 Via Oporto
. Quality King-Size Bed, TV's, stereos, appliances, Newport 613-1570 ·~lhi M~p~~ ~=
beautiful quilted mattress, tools and of!ie(! equipment. }, FT. CU1t0U1 Flaminigo $235. 495-5361 evea.
'66 KAWASAKI 175 cc, iood
tn dirt Ir: sl:rttt, $200. * 645-1435 •
split toundatlon, blt·in TOF CASH IN 30 Minutes! Racer. Blue and goh!. ·-==========o
lr.ame. Never used. $98. 531·1212 * 893-0l.55 'frailer & boat freshly Aircreft 9100 oo YAMAHA too cc dirt
\Vorth $250. 842-6536 e WANTED .-p 1 int ed . New white --------bike. Fully equipped, $300.
64 HONDA 250
Equlpt for dirt. Make oHtt?
6'J$.8'191, 642-flfi$
\'VHIRLPOOL gas reir~g. Furniture e Appliances n 1 u i ah Yd e · Upholster:v 1964 CESSNA 150 Comm1i1.ter. or best offer. 613-3572
frost free, $100. J\.1apel din· Color TV • p · Three 161,.i hp Champion 900 hn. TT. $4500. ~ I ..;c_;,H;;;O'°N"D'°A;.,T;:;RAIL"",.90".-ing nn sci 11115 ch:rs & ' 1anos engineL Complete with =========
buffet, $75. 642-3219 ETC. several fuel tanke. steering Mobile Homes 9200 $15!"~!1!'-lie.
C Sh • I/ h and control~ See at 2808 ---..,--~· UPHOLSTERING -$79.:iO. 2 Q lft 2 OUf Lafayette. Ne\\-port Beach. SEE the Dual Wide Roe.d-
pc. (European craftsn1eli) 541-4531 t'OR SKIPPER OR BOAT liner Pan American, Para·
Fl'f!:e set, .. ~I, P!~P· ~ WANTlD: \Vicker li11ini;: MAINTENANCE CA LL mount. Elite and General
'66 y AMA.HA 100 twin. Good
cond. $150.
96Z--2647
All '6t mffof• flOW fl•N•
StY• ...,_ $ .... aur, Tr11ck--
Ctmpw '*'lcn.. '
t .t.11 ft. Mot.Ith. Cha1Ji1
Modalt, Salf Co11tti11a4
U11ih, All C1mp1r Acct ..
1orie1 111 Stock.
5 Yeer fi111"ci"t On
Apprt,,.111 Credit
CAMPER REMTALS
Main. lfB _Be~ 1 536-6405 room rurnilure. couch, 543-3561 mobile homes now at
11igher prices a~ comiqg _ WATER heater 21J tgals SlJ. chair, etc. Call 645-2929 Dual Wide Sales Trailer, Travel THEODORE. but "'c are still discounling good for s111.a!l".-1' horn~ orl * W A N T E D * 12' BOAT, 1S hp, o.b., lrlr, ..:....;;.;. __ _
9425
all . & . ti rental. 642-3.}26 aJtcr .) or ONE SHAMPOO BOWL ANO ball tank. pu mp &: bat!. Oianmon Mobilf! Homes Inc. 1966 16' HI-LOW Travel Rob"1ns Ford ' pianos organs in ie '·A "· charger $200. 962-3139 520 N. Harbor, S.A. Tr 11 l I er w/accessorlcs.
last days or the great Mov· v.w'"'nu.'i. CHAIR. 8'79-GC& (Fullerton) I~~=~==~== 531.a571 "'"2495 alt•r • p.m. · Sal ft ill t N B h · Cl b DAILY PILOT Dn&E·A· ,,,..,. ,, ing e. 'v cos you pt c T1nn11 u for Daily Pilot Want Ad• ·~-Yoo -·---=-==~,-,.,~----,, 2060 HARIOR llVD. money to wait. Shop & buy Chae'" f ·r m-"· ,-... ULl.,Lo:to -.. Mal 10' WIDE Mobile home; sell '8 x 28' 1052 Roadmaster. COST MES now at:· '"'r. ami Y ...... ut:J'S ip Dial &f2.5678 for just penalea a dQ. Oi&I Jor cash; ln nice aduJt park; Self contained. Good con-ut-otll A
WARD'S.BALDWIN sruoro ~:~uS:fe~=~:i~gm. T_RA~N.;.S;.:P..;O;.:R.;.T;.:A..;T;.:l:.:0..;N:-:.:.,..:.:::"'2.o678=========-•no~pe~l>.~646-~;-~==:=-~d~!Uo~· ~··_,;"~...,..~~==:::~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~! 1801 NeWpOrt, C.M. 642-8484 h , 0
Mac lne-$85. Truer.. 9500 Truer.. 9500 Truckt 9500Trucko 9.500Truclts 9500
Yamaha • .~753 * 1::;::;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;::;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;,.;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.;;;;;,;;;;;;=:;::~~~==~;:.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Pianos & Orgins MOUNTED big game heads, Ii See them now at 110me world records. Caast Music •962-8671 •
l 839 Newport Blvd, CM 1 POO=°"L~T"a°"b~le~7"' "s",-,-~,-.,-ock
646.(1271 · Equip. ind. 1175. Zf' grrl
===~~~--~I bicycle $15. 549-2877 HAMMOND. Steinway Ya.
maha • new & used pianos HOLIDAY Health S p a
of all makes. Best buyi in membership, for l\\o'O, ap-
So. Calif. right here. prox. 8 mos. bal. 962-4511
SCHMIDT MUSIC OJ., PE,MCO Aquarium 77 gal. 190i N. Main, wl.Duorescent Hghts.
Santa Ana 962-332$ Call 9--5
.---1969 CORVETTES
LARGEST SELECTION IN
ORANGE COUNTY
• CONVERTIBLES • HARDTOPS • FASTBACKS
fl" 300 H.P., 350 H.P. & 400 H.P.
======-===I Tolovislon 1205 ===·---=
STEREO tape n:.conle1 , Sony
500 with mies & speakers. II" CHOICE OF COLORS Antiques 1110 RENT TV $10 Flnt S185 takes. 548-6473
PVT Pty h8.!'1 old glass, Nt Deposit -Free Delivery SURFBOARD. 9' 6" x 21%",
c h In a, pai n t Ing s . 534-0471 Ol" 172-9110 :'15 lbs wt caM'}'ing rack.
Reasonable. 968-2488 9859 USED TVi $25 & up. Repair& Best offer. 842-3248
Ellis, F.V. In shop or home. 2071 FOR Sale Newport Beach
VAST !ltock Amer & Eur Harbor Bl .• CM. 645-1672 Tennis Club Fa rn i I y
furn & clocks. Larry Membership, S450. 642-5532.
Morgan Antiques. 2 4 ~ 8 HI-Fl & Stereo 1210 BALBOA Bay Club mem-
Ne·-Blvd., C. M. I----------~ h. RE SON ABLE' "'~·;;~";;====-=-S'l'EREO -1968 Solid state, .... rs ip. A · --fl) 827·7870 Sewl-Machines 1120 4 :ipd, 4 speaker audio ~----~~~--·~··--·----system in walnut coruiole. F'OR saJe 8' 6" Jacobs
Left on lay away. Pay Surfboard. good condition
balance ot f19 cub or low ·s10. Call 615-0673
pymnt..Warebou!e. 535-7289 STURDY bunk. trundle beds,
175. c • .,.,. .. & Equip. 8300 * 546-1889 •
............
•or.u.li J ..e ... ~1
,, '
""" CHOICE OF MODELS
fl" CHOICE OF EQUIPMENT
CHEVY TRUCK CENTER Wf81p
'69 CHEVY >/4 TON
SUBURBAN -CARRYALL
Turbo Hydram1tic. 350 cc. •ntlna, power
1telll'l119, power breUt, 9.50116 fite1, 111
h•tyV d11ty 011uipt., c111to111 lntarior, tic.
51r. No. 6610 • slOOO ort•m. Dftcetl!f Stlc~ Prkt
'69 CHEVY 108 VAN
\'.f, Fully f•c*-ty .q.Jpped l11clwd!n9
"'""Y ••tr.11. Ser. Ne. 1109. IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY.
52595 :~~
'69 CHEVY 112 TON
I' FLEETSIDE
Fully fecfory eq"vipped In·
cl11clln9 1111ny orfr11. Ser.
Ne, 0522.
FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
FREl·FREE·FRIE
50 GALLONS OF GAS
WITH PURCHASE OF ANY NEW CAR OR TRUCK
ON PRUENTATION OF THIS ADV. AT THE TIME OF PURCHASE
'68'5 AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS
WERE IS YOUR CHAN!:E TO IUY A 1961 CHEVROLET
AND SAVE YOURSELF HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS
•DEMONSTRATORS •EXECUTIVE CARS
e IMPALAS e WRICIS e WAGON e CORVAIRS e CAMAROS
28J8 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Now -546-1200 --546-1203 ' .
··--·------·------------·-------· .. -. .. -·
/
I
' !
l
' 1
i
• . • • .
l • • . • • .
? .
l • I • '
• l
l , •
I·
l l • I
!
t
l
I
.. '
i
I
. . -· ~ .. -· -. -..... ,. ··~-----. -----·-~·------------------
:sf DAILY PILOT f'rlday, JilTIUll'f 24, 1969
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I _:,._T~O~Y!O~TA~--IT~ltA=N;,S;PO;:;;R.:.;T.:,.Ac..Tl_o1NITTO Imported Autoo 9600 TRANSPORTATION
I• Campora 9S20 I---------tmporttd Autoo 9600 • -mo· FOR_D_l'.t_T_ON_
_1111..,port.....,,,_td~A.,,u-'IOl.;;...-';..;600= lmpot'fM Auloa 9600 lm .. rtod Autoo 9600 linporltd Autoa
Long Bed
6 cly. stick. R l H, CWflotn
English Ford
Cornplct.e sa!n • lt.'rvlcc • BMW * '67 DATSUN 'M: FIAT llOOD Sedin., R/R.
BMW DATSUN FIAT
1 0 °Ito
oab. H" 6 mo old camper
on It and !hows the loving
r.are 0
0( a proud o.,.,•ncr. Full
Prioo $109S
E932G8
1001MPll. 32 ml pe~I~ T I M MOTO.RS Bi& Sedan. Near new! Ono Lo mile&. El. mrch.· cood. f'ul fi11e pass. s....,... owner. Excdll'nt condlUo.n. """ ,_, i~llni;. Gardea Grovt Bld at Beach ,.__ u•....-uw CORTINA 5.14--or ' (I) 89U65I ~ .... !>l. """ .... man ====== * D.1 ... 2 Door * CORTINA :" :.U!!':iic.""k: MERCEDES BENZ
$1883 green ext.. plush black
lealllee bucket ,..,., 115 '63 M"""•• ~ S. """" .. '611 CORTIN.A cUi R It If. .......... de'· will ,,..,. _,. tlonal cond. Low m J. JOHNSON & SON
Down JHl l=~~;,rc~_7n50
Duna llugglH 9525
trruncdiatc Delivery · ·-""""' u u .... v••• Over 50 :.l doors, 4 doors, ll,000 ml undeJ'.warr, _... prty. 49UhJ 01' ~ . AM/FM.
