HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaI
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DA ILY. PILot 1
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, l-IO~MB£R ifO, :1969
VOL. & HO. Ut, I ll'CJIONS, a f'A81"1
Utah Search
Ends for
SA Woman
From Wire ·Services
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Searchers hunUn1 tbs wife or a Santa
Alla physician, millinc 'five days In freez-
ing U&ah mouMains, •quit Saturday, as
aulhoritiu conaklered the possibility of
fool·play In her disappearll)Ce. ,
Mn. ·Katherine~ a, qould hard-' .
ly have survived ,temperatures in
the rugged, sno'w' mountains near
Kanab. Utah, U llbe-y wandered off
on a hike. ~
Kane County Sherif[ Lanard Johnson
added another oaiinous note lo the disap-
pearance of Dr. 'Marvin Shapiro's wife .
!Nnl their trailer home in Strawberry
Ca1;1yon.
"Further lrivesU,ation 0£ her trailer
lpr)t and questioning of. persons in tbe
are.I hive Clused us to. be:l~v~. Mrs. ~irg may hive, ~'Whh foul ,pl~y,"
hc lllid.
Burglars
Track Mud
• ~to ·ff9me.
"' . AuthoriUea did not ~ale oo tho
crime -ooooept, but. Dr. Shapiro, who has
olllces at 016 W. )7th ,St., 4anla ~ hat ione t9, Sant.a-Clara, Utah, as a result_of -~-~oc-----.~'V'9;,.....,.
the case. '! ,
M,..Y, mud-slogging borg!An rifled the
home of a retired couple In Newport
Heaclrover-uie-w~kend-and made-off
'vith '6,000 in cllS;h and jew$ kept In i
safe .
si-.er~f Jol)nson hinted that Santa Clara Sndd 111,. It's SprlHfl
police are questioning persons who might
have knowledge or ~1rs. Shapiro's -cUsap-As sp g arrives In Australia,
pcarance last Tuesday or Wednesday. .eyes of seasoned girl watchers William Payne Troxler, 86, 1•24 SAn-
tiago Driv.e, told police lhe thieves·blt his
home late Friday night while he and' his
"'ife. were out.
Initially, investigators assumed she . fall na"turally in the direction of
became lost while on a hike hundng In· girls li)te Rosematy K!ng, 22,
dU!n 'relics in .pie ,rugged , 1,000 foot moun-who briglitens Sidney scene
talns ol.. 10UUieastern Utah. while Wearing bolero top With Included in lhe haul were several
custom-made piece.LQ! jewelry. among
them an emerald ring with 17 diamonds.
The search was suspended Saturday glass ~sets .
after roore ·than 100 posse members in· ---~---------
eluding some on horse back, in four·w.heel
drivt trucks and three airplanes hunted
the \'ictim unsuccessfully.
Sheriff Johnson said he would confer
y;ith Dr. Shapiro -who said hill wife was
an ellpert outdoorswoman -about the
possibility of further searches.
The ~smog woman 's family has
vowid nbt to give QP hope ol finding
some clue to her fate and a ~pokesman
~4 today in Santa Ana that they will
COQtinue ·to search.
..'.J)r. •. Shapiro and his son Dan. 18, w~ll
continue to look for Mrs. Shapiro for at
lqast several more d3ys and _volunteers
,vill join them next weekend 1f she has
not been found .
UCl's Hoy to Address
Laguna Rofary Unit
Laguna Beach Rotar\ans will look al
the fUture and past oLUCI at ~r Fri:..
day luncheon meeting in the Hotel
Laguna.
John C. Hoy, UCI vice chancellor for
~tudent affairs, will speak on "University
of Cali!ornia,·,Irvlne, Five Years Past. -
The Neri Five Years." The meeting
~at 12:15 P·~· '
Orange (;east
Weather
Blue -I nd dry -skies will
beam over the Orai'lge COut Tues-
day With temperatures inching
back up to the high &O's along the
shore and over the 70 mark furth-
er inland.
--;--INSmE-~DAY
I < 'F:&", .,· Gr ,b 'Y<n1fi'1aw i •. k, Jor 1,o--
dc.ul'1. the ,:eJjectiUi tl for a
Nix1ti's Backers,
Fiie to Show
Stand on War
'By Associated Press
Sup119.rt:ers and opponents of President
'""Nl"ton's l{Vielnam policy hold n e w
de1'110nstraticins this week In the con-
tinuing dintroversy over the nation ')! In·
volvemint in th e war.
A \veelt of activities by groups backing
the Preiident will be highlighted by
VelerallS' Day ceremonies Tuesday in
Washington. The focus returns to the na-
tion's capita l Saturday when critics plan
a massl 'e antiwar march and rally.
As signs of support through the week
for N!JCon's Vietnam policies, ad·
rninistrlition backers called -ror part.icipa.
tion ~·' parades, burning of 'ear headl ' ta, waving nags and the wearing
or but . that say "I L.:tve America."
"Tf!J) It ~o Hanoi," "Oper.i.tion
Spe~oot." "Freedom Rally," "Honor
Amelica' Week" aod "National Con·
fideijct Week" are among the titles given
the \Ito-administration demonstrations.
Iii Wa~hington, the White House is
cir&lating .a ·photograph or President
Nixo~ with stacks of telegrams as1part of
its cJimpaign to convince CongresS the
actmihisttatlon's Vietnam policy · has
oven.·helmlf1i public support. J '
SJJP~ORT TELEGRAMS
·mie postqro-siZe Pictures show Nixon
oat a presidential desk laden . with
telegra~s prompted by his speech on the
\var last MOl)day night.
&ryce N. Harlow. Nixon's congressional
Pollet said the burglars tracked mud
through the Troxler house . Their ap-
parently badly-running car also made a
mes:. ot the couple's driveway, depositing
a large puddle of oil on the pavement.
Police said the couple arrived home
late in the ev'ening alid, as TroUr began
cleaning up the oil srriear his wife went
inside.
She noticed the safe gone when she
entered lhe bedroom and called police.
The thieves pried open a bathroom
screen then opened an unlocked window,
poli ce said.
After leaving the house with the safe
the thieves took a breather on the front
lawn aod set the safe down for a sbOrt
time, making an indentation on the rain·
soaked front lawn.
They picked it up again and drove otf,
poli~ said, '
Ma~ked B!irglar
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Assaults Nurse
In Mesa Home
A 28--year-old Costa Mesa nurse who
dozed off while watching television was·
raped in her apartment by a masked
burglar early Saturday0' before she
escaped and riln screaming for help.
The vicUm'S cries ,stopped a passing
motOrist In the 100. block of Monte Vista
Avenue, who told police he chased lhe
suspect's .car a short distance but he got liaison chief, signed letters sent to ~ iUembeii. 0£-:-;Cooit'! ~ wiur--t he away. .
Pi!'"9i(l!P\t.""""'1'~t;',ol (!·SW!w .. The young wo!"an was. driven to the Poll"Opo\1U.•7j·per.,.,,tau~'iU..i Costa Mesa Pohce Facllity by !lay L.
' Nixon'. .war J>O!ifr~·. (. , -t~ Foga~y Jr., where be ~nd the victim 1!&1c~1oj laws pauiejl._bt.Jhe..Ttat.e
legisl turi · lo:st se'lii6l: f!Onip.
grllp <ii1d ~· drhrifl
"L ll1I! "I'• 1JI' you are>a.j(Unp~ described lo Offic<r Richard Joh!llon
J as 1 waS ,with 'the overwbeln}!ng public what had happened.
•' suppurt of ihe°';J>midenl'• poi!lion .lllat-Awakening--beeause ol a nolae, the crac urns Ledtl' thl list. Set'
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was evidenced ' Jn tJie ~ Gallup nur3e said, she got up from the living
.. Poll .":.;•Harlow said in tbe letter. ~ room floor at 3 a.m., only to be con-
1 Hi\rlow, in an Interview SUl)day, fronted;by a man "'1 his 20'1 with a jacket
reitctated hit contenUon that Nllon has swaddling most of his face. ,
·v•On over the "silent majority" and he She -told invuUa:aton he threw her io
\ ,said public oplbJon wUI remain behind the lhe fbr on a large pillow, covered Mr
•' fre!!idcnt. '. ... ... · , head with the parka and assaulted her.
Activities by supporters and critics One earlier incident involvin1 a peeplng
bepn early. A Veterans Day parade .,aa tom, which she did not report to police,
held Saturday-in Midland 'Part, N.J., a might have been related to the tel 11.-
(Set PROTESTS, P11e l ) tack, the victlm told ofrlcers.
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DAILY ,IL.OT llllf PMll
FAIRV.IEW STATE HOSPITAL IN .COST.A MESA -<M WARDS SCATTERED OVER ~,ACRES
This is Home for 2,152 Retarded P1rson1 Ranging in Age From Seven Days to 83 Years
Fairview Home for
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Editor's Note : Hope and hopeless-
ness Jive ritk by side in ·the toom!
and wards oj Fairview State Hol'pital,
an institution that i.! so m1tcli a part,
yet so far apart from the Ora1ige
Coa.1i comiµunlt11. This is the first of
six articles in a sptcial report on the
liospital for the menially retarded.
doing so. Sometimes· fear.
Very often, love.
Three stories below thO&e decorated
pediatrics wards, in'the office of the man
in charge is another Peanuts figure on a
plaque-Good Old Charlie Brown. .
"I've developed a new philOIOphy/' the
plaqtfe says, "I only dread one day at a
time."
The sentiment is a bit of humor lor Dr.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Anthony N. TOto, superintendent and
or "'-0111Y ft\111 111tt medical director of the hospital serving
one can't see them from the roadway, Oranje ·and parts of Los Angeles anil San
b P •• 1 1 h 1 Diego Counties. ut eanu~ com c. str p c arac ers , NeW. philosophies •are constantly beiilg decorate top floor wlndO\\.'S of the big P,each·colored building with aluminum developed by research teams and there la
surWlade.!. room for dread in none of tbtm,' only op-~cheery theme can also be seen in t~C:sTcies the~Pattenta In the hospital, ~tlier rooms. \Yhose f4 wards are scattered over 400
This is Fairview Sta~ !fospital -or at acres atiother· l ,!!®_,te o.ut.sideJnJmler:,..--11,....
!call aH-lhat•m1ny know about-the four--oomes or other speclallzed programs..· ·
story !tnrlure at 2501 Harbor Blvd., Scanning· data aheets on the patlent'
Costa Mesa, built a decade ago. population, one sees that 1,063 are pro.
It t: h o m e -le m p o r a r y or fondly retarded. The" term bu tactless
1, permanent-for 2,25.Z retarded persons.' variations on the outalde. "Vegellbte." i.s'
'lbty range In age from seven daya to 83 1¥1e of lliem. 1 • • "
' year1. AU art claued U -children ...... Alk ...Little can be dOne-for many of lhes&'
• liavt special needl. Imperfect vlctlma of It classifiable
' Almost all have something lo give. defett! 1n a society that wonhlps the'
· 'f'he f&mUlar little people who populate mo&t nearly perfect.
) a' paper world that is a genuine reflection Thi~ aUll leaves hundreds ranging up1
of our own-the P e a n u t s charac-' the ladder ol capability for whom help ls
t ten-have characterlstlet: In common available and who may look worfard to a•
With humans at Fairview. ho!ppy, ultlul life within lhelr limits.
Pleasure. Loneliness. A sense of What ls being done for them? •
\ bewilderment with a comple:< world. The tu much· as PoAlble-far more than
wonder of learning new thlngs,-wlthln -ever before-says Dr. 'l'oto, chief of--the
their limits. A senae or achievement al (See FAJRYIEW, Pa1t I)
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ART WORK FROM l'AIRVllW
Rtlirdod C1n Cro.111, T•
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J DAILY l'ILOT .s
Bucher Doubts
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He'll Get . Ship_·
. " ~. ,· .. • ' . . .. FRESNO (UPI) -Former Pueblo during 1he ll·month lD)prbonnrent,
Commander Lloyd ?i.1. "Pete" ·Bucher Bucher told the dinner guesb that,
says "chances are not too good" he .. ;ffUl despite 11 months in close contact, the crew go\.alopg ~r. . e1·er be a ship commander agairl. "Oh, there were times, particularly
Bucher and hls wife were in Fresno wilh those who were quarantined with
saturday to attend a chalice dinner other guys for a long period," he said,
iiponsored by the Knights of Columbus. "After a while you'd· get sick of hearing
•:"I'd like very much to go sfilpbo~ard ,the same old story ·about tlle same oki , girl ·and somebody ,voUJp a:et up and
again -that's the basic idea of ,bein& a punCh somebOOy, bUt it was un·
naval officer," Bucher said, "byt with derstandable. No bard f,f:elings remaln."
this management schooling, the diaocel Blicher noted that a11er the long ,cap-
are not too good." tivlty and subsequent hearijfp on ~
Bucher is now attending th~ NaVal . ~111ture he feels "inucb beJter equipped bOthlphysically and mentallf to face ~y Postiraduate School in Monterey and situation." . .
hopes to get a master's degree i.n . Bucher said he had ••no way-of knowing
management. what my next assi gnment is going to be,"
lte spent part of the day with Yeoman but that he wanted to stay in the Navy.
1.C. Armando Canales of Fresno, who "l have no plans to get out," he said.
was aboard the Pueblo at the time it was
captured by the North Koreans. Canales
is cuJTenUy slationed at Lefnoore Naval A' • -f' l -8
Alr-StaUon. -- - --'f,~a e*-s-Bucher saia be tries to keep in touch fl.
with his old Pueblo crewmen.
Recountine some of ~ e1perience.s
Reds lntensif y
Camho<lia Border
Attacks on U.S.
SAIGON (UPI) -Communisl lroops
lhtensliYinl their offensive along the
Cambodian border inflicted h e a v Y
cuua1ties on a U.S. Special Forces camp
SUnday and today, riddled two.helicopter
gunships with intense. gr~ ~ and at·
tacked a U.S. air field, inflicting con-
siderable damage.
The series of attacks ranged along the
border from Bu Prang, 112 miles north of
Saigon, to the air base at Ban Me ·Thuot, so miles to the north. North Vietnamese
Communists have massed an estimated
7 ,000 men in the area against ·SOuth Viel·
namese ground fOrces. .
The attacks coincided with disclosure
that a ca ptured Communist docum~t
from a liaison runner called for "1n·
tensive atlacks" throughout South Viet·
nam to !Upport the antiwar protest
march on Waahington scheduled for next
Saturday. ..
The attacks on the allied mercenanes
the.re killed three U.S. special forces men
advi>lng the tribesmen troops and lhal
one ~man mercenary company took
two-thirds casualties, meaning 60 men
killed or wounded. The Communisls lost
12 known dead. --u:S.--1igbter~bombers and government·
piloted AlE Skyralder planes supported
the ground troops committed to action in
another test of the Vietnamese ability to
defend themselves. The Communists had
brou&ht in 31 milmeter antiaircraft guns
and two helicopter gushJps were so badly
hit they· made forced landings at Ban
Me Thuot.
Ban Me Thuol itself was the target of
Communist attacks.
Scaff old Tumbles,
Official Killed
LONDON (AP) -A nine.story scar.
folding collapsed in Whitehall today, kill·
ing Si!' David Rose, governor general of
Guyana, and injuring at least two others.
The scaffolding, erected for cJeaninc a
building near the Houses of Parliament;-
collapsed onto a limousine in which Sir
David and the two inj ured men were sit·
ting.
Sir David was in London to give up his
post, which will disappear when Guyan a
becomes a republic in February.
He was taken by ambulance to
\Vestminster Hospital but was dead on
arrival.
The roof of the car was crushed to body
level, witnesses said.
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New .Engines
To Curb Smog
Air California soon will begin lo install
Stl0,000 jn new-d~slgn engine components
tq redu~ air pollutio.o, the airijnes•
spokesmen said today.
··Th' new componenta, known as burner
cans, are the cumbustlon chambers
\olo'here ~1 and air are mixed and burned,
according to Air Cal mai.ntenan ce head
R. W. Clilford.
The announcement followed reports
that the citf o( NfWport Beach might sue
t:1e carrier, wb,ich ,uses Orange County
Airport, for allegedly polluUng the air.
The court action would be patterned
after one under way in New Jersey where
several national air carriers are named
as defendants in an antipollution action.
Clifford said that Pratt & Whitney,
builders of the engines on the six Air Cal
jets, has developed an improved burner
can after lwo years of tests.
But the devices, costing $10,000 each in·
stalled, are on back order and are !till
scarce.
Clifford said that as soon as the can!
are received they will be installed in Air
Cal jets as the planes come up for
o\·erhaul on a normal schedule.
A specifjc date for completion of th~
changeover hu not been · detennined
because of the small supply of I.be com·
bustiDn cans.
Clifford descrlbed U\e burne~ cans u
the t\heart" of the jet-eftl!ne. ,
Those in use presenUy on most jets, he
said, develop hot spots, causing the
engines pour amoke. i
The new version has fewer hot.spots, he
said, and produces a smaller "plume" of
smoke when the jets take off.
Youth, Woman
Killed in C.Ounty
Two motorists, one of them a boy whG
only recently obtained his driver's
license, were killed Sunday in separate
traffic ·accidents.
Dines Windish, 17, of Anaheim, died on
St.ate College Boulevard in that city when
his auto skidded and smashed into a
power pole. He was dead on arrival at
Anaheim Memorial Hospital.
-Jnvestigating----officers-described road
conditions as good at the time of tht: ac·
cident and asswned today that young
Windish lost control or hjs vehicle.
Mrs. Kathleen Hannah McCluskey. 39,
of Brea, died in the fiery wreckage of a
station wagon which skidded off Lambert
Road in Brea and finished upside down in
an adjacent flood control channel.
William J . Morrow, 44, of Pomona. the
driver of the car, is listed in serious con·
dition tClday at St. Jude Hospital,
Fullerton, with burns and multiple in·
juries.
Officers said Mrs. McCluskey's body
'vas burned almost beyond recognition
and identification was not established un-
til tl hours after the accident.
Rwsia n-s · F.e~r
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LONDON (UPl) -Commun Is t the $0\'iets more dlrectly in the Middle
diplomatJc sources said today the SoYiet East in the ,apparent bope that UUs would
Union ii~ concerned that E~pt',s htir~en· fOrc~ Isratf'lo baCk do\\'.n ..
tng potlUon coUlll a1'rl'a.new major war :\ 'Pbt-~. it 1"81-~ remain
)n th~ Middle¥'~ • ..• ._ •iokoa~l.ntap11t1c.J.W,Jn!1!" •e!'.bll•:
Tbe Sou~s aaid Egyptian Presid ent du not 11an{ lo be ~bed· IP.to I" , l>O'iUon
Garn.at Abdel. Nasser's "blood and fire" where ~ CQUla. .IP ·lhi: ' at ot a
speech" In <lalro J1111 Tlnii'sday tool< !lie direct~ tooiirolilaum WJlh' lht Uolltill,
Kremlin l:!y Sl}l'prise. Moscow's hold on States. _-' . 1,
Nasser was described aa weakening. Illustrating this poin~~ the \sourc~s
CommUnist diplomats said the Arab reported'that a Rusaian l'.lli.litary1adviler
}Vorld has increa~y tried to ,involve 1who scrambled a Soviet.built MJV durin&:
an Ara~ Mu or iSh Was promptly
ordered' f Juve Egypt and return to
Ruasla. r , t •
""" ooWcea'~d !be Sovlt!I will ·COn·
tinbe tolEie Eay-Pt, Syria aod Other Arab
nalloMj II mlil<rial and moral, support
and fu · them in.ilitary advice.
Morei than 3,000 Soviet military ad·
v~m .. currently ba!ei1 in EiYP!, ,and
som-' aitlmates say the figure ma)' tie as
high ~ 4,500. Ruuian weapon.s continue
to st1'111-into Egypt and the Arabs claim
even 'f!""le are needed. .... .,
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·-.. VIETl'Y~ ;.PROTESTS '. • . ' i· ' i ./ I . I
DAILY .. !LDT Si.II "llol•
HEADS FAIRVIEW STAFF .
Or. Anthony N. Toto
lpwn •t i,~ ~1 hai 1os1 eigbt;m ~ !Army,ph)'slclan~bo~ccMgt·""1'\l•led JlesaJt , Plant
Vietnam. Polle& estimated• there were for refusini to tram Gr.etn Beret ~cs. t ..
8,000 marchers ~nd 25,0oo spectators. told the rally, ~Mr. ~i•on shoutdn'f,,Wtlr· ~o f Pr'. L i..
Sponsors of lhe parade said lhey ~ !~·~ ~ :1:.1r:::= ~= .t ue or O.pc
wanted to dramatize their support or the belng the first president to lose the ·
President's policies and opposition to an· Army." ·• The proposed· Bolsa lsland nuclear
From-P-Gfle I _Jim_ demonstrator~._ _ Pra)]_rs were offered in many churches \'leawater conv'ers.ion plant off Huntington
FAIRVIEW ...
staff or 1,600 employes. fro rri
psychiatrists · lo hospital workers who
handle menial chores.
Not nearly enough, says California
Assemblyman Larry Townsend ( D·
Gardena) a member ot the Assembly
Hea!Lh and Welfare Committee.
The Los Angeles County Jcgislalor
{oured Fairview State Hospital recently,
then issued a statement in Sacramento
which criticized understaffing and other
correctlble problems.
.. It is the state system itself," Town-
sen d later told the DAILY PILOT, "I'm
not knocking anyone. I have nothing but
praise for Fairvie\v."
Whatever the comp Ii men ts and
cri ticisms encountered, Fairview State
Hospital is a very real part of the Orange
Coast community. while necessarily re-
maining apart in other ways.
This serie s of articles will be a tour or
miles of corridors and visits with its
people, many of whose lives would have
gone to waste in anotner time.
"Isn't it depressing?," is the question
many ask abput Fairview and other such
facilities.
Fairview State Hospital Is just a part
of the larger world around us.
And depressing or heartening. people
make their own views or that.
Jtgne'w Describes
De_mo~stratwns
As 'Carnival'
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew describ-
ed Vietnam protest demonstrations ~ay
:!S a pointless ''carnival in the streets"
which proves nothing. (Related Story
Page S).
Agnew spoke out as both critics and
backers of President Nixon's policy
bek'an a week of-demonstrations in-the
controversy over America's Vietnam war
involvement.
The vice president said, "The mob, the
mobilization, the moratorium h a v e
become somewhat fashiona ble forms of
citizen expression. They are negative in
content, disruptive. in effect. They in·
flame emotions rather than stiumlatc
solutions."
Agqew called for recognition of "a
silent young majority who go lo school,
and :O work, and to war if necessary."
-He..saidJhey have_ been "oversha dowed
by the strident minority who arfOiife un.
tr. themselves voice, virtue and power out
of pr(lportion to their numbers, and even
more out: of proportion to their abilities."
His speech was prepared for the Na·
tional Municipal League, meeting in
Philadelphia.
5 Guilty Ove r Protest
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -five persons
have been convicted of-two misdemeanor -
counts of disturbing the peace and
disrupting a public meeting in connection
with a disturbance and demonstration at
the Biltmore Hotel
AfAltCH FOR PEACE thr~ughout the nation . Sunday f~r the Beach will be investigated by the Joint
estim ated 1.300 American servicemen Legislative Committee · on A to m i c In llou ston,· Tex., a "march far peace"
covered 36 blocks , Sunday. Police
estimated there were 900 marchers and
put the total attendance at a rally af·
terward at 1,900. ,
About 75 of the demonstrators iden·
tified themselves as soldiers from Ft.
Hood, Tex. Dr. Howard Levy, a former
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Captured Cong
Document Vrges
AU-out' Attacks
SAIGON (AP) -A Viet Cong docu-
ment found 30 miles east of Saigon calls
for intensive attacks in that region this
weekend to support the antiwar protest
march on Washington Sattu'day, official
sources said today.
The sources said the document was
taken last Tuesday from the body of
either a courier or a liaison officer who
was killed in a firefight with Australian
fo rces. . . ·
The directive. believed to have been
Issued by the Viet Cong 's local head·
quarters at Vung Tau, was dated Oct. 27.
Jt said : "In support of the upcoming
· ~trug1le Of the Amefican pOOple for
peace of South Vietnam and the
withdrawal of U.S. troops from South
. Vietnam, .we are t.o JB.unch intensive at·
•tacks in all aspects on th.e eoemy on No v.
14·15."
The dirt:etive called on Viet Cong
forces lo kill O,ffici(!ls representing the
Saigon government in hamlets and
yillages "to gradually break loose the ad·
ministrative grip and to aceelerate the
annihilation movement in support of the
struggle campaign for peaee which will
be initiated by the American people on
Nov. 15."
The allied sources said the directi ve
may ha ve betit issued only for pro-
paganda 'and -psychological purposes to-
boost the morale of the Viet Cong and
tha t the attacks may not ht: made.
missing or held captive in Southeast Asia. Development and Space, Chairman John
President Nixon had declared the day a V. Briggs (R·Fullerton) announced today.
National Day of Prayer and Concern. He "Driggs said the committee will meet
did not attend church services in Key Nov. 18 and 19 in the Orange County
Bisca.vne,-Fla., to join publicly in the Courthouse to diSCO\'er "What went
observance. \Vrong with the Bolsa Island develop·
A spokesman for the Wa~on ment, wtiy such an ambitious project got
Cathedral said services there were·con· dumped and how to avoid such problems
ducted as usual with "nothing" lo com· In the future."
memorate the National Day of Prayer. Jn The assemblyman said officials of the
Newport News, Va., a prayer program at Atomic Energy Commission, who helped
Todd Stadium drew crowds ~espite rain. develop plans for the project, have been
Today negotiations continue J for the invited to testify . : ·
route to be followed by the antiwar Briggs said his committet is concerned
demonstrators in Washington 8 mid with air pollution as well as industrial
government warnings of viole nce and progress. "We must look toward power
assurances from protest,ers, that they plants that produce little o~ no pollut~on.
plan only peaceful dissent. that can be used to ge~ate electrical
power ind 'reclaim seawater for a thirsty
POSSIBLE VIOLENCE California.'' ' Harlow repeated Sunday th~ govern-The Bolsa lsland project, located off
rnent's contention "that there js an active the seacoast south of Wamer Avenue in
possibility of violence." ' the Bolsa Chica State Beach area, was
"The Department or Justice said the dropped last year whetl origirial projected
Washington authorities must be ex· costs of $444 mHlion jumped to $775
tremely clreful in how the# haiidle this," million. '
Harlow said, "particularly in tfte vicinity "A~ Rep. Chet Holifield , chairman of
of the major public buildings such as the the Joint Congressional Committee on
White House." . Atomic Energy, pointed out last month,
Protest planners denied the predictions 'California can lead the way toward
of vioieoce. Dr. Benjamin Spoqt accused peaceful uses of nuclear energy in pro-
the administration Of trying JO frighten duclng much "needed power ·and desalin-
away demonstrators. ization of water.' It seems to me that we
,"It's perfectly Clear that Qle talk of can be leaders in thi1 field," Briggs said. viol~ce js ,all ~ng .from !fl;e aovern· "\Ve must bring those fropl ))usiness,
ment," Spock i81411"The govt riiiient is industry and government togettier, find
trying in every way. to lntimlilate people out our 'problems, develop solutioM and
who are coming tO protest against the use all segments of our society to bring
wu .. 'Presklentl ,Nixon is -desptr"ately California into; Qle nuclear age."
trying, tri niate it appear the Amt'rtCan The assemblyman said o:fficials of the
peopl~ are behirl'd him when in facl they State Department of Water Resources,
are ntt. !he 7'1etropolitan Water District, SIU1
Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr. said. "If it Diego Gas & Electric, and Southern
can keep them away, the' government can Callfoinia Edi.son would testify at the
say people are satisfied and want the war two-day hearings .in Santa Ana.
to continue."
The week's first demonstrations in
\Vashlngton will come from the pro-ad·
ministration si~e with two major events
on Ve:terans Day.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, gospel
singer Mahalia Jackson and Medal of
Honor winner Rodolfo C;-Hernandei-will
headline the official program Tuesday in
Arlington National Cemetery.
Offices to Close
Huntington Beach city offices will be
closed Tuesday in observance of Veterana
Da y.
Post offices will observe holiday
schedules. There will be no regular win-
dow service, or deliver ies.
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
--....... --CAUIOIHIA
OAAHQI CO.U I l"UI~ ISMHtO COMl"f.NY
9':11.m N, W11I -
•rt1M1111 .............
.Mesa A~tor Dies
J••li It. C11tl..,
yq Pt.-W •ne Gefttl• Mflllltf
Tt.e111•1 Kenlt
·~..,
n 1wie1 A. M•tf1hi11• ~lllllW -c.i. 1NM1 m *""' 911, $tl'M".._ __ .J.
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•
Kam Tong Loses Cancer Battle
A Costa Mesa man who survived the
perilous command of a special in·
telli gence unit in • Japanese-occupied
China dur ing World War II and the heady
v.·orld of Hollywood acting lost his last
flghl Saturday.
Cancer claimed the lift: of Kam 0.
Tong. 62,_of 278 Santo_ Tomas St .. after a
lengthy battle that worsened during the
past mon lh.
Graveslde funeral rites for Mr. Tong
will be held Tuesday at I p:m. in Pacific
View MemoM11,l Park~ corona del Mar,
with the·Rev , William Acton officiating.
"He hung right In there to the end. He
was a tougb guy," said freelance writer
Patrick McNulty, of Corona de! Mar, a
clo:ise fr iend of Mr. Tong.
'Mle veteran actor, whose Hollywood
career began prior to World War II, com-
manded an Office or Strateslc Stcurltles
tOSSI outfit In occupied China during lhe
194MS years of com bat.
A rart pb;tol be carried during the
perl1ous OSS auty was turned In to Costa
fltt:s:a pollce by Mr. Tona in June, I~,
' •
aflcr the assassination In Los Angeles or
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
I-le said lie "·anted to be rid of the relic
whi ch could contri bute to the violence of
the times If it fell into !he wrong hands.
Following World War II, said McNulty,
l\ir. Tong and his brother Frank, who
died___l_a$!_y_ear .... _wcnl into the bar and
restaura~t business, ov.·ning a poliiilar
spot in Los Angeles.
The care on North Broadway was a
hangout for newspapermen, writers and
policemen and was the source of many
anecdotes. accord ing to M'cNulty.
He appeared in such .ovles and
television shows as "Flower Drum Song,"
"t..ove is a Many..Splendored Thing."
"Have Gun, \VIII Travel*'. "Big V11Jey•·,
''Kill a Dr•gon." and scores or others.
He leaves his wile belly, a SOil
Bernard. a diughttr Xaren, a brother
Bew Tong, and sisters Lillie ti.t. Fong,
and Jennie P. Chuck.
Friends wishing to remember Mr. Tong
111re asked to contribute in his han1e to
U1elr Cavorlte charily.
I
This Is en extremely convenient location fo r those who use
MacArthur Blvd . frequently. Michelson is near the San Diego
Freeway, Ne\vport frec\-vay and across from the Orange
County Airport. Open your account at this convenient
loca tion and enjoy AMPLE PARKI NG ••. SPEED WINDOWS
FOR PEAKl'ERIODS ... BUILT-IN CUSTOMER ADDING .
MAC HINES ... COFFEE AND COOKIES ... SJT·DOWN
TELLERS ••• UNIQUE WEL(;_QME_CENTER-••
l'A-i'lO l!ANl<ING ... BEAUTIPU-LLY DECORATED.
EVERYONE IS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE ..•
REFRES HMENT AND GIFTS
•
Stl'Ying tht needs of the industrial compltl Michelson 1t M1cArlhur ... IJJ.Jll I
•
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.VOL. 62. NO. 269, 3 SECTIONS, ~2".PA6ES
BolsaAtom
Plant Study
Scheduled
The proposed Bofsa Island nuclt>..ar
seawater conversion plant off Huntington
Beach will be investigated by the Joint
Legislative Committee On Atomic
Development and Space, Chairman John
V. Briggs (R·Fullerton) announced today.
Briggs said the committee will meet
Nov. 18 and 19 in the Orange County
Courthouse to discover "What went
\vrong with the Bolsa Island develop..
1nenl, why such an ambitious project got
dumi;ecl and how to avoid such probl~ms
in the future."
The assemblyman said officials of the
Atomic Energy Commission, who helped
develop plans for the project, have been
invited to testify.
Briggs said his rommittee is ~ncern~
with air pollution as well as industrial
progress. "We must look toward power
plants that produce little or no pollution,
that can be used to generate electrical
pow·er and reclaim seawater for a thirsty
Calirornia."
The Bolsa Island project, located off
the ~eacoast south of Warner Avenue in
the Bolsa Chica State Beach area , was
dropped last year when original projected
costs of $444 million jumped to $775
million .
•·A." Rep. Chet Holifield, ch11irman of
the Joint Congressional Committee on
Atomic Energy, pointed out last month,
'California can lead the way toward
peaceful uses of nuclear energy in P~
ducing much needed power and desalm-
ization of water.' It seems to me that we
can be leaders in this field ," Briggs said.
"We must bring those from business,
Industry and government together, find
out our 'problems, develop solutions ~nd
use all segments of our society to br1og
California into the nuclear age."
The assemblyman said officials of the
State· Department of Water Resources,
the Metropolitan Water District, San
Diego Gas & Electric, and. Southern
California Edison 'o\'OUld testify at the
two-day hearings in Santa Ana.
' Swim Program
Highlights Beach
Fall Recreation
A comprehensive swimming program
for youngsters and adults highligh~ the
fall recreation program of the Huntington
Beach Recreation and Parks Depart·
ment.
Five classes will be offered this year at
the city pool at 16th Street and Palm
Avenue and at the Marina High School
pool. . I ~· . A few openings remain n ..... 1nn1ng
classes for youngsters in afternoon
sessions that began today. The registra·
tion fee is $4 and youngsters may apply
at the gymnasium-eool between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.nr. Mondays through Fridays.
Classes are scheduled for 2:30 p.m., 3:15
p.m. and 8 p.m. .
· Emotionally and mentally hnd1capped
children begin their special swimming
classes Tuesday with lessons each Tues-
day and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. and 7:15
p.m. Registration is at th~ cit~ gy_m.
The pool is open for public sw1mm1ng
lrom 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. each Satur·
day. Admission is 25 cents for youngsters
under 17 and 50 cents for adults.
.Family swimming limes are from 6:30
p.m. to 9 p.m. Afonclays and Wednesdays
with adm ission 25 cents for youths and SO
cents for adults. ·
OAILY PILOT Stiff Plltlt
Her /tlajesty
Rhonda Martyn is Marina High
S c h o o I • s 1969 Homecoming
Queen. She was named Friday
night during Marina-Hunting-
ton Beach gridiron battle. VU-
ings upset Oilers 6--3, giving
Queen Rhonda good reason to
smile.
Edison Athlete
Hurt in Game
Reported Better
Sam Fuga, 17-year.old Edison High
School football player who was seriously
injured Friday night, is reported im·
proving today.
Officials at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach said the youth, although
suffering a broken neck, was ·showing
de.fipite s.iP-S of imprpveme9l and had
regained the ability to move his·anns and J . . • • eP,., .
He is still In the intensive care ward
wher.e he has been since he was fl.llhed: lo
the h91!pital Frid4Y nipt after be.Inc in·
jl!)'ed in ~~ plai of the.game. _ Mark~ Naylon. l~yeafi>ld Edlsoft Hlgh
junior varsity player, died one week .ago
of head injuries suffered in a football
game Oct. 18.
Water Resom·ces
Official to Talk
J ohn R. Teerink, deputy director of the
state Department of Water Resources,
will be the speaker Nov. 19 at a g~neral
membership luncheon of the Hlmtington
Beath Chamber of Commerce.
Tcerink will discuss "Water Issues
Facing California," according to Bill
Woods, chamber president.
He also will discuss the Balsa Island
nuclear seawater conversion and power
complex proposed off Bolsa Chica State .
Park in Huntington Beach.
Teerink will also present slides showing
progress of state water projects, Woods
said.
Reservations may be made by calling
the chamber at 962-6661. Tickets for the
lunch'eon are $3.50 each. Deadline for
reservations is Monday, Nov. 17.
Nixon Plans Visi l
\VASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
J)I), ofl Veterans Day, will motor to the
Washington VO?terans Hospital to viait
some ol the wards.
To '• l'hiel
.N.Y. Stoeki
TEN CENTS
' .. ..
T ~}) of Pi~r Action Set
Council .In Disc~s ·Parking Part of Plan
. . I ·, • . ' .
8Y JACK B~CE Of ... De6lr ,. ......
Hunllngt<n lleach'1' wld<iy-diacussed .
"Top of Ille Pier" plu -belwe the
community toolabt for ...-•. dbcuaslon,
-A publlc bwiJ;g before !be dty"COWIC!I .
begins at 7:!0 p.m. ln Ille ··11w1tiqton
Beach lUih sChool auditorium. · . u~ fcr c!eclslon bY.,lli(cOOne:I! wtllbe a
first atage par!dn1 a~ty plu'wh!ch
calla fer the c!earilll of five ·dty bloc~•
on Pacific Coast Hl&hway 11111 Ille
purchase or-fi ve acres . ol unimproved
property.
Target area is between 6th and Lake
St,reets inland one block to Walnut
Avenue and Lbe five.acre Paree1 eaat of
School Bond
Issue Plan
Challenged
The premise that the ~uptington Beach
Un.ion High School DtJtrict will have to
call a '9.~ million bmd election for Jehool
building needs ne:lt February wu
challenged today by · a · Westm!M~r
pannt who asserts that· present facilities
can already house 25,000 or 30,000
Etudcnt.s. ·
Robert lif.•Gordon, $212 Princeton Ave.,
told dirtr!ct trustees by !etler that they
should investigate aome. o L h i. r
a.lternatives to the bond election and tM
construction of new ac:hoqls. ·
They are the following : ,
-To provide a four -day school weelc
and to use the filth day to emplqy
students iD socially 1*fut· ~Uons,
both .OD ml oll-eaCh ..... -.
jpend in cllll tllO -ium!><r·.i·"""8
he ·now :1perida in ,fiv:e,!.-'Jl"Ovkllne·.mcn-
capaclty to the ICboo1. ,
-To 111e .mtinfl facllllifll fJom 7 a.m.
to a p.ni. lllondv ·lbniulh ~· Half tht~wGuld altind-lalllrilm·I
a.m. to . 2-.-p.m., lbe Otliei' hilf .. from 10
a.I'll. 1o I p,m. :' . ·
This woiJld"double the capacity of·each
eldsUna high scbliol, Gonion" claims.
-To combine altematiYe!:·one' and tWo
to yield •a physical pli~t capabte· of prl>-
viding for about 30,(1()1) ~denla if -all ~f
the dlflrict's flVe high ·x:hOols re.main in
operation. · ' '
-Tojnstl~le a SW~& ibift from '3 Ji.m.
to 10 p.m. al.,.. of lbe·b!gb school• onl~,
which would, accor$flnl to Gordon •
ca!cu1atlons, provide ~ugh space _for
3,000 more puplls. This step alone would
eliminate the need for another high
school, he suggesta. ·
-To keep the school open during the
summer months and increase lta capacity
that way. • ·
-To prov!dt for flmble lcliedulln(,
which means that the school day is
broken down into small sepnents, .allow·
ing the student more freedom of choice in
selecting .the classes-he -would like to at.
tend.
In addition, Gordon suggests that the Sl
million portion of the bonds which is to be
applied to the ffilabll!laUoo 91 old
bul!dlnp on the Huntington.Beach Hllh
School campus be rejected.
Jf any one of the alternatives is brought
into operations, safs GoJ:dOO, "that 'plant
may be unneceasary lo providt for the
e.'llipected influx of students."
"Instead of spending one million to
renovai. ii. the factllty ml,irt be IOld for
several mtlllon, as ii .. The Field Aet,
whlcb pnJV!des for Wlhqualle llftty
(Sol llUILD~G, t ... J)
I • '
I : ~ '
l.ato qlendina IO·Allanta Avt.ue. •
Tl.< , llrbon • J;onct • lmtlluta Cllhins StoOrlpc. Oamm!Uee (CSC) baa 1"'"'*'1
that lbe dl)"1; 'forl:tni Au!Jiilrlty ~·and cloir ·the ....,ty..at an
·~ !iGOt ol l!.I million. ,
. Tho comm!llae aid Ille :objec\ oC the
plll) ·.i.. .. talre. full ·..i·~·. ol 'the
beocll :11111 plovtde a llmlf" llluii!lul for
rnovaUon and F•]tllll!oo ol !loWntown
bulin<IS lhn>lllH .provlllon,•ol adequate ..... . ' Pl'-•' .. 'The' project ~ be . plwed o,..r
several yeara lncludlnc up to five years
for tniUal construction and negotll:Uon of
alr rtjhts kue1 for some Z5 percent of Ii\<....._.
• Pr.vjded would be 1,171 parkinl _..,
and ~ ,,committee erUmalts that. lhe
1\(thority 'WOUid operate at a losi of
'91,000 a year for the first four s.
B7 tbe flfth year a net fevenue of
!JJ,OOU &nnualJy la· projected, increuina
"8,000 a yru lot the first four years. .
Incfea1e1 in· Indirect revenue including
silti ret1 Mte and bed tues are·ex·
. pecjed. to .total.more than, II m!U!on in
five years·and $10 million in 25.
The project already hu been outllned
In detail for the city cooncll and the
, put:illc ih a series of meetlnjs.
The Jut of lheli!, on Oct. 28, attended
by about 200 residents, saw speakers urge
lnipltmentatJon of' the plap.
PlaMihg Consultant· Ted A<bit pointed
out that. "while Oraoge County and the
City-or HuiltlngtOn Beach have seen the
fastest growth: in the nation,· the
downtown area nas not grown in popula·
lion or ·developmf:nt. ..
"Decisions niade now are vital," Adsit
sai~. 1''Phis js f.he !a;it ~flince. lf private
capital is not attracted now it will go
elsewhere; to south' Orange County areas
and San Diego County."
Dr. Thomas Ashley, vice prt!ident of
Economic Research ·AssoCiates · (ERA).
the firm hired by· the city to make a
survey of the .study area, warned that.
"lfuntington Beach is at the crossroad!
IS.. PARKING, Pa1e ZJ
Fairyiew . . . H.ome for 2,252
Editor's Nott: Hope and hopelesa·
ne.u liut lidt btl sl<U ·in the room,,
and worda of Fairvie.w State Hoapitol,
an ihltitUtion that· U ao much a part,
11et so /or aport from the Orange
Coaat communit11. Thia-ii tht first of
six aritcle.s-in a rpecial rtpor.t on tlte
hospital. for the ?Jientall11 retarded.
doing so. Sometimes fear.
Very often, love.
Three stories below tho5': decorated
pediatrics wards, in the office Of the man
in charge is another Peanuts figure on' 1
plaque-Good Old Charlie Brown_.
"t•ve developed a new philosophy," the
plaque says, ;,I only dread one day at a
time."
The sentiment Is a bit or humor for Or.
By ARTHUR R:VINSEL , AnPtorly N. Toto, 1uptrintendent ·and
or 1111 Dlltr """ s11tt medical . director of the hospital »ervina:
One can't see them lrom the roadway, Oranp and parts of Los An&eles and San ... _ Diego Counties. but Peanuts comic strip characl-Cn New ptµbophie.s, are constantly being
decorate top floor windows of t!)e big d loped by h and the · ·..,.•ch-colored btiild"'"' with alumtnum eve researc teams tt 1s
r-.... room-for dread in none of them, only op-.sun.shades. timlsm.
1be cheery theme ca!) also be seen in Besides the J)itients In the hospital,
other rooais. whole 44 warda are acattered over 400
'J'.hjs· Js Fait\'iew State Hospital -or at acres, another 1,000 are outalde in foster
=:ii£~c~.;:,: ,.~ol .. -~r.r;i'tu..i Cpila'~ • ·-' • ,. . .. Jiopulallon, .... -'Ilia• l,oe3 ~·pro-
11 -t.'''om·•~l•.1'P ••V.1 · er iOiidlr re(arded. 'Ille !<rm hu tidlOa ~ J,2» ·Htardod porn.. v-411 the aullldo. "Vepllbla" Ii Tbet13· IP ll'Gm -dll'I to q -II -. ' .. 1""" · ._, .-.. dllldsU. AJj Utile .., ,~ -r... many Ola-~'* ! ':'...... ' '"'"""' ~ " ,, d~ -Aloiilil' · liive.~IOllYO. · --~fif~,'liolililJ ,lliif wonb!Po IN
'Ille ram1111r·il!tJO.~oplewbo pi>pa)~te -ilearit perf,_i. • • : a poJitr world lhal"t. a 1mulne ..n.ctllin Thi.< ttlll luvt1 hundreds ranlillJ up
of our ,-Pe a 'nu I. s c:lJarac. the la4cflr of capabll!ly f°" whom help Js ~ii.Ye <&r~ 'Iii cofun\qo avallabl< and 'wbo ltlfY look !Orwanl IO a
wtth ~·at FakVte'w. bi.1JIPY, usellll llle w11hln tbeJr lnntts.
P~e. Lonelineas. A sense ot Wbaj is ~inl OOz!e for them ?
bewlldtnntntrwJth a complex world. 'Ifie AJ much 11 . polalble-far more than
Wllltdr:r" If lnrn1n& new tblnp, -wltbin ever before aa7s Dr. TOto, chief of the
theJr Jlmli., A ,._ ol aclJ!evaninl at (Sea "FAIJIVIEW, Pap I)
Reds Intensifying Attacks
From Cambodia on Berets
SAIGON (UPI) -Commwiist troops
lntenaityin& _,their offt111Ive along the
C1mbodlan border lnfticted h e a v y
CflU&lliu on a U.S. Special Forces.camp
Sunday and today, riddled two helicopter
gunoblpo With inl<nse .,ound lire aod a~
tacked a u·.s. air ·field, inflictlng con-
alderable damage.
'The series of attacks ranced along the
bordef froin Bu Prarlg, 112 miles north of
Saigon; to the air base at Ban Me Tbuot,
10 mil" to the north. North Vl.-
Communiltl have massed an· estimated
1,000 men In the area agaln!t South Viet·
namese JZ"OU1ld forces. ·
'lbe attacks CQinc.lded with di.sclosure
that a captured ~unist .docwnait
from a liaison J'UM!r called for · "in·
tensive attacks" throughoul South Viet· n.m-to -support tht anUwar -Protest
marCh· on Wuhlngton acheduled for next
siturdai .
' The attacks on the alUed mercenaries
there killed~ U.S. apeclal forces men
advi Sll)& the tribesmen troops and that
one 91).man mercenary company took
tWo-thirdi : casualties, meaning 60 men
killed "or ~ed. The Communls!3 Josi
12 known dead.
DAILY PILOT Sltfl "'919
ART WORK FROM FAIRVIEW
Ret1rd.c:l_C1n Create, Too
Agnew Describes
Demonstrations
As 'Carnival'
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew describ-
ed Vietnam protest.,demonatratlons today
us a pojntleas "carnival in the str.eets"
which proves nothioc.. (Related Story
Page 5).
•· Agnew spoke out as both critics and
backers of President. Nixbn's policy
began a week of demonstrations in the
controversy over America's Vietnam war
involvement.
The vice president said, "The mob, the
mobiflia'tion, the moratoriwn h a v c
becOme somewhat [ashionable forms of
citizen expression. They are negative in
content, . di~ruptive in effect. They In-
flame emotions rather Lhan stiumlatc
soJuUons.1'
. Agnew called for recognition of "a
si~t young majority who, 90 to school,
and !o work, and to war if necessary ."
Swim team workouts are scheduled
~fondays through Thursdays . from 4:30
p.m, to 6 p.m. at the Marina High School
pool, Springdale Street and Edinger
Avenue.
Tennis players may work out at two
local high schools during the evening
hours. The Marina courts are open f~om
5 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily while the Edison
High School courts will be lit from 6.p.m.
to IO p.m. daily except Saturdays.
War Policies at Stake.
U.S. n,hter-bombers and gove.rnment-
plloted AlE Skyralder planes supported
the ground troops committed to action in
another le.st of the Vietnamese ability to
defhtd1 themsetves. The Commun.tits had
brqu&ht In 37.mUmeter antiaircraft guns
and. two hreOcopter gushJps were so badly
hit· they made forced landings at Ban
Mc Thuot. '
Ban Me Thuot itaelf was the target of
Communist' atta~U-
Oru1e Coast
Pro,, Con Plan Demo1istrations This Week
' .· .
Beach School llistory
By Associated Pre.11
Thesis on Di splay
Supporters and opponents or President
Nixon's· Vietnam policy hold new
den1onstnrtions this week In the con-
tinuin1 controversy over the .nation's in·
volvement in the war.
A master's thesis outlining the history A week ol activities by groups backlng
oL the HuntlngtoQ Beach Union lllgh !he · Presidtnt will be h!ghllghted by
School Di.strict from its Start ln aswamp--Vetenms Day ceremonieS 1'Uaft«J-ln
to modern times Is now on display at the Washington. TM rocus ttturns to the na·
city's public library. tion:s capital Saturday when critics plan
The lrealise. pe nned In 1967 by P~ter a ma,slve antiwar .march and r11lly.
'Burwell, an English teacher at Edi~ As signs of support through the week
High School, tella.JlO~ . a group _ o~ in-for NiJ.00·1 V\etoam policies. ad-
terested citizens decided in 1906 to build a mlnistraUoo bacte11: called fw participa-
1ehool at a cost of $35,000 on s~ acres Of tlon ip paradu, burning of car
donated land near 17th and Marn Street. headlights, waving Rags and the wearing
/If k t of buttons that say u1 Lilve America."
S lack •r " "Tell '· J1. iro Hanoi:'; "Opera,llon
• ' S"'-akout," "Freedom 'Rally," ~·Honor NEW YORK·(i\P)-DecUoes llll!O""I "" the lead ht ld by advances In mo<lerafe America Week" aod "NaUonal Con·
1radlng thls afternoon as lhc stock mar--n•nce Week" are among the titles glven
kel continued its course thr0ugh the win· the pro-administration d~onslr1Uons.
nine columlL tSe.t quotations, Paces In Wash~on, thl Whit.I H«11e· I~
26-%7). cirCiilillng a phGiograph ot Pre~dtnt
.
'
Nixon with stacks of teleirams as part of be1an early. A Veterans Day parade was
Its campaign to convince Co111rtas the "'Id.Saturday In l)lldlaod Park, N.J., a
admlnlltraUon's Vietnam policy has town of. 1,000. tbat .. hu lost. li&ht 80llS in ov~rwbdm!nl public support. The postcard.size plclura·sbow Nixon Vietnam. Police ~ there ,w•re
at a presldentlil ,desk laden .with l,000 niaritien and ~,Ooo '~ton.
Id""'"' prompted,~ his speoch oo the sjiomon o1 the .Jllrade aid· they
w;ryi:'~~=-~IXOb't congmilooal w-to ~Uze tbe!r'~'ol the
liaison chkf, illiled !ellen -to l'1'0id00t'I jiOllClio Uil oppooil!Gn IO an·
n1emben of CC:qreN With t b; • Uwir ~· .
pbotograpli and an -al a Gallup ' Iii H-. l'ft .. a ''mirth for. peace"
Poll reportln( 77 petcpll l!llllPO<I for Ille cove:i:ad II bloW . SUnday.' Pollce
Nixon ,,.r policy. .. : '.' adrhatld there were tGO l1\IJ'dMn. and
"l am sure thlt you are 11 bnpreaed put the total atWndanoe at a rallf af-
as I WU0t!lh the OV"l';heim!DIC~lj , fl. !f.'....,.., •. ..i.._~ ~ wp]>Ol'I the Prelldiall ~ 1, ~ " -.: --
was evldtiicecl In. t11e··s · , lvu ·u ioldMin· lrDm 'Ft. l'oll •.• \1' Harlow .Ki~ ~'-rl' ' ' . ~1 Jllwln!t.vy,1 f~ Har!Ow, In in, a.i1.j 111wbow•~
mterated hb comin6oft Mlrill'lilil to1r111ror..,111ntmoilles,
won over the "sllent(rMIOHt)''' Ids be .. ~l.· ... "Mr .. JrflZC!fl ~'l wor.
said j)llbllc opinion !!IU rmaln lloblnd the . ~;: the Rrll ........ io lolo
P%•1dtnt. • . tie but 1hould be· ...,led aboul ~-lldrCifllei , ~.,,= -. • t . ... • l -· ,. .l .
* * * Document Urge$
AU-out Attacks
SAIGON (AP) -A Vici Cona docu·
mfllt found 30 mile1 eut ot SallOR calls: ror ~tensive attacb In that re&J.on Ws
'Weekend to support· the antiwar protest
·marcln1n Washington Saturdar,Offlcjai-
IOUl'ttl said teday.
The sources Wei the d9(ument was taten 1111 'l\J<sllay from the body o1
either a courier or a Ualaon officer who wa:a ll!!ed in" a fireflChl with Aullral!an
forcu.
· 'l'l>t ~ .... 'btU.vtd ·lo have been
Weaf.laer
Blue -and dry -skies will
beam over the Orange Coast Tues·
#day with temperatures inching
back up to the high 60's along the
shore and over the 70 mark furth-
er inland.
JNSmE TODAY
Grob ~our law book, for to-
day's the effective date for a
ataclc of laws passed b11 the .stole
legialaiure last seuion. PoN10-
araphy ...and drunkt'n driving
cnu:kdow11.f lead the liJt. See
Page 8.
~r .b1 tbil'{litt:'&oc'1:rlooal ~ =._., '1 :::':'' ... :: ~CIP4r:a-s at> \'uni TIU1 w•s dated-Oft. 27. ''"""" ,... , ... __ "'"'•• • ,., <tt aid: ''II ._i·~f ~ •pcoa\hlf -'"' ...:..... "" :slnlicf ... o! .IM '·Amtt!can 'peopto ·for '~ 11 1:1:1: '!\" ,u .
;pqee. of ~ Vietnam and the ' ::cr.'lfltllllll 1 .. ,t ::::11::,.... •:
wtthdr1wal •lof 1J.S. ln>op8, from Soutn "Mtl!ff ,...,, 1~ ,.,.,
Vietnlm,·w, .are \0 ltundl. lntenaive at.-~,,--· :: ::,e:-,..., ..,:
tacks fu all ~ll llllllht enemy oo No , Mtl .. 11 • .......,. ..... n.1111
R'IS. '""'"= ··= ,--t:=~=====:..__;~:i::.J
'
f DAILY PILOT H M~, N-"f 10, 1'69
Bucher ·nouhts
•
He'll Get ~liip
1RESNO (UPI) -Former Pueblo
Commander Lloyd 1.1. "Pete" ~ucher
says "chances are not too good" he will
t\'er be a ship commander agairr
Bucher and his wife were in. Fresno
Saturday to attend a chalice • din'ner
isponsored by the Knights of Columbus.
"I'd like very much to go shipboard
again -thal 's the basic idea of being a
naval offi«r," Bucher sa1d, "but with
this management schoolina. the chances
are not too good."
Bucher is now attending the Naval
Postgraduate School in Monterey and
hopes to gel a master's degree in
management
He !peol part of the day with Yeoman
l .C. Annando Canales of Fresno, who
was aboard the Pueblo at the lime it was
captured by the North Koreans. Canales
is currenUy stationed at Lemoore Naval
Air Station.
Bucher said he tries to keep in touch
wilh his old Pueblo crewinen.
Recounting some of his experiences
during lhe ti-month imprilolllllent,
Bucher told th e dinner guests that,
despite 11 months in close contact, the
crew eot along together.
"Oh, there were limes, particularly
with those who were quarantined with
other guys ,for a long period," he saitJ .
"After a while you'd get sick of hearina:
the Mme old story about the same old
girl ,and .somebody would get up and
punch somebody, •but it was un-
derstandable. No hard feelings remain."
B:.icher noted that after the long cap-
tivity and subsequent hf,f!.rings on the
capture he feels ·"much better equipped
both physically and mentaUy to face any
situation.·• Bucher said he had "no way of knowing
what my next assignment Is going to be,"
but that he wanted to stay in the Navy.
"l have no plans to get out," he said.
f'ro11• Page I
PROTESTS. • •
being the first president to lose the
Army."
Seeks End .
'.ef-P-otlution
Air Califurnia soon will begin to lnstall
$210,000 in new-d2sign engine components
to reduce air pollution, the airlines'
•pokesmen said toda,...
The new components, known a:ii burner
cans. are the cumbustion chambers
"'here fuel and air are mixed and burned.
ilCCOrding to Air Cal maintenan~ head
R. W. Cli.lford.
tbe announcement followed reports
that the city of Newport Beach m1sht.sue
1:1e carrier. which uses Ora nae County
Airport, for allegedly polluting the air.
ihe court action wouJU be patterned
after one under way in New Jersey where
several national air carriers are nrimed
as defendants in an antipollution acliqn.
Clifford said that Pratt & Whitney,
builders Of tfie engines on the six Air Cal
jets, has developed an improved burner
can after two years of tests.
But the devices, costing $10,000 each in-
stalled. are on back order and are still
scarce.
Clifford said that as soon as the cans
are received they will be installed in Air
Cal jets as the planes come up for
overhaul on a normal sc hedule.
From Page 1
Prayers were offered in many churche:ii
throughout the nation Sunday for tlle
estimated 1,300 American serviCf!men
missing or held captive in Southeast Asia.
Pre~ident Nixon had declared the day a
National Day of Prayer and Concern. lie
did not attend church services in Key
Biscayne. Fla., to join publicly in the
observance.
FIREMAN WASHES GASOLINE FROM COAST HIGHWAY FOLLOWING SUNDAY ACCIDENT
Huntington Man Stops for Chicken, Starts Chain Reaction Crash in Corona d•I Mar
A specific date for completion o( the
changeover has not been determined
because of the small supply of the com·
bustion cans.
Clifford desc ribed the burner cans 11s
the "heart" of the jet engine .
BUILDING. • •
standards does not apply to the buildings
if thev are not used as a school. That in-
COOlC. could be used to finanet a substan-
tial part of the change required by the
proposed alternatives.'' ,
A spokesman for the Washington
Cathedral said services t.here were con·
ducted as usual with "nothing" to com-
memorate the National Day or Prayer. In
Ne~'port News, Va., a prayer program at
Todd Stadium drew crowds despite rain.
Mesa A~tor Dies Huntington Man
Involved in CdM
Those in use presently on most jets, he
said, develop hot spots, causing the
engines pour smoke.
The new version has fewer hotspots. ht
said, and produces a smaller "plume" of
smoke when the jets take off.
At Thursday's special meeting of the
board .of. trustees, during which the bond
t'!lectiOn ls scheduled to come up aga in.
Cordon says he will ask the trustees to
rescind their earller decision lo call the
election.
Ttxtay negotiations con tlnue for the
route to be followed by the antiwar
demonstrators in Washington am id
government warnings or violence and
assurances from protesters that they
plan only peaceful dJssenl .
Karn Tong Loses Cancer Battle -ti -ti -ti
Auto Collisions Go to Springs
"Unde r the circumstances, I beg the
board and the administTation to begin im·
mediately to do the detailed work lhat is
necessary to describe these alternatives
more fulfy and to evaluate them.
''At the Ume that it appears one nr
them is feasible, preparaUons should be
made lo poll the conununlty," Gordon
uid.
Harlow repeated Sunday the govern·
ment's contention "that there is an active
possibility of violence."
"The Department or Justice said the
Washington authorities must be ex-
tremely careful in how they handle this,"
Harlow said, "particularly in the vicinity
of the major public buildings such as the
While House."
A Costa Mesa man \\'ho survived the
perilous command of a spe<:ial in·
tclligence un it in .Japancse-0ecupied
China during World War II and the heady
\\'Orld of Holly wood acting Jost his last
fight Saturday.
Cancer claimer! the life of Karn 0.
Tong. 62, of 278 Santo Tomas St., after a
lengthy batl!e that worsened during the
past month.
Graveside funeral riles for Mr. Tong
will be held Tuesday at t p.m. in Pacific
View Memorial Park, Corona de! Mar,
DAILY f'ILDT St•ll f'hett
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL IN COSTA MESA -44 WARDS SCATTERED OVER 400 ACRES
This is Home for 2,252 Retarded Persons Ranging in Age From Seven Days to 13 Years
DAILY PILOT
OtAMGI [QA.ST l'UlllSHtllG COMJl.6 M'f
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f'ruodt~t •"" P"b!•11>t r
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Vl(f Jlrn•O.•I •"d C.~"'t•tt '-'•"•'"
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•
Frorn l'a11e 1
FAIRVIEW. . . '
staff or 1,600 cmploycs, f r o m
psychiatrists to hospital workers who
handle menial chores.
Not nearly <'nough, says California
Asse1nblyn1an La1Ty i ownsend ID·
Gard<'na) a n1embcr of the Assembly
Jlea!th and 'Velfare Committee.
The Los Angeles County legislat{lr
lourerl Fairview Slate Hos pital recently,
then issued a statement in Sacran1ento
\Yhicll crillclzed understafflng and other
currectlble problems.
"It is the l!tate system ll~elf,'' To\\·n·
se nd later told lhc DAILY PILOT. •·r n1
not knocking anyone. I have nothing bu1
prais_e fgr Fairview.''
\\!hatever the c omp l f ments ana
criticisms cncquntered, Falrvtew State
llospital is a very real part of lhe Orange
Coast community, while necessarily re·
maining apart 1n other ways.
Thi:; series of articles will be 11 lour of
miles of corridors and ' visits with lls
people, many of wholie lives would hive
gone to waste Jn aoother time.
"J1n't it depressing'..'," is the question
meny tsk t1bout Fairview ind othtr such
facilities.
Fairview State HOJJpilal is just ai pert 11 .. ~'t
of tht' ln.rgt'r world around us. DA.Ii._'!' ""•DT 11111 1tt11
And ~•P·~· Ing nfLh .. nonlng.-!!O>!>l<-~IHIADS FAIRVIEW oS:r-AFF--
makC! their own \'lcws of lhal. Or. Anthony N. T o)o
' (
with the Rev . wqliam Acton officiating.
"He hung right in there to the end. He
was a tough guy," said freelance writer
Patrick ~1cNulty, of Corona del Mar. a
close fr~nd of Mr. Tong.
The veteran actor. whose Hollywood
career began prior to World 'Var II, com·
manded an OfUce of Strategic Securities
IOSS l outfit in occupied China during the
1944~5 years of combat.
A rare pistol he carried during the
perilous 0SS duly was turned in to Costa
Mesa police by Mr. Tong in June. 1968.
after the assassination in Los Angeles of
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
Me said he wanted to be rid of the relic
which could contribute to the violence of
lhe times if ii fell into the ~·rong hands.
Following World War 11, said McNulty.
Mr. Tong and his brother Frank, who
died last year. went into the bar and
restaurant business, owning a popular
spot in Los Angeles. ·
The cafe on North Broadway was a
hangout for newspapermen, \\'rilers and
policemen and was the source of many
anecdotes, according .to McN ulty.
He appeared in ,such movies and
television show s as "Flower Drum SOng."
"Love is a Many.Splendored Thing.''
1'Have Gun. Will Travel ", ·'Big Valley '',
"Kill a Dragon ," and scores of others.
He leaves his wife Betty, a son
Bernard, a daughter Karen. a brother
Bew Tong, and sisters Lillie ~1. Fong,
and Jennie P. Chuck.
Friends wishing lo remember l\'lr. Tong
arc asked to contribute in his name lo
their favorite charily.
A driver pulling out or a Corona de\
f.1ar fried chicken shop Sunday night
touched off a series of crashes which sent
a South Gate youth lo the hospital with
n1ajor injuries, police reported;
Daniel Wilson. 18, South Gate. suffered
severe face cuts and a broken kneecap in
the• 6:15 p.m. crash at Iris Avenue and
East Pacific Coast Highway.
Police said William Barry GillenWater
of 9151 Capaa St.. Huntington Beach. was
pulling out or the chicken establishment
~·hen his car collided with one driven by
Eddy Acosta. 21. Salicoy.
Acosta's car, carrying Wilson, caromed
off the other auto and crossed the hiahway
hiting aoother vehicle head-on.
The driver o( the head-on car was
Lawrence Johnson of Omaha. Neb.
Only Wilson suffered major injuries in
the crashes, police said. The other driv-
ers complained of minor pains and bruis-
es. Officers said Wilson was treated at
Hoag ~1emorial llospllal.
Offices to Clo~e
Huntington Beach city offices will be
closed Tuesday in observance or Veterans
Dny.
Post offices "'ill observe .holiday
!>Chcdules. There will be no regular win-
dow service. or deliveries.
Via Bay Area
It will soon be possible to take an Air
California flight from Orange County
Airport to Palm Springs -with a stop-
over in San Francisco .
The <:aunty-based line has won Cali-
fornia Public Utilities Commission per4
mission to provide se rvice between Palm
Springs and the Bay Area cities of San
Francisco, Oakland and San Jose.
Air Cal will use Boeing 737 jets for the
nights to the desert resort from San
Francisco. One-way fare ""ill be $20.
about $6 under. the rate no\v ~arged by
other airlines.
Two trips a day will begin "as soon 8!"
possibl~;· Air Cal spokesmen said.
Frorn Page 1
PARKING ...
today. It will either go forward or slide
do1vnhill."
Ashley said creation of the parkin;
ccmplex and subsequent development of
a major specialty shopping center "'ere
uecessary to attract office building and
hotel·motel enterprises.
.. The city must invest In its future or
the private sector will not be interested.'"
the research expert warned. ·'Th&
downtown ana must be rejuvenated at
::ill possible speed."
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
.
the new home of
Newport National Bank's Airport Office
·rhis is an ext remely convenienl location for those \Vho use
1'1RcArthur Blvd. frequently. ~lichel son is near the Snn Diego
Frec\vay, Newport FrecwRy and a cross fr om the Orange
Cou nty Airport. Open you r Hccount al lh is r:onvenicnt
lor.11tion nnd enjoy A ~1PLE PARKING .•. SPEED WINDOWS
FOR PEAKl'ERIODS ... BUILT·IN CUSTOMER ADDING
MACHINES ... COFFEE AND COOKIES ... SIT·DOWN
TELLERS ... UNIQUE WELCOME CENTER ..•
PATlO BANKING ... BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED.
EVERYONE IS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE ...
REFRESHMENT AND GIFTS
Servinc !ht nieds of the industrial tomplex.
'
~
OMNGE
COUNTY
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Refle(!tfng on Future
Loony mirrQ.rs like this one may some day prodJice
water from moon rocks. Dr. Erich A; Farber, di·
rector of the Solar Energy an$) Energy Conversion
Lab at the University 'of Florida in Gainesville, dis-
plays mirror that concentrates solar energy, focus-
ing intense heat of up to 5,000 degrees for cooking,
heating, or distilling fresh water frotn sea water.
Dr. Farber says solar energy is extremely practical
for undeveloped regions such as the moon.
\
Lost Countian Search
Ended; Foul Play Eyed
From Wire Services
Searchers hunting the wife of a Santa
Ana physician, r.iissing five days ln freez..
ing Utah mountains, quit Saturday, as
authorities considered the possibility of
foul play in her disappearance.
Mrs. Katherine Shapiro, 42, could hard-
ly have survived winter temperatures in
the rugged, snow-covered mountains near
Kanab, Utah, if she merely wandered off
on a bike.
Kane County Sheriff Lanard Johnson
added another ominou! note to the disap..
pearance of Dr. hfarvin Shapiro's wife
from their trailer home in Strawberry
Canyon.
"Further Investigation of her trailer
home and questioning of persons in the
area have caused us to believe Mrs.
Youth, Woman
Killed in County
Two motorists, one of them a boy who
only recently obtained his driver's
-license, were killed Sunday in separate
I · traffic accidents.
I .Dines Windish, 17, of Anaheim, died on
State College Boulevard in that city when
his auto skklded and smashed into a
Shapiro may have met with foul play,"
he said.
Authorities did not elaborate on the
crime concept, but Dr. 'Shapiro, who has
offices at SIS W. 17th St., Santa Ana, has
gone to Santa Clara, Utah, as a result of
the ~se.
Sheriff Johnson hinted that Santa Clara
police are questioning persons who mlghl
have knowledge of Mrs. Shapiro's di!ap-
pe:arance last Tuesday or Wednesday,
Initially, investigators ass~ she
became lost while on a hilt hunting In-
dian relics in the rugged, 8,000 foot moWl-
tains of southeastern Utah.
The search was suspended Saturday
after more than 100 posse members in~
eluding some on horseback, ln four-wheel
drive trucks and three aiiplanes hunted
the victim unsuccessfully. ·
Sheriff Johnson said he wou1d confer
with Dr. Shapiro-who said hls wife was
an expert outdoorswoman -about the
possibility or further searches.
The missing woman's family ha s
vowed not to give up hope of fmding
some clue to her fate aod a spokesman
said today in Santa Ana that they will
continue to search.
Dr. Shapiro and his son Dan, 18, will
continue to look for Mrs. Shapiro for at
least several more days and volunteers
will join them nei:t weekend lf she has
not been foun:I.
Russians Fear
Egypt to Bring
War in Mideast
LONDON (UPI) -Communist
diplomatic sources said today the Soviet
lJn.ior is concerned that Egypt's harden-
ing posiUon could start a new major war
in the Middle East.
The sources said Egyptian President
Carnal Abdel Nasser's "blood and fire"
s~h ln Cairo last Thursday took the
Kremlin by surprise.· Moscow's hold on
Nasser was described as weakening.
Communist diplomats said the Arab
world has lncrea!ingly tried b? involve
the So\•iet.s more direcUy in the Middle
East in the apparent hope that tttis would
force Israel to back down.
The Russians, it was reported, remain
violently antagonistic toward Israel but
do not want to be puShed into a posltion
lVhere they could face the threat of a
di1·&.:t confrontation with the United
States.
Illustrating this point, the sources
reported that a Russian military adviser
who scrambled a Soviet-built MIG during
an Ara~Israeli sltinnish was promptly
ordered to leave Egypt and return to
Russia.
Thr. sources said the Soviets will con-
tinue to give Egypt, Syria and other Arab
nations Ml material and moral support
and furnish them military advice.
t
, power pole. He was dead on arrival at
Anaheim Memorial Hospital.
Investigating officers described road
conditions as good at the time of the ac-
cident and assumed today that young
Windish lost control of his vehicle.
Mrs. Kathleen Hannah McCluskey, 39,
of Brea. died in the fiery Wreck age of a
station wagon which skidded off Lambert
Road in Brea and finished upside down in
Businessmen to ExalJline
County's General Plan
• an adjaei!nl flood control ·channel.
'7 William J. Morrow , 44, of Pomona, the
: driver of the car, Is listed in serious con-
• dition today at St. Jude Hospital,
".' Fullerton, with burns and multiple in-! :.juries.
The outlook in !our key aspects of the
economy, and the newly-adopted Orange
County General Plan, will be examined
by 800 Orange County businessmen at the
Orange County-Economic Development
Con!erence Thursday at Anaheim Con-
vention -Center. .
I
I
:'.}4 Persons Caught
~.In Fresno Roundup
The Economic Development Con-
ference sponsored by Orange County
Chamber or Comtnerce, is open to the
public. Reservitions can be made by call·
ing the chamber office.
On the morning session or the day.Jong :i FRESNO (UPI) -Local law en-conference, Ivy Ba.ker .Priest, California
. : forei!ment officers and state narcotics State Treasurer, will d1scu~ money and
·agents have arrested 14 persons in a Houston Flournoy, Calllorrua Slate Con-
: rie!-of raids in the Fresno area-on. ~tr-21.ltt, will be the ~aker on ta:1es.
·:charges of selling marijuana and \Yi1liam J .. Bird, vice . presl.dent of
: diingerous drugs. Kaiser Industries Corporalion, will speak
:~· JCs Bow Out
'
on markets and Niels Pedersen,
.southern area manpower adininlstrator
for California Department of Employ·
ment, will report on labor. '
The luncheon speaker will be Jerome
W. Hull, president of Pacific Telephone
Company.
Heading the.afternoon discussion .of the
Orange County General Plan will be
Forest Dickason, Orange County Plan-
ning Director: Dean E. Shull, Jr., city
councilman from La Habra: IAJton E.
Allen, Fifth District County Supervisor;
William Sauers, executive vlc;e president,
Autonetlcs, representing the Orange
County Chamber of Commerce, and Ed-
_mund._B_uste_r:,_e!~j!_e~sidefil,
The Townsend Company, speaking for the
private sect.or.
,• UCI Alon,e • •
ID Protest
By THOMAS FORTUNE
' • ' Of "" Deity ,, ... lt•fl ,•.
: : · UC Irvine maY become the war dissent ·
: : lighting rod' of the Orange. Coast when
•:the second mid-month Vietnam War
: ·'Moratorium occurt the end of this week.
:: Oct. 15 moratorium activities at area
: :iunior college,, and even a few hi~h ~~.schools evidently won't be repeated. Tins
: ; tbne It appears UCI will go it alone.
{..: AJ_plansJOL...ililii -lDOOth~s-protest are 1 . · laid the same pattern is apparent na·
: : Uonwide. For some the Oct 15
•:moratorium was A one-shot demonstra-!: ti on of fetllng against the war .. But for
• : 'Olhera, such as the student orgaruzers at
; : UCI, it was just a beginning.
: . The promise was made then to build
: . momentum with a two-day moratorium
:; this month1 three days In December and
: A tb on until the war ends. ..
·• 'Since Nov. 15 falls on Saturday, not
much of I school day, 'UCI'a two.day
moratorium actlv!Ues will be Thursday
and Friday.
Like last month there will be picketing,
alt&native eduC&Uon clanes and ·a noon
' . •
rally with speakers. A new twist will be a
"live in" all Thursday night on the cen-
tral lawn in the middle of campus.
"It is the right of students to use the
la~ and we will not deny them that
right," said Vice Chancellor for Student
Affairs John C. Hoy.
He aaid it has been arranged so
students will clean up any debris and pro-
vide their own security, •
Friday afternoon UCI students will
caravan to~HlllcreSt-Part~rn Jl'UQerton
and march with Ca1 Statfl Fullerton
students to Hughes Ground System1
aeTos:paei! pliiil -
Friday night chartered buae1 will
dcpart~trvine--for a "March Apln!t
Death" in San FraociJco on Saturday.
These events were ~ In the un-
derground newspaper "Saddle Sore,"
distributed on the Saddleback College
campus. Some atudentl at Golden West
were aaid to be organizing activities bwt
they haven't been announced yet. A
cotfin·march at Orange Coa~t College
was sanctioned by the student body '
government last month but nothing Utll
inonl.ffi;." -~--
•
'f1)e moratorium Is 1 moratorium
against "businesa as usual." For students
that means •kipping classes. Fol pro-
fessors it could mean not holding classes.
But UCI Vice Chancellor for Academlc
Affairs Roger Rus:sell told faculty at an
Academic Senate mee ting Wednesday It
1a not the policy of the University to
cancel classes.
A majority of the SO pro(essors present
then passed a motion that reschedu1ing of
a.ssri--or-devoung--;-cla m· to
dilCUSSlon of the war "would be con-
1iatent with res~nsibilities of the ficulty." - ---
They •ouldn't be cancelling classes and
~they "ouldn't-be-conductmg-businw~11
usual. _
A sidelight to the UCT moratorium
plans ls C8JlS!'llation by the U.S. Army of
1 recruiting engagement on campus next
FrldaY,. Dean of Studenti Robert Lawren-
ce sald the Army agreed to reschedule JLs
recruiting date forne1t spring.
''lt's just. that when the moratorium
takes place It attracts to campus a great
number of people concentraling on
spcclficissucs," Lawrence cxplnlncd.
•
•
Monday, Novtmbtl' 10, 1%~ H
SPECIAL!
c4e wig for all seasons
from Deltress oj ·London
18.99
pre-sty Jed, pre-cut, ready to wear
TI1i s "'ig is truly ania£u1g. It Io.0\.J anJ feels just Jd .. e rul hair. But j(s a
whole lot easier to care £or. It's pre-styled, and you never set it. Just wash
it in cold ~·ater. Toss it for curls. Brush it for sleckn'ess. Try it. It's sOft,
silky, ful~ and natural. Because it's made of Deltrcs.s«l modacrylic. With
•contou r stitching on a stretch base. Cut and styltd in London . C.Omes in .
your choice of a v•ide range of natural shades .
miy co cosmetio 136
• I black
2 off black
'1 dark bro,vn
6 chestnut brov.·n
8 medi um red bro" n
10 medium golden
bro"'"
I Z reddish brov.•11
l 7 light bro\\·n
~o medium brov.•n
22 light a.sh blonde
28 littht auburn
j ! auburn
•
~-
f.4 mixed brown gray
49 very ligtit l>rown
~ 1 gray
IOI platinum blonde
103 blonde
17/22 light frosted
~Liz frosted
may co south coast plaza, san di ego fwy a! lirls!ol, cost a mesa: 5'46-9321·
shop m~nday thru saturday I 0 am to 9:30 pm
"'~fl Y PllC.1 ~
••
• ..
---
,
•
MAVCO
·--
~·
4 ~J tlLef ' M.._,, NMm ... 10, 1169
1'1hleli1t. ·£rlil•
Arabian Summit
. Meeting Or dered
Troops Brace
For Action
~ Washington
W AIH!NGTON (AP) -5 e v er a I
thouland tl'oopl """"' the country bl••
betn -to he reacly I« paosll>I• alrliftltll lo WubiJlllon bl CU< violellC< .,;.pa duriJlg this weei'• IC!Mduled
Moritorlum activities in the natloll's
capital.
Tbe Pentagon ac._ltdpl that the
wml 10 he ready had ..,. out. but
deollned to say which Ulllll « llmv -are blvOlved.
'
,..... Jut wtjk Jn wlilcb be aald Wit
lllilol ilrnl WU the ooly IOIUUon to tbe Middle 1111 Coiilllcl ·
Tbt Arth ~ CooUICll. with np-
"'8AU .. IRin IS .. -~ at tbe meotlitr In Cairo, coMoallatod Ill
·wrath aplnat the Utill•F 8tatae Ibis --~·denoomcln&,Wlllllnllon u lt.t ....,t eoemy llld I ll1ead ol Israel. 'l)lt
.,..P called for mobWali«\ of all Arib
,......... to de(eat•ilr•el.
,,.. --ltloll llarod up In -11 pile• .ioay ua lo ra e 11
•111>1-made their MOi>ad atladt In lit -.nany daJ1 apinll Egyptian oolltloNI In
the G'!lf of Suez. A Tel Aviv mllllarY
opol<lliilan aald an plinea -to their bUll.
A Jonlanlan military 1pokeam111 In
Amman said an lsriill patrol crooied the
-Jordan !liver lite Sunday and blew up a
hauae, klllinl a farmer llld JnJurlna two
.....,,. He sal4 the 1itack took plaee at
the Vlllap of AJ.Bakour1, !Ollr milH """"'1b IJI the S. of Galilee and a mile and
I balf lnlJdt Jordan.
'!bore 'jfU I J\ew Ourry of anU·ltratl
ldivJly In the OCCUPled Gasa Strip 111<1 lhHt . b,raeU . seldlin were wolinded l!IlhUJ·today 1'IJen I grenade WU burled
at I motortzed patrol movlnJ tbroll&h the
main, .-ol Gasa. 'lbree Arab b,.-. ..... -.
WblUatr a new Arab eummll confer~
'.Among troopa out.side Wllliln&toa that -·a.Id leod to 1110tbor ...-JI of
could he mede available la addition to a wu nmaJiied to be -. C«nnntn11t
total of abc>rt za,ooo mU111ry perllOllllfl dl)lilalOla 1n ~ a&ld today the· somt
1tallonectlntbecilY:1area,lt.wu!Qoown,_ Unloa .-1nldY.baa wwrlod about Nu.
are elements of the 112nd Alr1>arne aer'a b!Ood lllll fire opoech alnce it did
lllvlalon at Fort Brau. N.C. not :niit I c:oalniotaUCll with the United
. · Jerry Frledbetrn, Pentagon ,,.._ .. , SlaC.., lll the Miild!e Eu!.
. acknowled&ed that forces outside • 100-'Ille taraeU air au.ct aaatnst Egypt
inlle radius c1 •ashln;ton were Wormed appreered to ·be a furtber repriall for an
that they mllht be IWM10l!ed lo E~ naval atlack 5alur'llay niibt on
Wubington. Isratlr poslUona .. the Sinai Peninsula.
, "Al a part of our precantionary Egyp< said the bomberdmenl caused
measures. certain commanden bave heavy dimage and cuualtia. Israel
heeo advised to iMUre that the denitd the claim.
nlpOl!llvene" of their Ulllt. Is 1p-
propial.e to meet possible needs should
tbill he ~ellled by the Jllltlce llepaJ't.
-meutf!-Fl'Jedhtim uid.
'!llil meant th1t the unite l!iloWd be
ready to rriove at a moment's notice.
l"rledbeim emphasized that federal
troops would he bro11ght Into Washington
only if the Justice lleperto>Cnl flit. the.tr
pre&eQce would be neceasary to maintain
law and order.
Offtcials My there has been no direct
lndleallon that the Pentagon will be the
target of war proteat acti vities beginning
'lb\ndty, but a big march Saturday js to
be auemblill& not far from the Pentagon •.
or the za.00o millllry personnel based
on Washingt.00 area, about 10,000 are in
organized troops units.
U.S. Guard Ends Hunt
•
For Tanker's Crew
NJ;W YORK (AP) -Tbe Coast Guard
has eoded the .search for 31 missing
cttwm~ of the Liberian tanker Keo.
which split in lW'O io the Atlantic. Eight
bodite: were rtcOvered.
'I'be vessel reported J&st Wednesday
that lt3 crew of 3Z Groen llld four South
Americans had taken refuge in Ute mm'
!teUon liter the .vesoel broke up 'bl rag,
mg· 1taa 1JO nules aoutbealt of N Ill"' tuck•'· . •
----
Slae'• in Bad Shape?
Alexandra the Great, a Honolulu lltripper, complaiJ\$ that .her extra·
ordinary bust measurement -48 -prevents her from leading a
nonnal life. She's considering surgical r¢~ction of_her breasts, much
to the diarrtay of her admirers.
Supreme Co urt Continues
Se gregation Cra ckdown
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court followed up its recent crackdown
on Mississippi school segregation today
by turning down an appeal of 44
Louisiana school districts which sought to
keep "freedom of choice" s c ho o I
systems.
The high court took lbe action by ref us·
tng t? review a lower court ruling q:ainst ·
the Louisiana KhOol boards. The re~
jectioo w11 announced in an UD!igned
order without )~ent.
1n othe1"aetlon1, the court:
-Rejected a government requej\ to
rev.iew an overtime pay rµling. which the
Poot Office llepartrneol said could alloct
approximately 450,000 employes and cost
$100 million.
-Turned down a Federal Trade Com·
niliil'iion effort to reir\Sale a reaulatlon
aimed at protecting U.S. consumera from
misbranded ,.001 Imports. The U.S. Court
of Appeals had held that authority for
such regulsUon rested with tile customs
bureau. ·
' ' J • -Upheld an Interstate Commerce
Commi•sion order settit11i11*t.iocial frei&ht
car rental rates. ,
l1alerp!K!f11-------
.·'
Apollo 1·2
esrl'roce
Trio
u re
' • CAn ~ n.. (AP) -~ pboqrapb futur~ Apollo Jandlnc oltes.
· JI ,.aoajiila CW*. cand Jr. iild jirlmully the highlands near the crllerl ~ ..... ~~-· .. ;:~~ Fra Mauro, LaLande and Delcar1el. ,,..,.._ ..,., -w GonlGa Ibo planned some lime todlY:
lbolr·-pl to,lud oi' 1111' iiloOl)'l!"d In qie command ship simulator. ',o.L ' . " At the launch pad, the countdoWll mov·
The1 -Jn tlle lwlar Jandio' eel smoothly toward the scheduled
tralpor """'1e'bl a lesl _..u.i1'<f wJlh ' blaetolf of a Saturn 5 rocket al 8:21 a.m.
the MfalGn Coatro1 Ceu1er bl -· PST Friday • ]b. , f , . · Coorad llld Bean are to flY the Jandl'!I
Tbe third Apolo Ji ......,.., Richard craft they call Intrepid to a touchdown m
F o,ir'doa Jr raied a brlellna on Jhe moon's Ocean of Storms Nov. It. hinar ~ from IP""•llaia ol. the· They can abort the attempt at any lime
U.S .... toaJcal surV.,.. One of..G«don'I alter they ~ate from Gordon and the
IUka 11 he· orblll the lll09D i. to command ship until the moment of touchdown. They also can make a qtdck
Jurist , Gets
0 -!le Supporter,
Loses Another
WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. ThomaaJ.
Mcintyre, (J).N.H.), lll1l10l1llCod today he
will vote against confinnatlon of Judge
Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. as a supreme
C.ourt justice," while Sen. Rob:ert J. Dole,
(!I-Kan.), declared bis IU-1 of the em-
battled nomlnet.
Mcintyre's announcement brought to 39
the number of votes aligned against
Haynsworth in an -Alsoclated Preas
survey. Another 10 !le!lltors were comited
as leaning against. confirmation.
Including Dole, 36 senators are
declared supporters of .President Nixon's
nomine't.
"There has been an abundance ol un·
just criticism.and clamor In this inltance:
and unleaa there is IOme valid revelation
not heretofore made, when the roll is
called, 1 shall vote aye," Dole said in a
statement.
But Mcintyre said he felt the nomina·
tioo of Judge Haynsworth "hu proved to
be most unfortunate." He 1 a i d
Haynsworth'• record does not 111eet the
"ver/ high standards" required of a ·
Supreme O>urt nominee.
The Senate Is scheduled to begin debate
on the nomination Thunday .,
Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, {0-Ga.),
said eulier Haynsworth's confirmation
appears "extremely doublful." And a
news magazine reported that Chief
Justice Warren Burger has been lobbying
for Haynsworth'• coi)fll"matlon. '
Talmadge said Haynsworth supporters
could muster less than _50 percent of the
votes needed. 1
•
takeoff !n case somelh.ini goes wroDI
alter the landing.
Th! two &hips are to ·1,1ndock et an
alUtude of 86 miles. Intrepid is to land I
hours and 27 minutes later. The most
criUcal period is the last 12 minutes when
the astronauts trigger their daicent
engine to drop the final 49,200 fetL
TM most likely abort procedure Is to
separate the cabin section from the des-
cent engine stage and fire up the asctnt
engine to 'st.art a series of maneuvers tD
steer Intrepid back to the command 1hip,
Yankee Clipper. •
Apollo 11, man's fir~t lunar landing,
came within 14 seconds of being aborted
last July as astronauts Neil A. Annstrong
and F.dwin E. Aldrin Jr. hovered 150 feet
above the swiace, their fuel running
dangerously low as they sought a smooth
parking spot.
Gordon will be ready to fly a rescue
mission if Conrad and Bean have to abort
and cannot perform a successful -ren-
dezvous .
Gordon said ln a recent interview that
he could safely drop u close as 50,000
feet to the moon for a rescue, with the
exact altitude depending on the height of
mountalna in the area.
"I sure don't want to come home
without them," Gordon said. "So I'm
going to go down and gel them if I have
to."
A five-man medical team examined
Conrad, Gordon and Bean for 21n hours
Sunday llld pronounced them physlcaU):
fit.
Dr. Charles Berry, the astronauts•
chief physician, reportE:d: 1'The three
crewmen are in good phyi;ical condition.
They are in excellent spirits and eager to
fly."
Hijack Attempt
By Bo y Foiled
The Diltrict of Columbia N1tional
Guard, amounUna ·to 2,700 men, already
Is planning training activities durina th•
time of the Moratorium. which will keep
Washington guardamen ready to ,. into
action I!-.
Rented Plane
Latin SecUrity Council
Proposed in Ro cky Report
. -Let ~·a ·Kanw siate court ruling
that a prison pa'rotee i1 'not entitled to a
hearing and a' !fwyer before hls parole
can be rev~ked.-
Tbe Loui11iana school board cues were
brought under .one legal tent lJy the U.S.
5th Circuit <1Nrt of Appeal!.
Thi:! Supreme Court had already ruled
In an important 1968 case tha~ "freedom
of cho.ice" plans were invalid when they
were clearly failing to bring about
dese®atlon.
In a newspaper Interview Sunday In
Augulla, Ga .. Talmadgo said opposition
to the South Carolina judge is "a product
of geographical dl&eriminaUon."
Newsweek Magazine, mean w h 11 e,
qucted unnamed senatora as saying
Burger had approac::hed them to urge
their support of Hayn~orth.
"One ranking GOP senat9r says Burger
has betn buttonholing senators at social
functions and telling them , '1£ Judge
Haynsworth isn't qualified to sit on the
Supreme Court, then I'm not either,' "
the magazine sajd,
CJNCINNATf (UPI) -A l~year-01d
boy, using a teenage girl as a hostage.
boarded a Delta jetliner at Greater Cin-
cinnati Airport today and demanded the
plane be Down out of the country. The
boy was arrested before the aircraft took
off on a rught to Chicago.
Police identified the would-be skyjacker
as David L. Boothe of Norwood, a CiJ1..
ciMati suburb. Delta offieials said he
held a knift to the throat of Gloria Jean
House, 18, of Milford, another Cincinnati
suburb. WASHINGTON (AP)-New York Gov.
Nellon.A. Rockellller proposed to Preai-
d .. t Nilon the cr<aUon of a Wemm
SANTA SUSANA (UPI) -A amall Hem!IPhere Security Council to cope with 'the ••f~ of au!w-'-" that o-ate
Crashes, 2 Hurt
rented ptivate plllle atteinP'ed an QOWj' ~ emorl'!ncy landing during the -kend Jn lhn>ufhi!Ut nauons of the Intor·~ean
a parking lot behind a supermarket but Alliance. ·
ins1ead cruhed in a nearby field u bun-Rocl<eleller alao urpd reveroing the
dreds of shoppera watched in fright. rec<nt downward trtnd in U.S. Jlf&nll lor
The pilot, 3l-year-01d Mark Devane, of aulsting the traininf of securlly lon:ea bl
Lancaster, and Margaret Thompson, 13, other western hemisphere countries~
Glendora. wtre in fair condition today at 1be reconunendaUons were included in
Simi Valley Community Hospital. Miss Rockefeller'• Latin American report to
Thompson su.iatned internal-injuriefl,-Nlxon-wbieh-had·betn kept.~t-aince-it -
doctor! ~. 8ftd Devane suffered a cob· wu d6livertd to the President laat Sept.
cul&lon. 3. It w115 made public today by the White
Sheriff's deputies say the plane, which HOUie.
Devane rented at Van Nuys Airport, ran Tbt secw-ity recommendations were ig·
out of gas .over Santa Susana S4turday nored by Nixon in h11 October 31 La.Un
night and he headed it ~ toward the America policy statement. However
shopping center. It toucb<d down in the virtually all of the othe< propoaals in'.
lot Di.it became airborne a1aJn, hit some eluded in Nixon 's statement were based
overhead power Jines. flipped over and on propoaals by Rockefeller, who made a
crasbed In the field. Mrlea of trip• to the ngton in hebaU ol
the President earlier this year.
"The purpose of the council would be to
help the hemisphere countries wor.k
toiethtr in creating and preserving the
tlod of orderljr environment, free from
terror and violence, in which each citizen
of eaCh country c&Q build a beUer life for
hlmltlf and his farmty,'' Rockefeller said.
He urged that the council ha ve its
headquarters outside the United States.
On lrls ~endatlon for ilcrea sing
security granta: for A m e r I c a • s
htmispheric neigbbors Rockefeller said
in-the-report: _
"ln view Qf the growing subversion
against hemi1Phere governme~. the
mounting terrorism and violence agal~t
citizens, and the rapidly expanding
population, It ii essential that the training
program whtch brings military and police
personnel from other hemisphere nations
to the United States and to training
centeni in Panama be continued and
atrengtbened."
Yuma Gets Heavy Rainfall
Downpou r Fa r Exceeds Normal November Amount
C•Hfono ..
S11n; llf-. !'Wes _ .. ,
,_... Ii~ ............ 11:1• •·"'· a.•
$t(OftO '°" 'i 111w\V I!••·""· o.t
r:lrrt liltfil ' ••••• ' ....... t ;ot '""· •. , '"'' '°"" ............... 1:J6; '·""· 2.2 hconil ttltft ............ ll:M 1.11>. a,, Sl'Cl9llf .... , •••••••••••• f :N 1.rn. I ,t
..... • .... ,; .. '''"' htii 'lJI llti,
. ~-_.... r:u ''"'' Mtt J:11t "·""'
Temperature•
Allllltle
Blk•r•ti.!d
Blslil•.U ....
Om..,
lrown1vlll1
Chktff
Cl11tl11n1tt °"W' Dn ,..,.. .....
Fth11enkl
FOl"I WOrlll
Frt1!'0
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IC.1nu1 (l!'f
llJ ""'' lff AnltlfJ
Mo"' M._..,,
N..,, Orllll'lf
Nt'fl Yorlt
O.k!tnd
Okl•hllfN Cit~
°""" ..... .,_ ...
,..Im $print• ·-· 1;'!11""1••" •ertt•"' lttl,. ClfY
lttf 11un ·-1ttt•ll'ltfl'6 hit ltllt Cll'r
''" Dleto $tn FrtnGIKo ..... -·-1lltfrn'il
Wt1h!nt!Oft
tlltll Low PPM. " ~ ~ " " ~ " " " " SJ 4.\ n •.s 1.n
N;, M ., •1
., 45 " ~ .... " " 16 11 .01
,. S6 .02
" " " ... 71 ., ., " .. " ., ,, .01 " ~ " .. SS !II ,CJ .. " " .. 62 ' '3 .. " n " ,. " .tf " ., " .. .. " n " .. " " .. " " "' $6 .le " .. " .. " .. ,1---,. ,Tl: ,. .. JU
A spokeman for the court said Burger
would ha ve no conuneot on the reporl
Eas y Primarv Winner
Delta officials said the hijack attempt
was folled when airport official• and
police persuaded the youth to sumnder.
Garrison Victory Likely
--~J_U_l.U .. Ai'lt GARltfSO!L't~ASTS VICJ'ORY.___
R•nomin1tlon •• DA Tant1mount to Eltcllon
--~---!..'"·-. ·---
NEW ORLEANS I AP) -Flamboyant
of controversy for his handling of a John
F. Kennedy assassination probe, appears
headed for his third four-year tenn as
distri ct attorney.
The 6-foot·7 Garrison easily won the
Democratic nomination Saturday with
84,992 votes and will face Republican Phil
Trice in the April 1970 general election. His nearest rival, former Asst. U.S. At-ty: Harry F. Cormick;-recel\l"ed 60,385
votes. Two former Garrison aides ran
third and fourth. Charles R. Ward getting
7,587 votes and Ross T. Scaccia 4,523.
COMick said the Kennedy investigaliorf
might have been a major factor In Gar·
rison's victory.
"This Kennedy thing is still very much
a'live in the !ftindS of the JH!Ople,'' Connlck
saSd. "It's JUst a guess on my part but
epparenUy they feel he should be re ..
elected because of his stand against the federal government'."
Garrison, who bad claimed that retired
businessman Clay Shaw conspired to
murder Ktnne<ly ind that the federal
government had tried to suppress his in·
vee:Ugation. was asked the reason for hi8
vi~tory. "Maybe it'a my sex appeal," he
aa1d.
Shlw, acquitted two years after his Ir•
rest o~ the conspiracy charge, iia.kl, "I'm
not going to make any comment on the
election. There seems to be no Point of u
at this Ume."
Garrison'• district Is Orleans Pariah
wbkh hu-the aame-boundaries as-the a:
ty of New Orleans.
2 East Berlin Youths
Escape to West Section
• ~ERLJN (AP). -Tw~ East Berlla
youths crossed Communist barrlers tnte
the French sector«. West Berlin Sunday
pollce ~'ioday. Thq wero un'.
notlced bY the East Gerlllan border gu1rd1.
1lle delecUo• by the ta. llld :ll-711r-old
youtha kepj up a wove of I<fupa fl!JIIU.I In recent di) ..
. ,. •
I "
I
I
I
1-
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J OD EAN HAS'l'INGS. 642-4321 ,....,,................ .. ...
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Wives Face
Dilemma
Members aod guests of the ·Golden West College Faculty Wives'
Club' ~ill fai;:e a dyefilrria when they a,ttend the annual schola rship
dessert arid fashion shoW taking place 3t 1 p.m. SaturdaY, Nov. 15, in
the college coinmunity center.
On one band will be elegant fashions asserpbled from shops
throughout Orange County. On the other will be tables groaning with
a selection of five sumptuous .desserts, including pecan pie and straw·
berry cream cheese cake, to.inspire thoughts abou t holiday baking.
Commentating on the collection of sleek styles which are es-
pecially directed to the busy life of a facu1ty wife will be Miss Florence
S!1l,ales, and all proceeds from the event will benefit deserving women
stu<lents who plan to further tbe:ir e<19c.ation with ~cholars~ip ai~. \
ncketa:, at $2 each, include ho.th the show and dessert. Seating
for the afternoon event wW be ;at· individual tables of four, and entire
tables may be reserved in advance by calling Mrs. Tom Hermstad,
president of the club.
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Planning the b~efit. are the ~fmes. James Curran. chairman;
Tom Hernandez and Warren Peterkin, ticke'ts; l\1artin Newitz, pu~
licity: Fred Owens, desserts; Hermstad, table reservations, and Ray
Shackleford, door . prizes. FASHIONS: AN ACADEMI C QUESTWN -PI an n i n g to. Hermstad are Mrs. Martin Newitz (left) and Mrs. Masato Haya ..
shi. The event benefits deserving women students who plan to
further their education with scholarship aid.
The next event planned by the club will be a Christmas open
house for members and husbands. The William Sha\vls will open "their
Hgraduate" as a fashion expert is Mrs. Thomas Hermstad (right),
president of Golden West Faculty \Vives' Club which will sponsor
its annual dessert ~nd fashion show next Saturday. Assisting Mrs . Irvine home for the holiday special. ·
Las Damas
Ring Bells
It was in 1948 that 20 COD·
cemed homeowne1'I reallied a
need for immediate local fire
protec:tlon.
It was in 1'48 that a new
women's organii.aUon in the
area -Las Damu -decided
to lend ill support to the
endeavor.
'Ibe ZO Sunaet B e • c h
residents formed their own
volllli.eer f i r e department
under the jurisdlc:tlon of the'
Orange Oow!ty Fire Preven-
tion Depertmert, and Las
Damu began plamlna: a
fesUve ball wlth proceeds to
go toward the purchue of fire-
. fi_gbtin& equipment. I t ' s
been an annuli event ever
slace.
The 21at Fireman's Ball will
lake place at t p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 15, in the Meadowlark
Coontry Club. Thb fl!&r's pro-
cttm have been earmarked
for the purchase of a new
water distributor for attle-
flrts and a dry powder ex·
tlnguisher for the Sunset
Beach rescue truck.
Tickets to the semiformal
affair w1u be n, and Johnny
Wirlkler's orcheatra will play
for dancing until the wee
small hours.
The evening of fun with a
purpoee ii Open to the public,
and advanced t I c k e t in-
fonnaUon may be obtained by
calilnl Mn. John Woods, S92-
Slllt. 'riclcets 1lso moy be
purchued at the door, ac-
cording to Mrs. William Mof-
fett, chairman.
Among prlW to be given
away will be a sabot, and Jim
Dunl, guitarist Ind folk
singer, will entertain during
intermislion.
SIRENS SOUND BALL ALARM -For 21 yea,., Las Damas of
Sunset Beach have staged a gala ball to raise fWlds for the volun·
teer Sunset Beach Fire Department. \Yhile Mrs: John Woods lends
an assist with the equipment, Fire Chief and Mrs. Jack Osteen
and Mrs. William Molfett, chairman (left to right), wait for their
transportation to this year's benefit which will take place n e x t
Saturday in Meado,vlark Country Club.
Organizations
Join Cam.pai·gn
Seal Beach Is a beehive of activity as ar;ea or-
ganizations jump on the bandwagon during the final
Clean.up, Paint·up, Fix-up days for Seal Beach
Beautiful Week sponsored by the SeaJ Beach Juiliot'
Woman's Club. , .
Trees have been planted at Zoe'ler School, and
according to Mrs. Saul Mill st.ein, PTA pre.Sident,
that organization 'also is repainting and decorating
trash receptacles and benche$ at_ the schoool.
The Leisure World Garden Club is planting two
trees on the community.'s golf course as: their 'con-
tribution· to the citywide campaign. Mrs. Kathleen
. Argabright is. president. · · · .
Cleaning up around the historical marker at
· Anaheim Landing a.re members of 'the woman'.1
club Garden Section, and many youth groups have
. volunteered to participate by planting flower seeds
and bulbs and picking up litter. '
Planting flowers are Brownie troops led by the
Mmes. Warner Brawner, Russell Mangum J_r .. Fred-
ri ck Belt and Willard Morris and Cadettes led by
Mrs. Dan MacGilvary. '
Girl Scouts plan to clean the Electric Avenue
right-of-way and also plant a tree along the club-.
hou_se ~arkw~y, an~ _Boy ~outs, headed by Larry
Weir, also will part1c1pate 10 the project.
In resp:om-e--to a letter-from-the Seal Beach-Jun-.
iors. Goodwill Industries has announced that it wil1
send a truck to 'anyone's home lo pick up-ife-ms too
large for area pick·up stations and there will' be a
pick-up scheduled at the Seal Beach Center parking
lot collection station Thursday, Nov. 20.
The Juniors have distributed posters to many .of
the area stores and offices, and the city's school
district has distributed more than 1000 bufton·s as
reminders. All grades are .parti~ipating in a. poster
contest in McGaugh Scboot. · -
A review committee has completed a survey of
sites within the city, and those selected ·by tqe com-
mittee wilL be honored during an awards banquet in
the Old R~n~h Country.Club on Thursday, Nov, 20.
Compr1smg the review committee were M r 11 ~ike Knapp and Mrs. Jerry Roch ete from. the Jun:
1ors;_ ~dwa~d Lovell, landscape artist; Bob Neprud,
adm1n1strat1ve planning assistant for the city and
William Thomas, division manager for Geiieral
Telephone Co. ·
'M I . onroe s Doctrine'-Free Tra·de With No Entan.glements
home when they pounded on her door.
frigh tened to death by a deranged man
who exposed himself.
Emporia Board of Educalion.
-MJ,lS. L.
mention it to her family ?
• -CONCERNED NOT
DEAR CONCERNED: Are you
absolutely certain of your facts? U so,
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DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm a 38-year·
old blchelor of average looks and
personality. I have an average position
and..l llve.Jn_an.averaae a~t. My
problem is women.
I am takinl out five different ones at
present. They 111 l)ave the same goal in
mind -marria1e. These are not silly,
frivolous girls. They are between 32 and
-45 years of age. I am happy in my
prueut state and have no desire to settle
down. I mJgbt reconsider u.ie day, but for
the tJme belng I want no ues.
ANN LANDERS ~ These days it takes courage to open
one's door -to anybody. We, 1n-
Emporia, Kan. hit on a solution to the
problem. Perh<lps you 'd Uke to pass it on
to your readers in other cities: We have
implemented a plan to help children who
might run into trouble on the way to and
from school. lt is the Block Mother
system. These women arc selected by the
home room teacher from kindergarten
thrcugh grade 12. The mothers have
placards in the front window -one on
every block. The children are instructed
lo go to these homes if they run in to trou·
ble.
DEAR MRS. L.: ll't bard to believe
that ht America we netd tbtlter 1t.alkin1
"'bei'elldr on their· "11 to ud rrem-
tcbool can run wben ~y need ~
tecUon. But It'• one .t tH tragic realities
of our time and we m11t face tt. My
thanks to you for writing and a garland
ot toses to die Emporia, Kan. Board of
uk yaur cou1ill If abe ii, aware ol Hr
f'rlend"r'htor)';-lf He .. , olfw DO com-__ _,
meat. Merely uy, 0 1 juA wanled te
In cae you think I am imagining
thines, I'd like to rtve you a few sample
sentences. Min A said to me after two
dates, "You'll be to ln two years -and
that'• no kid anymort. You need to settle
down. J'm~wlll~ to glVUIP"lTIY ,_
and ml1'l'l' you.' Mn. B.' (a widow) said
alter four d,tes, "If we were married,
our combined incomes woold enable t:tc>th
or us to live a lot better than· either of' us
i~ living now. HO\f aboot it?" Miss C (a
career girl) aald alter two theater dates
a'nd one concert : "I am not a loose
woman. but I would consider going to bed
with you If you told me you-had marriage
in mind.1'
1 hate to come right out and say, "I am
not inte~ested Jn marriage.'' I seld that
once ·and the woman bawled for Jwo
hours. -Please tell me how to make my
position clear without hurting anybody's
feeli.rigs.
-NO STRINGS MONROE
DEAR NO STRINGS : Any guy -:ho can
juggle rlvt women at a time and has
managed kt avokl foreign enlan«lemenu
for 31 yel.rs doesn't need any advice from
Ann Lande.rs. The Monroe Doctrine, as
yoa pncUce II, 1eem1 to be ex,remely ef·
rectlve.
DE.\R ANN LANDERS' I'd like lo add
--my-word_s of praise_ for lhe kind woma;n
who Jet those three teenage girls Into he r
If you U5e-thls.lc.Uer...Ann. please. tlon't
cm:l lt me -give the credit to the
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Education. ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My cooain,
\Vllh whom I have never been very clost,
' It dating s man I know has served time
ror armed robbery. He has been married
twk:e and has a 9-year-oktllOll.
J cannot believe my cousin knows of his
past. She ls~a fine..person, but very naive.
Shall I tell her, or would II be better to
make sart JM bew." 0. -.ot ttll hr
famUy.
Drinking may be "In'' to.the kids you
run with .-.but It can put you "out'' for
keeps. You can cool it a.nd stay popular.
Read '1Booze and You -For Teenagen
OnJy," by Ann Landers. Send 35 centa in
coin and a long, s<lf addt.....i. stamped
evelopr. with your request. •
Ann Landers will be glad to help J<1U
with your problems. Send them &o hli' In
care ol the DAILY PILOT enclooJni a
ocll-addt'used, slamped envelcij)O.
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!J .J'~ll Y PILOT
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Speakers
Thankful
Are We 11\ankful?
Member• d. Lu OW 1-~~~lrf:lOl~a~C~l u b , Hun-. iiitOii &iC1i; will illi'"" !hi
toplc when they meet 1t 7:30
p.m. WedneadlJ, Nov. 12, 1n
• the Mercury Slvln11 and Loan
bulldin(.
Mr•. J. M. Clari will give
her 1et-acqualnttd speech and
Mrs. G1ry.' Giles,
toutmlstreu1 will introduce
Mn. Ralph 'Almgren, Mn.
Velma Bolin and Mn. Hal
Hennannl. •
Actln( 11 Umekeeper will be
Mn. Cl~e Double, and an
educalkm. capeule "10 be of.
fend by Ml!o' Pa( Ha)'Mll.
Mr1. Calvln Olcott will lead
impromptu topics, and lbe
clo.lng thou&bl w I'! I be
pre.sen&ed by Mrs. P a u l
Bronson. Serving as evaluator
will• Mn. Allan KtMedy.
...
Toutmlltreu c I u b s are
open to all women interested
in developing poiae and con·
fl4ence. For information call
Mrs. Rollo West, "6-3052.
Twins Club
PRETTY GIRLS' MELODY -To help establish a dress code for their school,
Arevalos girls from Fountain \_'alley spe~t a month studying good. grooming,
and awards were presented during a fashion show at the concl~s1on o( the
course. Mrs. Mike Gavin, learning coordinator, congratulates \V111ncr Kathy
Hughes.
' Li Hie Designers ·Win Competi tion .
R~eiving $50 Savings Bonds and two AcrilaJi out-
fits .are Jill Walker (left), 10, of Westminster and
· Deneece Glenn (right), 7, of Costa Mesa who won
s~nd-place honors in the li ttle designer competi-
Horoscope
Aries:
TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 11
By SYDNEY OMARR
.Spotlight on Sagittarius.
l\lodes of travel uudergo re-
vision. Controversial publics.
tiott, relating: to war and
peatt, could grab headliKS.
ARJES (~1arch 21-April 19):
Eyes Eyes Educa tion in Fashion
lion sponsored by May Co. with Monsanto Textiles Division and Jabberwocty. With them is a represen-
tative from the lalter firm, Miss P1ul.1 Novick.
Dr. Barbara Mitchell will
speak on Eye Problems when
the Orange Coast Mothers o(
Twins Club meets Wednesday,
Nov. 12, in the Villa Sweden
restaurant, Huntington Beach .
Grooming Aids Code
Revise Plans
A social hour at 7 p.m. will Jn order to help establish rtquested the advice of a
be followed by dinner at a. a school dress code, girls in dermatologist. cosmetologist,
Dr. Mitchell, who has been fifth through eighth grades fashion advisor and school dis-
practicing opthalmology in attending Arevalos School , trict .health coordinator to
Long Beach, recently opened Fountain Va lley, have just work with them on general
an office in Huntington Beach. completed a month's progran1 and individual grooming prob-
Among the eye dlaorde.rs she in good grooming. lems.
will discuss Is d Y s 1 e x I a To learn "what's good and Mrs. Mike Gavin, learning
(reading disabilities). what isn't," the young women coordinator for the Fountain
All mothers o( twins In the Valley School District, said
area are invited to attend the the girls spent a great deal of
meeUng and reservations may Weavers Show time in small groups discuss·
mantic aura persLst.s. Excel-here to principles or golden be made by calling Mrs. Gary ing dress standards. "To them,
lent for organizlng charitable rule. You are going to suc· Clements, 342-3534. •he school dress code isn't a
enterprises. Especially good ceed. A Christmas boutique to Wares at Tea table of rules and regulations:
for appearances belott latte AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. benefit the club's philan-it's a program. Kids are help-
groo,ps. Y~ are dynat mtc, op-18): Some of your aspiration.'! thropic program is being plan· Woven articles and yarns ing kids analyze the thing they ,po~llR'G'o" c'As attr~~ ~· may require revision. Be will-ned for December, and all will be on di.splay and for sale wear in terms of standards
ug . .-.xpt. 2.2 ): ing to tear down in order ta proceeds will be used to aid when the South Co a .!5 t they help develop," she main·
Money, investments, basic se-rebuild. fl.1any are with you. f ·u · Weavers' Guild, Inc., hosts its tained. curity .,. ht'lhl'·ht-•. Deal n~y am1 e! with twins. N , ,. ~ Know this and exude confi. ovember tea and sale next Mrs J h z· er an with one who claims to ha'• · osep 1mm m • dence , charm. Thursday in lhe Santa Ana f th o · p t h important baclt.ing. You soon owner o e aisy a c
learn whtlher individual is PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Unusual Bow Library. Dress Shop and former home
substantial or olhe:rwi~. Get Written word brings gain . Mrs. L. I. Dow will present economics teacher, was invit-
at truth. Read and write. Absorb and 1 workshop during the morn-ed to give professional advice
the fashions t.hey selected with
the assistance of Miss Barbara
Stacey, Sears fashions coordi·
nator. A real cooperative et·
fort, the show involved even
the boys in set designs. ar·
ranging the room and taping
the music.
At the conclusion of the prD-
gram awards were presented
by Mrs. Michael Brick, wife
of the district superintendent,
and girls showing the most
progress were presented with
a nosegay from the supcrin•
tenden~'s office.
First place went to 12-year·
old Kathy Hughes. 1vho also
received a 10-week scholarship
to a charm school from Sears.
Others receiving certi!icales or
merit included Lori Parlin, Su-
zanne Ellickson. 'Teresa ~1az·
zow\a, Brenda ~1etz, Lls3 Kol·
Hnger, Rosalind Ra dam and
Debbie FC'mleil.
Long journey. revision 0£ ba·
sic plans, pushing beyond cur-
rent horizon.'! indicated. Be
versatile. The past need not
dominate present thoughts,
actions. Think.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): disaeminate knowledge. No Fo r Gift Box ing on finishing with knots and on line and design of garments
Talklnn alone does not suf· day for being superficial. Say other techniques. in relation to figure types and----------
.. 46 what you mean-me.an what E k S k I ch d ki hat ould •-· te f lice ; you need a written state-a sy to Mo e ac un es an coo es w w UC appropr1a or T s t c VALRIE DAVIS
S.trothtd
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
ment, aoreement. Expansion you say. Top person makes · will be available for purchase speci,fic oceaaions. op por s overege
e-appraisal. and th · "h I T Id th thl . Th 0 ·1 P" t due. Your manner, style are To make an unusual five-ere JS a ..., c ar1e or o cone u e e mon · ong 1n e a1 y 1.0
'.March Day
Selected
Agreement on funds can be
reached today. Member of op-
posite sex has been insistent.
H.each decision which is fair,
but doesn't cost ex cess
amount. Message clear by to-
night.
appreciated. You re ce ive IF TODAY IS YOUR Inch bow for a gift package,,f,t;:he=wor=k=s=ho~p=·======~pr=O~flf=•=m='=the=~'=ir=la=m=od=el=ed==========:;, meaningful compliment. Stand BIRTHDAY. you are intuitive, cut ribbon into 14 pieces, eacbl
tall. a natural teacher. You are 16 inches long.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): always willing to experiment M k fl · ht f New approach could result in and to share knowledge. Cur-a e a gure eig rom
solid financial 1ain. You add rent period of basic frustra -eachhplece. Mols~Aand se_cure
to possessions. Leo individual tion is about to be erased. You at dt e center. J.11.:-n moisten
The engagement or Valrie
.lean Davis and Paul Calvin
Adling has been announced by
f.1r. and ~trs. Gu y E. Da vis of
Fountain Valley, parents of
the bride·lo-bt'.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): could play paramount role. will be on the move. an attach one fiJUre eight
This ls a day to pay, collect crosswise at the ctnter of Study Taurus message . You
are due to get answer to vital
question -could affect public
relations and marital status.
Stress change. travel, variety.
deb•-1"ncludes favors. To find ""'' more •llClu' vou .. e11 another. ..,,._ Incl ••1rol08Y. Otllfr SrclnfY Om1rr'1 ,..A li tl h' f' r SAGlTrARIUS (Nov.' 22_ »-oa" bookt.t. nw T...,111 "'°"'' ..... n nue a ac ing 1gu e
flee 2t) Cycl bl .. l. A1tl"O!Oly. 5etHI 111.1~i. 1ric1 w eights to the ctnter, crosswise . : e '6"'; circum-.:..,,, 10 Orn••• 11>1111;111 tM DAtLV each time, until the bow is
CANCER (June 21..July 22):
Your diet and how you handle
yourself during crises are
highlighted. Key is to set mod-
erate pace-and to practice
moderation. Adjust domestic
situation. Do so diplomatic-
ally.
stances favor your special ef-PILOT. So• l1«1. G••l!d c.,,1r1t s1 ..
forts. Make contacts. SI.res! lr='=""="=-=v="'::·;,":::·v=·::':;":;";,· ====":m:P;:1:'':':· ======:;\ p-eater lndependenct. Be oriC"-
1nal. Your hunches pay divi-
dends. Your liming is sharp.
l\.1iss Davis is a graduate of
f'ountain Valley 11igh School
and attended Golden West
College.
Her fiance, son of J\lrs.
LEO /July 23-Aug. 22): Ro-
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
Ill): Remember thoie Who
mlghl be confined to home
hospital. Llttle cons.ide.ratlo~
taday goes a Joog way. Ad-J\1aureen Barton of Goleta and
Walter Adling of Buena Park,
is a graduate of Western High
School and attended Cypress
Junior College. H~ present.!Y is
slationed at Camp Pendleton
with the U.S. Marine Corps.
Gardene rs Ge t Pre view
1lle couple plan to marry
i\.1arch 14.
Holiday Settings Seen
T a ble se tling s to r gardening proa:ram in pr6-
Song Fest
Da te Noted
Thanksgjving and Christmas gress in that country.
along with other arrangemenlc; Mrs. Neil H. Lewis, tea
appropriate for the holida.vs chairman, will be .assisted by the Mmes. Norman Alexander, will be shown by Mrs. A. J . Georae R:Campbell, s . Berne
Antosik when Laguna Beach Carlton, Norris C a v a I t e r ,
Garden Club meets in the James R. Cavitt. J . Orville
Banjo and piano mu~ic will Woman's Clubhouse at 1 :30 Chilton. B. Dean Clanton, Jack
fill the Senior Citiiens Recrea· p.m. Friday. Nov. 14 . Cole, Leonard Davis, Charle1
lion Center. Newport Beach, Approach to Beauty Through Dilllnter. Dales A. Dunbar.
when the Night Owls or the Design will be the theme of Jessie Dungan and Robert
Newport Beach Hoot 'n Holler the flower arranging lecture Qusoe.
Roost gather Sunday, Nov. 16, and demonstration to be -,;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;,II at 2 p.m. presented by the clubwoman ! l
Joe Chapeile of Costa Meia. who also is' a flower arranging
banjoist, V.'ill be accompanied teacher In Floral Arts SlUd1o,
on the piano by r.1rs. G. L. Laguna Beach,
Stewert and song sheets \viii \, A display of Ko r e an
be distributed for gr o u p l\arments. u t e n s i I s and
si nging. a,rti facts also will be presented
The grou p is asking co n·'-by Col. Frank E. Gillette,
tributlons fqr the Christmas stat~· chainnan or World
ba:r.aar table and currently is Ca rdelliqg of Ca 1 i r pr n i a
planning the annual Christmas Gardtn Ctubs, Inc.
party for Sunday, Dec. I~. in CoJ. Gillette lived in Korea
the Sheraton Beach Inn. Uun· for many years.,He will give a
tin gt.on Beach. short talk on· ~e world
~lPQf\Lt~~
STRICTLY JUNIORS
-NOW OPEN •.• In The Alley Of
--+-~Optn Fri. b11.
. 'tll '
_.!414 VIA Uto AU C l~f
N1WPOIT llACH CARDS WILCOMI
VISIT US .
tho
Stor~
Visits
You
Fer Yollt'
Co111pltrl_e
M•l•r11lt)
w.rtl1ebe .,
r•••oft1bl1
prit1t • , •
• •
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
1 17•7 Newp•rt 11 .. 11. · emr !:::--••t-1J•1
"
FASHIONS BY GLYCINE
OF SWITZERLANO
Ladies 14 karat gold ai1mond walches
-in-all the latest styles.
•· From lefJ: $395. $595.
With turquoise dial, $795. $295.
SLA..VICK'S
t 8 FASHION ISLAND
NcWPORT BCACH -644 .1380
.. 'l
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F-ountain *.alley 'Today'1 Fbaal
N. Y. Stoeke
• VOL. 62, NO. 269, l SECTIONS, 42' PA6ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY; NOVEMIER ·10, 1969
BolsaAtom
Plant Study
Top of Pier Action Set
Scheduled Council_ to Discuss Parking Part of Plan
The proposed Bolsa Island n~clear
scaw!lter conversion plant off Huntington
Beach will be investigated by the Joint
Legislative Committee on A t o m i c
Development and Space, c_hairman John
V. Briggs (R-Fullerton) announced today.
Briggs said the committee will meet
No./. '18 and 19 in the Orange County
Courthouse to discover "What went
,vrong · with the Bolsa Island develop-
ment why such an ambitious proj~ got
numPe<t and how io avoid such probl!m!
in the future .·•
DAIL'I' .. !LOT Stilt .. lle!t
By JAck BROBACK.
Of tM IMlllY ,lllt Sltff
Huntington Beach's widely-discussed
"Top or the Pier" plan goes befo:e the
community tonight ror more discussion.
A public hearing before the city council
&gins at 7:30 p.m. in the Huntington
Beach High School auditorium.
Up for decision by tbe council will be a
first stage parking authority plan which
calls for the clearing of five cltY. blocks
on Pacific Coast Highway and the
purchase of five acres of unimproved
property. .
Target area is between 6th and Lake
Streets inland one block to Walnut
Avenue and the five.acre parcel east of
l.ake extending to Atlanta AV£nue.
T~.e Urban Land Institute CiUzen.s
Steering Committee (CSC) haS proposed
that the city's Parking Authority
purchase and clear the property at an
estimated cost ot $3.8 million.
Th.! committee said the object of the
plan ~ to take full advantage of the
beach and provide a strong stimulus for
renovation and expansion ol downtown
business through provision of adequate
parking.
The project would be phased over
several years including up to five years
for initial construction and negotiation of
;;ir rights leases for some 2S percent of
the area.
Provided would be 1,878 parking spac¢s
and tbe commit~ e.sUl"(lates that the
authority would operate at a loss of
S96,000 a year for the first four s.
B~· the fifth ye'ar • net. revenue of
!21,0l)J annually ls projected, increasing
,96,000 a yei.r for the first four years.
Increases in indirect revenue including
sales rt:al estate and bed taxes are ex-
pected ' to total more than ,I, million in
Jive years and ''O million in 25.
The ·project already has been outlined
In detail for the city council and the
public in a series of meetings.
1'he last of Uiese, on Oct. 28, attended
liy about 200 residents, saw speaker$ urge
bnplementatioa of the plan.
Planning Consultant Ted Adsit painted
out thAt ""while Orange County and the
City of Huntington Beach have seeQ the '
fas.test 1rowth • in the naUon, Ult
downtown area has not grown in popula·
lion or deveklpment."
·'Decisions made now are vital," Adsit
said. "This ls ·the last chanCe .. J( private
capital is . not attracted now it will go
elSewht:"e. to ~uth Orange County areas
and San Diego County.:• '
Dr. Thomas, Ashley, vice president of
Economic Research .Associates .(ERA),
the firm hired, by the . city to make a
survey of the study area, warned that.
•·11w1tington Beach is at the crossroads
"lSee PARXING , Page Z) The assemblyman said officials of the
Atomic Eriergy Commission, who helped
de\•elop plans for the project, have been
Invited to teslUy.
Briggs said his committee is ~ncern.ed
with air pollution as we.II as mdustnal
progress. "We mu.st look toward ~er
plants that produce little or no pollut~on.
that can De used to generate elect~1cal
power and reclaim seawater for a thirsty
California.''
Her 1'1ajesly
Rhonda Martyn is Marina High
S c h o o I ' s 1969 Homecoming
Queen. She was named Friday
night during Marina-Hunting-
ton Beach gridiron battle. Vik-
ings upset Oilers 6-3, giving
Queen Rhonda good reason to
smile.
School Bond
Issue Plan
Challenged
Fairview Home for ·2,252
The Bolsa Island project, located o_U
the sea.coast south of Warner Avenue _in
the Bolsa cruca State Beach area.' was
dropped last year when o_riginal pro1ected
CO.<its of $444 million Jumped to $775
million.
"As Rep. Chet Holifield, chai~man o[
the Joint congressional C.Omnuttee on
Atomic Energy, ·pointed out last month ,
'California can lead the way ~oward
peaceful uses of nuclear energy in p~o
ducing much needed power and desalin-
ization or wa\er .' It seems to ~ that ~e
can be ·1eaders in this Held," Briggs. said.
"\Ve must bring thGSe from bus1ne_ss,
Industry, and government toget~er, find
nut our problems, develop solutions ~nd
use all segments of our socie~. to bring
California 'itJto the nu'clear age.
The assemblyman said officials of lhe
State De_partment of Water . R~sources,
the Metropolitan Water District, San
Diego Gas & Electric. arid. Southern
caIUomia Edison would testify at the
hvr.t-day bearin&S in Santa Ana.
Swim Prog1·am
Highlights Beach
Fall Recreation
A comprehensive swimming program
ror youngsters and adults higl"il!gh_ts the
fall recreation program of the Huntington
Beach Recreation and Parks Depart-
ment. t
Edison Athlete
Hurt in Game
Reported Better·
Sam Fuga, 17-year-old Edison High
School football player who was seriouSly
injured Friday night, is reported im-
proving today.
Officials at Hoag ~1emorial Hospital In
Newport · Beach said the youth, although
suffering 4l broken neck, was showing
definite signs of 'improyemf:nt aod had
regained lhe ability to move his arms and
legs:
He is still In the Intensive care ward
where he has been since he was rushed to
the hospital Friday night after being in·
jured in the seCond play of the game.
Mark Naylon, 15-year-old Edison High
junior varsity player, died one week ago
of head injuries suffered in a football
game Oct. 18.
Water Resources
.Official to Talk
The premise that the Huntington Beach
Union High School District will have to
call a $9.S million bond election for schoo l
building needs next February was
challenged today by a Westminster
parent who 'asserts that present facilities
can already house 25,000 or 30,000
~tudcnts.
Robert M. Gordon, 5212 Princeton Ave.,
told district trustees by letter that they
should investigate some o th e r
alternatives to the bond election and lbe
construction of new schools.
They are the folklwina::
-To provide a four -day school week
and to use the filth day to employ
students in socially useful occupatiOM,
both on and off campus, Each child cou1d
spend in class the same number of hours
he now spends in 'five, prov1ding more
capacity to the school.'
-To use existing facllities from 1 a.m.
to S p.m. Monday through Friday.· Half
the students would attend sessions from 7
a.m. to 2 p.m., the otber half from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
This would double the capacity of each
existing high school, Gordon claims.
-To combine alternatives one and ty,·o
to yield a physical plant capable or pro-
viding for about 30,000 students if all or
the district's five· high schools remain in
operation.
-To Institute a swing shift from 3 p.m.
to 10 p;m, at one of the high schools only,
y,·hich would, according to GC'rdon 's
calculations. provide enough space for
3.000 more pupils. This step alone would
eliminate the need for another high
school, he suggests.
E.'ditor'a Note: Hope and hopeless·
ness l ive side by side tn the rooms
ond wards o/ Fairview State HoSP.iUll,
on institution that is so much a part,
yet so far. apart f rom tile Orange
Coast community. This is the f irst of
· six articles in a spedal report on the
hospital for tlte mentally retarded.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of rM DtltJ '"" Sltlt
One can't see them from the roadway,
but .._Peanuts comic strip characters
decorate top floor windows of the big
peach·colored building with aluminum
sunshades.
The cheery theme can also be seen in
other rooms.
'I'hili is Fairvi~w Slate Hospita1 -or at
I~ all th{lt.many kJlOYf al;>out-the four-
i;torj-sti:uehft at 2501 Harbor Blvd.,
COsti Mesa, built a• decade ·ago.
It is home-tem.,,·o r1ry or
pennantnt~(or 2,W retarded persons. They .._._ from oeven daj1 IA> 83
years.· All are cluaecl as cblldttn. All
blve apeda1 needs.
Almost all have somethin1 to Sivt.
The familiar little peOp le who populate
a paprr worki that is a genuine reflection
of our own-the P e a n u t s charac-
ters-have characteristics In common
with humans at Faitview.
Pleasure. Loneliness. A seme of
bewilderment with a complex world. The
wonder of learning new things, within
their limits. A sense ol achievement at
doing so. Sometimes tear.
Very often, love.
Three stories' below those decorated
podiatries wards, in the office of the man
in charge is another Peanuts figure on a
plaque-Good Old Charlie Brown.
"I've developed a new philosophy." the
plaque says, "I only dread one day at a
time:"
The set1timenl is a bit of humor for Dr.
Anthony N. Toto, superintendent and
medical director or the hospital serving
Orange and parts of Los Angeles and San
Diego Counties.
New philosophies are constantly being
devtlopcd by research teams and there is
room for dread in none of them, only oir
timism.
Besides the patients In the hospital.
whose « wards are scattered over 400
acres, another 1,000 are outside in foster
h. mes or other specialiled programs.
Scanning data aheell on the patient
pOputation, one sees that 1,063 ate pro-
.fondly retarded. The ~rm hu tactless
varlations on the ou.talde. ".Vegetable" ll .
one of them.-
Little caa be done for m• of.. these
Imperfect Victlml ol 19 olUilllable
dt:fecll in 1 Society that Worlhlps the
most nearly perfect.
Thill still leaves hundreds ranging up
the ladder of capability for whom help js
available and who may look forward to 1
hJppy, useful life wlUtln their limits.
What is being done for them·!
As much as J>O!Slble--far more than
ever before-says Dr. Toto, chief of the
tSee FAIBVTEW, Pqe I)
Reds Intensifying Attacks
OAIL Y 'ILOT Stitt ''-"'
ART WORK FROM FAIRVIEW
Rttardtd C•n Cre•t1, Too
Agnew Describes
Demonstratw ni. Five classes will be offered this year a
the city pool at 16th Street and Palm
Avenue and at the l\1arina High School
pool. . . A few openings remain in beg1nn1ng
classes for youngsters in aftei:-noon
sessions that began today. The registra-
tion fee is $4 and yuungsters may apply
at the gymnasium-pool between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. l\1ondays through Fridays.
Classes are scheduled for 2:30 p.m., 3: 15
·J-oh.n R. Teerink, deputy director of the
state Department of Water Resources,
y.•iJI be the speaker Nov. 19 .at a general
membership luncheon of the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce.
Tcerink will discuss "Water Issues
Facing California," acC-Ording to Bill
\Voods, chamber president.
-To keep the school open during the
summer months and increase its capacity
that way. .
-To provide for flexible scheduling\
which means that the school day is
broken down into small segments, allow-
ing the student more freedom of choice in
selecting the classes he would like to at-
tend .
From Cambodia on .Berets -As 'Carnival' 1·
p.m.·an<! 8 p.m. .
Emotionally and mentally hnd1capped
children begin their special swimming
classes Tuesday with lessons each Tues-
day and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. _and 7: 15
p.m. Registration is at th~ c1tr gy.m.
The pool is open for public sw1mm1ng
from 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. each Satur·
day: Admission is 25 cents for youngsters
under 17 and 50 cents for adults.
Family swimming times are from 6:30
p.m. io -9 p.m. MOndays a'iictWedni!:sdays
with admi!sion 2S cents for youths and 50
cents for adults.
Swim team workouts are scheduled
Mondays through 111ursdays from 4:30
p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Marina High ~bool
pool, Springdale Street and Edinger
Avenue. Tennis players may work out at two
local high schools during the evening
hours. The Marina courts are open from
5 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily while the Edison
High School courts will be lit from 6 p.m.
to 10 p.m. daily except Saturdays.
Beach School Jlisto1·y
Thesis on Display
He also will discuss the Bo\sa Island
nuclear seawater conversion and power
complex proposed off Bolsa Chica State
Park in Huntington Beach.
Teerink will also present slides showing
-progress of state water projects, W<Qls
said.
Reservations may be made by calling
the chamber at 962-6661. Tickets for the
lunch.eqn are $3.50 each. Deadline for
reservations is Monday. Nov. 17.
Nixon Plans Vi sit
\VA.'ili.INGTON <AP> -PreSident Nix·
on, on VeteranS D"i}', will motor lo the
WaSbington V~tera~ Hospital to visit
rome of lhe wards.
tn addition, Gordon suggests that the $1
million portion of the bonds which is to be
applied to the rehabilitation of old
buildings on the Huntington Beach High
School campus be rejected.
If any one of the alternatives is brought
into operations, says Gordon, "that plant
may be unnecessary to provide for the
e.'<pected influx of studenls."
"Instead of spending one million to
renovate It, the facility might be sold for
several-m1Illon--;-as-ls. The Field Act.
which provides for earthquake safety
(See BUILDING, Pqe I)
SAIGON (UPI ) -Commun ist troops
Intensifying their offensive along the
Cambodian border inflicted h e a v y
casualties on a U.S. Special Forces-<:amp-
Sunday and today, riddled two helicopter
gunships with intense ground fire and at-
tacked a U.S. air field. inflicting con-
siderable damage.
The series of attacks ranged along the
border from Bu Prang, 112 miles north of
Saigon, to the air base at Ban Me T·buot,
50 miles to the north. North Vietnamese
Communists have ma ssed an estimated
7,000 men in the area against South Viet-
namese ground forces.
The attacks t'Oincided with disclol'lure
that a captured Communist docun1ent
War ·Policies at Stake
Pro, Con Plan, Demonstrations This Week
... • By A11ociated Pres• Nixon with stacks of telegrams as part of began early. A Veterans Day parade was
Supporters and opponents or President its campaign to convin~ Congress the held Saturday in Midland Park, N.J .• a
Nixon's Vietnam policy hold new administration's Vietnam palicy has town or 11000 that has lost eight sons in
from a liaison runner called for "in-
.tensive attacks" throughout South Viet-
nam to support the antiwar protest
march on Washington scheduled-for next
Saturday .
The attacks on the allied mercenaries
lhere killed three U.S. special forces men
advising the tribesmen troops and that
one 90-man mercenary t'Ompany took
two-thirds casualties, meaning 60 men
killed or wounded .·11le Communists lost
12 known dead.
U.S. fighter-bombers and government-
piloted AlE Skyraider planes supported
the ground troops committed to attion in
another test of the Vietnamese ability to
defend themselves. The Communists had
brought in 37 milmeter antiaircraft guns
and two helicopter gushlps were so badly
hit they made forced landings at Ban
Mc Thuot.
Ban Me' Thuot itself was the target of
Communist a\taclt.s.
* * * Document Urges
All-out Attacks
denlonstrations .this week in the coo-ove™·helming public support.
tinuing controversy over the nation's in-Tht postcard·siu pictures show Nixon Vietnam. Pollet estimated there were SAIGON (AP) -A Viet Cong dOCU·
vo\vement In the war. at a presidential desk laden with 1,000 marchers and 25,000 spectators. ment found 30 miles east of Saigon calli.
A master's thesis outlining l~e history A \•;eek of activities by groups backing telegrams prompted by his speech on the Sponsors of the parade said they for Intensive attacks In lhat region this
of the Huntington ~ach t?n1on High the · President will be highlighted by \'Jar last Monday night. ' wanted to dramatlu ·their support or the weekend to support the antiwar protest
School District from its start. in a swamp \1eter&ns Day ceremonies Tuesday in Bryce N. Harlow, Nixon's congressional . 1 march on Washiniton Satlflday; official
10 modem times is now on display at the WWUngton. The focus, returns to the na-liaison chief, signed letters sent to President's policies and opposit on to an-sources said .today: J ' ·
city's public library. . -tiOO'SC3J)ltal"S8tUfdiyW hen allies p lan nieiiiliers of COngress with the Uwar demonstraton. The sources . said the doCument was
The treatise. penned in 1967 by P~ter a mi.c"Sive antiwar mareh and 'Tally. photograph and an account of a Gallup Jn HOUiton, Tex .• a "march for peace'' taken last Tuesday from the body of
Burwell, an Enallsh teacher at Edi500 As ,Jigns o! support through the week Poll reporting 77 percent support for the covered 38 blocks Sunday. Police either a couriu or a liaison olUctr who
High School, tells ~w .• group of in· for Ni.Jon's Vietnam policies, ad· Nixon war policy. estimated the.re were 900 marchert and was killed in a firerlgttt with Australian
terested citlr.ens decided in I90!_to build f mlnlstratlon backers called for partlcipa· "I am sure that you are as lmptt:ssed Jl'.lt the tOUl attendance 1t a nlly af-rorc::ts.
echoOI at a cost of $M.OOO on su: acres 0 tion in parades, burning of car as r was with the overwhelmti:ig wblic t.erwant at 1,900. The direct.ive ,_belleveit to hl!ve been
donated land near 17th and Main sgeet. headlights, waving nap ana the wearing support of the Prtsldeht's. po1iUon lhat AboUt n of the demonlU"tton lden· Issued by the VJc( Cone's local head·
of buttons that say "I Wve America." Was evidenced in tbe attached Gallup tlfled themselvea as 110ldJe.rs from Ft. quarters al ~una Tau. was dated Oct. 27 . . Steek Market
NEW YORK (XP)-m narrowed ·
ttie lead held by advances Jn modtratc
trading this afternoon .as the stock mar·
ket continued il! course through the win·
ntng column. (Se• quotations, Pages
-19'!1 •
'.L
"!'tll It To Hanoi.'' "Operation f'ot1 ..... ,"Harlow Aid in the lette:r!t · llood) Te1. Dr. How•rd ·Levy, a former It a.aid:. "ln support of lhe upcomlng
Spcokout," "FrM:dom Rally," nuonor · JfarloW. ln an Interview SUnday, Anny ph1sk:lan who was court.martialed s~le, of . the American people (or
Arne1 ica · Wttlr' ai\d ·"National Con--ttltcroted his contmUon that Nb:on has for refuting to train Grttn Beret medics, pe11ce of SOOlh Vietnam and the
fidence Week" are am ong the titles given v.·on over the "s11ent m11jorit,y '' and he told the r•llY, "Mr. Nixon shouldn't wor· withdrawal of U.S. troops , from South
the pro-adniinlstratlon demonstrations. said public opln.ion will remain beh ind the ry about being the: flr11t praldenl to lose Vietnam . we are to launc~ Intensive al·
tn W1shlnglon, the White l~ouse 1:11 Pr~c:ldent. a war -but should be worried about tacks In all aspecta on the enemy on NOv.
· .dllaUni;-.a-J>hotOi<aplwlLl'Icsidcnt_.ActJrltle~_aupponusJ•<L.crtu,..._ __ ,lllop~au._.z,__ _ __,1"'1""1._" ----
t ' ,,
•
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew describ-
ed Vietnam protest demonstraUoru today
t!S a pointlw "Carnival in the streets"
v.•hich proves nothlna:. (Related Story
Page~S).
Agnew spoke out as both\ critics and
backers of President Nixon's policy
began a week of demonstrations in the
controversy over America's Vietnam war
invol\·ement .
The vice presKtent said, "The mob , the
mobilization, f!ie moratorium h a v e
bcJ;o_me 9:0mewl1at fashionable fonns or
citizen expression. They are negatlve1 in
content, disruptive in effect They In-
flame emo11ons rather than stiumlatc
solulions." ·
Agnew called for recognition of "a
silent young majority ·who go to school,
and :i> work, and to war if necessary."
Orange C:oa~t
Wea tiler
Blue -and dry -skies will
beam over the Orange Coast Tues-
day with temperatures inching
back up to the high 60's along the
shore and over the 70 mark furth·
er inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Grob your law book. for to-
datta the effective date. for a
stack of law1 passed by the 1Jote
leQi.!lature last sesrion. Por110-
oraphy and drunke-n drlvi110
crackdowns lead the ti.st Se1
Page 8.
I
' .. !" ,. .l'
f OAILY PILOT H Mooda, ~-bit 10, lM
Bucher Doubts
'
'
• • ~Air--C:al~an
-Seeks .End
·,
:tfe ~111;-;:;rle t;;;:::SIIip
'
• Oi :eollution
Atr ~allforQia soon will begin to In.stall
$210,000 in new-Oesign engine componenLo;
to reduce air pollution, the airlines'
ipokesmen said today. FRESNO (UPI) -Former Pueblo
Commander Lloyd /\-1. "Pete" Bucher
11ays "chances are not too good" he will
e\•er be a ship commander again.
Buche r and his wife were in'freJl'{o
Saturday to a\tend a chalice , dlnoi!r
liponsored by the Knights of Columbus.
"I'd like very much to go shipboard
again -that's the basic idea of being a
naval o£ficer," Bucher said, "but with
this management schooling, the chances
are not too good."
Bucher is now attending the Naval
Postgraduate School in Monterey and
ho~ to get a master's degree in
management. ..
lfe spent part of lht day with Yeoman
t.C. Armando Canales of Fresno, who
was aboard the Pueblo at the time it was
captured by the North Koreans. Canales
is currently stationed at Lemoore Naval
Air Station.
Bucher said he tries to keep in touch
with-his cld Pueblo crewmen.
Recounting some of hi~ ex?'r!encel
during the It-month unpr1soMlent,
Bucher told the dinner Juests that,
despite 11 months in close cont.act, the
crew got along together.
"Oh, thtre were times. partlcu\atly
with those who were quarantined with
other guys f6r a long period," he said.
"After a while you'd get sick of hearing
th~ :same old story about the same old
girl and somebody would get up and
Jl\lf'Clt somebody, but It was un·
derslandablt. No han1 feelings remain."
Bucher nl)ted that after the long cap-
tivity and subsequent hearings on the
cai>ture he feels ''much betttr equipped
both.physically and mentally to fa« any
situation."
Bucher said he had "no way of knowing
what my ner. assignment is going ta be,"
but that he wanted to stay in the' Navy.
"I have no plans to get out," he sald.
From P8fle 1
PROTESTS ...
being the first president to lost the
Ar.my."
DAILY ,ILOT ,lltft ~"t alcN!11 "'9tllel"
The new components, known as burner
cans, are the cumbustion chamt>tirs
·where fuel and air are mixed and burn~.
according to Air Cal maintenance head
R. \V. Clifford.
The announcement followed rep<J{s
that lhe city of Newport Beach might ~e
t:ie carrier, which uses Oraflie County
Airport, for allegedly polluting the air.
The court action would be pattern~d
after one under way in New Jersey where
several national air carriers are named
as defelklants in an antipollution action.
Clifford said that Pratt & Whitney,
builders of the enginf!s on the six Air ~l
jets, has developed ao improved burner
can after two years of tests. .
But the devices, costing $10,000 ~ch in-
stalled, are on back order and are still
scarce. Clifford said that as soon as the can::;
are received they will be installed in Air
Cal jets as the planes come up for
overhaul on a normal schedule.
From Page 1
Prayers were offered In many churehes
throughout the nation Sunday for the
"estimated 1.300 American serviceme n
missing or held c1pUve in Southeast Asia.
President Ni1on had declared the day a
National Day of Prayer and Concern. He
did not attend church services in Key
Biscayne, Fla ., to join publicly in the
observance .
FIREMAN WASHES GASOLINE FROM COAST HIGHWAY FOLLOWING SUNDAY ACCIDENT
Huntington M•n Steps for Chick•n, St•rf1 Ch•ln R••ction Cr••h in Corona del Mar
A specific date for completion of the
<'hanceover has not been determined
because of the small supply of the com·
bustion cans. Clifford described the burner cans as
the ';heart'' of th e jct engine.
Those in use presently on most.jets, he
sai d, develop hot spats, causing &he
engines pour smoke. BUILDING. • •
standards does not apply to the buildings
if theY are not used as a school. That In-
come' could be used to finance a substan-
ti al part of the change required by the
proposed alternatives."
'A spokesm,an for the Washington
Cathedral said service! there were con·
dUcted as usual with "nothing" to com-
memorate the National Day of Prayer. In
NewJ>(lrt News, Va., a prayer program at
Todd Stadium-drew crowds despite rain.
Mesa A~tor Dies Hunting!on Man
Involved in CdM
Auto Collisions
The new version has fewer hotspats, hr.
said, and produces a smaller "plume" -0r
smoke when the jets take off.
At Thursday's special meeting or the
board of trust ... , during which tile bond
eled.lo(l ill scheduled to come up again,
Cordon uys he will ask the trustees to
rescind their earlier decision to call the
election.
Today negotiations continue for the
route to be followed by the antiwar
demonstrators in Washington amid
government warnings cf violence and
assurances from protesters that they
plan only pe.aceful dissent.
Kam T 011g Loses Cancer Battle -{:{ -{:{ -tr
Go to Springs
"Under the circumstances, I beg the
board and the administration to begin im·
mediltely to do the detailed work that is
nec:euiqy to describe these alternatives
more fuify and to evaluate them. -
·'At the time that it ippears on e of
thenrill feuible, preparaticns should be
made to poll the community:•· Gordon
aaid.
Harlow repeated Sunday the govern-
ment's contention "that there is an active
possibility of violence." ,
"The Department of Justice said the
Washington authorities must be ex-
tremely careful in how they handle this,"
Harlow said, "particularly in the vicinity
of the major public buildings such as the
White House."
A Costa Mesa man who survived lhe
peMlous command or a special in·
telligence unit in Japanese-0ecupied
China during World War II and the heady
world of Hollywood acting Jost his las~
fight Saturday.
Cancer claimed the lire of Kam D.
Tong, 62, of 278 Santo Tomas SL, after a
lengthy battle that worsened during the
past month.
Graveside funeral rites for t.1r. Tong
will be. held Tuesday al I p.m. in Pacific
View Memorial Park, Corona del Mar.
OA1LY l'ILOT l"ff l'Mlt
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL IN COSTA MESA -44 WARDS SCATTERED OVER 400 ACRES
This is Hom• for 2,112 Rtf1rdtd Ptr1on1 Ranging In AO• From Seven Days to 13 Y•1r1
DAILY PILOT
Oii.ANO! (04ST l'Ul l lSMING C:CMl'AN'I
Jloh•rl H. w •• d
Prc1'1ltnl """ PubJi11>er
J•ck R. Curley vrct Prt~1cknl •"" c;cntr .. "'-"'"r
Thom11 1(1t•il
£lf t1Gf •
lho111•1 A. Murp~int
~nlflnt Ea••Or
Alhtrl W, l ~l•1
"'•10<••te Eflto•
H111tl11gt•11 l•och Offl'•
JC' 51h S+rt1t
M•:lin9 Addr1u: P.O. B•• 790, '2i41
Ot"-r OfllcM
Ntl••ff'I l tltll ;111 W•ot lollr'l1 l w•t•lrl
Co•I• MUI llO ~-e•I ••v SI•~(· Llf~"I llt•'"' 111 ~ ornl Av1n~1
t 'ro1n Page 1
FAIRVIEW ...
staff of 1,600 employes, fr om
psychiatrists to hospital workers who
handle menial chores.
Nol nearly enough, says catifomia
Assemblyman Larry Townsend ([).
Gardena) a member of the Assembly
1-lcallh and 'VcUare Comn1ittec.
The Los Angeles County legislator
toured Fairview Stale 1-lospital recently.
then issued a statement in Sacramento
\l'hich criticized understaffing and other
corrcctible problems.
"H is the stale system itself,'' Town-
send later told the ·DAILY Pl.LOT, "l'n1
not knocking anyone. 1 have nothing but
praise for Fairview."
Whatever the compliments and
'-". , ·i critjcisms encom:itered, Fairview State DAILY "l~Ot, wll~ "'ftkft •1 (61>1blnff !"t
,,.,,..,.,.,e,., "' c"D""''o "'"' 1~(t~1 ~~"· Hospital is a very real part of the Orange •t"t frl' ~rtlt f"l!IH°"'I '"' N\11\1 ... !0-~ 9-fl. ,._,,,'" v1u1v. cn11 Mu•. Ntw· Coast community, while necessa rily re· ~I •••<II .,._, L•GIM• 8t~(ll, a:onv Wl!l'I
,,,.. '"••• tdllftft1. o,.~ c .. 11 l'vau1~· maining apart in other ways.
Int Cool'rl0ot11r ,.,.mtlritJ1,.n1• ~rl 11 2211 w .. , Tbts series of-articles will be a tour ol •llt<IM 11\<0--;--Nt-• @N(.11, .,,. ·ilt
wt.i 111.., '"!fl• ..... c .. 11 1101. • miles of ct1rrldors and visll11 with its
,,..,.... 11t41 441·4J2t ·peoplt, many or whose Jives would have
,,_ W••l...,.. c.u 140.tzzo gone to \\'Ute in another time. ~e1zw1n.41 Mftt'tlll11t 641·••71 "Isn 't it depressing-?," Is the qttefiliOn (W'l"lfllf, ..... Ot-• ~llSI Pu!Wlll'lt ... '"""'~' ... -11 •, , , ,, • ...,,,,,,>Oii.. many ask about Fairview and other sucb ~1ori.tt _tt., ~ ~'11~""11'1 .,..,.,., fa cilities. · '-ft..'"'°""'° ......... lllf<•lll l'Cfl'"1"!0ll ,).-..Q.... ~ ,,,.,,~ _.,_,, Fairview State Hospital is just a part .1...:
with the Rev. William Acton officiating.
"He hung right in there to the end. He
was a tough guy," said freelance writer
Patrick McNulty, of Corona de! Mar. 11
close friend of Mr. Tong.
The veteran actor, whose l{ollywood
career began prior to World War II, com-
manded an Office of Strategic Securities
(QSS) ouUit in occupied China during the
1944-45 years of coinbat .
A rare pistol he carried during the
perilous OSS duty was turned in to Costa
Mesa police by Mr. Tong in June, 1968,
after the assassination in Los Angeles of
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
He said he wanted to be rid of the relic
which could cootr\bute to the violence of
the times if it fell into the wrong hands.
Following )Vorld War 11, said McNulty.
Mr. Tong and his brother Frank, who
died last year, went into the bar and
re11taurant business, owning a popular
spot in I.Als Angeles.
The care on North Broadway was a
ha!1.JOUt for newspapermen, writers and
pohcemen and w1s the ·source of many
anecdotes, according lo McNulty.
He appeared in such movies and
television shows as "Flower Drum Song,"
"Love is a Many.Splendored Thing."
.. Have Gun, Will Travel ". "Big Valley",
"Kill a Dragon," and scores of others.
He leaves his wife Betty. a son
Bernard, a daughter Karen. a brother
Bew Tong, and sisters Lillie M. Fong,
and Jennie P. Chuck.
Friends wi11hing to remember Mr. Tong
are asked to contribute in his name to
their favorite charity.
A driver pulling out of a Corona del
Mar fried chicken shop Sunday night
louched off a series of crashes which sent
e South Gate youth to the hospital with
n1ajor injuries, police reported .
Daniel \Vilson. 18, South Gate, suffered
severe face cuts and a broken kheecap in
the 6:15 p.m. crash at Iris Avenue and
East Pacific Coast Highway.
Poli ce said William Barry Gillenwater
of 9151 Capaa St., Huntington Beach, was
pulling out er the chicken establishment
when his car collided with one driven by
Eddy Acosta, 21, Saticoy.
Acosta's car, carrying Wilson, caromed
off !,he other auto and crossed the highway
biting another vehicle head-on.
The drive r of the head-on car was
Lawrence Johnson of Omaha, Neb.
Only Wllson suffered major injuries in
the crashes, police said. The other driv·
ers complained of minor pains and bruis·
es. Officers said Wilson was treated at
Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Offices to Clo~c
Hlltitington Beach city offices will be
closed Tuesday in observance of Veterans
Day.
Post offices will observ~ holiday
!.-Ched.ules. There will be no re'gular win·
dow service, or deli veries.
Via Bay Area
lt will soon be po6Sible to take an Alr
California flight from Orange County
Airport to Palm Springs -with a stoir
over in San Francisco.
The l'ounty-based line has won Call·
fornia Public Utilities Commission per.
mission to provide service betv.·een Palm
Springs and the Bay Area cities of San
Francisco, Oakland and S1'n JQSe.
Air Cal will use Boeing 737 jets for the
flights to the desert resort from San
Francisco. One-way fare will be $20.
about $6 under the rate now t!iarged by
other airlines.
Two trips a day will begin "as soon ai:
possible,'' Air Cal spokesmen said.
Fro1n Page 1
PARKING ...
today. It will either go forward or slide
dO\VnhiJI."
Ashley said creation of the parking
ccmplex and subsequent development of
a major specialty shopping center were
necessary ta attract office building and
hotel-motel enterprises.
"The city must invest in its future or
the private sector •will not be interested.'•
the research expert warned. "Th•
downtown area must be rejuven1ted at
all possible speed."
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
This is an extremely convenient location for those who use
MacArthur Blvd. frequently. Michelson is near the San Diego
Free\vay, Newport Freeway and across from lhe Orange
County Airport. Open your account at this convenient
location and enjoy AMPLE PARKING.,. SPEED WINDOWS
FOR PEAK .PERIODS .• , BUILT-IN CUSTOMER ADDING
MACH INES ... COFFEE AND COOKIES ... SlT·DOWN
TELLERS.,. UNIQUE WELCOME CENTER,. ,
PATIO BANKING,., BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED.
@ EVERYONE IS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE.,.
REFRESHMENT AND GlfTS -
---
S1Ninr Hit needs of the indu5trial tom~lex. Michelson 11 MocArthur ... 133·3lll
, I
•
ii
~~~~~~:f.1:1.~:.~.:· (~~~z::~.i·~: or the larger world around us . DAILY'' OT s11 "''' t:::":":··:u~ ... ~-=·~,·~·:·~·~·~·~·"~'~'"t:~~·~·~·=~-;mi;iA~ndi-tiid~epfr~esws~ln~gliiior.'6hr''n'~'er.ru~··~i!...!'.peoo::.tp~l•:.._ _ _:_H~E~ADD7:"-S FAIRVIEW ST~A~F~F'----f::=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=.:::::::::::::::::.::::~:::::::::--~i'~~ ---;--ii;;mT.1b11111r1~l --ma e11 ov.·n v ews or Iha . ~ ff:10t.,
l
,I
I -.. ~·--
Today's FINI
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VOL 62, NO. 269, l SECTIONS, 42 °PAGES ORANGE CouNTY,·CAIJ~IA TEN CENTS
' .. .. , . '
I -· • e ens1ve
I .
Foul Play Feared
Hunt for County
Woman Ended
From Wire Services
Searchers hunting the wife of a Santa
Ana physician, r11issing five days in freez-
ing Utah mountains, quit Saturday, as
authorities considered the pos.sibiUly or
foul play in her disappearance.
Mrs. Katherine Shapiro, 42, could hard-
ly have survived winter temperatures in
the rugged, snow~vered mountains near
Kanab. ·Utah, if she merely wandered of(
on a hike.
Kane County Sheriff l..aoard Johnson
added another ominous note to the disap-
pearance of Dr. Marvin Shapiro's wife
fron1 their trailer home in Strawberry
Canyon.
"Further investigation or her trailer
. home and questioning o! ptrsons in the
area have caused us to believe Mis.
Shapiro may have met with foul play,''
he snid.
Authorities did not elaborate on the
crime·concept..but Dr. Shapiro, who has
otUces at 516 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, has
gone to Santa Clara, Utah , as a result of
thli: c.:ise.
St:eriff J~nson hinted that Santa Clara
police are questioni11g persons who might
have knowledge·of Mrs. Sh"apiro's dlsap.
pcarence last TueSday or Wednesday.
Initially, ·investigators assumed she
became lost while on a hike hunting In-
dia n relics in the .rugged, 8,000 foot moun-
la\ns of sout.heattern Ulah.
The search was 11.Upended Saturday
Mission Hospital
Start Set Today
Groundbreaking was scheduled thls
afternoon for the first phase of Mission
Commwlity Hospital at the IS.acre
fonner interim site or Saddleback
College, Crown Valley Parkway and the
San Diego Freeway.
Dr. Russe ll Hendrickson, bead of the
planned hospital's executive committee,
said the first phase is to comprise 126.
beds inclliding 12 for the obstetrics sec·
tion. He said completion is expected in
one year.
It was announced that there will be 14!
physicians on the medical staff and 2ti5
ancillary employes when the first phase
of the proprietary hospital opens.
The executive committee includes Dr.
Louis J . Cella, Jr., Dr. Robert Cllfford,
Dr. Henry L. Foucher, Dr. Thomas A.
Greubel, Dr . H. E. Morton ·and Robert-L.
Brent.
Il was esti mated that the hospital when
completed, will be a $5 million facility.
after more lhan UlO posse members In-
cluding sorhe on horselllck, In four-wheel
drive trucks and three airplanes hunted
lhe \'ictim unsuceessfully.
Sheriff Johnson said he would confer
vdth Dr. Shapiro -who sald his wife was
an expert outdoorswoman -about the
possibility of further searches.
The missing woman's family has
vowed not to give up hope of finding
some clue to her fale and a spokesman
said today in Santa Ana that they will
continue to search.
Dr. Shapiro and his son Dan, 18, will
continue to look for Mrs. Shapiro for at
least several more days and volunteers
will join them next weekend if she has
not been found.
Ex-Playhouse
Manager Gets
, Settlement
Directors of the Laguna-Moulton
Playhouse were reported today to have
agreed on a financiaJ setUement with
Mrs. Irma Nofziger, fmner general
mllBl£er who recently was une,xpectedly
as.led to take a si.J:-month leave of
abllence.
\Vhile officials declined to reveal
details or the setUement approved at a
Saturday board meeting, one source
stated that it involved 'a $1,000 payment.
Mrs. Nofzlger's contract with the
flayhouse still had eight months to run
'\'hen the leave of absence proposal was
made.
At the time, it was slated lhat the in·
creased work load In the new, enlarged
Playhouse opt!ration, necessitated a
revision of administration procedures to
spread some of the duties fonnerly
undt!rtaken by the general manager.
Mrs. Nofzige r, who has been associa-
tion with the Laguna Players for the past
20 years, declined an Invitation to meet
wlttt the board at the Saf.urday session.
"In view of their action," she said prior
to lhe meeting, "I don't feel anyUting
would be accomplished."
Nixon Plans Visit
\ \VASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
en. on Veterans Day, \viii motor to the
\Vast-Jngton Veterans Hospital to visit
some of lhe wards.
' i l Here's Pie in Your Eye
Laguna Beach High's Lucy Boyd (top) takes a shot
in the face with cream pie tossed by San Clemente-
High's Monica .Hutchens and Laguha High's .Shar-
man 'Farnes {bottom) says something about bow it ·
feels. Girls wefe ~embers of group ol Laguna High
student body officers that paid off a debt iast Friday
in San Clemente. lt seems· San. Clemente High stu-
dent 'Officers sold more ac:livity. cards this year.
'.
Fairview Home for Drug Counseling Topic
Of L<;iguna Group Meet Editor's Note : Hope and hopeless·
ness live side b11 side in the roC»"n!
and ward.1 oj Fairview State Hospitol,
611 institutio11 that is so much a pari,
yet so far apart from the Oral1ge
Coast commknity. This i.r the first of
six article.s in a special report on the
hospital for the mentally retarded.
Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 11'1• Deih' I'll., 11.n
One canil see them rrom the roadway,
bul Peanuts comic strip characters
decorate top floor window,1 of the big
peach-colored building wrth aluminum
sunshades.
The cheery theme can also be seen in
other rooms.
This is Fairvie~ State Hospital -or at
least al\ lhat many know about-the four·
nary structure at 2501 Harbor Blvd.,
Cost.a Mesa. built a dec@de ago:
It is home -t e mpo rary or
permanent-for 2,252 retarded persons.
They range in age from seven days lo 13
years. All are classed as children. All
have speclil needs. •
Almosl all have somelhinl 1o give.
The famJliar little people who populate a paper world that is a genuine renection
of our own-the P e a n u t s charac·
ten-have characteristics· in CORtmon
.wtth humam al Fail-view.
Pleasure. Loneliness. A sense of
bewUdermenl with a complex world. The
\\'Onder of learning new things, within
=l==;-Uieir.' ---. .
I'
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•
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Beret Camp,
Two ·copters
Under Fire
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist troops
lntensi!ylng tttelr offensive along the
Cambodian border innicted h e a v y
casualties on a U.S. Special Forces camp
Sunday and today, riddled two ttelicopter
gunsh.ips with intens·e ground fire and at-
tacked a U.S. air field , inflicting coo-
siderable damage.
The series of attacks ranged along the
border from Bu Prang , 112 mileli north or
Saigon, to the air base at Ban Me Tbuot,
50 mile s to the north. North Vietnamese
Communists have massed an estimated
7 ,000 men in the area a.eainst South Viet·
namese ground forces.
The attacks coinckled wilh ·disclosure
that a captured Communist document
from a liaison runner called for "in-
tensive attacks" lhroughout South Viet-
nam to support the antiwar protest
march on Washington scheduled for neX1
Saturday.
The attacks on lhe allied mercenaries
there killed three U.S. special fo_rces men
advlsing the_ tribesmen troops and that
one 90-man mercenary company took
two-tttirds casualties, meaning 60 men
'killed or wounded. Ttte Communists lost
12 known dead .
U.S. fighter-bombers afld government·
piloted. AlE Skyraider planes supported
the ground troops committed to action in
another test of tbe Vietnamese ability to
defend themselves. The Communists had
brought in 37 milmeter anUaircraft guns
and two helicopter guships were so badly
hit they made forced landings at Ban
-Me Thuot.
Ban Me Thuot itself was the target or
Communist attacks.
Festival of Arts
Trio Re-elected;
No Opposition
With only the three incumbents in the
running for three vacancies on the
Festival or Arts Board of Directors; an-
nouncement of ttte names of "new direc-
tors" will come as no surprise at
Lonigtit•s general membership meeting.
Re-elected directors Verner Beck,
Stuart Durkee anc.l Dr. Harold Burton will
he presented to Festival members at the
8 p.m. session in the FesUval Forum as
they begin new, three-year terms oo the
board.
Continuing as directors will be William
Martin, who has served as board presi·
dent for the past year, ·Mrs. Helen
Keeley, PauLGriem, Rlcbar.d_Br@ks, 0.
E. Shroeder and David Young.
New officers will be elected at the
regular Festival board meetin& Tuesday.
The Festival Chorale, di"rected by
?.lari\yn lnti!rI11ndi, will present a pro-
gram of vocal music for tonigttfs gather~
t~n~•~· ~~~~~~~~~ --Stork lllarket
NEW YORK cAP> DeCliiies narrowed
the lead held by advances in moderate
trading this afternoon as the stock m~r
ket continued ils course tttrough the win-
ning column. ·(See quotations, Pages
26-27).
Weather
Blue -and dry -skies will
beam over the orange Coast Tues-
day with temperatures inching
back up to the high &O's along the
shore and over the. 70 mark furth-
er inland:
' .
INSIDE TODAY
Grab your Jaw · book, for to-
1 day's the e//tctiut date, for 11
stack of law.s passed by file 1faft
.,.. legi~latk~ • 1e11t ses,il)n. Porno-
graph11 a:nd~nlmi dritiing
ct4tkdoum's· lead -&ht Ii.st Ste
l'agl 8.