GTs, sl.atlon .,1:agons In below book. Xlot, one =======~ Private party. -494-0397
iitock. FUiiy automatic owner. 64~141 F,ERRARI 1965 MERCEDES Dieeel.
or 4 sper.d. , new paint. blut w/tan int yo"iJt J:tJ'Ji.f0c".u. t.A TSUN fERlAIU Muat ,.. to appreo, Ori& FORCED to Sell • V WDune
with Buggy. Fiberglas body, new
en&· .$9X). 49.l-32Z3 Approved 8•n~ Credit 1.,;=o;.:=======-
--------Newport lmporll Ltd. Or-,,0="""'==1m>~·=W.=1&14== THEODORE • DOT • :-::i• •=IY• only author--·-MG
Is All You Need
AT
Robins Ford DATsuN ~.;~="!'.~ ----
• Spot Cash for Im;iorta 2060 HARBOR BLVD. AUTHORIZED l)E:Allk Newport Beach
We p., more !0< any impo" cos~~SA HUNTINGTON 64~,::.00!horlud MG n:::'~™ ,.,an11 ... of yoar, moke ======= BEACH
or condition. lry us befort ALFA ROMEO
9600 lmPorted Autos
you ..U. ELM 0 RE New and U•ad Can J• SI MOTORS, 15300 Bncb Blvd. -------C I t S , & Part Im emons '62 ALPllA Spider, xlnt rond. omp • • erv1ce 1
Weatmm.ter ..... 3322. Roll bar, "'""· $995 • ..-18835 BEACH BLVD •
best oUer. 968-2861 8'42-7781 -540.0442 BUSI&n' marketplace ill J,111 1 '"u., s.. s.11 Dl•t• TO. DELIVER ....... -DAILY PILOT •usTIN Fwy . .,, i"'. •·· .; ..... A North of A'•"'• Ousit~ ecdon. Sav• 1--------l·-------ANY money, \ime .il effort. Look 1968 AUSTIN America, 4500 1S YOUR AD IN a..A.SSI·
n1i, uuder warranty, $1600. FIED! Someone will he
Brand New or Used 1-oow-=!!.=' =====k·'='=";;d'=· =,.,...='=18===:!:='oc="'".'"'='="'=:''=°'="=..,...,.==·::::::::=:
New Cers 9800 New Can 9800New Can Toyota
TODAY!
•
ALSO
IF YOU WISH
No Pmt.
9800
•
BREAK AWAY NOW
[i~[j~[]~
ILMORE MOTORS
15300 HACH II.YD. WESTMINSTER '94-3322
1.-li: fl11•11elnt .... n.111. •n
bo11lr •PP''"'' of -4Jt.
FREE·F"-E~
Las V~s Vacation
.J DAYS & 1 NIGHTS
FOR lWO
No Pwrch••• N..:eu•ry
15300 Beac~-Blvd.
Westminster
894·ll22
OPEN 7 DAYS
until
March
1969 UNLESS YOU'VE GOT
SOMETHING AGAINST
SAVING A BUCK!
THE INCOMPARABLE PONTIAC
• AND
· · While They Lasl! GRAND PRIX
.
'
•
'
' ..
•'
•
~
DEMONSTRATORS
All Low Mi1ee9e ,,
FANTASTIC
Savings
LIMITED OFFER!
• + PLUS +
BONUS
ON ANY
IMPORT
OR DOMESTIC
TRADE-IN • ~ • . . exclulively tt • , .
.. JIM
SLEMONS
IMPORTS
AUTHORIZED
' TOYOTA DEALER ;
411 West Warner
~ANTA ANA
.540-2512
O~ 1 DAYS
• •
'68 CHRYSLER
Npl, 1 dr. H.T. VI. •11\01111+ic, r1dio, h11t1r, pow1 r 1l•••in9,
w1w. 1,716 '"ii••. y1llow with bl1ck vinyl lep. tfTt)'I), Fie·
lory 1ir.
s3577
'68 CHEVROLET
El C•'"'"" 3•6 SS. VI ~ 1p11d, power tl1•rin9, r1dio, h11+1r,
Rid li111 lir11, Cl '"P'' 1h1 1!, lli,175 '"il11. !&&180A J $3277
'65 CHEVROLET
lrnp1l1 '4 dr, H.T. VI, pow•r9lid1, r1dio, h•tltr. wkilt w1 tl1.
16,7•5 '""''· f1clory t lr. (,tl,201 $1677
'67 FIAT 1500
R11dti••· • 1p1•d, r1dio, h11t1 r, rid ... ith bl1c~ !or ~nd in.
!triot. 11,1f1 mil11. (TRTll,ll
$1477
0
'69 PONTIAC G.T.O.
Be•ut iful Limelite Green, fully equipped with
e ir conditioning, front wheel disc breke1, 400
cubic inch engine 1350 h.p. th•+ iii, shoulder
herne11, he•dre1ts, hidden wind1hield antenn •,
remote control outside mirror, pu1h button r•dio
and ell the st•nd•rd deluxe Grend Pril' acces-
sories. Strial Numb•r 27657~Pl9908.
54577
'67 PONTIAC G.T.O.
Conv1rtibl1, VI, '4 1p11d, pow1r 1l1•rl119, r1di•, h11!1r. 11d 2 Or, H.T. VI, hydrt'"•lic, powtr 1l•1rin9 I br1k11, r1dio,
i; .. t; .. , ...... "'33Ti' .... ,. h11l1r, WSW, f1clory •ir, vinyl lop. ITBT'4l61
$2877
'67 CHEVROLET CAPRICE '67 FIREBIRD 400
2 Door h1r.!top. VB, •ul•"'1tic, pow1r 1t11rint .l br1•••· ••· VI 1n9int • sp11d !t1n1'"iu!on, r1i:lio i nd h11\er. ••d lin• di1, ht•l•r. WSW, vinyl l•p, f•clory •ir. r 5,145 '"il11. IV6X· tit•• Slll $2777 $2677
'66 MUSTANG '64 PONTIAC G.T.O.
6 cylind•r, ~ 1p11d, r1di1, t..1t1r, while w11l1, 10.175 "lilts. Co11v1rtibl1. VI, hydr1m1lic, power 1!11ri~t. r1di1 i nd h••I·
!XEIOJ'll •r, whil1 1id 1 wilt fir11. ! 'Al? I I I
$1677 $1377
•
'67 OLDSMOBILE '65 CHEVROLET .
Viii• Crui11r , VI, •ulo'"•lic, powtr 1l11ri11t I lir1•11, ••di•,
h••l•r, WSW. f1ctory •ir. IUDC•11 I
lll'lp1l1 SS. VI, •ulomtllc, pewtr 1t11rl119, ••dio. h11lt•. WSW,
vinyl top. 211,'475 '"1'•1. INOY5111
$2977 $1777
. . ..
• • : DID YOU :
: KNOVI :
:THAT YOU:
: CAN BE :
• • DRIVING :
: A BRAND:
• NEW • • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
1969
POOLE BUICK
,., • IJtth ..
2 DOOR
SEDAN
F-octMY OrMr
N111!1bef 2212)
• • • •
• • • • • • • • DOWN •
-•4 •
• l'lu1 Tu erul lfcet1M "
• ApprowM CrHlt. GMAC •
"or IOllll ff11C111c:l119. • • • • • •
POOLE'S FINE
USED CARS
• • • • '6' TOIONADO •
•Mill pow•r, f•clory •it, 1-• '"ii••,•· t SIN112 ) •
: $3295 •
• • • '63 IUICK Skylark •
H.T. Cp•. Auto111otic, rtd··
• io, ht•ter, ,_ ... tl••ring,
• f1clo,Y !\:Jr •fFXCW9 I ~ •
• $1195 • ··-------· • '64 RIVIERA •
8 R•dio, h••l1r, •uto., PS,•
• PB, pow•r window1, •it I
cond ., I own1r, loc•I c••·
• IHCT270J I
: $1995 :
•·65 OLDS Dyftomlo 11• • • '4 Or. H.T. RIH, •Ulo., I'S,
••it COii •. IMOY l411 ) •
• $1595 • •:-------·
• '6Z MIRC. Montoray •
I Allio1111tic, •ir cone!., pow.•
••• 1t11rin9. IGEX5,0) I • $695 • ·-------· • '65 OLDS Cuti... •
I H.T. Cpt . RIH, •Mio., I'S,•
1•ir cond. IPGP8161 •
• $1595 •
111-------·
• 165 BUICK Skyl1rk I
1 H.T. Cp•. RIH, 1ulo.1 PS .•
P.w;ftdows, •it COftd.
1 !PDY2'4'11 •
• $1695 • • •
• '64 BUICK Skylark •
I Aulon11tic, powtr tlttrin9,I
1 r1dio, h•1t1r. IRIA67'1 I • $795 • IL------·
• 67 OLD'S Sia. WG'J. •
1 A11!0'"1t ic, 1ir cond., '·I
111•~·•~9 I h11~11. IVCL-I
071 )
• $3195 • • I • 1 '66 DODGE MtMCo •
'4 Dr. H.T. RIH, •vto.,
I PS, •'• cond. fTPUOJ21 •
• $1995 • • • ..........
• JAGUAR • • •
I HEADQUARTERS •
ICornplete S.les. Sen-·•
1ice ind P1rh Depart.1
1ment for JAGUARS. •
1 S•• Tho bdtint I t••• J•tv•r r.,.., ~·······= : 214 E. 17th ST. :
• 541-7765•
1 Mon-Fri 1:30 em 1
I to9pm I
I S.turcl1y 1:30 am 1
• to6pm I
• Sund1y1 10 1m I
I to4pm I
!/>~BUICK
I tHI iUIC• r:'.O~MfQ I
COSTA MESA
,
-• ··-•·•· •··-----~-·----·------~~---------. --.• ---....,......_...........-----• -T --~..----·-------..-------.....-----.---• • -"'• • --
TM,NSPORTATION fRANSPOllTATION • TRANSPORTATION
I • "" u.w -.o... 990I UMd Con . _ t911DU.... Can _ ·"°' TRANSPOllTATIOl'C TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'OltTATION • UIOd Corio HOO Usoc(C.n 99CIOU .... Cn f90o 99CIOUNd Cors -·
CONNELL _CHEVRQL~T'$. U.SED CAR ~ENTER SPECIALS
'
~
• • ,
' '
•
I
'6'1 CHEV~OLET
8' Fltoet&id& . ~ Glepl!fqod IJ'ffn. Step ~· tactOry warranty. Lie. No.-4S64 ,
51695 ..