1'1.R... " _ ... , " Callltrllla1 ' IMYltt 16-11 CIMtlflft ,.., "llltMI "tWI ... c-lc• • Orlllft CW!!" " ,,.._. " IVIVll l'llrltt " ~.:.~.: " -· ..... • ""fl !Mfll"' ... ..
\ lllftftal~"llM!t U·U r ... ,,..,... • ftl!MM• ..... Tl!M'9" 1•11 --n WHlfltf ' AIWI lfMitn " --..
Mtl .. • • .._.. ,....n·H
z DAll Y PILOT L
~oth Sides,-
On Vie tnam
Set Marches
By AtlOCltted Prt11
Supporters and opponents of President
Nixon's Vietnam policy hold new
den1onstrations 'this week in the coo.
tinuing controversy over the nation's Jn-
volvement in the war.
A week of act.lvitles by groups backlog
the President will bt highlighted by
Veterans Day ~emonies TuesdaY in
Washington. The focus returns to the na-
tion's capital Saturday when critics plan
a massive antiwar march and rally.
As signs of support through the week
for Nlxon·s Vietnam policies, ad-
ministration backers called for participa-
tion in parades, burning of .car
headlights, waving flags and the wearing
of buttons that say "I Love America."
''Tell lt To Hanoi,'' "Operation
Speakout," "Freedom Rally,'~ "Honor
America Week" and "Nalional C<ln-
fidence Week" are among the lilies given
the pro.admlnlstraUon demonstrations.
DAil Y 'ILOT llelf ,,. ..
.Bucher Doubts
• ... •
He'll Get Ship
FRESNO . (UPI) -~·orm~ Pueblo
f",ommander Lloyd M. "Pete'" Bucher
says "c!iances are nol ioq. gOO:d" he will
ever be a stiip com(IUUlder a14in.
, B\dier · aqd ht5 yi-ire Were.t In Fresno Satur~ to atleod al"ch'!fice dinner
spoosored by the Kni&h1icil £<>1wnbus.'
"I'd lll.:e Wry much~ t'O Jo shipboard ,
again -that's the basic id.ta of being a
naval officer," Bucher sakf, "but with
thls management schooUn11 the chances
are not too good."
Bucher is now attending the Naval
Postgraduate School in , Monterey and
hopes to get a master's degree in
management.
Ile spent part of the day with Yeoman
1.C. Armando Canales ol Freano1 who
was aboard the Pueblo at the Ume 1t was
captured by the North Korean s. Canales
is currently stationed at Lemoore Naval
Air Station.
·'Oh. there were times, particularly
with those who were quarantined wit ll
othtr g\lys for a Jong period,'' he said.
"Alter' a while you'd get sick of hearing
the tame old story about the same old
4i rl and S001ebody would get up and
11unch somebody. but it was un-
derstandable. No hard feelinp rerpain."
Bucher noted that after the loug <111p..
tivity and subsequent hearings on the
capture he feels "much better equipped
bot.h physically and mentally to face any
situation."
Bucher said he had "no way of know ing
\vhat my ne1t assignment is going to be,"
but that he wanted to stay in the !'i'avy.
"1 have no plans to· get out," he.1aaid.
Air Cal Set s
In Washington, the Whlte House Is
circulating a phc*ograph of President
Nixon with stacks of telegrams as part of
it! campaign to convince C.Ongres."1 the
administration's VJetnam poUcy has
overwhelming public support.
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL IN COSTA MESA -44 WARDS SCATTIRl!O OVER 400 ACRES
Thi• 11 Hom• for 2,252 Ret1rded Persona Renvln9 In Al• From S.Vt n Day1 to 13 Ye1r1
Bucher scUd he tries to keep ln touclt
v.·Hh his old Pueblo crewmen.
ReL'OUnUng some of his experiences
during the 11-month imprisonment,
Bucher told the dinner guests that,
despite JI months in close' coritact, the
crew got alon& ~ether.
Ne'w En gines
To Curb Smog·
SUPPORT TELEGRAMS
The postcard-size pictures show Nixon
at a presidential desk laden with
telegrams prompted by his speech on the
\1ar last Monday night.
Bryce N. Harlow, Nixon's ct1na:ressional
liaison cblef. signed letters sent to
members of Congress wllh th e
photognph and an acoount of a Gallup
Poll reporting 77 percent support for the
Nixon w1r pollcy.
"I am sure that you are as Impressed
as l was with the overwhelming public
support of the President's poaltlon that
was evidenced in the attached GaUup
Poll ••. , " Harlow said in the letter.
Harlow In an interview Sunday,
reiterated his contention th1t Ni:1on has
won over the "silent majority" and he
said publlc opinion will remain behind the
Pra1ddent.
AcUvlUes by supporters and critics
began early. A Veterans Day parade was
held Saturday In Midland Park, N .J., a
i~tn!.'·~u1!at e~:i~~t'!t elf~°:~~
a 000 marchers and 15,000 spectators.
'Sponsora of the parade said they
wanted to dr1m1tiu: their wppart of the
Presldent'a policies and Gl)poaition to an-
tiwar demonstrators.
MAUCH FOR PEACE
In Houston, Tex., a "march for pe1ce"
covered 36 blocks Sunday. Police
estimated there were 900 marchers and
put the total attendance 1t 1 rally af·
terward at 1,900.
About 7S of the <1,emonstrators iden·
lifled themelvea a'i soldiers from Ft.
Hood, Ter. Dr. Howard Levy, a forme r
Army physician who was court-martialed
for rtluain& to train Green Beret medics,
told the rally, ••Mr. Nixon shouldn't wor·
ry about being the first president to lose
a war -but should be worried about
being the first president to lose the
Army."
Prayers were offered In many churches
throughout the nation Sunday for the
esUmated l,300 American servicemen
ml1alng or held captive in Southeut Alia.
Pres.ldent Nlron had decl1red the day a
NaUon1l Day of Prayer and C.Once.rn. He
did not attend church services in Key
Blscay,ne, F11., to join publicly in the
oblervance.
A &p0kesman for the Washington
Cathedral said services there were con-
ducted as usual with "nothing" to com-
memorate the National Day of Prayer. 1n
NewPort News, Va., a prayer program 1t
Todd Stadium drew crowds despite rain.
Today negotiation• continue for the
route to bt followed by the antiwar
demonstrators in Washington am Id
government warnings of violence and
assurances from protesters that they
plan only peaceful dluent.
Harlow repeated Sunday the govern-
ment's contention "that there is an active
possibility of viole.nce."
!1AllY ~'!101
OflAHG~ COAl1 l"Vfl. llM\JIQ; COMHJl'f
l•Nt9 N. W•••
l'rMllllM .... ,,..ilfltl'
J••t It C.ul.., ¥kt ,,.~ •fMI ~ .. .......,
ThM•• K11Yil ....
Th11111t A, M119hin1
..... 111'11111 ••lfw
l !1li•<4 '· Ntll L-•-11 C:"t l•!ltt
............ OffM.
Jt t •••••• ...... M1Ul*t Alllil•1111 P.O. 111 •••, tl•ll --CHI• Mtwo: uo 'Nut •• , , .....
Wl'WM•I IHM.lt' 1711 Wal ••'Ill~ l••trffN Hllfl!lr>t1'1'1 lff<ll: _, Jt11 i"ttl
Report Sw te d
On Capo A rea
Mobile Home s
Dale Ladd, represenUn1 the Citizens
Advisory Committee 1tudylng mobile
home park.I, will report preliminary fin·
dings to San Juan Capi1trano City Coun·
cil tonlghl.
In a recent talk In Mission Viej o, Stuart
Bailey, acting county plannina director,
said that a city to the south with a
Spanish name (apparently meanina
Capistrano) would have more trailers
than single family residen<:es on the basis
of already approved mobile home plans.
The coounittee aware of this fact is
making a complete study of the effect
rnomle home JlB!'ks have on a community
in terms or schools, buying power, tax
base and other rel1ted areas.
While lhe commlttee ls conductin& It.a
research a moratorium on the procealn&
of mobile home p,ark applications is 1n ef.
feet in Sa.n Juan CapistrlJIO.
"People are getting a king very well,"
said Dr. Phy Ilia ,$baillman, a committee:
member. She sakl there wu some initial
dissension becaU1e of opposing viewpoint!
or committee members but work was
now progressing very welt.
"Everyone hes ~n assignment to com-
plete and bring to the committee and we
have received infonnatlon from other
cities about what they have done and
their plans for the future In reaard to
mobile home parks," she said.
"Although we do not yet know what our
r~mmendaUons will be we have come
to a few conclusions," she continued.
"For uample we all Hem to arree that
the only parks that are of economic help
to a city are fi ve star parks. These parks
regulate the number of trailers per acre,
many leu than nonnal. They regulate
the 6ize of trailers, normally larger and
lh.?y require planting and recreation
<'rews. These are definitely top grade
parks," she said.
Dr. Shainman sai4 that her particular
.assignment was to look into the relative
income by housing development per acre
in comparison to mobile home park• per
acre.
The committee has been authorized to
make a rect1mmendation to the council on
whether or not to limit mobile home
parks in the future. Six lo nine months
has been 11lotted for the study.
Hearing Dela yed
In Liquor Thefts
Two defendants in a liquor theft case
lnwlving Feliciano·s Restaurant in
Newport. Beach Thursday won con·
tinuance until Nov. 14 of a court prcr
teeding In which they will answer 11n in·
dlctment by the Orange County Grand
Jury .
Eugne Rondondo, 42, 1~1 CArnwall
Lane, Newport Beach, and Charles
Dryer, 31, 1645 Sunst Ridge Drive,
Laguna Beach, must answer the In·
dlctment charging grand theft. burglary
and conspiracy from several liquor
distributors and 1 motel·restaurant firm .
The defendants' request for con-
tinuance was granted in su!)4!rlor court.
They will return next Friday for the
same process.
District attorney's inve1tig1tors 11ld
they expected that the can ml1ht go ·10
trial 1n Superior Court aomeUme. nexl
yw.
DAIL T ,ll.OT lhff '1111• HEADS FAIRVIEW STAFF
Dr. Anthony N. Toto
Burglars Collect
$6,000 in Gems,
Casl1 in Newport
Messy, mud-slouing burglars rifled the
home of a retired couple Jn Newport
Beach · over the weekend and made off
with $6,000 in cash ind jewels kept in a
sare.
William P11yne Troxler, 66, 1424 S.n·
tlago Drive, told police the thieves fut his
home late Friday night while he and his
\\•ife \\'ere out.
Included in the haul were several
custom·made pieces of jewelry, among
lhem an emerald ring with 17 diamonds.
Police said the burglars tracked mud
through the Troxler house. Their ap-
parently badly-running car also made a
mess o! the couple's driveway, depositing
a large puddle of oil on the pavement.
Police said the couple arrived home
late in the evening and as Troxler began
cleaning up the oil smear his wife went
inside.
She noticed the safe gone when she
entered the bedroom and called police.
The thieves pried open a bathroon1
screen then opened an unlocked window,
police said.
After leavina the house with the safe
lhe thieves took a breather on the front
lawn and set the ufe down for a short
time, making an Indentation on the rain·
soakt!d front lawn.
Th.?y picked it up again and drove off,
po!ict: said.
La guna Adds
To \vin g Service
Stranded Laguna motorists, or thOiC
who overstay their welcome In parking
placu, now will have two chancet for
1citting their car1 towed awl)'.
City councilmen have decided to beef
up the city's emergency towtna: service
et::.~0! ::..=-.. ,_~~T'l'J! UCI' H by extending their agreemtnt to include _____ ... ,_...... s oy lo Address lwo conlractors, lnslead of lhe 1ln&I• :::,•::...,: ~ ~ ... ~!t company that has handled c I l y :.:...~ C:: .. ~-:"1 ... C.:-.:;r L R l U •t assignments sJnct January, 1"9 . ..... -._ .,. ,. ..,, "' agu ua 0 ary Ul The d\JUts now will be shared by John 1t,.... c... ..... -· Noutary and A. K. CUrrcll, whose Laguna ::.·~t!z :::. :.:;~:;~ Laguna Be11ch RotarlAns will look at To1vin1 Service, m L31una Canyon
t.¥r-. ,.., .,._ tMI hi!,_. lhe fvture Ind past of UCI at U1eir ~·rl.:....-1191d, has had the exclusive contract, and ,..,...., ... ..,... ....... ""'tr"-. d1y luncheon meetlnr In the llotel--Larry Hunt or Larry Hunt Auto Cente r,
....,..,---... .,.,. ........ " "'""' I A N I ""' .. ...., 1., ..,.. _... ..,. j,;Gguna. J 404 . Coas t II gh11 .. ay .
.....-• ....,. .....,, .John C. lioy, UCI vice chancellor for The two contractors will alternate their
F ron• Poge l
FAIRVIEW . ••
1laff or · 1,llOO employes, f r o m
psychiatriaC. to hoapilal workers who
handlo menial chores.
Not nearly enough, says California
Asseniblyman Larry Townsend (D·
Gardeoa.) a member of the Aasembly
Health and Welfare Committee.
The Los Angeles County legislator
toured Fairview State Hospital recently,
then issued a statement in Sacramento
which criUclied understafllng and other
correctlble problems.
"It is the state system Itself," Town-
send later told the DAILY PILOT. "I'm
not knocking anyone. I have nothing but
praise for Fairview ."
Whatever \he compliments and
criticisms encountered, Fairview State
1-lospilal is a very real part of the Orange
Coast community, \11hile necessarily re-
maining apart in other ways.
Thia aeries of articles will be a tour of
miles of corridors and visits: with ils
people. many of whole lives would have
a:one to wute ln another time.
"lln't it depreaing!," Js the question
many uk about Fairview and other such
facilities.
Falrvlew State Hospital ls just a part
of.the,Jarser world around us.
And depressing or heartenina. people
make their own vlewa of that.
14 Persons Caught
lu Fresno Roundup
FRESNO (UPI) -Local law en-
forcement officers and state narcot.iCs
agent, have arrested 14 per!Ons in a
~erles of raids in the Fresno area on
charaes of sellifll marijuana and
dangerous dru1s.
Russia Worried
Ove r Hard Lin e
Stand by Nasser
LONDON (UPI) -Communist
diplomaUc sources said today yie Soviet
Unior. is concerned that Egypt's harden-
ing posilion could starl a new major war
in the Middle East.
The sources said Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser's "blood and fire"
speech in Cairo last Thursday took the
Kremlin by surprise . Moscow 's hold on
Nasser was described as weakening.
Communist diplomata said the Arab
wor!J has increasingly tried to involve
the Soviets more directly in the Middle
East in the apparent hope lhat this would
force Israel to back down.
The Russians, it was reported, remain
violently antagonistic toward Israel but
du not want to be pushed into a position
where they eould lace the threat of a
dll'ect confrontation with the United
St.ates
lllustraling this point, the sources
rej)Orte.tl that a Russian mllilary advtser
who scrambled a Soviet·builL MIG during
an Arab-lstaeli skirmish wa! promptly
ordered to leave Egypt and return to
Russia .
Thi: sources said the Soviets will con-
tinue to give Egypt, Syria and other Arab
nalions full material and moral support
and furnish tbem mililary advice.
More than 3,000 Soviet military ad·
viaers are currently based In Egypt, and
some estimates say the figu re may be as
high as 4,5(1(1, Russian weapona continue
to stream into Egypt and the Ar1bs claJm
even more are needed.
Air California soon will begin lo inst all
$210,000 in new-design engine component~
to reduce air pollution, the airlines'
.!ipokesmen scUd today .
The new components. know n as burner
cans, are the cumbustion chambers
where fuel and air are mixed and·burned.
according to Air Cal maintenance head
R. W. C!Uford.
The announcement followed reports
that the city of Newport Beach might sue
C1e tarrier, which uses Orange County
Airport, for allegedly polluting the air.
The court acUon would be patterne.cl
after one under way in New Jersey where
several national air carriers are named
as defendants in· an antipollution action.
Clifford said that Pratt & Whitney.
builders of the en1ines on the six Air Cal
jets, ha.s developed an improved burner
can after two years or tests.
But the devices, cosling $10.000 each in-
stalled, are on back order and are slill
scarce.
Clifford said that as soon as the cans
are received they will be installed in Air
Cal jeta as the planes come up for
O\'erhaul·on a normal schedule.
A specllic date for completion of the
<'hangeover has not been determined
because of the small supply of the com-
bustion cans.
Clifford described the burner cans as
the "heart" of the jet engine.
· Those in use presently on most jets. he
said, develop hot spots, causing the
engines pour smoke.
The new version has fewer hotspots. h!!
said. and produces a smaller "plume" or
smoke whe n the jets take off.
5 Guilty Over Protest
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Five persons
have been convicted of two misdemeanor
coonts of disturbing the peace and
disrupting a public meeting In connection
with a disturbance and demonstration at
the Biltmore Hotel
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
the new home of
Newport National Bank's Airport Office
Thia is 111n extremely convenient location for those who use
MacArthur Blvd. frequently, Michelson is near th e St1n Dieso
frf!cway, Ne\vport Free way and across from the Orange
County Airport. Open your acco11nt al I his convenient
lor.olion and enjoy AMPLE PARKING .•. SPEED WINDOWS
FOR PEAK PERIODS ... BUILT-IN CUSTOMER ADDING
MACHINES •• , COFFEE ANO COOKIES •• , SIT-DOWN
TELLERS ••• UNIQUE WELCOME CENTER .••
PATIO BANKING •.• BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED.
EVERYONE IS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE •••
REFRESMMENT ANO-GIFTS ...
Strv111r th1 n°eed1 of !he industrial complex.
=-c.:::t:-a:=:.• :.er'...:-: ,:fudent affalra1 will ~peak on ''University l'IC!rvices. each answering cal11 for half or
_.... llM t w -" ... ........,, of California, Irvine, Five Years Past -e:ich nlonlh, hut with the understanding ...,,,..,,.-5~ .. ~""'~ti:'.;. :i::ii-:;;:;;~"""";;;l~lTh~1: e~ Years." Tb.e 111rce_tjng___tbaLeHhc.r..can...bc-t:a.ilt'l:L&Lany~tlme io.-i------------------
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Lag•a Beaeh
EDITION
* * VOL, 62, NO. 269, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY ;.cALIFORNl.A
•
• •
MON PA"(; NOV EM BEii. ·10, 1969 TEN CENTS
• e s Ill ens.1ve
Fo11l Play Feared
Hunt for County
Woman Ended
From Wire Senrlcts
Searchers hunt ing the wife or a Santa
Ana physician, r.1issing five .days in freez-
ing Utah mountains, quit Saturday , as
authorities considered the possibility of
foul play in her disappearance.
li1rs. Katherine Shapiro, 42, could hard-
ly have survived winter temperatures in
the rugged , snow-covered mountains near
Kanab. Utah, if she merely wandered off
on a hike.
Kane County Sheriff Lanard Johnson
added another on1inous note to the disap.
peararice of Dr. Marvin Shapiro's wife
rron1 their trailer ho1ne in Strawberry
Canyon. \
''Further investigation of her trailer
home and questioning of persons in the
area have caused us to belieYe Mrs.
Shapiro may have met with fouJ play,"
ht' said.
Authorities did not elaborate on the
crhne concept, buL Dr. Shapiro , who has
olfices at 516 W. 17th St.. Santa Ana, ha s
gone to Santa Clara, Utah, as a result of
the case.
Sheriff Johnson hinted that Santa Clara
police are queslk>nlng persons who might
h:ive knowledge of Mrs. Shapiro's disaP-
Pl'arance last Tuesday or .Wednesday.
Initially. investigators assumed she
became lost while on a hlke hunting In-
dian relics in the rugged, 8,000 fool moun·
tains of southeas tern Utah.
The search was suspended Saturday
Miss ion Hospital
Start Set Today
Groundbreaking was scheduled thi s
afternoon for the first phase of Mission
Community Hospilal at the 15-acre
former interim site of Saddleback
College. Crown Valley Parkway and the
San Diego r~reeway.
Dr. Russell Hendrickson, head (If the
planned hospital"s executive C(lmmitlee.
said the first phase is to com prise 126
beds including 12 for the oMtetrics 'J:tt·
lion. He said complelion is expected in
one year.
It was announced that there will be 142
physicians on the medical staff and 26.S
ancillary employes when th e first phase
of the proprietory hospital opens.
The executive committee includes Dr.
Louis J . Cella. Jr., Dr. Robert Clifford,
Dr . Henry L. Fouche r, Dr. Thomas A.
Greubel , Dr. H. E. Morton and Rober t L.
Brent
Il wa s estimated that the hospita l when
completed , will be a $5 million facili ty.
after more than 100 posse members In·
eluding some on horseback, in four-wheel
drjv~ trucks and three airplanes hunted
the \'ictim unsuccessfully.
~heriff Johnson said he would confer
\\"ith Dr. Shaplr;:i -wh<l said his wife was
an experl outdoorswoman -about the
po51i bility of further searches.
The missing woman's family has
vowed not to give up hope of finding
some clue to her fate and a spokesman
said today in Santa Ana that they will
conti nue to search.
Dr. Shapiro and his son Dan, 18, will
continue to look for Mrs. Shapiro for at
least several more days and volunteers
will join them next weekend if she has
not been found ,
Ex-Playhouse
Manager Gets
Settle11ient
Direclo~ or the Laguna-Moulton
Playhouse were nlported today to have
1agrced on a financial settlement with
Mrs. Irma Nofziger, former general
manager who recently was unexpected ly
asked to take a six.month leave of
absence.
\Vhile officials declined to reveal
details of the settlem ent app roved at a
Saturday board meeting, one source
stated that it involved a $1 ,000 payment.
~lrs. Nofziger's contract with the
J'layhouse still had eight months to run
when the leave of absence proposal was
made.
At the time, it was stated that the in·
creased work load in the new. enla rged
Playhouse operation, necessitated a
1"6Vision of administration procedures to
&pread some of the duties formerly
undertaken by the general manager'.
Mrs. Nofziger, who has been associa.
lion with the Laguna "Players for the past
20 years, declined an invitation to meet
with lhe board at the Saturday session.
"In view of their action." she said prior
to the meeting , ''I don 't feel anything
wou ld be accomplished."
Nixon Plans Vi sit
\VASHlNGTON £AP) -P.resident Ni:<·
on, on Veterans Day, will molor to the
\Vasl1ington Veterans Hpspita l to visit
some of the wards.
...
Here's Pie in Your Eye
Laguna Beach High's Lucy Boyd (lop) lakes a shot
in the face with cream pie tossed by San Clemente
l·ligh's Monica Hutchens and Laguna Hi gh's Shar-
man Farnes (bottom) says somethi.ng about how it
..
feels. Girls wer'e members o! group of ~aguna High .
student bod y officers that paid off a debt last Friday
in San Clemehte. I.t. seems San. Clemente High .stu-
dent offic:;ers sold more a·C'tivity , cards this year.
Fairview -Home for Drug Counsel,ing Topic
Of Laguna Group Meet -Editor's Note: 1lope and hopeless·
ncss live side b11 side i11 the rooms
and wards of Fairview State llospitat,
a11 in.stitutio11 that is so much a part,
uet so jar apart from the Ora119e
COO$t communittJ, This is the firs! of
six article s in a special report on the
hospital for the mentally retarded.
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
• 01 lht 0111\1 P'!k>I Still
doing so. Sometir;nes fear.
Very often, love.
Three stories below those decorated
pediatrics wanfs, in the office of the man
in charge is another Peanuts figure on a
plaque-Good Old Charlie Brown.
"I've developed a new philosophy," the
plaque says, "I only dread one day at a
time.·•
The senliment is a bit of humor for Dr.
Anthony .N. Toto, superintendent and
medical director of the hcispltal serving
Orange and parts of Los Angeles and San One can't see them from the roadway, Diego Cou nties.
but Pcanuls comic slrip characters .. New philosophies are C(lnstantly being
decorate top floor windows of the big developed by research teams and there is
peach·C(llorcd building with aluminum room for dread in none of them, only op.
sunshades. timlsm.
The cheery theme can also be seen in Besides the patients In the hospital,
olher rooms. whose .f!_wards 11re scat~ed over 400
This is Fairview Slate Hospital -or al acres, another 1,000 are outside in foster
least all that many know aqoot-lhe four· horoes or other specializ.ed programs.
story structure at 2501 ljlarbor Blvd., ~anning data sheets on the patient
Costa Mesa, built a decade ago. population. one sees that 1,063 are pro-
It is home -tem p orary or fonQly retarded. The term has tactleM '
permanent...o.fOr '2,JS: ttlarded persons. -vartattons on--the"outside. "Vegetable" ls ·
They range in age'frorn SC\'en days lo 83 One of them.
years. All are classed as children. All Little can be clone for many of these
have special needs. Imperfect victims Qf 19 classifiable
Almost all have sometlling to give. defects in a sOClely lha worships lhc
The familiar Uttle people who populate most nearly perfect.
n paper world that Is a genuine reOection Thi.1 still leaves hundreds ranging up
or our own-the Pe an u t s charec-.the ladder 0£ ... e&pability for whom help is
ters-have charactcri5tics in common available and who may )ook worfard to a
with humans at Fairv iew. h.ippy, useful life within lhelr limits.
PJeosure. Loneliness. A sense ot Wh;u is being done for them?
bewilderment wilh a C(lffiplex world. The s much-&:1-po!!'liblt-ft1r more than
\\'Onder onearnrng nm thin~. within -ever bef()f"e-!AY8 Dr. Toto. rchlef of the
1htlt Umftt. A ~ W .tr.::.ioit•emtttt at (Stt: FAlkVlE'W, P11e 21
.. ·-·-. ••
r
Expansion of counseling . services ,for
Laguna Beach students and parents in·
volved in narcotics problems will be
discussed at tonight's meeUng of the
·Laguna COordinaUng Council, at · 7:30
'
Truste,es Weigh
Youth's · Problem
The board of tNstees .of the Lag\lna
Beach Unified School • District has
sched\J led an executive sessiOJl Tuesday
rujhl '61 meet ·wurf Mts. 'COanie. Ha'ri:li,;-"m Moontaln 'Riad/ M10 •his thrtltfnt<f"
lo· withdraw her ' son fr0m'" Thilnlon
lntermedlate Sotilol becau9e' ~'his -isnot
·gettini in educal.ion lhere."
At last"wee\'.1 school ·bciar'd ~eeUft_g
f\frs. Har41e ma)ntaln~ ffie school, whiCh
has won nationwide aftention !dr ~t.s
modern ICheduling system, is-''eic~ng
her son.·to "communist and hippie ideas'"
·and Is "anll·AmUican."' She 11lso'Jabeled
trustee --or. Normlr_\ Bro'l'ne a •!left-.
wtneer" """' "° said "° hid"not &ten $ Wcnled abo\it< Thursto~·s Jnnuence·on his
~•LY ,·n.crY,..-"""'" • CJYr"n two children Wh<> ·at~nded the l' achoel,
ARl' WORK_EROM..EAIR.VIEW° Tru!te<• then Invited thc·inother 10
Rttt-rded Ctn Crette, Too discuss her problems with them in
private session.
~ ' . '
o·ctock ln the Laguna Federat BQllding.
· Richard . Hollbter, director of pupil
services at 'La(u~a Beach High School
8.nd Mr. Mary Melanson, case work '
supervisOr fOr · Ca"tholic ·we1t&re _.w111'.
describe 1 cOunsc.lin"g available ·for adults
i!nd youth on narC(ltiCs and in the area of
psycholoiical problems.
Cou~cil members will be asked to ,
underwrite a se<:(lnd day of counseling:
which has been added lo the one ·d8y ai
wee.k ~w .. !inanced by ilie Coffim'Unily,
Chest. ,
'ttlC )roUU.-orierited . program.. wu1~1~
Cl'ude commenta, b)t high school Prtdcipal
Robert Reeves on dlfflcultles that ht1ve'
trlsen.frotn Ult scl\ool's lnctustc:in .tiy the-
ClF In the Crestview athletic league of.
far larger high schools and a talk on the
newly ~rgani~ed Youth Prob!em. Center,
in Ne~ Beach. • ·
The session. is ape!\ to the public."
Ac1·ial . T1·an1 .Studied
. FRF.SNO (UPt\ -. Tllo Sierra -Clllb .
says officials · a't Yosemite National "Park
:}re ·:serloosly considering" the in-·
stalln bon-of an-aerial tram-t~-whl!
sightseer~ fron1 Yosemite Valley to
Glacier Polnt. I
·"'' ' .
Beret Camp,
TwoCOpters
Under Fire
SAIGON (UPl) -Communist troops
Intensifying their oflensiYe alon& the
Cambodian border inllicted h e 1 v y
casualties on a U.S. ·Special Forces camp
Sunday and today, riddled two helicopter
gunships with intense ground fife arid at.
tacked a U.S. air field, infllctin& con-
siderable damage.
The series of attack! ran1ed alOng the
border frQm Bu Prang, 112 miles north oL
Saigon, to the air base al Ban Me Thuol,
50 miles to lhe north. North , \'jetnamese
Communists have massed an cstlmated
1,000 men in the area against $.outh Viel·
namese ground forces.
The attacks coincided with disclosure.
that a captured Commurilst document
from a liaison runner Called for "in-
tensive attacks" throughout South Viet·
nam to sup(lOrt the antiwar protest
march on Wublngtoo scheduled for next
Saturday.
nie attacks on the allied mercenariea thett killed three U.S. si)eclal forces meft
advislog ~ tribesmen troops and that
one •man mercenary company took
twq-thir~ caBUaltles, meaning eo men
killed or wounded. The Communtsta mt
12 known-dead. . , u .s. fighter-bombers and aovermnen~
piloted AtE' stYralder pines sopported
the ground troops commltjed 1o adloo in
another test of ~ Vietnamese abillty to
defend'"lhemselves. 1be Communiitl had
brought in -3'1 milmeter antlalrcraft gum
and two helicopter gushipa: were so badJy'
hit they made forced Jandtna1 at Ban
Me 'Ibuot. , '
Ban Me" 1buot itself was tbt target ·or
Communist attacks.
Festival of Arts
Trio Re-elected;
No Opposition
With only the three iJICWTlbents In the
running for three vacancies on the
Festival ot Aris Board of Dlrecton; an·
riouncement of the names of "new direc·
tors" will C(lme as no surprile. at
tonight's general membership meetlng.
Re-elected director• Ve.mer Beet,
Stuart Durkee and Dr. Harold Burton will
be presented to Festival member• at the
8 p.m. session in the Festival Forum as
they begin new, three-year terms on the b0il1'-d. ~-
Continuing as directors Will be William
Manin, who has setwed as ~d presi-
dent for the past year, Mrs. !{elen
Keeley, Paul Griem, Richard Brooks, 0.
E. Shroeder and Davkt Young.
l'jew officers will be elected ' at the
regUlar Fts:Uval board meeting Tueaday.
The Festival Cb<>rale, directed by
Marilyil Inth'landi, wlU present a pr~
gram of vocal.Jhusic for tonlght1s gather·
init.
Stock M•rket
NEW YORK (AP> &ennes .narrowed
tl)e lead held by adv.,_ In moder•\•
trading this afternoon u the stock maJ'lo
ket continued its course tll'Oqh the win-
ning column. (See quotlticq, Pages
2&-27).
Oraag19
Weadier
Blue -and dry -skies will
beam over the Orance Coan Tues-
day with temperatura · inching
back up· to the high IO's alOOl:the
shore and over lhe 70 mark~ furth-
er inland.
INSmE TODAY .
CTab 11our iat.o~ boOk, for t.o-
day'1 the ~fftctive date for a
'""" •I lmDI paawl bv lh• ..... ·legislature la.It 11slion. P~
gtcp~y and drunl«n drivino
crack4otoni. lead the list. Stt
Pagt 8.
IMHM n ' Meet"'" . tt
CC•IH9titl• I _.,..... t•lt ~ ................. +" """·;=-~,.-"-~ 111 c~ 11 tvtwi.,.,,., N DMfl ~ II ~ INt
1"1tf1ell ,." • • .......... ,..., 1""'9tl""""' 1•11 Tiii.._ .. ~~~.' ~-= ... l
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•
. ! llA!tV PJ(OT l
Both · Sides
011 Vietnam
Set Marches
By Associated Press
Supporters and opponents of President.
Nixon's Vietnam policy hold new
denu'lnstrations this week in the con·
tinuing controversy over the nation's in-
volvement 'in the war.
A week of activities by groups backi ng
the President. will be highlighted by
'Vete'rnns Day ceremonies Tuesday in
Washington. The focus returns to the na·
tion's capital Saturday when critic:> plan
a massive antiwar march and rally.
As signs of support lhrou~h the week
for Nixon's Vietnam policies, ad·
ministration backers called for participa·
tion in parades, burning of car
t1e41.dlights. waving flags and the wearing
or bultons lhat say "I L.lve America."
"Tell It To Hanoi." •·operation
Speakout," "Freedom Rally," "Honor
America Week" and "National Con·
fidence Week" are among the titles given
the pro-administration demonstrations.
ln Washington, the \Vhite House is
circulating a photogra ph. <>f President
Nixon with stacks of telegrams as part of
it.s_ campaign to convince Con~ess the
admi nistration 's Vietnam policy has
ovei"A·helming public support.
SUPPORT TELEGRAMS
The postcard-size pictures show Ni."<on
lll a presidential desk laden with
telegrams prompted by his speech on the
\'1ar last Monday night. l:iryce N. Harlow, Nixon's congressional
liaison chief, signed letters sent to
niembers · of Congress with the
photograph and an account of a Gallup
Poll reporting 77 percent support for the
Nixon war policy.
•· 1 am sure that you are as impressed
as I was with the overwhelming public
support of the President's position that
was evidenced in the atlached Gallup
Poll .... " Harlow said in the letter.
l'Iarlow. in an interview Sunday,
reiterated his contention that Nixon has
\von over the "silent majority" ..and he
said public opinion will remain behind the
President. Activities by supporters and critics
began early. A Veterans Day parade was
held Saturday in Midland Park, N .J ., a
town of 8,000 that has lost ei ght sons in
Vietnam. Police estimated there were
8 000 marchers and 25,000 spectators.
'Sponsors or the parade said they
wanted to dramatize their support of the
President's policies and opposition to an·
tiwar demonstrators.
~1AltCB FOR PEACE
ln Houston, Tex .• a "march for peace"
covered 36 blocks Sund ay. Police
estimated there were 900 marchers and
put the total attendance at a rally af-
terward at 1,900.
About 75 of the demonstrators iden·
tified themselves as soldiers from Fl.
llood, Tex. Dr. Howard Levy, a fo~mer
Army physician who was cour l·mart18:led
for refusing to train Green Beret medics,
told the rally, "Mr. Nixon shouldn't wor-
ry about being the first president to lose
a war -but should be worried about
being the first president to lose the
Army."
Prarers were offered in many chu rches
throughout the nation . Sunday f.or the
estimcited 1.300 American servicemen
missing or held captive in Southeast· Asia.
President Nixon had declared the day a
Na tional Day of Prayer and Concern. He
did not attend church services in Key
Biscayne, Fla., to join publicly in the
observance.
A spokesman for the Washington
Cathedral said services there were con·
ducted as usual with •·nothing" to com·
inemorate the National Day of Prayer. Jn
Newport News. Va., a prayer program at
Todd Stadium drew crowds despite rain.
Tod ay negotiations continue for the
route to be followed by the anliwar
clemonslrators in Washington am i d
government warnings of violence and
assurances from protesters th.al they
plan only peaceful dissent.
Harlow repeated Sunday the govern·
-ment's contention--·that-therc is an active
possibiilty of viOJence. ''
•
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DAILY PILOT
011 ... "IG~ CO.Ul PUll lSHltllf C0o¥.MNY
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DAILY PILOY Sltll PMto
. . He~11 · Get Ship
FitESNO (UPI) ~ Fornie r Pueblo
Co1nmnnder Lloyd ~1 . "Pete" Bucher
says "chances are not too good" he will
e1•er. be a ~hip commaJlder again,
Bucher and his wife were in Fresno
Saturday to altend a chalice dinner
spOnsored by the Knights of Columbus.
"l'.d like· very much to gO shipboard
aga in -that's the basic idea of being a
naval officer," Bucher said, "but with
this managemcn~ schooling, lhe chances
arc not too good."
Buch:!r is now attending the Naval
Postgraduate School in Monterey an d
hopes to get a master's degree in
1nanagement. •
Ile spent pari of the day with Yeoman
1.C. Armando Canales of Fresno, who
1vas aboard the Pueblo al t.he time it was
captured by the North Koreans. Canales
is curre ntly stationed at Lemoore Naval
Air Station.
··uh. there were ti1nes, particular!~
witl~ those who were quar antined wit h
other guys for a long period ," he said .
"After a white you 'd get sick of hearing
the same old story about the sa1ne old
girl and somebody would get up and
punch .somebody, but it was un·
derslandable . No hard feelings remain .''
Bucher noted tha t afte r the long cap-
tivity and subsequent heari11gs on the
captur:e he feels "much belle~ cquippctl
both physically and mentally to face any
situation." :
Bucher said he had ··no wav Qr kno1ving
v.·hat n1y next assignment is going to be,"
but that he Wanted to stay in the Navy.
"1 have no plans to get out,",he said.
' ' Air Cal Sets
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL IN COSTA MESA -44 WARDS SCATTERED OVER 400 ACRES
This is Home for 2,252 R1t1rdtd Persons Ranging in Age From Sev•n D1ys to!~. Ytars
Bucher said he tries to keep in touch
\':ilh his old Pueblo crewmen.
Hel'.OUnting some of his experiences
rlur!ng the I I-month imprisonment,
Bucher told the dinner guests that,
despite 11 months in close contact . the
crew got along together.
Neiv Engi1ies
To CurbSrnog·
Report Slawd
On Capo Ar:ea
Mobile Hornes
Dale Ladd, represen ting the Citizens
Ad visory Committee studying mobile
home parks, will report preliminary fin·
dings to San Juan Capistrano City Coun·
cil tonight.
In a recent Calk in Mission Viejo, Stuart
Bailey, acting county planning director,
s<Jid that a city to, the south with a
Spanish name (a pparenlly meaning
Capistrano ) would have more trailers
than ,single family residences on the basis
c:f :.1lready approved mobile home plans.
The committee aware of thi:; fact is
n1aking _1. ~omplele study <>f the effect
n1obile home parks have on a community
in terms (if schools, buying power, tax
base and other related areas.
While the committee is conducting i!J
research a moratorium on the processing
of m~bile home park applications is 1n ef·
feet tn San Juan Capistrano.
"People are getting along vt!ry well,''
said Dr. Phyllis Shainma n, a commlUce
member. She said there was some initial
dissension because of opposing viewpoints
of committee members but work was
now progfessing very well.
·'Everyone has an assignment to com-
plete and bring to the committee and we
have received information from other
cities about what they have done and
their plans for the future in regard to
niobil~ home parks," she said.
"Although we do not yet know what our
recommendations will be we have come
to a few conclusions," she continued.
•·f'or example we all seem to agree that
the only parks that are of economic help
10 a city are five st.ar parks. These parks
regulate the number of trailers per acrl!,
n1any less than nonnal. They regulate
the .!.ize of trailers. normally larger and
th.?.y require planting and recrealion
<lreas. These are definitely top grade
parks," she said .
Dr.•Shainman sald that her particul ar
assignment \Vas to look into lhe relative
income by housing development per acre
in comparison to mobile home parks per
acre.
The committee has be<'n au\horized lo
make a recommendation to the council on
\1-helhcr or not to limit mobile home
parks in the ruturc. Six io nine nionths
has been allotted for the study.
Hearing Delayed
In Liquor Tl1ef ts
1'1vo defendants in a liquor theft case
tnvol\ting Feliciano's Re stau rant i n
Newport Beach Thursday won con·
tinuance until Nov. 14 of a court pro-
ceeding in which they will ansv•er an in ·
dictment by the Orange County Grand
Jury.
Eugne Rondondo. 42, 1501 Corn\vall
La ne, Newport Beach, and Charles
Dryer. :11. 1645 Sunst Rldge Drive,
l..aguna Beach, must ans1ver the in·
diclment charging grand theft. burglary
and conspiracy from several liquor
distributors and a motel-restaurant firm.
The defendants' reques t for con·
1inuanc<' was granted in super ior court .
They will return next Friday tor the
same process.
District attorney 's investigators said
!hey expected that the case might go to
trial in Superior Court sometime next
year.
UCl's Hoy to • .\ddress
Lag1u1a Rotary Unit
1,agunR Beach Rotarians "'Ill look at
1hc future and past of UC I at their F'ri·
day luncheon meeting in the Hotel
Laguna.
JGbn C. Hoy, UCl vice ch1u1ceuo·r for
l'!tuaent affairs, \\'111 speak on ·•tJni\'crsity
t>f-C'~IUornia. frvine.. Five Year& Past -
'I'he Next f«ive Years.'\ The meeting
begin$ at 12: 1$ p.111.
O.r.IL Y PILOT Still Phot•
HEADS FAIRVIEW STAFF
Or. Anthony N. Toto
Burglars Collect
$6,000 in Gems,
Casl1 ih N e\vport
~·Iessy, mud-slogg ing burglars ri fled the
home of a retired couple in Newport
Heach over the weekend and made ~ff
\l'ilh $6,000 in cash and jewels kept in a
safe.
\Villiam Payne Troxler, 66. 1424 San·
tiago Drive, told police the thieves hit his
home late Friday nigh l while he and his
11·ifc 11·cre out.
lncludcd in the haul 11·ere several
custom·made pieces of jewelry, among
them an emerald ring with l~ diamonds.
POiice said the burglars tracked mud
through the Troxler house. Their ap-
pa!'cntly badly.running car also made a
1nes.::. of the couple's driveway, depositing
a hirgc puddle of oil on the paven1ent.
l?olice said-the couple arrived ·home
late in the evening Jntl as Tro-xler began
clean ing up the oil ~tncar his wife \vent
insl<l\!.
She noticed the safe gone 1vhen she
cnterl't.I lhe bedroon1 and called police.
The thi eve s pried open a bathroom
sc reen then opened an unlocked window,
police said.
Afll!r leaving the house with the safe
the thieVes took a brcaiher on the front
lawn <Jnd set the safe down for a short
li n1e, making an indentation on the rain·
soakl'd (rant la\\'n.
Th ... y picked ii up again an<l drove off,
polict: said.
Laguna Adds
To,ving Service
Stranded l,aguna i~otorisls, or those
v.'ho overstay their welcome in parking
places, no1v will have two chances for
getting lheir cars towed av.·ay.
C.:ily councilmen have decided to beef
up Ule city 's emergency to"·ing service
by extending their agreement to include
two contractors, iruilcad of tbc i;\ngle
company that has handled c It y
asslgnmcnls sinCt' January, 19S9.
The duties now will be shared b)l' John
Noutary and A. K. Currell. whose Wlguna
Towing Service. '777 Lngun~ ~nyon
Road, has had the exclusive conlract. and
l .. arry Hunt of l.arry Hunt Auto Cen ter,
110·1 N. Coa111 Highway.
The t'>•i'O eontrAtrors will alternatt their
scr1·lccs. cuch answering calls for half or
('<1Ch rnont h. but ll'ith the understanding
that eit her can bt (alltU nt any t.i1nc in
case of cn1ergency. · , -.
Fro•n l'oge 1
FAIRVIEW. ••
staff Of' 1,600 . employes. ( r o 111
psychilitrists to hospital workers who
handle menial chOres.
Not neBrly enough, says California
Assemblyman Larry Towl16Cnd (D·
Gardena) a member of the Assembly
Health and Wellare Committee.
The Los Angeles County legislator
toured Fairview State Hospital recently,
then issued a statement in Sacramento
which criticized understafflng and other
correctible problems.
"It is the state system itself." Town-
send la ter told the DAILY PiLbT, "I'm
not knocking anyone. I have nothing but
praise for Fai rview ."
Whatever the compliments and
criticisms encountered. Fairview State
J~ospital is a very real part of the Orange
Coast community, \vhile necessarily re·
maining apart in other ways.
This series of articles will be a tour or ~miles of CorridOrs and viliiis with its
peOple, rn~ny of whose Jives would have
gone to waste in another time.
·~sn't it depressing?," is the question
many ask about Fairview and other such
facilities.
Fairview State Hospital is just a part
of the larger world around us.
And depressing or heartening. people
make thei r own views of that.
14 Persons Caught
In Fresno Roundup
FRESNO (UPI) -Local law en·
rorctment officers and state narcotics
agents have arrested 14 persons in a
:..cries of raids in the Fresno area on
charges of selling marijuana and
dangerous drugs.
Russia Worried
Over Hard Line
Stand by Nasser
LONDON (UPI) -Communi st
diplomatic sources said tod~y the Soviet
l lniol" is concerned that Egypt's harden·
ing position could start a new major war
in the l\1iddle East.
The sourc es sald Egyptian President
Garr.al Abdel Nasser's "blood and fire ''
~peech in Cairo last Thursday took the
!\rcn1lin 'by surprise. ~toscow's hold on
Nass.~r \Vas described as V.'eakening.
Communist diplomats said the Arab
\l'OrlJ has increasingly tried to involve
the So\'iets more directly in the Midd le
East in th~ apparent hope that this would
force Israel to back down.
Th ... Russians , it was reported, remain
violently antagonistic toward Israel but
du not want to be pUshed into a poSilion
\\'he re they ·could face the threat of a
dile~l confrontation with the United
States
Illu&lrating this point. the sources
rej)Orted that a Russian military adviser
\\·ho scr:unbled a Soviel·built ~t!G during
an Arab·lsraeli skinnish was promptly
urdered to leave Egypt and return to
Russia.
Thr, sources said the Soviets will con-
Onue tn give Egypt, Sy ria and other Arab
nations full material and moral supporl
and furnish them military advice.
More than 3,000 Soviet military ad-
visers are currently based in Egypt, and
som~ estimates say the figure may be as
high as 4,500. Russian weapons continue
to stream into Egypt and the Arabs claim
even more are needed.
Air California soon will begin to install
$210,000 in new-design engine eomponenls
to reduce air pollution, the ·airlines'
~pokesmen said today.
The new components, known as burner
cans , are the cumbustion chambers
v.·here fuel and-air are mixed and burned,
according to Air Cal maintenance head
R. W. Clifford.
The announcement followed report:;
t!1at the city of Newport Beach might sue
t:1e carrier. wh ich uses Orange County
Ai rport. for allegedly polluting the air.
The court action would be patterned
afte r one und er way in New Jersey wher e
seve ral national air carriers are named
as defendants in an anlipolluLion action.
Clifford said that Pratt & \Vhilncv,
hui!ders of the engines on the six Air C3.I
jets, has developed an improved bur ner
can after two years or tes1 s.
Bui the devices. costing $10,000 each in ·
stalled. are on back .order and are still
scarce.
Clifford said that as soon as the cans
are received they will be in stalled in Air
Cal jets as the planes come up for
overhaul on a normal schedule.
A specific date for completion of the
changeove r has not been determined
because of the small supply of lhe com·
buslion cans.
, Clifford described the burner cans as
the "heart" of the jet engine.
Those in use presently on mosL jets. he
said . develop hot spots, causing ·tho
engines pour smoke.
The new version ha s fewer holspo\s. hr
said. and produces a smaller "plun1e'' ol'
smoke when the jets take o!L
5 Guilty Over Protest
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -f ive persons
have been convicted of hvo 1nisden1eanor
counts of disturbing the peace and
disrupting a public meeting in connection
with a disturbance and demonstra tion at
the Biltmore Hotel
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
l ····''" =~ -·---"---
. . . .. .J .
the new home of
Newport National Bank's Airport Office
'fhis is an extrcm clv conveni ent lor:Ation for !hose \vho use ~vla ci\rthur Blvd . freq.ue11 t!y. Michelson is neat the S<in Diego
Frec\vay, Ne\vport FrHe\VHY And across froin the Orange
County Airport. Open yo ur account al lhis convenient
lor.RtioE i!_ndKn joy AMPLE J1ARKI NG ~. S..e.£.EQ Wl~DOW.S_
!'OR PEA .PERIODS .•. BU LLT·IN CUSTOMER ADDING
MACfUNES .•• COFFEE AND COOKLES ••. SIT·DOWN
TELLERS ••. UNIQUE WELCOME CENTE R .• ,
PATTO BANKLNG ... BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED.
EVERYONE IS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE •••
REFRESHMENT AND GIFTS
Sol!ffii the nl!ds of lh1 in®!lrl!Lnm_pJ!•.
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DAILY PILOT JJt
Trials Set
June 8-12
For Cup
Preliminary trials that will
lead to the selection of a de-
fender {or the America·s Cup
next summer will be held Jn
Lo!!g Island Sound off Slam.-
lord, Conn. June a.12.
These will be followed by ob-
servation trials off Newport,
R.I. beginning Aug. JS. Then
the New York Ya cht Club's
selecUon committee must d!-
clde by Sept. 8 which 12-meter
will be the detender for the
Cup series starting Sept. IS.
There will be two new 12-
meters In the trials, plus the
1967 defender and Possibly one other.
Australia and France have
both challenged for the Cup
and will hold elimination trials
next summer to decide which
competes against the U.S. de-
fender.
Many Services Planned
Acapulco Race Shapes Up
-'
New Way Found
To Stop Hair Loss,
Grow More Hair
BLACKFIN TAKES EARLY LA PAZ LEAD
Windw1rd P11s19e Caught Up, Apparently Leading New yachts being built in
the U.S. for the trials are Char-
lie Morgan's Heritage, now be-
. ing completed in Florida, and
an as yet unnamed yacht be-
ing built by Robert McCul-
lough ol New York. The 1967
defender Intrepid will be back
for another try under the same
syndi cate and with Bill Ficke r
of Newport Beach at the helm .
To: Loc1<:h laboratory Con~uUantJ, Inc.
Box 66001, 33 11 \VcJI Mai11 SL
Housion, Texu 77006
Passage Holds Lead
In La Paz Boat Race
I am 1ubmittin1 the followin1 information with the under·
ttandin1 1hat ii will be kept 1hie:tly e:on6dential and !hat I am
under no obligation whatsoever. I now have or havo had the
followin1 conditions:
Do you have dandrulf? __ Tt It dry? __ or ofly~--
D()('I rour forehead become oily or sreasy ~------
Dots )Our tcMlp itch? Whc11? _____ _
Outboard
Major Help
To Fishers
A_ ne.w electrlc__outboard
motor uses a foot pedal con-
trol, allowing lishenn en to
stop, start, shirt to reverse
and control spe_ed and direc-
lion -leaving both hands free
for working a fish .
The Electra Pal Barracuda
electric fi shing motor is pro-
duced by the Electra Pal
Division of Osbor Engineering
Corp., 1400 E. Lafayette St.,
Bloomington, JU.
TtiT motor is generally
mounted on the gunwale near
the bow for maximum control.
but can be clamped on the
stern, the bo'v or any pla ce
along the gun1vale. The small
motor is usually used in con-
junction with a larger motor
mounted in the usual place on
the ste m which drives the
boat to the fishing area.
The pedal control allows the
analer to sit anywhere in the
boat. The pedal unit even has
a combination , night light-
cigarette lighter.
A sealed engine, lubricated
for a lifetime, ii has a four
barrier water seal system that
bars all moisture. So 11 d
11 luminum castings are light
and suitable for both fresh and
salt water. The Barracuda
prodoces no Mist, -exhausr-or·t----1
fuel slicks. ,
Like other motors in the
Electra Pal line, it features a
permanent magnet motor and
propeller which are carefully
balanced to ensure smooth
opuat.ion.
The Electra·Nellc thn1st
control gives a gradual, flu id·
like 1cceleratlon and dectll!ra·
lion. aUowlng the angltr to
match the power lo U1<l wiod
and waves or met!Kld of
ft.bing.
FAIR
'•1t, ftir, -f•ttv•l:--Tti1-1.--
thr11 worch ''"' •p ftc.to" h1
eJ11r1l!e" •" lh1 DAILV P'ILOT
e41toti1/ P•t• ,.,,,., 4ty. '
•
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D
How Ions has )'OUr hair been 1hinnin1 ? _____ _
Do you t1ill ha•·c any we•k hair on ior or )'Our he1d?_
How Iona !1 it? I~ it dr~ ~ h it oily? __ _
Au ach any n!hcr infnrmaiion you frcl may be helpful.
The have and holders ... a personality analysis
Read the persona lity desc rip tions and se lect the one that su its yo u best to find the right savings plan for your type.
The charts will show yo u how each one works. We've bee n matching people to savings plans for 33 years. The kin d
of people who want their money to keep its buying power. Who want the value of their money to remain steady 1n an
up-and-<lown market. Who would rather have their mo ney earn interest than to pay exo rbitant carrying or loading
charges. Who want their money to multiply so they can pay ca sh for things. Who wa nt to be able to get their hands
on their money when they need it. Saving people, like you-the ki nd who want to HOLD their money and HAVE it
earn interest. Come in and let one of our people experts get you started on your personalized-to-your-<iavinge-
personality program at Newport Balboa Savings.
Are you one of the
regular people?
PLAN #I
Regular Account
This plan Is for regular
people with regular
salaries who have -
.decided to save regular
amounts anywhere from
$5 a week up, but wh o
want their money working
for them. They also want
it to be some pla ce they
can get their handi on it
If they need it in a hurry.
If they can leave it alone
for a yea r or more. it will
give them the Big Annual
5.t3y;eld.
11EGULAA MONTHLY
INVESTMENT
$25 $50 $100
6 t.4 05, 152 ,.. 608
1 Vr, :JOB 616 1.233
2Yrs. 632 I .2f.i-4 2.529
3 Yrs. 972 1 .~6 J .892
A Yrs. , .331 7.662 5 .324
5 Vis. 1,707 3.415 6.830
10 Yrs. 3.900 7,801 15,602
15 Yrs. 6.715 13,432 26,864
20 Yrs. 10,329 20.662 <4 ' ,325
D-
Are you one of the
other-people people?
PLAN #2
Life Income Plan
This is for people who
have a sum of money they
would like' to put aside
and receive the interest
every month but not
touch the principal.
Perhaps you intend to
leave your money to your
hei rs. In this plan the
original i_nvestment is
retained for a lifetime
and you have a regu lar
income every month . If
you r future plans are fo r
your children·s future,
then thi s saving s program
may suit you.
llFE INCOME PlAN
$12000
1 .. ,500
20,000
25,000
S0,000
$ SO.DO Per Month
60.00 Pe r Month
83.00 Pe r Month
10"00Per Month
208.00 Per Mor.th
Are you one of the
retiring people?
PLAN #3
Monthly Security Account
This is for people who have
a lum p sum of money bu t
who know that if they do n't
put it away somewhere out
of sight, they will spend it.
Perhaps they are looking
forward to reti r~ment and
know it would be better to
have a certain amount
coming in every mo nth over
a grven period. Not only will
they get back a lot more than
they put In. but there will be
a nestegg to rewa rd
themselves for not
blowing it al l at once.
INVEST $10,000.00 ANO;
yo\J recelva ar.d you reteln
each mor.th for a n e1t1te of'
S 50 00 10 ye1rs $ 8,675.00
S SO 00 1 S y11rs $ 7 .725.00
$ 75.00 10ye1r1 $ 4,77500
$ 75 00 l 5 yet•S $ 1,000.00
$10000 10yee•s $ 87500
INVEST s2s,ooo.oo ANO:
you receive and you ret11n
each month ror an esl1te of•
$100.00 10yeers $25,600.00
$100 00 15 yeers $28.050.00
$150.00 10yeers $17,800,00
$200.00 10years $10,00000
$250.00 10 years $ 2.200.00
"'1,...ftll --ttlb tit• M'ilct t. .. , • .,....1 ... ,, Satltft 1114 11 tM c11u.,,,11
riftt Klll tlf• MftW 'Wille~ I ••II •IMf
l .. ft UHCi•llOll ""' 11111 ...... Ill ritllt l• ·~ul,. •• tt 111 -llol Jotlu ti' lftl"'I i. W(!IHlrt•. Nt>l'"fl l t l• St rittl ... Ml •"'Y •ll•d•••tl '°""'I lllM'11Y ••tttt.t
41!11 " -~"tiff It Mf .. tifl lJ '""-
Are you one of the
patient people?
PLAN #4
Gu•r•nteed
Annual Rate Account
This plan is for patient people
who aiieady have a sum of
money to Invest and are willing
to wait a while for a good
return on their money. The
minimum deposit is $1,000
{more if you wish, o'f course),
in exchange for which you ·
receive a certificate which
guarantees an annual rate
of 5.25 % for 3, 4 or 5 years.
Are you one of the patient
ones? Then the GUARANTE ED
ANNUAL RATE ACCOUNT
is for you.
Initial
0.poolt
$ 1.000 s 5.000
$10.000
$15,000
YOU Wi ll AECEtVE
aft1r
3 )'llrl "'y11rs S y11rJ
$ 1,170 s 1,233 s 1,300
S S,352 $ 8,1 68 $ 8.500
$11 ,705 $12,336 $13.001
$17,558 $18.504 $19,502
•
Are you one of the
enterprising people?
PLAN #5
3-Year Bonus Account
For people who warit not
only the current yield on
the ir savings, bufwould
like a sum oVer and above.
In th is plan yo u invest a
minimum of $1000 which
earns you the current yield
PLUS an extra !hi% per
year at the end of 3 years.
Jf you would like to be
enterprisin~ and safe at
the same t1rTie, tfien thti
3-year bonus account
Is for you.
YOU Will RECEIVE
l"i!i•I •h•r -·•ft•r •ft•r
Oepo1lt 3 y1ars <t ''''' 5 )'l•I'* s 1.000 s 1.169 $ 1.232 $ 1,298 s 5.000 s 5.8"46 $ 6,161 $ 6, .. 93
$10,000 SIJ,61i3 · $12.323 $12,987
$15,000 f l 7_s40 St8,•!5 $19;"8f
""
.. ft@wpor~.-~o~t~~~~ Savings
P. A Palmtr, Chi-:;mM of .r,1 BiSafd • AQnu·atomQUflt, Prttlefiiit"= -•
Mt1n 0ffl(lt : 336G \lif Li.do, Newport Betch,, c·,r,rorni1-™3 • F'tJont 71<!/673·3130 1 Coton1 dtl_M1r Oll1;f,J111M;)1/ Plw 1 ~Newport Cen\tr Drive • Coron• dtl Mir, C11Jforn11 92W • Phii>f)t 714/544·1•1
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• DAil V PILOT L
Republic/I·-~• .
;~·Acquires
ta-Hi
AcquislUon of the Sta·l:ll
Corporation. NewpOrt Beach.
d~veloper and manufacturer
of equipment for newspaper
printing and handling, was an-
nounced today by Republic
Corp.
Sta-Iii has a 60,000-square-
foot manufacturing plant and
engineering laboratory in the
Irvine indust'rlal re s e a r ch
Complex. It also has sales and
5ervlce o[fices in New York
NEW ENTRY FROM DODGE FOR SEVENTIES IS ITS SPORTY CHALLENGER
; It Will Be Av•ll•bl• H H•rdtop or Convertlblo Wltfl Wlde Choice of En9I""
~-City; Chicago; Detroit ;
Dallas: WJchita, K·ansas :
.Paramus, N, J. : Montreal,
Canada: and European head.
quarters in Brussels, Belgium.
Sales are in ' excest ol
$4.000,000 per year.
In High Gear
Acquisition of Ute privately
nwned company was for an
.undisclosed amoont of com-
mon stock.
Gerald R. Block, Republic's
board chainnan. said that
··there will be a continuation or
the present m a·n a gem en t
headed by Vernon R. Spitaleri.
Dodge Offers Challenge to Seventies
By CARL CARSTENSEN
ot Ille DlllJ !"Ott Slttt
,. With the announcement of
the 1970 passenger cars, auto
experts heralded the coming
decade as the "greatest sales
era . In the history of the in-
dustry."
" Witter Sets
Workshop The 10 million car year
would become honnal and
!lights w')uld be set for 12
million new car sales a year.
lt shouldn't sound far out as
just 10 years ago sales were
barely over 6 million units.
Yet if this is the case the
domestic auto makers will
have to spring with many
more new and dif f erent
models than have been offered
for this first year of the seven-
ties.
.A workshop on rn o n e y
management will be presented
Saturday, Nov: 15, at the
Newport Beach olrice of Dean
• jV;tter & Co.
-Speakers will b e prC>o ~ "ressional men who a r e ~ s~.alist.s in their fields.
"' ToPICs of discussion wiU in-
., Clude ways to create effective
estate planning and how to
select s u l ta b I e investment
counsel.
The seminar will begin at 10
a.vi. Reservations may be
·made by phoning 644-229'l or
~ m-0230.
Most people agree that only
five or six really new cars
were introduced this year, one
of whJch js the Dodge
Challenger. The birth of the
Challenger has to be one o{
Dodge's. poorest kept secrets.
It parallels past "cat out of
the bag" mysteries such as
Ford's Mustang in 1964 and
Oldsmobile's Toronado. It was
talked about for two years
prior to ils entry. ·
•
'
Wiseman Heads
-Education Unit
: be~~· n:::::~r:~~~;~du~~~ '
Dodge did a good promotion
job. The trick is to keep it
going. After the very suc·
cessful Gharger they'll be hard
pressed·to keep pace.
.. tion by. the Orange CoWlty
Chapter of the National
• Association of Accountants.
" Dr. Wiseman is a professor
" of accounting at Califoniia
Offered as a 2~oor hardtop
Or convertible with .a wide
range of · engine options · it
challenges the well entrenched
medium priced can such as
Cougar, Firebird and some of
the classier versions of the
Mustang and Camaro.
State College at Fullerton. Dr.
Wiseman is also a member of
.. ihe American Jnsitute of ~ Certified Public Accountants
' and the American Accounting
:Association.
\.
I
Saturday Morning
special ... for Investors
An Investment Management Workshop
emphasizing •
professional inv.stment approach
Dean Witter & Co. is sponsoring a free seminar for
inveslors interested in the finer points of effective
investment n1anagement.
It will be held at Dean \Vitter's ne\Y Fashion Island
office in Ne\vport Beach. Featured will be several
guest speakers - specialists in their fields:
e A prominent attorney and tax expert will sug·
gest ways to establish and pr.,.rve thti maxi-
mum after.tax estate.
•• A Vice President and senior portfolio m1n19er
of a leading counHling firm will define the role
of the Investment Counselor and glvt some
guidelines for selecting one.
Plan now ' to •ttend. There'll be 1mplt time
questions, •nd refreshments will be served.
Date: Saturday, November 15
Time: St1rtin9 at 10:00 a.m.
Place: Dean Witter &. Co.
SSO Newport Center
Newport Beach
Drive
,.,
! . For rMerv1tions, c1ll Dt1n Witter Account Extcu.-
~ tivet Jamet Muz::zy or Max R1cty 1t 6-«-2292 or
833.()230.
•
••
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1
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Yo rl'rc clos(' to 1nen who know
when you invtst with
DEAN WJTT·ER. IC: Co •
JNCD&POltATD
--""-"""'' l'ltw ,..,. l!Kl bcllfll9tl.~---
SSO Newport Center Drive •
NEWPORT BEACH, CAL.
644-2292
92660
1 J,farMt NcW.: Henr 11 oonciae summary of the merket open-
-~i-=lna and the laltlt bU.i""" and ftnMClal ..,... hi&lillshlo. on DKAI'! Wll'IER MARKET REPORr
KFAC. o;,1Position1330
8:00 a.m.. MonditJ' llroucl1 t'riday J •
Unintentionally it will even
compete with the Charger. It
comes in " two se rie s.
Challenger and Challenger R-
T. ln both series, a formal
hardtop SE (Special EdiUon)
features the complete range ol
luxury extras.
Standard engines are the 225
cubic inch six and 318 cubic in-
ch V--8 for Challenger, and
383 cubic inch high-performan-
ce V--8 4 barrel for the R·T.
Optional engines go as high
as the 42ti Heml with a cut out
hood so it'll flt and the 440
cubic inch. Special Six Pack.
three carburetor V -8 •
Needless to say, the last two
aren't really necessary for the
street.
The ll~inch wheelbase Is
the shortest in the Dodge line
but about two inches longer
than competitors in its class
and slightly wider.
Interior room is ample but If
you are better than average in
si1.e: you need a plan to enter,
the car from the driver's side.
The steering wheel sits low
and you must slide in, The ad-
justable wheel is not available
this year whJch would make
all the difference but a local
Dodge official said the car will
come with a slightly · mailer
steering· wheel in the near
future.
Thls·Wfll make It perfect.
Handling and suspension l!
good as lt has been in most of
the D o d g e intennediates.
You'll notice Jots of
Challengers on the road or it
will appear that way as the
color lineup is wild. Choices
are sub-lime (a bright and
sLartling chartreuse); plum
crazy (way-out purple); hemi
orange (more a tangerine);
top banana (bright yellow);
and go.mango (yellow-reddish·
orange). Apparently th e
buyers like then as 34 percent or Challenger buyers are
choosing the way out colors.
And naturally It figures that
ror the-first month of the new
model ·year Southern
California leads the country in
ChaJlenger sales. It'!I a worthy
addition to th_e.. race of sporty
autos that continues to capture
a stronger segment of the auto
market each week .
* * CHEV CORVEITE PASSES
QUARTER MilJJON MARK
Chevrolet's famed Corvette
ls 2SO,OOO cars· old.
Ceremonies at the division'!!
St. Louis Assembly Plant
marked t"CIDpletion qf the
quarter-millionth fiber glass
bomed 11ports car that grew
from a "dream car" to an in-
ternatiooal auto ce.lebrith.
John Z. DeLorean, Chevrolet
general . manager, , declared
that Corvette's total pro-
duction surpasses •the num ber
of two-seat sports cars buUt
under any otber s in g I e
nam·eplate in world
automotive histofy.
"Th.e Corvette's .overall in-
fluence upon 1.u·tomottve
trends and Chevrolet's in-
dividual image goes f a r
beyond the number actually
built and sold," De.Lorean
said.
"In 19fll, it began the
American industry's break
with the traditional 11ingle-size
car. By spotlighting customer
desire for distinctive ap-
Your Money's Worth
Productivity l(ey GM
By SYLVIA PORTER
General Motors, the world 's
largest corporation employing
more than 450,000 hourly rated
workers, will enter its cri.tcial
labor negotiations in the fall of
970 prepared to negotiate
demands for the largest cash
plus fringe benefit package in
all history.
The size of the hourly pay
hike to be granted by GM will
be vlta/ly influenced by the
record-size wage patterns now
belng set in the electrical in-
dustry and to be set in rubber
next spring -and these will
surely be far above 1969'1
swollen average of 7 y,
percent. It also will be af-
fected by the 101,'z percent
wage package GM has offered
It \Yorkers in Britain.
WHAT'S rttORE, while GM
will light what it considers ex-
cessive cash increases, it
recognizes how much inflation
has hit its workers since its
1967 contract granted an an·
nual 6-7 percent wage bike.
But GM will demand (and
NIGHTS
SUNDAYS
&
HOLIDAYS
Cen be mol'9
"rofitable
for you.
CALL ~S NOW FOR
INFORMATION ANO
A BROCHURE.
I mEPHONC -_Jib ANSW!RINQ BUREAU
-543.2222
I OFFICES TO BERY£
Al.I. OF ORANGE CO. . ,
here Is where the fight will
come) the strong !Upporl of
the United A u t o Workers in
improving the productivity oE
its wokers, primarily via more
work per hour and less
absenteeism.
Higher-output-per man·hour
Is what GM's top management
feels it must obtain if the cor·
poration is to keep price in·
creases to a minimum and
still be able to maintain a
reasonable profit margin.
THERE WERE key points
made or impied by James M.
Roche, board chalnnan of GM
in an exclusive interview at
GM's headquarters in New
York City a few day1 ago.
Lean, tall, soft-spoken with
a channing, youthful smile,
Roche seems much younger
than his soon·ti>be 63 years ,
and almost too agreeabll!: to
be the chief exeeuUve oflcer
of so enormous an industrial
complez Yet, Roche w a !I
thoroughly aware throughout
our long frank talk that I was
asking him deep-down ques..
lions about the "BIG One."
the critical 1970 auto negotia-
tions. Among his o t b e r
disclosures:
-He sees no end to this
price-wage spiral and doubts
that e1,1en a business slump
can stop it "unless and until
productivity is increased and
maintsined in better balance
with Increased wage costs .
This. labor itself must detide
to do:"
-HE POINTEDLY asks, ••ttow can inf1ation be halted
with productivity Jncrea!les of
All Mott-All Models
Ati.aM• -Tl"lltb
Complete-New York Stock List
11
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DAllV·Plln. '1,
Monday's Closing PriCf1J-C'Aimplete Yorlr-Stock Exchange List
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GAFFERS & SAnl.ER
Stainless steel 90" swivel lmpe.lln.
fti -carbon 5teel cuttin1 slen1.
#W[ 00.
SAVE 3.97 $21 llOWI
Coweml 2 qt mo serole. obla~a pan, atmty pan.
p:e plate, mus.
CVJ. 6 Mtd
C1.IPS.
SAVI $2 PEI SET 197
SET
·297
SAVl$2
Salem maple finish on ser """!"19 ""'d hardwood. Au th<ntlc ,design. SAVE OVER $6 ...,.UJ. ...... ,_ .
18'!..~ '! --__ ,.UINI
SHOP THE STOIE CllARGI n
••A•A-'CAU llEAUST YOU! ·==•• naowr ....... Cll .... ANAHEIM n CA11D1 ..... , ......... , ...... ..,. -------
.
"
GIRLS' STRnCH
NYLON TIGHTS
·.100~ nykn !.>-
sorted cololS. Sizes
1-3, 4<X, i-11, 11-14.
OUIU .. PltCl1.JI
86~.
SAYE42c
26 PC. PUNCH SET
197
SET
. RAZOR'BLADE~
~Opuble-edged. Dispenser -
pack of 5 blades.
'COMPAll 29c AT79t
11202
LOS ANGELES
'lffllSH ll'ID. 9t MAU111 ""'11'!.t&A'NR: ..
SAN BERNARDINO
•" OIAIMI SltOW IOAD ""'.,,""' ........ ,,, .... , ................
J Unfinished Ponderosa
; pine. 4 spacious draw·
l ers. Cllair included. ·14ea U~f.I
EAST LOS ANGELES
JJ7J IASt OlTMPIC llYI.
I ftlKrt t•ff M •ru.nK ,,,, ., ,...,.u
COVINA
11n NOITM AIUSA AYL ,,,,.,,.,... ......... ,,,,,,,,, ........ ""'·
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'
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Wh ite plastic carrier.makes'1 ·
toting baby' easier, S!f!ty '. '
stra~ SAVI 1~11
116
&illiant, incande""1! ftgbl
Available in 40 •. 60 • 75
and 100 watts.
6 8·8c FOR .
OUI II&. Piia 1tt U..
PENNZOIL Motor Oil
A su11eriOI' q11al ity -better engine
lubricatian. 20 or JD •eight oil.
AND BLACK VINYL CASE
2 pc. 51" cot 1~ Yll'IM wtipt \liayl ttse -hthrlmi-.: zicpef; Mn:!e.
VALllYWEST
CJUIMA •AllK
(AltOfl l'R. 9t IOl(Oil ll¥1, ,.. MITlll.,, ~ '''"'''
ONfARIO
1au ltO.MOUlftlll AYL .., .. '"'"' ,._.,
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U•nl WT .. " OSIOI .. ,,,,, .,, ....... "'" ,,.,.,,
COSTA MESA
*8UISTOlAYL ,.,.,,....,.,.,
lf'IWl'r• u. rwr • 111111 m.
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59!1
$10
RABBIT EAR·
TY ANTENNA
Indoor desigL Heavily weipled base,
,tllff~~~,,~
,51xi!l" waterproof IXlOCbo ·with
· metal snaps. Ideal far sportsmen.
MIN'S OI WOMlll'S 4 99 C sWEAnRs FOR .
SKIRTS'LA1N 29c ·: :' NO U!i'IT , .
_ .............. -... UCll •wmT _.,. ____ ,...•n
'~-·QINM,~
TOHANCI * STORE HOURS * TOllAICI llYD. AT
IAWTllOIM llYD. ....... " '"· 12 -··· '"' l•t· 10..t1 I•••_,,10.7
DOWNEY .ANAKllM. COVINA
WOOll:wn AT IMPlllM ..... ht.1 ... , •••• 10-7 --· ---
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r'.·Neltport ·Darhor
N.Y. Stoeks EDITION ·
*-~ VO~. 62, NO,. 269, 3 SECTIONS, '4t PA6ES , . '
ORANGE COUm'<, CALIFORNIA MONDAY. NOVEMBER ·10, 1969 TEN CENTS
' ' . '
DAILY ,.ILOT Sl•ff f'Mtt
$6,000 Geln Theft
Safe Taken Fro~ Newp()rt Home·
. Messy, mud-slogging bUrg'lars rifled the
home of a retired couple in Newport
Beach ever the weekend and made off
with '6,000 in cash and jewels kept in a
safe.
WiUiam Payne Troxler, 66, 1424 San·
liago Drive, told police the thieves hit his
home late Friday night while he and hi8
\\'ile were out.
Included in the haul were several
custom-made pieces of jewelry, among
Viet Policy
Backers, Foes
To Protest
By Associated Press
them an .em~rald ring with 17 diamonds. ·
Police said the btirglars tracked mud
throui h the Troxler house. Their ap-
pa!'ently badly·running car ·also made a
meS.l of the couple's driveway, deposiUnl
a large puddle of oil on the pavement.
Police said the couple arrived home
late in the evening and as Troxler began
cleaning up the oil smear his wife went
inside.
She noticed the safe gone when she
cOtere<l tbe bedroc;o\ and 'caled police.
'The •thiev~ pried oj>eh 'a bathrQani
sCrttn then opened an unlSJC;ked window,
police said.
After leaving the house with the safe
the thieves took a breather. on the front
lawn and let the safe down. fqr ·a s.hort
time, making an indentation on the rain·
sOakcd front' lawn.
They picked it up again and drave ofl,
police said.
$210,000 Project
Air Cal Trying
To Reduce ~mog
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL IN COSTA MESA -44 WAROS SCATTERED OVER 400 ACRES
ifhls is Home for 2,252 R1tardtd P1r1on1-R1ngint in Age From Seven 0·1ys to 83 Years
Supporter$ and opponents of President
Nix6n's Vietnam policy hold n e \V
denlonstrations this week in the con-
tinuing controversy over the nation's in-
volvement in the war.
A week of activities by groups backing
the President will be highlighted by
Veter.i:ns Day ceremonies Tuesday in
\Vashington. The focut; returns to the na-
tion 's capital Saturday when critics plan
a massive antiwar march and rally.
Air California soon will begin to install
$210,000 in new.(jesign engine components
to reduce air pollution, the airlines'
:i;pokesmen saJd today.
can after two yean ol tests.
Bi.It the devices, costing $10,000 each in·
stalled, are on back order and are still
sca rce.
Fairview
!
Editor's Note: Hor>e and hopeless·
t1ess live side by side jn the rooms
n1!fl wqids of Fairview State Hospital,
nn i~titution that U so much a part,
'1tt .SD. far apart .from the Or~nge
Coast communitv .. This· is ,tlif Jirat of
six arU&s~n ii\,,3eclciJ.~;q:;qtl ~)he
Jtosp:i.t<Jt for the mthtallti' retarded. '
By ARTJiUI\ I\.' VINSEL
Of tlle o.l~·Plw stefl
pne can't See ;them from the.roadway,
but. Peailuts comic strip Cbaracters
decorate top noor windows of the 'big
peach-colored building with alwhinum
.sull$hades.
The cheery theme can ·also be seen in
other rooms.
This is i'airview Stale Hospital -or at
least all that many know about-the four-
story structure. at 2501 Harbor Blvd.,
CoSta Mesa. bui~t a ~ecade ago.
It is home-temporary or
permanent-for 2,252 retarded persons.
They range.in age from Seven d·ays to 83
years. All are classed as children. All
have specia l needs.
Almost au have something lo give.
The familiar littJe people who populate
a paper ,world that is a genuine reDection
of our own-the P e a nu t s cbarac-
ters-haVe characteristics in common
with humans at Fairview.
Pleasure. Loneliness. A sense or
bewilderment with 'a complex world. The
wonder of learning new things, within
their limits. A seilse· of achievement at
Home for
doing so. Sometimes fear.
Very often, love.
Three stories below those ·decorated
pediatrics wards, in the office or the man
in ch arge is another Peanuts:· figure on a
elaq~il"'( Ql.d;~harlie ~r9wn. .
•t1·v~·deV1!lo~ a new phil9sophy," the
ptaq'ue· says; ... I.only 'dread .one day at a
time." '
The sentiment is a bit of bUmor for Dr.
Anthony N. · Toto, superintendent and
med.ICal directOr of the hospital' serving
Orange and parts.of Los Angeles and San
Diego Counties.
New philosophies are constantly being
developed bf researeh teams and there is
room for dread in none of them, only op-
timism.
·BeSides the patients in the 'hospital,
·whose 44 wards are scattered over 400,
acres, another 1.000 are out.side in foster
h.mes or other specialized programs.
. Sca nning· data sheets on the patient
population, one sees that 1,063 are pro-
fondly retarded. The term has tactless .
variations on the outside. "Vegetable'' is
one of them.
Little can be done for many of these
Imperfect victims . of 19 classifiable
defects in a society that worships the
most nearly perfect.
This still leaves hundreds ranging up
the ladder of capability for whom help is
available and who may look forward to a
bcppy, useful life within their limits.
\Vhat is being done for them ?
As much as possible-far more than
ever before-says Dr. Toto, chief of the
(See FAIRVIE\V, Page%)
DAILY ,lLOT Slt fl f'llolt
ART WORK FROM FAIRVIEW
Rtt•rded Can Create, Too
As signs of support through the week
for Nixon's Vietnam policies, ad·
ministration backers called for participa·
tion in parades, burning of car
l1eadlights. waving flags and the wearing
of buttons that say ''l Lvve America."
"Tell lt To Hanoi," "Operation
Speakout," "Freedom Rally," "Honor
Amerq Week'' and "National Con-
ridenCe week;' are among th'e t1Ues liven
the p~admihistration demanstrlitions.
IO ·waShinjton. 'the White Hoiise is
circuliting a photograph ·of Pteaident
Nixon wlµt stacks of telegram1 as part of
its campaign to convince Congress the
administration's Vietnam policy has.
over~·heJmjng public 11upport.
Th~ postcard-size pictures show N~on
at a pre~idenUal desk laden with
telegrams .prompted by his speech on the
war last Monday night.
Bryce N. Harlow, Nixon's congressional
liaison chief, "signed letters sent to
niembers of Congrtss with the
photograph and an acCQunt of a Gallup
Poll reporting 77 percent support for the
Nixon war policy.
"I am sure that you are as imp~ssed
as I was with the overwhelming public
support ·of the President's.position that
was evidenced in the attached Gallup
!'oll .... " Harlow said in the letter.
Harlow, in an interview Sonday,
reiterated his contention that Nixon has
won over the "silent majority" and he
said public opinion will remain behind the
Przsident. ·
Activities by supporters and critics
began earl y. A Veterans Day parade was
held Saturday in Midland Park, N.J., a
tov;n of 8,000 that has lost eight sons ln
Vietnam. Pol.ice. estimated there were ·
8,000 marchers aOd 25,000 spectators.
The new components, known as burner
cans, are the cumbustion chambers
where fuel and air are mixed and burned,
according to Air Cal maintenance head
R. W. Clifford.
The announcement followed report:s
t!iat the city cf Newport Beach might sue .
t:1e cariier, Which uses Orange· County
Airport, for allegedly polluting the air.
The. .court action would be ' patterned .
after o,ne uDQer way in New Jersey wher'e .
s~veral ·national air cartie/i are named
a,s d.deilda"nt& ln' an arlt!PotlutiQR ictfon: ·
Clifford Sald that Pratt·· " Wliitnef.
h'uilders of the engines :on l~'·six ,.\ii Cal
jets, has developed an .improved burner
Clifford said thal as soon as the cans
are received they will be installed. in Air
Cal jets u the planes come up for
overhau) oq a normal schedule.
A specific date for completion of the
C':hangeover ·bas not been · determined
because til ~ small supply of the com·
bustiori cans.
OUffofd described the burner cana as
the ~'heart" of the jet engine.
Those in use presenUy on most Jets, be
said, develop !tot spots, ca,.,inC Ill<
enginea . ~ smoke.
The iJiw v"'""1' Jia,s fewer bol!pot ... h•
said, lnctproducel-a m;nal1er "pl.Ume'' of
smoke when the· jets t'alle off. •
Neuppo:ft ·Firm to Change
Buses to Ste(lm Power
A Newport Beach firm is one of four
selected by the. state Assembly Rules
Committee-to convert municipal buses to
st~ain power.
General Steam Corporation, 3800 Cam-
pus Drive, is already road testing a small
steam engine Installed in a Californi:i
Jiighway Patrol car,
Assemblyman Eugene A. Chappie CR·
Sacramento), Rul es Committee chair-
man, said today selection or General
Steam and other companies for the bua
cxperin1ent was based on recommenda-
tions made by a technical advisory panel.
the As&'l!:mbly, said it ls not belie\'td that
the $450,000 now available will be enough
· to finance all four systema. A! a result.
a contract wifi b; eXecuteOimmediaUly
\vith Brobeck & Associates, and negoti-
ations for contracts will be entered into
with General Steam and the other lwo
firms .
Wenstrom said these negotiations will
enable the project staff to eorne up with
a precise determination on how much
additional money is needed. The Depan..
ment of Transportati~n will ~n be "~Ked
to provide the -supplemental funding,
\\.'hich Wenstrom said he is very hqpelut
ol obtaining.
Harbor Board to Conside1· Agneiv Describes
Demo1istrations
As 'Carnival'
f!ponsors of the parade said they
\vanted lo dramatize their support of the
President's policies and opposition to an-
thvar demonstrators.
Each company is to convert one bus to
steam power. The buses will be provided
by the Alameda-Contra (:osta Transit Dis·
trict and the San Francisco Municipal
Railway. . ·
Tht U.S. Department of Transportation
Is funding the snioc research project. It
has made $450,000 available to the As-
sembly for the state-controlled program.
Donald Johnson, vice president and
general manager 'or General Steam, said
his company at present is testing an 81h·
by·24-inch steam engine in a CHP car
irl Riverside county. The engine, he said,
operates on less than two pints of water.
The prototype research model has cost
about $600,000 in state funds, Bay W orli:, Tidelands Fee
In Hcuston, Tex .• a "march for peace"
cove1·ed 36 blocks · Sunday. Police
cslimated there were 90I> marchers and
put th e total attendance at a rally af~
krward at 1,900.
About 75 cf the demonstrators iden-
tified (hemielves as soldiers from Ft.
Hood, Tex. Dr. Howard Levy, a former
Army physician who was court-martia\ed
Other research and , development firms
selected along with Newport's Gene_ral
Steam are William P. Brobeck & Associ.
ates -or ·eerkeley, Lear Motors· Corpora·
tion of Reno, Nev .. and Steam Power
Systems, 1!1c., of San Diego. Orange County Har_bor Como:iissi.on~rs,
fresh from a gift of life for their district,
will act on jlt !'east three major construc-
tioD-..prDj!?Cls Wednesday affecting large
parts of the OJ:ange .Coast. _ .
The commission wdl consider adoption
of final construction plans and financing
a.rrangements for the ·Aliso Beach pier
in South Laguna, including financing
with the stale and federal government.
Commissioners also will consider giv-
ing preliminary approval to the lessee
for development of the first stages of a
marina and parking lot at SU11Stt Aqua·
tic Park an.Anahfim Bay.
Jn n1atters relating to N_ewport Beach,
Route Talk Set
For Homeowners
' 'Cliff Haven-Community A~~tion
meinberli. mal\Y or whose home.s lie 1n the
path of the adopted Pacific Cout Fr..,
way route, Wedilesdar, !light will hear
about Newport Beach city government
~ns to seek a ne'!' a!.!S_nmtnJ. ~
:nib lh,.;u.g 'WIU be· l.ifld 10 !he En-
•ign School's multl·purpose room . at a
p.nt . M. J. Slarner, president oI the ast0e1-
atil)fJ said speakers will be Ctty Plair
ning 'Director Larry Wilson and Traffle-
Engineer Robert Jaffe. "Their subject
\Viii be lhe Coast Freeway. west of the ·~p• ."311~tnL~iat5us.....~d...plan·
ning conslderations,'' said tamer.
\'ice President Spiro T. Agnew describ-the commission will act on plans for maintenance dredging of the Upper Bay cd Vietnam protest demonstrations today
water ski chaMels closed since last win· ::!S a pointless "carnival in the streets"
ter when record flooding silted up the ~·hich proves nothing. (Related Story
ar~~missioners also will continue dis· Page S).
cussion 011 the propose(! ·rees for county Agnew spoke out as both critics and
tidelands used by private individuals on backers of President Nixon's policy
Newport Bay. Thus far the commission began a week of demonstrations in the
has been reluctant to grant permission controversy over America's Vietnam war to levy such fees . The group also will· consider a lease involvemenl
extension for the Sea Scouts' base on the 1'he vice president .said, "The mob, the
(See PROTESTS, Page%) Michael Wenstrom, Project director for
Mesa A~ior Dies
Kam Tong Loses Cancer Battle
harbor. mob!lization, the moratorium ha v • A Cos'· Mesa man w .. -"'•rv1·,ed t"· • th · t· I Lo A I f · The Sea Scouts al..-will request an WI' 1w .,u ue a1.er e assass1na ion n s nge es o
i.w becc.me somewhat fashionable fotms or ner•'lous command of a s~r·a1 In Se Rob rt F Ke ed area to conduct their acUvlties in Dana " "........ · n. e · nn Y· }!arbor. . citizen expression. They are negative in teiligence unit in Japanese-occopied He said he wanted to be rid of the relic
The busy meeting will be kicked orf content, disruptive in effect. They in-China during World War U and the heady \vhlch·could contribute to the violence o(
with a report on last week's 4-1 action fl ame. emotions ratl~er, than stiumla tc ~·orld of flollywood acting lost his la st the times il it felJ into the wrong hands.
by county Supervisors to keep the Or· solution5.." fight Salurday. Fol!OV(ing World War II, said McNulty,
ange County Harbor District. alive. Cjl.ncer claimed the life of Kam D. f.1r. Tong and his brother Frank, who
Commissioners Wednesday also will re-Agnew called !or reCQgnilion of ''a Tong. 62, of 278 Santo Tomas St., after a died· last year, went into the bar and
organize; selecting board officers to hold silent yOllrfg majority w~o go to sc~~I, lengUiy battle that worsened during the restaurant business, owning a popular on~yfiaf terms. and to ~ork, and t~ war 1f .~ecessary. past montJ\. spot_in-t<>S Angeles. c. ·c "Jack'.' Wooley's tenn as chair•·· He said they have been overshadowed OraveskJe-funeral rites for "Mr. 'l'<>ng The cafe on North Broadway was 1 man ~pires soon. by tbt. strreent minority who arrog~te un-will be held i:uesday at t p.m. in Pacific hangout for newspapermen,. writers: and v. th<!"mselves voice, virtu e and power out View Memonal Park, Corona del Mar, policemen and was the source o( many Stock Market '-" or P«'Portion to their 111m~,a)Ml.even. 1 f!ltlJ•t!WJ\.el'-,W!lll•m ~c~n offli;JaUng. . anecdotes, aeeonllng to.M<l'(ulty • '-
mor:e out of proportion ~-~:l1-_ . ....-'lfe bung right in there to the end. He He appeared in such movies and
His speech \vas pttJ)attittf~ -ri ; 1••s-1f'loug1h ''"Y" said freelance writer t I 'slon .i... ,·--~ ""'--<Son 'tJ NEW YORI\; (AP)-Dedines,narrowed . tional, ~IUOIC\,·~ 1eall! *1[!Jl , i ·. '· "':l.iJe.k. McN~i~,· of Corona dei """') ~evi -••" rw•Cfrw••m g, the-!•adil!old ,~ advancel in. in6ifetate Pilil d l·•t , , ""'• .. "t.ove' ll.-1.:11..y-!!Plc"""rl\I. '!11~c· ttal:llflk ·tbJr ~n as the stock .. rnar• · . & ct"' 3t •', •• 1 • •• ·~· '· • ·/• c .. ·frf!nct.ol r;Tong. ;. ' "Have.Gun, .will 11avel1~=<s1g Valley",
ket continued its cour'41 through the win· The veteran actor._ whose Holl)rwp{ld "Rtll i Or;i.gon," and scores of ofher!i.
ning column. (See quotations, Pages ~ career began prior to World War' IJ, com· lie lea ves his Wife Betlf, a gon
u.211. Nixon Plans Visit mon<lod an Office or Sl[ategic Seeuritl" Bernard., a daughter Karen, a brother
Several a.nalysts attributed the fallotr (OSS) outfit in occupled China dur\ng ~ Bf:w Tq, and sistY,S Wiiie ~f. Fong,
to pro(it takinf,, esPeclaJJy In some of \VASHTNGTON (AP) -President Nix· 1944-'45 years of combat. and JerlnJe P,'Chuck.
the ht1h-flyinc ssues. sucll as Memorex.· nn. on Veterans Day, will motor to the. A rare. pistol he carrjed during the Friends wishlna to remember fl.t i. Tong
wlllclt pined 21.polnl!..ill..tbe Jatter.,part_ IV a&!linat• l':teca03 llospllaLto_v • J><rllous.J)SS dulj'.wauurnedJn.to.eo.i._"c.JOSked..to.oootdl>utc nJlls..namc..Jo_
or list wCek:-U was ortr.ilo 155%. some of the , ... atds. ~ ..;~ ?ifesa police by M!· TOng in June, 19$8, lheir-ravorife,Charity.
,
....
Johnson said that., j f mass-produced,
stei m Cars-wrlh-sucll an engIDe Wbuld
cost about one-third the price of a 1970
gasoline driven car.
Joht'lson's finn will produce only en·
gltjes, not cars, he added.
Orange <:oast
Weadaer
Blue -and dry -skies will
beam over the Orange Coast Tues-
day with tC:mperatures inching
back up to the hJgh 8011 alcng the ·
shore and over tht 70 mark furth·
er inland .
INSWE"-TOD,\ Y
Grab yo ut law book. for to-
doy's the tJJtctive date for o
stack of law8 paased by tht statt
ltgillaturt last 1ession. Porno-
grcphy ond-dTU!lk<A driving
crackc.loWM lead th~ list, St•
Po"• B. • ' ,, •• ._ ~ I ,' ,j...t~' •-·n .·.-...11111' I.-1f
Clllftrflll I .._ ... , l .. 11 CllHlllff Jlon NtlleMI ,.... 4-.I
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0.afll Htfl(H It. s_.m tNt
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Ft11er.c• 2'-U Tl'>MMrt M-11 14.....C-H WMltW 4
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IJ
-
• 2 DAil. Y PILOT N M-.,i Nr•• 11, 1M
'Won't Q•ll Nti9'9
Bucher Doubts
• • He'll Get :' ·Ship ..
P'llESllO (UPI) -Former Pueblo
Commander Lloyd M. "Pete" Bucher
l!ays '1chances are not too 1ood" be, will
ever be a lhlp commander 11ain.
Bucher and hi• wife were In Fresno
Saturday to attend t chalice . dinner
spouored by the Knlshts of Columbus.
"I'd llke very much to go shlpbbard
aaain -that's the basic idea of bclng a
naval officer," Bucher said, "but with
lhls management schooling, the chances _
are not too good."
Buch!r 11 now aUendln1 the Naval
Postgraduate School ln Monterey and
hope.s to get a master's decree in
management. • He spent p.vt o( lhe day with Yeoman
J.C. Armando Clnale1 of l'resoo, who
wu 1board the Pueblo at the Ume it was
captured by the North Koreans. Cenales
Jt currently stat.ioned at Lemoore Naval
Air Slatlon.
Bucher aaid he tries to keep in touch
with hia old Pueblo crewmen.
Recounting some of hia experiences
'
DAIL'r PILOT Ii.ff,._..
HIADS FAIRVIEW STAFF
Dr: Antllony N. Toto
Fro111 Page l
FAIRVIEW ...
stair or 1.600 employe1. Ir om
1>3ychiatrists to hotpltal workers who
handle menial chores.
Not nearly enough, says California
Assemblyman LalTY Townsend (D-
Gardena) a member of the A1'9mbly
Health i nd Welf1re Committee.
The Loi Ancet11 county leaialator
toured F1irview State H01pital rectntly,
thtn i.uued a statement In Sacramento
which crlUclud underslafflng and other
coM'eC'tlble problems .
"It is the slate 1y1tem Itself." Town-
send later told the DAILY PILOT, "I'm
not knocklna: anyone. 1 have nothin& but
praise for Fairview."
\\'hatever the compliments and
critlcl1m1 encountered, Fairview Slate
Hoe:plt1l ia 1 very re1l part of the Or1nae
Cotat community, while neccasarily re-
malnina aput in other way1.
This series or articles will be a lour of
miles of corridors and visits wlth its
people, many of wholie lives would have
gone to waete in another Umt.
"J1n't it depr111ing~." is the queslio n
many aek about Fairview and other such
!aeilltle&.
Fairview Slate Hospital Is just a part
of the l1r1er world around us.
And depreutnr or heartenln;. people
make their own views of that.
UAI I Y VII 0 I
DIANll CO.U1 ~·~~·HIM Ce#.ll'ANY
~ l•Mrt N. W1t4
• ,... ....... iou. ....
J•c."' a. c .... 1,.,
..... ,,... ..... Gtotf111 """'*"''
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. J,,.,,.. '· c.111~, ,,._... .,~
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M1IW11t Aitlrtw ,,o. ltt 11r1, t J6•J, --c.i. ,,...., ,.. ......... '''"' LA--..C~· m ~l<nl •-Hlll'll"llw!t lltcll: .. )!fl ....... ,
•
durl111 the ll·month imprisonment,
Bucher told the dlnner rue,,ta that,
despite 11 monlhs in close ·contact, lhe
crew got along together.
"Oh, there were times, particularly
with those who were quarant1ned with
otlitr IUYI for a long'period,'' he sald.
..Afttt a Whtie yoti'd get sick of hearing
the same old story about lhe same old
girl and somebody would get up and
punch somebody, but it was un-
derstandable. No hard feelings remain.''
Bucher noted that after the loq c11>
tivity and aub!llqutnt hearinp on the
capture he feels "much better equipped
both physically and mentally to face any
situation."
Bucher said he had "no way of \nowlnc
what my next assignment ta 1olni to be,"
but that he wanted to stay 1n the Na\')'.
"l have no plans to 1et out," he said.
Fron• Page 1
PROTESTS ...
for refusing to train Green Beret medics.
told the rally, ''Mr. Ni1:on lihouldn't wor·
ry about beln& the first president to lo1e
a war -but should be worried about
being the flnt president to lose l:hl!
Arm'/:" Pr1yen were offered in many churches
throughout ·u~ nation . Sunday f_or the
estimated 1,300 American se.rv1cem~n
missing or held captive in Southeast Asia.
President Nixori had declared the day a
National Dey of Pr1yer and Concern. He
did not attend church 11rvices In Key
Biscayne, Fla., to join publicly in the
observance. A spokesman for the Washington
Cathedral 1ild servlctl there were con·
ducted 11 usual with "noth!n1" to com·
memorate the NaUonal Day of Prayer. ln
Newport News, Va., a pr1yer pr~ir~ at
Todd Stadium drew crowds de1pdt r11n.
Today negotiations continue for th1
route to be followed by the antiwar
demonstrator• in W1ahlngton amid
government warnings of violence and
;\Jlurances from prote1ter1 that they
plan only pu.cefut dlllent.
Harlow repeated Sunday the 1ovem·
ment'a contenUon "that there i• an aclive
poulbili\l' of vlolonc<."
"The Department of Justice said th•
Wuhington 1uthoritie1 must be ex·
trertm7 cartful in how they handle thla, ·•
Harlow uld, "portlcularly in !he vicinity
nf the major public bulldinl• 1uch 11 tbe
White House."
Protest planners denied the predl¢ion!I
nf vioience. Dr. Benjamin SPoCk accused
the administration of trying to fri1httn
1way dlmonltratof•·
''It's perfectly clear Uiat the talk of
violence is all coming from tht govern-
ment," Spock said. "The government i1'
tryinf in every way to intimidate people
who are comin& to protest aaainat the
war. Preside11t ~ixon ls desperately
trying to make it appear the American
peopl~ are behind him when in fact they
are not."
Mr$. Martin Luther King Jr. said, "If it
can keep them away, the 1GVernm1nt can
say ~pie tre 11tllfled 1hd want the war
to continue."
The week'a first demOllltrations In
\Vashiniton will come from the pro-ad·
ministration side wilh two major events
on Veterans Day.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burce.r. 1oapel
sinaer MahaJia Jackaon and Medal of
Honor winner Rodolfo C. tlernandei will
headline lhe official proiram Tuesday in
Arlington National Cemetery.
This will be followed by a rally at
\Vashington 11-fonument being 1pon1ored
by the American Lesion and Veteran• of
Forelsn Wars. The rally is desi1ned to
pl't:lvide thOH persons the President call-
l"d the "silent majority" a chance to
sh<>w their opeoslUon to the war critics.
* * * Document Vrges
All-out Attacks
SAIGON IAP) -A Viet COn1 dOCU•
ment found 30 mlle1 ea1t of Saigon ca\lli
for intensive attack• In that region lhi11
wttkend to support the antiwar protest
march on Washington Saturday, official
sources said today .
The sources 11id the document Wl!l
taken last Tuesda,y from the body of
tither a courier or a liaison officer who
v.•as killed in a firefight with Au stralian
forces.
The. directive, believ~ to have been
Issued by the Viet Cong's local head·
quarters at Vuna Tau, was dated Oct . 27.
It s11.ld: "Jn support or the upcomln&
f!lruggle of U1e American people for
pe1ce of South Vltln111m and the
withdrawal of U.S. trooP1 from South
Vleln•m. wt ire to launch ln11n1lve •I·
tacks in 111 aapccla on the enemy on Nov.
Ji-15."
Badham Slates
Talk Tuesday
Ammblymon llobert E. Badha"' CR·
Newport Stach} will talk about reap-
portionment and 11.t pollllcal lmpacl
'rueid1y nl1ht 1t lhe Newporter Inn.
The 7:30 p.m. meeU111 of the H11rbor
Area Youna Republicans I! open to the
publl~. according to Joan Carl, YR
publici$l.
>.rttr • Quest.ion and answer atssion,
rt f"'ahmtnt will be served in the Lido
),OlUljC.
DAI\. V PILOT .....,. 1tr 111....,. K•llr
Communists
Stepping Up
Offen siv e
SAIGON (UPI) -communist troopll
intensifying their ofrensive along Iha
CambQdian bor~er innicted h e I v Y
casua1Ue1 on a U.S. Speeial Forces c1mp
Sunday and today, riddled two helicopter
gunshJps with intense ground flre and at-
tacked a U.S. alr field, lnflicUna con·
alderable damage.
The series of attacks ranged alone thP
border from Bu Prang, 112 mile.~ north nf
sai,on, to the air base al Ban ~le Thuot,
50 rpllu to the north. Nortb Vlet°'1ftese
Communists have ma'5ed an esUm1ted
7 ,000 men ln the 1rea against South Viel·
namese ground forces.
The attack• coincided with disclosure
thal 1 captured Coi:µmunist docwnent
from 1 liaison runner called for "in·
tensive attacks" throughout sOulh Viet-
nam tO support the antiwar protest
march on Washington scheduled for next
Saturdav.
The aitacks on the allied mer_ctnsrits
there killed three U.S. special forces me n
advising the tribesmen troops and that
one 90-man mercenary company took
two-thirds casualties, meaning llO men
killed or wounded. The Communists lost
12 known dead.
FIR!MAN WASHES GASOLINE FROM COAST HIGHWAY FOLLOWING SUNDAY ACCIOENT
Huntington Man Stops for Ch lck1n, St•rta Ch•ln Reaction Cr•1h In Coron• d1I Mar
1in4 Children Need Huntington Man
Involved in CdM
Auto Collisions Foster Home-Recruiter
One out of four children of today'a
generation will spend some time ln a
fo1te r home, according to Orange County
foster home recruiter Bert Knight.
Knlsht, a Laguna Beach resident, said
Edison Athl ete
Hurt in Game
Reported Better
Sam P'u1a. 11.yur-old Edison Hl1h
School football player who was serlouslJ
injured Friday night, is reparted im·
proving today.
O!flclals at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach aald the youth, althoualt
l!uffer:lrig a broken neck, was showing
definite 1igns of improvement and had
regained the ability to move his arms and
logs.
He ls still in the intensive. care ward
where he ha1 been tince ht wa1 rushed IG
the hospital Friday night after being in·
jured In the seeond play.of the same.
Mark Naylon, l}year-old Edlson High
junior var1lty player, died one week ago
of head Injuries 1uffered' in a football
same Oct. 18.
Hearing Dela yed
In Liquor Thefts
Two defendants In a liquor lhe!t case
Involving Fellciano's Restaurant i n
Newport Beach Thursday won con-
llnuJnce until Nov. 14 of a court pro-
cetdinC in which they will answer an in·
d\ctment by the Orange County Grand
Jury.
Eugne Rondondo, 4Z, 1501 Cornwall
Lane, Newport Beach, and Charles
Dryer, 31 , 1846 Sunst Rldae Drive,
Lacuna Btach must answer the In·
dlctment char~ng grand theft, burelary
and consplr1cy from several liquor
distributors and a motel·restaurant firm.
The defendants' re.quest for con·
tinuance waa granted In superior court.
They Y.11\I return next Friday !or the
lame process.
Dl1lrlct attorney's Investigator• aaid
lhty expected that the case might go to
trial In Superior Court sometime next
year.
Sirl1an in Trance
Says Hypnotist
LAS VEGAS (UPI} - A California
p~ychlotrist 1ald Sunday that Sirhan
Sirhan wa~ in ;i stlf·induced hypnotic
i;tate when he killed Sen. Robert Ken·
nedy.
Or. Bem1rd Di1mond. medic•! hyp-
notirt and dean of the school of
criminology at tht University o f
California, said he used hypnosis to ex·
"mll'tt Sirhan in preparation for his
defenae prior to his tri1:I.
Dt11mond told the 14th IMual con-
ven tion or the American Institute of h)'l)·
noal s th•l the examlnaUoos revealed
Sirhan had no COlllCious knowted1e of
!!hoolll\I Kennedy or of entries m1dt in a
notebook which 11ld "RFK must dlr."
Offi ces in New port
To Close ou. Tuesday
Newport Btach City Hall ard Ila pulJ.
lic ltbrarles will close Tuesd1y for Vtt·
tram: Chiy .
City tr-1ah plckllp.,-ho\\'ever, y.·\Jl pro-
1'ced tts usuaf bu~ rt1ildl!nt1 art uraed io
put lh(Jr containers out early.
•
the county Welfare Department'• efforts
to provide foster care will be dlSCUNed
We~nesday at 8 p.m. at the E. A. Rea
School, &01 Hamilton Ave., Costa Mesa.
He said the program will feature a
~pcaker and a film titled "The Homeless
Child."
Knisht called It an 11 0peratton
Awareness" program. "We need many
n1ore foster homes for children who must
live outside their own homes." he said.
The pro1r1m 11 open to the public. There
i~ no charce.
Go to Springs
Via Bay Area
\t.w111 soon be poalible to take u Air
CaltrornlJ.~ fljlhl from Oranfe COunty
Airport to P•ffl\ Sr.rings -with a stop-
over In San fr111c aco. 1'ht county-baaed line ha! won Cali-
fornia Public UUUtle1 Commission per-
mi11lon to provide aervlce bt;tween Palm
Spring! and the Bay Area citle1 of San
Fr1nclsco, Oakland and San Joee.
Air Cal will u11 Boeina 737 jet.a for lhe
flight.I to the deaert resort from San
Francl1co. One.way fare will be $20.
about $8 undtr the rato now diar1ed by
ot.her alrUne1.
Two trlP1 a day. will be'gin "as soon as
posalbl,,'• Air C•l 1poke.1men sald.
A driver pulling out of a Corona de.I
Mar fried chicken 1hop Sunday nl1ht
touched off a series of crashes which sent
a South Gate youth to the hospital with
major injuries, police reported.
Daniel Wilson, 18, South Gate, suffered
severe face cut!! and a broken kneecap in
the 6:15 p.m. crash at Iris Avenue and
East Pacific Coast l1ighway.
Police said William Barry Gillenwater
of 9151 Capaa St., Huntin1ton Beach, was
pulling out of the chicken establishment
when hil car collided with one driven by
Eddy Ac0&ta, 21, Saliet1y.
Ac.:osta's car, carrying Wilson, c1romed
off the other auto and croned the h11hway
hiting 1nolhtr vehicle head-on.
The driver o! the head~n car was
Lawrence Johnson of Omaha, Neb.
Only Wilton auffered m1jor "injuries In
the craaht1, police said. The other driv·
crs complained of minor pa ins and brui~·
es. Officers 1aid Wilson was treated al
Hoac Memoria l Hospital.
Ae rial Train Studied
FRF.SNO (UPI) -The Sierr1 Club
sliys officlal11 at Yosemite National Park
art. "seriously considertn1" the Jn-
stallaUon of an aerial tram to whl1k
sightseers from Yosemite Valley to
Glacier Point.
Suddenly, It's Sprl1111
As spring arrives in Australia ,
eyes of seasoned girl watchers
fall naturally in the direction of
girls like Rosemary King, 22.
who brightens Sidney scene
\Yhile wearing bolero top with
gla.ss insets.
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
•
the new home of
Newport National Bank's Airport Office
This is an extremely convenient locat ion for lho se who t1 se I!:
MacArthur Blvd. frequently. Michelso n is near lhe San Diego
freeway, Ne,vport r~reeway and across from the Orange
County Airport. Open your ac:count al this co nvenient
location and en joy AMPLE PARKING ••. SPEED WINDOWS
FOR PEAKl'ERIODS .•• BUILT-IN CUSTOMER ADDING
MACHINES.,. COFFEE AND COOKl~S .•• SIT-DOWN
TELLERS ••• UNIQUF. WELCOME CENTER . , ,
PATIO BANKING.,. BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED.
@ EVERYONE IS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE ..•
REFRESHMENT AND GIFTS -
Servin& th1 1111ds of tht il'dustrial tompltt.
: .. . .. "':{J • f \. •
•
of
p ..
p
p
rr
11
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---~·-·~~------..... --~--------....-----.--r---------~--------·
'
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
~· --,.,.,... .. p .. "
•
• MERRIMENT ABOUNDS -Attuned to the festive Thanksgiving
~eekend and the highlight of that time. the SJlllUal Naijonal Char-
ity League Oebutante Ball, are members and spOuses of the span:
am. MtuM ~
soring orgilnizalion. In a festive mood are (left to right) Richard
\Valter Smith, Airs. John Christian Londelius, i1rs. Jack Linden
Caldwell, ball director, and Caldwell _
~· '
E_xcitement o:f Debut Mounts
Excitement is mounting for
. ~nts of National c:;harity . League deb\ltantes_
filled moment of .when the traditional series or. parties, Smith, whose· daughter was
young ladies ma~~UJ.e · r ;and thil ye~rj,11.l)C>Q:~. _ J>Jestl1ted,lulyear.? " fonruil bow to soci<ljl. '. Sharing -llie 1lmellslii:W.re -. A'lio acceptlng"'bosl 'tiles On Thanksgiving y;eekend
they .will be reunited with the
coeds who will be returning
from roI.leges 'arid highlighting
the vaca~oo will. be ~ pride·
The ball, spclOSOl:ed bY. the debut.antes' parents who weie were other parents d 1968
Newport Chapter t£,F.CL,' will the honored guests during a debutantes, Dr. and Mrs. Earl
take place Saturdff. Nov. 29, festive coclttail party Jven Wllllam Haskell and th e
in the Newporter IM. ' .ye.11terday in the home Mr. Mes.m. and.. Mmes. CharJes
Leading Up to the ~11 is' a . and Mrs. ~chard Waller Hislop Barr, Claude E~in
'Ni~efy _ Sur,v·ivin'g•
Bowing's _StilJ • _Style In
By LINDA KRAMER
(AP} -In an era marked by youthful
protest against the alleged injustices and
false values set by their elders, certain of the
traditionaJ niceties of a bygone era neverthe-
1ess have managed to survive.
Among these is the custom of presenting
a young girl to society, known as a debut or
"corning-out."
"I do think debuts have a value for some
people," comments Miss Beatrice Joyce,
founder of tbe International Oebutante Ball.
"Certain girls look forward to them, and
deb parties are still a nice way for you n g
girls to meet young men."
Debuts aJso are valuable, she adds, be-
cause they help to "keep the young people
!rom becoming hippies and things.''
Debutante balls today vary widely as to
style and type. The trend is toward mass
presentations as "people do not have the
homes or help they used to," says Miss Joyce ...
A mass debut as opposed to a single
presentation , increases the selection of boys,
"especially u so many of our young men to-
day are in the armed forces."
At the lnten1ationa1, held annuaJly in late
December, about 50 girls bow to society, One
o! the objecti~s of the 15-year-old gala, ac-
cording· to Mis,, Joy:ce.i is to· promote Interna-
tional .frlenil1hip. · ·
· The, .reliutairtes .wme: from all p,ai:u of
the Uni,ted Sljites and' Ii-om about 15 .'roreign
countries. . ·
This year Maureen Finch, dai.Jgtiter of
Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare
Robert Finch, will represent the United
States. A Pakistani prjncess and several
countesses from France also will be present-
ed.
The girls invited to the ball usually are
related to postdebs or they are friends of the
ball's committee. Miss Joyce remarks that
the committee "tries not to hurt anyone," al-
though the members like "to keep it as dis-
tinguished as possible."
Actually, any group that wishes to do so
can sponsor a debutante ball; whether it be
a bowling league or a country club. Member-s~ip in the Social Register is not a prerequi·
site.
Debuts are notoriously costly affairs. The
International charges $60 a ticket for the deb,
her parents, her escort, and her party or
friends.
Each deb usually has a table for about
10 or so of her friends. Add to that $200 to
$300 for a white gown.
However, debuts do raise money for wor· thy causes.
,
Meeks, Clyde McDaniel Hom,
· Allen .TbomaS Campbell, Paul
Joel Wllllldils, wuu.m i;.pp
O'Bryon and John Christian
l.ondelius. Mfs. Londelius was
party chairman.
Honored guests• were Dr.
and Mi's. Nolan· Frfu:elle and ,
the Messrs. and MmeS. Jack
Lindert Caldwell, M 8 I Ci>' I m
. Cutler, John LeOn Laun Ji'.,
· ~ge Edward Newton,
Robert stanley Ro sen as t,
. Haru: William Vogel and &y
Blakeney Woolsey.
SPECIAL DELIVERY -Mrs. Herber! Dewitz ;s one of a dozen mem-
bers delivered to Opera League ranks th·anks tO.,a recent nien,iber~hip
drive, and Mrs. stanley Eichstaedt is enthusiasqc about the situation.
New members will be feted at a party Tuesday, Nov. 18.
League .Recruits Pu t'
Also invited . were Chapter
board members and 1their
husbands, 11,irs. ~ward [4!isy
Corlett, presideiit, and Dr. , ~
Corlett, and the Messrs~ and
Mmes. Richard Curlis Rawl-
ings, Richard Lans.ing · Lawrence, Herbert J o h n
Meany, Robert Hayes.
f1.tarshall James StyU, Meeks,
Howard LaWI'el}Ce Bryan Jr.,
Wllll~m Raymond Scholle,
Earl Stafford Olrich and Lee
Paxton Jordan Jr.
In Party S.potl i'ght . . \ i Opera League members will celebrate the success of\tbeir meipbe11-
1:~ ship drive last month with a Getting-to-know-you ·Party 'in \Batel Laguna
lllf Tuesday, Nov. 18.
Mrs. George William
Elerding, rehearsal director
and Dr .. ,Elerdlng were asked
to come from Los Angeles.
Mrs. Caldwell i.s ball direc-
tor and assisting her are the
Mmes. Meany, James Richard
White, Edwin Terrence Moran
Ill, John Hallam Hiestand,
Russell R e e d Langenbeck,
Melvin Daniel Kilmer 1r11
Llsso Stewart Mims, Rawlings, Jordan, Wahlers 0 I and er,
Donald Eugene Neptune, Dan
Eugene Bayless, Jack Keith
Samuels, Peter Duyan Jr.,
Holmes Mills, Guy Austin
Smith, Rosena.st and Henry
Wagner Jr. They and their
husbands: also attended the
gala.
Presented to ·~icty duri ng
the &Mual ball will be the
Aflsses Janis Linden Caldwell,
Stephanie Cutler, Di an e
Frizzelle, Kristine L a u n ,
Roby_nn Alberta Newton, Carol
Jean Rosenast, Rhooda Di·
anne Vogel and Barbara Lau-
ise Woolsey.
~ A dozen new members, along with prospective supporjers, will·-be ·
guests of honor al the alfair which is to begin with a gettin11-acquainted
t. hour at noon. '• \ ·
'
To create an intimate atmosphere, luncheon at 1 p.m . ...,~ be served
at small tables. Senior members will be hostesses to the new 1<eeruits.
Introductions will be made by Mrs. C. Sidney Johnston '.of Laguna
Niguel, president of the league which supports Lyric Opera Association
of Orange Cou_nty. Coming fµnd ·raising events, beginning with ~ Holiday
Hol!le Tour Dec. 14, will be summarized by Mrs. Jay 0. Pyle of Newport
Beach, ways and means chairman. '.
Mrs. John C. Nichols of South Laguna ls chairman of the hospitaJi ..
ty committee for the affair. Assisting her are the Mmes. Craig Ketcham,
Jack Lyons and Elizabeth Sill Hanes. _ \ _
All women interested in joining the league are invited to atteml, and
tickets are $3.50 Iler person. Attractions will include a door prize. \
Reservations may be made until next Friday by calling the Mmes.
Thomas Armstrong 0£ Laguna Niguel, treasurer, 495-5335; Zachary M~aby
of Laguna Beach, vice prjsident, 494-4494, or William Wittman of Emerald
Bay, recording secretary. 4~760. . · l
New members to be welcomed are the Mmes. Mary Neher, Ec!win
Hay, H. A. De"yiney, Robert Karg, Vernon H. Grant, R. J . DrexiliuS, 1Jo-
seph E. Jensen Jr., Wilbur C. Wagner, R. N. Lewis, W. S. Hanne.nberg,
Morse Cobrs, Matteo Nardini, George M. Lawler, V.F.A. Ostby, Herliert
Dewitz and Rita Myers.
I 'M I onroe s Doctr·ine' -Free Trade With No Entanglements
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm a 38-year-who lel those three teenage girls into her credi'. me -give the credit to the
Old bachelor of average looks and ~rne. whetLtlieY pounded on her door, Emporia Board of Education. ~lity. I have an average position frightened to death by a deranged man
and I live in an average apartment. ~ly who exposed himself. -MRS. L. problem is "''Omen. DEAR MRS. L.: lt'1 bard ti believe
These days it takes courage to open-~•t la America we Med Wlter 1tatloe1 I am taking out five different ones at one'• door _ to anybody. We, In wbere lld1 08' Uielr way to ud from
present. ~Y all.Jlave the same goal _In Emporia, Kan. hit on a solution to the 1ti.o,I cu. ~ wbea dtey .... ,..
mlnd -marriage. 'Jbese are not silly, after four datu, .. If we were married, position clear without hurting anybody's problem. Perhaps you'd like to pass It on tec:tlon. Bat It• He of die tragic rellKtH
frivolous girls. They are between 32 and our combined 1ncomea: would enable both feelings. to your readeiS il'i other Cities: We have or oar time and we _man f1et IL My
mention it to her family?
--WNCERNED NOT
DEAR CONCERNED: Are . 71 •
ablOla&ely certabl ol )'OUI' fadl? U IO,
uk year coabl ff. llte it aware tf lier
friead:l1 ... &ory. u ... b, tffer .. ~
meat. Merely uy~ "I jut .........
make IU'e >:oa bew." DI Mt tell m
f1mli)'.
' ' I
. .
4$ years of age. l am happy in my or us to live a lot better than either of us , implemented a plan to help children who tllu!L&e..ytu for wrlt1a1 aid a carlud .
present state and have no desire to &ettle ts living now. How about It?" Miss c (a -NO STRINGS MONROE might run Into trouble on-the wav to and of rotel to dlJ Emporia, kn. 8olnl ol
down. I might reconsider one day, but ror career girl) &aid after two theater d::ites DEAR NO STRINGS: Any PY wJto can from school. It Is the Block "Mother Educallon.
Drinking may be nin" to tM kids yOO -
the time being l want no ties. and one concert: "I am not a loose juggle five women at a dme and ba11
but r -·'d managed to avoid foreign entanglements system. These women are selected by the DEAR ANN LANDERS M cous1n In case you think I am imagining woman, Wvw consider going lo bed for as yein doetn'l need •ny Hvlce from home room teacher from kindergarten · : y ' things, I'd Jlke to give you a few sample with you if you told '1'f you had marriage Ann Landers. The ~fonroe Doctrhtt, as through grade 12. Tile motheni have with whom J have never betn very clole,
.. ntences. Mll.!I A said to me after two in mind." placards in the front window -,...ft on is dating a man l know lw served Ume you practice It, 1etm1 to be extremely ef· """" for armed roblliery He hu been married __ d_ates. ••yf!lilU] be 40 In two Ye.!rs -~•;;nd;;.--~~:l,.:h;;att to comer ht out an<!_ say..l' ~·_I am feclh·e. every block. Tho children are Instructed twice and ha.a a e.Year.old son. "
that's no 1nymore. oo-ileoino aet e no: temt<<nii mmr.ge:'rniii! l:Ka;r~=~------~=---to-gu to-theae·home1·H U..,.-nm·lftto--u """-'-'fcan!'Ofbili<ve'i1ij'l!OO>llf-• ortt
down. l'm wiUlng to give up my freedom ofiee and the woma11 bawled fOr two OE.AR ANN LANDERS : I'd llkt to add ble. past. She ii a One penon, but 'l!T1' naive.
ml matr7 you.• Mn. B. l• widow) •l!fl hours. Pleaae tell me how to mike my my word> of pralae for 1111! kind woman If you use this l•t!f• Ann, pleue don't Sball 1 tell her,, or would H be'better to
'
run with'_..:. bUt It can put yOi.I "out'' for
keeps. You can cool It and stay popui•r.
Read "Boote and You -For Teenagn
Only," by AM Landen. 'Send 35 centa In
coin Ind a tong, self lddreaaed, Slamped
evelup• with your" request.
Ann .Londo"-will be gild to help JOU __
wltlryouq1roolomlcSmt thom-to:t.rir
care or the DAIL y Pit.Or encloolol I .
aeH-lddfwecl. •tamped envelope. 1
•
•
Mond>Y, N°"mbo< 10, 1969
(Little Designers 1 Wi~ Competition
' : Receiving $50 5avines Boods and two Attilan out-.''.1ita ""' Jill Walker (left), 10, of Westmin£1er and
Deoeece Glenn (right), 7, of CoN Mesa ..., won
second-place honors in the Utt!~ desiper <lOlllpel~
Horoscope
Aries:
lion sponsored by May Co. with Monsanto Textiles
Division and Jabberwocky. With them is a.represen-
tative from the latter firm, Miss Paula NoVIck.
I
Revise Plans
Speakers
Thankful
Are We Thankful!
Members of Las Ol&s
ToutmlstreN C l u b , Hun.
Unl\00 Beacll, will dllcUll the
topic -they meet at 7:111 p.m. Wednuday, Nov. 12, 1n
the Mercury S1vlnp and Loab
bulfdllljf.
Mra. J . M. Clark will &lve
her cet-iu:qualnttd 1peech and
Mr•. G1ry Giies ,
tou\miJtrHT, will . lntroduct
Mrs. Ralph . Almgren, Mrs.
Velma Bolln and Mrs. Hal
Hermanru.
Actlnc aa timekeeper will be
Mn. Clarence Double, and an
edueallon eaplllle will be <JI,
fered _by Mils Pat Ha)'nell.
Mrs. Calvin 'Olcott will Jud
Impromptu topica, and the
clOllog thought "" i I I be prne.oJed by Mrs. Pa u I
Bronlon.·Serving as evaluator
wUI be Mr1. AJ!an Kennedy.
Toastmistress c 1 u b s are
open to all women interested
In developing poise and co11·
fideoce. For information call
Mn. Rollo West, 536-3052. •
Twins Club
PRETTY GIRLS' MELODY -To help establish a dress code for their sch.ool,
Arevalos girls from Fountain Valley spent a month studying good_ groomrng,
and awards were presented during a fashion show at the concl~s1on of the
course. Mrs. Mike Gavin, learning coordinator, congratulates winner Kathy
Hughes.
Eyes Eyes Education in Fashion -Dr. Barbara Mitchell will
speak (In Eye Problems when
the Orange Coast Mother• of
Twins Club meets Wednesday,
Nov. 12, ln the Villa Sweden
restaurant, Huntington Beach.
Grooming Aids Code
A 90ejal hour at 7 p.m. will In order to help establish requested the advi~ o( a
be followed '6y dinner at I. a school dress code, girls in dennatologist, cosmetologist,
Dr. Mitchell, who has been fifth through eighth grades fashion advisor and school dis-
pracUcing opthalmology in attending Arevalos School, trict health CQOrdinator to
Loni Beach, recently opened Fountain Valley, have just work with them on general
an office in HunUngton Beach. completed a month's program and individual grooming prob.
Among the eye d!IOl'ders she in good grooming. lems.
will discuss ls d Y s I el i a To learn "what's good and Mrs. Mike Gavin, learning
(reading disabilities). what isn't," the young women coordinator for the Fountain
All mothers of twins In the Valley School District, said
Atea are invited to attend the the girls spent a great deal of
meeting and reservations.may Weavers Show time in small groups discuss-
the fashions they selected with
the assistance of Miss Barbara
Stacey, Sears fashions coonfi..
nator. A real cooperative ef·
fort, the show involved even
lhe boys in set designs, ar·
ranging the room and taping
the music.
TUESDAY
NOvr:MIER 11 "! l'fDNBY i>MARR
mantlc aura perslats. Excel· here to principles or golden be made by calling Mrs. Gary ing dress standards. "To them,
_Jent f~ organizing charitable rule. You are going to sue-Clements, 842-3534. !be school dress code isn't a
enterprilea. ElpeciaUy good ceed. A Christmas boutique to Wares at Tea table of rules and regulations;
At the conclusion or ihe pro-
gram a1va rds were presented·
·by Mrs. Michael Brick, wife
of the district superintendent,
and girls showing the most
progress v.•erc presented with
a nosegay from the superin·
tendent 's o!fice.
VALRIE DAVIS
lletrothocl
March Day
Selected
The ,engagement of Valrie
. Jean Davis and Pau l Calvin
Adling has been announced by
tifr. and Mr!. Guy E. Davi! of
Fountain Valley, parents of
the bride-to-be.
tifiss Davis is a graduate ot.
Fountain Valley High School
and attended Golden West
Colleie.
Her (iance, &On o( Mrs.
Sfe!'Ast I • Sagittarius.
..... If tran:I ••e:rie re-...._ Cs:awnd&I pa.blica-
U., " ...... ill war ud -..-... ~ .. --
AltlEI (-2t·April 19)'
'-)llneJ, ...wo. · o1 ba·
s.ic pims, J1U11aiDc beyond cur-
ftft1. la:i:a& indicated. Be
vtnalilL '!lie .put need not
don±ste present thoughts,
I CtimL 'J'biU.
TAualJS (April 211-May 20)' Acrttilitllt en funds can be
reached today. Member of OP-
poeite Je:J: has: been insistent.
RMch decision which is fair,
but doesn't cost ex c es~
amount Message clear by to-
night.
GEl\UNI (May 21-June 20 ):
Study Taurus message. You
are due 1o aet answer to vit.al
question -coukl affect public
relations and marital status.
Stress change, travel, variety.
CANCER (June 21.July 22 ):
Your diet and how you handle
yourself during criaes are
highlighted. Key is to set mod-
erate pace-and to practice
moderation. Adjust domestic
situation. Do so diplomatic·
ally.
LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): Ro-
for appearances before large AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. benefit the club's philan· it's a program. Kids ore help-
gro1ps. y°':I ar:trdynaedmic, op-18 ): Some of your aspirations thropic program is being pla~ \Voven arti cles and . yarns ing kids analyze the thing they ~m'oo"1 11 1 act · 1nay require revWon. Be will-ned for December. and all will be on di.splay and for sale wear in terms of standards
M In (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): ing to tear down in order to proceeds will be used to aid when the South Coast they help develop," she mai~ oney, ve!tments, ba sic se-bu'ld M ·1h Weavers' Gu1'ld I•c hosts 1·ts ta1··ed. 't hi hl 'gh re J • any are w 1 you. needy families with twins. • ... , " curl Y are I 1 led. Deal Know this and exude confi· November lea and sale next Airs. Joseph Zimmerman, with one who claims lo have dence, charm. Thursday Jn the Santa Ana important backing. You soon owne r of the Daisy Patch
learn whether Individual is PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20): Unusual Bow Library. Dress Shop and former home substantial or otherwise. Get Written word brings gain. Mrs. L. I. Dow will present economics teacher, was invit-
at truth. · Read and write. Absorb and 1 workshop during the morn-ed to give professional advi ce
LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0cL 22 ): disseminate knowledge. No For Gift Box ing on finishing with knots and on line and design of garments
Talking alone does not suf-day for being superficial. Say other techniques. in rl.'laUon to figure types and----------
lice ·, you need a written slate-what you 'me,n-mean wha t Easy to Make Saclt lunches and cookies what would be appropriate for Top Sports Coverage
First place wenl lo 12-year-
old Ka thy Hughes, who also
received a JO-week scholarship
to a charm school from Sear.~.
Others receiving certificates of
merit included Lori Partin, Su-
zanne EUickson, Teresa Maz-
:r.owla, Brenda Metz, Lisa Kol·
linger, Rosalind Radam snd
Debbie Fennell.
you say. Top ""rson makes ill be a 'labl f h :r· · ment, aereement. Expansion r~ w va1 e or pure ase .specu.1c occasions.
dul.'. Your mannl.'r, style are appraisal. ·ro make an unusual five-and there is a $2 charge fo r 'fo conclude the month-long in The Da ily Pi!ot
appreciated. You r e c e 1 v e IF TODA y IS y o u R Inch bow for 8 gift package,; fr.:th=e=w=o=r=ks:h:op:.:::::::::::::::~~p~ro~g~ra~m~·~lh~egg~ir~ls~m~od~e~led~~~~~~~~~~i'j meaningful compliment. Stand BIRTHDAY you are intuitive. cut ribbon into 14 pieces, each
tall. a natural teacher. You are 16 inches long.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): always willing to experiment M k 1· I f New approach could res ult in and to share knowledge. Cur-a c a igure eig 11 rom solid f1.nancia t gai·n. You add 1 ·od 1 ba . 1 each piece. Moisten and secure ren peri o Sic rustra-at the center. Then moisten
to possessions. I.to individual lion is about to be erased. You and attach one figure eight
could play paramount role. will be on the move. crosswise at the cen ter of
This ls a day to pay, collect , another . d b o find out mote 1t1aul you.,eU e ls-includes favors. •nd -.11ro1on. "'"''' srane~ em.er·• c t' I I · 1· ' SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22. .st-Ne• '**'"'· TM t rvih ,&,bout on 1nue at ac 11ng 1gure
Dec. 21)' Cycle high·. ci·rcum -"11ro10t1r. Send blr1tw;1111 1nc1 ~ eights to the center. crosswise
'""" lo am..rr Bootii.t '"" 0,&,ILY h t' f'] th bu . stances favor your special ef-~1Lo1, Box 12.0, Gr•nd Ct<1!r•I 511. cac ime, un 1 e w ts
forts. A1ake contacts. Stress tion, N..-Yort:, H.Y. 10011, complete. ~realer independence. Be orig.Ii=====================;!
1nal. Your hun ches pay divi-
dends. Your timing is sharp.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Remember those who
might be confined lo home
hospital. Llttle consideratio~
today goes a Jong way. Ad-Maureen Barton of Goleta and
Walter Adling of Buena Park,
is a graduate of Western High
School and attended Cypre ss
Junior Colle~. He presentJy is
Rationed at camp PendleWn
with the U.S. Marine Corp.~.
Gardeners Get Preview
The couple plan to marry
March 14.
Holiday Settings Seen
Song Fest
Date Noted
'fa ble se tting !I for
1'hanksgiving and Chri.stmas
along with other arrangements
appropriate for the holidays
will be shov.•n by Mrs. A .. J.
Anlosik v"hen Laguna Beach
Garden Club meets In the
Wmian's Clubhouse at I ::Kl
p.m. Friday, Nov. 14.
Apprnach to Beauty Threugh •
Design will be Ult theme of
the flower arranging lecture
aardening proiram in pro-
gress in that country. I
Mrs. Neil H. Lewis. tea
chairman, will be assisted byl
the Mmes. Norman Alexander
Georie R. Campbcil. S. Be~'I
Ca rlton, Norris Ca v a Ii er .
James R. Cavitt. J. Orvill~1 Chilton, 8. Dean Clanton. Jack1 Cole. Leonard Davis, Charles/
Dillinger, Dales A. Dunbar.
Jea!ie Dungan and Robert
DuSoe.
Banjo and piano mu.sic will
fill the Senior Citizens Recrea-
tion Cenlu. Newport Beach,
when \be' Night Owls o! the
Newport Beach Hoot 'n Holler
Roost 1atheT Sunday, Nov. 16,
at 2 p.m.
and demonstration to be -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~/I presented by the clubwomanl I
who also is a flower arrana
teacher in Floral Arts Stud1o,
Jot Chapelle ol Costa Mesa.
banjoist, will be accompanied
on lhe piano by Mrs. G. L.
Stewert and song sheets will
be distributed for g r o u p
singing.
The group ls asking con-
tributions for the Chrlstma.,
bazaar table and currl.'ntly is
planning the annual Chri!lmas
party for Sunday, Dec. 14. in
the Sheraton Beach Inn, Hun-tinston ~ach.
Laguna Beach,
A display of Korean
gannenl.s. u ten s i Is and
artifacts also will be presenled
by Col. Frank E. Gillette,
state chairman of World
Gardening of Ca l i fornia
Garden Clubs, Inc.
Col . Gillette lived In Korea
for many years. lie will give a
short talk. on the world
LID f\LLEY
STRICTLY JUNIORS
NOW OPEN ... In The Alley Of
VISIT US
For Yell!'
Co111plt to
Moter11ity
WtrdroDo 1f
ro1111111 b111
pri~OI , • ,
CATHY'S
• • •
J4J4 VIA LIDO
NIW,lf llACH
AU. CWIJ
~··· wrLCOMI
MA TERN/TY SHOP 7-j~f--'-,11n-N-,ertlJ,d:--
e·.1~ ~ ,4,.fll1
% . .
FASHIONS BY Gl YCINE
OF SWITZERLAND
Ladies 14 karat gold diamond watch es
In an the latest styles.
From left: $395. $595.
Wilh t\Jrquol• dial, $795. $295.
SLA..VICK'S
11 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -6H-l l80
01N11 M111ll1y, ,rllliry ••tll f :JI ,.111. .. ... ROBINSONS NE'NFORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800
l
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J
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.VOL. 62, NO. 269, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE ~um. CAt1FOltNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER ·10, 19lo9 ••
f
"
• .
'T..,.'s Fln•I
N.l'. Stoe.lu
TEN CENTS
. Fairview, 'O·f·fers Home-and Hel.p ..... to 2,252
'
Sentiment, Hqnior Cheer Patients, Sta.ff
. DArl.Y l'ILOT Sl•ff P'llet9
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL IN COSTA MESA -44 WAROS SCATTERED OVER 400 ACRES
This is Home for 2,252 R•terded Per.sons Renging in Age F rom Seven Days to 13 Years
Editor's Note: Hore and hopeless·
m11 live ride by 1(de in the rooms
and wards of Fairview Stale Hospital,
an imtitution that is 10 much a part,
yet 10 Jar apart from the Orange
Coast community. This is the first of
six articles in a special report on the
/lospital for the mentally retarded.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ""' Dall~ P'llfl 51•ff
One can't see them from the roadway,
but Peanut.s comic strip characters
dCCQrate top floor windows of the big
peach·colored building with aluminum
sunshades.
The cheery theme can also be seen in
other rooms.
This is Fairview Slate Hospital -or at .
least all that many know about-the four·
story structure at 2501 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, built a decade ago.
It is home-temporary or
permanent-for 2,252 retarded persons.
They range in age from seven days to 83
years. All are classed as children. All
have special netds.
Almost all have something to ~ive.
The familiar little people who populate
a paper world that is a genuine refleclion
of our own-the P e a n u 1 s charac-
ters-have characteristics in common
\Vllh humans at Fairview.
Pleasure. Loneli ness. A sense of
bewilderment with a complex world. The
'vonder of learning new things. within
their limits. A sense of achievement al
doing so. Sqmetlmes fear.
Very often, love.,
Three stories below those decorated
pediatrics wards, in lhe office of. the man
in charge is ·another Peanuts figure on a
plaqUe-Good Old Charlie Brown.
"I've develqped a new philosophy," the
plaque says, "I only dread one day at a
lime."
, The sentiment is a bit or humor for Dr.
Anthony N. Toto, superintendent and
medical director of, the hospttal serving
Orange and parts of Los Angeles and San
Diego Counties.
New phllosophies are constanUy being
developed by research teams and there is
room for dread in none of them, only op..
limism.
Besides the patients In the hospital,
Whose 44 ' wards arie scattered over 400
acres. another 1,000 are out.side l'n foster
h.mes or other specialized progrtms.
Scanning data. sheets on 1the patient
pbplllation, one sees that 1,063 are prcr
foundly retarded. The tenn has tactless
\'ariations on the outside. "Vegetable" Is
one of them.
Little can be done for many of these
Imperfect victims of 19 clasSifiable
delects in a society that wOrahips the
most nearly perfect.
Thi.~ ... 1Ul1 leaves hundrt!Cfs ranging up
the ladder of capability for whom he lp is
available and who may look forward to a
h.!ppy, useful life within their liml ls.
What i1 being done for them?
A! f!lUCh a'I J>osstble-;-far more than
ever before-says Dr. Toto, chief or the
(See FAIRVIEW, P•ge %)
Nixo1~'s Backers,
Foes to Show
Stand' on W'""
1 Killed, 3 Hurt • Ill Mesa Accidents
By Anocla&ed Pren
SupportA!rs and /--ol Pml<lent
NL'<on's Vletna,n policy hold '. n e·w
den1onslrations this week In the con-
tinuing controversy over the nation's In-
volvement in 'the war.
A \\•eek of activities by groups backing
the President w111 be highlighted by
\l'eter<'.lns Day ceremonies Tuesday in
\Vashi.ngtbn. The focus returns to the na·
tion's caPiLal Satur$y when critics plan
a massive ootiwar march and rally.
As signs of support through the weekt
for Nixon's Vietnam policies, acil
ministration backers called foe participa·
tion in parades, bufning of car
Jieadlights, waving nags and the wearing
of buttons that say "IL.we America ."
"Tell U To Hanoi," "Operation
Speakout," "Freedom Rally," "Honor
Amet1ca Week1' and "National Con-
fidence Week" are among the titles given
tne pro.administration demonstrations.
In Washington. the While House is
circulating a photograph of President
Nlxon with stacks o( telegrams as part of
it! campaign to convince Congress the
administration's Vietnam policy has
over\.\·helming/ublic support.
The postcar. -size pictures show Nixon
at a presidential desk laden \.\'ith
telegrams prompted by his speech on the
\•1ar last ~1pnday night.
Bryce N. Harlo,v, Nlxon'.s congressional
liaison cP,ief. signed lett.ers sent to
niember~ of Congress with t h e
photograph and an account of a Gallup
Poll reporting 77 percent support for the
Nixon War policy.
"I am sure that you are as impressed
as r Was with the overwhelming public
support of the President's position that
\Vas , evidenced in the attached ·Gallup
Poll ... , " Harlow said in the Jetter.
}lorlo"'· in an inlerview Sunday.
re.iterated hts contention that Ni1on has
won over the "silent majority" and he
said public opinion will remain behind the
J>rasident
AcliviUes by supporters and critics
I
began early. A Veterans Day parade was
held Saturday in Midl'°d Park._ N.J., a
town of 8,000 that has lost eight sons in
'Vietnam. Police estimated there were
3,000 nlarchers and 25.000 spectators.
l Spo~sors of the parade said they
wanted to dramatize their support of the
Pfe7ident's policies and oppo!ilion to an-f tlwar demonstrators .
rn Houston, Tex., a "march for peace"
covered 36 blocks SwKlay. Police
cstUnoted there were 90(, marchers ... and
put the tot.al ' attendance • at a rally af-
terward at 1.900.
Sto"k Jti•rkf!t
NEW YORK IAP)-Declines narrowed
!he ~lead held by advancfS in moderate
trading this aflernoon .u the stock mar-
ket continued its course through the wln-
nlna column. (See quotations. Pages
~). .
Several analyst! attributed the falloff
to profit taklng, especlally In some of
1he hlgll-flying issues. such as Memorex.
\\"hich gained 29 points In the latter part
or last week. tt was off siw to 155~l.
tnvestjgation , oontinues today Into a
• .,..v~~ap Kcideol whi<h kill·
ed a Costa Mesa man Saturday, one of
many .mishaps occurring on rain-slicked
::.treets apd injuring aeveral persons.
(lnotber case involved a felony hit and
run in w:hich the offender dto.ve off after
hitting· a bicyclist, while a policeman
tried lo make a U-turn in heavy traffic
and go back to the accident scene.
In the fatal crash. the ·dead man.
.Joseph Ennico, 47. of 1927 Maple St., was
J\urled 72 feet while· crossing Newport
B:iulcvard at Harbor Boulevard at 12:59
a.m .·, police said.
Protests Called
Street Carnivals
By Spiro Agnew
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew describ-,
eel Vietnam protest demonstrations today
~s a pointless "carnival in the streels"
"·hi ch proves nothing. (Re lated Story
Page 5).
Agnew spoke out as both crilics and
backers of President Nixon's policy
began a week of demonstrations in the
controversy over America's Vietnam war
involvement.
The vice president said, "The mob, the
mobilization. the moratorium h a v e
becvme somewhat faShionable forms of
. citizen expression. They are negative in
content, disruptive in effect_ They in-
tlame emotions rather than sUumlate
solutions."
•
Agnew called for recognition of "a
silent young majority who go to school,
an<f ~.work, aDd to war if necessary."
He said they have been "overshadowed
by the strident minority who arrogate un-
i..-. themselves voice, virtue and power out
of proportion to their numbers, and even
more out of proportion to their abilities."
His speech was prepared for the Na-
lioi'lal ~unic:ipal League, meeting in
Philadelphia. ·
Mail Y uJe Gifts
To Vietnam Gls
Before Weekend
lt's that time again .
Cosla Mesa's Dan1Jyn .Oliver and the .
U.S. PC.St Office warn that packages be-
ing mailed to servicemen overseas should
be mailed this week to assure prompt
delivery during the holidays .
f\irs . Oliver, 'Wr1 YulaJn Drive, who
spearheaded last sprina1s suetesSlul We
Care Cookielifl mailings to Vietnam, is
sending o{f mote good.lea In a mlni-ver-
sior. of the drive.
Girls or Brownie Troop 462 have ob-
tained toothpaste, wrapped candies.
chewing gum and other goodies, while
Girls Club of the Harbor Area members
ire making package decoraUon...
Only recently, Costa Mesa city officials
ljliUalod , • study '{ ~ling vinou•
problems at the tr1angurar .mtenectkm,
where 19 reported tr3HiC iccideab have
occurred since last May\
Motorist William Hansen, 22, oI 644
S:hlllimar Oi:lv.e, Costa Mesa, was not
cited after hil nortbboUod car slammed
irito EnnlCo, who wrui apparently crossing
against a walk signal.
"I don't see how anybody could have
seen him with the dark clothes he had
on,'' said witness Anthony.Pezzullo, of 116
Church St., Costa Mesa, while talking to
police.
Funeral arrangements for the victim,
who Inv., his Jll!<llll and f brolher, will
be In Bangor, Pa., where the survi\'ors
all live, according to BeJI Broadway
~lnrtuary spokesmen.
Other . w~end accidents left two
women 'whole cars crashed into power
poles and the teenaged hit-and-run victim
recovering rrom their injuries today.
In the hlt·run accident, Perry D.
Hansen, 15, of "2<110 Swan Drive, suffered
cuts and brulses·Friday night when a car
attc1npting to pass another vehicle on the
right hit h.is bicycle on Estancia Drive
north of Joann Street
War Intelligence E~pert,
Veteran Actor Succumbs
A Costa Mesa man who survived the
perilous command of a special in-
telllgence unit in Japanese-occupied
China during World War II and the heady
world of Hollywood acting lost his last
fight Saturday.
Cance r claimed the life of Kam D.
Tong, 62. of 278 Santo Tomas St., after a
lengthy battle that worsened during !he
past month.
Graveside funeral rjles for Mr. T{)ng
wi ll be held Tuesday at I p.m. in Pacific
View Memorial Park. Corona del rttar,
with the Rev. William Acton officiating.
"He hung right in there to the end . He
was a tough guy," said freela nce writer
Patrick McNulty, of Corona de! Mar, a
close friend of Mr. Tong.
The veteran actor, whose Hollywood
career began prior to World War II , com·
manded an Office of Strategic Securities
(0SS) outfit in occupied China during !he
1944-45 year!I of combat.
A rare pistol he carried during the
perilous OSS duly was turned in to Costa
Mesa police by Mr. Tong in June, 1968,
after the assassination In Los Angeles of
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
He said he wanted to be rid of tbe relic
wfiich could corltrlbute to the violence of
lhe tlmes if it fell into the wrong hands.
Followln£ Wnftd War 11, said ~1cNulty,
Mr. Tong and his brother Frank. who
died last year, went into lhe bar and
restaurant business, owning a popular
spot in Los Angeles.
The cafe on North Broadway \vas a
hangout for newspapermen, writers and
palicemen and was th<:: source or many
anecdotes, according to McNulty.
He appeared In such movies and
television shows as "Flower Drum Song,"
"Love is a Many.Splendored Thing,"
"Have Gun , Will Travel", "Big Valley",
"Kill a Dragon," and scores of others.
He leaves his wife Betty, a son
Bernard. a daughter Kiircn, a brother
Bew Tong, and sisters Lillie ~1. Fong,
and Jennie P. Chuck.
Friends wishing to remember Mr. Tong
arc asked to contribute in his name to
their favorite charity.
Planne1·s Consider Rezone
In Downiown Tonight
• Llghts will be burning -tale ln ~ta
f\f~ City ·Hall tonight. with meetings
scheduled ""br both the city council and
plaMl.ni commisSiOo.
The most important pending action by
the planning commission is eStablish-
ment of a conditional pennjt (CP) zone
over a 200-acre ,area encompassing the
downtown area of the city. •
The area to be considered for such 1
zone during the 7:30 p.m. session Is
roughly bdunded by Orange and Pomona
.avenues and 17th and 19th slreets.
Under IUCh zoning, any new develop-
ment woukl recdve cartful · study
through c:lly staff, Planning Commis.slon
1utd City Council channels before con·
1tructlon could begin.
The action Is be.ing taken lo protect the
future of the downtown area, Ylhicli Is
the target of a major urban redevelop.
ment project now in the works and ex-
pected to span a decad~ or more,
"Persons with -sizeable investments in
the area will feel more secure v;ilh
grea\et c1uUons being taken," 'says a
planning department report on the
matter.
During their own 7:30 p.m. meeting,
councilmen will discuss procttding to ~
Interview C1>r.aullin1 firms which bave
applied to engineer that reclevek>pment
program.
Seven other Items runain on the plan·
niflg commission agenda betides the CP
zone, ·while r,ouncllmtn will discuss a
few matte.rs in addiion to the consultant
screening.
The driver of lhe red Ford M1v1rick
slopped and~a& liAllHll beiiod 111111 I!>
get a co&Ch from nearby Elta.ncla HI~
Sch8ol to glye.. first aid, at which time ,tbe
man left. 1.. ...
Colla Meaa Police O!OOl!f'~ Stonebock had se.n the boy· !!'Ille .th!
roadwty in bia rear view minor :was
h yjng (o tum back In rusb-bour traffic: at
the time.
HallS'en was treated at Costa Mesa
~1emorlal Hospital and released.
Nina E. Rooney, 31. of 735 Joann St,
Costa Mesa, was treated al Hoag
(See TRAFFIC, P•gc %)
Burglars Collect
$6,000 in Gem s,
Ca sh in N e\vport
rt1essy. mud·slogging burglars rifled the
home of a retired couple In Newport
Heach over the weekend and made off
\vith $6,000 in cash aod jewels kept in a s~fe. · '
\Villiam Payne Troxler, 66. '1424 San-
tiago Drive. told police lhe thieves hit his
home late FridfY nighl while he and his
\\'lfe \\'ere out.
Included in the haul were several
custoll'-made pieces of jewelry, among
them an emerald ring with 17 diamonds.
Police said the burglars tracked mud
through the Troxler house. Their ap..
pa:·ently badly-running car also made a
meb ol the couple's driveway, depositing
a large puddle of oil on the pavement.
Police said the couple arrived home
late in the evening wnd as Troxler began
cleaning up the oil smear his wUe went
inside.
She noticed the safe gone when she
cnteretl the bedroom and called police.
The thieves pried open a bathroom
screen then opened an unlocked window,
police said.
After !Caving the house with the safe
the Ulieves took a breather on the front
lawn and' set the safe down for a short
time, making· an indentation on the rain·
soakl!d front lawn.
They picked it up again and drove off, ·
police: &aid.
Daley to Testify
111 'Riot Trial
CH_1CAGO (UPI) -A city attorney
said today Chicago Mayor Richard J.
Daley is willing to testify as a defense
\VilnUf in the riot conspiracy trial of the
"Chicago Seven.''
However, Corporation Counsel t.1arvin
Aspen asked the U.S. district COt;lrl to,
quash subpoenas calling for testimony
fr:im Chicago PoUce Superintendeot
James Conlisk and James J. ~!cDonough,
director of streets and sanltaUon.
Subpoenas served lete last week called
fc.r Daley, Cont~k and McDonough to ap.
pear in court t'oday '"'Ith record$ per·
ttilning to th e 1968 Democrauc national
con,·ention and disturbances dur1ng the
cohvenUon week.
•
' ' ART WORK FROM FAIRVIEW
Retarded C1n Create, TOo . .
M~ked Bu~glar
A~ta~ks Niirse,
Escapes ,in ~esa
A 28-year-old Costa Mesa nurse w))o
dozed o(f while ,watching television was
raped in her ' apartment . by a masked
bu:s:lar early Saturday', before she
escaped and ran screaming f9r help ..
'Nle victim's cries stopped a passing
motorist in the JOO block 0£ Monte Vista
Avenue, who told police he ,chased .the
suspcct's car a short distance but he got
&\vay.
The Young woman was driven to the
Costa ~lesa Police Facility by Ray L.
Fogarty Jr .. where he and the victim
described t:> Officer Richard Johnson
\vhat had happened.
A\\'8kening because . of a noise. the
nurse said, she got up from the liying
room Ooor at 3 a.m .• only to be con..
fronted by a man in his 20's with a jacket
swaddling most of his lace.
She told investigators he threw her to
the Ooor on a large pillow, cove.red her
head with the parka and ·assaulted her.
One earlicr·incident involving a peeping
tom, which she did not report to police,
might have ~en related to the se1 at-
tack. the vi<:tim told officers.
Tires '\11orth $500
Taken Fro111 Sta tion
Burglars kicked their way into a Cosil
Mesa . service station over the weekend
and stole nine new tires ~·orth more thau
$500, police said today.
Roy A. Tautfest, cnrner of a Union sta-
tion at 3599 Harbor· Boulevard discovered
the smash-in tllmugh lhe structure's
alu~um d09rs when h~ arrived to oP,en
up.
Orange · Coast
'l'eai.ller.
Blue -and dry -akJes wi ll
beam over· the.. Orange Coast Tues-
day' wllh temperatures inching ·
back up to the. hJgh &01s along tho
shore and over lhe 70 tnarlr furU1·1
er inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
Grab vour law book , for to-
dau'• t11e effee~vt date for a
sta~lc: Of law1 pa.saed by the :Stale .
leguloture la.st 1eJsiol\. Porllf1>
graphy and dr101kell driving
crachdown.s lead tile li1t. See Pago 8. · ,_.,,'" ,,
t1:1f""111I• a
Clanllll<I »tt '""k• )4 ,, ..... ,. ,It
0.~111 """k•• ,, 1:.iJtrlal ,.~.. •
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Artr1 'Ll!lftr1 Tl
Mllllot• '
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Ort• (""'' It tJh'lt .....,., H '""' ""' lltct. """9rll1h ,..,,
1tlt•llltfl ,.. Tl'iMftn 1•11 w-. Worlt ,..,., ~
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2 DAILY Pit.OT C M6nda1, N11::1•r 11, 19" •
W011't Qtait Navv '
Bucher Doubts •
lie.tr Get Sliip
FR~NO (l!Pll -Fonner . Pueblo
CoJTlmander Lloyd ~1. "Pet:" Bucher
gays "chances are not too good" he will
e\•tr be a 1hlp commander again.
Bucher and his wife were in Fresn&
Saturday to attend 1 chalice dinner·
spol\SOred by the Knights of Columbus.
"I'd like very much to go shipboard
again -that's the basic idea of be.in& a ' naval offictr, '' Bucher said, "bul with.
this managtn'!ent scboollng, the chances
are DOl too good."
Air Cal Sets
New Engines
To Curb Smog .
Air Calilornla soon will be&ln lo Install
$210,000 in new4est&n enilne components
lo reduct a1r pc)UuUon, tht airline&'
spokesmen Wd todJy. . ·
The oeyr CC!l'Uponelts, known u burner
cans, are _tht cwnbuatJoo cbambtrs
wbere fuel ml air mo mi..I ml-·
accord.inc to Air CaJ miintenance head
R. w. Clll!onl.
The amw;iuncemenl !GI.lawed 'l'tpart!
that the city of Newport Beldl ml&ht sue
C1e carrier, which uaes Orance County.
Airport, for alle&edly polluUng the air.
The court adion would be patterned
after ooe under war in ~ew Jersey where
several national &U' carrien are named
as defendants.in an antlpoUuUoo action.
Clifford aaid • that ·~alt & Whitney,
builders of lhe enstne1 on the sis Air Cal
jets, has developed an improved burner
Can aft.tr lwo yW1 of tuts~
Bt1t the devices, coellnc '10,000 each in·
stalled, are on back order and are still
scarce.
Clifford said that as soon as the cans
are· reCeived they will be installed in Air
Cal jets as the planes come up for
o\·erhaul on a normal schedule.
A specific date for completion of the ~hangeover has not been determined
because of the small supply of the com-
bustion cans. .
Clifford described the burner cans as
the "heart" of lhe jet enaine.
Tl.-in uoe -"Yon most i•b, he
&aid, develop hot a:pot.s, causing the
engines pour smoke. The new version bu fewer hotspots. he
!aid, and produces a 1malle:; "plume" ol
smoke when the jets take off.
Film, Book Study
Highlight Meet
A special color film and book review or
11 controvers.ial volume -on political
movtmenll and also earth movements -
u·UI be fealllffi! Wednesday, when the
Co&ta Mesa Hl!lorical Society meets.
The 7:30 p.m. session will be al Costa
Mua Civic Center, and the public is in-
vited.
"Heritage," Is the title of the state O!-
fict of Architecture and the Division of
Parks and Beaches and de.scribes efforts
to preserve California I a n d m a r k
buildings.
Former Orange County Librarian Kay
Walton will also review Curt Gentry's
book "The Last Days of the Late, Great
State of California."
Although it deals heavily wilh Gov.
Ronald Reagan's rise lO political power
'nd matters surrounding his elevation, it
also features a tongue-in-cheek story <lf
an earthquake which destroys the stale.
Tbe book was ju.st becoming prominent
last spring when various and sundry self.
styled prophets predicted California
,.,.ould be rent by quakes In April and
Gentry bore much undeserved blame.
Vl.•OI (OA.•l' f'Ult llMIM• CM'AJt'r
l•"rf N. Wt-4 • Pr11llfllot tN P'\llllbfltr
J•tk a. Cwrl•'f
VIit 'r•lft!ll ,,.. c.-r• INlleffl
T1i•111•t K1nil -TJi.11011t A. M11r111~i•1 ~ ... ,,. .._ __
lJO W11f 111 S1!1tl
M•llrftt Atlfr1111 ,.0, 1 .. 1S•O, tJaz• ...... -..
.._. .. 11e1t1 m1 "'""' ..... ...,...,.
LttWN IUKlt" 1H •-ti ·-H\lllllf>tlefl 114(11 ... Slit lin.1
Bucher ls now attindlng the Nava1
Postgraduate School in Monterty and
hopes to get a master's degree in
management.
lfe spen~ part of the day with Yeoman
1.C. Annando Canales of Fresno, who
was aboard the Pueblo at lhc time it was
captured by the North Koreans. Canales
is cUrrentJy statioOed at 1':moore Naval
Air Station.
Buch.er said he tries to k~cp in touctJ
with his old Pueblo crewmen.
Ret.'Ounting some of h.is · esperiences
during the 11-month imprisonment,
Bucher told the dinner guests thit,
despite 11 months in close contact, the
crew got along together.
"Oh, there were times, particularly
with those wh.o were quarantined with
other guys for a long period," he said.
"After a while you'd get sick of heariJlg
lhe same old story about the same old
girl arid somebody would get up and
DWM!h somebody, but It was un-
derslandable. No hard feelings remain."
Bucher noted thal after the long cap-
tivity and subsequent hearings on the
capture he feels "much better equipped
both physically and mentally to face any
situation."
Bucher said he had "no way of knowing
what m:!J next assignment is going to be,"
but that be wanted to stay in the Navy.
"I have no plans to get out," he said.
DAILY PILOT stiff Plltll
HEADS FAIRVIEW STAFF
Dr. Anthony N. Toto
Fron• Page I
FAIRVIEW ...
staff of l .600 e1nploycs, f r o m
psychiatrists to hospilal \Yorkers who
handle menial chores.
Not nearly enough, says California
Assemblyman Larry Townsend ID-
Gardcna) a member of the Assembly
J{ealth and Welfare Committee.
The Los Angeles County legislator
toured Fairview Slate Hospital recently,
lb.en i"ued a statement in Sacramento
\\•hich criticized understaffing and <llher
corrcrtible problems.
"fl is the state system itself,'' TO\vn·
send later told the DAILY PILOT, "t'm
not knocking anyone. l have noth.ing but
praise for Fairvie\v ."
· \Vhatever the com pl iments and
criticisms cncounter'1:l. Fairview Slate
Hospital is a very real part of the Orange
CQast community, while neccs:sarily re·
maining apart in other ways.
This series of articles \Vill be a tour of
miles of corridors and visils with. its
people, many of whose lives would h.ave
gone to waste in anoth.er lime.
"Isn't it depressing?," is the question
many ask about Fairview and other such
facilities.
Fairview State Hospital Is 1ust 1 part
or the larger world around us.
And depressing or heartening, people
make their own views of that.
Hearing Delayed
111 Liquor Tl1ef ts
°r\l'o defend1ntg In a liquor theft ca~t':
Involving Feliciano':s RCEtaurllnl i n
Newport Beach Thursday won con.
linuance until Nov. 14 of a court pro-
ceeding in which lhey will answer an in·
dictment by lhe Orange County Grand
Jury.
Eugnt Rondondo. 42, !SOI Corn~·all
1..ane, Newport Beach, and Charle•
Dryer. 31. 1&45 Sunst:-Ridge Otl\•e,
Laguna Beaich, must ans~·er the in·
didment charging grand theft. burglary
and conspiracy from several liquor
distribulors and a motel-restaurant firm.
The defendant&' request for con-
11nuance was gtanted In superior court.
They will relurn next Friday !or the
same proce.u.
District auomey's lnvt!llgalors said
they ex-pfctcd that the case mi;ht go to
lrial in-Superior Court ~otime ne1(t
)'tllr.
I
DAILY Pl LOT Plloll •1 1tlc111r~ KMlllW
•
Communists
Stepping Up
. . .
• ens1ve
SAlGON (UPl) -communis t troops
Intensifying their <lffensivc along the
Cambodian border inflicled h e a v y
casua lties on .a U.S. Special Forces camp
Sunday a;nd today , riddled two h.elicOpter
gunships .with intense ground fire and at·
tacked a U.S. air field, lnrlicting con·
1iderable dam age.
The series of attacks ranged along the
border from Bu Prang, 112 mUe.s north of
Saij:on, to the air base at Ban ~e 'Illuot,
50 -miles to lhe north. North Vietnamese
Communists have maned an estimated
7 ,000 men in the area against South Viel·
namese ground forces.
The attacks coincid'1:l with disclosure
that a. captured Communist, document
from a liaison runner called for "in-
Unsive attacks" throughout South Viet-
nam to support the antiwar protest
march on Washington scheduled for next
~turday.
The attacks on the allied mercenaries
there killed thtee U.S. special forces men
advising the tribesmen troops and that
one 9£1.man mercenary company took
two-thirds casualties. meaning' 60 men
killed or wounded. The Communists lost
IZ known dead.
FIREMAN WASHES GASOLINE FROM COAST HIGHWAY FOLLOWING SUNDAY ACCIDENT
Huntington M•n Stops for Chicken, St•rt• Ch•in Re•ction Crash in Coron• del Mar
Huntington Man
Involved in CdM
Auto Collisions
A driver pulling out of 1 Corona del
Mar fried chicken shop Sunday night
touched off a series of crash.es which sent
a Soulh GRte youth to th.e hospital with
major injuries, police reported .
Daniel Wilson, 18, South Gate, suffered
severe face cuts and a broken kneecap in
the-t:IS p.m. crash at Iris Avenue and
East Pacific Coast High.\vay,
Police said William Barry Gillenwater
o! 9151 Capaa St.. Huntington Beach, was
pulling oul Of the ch.icken establishment
when his car collided with one dri ven by
Eddy Acosta. 21 , Saticoy.
Acosta's car, carrying Wilson, caromed
off the other auto and crossed the highway
hlting another vehicle head.on.
The driver of the head.on car was
Lawrence Johnson of Omaha. Neb.
Only Wilson suffered major injuries in
the crashes, police said. The other driv-
ers complained of minor pains and bruis-
es. Officers said Wilson was treated at
Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Foster Program
Meeting .Topic
Newport Firm to Change
Buses to Steam Power
A Newport Beach firm is one of four
~elected by the state Assembly Rules
Committee lo convert municipal buses to
l:ileam power.
General Steam Corporation, 3800 Cam-
pus Drive, is already road testing a small
steam engine installed in a California
Hii;hway Patrol car.
Assemblyman Eugene A. Ch.appie ( R·
Sacramento), Rules Committee chair.
man, said today selection of General
Steam and other companies for the bus
experiment was based on recommenda-
tions made by a technical adviS<lry panel.
Each company is to convert one bus ti)
sttam power. The buses will be provided
by the A'lameda-Contra Costa Transit Dis·
trict and the San Francisco Municipal
Railway.
The U.S. Department or Transportation
Is runding the smo1 research project. It
ha11 made $450,000 available to lhe As-
sembly for the state-controlled program .
Other research and development firms
selected along witi) Newport's General
Steam are William P. Brobeck & Associ-
ates of Berkeley, Lear Motors Corpora-
tion of Reno, Nev., and Steam Power
Syste1ns, Inc .• of San Diego.
Michael Wenstrom , Project director for
the Assembly, said it is not believed that
the 54.50,000 now available will be enough.
to finance all foor systems. As a result.
a contract will be el\:ecuted immedi~tely
with Brobeck & Associates, and negoti·
ations for contracts will be entered into
with General Steam and the other two
firms.
\Venstron1 said these negotiations will
enable the project staff to come up with
a precise determination on h.ow mu('h
additional money is needed. The Depart·
menl of Transportation will then be asked
to provide the su pple mental funding,
.,.,.hich \\'enstrom said he is very hopeful
of obtaining.
Donald Johnson, vice president and
general manager of General Steam. said
h.is company. at present is testing an 8\4,. Violence Continues by.24-inch steam engine In a CHP C8'
Jn Riverside County. The engine, he said,
A• Ft"li"pi"no• Vote operates on less than two pints or wate.. .Suddenly, _ft'• .Spring "' n 'l'he prototype research model has cost about $600,000 in slate funds. ,-\s spring arrives Jn Australia,
MANILA (UPI) -Six more persons Johnson said that. if mass-produced, eyes <lf seasoned girl watchers
'1·erc killed in campaign-related violence steam cars with such an engine would fall naturally in the direcllon of ~1onday on lhe eve of lh.c Philippine na· cost about one-third the price of a 1970 girls like Rosemary Kin g, 22,
tional elections In wh.lch President gasoline driven car. who brightens Sydney scene
Jo"erdinand E. Marcos is seeking an un-Johnson·s finn will produce only en· while wearing bolero top y,•ith
One out of fou r children of today's precedented second term. gines. not cars, he added. glass insets.
generation will spend some time in a f----------------=----------------'-'------------
foster home, according to Orange County
foster home recruiter Bert Knigh.I.