'66 CHEV. 1/z.Ton
Plcltup. V-8 eng. aUto. ·trans .. factory
air cond.U radio Ir ·ht.at.er, extra nice. Lie. No. 41818 · ·
51995
.. ' .,
·6s PLYMOUTH
Sport Fury convertible. VS. automatic,
power steer., radio, heater. CNBV894) .$995
'65 INTERNATIONAL
PICKUP -V-8, standard shift. Lie. No.
531194 $1195
'66DODGE s,,rt Van
Aul.. ·-rodfo, ............ -llOn'!'-o Uc. N0< TGR310 •
, •••••••••••••••.
:, O~NGE COUNTr.S :
: I EL CAMINO : 51995 , e HEAD9UARTEitS e
• • • ______ .. e '67 CUSTOM •
• 4 1pd. tranl., 327 VS, 1'611: Yotiow with •
• ~vinyl interior. New wide oval tires. • 'e_.hc:IOl'Y $ oond. Slk. No. 119'1 • ·:--2495 • .~..... .., .......... ::" .
• .. '66 CUSTOM :
• 327 VB, A.T., P .s.. Fact~ air cond., · •
• R&H. Bucket seata. Em\ine white with •
• r<d Jnterior, I.Jc No. '1'5.1016
Convertibl•. 427 V -8 eng., f speed trans, • $21· 95 •• AM-FM radio, low mileare with factory • • new ~ WlllT8.llty. Red with white top.
red interior. Llc. No, UES361 • •
. $895 . .
' '' I
'67 ·C
'
'68 CHEVY VAN
1(8 Se'ries (iont Van), V-8 enetne~ fjt!atl, aide cSoors, rear wlndoWa, mlleap, ttW under new car warrant)',
Uc. No. V94883
52295 .. . .
. ' '65 IMPALA
Sr1! Coutfci 327 V-8, A.T., P.S., factory a oondl n. Rtilt Willow lreeA. Lie.
No. PClt88<
$1295
· '65 FORD GALAXIE
500 H.T. Cou{fc. VS, auto., PS, factocy air, RIUI. Ye ow with black vleyl in ..
terior. (RUC363)
$3495 : Pa~o ~~~ ~~~~~~lo•• :
==.66=Rl:V:IE:RA=. = ! Ra&o .. Si095v~n•.-! .-.6"'s•T•-H•U•N•DE•R•B•IRD• ....
Custom coupe. Full power and factory •• '64 EL CAMINO •
51495
ah-conditioning. Ra&o ·end heat". A
., ___ $_3 __ ._2_:_,_s ___ _. i ~~lli;149'5·~~.~ J;:"'h':.~ I.
H.T. Coupe. 'Full power, factory' atr'·con·
ditiQJling, radi<>; beater, special paint job.
IPCY<51J $1395 .
·,61 IMPALA
'64 CHEVROLET
%-Ton 8' FleeWde Pickup with camptl', V-8 eng., radlo I: helter, atep reu bumper.
Llc. No. 1..26441
'67 DATSUN
Deluxe 4 Door. AT., R&H, Ivory with red
interior. Like new. Lie. No. VEH017
" .
'64 CHRYSLER 300 ·
Hardtop Coupe. Auto. ~ PQWa' steer.,
' factory air coiid. Beige wi1h parchment in·
Wlor. UG. No. XEV911
~495
I
4 ! I
• l
I
I
!
!
• .
'67 PONTIAC
Bonneville H.T: Coupe. A.T., P.S., fac-
tory air condition, R&Jf. Blue with b)Jck
•
. . . _ ..... ..._ ___ ......
• ·~7_,c:ustOM . . •~ '65 JtA~BJ,JR: '.170 .:. . . ~ '62 MONZA ' ' ' J -11..-.1
• V-8. AT., P.S., "RlH. Willow green "1th·. 4 -Door. V8, automatic, ~r steerlni', "7 -·
'65 DA·TSUH . .
A black vinyl' interior, Ni:w set of wbJte. •. radi2.t... heater. white w/tfl'Hln trim. ~u.pe_. ·-~AT,. R&H. Ermine _____ whit~. I.Je. ___ N_o. ··\· w--wan tires. Stk; No. 1763.B'--(FBH:>1l )" -------. ~--.P~· -QMX883-. ----! $2395 ; $795 5395 i:anaeau roof. Uc. No.. TXU551 -Pickup. Radio. Heater. UC. No. NMW~
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
~!~ 546·1203 :A~ 546,120
lmpoffod Autos 9600 Imported Auto1 9600 Imported Auto1 9600 lmpor:tod· A-9dOO lmPorled Aulot 96CJo AntlquM, CIU1IC1 9615 Roce C'ln, ROdo
MG PORSCHE TOYOTA 11UUMPH VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN __ v_o_Lv_o __ 19.16_F_a<d_grllle_llS_.-2-.. -.. 1923 MO~T~:
MG '64 C Xlnt Cond clean -------1~68;-:VW;;;:-, -;;Be;,lge;;,-;c:;;;hro;;;me;;-;-;;tl;:, , . YOlVOf ds1'°'0 ' como pl~twlendth glua 51&"152 or ~ I ' ' ' TOYOTA -'67 CORONA SPITFIRE '63. "Like new, headen 4 & 8 track stereo. 63 V.W. Bug, competition ea. ne ._..,., • com-
:::;:· or~~;· $3000. Low mi ., sage green 4 dr. 38,000 miles, ·$985 or trade Coco m~t & cover. 673--9562 ye"°'!• 3 mo. new tires, All Modtli Fr, $2•695 wplbeeetei.wl, ~-:~·-IJ'&me,.. m"a&k el6a" Autos Wanted 97.oo1 · sedan with AM-FM radio, for VW Bus. 675-6218 chronie wbls, reblt eng by -..-a ·
' Silts, Service, Parts '58 PORSCHE speedster. 62 wsw, heater. None cleaner. '59 VW, new titt8 & IUJU'OOt. prof. with 6 mo guar now " L • trailer witb fJO. V.W. bull WILL ~ cash tor )'1JUf
· Complete new MG inventory s 90 eng. Gd cond. Pvt (TBU317J VAUXH~LL Special exhaust & wheels. 1 wks old. New tra~el, Ill II.Dia seeta about 6' lQnt. $25 for Rambler, AMX ~ J.-VlllJn.
See the new Austin America pty. 673-3261 e$1495 $395. Call 549--0548 Xlnt buy at $800. 494-04.TI 3-of them. Call 53f-M1l H.B. Amerlcaz\ Rebel, And .4m-
Here Now! '59 FOR.SHE 1600 s. New BILL MAXEY '60 vauxan < °'· '66 VW .. Blue, b1k ioL '63 vw Van, co' vat ' IHl'ORTS 1939 CAD Limo. Good run-:,dar. Top dollu ~!
paiht &: engine. Call aft Must Sell! $2X> Chrome nma. $1300, powered. 140,hp,.larp tires. TOTOTA·YOLVO Dina: cond. V-8,. ~ $$)), •
5 pm. Don 642-5400 ITl~YIOIT(AI 874 Darrell St., CM 543-2863 camper, no dentB., gd cond. ~ Harbor, C.M. 646-930.1 &t6-6498 • , J1rlUµort
311nµort s '63 PORSCHE s, xlnt cond, -===54S-=2535====l '68 VW Fa•tbacl<, ""' new; 673-1826 * N '61 Red Mere<d., Conv. zro • J
all new equip. ~st Oller. \/ ..... light blue. blk. vinyl inter. '65 vw Bu-. T 0 p shape. ew Yolvos * SE Cl8:Pic-BEST OFFER,. • ~·, •
494-32:l7 attec 6 l8B8l BEACH BL D. VOLKSWAGl;N Call; 644--0256 Clean! Good""'· Pi-v par-GET A 494-1565 .... ' · ;,..'!
:noo-w.eoastHwy. =======. ~u!'~ ~~tH!:7·~~ '65 VW, radio, chr o m e ty.$1425.548-7473 BEnER DEAL MODFJ.. T FORD, Express ~ flltl"' f: Newport Beach SIMCA rru ,· 0
.
0 MUST, SELL '62. vw !Bug) wheeb, new tin, to mn ... '60 vw Cam ... with Covak Herb Friedlander truck, '"""""red. $'l9!1. 381 642-6023 t;
642-"15 54~1764 -------69 JOYOJAf and 59 VW Pick Up un-clean. S9'15. 613-<t5tt!i engine. $100J "' ""t alle•. 13150 Beach Blvd. !Hwy 39) E. 16th St. C.M. 548-5986 lMFORTS WAN'l'DI
Authoriu!d MG Dealer '58 SIMCA mediately, bo!~ .. ~xc cond TOYOTA 67>1270 _ 2 b1ks So. G.G. Fwy. DAILY PIID!'_ DIME-A-~e Cowrt:leaB_UYER__ •
1967 MGB. $12.5 includes '69 tag All Models Fr. $1770 ·-make otter. O'W'"'t790 · '60 VW Panel Bus. Oeanl 893-7566 537~4 LINFS Yoo can use tbem -'rt'.fP---S
Wire wheels, radio. Lo mile-• 962-1966 • If l • '64 VW Bus. Xlnt cond. Wk New tires, $500 or best otter. DON'T JUST WISH tor some-ill' JUlt pennies a day. Dial BILL~~ ~Yd. age. Must sell! $2200. ftlll II.Dia daya 9-5 PM 545-7400 Aft 67S-2261 . 1 thb:la: to :furnhh yoor ham• 642-5678 _ * 673-7642 * SUBARU 6 •wk end•,.,,_,.,,. •64 VW Xnlt cond $795 .•• !Ind .,.at buyJ to to-7"'==:==;;===!.;IL=:llea;;®:;;:· =='Pb.;.:&n;;;
LATE ''7 MG Midget; load· 1969 SUBARU (ltf'ORTS '64 vw Squareback SUnl'Ool. 962-2'l73 °• 96Ul53tt ,.,,., Claallled Ads. Imported Aut0., . ffOOtmported Aufft 9'CIO-
ed; 15,000 Mi. Called to $1297 66 MPG ovor•vOLVO Good-.~.~; "'"'ice. S250 and take ov" from ; -~ ·~ MG MG M"'-. Mi.. ' 1 paymts. Karl, 968-5217 Complete foreign car service 1966 Harbor, C.M. &i&.9303 "' v
·53 MG TD, oomp1e1.1y re-Kosta Kustom Kors TOYOTA ·~N;/rlrlrlrl~rlrlrlrlrlrlrlrlrlr!rlrlrlr!J'rfi_ I, ,rl .. ,.'! ..... , '\a, . \,_;._"!. .... ,.~ conditioned. $1400. 1980 Harbor Blvd. 646-5484 ~ "' .,
1-968-E-0~-~-~-·~_;E_:~-~-55-~-W-ag. 1962~Xln~-;t-~~~~c~§.BEA~oo~:~.~N~•w;;h!:¥1l~E~~L~oMO~~u~~~R~~~E~siiiili-~F~: .. :.~~d~ .... ~~~ $225°~. ~ AMER I (A~ ~. c
13,000 miles. AM-FM, w/w. tOp & tires $500. 962-8605 .... _... .. "'"""" ". ,, ::ti
s1150. Call 114>-1.159 TOYOTA -. YeUow w/black '""''°'· , SOCK IT TO 'EM! the ctoclr. dla1 M2"61S. fin ... & Re. • .. -y Iii.