Knight, a Latj:una Beach resident, said
the county Welfare Department's efforts
l.o provide foster care will be discussed
\'/et!nt'sday at a p.m. at the E. A. Rea
School, 601 Hamilton Ave., Costa Mesa,
fie said the program will feature a
iipeaker and a film titled "1\e.Jiomeless
Child."
Knight called It an ''Operation
Awareness" program. "We need many
n1ore foster homes for children who must
li'¥e outside their own homes," he said.
The proaram is open to the public. There
is no charge.
Go to Spri11gs
Via Bay Area
11 will soon be possible lo take an Air
California ni ght from Orange County
Airport to Palm Springs -with a slop.
over in San Francisco.
The county-based line has won Cali·
fornia Public Utilities Conunlssion per-
n1ission to provide service between Palm
Springs and th.e Bay Arca cities of San
Francisco, Oakland and San Jose.
Air Cal will use Boeing 737 jeta for the
Flights lo the desert resort fron1 San
Francisco. One-way fare ·will be $20,
about $8 under the rate now t1Jarged by
other airline!.
Two trips a day will be(in ';aa soon is
pos.slbh:~;· Air Cal spokesmen said.
Fro1n Pqe I
TRAFFIC ...
fi lemorial Hospital for multiple he1d '
lacerations and a broken collarbone and
then released early today.
Pollee: said her ca r left Pomona Avenue
!lorth on West 17th Street during a he1vy
downpour and slimmed into 11 Southern
r::allfomla Edison C.Ompany light stan·
dard.
Tiie s1mc t,vpe of act:ident sent Willa L.
Bonner, 45, of 3078 Gibraltar Ave., Costa
~1th, for treatm!nt of mouth cuta 1t
3:25 p.m. Sunday, accordlni; to police.
JIPr car hit a tlreet l!Jht sla.ndt11rd Cllt
Baker Street st li1esa Verde Drive east.
. .
··--' •
MICHELSON
AT
MACARTHUR
the new home of
Newport National Bank's Airport Office
This is an extremely convenien t ]ocati on ror those who use
1'.iacArthur Blvd. frequently. Mi chelson is near lhc San Diego
Free\vay, Newport .Freeivay and across from th e Or1,1ngc
County Airport. Open yo ur accoun111t this co nvenien t
lor.ation and enjoy AMPLE PARKI NG ... SPEED WINDOWS
FOR PEAK PERIODS •.• BUILT·IN CUSTOMER ADDING
MACHINES ... COFFEE AND COOKIES ... SIT-DOWN
TELLERS ••• UNIQUE WELCOME CENTER .. ,
PATIO BANKING ... BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED.
EVERYONE JS INVITED TO OUR OPEN HOUSE ..•
REFRESHMENT AND GIFTS ~ ~ .
Sminr ths T1e1ds of tht industrial tompler.
'
..
.. ..
••
" ·• '.•
•, .. .. .
• . " :. ..
;i
-' • ·' .. ..
I :, • •I
f
Reflecting 0n Future
Loony mirrors like this one may some day produce
water from moon rocks. Dr. Erich A. Farber, di-
rector of the Solar Energy and Energr COQversion
Lab at the University of Florida in Gamesville, dis-
plays mirror that concentrates solar energy:, focus-
Ing intense heat of up to 5,000 degrees for cooking,
heating, or distilling fresh water from sea water.
Dr. Farber 11ays solar energy is extremely practical
for undeveloped regions such as the moon.
Down tlae
Mission
Trail
Viejo Expands
Chrisbnas Nights
MISSION VIEJO -The holiday season
will find Mission Viejo's traditional Five
Nights of Christmas expanded to Twelve
Night& of t'hristmas.
Major event& will \ake place on five
nights with smaller events being staged
on the other seven. All programs will
take place in the tour comers or Mission
Viejo'• version of the town square at the
tntersediod of La Paz and Chrl!anta.
Themes will Include Declt the Town
with Stars of Light; Cbrislmas is the
Time for Giving; Santa's Come to Town
,and Christ the Savior is Born. Event! will
be staged from Nov. 30 to Dec. 21 on Sun-
days, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
e Craft Plans Told
LAKE FOREST -Members of the
Arts and Crafts group at the Beach and
Tennis Club have scheduled several ac-
tivities for the month of November.
Lee Phinney, arts and crafts director,
said the children will be making
Thanksgiving placemarkers telling about
the beginnings of the holiday and may
produce a short play to be presented near
the end of the month.
On Friday, Nov. 28 a group of 50
~hildren will spend the day at a riding
. stable. For more lnformltion on · this or
the other activities contact the club at
830-6161.
· e 'Heritage' Wins OK
; SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A n
1 American Heritage program sponsored
: tjy the Exchange CJub of Laguna Hills-El
; Toro has been approved by the trustees
· Of the San Joaquin Elementary School
·District.
Dr. Willlam Stocks, ass Is tan t
superintendent, recommended the pro-
. gram but warned the board that a C?fl·
. troversy over aeparation of church and
itate coo.Id arise because of the program
: title '"One Natloil Ullder God".
IC• Bow Out
'
Businessmen to Examine
County's General Plan
The ouUook In four key a!ptcts of the
economy, and the newly-adopted Orange
County General Plan, will be e:ramined
by 800 Orange County businessmen at the
Orange County-Economlc Development
Conferenee 'Ibursday at Anaheim Con-
venUon Center.
Laguna Citizen
Brings Arrest
In Car Theft Try
An alert citizen and a faulty carburetor
combined to foil a suspected car thief in
Laguna Beach Friday night.
John Garnett Walker, 24, of Tustin was
booked on charges of attempted grand
theft after witness James D'Amato, a
food supply salesman, told police he spot-
ted him trying to drive off in a car he
knew belonged to his friends Bob and
Genelle Cox, owners or the Ship Ahoy
restaurant, 480 S. Coast Highway, police
said.
D' Amato had pulled Into a parking
space outside the restaurant, police said,
when he noticed the young man get intQ
the Co:r vehicle, start up the motor and
drive off, only to-stall after traveling
about 10 feet.
Questioned by D'Amato, Walker said be
was taking the car "to a friend's house.''
He accepted an invitation to go into the
restaurant where Mrs. Cox said she'd
never seen him before. Police were sum-
moned ~ mide the arrest.
"I've been meaning to get that
carburetor fixed," said Cox later, "dam-
ed thing has been stalling on us for
weeks. Fortuntately, I didn't get around to
It."
Iris1J Drinkin~ Curfew
Lifted Over Weekend
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -
Authorities lifted Belfast's drinking
curfew over the weekend , and police and
anny fficials reported no disturbances.
"Tile curfew had been In effect for three
weekends to check street disturbances
between the Roman Catholic and Protes-
tant communities. Pubs closed at 7 p.m.
Instead of 10 on Friday and Saturday
nights far the first two weekends, and at
1,30 i the third weekend.
~
The: Economic Development · Con-
f erenc< spomored by Orange Coonty
Chamber of Commerce, is open to the
public. Reservations can be made by caU.
Ing the chamber office. •
On the morning session of the day-lone
conference. Ivy Baker Priest, California
State Treasurer, will discuss money and
Houston Flournoy, California State Con-
troller, will be the speaker on ta:res.
William J. Bird, vice pre.sident of
Kaiser Industries Corporatk>o, will speak
on markets and Niels Pedersen,
southern area manpower administrator
for California Department of Employ-
ment, will report on labor.
The luncheon speaker will be Jerome
W. Hu11, president of Pacific Telephone
Company.
Heading the afternoon d.iscusalon of the
Orange County General Plan will be
Forest DicJtalon, Orange County Plan-
ning Director: Dein E. Shull, J1r., city
councilman from La ltabra; A ton E.
Allen, Fiflh DlltrlcLCountyJy~lsor;
William Sauers, e:recuUve vice preSldent.
Autonetics, represenUng the Orange
County Chamber of Commerce, and Ed-
mund Buster, eZecutive vice president,
The Townsend COmpany, speaking for the
private sector.
Steve Chula, 19,
Gets Probation
Steve Loyd Chula, 19, stepson or pn>
mincnt Orange County Attorney George
Chula and figure in a bizarre murder in
Hawaii has been placed on probaUon for
implication in a marijuana smuggling
case in San Diego. -
Chnla, indicted earlier this year for
marijuana smuggling and jumping bail,
was ordered to be placed on probation
until he turns 21.
A U.S. District Court judge in San
Diego imposed the probatloo. and con-
victed the Newport Beach youth of
juvenile delinquency.
Chula, son of the lawyer who Is defen-
ding Dr. Timothy Leary on a Laguna
Beach narcotics case, was a witness in
the slaying last March of Costa Mesa
surfer Bill Pond in Honolulu.
Chula witnessed the execuUon • atyle
slaying of. the COsta Mesa youth who
alleged1y was an Innocent party in a
di!pute involving marijuana aDd a large
amoontof casb.
.. UCI Alon·e • ID Protest
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of t11e O•llY l'Ollf lt•fr
· . UC Irvine may become lhe war dissent
: lighting rod of the Orange Coast when
: the second mid-month Vietnam War ~Moratorium occurs the end of this week.
; Oct. 15 moratorium acUvilies at a:ea
; junior colleges and even a few high
:ICbools evidenUy WC?D't be repeated. 'Ibis
:time It appears UCI wlll go ft •lone.
: . Ai plans for ibis mon~'s protest are
'.lakl-lhe same pattern 11 apparent na-
. tionwide. For some the Oct. 15
:moratorium was a one-«hot demonstra-
• tion of feeling against the war. But for
:others, such Ill! the student orpnilen at
. UCl, it was just a beginning.
· The jninise was made then to bUlld
ritcmentum with • two-day moratorium
:tbil mooth •. U... days In Dec<mber and
: .,. on unUI the war ends.
; , SI-Nov. II falls on SCirdaf; not much of • school day. ucr. two-day .
moratorium acUvltles will be Thunday
and Frklay.
Lite last month there will be picketing,
1l!t1 uatfft ed\lcation classes and a noon
rally With speakers. A new twist will be a
"live Jn" all 111unday rUght on the cen-
tral lawn in the,midiHe of campus.
"It is the right fA student! to use the
lawn and we win oot dtny them that
right," said Vicie Chark..-ellor for Student
Affairs John C. Hoy.
He said It bu been arranged to
studerlt.s will clean up any debris and pr~
v1de their own aec:urity.
Friday aftmloon UCI atudent.s will
caravan to Hillcrest Park Jn Fullerton
and march wfth Cal State Fullerton
students to Hughes Ground S)'Steml
aerospace plant.
Friday nJ&bl. chartered buoel wlU
depart lrvlne for a "March Aplnst
Death" in San Francbco on Slturd1y.
T6ete tftnts were listed In the un-
derground ne-npaper "Siddle Bore,"
distributed on the 5addleback College
camp.tj. Some ltudentl at Golden West
were said to be organizing 1ctlvllles but
they haven't been al'!nounced yet. A
cofiln•march •t .Or1.11ge Coast College
WM lliPCtJoned by the student body
g9vemmtnt last mooth but nothing thil
month.
The moratorium Is 1 moratorium
against "bu!lnea as usual." Far studenta
that means sldpping classes. For pro-
fessors It could mean not holding classes.
But UCI Vice 'Chanctllor for Academic
Affairs Roger Russell lold facutty at an
Academic Senate meetmg W'ednesd;y It
Is not the policy ol the Unlvenlty to
cancel classes.
A majority ol the IO prof.-s praei1t
then paaed a motion lhat rescheduling of
clwea or de!"lh!I_ clau Umt to
discussion of the war "would be c:M-
sistent with responsibflitiu ol. lbe
faCulty."
They wouldn't be cancelling cl.-and
they wouldn't be candiictlng bwlness u
usual.
A lldel!glit ·lo the UCI montorlum
plant la cancellation by the U.S. Anny of
a recruiting engagement on campus next
Friday. Dean of Students Robert Lawren-
ce said the Army agreed to reschedule ltl
rten.1ltJng date for next spring.
"It's just that when the moratorium
takes place It attracts to campus 1 great
number o~_Rle ncentr.lllng on
specific Issues," tawrcnce explained . . -
Monday, NMmbtr 10, 1969 S
SPECIAL!
the wig for all seasons
from Deltress of London
18.99
I
•j .. 4 • t
pre-styled, pre-cut, read y to wear
lbis ••ig is truly amazing. It looks and fttls just lib 1eal lwr. But .it·1 a
whole lot easier to care for. It's pre-styled, and you neTer set it Just Wllb
it in cold ,.,.a.fer. TOM it for curls. Brush it for slceknesJ. Try it. Jt's .!Oft,
silky, full, and natural. Because it's-made of Deltressll modaaylic. With
contour stitching on a stretch base. Cut and sl)•lcd in London. C.omcs in
your choia: of a V.'ide r<1.n.c:e of natura l shades .
l b!.t1 .. k
c off black
'1 dark brown
6 chestnut bro•·n
8 medium red brD\\'n
10 medium goldt11
hro"9;n
l .! reddish brO'\\'n
17 light brown
~O ~ium brown
~l light ash blon d•
28 lighf auburn
j~ auburn
;4 mixed !Xown gray
·19 very light brcrwn
)I gray
I 01 platinum blonde
IOl b~de
17 /22 light fr05ted
8/22 fto.ted
may co south coast pl.11, sen ditc)o fwy 1t bristol, costa men; 546-93 il
shop mond1y thru satur<lay. 10 1m to 9:30 pm
DAILY 1'11.0f I
•
'
J
•
,
1 DA_ILV l'l\OT ......,, H...., 10, lM . ,
Arabian Summit
Meeting
IJ Uilted Prm 11-'
• The Arab dden1t council called -,
rti an Arab IUJlll11lt c:on1..-. to ba btld
in Morocco next mon(h to map flllart
-leiY In the coollk:t with ...... -.n ForeJcn Miolater AMol lladl
-.1"!> -in Cairo. , ·~t Oamal Abdel N-1111 ulled such a meeting to l..U. 1111 "lilood and , ..... pol1ey eounclalod In •
':f roops Brace
For Action
In Washington
WASHINGTON, (AP) -Saveral
thousand troopl acrosa the COOllllr7 have
beoft · al«1ed to be ready I« ~
airlifting to Waahlngton Jn °* >tolol!ce
enipta during tbls wet!<'• lldloduJed
M•torium acUvlUes in Uli natkla'a
capital.
The PentallOll .. -ledled '11111 Illa
wm! to be ready bad -GUI. but oleclined to say which unlta or bow 111&111
are involved.
Among troops outside WasbJnalaa that
could be·made available In -to a to1a1 o1 aboot 28,000 military per-I
stltioned in the city's area, lt wa known,
are e!ementa .of the Dnd AtrborDe
Dtvlalm at Fort Bragg. N.C.
Jerey Frledhelm. Pelitaaoo ,~..;.
mnowledJed Uiat forces out.Ide a 100.
mile radius ol Walhlngtoo were Informed
that (hey mllht be aummooed to
Walhlnllon.
1!M a pvt of our precauUonary
· meaaurea. certain conUnanden have
)>ean advlaed to lno"1e that the
respomiveoess of their unltl is ap-
! propiate to meet paaible netdl lhould
· this be requested by the JUJtlce Depart-
ment," Friedhe.IM &lid.
• Thia maant that the unlta 1111ould be
(-Rldy to move ll a moment's notice.
: ' Frledhelm emphasiaed (hat ledttal
• troopl would be brought Into Walhlngton
icm1y U the Ju1Uce Department felt their
JnMnCe would be neceasatY to maintain
law and ordtr.
Officials say there has been no direct
lndleation that lhe Pentagon will be the taraet of war protest acllvlties beginning
"lburlday, but I big march S•turday is to
be nembllng not far from the Pentagon. or the 11.000 military peraonnel based
'on WaShington area, about 10,000 are lo
-Ol'laniJed-lroop&-wl!Lts---
ere
opoacfl Jut -In 1'hlcll' he &aid war aplnlt larael waa lhe "'11 aolulloo to the
-Eaat coalUct. TIM Arab dal.,.. COW>Cll, with rtp--.U•• lrocn u natlono Pl"Hnl at Ille -'Ina In Callo, ....... tratad tta
wra(h aplnol the United Stala lhis -...r, -.:Jni Waalllnatm aa Ila
--llld a lrlead ol hraal. 'Ille lrWP ~lied for "'<lhllluU. d ill Arab
--to de(llll llrael. TIM Nldeut conlllct llM1I llared up In
-places lodo)' Ud .1., a e 11
w..,U-made lbelr -attack In u .....,. dl1I ap1nll F.cYPUu poalllom In
lhe Gull ol Suu. A Tel Aviv mJUtary
spokeaman &aid all planes returnod t•
lbe1r ·-· A Jordanian mlliLary 1pokesman in
Amman &aid an Jaraell patrol cro...d Ille
Jordan River late Sunday and blew up a
houle , killinl a farmer and injuring two wmen. He uJd the attack took place at
the vil111e " Al·Bakoura, four mills
.IOllll> al Ille Seo of Oa!Uee llld • mile and
1 half iUkle Jordan.
'nwe~JU a MW flurry of antl.tsfaet
actll'lly Ii> tbe occupled GUI Strip and
three liratll IOld!ers were wowlded aJlahllY todOJ wbeft a grwlllde Wll hurled
at a niotorlaod palrol movlni thrl>lllh the
main ·1tne1 ol Gau. Three Arab
"1ltaa\llll ... """11did.
Wbotllor a -Arab aummis cooler-
-CGU1d lead to anolher ootbreat or
war----• be -· Communist dlplomat1 In ~ &aid todo1 the Soviet
Uftle a1rM<11 ha wortied about Nas-
_., blood and Ore ~ since It did
not·want a caoln>ntation with the United
Sta• In the Middle Eut.
TIM! ~ air attocl: aplnat Egypt
a-le be a tunber reprisal lor an Ei1Ptfan nanJ attocl: Sa1w'day night on
llll'ffll paolttooa m the 8lnal Peninsula.
Eapt aaid Ille bombardment caused
heavy damage and casualties. Israel
denied the clalm.
U.S. Guard Ends Hunt
For Tanker's Crew
Ni:W YORK (AP) -The CO&SI Guan!
hu ended the aurch for 28 missing
crew1nen ()f the Liberian tanker Keo,
which aplit ln two in the Atlantic. Eight
bodies were recovered.
'n!.e vessel reported last Wednesday
that lta crew of Ii Greeb llld lour South
Amlricans had taken refuge tn the stern '
.ectlon,.atter the veael broke up bi. rag.
tng liila 120 miles IOUt.beast of Nan-tuclrd. ·
She's ita Bad Shape?
Alexandra the Great, a llonolulu stripper, complains that her extra·
ordinary bust measurement -48 -prevents her from leading a
nonnal life. She's considering surgical reduction of her breasts, much
to the dismay of her admirers.
SupremeCourtContinu~s
Segregation Crackdown
WASHING TON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court followed up its re<:ent crackdown
en Missis.sippi school segregation today
by turni ng down an appeal of 44
Louisiana school districts which sought to
keep "freedom of choice" sch o o I
systems.
The high court took the action by refus-
ing t1 review a lower court ruling against
the l..ooisiana sc hool boards. · The re·
Jeclion was announced in an unsigned
<Jtder without comment.
·ln other actions, the court:
-Rejected a government request lo
review an overtime pay ruling which the
Post Office Department said could affect
approximately 450,000 employes and cost
$UXI million.
-Turned d0\\'11 a Federal Trade Com·
mission effort to reinsate a regulation
aimed at protecting U.S. consumers from
misbranded wool imports. The U.S. Court
of Appeals had held that authority for
such 1·egulation rested with the customs
bureau.
-Upheld ai:i Interstate Commerce
Commissioo order settibg national freight
~8.r rental rate.s.
l..:
Trio
es (·roee ure
·, II ~
CAP!; KllllllllDY, FIL (APJ-,Apollo pbolocrapb future Apollo landlnc llleo,
JJ -Charla Coond J.. and JJrimltlly Ille blPlandJ near the cratu1
Alan L. -_, pndlood --)Ira llalin>, l•l•ndo llld Deocarla.
procedure& teqUlnd u .lblJ -td' --lllo planned ...,. time todoy lhOlr atlenip\ to land oo Ille' mooa -In Ibo oommand lhlp almulator.
week. : ' ' , At tht launch J)ld. the countdown mov·
Tiiey rebearHd In Ille hniar lander ed llllOOlbJy toward the ICheduled
lraiDer Wlbide·ID a tell ...nlnalod wl1h blaotoli ol a Salum 5 rocket at 1:11 a.m.
lho Mluloo Colllrol Ca>ler In' llo1atoa, PST P'rtdoy.
Tu. • Coared llld Bean are to fly the landiJC
The third Apollo 1J cmmwi Jlltbard ' craft Ibey call lntupld to a toucbdown Jn
F., Gordon Jr., received a br'lefln.I on the moon'• Ocean of Storms Nov. Jt.
lunar topography from ra)laf,J J the They CID abort the att.empt at any time
' U.S. geological Survey. 61· G«doo'• alter they aeparate from Gonion llld the
\ tub u be orb1ta u. mooo la to command ahip until the moment of .
toui::hdown. lbey alao can mate a quick
-··Jurist Gets
One Supporter,
Loses Anoth,er
WASHINGTON (AP) -Seo. Thomaa J.
~fclnlyre, (D-N.H.), announced today he
will vote against confinnation or Judge
Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. as a Supreme.
Court justice, while Sen. Robert J. Dolt,
(R·Kan.), declared his support ol thee~
battled nominee.
Mcintyre's announcement brought to' 39
the number of votes aligned against
Haynsl'.'Orth in an Associated Press
survey. Another 10 senators wetecounted
as leaning against confirmaUon. ·
Including Dole, 36 senators are
decl&.red supporters of PrQident Nixon's
nominee .
"There has betn an abundance of un-
just criticism and clamor in this inltance
and unless there is some valid revelaUon
no t heretofore made, when the roll is
called, t sball vote aye;• Dole said in a
statement.
But 1'.iclntyre said he felt the nomina-
tion of Judge Haynsworth "has proved to
be most unfortunate." He s a i d
Ha;(llsworth's record does not meet the
"ver; h.igh standards" required of a
Supreme Court nomin'ee.
The Senate is scheduled to begin debate
<ln the nomination Thursday.
Sen. Hennan E. Talmadge, {0-Ga.),
said earlier Haynsworth's confirmation
appears "extremely doubl!ul." And a
news magazine reported that Chief
JusUce Warren Burger has been lobbying
for Hnynsworth's CC1nfirmation.
Talmadge said Haynsworth supporters
could muster less than 50 percent of the
votes needed.
takeoff ln cue somethln& goes wrong
all<\> the llndlng.
'!be two ships art to undoct at an
a!Utude ol 15 mUu. Intrepid is lo lllld 2
houn llld 11 minutes later. The moot
criUcal period is the last 12 minutes when
the astronauts lrlgge:r their descent
engine to drop the final '9,200 feet.
The moat liiely abort procedure Is to
separ1te lhe cabin 1eetion from the des·
cent engine stq:e and fire up the ascent
engine to start a serlu of maneuvers to
steer Intrepid back to the command ship.
Yankee Clipper. i
Apolla 11, man's first lunar landing.
came within 14 seconds of being aborted
last July as astronauts Neil A. Armstrong
and F.dwin E. Aldrin Jr. hovered 150 feet
above lhe surface, their fuel running
dangerously'low as they IOUgbt a smooth
parking spot.
Gordon will be ready to fly a rescue
mlsslon if Conrad and Bean have to 1bort
and cannot perform a ·successful ren-
dezvous.
Gordon said In a recent interview that
he could safely drop as close as 50,000
feet to the moon for a rescue, with the
exact altitude depending on the height oC
mountains In 1be area.
"I 6UI'e don't want to come home
without them," Gordon said. "So I'm
going to go down and get them if I have
to."
A five-man medical team examined
Conrad, Gordon arxl Bean for 2~ hours
Sunday llld pronounced them ph)'lllcaJIJ.
Ill.
Or. Charles Berry, the astronauts•
chJef physician, reporttd : •1The three
crewmen are in good pbysical condition.
They are in excellent spirits and eager to
fly."
Hijack Attempt
By Boy Foiled
Tbe lli!trlct of Columbia Nati6nal
Guard, amounUng to 2,100 men, alrtadY
·Is planning training acttvitle1 during the
time of the Moratorium wtuch will keep
Waahlnglon guard1men rw11 to ao into
act!OD U oetded.
. Rented Plane
Crashes, 2 Hurt
Latin Security Council
Proposed in Rocky Report
=tit !tahd a-Kansas-State-court ruling
that a pr ison parolee is not entitled to a
hearing and a lawyer before his parole
can be revoked.
The Louisiana school board cases were
brcught under one legal tent by the U.S.
Slit Circuit Court of Appeals.
The Supreme Court had already ruled
fn an important 1968 case that "freedo1n
of choice" plans were invalid when they
\ll'ere clearly failing to bring about
desegregation.
In a newspaper interview Sunday In
Augusta, Ga .. Talmadg~ said oppos~tion
to the South Carolina judge Is "a product
of geographical diacrimination."
Newsweek Magazine, mean w h 11 e,
quoted unnamed senators as saying
Burger had approached them to urge
their support of Haynsworth.
"One ranking GOP aenator says Burger
has been buttonh<lllng senators at social
functions and telling them, 'lf Judge
Haynsworth isn't qualified to sit on the
Supreme Court, then I'm not either,' "
the magazine said.
CINCINNATI (UPI) -A 14-year.old
boy, using a teenage girl ai a boltage,
boarded a Della jetliner at Greater Cin-
cinnati Airport today and demanded the
plane be flown out of the country. The
boy was arrested before the aircraft took
<lff on a flight to Odcag<>.
Police identified the would-be skyjacker
as David L. Boothe or Norwood, a Cin-
cinnaU suburb. Delta officials said he
held a knift to the throat or Gloria Jean
House, 18, of Millord, another ClncinnaU
suburb.
SANTA SUSANA (UPI) '-A 811\all
rented private plane attempted an
emergency landing during the weekend in
a parking lot behind a supermarket but
inatead craahed In a nearby Held a hun-
drtds or shoppers watched tn fright.
The pilot, 32-year-okl Mark Devane, of
Lancuter. and Margaret Tl>ompson, 23.
Glendora. were in fair condition today at
Simi Valley Community Hospital. Mi"
Thom~ sustained internal injuries,
aoctort ialil, ari<roevane .u1retec1 ' -
cusaion.
Sherm's deputies say the plane, which
Devane rented at Van Nuys Airport, ran
out of gu over Santa Susana Saturday
n!sJ!t and he headed II down toiranl the
shopping center. It touched down In the
lot bl.It became airborne again, hit some
<lverhead power lines, flipped over aod
cruhed in (he field.
WASJIJNQTON (AP) -New York Gov,
Nelson A. Rockef.Uer proposed to Presi·
dtot Nixon the cru.Uon of a Western
Hemisphere Security Council to cope with
.the "forces of subversion" that operate
throughout naUons of the Jnter·American
AIUance.
Rockefeller aleo urged reversing the
recent downward trend in U.S. gran&6 for
assisting the tralnlng ()f 11eCUrtty forces in
other western hemisphere countries.
The recommendations were Included in
Rockefeller'1 Latin American report to
Nixon which had been kept secret since it
was dBi.vi!rtd to the President last Sept.
3. It WH made public today by the White
11-.
Tbe security recommen(laUons were ig·
nored by Nixon ln his October 31 Latin
America policy statement. However,
virtually all of the other proposals in·
eluded In Nixon's statement were based
on proposals by Rockefeller, who made a
serlea of Lrlps to the region In behalf of
the President earlier th.is year.
"The purpose of the council would be to
help the hemisphere countries work
together in creating and preserving lite
kind of orderly environment, free fron 1
terror and violence, in wh.icl1 each citizen
<lf each country can build a better life for
himself and bis family," Rockefeller said.
He urged that the council have its
headquarters outside the United States.
On his recommendation for iicreasing
security grants for Am er I ca 's
hemispheric neighbors Rockefeller said
in the report:
"In view of the growing sub\'etsion
against hemisphere governments, the
mounting terrorism and violence against
cititens, and the rapidly expanding
population, it is essential that the training
program which brings military and police
personnel from other hemisphere nations
to the United States and to !raining
centers in Panama be continued and
strengthened.''
Yuma Gets Heavy Rainfall
Downpour Far Exceeds Normal November Amount
Te1nperat1rres
A!bullUOfQ\le
.Afl<""'°fff
All•nta
8~~1r11101d
fll1m•r'k Bo!se
OM ...
l!rownivll!t
C~l<•l<I
Clr1<!rm11t
~nvtr
0.1 Moone~
Oelrol!
F1lrto~nks
Fort Wo'11'1
""'"" Htlffl•
K1nMi t!h
l11 V1N1
LOI A~1tlt1 M'"'" Mlnnt1tDClll1
Ntw OtllHIS
Ntw Yott
O.kltnd
OliltllOml Cll~ ........
.ill•to """" illt!m "..-Inti .......
P l!laour11'1
Port11nc1
ll1111d Cttr
RH a lull ·-,,,, • ....,.10
$111 L•ltt City
5tn Dlfff
SIM Frtn<IJ<O
Sul!IL
!tlldk•nt Tll ....... t
Vlt1~l~11on
" " . " ~ 5, ,.
" " SJ •S Lll
u " ., ., ,, •\
.~l 7>
6~ .u
Sl Al
I& 11 .07
11 .M .OJ 61 ,,
~ " " •s 6l .'O " ~ IO •l .or
H "' It •I " ~ " " IJ '' ., 0
d " 11 SI
,.,
'' $t "' " . " " H » " " " " ~ ..
SJ J?
U M .10
~ " J C JO . ,, .tt
., l' 11 H M .<'
A spokesman for the court said Burger
would have no conunent oo the report.
Delta officials said the hijack attempt
was foiled when airport officials and
police persuaded the youth to surrender.
Ensy Pri·naary Winner
•
Garrison Victory Likely
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Flamboyant
ot controversy for his handUng of a John
F. Kennedy assuslnation probe, appears
headed for his third four-year term as '
district attorney .
The 6-foot-7 Garrison easily won the
Democratic nomination Saturday with
84,992 votes and will face Republican Phil
Trice In the April 1970 general election.
His nearest rival, fonner Asst. U.S. At-
ty. Harry F. Connick, received 60,385
votes. Two former Garrison aides ran
third and fourth, Charles R. Ward gettma
'l,$87 votes and Ross T. Scaccia 4,523.
Connick said the Kennedy investlgatlol'I
might have been a major factor in Gar~
rison's victory.
"This Kennedy thing Is &till vm mucli:
alive in the minds ()f the pec>ple," Cclnnick
said. "It's just a irue111 on my pirl but
apparently they feel he should be re-
elected because of ~11 stand qainlt tht
federal government. '
Garrison, who had claimed that ret.lred
businessman C'lly ' Shaw conspired to
murder Kennedy and that the federal
government had tried to suppress his In.
vestlgatlon, was asked the reason lot h11
victory. "Maybe it's my sez appeal," ht said.
Shaw, acquttted two 10an alter hll ar·
rest on the ronspiracy charge, said, "Jtm.
oot gotna: to make any comment on the
election. There seema to be no point of it
at this time." ,
Garrison'• district 11 Orleans Pariah,
w!Uch has the Jame boundaries II the ci•
ly ol New Orleans.
· 2 East Berlin Youths
E~ape to West Section
BERLIN (AP) -Two East Berlia
YOlltils cmM Commanlst bmlen lnlo
the FJ'fllCh lltlor of Welt Berlin SundaJ,
police confirmed _,. They ..,. .,,.
noticed bJ the Eail Oerman border
guanls.
'Ille delecllon bJ the 18-and 11-yr&N>ld JUB"ll:-,U~T-GARRISOl\rTOASTS VICTORY-------y'Olitha ii!pl up a wove o1 r<ful"I filj!iti
Rtnornin11tion 111 DA Tant1mount to Election In rteent day!.
• <
80% Back
S~ches
I
Of Agnew
ASIJINGTONlAP)-::V "'
Prtsldent Spiro T. Agnew says
more than IO pm:ent or the
messages he bas l'eceived a~
prove of his stinging verbal at-
tacks on some participants in
Vietnam war protest
demonstrations.
And, the vice: president said :
"I'm going to continue to say
what 1 think is proper lo uy
and in the way I want to say
•t "
I .The latest tally by his office, 1869 Christmas Stamp
Agnew said Sunday in 1 This year's Christmas stamp wu issued with tint day c~remonie~ at Christmas, copyrighted lnterview with Fl Re rod th · 'Wi S U.S. News & World Report, a. p uced on e stamp is a wmler scene, • inter unday in. Nocway, Maine.•
showed he had received 7,l!Z ----~---------------~--------commuaicatioos backing his
speeches and l,517 oppo!ing
his remarks. · •
"That's about 4~ -almost
S to I," the vice president aid. Hijack ·Lawyer Not Agent
Mood.,, N-10, 1969
Draft Overhaul
Slated Next Year
WASHINGTON CAP) -Sen. hearings can be held
• DAii. Y PILOT li
Violence
EIJupts
' ln ··Strike
-
OliifSliMIJ7Cliilnnan cil year. COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) -
Armed Services Committee, "U they agree,all 'right," he UbloO plclieli burned a
..,, he'U guarantee an early said. ••u lhey don't, I think It's · guanfs • ciar., stdned two
f9fUJD. nez.t year for advocaleS a foolish thlng even to brlni aheriffs cars 1nd 1 flre truck
of fl sweeping overhaul of the lhe bill up." and smashed windows at a
military draft system. Stennis commented on the Westinghouee Corp, plant to.
But the Ml s 1 ls 1 I p p I CBS radio-television program ~ay in a local walkoot .over a c6ntraot dispute, the sberilf'f
Democrat ·told his co11e81u .. "Face the Nation." Nixon Fine ornce 1&ld.
any "hanun-scarum" ~te "I am going to met with The pickets surrounded .a.
aimed at adding r e f o rm those who wish to oiler these car attempting to enter the
far-reaching amendments and A f te Ch k I t t da..,_, nd '-'-amendments to • pending . discuss it, guarantee them r ec . pan a , •• -.• -·-n>dting -It but six police dralt-by-Joltery measure will that we will have com-cruisers arrtved and broke up.
kill all chances for action on prehensive bearings next year, W~HJNGTON (AP) -, the 'dillturbanct. The car was
that bill this session. then ask them not to bring the President Nixon un~rwen~ a driven away from the plant.
Stennis called his cammlttee amendments up," Stenn Is two how: physical examination
together today-to CDnslder the said. at Bethesda Naval Hospital No injuries were reported.,,
President's lottery measure He said he already has and described himself as being Patrolman Dale Clark o, tHe
which passed the House two discussed the issue with Assis--in fine condition. · Frantnn·· Townablp· Po fi c'e
weeks ago. tant Democratic Le ad e·r "It waS just a routine ~rtment aid most ol the
"I'm going to recommend to Edward M. ·Kennedy, but not physical with a routine window• in the front of °'f
them that we pass this bill ex-with. other se nators. result," he told newsmen as buil4iD1· ~er. ~. ;~
actly as we ~ived it ... " he. K'ennedy broke an Impasse he left the hospital i n Ftremen were ciJled after ~ Agnew has made several
strong-worded speeches since
the Oct. 15 Vietnam
Moratorium Day.
said Sunday. last Thursday when he agreed suburban Maryland. telephone pole wu set ablna
ROME (AP)-Marvin Mitch-attome,y1 in the cue, com· the J.awy.ers to "cl06e ranks, Stennis said he would ask in principle to a speedy draft. Asked if he were In, fine and one ol the fire 'trucks WEf-
etsoJ, the California lawyer mented durina a preaa con-stop fighUng one another and for refonn-minded senators to reform vote limited only to the shape, he replied, "Yesi yes sf:Orled, .tho aberiff'1 GlfJ~
In New Orleans on]y foor
days after the big nationwide
demonstration, Agnew said the
protest was encruraged by
"an effete corps of impudent
snobs."
who u in ItalJ to look ·after,_f_<ftll< __ •_h_e_had __ ca_n_ec1ec1_um_ur~p'----fi~1g~h-t_fu_r_Ra--'-ph_a_e1_.'_' ____ h_~_d_am_endm __ •_nb __ un_W_f_u_ll_l~_te~ry'---lu_u_e_. _____ -_w_·11n_'t_d_o_a~ny~dam--•~ge--_" ___ .. _~_. ______ ~
the ht\eresb GI piano hlj&drer r
Agnew said then t h a l
thousands of well-motivated
young people were taking part
without considering the con-
sequences to their country . At
that time he also criticized
plans for the second Vietnam
war protest which is scheduled
for later this week.
"Unfortunately, we have not
seen the end," ..Agnew said.
"The hank:ore dissidents and
professional anarchist! within
the s o-called 'peace
movement' will continue to ex-
acerbate the situation.
"Nov. 15 is al ready planned
-wilder, more violent. t n1
equally barren or 'co111:lruc~:1·c
result "
Agne\,. S<)i(i ~· · · •~ .. '.
indicated "": 1:
rellrcti,1·'. I· .... ; ,.
' . \
Raphael Miaichlello, denied
today that be ls here 11u an
agent cf the American pvero-
menL"
lie reluaed to say who had
llC01Sed .birn of being an
agent, but, be as.wrted: 1'1
have not been COQlacted by
the State Department, the CIA
or any other government
body. I am not here to f,et him
extradited to ,America. •
• He would not ,say, however,
whether he would Oppose a
formal extradition request if
one were received.
!\fitchelson said he ·was ask·
ed to look out·for the m.year·
old ~1arine corporal by Mini·
chicl•i·s mother and sister in
S.'<ittle. \Vash.,. by his father
in J;-11., <ind by Ilic defendant
l" ,.~ ·:.
-. ''.
-~,
~"::o has been
~. crJ I Italian
s
·-1
. u GI
· !1.i • H's n1ol11er and 17·
·.: J \\ k1:;\\', \\'ho has a
1:, 1~v:::1l hs old. filed a
l;.S. Distriel Cpurl action to
r ·;·cc ccmetert officials to
:. stop "maintainilg a policy of
1·1 di scr im in a ti on against
Negroes."
.rr\· Jr .. ----------
. 1: ,~ih :t i1l Viet-
,, , 11.e ag-e of 20.
s bJ:ick. Elmwood 1
( it< .1·. \rbich you can see
f ·0111 ti1c porch of h i s
childhood home , is white.
&o Bill, who wanted to be
buried in Elmwood, had to be
laid to rest in a Negro
<'Cmetery at the other end of
the city. COSTA M~ZH ....W ~.
Elmwood could sti ll be his
tinat resting place.
ADMIRAL 1 COLOR TV Large ScrHn
Wood Contole .... • DELUXE
KENMORE WASHER ......
2 DOOR
G. E. REFRIGERATOR ....
REPOSESSED -PACKARD BELL COLOR TV lowtlfvl Sponloh Sold MW t... $9J0 • ZENITH
COLOR TV Pecan -
llefnoto •........
·-
-99
' l $79
$69
' SAVE
$400.
$239 •
Buffums' introduces Zsa Zsa ,cosmeticil • • • '
wonderful new ways to be beautiful
Come in and meet Miss Diana Fa rmer, Zsa Zsa's· special represen tati~e. She will be in our
Newport store Thursday, November 13 and Friday, November 14.
B1111J Is HW llY Zsa Zn, No woman sho.uld make-up wilho~l lhe proper tQolS.;Zsa Zsa's-jjlUt
you ,,, bur silver bamboo-handled make-tJp brushes in a s0ft jewelry pOOcll. ,',. Yqars Will ..
PiJrcltase of any two items from hernew beauty collection. Zs,a-Zsa has selected ·speciaf eta·
sers, moisturizers and lotions bra bi.sic skiir.care program to help keep .yi:m skin soft, fmfl.lllil
yoolhful. Cosmetics: --------
BuffumS·
-
, ,
,,
"
" '
1. , ' '
1·. -,
' ,.
. '
. '
..
·,
N.wport e :#1 Fashron lslanCI e Newport Center e 64<4-2200 8 Monday, Thursday, Friday 10:00 Tin 9:30 e OtHor D 1ys ·10:00 m S:30
6
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DAILY PILOT DITGBIAL PAGE
No District Dissolution
•
--For-more than-IS-y88lll lhe-Oren1e County .Harbor
DiJtrict has had a 1peclal Legislature-created status.
Two years ago serious coirtroveny over the district's
operations arose.
A campaign to dissolve the district end reduce it to
a county depertrnent without separate taxing powers
was mounted. Some ol the drive came from the erron-eous impression among Inland city officials that the dis-
trict bas benefited only the coastal residents. Mixed
in, too, were personality clashes which further confused
the issue. Huntington Beach officials nave been particularly
unhappy since the district declined to pay for the city
policing of Huntington Harbi>ur within the city's bound-
aries. 'nlls sore festered uatil the city joined some of the
inland cities in seeking dissolution of the district.
The Board of Supervisors finally settled the question
la.st week, at least for another year. The boanl voted 4
to 1 to reject the proposal to dissolve the district.
A!Semblyman John V. Briggs, R-Fullerlon, one ol
the pr<><lissolutlon leaders, told the supervtsors that ii
they decided against dissolution he is "committed to put
the Issue to the Legislature in January." He wants the
question put to a vote in the November election n ex t
year.
lnstead of continuing his negative approach which
can accomplish nothing construcUve for anyone, Briggs
would be better advised to join In a positive approach by
supporting a proposal by the Orange County Coast As-
sociation.
This is that the Harbor District's name be changed
to Orange County Recreation, Parks and Harbors Dis·
trict and representation on its govtming board be in-
creased.
nffW·name-and-enlargect-t>oard-membel'lhlp-wapld-bel1>---l-
correct the false Impression !hat the dislrlct's acliv •
ties and facilities benefit only coastal residents.
.Even critics of the present operation aclmlt that the
district has done a good job. It now operates Newport
Harbor, Upper Newport Bay, Aliso Beach, Sunset Bay
Aquatic Parle, Sunset Beach parking, the new D an a
Point Harbor, four offshore fishing reefs, five marine
life refuges (two Of them jointly with cities) and beach
erosion control as agent for the supervisors.
The enlarged function and the name Change a r e
clearly desirable. What is equally essential, however,
ts more and better communications between the diS'trict
and · cltY. governments throughout the county.
Now that the supervisors have decided again st dis·
solution, the drive should be to expand the district's ef·
forts to maximize recreational facilitie s all over t h e
county -and to improve the district's image through
better comµrunity relations.
Day for a Special Prayer
Veteran's Day tomorrow brings the unhappy para·
dox of American young men faithfully performing the
patriotic duty asked of them by the country while num-
bers of their fellow countrymen, comfortably secure at
home, prepare to demonstrate against the cause f o r
which these young men are serving.
As the name implies, Harbor District functions
would be broadened to include county parks. And the
The men -and women -who are serving the cause
of freedom in Vietnam and a thousand outposts around
the world. -are no less heroes than those before them
who fought for freedom in Europe or Korea. They de--
serve a special prayer tomorrow for the extra burden
of a divided nation which they must bear. End of the Trail
In Fashion,
Men Differ
' From Women
My colleague, Art Buchwald, had an
amusing piece a few weeks ago aboot the
Nehru suit. Like me, Art bought a Nehru
suit 1 couple of years ago, at the prod·
ding of his wile -1.nd, like me, wore it
twiet.
Just as suddenly as it came Jn, it went
Out. And there we were, stuck for a bun·
dred bucks, with this damned costume in
the closet, too new to throw out, and too
pane to wear with any self~nfidence.
Now, tam all for the fashion revolution
ln men's clothes, and I have publicly ap-
plauded the color, the boldness, the flair
of modem male attire, as contrasted with
lhe dull conformity of the recent past.
BUT, PSYCHOLOGICALLY, the style
manipulators cannot handle men with the
aame arrogant impunity they handle
women.
Men are willing, even eager, tG try
something new, something that makes
them feel more virile and dashing. They
are not willing to change fashions every
few months, or even every year -
be<:3use they are the ones who pay the
bUl!, a n d not the ones who carry t h e
charge-pla~s.
tt bits a husband right in the solar
plexus to buy a piece of clothing lhat will
be obsolescent as 8000 as the wind
changes.
WOMEN, OVER the years, have learn·
ed to accept the weather-vane nature of
fuhion will! a pbllosophlcal shrug. They
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Thal profanity lndialea 1 !act of
vocabulary u well u good taste Is
an old truth. ·Tberdore one may
question lhe quality of an El!Jllsh
department ol a unlvenlty when
writers on the campw: newspaper
have lo resorl to profanity to et-
press an opinion.
-H. B.M.
Tllll """"' nfltdt ...._,. ...... .... .....,.,, ................. , ......
·--.....,. .. ......, ... Dlllr .......
throw away perfec1J>' pod 11-and
skirtl and coats that are onJy a ·RllOD or
two old, becluae they have been ~
dilioD!Jd lo do lbll lrom b!rill.
l don't believe that men can be con-
ditioned In the same way. We are wtiling
to cbabge our image, as the phrue goes,
but not to enter an Annual Style Derby,
in the bot, competitive spirU of Women.
LAST YEAR, FOR lnatance, I bought a
half-dozen pairs of dress alacks that were
neaUy tapered down to a peg bottom,
because they look sleeker than the o I d
"fat pants" men used to wear. Thia year,
the "elephant leg" is being shown for
men, with a bell·bottom flair; but if
anyone thinks I'm going to donate my
tapered slacks to Goodwin, they don't
realize the vast amount of ill will this
fashion change hu generated on my
part.
And K's not just the principle of the
thing. It's the money. Few families can
afford to aipport two adults in the style
to which the manipulators want us tG
become aecustomed. And if only one of
us can keep up with the whirligig of
fashion , you know darn well which one in
lhe family it's going to be.
Miss Elizabeth's Story
Sherwood Anderson? He was something
of. a nliddle-western Chekhov whose "Tile
Triumph of the Egg" has been a standard
in antholGgjes for nearly 50 years.
Anderson (1876-194.1) was of the genera·
tlon of Dreiser, Floyd Dell and Sandburg,
a member of the Chicago littrary
renaissance. Jn a bookstore not long ago I
spotted a paperbaek edtUon o f
"Wmesburg, Ohio,'' Anderson's collection
of related short stories, so for an · his
artlessness and atyliRd Midwest realism,
this voict from lbe shadows must be read
by someone now.
"A Story-Teller's Story" (t92t) was
half ficUon, as nearly all Anderson's fie·
Uon was autobiography. A beardless
Whitman, he was a ''.re-emergent
adolescent," as one critic of that lime put
ii, with "the bewilderment of a mature
man who bas suddenly !>ten forced to
lhlnk."
Anderson. She was "never IW'e who be
would be when be woke up in the morn-
ing."
FOR ANDERSON, as a critic who knew
him noted, modern society and the
worship of materialistic success resulted
in the erection of walls between people, a
sterile sexuality, and a loss of skill in
handicraft and the art&. Such wall!, he
believed, could only be broken down by
love, creative human relationships and a
return to a personal involvement in one's
craft.
Miss Eliiabeth ow some ol the other
side of Anderson during an erraUc mar·
rlage of eigbt ye:an, which now must
seem a very long time ago to this lady
who had a minor and Ur1Uc role in that
particular atory-teller's story, that roam·
tng, lmprovlden~ maverick artlst and
teller ol tall tales who may or may not be
read today. Miss EU;abeth's memoir was
wiltten with the lsSistance of Gerald R.
Kelly (LltUe, Brown; 16.75).
UKE SO MANY seni111e1 and sub-
gentuses in littratllre, Anderson was a
booriah fellow who, In 1919, WTO!e for his
loving~aecond-wife-who-wu traveling in
Calllornlo: "I just wish you would not
come back." She did not. and never aaw
him 1galn. That lady, EI I z • 6 et h w. K. WlMSAIT. Yale prorwor or
Andenon. who 1t U, continues to operate literature wllo has written so m111y
an embl'Wdff')' shop In Taxco, Mexico, diSUnguisbed works on literature and
abedl some revealing footnotes on criticism, has a new book out thJti month,
AncWtOn and hls-Umu in a memoir ti· 1'The Idea of Comedy: Essays in Prose
Ued almply ••Mla Elizabeth." Jt ii a and Verse," covering the period from
curfaul and moving document Ben Jonson to George Meredith. These
M maoa«tt of 1 New York bookstore days when the theater has become a bat·
la Jiii, Jillsl Elltabe<h became • llelll'O"nd for and qamol nudity, among
.mnctet fn her own right, friend of other things, Or. Wimsatt brtngs us an
Edna a. Vincent Millay, Max Eastman, entertalnln& humorous view of stqe
,~..,.. Gerlnlde Sleln, '!11ornton comedy In lhe clos>N; trad!Uon (Prentice·
---.. -otoh Anlerlc• lfter1t1-lllll;~.81,poper-f3.50J.-~ fllllllleOo ol tbe period. And of course Willlam Doau
• •
Mission Viejo Parent Answers a Young Teacher
Sex Education: School Help Needed
To the Editor:
In his address to the Mission Viejo
Rep.1blican Women's Club, Mr. Bruce
Glenn, head Of the social science depart·
ment at Mission Viejo High School, pro-
jected an appalling lack of understanding
of the human condition ; of what
motivates peopli to do what they do and
to avoid what makes them anxious.
Mr. Glenn lumps together two of our
society's current anxieties -Com·
munism and sex education -adds a
neurotic misrepresentation of sensitivity
training; then, through the distortion of
minutiae of truth, he attempts tG change
our anxieUes into hostilities which he
dirtcts ap.inst knowledge, thus our
educatiGnal insUtuUons. Further, he sug·
gests that these hostilities can be resolv·
ed if we resb'lct knowledge, distort truth,
Ignore, fact a and misrepresent rela·
tlonsblps.
MR. GLENN'S ARGUMENT is an odd
one for an educator. Tbe thrust of it Is
strongly ANTieducation. He appears tG
say the following: The Communist con·
spiracy should be countered by -NOT
leaching sei: education and human
senslUVity ••• wt can develop a society
that is increasingly skillful at living
together by NOT learning tG better
understand ourselves, and others and how
Aussie
WASHlNGTON -What can happen to
American prestige and leadership in, a
very brief time has been illustrated in the
recent Australian elections. T h e
Australians have turned sharply away
frGm their all-out political support of
America's role and leadershi p in Asia, at
its peak when President Johnson visi ted
ther~ in 1966.
Prime Minister John GQrton's govern·
ment has been barely able to survive a
heavy reaction supporting tile Labor
leadership's demand for the withdrawal
of Australian troops from Malaysia,
Singapore and Vietnam and favoring Jet·
ting Asia take care of itself.
Au stralia is clearly having serious sec·
ond thoughts about its own involvement
on the Asian mainland when the
.American government's resolve to see
the matter through has bctn undermined
by a collapse in public support.
A STRONG ELEMENT in l ht:
Australian reversal was tile apprehension
that America cannot be depended upon in
the present political climate to persevere
in such a difficult and circumscribed
undertaking as that in Vietnam.
Thus we have the fir st concrete
evidence that American credibility as th e
unbeatable champion of the free world is
fading . A nation like Austra lia which
must continue to Jive conliguous to and
have profitable relations with Asia has
the long-run to think about when the col·
ossua from across the Pacific fa lters.
A:t lhrough the period or xustralian
support of American policy there was
strong opposition. President Johnson got
,---By 6eor9e --~
Dear Geora:e:
My d.Q:& can ~s\ver questions
beUer than you! (Just kidding -wan~ to sec II
you have the nerve to print this.)
SUE AND THE OFFICE GANG
Dear Sue and Gang :
Nevi:ir mind about my nerve -
just Jet me know how much your
riog will work for. f'rn tired of
~ --,:tealtng rrom-Abby-end-Ann.
LetteT1 from r eadeTs are tuelcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages i·n 300 wOT<b or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. Alt let·
ters must include signature and mail·
ing address, but names may be with·
held on request if sufficient reason
is apparent.
we interrelate (the true gOal of sensitivi·
ty training} ••• we can develop young
adult.a with healthy sexual attitudes by
NOT teaching them the world's ac·
cumulated wisdom on the subject.
I AGREE THAT parent.5 have a
responsibility to teach their kids about
sex. But, how can we if we parents wait
"until a question is asked" as Mr. Glenn
suggests? As most parents knGw -and
Mr. Glenn obviously does not know -few
Y.id.s will voltmtarily ask their parent..1
about sex. Knowledgeable parents kno\Y
that teen-agers are going to accept only
part of what they hear from mom and
dad. A significant part of their sex educa·
lion will come from their peer group; in
lhe alley and, hopefully, In the controlled
environment of the classroom.
As a parenl, I will do my part but I
need the school to help me give my kids
the healthiest possible altitudes toward
sex.
I suggest to t.-tr. Glenn that he redirect
the energy he uses fighting sex education,
sensitivity training and communism into
an equally sincere attack on ignorance.
J1c wiU then discover that knowled ge not
only builds better human beings in our
society. but. knowledge makes com·
n1unism a very unattractive alternative
to ·~ur American way of life.
Education is the road to trutll and
knowledge. If f¥1r. Glenn will believe in it,
he can become an important and creative
iorce in the lives of those kid s at Mission
Vi~jG Jligh Scllool. two of whom are
mine.
GIL SILVIUS
'Si111pl"11 l11sn11e'
,. the Edi tor :
11ow do tile wives and mothers feel
about putting a known Comm unist in our
schools or rol!eges 'vhen the Commies
arc killing their sons and husbands? It's
as sin1p le as that.
Sim ply insane.
RANDOLPH D. FULCHEll
Fo1dl11g Ber Neat
To the Editor : •
Angela Davis is betraying her
American heritage of freedom (yes, her
freedom} by taking refuge behind the Bill
of Rights to aid in the destruction of tho
Bill of Rights and the Constitution. She is
betraying her position of trust for which
fhe is generously paid, to spread distor·
lions. Miss Davis is capitalizing on her
position of relative affluence to deride the
capitalistic economy in favor of a
bankrupt socialistic ideology.
HER DIALOGUE contradicts her way
Cif life from which she has made no visi·
ble effort to escape.
Angela is fouling her nest of academic
freedom by condemning the system that
gave birth to freedom and abundance and
by embracing a doctrine of
tctalitarianism that suppresses a 11
freedom. By common sense standards,
this un·American, Communist activist
forfeited her right to teach when she ad·
vacated the abolition and destruction of
lreedom and llelf determination.
ARTHUR B. McQUERN
The Angela Davis case has been sa
thoroughly discussed in Mailbox that,
unless there is some new develop-
ment. 110 fnore letters on the subject
1ui/l be published.
-Editor
Support of U.S. Declines
Rii:;har.cLWilson
a la!:I~ of it whe n his car was splashed
ll'illl yello1v paint and a n g r y
demonstrators screamed at him in
J\ustralian cities. But the overwhehning
majority of Australians backed the late
Prime ttlinister Holt in his articulate and
dedicated suppor t of Johnson.
"YOU NEVER UAD such a loyal all y;'
said Prime A-1inister Hott and so it seem·
c::I until America began to wince from the
prolonged pain of Vietnain. Australian
misghings rose proportionately and now
Prime Minister Gorton will have dif·
fi culty gauging Australian withdrawal
!rom Vietnam to the pace of Artteri cao
\\•ithdrawals and maintaining even token
Australian representation in 11alaysia
and Singapore.
If Holt had lived (he was drowned in a
S\vimming accident) tht A~tralian break
\vilh American policy might not have
been so sharp. But with Johnson's
politi cnl dem ise and with the massive
sh ift in American opinion al the middle
level Holt could probably not 'nave been
able tG sustain his pro-Johnson line.
The Australian experience suggests
that Pacific nations are arriving at their
O\vn conclusions on Nixon's low-profile
ls Our System a Lie?
For over 100 years, the opportunity to
climb to the tGp of the acaden1ic ladd('r
has beer. an inspiralion to millions of
California yotmg people.
\Ve ha\•e told them tllal if they work
hard, get high grades and are responsible
they can qualify to enter our tuition-free
state colleges and universities.
Guest F..dito"Iiai
In cleny entrance to 34,000
students. UC's figure is 25,000.
qualified
Suddenly this chance for our young TliE RE AGAN administration,
people to achieve i!I being threatened. however, has stressed that the initial
Gov. Ronald Reagan's fiscal experts have a!!__ocatlon fi gu res are rock bo_ttom: that
announced initial, drastic cul3 in finan· they can be revised upward.
cial ayppoAfqr the statc_college.!l-and _ Callfornians should Jnsls_L on n_olhing
University or California. less than a guarantee of higher education
for all qualified studt:nts. They should
AT THE STATE COLLEGE level, the also insist that any diversion of students
proposed allocation js $265.2 million for lo junior colleges not become an ad·
next yea.r. It is some $6.l million less than ditlonal bu rden on local taxpayers. They
the $32.8.2 million state cbllege officials sh:iuld insist, as well, tha,t the final
say Is needed to permit entrance tow all buitgets be establl$hed soon so stUdents
qualified students. can make plans for theii-future.
'The story is much the same for UC. lts The state. In an era or !iOCia;f unrest,
s11pport program was $314.3 million this can 111 afford a situation lb.at undermines
)•car. Its proposed slate allocaUon for the incentive of its young people and their
next year is $286 million. This Is $88 plans to achieve. For if We close our
million less than the $3i4 million UC of· historic doors of Gpportunlty to too,,e who
fici als say is needed to admit all qualified ""-ork hard to qualify theJ1llel ves1 our /
s111dcnts. whole social system becomes a lie. The
' hc-rcsull-0-f thesc-budgc.t.cuU:-ls-lbdt.-ktdS-u·illJcnow-it-and~will--liMht-it ·;
!talc college officials say they may have Education News Sti:vicer
I
poli·~y in Asia and the ultimate meaning
of the American withdrawal from Viet·
nam. Their reading of what Nixon is
dol n.;:: may be different than his own in·
terprelation of it. They may have con·
eluded that he is in the process of Ji.
quidating completely an unsuccessful
policy with no hope of reaching the gGais
he sUll professes.
WHEN NIXON travelled to Southeast
Asia in the late summer it seemed that
tile governments in Manila, Djakarta,
•Bangkok and Saigon sympathized with
his policy of reducing the American
presence and did not regard this as an
elaborate bug-out.
They may now have concluded,
however, that Nixon is on an irreversible
course he can nG longer control and that
they had better look for new ar·
rangements in an Asia where America
can no longer be .relied on. If the
governments of the free Asian countries
have not reached this conclusioit, the
voters in those countries may be catching
up with them , as would appear to be the
case in Australia.
Wh at the ultimate effect will be, not
c:inly in Asia but in the non-Communist
nations of Europe, cannot be foreseen ,
but it surely will be one result that
America no longer looms so large.
-----
Monday , November 10, 1969
The editorial page of t~e Dally
Pilot seeks to inform and tUm-
ulate reader• by pre1tnting thb
'1U!WSJ)(Jper'1 opfniom and com-
mt1~tary 011 topics of intfrtst
and significonct, by protridlng ti
forum for the erpreuion of
our rtadera' opiniona, and bW
prcaen«ng the diDerae vfe10o
points of fnfortMd obserwr•
a·rid JPOktsmtn on toptcs of the
day.
_Robejt.N._W.eed, Publisbtt._ _
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Monday, t4owmbtr 10, 1969 DAILY PILDT 7
Drunken
Driver . ~\ . .h
CHECKING
Data-Toll.~_ ........... •UP•
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
drinking driver who Is in-
volved lo an auto accident in
Callfomia is likely lo be 21 to
25 years old, male and more of
a fatal dan&er to himself than
others.
Those facts emerged rrom a
detailed report bf the highway
patrol on acchlents in 1968 in
which the symbol "HBD" ap·
peared. on the report. ,
It stands for "had been
drinkii:ig."
In 1968, that symbol ap-
peared on 31,228 fatal and in-
jury accident reports.
Some 856 drivers who were
obvioUsly drunk or whose
ability was impaired by
alcohol were involved in ff;lal
accidents J35t year. Of these,
489 were single.car accidents:
329 involved another vehicle
and 38 hit a pedestrian .
However, the number of
fatalities involving a drinking
driver dropped by 73 fron1
1967, to 1,688. Patrol officials
said they didn 't know why.
OneinFourWomen •
Sleep~ in Pajamas
By L. M. BOYD . '
AM ASKED TO NAME the
Ertglish languag~ word with
the nu>St synonyms. That's
easy. "Drunk." L· , • CAN
ANYBODY VEjl\IFY the
wide.spread report that the lot
pictY.red ln the Gerber' Baby
Foo(\ ads was actially the late
Humphrey Bogar in infancy?
... \'I' HAS BEEN DETER~UNED lhat one out
of ever;Y four grown women
sleeps, fu pajamas ••. A SIGN
IN the ball of a small Omaha
hotel directs occupants: "Add
anti-freeze daily and change
the sheets every 1,000 miles."
... RAR Y REPORTED is
the fact that women's feet
have grown consfderably big-
ger in the last I~ years.
service
GRANDDAD was a Jad, the
best-dressed men did not wear
creases in their trousers.
Custom tailored slacks were
not pressed llke that. Cheaper
pants were, though . So they'd
stack on dry goods counters.
CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q.
';How cold does it have to get
before it's loo c;old to snow?"
A. Don't believe it ever gets
too cold to snow ... Q. "ASK
YOUR LOVE and War man-
as far es cooking goes, what
should a bride learn first?" A.
How to make a decent cup of
coffee. he says ••. Q. "WltO
1NvENTED th• ·rocking Postcard of St•pJJort chair?" A. Name of the •
gentleman eludes me, but he lived 00 Cape Cod. Will check \Vhite House has sent to l'ach member of Congress a picture. postcard type mes-
rurther. _. Q. "WHAT DOES sage pointing out a Gal lup Poll U:i~t says 77 percent of the American people
the u.s. Treasury Department approve of President Nixon's V1ctnam policy address. Here, Sen. Harrison
in Washington, D. c. do with A. \Villiams (D-N.J .) hol ds the picture of the President seated behind ·a desk·
counterfeit bills?'. A. Stores ful of te1egrams of congra·tulation. 'fhe accompanying note is from Bryce Har·
Geologist Sees
Rainier Activity
OLYMeIA. Wash. (UPl1)~ ---Jboou1t caused little d&mage..-
There will be more volcanic However, Crandell said his
actlvlty from ML Rainier, a studies show large areas have.
now docile peak with an ex· been inundated by mud nows
plosive history. a federal and fioods ln the last 10,000 -Joglst and exN>rt 00 the years beca use of volcanic ac-e...... r-tlvity.
mountain said. "We don't know if we'll have
Dr. Dwight R. Crandell, with three hours, three days or
the U.S. Geological Survey in three years warning before
Denver, Colo., told a con-something happens," Crandell
fertnce of sclentlrts and said. "As far as we can tell
government officials the only from geologic records, there is
quesUon is "when and what no pattern of actlvlty."
form the activity will take." He said whatever the next
He said the last recorded action may be, "the tradi-
vok:ank: acUvtty on M t • tlonal Java now would be no
Rainier. which at lf,410 feet is direct danger." However, he
the fifth highest mountain in said, heat Involved could pro--
the contiguou,, United duce "very hazardous" mud
States, occurred lo the 1800s, flows.
Scienee Shrinks Painful
Hemorrhoids
Stops Itch-Relieves Pain
Finch Way That Both Reliev .. Pain
and Shrinlca P'd .. In Most Cases
N"' Yort. N.Y. (Spodll), Sci-
ence hu found a •pecial for-: mule with the ability, in m011t
uses-to shrink hemorrhoids. a~p ltcbiq and"nlle•e J>Ain.
lb ca1a after ca11 doctor• proved, while gently ~llevinc ,.i.. .m.l net .. ~ .. (abrink-
age) took plr.ee. The aecrtt ft
Prepa.ratio• B•. There ia nr.
other fonnule for hemorrhoids
like it. Prepar"'tion H al11>
1oothe1 Irritated U11ue1 an4
helps preymt .fmther infection..
InointmentPr lllPJ)OliW,.form.
Of the 5.85.1 persons who
died on state roads last year.
34.8 percent were in an ac-
cident which involved a drink-
ing driver.
Drunks also can k i l I
themselves on foot, I.he patrol
noted, It reported I 7 7
pedestrians who had been
drinking died in motor vehicle
accidents.
USED CARS -\Vould you
pay $655.45 for an old Jeep in
good condition? So would I.
That was the average sale
price of 119 Jeeps which the
U.S. Government recently put
up for auction at Camp McCoy
near S p a r t a. Wisc. Highe.<:t
bidder paid $950. Don't know
what the cheafiest went for.
Do you perchance recall what
I he Government originally
paid for each of those Jeeps?
Just $293.40. Jt is not often you
hear about such bargains in
military hardware.
them in what is formally low, presidential aide. · _
known as the Funny Money1-----'-----------------='----------.:...-------------------
Room . . • Q. ••GENIUS
The ffiost fr equent violation
by drinking drivers involved in
fatalities \Vas exceeding the
speed limit.
The statiSt ics a !so showed
far more males than females
in accideW involving a drink·
ing driver.
'The male 21-25 was most
prone to such accidents.
Among females, the peak oc-
currence was in the 36--f-O age
groop.
GEORGE WASHINGTON
wore size 14 shoes.
AMONG ALL CATEGORIF.S
of culprit, that outlaw most
apt to admit his crime in a fit
of unbridled bragging is the
bank robber. Or so says a
former FBI man of long
FBEE
·HOLIDAY SHOW
for Kiddies
1/ I
Ii
TUESDAY, NOV. 11
• FASIDON ISLAND•
Performances: 11a.m.,1 p.m.,
2 p.m., 3 p.m.
Bring the little ones lo }'ashion I.land,
Tuesday only, for a delightful holiday
show on the mall. }'ree balloons and
loads of laughter with the Mitchell
Marionettes. Fol1r performances.
58 Fine Stores and Services
FASHION j ISLAND
1fJ:WPOltT CllMTlla
PAClnC COAST HIGHWAY BETWEEN JAMI ORE£ AND MAC ARTHUI
SHOWS UP much oftener in
men than in women, does it
not?" A. Does indeed. So does
idiocy.
EPITAPI{ -Joe Miller was
a fine chap, a dramatic actor,
an Englishman with a serious
tum of mind. He died in 1738.
A careful study of-the.records
of the day do not indicate he
ever told a joke in public.
Nonetheless, a year after Mr.
Millet's demise, some cunning
entrepreneW' collected all the
bad gags current in the Lon-
don streets and published
them in a volume peculiarly
called, "Joe Miller's Jest
Book." What an odd thing to
do to an honorable man!
RAPID REPLY: No trouble
at all, Mr. B. First fellow ever
to put his head in a lion's
mouth was one Isaac Van
Am burgh.
Your questians and com·
111ents are welcomed and
witL be used whenever pos·
sible in "Checking Up." Ad·
dress mail to L. M. Boyd, in
care of the DaUt1 Pilot, Bo;z;
1875, Newport Beach, Calif.
92663.
Bond ,Worth
$30-Million.
KANSAS CITY IAP). -
Cameron K. Reed says Kansas
may owe him $30 million.
Reed, president of t h e
United Funds Inc., recently
discovered a $500 bond issued
by the territorial government
of Kansas on May 14, 1859.
Reed said he bought It from a
friend for $25 about 20 years
ago, then put it away and for-
got it.
"Al ID pcrccnl -the In·
terest it was supposed to draw
-the value of the bond
doubles about every seven
years," Reed said. "That
makes it worth about $30
million.''
However, Recd doesn't think
he'll try to collect fron1 the
state. ''I suppose I'll give il to
the Kansas Historical Socety."
he said , "if it \1·ants the
thing .''
PUT CASH IN
YOUR POCKET
&II un,Yonted !terns
'vith a DAILY PILOT
Classlfied Ad.
PHONE
642-5678
Come in now/
I
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'''•••» •:••·"~" •'• ' .... '.. l> ..
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ware. Pecan veneer over hard·
woad. Rich black vinyl seat
covers.
SAVE $7518 piece
'Contemporary'
group
REG. $749$674
NOW .
Includes china cabinet, , ...
!angular !oblo plus 3 1-
2 armchairs and -4 side chairs..
Jn fine pecan veneer ever se-
lected hardwood. Fine detaiJ.
ing and cane bocked chai~
Buffet, 3 drawers, 2 doo,.
REG. $205 NOW $184
~------------Theso Storos Open Sunday, Toa! 12 lo 5 p.m. -------------.
CANOGA PARK
MONT{lLAIR
DOWNEY
LAKEWOQ[)
FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
NEWPORT BEAC·t:i. ___ 'JENIUBA
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I D.111.V-'8.0T • ......,, N-IO, 1'69
Dems to Sponsor
Tax Relief Bill
FRESNO (Pl)
Callf<nlia Danocnll, hopln(
In win boct tile blue c:olllr
vote. may ·-a "lltUe mlD'&" property tu. relief
measure on next y~·· ballot.
The idea Js to give
Democratic candidates
:lfinethlnc popular to ban1
their hata on at the ballot box.
The P<-1 ., .. disclosed
by party leaden Sunday al tile
windup of a s t atewide
Democratic convention at-
knded by l,IGO.
Sev<ral tu relief plmw 111"
under conaldera.tion.
Dm>ocrats hope tlley can find
one to unite behind. Party of·
fidala durilll the weekend
Gross State
Product
Jumps 8,2%
const..Uy polnkd to sur.10y1
which show voters -
particulirly labor u n lo n
members -are u alarmed
about high projlerty toes u
anything else. •
One tentative plan; by
Assemblyman Joe W.
Gonsalves, CD· .La Mirada).
would place a limit on the
amount ol property taxeo
which could be levied qlinllt
residences. The limit would be
1 percent of assessed value. So
if a home were assessed at
$$,000, the property tu would
be ISO.
The state would be required
for Jocal government But it
• •
to make up the lost revenue tt'i
couldn't do it by raisin& the ~··
sales or income tu. II
"Gov. Reqan would ha>e to 1 'ft.;.,
go to his friend! -the big '-------------------'
businesses, the oil companies, -·-------------------the corporations -for the
revenue," said G. W. (Joe)
Holsinger of Burlingame, the
North·ern California
DemocraUc chairman.
• Increase of Agencies
Adding to Tax Bills
•
' . Pornpgraphy.,.Dmn~n Dr.i~ing...:.Cr.ac~wri.s Begin
SACRAMllN'l'O" (AP) -
stricter ,law1• oa. ~aphy
and drunk driving are. the
highlipll al a stack of new
laws wblcb a:o into effect to--
day.
The 111811 ie&iliaiure odopted
more than 11000 new laws, and
most of them go into effect on
the 8tst day after the end of
the session -today.
A few go into effect on
specific dates, and others went
lnto force the moment they
were slgned by Gov. Reagan,
because they were passed by a
two-thirds vote u being of an
''Urgent" nalurt.
An analysis of the laws
gQtng lnto operation today in-
dicates the legislature was
bent on putlng tighter controls
over the moral and sexual
behavior or Californians.
A major revision of the. anti·
pornography law, designed to
make it easier for police and
distri ct attorneys to get con-
victions, gives a special defini·
Uon of obscene material for
minors, less rigid than the one
for adults.
tentli al 0ne jierceni or hilJlier. Wider tile protectiOJ\ or tile adopled.
That is the level at which a Bay c.o n s er vat ion and A coroner now ha!i the
driver. ii presumed from now D e~lopment Commission power ~n1y to df:lermi,ne he
on to be dnmk. bee I ol. a· law making. the cause of death UJlQer a Ia''
Another new law -which BCOC .permanent agency. ii which takes away his authori·
J:lready is in trouble in lbe wodld hive gone . oµt of ex. ty to declarii justflabl,e homi·
courts gives 1 o ca l Jstence ff the law hadn't been cide.
governments the authority toji.iiii~~~i;;;;;;ii;i;;;;;;;;;;,.i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
ouUaw topies.s and bottomleu
entertainers and waitresses.
Los Angeles County's new
ordinance, which was to go in-
to effect today, was ~eclared
invalid last week by a
Superior Court judge. It Pro-
bably will go to the U.S.
Supreme Court lor final Jude·
ment.
Another field in wtUch the
legislature adopted several
new laws was conservation
and the environment. ·
The Agriculture Department
now has greater control over
pesticides, which experts say
are becoming a threat to man
and beast. And the state now
can levy a fine of up to $6,000
a day against a persistent
polluter of' the waters of
€alirornia.
San Ftancisco Bay remalos
I
I SEE BY TODAYS
. WANT ADS
e Good deed for a big broth·
er -save a sole! High
school student needs trlln,s.
portation from lluntireton
Beach to Santa Ana.
e Those bare walls \l'On'l
close you in il you select
an original oil paintlqa;, in
beautiM gilt rrames, eith-
er castles, ships or n1is·
sions .
It also will re easier for ;====;:======,II
police to make a drunken drlv· Gloomy Gus ls
• Ever been caught II\ a log
at sea? You'll hurry for
this Heathkit RDf and
fog horn and hailer -
even a new 4'' airglide
comPf\S:S -all reasonably
priced.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Calllomla'• ..... -pro-duct amr u pm:ent In tile
put yw to ., October total
al 1101.75 blllloo, •c:oordln& to
tile Bank a1 Callforma.
Democrats believe Reagan
and most Republicans would
be lorecd to oP(JOOO tile
measure, which would get on
tbe ballot tbroop . t h e
sipature gathering inttiaUve SACRAMENTO (UPI) -If
taxes hurt one rtUOn may be
the ever increasing number Of
agencies with taxing power.
ing charge stick -if the
ing districts. alcohol content of the driver's Your Kinda Guy
"I think ft atso· is signifl· .:b:iood:::•:...b:::re.::•:::tll:...:or:...:ur:.:ine:::...is::...:one-::;:_..:::=:;:::======== L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pencml tncome in the state
,.... up JO.I percent to 187.JO
biIUon, aod wages and aallria
accounted for 81 percent of all
penonol incom<, tile bank
said Sunday.
p...,.,.i spendlnr amounkd
to 167.31 billlan, With retail
sales Ning lo.7 .perc<nl to
Ml.20 billion and eervkes ris-lnl to 125.11 billion.
llusiness spending foe fixed
Investment grew 4.1 percent in
a year to an October total of
$13,23 billion, whJle govern.
ment spending ·roee 8.3 per·
-to 121.21 billion. Califbrnla'1 man\lfaeturing
odvanced U -·to 125.75
bllllan. ligrlcuKure jumped 1.5
-to 13.31 billion, tile
construdlon Industry pined
7.2 percent to 14.7 billion,
mining inched .I percent to
11.01 bllllon, utilities rrew 1.3
-to 19.41 billion, trsde odvanced U percent to Ill.II
biftion. fmance-real estate-io-
sui'ance climbed t .5 percent
and accumulakd $1Ul billion,
and servi"' produtdon gained
7.1 _..t to $il.C bllllon.
·Teacher Appeal
Bargaining Ban
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Delegates to lhe Ca1lfomia
T 1acber1 Association con·
wriUon are appealing to the
l'llslature to rte0gniu col·
lecU.ve bargaining rights of
teochen and permit them to
designate a single collect.ive
bargaining agent to d<al with
achool boards.
The request was voted upon
at a resolution sesskln Satur·
day. 'll1e teachers aJao vGted
to spomor a consUtutional in-
itlaltve requiring tile lllte to
provide IO percent of funds
needed to lllpporl I o c a i -·
process.
Assembly Democratic
leader Jess -Unruh, a probable
candidate for the party's
gubernatorial nomination, said
be would support lllCh. a pn>-
position. Durini a faee-U>lace debate
with San Francllco Mayor
Joseph Alioto Salurday, Unruh
said any klcal property tax
losses should be made up by
raising levies on such interests
as oil, banks, liquor, cor·
porationa and toba ceo.
Unruh and Alioto, competing
unannounced for the
g u b e matoria1 nomination,
found llWe to areue about dur·
Ing the debate.
Man Kills
Boy Found
In Garden
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Police 1 a y :neighborhood
children had been el.Im.bing
..... 'Doyle 'llwd'• 'l!ockyml
fence"for some ·time, trampl-·
ing his garden.
When Heard returned from
church Sunday, police say, his
landlady told hlm the children
were at it again. .
Intending to frighten the
youngsters, Heard, 5'1, took his
.31<aliber pistol Into the back
yard and fired once, police
reporkd. Heird said be lired
into tile ground.
Jerry Robinson, I, standint
outside the fence, was bil in
tht. chest. He ran home, col·
lapsed and was pr~
dead at a hospital.
Ballistics Wts and a n
autopsy , will be conducted to
determine if the· ballet struck
the ground beloce hitting tile
youngster.
Our regular
dinner box
forjustBW
Moe'·• tlaroqll. £rid&)',
Jfcw.10, 11111, 1ll and 14
2'2' last Cod wy. c:orw clel Mar 67J.372l
cant," Flournoy said, "that1 · =
St.ate Cmtroller Houston J.
Flournoy said Sunday tile
number ol special district tu:·
ing jurl.sdlctlons increased the
past liscal year by 131 to 3~11
districts. The increase was the
(reatest tn 13 years.
"'The districts provide special
services not offered by coun.
ties, cities, school districts and
irrigaUon districts.
Flournoy said most of the
new diltrkrts were created to
meet Jwoad groups of needs,
r . "sUy created by urban
awL New categories of
L .strtdl a-eated in the past
fiscal year art joint exercise
of power districts and com·
munlty deveiopmt11t and boos·
Prisoner
Shot After
Getting Gun
MADERA . (AJ') A
prisoner ahot in an exchange
of gunfire with officers on
Madera's main street was in
critical condition in the county
hosptial today.
The -sheriff's oUiCe said
Leonardo Vasquez, 65, of
Madera, was wounded in the
abdomen by a shotgun blast
. Sunday night after grabbing a
deputy's gun while being
transported from jail to a
hospital.
The driver stopped the car
and he and tile deputy bolkd
for cover.
Vasquez firtd three shots
before being wo unded .
deputies said. Neither officer
was hll
the number or air pollution
c o n t r o 1 districts increased
from nine to 14.''
The controller said the
districb last fiJcal yf:ar col·
lected lt.571 billion and spent
$1 .4711 billion.
Los Angeles County ho.cl tile
most opecial districts With 342
districts. The state's most
densely populated and most
sparsely populated counties -
San Francisco and Alpine -
had the fewest districts -four
each. ·
Securities
Group Ends
SACRAMENTO (UP I) -
The Califonlla Districts
Securities Commission ended
its :JS.year.old existence today
but its functions wUI continue
under the state treasurer's of·
fice.
The COSC was abolished by
tile 11811 leatsiatme which
tranafered !ts 1-to tile
trmurer. Tbe 001111111'sion acts as a watchdog on
aecuriUes Issued by special
districts.
State Treasurer Ivy Baker
Priest said the commission's
offices would remain in San
Francisco.
Present members or the
commission, ·established in
1931 depreMion days, are
Albert T. Henley, San J ose,
chairman; Harry C. Griffen,
Lemon Grove, vice chairman,
and Milton L. Kldd, Modesto.
COMPACT
Tli• DAILY PILOT t1U1 Y••
ltlotl -f11 , ... atNC• -1¥1'Y
ii1y 1liovt your com1•111"ity thin
1rry other 111wtp1pw 1!•111 th•
Gr.et Or1•1• C.11t.
n•1asupper,1 lunch, a picnic.
a blnquet In a box. And look et
whatyouget:thrHplumpplOCM
of juicy golden-brown Kentucky
Fried Chicken, whipped potatoes
and gravy, cole slaw and roll.
And you can buy up to six boxes
OI only 994 -"· A mlghly flne
price for such a fing8r·llckln'
good felst from~ Sanders.
691 SOiitli Coast . wy.
1.G9una ltacll 494·9418
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'·
Huge savings on shag or
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REG. 7.99 sq. yd.
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I REG. 9.99 sq. yd.
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7.99 sq.¥d·
Pad and Installation available at re9ular low Penney prlc:es. . ~· . " :
for Shop at Home convenience, Phone the
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• We bring samples.
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CANOGA PARK
(813-3660)
FULLERTON
(871'-4343)
• frff consuftotion.
• No obligation.
IAKEWOOO NEWPORT W.CH
(634-7000) (l:IU713)
DOWNEV HUNTINGTON lfAOI ONTCIAm -~~,----,,--.,-
(149...Ul) <m.mu <6n.3111 .. "'·ni n (6'2.1m1
..
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ai8PIM ,~lll'#ID• 21
Born to Purple,
--0-Reooy w Reign
LONllOll (AP) -II was -·-.-1111. Bmln b*bded by tbe
11i.i-. .CIOchaolovaklo
...... ..,. the Communllla •.•
--!noted ..•. The . , mt -ol l•ml pro; l elllmed ••• '11lo Olympic
-ID~ ...
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Allll ..,. llllnl -.. A boy
... bam to lhe llU?Jlle. to be
Ibo -1:1111 al I!:nilud. tliil WD .., &lndly, Nov.
11, II Buckhllfllln P.w:..
'l1lo boy, Cbulel . Pblllp ll~iSl'"lJ
Arthur Georp Windsor;. ,L.
.. -his 2111 blrlhdly "" Fridl¥ boorln( the weJcl>t ol .
lllCh UU.. u Prince ol Wal.,, .
Evl of O>eater, Duke of ·
Cornwall, ·Dute al Rolhelay,
Earl ol Calricl:, Baron ol Ren-
frow, Lard ol lhe lal• and HEIR TUINING 21
Grul Steward ol S<ollond. Brltalf.>'• Prfnca CW.rlH
In lllla ..... f.......m,tng \
era of reined royalty, the ', ,
tilrlhday wUI be In that vein, PIAnl ,jlth IDfluence ovtr the
Ml Prince Charlu lnlenda to royal ~ •.
alebrafe 11 Wilb 0 bang. Chari. WU uked r<CtDlly
The -. formal port ol the about his father'• pendwll for
-will brlq In telling people ... etlmta. to
v1o11n maet1ro y e b u d I "sit down and lllul up."
-and his D-plece "Does he tell you thll!" .,
Fallval Orcbelln, plua celllat Interview« med.
Maurtoe Gendron. Prince "All the-tne,I' the future
Owles Is an admirer ol King said wl!h • wide grin.
Mmlbln and ol Mozart. and He protably expects little ~ viollnl!t sald he will oblige change in that once he's 21.
with smnethlng ol Mozart'•. The big chsnge h in the
The invitaUon to Gendron was financi al rtalm. Charles has a natural, Charles being an enthusiastlc amateur ctllbt. been drawing $72,000 a year from the revenues of the
For reocblna his majority Duchy ol Cornwall. A1J of this
with -. popular and olreody week, be is enUUed to the full
..tabllabed u • worm, w!Uy '518,000. Among his holdings
all-rounder, Quarles bas been as the duke are Dartmoor atven the bJep~ of his Prison, the Comish oy1te
!Mlher, Queen Elliobelh II, beds, vast laming acr..,.,
and his father, Prlnoe·PblllP, granite quarries, tin mines
for a proper blowout al the ond blgh-priced ...i ..tale in
palace where he Wll born. London. 11
The guest list Is being made Chari" bu alnoUnced he
up -· From all lndlcal(ons will oc<ept only half the lbe llgbla In the -old llone d11cily'1 nvenues Ind plow the
edlftce will be blutng, the rut back into the govenunent
binds · pMying and the wine pool from wbidl the royal
Oowtng. family draws ill reWnue.
'IWnlng 21 In Britain sUU He'll .un be 1elllo( l!q on
rolis major C<lebrsUons. For about $1,IOO a -k -tu
a..r1e1 H Is • mlll_2_,~P in fre<. .
the control ol • w•-n<W The prince bu -up his '°'.:: Fr!dly, he wUI Ide on lrcheolOI)' stud!" at cam. lbe odminlltralkln of inherited bridge and h abort lo llnlah est&'-worth millions -in conctntrating on hi! history courses.
eithef pounda « dollars. Ch-~-•·· ··•• be I 1111 pmonal decl!IOll! on ~ -..,.. 1 . tDID1111bjedl. however, at.fll 1eriou1I1-~~n· ··
are likely 1o be under the per!.,,.. In fl!i annod -.
llOndlny-al llis mother, as tbe-'lbalt!Q!ld bl~!;;-:: ., ' ·
-...Ip, .. Wl!il ... his ol lbe family ' --
fdler aa a atroog w I 11 e d to h i s grea dfather,
Galaxy Tests
At Half Point
Gecrge V, known as the aallor
kini. His , own fa~r, Pbpip,
·was a naval offl:ctr". when he
manied Prlnceu Elizabeth.
Both he and Charles now are
quallOed pilots. I .
Another thing°"'" would MAlUEl'TA, Ga. (AP) -like to pursue Is amateur ~a Co. officials tht.abicals, at ~ he hu
R1J t011in1 oldie CIA Goluy, shown '°'"e talenii.along wllb
Iarpat olrplone In the world, · playing the celll! Ml the
hu ...-the balfway point druml, and lwlDjllic • lood
Ml tllal lell& lllow the lllck 11 polo. He jf !mlnhlbllod
al!<nll meell or exceeds Air In wb-er rolei• •atsned
Farct l'Jll'lnteel. him. j.J
I , , I
. i
'
) .......
~ '
I /t
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Wave'ferm. mcike a eautiful
difference right ab<!~I now?
12.50 I .
• ·--·--
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LINGTHS
WIDTH 41" 144•
.54• 5.99
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Pl111:-111e, beige; litue::.111111 length•
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$11
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Insulated textured weave that's smart in any
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LENGTHS
WIDTH 50" 75•. 100" 125" 150"
54• $Ii 19.49 $25-. ' , ,
84" .t.12 21.49 $28-38.49 S..2 .. ,
. Plus: white, champagne, olive,_ blue,
loden, red, pumpkin ... and lengths
from 45' to 84" ••• 171" combiiiations of
sizes and colors available 1 on ipecjal
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The total look of beauty fQr )'OUr windows Is achieved with the right
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iu0" ... *7 41-16" ... 'IO
11-150" ... 13.50
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'Tique', e1egant
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luxurious rayon/ cotton brocade that loob
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LENGTHS ---WIDTH so• 75• 100" 125" 150"
54• 8.49 SIS $20
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14" 9.49 S18 s2.4 l.10 $36
Plus: champagn•, bronze glo, will-,
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•our Guarantee Against Sunfacling
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·DECORATE NOW •• :CHARGE 11'1
,
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'lfo Da•P~ Wt ...
Rains w Flood
,~·· :i1;1lris -c R· ? fi',4r~y I ~ ft.~~'~~·:·
.: I 1' \1; ~, \ "':'}!t-.t·c1 1
. , ' I ~ , The U.S .. Antry \>11'111 ill ~1 ni.Jv! I 1 Enci..neers 111·s the
cot .. M.,... tt 1 • , reapooilblUty ol remoViag the . . . ..... Ind debris brougbt .sANTA .AN~ ..., ile1llCIVll ol c1o.-n by heavy noack
....i. '""'1 Ille , SalU Ana J.ut year.
River _,'.t • bo oqaipleted The <Jorpt ol EnclDeen hu
belaft mid-~"""· b ii t lndlcaled that Ille w. shGuld -~--·t....... ,.. ' ried llliout· thi pooolbWty thol :::. ;:'.'"" by the end of
flood' coodltlooll will arise The County • Flood CoOtrol
be!°"" ~ river IJ.boct,lo ill llillild-tia dRldol lo lpeDd
"'°mill ~.<0P4cjlj. 9illl'd 'to'-..... leirel of HObvlaOsly tbe rfver ·ii· net .-~ ":!"'' ' u ule now as It ,,,.. beforo' the r!P'rop <riln!~ siding)
r' •---•-· " --'d 0.. feet fnm. just above last yiea 5 ~vy '~• .., Pidflc OJiit. Highway
Jock , Scbwone. du La.a ~ 'to tlili• san Diego
engineer for tbe OJance.~ Jl'noewliJ. Dlnliilclii>•lluch,
ty·Plood Ccittrol Dlllrlcl. but Founllln V1lley and Costa
it would like 1 lcq,. he~~ Mesa..rai~nts were unnerved ••,i,n,: ~ =.,.·.,. Id ye.: IJ,lbe helvy.now ol
e1po111• o1.1u11 ClpOdty -w'Jllr;~ ,tbe top, o1 and !be ground can aboorb -the riYfl' llinlll.
much' of tbe flnt rains," ht "'1be riPorap pr t vent•
.aft'llalned. erosion of the dirt levees," ex-
-r plained ·Schwarze, "as t be
F;cononiic
Outlook
Meet ,Set
'
Corpe: o( Engineers completes
its tut, we'll begin work on
the river bankl."
Schwarze estimated that the
· Santa Ana River b now at
about half of its carrying
c1ptcity it held prior ·to the
floods last )'tar,
-
County Up
In Income
Victim 0£ Faial-"
~--r--.
Crash Identified
SANT~k -'Orqe Roiil usl ol HaMrd A\'elllle
-~lji iOOijilOJ'a a• p u In 'S'in · Wl'f o I a car In
bavo ldmlllled 1 1111!1 ldlled In wl\lch he rode • · I fOC-<MJled. headon colli.lion ' 16
lhat. criticllty lnJund three Lub ~'~ 11, tljt •~·
atber "'80QI OW' lrvint lir\fs roommate Was.paulng a
'l'ueadoJ. • . . truck In · denie · f0,0
·l'ben he
' '" ' I . Ciro llirtn, a. o1 7Al2Z W. crlShed i(llo, .....,U...• ·car
:!!•r.:"ll~ :r.;,. driven by Mn. P.UI D.~il&,
1111 RMilM!p 00 Bamnca 63;·el llOZI ~.Drive,
• Irvine. • • t . , . '
'
Astr Jogers
M~t Tuesday
She and.ber liuibud Monb.
.63, were lok•n, io· ~ 111 ...
Memorll! H"'1'~ '~.with
Con<1 Iller' iJ/e: 7 -~~' ac-cident, all ' ~ from
multiple 'fractures' Qif'other
BUENA ARK -Education-injufies.' . · ' · 1 • ·
LOS ANGELES -Orange al· Ast ·of Ormse Cowl· . Tht youdger mlft .. fa In
County personal income hap ty will cofiuct ~ November utlsfaddry. 'condition "toaay. meet•·• Olday al Cod., while the Fritz couple Is in nearly tripled since 1960, ~ here serious ·conditian, ·~·\o
Security Pacific N a t i o n a 1 1be :i.i ~ beJ;ins it,_ti_' os_plc.tal~•-utllDrities __ ·....,.,· _· .,..-..,.-
Bank poinll out in 1 t 1 g 15 ~~ . 11 7 .'Ad~rthi•~t
of : p.m . ., ... llllir 1s p.m.1 ___ .;:.:===---",M'onthly s u m m a r Y Featured speatft-will be D1™!
liusiness C on d it i on s in Rudbyar cl, San Jacinto. His C!'~ .. thern California." , -topic will be "What our Pro' ''County personal income rose gmsive Youths Expect o(
-percent from $1.70 billion us."
in 1960 to $4.76 billion last;:========::;! year, according to the bank'a
Economic Research Depari·
ment. An increase of more
than $1 billion was recorded
from 1!116 to )961.
Per c"aptta personal income
amounted to 1'3,611 last year,
up 51.7 percst from '2.36S in
11111.
. Orly· O"•.
Flnal stocb In alf homt fdltlOf!S.
T~t's. a big ~e,.i? fl Is In Orlll9t
County. The DAILY PJLOT Is Ult
only cr~ly ntwspaper that qenv-. . ' ers the package, .
FIRST RAINS B~ING WATER TO, SANTA,.ANA RIVER .
Silt from L.••t Y1ar"1 Storms Hi1s Cut River11 Cap1clty _
,
AN~ -"Pldlk•Tele· "'-~~J .. ...,,. ·w. Hull .w111 ,lie 111e
1tmcbeoa ~,'Jllnda1 II
lbe . day..... ~-County Econom1e ·<iUlki6k .~enilce Shop1
DEATH NOTICES
_ Al.TPETER
HeMY JI. Altpeter. l;WI Plec:1111i.,
Ne~ llMU.. 0.lt ltt <lttlll, N~
tier f. St rvlcn Ind lnll'l'll'lftll Wiii 1111
!wld Ill Wiiiow *'"'"· llllnol1. S.111 Mor!IMry, C:0.11 M_, ,.,,._.rdlri• dl-
<K~
BOYD
E!11 M9't 8 o<rd. Alli 61),\of 1µ6 Hl'W•
POrl 8/vd., Co.!1 Met.. D1l1 el' dMtll.
NO¥embtr •• Sul'lllvecl b'( ,..,,.. Ila.
tel'1, Int Wrlihl, COlll M91.e J Nlri. ,
Flnlt 11\d (llil PtMllOft, both of
OeftYt:rl bnil/Mr, ltobert Brvct, COlll
Mnl. Memorltl MtVlcn will tit llitld
WedoaU'I', 10 AM. t i Wlnl»9!er Ftm-
l!y Mortu11ry Cl'te-4 Wtlll C"9Pltln J.
P, F-ndtr otfkl1tlrtll. 1""'1ltwnl,
Ftlrll~ Memorltl P1r1l.
BROWN
So.xii J, l rown. 16557 GrWm Pl.,
Huntt"'~ Betcll. Sur"llvlld by two ~ ~ w. ·~ Jatin ,_, tlVH d1119llttra. Mtr..., o. Morrlton.
Verni Ml>• kli-Ind Lllcll141 Goti..
orf>; 1) 1r11Mk!lllc1An1 11 1rut1r1.,.
d!lldrwn. S.rvlcu. T!Jftdey, I PM,
Petit Ftmllv Coklft111 FuMr•I Honit.
--()filiL--
lttVrnefld p, (Ill, 921 E'. h lbOt lllYd.,
lh!boe.. 0.te ol dfeltl, Ncrw. 7. $U••
vtvtd 11"11' •lte. Liiv K. C.11; -. Aklt-
trd C.H. ol Sal.Ith I.Mt T•hot; co...
11,.,, #,no, M1rforle MODOy. Priv1!1
~!cat. Wiii bfl hlld Tuno • .,, 11 AM.
P•clllc View .CfMpe(, ln1•rm•"'· P1·
clflc V'"" #Mrnorl1I P1rk. Dfr..:ted
b't Pldtlc View Mo•l\l•r'f·
CLELAND
l!Vtl'ftt Clelend. A .. 17, of m11 V!1
Bonil1, LIVCIM frillfwl, Diii• of -tti.
Nov. ·a. Sul'llfvld lrf Mb1M. WlltM!r
01v1 Cl1l1Mh d"itull'ller. Judy Elltn•
M1x.,.,.U1 .on, Pl!llll1 w1vne Chol>I,.,,
bot~ of Sl,.,11 AMI p1r1Jt1!$, Mr. Ind
Mn. C. H. Corkins, Phoenl•; brother,
Aabfft w. Corkll\1, .s. ... An!orilo Ind
-tr1nddlu9111er. $1...,lces,. Tu15d11,
11 AM. Wlnbl91~ F1mltr Mortu1ry
Ch1pel, wl!ll CNJll1I" J. P. Fof'Wn·
dill' ollkl11ln1. lnlll!'ml'ftl, F1lrll1\l'lf\
M1rr10rl1I P1rk.
DILLER
OllVI LH OHier. llt~dtlll of Co1t1
Mn.ti d.1!1 of dellh, Nov1mt.r '·
'$urv1Yld bJ wlft, Rose, of lhe .....,.,
SOii. Gll'll Oll!er. of NnaM; O.U'll>-ttr. Lotr1r,.., ol Tex11; 1111<1aon.
Hlr!"'I' MGf'9en, ~.,., 8runo1 bro!l\tr,
Ar'lllur Ol!ltr, of Orl!'IO"; four 11111r1,
K1tti1rlM Younv, CDWln1: Auth T1ler.
of W11hln11on; Go!dlt L.l1nll1rd!, of
!.ln11 Aou: LHll111 Hln'IOn. !tiin J<>M;
tllres 1<1ndc.hlldrl1't 1<'<1' six 1tc11-
1r1nddtlldr..,_ Sln'ltH wer1 hela lo.
div. Mona•~. I PM. P1clllc Vltw
Ch1pel. lnttn•tent, H1•bo< llfll Mt·
morl1I P•rll. Dl•Klfll bY Ptclllc Vltw
Morlu1rv.
ENNICO
Joltl>h Ennlco. Ate A7, ol 1'27 M1Ple.
Cost• Mr)I. O.te of· oH1th, Nov. I.
Survlwd bv "'llllt. Ml. I nd Mn.
P1u4 Ennlco. ll1ngor, P1.z brolllcr,
Chftlltl" E,,.,,lco, 11•"!'0"· s1 ... 1ce:s Ind
lnlffmflll wlll bl he(d In 111"'00!'· P•.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcllff l\.lortuary
(2'1 E. 17th St., Costa !\.IHI
llMlll •• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del !\.tar OR 3-tcst
Costa l\.fe1a Ml I-HU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
'110 Broadw•y, Colla Men
u "14.U . ' DILDAY BROTBERS
llwJUqton Valley
l\tortuary
17911 Be1cti Blvd.
HW1ilngton Beacb
ltt-7171 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemeiuy • MOflaary
-Cliapd aset Paclfle View Drive
Newport Bead, Clllfonll
llf.!711 • PEEK FAMILY
COLO~~
7111 "'" Avt. i Wt1tml-r m ·llii • SHEFFER MORTUARY
Lqaa1 ..... 414-1511
.... Clemeale .....
' here: ~ ~ "1
DEATH NPTICES
BtH llrmdwtl' Moriv.,.,, forw1rdlnt
director,.
The . -· ipoaiond 'Pot' :pa-y by the .Oral)p Coanty-....... ber .of O:.mmerce, fltlrtl at
1:30 1.m: in tbe Anabttm.Con-
HANVELT' F 01; liuli~·ns ":=.,~.ten .iui. be 11:~1 •A. H-.11\ "" SI., of 2111 . ·< J~ n-•-~ r.:i!'Ot'nla F ....... Aft,, ~ Mmt. Giit of .,, ~ l".&n;o ..
""'"" ~ 1. $1,1 .... JvW b'f·Wlft. FULL·~·-....;0ri..~. ·---· -111--l J Bird L.wll91 1t1r.. '°""' Ru11ell H .. Jr.. ~lV•, .... .,... -u~ .... 'ffUJ.WIUI • '
c.otorMi:l1 R-...clllll, S.11 J-; Ind ' • • --1--· •vice )lftllident• Jn cblf1e of
1tobln H.n-..n. y111Cou~1 '"'-· CoUnty otgaauM.t.ionl a ri• special ptoJed' fGr~ tn-·:~•a.:"' S:111W:.1"::'1:on=. · throWIJ1i a legiJ "i>Ot" party ·daltrles; 1te:t;t11 .1 ~.
Mono.1. t ~M. a.tt.11,-iw..,. 0t•Pt1. h~ Nov: tit fOr ~benefit of eouthem manpdwer'•ectininl•
with llll'f'. l . V. To~ olflcr.111111.ilp. , 1. I In lrllor .. forr .u •• r.u1-1 • .,•,.._ ""'*"'· Herbur ""' M-111 Pm. Navl.io' aod Hop . lnd ans ~ "9W"'11m .IA:" F1m!ll' .-..SI• ,,_ wl'1'11"' to .... _. ... __.. of. Empl---' and n14lkl __.111 (,Ol'ltrlbutloM •lt•i• Orange County. ,,_ .... ~'" .. ,, ....... ...,..
Cortlrlbute lo IM Otrl1t Lllt"°'r111 ~ S t & t"e COr:itroDer ffoustoft Church. tCOiM1 Mew. 11111 erD111w1y .. On. 'hand will be authentic Fl •
Mortuir'j', Dlr..:tort.,... Indian articles arid Indian tm'nOY· · · ' KRUEGER 111t 1rtttnoon conft!rm:e.
Dr. 11:1c11an1 H. Kru1t1r. A" "· at dancer s, 1s guests are asked session will ltie'..devoted ',to ~·
"' w. 1ttfi s1 .•. c.o.11 Mia.. Ott. vt to<.bring 1.useable aluminum awions of .tbe -newty edopted
dMlll. Nowtf!lblr L Sl,lrlll.,lld II)' wife, r-""""'· l"! ... :..-1 Pl ~-:;t::'·;;'M!=r~.~-'ic~ qr ~l '~g ,pot or .large Orange -.......... i..r ~Al; an.
"'· Tmr111 1itd t.ur 1•tndC11tMr.... c104:ot.foo(l, . . ,Speakers wtl1 inctudt coun·
$e!"'t'ke1 -. htld toc1A1. Morld9r. 11 ' • ty Piannint DtreclOr l'arest
AM, lltll 8rNdw11 Clla1MI, wlltt lttv. ,The ~y wQl be held .from Di·ck•-, < -<.JI I bT.a· City
L. !:. "'"'*""' .. klatlt'MI. • •• '-!Jli' -IR 11........ bly -· -rMfl:l.-~Kl!Jc _Yi.w~arr11 Plfk._~t:_~ .. ~811~11J room Couocllman ne,an E. SlmD Jr., .
Ol.-.led IW ~~•c-ci•r Morhllrr. of · !°4'11~ Savings and Fifth Dilhict -c:om:ity · Super-
How1rd s. Li!~!Y }.), of '1560 Pi.-. Loan, 1to ~guna . R 0 a d • Vi!Or Alton Allen, Ml"Oll*"
cen111, ,.,,., coi11 MH•. 0.11 "' Fullerton.. q lems donated will execuUYe WllUam Sauti'I arid
de1tr., NOY-II« I. Survfv«I br .on. L."•aln --"' Eclm d E1r1e s11nW01111. M1s)lchu,1111. Strv· be taken to the Arizona In-U\6.:1 eu e.-.~uwve un
k e1 Ind ln!lrmrnl prlv1tr. 91111 Mor· dians by members of the ·0r. Buster.
1u1,.,, eo111 Mew. 01rec!01"1. h •Son Conference naervaUons can NOBLES ange County c aptera 01 s
Fr1nc:1s I!. Hobin. 11'! W. llflbu 0£ the American Revolution be 11)ade through the county
BIY'd .. Newoort 8"cr.. 0..lt ol dr1tll, and f.os Ninos Society Of Chamber of Commerce office,
Novrmbflr t. SdrvlvH .,., 1wo Ml'!s. Children ()r the American 1477 S. M•...,,_-·Ave,, Ana· Geollrrr ind 0r'9Wf, of Woodland ~-
Hiiis; p1r1n11, Mr. 1nd Mrt. Loo J, Revolu~on. hebn, te,lePlont 774-28$1. Derle' Sr.1 two 1r111r1. Mn. Mlort1-l ___ _.,. _____________ ~..._----·I
rel O'Flahlrtv, NewPOrl 8e1c11; Mrs.
Ci1111rlnt M•ll11$1<1, We1Tdw1trri
brolhflr, L.O J, Oerlet, Jr~ S.1111
MCM'llUI. Jlowrv. TiiesGsy, I PM.. ltt-
oultm Miu. WlllMsda.,, t AM. belh
11 Oii~ LMV of 11\1. Cu·me1 C11t1ollc
Church. lnt1rmtf11, GOid 5heolltro
Ce...elery. 811tr Mortu1,.,, C•l1
Mell, Olrtc!Ort..
Crossword' Puzzle
STEPHENS
Vlvlln L. $trolltf!J. 41031 Pur.i1 Bull>. '
L•nc•1ler. survived bv sitters. Mn ... I Addieo LH Pol1411'1 Mn. Mlr•••cl l .
Rldllnb, West C...,..; ~hlr, M1~
COll'!I LllCh, H111n1on. Sarvlctl -·· ' ~Id IOdtY, Mondt.,, l PM. Ptclllc
VI...,. C~11111. 1nurnme11t. P1c1tlc Vltw
Momorltl Park. O!reetlO t>v P1clllc
Vlrw Mor!u1rv.
TONG
Kim 0 . T-. ,,. S.nto Tt'll'lltS, Cos!•
MeM. 01!1 of detlll. Novtmt.r I.
Su•vlYIO by wllt, 84il1Y1 Ml'!. tltrntrd
8 . Tori11 d1u1hl1r, K1r~ J .; lirollltr,
etw D. Ton11; •liters, L1111t M. Fpng;
Jt11nl1 P. Chudr.. Gr.-v11ldl 1.1 ... 1c11.
Tut$<11.,, 1 PM, P1clflc Vl1w Mtmor·
111 Ptrtc, with RIV, Wlll111t1 Ac.loq
ollk l1Ung. Flmllv IUlltlll !host
whhlng to """II.I "19t'nOrl1t ~lrl'blltlon~ •le•M cOnlril!IM to tltffr · 11· vorlle ct..rll., ln his m~. P1c!flc
View Mor!u1,.,, DlrKlora.
ACROSS
1 Niss Fauow 4 Fish
9 Feel one's .. ,
14 Objective
lS Informed
16 Biid 17 Bay of the
Black Sta: J words
19 Skillful 20 Dlspu lt
Zl Time of day
22 Tret
23 Instru ction .
lo ttie printer
24 Add beauty
WORLEY · . " '26M an'1
J1mu r . Wor!e¥. 0111 of d..1t1, tfw. nickname
I. Rtlklent ol JCl1 Mlln SI., liunll ..... Z9 Business ton BelCh. Survl.,ld bl' SOii, Pit H. I
Worlev; 4lu111ter, Ooro111v .-. Miiier; , abbrtvlalion
slllrra.. Anglt Birch, Gr1lnlltld. Ml .. ,·31 l ook at
sourh A\11 Jl lchtv, of AldrldM, MJt. 32.Frtt frOftl,
111Url. Gr•.,.•ld• ....,.1«,, Tundtv. 11 I infirm!..,
AM. Good $hepl\erd C1met1,.,, OlrKI· l p iv"I 411'1 bl' 01141)1 BrO!l!Crs Mor1u1ry, 10· , J tact
1111. 3 Ivan or
Help la(e 'the terror out of ·
Ktiiii:rntHifd tlillflf,
JOU r11ll1 know the ll·
trlld~lln1: frictiOl'l lld ipi•'lf
1timln1Uon,
CollSUpltiolt ta be.MUii
COUffftJIMl101~111f Pl t11tM
clttly lrrit1tion, Md COUNTERHOIO
Ull llst lllt PliO Md ikllllll: of
IMll'llOl'I hold 111 n ll!Mll Uon .dlrKllJ •
· co·uwn1111010 a'.eh 111I '"' Jiltd stools 11 ellow for tis/tr
_pnup;"dtttfttrlll ttflCft"
Mll·ptin llNt fir HM WI, ....
&llillt fiSSlll for flOUrl; If tfll .-mt llmt l"IW and _,...
1ona111td 1r1as.
COUNTIJNOfD, dlliul!y latMI ., Mttora, M .lllPllOSitof)' ft wMle ,
~-..... ,..,. . .,.. .
Peter
31 CtemOI'
)9 Marred
badly
~l Canadian
prime
I mlnlstrr ) 43 Mapmaktf ... S
1bbttNlation.
1 44 Dtcklt what
news Is flt
to print
46 Removes errors ·
47 Small valley 49 "To·-··is human"
Sil Place for recupe1ation
51 "Janr --·" 52 Respond to a stimulus 54 NFL tram
58 Roofln9
111at!rlal 60 Navy man:
Abbr. :
61 l.•J Vegas · St«;llo,. 6l Nt•l best to a strike 64 Invention ot~t876
66 Sate l1ltt of Uranus 67 Pure air
68 Checker
pltCl:S
69 FemlnTnt
name
7G Rtpl•nllh -.
71 Man'S
nlc .. n1me
' Saturday's Punlt Solved:
11 /10/6,
7 Co11rgt 35 Dl"trt olflctr 37 Kind of
a ll'ost harsh l'Ol5t
9 Sptr or 4G Cop;ioration
Ztppelin 4z ~~,,.,,1 10 S111d ingrtd ltnl .CS lltn1 ° 11 Loadtd bt·. circus ,.,,, '"'"'~ ''" 12 Vitality . 41 'Movtd
13 Noun or tow•d· adjtclivt 53 Punctuation
tndlng merk
11 Picnic e.g. 55 Ftahwt
l4 Ont whO of many
agrees flowe rs
}D01'N ZS Most handy 5\ Undergto LSld
Z7 Grett porm wor .. tr
l Hiii s ZI Prier lists, 57 Exhausted
2 Orvoid or of 1 sort 59 Put trust in
lift , 30 Alvtr •to Utt 61 Cast forth
3 Proverb liltdlterrn~ 62 Tool 4 Sidewalk.-·· 33 lcoil 63 Befort
S Awa y: Scot 34 Kind of ,et-65 Co111p1ss
6 DtslloYt-. .to91t111r point r.-r., -..,,..,r.,-.':',-10 n • 11 lJ
'
, at
l· "_ . home!
.• Fr~consultationl • Free estllilatof
~ No tlbllgationf • We bring ICHllplos!
ca11 coliect 't114> s2a-6s11
' r'
·SAL1:·1~-sf%off '"
for a li..,.ited . tline only
.DRAPERY .SLlPCOVER.:I .-REUPHOLSTERY . .. •
B.~autiful custo!ll draperies and beautiful antique satin, 11pen or Slob
slipqovers made just for you ... textured weaves ... lcMify harmon-
redecorate at tremendous savings izing slipcovers In coiJon pr'ints or
on our Fashion Manor custom solids! Expert custom.workmanship
" •
..
; •• . '
• SMITllS'-lllOll'l'VAIW
117 Mu S..
u .. 11n"'"' Bodi
fabrics! Give your home a whole . :. regular row pn~! .-f.-f.'...f;:!.-~n~ew-niolrWitl'rll"f"a"'p'"e""s'o«----~-"---'-------~-------. ' U/10/19 · • .
•
•
3 ,I J f ··~ .z $ £_2£1..,LJ_
' ' • OAILV PltOT J ,l ,
. ---· -.;~'.i Nfxui1 U8ed Friend of Ho
-·-·~·-·-·'. '
\Cuddlt, N~w-Blft Watch Out Later
: . 1 .
UPIT1 ...... t9
... ~ev~ it or not this' tu.ddly' little &ear ·cub wUJ·ma-pounds. Now the one.pound, eight-ounce female cub,
· \\,Ire into t~e. wc:i:rld'a larg·est carni*ir~.::The baby is born at the Los Angeles Z6o, looks like a lovable
. &i kodiak bear aqd. will eventually iweith some1900 puppy ...:... witli big feet. · . . . . . ..
'·.·.
'
_,
•
3 DAYS ONL:Y• , --. . .. -.
Mon.1 Tues., Wed.I
Here's a ,ltreak ••.
. ~ ' 1 ' '
a · .brake s.pe~ial ••.
. . . I ... iust tor you! . I
"
, . Yl. I -.
., •' •
. •' ..
--
•.I : ' • •• ,, •
j
only 32.88*
Most Fords, Chevrolets and American c. •
-' ' (,'.
>acts
(/;
•volkswagens and most other American cars 41.88
OUR SERVICE INCLUDES: . ,
Installation of new·:dded lining•, ~eb~ildinlf of all wheel ·cylinder£>
resurfacing of broke tlltms, bleeding and refi.lli~g braka 1ystem, repaclcing
f' li'ont wheel bearings, imtalling new front greo~ 'Mais , , • morel ·
l ' . . . '
, I\
' '>
I •
. ' bKlr'1T: .. CHARGE IT! ' .
. " ~
•
• . , -
Cushiqnmaster shock .
' I . 1bsorber speci1l I
I ' . '
-
: 1 4 for 2 9~88 Installed
I I
~ '' ' Stop · 1n now for 1moother riding , ..
extra service , • , extra 10fety on the
road I' Up to -43% more cu1hionlng ·
phton area than ordinary •hock
ab10rben. "'
1 l Thi•• 'Stores Open Sundoy Too! 12 to 5 P.M. ---------!
BUENA PARK ;(~~~~~~) CANOGAPARK CHU~VISTA ICllMd llN•Y) ,\
DOWNEY , ;'; , FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH .
• I '
.. .
' . ' .. Secret· Contact Ex-Erenclt, Resistance Figliter
' WASHINGTON (AP) -A move to break Ille dadloci In
World Wai-11 F:rench resist-the Plril talkl.
llic<~fit0 ._-;w11-1-clbse-.. t SJ>Olm clt1'ctlr.wlth im
fflend.ol thellate Ho .Chi Minh dlvldual who had kriQwn Ho
fippean to 6'e the secret inter-Chi Minh 'on a penonal basls
!"edlary w~ convey~ .Pres-for 25 years," said the .Presi-
itieht Nixon. s .peace .Jmliallve den(. "'Jbrough him I sent a !-0 the _North Vietnamese Pres-, Jetter to Ho ClU 'Minh." · _ide~ ~.July, '.~ · ·: . t;'Nlxon IUt "he did this
wrlllng "at lM present time cord 15,000 Frencll tooi:w Ul
the allied attitude Is more North Vietnam were to be
-hatml~n •Vietminh relieved by native lroe>Pf
< th• Independence moye:-wliliiila-nve-y~ar -porl<¥J. --~
ment)." It waS during this France agreed to &r• and
perlOd that Safnleny and Ho equip lhe Vietnam foi'tts.
,U.S. pffic~ala ind.lea~~ he. is •outside "Ult usual diplomatic Jean-.s&ln~eny, a ·p_rivate c11i-~ ch&tmell". with 'Uie hope it
, .z.en. now ~~t on.ce ~-Otar Its I qtlght ; leltt to -OWtructive
· ~e Gaul~e s muUster ol veter-I progress in ·bi'ihging· tile war ans .~faf1rs ~nd a Frei\ch gov-&o an"end •
tmment e'Xpert· on Indochina , • • . . .which includes Vietnam. While fl>tre was no 0U1caal
. :· Duripg WOrld War JI Sain-~ .confii"mathln ~t Salnteny is
teny' hetded· a Prench lntelli-:· ih~ man ~lxon t~ to for
gence Unit , operating from • ·relayIN: Ilia me8lage to· Ho,
Kunming in the south of China officials 'igd.icate Salnteny ·"~
into Indochina. At that time he . approacned by t h e adl
;w.as serving throu5h J\t-5, the • mlniltraUon iq late July.
. Qritidl militarf intelligence , The .an,wer signed by Ho,
. Last September it was which In effect rejected the
Sainteny w h o · represented • peace bid, was received Aug.
France at the funeral services · :Kl. only a few ~· before
in: Hanoi for Ho. , Ho's deaUi was 1"tP:rled.
· \ In: hls Vietnam policy speech ' I~. ·was noi the first time
lasl' ~1onday; President Nixon Sainteny had J;leen uaed by a
said that" iri mid-July · he I goyemmenl lo Ji:jdge the-pp
becam2 convinced it was i betweeri Hanoi· and tt\! 'lest.
necessa ry to make a major 1 .1_ He has been quoted u
establlshed a close friendship . However, friction arosel and
1''eb. 21, 1'41,' Sainteny and by November 1948 fighting
Ho signed an agreement under broke out that resulted in the
which France recogniied the Jndocllina war and IM. defeat
Republic of Vletriam a( a tree o( France.
naUon but sti11 •a member ol Ht. served in North Vietnam
the Indochinese Federation as a de~egate general for the
and the French Union. French government from 111$4-
\JOOer the Sainteny·llo ac· 1957, in an effort \o reakh
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) -
Somewhere between Riverside
and Rochester, N.Y·., a check
for $28.18 got "l~t in the
nlails" for u. years. Druggist
Phil Banks, since reUred,
wrote the check payable to tbe
Eastman Kodak Co. hi 1945
and the f11111 cashed it on A"qg.
21 of that year.
But Banks never got the
canceled check back from his
bank.
It turned up last week on lbe
de:;k ol Billie Clinton, postal
inforrnaUon clerk here. There
was no evelope, but the check
bor:!: the name Banks Drug qo.
along with its longtime a~
dress in Riverside.
The drug company went OQt
or business last year 90 the
post oftitf: forwarded It to
Banks' residence.
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Save at El Ranch~. • • I
where the price is right! 1
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VARIETY! TIMELY! I
FRESH! /
""'~
,.
N_EW CROP-
Mlx1d N11i1 c
AJways a :sif!l o( gracious hos pitaliLy ... and always a wclt:omc treat to usher in the autumn'.
Heinz Ketchup ....... . .. . .... 23¢ Uncle ~n's Rice ............... 29¢
1'h..ick .'Ind navorf11J ... 1-1 ounce bottle. ~1a,·orcd varictie!! complcn1cnl 1neals : r.eg. 3:lc
Andersen's Pea Soup .......... 19• Krispy Crackers .. . .. .. .. . ... 33¢
It"s .:;ou 11 'n cracker li1nc '. Stlll);hiu!'. , , 16 oz.
Zee Tissue . . .. .. .. . . .. .. . '19• Facial Tisses .............. . ... 25¢
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I I Save on U1e packas:-e o! !our rolls'. h:leen~ ... fur snect.es : .•. 200-<.:l. pkg.
m F irst of the U't l'k 811 /Jfr spet:ia.Ja in 1'1f.CJ.ls.' I
I ~~~-~!d _~.t ~!~.~~~~~ ~:: :.: ::~:,!!~ :
1
1 Seafood Rolls ...................... 25~ n U· Shrimp.:. l 'roth ••• or Lob3lu'. B1 l''la vo! Deep fried ••. ready for yuu lo heal, ser ve and cnjo~·l I
I We Will !~,:1~~.~e!~~:~ ~~~ . .' .. Nov. 11th I
Pick Up Your Super· f\
1ov. JO and 1:!. No Sales lo Dealer~. I ,
S~opper Recipes at
El Rancho This Weel!
Every week ... four ""' recipes ... to add to your. food adventures!
\'ariety is lhc &picc of life .•. and the answer lo menu problems. "1'hafs
\vhy so rnany hon1e·makers look forward tone'" rec ipc:;i; each \\o"CCk at El Rancho'.
f 'ood is fun . , . and El Raru:ho makes it more fun lo cook!
ARCAQIA :
Sunset and Huntington Dr. ([I Rancho Cente~
PASADENA: '
J2D Wut C~ondo Blvd.
~OUTN PASADENA :
Fremont •rd Huntineton Dr.
HUllTJJIGTOll .BEACH:
Warner and Algonquin (Bo,ardwalk Center)
NEWPORT BEACH :
2717 He"l'Ort 81Yd. and
2555 El.U.IU!f lir. (EJslblutf Vill1p Cent•~:
\
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JI DAILY ~!LOT
·.• : ·! .. , .·• :;
' ·~ Ul'I T.....,.,. .,
:E, Mountain of Millions? :: .
::, . Although this imposing stack of ingots looks like a mountain of silver bullion
:: worth millions it's really aluminum alloy worth mere thousands. Steven Gran-
:-ger paints numbers on ingots at the foundry of Westinghouse Company's out·
:~ door Jightiog department in Cleveland. Eventually the ingots will become out·
:...-door lighting Cixture.5 .
•• " ., :; W at~h Agitation~ Best
i? Ger1na11. Says They' re Heart Dis~ase Links
;3· BADEN.BADEN, ·Germany He said in the society's opin-parts of Europe. of sticking
::, (UPI) - A leading German ions $40 billion invested in r~ finnly to the coronary theory
:::, heart specialist said today ex-search into the cause of heart and Ignoring the latest discov-:~ cessive weight, high. ,choles-disease had produced no prac-eries, for which it has been ~ lical results. :; terol content and ex. cessive fijhting for the past 100 • He said for 40 years medical
.i.. cigarette smoking were not had held th y'e•-." ~ experts to e s<>-.....
:;: import.ant causes of heart dis-called "roronai'y theory," ac· But Kern said the society
· ·"' ease, cording to which heart attacks argued that the coronary the-~ He .gald the sole important are caused by vessel constric-ory wu crumbling steadily.
:~: causes were exce~ive agita-tion or arteriosclerosis. But 'Jbe thesia: that failure of the :~ lion and lack of adequate rest. Kern said every heart attack heart mutele was the }X'inci·
:•! Or. Berthold Kern argued had its roots in the muscle of pal cau.scl; WU DOW accepted
: ~ t.htR points strongly at a coo· the Jeft side of the heart and in many countrlm, he 1aid.
: :; ference of the Internatlonal So-could in every case be delayed Kern saJd that 1ince 19)'.J
; ~ ciety for combat ting Heart by proper treatment. some 30 m!lllon persom have · :~ Di~ease. of which he is a "No heatt' ... attick comes as died from 1-rt attacb. He
: ,· -melJlber, He gajd every case a l>oil fnml ti.. blur, but. ii 1td Mid in the IOdet.y's opinion
:;"; .. of heart di.seue is susceptible up lo s1oWly!'1"Kem said. .. Un-20 miDJOn of these deaths
: .. ; io-treetment, if p~ly han· iversiUes accuse thiJ aOclety. could have been averted with
: J died. ~ which has membtrB' In all proper treatment.
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!j .. . ~ . . . ,• ·' •' •• ~ •• ,: ., .. . , .. :-: . .. ;.
" ,• •• -: •• ~ ~ •• ~ !t • •
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GREAT-CHRISTM·AS GIFT!
5 x 7 PORTRAIT, 4r a Mt l 49
Of4,WALLET SIZE PHOTOS ......... e .
fCHILDREN PHOTOGRAPHED TOGETHER.,,:_,.2.98
"I.A.CH ADDITIONAL S17 Ol 4 WALLn $111 filtOUP S1.4t•
Great color Portraits, as only !he :'Pixy'' photoiraphm ea1>1
~ure them. All portraits are delivered to )'OU at our store. You
rave your choice of several poses. No malling, handling,'
'Pf other char~ Aae limit. 12 years • . ---
COMI TO PINNm COSTA Miiii TUDDAT THIOUeH SATUl· 1
DAT, NOVIMlft 11 ... 11rl:PHOT'o.IAPHOS HOUIS1 t :lt A.M.
TO l:M P • .M.
~--..
' U.S. Plans to Supply 325 Freedom Fighters
WASHINGTON (,\Pl -'Ille
p~ piano In produce ..
many II S25 rtlltlvely in--
expenalvt, euy-to-fiy llpter
aircraft for Allan awes in-
cludln& South Vletnlm over
the next five or lix yew.
Olflci1Ja 'lbundly reported
this 11 Ille r.r ..... ble dom111d
for tbe new J« 11 Sen. J. W.
Fulbrl&flt atta<Ud Ille pro-
tp'llll u "back-IOfdlh
aid."
'Ille plane wwld ao not only
In Soulh Vietnam but allo In
South Korea. Formoea and
other countries ellJtble for
U.S. mlUtary aid, l'enta1on
offlclw said.
MlllY _,Id be aold but 1n
urupecifled number of others
also would be given away
under the aid program, they
said. •
Fu!lbr!lh~ chllnnlll of tile Senatt Foreip Relat Jon1
Committee, uld the Pen--
tqon's propoted development
of Ille plane Jmpll., !be United
Slate. npecta In be Involved
in Southeut Alla 0 for a good
many years to come."
Fulbright sharply criticized
the plan as a Senate-House
conferenet group completed
aeUon. on a '20.7 billion
military Jll"ICUftlll" bill con-
taining NI million for the
alrcralt.
'Ille P!l!lqQn put In a ~ able In buy 1he lllW plane for alrcrlll llUC!i u lbe FlllA run doclllaa bal -. ,..... on
quell for dlvllopmenl lw1111 eomelblnc arumd ti rnlllloo arumd" mllllon: 'llllldl oamplD)' ,,.uld• llulld
for the plane earlier thia year each. Latelt A m er i c a n 'Ibe Peatqon uys n o tbl M'lf atrcntt. at lhe augesllon of !lop. Meo-:-------------.-...--'--------------
del Riven (1).8.C.), chairman
of Ille HOUie Armed Service.
Committee,
Fulbrtlhl -Rlv.n of IO!lllni Ille -_ aJrqlll pro-
lflrn -.lhe Pi!nlqbl.
Alll>oup lbe d<olp hu no!
been cholen, Pentqon of·
11c1111 upect the plaqe 1n
follow or be ' a revamped
venloo of li>e Nortllrop.pro.
ch&ced n "Fnedom Jl'tahter,"
the standard American
givea•IY plane whlQI more than a dean countries have
received over put years.
1be F5, llmUar to the Air
Force's 111 1upe-r1onic
trainer, baa been popular
amon1 the smaller nattona
becanae It 11 not laden wttb
mnpllcated electronlcs gear
requlrlnc lnlenalve training.
The United States has never:
med the F5 fOI' Ila own forces
but some 1,000 models have
been sold or given away
abroad under the aid program.
The F5 flies up to 1,000 mph
and can haul over three tons
of mi.Miles or bombs, making
it ideal for close support of
troops In a ·War like Vietnam.
Allies probably would be
Old World '
Me.dlterraw11
Spe11ula Farnltqre
OVIR $100,llOO INVINTOlY
TO CHOOSE FROM
DICORATORS CANCILLATION _,
RITURNS ~ROM MODIL HOMIS
DECORATORS DRIAM HOUSI ON DISPLAY
It..,,, •s follows: Gorgeous custom qui~od sofe with soporal• pillows
with i...,vy ook trim decor and metching k>vo se.at, 3 m•lching ook OC·
casionol tob!.1, 58" toll decorator I.mp, hanging choin swog I.mp, on
8-pieco king size master bedroom suite, ponolecl Modilerronoon sty!.
with top quolity 15 yoors worronty king sizo moires• ond box sprin91-
Sponi1h dining set, otc.
COMPLETE HOUSEFUL WAS
IHULAILY
ANY PIECE CAN BE PURCHASED MUST INDIVIDUALLY At EQUAL SAVINGS
$1528.00
SACRIFICE
$568
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT
NO MONEY
DOWNeNO
PAYMENT
TILL 1970
·'
Oneel
Glendale Federal's
Umpteen ways to save
is a Guaranteed
ClENDAll fDlf&U
SAVINGS---
Growth
account • •
Aak about ours.,.., gua1MIMd
growth account. Or our ~GUll•tilwd
Income accpunta. We alto han flexible
savings oecounlo end high eemlng
Investment ~ng1 accounts. There ere no
higher rates on Insured savings anywhere.
So safe, so secure. Umpleen waya to
save mak• you fMf 10 foe! rau .
Nawoorl Baa ch 2333 Ent eout Highway 00111 Mesa ,. Nnpoit lllVll.
NATION'S llCOND LARO EST FEDERAL WITH AllETS OVER ONI BILLION DOLLARI. 21 omc11
5% ==='a:.r li.2,% ~:-.1.25% ~"""""'"" D.21% :=::-
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MEN OF APOLLO 12 -These are the men who 'vill
fly Apollo 12 misston to the IJlOOn Kriday. From left
are Charles Conrad Jr., mission .commander: Rich·
ard F. Gordon, command module pilot, and Alan L.
Bean, lunar module pilot. Gordon \Viti orbit the moon
in command, module (Yankee Clipper). while Con·
rad and Bean drop to lunar surface in lunar module
(Intrepid).
R,isk Greater
• . I''
~lth1 g".B ~ck·
Fl~feway Takes Hon1es
li.iws Used t-0 Relocate Fumilies ...... . '
Ftoru Spafe l '
SACAAMENTO . (AP) plan'ners have put lhein in the
Some-<230 Juliilies. in the path w.ay 6f an i. e)(tensk>n ol
or a new freeway on the l\lex· Interstate :; through the town SPACE CENTER, Houstoo ican border aten't just beirrg o( San Ysidro, just across the
(UP}) -The Apollo 12 moon shoved out or the way and border from Tijuana, Mexico.
pilots must take the risk of forgotten, as has been the case 'I:hey can't· moVi! into new
getting ~!randed in space on occasion in lhc past. homes nea rby because, for one
mu ch earlier in I.heir mission Instead. a new state la1v is reason, the vacancy rate is on·
lha n the 1nan o( any past being . iJlvpked ror the first ly one percenl, and what is
lunar flight. time ·to provide them 1vith available is too expensive. The
For APQllo 12, "biting ~ · ·hon1es to replace the ones they state reports that vacant pr~
bullet'' coincs just 30 hour!. 5.1 will lose to the bulldozers. perty suitable for new housing
minutes after the .bJ'as toff And, state officials 'op· it can afford to put up zoomed
frotn Cape Kennedy. timistically predict, the new from $18,000 to $25,000 for a lot
During earlil::r-nlghts to, the homes in most cases will be when news of the project got
moon, astrooituls followed a better and give the ap-out.
path that would bring the1n proximately 1,000 individuals lnsead, the state now -
looping around the moon and in\"olved a chance to live in I.he with federal .. financ ial aid -
back to earth \vilh only minor first home they ever hafe \Viii offer the d isplaced
course adjustments if their owned. pcrSQnS a choice of either tak-
spacechift rocket engine fail2d An element of choice by the ing money they are entitled to
to fire!' ! persoru; being displaced,;. aod a and looking for a new home
OOIY after they dropped ilito helping financia l hand are the themselves, or taking part in
luna r orbit \vith a blast . of keys to the project. the new housing program of-
their main c.:o1nmand &hip The families are mostly of fered by the state.
engine 1vere they dependent on Mexican descent and ~r -. lf they look to the stale.
rotkel power to get back about l~ree-fourilis with an they will find they can either
home. Engineers said if the annual 1nc~~e of !es~ than buy a home ~ they have the
tjcket w?rit~. ~.!Ci ~~~L _j5~'1· ~I?US.~,~ h1ghw!~ money, rent ~ home or apart-
tbem into moon l)fbit. 1t pro-. •
· ment, or buy or rent a trailer
home.
The choices open will be ex-
plained to each famil y, bul
each will make the final
decision. Discussions with
residents showed few will go
for apartments since mosl
prer~r a private home.
Hom es a vai lable fo r
purchase will be in the $17,500
range. with rental homes to
$100-$125 a month and mobile
homes at ~ for site ran·
tal, plus what ever it .costs to
buy or rent the trailer.
Construction will be handled
by private builders, aod the
new homes are likely to be
prefabricated ones built at a
factory and assembled in only
a few days at lhe site.
Cost or the project is put at
about $4 million, and is seen
as a preview o( a bigger· pr~
ject that \Viii occur when the
Century Freeway s I i c e s
Utrough Watt.s in Los Angeles
and paves over ~,600 homes.
Serves State Park
bab!y would\..ork again to'get· · · 111~;t~'i;, s~.~~ ~ 1.u~h • Comt.uter
rocket will aim it out to1vard r
the 1noon on the same type
"free return trajectory " used · SAC RA M E.:N T 0 fAPI
in the past. -People who want to camp in
: But about halfway between a state park ne.'l:t1Year will be
e.'.lrth and moon. t h e ab l"e to rese rve a •porby com·
astronauts wiU fire their com· putcr.
mand 'ship engine to leave this By plunking down a $1 fee at
course and get on another one a computer outlet in a
called a "non-free return tra-neighborhood bank or store,
jectory." from that moment they will find out immediately
oo they can no longer coast whether the desired location
around the moon and back to will have room for them on
earth. the specified da'tc.
Unless they fire thei r big If not, Uie helpful computer
which will.
lnfonnation from the ouUets
will go straight into a central
computer in Los Angeles.
Reservations, if ayailable, will
be confirmed in seconds.
About 6,600 state park
ca mpsites are available under
the system , said William Penn
Mott Jr., stale parks and
recreati.on director.
Mott's department lau nched
11 system or reservations by
mail in 1968, but sometimes it
was weeks before the camper
knew whether the spot he
••anted was available.
Most of the camping-by·
corliputer outlets will be in the
Los Angeles and San Fran·
cisco metropolitan areas next
year. Eventually, they will· be
established statewide.
The state leases the com-
puter service from Com·
putlcket. a flnn which makes
reservations for sports evenlS
and plays. rock-el engine again, or use \Yill suggest another camp
other rockets on the Apollo, ---------------------------------1
they' will loop around the moon
and speed back betwee n the
moon ~Q.d the earth -miss ing
the earth by 56.600 miles.
Apollo 12 flight dirtctor
Gerald D. ·.Grirfin said the
risks or switching to the non·
free return pafh are the same
as the risks of gOing into lunar
orbit. In both cases. he sa id,
the spa~craft engine must
work Lo get the astronallts
Is I Enjoy the Luxury of Soft Water with an
-eafSAutomatic Water-Softener
home.
"You"re just biting the
bullet a Jillie sooner," Griffin
said.
And if the 1nain engine
breaks do\\·n after the
ma n euver.he :said the
astronaut s st ill have a pair.of
alterna te \1•ays to get back on
a free return course:
-Until they are about two-
thirds or the w'ay to the n1oon. 1
the astronauts can use their '
small control rocket's to get
baclN>n this course.
-Or they can wail until two
hours after they loop around
the moon ·and lire 'a blast of
1he descent engine in their
lunar landing craft: which
1vould still be hooked to the
Apollo command ship nose. to
get back on the earth-bound
path.
The reasons behind the new
lrajectory are complex, based
on the relative positions of the
earth and sun and moon at
this time or year.
Mission analysis e x p e r I
Eugene Ricks i&id thi11 was
the Only way Apollo 12 co11ld
get to ils target, the lunnr
Ocea n o( Storms on the left
side of the moon's face, with
lhe proper lighting of the Ian·
ding sile and slill meel the
necessary launch and tracking
requirements.
Sears Automatic Takes the Work Out of Softening Water
WITH SOFT WATE}?
Yoo Savt Money •oap and cloth-• Yeu Work Its.! er without effort,
. on detergents, I I Keeps things clean.
ing Juts lon ger e~iminates bath tu~
~~~~~~~--' '-~~~~~~--'· nngs
FREE Estimates!
Phone Sears
Today!
•
SAVEfSO
This Week
Monday, ~OVtm!•I 10,' 1969 DAILY PILOT l:J
~' . _Jlased' on Ffill~prlnts ~· ---~-..
Credit Card ' Tlieft Solutioli : Fou-nd?
-,
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HEMET (UPI ) An picture or ·h\s fingerprint 'will lt'1 a pasaive eleclrOnlc s1ina1 engjnee.rlni consult.an~ firm
engineer namOOThUi'low M. be taken-and·wuJ~be-converted-. that hQ..to-be--trlggered.-IJy-a 81Jed..Mote0.Auodatel-'Oley
~forrow has come up with ·to aQ electronic signal and the coqiparatqr. You Cllf1 put. it ·spieeiaUie Jn meuurement
what he feels Is the last word signal will be lmbedded in the ' any place and · It will work. engineering -v e r l lJ~ n c
in verifying credit cards to c~d with an clectr<Hlhemical · The closest relationship would ; welghts and meuurets and the
prevent fraud . Jt1s based on process.· be that it's like a magnetic like. : • · •
fingerprints and you can't do The service slation 0 r tape but you can't wipe it'iiiiiii!;;;;:;:.;;;;;;;;iiiiijiiiijjji
much better Utan that. whatever place uses t he out" · • : II Get the motf on
Morrow,L48, who graduated aystem will ha'< a Utile pie<e The credit can! miy be INSURED SAYfl("" I. as a physics major rrom of m8chinery -you will put adaptable to use. ip a pay N
Pasadena College, work ed your Ungi:r in one end and th e telephoile with a special slot KEYSTON'E
part-lime for nine years on the · card in lhe other. or it could be used to Identity SAVINGS
credit card plan . ' If they don't match, various and run qu ick ch~ks on k, d . . t ~)ID LW.H ""60c:IAll<;IN He says it will carry an . alarm systems can be sCt np · per!:onssec 1nga .mw1on oa t-'d wcc.,,...,_,,.,...,,.,.
electronic picture or the _ a red or a green light may classified military area, Mor· &SI ... , "l:.::5 ,38"' '" "d SttaAl:•Sn111 • MNUM holder's fingerprint ,and .this go on or a noise ... it can be row sa1 · 1,.1.,..~..,.._.i.i:,r ... -.
can be verified· by placing the adapted to anything like that. Morrow s a Id he ls ,,_;""" 1 .. -.u ltf~,...i
~ard i~ a device and the finger •·ft ,won't look any differ~nt negotiating with an Anaheim
1n a viewer to match the card. than the credit cards you see credJt card manulaclurtr to
"Basically what It does is now. You cao't see the elec· go into production. He has a
lhis," says l\1orrow. ··when a tronlc signal. Probably the patent pending on. the card.
person gets a credit card, a be st "'ay to describe it Is that Morrow works \Vith his own
Prices Effective Seginning Today
Ask A.bout Sears
l:OU \'Cnient
Creilit Plans
· Jinuny Cara!!, fi\e-tim"'
Wurld·s Pockrt Uill iarJ
Champion, will appear
penonalJy" fron1 I:! uoon
lo :?:30· P\f an1 I 6:10 l'l\1
10 8:30-P~I in the follow·
ing stores on th e follo1\ ing
da~:
Sean El ~lontc
No,·emh4'r I 0 and 11
Sean Co,·inu-
No\·e mbrr 12 an1l 13
SAVE
$9!
Electric Adders
Regular
$68.llll 5988 •
e Portable addrr addE, t ubtracl.-.
and mulliplies -
e Add~ 7 colu1nns. 101als n
•Simplified keyboard with ~ub
lotal, r_epeat and correclion key
'" •• ' .
. ' . ' . • Sears
Scars Auto Focus Slide Projector
With Automatic Timer
Sear:'\ Lo~·.
!,ow Prirr!
88
•Au tomatic focu~ ..• focus the first slide
and all procee<ling &lides pop automati·
cu Uy into focus
•Solid oitate portable timer accessory con·
lrols. from 5 to 4Q seconds allowing com·
ple1ely auto in a.tic ope ration
e l,.ully 1·e111ote forwurd and re ,e r~c. \\ itli
round 100...lide tray
SAVE $40!
Me~alisl Power 12 'in Choice of
Pica or Elite Type
Regular
239.9') 19988
I ~x tra fa st, repeating 'l?P•er carriaae return,
big 12·in. carriage, pa~r injector
•Chec k protector L:ey. 51h. row lab !J!lem
• /\l ~o .feature& 3·way ~race bar and lot! more!
---------------------------------------·----------BOAT BUFFS
! I I UNA PAIK ll MONTE lOHO lb,Qt PICO........ "°""°"" SOUTH CQUT l"l."'4 I ~llflo• \Locll1boy ii th1 only s s c pl---B • { ~ CANOOA'ARK GllNl:>Alfi 0l'f'W'IC 6M)T0 • SAN'[A~..J. .. __ TOllAMa !~II·~~· ~:~:p;p::i·~: 0~~·~;: . ears o. oast uua, 3333 r1sto ut . ~-~~----~~---.:~--------!Sears~~!~ .... --~~---=-=..!
County, Hi1 11cl .. ,l•1 co .. •r•t• tMu,-a.ucim. Phone "'"3999 · · _.....,_._. • -M I -oW.uliag.._l.t\L._~hfui.t 111w• -'·~~~~================""=u-;::-..;::;::~~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;;;:::J=-~=",.,m=d~"='='"='~l='=.....,=='~'=''="=A=.=M=,,.=t=>=0 =•·="=·='=""='="='='=._=="='='=·="=·=-==-=·==·~-==="='*='•=0=0==·==="='~"~'="=ar===J i• 1 dill y f11!1111 ofttlf-O"AiC'r
, PILOT.
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, .. DAILY PILOT M-. N-10, IM ,_ .
!' LEGAL NOrlCE iltnu .-PVM.te 11•.t.•1111•1
Har6orBoy1
Club Joim
~akO
Russian Diplomac,y Coming · Up Roses
t' By WIUJAM L RYAN
,.,. ...... Cll'MIM 'Mt
Atlantic Treaty Or&anliaUon Moecow, to be sure, Ls not Bu& on the wtiole.. Moecow and "nlliclW 11 be rat lo n petition. The Uru.si ol Soviet
~-~ u.~~ ==~ =tr:: lllllll leel tt II DOI doilll badly. ~~m::;;n!~'!.i c::.~ =:b.e = !"k r~
Europe. The climata, too, Is about CblDa and b.., to meod ~ '5ls .~~olqu~~olt pol!Ucal and ecooomlc com-!hit 10t1 ol i!Ung. ~
holpltable for 111e Soviet drl"-"~ __ ., am--. ~~~~~~~;,;~~~' ~==~===i Europe's trade wlll1 th e !T1n:t::'" ~ ~ :::: minds· In the lorthcomlng1;:
Ru.Yla.,, partlcululy 111at ol who!• Communist Cl!llp. Some arms limltatloo 1o1u wlll1 the
France. and !taly, has betn big Kremlln beldlcllea come Unlted States' Soviet pollU-
1795 LAGUNA
CANYON
ROAD
mcCormict
LAGUNA BEACH
MORTUARY
rlslng at.adily. from Inside the bloc. Moocow clans -II not the mll!tary -
t.Uddlt £111 -has failed to achieve ill 1oat1 share with u.s: leaders an
• 494-9415
•
The chronic Arab-Israeli in Comecon -the Council of anxiety to J euen the coa-
crlsis, compounded by heavy Mutual Economic Aid -In stantly riling cost of arms.
Arab guerrilla pressure on which Jt wanted to Integrate Yet there can hanil): be a
Lebanon, has U.S. pollcy in a Commuriat economies lh a secure peaceful coexls~nct ol
bind. American interests in way that would primarily the superpowers while the
the area are obvioos: a net ol benefit Soviet interests. 1bls Rusai.ans cling to the idea ol
$2 billion annual Inf I u x appear! to have caused dif. world revoluUon in com·
generated by U.S. buslneJI in-ferences in high places which munism's name. What may be
terests there; the importance could bring political troubles coming is a shift in emF,uls.
of the arta to NATO and to ~ln~ll1~e~K~1<1D~~lln.':_ ____ ~a~w~ay~fro~m~su~pport~~of'.:V>~ol~e~nc<~!:::=====,;======'=======-Westem Europe. 1-
.... tnr IUf'l•MM COU•T 01' THI
tUl'l!•ICR COUltT 01" TM• STATI OP CALll"OltNIA P'Olll
STATll CW CALl,OINIA f'Olt THI COUHTY OP OltANOI
: THl coi:,:~:!:uouNe• l+OTM:I Of' "':At.=''o,. PITITION
NOTICI: 01" HIAll ... ACC:OllMT AHO llOlt ,.01-ATI Of' WILL. AND 1'0 11:
.. Jil'OltT 011 ·~oonll,&TtON SY LITTllllJ TISTAMINTAltY SliUSTl:"S Ofl INTlll VIYOI TRUST lstf .. "' l"HILI, S, OMOHUNOltO, ·~NO PirlTtoff POW llTTLIMllfT AIM k""""" a l"llWI' I~ Offtotlufldrt. NO DfKMA1t•I ir..llo known ti f'hlll .. SllltlNft omotr.I~
1'1Hf-r,.lt~ST~o: .... ~E ICIDNEY ~r:o~~s ,HEltElY GIVIN Thl1
)IOTIC' IS HElt'l!tY GIVl!N 'Til9t ll_,,. l(tlHY llM tllM ~kl • Mlltloll MOlll:ltlS G l A IS E It, SHtltLl!Y ltC' ..,..,_ If wlll Mid tor lu\1Mle9 ol
L0KOW1TI. l'IL0"""NA MAltlKAll uttws T•l-hrt le ,..ttti.n.r, AfilD LEONAlllD MAUI' htYI fll• ,_,... """-"' wfllctl 11 l'Mff for f'U"her
h{ • ~ Ill ACCOUNT AND ltl~lt'r •...tkvlert. lnof tllet IN tlml 1/llf ll'le" n1' ADMINISTllATION AY TllUITl!'"S Ill .... rlnt TM .. IM Nt bMi'I 1et tor °" \NTEll vrvos TllUIT ANO P'ETI-Nonm•r 11. 1Nf, ,, •:• I .Ill., 11'1 "" ,.,OW FOlt SETILIMINT ANO PIS-~ ol OtNrtrnwlt No. l et nld
Qt.f.llGE, ~ to wttktl 11 !Mde Ullrl, 11 1'H (l\lk (.-ilW Orlvtl Wnl, 111
W lln1tlel' Ml"lklllll,.., Ind ftlll the llmt the (f1Y f1I Stt1!1 Anl, Ctllfltl'lll. 1~ .. _. tif f1Mt1nt ft11 .. me flH bftn Oltod Nowtmbfr 7, lH•
• fW ,..,..,..,.. ft, !M, 1t t~Jll AM.. W. E. ST JOHN,
14..,.. ~ f1I Dwerlm91'1t No. J el CwnlY (llrt
·--el 1IO CIVk: (fftlltf Orlvt Kitr1 P', ..,_, · -, .,. ...... ~ °""'· ...,..,, 11 .. C1tJ If S.1111 Ane. C.11flr." • .....,.,. H1111t.; C.lf; ... '-
... _ - ' '"' Ttlt CtlSI t1Hl11 ' . . A""-fir ,......._. •• W. I . IT JOHN, County Clllrll:. P'ubllthlll Ort-CMU Dtll1 .. 1 .. 1,
OOlfALD IU.llM Howmlltr I ti. lS. 1... _..., .. "· ..... •trtet ----·--------, ....... C~ ft1t'I
Ttl1 {ftl) KMl'6 ........, fir PtnrllMn LEGAL NOTICE
now:
Europe-
1be Soviet aim is universal
acceptance t:l. the map as it
was left by World War II.
There WM 1 clear note of
satisfacUon in this week's
speech by Leonid I. Brezhnev,
the Soviet Communist party
chief, with reference to
Gennany. Willy Braodt, the
Social Democratic chancellor
ol West Gennany's 11 e w
government, appeara rea<fr to
make substantial conceas1ons
to Eastern Communist
regimes, including the Soviet
Union, in return for better
rellilons, while at the same
time see.king a more in·
dependent voice in t h e
Western alliance.
Moecow, pushing for an all·
European conference, calls
continental s e c u r i t y in-
separable from Soviet securi·
ty. A security arrangement
could undennine 111e North
Westem · sources on the
scene say anti·U.S. feeling is
rising to a point where ln
some areas it may become in-
tolerable for Americaru;. 'The
Russi&ns have stepped suavely
into the Lebanese situallon,
suggesting that only they can
prevent the area from having
another explosion. On the
other hand, the Americans are
losing some of the influence
they hive enjoyed w I t h
moderate Arab leaders, such
as the Lebane9e and Jorda·
nians, because of h e a v y
pressures on them generated
by the crisis.
The "Third World'' -
The Middle East crisis ap.
pears to have hurt lhe U.S.
image in many areas of the
underdeveloped world. AbOut
SO states, including 14 Arab
nations and others in Africa.
Asia and Latin America, have
been h1 opposition to U.E.
policy in the Arab.-Israeli
crisis. The Vietnam situation
also hurts the Americans in
these areas. Meanwhile, Soviet
trade and contacts in t)ils
"third world" have been in-
creasing.
Asia-
Brezhnev has laid down
"Asian collective security" as
a Soviet goal. Although it may
be difficult to sell, he may set-
tle for a background role in
some sort of arrangement
which, as in Europe, could 1
suggest to Asians that a
\Vestem presence is not im·
port.ant. Britain already is
pu]ling out of Southeast Asia .
The Americans are reducing
Traffic Wrecks ~:.:m~~ P,',; ':; 'o"i.:
portunity to establish a
Meeting Topic powerful offstage presence, . while at the same time pro-
,Llublllf!ld °"'"" COllf 01111 Piiot. -----------·I .........,.., .. 16. lS. lNt 707'"4t
Traffic acciderrb: and how to viding it.self with a lever
avoid an of tbitm will be the agaimt Red Chinese aims.
subject of a'"nfe driving pro-U.S. troubles tend to be
gram sponsoreCi by the Hun· magnified in Asia, possibly
tlngton Beach Satety Council, because of Vietnam. For ex-
at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 20 in City ample, the Japanese can be
T .. n.. Council chambers. demanding 1about getting the
NOTICI TO c•101To•s Stuart Wilkinson, p u b 11 c United States out of Okinawa,
LEGAL NOTICE IUl•lltoR COVRT OJI TIU! ! 1TAT1 011 cAt111011tr• 1110• safety consultant or the and it beconits a loud pubic
SU .. ERIOR (OU•T 01' THll THI COUNTY o .. ORAM•• Automobile Club of Southern issue. But when mention is
s~~1:c:~~:.;·~:•0t1~!:ool!R Est1te 111VY"t'1~--. CaWomta will discuss made of Japan's clabn to four
frM, ..... m NOTICE IS HlltlEIY OIVIN ti 1111 "ProfessJonal Driving Techni· Kuriles islands held by the
credlle•s al tt\9 1lllwe llllMd ~ · R !ans · W Id W JI "'"IC' ol" t1t:A•1"• 0111 ,..,,,,oN flllt 111 PlrJDlll "'""" cl•hm ,111 ... , '"' ques" and show the film uss smce or ar .
Poll ,.•o•ATE "" WILL ANO FOil uld ctKed•nt ,,.. ~ul,l!d 10 111e TM,.,, "Final Factor" concerning the Soviet press dismisses this UTil:ltS Tl!STAMl"NTAJIY wllto the rt«IHtrJ "Olld°O"'s In the Dflkt
<111111 II toA c. 1A1LEY, Otce••ed. of rM c1er1c 111toe t11aYe entined' caurt or au tomoblle accidents, ac· as "revanchist." and a plot ol
NOTtCE is HEllEIY GIVEN Thtt ,..,.. to •rtstn1 Pitnt Wllfl ""' n1ce1$1,., cordm' g to Ed Sull1·"an. pre••" "ruling circ· !es," and there is IMlllY Gel~•rd .... l lltd Mrrln • Plllllan -.hrrt ••• tht U;....t ... ltntd II ""' allkt y
tat prat.te 11 wm •nd '°' luwnc• 11 a1 BUSH, BUSH a. LARSEN. AT-dent oI the safety council. no public Japanese uproar.
Lll'ter1 TM!ttnenlt,., to Ptllllontt, TOllNEYS ""II• m Mlrcu,., 51¥ln,., -------'-----------------·I •$tenet to wlllcll h m1de !or lurll'ler ' 1 • ,.,,Jc.iltrl. encl lhll "" !!mt tncl oltct llulkll!'>ll. 7112 Edlnltr A"11nut, Hunllntton °' ·l'le••I... ""' Sime his •en •et f()l' !Nell. t.llHor"I' "'" wlllcll Is IM lllCt N41ftmbtr ?I, ltff, 1t t •lD 1.m., In lfl9 of l1111lnn s II !ht ~lined In 1n ll'llf. ~ 11 ON1rtm1nl No. ) al itld hll"I Ptrt1lnl1'11 hi tht etftle II "Id ~ <-'• II 10I Cl'lk C..iltf' Wul, 1n tl'lr Cl-dtn!, wllllln feur IMnths lflllf' the fl'11
lt-11 '1nll Ant, Ctlllorl'tll. PUgtl:.~!~. "f,1:,L
Ot1ed Navtmbtr '· lfllt. 1 JOYCE o MuoGI! W. E. ST JOHN, COltl'lty (lerli: a~ I •• , '1• 1--Ill NtlWM'll. SIMll & Afll'-il, .... m n-. rt "I( w '" ""' w 11 .. 0 .... 1M7, Annir11ed ol tht 111111ol1ht1blte "'""""' •Mc:fl, C111Mn!l1 t216) 111rntd d-.::lldenl. Tth UlO '44·1:111 IUIH, IUSH & LAltSEN
Affll'Mt1 ltr' .. 1111111-IY : K. Diii IVll
,.ubll1ht'd °''"" tent D1l1Y 'Hor, Hlt e.i...,. An., Suite •'7 J.IMmllrr r,10, lS. 1Hf ~1t-'' Nntln9* SNtll, Ctlll, '1441 Tel fTII) tn·Ull
LEGAL NOTICE AHwfte,. flt A'"'l11IJtr1lrl• ------=c=c------'ubll1f'oed Or11111e Ce.11t Delly l'llot, ,..um Odalllr :io. 21 ~ N0¥1m11tr 3, 10.
Uff 1'5H• Cl!llTll"l(ATE 01" •USlflEIS
FICTITIOUS .. lltM flAMI LEGAL NOTICE JHE UNOERSIGNEO doel fler!b1
c1rt!IV tl'ltl r... 11 c!P!ld11cl1119 • 1Mr1-l---~-==-----er1"1!Rd bu1lnfH " 1717 Mon ...... 11, CCKI• .. -15111 =· .;·~~ .. n~~-~~~E,~~1=1 '~id ttllT~1~c:;~~ou~ 11:~s~N111,
,...,,, Is ea~ or 1119 lolt-"lnt -· Tht una't'11tne11 !Ion Cfl"llft flt 11 con-
-whlln n...,. lft f11l1 lfld 1i.<;1 l'I duc:llnt • bu'1"'" ti ..0 lox 1" S COiii ...rdltl'K• 11 11 fel'-t, lo.wit: Me11, C11ll~ undtr tM fkmillll firm
•Mr. Oontld E. PttJt , I071 5111 Clrclll, ntmt of OJ PARK PllOOUCTS CO. UI
~11.,.i..n Bttcfl, Ct!ltomlt 9''-" AA8LE CO (l) .U.8LE T'tl S!RV1C! Ind
WITNESS m1 "Ind lt\!1 Ulfl dlw el th.ti "Id tlrm It COtnlOIN '11 Ille follow·
C>Oobel', Ifft n1 ...,_, W11Cn9 111me In M1 tNI 111<1 Oo ... kt E. l'IYt • ot ttlldenct II 11 !allows:
STATE OF CALIFOtt N1A l °'""I' Kell" Be,_.., 2Sll Vi1l1 Ot.,
COUNTY OF OltANGE I ,S, Nt-' Btldl.
OH THIS 1'111 dtt al Oclebtt. 19ff, Dt!eod 10.lMt
bl'la•t ~. Rod f lrl LlP!tDld, I NatlrJ O.,ftnll Klllfl llem.on
.. !Allie '" Ina' IOI' tt.. .. Id COU!llY '"" $!1!1 ol C..H1«nl1, Ot·~· C0\11'11'\1: Slttt. rttldl"' lhtrtlft. dulY commlHl-.1 Oii Odllbfr 21. lHf, befort ""• • tNI IWOf"' "rtDlllllY -•tM Danlld If. Nat.,., l"ulllle I" t l'ld lot .. Id 5'1111t, ,,_ ~-to rM to bt ~ 1er1Dt1 ~J,., l,_..red 0-11 K1J111 l'-wt\Olle Nme Is 111bKrlbld to IM 1"t'llhlft known to me to lit IM 1t1Mft WllDM
lrtjtrvm'"l, 1nd ld!-lttlllt'd to mt IMI ntme Is 1ublcrlllld I• Ille wlrll!n !.,.
,,.llK\119<1 ""'........ tlrvmMI ll'ld KkMWlfcltltd hi Ute\ltfld 1M WITNESS WHEREOF, I 111"11 lilt wmt. .-,_,,,Ml mt ht fld tnd •"l•ed my .t-(Off'l(IAL S'EALI •
tlci91 -· tt19 .. t tnd .,.., 111 tll lt J05E .. H £. DAVIS ~ fl'1t ,....,.. wrttto11. NII•,., ,.111111c..c;actf9nll1
ll\SFICIAL. $EAL\ l'rlnt!MI Offlu In -1 0!'11111 (euntv 11100 IAltl Lll'l"OLO Mt CammlHlorl ~Im ..... ,., ,.111111<, C1Hltrnl1 J..,,,1 21, tt1'0.
l'ttndHI Off1U In l'ull!l1111d Ottftfl COlll Ot!lt .. 1111, Ot-1 C-lt Oc'!Olllf f1, -'tlfTlbltf ), 10. 17 Ifft MY Comml111Dl'I El!tltn ioo. .. ,
Ftto, 11, Im l"llb!IU*I Ortftft ce11t D•llt ,.,tot, Ot1t'*' 20, 2T 11'1d ~Yembtr t 10 1Mt 1t51 .. ,
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTIC& .... " Cl!RTll'l(ATI 01' SUUHlll
l'ICTITIOVS lfAMI
Trade all
those bUls
for one
=1G11U
'L•
'1J
use ourmoney-
and save!
-a rollef to got rid al II -bite and htrMaaly.,....-_,1111ypayn•ll. 'lhars
w1111 Moms Pion """1IY is for.
You may borrow from $100 to $5,DOO, o< more.
with paymenta och&dule<nh<rWiy '!'OU wen
tnenl. Juot phOn& or come In tll1d tell ua w!lat
you .-. We'll toD you what your loan will
COii-mid -you to compere wr oemcM
--llodlng companies. Chin .. ""' you,_at-
Morr is Plan
SEARS Has Everything ... , Sun. Hou r" 12 Noun
Including SUNDAY SHOPPING to s P.i\l
Sears Improve Your Home with Sears
Efficient HeatingDuriilg
This BIG PRE-HOIIDAY
-~"° -~vailahle
at Se11r1
Appli.nce
and Catalog
Stctfft
SAVE*lO!
Automat~c Console
Wall Furnaces
Hegular
'84.95-
• 10,000 BTU direct vent furnace!
SIM.95, 20,000 BTU unir___94.88
$124.95, 30,000 BTU uniLl 14.88
..,J.1.9:> Conver:iion Ki• 28.88
Co nverts manual control floor furnace
to 1uloma1ic operation.
Pri~ Effecti•e Besinnin1 Tod1y!
SAVE $2 0 !
Sears 75,000 BTU Unit
Gas Closet Furnaces
Regular
'129.95 10988
.Uk . .\bout Sean Conventent Cndit P1em
•Rugged unit gives maximum effieimeprith
minimum over.wt furnace me
• Lint.fnoe gu burners reduce morifttenance,
....ure top efficiency at all timea
• Qu.iet rubber cushioned blower motor
Model 76481
$159.95, 100,000 BTU Closet Furnace 144.88
$189.95, 125,000 BTU Closet Furnace 174.88
Sean Horizontal Furnaces
Sl89.95, 75,000 BTU Unit-___ _.69.88
$219.95, 100,000 BTU Uni 89.88
1 nsullatio~: Sears will handle the installation
for you at a reasonable charge. All work is
co mpleted by expert workmen ••• it's the
modern _and convenient way to insttlJ.
SAVE '12 ! Counterflow
Wall Furnaces
Regular
'139.95 127~~·
• Sears automatic 35,·
000 BTU wall furnace
with wall thermostat
• Efficient counterflow
distribution of warm
air at floor level
•Recess,
mount
or 1orface
SAVE '20!
Direct Vent
Wall Furnaces
Regular
'169.95 149!!,
"'" • Sean "400" wall fur•
nace with 30,000
BTU'S
• Combmtionairdrawn
from outdoors aud
not from the room
• 1 nclades wall ther•
moatat
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""'~".""~-~ . ..,,,,"""""' ........................................................................................................ ~~~~~~~~~-~-·---
Teene:rs _
. ..
' Still
-Smoking
NEW YORK (AP) -T-
agers In g-al tltint cigaret-
tes are dangerous. but social
pr...urtS pusb four out of 10
into smoking them, a new
study lll)ds.
The teen years are crucial
Jn the decision whether to
smoke, the survey says. Tbe~
greatest influence t o w 1 r d
smoking is their friends. but
_many youngsten might choose
not to smoke · if parents,
teachers, doctors and other
adults set better examples, it addi. -_,
Huntington
Boys Club
Now Busy
Fil aitd w nter acUYlties at
the Huntington Beach Boys
Club have just begun with
events ranging from judo
classes to horseback riding.
"Physical fitno..ss, wrestling,
basketball, soccer and judo
will bf; the main team and In-
dividual sports this year," ac-
cording to Pat Downey, the
club's executive director.
In addition the program will
encompass a chess club, pool
tournamen ts, table t t n n i s
competition, checkers ·and
olh~r games.
Spe~lat events this year in-
clude sleep.overs, snow trips,
z o o excursions, horseback
ridin1 and overnight .. camping.
Classes in sewing and cooking
will also be offered to
members.
'The national.survey of 1,562
teeo-ogll'I . found -Ola.I 65 pel'·
c61t of smokers and 16 per·
cmt: of ·'nonsmokers believe
ci4&rtttes ~use luog cancer,
TRIPLES RISK Belaemoth Ba'b!I Around Thanksgiving · and
Christmas holidays the club
will ~ponsor turkey and ham
sho6ts, said Downey. About half the anok.ers and
70 percent of nonsmokers Photographer gets a wary eye from Pilar, a lS. in the year she bas been al the Los Angeles Zoo, her
think it is "definitely or pnr month-old baby" Indian ele;>hant as she guzzles a keepers feed her enough to gain some 80 to 100-The club 1vill also provide
''homework helpers" to aid
thos~ bof s. who have trouble
with their school work.
bably true" that cigarette bottle of milk. Althoogb Pilar bas gained 513 pounds pounds a month. smoking triples the risk of--------~----'----'---~-------------------
premature heart attack.
.. Y~:f~::;:~f: Zoo Director Wants 1 Male Tiger, Winds Up With T. wo
like a big shot ••• makes you
The Boys Club of Huntington
Beach is located at 319
Yorktown Ave. and iB open to
any boy between eight and 18 look older .... makes you feel PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -
like one of the crowd," or that Portland 1.00 directer Jack
smokibi relued them when Marks went Ito California to
they felt nervous, or helped buy a male tiger and ended up
when they were bend or with two-Cree ones -which
depreaaed. Far more boys should ·make the zoo's two
than glrls thought smoking . !emale tigers happy.
made them more attractive Marks said be offered the ....wcy,
Tho study conducted by
Lltberman Research, Inc.,
Jut March and April was
!poosored by the American
Cancer Society with the fin-
dings released today at the
!Ociety's annual meetinr.