.68 Opet Kadette Rallye Ulod C1" 9900 Ulod Con 9900 DELIVERS
10,000 mil" S1895 NEW CAR ARRIVED! ....... .,... ..
• 646-9292 • Have 1968 Toyota HT. White " • .. -::=PEU=GEO=T::£~]~n~~~ JOHNSON & soN ·~~0 ~ A·us TIN
~-!~;..."':~~~;ms!' .... ~~ BARGAIN BASKET
titts, brakes, very aood looldllg 1for ft. Dial 6"2-66'1'8
engine. 49f-.5976 or 675-6595 for quick, ettlclent l'@IU1ts.
VOLVO VOLVO
, I .
WE ARE ONLY #1
SO WE TRY HARDER
FOR YOU
41/Q0/ Bank Fln1nclng '/°6. /0 ~c. ..
WE NEED YOUR
TRAD!; IN
'. 1966
' _,. (Gil Ll.IDU H11Hr
lltPORTS f • CM
TOTOT .. fOLY0646-9303
1'57 CAD1LUC· ~ do V1llt $395
Factory air, tun IJOWff• GM003 '
1'5f IMPDIAL L•-4'Dt. $395
Factory air, full power. OSJ169
1'59 LINCOLN 2·Df. taprt H.f , $395
Factory~· full power. JPC505 _
n'1 FOtlD Galatdt 4-oDr. H.T. $395
P.S., P~, auto., IWL GGZ1M
IHI Nu4HOT 404 -$395 • 4eyl'1pd. M11e9&e-gettel'. PLN668 . . .
'IHI llAMKD C:--$395 Auto., S-cy~ 35,000 Oct. mL JBM!I0.5 • nu COMO Clot. 4-Df. w-'595 Auto., 6-cyl, RAIL Shlq>. PUF098 . -nu PLTMOUTM,..,. 5,.., w.,. '695 P.S..PJ!., V-8, auto., lWt FWY59<
HU MaCUIT c.io.y P°'1t w ... U."9'•5" .......,, alt', f\lll -.1'JM5112 . a
~ ,. ~~·
I HS CHlftU. 300 Dtlm sedtll $99' 5 S..,~ outo,•alt', lWL Rl:ll221
JOHNSON & SON
1941 HAllOR IOULEVAD:-• '
COST~ MESA • 642·7os0
.1969 TOYOTA
COROLLA. th'e all new amazing, fantastic , unbeli evable, gorgeous
CJ ft. W.11
•&0•• .....
• • Sf4. -
AUSTIN AMERICA .
• Automolic or 4-<peed • Independent Suspension ' . ·-.-• _WW.. ........ ..... ...---·"""-··---. e WIM1•1ti1•....,.
:: ~
• Front Wheel Drive • Di1c Brak11 •
• Full Loathor lntlrior . ,,....., ..... ·-. .... -·--............
for
only -:: $4CJ'IO ... mo. :: AqTH~~D
.. . . , .. , MG. AUSTIN HEALY DEALER
lnciuilot 'rox I: Lie.-'· "r..,
& lnlol'Slt -36 Mol. 3, 00 w. COAST HWY.
:: NEWPoR-1' _ llAClf ·
~642·9405=540--1764-' . .
C...plolo ........
-OAC
I II
'I
ll
I'
l
•
' ,. .
•
TltANSl'OttTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTA'l'ION
' ·ESCAPE FROM THE ORDINARY
ONLY UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
MAKES . IT SO EASY
OPEN f:vENJNQS
AND SVNDAVS
.•
HERE ARE JUST · A FrN ''VALUE RA TED'' SPECIALS .. .
'67 OLDS
D•lt• Cudo11t Cpe. ITUJl72}. Tlil1 c•r
11 •-iulpp•d with pew1r wlndow1, pow•
'' 1t••rlnt I br•k•1, redlo, h1afet, tlr
eond,, t~rbo hydternetlc, b111;•1t •••h
end con1olt. A t•ld be1•ty end pric1d
rttl low et s2700
'66 OLDS
T1ron1do cp~. l1tr. No. 50113) 1 b1tll•
tlf11I ch1mp14111 1olcf wl+fl p1rch1mtnf
lt1ftrlor. R1dlo, h11t1r, ,_,, 1f1trl119,
br1k11, 1ir cond., turboliyd'rlll'llflc 1nd
m1ny more f1ctory 1dr11,
'64 OLDS
Jthltr I crlmton with wlt1t1 lnt1rl1r.
l~k1t •••.ta. con1ol1, r1dlo, ht1ftr1
powtr lkttl119, brekt1 tnd hydrtmetlc,
If yc111 went t tporh Cit try this ont at
$1050
'65 RAMBLER
M1rllt1 cpo. 11\EHltll bto11tlful. Rod a
b11ck with r1 .. lo, ht1t1r, powtt it11r•
1114, f1ctory 1ir con ... , 1uto. tr1n1. Don't
plll fhi1 lllC•,llMf buy.
'67 OLDS
C11tl111 S1prtmt cpt. ITSR7171 If yo•
wtnt t bttufif\11 ctr yo111 mw1t ... tlll1
Ol'I•. R1dlo, h•1t•r, pow•r 1t.•rh11, 1ir
co11il., 1114 oth•r f1ctory 1rlr11.
$2450
'67 OLDS -.
C11tl111 2 dr. Hrd, fop. l•1r, 110. 219•
155) f1r11 9r1tt1 with bl1cli vl11yl top.
.Rtdlo, h11ttr, powtr •ft1rln9, · 1ufo.
m1tic tr1n1.
'66 OLDS
·l•ro111d1 cpl. ITfHllJ), lllff L11c.rn•
Ml1t, witlri r1illo, ht1t•r, f111\ paw•r
tqllpr11t11f l1t1t.,ri111, brtk11, 111t1, tnd
wlnd1W\ I turbt hydrtrn1tlc, tint1d 9l1i1
tnd t lot mort ftcfory option1 ind only
$2725
'68 OLDS
C11tl1n 4 dr. Hof. 1d11. (WX6J2f) 1
top of tli1 Uni f1ll'llly c:1r with r1dlo,
h11t1r, P-•r 1t.trin9, 1ir c:ond., 111!0,
m1tlc tr11u., tlnttd 9lt1•, ind m1ny
'67 CHRYSLER
"JOO" HNI. tip 1dn , 111•. no. 214!1tl
U•ury phll lpQrty bucket .. , ... ttdlo,
httftr, eir cond,. power 1tt.n•v.
brek11, I l'lnyl top, tit of tltl1 end cofl'lo
fort too.
$2850
'64 OLDS
II 4 dr. Hrd, top , .. n. IJAEtl4l 11111.
tlful l1ig1 wit+. 9old111 91lge &: brown
l11t1rior. R1dio1 h11t1r, hydr1r111tlc,
pow1r d11ring, br1kt1 ind 1ir cond. A
it11I 11
iU :N s2700 $1475 $2025 ~2750 $1175
'66 CHEV. Im~ '62 FORD '65 OLDS '64 FORD '65 OLDS i i v
:E
:R ;s , I
2 Dr. Hr4, fop.'"'· no. 10114211 Nllf
nice f1mily cir with 9ood 1col'Ot11J ind
pl1M, of VI po_,. R1dlo, h11t1r, po•
9' .... rll'lf. pow1r91id1, w/w1JI tit1t l
tlntM 91•••·
·61!1xy 2 dt, Hrd. top (QCVl711 J•t
IJl1ck "tth ,, .. ,~ ''''''• ·pow1r:...1f1...-
l119, w/w1ll tir11 1M l •pd. Ctul19·
O·M1tic fron1. A r11I buy:
C11tl111 2 dr, Hrd. top, powd1r blue
wllh wMt1 t•r.· (W)CS367l r1dio, h11I·
1t,-Power • 11rt11,, 1ir c:olid., b1,1cktt
111h, consol1 Ind 1ulom1tic tr1n1. A
blst $ 11v•r.
G•I 500 2 dr. Hrd. top ·IH6S417:1
Look 1t this b11I buy i ncl yo11 won't
""" to fO lfty f1rth1r. Eq11ipp14 wift. r1di•, h1o1t1r, pOWlf' 1teo1rln9, br1k11,
o1ir cond, 111d Ctui11•0•11'1ttic tr1ns.
C1ttl•11 .l dr. Hrd. f.op, powd1r blue
with whilt top. IWXS.367) r•dlo, heil·
f'i pow'' •*•1rf~9, .•ir~ co~_., butk1t s11h, consol1, 111CI 1utom1lic tr1nt. A
b1't $ ••-•r. -·-1550 $685
'T Iv
I
.JOHNSON & SON
PREMIUM
TRADE-INS! THE
CONTINENTAL
INSPIRED
HERE ARE BUT A , F£W OF
»IE FINEST RE-SALE CARS MARQUIS
ut ORANGE COUNTY-BUY NOW AND SAVE!
•
'67 CONTINENTAL 4-Dr. SM. $3995 h111tif11I C1rn10 Gr-n finl1h with
Nfh1 block int.rlor, l1nd111 roof, ·
1111ippe4 wlHi 111 th• lllXllry cir
1ppoh1tmlflh. PS, Pl, 6 w1y 111t, P/W, AM·fM, 1uto.
*•"'P· 1lr cond. pow1r door locks. 1tc. 0111 ow111r
tr11l11t1l111cf lik1 n•w. a.l111c1 of now ctr w1rr111ty.
WATI04 ·
'67 CONTINENTAL $3895 4 dr, S11fo1"' 9r11 fi11., drlr: Ivy
901 .. inf., It. l...y 9old l11ulM roof.