Each teen-ager wa.s in
tervkwed for about an hour.
One third were 13 or 14 years
old, another third 15 or 16, the
re.st 17 or 18.
TRIED CIGARE'ITES
Sixty-two percent said they
had tried a cigarette at some
time, and %1 percent said they
were cum:nUy smoking -had
smok«I a cigarette in the last
30 days.
A large majority said they
were not tempted to smoke,
and that they did not expect to
be smoking five years Crom
now, Dr. Lieberman said.
Bat by the time they depart
their teen years. three out of
four have tried cigarettes and
"the current smoking rate is
up to 42 perceot. which just
about matches the rate of
cigarette smoking by the adult
PoPJlation," be said.
Teen-agers are 50 percent
more likely to smoke if the
adults, parents, teachers and
others with whom they come
in contact are smokers, but
are abnost 100 percent more
likely to smoke if their
friends, brothers and sisters
smoke, the study finds.
1be youngsters are very
much aware of cigarette com·
mercials, and the antismoking
messages being broedcast or Jrinted, but see fa:r more of
the commercials for cigaret-
tes, the survey says.
GOOD RAPPORT
Another finding Is that "a
teen·ager is less apt to smoke
if he has god rapport with his
parents and they_ $lll_!>ke,Jtian -
if his parents don't smoke but
he had bad rapport with
them."
Teen-age smok&s • 1 a r e
more adventurous, more ex.
perimental, more anxiety-rid-
den and more prone lo reject
the valu es of th e
Establishment. Smokers more
titan nonsmokers d es c r i b e
themselves as nervou s,
frustrated , depre sse d
rebellious, rec k 1 es s, aezy,
s wingers, liking to live
dangerously. living for the~
merit, and wanUng lo try new
things." .
Nonsmokers, the study says,
"are happier, more semible,
more success oriented, more
self-confident and more in·
clined to accept the values of
the Establishment. N on
smokers more than smokers
describe themselves as happy ,
relaxed, clean-<:Ut, caut.iow,
ambitious , hard-working. in·
telligent and successruL
Gymnastics
Program Set
An eigbt·week gymnastics
program spon!lOred by the
Fountain Valley Parks and
Recreatloo Deparlment starU
Nov. 18.
Two classa, one for
chlldren age 6-10, the other for
)'outh 11 and older, will meet
Tutlday e"1!1ng from a p.m.
to JO p.m., in the gymnasium
of Founllin Valley Hi g b
School. P~nt.a may register their
cblldren for the course at the
cashJer11 offlce Jn city ball ,
,.
...... , ...... Iii ... c......--... •. .................
Cllllla' -..1 -------C119Cln ...... ---
high bid of $475 for a Bengal
tiger al the bankruptcy auc-
tion of Jungleland at Ttiousand
Oaks, Calif. However, when he
went to pay for it, Ed PotU;r,
manager of the Milton J .
Wershow auctioneering firm
handling the sale, paid for the
animal and gave it to· Mark.s~ he gave that one to me also, years. Membership fee is $1.50
h th for our zoo." "Then a.not er strange 1ng per year._
happened," Mar~ said. Marks ended up buying a Club hours are from 2:30
"Someone else had booght a pair of Australian black swans p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 6:30
. ror $250 to add to his zoo. p.m. to . 9 p.m. 1.ionday
ipale tiger, just for its pelt, but _ "And maybe after a while," through Friday. On Saturday
he decided the 'tiger Sti~l hael Marks said, "we will be rais· the club Is open from 10 a.m.
qUlte a few good years left, so ing some little cygnets." to 1 p.m .
~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~-
Prices Effect.he Beginning Tod•JI
All ·New •.• Kenmore
Dishwashers Now
Feature The Convenience
of "Forced Air" Drying!.
SAVE '40!
Regular
$239.95
e Dishes, poa, """' dry
faster. more eYenir ....
aad 1be1 come out
r~' co be used
• Eas' to operate .••
simply IOICI. No pre--
set panern to follow
e Powerful SP"fS of bot
water sec evtttt:hing
sparkling: clean and
hyae.ua11, ~bed
eWhiie,#7152
19988
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TawnrGold,Coppenone,Avoado. 20488
#7153+9
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Home Tritl
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Your monthly payments
begin in February
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Sears Lady Kenmore ,·'
'rop-Loading
Replar 1-7483 $199.95 •
(
e4 1u.to111atic wai;h c)·cle• wilb \.;
a..,wtie riaai1t1 a&enl dispenM!l'
e U,;im;c w..a.i111 fftioa
SAVE '20!
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Built-in Model
Re1ubr 18988 $209.95
•' automatic •a~h cycles ..• pub fttton control panel
• Hnieaic wa1b cycJe
•Fron\ panel1 avail1ble in
wbite.eoppertonc, 1vocado ttf'
·ebn•e·
•If• ~. aeeded •.. no
C*!ial leecl pettern to follow
Model.7146 J,.n'I ln•lail.stioft An111bl e Model 7162
&...._GI,_,,,,
_, 01 S-1.,_ a 4-4111
.:lll1'tl0!9.., ....... ,
-!WOUI OI 11-J:QI
lOMa ILflOI"' l-0121 ......wm11
a'fWl:&*"DMt ~m1
OUHOl W.JH»
r~MU 1.J211, a Mll l
JCOWf Mlfl
....,, • J.114$, Nol t..Jlll,"' ...,,,
..... nltWm "" ,_,,,,
'lfARS CATA LOG AND APPllANCE <",TORI', *""--,,,_. ......... -~ llllMtlNO'fCM .:M)f ..... ............, .. tea •a ...-o
llHfA AMA ICI 7~1 fOllNCt S42·1Sll
WU rt·tl'llOS "4..,,1 -YM&ff JO 1·1461, '''.J220
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tDUlll COU' ftAlA ~
St ·a rs __ ....
llllOll.Sl11e<.Avo.,.lor-$1-eacn.-f-----------------------
• • T
L
Mond11, Novembtr 10, 196~ DAILY PILDT JS
PUB[lrHDTICc -
.. '
e.ttoas. Costa Meaa's Fl•ftt M•'s Store, must close
Its door forever, due to the pcnsi•t of Mr. Carlton.
We must HI oil ow fl1e stock of natlOMUy od•«•
tlsed .... ds In men's ctotllln9, sportcoah, slacks, and
In fl•• 1um1s1111191 of dllrts. 1wtoter1 & knits. In order
to dtar al our obll,,.tlHs, al our prices ha'le beew
slashed dnntlcally from 300/o to 70°/o. Come preparetl
to buy, this Is Or.oat• County's bl99ftt toln.t out of
busineu sale.
MRS. CARLTON
MEN'S SUITS
Our Reg. $55.00
SUITS
NOW $29
Our Reg. $79.00
SUITS
NOW
549
Our Reg. $69.00
SUITS
NOW $39
Our Reg. $150.00
SUITS
NOW $89
MEN'S SPORTCOATS
°"' Reg. $49.00 Our Reg. $5'.00
COATS COATS
NOW $29 NOW $35
Our Reg. $6'.00 Our Reg. $95.00
COATS COATS
NOW .$42 NOW $59
MEN'S SLACKS
Perm. Press FLARES
Nat1 Adv. & BELLS
SLACKS Val. to $16.00
$65D s900
Nat. Adv. IMPORTED
FABRIC Custom Hand Tailor
SLACKS Val. to $35.00
$1400 $2000
CARDIGAN Nat. Adv.
SWEATERS Lon9 Sleeve
Our Re9. $16.00 DRESS SHIRTS
$12•0 $560
NOW
Nat. Adv. Nat. Adv.
Suede Front S!iort Slffve SWEATER
DRESS SHIRTS Req. $28.00 s4 oo s21 oo
NOW
SALE STARTS TODAY -10 A.M.,. r--------
CARLTON'S
i10 E. 17th ST., HILGREN SQ.
COSTA MESA
OPEN DAILY 10·9-SAT. 10·6
OPEN SUNDAY
FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE!
12 to 5 •
.
'
' '
" .
"
•'
"• .
"'
., '.
' I
• l
J8 DAILY PILOT
'Rondelay' Boring Musical
By WllJJAM GLOVER
NEW YCRK (AP)
"Rondelay," a m~al beset
with artistic .,.,.ots during
rehearsal, unhappily opened
Wednesday night at Hudson
West, a new off-Broadway
theater wilh some troubles of
i I
Westword Ho-World's Lorgest
Motel-J ,000 Rooms Be1wttn
I Slordul\ Hotel & Oozzl!l'lg New I CllCR Cl¥J!$'
I COMPAIEI YOU'U SAVE ••.
-ltfidweek Sptri•ll Now Lowest Winter R11lts1
I CoMP._Ort ot $16-10' nownl roolll'I, double b.d, freo TV
YOU HY OILT SJ lioclo, $1.IO for 2 '"''' C9MJtO!" •I $11-2 dolilble Mck,. .. ly $10.90 two pe•p11
I Fri .. s.t. 6 HoliM,s """"'$2 I 600 01H. "-'••A~'"""' S2 A.uii'-':"'' ""'
f~E£!1 33°0 REFUND PACKAGE
BRING THIS COUPON TO FRONT DESK WHEN YOU CHECK IN
SINO HO MONEY NOW •• OllDEl SY MAIL 0 11 PHONE!
~ fhlo ed ._;!fa ,_ ........ o!io" •oqUO•I, QOI '""''"<llo!o ..-rl-confir.
-;-. ri.. 4hlod. Ori~• !ft lod•J, er moli;• ,,._...,rloM for o fu1u,. •I<""
Contod • • ,_ ,,_..•I 091"1.
fllOM CAUf,, AllZ., UTAH, Oil : tDAHO
DI.Al f.REE (BOO) 648-6898 Anytime
' ' I
Its own.
First, let's consider the
sho w. based losely upon
Arthur Schnilzler's once-dar-
ing and now musty Jove
char1u:1e~··ta-Ronde:"-JCrry
Douglas and Hal Jordan, a
youthful pair who missed in a
previous creative effort, are
respeclively responsible for
book-lyrics and music. They
range a gamut lrom moronic
lO sophomoric.
Eighteen players are in-
volved in the marathon relay
of partner--swapping, and two
of them save the evening from
being a total shambles. Louise
Clay has a Bea Lillie flair for
drollery as a young wile. Pax·
ton Whitel)ead turns a silly .
V}ennese count int-0 a wistfully
real creature.
The rest -Barbara Lang as
a trollop weaving in and out of
a U)in continuity, Terence
Monk, Carole Demas, Peter
York and Dillon ·Evans most
conspicl.iously -try to cope
with the utter Jack of any
viewpo int as to whether the
show is trying to be burlesque,
campy sardonic or hep.
•
I
I
I I ' ..
I
I
I I
I I
I I
I
I I
I
I
I I I I
I
l1t r.t• s,n..., AnotMr WMtward Ho to Serve Yo11 ... I
101 L ..... c...,._, Pol• Sprill:p. c:.J'rf. PtiMt (1141 J1J·ISJI •'
-------------·~
Cyril Ritchard dropped out
as director two weeks ago in
dispu\e over concept, and a
few days ago Choreographer
.Jacques D'Amboise I e ft
because of management's
determination to inject a few
ill-advised touches of semi-
nudity.
Anyon(' alert to omens can
take warning from the opening
words of the title tune that
starts and ends the yawn-pro-
voker. "On and on and on,"
chants the chorus. Nuff said .
RIVALRY -Glo ria Newton s 1 z e s up the healthy
opposition presented by Diane Lysiak as she at
tempts to thwart a budding romance with he hu s-
band in the Rancho Community Players' production
of "The Marriage Go Round."
'209.88, 14·.l <.:u. Ft. Ue frigeralor }"re.,.,er
• Por c,Jain r nameled inlerior, f'•!IY lo clean, raAt and
,,i&;n rest1;1a nt. 11.0 Cu. t·1. rf'ff'igenalor r.tttion
• t·reezer door !ilu:lf makf'@ fro7,en fond pal'ka~!I ca~y tn
re1ch. :tos cu. ft. freezer hold i1 108-11>!. or frozen food. Model 68300 .
15.8 Cu. ft. Up right F r eezer
• Fltnh door hing.in,_, freezer fil.$ in.to a.ny corner. grill e
type&hel•e11, aero cold air circnlale& freely ..-ound food
e Joke and sour can :o.htlve!l. keep~ eang ri1d1t al your fin·
Jertips, never mix with other pac kages. Holda Sll lb•.
of fnnt n fond . ~lodrl :!9211
:5ean Appliancu BACKED 8)
SER\1CE THE DAY YOU WANT IT ...
_4u urtd by the_.m~~l re6per,led ll«!niee orpnh:alion an~·
"'·here ••• St-an nalionw ide «!Xpert iw:rvicc!
1119aMKfA l_.400, 511-4$10
C.lrlMllM '"l< l'°"°'61
U#tOM I« 6.lHT, Ml 2•5761
CO¥INA "'-°'11
lt#oOHfl GI l.Jfll
otfHOMl Of .S.lOOl, 0 4·l611
to<>1l'l'WOOO HO f .Jf41
l«llr«>otl' Ot 8·2JJI
lCIHO llOC.ll Hl J.O ' l I
HCllW.IU UN' ... 7761
QIYi!n(: &. XJt0 ~ IJll l
owo 6)7.1100
,AW!Olf'lil.#U l·l l ll, fl J ,•Jll
'!CO wt ••1'61
~to 1'1145, NA f•J l61, n1 6"67JI
~ Plll'IAHDO fM 1·7121
Gift Mom With a ~cars
Coldspot }'r eezer or
Hcf riger a to r-}'r ce:r.er
SltHfA ANA l';I 7·ll 7l fOtto•ct 54i-111 I
IANU, '[ 5""'1GS 944-!0!1 y,,_IU'I' PO 1·846!, f 84 11'°
Wfll lilCNICA ()( •·41711 '"'-'" 0.1fl1
$0Ul'H CO"-SI "A1A 540.JJlJ
ALSO A'/AILABLE AT SEARS CATALOG AND APPLIANCE STORES
MMNfllllA JIMS)t •
NJCNIU,, ...S.f100 (MMO .,.,,,,
Ul.'IW Cll'T .,.l:NI
CWIUl ... IJJD
OOWNl1 m.tJll
tlAlltfOM JH.llfl cwtrtH OIO'l'l &)l.'700
GU.HA04 .. ll a.o-16'1
,H.lQHOA MGfl ,,.,,.,
MOWl'HIUO 7'4.mt ...............
OHTAllO "'4011
'AlOI V!!llllS '"""' 'lACDm4 nu110
tlllOMlO lltAOt m.s.n:
mtoA >UJlll
SAW lfC*> J.O,f4S1
JHttMAM CAO .. 1~100
.$1,MAHO SJ2,f4S\
llOUND .. J ltl'
Wilt (O'f»<• PULl 0.0 >IOI
.... 11\"HU!fl f.J'll JV7t
WUTWNlfll• .. ) dl1 _ ... ,_ Wlt.Ml .... >ON PO.OOIJ
.,.H!t!lfl ' .. I -
••'TIMINCilOtl fJ0.0011
Sears
'Marriage Go Round'
Rancho Co1'11£dy P"lea,Sant,
'
B
By TOM mus
Of Tiit Olllr 1'1111 Iliff
"The Marriage Go Round,''
which opens the new season
for the Rancho Conununity
Players of Mission Viejo, is in·
deed a funny little comedy -
so funny , in 1act, that et/en the
Mission Viejo Higti. School
theater just a few days before
opening nighL c~uently,
th& selling is composed of
bare essential s with a curtain
as a backdrop. arid technical
'effects are nol raWr stlarp.
Someday, hopefully, th~
' young and enterprising group
·-i may have its own playhoust.
UnUI then, more ambitious
projects will have to be con·
fined to lhe creation of one of
thf most attractive and unique
progran1s put out by a county
theater group this season.
"fHl" MM.llMll 00 IOUHD""
A ml!Wd"t' b'I L•llt S"""tf\S. i:Hrecled
b"t' EH S.bD, •I-11'111-Jro""ie
Hlrxll, 19' '-INC!lon tr'/' 9111 Ind
SU$1n P....,,icli;;, tlthlln9 b"t' CJ1rt; Fir.
rlllt. prewnt.d b"f fM ltMICho Comlnun-
ll"t' Pli"ff't"I, FrlOior• ono Sotu!'dl"f'I tlrrwetl May, 22 11 tl!o M!llklll Vida
Hlllll $Cl'IOOI Lltlle n-t«.
T HI CAST
Paul Delvllle ............. Jock 1Clel1D11
Content DolvH .......... , .Glori• HewfGll
lt1lrl11 SV09 .......... ~ .. 011111 Lyl/M
lll:GM &onlett .................. EdO S.bu
Four more performa nces of
''The Marriage Go Round" are
responsibility for the overall scheduled, Fridays an rl
la10ess of · the Rancho pro-Saturdays through Nov. 22 at
duction. The show contains the MVHS theater.
many uncertainti es of \ ., members of the cast couldn't character and m 0 v em en t CM:~Nl• cwtc coAST IHllllWAY ~ •
keep thei r faces straight. which could have been. ironed ,
This prevailing looseness or t d · h '! j character prevents the Rancho ou urtng re ea rsa s. The weU -turned p h r a s e • ' · ·
production from scaling ariy which is the saving grace of ..,...,.,..u w1t ... te ..... ll!r
great comedic heights, yet many an otherwise harmless
despite the absence of stage little comedy, is relied upon j
discipline, "Marriage Go too often in "Marriage Go
Round" is an enjoyable, if Round." Miss Newton and
uninspired, ·offering. Kielson p r 0 v e themselves
.,. .7/on~~.
:;,. I '71Itl 8 ..
I ,_. .{otJeGotfi.
1to u111111••··~ .ic1u111 • llCMlllCO&.DI• ...... .,..----.................. ,.,..,..,o;
~~~· .__ ·--
• ,1111)-1~\ _CulltBMP
~,_. ElllQr Ill_
·-···---""""· - t
ll is a one-joke play, carried adept at the art, while Miss
more by its juicy script than Lysiak depends almost solely
by any exceptional acting on on physica l punctuation to un·
the_part of its four-character derscore her characterization.
cast Simpl y put, a college Like some other community I
professor ~luctantly eludes theater groups, the Rancho
his voluptuous house guest Players are operating under l
who wants to bear his child for the handicap of borrov.·ed
anthropological reasons, while facili ties, moving into the
his wile reels out just enough,_:::::::::::::.,...::;.:.::::,..:.::::;,=-="~""'
-and almost too much -
rope.
As staged by Ille Rancho
Players, the show is relaxed
almost to the brink 0 r
disinterest, with the three
princi pals c I i n g I n g lo
playwright Leslie s,t evens '
dialogue as if it were a life 1
preserver at sea. The
performances are pleasant,
but hardly engrossing .
TH lt:ATR E J ....,..,..,-..s,C<Hr•••"'-1•6 1.1 ________ ......... ~ ....
"Daddy's Gone
A Hunting"
t
.. r
( • '
Jack Kielson as the pro-
fessor and prospective pro-
pagator wanders around the
stage, grinning devilishly at
the prospect of curling up with
the bundle of Swedish pastry
that is literally tossed in his l;::::::::=:=:=:=:=:;:::::;::::=::======~·-~-=--=--=-c::==:=:=:::::::; ,,
lap. His offhand interpretation ~· •
sets the over-relaxed lone for; ~ ••• .( IT'S NEW
the show. though his delivery, • • ...., )'"
particularly in his so Io ~ TNF'&TF'I EXCLUSIVE AREA
speeches. is quite well hand!· ~ SHOWING
ed . 2905 l a t Coast Higliway FOR ADU LTS ONLY Gloria N~wlon as his wary Col'O•a hi Mor-.ti. 673-6160 wife hones a delicious culling
edge on her dialogue, which is
by far the best in the plaY. but
her perform ance is marred by
a lack of concentration. \Verel he r timing sharpened t o
match he.r affinit y for comedic
phrasing, Miss Newton would 'I
tum in a gem or a portrayal.
Eye catching indeed is I
Diane Lysiak as the blonde
bombshell from Stockholm ,
who doesn't really want to
break up a happy home. jusl!
bend it a little. However. the
total absence of even an at·
ternpl at a Swedish accent
creates a yawning credibility
gap in her pcrformanee which I
\•isua l allure alone cannol 1
remedy.
Director Ede Sabo -who
does a creditable job in a I
cameo role -must shoulder a I
large porti on of lhe ·
'H ol111 es' Role
I IOLL V\VOOn <UPI l
Gritis h character a c t r e s s
Catherine Lacey has been casl
for a role in Billy \Vilder's
"The Private Life of Sherlock '
Ho lmes.·•
··aALBOAi .• . 673-4048
• • Open
6:45 1ot r. 1.1~
lalltoa P.nlnMI•
No w -ENDS l ONITt:
A NEW SIZZLER
F•Olll SWEDEN -
''INGA II
@ '"'::.~/·I
& "SEDUCE A
PLAYBOY "
TH E BEST
ll.ood1nlitip p o I I • prov1
"P111111 h " !1 o"• of tho ..-orld'1
, "Makes
·1u111na or s111ar aeorae'
rook Ilka
8 Waml UP."
_ ... s..--
W I.a . II omanpart .,; .. ,-bf 0 a!& -c_...,_"
@"'="..::."I
"A TRIUMPH! ONE OF
THE MOST APPEALING
. PERFORMANCES OFTHE . ,
·SEASON•"-· ... ~·''"" , 0 Ht., Yorli,11'";_.. J'
.: · "SHOULD WIN UZA MINNfLU ·~'i • ,. , AN ACADEMY AWARD'" ~ -r~..,,.5 1~-• "i!, 11 -· Liie Af•r•r;... t =~~~AND fNDEAllNS! UZA J
IT'S THE :.~:IMl'l.Y 1"1N0flfUl• t
TH Of PflfOlllAJlcE •
AT BIEAU HEAITI A•D -OSCARS•" n-. -"·"'"-.. -~-• 'tolid1, "•••ilrlo
2nd at-HU NTINGTON
D1ck Vo11 Dy~e
"SOME KIND OF NUT" I 21'14 or HAll.IO•
Jado; lemmon &-Wa lt11 Motth11v
"THE ODO COUPLE"
WEST COAST PREMIERE RUN
NOW AT BOTH THEATRES
' \
'
$ho 6 N19h1t Mof!dor th•-•th Sotllrd-9:30 ... ~. to 9.·30 P.M. s11"da,. r 2 00-oo 5 '.". mt1I pop11l1r comic llrip1. R11d .. ., , ~~~~~~~~~--~~-'--~~~~-~-·-~~a-·-~~~~~~-11='='=·'="~'=='•:=th:•:D~A~l~L~Y=P~l~LO~T.:::i1-_;
"
Pi
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RC
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• •
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,I
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-
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~~.:;:-.!.-..c::·•;
\ « .. DAILY PILOT Sllll ,.,._,.
Plilying the Game
Colin Vogel (Cocky) strives to make a good showing
in "the game" as Steve Nisbet (Sir) watches crit·
ically in thi s scene from. "The Roar of the Grease-
paint, the Smell of the Crowd ," opening Tuesday
for two weeks at UC Jrvine's Campus Theater.
1¥1. SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.
Co•t. SAT. &-SUN. from 2 f'.M.
for the best 9 11id1 to wh1l'1
htpp1nin9 on TV, tt 1d T\I
WEEK -diitrib11!1d witll th1
S1t11rday tdition of the O"ILY
PILOT.
1tt ARIA SHOWING
HOLLYWOOD UKE IT WAS.I
_..,.....,_.
f:••yti
1C(Ml(,"9• -oo:VAN DYKE
"'«l-IUE lEE
MCl<t-Y ROONEY t. ' ~ eokl< lfJ\~
l ACADEMY A.WAtDS
~~~ -1.--. PETEllO'IOOI.€
1 IOOHARINE HEPllURN
i ·~
11HE UON INWINT€R.. ..------ALSO -
MIT .. IL Fiii'SOUTH COAST
G(llRIL PLAZA THEATRE ~TICll San Dieco Freeway at 81i5tot • 546-27 11
A louch O'Blarney and a beap O'Magic
,,
-£-~~~~'--~-"--~-_._ Also
Hi Kids!
----
It's a RINQ.A.DING
LAUGH AFFAIR! "
ltey Gordeti m -Oet1'r ,.,, .. S,.C.l•I
Sito• -Sfrt•rday No,. 11 -11::10 p.M. -
Monday, Novtmbtr 10, 196<J OAJLV mor J7
Pain Bo·gers Studies Bard t o A~t Bu111h
.
By CYNTIUA LOWRY glrl on the show, 1 went over. indicate her prefcrenl'ts: La s Vegas, and NeW York,
NEW .YORK (AP) -There ThlY,. handed me a mono&ogue Lucille Ball and Gracie Allen. moved on to mode;llng -all
ls I dellah\£u1, and perhaps and, with 11' writers sitting "l parl.\cularl y l\ke Craci•'I the while studying acting.
very American, character in there, l read it -cold. It Ytas ·attitude -she played every Since tbe action was mostl y
conlelriporary mythology. · scary ." line very seriously, as if she in thf: West, Pam went to
· -tne-beiatiful;-Jn--..lll"-\'oice-changed-gears_was...ibe-onlJ one-.'.31'.®n4 1Y1HL.li9.Uf.Wood, enrolled in a
ie11uous, 4~mb bJonde, ir· audJbJy into the syllables or WB6 in step,·• she said, "And, drama work.shop at one of the
resistible to the dominating t~beauWIJ.l but dumb broad : you kno w, Marilyn Monroe studiOI. Thia led lo 90me small
JP&le, enemy of the faithful, "And I think it's wonderful." had a simple, lovely gift for TV roles and a rew mln()r
plain wife, and trlumphjnl in Is she afraid she \V III be comedy, too." movie ~rlS.
most comedy encounterl. struck in a casting rut ? Pam comes from Houston, Pain Works the nornlally
It's the Billie Dawns and '•We 11 , ' ' s h e s aid Tex., where her father is in, of horrendous hour s of "Laugh·
Lorelei Lees, the chorines and thoughtfully, "I re ally do love course, the oll business. Even In '," starting wlth a six-hour
the gunsel's molls of a to hear people lau gh. I thin k l before she was out of high day on f\tondays and a read·
thousand 1930 movie nights. love to do comedy. I don't school she was entering beau· through. but after that it
And right now, a 5-foot-8 think I'll mind being typecast ty conteslS and even won shoots up to 12. 14 and
bJ:ighfbeauty ~ putUng,in up because ·it . would be terrible ;'hfiss ·Teias"• in the. ?tliss somi!Umes 16 gruelling hours
to 18 hours a day learning how not tdbe able to ktd'or laugh.'' Uiti.Jerse'preliminaries. ' · a day. The day she r eally
to act liktf a bubble-headed sex Pam's show bu!lness idols I:ater she was a ShOWgii'l In dreads comes c'Very three
symbol.
Her name is Pamela Rogers
and she is the latest eye.filling
attraction of the television
series, "Laugh· In."
.
SEARS Has Everything
weeks when she and a couple She is. In tacl, more likely lo
oC other girls shoot what lhcy be handling the straight lines
call "Body credits." Those are that set up the jokes.
the qu~k s.bots of the dancing She bas been married for
writhing torsos which have the past three years to Jere
been palnttd_WjlJLwocd.s.._ ga& enshaw,-a-vic1-pres1'itot-in
lines and such. charge of producUoo for 'a filin ·
"It taks a couple or hours to company. They live i n
get the paint on, and as long to Sherman Oaks in t h c
get it off. And they have to 'San Fernando Valley, a short
touch it up between tupes," drive from her beautiful
11he said. "I hope il15 on the downtown Burbank base.
screen long enough to make · She likeli to cook ," to
all the standing around - and detorale her home and she '~
the tickling -worth It. crazy about her husband,
As an apprentice sex kitten, which are terrible things to
Pam 1s no~ yel being give n reveal about a girl whose
many or those boff lines or public Image is Sexy, stupid
gags that fl y around lhe show. and frivolous.
or C 0 Ur Se I 4'Laugh-ln"
already has a senior beauliful-
afld-dumb chracter, name of
Goldie Hawn, whose perform·
ing career is now trium-
phantly launched in films and
Including SUNDAY SHOPPING
Sunday Hours
12 Noon
to 5 P.M.
in dancing, singing guest shots
on variety shows and who has
allowed her admirers to see
that there's plenty of gray
matter beneath the blonde
curls, Pam, therefore, is the
a pprentice comedy-cum-sex
girl.
Miss Rogers recenily was
dispatched to the East Coast
for .some promotlorial ac·
tivities. Her first ex.posurc on
Johnny Carson's show was
almost more t h a n she or
Carron bargained for -a
critical zipper slipped on her
scanty costume, fortunately
just before she gave a slithery
demonstration of a dance caU-
ed "The Pop Corn." Eme rgen-
cy repairs were made during a
commercial.
The next day, MiM Rogers
turned up at NBC in a crowd·
stopping pants suit of rust-col·
ored 91.lede, boots and cowgtrl
hat with her wide green eyes
covered by huge dark glasses
and a tragic expression on her
face.
She talked about how she
had landed the "Laugh-in"
job.
"I had a part in Rowan and
Martin's movie, 'The Maltese
Bippy,' and when my agent
learned they wanted a new
Character
Corrigan
Dead at 69
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Character actor Lloyd Cor·
rigan, who came from a show
business family and became a
successful writer, director and
actor, is dead at 69.
Corrigan, who came to
Hollywood as a screenwriter
for Paramount Pictures in the
1920, moved to directing and
finally acting. He appeared in
dozens or movies, including
"Dr. Fu Manchu," which he
helped write, and "Tl's a Mad,
Mad, Mad, A1ad World.
E:iccbul" Rt1trud S 11t E111411rm1trl
TONIGHT AT
1:00 p ,M.
2001
"ONE Of TlllS YEAR'S BITTER
MOVIES! FlllJY, Romantic,
Toacbing! ......... ,...,_
,,..
••• ·. ==-
KATHA~NE HEPBURN as
TM l'll\DWOMlm
oCCHftlLIDt
Ill• "~OlOll••llOM --·•-OS. 2nd POPULAR HIT
lifa:U
ENDS TUESDAY
Prices Effective Beginning Today
Sears
I ~:
SAVE $15 0 11 Me n 's, Women's Watches
•
•All Tradition watches J1ave 17-je~·cl precision made 5,,,ifiS
movements with incahloc sl1 ock protection, unbreakable
main11prir.gs aq,cl ere anti-magnetic
•Every watch i ~ subjecLed to rigid c1ua li1y control te sts be-
fore it meets Sears standards
•Tradition. watches are among lhe finest '"at ch values
available. Fashion 1lc~i~necl exelt1 sively lly Sea rs
L•c ~cars !\evolving Charge
Regular 949.99
YOUR CHOICE
88
,-------------------------------------------------, I M.llNA 'ARK ll MONTE \ONG lfACH P1CO at Rimpov POMONA SOUTH COAST PtAlA I
CANOGA PAIK . CilfNDAll OlYMPIC & SO!O SANfA ANA TOl:AAHC!
J COMPTON HOllYWOOO ORANGE s SANTA ff SHtNGS "',•,1tll. .... "-··· I
COVINA INGLEWOOO PASADEN.4. ears $ANJA MONICA """"'"' -11
,_________________________ _ __________________ ,
hp Nlflht1 MMtllr ......... h Sotvnlq9i30 A.M. I• 9:30 P.M .. Svndor 11 N•tn I• s '·"'-1'SolitfacfionGuaranl1td Of'YoVf Mont)' o
t
• l& DAILY PILOT Moodlr, """""" 10. 1'169 •' :=;LEGAJ.;;;;;roNOT!imfii.--1-------------------------------------------:-------
IJHIFIED tc:ltOCl DISTIUC'f °'
a ESOt.UTION O' """ IOAllD Of' EOOCATIOM Of' N~T..IUSA OR.ANGE COUNT'I, CALlf'OltHIA
~ 21, ""' 0!1 ll'IOttol'I 111 M9nltw DONALD A,
lfAAUSS. duW _..... .-.cl c-rltoll. "" folll:IW ..... llttOMlon _, ... 1*1:
ltfSOl.VED tlllot It 11 the lnNfttloll ot "°"' llolnf 1111 El!Nullon. --"' lo s.e-. t1on1 ltlll lo IUU. ~Ml....e, of tM
t;-..lloll CoOe, lo 1r1nt lo tM llooultW"'
C..Hlon'll& EdllOIJ. I i;s"r~I~\ 111 ..... _, fOf' ~""""' • 1 c I r r c tr-~ llM __.. _,, vndllr
incl ~ ""'' cert1Jn r11I -rv kleettcl 111 ffle Oh of NtwpOl'I Dffdl. c-1v « °'"'""· St1i. ol c.1nom11. Dn the follO'WIM cond111Dfl : ... .
Thll p-ly II ft&erl btod II followl:
A 11r11 of Lind, ' IHI In wldtll, 1,1,,.
wlthlt1 • -!Ion ol tllodl .S2 ol lrvl,..'1
SVbdlvl1lon, 11 1howfl on • matt •9tOl'd-
ed Ill Book 1, '"' M of M~lllntO~I
""'"' In "" offlu ol' l'M CDlll)ty llecordtr ol uld County, 11111 ct11t.•llM
o1 uld 1"111 of l1nd M t1111 dfta"*I 11
follllwl: eornr-1111 II Point .. ,. .. II relet>red
to In NI c:erl•ln Cor-11t1Dn Gr•nt
D9flll to Newport Meu Unltled Sd!ool Dlstl1ct, rKWOeo1 ~ 5, lMt, hi 8flOk tCl1', p ...... of Offk1111 llKOl'lh
of wld C-l'f, ukl .-olnl be!,.. ln ~
<'lll'llMIM di Vhll Del Onl, n -"''bll"*'1 ~ -.. ....... ,."' •'-• ltneefll CVNI, toftUIWI "°""'4!11twty
•rid "-"'"" 1 r.cllu1 of ...0 fftf ~ • ctntr.t ..... of 14 .,,_ lt '"' •
lndoet •n •re dlsl...n of 110.M fief; ~. hnetnl to Will CUNt, SOl.l'fl
6' ..,._ 11 '"' 110 lf!Ctie1 E1 .. , D IHI ID 1t1e TitUE POINT OF BEGIN-
NING of Ill.ls dtlal1tlofl1 tlleno, soufll-"""' Ill I 1tr119hl lfM, I dlsflTICI of \f1 Ne! ta I POlnt localed
t11 ftet """"-fer"", muwred 11 rl9M -lei from Mid Ctnllrtlne Col VIII• Oii Or-. ulll 1111 menllonM POlnl
btln9 hlrelllffter reftrred to 11 l"olnt
"X". AlSO. I 1lrl1 of llnd, 10 fl!,tl In
wldlll, .hi"' wllllln Niii lllodl J?, tl'le <:etilwllne of ulcl 1trk> bllM Ott.c:rlbed
II fOll-.~ tlf91nnlM 11 $Aid Point ")!:"; 'Mnct,
watttlY. In 1 1tr1h1lll Hne, 1 dlst11\Ct
of 10 IHI ta I POln! ~ltd lH fe~
1autllweslerl¥, mN..urld 11 rltlll 11>11ln
from Uld ce"'"'lllll' of v1111 Del Oro.
NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN tt111 on tt.e 11111 di¥ of No¥embtr, lMt, al ~
"""'' ol 1::KI o'clDdt ,.,M. I 1>11bllc meell111 or IM Board of Educ;1!1on Wiii be M id ••
111 r"ulllr "'"'11111 Piece tor I PUbllc
t>Hrlnt 11-tM question of IT>lkl111 !tie lf()rflotld tr9"1.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED 1111! ffle
CleOI of 11111 lloard of Educ1tton Is "'"""' directed to If~ notice ol lhtl 110,......ld
Pllbllc mffllnt DI' PClltlllll CoPles ol !tilt
llnolutlon, 1lened tw 1 ..... 1or11¥ of !ht
member1 af thl llolrd el Edut1tlon fn
t11ree (]) Pllblk Pile" Ill JM Dl1trlc!, Hid POS!f ... lo be completed not !es.I lti1n
IM (10) dl'n blfor1 lhtl dale of Nld PUbllc rnHll ... , Nld capi.t lo be PCllfftl
-11 I nd on UOT Slll,_.111 Street.
N"""°" 8udl. C.llfomi.. -11 11..t "" 1U7 P llCMlll A,,_ COlll Met.a-.
C1lllomle l<'ld -11 Mid on 10110 Cllff Drtft, Newport tl91di, Cllllornl1 Ind DI'
pllbllstll11t 1 notice el tl'le ldootlorl of th!1
Rnolullon once In tl'le 01!"" Plkrt, 1
,,,__, of •-••I clrClllallon ~bll1hfod In fhe N--l·Mftl Unified School
Dktrkl, said Plltillclllorl to be m1.te ,!II
le1.t 11 .... t!I doll'I btf-tl'le dlll of Hid
pub!k mHll1111. AYES: Mt'MllEllS M1rl1n c. se..,nan,
O<>Mld A. Str1u11, Selim 5. Franklln,
E!lubelll M. LIU'f, Tllo!N• C. CIH'f,
J1mel w. Pevton
NOES: MEMBERS NONE
AllSENT: MEMBERS ADqerltk H.
M1eMllll1n
STATE OF CALIFORNIA!
COU NTY OF ORANGE ) u . t, DONALD A. STRAUSS, C.ierll of the
806rd of Edue1!1on of Ille Newport-Mes• Unified School Dlltrkl of 0.-1no1 County,
C11!fornl1, lier~ urtlf'f 1111! lhtl lbow 1nd lorl9ol1111 Rnolutlon W•t dulY 1nd
•e!lulerty 1clapled b't 1111 stld B08rd 11 1
llP11ul1r mtellflll thereof llelcl on Ille 2ht
d•'f of October, lfft. and 011sM b¥ 1 unanl......,. ¥011 of 111 tM rnembff1 of
511d B111nl,
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I !lave
her.unto u t m¥ h~t'ld 1nd wit 11111 2111
da't ol October. 1fft.
D, A. STRAUSS
CleOI al Wld Iii.tit of Educ1tlon
M1rL111 C. Berteson. Thc!mlt C. C11r,i,
!eflm S. Fr1nklln, Ellubllll M. Liit.,
lloderltt H. MICMllll11l, J""'" W.
Pr.ifon. Ml!m!Mn of ll'lt !lo.rd of ll!'dUCl-lion of Newoorl-MHI Unlfltd khoal
Dbtrlct of Ora,.,e Counly, CAllfoml1
NOTICE OP INTENTION
TO DEDIC.I.TIE l"ASEllll!NT
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN tr..t Dll
'""' 2111 day of October. !Mt, ~ k.trd of
Educlllorl of Ille Ntw-1-MHI Unified
Sdlool Dl1trlcl of OtlnQI CounlY,
C1flfornl1. ldoottd a RtMllutlan ol lni'Pfl.
lion lo dedlute 111 •1wmtnl la ~~
C1lffoml1 Edl11111 C111!'1Pln¥, I tof'JIOl'1tlon,
tor undertround 111tclrtc tine lr•llll'l'lln lan
__..Id Mte!Mflt -fo-bif--klclted -
Offf" on Ind ICTllM -1IOlll of 11111 Mid
Peral of 111\d k>c11ed 11 tht E11tblvfr
5'11Do1 sri. In 1111 c11y of N-_.i Btadl.
A PUtiHc mHllflll UP011 tl'le 'l!Jflllon of meklflll W('I\ dedlc1!1on Wiii .,. l>tld II
COlll Met.a-Hloll Scllool l.¥CP!Jm. H!e F1lrvlew ROfld, Ca1f1 MMI, C111forn11, an
tht 11111 d1y ol Na~blr. 1fff, at Ille
llout of 7:30 o'clock P.M. BOARD 01' EDUCATION
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
By D. A. Sl<IUH C~k of 11ld Board
P11bll1hfod Or11>11e C011t 01llr Piiot, Navemtlotr 10, 1'0 7011.,
LEGAL NOTICE
•All·i1J2
SUPl!llott COURT 01'" THI! STATI! 01' CALll'"OllNIA 1'"011
THE COUNTY 01'" DI ANO• N1. A .... 124
MDTICI: OP HEARING 01'" "P:TITION
FOii "'aoaATE 0 1' WILL AHO FOii
llETTEllS TESTAMENTAIY o!::':O. of Hrten Ellllbol!lll Quinn,
NOTICE 15 HEREll'f GIVEN Thll Fllher Desmond Quinn 1111 flltd hoerl!ln 1 t>etlllon tor Pl'flbalt! of wflt 11'14 for 111uanc:• of Lett1r1 Tnt1men11rr 1o Prll·
llOMI'", rdtrtnc:I to wl'lldl 11 m...te for
furtller PIP1 lcul1'1. lrd lll•t 1t>1 II~ 11\d
Pl.Ke ol l'lffrl119 !tie w~ ha1 bffn w
lor N""ff!lbtr 71, Ifft, 11 t:lll 1.m., In Ille
courtroom al °"'•lml'nl No. 3 of 111d
court, 11 7'1111 Civic Center Drl~ Wnt, In
Ille Cll'I' at S11nl1 An1, C1lllo(llf1. D1'*1 Octobw '1, lttf.
W. E, ST JOHN, Cou~IY C!trk. Allll Mtrtlll ltltdY,
1111 Nlrll\ Mlln llrltt,
Stllll AM, C1Ufllrnl1 T1h 014) US.Mn ,.,, .. ......, fw "ttlllontr
Publllh~ Or•1111r Ca111 Dlll'f PHot.
NovembH" •· 5, 10, lt6f 1051.,
LEGAL NOTICE
BAR 21U SUl'ElllOR COURT OP' THIE
STATE 01' C.l.Lll'"ORNIA 1'"0 11
THI COUNTY 01'" OllANOI '"· "'""'JU NOTIC.-01'" HEAR ING ON "l!'TtTION
POI flllOIATI' 01'" Will ANO 1'"011 LETTEIS TESTAMl"NTARY
E1!1!1 ol AN GELA O. OYH.-.RZAllAL Decui.N. '
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN T"-1 DAVID S. HIGUl:RA ha. llltd ,_.rt!n 1
t>elltlon tor prolMte of will •rd tor lu111t11Ce of Leller1 Tn11~t1rv lo Pttl· I~. ~erence lo w~1ch 11 midi! tor
turtMr N <llcvllrs. 11!11 11111 "'41 ti .... Ind
1>llCI af Jtnrlt111 '""' same lllt bro!n 1tl
'"'" No'IM!bet 21, 1'6t. 1t t ::KI A.M .• fn
Ille courtr"""' el ~r"™'"' No. J o1 slld COUrl, 11 7'1111 Chic C1111•r Drive Wnt. ill "" CllY ol $int1 ........ C1Hlor1111. D1fm Odobfr )Cl, lMt. W, E, ST JOHN, Counho Cit"-.
MAGEL. lll:GAH I DAVIDSON,
.A"""""I II L-lfM Mlrtll Mllo1 Slrltl, Sl'flll A111. C1llfllrnl1 f1NI
Tl:LI l n 4) J4f..U.J
Altlnlln for l"llllltner
Pllbll111ed Dr•Me CO.ti Dlf!'f Piiot, No<tember •, S. 10, lfff l(l»-6t
LEGAL NOTICE
SU .. 1:111011 COURT DI'" TMIE
STATE 01'" CALll'OllNIA 1'"0 11: THI: COUNTY 0 1'" ORANGI
NI. A ... 2tl
0 1 0 111 TO SHOW CAUSE
AP .. LICATION OF VIOA COLEMAN JOH NSTON FOR CHANGE OF NAME
WHEREAi, VIDA COLEMAN
JOHNSTON, 1111'11!'-r, 1111 lllH 1n IP. ~•kel'lon wltll the Clttt. ol 11111 Court tor
1n order a.-1111 lloltillol'IM; n1me 1rom
Vfdl C.lefrMn Jol'ln11Pn lo YIOA VIOLA
COl.EMAN.
IT IS OltDEltED tlllt 11t --i,... ffnJIMI Ill IM •~titted mft'tt-r IP. _, befon' 11111 Court II 9:30 1.m., on
NIY. 1f, !Mt, In !he ~ loc"l!«I 11 C-iflouM, Santi AN, C I I I I o t n I 1 , OeH,,.,.,.,,. J. Ind lh:lw CIUH, If l n'f,
W1W IM -llutlOll tor Cflt"'I 11'1 Nmt
l houlill l'lol be lflnlolll.
IT IJ fUltTM!.I ORDERED ttlll I -.Mlll'lld 111 tM 0.-lnot C""IV 0.lty
PIW, COlll Mtlli I ~ Of -•I
clrcvltffoot MnlM lfl 1111 C-IV of °"'""" Clllfomil, eMe 1 Wffl! tor tour ~ ""*' '"'"" " ..... dtlt "" for PINrl,. "" -lkAllOI>.
DATI D: Qcl, ''' '"'· l!;ATMOND THOM"M>fl
,_
011.t.'" a POl"O'llCM
Sul• .. Utt .......... If l'IM lltn
Llf ......... C.llflnlll "'" Tl! (tlSI lnolbl
•
--
•
shop monday and tuesday only for our veteran's day sale , , , bring the kids in luesday. ; • "scliool'i out!
easy-care c ardigan~
in your favorite colors
Our group of cardigan cover-ups.
Jacket styles, ribs, and embroider -
ies. In easy cari; acrylic. 36-40.
values 14.00 to 15.00
may co campus shop 43
9.99
Van Heusen's Tycora®
discontinued styles
Pu re Tycora® texturized nylon
shirts with 3-button placket front.
Machine was hable. Sizes M-XL.
reg. 7.50 3.99
may co men's sportswear 84
non-cling slips of nylon lricot
Soft and smooth. Gored 10 lit.
Chemise length. Perfect under
knits. In white. Sizes 32-36.
value 5.00 3. 99
r.lJY to daytime lingerie :'
big group of dress shirts
Short sleeve. So lids, stripes. But-
ton-Oown, spread collars. 14 y,.
16 \S . Reg. 7.50-9.00 long sleeve,
3.9~. reg. 6.00 7.50 3.39
3/10.00
rnJy co men'$ furnishing~ b
clingy. nylon tops
to wear with pants
A. collection of little nylon lops.
Perfect for pants and skirts in a
spectrum of colors. Sizes S-M-l.
value 7.00 4.90
may co boulevard sportswear 16
·'
[fashion coats in camel
·hair or plushy fun fake
Shown, our tailored camel hair
coaL Or choose a modaaylic or
rayon pile fun fake fur. sizes 6-16.
,eg. 60.00
70.00 39.99-49.99
may co misses, boulevard coats 27, 103
woven patterned coat
and heather knit dress
Coai and dress in Coloray® rayon
bonded to acetate, ·brown, green,
blue, gold, 12-20, 12\S-22\S .
reg. 28.00 19 • 99
111.1y c.o bou leva rd dresses 95, 57
-----+-------------t
precuffed styles in
Dacron ®/wool
Dacron® polyester and wool. Belt
loops. Whiskey, olive, navy,
black. 30-40. 2 pair 26.00
reg. 16.00 13 • 99·
50.00-55.00 sport coats 39.00
may co men's sportswear 45
girls' knee-high boots
Sparkl ing vinyl boots with low.
low heels. And how they fit.
Choose bone or black. Sizes 10-4.
reg. 11.00 8. 99
14.00 boot, sizes 5-9 9.99
may co young peoples shoes 70
boys' washable sweaters
Mac hine washabl e lambswool v-
neck or crew-neck pullovers.
Handsome color choice. 10·20.
reg. 10.00·1 2.00 6.99
may co boys' furnishings 23
Surety soft. buyoyant
Dacron • filled pillows
Dacron® p0lyester filling won't
pack or bunch. Cotton cover.
reg. 5.00 20"x26" 3. 9 9
reg. 6.50 20"x30" queen 5.49
reg. 9.00 .20"x36" king 6.99
may co domestics 34
half price fashion jewelry
You'll find pins, necklaces, ear-
rings, and bracelets just like
you've always wanted. Hurry int
reg. 2.00-15.00 99<-7.50
111.1y co jewel ry 22
fine Franciscan china
Now through December 6 you
ca n get this elegant masterpiece
china in mal'.IY beautiful patterns.
45-pc. set
;eJl4 3~9 t .6Q. 233.28-211 .88
may co south coast plaza, san diego fwy at bristol, costa mese;
'
shop monday through salurday 10 11.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Simmons firm mattress
for comfortable sleep
Renaissance mattre ss or bo x
spring, quilted cover, super-firm.
reg.79.95 59 99 twin orfull, each •
reg. 229".00 60x80" queen, 189.00
reg. 269.00 6x7' king set 229.00
may _co sleep shop 145
young girls pea jacket
Sporty· double-breas!ed pea jacket
for windy days ahead. Roomy
front slash ~kets. Navy. 7-14.
reg. 17.00 14.99
·, \' tn ..::iris dresses Sf,
no-iron Romona lacy 1ableclolh
Polyester and cotton; acetate lac e
insert, lrim. White, gold, green
yellow. 64x90 oblong or·oval .
reg. 16.00 13.99
reg. 14.00 68" round 11 .q"
m~y co linms 30
546.9321
---·'~tiiltil DiOi .-llit,1----------------------------------------
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LEGAL NOTICE
LIGAL NOTICI
NOTICE IS HE.ltlaY GIVEN tl'l•I "1•
tnllo.,1119 lttrr11 ol fouNI or 11vtd .,,.eny
h•v• llffn ll•ld lw tl'le 'ollc• D"1rtrntn1 <>I IM City of COlll MHI fOI" I ,trlocl In ~~c"s .,, ntnet'I' Ctol d1v1:
Cr1l11 1ltrtt hH ll«k. ' btvt blk11, 1 •iretn lll~t. 1 blkf -color Uf!k-.
NO'flCE IS l'UltTHEllt GIVEN tllll II
no OWMf' IPHID 11111 -" "" owne,..111• of tllt ,,.,.,,., w!lllln If'"""
f7) dl VI fol-1111' 11\t •M lltt!ltl'I Ill !Ml Nol!ce. ff\f !Ult ttlt<"rto 11\eN VIII In tllt
11n11tt, It there be OM(IOI' In tM Cltf ..r
(Mii MU.. In wflkl'I c•M 111• '''°"..,., •11111 b9 ..W 1f •llbllc .uctlofl ti 1 time •rod d•ff tt tie l lll'OUl!Ced'. DATED: 'fllWl!lller lt, lN,, It. f , NITH CHIEF OF POLICE
'ubllslleCI 0.lftl'I Ca11t OtUJ "11tt1 N6v1tm k r lt, lfH 111n-#
.LEGAL NOTICE
·1
"
.~ ,•
• . ,
easy-care plaid pants
for going young girls
Flue leg pan~ in easy-care acrylic bonded to
acetate. All sorts of bright sunny plaids. 7-14 .
7.00 dinky bloo!<, siz., 7-t 4 4.99
r~.6· 7.00
rl'llJ co S""""'eat ,77 .r
short arid slinky top
4.99
just one from a group
Short-slttt~ triaatate ktlit top. OM of a
grou~ including 1 buttontd ·~It. Ml.fty
faskion colors. In s1zM 8 through 16.
reb. 5.99
m•y co better blou"' }9
cas ual or dressy bag's
3.9')
Soft ltatMr tnd vinyl handb<gs. Simply tiiJ,
ortd. In black pattnt. or black, brOf.tn, bOne
and mort fall fuhion colors.
re1,. I ).00 · 16.00
m•r co handb&a• l6
girls'. corduroy coat
9.99
C.r re.dy for oold ., .. w, in • duhina cOt·
ron ~rduroy coat .. ·ith i.n Edwardiaft collie.
Comes in beise. in si:..tt 6-14.
••lue i1.oo 22.9'J
may co
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shop our vtttran's day S< monday and tuesday only
bringtht kid$ iii tut14ay, school"• ou t'.
Slim Wheel for a slim,
trim figure in no time
J.611 the Slim Wheel on the floor five rimes
a day a.id w1tch that tummy fla tt~n . Witli
etsJ to follow instruc.1iOn5 .
reg. 7.95
'"'Y"' iporting goods l-0
wool coordinates from
1 favorite famed maker
3.99
Vflt. shirt, skirt and pants from a group.
Pure wool. Camel or black. Skirt 10.99,
blotut 7 .It, ptnts (not sho"'n) 12.tl
Ve6t reg. 20.00
may'° coordinatts IOI
softly tapered city shoes
l2.9'J
ShOfs sitnply tai lortd without a tract of uim.
High or mid httls. Black or btown and
oth~r fuhion shadts a•ailablt.
reg. l~.00-1 7.00
ma y co modttate clress Jhots 12
l l.9'J
washab le terry cloth robes
Perftct aftt r ba th or ,.,;rn. Lush cotton.
Lovtly jacquard duign. Gold. red. g.ctn,
blue colors, jn lites p·$·m·l-
reg. 17.00
,.,, co lounptu lJ
13.9')
•
110 pound barbell set
for building up
Build yourstl f up or 5lim do"'" .•. this
mu.Kie builder stt has dumbcll ban 111d
lhrom e ~let-\'ed b1r. P!tstic clad weights .
m•y a> tporting goods \0
Rex Flex by Jarman ,
the soft-step shoe
16.00
So comfortable. the Re,. Fltx fttls like •
glove on your foot tht flr.~t time you wear it.
Brown or blaLk leather,
reg . .!;J.00
may co mws shoes 60
group of sport coats
24.99
Two and three button 5tyles in Jtt.SOn span·
ning Dacron• polyester and "·ool. Miily
colors. Perf«t for the holiday season .
39.00
may co mtn 's sportnvear 4 ~
boys ' ski parka
\Vind and ?t'eather resistant n)'lon, com·
plttCly reversible. Hu a roncealed hood .
Blue or olive fall i:olor" in sizrs 10 th rough
IA.
reg. 1;;.1;1 l 4.9'J
may co boys· ~tac 14
touth coast plata , stn die110 fwy. at bristol, costa meu; 546-9321 ;
shop monday thru saturday I 0 a.m . to 9: 30 p.m.
•
DAl~Y PILOT Jf
· . .\.:·\. :£$°
exciting fur fashions
at one low price
,I
Choose from designer roats , jackets, stoles.
Sho\\•n, blal'k·d>·~ broadtail processed lttnb
j~l ket .,·ith natural mink collar and cuff.
,,,, 222
may co fur salon 47
fur products ldxkd ro 1lw:lw <out1try ol oti&1n
of importd (un
boys' fa mous maker
knit shirts
Wear without wrinkling. Nt'Yer need$ iron-
ing. Crew nec k coll ars. Ma.ny fashion colors.
Jn 5i:r:C1 10 lo :20.
reg. ). ~o
6.00 no -iron iean s. 10·20 3.99
may co. boys' "'tilr 23, 14
save! pool tables
41 " pool table "'ilh foldin,g aluminum legs,
.. ·arp·proof hard top. Includes 2C)" cue
s1kks, 1" ba lls.
r ~. 1 (1.'J'I l4.99
may co toys"~
Tasco 6-12 zoom binoculars
Zooms fro m 6·1 2 powers at tourh of rlie
""':iti:h. )I}' field vie"' at 1000 yards. Leath·
" '"' 1nd stt of swp_s. Holid .. Jt t oz
39.9')
may oo camerl! 37
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4 of 10 Vietnam Divisions Said Ready for Operation·
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WASHINGTON (AP)
Four ol South Vlttnam's 10
-regular anny d.Jvilions have
reached reasonably acceptable
t.-ombat shape, according to
U.S. military sources.
now than wben we made OW'
first estimltes ln J uoe.'"
..nam's best, • and some
Americans have even called it
~aJ..tO some U.S. divi!ionl in
1 ~bat capablllty.
rtfJected the division's con-
dition last sprtng ond the 11h
bu improved ill the pest four
The armortd cavalrJ, using Two diviaiom, the 22nd -and
M43 tanu •nd pul!lllllllj car· !3n!Lalhe C<ntnl rupJlndJ
rlers, have been Conduljlini ll C!lrlfl ,MU an conslllered
road security operations lnc1 qulltlc. marks, in Pa r t
Serving as a battle reserfe, be<:aUH they have not yet
They reported tllO 25th . aiid !)Own" In quality and lhe
ARYN •viliaP, once 1enerally-rlltb-Divilion WN nnted ·bf UaUd the W«J!, 'llU made :...-the. il.S. ri>llltary ......,.. as on
some -ble _. In the the botlom.
These officers said just a
year ago only one ARVN
division could be rated as al
least good.
American military IOUl'Clll
said the South Vietnamese lit
divls'°D in the Northern l'
Corps and lhe-7th,-tth and lllt
divisions in the Mekong1R1ve1
Delta are at least reasonably
acceptable.
UNI'LllllJ'ROVED
mooths. '
The ·u.s. otncen: who
-discussed-current evaluatlons
There was a report recently gave high marks lo the South
the ARVN 7th Division have Vjelnam~ airborne . troops
been downrated in a combat and ·referred .to 14 armored
evaluation report. OfUcials cavalry squadrons as "a re.al
said, however, this report succeSs •story."'
these officers"aaMj. fought hlllY,u dtvlslons.
The South Vletnameccsec-.2"n~~The poorest of the South
Division, also in lhe northern· Vietnamese divisions are the
most corps, ls regarded as three in the Ill Corps area
"marginally good," and gel· surrounding Saigon, the U.S.
P14l fft monUW., with a new 1be 1'11, according lo these Am~ is aHllcted wllh conunarider whO, u one U. ·~ r leaaersfiipl:L>e-'--....nt
A .d " .. ft poo , ............. rmy man sa1 • seems w of·first·line South Vietnamese
know wbat he's doing." leaden 'probably ts the mos~
The Sooth Vietnamese 5th difficult· problem facing U.S. The 1st Division tong has
been regarded as Sooth Viet-ting better. sources said. Division was described as "up adviJefs.
They now rank the re-
maining six South Vietnamese
divisions from marginal to -· v.s. authorities concede Uie
SOUth Vietnamese army has
not yet been battle tested on a
wide scale since the Nixon ad·
ministration ordered a speed.
up in the "VietnamitaUon" of ..,
tilt war.
The aim of that program Is
to prepart the South Viet·
namese forces to replace U.S.
ground combat units as soon
as possible, so Americans may
be withdrawn gradually.
LOSE BA1TLES
<;The ARYN is going lo IOSt
some battles, there are pro-
blems and there are some bad
units, bot the South Viet-
namese arc doing better," 1one
civilian official said.
Last M o n d a y • President
Nixon reported progress in
training lhe Sooth Vietnam~
forces has been. grealer than
anticipated and U1at. as · a
result. the U.S. withdrawal
timetable "is more optimistic
Unions Ag ree
To Help End
Homes Crisis
WASHINGTON (AP )
'I'hree labor unions have
agreed to build low-cost.
prefabricated homes on an
assembly line basis under a
contract the government says
provides a major start in
overcoming the nation's hous-
ing shortage.
A three-bedroom house with
one bath and all utilities would
Cost well under $10,IXXI ac·
cording to a top official of the
company that signed a con·
tract with three building·
trades unions Thursday to
mass produce the structures.
George Romney, Secretary
of Housing and U r b a n
Development, hailed the con-
tract as a significant ·start ln
reaching fonner President
Lyndon 8. Johnson's goal of t6
million new housing units in
the next decade.
Romney's department also
said another program aimed
al both creating new housing
and aiding the nation's poor
was working.
HUD announced its venture
of providing m Olf' lg age
subsidies to help low-income
famili es afford home
ownership has passed the 011e·
year mark with all the
earmarks of success.
Some 16,500 families v:ith
average annual incomes of
$5,600 own homes thanks to
the program and the number
is expected to triple by next
June 30, !IUD off I c I a Is
reported .
The pre·fabricated home
contract calls for carpenters.
plumbers and e 1 ec tr i cal
\\'Orkers to join in eventually
producing 2.500 homes a year
for Prestige Structures, Inc ..
of Charlotte, Mich.
Romney, formt!r governor of
t1ichigan. said the interunion
arrangemenl might for ce
other manufaclurers I:> seek
similar agreements v.• i t h
organized labor if they are ta
remain competit ive in the
prefabricated housing field.
Tne agreement marked a
reversal in \\'hat has been op-
position by the unions lo 1nass·
produced housin g. Increasing
popularity of mobile homes is
coo.sklered one fa ctor in the
uniGns' reversal.
Alan Ginsburg. executive
vice president of VTR Inc. al
New York. parent firm of
Prestige St ructures. s a i d
workers will be paid up lo
$4 .30 per hour to manufacture
the homes -lower v.•ages
than those paid m o s t
tradesmen.
HUD has guaranteed to
finance purchases of Prestige
llomcs. under the agreement.
~Torion A. Baruch. directn-r
of HUD's low and moderate
housing division. said that
"Considering the tlghl money
problem . the mortgage
subsldy program has moved
alq exceedlngly well .'"
Under the SllO-million pro-
gram. a low·income famil y is
rtQUl(ed to pay 2G P.ercent of
its adjusted monthly income
for prlncipo1I, interest taxes
and Insurancr. The govern-
ment. In most cases. picks up
the difference between the 20
perct'nl and total mon~ly
cosll.
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Any ,~40Qcaristlght-new. 1
The sineWy Mercede~·Beni ·!BOSE: is ·btJiltto b,e1
1
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rattle-free even after 50,000 miles:· -
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Lift the hood, and you'll see why. '
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One of the sweet pleasures of
driving any brand-new car is that firm ,
buttoned-up feeling it has when it
thumps across the inevitable potholes
and corrugated railroad tracks.
Especially if the car you traded-
in had taken to moaning and groaning
over such indignities.
Mercedes·Benz engineers like
the nice, tight, "neW-car feel'' so much
they think it ought 'to last longer than
new-car smell, new-car payments, and
even ;i new-car wartanly. In fact, they
stt no reason why you should not go
right on enjoying it year after ye_,.,.·
aft~r year.
And , since Mercedes-Benz en-
gineers stubbornly ref use to waste lime
on annual face-lifts or superfluous
gimmickry, they h.tve ample opportu-
nity lo make such dreams come true.
Born to last
Result : every Mercedes-Benz
280SE begins life in a shower of sparks.
Its c~ssis and body are not bolted into
being, like those of a conventional
sedan, but solidified by thousands of
ltJclds into a single, rigid unit.
Flip up the hood or peer into
the wheel \veils behind the tires, and
examine the frame. You can actually
sec the tell tale pockmarks of the welds.
And you'll "feel" the diffe;ence
they m'ake from the first tar strip you
hit. After 50,000 miles or so, you may
begin to \Vonder if yo ur 280SE will
ever rattle.
When welding stops, hands in
soft gloves caress lhe exterior of the
body to detect bumps and burrs. They
are smoothed away. Vila) seams arc
soldered and buffed to oblivion.
Then the raw body is dunked
\vhole, like a taffy apple, into a gigantic
vat of primer. It emerges \Vith 24
pounds of rust protection.
Next, it is baked, spray-painted,
hand·sanded, sprayed again, then
hand-sprayed. Even the insides of the
hubcaps are coated. Total primer and
paint anti-corrosion protection; over
44 pounds.
As a fin al flourish in its .1nn,1 -
ment against road salt, rust and rot,
the 280SE gets a 24-pound fnctory
slathering of undercoating.
Unrelenting power
The overhead·cam, (11cl-i11;cc-
1ion engine equals the coach\\'Ork for
longevity.
Bearings arc delic.ttt'ly ma-
chined to within 4/10,000ths of Jn
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contoured with llelp from ortliopedic
physicians. The springs inside are
actually tuned to !he car's suspension
movements-to cancel thousands of
tiny, tiring tremors every mile.
Check the rear shelf. CafRete.d.
Feel the. underside of the dash. No spa-
ghetti tangle of wires-it's fully fi n-
ished off. Finger the wood trim. Real
walnut, not plastij:.
Many cars ue designed to win
admit ation for their owners. Mercedes-
Beni cars are designed to win admira-
tion from their owners.
Unconventional? Defiantly so.
Mercedes-Benz does not build conven-
tional cars-and never will.
280SE vs. 2805 vs. 280SEL
The. 280SE sells for about
$1 ,soo• complete with automatic shift,
power stet:ring, vinyl upholstery,
white. walls, and AM/FM radio.
If you c.anlive without the 15%
power-boost from that "E"-for
Einspritzmgtor, or fuel-injection en-
gine-you can make a tidy savings by
ordering the standard 2805.
The UWSE iJ rat ed the $aftil, 111ot l ro11tlworthy cllr in lht "lu.u1ry" fitld. A 1ound inuestmcnt, loo.
You can also order a 280SEL-
the 280SE with a wheelbase four inches
longer. (Four inches invested in leg-
room for the rear compartment, not
squandered. in useless overhang.)
inch, and pistons and connecting rods
.1rc pJinstakingly matched .1nd bal·
<1nced. Yet this po\ver plant is about
<IS fragile as a bull. It's built to crui~
above 100 mph on Germany's wide-
open autobahns for hours on end (n11d
of/err does).
Heroic ha ndli ng
The legendary stamin.t of a
M ercedes-Ben z is a virtue you ca n
appreciate only with the passing of
time. But you needn•t wait a moment
to savor this car's tnle genius: its quick
reflexes and heroic handling ability.
The 280SE bristles with sophis·
tic.1ted, ultra-performance features
that simply do not exist on domestic
sedans in the so-called "fine car" field .
Scrapping: the solid "bean1 "
re<1r-axle system of domes tic sedans, it
uses an articulated axle, so that each
re,1r \Vheel ca n move up and down
independen tly of the other, just as the
front wheels do.
This endO\\'S the car '"ith the
agility of a scrambling quarterback.
-You can blast it over rutted gravel
J.1nes ; it behaves with almost eerie
calm. You c.tn thread it through the
..
corkscrew turns of a mountain road -
and cnioy yourself.
There's no sloppy play in the
steering, either. No mu shiness. When
you hold the wheel, you are blessed
'''ith the "feel" of the road. When you
tum the \vheel. the car responds in·
~tantly. Suddenly, you are a more con-
fide11 / driver.
Taut, sensitive steering is re-
tained. even wilh Mercedes-Benz power
steering-characterized by Car and
Driver as "unquestionably the most
precise unit of its kind ever developed."
Aweso me brakes
Unless you have driven a 180-
m ph Grand Prix raci ng car or a
Mercedes-Benz, chances are you have
never experienced the .I\vesome stop-
ping power of really good brokes.
Di5c brakes.
Mercedes-Benz engineers insist
11n then1 . Nor do they stint by putting
disc br;ikes only at the front wheels,
and settling for conventional drum
brakes on the rear. They attach a mas-
!tive, ca.liper·type disc brake to every
\\•heel of cver.v Mercedes-Benz.
Someday, doubtless, 4-ivhecl
•
disc brakes 1vill be offered ori a do-
1nestic "lu xury" car.
The pinnacle of safety
The responsiveness which
makes the 280SE such a pleasure to
drive is its best defense against blun-
dering motorists. However, if the worst
happens, !he car Is designed to shield
you. Naturally, it meets all the U.S.
sa·fety regulations. But a Mercedes-
Benz has additional safety features.
The entire passenger compart-
ment is built as a sturdy"safety zone."
Doors are designed to stay shut on im-
polct. The front a11d rear of the car are
,engineered to cnunplc in a crash at-a
rontrollcd rate, absorbing shock and
reducing the threolt of serious injury.
Cl!r and Driver's sober conclu-
sion: Of all the 1vorld's cars, the Mer-
cedes-Benz line "represents the present
pinnpcle in safe car engineering."
Showr<>om experiments
The 280SE is as habitable as it
is durable, roadworthy, and safe.
-Slip behind the wheel, and Aex
your back. This is no marshmallow
scJt. It supporls you. It should : it was
Other models to ponder:
250 Sedan-an unflappable.
road car with superb handling and
braking, 55,313*.
300SEL 6.3 Sedan-"Merely
the greatest sedan in the world"-
Road & Track, $14,570*.
Idea: If you plan to vacation
abroad this yeu, clip the coupon for 1.
brochure with details of European
Delivery. You can enjoy the. conve-
nience. of touring in your own new
Mercedes-Benz-while making a sub-
stantial saving on U.S. prices. ............................
• Mtrttdts-Benz of North
• Amtrlca, Inc. @
: Jim Sirmons Imports, llK.
: 120 W. Warner Avt.
: Santa Ana, tailf. 92707
Ple£se send mt your new Europt1n Ot:· •
livery brochurt, complete with work·
shett for computing my ,avings.
HAMI!
flA1 l '"
............................
•Wat Cout pocll of entry, ftd~vc ti Ir~ options, •lite and local tun, ti any •
Jim Sle mons Impo rts, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avenue, Santa Ana, California 92707 Phone: 714·546-4114
-=-----.'l'he-11vera.gunnuai..Jubsid71---------------------------------------i. 1!Ut • fem1b'. HUV •!UciaJr1
estimate.
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Curses, :fxpanded Flower De monstration Foiled · Again
Mission Viejo Women's Club members (left t,o right) Mrs. Frank
Elsener and Mrs. Robert Brumfiel check supPllg!s which they will
bring to a meeting in Mission Viejo Swim and Racquet Club to--
morrow at 8 p.m. when Mrs. Paul Friebertshauer will show them
The Laguna Line
how to make expanded foil flowers. A cerrterpiece will be award-
ed and refreshments will be served during the meeting which is
open to swim and racquet club members.
Things to See, Places to Be, Abound
Besides thinking of stuffing turkeys, """women have things · The concert itseu· w.ill begip at 8:30 p.m. and marks the 10th
lo see, people lo meel and places to be. " · ·. , . . " ,. . . , . ;elllli¥11:1licy. ~~ tJie. ~ty• , • "·
ONE · OF the places Laguna Beach I! nch members, Na·
tional League of American Pen Women ;!!lf ~t FridBY from
3-5 p.m. is Laguna Federal Savings and ' building.
They are capping a month-long exhibiJ·of·paiJltings, books
and crafts with a special tea to which all e~itors will greet visi-
tors. f:..,
Artists showing works Include Joyce' CIArk;lllizabeth llJliol,
Thelma Paddock Hope, Anny Krikl, Lonifl !Aiyden, . CharloUe
Light, Janie Poyer, Dorothy Stephens, Anile.Son; ·Antoilletle Wt·
king, Bernice Simmons, Fern Warner, Elsa ~r,.Jo·w·asserman,
F1orence Dippel and Virginia Woolley. l,
Branch authors displaying their books -will be Edna Baker,
Ruth Forbes Sherry and F1orence Wiggins. Crafts will be shown
by Ann Maguire and Bernice Sinunons. 1
During the exhibit throughout November there will be at
least one member present Monday to Friday to discuss the works
and handle &ales.
PEOPLE TO meet for Cavalier Chapter members, Col011ial
Dames XVII Century, include Mrs. Howanl Lockway, their -guest
speaker tomorrow in the Old Brussels restaurant at 12: 15 p.m.
Mrs. Lockway, a teacher and the first police":oman of ~hoe
nix will discuss Looal Educational Trends follow1ng a business
meeting led by Mrs. Beatrice Crist. Mrs. Lawrence Dunaway will
introduce the speaker.
Visiting society members and Lagwia residents eli gible for
membership are invited to the meeting.
THINGS AFFILIATES of Laguna Beach Art Association
will be seeing include a portrait demonstration given by artist
Leslie B. DeMille, third cousin of the late Mr. Cecil B. DeMille. in
the association's gallery at 2 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17.
Mrs. Hovey Cox will conduct the business meeting and ~rs.
Walter Larson, hospitality chairman, and her committee. w I 11
serve tea. Mrs. William Giescben, prograin chairman, will pre-
sent the speaker.
DeMille has a long list of portraits painted of motion picture
and television potentates. His painting of Gov. Ronald Reagan
hangs in Sacramento, and last summer he was commissioned by
Dwight Chapin, special assistant to the President, to paint three
different portrait studies of President Nixon which will hang in
the White House.
LAGUNA BEACH Chamber Music Society is hosting an al-
er.the-concert supper Jn honor of the Berlin· Philharmonic Octet
Wednesday, Nov. 19, in the Towers restaurant following the
society's first presentation this season.
RIVIERA CLUB'S. Creative Living Section members w 111
learn how to make Christmas foods. during a meeting Monday,
Nov. 24. Members will board a bus, actoss lrom· Festival of Arts
grounds, which will Like .them to the s0uthern Counties Gas C::o.,
Anaheim where the:boliday demonStrat~on 1s to be gi~en.
HARD· WORKING; IUau ·committee chairmen for Tres Osos
, Guild, Chiidren'.S HosPit.8I 'of OrSnge :count.Y were, rewarded with
a iuncheon h0sted by thelr· c~ainnan, Mrs .. Michael . Collins, ·*
cenUy. . ' "Because or ex~epti~n~l support from the public and· corn·
munity businesses, tickets to the event Were sold out in advance,"
said Mrs. Alan· McMillan of Mission Viejo.
The guild presented a check for $3,500 lo Willlam H. Spur.
geon· Ill, vice president of Children's Hospital, at a meeting last
Thursday.
• Woinen who unfted efforts In this-successful eVent included.
tQe Mmes. John Martin, Robert Hi ddon, Tim -Strader, John Park-
er, William De Vries, McMillen , Tom Reeder,..G"ratian Bidart and
John Yesier. '
Those who wish to join Tres Osos in future endeavors may
obtain membership information by calling Mrs. John Dershimer
of Mission Viejo, 25941 Via Viento. The group is the 14th guild to
join the hospital cause and draws its members !ram Mission Vie--
jo, Laguna Hills, El Toro, Lake Forest and San Juan Capistrano.
LAGUNA SHUFFLEBOARD Club members enjoyed their
first fall Kaffee Klatch whlch attracted more than 60 guests in-
cluding many Canadian visitors to Laguna Beach who enjoy the
facilities of the popular club. Mrs. Helen Doran and Elmer Edgar
hosted the reCent gathering~
Things should go quite smoothly for the club this season.
AU eight courts at the Heisler Park club have been resurfaced
.by the city of Laguna Beach under the direction of the park super·
intendent. Mrs. Barbara Page, spokesman for the group, said
playing is roore enjoyable thanks to improvemen'ts.
BY THE WAY, Las Damas del Mar Auxiliary, Children's
Home Society, has a new honorary member -Mrs. Richard M.
Nixon.
In accepting honorary membership from the group, Mrs.
Nixon wrote in a letter "it is a pleasure for me to be associated
even in this limited way, with your many splendid programs fof
the benefit of Children's Home Society."
-
SPECIAL DEL IVERY -Mrs. Herbert Dewitz is one of a dozen mem·.
hers delivered to Opera League ranks thanks to a recent membership
drive, and Mrs. Stanley Eichstaedt is enthusiastic abo ut the situaUon.
New members will be feted at a party Tuesday, Nov. 18.
~ League Recruits Put
I In Party Spotlight ~ Opera League members will celebrate the success o[ their member· ~ ship dnve last month with a Getting-to-know-you Party in Hotel Laguna
Tuesday, Nov. 18.
' A dozen new members, along with prospective supporters, will be
guests of honor at the affair which is to begin with a getting-acquainted
11 hour at noon.
-.;i To create an intimate atmosphere, luncheon at 1 p.m. will be served ~'. at small tables. Senior members will be hostesses to the new recruits.
. Introductions will be made by Mrs. C. Sidney Johnston of Laguna
Niguel, president of the league which supports Lyric Opera Association 4 of Orange CouD'ty. Coming fund-raising events, beginning wl\h a Holiday
• Home Tour Dec. 14, will be summarized by Mrs . Jay 0. Pyle of Newport
Beach, ways and means chairman.
I
i Mrs. John C. Nichols of South Laguna is chairman of the hospitali·
ty committee for the affair. Assisting her are the Mmes. Craig Ketcham,
. Jack Lyons and Elizabeth Sill Hanes.
All women interested in joining the league are invited to attend, and
~ tickets are $3.50 per person. Attractions wiU include a door prize.
Reservations may be made until next Friday by calling the Mmes.
Thomas Armstrong of Laguna Nlguel, treasurer, 495-5335; Zachary Malaby
of Laguna Beach, vice president, 494-4494, -0r William Wittman of Emerald
Bay, recording secretary, 494-8760.
New members to be welcomed are the Mmes. 1'1ary Neher, Edwin
Hay, H. A. Deviney, Robert Karg, Vernon H. Grant. R. J . Orexilius, Jo-
seph E. Jensen Jr., Wilbur C. Wagner, R. N. Lewis, W. S. Hannenberg, W Morse Coors, Matteo Nardini, George M. Lawler, V.F.A. Ostby, Herbert
Dewitz and Rita Myelrs.
'Monroe'~ Doctrine' -Free Trade With No Entanglements
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 38·year-
old bachelor of average looks and
personality. I have an average posiUon
and I live tn an average apartment. My
problem is women.
ANN LANDERS ~ home when they pounded on her door,
frightened to death by a deran1cd man
J!ilt g_xP:O~ hi_rpseU. '
These days It takes courage to open
one's door -to anybody. We, in
Emporia, Kan. hit on a soluUon to the
problem. Perhaps you'd like to pasa it on
lo your readers in other cities: We have
implemented a plan to help children who
might run into trouble on the way to and
from school. IL b the Block Mother
system. Thea,e women aruel~ by the
home room teacher from kindergarten
through grade u . The mothen hive
placards ln the front window -one on
evtry block. The children are lnttructed
to gu to these bomes lf they run into tn:Ju.
after four dates, "U we were manled,
our combined Incomes would enable bolh
of us to live a lot better than either of us
I am taking out five different ones at
present. They all have the same goal in
mind -marriage. These are not silly,
frivolous girls. They are between 32 and
45 years o( age. I am ~ppy in my
pre.sent state and have no deslre to settle is living now. How about it?". Miss C (a
dow.n. I mlght"l'eco"'lder '!le day, but for career girl) said after tw9 theater dates
the Ume being 1 want no Ues. and one concert: "I am not a loose
In case you think I am Imagining woman, but J would consider going ld bed
thinp, J,.d lib to give you a few sample with yoo lf you told me YoU had marriage
sentences. Miss A said to me after two in m1nd."
dates, "You'll be 40 In two years -and I hate to come right out and say, "I am
that'• no kid anymore. You need to Bettle not interested In marriage.'' I said that
·down. rm willing to give up my freedom once and the woman bawled for two
---01nd mAn)'-JIOU.''-Mrs.-8..-fa...wkSowl-laid--houra.-P-:leue tell me-how to make m
posiUon clear without hurting anybody's
!eellnp.
~ NO STRINGS MONROE
DEAR NO smlNGS: Any gay who c:an
Juule five women at 1 Ume ud tiu
muqed lo avoid lorelgn enlangltmeatl
for 31 years doesn't nffd any advice lrtm
Ann Luders. Tbe Moaroe Doctrine, at
you pn1c:Uce it, sttmt lo be ei:trtme.ly tf·
fectlve.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'd like to add ble.
my words of praise for the kind woman If you use this let.ter. Ann, pleaae don't
who.Jet Uwae..thr.eueena&e..altla.bl.UJ.JJ«-..JCr · me -ve the credit to th&
I .
Emporia Board of F.ducatlon.
-MRS. L.
DEAR MRS. L.: It's ~bird to believe
thtt 1n America we need •tbeUer 1tatton1
where kids on tbelr way &o and from
ICltool can run wbe:a tfty Deed ~
tcctlon. Bat tt's one of the &ra«lc realUlet
of ear time ud we mlllf face it. My
thinks to yoa for writing aad a garland
of nllft t. tM Emporia, Kan. Board of
Education.
DEAR 'ANN LANDERS: My cousin,
With whom I bave never been very close,
is dating a man I know has EWVed time
for armed robbery. He bu be'" married
twice and has a &-year-old son.
I c1Mot beUeve my cousin knows of his
past. She ~ a fine person, but very naive.
Shall I Lell her.1 or would it be better to
mention It to her family?
-<.'ONCERNED NOT
DEAR CONCERNED: Art y o 1
absolutely certala of your fK11? 11 so,
ask yo11r, cousin I( tbe 11 aware of btr
friend's IUttory, lf site 11, offer ne com..
ment. Merely 'aay, "I j111t wanted a.
make Ate you Dew." Do DtC RD lier
family.
Drinking.may be "In" to \he k1ds yoe
run with -but it can put you "out" fot
keeps. You can cool It and sla)' popular.
Read 1'Booze and You -For Teenagers
Only," by Ann Landers. Send 35 cent.s in
coin and a long, self lddressed, at.amped
evelope wi04'our request.
Ann Landers will be glad to help you
with your problems. Send them \o her In
care of the DAILY PlUYI' enclosing a
ielt·addresscd, st.amped envelope.
I
I
I
l
I
j
-
,
ff DAILY '1LOT MOfldU, Nowmbtr 10, 1969
-Speakers
Thankful
Are We Thankful?