Fully llO!. •q11ipt. inc. tilt 1hg whl.,
tfw10 f1pt •yit., full pwr., I ownr.,
be111t, l'l'l•h1t. TRK424
'67 CONTINENTAL H.T. Cpo. $3895 Attt-1ctiv1 1rltc 9old fini1h with
m1tchln9 l11fhtr interior, 1uto. tr1n1,
RIH, o1ir cond., PS, PB, PW, 6 w1y
pwr. 111t. l11utifully m1int1inod, lo1l1nc1 of 111w Cit
w1rr1n1y. TXTll3
'66 CONTINENTAL Coovt. $'3495 Strildt19 111hlmn rt,ttttt t11i1t finith
witk ""'lchi119 int1tior & blo1ck fop.
A1 you would 1xp1ct 111to. tr1n1.,
Ro1dio w/•l•r•o t1p1 system, 111fom1tic t1mp. •Ir
'67 MERCURY Colony Park $2995 St1. W19. Arctic whlt1 with blv•
d1lu•1 l11_t1rlor. Equipp•d with 1uto,
tr1n1., RIH, tilt 1t11rin1J wh1tl, PS,
PB, 6 w1., pow1r 111t, lugg1g1 rick, tic, Sold 11tw &
11rvlc1d by John1on I Son. TME172. S1t1 Pric1d
'67 MERCURY Colony l'ork $2795 9 p111, 1t1. W!lll. St<iu'l9 1rcfic: wht
w/turq. Int., 1. tr1n1,, RIH, 1ir con .,
PS, Pl, c1nt1r f1ci119 lrd 1t1f,
11199. rtcli, dual 1ct. t1ll,1t1, I own.
ctr, m111t 1t1 to •ppr1ci1t•. lie. UIH767
'67 COUGAR $2295 Mtd. blu1 f1'11f11lc fin. w/ft'lich. int.,
1. tr1n1 ., R&H, PS, tic. Very clt1n,
Lie. UDRl 19
'67 MERCURY MDftt. 4-dr HT $2095 Ait1c gold fin. w/ftlfch, int., •·
tr1n•., R&H , PS, Pl, f•c, 1ir cond.
lie. TUVlr'
'65 MERCURY Montlfty $1895 . 4DSO "8r1t11w1y", Arctic wkil1
with med ium bl1,10 interior. Fully ft(!,
equipp1d plus 1ulo. tr1ns. R&H , PS, PB,
l1ctory 1ir cond., ont own•r. lmm1c, c:ond, VJE452
co11d., 1utom1lic 1p•ff control. PS, PB, 6 w1y 1111, ---------------
P/W, 1tc. C1r1fwlly m1int1i11-d. 26,000 1ctu1I mi.
SQL220.
'66 CONTINENTAL 4-Dr. SM. $3295 Silv1r mist fini1h with blec• f11t1rlor
l L•11d111 roof. Alt tho lu><ury tp•
poinfm•nl1, PS, Pl, PW, I w1y 111t,
RIH •ir cond. Plu1 1ut1m1tlc ''"' ••nfrol, 1te. )6,.
000 1ctu1I fl'lil11. RUl,f7
'66 CONTINENTAL 4-Dr. SM. $2995 Ermi111 whlt1 1d1rior with bur;1111dy
l11lh1r lnt1rior, 1ulo. tr1~1. AM·fM,
R&H, 1ir cond., fwlt pwr., 1t"'f·•
~1k11, I w1y "•*•tilt •*•1ri119 whe1l, etc. SAl4J7.
'65 CHEVROLET $1395 St1. Wgn . lmpe11 . Berm11d1 blu1
m1t11fc fin . w/blk vi"yl Int., 1. lren1,
R&H, PS, Pl, fie. 1i1, 1how1 e•c•I.
c1r1, Lie. WFTtl2
'67 TORONADO $3295 CDtlu11!. Gr•cl111 told fin. w/t1fl11
blk. int. Otl. cpo., full pwr., fte. 1ir
c:ond, I ow11., lik1 new. Show' fe,.
tidio111 c1rt. Stock Nirmber 4244
'67 llRRlCUDl 2-Dr. H.T. $1895 VI, 4 1pe1d tr1n1., pow1r 1ft1rln9,
R&H , 1tc. V•ry c111n, low ll'llltt. Mid.
night blu1 m1t1llic w/"'1tchi119 In•
ltrior. TXS77l
'61 COUGAR
Diall'lorid l>lu1 fin, w/bl•. vi11yl l11f.,
1. tr1n1., RIH, PS, P dlt c I, driv111
011ly 17,000 ml. ll'l'lm1c. Llc1n11
N1. WIC227
$3095 '67 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill $1995 2 .. ,. H.T. 8e1 ut. Ait1c 9old, w/bl\.,
vl11yl upho/1t. fully fie. 1q11ipl., 11110.,
RIH, PS, Pl, ftc. •Ir, low mi. Tr1dtd
by orig. own1r, Lie. 011
IOb.DSOD+SOD
LlllOLI dlmlllTIL • llHIM• DllmltY•CllW
....... IOIUYAll, COltA ~ ., ......
. .
s1575
9700 Auto Leising . 9810 UMd Cors 9900 UMd Cirs 9900 Uttd Cars 9900
WE PAY ••• CASH
tor used can I: trucks just
call 111 for tree estimate.
GROTH CHEVROlfT
Ask for Sales Manqer
18211 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
KI 9--3111
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Meaa 546-1200
Will Buy
Your Volklwapn Gr Ponche
A pa.y top dollan. Paid for
ot not can Ralph
673-1190
I ALL MAKES
I COMPETETIVE PRICES
Cort Fox Auto Leising
224 W. Coast Hi&hway
BUICK
64 RIVIERA
CADILLAC CHEVROLET
NewPort Beach 642-8440
Used C1r1 9900
ONE OWNER
Immaculate! 26,000 Miles
with pwr etttrtng, brakes,
windows, f a c t air. $1950.
Firm. 64&.3700 No Dea1ers.
FOR Sal• l.966 Bulcl< Rivi•ra __ C:::..:.H.:!YR::.:..:.:.:O:..:LET:::::.:..__ 1
xlnt cofld. lo mileage, pvt ,68 CHEVY II
TRANSPORTATION party. 548-5800 Nova series. Air, automatic
WSALE
'59 BUICK INVICT A Blue trans., power steering, Ra·
4 dr, hdtp. P .S., P.B. Orig dio, Heater, + other extras.
owner $175. 642-1979 Low miles. # 24316L
Credit problem1 See us for
ln•tant d•llv..,,, low pdo<s, CADILLAC
easy terms. We decide on --------
your credit. Call or come 1963 COUPE De Ville. Faml·
in today. I Full "· 540-4192 Y car. power, ""'
BLUE CHIP mso. Gn-1396
AUTO SALES
2145 Harbor, Costa Meu
WE PAY CASH FOR
YOUR CAR PAID
FOR OR NOT!
MAN't WONDERFUL OP.
PORTUNITIES lla•e hem
di&COVered ln C1utWed Adi.
Turn back to ''Bueeu ~
DOrtunitl!a" NOWI
HOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
$2090
GUARANTY
CHEVROLET
711 E. 17th SL
At Santa Ana Freeway
Santa Ana 54l-9311
VS, fac air, R & H, automa·
tic, power steering, buckets.
V91468
$1000
GUARANTY
'67 CAPRICE 2"' HT. A/C CHEVROLET
Loaded w/xtras! Xlnt cond. m E. 17th St.
$2450 495-4Zl'8 wknds only At Santa Ana Freeway
'61 Cl-IEVY Impala 6 cyl. Santa Ana 543-9311
standard trans. 4 Door. $345. '56 OiEV. 2-Dr., 283, 4 spd.;
962-8487 Hurst linkage: positractlon:
'56 CHEV WAGON new paint & inter. 4 Track
2 dr. V-3 $175 stereo; good tires. Best of.
673-8'r.M or 642-0895 fer! 549--0438 Eves.
'63 BELAIR. Xlnt coOO. 4
1;1;.;m;:oo.;rted;.;.:"-'A;.;·u1a1='--9600.;...;.;.._lm--'-po"-rt-ed..;;.._A..;u_1oe;.;;.._9_600.c;.. lmportld Autos 9600 lmport.d Autos 9600 dr, auto trans. $000. 2115
Parsons, C.M. or ca 11
645-1409
• .. • , ., ___ -"f'· r •_r _-__ _.....__':....__":'."'_~ .. . .. . .. ~-----
.... -··-··· ---.. .----~--. --, -·-·· ,,. . ---
rRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANIPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION
''~"' January 24, 1%9 OAl~Y PllOT 37
TRANSPORTATION TR 4N5PORTATION TRANSPORTATION -..,T°'RA=N"'S"'PO"'R"'T"i"T'°'IO"'N:---.T'"RA"""N"SPO""'ilT."'""A.,TIOllnm.--'=-<· · ,. .,,
NtwCu1 9IOONawC.rt HOON.WC.rt t800 NowC.rt 9900Ntw Cart HOONtw Cart 9100 Now Cart 9900 -Cart 9800 New Can 9800
I
CADILLAC for NINETEEN S.IXTY-NINE
JANUARY
SALE
1964 CADILLAC
"' Do•r h1•dtop fioilh•d 111 Roy1I• lh1• llff•rlw with 11M1khh11 tll•1 cloftl
inl1rior. H11 111 th1 pop-l1r C1dilltc pawor 1•1l1tt h11lwtlifit 'owor
1'1erin9, power br11i11, pow11 windowt, AM ·f ... r1•il" cnilM control 111d
much , 1111"h moro. tVHU8981
SALi 51444 ;llCI _
1963 CADILLAC
Th1 popult1 S1d111 D1Vlll1 f111hhed fn 1rmi111 whit1 11hri1r wlfh eo11-
tl41tlin9 bluo dotli ~nd l1tlh1r int1rior. Ht1 111 th1 pop11l1r ~tdUl1c pow·
'' t1ti1h icludin9 1!1trin9, br11i•1, widows, 111!, AM:.fM rtdl1 ind
C1dill1c'1 f1mou1 f1cfory tit collditionl119, tRRG499)
SALE s1111 PRICE
1967 CADILLAC
Thi1 lov1ly Coup• 01 Viti• h11 111 pow•t •Uilf1 lndudlnt .,..,.,,
s+11rin9, br1k•1, window•, Mtt 1nd C1dill1c'1 f1mo111 ftct.ry 1lr con·
ditioning, '11r10 AM-FM, tilt wh11I. twili9ht ""'·· Promlum Do11il•
E19f1 lir11. 81111tif11I locoUy driv1n fin1 1uiomoltil1. lVAX710I
SALE s4333 PRICE
1966 BUICK
Cullom l1S1br• "' Door l111tdlop. Sp1rkllnt t11I bl110 with 1111tehin9 lnttr•
for, F1ctory oir conditionin9, .111tomttic tr1n1mhslon, powor rl11rin91
power br1•11, r1dio, ~t1f1r, ttc, Truly t fin1 tutomobilo th1t m111t bt
1••11 tnd driY•11 to epprtciafo Its fino v1l11tl ISIW"t91
· SAl:E ~22-22-PRICE ----
1964 RIVIERA
A 1t11n11!11t powd1r \.hr• 1vtomobil1 wlth bfut 'vl11yl Tnt•rior te 1natch. Htt
tll powtr l11cl11din9 powor 1t11rint, powtr W•••s. ,ow•r wln•OWI, r1iillo
tnd ht1t1r, 1vtom1tlc trofu111i11lon, white 1ido wall tlt11 ind cv1t1111 in·
f.orler. This c•r h11 only 48,000 mil••· Mu1t ••• this 1111. (NIYltll
SALE ·PRICED
1967 CADILLAC
D•Vill• conv1rtiblo. lotutlful C1111to boi90 with m1tchl119 top 111d l11th•r
inf1rlor, Thi1 low 111il1t90 cir i1 e•c•ptio11tlly oq11lpp•• with f1ctory 1ir
co11ditionin9, power 1!01rin9, powor br1 ko1, p1wor Mth, pow•r windows,
tilt ind ttl11copic wh1tl, AM·fM r1dlo. IXSP•'IZI
-;~LE s4222PRICE
1967 CONTINENTAL
A b1011tiful turquoise 4 door with t11rquoi1t full lotlher inttrior. All tht
popllltr pow1r 11si1f1 includin9 pow1r 1t.odn9, brtlrtt, "'lndow1, 1t1h,
f1ctory t lr conditioning. Thi1 cit 11 1b1ol11toty ft11f11tic l111id1 & out ind
11111 wilting for th1t ptrtic11!1r b11y1r. ITGM77t1,
SALE s3333 PRICE
--.....
•
' ' i FROM ANYWHEU ~ IN OlANGI COUNTl
• I MILi SOlfTM Of UN DllGO FWY.
OH HAUOl ILVD.
A Masterpiece from . a.
... The Master Craftsmen
On Display and. Ready for Delivery Today!
ORDER YOUR 1969 CADILLAC NOW!
LEASE DIRECT e FAST DELIVERY
. FAST SERVICE
LARGEST SELECTION
OF LATE MODEL PREVIOUSLY OWNED
CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY
Tho "or popwl1r El Do11do. Flnhh.d 111 Mroq11• told with \iotgo ptld-4 roof tnd 9o!d l11t1rlor.
T» ............. -p0Wff -.+torin91 pow ... br.Ut; powor-wlndowtr ,._, ..... ~p-••·"•nt window&,.-~
pOW•t h1111• lld r1lt11t, $tor•• AM.FM ltdlo, 111d 1111ny mltl'' l1111ury pow1r ft1h1rt1 inel11din9
C.di/11e f1 1tory 1ir·condit!onln9. l1tt1r 91t htr• flr1t on thJ1 l1111ty, lVTll671
1 6444
I 1967
Sedan De Ville
Thi1 lovtly Sod111 D1Villo h11 t11 popul11 po"''' tnlsh l11cl11dlnt pow1r sfttrlnt , powor br1k1r..
pow1r window•, pow•r 111t •nd C1dif11c'1 f1mo111 f1ctory 1ir condifionin9, Thi1 b11utlf11I 111to ..
mobll• h11 bo111 vtry ct11f11lly drivon ind 1how1 only tht lln1tt of c1ro by it's pr1vio111 1w11on.
144451
53999
SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN
8:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. MONDAY thru FRIDAY
9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY and SUNDAY
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1969
JANUARY
SALE
1965 BUICK
Wltic•t. A ll'flfy 1pt11l•h 1il.,•r oxtorior with rod vT«yl l11hri1r 1114 poww
1 .. .rf1t. poww brt•••• powtr •••fJ. powOf wln4'1ft, AM-FM rt41•, tllt
•ftHlllt whotl, 1111to1111tlc tron11nl11lo11, 1vt1m1tlc trunk lid r•ltt11, wlro
whttl to"" 11141 of cou111 f1ctory •Ir conditio11i119. IRRYJ761
SALi , 888 PllCI
1966 THUNDERBIRD
Tho .,.rty 2 d;., h1rdh>p ls fully •ttufppff wit~ ,__, 1ktri119, p-•r
b111i11, p•w•r wl11dow1, Powor sett 111d Ford'1 f1mou1 f1ctory 1lr COii·
dltlonlng. A lotvHful Mtln 1IN1r o•t•tior with bl1ck vinyl ln .. rlor. Mvlf
bt 1ton I 4ri"on I• fully 1pjWtcitt1I (RTUll9 I.
SALE s2222 PRICE
1965 THUNDERBIRD
Lend111 h1Ntop. A ti.1111tlful ffpphlr1 tll111 f .IJr.J "'ltfl th• wfllt. law ..
"'of, tll vlnyl lnttrior. h11 ,owor oq11lp111011t Incl. p-or "'°'"' ,...,
1to1rln91 pewtr wlndowt, p1wor 101t ind ftcfory 1ir condltlOfl"-f. A.a
outat111dln9 ctr 1t e11h ftndin9 11vln ... IMPPl 21)
SALE 51666 P~CE
1967 BROUGHAM
Fltotw.M 1,.119ht111. Mtf1rifc r191I "'"' with bite• ptlldtd top o!Hi
bl1clr t1p11try tnd lotthtr lntorlor. All pow•r lncludi119 rio1rln9 br••• ..
wlndow1, vont windows, h1111k lld t1lt111. St•r•o r1dlo, tilt 111.d t1l11copic
1f1trlnt whttl phu foctory 1ir conditio11in9. IUKV.23f)
. s4
SALE -555 PRICE
1965 CADILLAC
n.o popul1r 11d1n DoVlllt. Flnhh1d 111 ltroqu1 9old _,.,,., with 1111tch-
ln9 gold l11th•r i nd cloth inttrior, H11 1U th• popul1r C.dJll1c lu'ury
f1thlrt1 lncludiftf powor 1ftorl119, power brtko1, p1w1r wbMfowa, p9W1r
•••h, 1i9111I H1kin9 rtdl• t nd of courao C1dlll1c f•ctory 1lr cOIMllH011l"91. 17121)
SALE $2666 PRICE
1962 CADILLAC
Co11p1 D1Vll11, Thi• 1111J1dic tu1•do bl1c• Ctdil1tc wl'th whit. l11tfiot
lnt1fior h11 •lflloM tit of th• d1 lu10 f11tutt1 th1t CtdHltc h ftll'llllt fw
lncl11dln9 pow1t 1t.1rln9, pow•r b11k11, pow•r •••h tnd powor •t11d......,
Al10 h11 Ctdlll1e ftctory t ir conditlonh19. Yo11 m111t drift thil •11ii.
lJRH&l2l
SALE $888 PRICE
1967 OLDSMOBILE
t ptuon9tr c111toM V11t• Ctul1ot tftflon w19111 fully 1111JppH with
powtt 1ft1rl1191 pow•r lirtlos, po"'er window•, 1utomttlc tr1n1111ltdo11,
r1dlo ol"I h11tor, ftcfoty 11' conditlo11ln9, 1!111ul•t1• -od '1111ollln1. It'•
1b.ol11toly 901901111, lllrr• 1olcil 1xt1tlor with 111tchlnf ¥f11yl lr1torlor,
SALE PRICED
Your Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Harbor Area
NABERS CADILLAC
-
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
540-9100
---------------
Usod Cart 9900 UNd Cart 9900 Uoad Cart 9900 u .. d Cort
DRIVE TO LAGUNA
FOR THE CORVAIR
'62 MONZA Convertible, R
& H, 4 speed. Original
owner. $500. 494-8444
CORVETIE
'68 CORVETTE conv, tnt'l
bluf", as new, orig owner,
Afl1-Fr.1, autom, pwr strg
& brakes, elec \Vindows,
new tires. Imm ac u I at c.
494-5489
'6.1 FASTBACK, red. black
inter.; 327, 4 spd. Map,
11m!o-tape, AMfFM. Xlnt
cond. $2350. Cl) 493--1867
COUGAR --'67 OJUGAR. lime w/blk
vinyl top, loaded & air.
$2<00. 545-8375 --DODGE
DODGE
'65 DART
Cpc, Runs good, local car.
See to appreciate.
GUARANTY
CHEVROLET
FORD MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE
FORD •rr Country Squire 10 '64 Font Galaxlt XL '65 MUSTANCi IRllVERSITY puaerwer Station Waaon. Owned by Uttle 'ole retired Cpe, Bucket teat, automatic
Factory i.ir, fUU pcn\'el'. 300 marine. Sky blue, V-8, auto. tram., rad~ beater. V.ry
e.,.ine. All DeLun exttu. motlc, !act .... PWl ,,_. clean. Low mil•• OWP432. SALES A· SERVICE
Beautiful lime aold ml Im. ar.. dlr. Ex""1ent cond. 175 $1095 01.DSMOBllf
maculate. Must Sellt $2'r.!I), CUb dell...,_ wm .... !or-GUARANTY
RAMBLER
T·BIRD
Private Party. IW6.()l)f5 'eip car in trade, fine prvt • 711 E. 11th Sl prt,y.'IK-8'113 or 56-0llM CHEVROLET 2850 Harbor Blvd. '60 T·BIRD
Al Santa Ana Fttewa.Y '63 Ford XL HT, bucket 111 E. t'ttb St. Cocta Meta Estel Gold body, white lthr,
Santa Ana ~9311 sea.ta, white ext, fact air, MERC"•f At •·-ta Ana -..... 54().9640 Uted can 540-8881 dlr, bucket stat&. Rblt eng: dlr. $85 cash dell1. P)'mnt Uft ...,, ... .,.., .. ..., hauled trans, aJao new
$29 mo. 545-0634 Santa Ana 5G8311 '64 OLDS 88 Conv. R/H, =t. Car ln perfect lhape! FALCON '65 MUSTANG 2 + 2, '63 MERCURY '65 Muatazw GT 289-4V. W/w. Ps. ~l583oond. $915. $85 CaAh will deliver and
FALCON w/Cobra e n I. ' Red/Black lilt PIS. \78, Hardtop. Air. Immaculate. Ori&lnal oWDer 4 spd. fine prvt prty, pYttlla $Zl.86.
.,,..._ Indy tin. """" ' • IP· EL cond. S-Bool< 11!'5, Our """' 1895 mx Int rally PK. otac. PONTIAC 491-9113 "' 56-0llM
..... 54&-6!29 llWPOl1Et MOTORS -· --... Lli<E Sm! DOW 1965 T-8ltd .. ""'=· ====-== •115 Fm! Bui. RIH. 1149'. -· u.~ 81.J ·-""!:.:!::.·G"!4'~ '65 PONTIAC OTO lull powr. an "" -.
FORD $25(1, under bluebook r&-~ .__. ""' -_..,o,.,.,., ... ,..... .. _ Local car, Low mllet. Owned va!VH eround. new nm.
tall !or qulclc ule -oa.8511 drt,., auto obllt, Ml. ti.. by lltU• •oJe Wly In Caot. Just ape\11 l$l0. Must ,.u,
54 l'ORD V4
Auto. 4 dr. Good llrea.
$175 or heat offao
Runs good. 83W6n
* ~2502 * '65 MERC. Convert. Pwr. blue, bood cond. $121!5. tnno. ~usb blue kcket' S191$. Before 5:30 LI 1--.1251.
'64 GALX 500 XL. 2 dr, 1teer. I: brb; R&:Jl. air-~ leavlqr area. Rafi. titue at. white top, ="'~U,..,,Ml<=..,'....,,=..,....,..-1 H'J1{, R/H, PS/PB/PW, mod. 34,000 Mi. Xlnt Omd.; V.f, auto, dlr, pwr iteerfrW, '62~ T·Blrd. $325 b • 1 ow
bkt _..,Pvt plf, lll95. $12)0.~7.ut6PM .. MUSTANG, 3~ V,< --....... 185Cub Bluebook. Mechlnleally
ile-m1· •51 Mi':RC 9 ..,. ..,.. us· now -. urn, moo. doll. w!11 fine prYt p...,.. JOnl N-body -.
.. FAJRLANE 50>; JWI. top e&nier, &'OOd work « c.onlider eood tn.n1 car u 49f.ITl'3 or 545-0534_ 646-Gla aft 5 6.1 FORD Falcon Wagon.
Auto. trans. New w/w tiftL
RJH, Xlnt cond. $795.
64J.<12I NB
pwr. .-.. air; -""" ..... Rwlo PJd $90, putie1 pmL e."1932 US7 FIREBIRD GI llct m '64 T-BIRD, -aood cond.
slau: 289 enc .. mw drtl; ICT4ta aft 5 or Sat 'G6 Multq V-8, black, auto pi,,, NB, ctm trtm N e w Full power, atr. sm.o tape.
IOOJ. ortr. ,,.,,... •-e COMET Clllon ... •·or """" Interior -· wire ---11.000 mu... -prict,-0.,.. Mz. '63 GAL. 000; 4 D<. bdtp. oo GALAXIE. AINx>od, hnl top, 4 ....... R/11, Wl7 -......_ hr1«I cond. Verdm G,.... PaJnL 1S11JO. "lmbtd< 64<-:mll V~; 4Uto., ~ ,.=7 mce. auto. ae.n. Good 2nd qar lharp. orti owner, will aac., S1886. .*1911 H5-'1314 eVH. . 19N T.aIRD. LllDt ..,,, a.
15711. Owntr -· .... 1oc11 drtYln( $ 2 O O. $UlO. m-oo "115 MUSTANG OolMrl. Pwr. '811 GTO aDver/-wlblk pwr. 1 ..-. I• 1213, 1249
1965 FORI> OowlbT 8Q'ulft 54MIJS7 w MERC. Sta. wqon· atr-attoer. le brakes. Low Ml. Int. 1mmac le mechan1catly Harbor Blvd, C.M.
CLEANEST USED CARS
'66 GALAXIE 500 HT coupe r & h, pwr sir,
auto trans, air cond. Uc #SVFl!B .. $1995
'66 RAMBLER Amb..,ador 4 Door sedan
V-8, r & h, auto trano. Uc #Tl'-V803 $179S
'M CHEV Caprice. Slatkin Wago'!,. r & hi air
cond, ps, au'IO trans. Uc #RYSG·16 •. $ 99S
'67 FORD LTD HT coupe, r & b, auto IT&llB,
po, pb. Uc #PVTS74 ........... ,. . $2$95
'66' CHIV C&prlce HT Coupe, r & h, auto ·
lrlDI, ps, air cond, bucket .eai.. Uc #RYS-
411 .................•••.•..••.•• $2195
'68 CHEV Impala HT Coupe, r & .~!!'lo trans, pwr strg, air cond. · Uc # "'"""38 ........... ' .................... '2695
'60 FORD Falcon Ranchero, r & h, 1uto trans,
Lie #HMVB49 .......... :. .......• $195
-'67 CADILLAC Coupe de Ville, full pwr, l!r.
Uc #STK368 .....•.....•.......• '4495
''4 THUNDERBIRD f\111 pwr, .ir, IJc #OBJ:. •
527 ...... ·~. ' .. : .••.•...•......... $1695
;
'
.
' •
• f •
• .
' "
'Q OODGE Clllt Sportlman
van: camper equlp'd., xhft
bualneu/pleasure car: no
down, take over paymtL
U apprv'd. credit. 844--0477
'64 POLARA 4-dOor, big V-8.
auto, run power. AMfF?tl.
New lie. ssz;. 646-4650
65 4 dr Dodge Dart. Rad'°·
hea !er. One ownrr. Ex. South Coast Motors :
Waaon-L<>eded! XlnL .';'l'JO 'SI FALCON 2 dr0 6 cyt, I """"· • -1na1' 3rd SL!(», 546-lBl!ll ..... S --$ISOO. Z:.. 'IO T-B!RD. lillii om4.
m-3210 or m-7111.. . opd. dlr, ll!O cull deh, SML Sl995. -7 Alt. 6 'll6 MU>lrANG Vynl Top. or "k-.1 -JA85 ...... axtru. $395
~7 FORD Station w~ pymtl $1£. per mo. $9m PM Ma.kt offtt. '9nt condition '55 PONTIAC, ' dr. eood • Call: 988-m . ~ mnd. call betMW 12 usr FORD. CUilom m 'M Mm: with m. l(l(ld thruout. Can~ tnN. tatr cond. Wll1 rake •115 T-Btrd HT $1450. or bat '°""· ......m alti PM
'68 R.T. 9,!XXI ml. .440 CU.
IJll. 4 Spd. & Trade., posi.
LI ~3209, ~12 ~lh St. N.8.
SOC...1\ IT TO 'EM!
and 7. 613-3444. Good oondltloo. $l0o. eo.ta -!loo. ,.... ollor. '61 CONVERT. v.a, nd no ie. thin $75. oiler. 515-1Tl5
'6f P'ALOON Convert.: ltick Mna. 5«)..f'1'0I e ._... • wtwtitte 10p: auto •• JW{, ,... ~""'"-r=-".,._-"---.,,a,-a..,--'-, -..,"'"1
lhlft. Ofla owner. A~i coad. '!II FORD 1' a fr le n • • 'ri8 MERC. Rdtp. Good pwr. sleet. S1(IOO. 144-~ IOJN U. ....... , • tbl 4U11* e.* W tt wttll 1
Dys 64:l-03CM Ewa 50-4452 trantportaOon car. $ 8 S, motor, tirell. trans.; $100 1llE QtnCKER YOU CALL. OA.n.Y PD..O'I' WANT ADS! Dal1J Pilot ...-Adi
SO<f.ITTO'EM! ......mo A ~ THE QtnCKER YOU SELL,_w_-om_, ______ 11G-5611
FORD· MEICUIY • -
303 BROADWAY, LAOUllA MACH
49445 IS S49-llSI
.. 1111.Y PLOT
MID
"
WINTER
PRICE
CUTS!
1·
..
FASTBACK or
2 Dr. HARDTOP
• -
FORD is
N~riiber One in
Southern 1
California •.•
TEST DRIVE ONE AND
RND OUT WHY!
. BRAND NEW 1969
MUSTANG
ORDE> NOW $23980~
'Ll~ENSE
~ BRANDNEW1969 ~CUSTOM~::::.
'1S-Mim~s
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
ON Al'l'ROVED
CREDIT THRU
CALIF. FUNDING $ BRAND NEW 1969 FALCON CLUB COUPE
Pin T•x altd Llcenae
Full size 121 inch wherl
be1 •, c•rp•fs, heeter-•rH:l
full factory' equipment in•
.,\,ded . l9JSOVIZSIOOI .
!Whitewall tires and wheel
covers optional.)
48 MONTHS FINANCING AVAILAILE THROUliH CALIF. FUNDING ON CREDIT Al'l'ROVAL
~$ s$
Mid-Season Savings on Guaranteed Used Cars
li9 ci r b1n1fit 1t • coll'lpact
ctr price. Full f1ttory equip·
p1d ind11din9 h11t1r, d1·
fro1t1r, c.011rt11y lighting,
comp!.te 11f1ty f11tur11,
eh:. C~OU111717l whit•· :;~.!'oi; "' .... , '""' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY plu ... rr.!:
'66 RAMBLER
AMEllCAN ttO I Oaor Hml!OP. V1, auto. lrl M.,
R&H, PS, IKI. 1lr, -, ISIV ~7l)
'67 IMPALA
COUPE V4, Rl.H, PS, l.ctory
1lr. ITSN '1'21
'66 NOVA
::::~·S'J'· 195 1v11;>. lr•M~
r11cllo, Mr. (SBP'231
'67 DODGE
DART 4-DOOR 'tYllndfr, IVIO. tr1M .. r1dlo,
heeltr. (TVllll l
'65. IMPALA
4·DOOR HARDTOP' V-&, 1vto 1'!"1111 .. llt & H, PCl'W1=r
1ltt!'lng end br'lk ... tact. 1Jr,
wtl!M wills. CFNC "5tl
'U MERCURY s995 W) METIOR
1 Dool' H1rdloll, V ... Iv"'-tr1t11.,
R&H, -· 1tmrl!llll, wlllttw1!11, IFSJ olOOl
'U T-llRD
2-DOOR HARDTOP
v.1, wto. '''"'·• 1v11 -•· 11~. 11r, wM-•"'-llHZ Dll •
'66 GALAXIE $1695 "'500" 2·DOOR HARDTOP V..e. w!D. tr1ns., R&H, POWtt 1tttrin9, IKI, Mr, w!llU1llr.,
!TA5 Oil)
'67 MUSTANG $1995 HARDTOP v.a, 1uto. tTIM., 11:1.H, POWf'r "-·~· """~""· """' .•.. (UJDMf)
'68 MUSTANG $2295 2-DOOR HARDTOP
Al.It&. tTIM., Rl.H, -11"rlnt,
Whll-&11.,. tlnlld t11u.
(VHB•I
'66 FORD $1495 COUNTRY SEDAN WAG •
. "' , ...... •oM .• ""' ~"' • ,.,..,.. IKl'lln 1Jr, 1119 rKlt,
ID P.W. (T8 K 4ml
'17 GALAXIE $1995 2-DOOR HARDTOP' .,,.._-·Ir-., IU,H, -'~"M· ""''' "" "'"'""''" (TUN 20ll
'68 T-llRD s3495 LANDAU 4-DOOR '29 \1-1. 1u10. tr1nt., RLH, fUh =.· i':i:R '~fti"JnVI '°"· ... Nie.
'63 RAMBLER s495 AMERICAN 2·DOOR
' tyllnder •!Id<, Miter, whltn'lt11. IOMK 206)
'66 MONZA
COUPE
""'"'~ S'J 195 R&H. (TFT·
151.)
NEW 1968V2 CORTINA
•.7.6 C.l.D. 11 hp t119ln•: fully 1ynchro,.i1td 4 1pttd fttnunit-
11011, 24 mo11th/24,000 nut• w•n•nty, di1c brtltt1,,vi11yl S.1i1clttt
111!.1, fu lly c1rpt+.d, •troflow v1nlil1tion, h11t1r I d1Wo1tir i~l1rior I 1~1rio~ decor 9ro11p1, .w /S/W lirtt, p1dd1d .!11h A
... ~s1·'"'7"' ·7"'"a'·" .;, ... • ... h;~:~::~:.
Immediate Dellv
l
)
,,
RfADY TO GOlll
. LOADED WITH EXTRAS
4 Sl'UD TINS.\llSSION e 3U CUllC INCH V-1 $
ENGINE . e 4 IADIL WIUIUTCMI e SUll , .
GllP ~TIAl e TINTID Gt.ASS e P11SH
IUTTIIN RADIO e HEA TU e HEAD llS1UlllTS
e RID LINE WIDE OVAl TIA ES e ANO MUCH
"/_ MOU ·-• .,, ..
.
'67 CHEV lm~la ~pt. . ' ,
V ... r..:lle. t.Mi-r, ,.... 1tetrlnt·HWll 5'0l
51688
'65 DODGE Dart Conv.
V·t. ~le ,.. .... , r1•10r Met.r, "'!'-' ,,..ri,,.,
Cit•"· (Mllll.719)
51188 ' ..
· '66 CHEV. Monza Cpe.
--...,. •. 1"'7*)
'67 DODGE Dart uc tTlllS ~adle· ,,...,,r, "'" m 2 or. HT. v .. m:,~ eom•i'. (TGX6'01 ·~····s,688 ····•1018
-
-· . . ~-.... ----·-. . . . .
SlllAl No.
JM2311K.126169
' ~~.\llll'ii';llf ..
. .
·B ·O
lllAND NEW
1969 VAUAHI'
2 DOOR SEDAN
Dtfl-.. (tlll -
.. .. ·-
'
CHBYSLER
PLl'lf OVTH
IMPERIAL
...
DAILY-
'
1--
' •
. • ' . .
i . • . . . . ' • . .
' • . . •
l .
I • . . . .
.•' ' . ... • ' . •:
" • • ' • ' ~ . • • ~ • ' ·-• ' .
' . .
l
• 1· l
' ' ••
~--
I ' I
I
--~:
•
--Willl.tlie.Oplioas.Yta.Wanl,-.
at Ille Price You Want!
NOW
o.-EN
SUNDAY$
SPORTSMEN'S SPECIAL
Tuck-Away camper Tel..coplc
•Ifft ''6 CHEVROLET PICKUP
"-t. 1111 ... , Nfl'l••IOI', 1lnk. cllr.tt.. OlllMj, »II. dOM\ ., Ir ...
$1695 ~~~~ $54~
FULL PRICE 30 Month1
'65 Ford Galaxie
• I Door HtrdloP. V.f, 111tom1Tlc, r..si... heeler, ,,_.-1l"'1nl. IVIJ Ol»I. 20"4 down or irldt, 81111
... prQ llW. ·Clt"ar-FULL •07;1 PllCI
'MUSTANG SPECIALS
lit wvinSI:• on sp1ci1lly equipped 2-Door H•rdtop or
Sport1Roof v1r1ion of •••ryotit'~ f1vorit1 fuft c.•r -.
Muri.J"t I . r::::
• E71 White Sidewell Tires • Wheel Coven··• Du1l1
•
R1cin9 Mirrors • T1p1 Stripe • Hood ScoqP. .
. SAVI ..... DUllNfi oua POP·OPnON SAi.Ei
FAIRLANE
SPECIALS
FACTORY CLEARDCEI SHELBY GT COBRAS!
The '69'11ft caning. An4 n Omigo County'> only authofizld SholbrCobr1 cleoler, W.
or• _.ting di"""1 with•tho flCfory to cl1111 tho ~st of tho '68'111 tho V.•1111
-""' ...,,dflrtcl on America'& number one high porionnoiicl ""'
GT 350'1-500's -500 KR's 4-SPDS, AVTO. TRANS., CONVERTIBLES
Radns NII W/bid "1Dc I. lnterlcr WI,. whMll. (VZU. $~'1'· ""09 .... 5" M "r.iu. $38 ... JD PllCI MONTHS
'61 Ford F350
C1b I. c11111i.. IGU171l. 20"4 i:kPwn or 1r..i..
$695 :~~. $29 ~:!:
'68 CORVE11E
l te choo1• f..1111 •. 2 door •11• 4 ,..,.,
l'llodtls. Herdtop1 1114 L..1ul1ul. All wltti
air conditionl'"J 1114 full power. S•N
with sl1r11 t1pe1 ''] thr1 '07 Models,. .........
'6 7 T -Bird Landau
Redio, heo1ter, tilt wheel, 11te11'11fic:,.p._
er 5ft1rl~t. br1•e• • wi11d-1 • "''• 1it
cond.,'f1c.t,iry Wl!l'flltfy, IVCKJIJI, 20'J.
down er tr1dt; ·
'67 Ambauador 990 H.T.
LO"Wll rnllMte, "'" PQllW, t lr ccn:llllo!lln .. (fJEX OJI 20'lio down ot lr.se. $'1895 ~~.
'66 Ford 7 Litre $2995 ~~~. $19 i:::t •• 1 ---'· 1PKt11 'lll'llftt1. -w~ ov•ls, :r fqtl, 11.000 S P1Utr>0rr H1rcttoo. 1111 1ntll'M!, 1uto(Jll!lc, •Ir concll·
lflllls, 1rclc ""'II• wll!I bllck lntwlot, PO.,.. Windows, ·--------.... ---· • llorn"f, oowtr dttrl .... {SVX '62). ~ dicnwn flf tr.a.. -l'.tteed.' 11r CDllClllbnlnt. (VZWI07) 111 "4 dofi'll or , eru. '* P!'icl slllS.
'64 Chevrolet Malibu Wag. r"ii1e5 011m$127,.." '67 FORD 4 Door $1595 ~~. $48 ~,l.! a--. ._..., pllWtl'" .t.rlne. IONJ 1'11. _,., ~ w ~7 OFFll Montn V.f. Olltomltlc:. fUlty ~IPMd, 211.00I od\111 mll-. f9C·
._, • tory • .,.rtanty. S.r. ,._ 1JSlllJO:la ~ -.ii or tr.O.. $795 ~~ $29 :-;.,:: ---------1.$1195-',~~. $'26 ';:'..::, '65 THUNDERBIRD '63 Chevrolet Impala ~ Fllll -·· factory •!r. IHK!f3) m. dowro or lfHI!.'
MUSTANG SALE ' -'"'"~· v.. """'""-'""· 'u'"· -$1595 FULL $61 Pll JD ,,..,.,,.. 1Kl'z •ni. 20"4 itawn or 1r101. , 64 Mere. Wa""n 1 0 Pass. riuc1 MONTHS $895 ' FUPRUICE $30 .. ".,' ... " .. -II to cJ.001• from. "6" I "I" cylir.det1,
4 1pt1d1, autorn1tic, Sorn• with power
1t1erin9 incl •ir co11dltionin9. 1961i thr•
1967 ,,,odolft con,,.rtible1, ceupe1, orid
2 + 2 f11tbocb. UAMPU.
1"5 MUSTANG
Hardtop c.,,.. f1..lly 9i1lipped fWXS.
.,,,, 20'J. c1-· It tr1d1.
$195 .•'~'tea $31 '='..!:. .,
c:.1any Park. Fut! ,owir,. 11r, IJZY nn, M ctDwn or
..... PUU $38 ...... _.. '64 FORD .'SALE ---------$1095 . PllCI 11 TO CHOOSE FROM Transportation Specials
Now 0•1r19ln9 15 c1t1 p1r we1• ihtt c1n
b1 r1t1il1d 1t .,.hol1Jol1 to the public.
loot tli1 de1ltrs on ffl11t older c1r1.
SAVE!!
'64 Chewrolet "Sedan
t.o.def. Air Cllllll!Kenln9.. COXD fUJ ~ dllwn or trldt.
$695 ~. $29 :.-~
2 Doon. • Door1, Sll!IMI,., H11rdliipl. Conwrtltllet.
W-. -wtth 1lr Md POW• 111tfhl9.
EXAMPlE:
'64 fORD GAU.XII ioa 4 DOOi
V ... , 11•TM11lk, fully e'IU~ (TWiii 4lU. :Ull.
Oawt1 or trodl.
$695 Full Price. $23 por 30 mos.
USED CAR SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE n HOURS UNLISS PREVIOUSLY SOLD. ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT
'
Get ~-hot 11vlngs on t~i1 hot-1111-
lng intelmecliite :M~ '"-' equlP"
pod with popular option• like:
• While Sidew1l Tire1 • Delu11
Wheel Covers • Dual Racing Mir·
rors • Tape Stripe • W 1TI-to-
Wan C..rp1tin9.
A SPORTY VINYL ROOF
SAVU YOU EVEN MORE!
t.;!3i;t
. . .
ENGLISH FORD
CLEARANCE
OllANIH COUNTY'S LARGEST
INYINTOIY NOW AT , , .
SAYlllGS YOU Will LOVE!
DELUXE 2 & 4 DOOR
SEDANS
GT 2 & 4 DOOR
SEDANS·
STATION WAGONS_
IN your · CHOICE OF
4 SPD. or -AUTO. TRANS.
SAVE TODAY!
• e IOI MILll PEit HOUJt
e S2 MILES Piil GALLON
e DISC IAAKIS
e FULL 5 PASL SIZE
e 0 te 60 IN 12.1 SECONDS
e LUXURY QUALITY IOTH
INSIDE AND OUT
•
SPORT CAR
FAMILY CAR
BUDGET CAR
I
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•
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