Members ol Las Olu
Toaslmistress C I u b • Hun-
tingtoo Beach, wtll diacuss the
toptc when they mett at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 12, in
Uie"Mef"cuty Savl ngs alfdl . .&li
tiullding.
Mrs. J. M. Clark will give
her get-acquainted speech and
Mrs . Gary Giles,
toastmistress, will introduce
Mrs .. Ralph Almgren, Mrs.
Velma Bolin and Mrs. Hal
Hermann!.
Acting as timekeeper will be
Mrs. Clarence Double, and an
educaUon capsule will be of-
fered by Miss Pat Haynes.
Mrs. Calvin Olcott will lead
impromplu topics, and the
closing thought w 111 be
presented by Mrs. P a u l
Bronson. Serving as evaluator
will be Mrs. Allan Ken.1edy.
Toastmiltress c.I u b s are
open to all women interested
In developiog poise and con·
fi dence . For information call
Mrs. Rollo West, ~.
Twins Club
Eyes Eyes
·-------------------, --
PR.ETTY GIRLS' MELODY _: To help establish a dress c?<fe for their sch_ool,
Arevalos girlS' from Fountain Valley spent a month studying good groonung,
and awards were presented during a fashion show at the conclusion of the
1 course. Mrs. Mike Gavin, learning coordipator, congratulates 'vinner Kathy
Hughes.
Education in Fa shion
little Designers Win Competition
Dr. Barbara l\1itchell will
spea k on Eye Problems when
the Orange Coast Mothers o(
1'Nins Club meets Wednesday,
Nov. 12, in the Villa Sweden
restaurant, Huntington Beach.
Grooming Aids Code Receiving $50 Savings Bonds and two Acrilan out·
fits are Jill Walker (left ), 10, o! Westminster and
Deneece Glenn (right), 7, of Costa Mesa who won
second-place honors in the little designer competi·
Horoscope
Aries:
TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 11
tion sponsored by May Co. with Monsanto Textiles
Division and Jabberwocky. \Vith them is a represen-
tative from the latter firm, Miss Paula Novick.
Revise Plans
A social hour at 7 p.m. will tn order to help establish requested the ad vice of a
be followed by dinner at 8. a school dress code. girls in dermatologist, t"Osmetologist,
Or. Mitchell, who has been fifth through eighth grades fashion advisor and school dis.
practicing opthalmology in attending Arevalos School , tric~ healrti coordinator to
Long Beach, recently opened Fountain Valley, have just work with them on gen~ral
an olfice in Huntington Beach. completed a month's program and individual grooming pro~
Among the eye di59rders she in good grooming. Jems.
will discuss is d y s le Ii a To learn ''what's good and Mrs. ltiikc Gavin, learning
(reading disabilities). what isn't," the young women coordinator for the Fountain
All molhers of twins In the Valley School District. said
area are invited to attend the the girls spenl a great deal o[
meeting and r~ervations may Weavers Show time in small groups di scuss-
mantic aura persists. Exc('l· here lo principles or golden be made by calling Mrs. Gary ing dress standards. "To then1,
lent for organizing charitable rule. You are going to suc· Clements, 842-3534. 'he school dress code isn't a
enterprises. Especially good ceed. A Christmas boutique to Wares at Tea !able of rules and regulations:
By SYDNEY OMARR for appearances before large AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J-Feb. b r· h 1 h.I it's a program. Kids arc help-
s-"'ghl groups. You are dynamic op-enc Jl 1 e cub's P 1 an-W 1 · g k ds I th th. they ,..,... on Sagittarius. posite sex i's attracted . • 18!: Some of your aspirations thropic program is being plan-oven arlic cs and yarns 1n 1 ana yze e 1ng
Modes of travel undergo _rt·. VIR. GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: may require revision. Be will· ned for December, and all 'viii be on display and for sale wear in terms of standa~ds
'?sJon. Controversial pubhca-Money, investments. basic se-ing to tear down in order IG proceeds will be used to aid when the South Coast they help develop," she ma1n-
lion. relal!.ng to wa r . and curity are highHghted. Dea! rebuild. ~1any are with you. needy families with twins. Weavers' Guild, Inc., hosts its tained.
peace, could grab headlines. with one who clai'ms to ha "' Know this and exude confi· November tea and sale next ~1rs. Joseph Zimmerman. • dence charm Thursday in the Santa Ana r th D · p t h important backing. You soon · · owner o e aisy a c learn whether individual is PISCF.S (Feb. 19-March 201: Unusual Bow Llbrary. Dress Shop and former home substantial or otherwise. Gel Written word brings gain. Mrs. L. I. Dow will present economics teacher. was invit-
al truth. Read and ~·rite. Absorb and a workshop during the morn-ed to give professional ad\'ice
ARI~ (March 21-April 191:
the fashions I.hey selected witli
lhe assistance of Miss Barbara
Stacey, Sears fashions coordl·
nator. A real cooperative ef·
fort, the show inYolved even
the boys in set designs. ar·
ranging the room and taping
the music.
At the conclusion of the pro-
gram awards were presented
by Mrs. Michael Brick, wife
of the distric t superintendent,
and girls showing the most
progress were presented with
a noseg3y fro1n the superin·
tendent's officr.
First place 1vent In 12-year-
old Kathy Hughes. who also
rcreived a 10-week scholarship
to a charm school from Sears.
Others receiv ing certificates of
n1erit included Lori Parlin, Su·
zanne Ellickson. Teresa ~faz
zowla, Brenda ~lelz. Lisa Kol-
linger, Rosalind Radam and
Debbie FeMell.
VALRIE DAVIS
Betrothod
Long journey. revision of ba-
sic plans, pushing beyond cur-
rent horizcns indicated. Be
versatile. The past need not
dominate present thoughts,
actions. Think.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221 : disseminate knowledge. No for Gift Box ing on finishing with knots and on line and design of garments
Talking alone does not suf· day for being superficial. Say other techniques. in relation to figure types and-----------
what you mean-mean what E M k Sack lunches d k. s hat ould be · t for T lice: you need a written state-asy ta a e an coo ·ie w ''' appropria e op Sports Coverago
March Day
Selected
The engagement of Va lrie
Jean Davis and Paul Calvin
Adling has been announced by
Mr. and Mrs. Guy E. Davis or
Fountain Valley, parents of
the bride-lo-be.
Miss Davis is a graduate or
Fountain Valley High Schoal
and atlended Golden \\'est
College.
Her fiance, son of ?i.1rs.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Agreement on funds can be
reached today. Member of op.
posite sex has been insistent.
Reach decision which is fair,
but-doesn'l cost exces s
atnount. Message clear by to-
night.
GEl\.tlNI (May 21-June 20):
Study Taurus message. You
are due to gel answer to vilal
question -could affect public
relations and marital sl.atus.
Stress change. travel, \'ariety.
CANCER (June 21-July 22l :
Your diet and how you handle
yourself during crises are
highlighted. Key is to set .mod-
erate pace-and to practice
1noderation. Adjust don1estic
situation. Do so diplomatic·
ally.
ment. agree.ment. Expa .. oion you say. Top person makes wW be available for purchase specific occasions. "" appraisal. a d th e · M h f T I d th lh 1 · Th D 'I P"' I due. Your manner. style are To make an unusual five-n er 1s a , .. c arge or o cone u e e rnon -ong 1n e a1 y r.o
appreciated. You r e c e i v e IF TODA y IS y o u R inch bow for a gift package, 1_f,t~h~e=w~or~k=s=ho~p=. =======~pc~o~g~ra~m~,~t~h~e gg~ir~ls::§m~od::§el~ed~~~~~~~~~~i'j meaningful compliment. St.and BIRTHDAY you are intuitive. cut ribbon into 14 pieces, eacb
tall. a natural teacher. You are 16 inches Jong.
SCORPJO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l: always willing lo experiment M k 1· · ht f New approach could result ,·n d t h k a e a irure e1g rom an o s arc nowledge. Cur· each piece. Moisten and secure
solid financial gain. You add rent period of basic frustra -al the center. Then moisten to possessions. Leo individu al lion is about to be erased. Y9u could play parijmount role. will be on the move. and attach one figure eight crosswise at the center of This is. a day to pay, collect ~ ,,_, another. d b I 'o "" ou t mor1 1boul ve>ursllf C {S-JnC UdeS faVOrS. • Incl IS1rolOllV. order Sydn•v Om~rr·s <' (" t h. r SAGI1TARJ US (Nov. 22-so-...,ge book1e1, The Tn.nh ADoot ... on 1nue at ac 1ng 1gure Dec. 2i)o Cycle high ·, ci·rcum-A1trolD9v. send blr1h<111r 1n<1 so eights to the center. crosswise ce<i!• 1o Omarr Sookltl the OAIL Y h f fJ th bow ' sta nces favor your specia l ef. P11.01, &oK n.:i. Gr•nd c;1n1,11 s11. eac ime, un L e IS
forts. Mak e contacts. Stress i-=';="=· ='=~='='"=·='·='=· =·~~'='·====::::'°~m~p=le~le~.=======• ~realer independence. Be orig-r
1nal. Your hunches pay divi-
dends. Your liming is sha rp.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19l : Remember those who
might be confined to home,
hospital. Lillie c:onsideralion Maureen Barton of GGlela and
Walter Adling of Buena Park,
is a graduate or \Yeslern High
Schoc:il and allendcd Cypress
Junior College. lie presently is
1;taUoned at Camp Pendleton
with uie U.S. Marine Corps.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 J: Ro-today goes a Jong way. Ad-
Gardeners Get Pre view
The couple plan to marry
ltfarch 14.
Holiday Settings Seen
Song Fest
Date Noted
T;iblc settings for
·rhanksgiving and Christmas
along with other arrangements
appropriate for the holidays
\\'ill be shown by Mrs. A. ·J.
Antosik when Laguna Beach
Garden C•Ub meets in the
Woman's Clubhouse at 1 :30
p.m. Friday. Nov. 14.
Approach to Beauty Through
Design v.•ill be the themf of
the flower arranging lecture
gardening progran1 in pro-,
gress In thal country . I
Mrs. Neil H. Lewis. tea
chairn1an, will be assisted by
tile ~tmes. Norman Alexander· I
George R. Campbell, S. Berne
Carlton, Norris C a v a 11 e r , I
James R. Cavitt. J. Orville
Chilton. B. Dean Clanton. Jack
Cole, Leonard Davis, Charles
Dillinger. Dales A. Dunbar.
Jessie Dungan and Robert
DuSoe.
Banjo and piano music will
rill the Senior Citizens Recrea-
tion Center, Newport Beach.
when th e Night Owls of the
Newport Beach Hoot 'n Holler
Roost gather Sunday, J~ov, 16,
al 2 p.m.
and demonstration to be -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: presented by the clubwomanl ·
~·ho also is a rlo~'er arranging
teacher in Floral Arts Studio, Joe Chapelle of Costa ~t es.1.
banjoist, will be accon1panied
on the piano by ~1rs. G. L.
Stewert and song sheels will
be distributed for g r o u p
singing.
The group Is asking con-
tributions for the Christmas
bazaar table and currently is
planning the annual Christmas
party for Sunday, Dec. I 4. in
the Sheraton Beach Inn, Hun-
tington Beach.
J.aguna Beach.
A .. display or Korean
garments, u t c n s i I s and
artifacts also \viii be presented
by Col. F'rank E .. Gillette.l
stale chainnan or \Voi'ld
c;aroening of Ca l ifornia
Garden Clubs. lri"c.
Col. Gillette Jived in Korea
ror many years. He will give a
short talk on the world
J:-lDQ f\LLY:Y
STRICTLY JUNIORS
NOW OPEN •.• In The Alley Of
Open Fri. Evts.
'Iii 9
•
l414 VIA LIDO AU. CRlOlf
H~Wl'OllT llACH CAllOS WILCOMI
VISIT US .
~o' You,
Compl•i•
M•t•,nfty
w •• drob• ••
rt•1011•bl1
prittl , ••
••
CATHY'S
MATERNITY SHOP
1767 Hew,ort ll"d.
C•tt" ~ 646.SJll
;:.::.;::,;,_;;:..:w;.._;::..:,:: ~ L.'._
FASHIONS BY GLYCINE
OF SWITZERLAND
Ladies 14 karat gold diamond watches
In all the latest styles,
From left: $395. S595.
With turquoise dial, $795. $295,
SLA.YICK'S
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -6~~· 1 llO
Ope11 Mo111d1y, Friday \llltll f:JO ,.111.
'/'"":'1·-~
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~
ROBINSON'S NE\i\/fDRT ·FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800
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New York Honeymoon -. ---
Mesan . Claims Br.ide
Dr. John Andrew Femino ot
Costa Mesa claimed C.rolyn
Lee Enockson ol Seal Beach -~ .. "'his bride during double i!iig
ceremonies conducted by the
R<v. Allred J, Gam>tto in St.
Hedwig C.lholic~Cbw<h. --
'!be bride Is the daughter cl
Mrs. John Wrana of Seal
Beach and was ·given in mar-
riage by her stepfather. She
wore a full lenglh gown of
white peau de soie, fashioned
with a train. Lace edged her
high neckline, fonned her
sleeves and edged her man-
tilla. She canied a bouquet of
pale yellow roses, stephanotis
and eymbldiums.
Miss Nona Caustin, maid of
honor, wore a gold peau de
soie gown and carried apricot
colored gladioli.
Libbeys
Honored
Celebrating 50 years of mar-
riage in their Shorecliffs home
recenUy were Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Libbey, native Califor·
--nians-and---SOUthlander-e-lor-20
years.
The couple were married in
San Francisco and established
-ir-nrst home m Santa
Maria.
Libbey was empl.oyed by the
Security First N at ion a I
Bank for 47 years prior to his
retirement and now is active
as a real est8te broker.
His wire is an author with
two books and more than 80
short stories to her credit
Family members joining the
celebration, which culminated
witlt a diMer party in Irvine
Coast Country Club, Included
their son, Louis Libbey, his
wire and children, L o u i 1
Everding Libbey 11 and Trish,
of Bayshores and two sisters,
Mrs. Lois Zamlock and Miss
Grace McMuny, both of
Berekley.
Monday, N0vtmb<r 10, 1969 DAil V PllOT U
Monday. CltJb
Hears · Music ·
Songsranglng lrom Op.ralta • p.m. 'Frlilay, Nov. II, In the
to popular blls 0( yesterday Mercury Savings and Loan
lll!d10day-wtll~be preaented·by-buJJdinl. Accepting b r ldf fl
Miss Patti Spangler when the reservations Is Mn. Edward
Monday Morning Club of Jlun. Olien,. chalrma , MWTIO,
Ungton Beach meets Monday, Beghmlng and experlenc
Nov. 17. golfers are invited to tee off in·
Following a 10:30 a.m. social the Goll SecUon which play•
hour and 11:30 a.m. buffet, the the Mile Square Golf Courie.
soprano will be introduced by Beginners may contact Mn. ~rs. Willia~ Summerfield, Howard Bailly, 536-2024, while first vice president. --M ed .: . , more ~..-.enc p .. yers 1re M1si1 Spangler a professional lnvJted to contact Mn. Fred
credits include the lead role as McCarl chairman 53M387.
Eliza Doolittle in the Chicago ' • production of "My F a i r Two holiday workshops are
Lady." She bas been featured planned by . the Crafts and
as a soloist with P a u I Hobbies Secti~ 1be fU'Sl took
Whiteman and has had several place today, in the home 0(
en g a g e m e n t s tn the Mrs. Ted Ohnsman who again
Copacabana, New Yofk, ln ad-will host the group on Tbun-
dition to TV appearances on day, Nov. 20.
the Buddy Hackett show and Lists of materlala will be
ShowUme Review. available when reMrVaUon1
Accepting reservations for are made with Mrs. Robert
members and guests is Mn. Jumper, chalnnan, at •1m.
In similar gowns in moss
·green and carrying iderltical
bouquets were Mrs. Arthur
Enockson, the bride's slster-in-
law, Mrs. Edward McAndrews
and Mrs. Daniel TorTes,
bridesmaid s . Andrea Enock.9oo. in a white gown,
was her aunt's flower girl. Hospital
Benefits
GOLDENWEDS
William Gillette, 962-4550, and.1 membership in the organlza·
tion is open to all women in
the area. Additiona l in-
formation may be obtained by
calling Mrs. Sherwood Olson,
962--0647.
Can you ea t
all day and
st ill lo se
weight?
Mr. and Mrs, Louis Lib!My
The bridegroom, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Femino of
Arcadia, asked his brother Dr.
Joseph Femino to be bis best
man. Ushers were Dr. Davey
Rosellini, Dr. Daniel Torres
and John Cummings, and John
Edward Femino was his
uncle's ring bearer. '
Following a reception in the
Edgewater Hyatt House, Long
Beach, the newlyweds left on
a wedding trip to Carmel and
New York. Upon th eir return,
they will reside in Costa Mesa.
The bride is a graduate of
Wilson High School, Long
Beach and attended Golden
West College. Her husband is
a graduate o! the University of
California, Riverside a n d
Oalifornia College of Medicine,
Los Angeles.
Not Kid Stuff
MRS. JOHN A. FEMINO
Costa Mesa Home
•
Collecting toys and cloth.ing
for Fairview State Hospital
will be the main order of bus-
iness"when the Newport Beach
Chapter of the Kiwi Club
meets Thursday, Nov. 13.
Hosting the gathering will be
Mrs. Leonard Spielman . of
Huntington Beach and servmg
as ro.bostess will be Mrs.
Robert Lyon.
Also on the 'agenda will be
c<lmpletion of plans for the
annual Christmas party.
Tbe Kiwi Club Is open lo
any former American Airlines
stewardesses. Anyone wishing
information may call ~s.
Fred Betts, membership
chairman, 6424817.
Makeup Date
Friends Host
Author Due
Adults Tickle Ivories Members of the Junior Sec·
tion <if the Wednesday Morn·
ing Club of Costa Mesa will
view a makeup demonstration
next Wednesday at 10 a.m. in
Merle Norman Cosmetic
Studio, Costa Mesa.
By GAY PAULEY
NEW YORK (UPI) -Don't
laugh when he .sits down at the
piano. Dad's just doing his
own thing.
For it turns out that today,
music lessons are not kid stuff
at alL Several hundred
Chapters
Plan Joint
Observance
thousand adults also are stu-that hidden longing to be able
dying music. Their numbers to surprise everyone at a
hardly measure up to the gathering. Piano and party go
piano students under 21 who together beautifully.
JlOW number close to 10 Of the thousands of adults
million. Their ranks, however, who will start lessons this
are growing steadily, reports a year, many will have had no
music education consultant, previous music training, Miss
Constance Wagner. Wagner says. Others will have
"Adults decide to team to a year or so .. 9f lessons from
play the piano for a variety of childhood,
Greeting guests will be the
Mmes. David Poppell,
chairman, Patrick Bresnahan,
co-chairman, and D o u g I a s
Patty, hospitality chairman.
Happiness Predicted reasons ," Miss Wagner con-''Persuading themselves
tinued. "An elementary that 'there's no lime like the
teacher !or example may find present' to start -and doing
jt is a requirement for so-will be half the batUe for The Happiness in Your discuss Scorpio and Sagit-certification. A mother whose all of them," said Miss tar
1
·us. hi! d · · h lloroscope will be the prin-c · d is stu ying piano may Wagner, w o is 1consultant to . od Because o! limited ac-decide that she can offer bet· the Story & Clark Piano Co. of cipal topic when the Z iac
ter guidance and more Un· Lincolnwood, Ill. Club or Orange County meets comm odations, interested
derstanding by taking lessons Miss ~'agner offers en-at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 19, persons are urged to make
Gamma Phi Beta alumnae also." couragement lo the adult 1 n Berkshires restaurant, reservations by noon Monday, from the Balboa Harbor and Businessmen most often see starters. Tiley usually make Nov. 17. Tickets will not be I Newport Beach. I th d Orange County chapters wi I music as a means of relax· more rapid progress in piano avai able at e oor.
celebrate the sorority's 95tlt ation and simple self-en· than children because of their Speaking will be Mis s For reservations are a
anniversary during a luncheon joyment, she said. greater ability to concentrate Elayne Manago, president of residents may call the Sun
next Thursday in the Sad· And another reason: for the and seconda rily becaU!e of Educational Astrology for Shop, 67~6661 , or Mrs. George
dleback Inn, Santa Ana; nonmusician, there always is their dedication. Orange County, wlto also will Weaver, 658-3181.
Guest speaker for the tt :30[i",;.o;;i;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j
a.m. event will be Mrs. Robert
Campbell, sorority province
di rector.
All Gamma Phis a r e
welcome and may make
reservations by calling Mrs.
William F-Macinnes, 548-8521,
or Mrs. Robert Kovich, 5ZS.-
SJ63.
The sorority was founded at
Syracuse University, N e wl York, and now has 89 col-
legiate and 216 a 1 um na e
chapters in the United States 1
and Canada.
Ranks Tapped
For Speakers
Horizons Unlimited is the
theme of the Orange County
Speakers Forum for the year.
During a meeting in the
Garden Grove home of Mrs.
J. Orland Smith, Mrs. Ellis
Porter will elaborate on Space
Travel while Mrs. Wayne
Reafsnyder will discuss Rapid
Transit. The meeting wilt be called
to order by Mrs. Lynn Craw·
ford tomorrow at 9:30 a.m.
Assisting as hostes!i!s will be
Mrs. Wayne Holt and Mrs.
Reafsnyder.
60 FREE
GlfiT PAKS
AYAll.AILI POI I
YlnNAlrll SlltYICIMIN
l'RIN• us NAMIS I
AND ADDIESSR • I
i~~/k~ ~~(f"o~;
SOUTH COAST PLAZA ,
l•wtr C•,..,... M•ft
l l'lti.I •I IN' Oltte ,,_~,
Cttll Me .. -·
al
anJ
, • , WISH TO EXTEND TO 0 UR WONDERFUL PATRONS,
NEIGHBORS AND FRIENDS A HAPPY THANKSGIVING, A
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR !
OOH, YOU 'RE NOT READY FOR THE HOLIDAYS? SEEMS LIKE
THEY ONLY HAPPENED A MONTH OR TWO AGO? NOVEM-
BER AND DECEMBER ARE A MAD RUSH YOU KNOW.
RELAX ••• GET THAT PERMANENT WAVE-NOW-
AT THE FOLLOWING SPECIAL PRICES
l'OREAL WHITE VELVET
INCLUDES HAIR CUT
tclRAFlltM (SS.00 CONDITIONIRJ , $25 CAN UCILLINCI HAii SPRAY
Sll YALUI -HO EXTRA
CHARC'jl FOR. TINTIO HAIR
ZOTOS LUSTRON
PERMANcNT
INCLUDIS CLAIROL
CUSTOM CAR.I
CONDITIONER e R.ATml
IATmf HAIR SPRAY e 'HAii CUT
SPICIALS GOOD THRU NOV. ZJ
All HAIR PIECES BROUGHT IN
TUES. & WED. SPECIAL 15% OFF
TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
Eastbluff Coiffures
Eastbluff Villa ge Shopping Center
6441570
Universitf-P ark-Coiffures
University Park Shopping Center
833-0270
•
Honors
The club's Bridge Section
met last Monday In Sir
George's Smorgasbord, and
couples' bridge will meet al 8
FAIR
Tinsel 'n Twinkle has a compl ete selec-
lion of all the enchanting accessories
that· are so much a part of Christm as. 7
foo t si mulated scotch pine tree, shown,
has the real sc•nt of a pine fo rest tt
comes in white or green with a bu!lt-in ?
foot electric cord. Made of PVC vinyt, 1t
won't fade or shed needles. It's fire retar-
d•nt. With stand in compact carton.
18.99
There's a great variety of sci~tillati.ng
indoo r and outdoor lights Including min-
iature, twinkle and novelty 1.99 to ;;.99
Di scover delightful ornaments to make ·
;·-you r home glow ••• from Austria, G_er-
, many, Hong Kong and Japan 30c to 4.00
may co tinsel 'n twinkle 123
may co south coast plaza
san diego fwy at bristol, cost a mesa; 546-932 t
shop monday thru saturday
10 am to 9:30 pm
• MA.VCO'
I.
1
\
14 DlllV f'ILOT MOl'ld,w, Nowmber 10, 1969
• Versatile Style Milad·y Takes on Human Form
Masculine writers depict the college this semester.
women as ange~ 1hrew1, D.lring a summary of Ule
vlrg\ns, nature but almost stereotypes male autbon have
never human beings. inlllcted on women, Dr. See
But then females can't com• insisted, "Today we are under
mother so scorned as in agent of desliuctlon by Emllle
American literature. Zola wbo portrays hla famous
She cited "The Silver COrd'' Nana as a stupid, hollow,~
and "Portnoy's Complaint" as p1tiful woman who deatroys
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
-plain, 1lnce women show the no~obllgailoL to.JJve...by-1he.se
exact same tendency when stereotypes, although they are
wriUng about men. still thrown at us all the time.
-Dr. Carolyn See, autkor of ~ We shouldn't even glve them
11The Rest Is Done With Mir· more importance Gian they
rors," drew this conclusion deserve by taklng Ulem too
during a talk on women's seriously."
portrayal In literature in UCI. Looking at examples of th e
just two in a whole series of all she touche!. To avoid disappointment, prospecUve
anllmomJltcrature so...po•ppw1!"ar'--tbe .. aving-men· who show-a. -bridtl..!We-remlndecl.--10--ha.ve...their y,1edding
in· the very country where great deal of prejudice against .stories wJtb black an4 Vfbite glossy photo-
molhcr happens lo be the women, Or. See pclnted out graphs to tbe DAILY PILOT Society Depart-slr~~ge:~~ will call Ernest there wu a minor literature ment prior to or within one week after the written by "sappy. men" who wedding, ~~di~r:~ai. ~e. r~h~nlJfd ~l Idealize their wive.s 1n1 ° For engagement announcements it is
leave the famous author out of ~~e~:re:i W:u':.aeX:.1~ ":0 ldl: su1ge1ted ~at the st?ry, also ac~ompanied
Her appearance was part of r8ther· ungallant treatment
an extension lecture series, women have received in th e
The SI Percent fi1inorlty, hands of male writers, Dr. See
which is being presented by pointed out that nowhere is
her list or male writers who teUige~... by a black and white glossy picture, bo
view women out or unsym· Her example of this ts a .submltted earl~. II the betr?lhal announce--
pathetic eyes. series of sonnets written in the ment..and wooding dat~ are six \Ve~ks or Jess
woman also is seen as an Ji 9th Century called "Angel in apart, only the wedding photo will be ac-
the House." cepted. ·
Peters-Pacini Rites "The writer uses all the To help fill r~Wrements on both wed·
clicbes about how it is to have ding and engagement stories, forms are avail·
a nice lady in the home with able in all of the DAlLY PILOT offices.
chHdren at her knee, who Further questions will be answe red by Social
seems to be some strange Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9406.
piece of animated cinnamon
toast." '----------------------•
D. H. Lawrence is one I Garden Setting Chosen
) j nrL• •)
Irene 't
t~ ) c..'./1-! ,
~ ~-!/
Irene Gilbert of Dublin again has created a most
feminine design \vith t\\'O different necklines and in·
tricate bodice seaming.
The princess shaping is the m t'st becoming line
of all. An ideal dress to show off your favorite pin
or necklace.
The zipper is set in the center back sean1 . Per·
feet in sheer \YOOI. velvet, silk. surah. lineJl or syn·
thetic fabrics. 62159 is cut in Misses sizes 8-18. Size
12, style I, requires approximately 2 )14 yards of
54" fabric and style II requires approx lmatcly I 314
yards of 54" fabric.
To order 62159· state size, include name, ad·
dress and zip code. 'send $2.00 postpaid !or each pat·
tern. Send order s for books anti pal'lems to
SPADEA, Box N, Dept CX-15 Milford, N.J. 08848.
HAL AEBISCHER Candles Shown
Wed ding music played on a
clavichord preceded the single
ring ceremony when Anita
Lucia Pacini became the bride
of Boyd Dawes Peters. The
early arternoon nuptials were
performed by the Rev. Loren
0. Flickinger.
The oceanview garden of
11ans Joseph Lorenze 0 r
Corona ctel t-.1ar was the set.
ling for the nuptials linking
lhe daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
r>.1ario Charles Pacini of
Newport Beacb and John E.
Newport
Rites Set
\Vedding pledges will be ex·
rhanged Jan. 31. in St. James
Episcopal Church. Newport
Beach, by Linda Gaston and
Da vid Robert Jlojas.
Their engagement has been
announced by Mrs. An1y
.Ja rvis Gaston of Newport
Beach, mother of ihe bride·lO.
be.
Another announ cement was
made during a Delta Chi
fraternity party in the
University Park Clubhou se.
HEARING AIDS
C111ro111 Aural A1t1pllflcarlon
NO SALESMIN
The future bride was
gradua1ed from Paci f i c
Palisades High School and will
receh•e her degree in physical A program presented by therapy next June r r om
Knotrs Berry Farm Candle California Slate College at
Shop \1'ill highligh t t he Long Beach.
3409 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
For Appoil'!.tment
675·38_33
1nccting next Thursday of the Her fiance, an alumnus <1f
Orange county Alumnae of Cardena High School. attended San Fernando Valley State
·Al pha Delta Pi. College and also will receive
ti1rs. Leland Coontz of his degree in physical therapy
Orange 1vill host the 11 :30 from CSC LB next June . He il'I
a.m. luncheon meeting which th son of f\1rs. Antonia
Will loclude-a"'SOCi!rfiour:--n E:'nteria-of-Glendale.
Peters of Chicago and Mrs.
Henrie Shenk of Seattle.
Given in marriage by her
father, the brid~ wore a long
sleeved gown or Swiss net wkn
embroidered flowers and a
watteau train. Her floor length
mantilla was decorated with
matclling flowers and she car-
ried a bouQuel of gardenias,
lilies of thP: valley, daisies and
baby 's breath. An heirloom
gold necklace completed her ~
ensemble.
author who never puts wome~ I
down, but instead gives her a Correttion
new mystique of sexuality I which makes her 8 positive Mr1. Jim Hall is taking
creature but one which still luncheon reservations f o r
never does anything, said the Atlantic Research Employes.
speaker. Her phone number is 64&-
8446, not 646-8448 as previously She pointed out that in published. The luncheon will
"Lady Chatterly's Lover," the lake place next Thursday in l
he'roine did not become "a Mesa Verde Country Club.
wonderful lady" until She gaVe .======='=====; up her German courses, in-
dependent a c t i on and
everything else but sexuality.
Let TV WEEK
Turn You On
WEIGHT CONTROL ...
GLANDULAR THERAPY
BEN B, THOMPSON , MD
Call for oppoJntment 646·0251
Open Mando., thru frldoy
1827 Westcliff Dr.
Newport Beach· Henry Miller also was~men
tioned as an author who sees
women . as cosmic thµlgs,
representing a kind of life
force, but not as a human
being.
EASY-CARE "JU ST FOR
YOU "
Mrs. Lawreilce Pacini wa s
matron (If honor and al·
tendants v.·erc Mrs. John
Richards, ~1rs. Keith Klafs,
Miss Louise Ettare, cousin of
the bride, and :P..1iss Susan
Ayala. They wore avocado
ala slienc gowns with· picture
hals and carried French
nosegays of asters, daisies and
baby 's breath.
Flower girl was Sandra
Peters, wearing a long while
dress. and ring bearer was
Dwight Battista 11.
The best novel ever written
by a man about a woman, said
Dr. See, is "Madame Bovary"
• in wbich the ··author was able
to project himself completely
into the sensitivity of a
woman."
Sm1rt f<!ishions, care-free f <!lbrics fe<!I·
iuring BARCO <!i nd other f<!lmous br<!ind
names.
MRS . BOYD PETERS
Newport Home
M•ny style• to choose tram. $8 98
Some as low as •
The bridegroom's brother,
Stuart H. Peters was best man
and ushers were Dr. Paul
Doff, Charles Lee, Pacini,
brothe r of the bridegroom and
William Nelson.
Another author who treated
\\'omen as truly wonderful I creatures was Stendhal, who
painled ·ihem as witt y.
delicate, refined creatures }~arbor 1-ligh School, the who "'ere always ready to
forme r t>.tiss Pacini attended commil themselves to madcap
UC t and Californ ia State adventureS. College al Long Beach. She[jii _________ _
Cathy's Uniforms
IARCO 1767 Newport Blvd.
Costa Mesa 646-5388
The newlyweds greeted their
guests in the Balboa Bay Club
whi ch was decorated with a
gazebo adorned with fresh
gardenias and jvy, gan:Jenia
topiary trees and twisted
junipers.
The guest book w a !:;
circulated by Or. John Evers
Jr. and M iss Karen J-iadley
sang folksongs.
After houeymooning i n
Carmel, San Francisco and
Europe, the new Mr. and Mrs.
Peters wil l establish their
home in Newport Beach.
A-graduate-of Newport-
was gradualed cum-laude
from the University of
Southern California.
Her husband, a graduate of
Francis West Parker prep
school in Chicago and Costa
~1esa High School, is attending
CSCLB.
Moose Group
\Vomen of the Moose, J 158
assemble the first and third
Thursday of each month for
n1eeting!:; in to.loose ilome,
Co.!ta Mesa. The programs
begin <1t BlJ.m.
only 6 weeks
'til Christmas
Gloria Mo.zshallaays: 14Hurry, it' a not too late for that beautiful
slender figure for Christmas •• , This
week, as 8·~4Pre-Cbrisfm3$" offer, all 26
locations in California in vite you to use
the $20.00 Gift Certificat.e coupon belo\\'.
iiESULTS GUARANTEED in writin g.
-
4Tell us the dress site you want t.o
1vcar, and we'll tell you how many visit! it
will take and guarantee in writing that
you will reach your goat.In fnct, so
positive are we that you v.ill obtain your
objective, that, as tttated in our guanmt.ee,
we will even let you he.ve Jo'REE OF
CHARGE, any and all fu rther visits,
until you reach your goal.
Cal.I for FREE 'eample visit. Actually use,
under supervision, the Gloria Marshall
" . m~chines, including our patentod
Circ·La·Matic." No Charge, No Obligation .
•
Comt IA comfor'?ble c:osual clothu, rliarobing
unn~. Prwotc playroom facilitie1 for
•mall c:Aildrm.
FIGURE· CONTROL SALONS
0..,M,111.M·-IOll-c-..,-1
JJAMf80~lElE IFAl83~~C
COTTON
SHIRT
FLANNEL
PLAIDS 'N SOLIDS
<'olor coordinated for hi• and hl'r shirts.
~t fOl' Chris.tmas robe
gift giving.
w1de color r•n1•
COMPARE AT 7tc to lfc yd.
3'" WI.. 69' Gvor. Waltftle ro.
BONDED
Sui ling.a
1,1·00111, u•ool blend~. acrylics
acetate tricot lining
PLAIDS
FANCIES
NOVELTIES
dress and 11uit "''eight11
VALUES TO $~.91 YARD
54"/60"
Widtb1 $2~~-.
holi-datinff .,.~
FABRICS
now look colors and designs for
"Elegance" Brocade Satin s
posh designs, good colors on acetat e
"Tosca" Glitter" Brocade
sparkly metallic designs on acetate
Twill Back Cotton Velveteen
High Pile Rayon Velvet
tremendous color selections
Printed Cotton Velveteen
the sew -in
mod , colorful designs and colors-36" to 45" \rid ths -. '
g roup.
$198 "· $2~!
$2~~
$3~!
$4~!
NEWPORT BEACH
430 PACIF IC COAST HWY. 642-3630
!? lloc~1 E1 1I or l~!lllo• !ty Ctubl
1140 YI. 17tll SlRln 543.9457 IAHTA ANA
Al'IA"llMo llVlllllY lol llll, CO VI"*• ClillNSl'l.t,W, DQWfrllf'I', OllNOALI, LAKIWOOD. LONO
lli.llCM, f'llWl"Oll:f 11.llCM, MO•fM "OLLYWOOO, 0.'lfAlllO, ,Al.llDINA. IA.If Otl.00, SANT ..
AM.II~ SANTA IAllllAlllA, IU"LANO, tAllZANA. WHlnllll. JtllM 11• 111 "llliNO, SACIU.MIHtO,
SAN JOSI, $UJ'lfrl'!'VA~I. WALIWUT CJlllK,
DRAPERlf
HUNTINGTON CENTER
EDINGER AT BEACH
HUNTINGTON BEACH 897°8013
OPIN MON THf':U ,R'I. 10 'TIL t P.M. -SAT. 'T IL 6 P.M.
IANKAMlll:ICAll:D & MAS'rllll CHAll:Gl ACCEPTE D
-
•
Trials Set
June 8-12
For Cup
-PreUmlnary ltialJ that~ will
lead to tho adedlon of a de-
fender for &he Am~~s Cup
next summer will be held in
1""f Island Sound oil Stam-
ford, Conn. June 8-12.
Tbese will be followed by ob-
servation trlab off Newport,
R.J. beginning Aug. 11. Then
the New YQrk Yacht Club's
selection committee must de-
clcle by Sept. a which 12-meter
will be the defeOOer for the
Cup series starting Sept. 15.
There will be two new ti.
meters In the trials, plus the
1967 defender and possibly
one other,
Australia and France have
both challenged for the Cup
and will hold elimlnatlon trials
next summer to decide Which
compet~s a1ainst tbe U.S. de-
fender.
----~-·---
M"""7, llowmb<r 10, 1969 DAILY JIJLOT" 2S
Many Servlees Planned.
Acapulco Race Shapes Up
New Way Found
To Stop Hair l9$s,
Grow More Hair
)\'JUt the Lao& Beach to LI,
Pu race under w1y, many
Sbuthland yachlameu are tum.
In( thell'-.tteotio1Ho' tlle-teUt
bi'enni1l san Diep to
Aca,pulco..._.race scheduled to
set under w1y F'ib. J, trio.
San Dies<> rlCfl cha1rman
Peter Peckham 1aid a
preliminary e s t I m 1 t e in-
dicates there may be 40 or
more yacht. In the ract.
In anntlCJpation of the raC&t
the Club de Yates de Acapulco
is already making elaborate
plans tG receive the
yachtsmen and their friends
and relatives.
Commodore Aaron Saeni Jr.
has listed 23 services that will Acapulco. A ri.tex ican Navy
be accorded lhe v 1 5 i 1 i 0 g vessel will also act as escort. yachtsmen by committees of
the Acapulco Yacht Club. 4. Charts of lhc route and
Here are some of the ar· progress of the race will be
rangements being made by the placed in prominent Acapulco
Acapulco hosts of the race: business finns, hotels and
1. Mexi fana Airlines will restaurants.
rival. providlnc .such con-HOUSTON, Texas -U But, If ,vou lrf: not a!tt•~
ven.ielas u l'Hlng offlclal you don't auUtr from male •lick bald, how can you be 1ure roc~ntJ, water, f~el, laun-pattern baldness, you can v.•hat Is actu11.llv causlnr yoµr
dry_ other neceuitles. now atop your hair kl6I:, . ha.Ir lou.! Even tt b&ldnea may
f, Meilcan troubldOn and and gro.w more hair. seem to "run In your famly." :n-=1
1= ~~~ ~. For Yt~ri "they ll&ld It couldn't thls It cretalnly no proof of the
the Um ol day ill'""'L be done. But-now a-firm ol. cause of YOUR hatr Jou. e or .., laboratory con1ultants hu de-M&n¥ condltlON can cau.e IO. Names of mechanics, veloped a tTHtment for both carpeotert and other yacht men and women, that 11 not halr loss. No matf:'r whJch one
repalrman will be available to only 1toppln&: h&i.t Jou ..• but Is caualn& your hair Jon, It you
all the yad)tabto preparing ls rttll,y &l'Owinc: Mir! wait until you are slick bald
for the return trip They don't even uk )'OU lo &nd your ha1r roots are dead, · take their word for It. U they "OU be nd h t So it 11. One of the Acapulco believe that tm treatment will J are YO e P. • you
banks will set up a bcanch it help you, thry invite )'OU to try Still have any -v.·eak halr on top
the yacht club to handle aU It for 32 days, at their rlak, and or your head, and would like tn 1ee tor yourae.lf! stop your hair lou and grow
monetary problem.!1, Natural'¥, they Y.•ould not of· morr. hair .•• now is the time
12. An American E1.press fer tbls no-risk trial unleu the to do t0methtng about It befon
Co. representative will provide treatmen~ worked. However, It it's too late
airline reservations and hotel b lmpcw1ble to help everyone. Loe h La. bo C 1 · Th j · . ac ratory onsu t-accommodatlons. e gre at ma onty of a ,_ Inc w sup·' Ith
I . h . fall n-• .,w ...,yyouw 13. Arrangements have been cases o excessive 11r treatment tor 32 days, at their
made to h:ave restaurant and and baldness are the begi n· risk, lf they believe the treat.
bar charges at the club hand!-ning and more fully devel· ment ..,.,.·111 help you. Just send
ed by Diners, American EJ. obped stages.dot male pa~ern i:!~ ~~el~~~lrl':t!i~ ~~~e!:"d pres~ and Carte Blanche aldness an c a n no ( be oonfldentlally, by mail and
credit cards. helped. wttho'ut oblip.tion. Adv.
BLACKFIN TAKES EARLY LA PAZ LEAD
Windward Passage Caught Up, Apparently Leading New yachts being built In
the U.S. for the trills are Char·
lie Morgan's Hefitage, now be-
ing completed in Florida, and
an a~ yet unnamed yacht be-
ing built by Robert McCul-
lough of New York. The 11157
defender Intrepid will be back
for another try under the ume
syndicate and with Bill Ficker
of Newport Beacb at the helm.
'provitle special reservations 5. Boats will be provided for on their flights to Acapulco and will have a telephone relatives to meet arriving
'number and one employe to yachts as they cross the finish
atteOO exclusively to persons line at Boca Chica entrance.
connected with the race. Other boats will be provided
It. Customs and im· HO ClllGATION COUPON ------~
migration office will be in· To: t oe1eh tabor11ory Con1ulltnts, Inc. stalled in the club premises. Box 66001, 13 11 Wut Miin St.
15. Photographic needs will Houslon, Tex1s 77006
Pcissag·e Holds Lead
11i La Paz Boat Race
2. Arrangements have been for the press covering the
made with the Radio Ham finU.ii of the race.
ASIOClatlon ol Mei:ico to have 8. Ettorts are being made l.o
members along the coa1t obtain slow airplanes to fly
monttOr transmissions from members of the press on a
the compeUng sailboats and scouting of the fleet as it ap-
be taken care of by a Kodak I 1m 1ubmittin1 tilt (ollow in1 inform1tion wich che undtr·
agency at the club. 1t1ndin1 1h11 it will M kept Mrictly confidcnti1I 1nd th1t l 1m
16. There will be two official under no obli11tion \lhllS<le\'tr. I now hll'"t or have h•d th•
festivities _ I beach party it 'ollowin1 condition!:
the Paradise Club and tbf: Do )"OU htl'"e d1ndrulf? __ Jt 11 dry? __ or oilY~---
trophy presentation dinner at Does your forchc1d become clly or 1reuy?·------
one of the leading hotels. Dou your ie1.lp Itch? \\/hen?·------
• How Iona h111 your hair been th in"inJ? ______ _
The ketch \\'i nd,var d T1•to and lhe Escu rdero ti. escortboatsasto theprogret:s proatbes Acapulco. BOAT BUFFS
Passagr rcrnaincd the a~ with neither reporting injuries. of the race. This infonnation 7. Motor boats will be pro-Alrno-leckiliiy ii tti. only
ptircnt leader Loday in the Holiday T\vo is owned by Batting Cl1amp will also be monitored by a vided t::i give a tow to finishing f.,ll.tirn• lio•ting iclitor worki"t
Long Beach to La Paz yach t Ken Croan of the Los Angele s ham network in Southern boats aud to supply the crews on •ny "•••P•P•r in Or•nt•
race bul race officials said 1'wo and the Escudero II, Ty Cobb led the American Galifornia. \\'ith refreshments. Co u"ty, Hi1 •1du1i'<'e co ... •r•t•
there may be come deep sea was skippered by Dick Valdes League in batting 12 times, ac· 3. Two Me1.ican motor a. Committees of c I u b ef bo1tir19 1"4' Y•thl!llf 11•~
Do ycu 1till h1v• 1ny v•e1k hair on lop of your bead7 __
How lon1 I• it~ 1 it dry? 11 ii oily? __ _
Au1ch 1ny 01hcr lnrorm11io11 you reel m1y be h1lpfu].
NAM~----------------
ADDRESS•-------------~ gamcsn1a nship going on. of the Long Beach Yacht Club. · cording to W or Id Book yachts will provide escort members have been formed to I ft • 4illy f••t1i1r• of the OAll't
Black fin. a r c h riv a I to -~·~po~n~so~,~·~J~the~~"'.:'~'·~---~E~ncycloped~~~i~a.~-----~l~rom~~C~abo~~San~-L~ucu~~~to~-!_•~Ue~n~d~eailCch~~bo~a~t_:oo~~itJ~~"''.:"~· ~P~IL~O~T-=======,dll_!~C~IT~Y~=======~A~T~========~ Hav.•aii's Windwa rd Passage, I
did not answer roll call, orfi.
cials reported Sunday, but
that caused no alarm.
In last July"s Transpacific
Yacht ra ce. Blackfin skipper
Ken DcMeusc a cc u s e d the
\Vindward Passage of radioing
phony position reports to give
!he Blackfin a false .sense of
securit y that e n ab I e d
\Vindv,rard Passage to cross
lhc finish Hne first by one
hou r. The Blackfin was pro·
nounced the "'inner after the
\Vindward Passage was dis-
qua lified .
Now, officials l heo ri z e
DeMcuse is purposely keeping
Jn um .
\Vindy,·ard' Passage. a 73-
footer skippered by Mark
.Johnson of Lahaina Yacht
Club of Hawaii, was near the
U.S. ~texican border Sunday.
Tanqueray Ill. skippered by
sran r.iil!er of the Long Beach
Y a c h t Club, was rol101vlrtg
rlosely along 'vfth Concerto.
piloted by Don Hall of
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
Two boats reported they
\vcre dismasted in rough seas
Sunday. reduci ng the com-
petitors to 30 in the fiv~ay
race, They were the Holiday
Outboard
Major Help
To Fishers
A new· electric outboard
n1olor uses a foot pedal con-
1 rol, allowing fishermen to
:ilop, start, shift lo reverse
and conlrol speed and dlrec·
Lion -leaving both hands free
fo r \vorking a fish .
The Electra Pal Barracuda
electric fishing motor is pr<r
1luced by the Electra Pal
Division of Osbo r Engineering
Corp., 1400 E. Lafayette St.,
Bloomington. I!L
The motor is generally
mou nted on the gunwale near
the bow for maximum control,
but can be clamped on the
stern. the bow or any place
along the gunwale. The small
1notor is usually used in con-
junction wilh a larger motor
mounted in the usual place on
the stern which drives the
boat lo the fishing area. i
The pedal control allows the
angler lo sit anywhere in the
boat. The pedal unit even has
a combination night light·
cigarette lighter.
A scaled engine. lubricated
for a lifetime, it has a four
barrier water seal system that
bars all moisture. So Ii d
alu1ninum castings are light
and suitable for both fresh and
~alt \Valer. The Barracuda
produces no noise. exhaust or
ruel slicks.
Like other motors in the
Electra Pal line. it features a
pern1ancnt magnet motor and
propeller which are carefully
ha lanced lo ensure smooth
opf'ration .
The Electra-Nelie thrust
control pives a gradual. nuid·
like acceleration and decelera·
lion. allowing the angler to
match lh po"·cr lo the wind
:ind ll'fl\'CS err met hod of
Oshlng.
FAIR
F•1t; fair, fa,lual. Tlt•tt
ilir•• word' '""" wp l.tclori I" op•r~1:0,. et" 1h1 0,\1LY rlLOt
odlforiol P•t• a•t'Y 4'1y_
0
0
The have and h.olders ••• a personalitj analysis
\_
• Read the personality descriptions and select the one that suits you best to find the right savings plan for your type.
The charts Will show you how each one works. We've been matching people to savings plans for 33 years. The kind
of people who want their money to kee p its buyin g power. Who want the value of the ir money to re ma in steady in an
up-and-down market Who would rather have their money earn interest than to pa y exo rbitant carrying or loading
charges. Who want their money to multiply so they can pay cas·h for things. Who want to be able to get their hands
on their, money when they need it Saving people, lik e you-the kind who want to HOLD their money and HAVE It
eam interest. Come in end Jet one of our people experts get you started on your personalized-to-your-caving~
personality program at Newport Balboa Savings.
Are you one of the
regular people?
PlAN #I
Re9ular Aooount
This plan is for regular
people with regular
a1laries who have
.deci ded to save regular
•mounts anywhere from
$5 a week up, but who
want their money working
for them. They also want
it lo be some place they
c an get their hands on it
If they need it in a hurry.
If they can leave rt elone
for a year or more , it will
give them the Big Annu1I
S .13 yield.
-..ECUL.AR MONTHl Y
INVESTMENT
$25 ... $100
6 ~OS. "' "" "" I Yr. 308 616 1.233
2 Yr1. 632 1.264 2.529
J Yrs. .,, 1,146 3 .892
A Yrs. , ,331 2.&52 S.324
5 Vrt.. 1,707 3.415 ... ,.
\0 VrL '·"° 7,801 15,902
15 Vra. tiJIS , 3.4'2 26,1164
20 Yrs. 10,329 20,Ml2 '4 1,375
D
Are you one of the
other-people people?
PUN #z
life Income f>tan
This is for people who
have a sum of money they
would like" to put aside
and receive the interest
every month but not
touch the principal.
Perhaps you Intend to
leave your money to your
heirs. In this plan the
original investment is
retained for a lifetime
and you have a regular
inc ome every month. If
your future plans are for
your children's future,
then this savings program
may s uit you.
llfE INCOME PLAN
lnllit l Otpotit AmO&tllt 11f Check
$12.000
1•.500
20.000
25.000
... 000
$ 50.00 Pf!I'" Month
60.00 Per Month
83.00 P1r Month
104.00 Por Month
208.00 Per Month
Are you one of the
retiring people?
PLAN #S
Monthly Security Accownt
This is for people who hive
1 lump sum of money but
who know that if they don't
put it away somewhere out
of sight, they will spend lt.
Perhaps they are looking
forward to retirement and
know it lHOuld be better to
have a certain amoont
coming in every month over
a given period. Not only wilt
thlyget back a lot more tha n
they put In , but there will be
a nestegg to reward
themselves for not
blowing it all at once.
INVEST $10,000.00 ANO:
Y01.I r1ce1ve a11d you ret1111
e•ch month for an et111e of'
S S0.00 10 years S 1,675.00
$ 50.00 15y•tra S 7,725.00
S 75.00 l 0 ye11r1 S 4.775.00
S 75.00 15 ye1r1 S 1.000.00
$100 00 1 o ye••• $ 875.00
IHI/EST $25,000.00 AND:
you r•ce l11• 11nd you rotein
t1ch mcnth for 1n e1t11• cf•
$1C(l.OO 10yetr1 S25.600.00
$100.00 15 ye1r1 SM,050.00
$150 00 10 ye•rt $17.BOO.OO
S200.00 10 yet r1 $10.0IX).00
Sf!I0.00 10 ye tr• $ 2,200.00
Are you one of the
patient people?
PlAN #4
Guaranteed
Annuel Rite Account
This plan is f~r patient people
who already heve a sum of
money to invest and are wil ling
to wait a whil e for a good
re tum on their money. The
minirnum deposit if $1 ,000
(more If you wish, of course),
in exchange for which you
receive a certificate which
guarantees an annual rate
of 5.25% for 3, 4 or 5 years .
Are'you one of the patient
ones? Then tne GUARANTEED
ANNUAL AATE ACCOUNT
ls fo r you.
l111!iol
Dtpo1it
s 1,000
$ 5,000
$10.000
$15,000
YOU Will RECEIVE
after tft•r 1ftor
3 r••r1 4 11ar1 5 , •• ,.
s 1.170 s 1,233 $ 1,300 s 5.852 s f.i.188 $ 6.500
$11.705 $12,336 $13,001
$17.551 $18,504 $11,502
Are you . one of the
enterprising people?
l'lAH #5
3-Year Bonut Account
for people who want not
only the current yield on
their savinga, but would
like a sum over and abov1.
In thls,plan y~u inve1t e
minimUm of $1000 whlcl'I
earns you the current yield
PLUS an extra ~% per
year at the end of 3 years.
Jf you would like to be
enterprising and safe •t
the same time. then the
3·year bonus account
is for you.
YOU Will MCEIV£
lniti•I •flff afl•r .,._,.
D•potit 3 rot•t 4 r•-$ ,. .. s 1.000 $ 1,168 $ 1.232 $ 1,291 s 5.000 $ 5.846 $ 6,161 s 8.493
S10.000 S11 ,e83 $12,323 $12•7
$15,000 $17.540 $18.486 $19,491
_tiOl!PO.~!,!o~!~~~~avings ..
Mani Offict ; 3356 '111 Lido, Nawpon BeKh. Celli~• 9?663 1 ~ 71 '4/07~1)) • Corona 0.1 Mat Off~: F~i.I Plau..5$0 Ntwpor\ Corar Drr'f't. • Cofone del M•r. CahfOl'Tlll 92e2& • ""°"9 71 4/644-1._1
•
•
•,
•
"
I
l
1
l
!
j
•
JC DAILY f'tl.Or
_Republic
Acquires
Sta-Hi
AcquWi!Oii o1 Ult Sla·lll
Coii>oratlon, Newport Beach,
developer and · manuflCb.lrer
of equipment for newspaper
printlng and handling, ........
nounced today by RepubUc
Corp.
Sta-Hf has a 60,00kquare-
foot manufacturing planl and
engineering laboratory in the
1 rvine industrial r e s ,e a r c h
Complex. It also h~ sales and
service offices in New York
City; Chicago; Detro 1 t:
Dallas: Wichita, K ans as ;
-Paramus, N . J ,,; Montreal.
NEW ENTRY FROM DODGE FOR SEVENTIES IS ITS SPORTY CHALLENGER
It Will Be Available H Hu dtop or Convertlble With Wide Ct.oleo of E,.1,,.,
Canada; and European head-
quarters in Brussels, Belgiwn.
Sales are in excess o[
$4,00l,OtlO per year.
In High Gear
Acquisition of the privately
owned company was for an
undisclosed amount of com-
mon stock.
Gerald R. Block, Republic's
board chainnan, said that
there will be a continuation of
the present.management
headed by Vernon R. Spitaleri,
Dodge Offers Challenge to.Seventies
Witter Sets
Workshop
~
A workshop on money
management will be presented
Saturday, .NDV. 15, at the
. ..Newpcrt Beach office of Dean
Willer & Co.
Speakers will b e pro-
fessional men who a r e
specialists in their fields.
Topics of discussion will in-
. elude ways to create effective
. estate planning and how to
select s u i ta b I e investment
counsel.
'Ibe seminar will begin at 10
a.m. Reservations may be
made by phoning 644-2292 or -·
Wiseman Heads
Education· Unit
Dr. Dorsey Wiseman has
been named director of educa·
lion by the Orange County
Oiapter of the National
Association of Accountants.
Dr. Wiseman is a professor
o( accounting at California
Slate College at Fullerton. Dr.
Wiseman i.s also a member of
the American Insitute of
, Certified Public Aceountants
, and the American Accounting
Association.
By CARL CARSTENSEN
Of ftM DIW 1"1191 Si.ff
With the announcement ol
the lt70 passenger carst auto
experts heralded the coming
decade as the "greatest sales
era in the history ol the in·
d~.''
1be 10 million car year
would become nonnal and
sights W®ld be set for 12
million new car sales a year.
It .shooldn't soood far out as
just 10 years ago sale! were
barely over 6 million units.
Yet if this is the case the
domestic auto makers will
have to llpring with many
more new and d iffe r en t
models than have been offered
for this firs! year or the seven .
ties .
Most people agree that only
five or six really new cars
were introduced this year, one
of which is the Dodg e
Challenger. 11le birth of the
OWJenger has to be one of
Dodge's poorest kept' secrets.
It parallels past "cat out of
the bag" mysteries such as
Ford's Mustang in 1964 and
Oldsmobile's Toronado. It was
talked about for two years
prior to its entry.
Dodge did a good promotion
job. The trick is lo keep it
goµig. Alter the very suc-
cessful Charger they'll be hard
pressed to keep pace.
Offered as a 2-door hardtop
or convertible with a wide
range of engine optioM it
challenges the well entrenched
medium priced cars such es
Cougar, Fireb~ and some 0£
the classier versions o{ the
Mustang and Camaro.
Saturday Morning
special •.. for Investors
An lnvesf1Mnt Mln....,..nt Workshop
•mpt..slzing a
profnsion1I lnYettmM1t approach
Dean \Vitter & Co. is spOnsoring a free seminar for
investors interested in the finer points of effective
investment management.
It \viii be held at Dean Witter's new Fashion Island
office in Newport Beach. Featured. will be several
guest speakers -specialists in their fields:
• A prominent attorn•y ind tax expert will 1ug·
gest ways to establish and preserve the maxi·
mum after.fix e1t1te,
e A Vice President and Mnior portfolio manager
of • l•eding counstllng firm wll l define the role
of the Investment CounMlor and give some
guidelines fo r .. 1ectin9 on,e.
' Pl1n now to 1ttend. There'll be ample time for
questions, and refrethments will be served.
D1te: Saturday, November 15
Time: Starting at 10:00 a.m.
Place: Dean Witter & Co.
550 N•wport Center Drive
Newport Beach
For retervatlons. c1ll Dean Witter Account ExtcU•
fives J1me1 Muny or Mix R1cey 1t 644·2292 or
133.0~30.
You'r« clo3'e to men who know
when yod~inve1t toitli , .•
DEAN WITTER. l5C: Co.
550 Newport Confer Drive • 642292
NEWPORT BEACH, CAL. 92660
)forlrel Nt!W•: Hear a cmcite•nnm1ryol the market opm-
kir and the i.tat bn•,,,. and ftl•i.:ill news hich~ cm
DEAN Wl')'l'EB MARKET REPORT
KYAC, Dial l'ool6on 1330
8:05 Lm., _, lbroolh Prido.l'
UnintentlonaUy it will even
compete with the Charger. Jt
comes in two se ri es ,
Challenger and Challenger R·
T. ln both series, a formal
hardtop SE (Special Edition)
features the complete range of
luxury extras.
Standard engines are the 225.
cubic inch six and 318 cubic in-
ch V-8 for Challenger, and
383 cubic inch high performan·
ce V-3 4 barrel for the R· T.
Optional engines go as high
as the 426 llemi with a cut out
hood so it'll fit and the 441>
cubic Inch. Special Six Pack.
three carburetor V -8 •
Needless to say, the last two
aren't really necessary for the
street.
The 1 JO.inch wheelbase is
the shortest in the Dodge line
but about two inches longer
than competitor'! in its clas.!
and slighUy wider.
Interior room is ample but It
you are better than average In
size you need a plan to enter
tbe car from the driver's side.
The steering wheel sits low
and you must slide In. The act.
justable wheel is not available
this year which would make
all the di!ference but a local
Dodge official said the car will
come with a slightly smaller
steering wheel in the near
future.
This will make it perfect.
Handling and suspension Is
good as it has been \n most of
the D o d g e intennediates.
You'll notice 1 o t s o(
Challengers on the road or it
will appear that way as the
color lineup is wild. Choices
are sut>.lime (a bright and
start.Ung chartreuse); plum
crazy (way-out purple); hentl
orange (more a tangerine);
top banana (bright yellow);
and go-mango (yellow·reddi.sh-
orange). Apparently the
buyers like then as 34 percent
of Challenger buyers are
choosing the way out colors.
And QJ!lurally it figures lhat
for the first month or the new
model year . Southern
California leads the country in
Challenger sales. It's a worthy
addition to the race of sporty
autos that conUnues to capture
a stronger segment ol the auto
market each week.
* * CHEV CORVEITE PASSES
QUARTER MILLION MARK
Chevrolet's famed Corvette
is 250,000 cars old.
Ceremonies at the division's
St. Louis Assembly Plant
marked completion Of the
quart.er·miillooth fiber glass
bodied sports car that grew
from a "dream car" to an in4
temational auto celebrith.
John Z. DeLorean, Chevrolet
general manager, declared
that Corvette's total pro-
duction surpasses the number or two-seat sports cars built
under any.. other .s in g I e
nameplate in world
automotive histol)'.
"The Corvette's overall in-
fluence upon automotive
trends and Chevrolet's in.
dividual image goes I a r
beyond the number actually
built end sold," DeLoreaa
.said.
.. In 1953, It began the
American industry's break
with !he traditional single-size
car. By spotlighting t"\lstomer
desire for dlstincUve ap-
Your Money's Worth
pearance a n d excitement,
Corvette pioneered the
specialty and penooal can
that contributed to the in-
dustry's growth during the
1950's and 1960's.
"While Corvette's 250,000
IDlal production ls a small
fraction o( the 40 million cars
built by Chevrolet since 1953,
the presUge it has achieved
has added luster and sales ap-
peal to every Chevr olet
passenger car line."
OeLorean credited both the
distinctive styling of. Ccrvette
and · l!s record as a n
automotive innovator tor the
car's success.
The calendar year sales
record was set ln 1961 with
29,87f deliveries. Sales this
yea r are running slightly
behind that rate due to a
shortage created by a two
month strike earner this year.
Producllon of the 19&9 model
Corvotte has been extended to
catch up with back orders and
will be completed later next
monlh. The 1970 m o d e I
Corvette will be introduced
early next year.
Chevrolet put the sports car
Into production after the
enthusiastic reception i t
received from 4 m I J I I o n
visitors \\'ho saw it as a
"dream car" in the 1953
Genetal Motors Motorama.
The first Corvette was pro-
duced on June 30, 1953 at
Chevrolet's Flint, Micbiian
Assembly Plant where the
first 300 were virtually band·
built until production was
moved in Detember to a
special Corvette assembly line
in SL Louis where all the rest
of the Corvettes have been
built.
Productivity l(ey GM Issue
By SVL VIA PORTER
General Motors, the world's
largest corporation employing
more than 450,000 hourly rated
workers, will enter its crucial
labor negotiations in the fall of
lt70 prepared to negotiate
demands for the largest cash
plus fringe benefit package in
all history.
The size of the hourly pay
hike to be granted by GM will
be vitally influenced by the
record-size wage patt erns now
being set in the electrical in·
dustry and to be set in rubber
next spring -and these will
surely be far above 1969's
swollen average or '1 ~~
percent. It also will be af.
fected by the 10 ~ percent
wage package GM ha s of fered
ii workers in Britai n.
WHAT'S ~IORE, while GM
will fight what it cons iders ex-
cessive' cash increases, it
recognizes how much inflation
has hit its workers since its
1967 contract granted an an·
nual 6-'1 percent wage hike.
Bu! GM will demand (and ··----·-· NIGHTS
SUNDAYS
&
HOLIDAYS
Ctn be mor•
Profit1ble
for you.
CALL US NOW FOR
INFORMATION A~
A BROCHURE.
I TD.Il'HONE -~b .USWERIN Q BtmlAU
543·2222
9 OFFICES TO SERYt:
ALL OF ORANGE CO,
here Is where the fight will
come) the strong support of
the United A u t o Workers in
improving the productivity Of
its wokers, primarily via more
work per hour and Jess
absenteeism.
Hlgher output per man·hour
fs what GM's top management
feels it must obtain if the cor-
poraUon is to keep price in·
creases to a minimum and
sti ll be able to maintain a
reasonable protit margin.
THERE V.'ERE key polnls
made or impied by James ~f.
Roche, board chairman of GM
in an exclusive interview at
GM's headquarters in New
York City a few days ago.
Lean, tall, soft-spoken wilh
a channing, youthful smile,
Roche seems much younger
than his soon-to-be 63 years
and almost too agreeable to
be the chief executive oficer
of so enormous an industrial
complex Yet, Roche was
thoroughly aware throughout
our long frank talk that I was
aski ng hlni. deep-down ques-
tions about the "BIG On e,''
the critical 1970 auto negotia·
lions. Among his o t h e r
disclosures:
-He sees no end lo this
price-wage spiral and doubts
that even a business slump
can stop it "unless and until
prcxluctivity is increased and
maintained \n better balance
with increased wage cosls.
This, labor itself must decide
to do."
-UE POINTEDLY asks.
''!low can innation be halted
·with prcxluctivity increases of
All Makot-All Modots
A11.....,...Jn-T,_
"Wh1re S1rvlce
M•f•t tt.1 Diff•t11te•"
.,, ..... ,......, ~7t c.111,.,. Dr. """""' .,.. ("" ..._
L" AfttMt H6 I. Wn tlinl ltUt na.1m
auto workers running below S
percent a year and pay hikes
far exceeding that percen·
tage?"
-"To be realistic, there
was no way o( avoiding the
price increases on our 1970
cars and this ill a fact which
should not be dismisse d
lightly." Roche cited Bureau
of Labor Statistics to indiCate
that auto prices (adjusted for
quality and equipment
changes) are only slightly
higher than In 1959 while
payroll costs have climbed 82
percent; steel is up 20 per·
cent; copper 96 percent: zinc 5
percent ; lead 41 percent;
aluminum 9 percent; nickel 39
percent.
-Since 1965, Bl.S figures
also show pay per man-hour
has jumped 25 percent but
output per man-hour has risen
only 12 percent, The result has
been a rise in unit labor costs
of 11 percent and in industrial
pri ces of JO percent. "This
distorted economy must be re-
versed.''
-AGAIN AND AGAIN,
Roche came back to the hj!art
or the ''10 auto negotiaUoos:
Productivity! "Absenteeism
on Friday and Monday ill
tremendous ...... "There is
a great erosion of time m the
hour or production ••• "
"Turnover is very high •• , • "
"We have been realistic in
recognizing the demaods or
labor," said Roche as I rose to
leave, and "labor must be
realistic in recognizing ita:
obligations to increase its pnr
ductivlty. This Is the key soJu.
lion to the problem of in-
flation ."
At 11 :59 P.M., Sept. 14, 1970.
GM 'a contarct with the UAW
will expire. Above is a preview
of what wll be the giant stakes
Jn the contract to replace it.
-AND ABOVE too It e
1tatements which clearly lm·
ply, to me at least. that tbe
price hikes on the '70s -
averaging about $125 on a bite
car and the highest In mare
than a decade -represent on-
ly a beginning. Automobile
prl"1! wlll be l!ofne up again.
Finance
Briefs
' WASHING TON (UPI) -An
examiner for the C Iv j I
AeronauUcs no.<4 fW rocom·
mended thal Pan Ame~
World Airway!! be. permitted
to go ahead wlih the propooed
purchase of • 45 J>l!l'OOll Jn.
terest ·m New York Airwaya,
operator of a helicopter ferry
system between the airports in
the metropolitan area.
KANSAS CITY (UPI) -
Kansas City Southe r n
lnduttries, Inc., the railwiy
holding ciimpany' sald the
Missouri Public Sen.rice Com·
mission bas asked for In-
formation conctming the re-
cent purchase of 13 perctnt of
the shares al Kansas City
Soulhem by Lee Natiooal
Corp. 'Ibe commission bas the
legal right to grant or
withhold approval of such a
sale.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Cess.
na Aircraft Corp. ot Wichita
expects to be a company with
$1 billion in annual sales by
the I a t e 1970s, senior vlce
president Robert P. Bauer told
a group of aerospace security
analysts In New York. He
pointed out that Ces,,na's sales
lripled during the 1960s. He
sltid the general aviation busi·
ness will grow faster io. the
coming decade.
SHERMAN OAKS, Calli.
(UPJ) -Hickok Manufactur-
ing Co. said it has setUed its
differences w i t h American
Safety Equipment Corp. on
the basl.s of a payment by
American Safety to Hickok of
$1.35 million and cancellation
of a 1963 agreement by which
the rlght to use the Hickok
tradename was licensed to
American Safety.
BOSTON (UPI) -Bostm
&: Maine Corp. said it now is
confident it will be able to
80lve all problems in connec-
tion with the maturing $65 mil·
lion of its bond Issues next
July.
President Richard J . Mul-
hern pointed out the bond is·
sues are the concern of Bos-
ton & Maine 'Corp., which op-
erates the Boston & Maine
Railroad, and are not obliga.
tions of the parent !Inn, Bos-
ton & Maine Industries, Inc. ·--NEW YORK (UPI) -Shar ..
holders of Western Union Tele-
graph Co. Wednesday ap-
proved the company's re-
structuring Involving the crea-
tion of a holdin~ company.
However, chairman Robert W.
Mc:Call sidd Western Union
has oo intention of becoming
a conglomerate. He said that
in diversifying under the new
structure, "we will stick to
fields we know. communica-
tions and Information
handling."
NSC Gains
Franchise
National Systems Corp.,
Newport Beach, has acquired
Patricia Stevens Franchise
Corp.
The acquisition, effective
Nov. 4, was for an undisclosed
'3.mount of cash and notes John
J. McNaughton, Nation a I
Systems president, said.
Patricia Stevens schools are
located in 33 cities throughout
t he United States .
McNaughron said it is Ute
oldest and largest sy!lem of
finishing schools and career
colleges for young women in
th e United Slates.
The curriculum offered by
Patricia Stevens career col·
lege and fini shing scboolll in-
cludes courses in the fashion
merchandising, e x e cu ti v e
secretarial, public relations
and professional m o d e 1 in g
fie lds.
Patricia Stevens, which was
founded in 1946, will be
operated as a wholly owned
subsidiary of N a t I o n a I
Systems Corp. Headquarters
for the newly acquired finn
will be moved from Kansas
City, M.Wouri to Newport
Beach.
Fed Off icer
ToGiveTalk
J. Howard Craven. senior
vice president and economic
advlser to the president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco, will be the featured
speaker at the November
meeting ol lhe Orange County
Chapter of the Nati onal
A.uodation or Accountants.
The meeting will be held al
the DL<neyland llolel Monday,
Nov. 17, beginning al a p.m.
The speaker's subject wlll
be "Uolled Slai<J Monelary
Policitll, Their Impact cin
Business."
Who Reads the Stars
1F or the Stars?
(~
r4. ..
,
~i« Ii. ~·
' ~ • :<. k' 11\;
It's Sydney Omarr
And now this articulate writer who has ' been called the "astrologer's astrologer"
reads the stars for you. Sydney Omarr,
longtime personal astrologer to many
of Hollywood'·s and the literary
world's mo st famous stars, is o DAILY
PILOT columnist.
Omarr's record for accuracy of
predictions based on astrological analysis
is amazing. Whether you read
astrological foreca sts for fun or as a
serious student of star.gazing, you'll
enjoy Sydney Omarr's daily column
in the
.
DAILY PILOT
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NO MATIER WHAT tliey're in the market for, our readers find the DAILY PILOT is th'e 'beat
place to put the bite on bargains. And they 'do it with ·tlie same gusto as the gourmet here
• showing how much he appredates the wares of the famed Alkmaar Cheese Market in The
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new appliances at bargain prices, a real car buy-or even a chunk of cheese. Just shop the
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Raiders,
. ' ,
Chiefs, Jets.
St~p Foe s
-· By Un\ted Prest Interaatloaal ·
Daryle · Lamonica, who I~ ihe
American Footbal1 League In touCbdown
panes, ran bls 1989 tOtal tO '25 Sunday
with thiee ·scoring tossu to Fred Bllet· ·
nikoff'in leading the Oakland Ralden't<> a
41-10 victory over the Denver BroncOI ..
D:espite the -victory, the Raiden: re-
mained a half came behind Western
Divistoo leader Kansas City u the Otiefs
wOn tfielr eighth game in nine tries by
iluuhing San Diego, 17..'I.
• ~ NeW .York Jeta u.sed thr.ee field
pat. by Jim ~ and lwo costly
. ~ltits ·by Buffalo to increase their
~ •:~~ to six with a 161 lriumpb
.,
'l'IJrnu'• field &<>als, all in the -
half, covered 37,'35 and 47 yaids. New
YOrk's .onJy other 9COl'e came on a one
yard touchdown plunge by Bill Mathis in-
thtr second quarter. Mathis' TD was set
llp by a pass interfei'erx:e penalty called
against BuffaJo's Booker E d g e r s o n
ag:atns~ Don Maynard in the end zone.
The other costly B~falo penalty was a
man in motion call-tagged against O. J.
Shnpoon, nullllying the former AIJ.
Amerlcan's apparent two yard touchdown
run. ' ·
Soccer-style kicker ·Horst Muh1mann .
booted.an 18 yard fi eld goal wit!) only 2%
seconds left to play as the Cincinriati
Bengail tied the Houston Oilers, 31.-31.
Rookie quarterback Greg Cook threw
four touchdown passes for the · Bengal'!I, thr... of them to tiabt end. B(lb Tnnnpy
for 19, 44· and II yards. Don ·Trul~ the
HO!JB!on quVtttback; countMld by run-nilJIJl>J'. two loochdowns and pwing for
tWo more on pa.uea of S7 and U yard! to
aplil end ·Jhn Beirne.
Tb:e Miami Dolphins, who went ahead
on Larry Ca:>nka11 S4 yard touchdown run
In the 19Uflh quarter, huna: oo for a 17-16
victory over &ston when a two point
cbpversion pass by the Patriots failed
\ViUt just 35 seconds left to play.
The Patriots acored in t~ ftnal min1,1te
on a 15 yard pass from Mike Taliaferro
to·~ul Rademacher but T1llaferro'• toss
to rookie Carl Garrett on the conversion
try missed as the Dolphins posted their
aecond victory. Garrett accounted for
Boston's fU"St touchdown with an ao yard
nm.
Kapp on Target
As .Vik.es -Top
· )JrQwns, 51-3
By United Prn1 lntenatlonal
Joe Kapp threw three touchdown
~s to Gene Washington and Bobby B~ant intercepted th ree passes Sunday
tp' fead .the fl.1.innesota Vikings to their
~eventh straight victory -a 51..3 trounc·
Jng of_ the Cleveland Browns.
Minnesota jumped to a 27-3 halftime
lead arid coasted to the: victory that mov·
ed. thtm (wo garnet in (rqnt of the Na·
lienal Football Le~ue's ctntral division.
. Kapp, who completed II of 24 puses
for 221 yards, hit Washington for !COring
passes of 11, 10 and ooe yards and the
Viking de£ense held Cleveland to just 40
yards and tWo· first dowm in the first
half.
Johnny Unit.as passed for t w o
touchdowns while Tom MaxweJI and Bub-
b"a Smith blocked field goals as the
Battimort Collf be_,t the Green Bay
Pickers 14-6. The loss dropped the
.P.~kers two games behind Mlnnesotl in
the Central Division while Ba1Umore re--n};Jned lbr.ee' games behind Los Angeles
lri lbe Coutal Divilon.
Calvin Hill romped 30 yards for ~ touchdown and set up another with 1 53-
yard run to propel the jittery Dallas
Cowboys to 1 SS-17 victory over the New
Orle1ns Saints.
The' victory gave Dallas a two-game
lead-over Washineton since_ the Redskins ''""re held· to a 28-21 tie by the
Phitadelph.ia Eagles. Philadelphia trailed
28-14 'with 10 minutes left in the game but
ria.IUtd to tie the game oo Norm Snead 's
4ne.ya.rd pJun1e with 55 seconds left after
an 'tnterfertoce call put the ball on the one: -
. Rook!• quamrback Bobby Douglass
Jed lhe Chicago Bears to their flrat vie·
t>ry ol .the ie:UOD, 1 • 7 rout of the.
t )tllburgh Steelers. GaJe Sayera acored
&wo touchd09ns and ran for 109 yards.
Bobby WJJUams' 11-yanl kickoff r<turn
~iimaxed 1n e.rly surge as the Detroit
U<inl -..i lhe nrst three time• Ibey
..... the boll .... theft held .. for • 1741
\1C't.ory over the Atlanta Falcons.
-.
• ' ..
' Monday, Ncwmbtr.10, 1961) DAILV PILOT !9
•
ti!". wly ~. lll· ~· ~ 'l)oy ~.,i , ~ pmo, ~ .... ...., II Yaril•. ,.s a. Alltn oald. "~ wore big delen.<ive plays,•• Allen five plays, rolling rlghl himself for nine PllbCI~. .. . -~ Winilell ~Tllcller-~ .• .l!'odle . ._lete,l IS of U pasaes arid declared. yanlsandatoochdownthalpulthegame _l'be, J\aml ~ 1'fq same b-i¥'1. · tolichdown, w11 a catl planned (a aa. three ·touchdowns. , The ~ma, ndw with eight straight vie· out of San Francisco's reach . · ~1 tq MJb · ~ ... ute · '!Okie from · VIDCt" -.. . • • "My arm st.1.11 l!n't normal, but two tories, built up a 20-9 lead at the half and . . . • / _ .~wbO .... ~ m_t:i;:1he fr!j~ Gf· ·Qq the ~ti touchdown, ·he !'id, •<ft weeks ·~ tor a pulled muscle makes ·a the main drlimatlcs came in an ~Uoo· . ~ loss~kept lhe ~r~ in the C~sUJ_I 'f~~Jee SCUilU. iiiilriNt ~an ~ jfiij or: run bUtrt~ rrqt-or Cli!ference--;"1inil<t:-'"•:1-wuntt oot--pacKea-unal .perloa-ror a near-caplClty,..-.-_DJvasloo-cellar-wllb..:34l.:.S.Lrecord . .-l:A>l --t-1
. io ~. ~¢1t~r1 Jae£ PVdet, 'who . ln U~ bucllpe,that J ~ned'td fun~ _if the' past two weeka becau9e of pa!n but ci-owd of 73J75 ln_Memorlal Coliseum. Angeles !en1a\ned three games. Jn front oJ t~ over calllog Ulf. delWive ligiu.b for · ttMir.e ·wu ~ni.· we.'d get the score, .becau,e I wasn't eC!ective. lt'a ': kit bet-Trailing 34-16, Brodie staged an elec-the Baltimore C'olts. ~ ~ ~ule.. Baughan/ 'aldel!"d by ·The.· blocking ~as· great.'' . , ltt now." 1 • trifying aerial show that produced two
a•M&il in~ ·Ii.st :-eek. 1 Allen CO{llPtimenJed 49er. quarterback Allen polnted to key tnterctpUons by touchdowns and narrowed tbe Ram lead :~~in!"~11:rt1~•
Glbriel ,~-Urie touc~ ~ John Brodie, whc>"returned after, being out Eddie 'Meador and Richie Pettibon, the to 34-30. • ' P•HlnQ Y&rd"ll•
··~ .. -...
and ran ·oine.-)'erd! for anothlr: in 'the two'weeta with a 80l'e arm. ' · . forll)er going for a touchdown and the Gabriel, with about two minutes to ;:~~ Y•rd•11t hich acoring g~e. · · • · · "Brod.le wu ·~· lie makec lhinga Jatter atopplrtg the 4ten after they reach-play, then put on hi! own overhead ~::",:."' '°''
"' ,,
is.n• .. ,
. G~ 'said ~ ~ on •the ftm 'Pl~ of. tough fof every~. not just the Rams," ed the~ 18 in the s:etond quarter. heroics, leading the Rams as yards in V•rdli ~!iJtd • ...
RAM COACH WORKS OUT -George Allen is failhfUI in his daily
physical fitness program and he drives himself as hard as he does bis
players at the team's.practice field. These exercises are a daily routine
for the only coach in professional football with a perfect (8-0)
-in league season competition.
record
P~rdu~ Battles Buckeyes Hot Knicks
Manhandle
LA, 112-102 Hayes Orders Cwsed Workouts for OSU
By AlioClated Prits
Tb.is is the week that was ror Purdue's
foothill team. The once-beaten
Boilermakers travel to Columbus, Ohio,
en·route, they hope, to a New Year's Day
engagement in the Rose Bowl at
Pasadena.
It's the week Purdue has been waiting
for since tht start of the season -
Purdue at Ohio State. And, like the old
gag headline that read, "Stagg Fears
Purdue," you can bet that Woody Hayes
oC ~an):ed Ohio State fears PurdUe.
He has on:lered closed workouts this week
for his Buckeyes. • B«b. teams warmed up.for the task at
hand Saturday. Ohio State made Jt 21
consecutive victories with a 12-7 maullilg
of Wisconsin while loth-ranied Purdue
breezed past Michigan State 41·13.
Despite their 7..0 record, the Buckeyes
have some points to prove. One ls to
answer critics who say they haven't
beaten anyooe o( note.
Ohio SLate'a first seven foes have a
combined U-41·1 record while Purdue and
Michigan, tbe final opponent, are 13·3.
that struck 30, players and manhandled
Baylor 5'-14 for a school record lath con-
secutive triumph. Tennessee, No. 3,
defeated Sooth car.Una 29-H on Bobby
Scott's three touchdown pas5ea and
George Hunt's three field goals. 1be Vols
have their biggest hurdle toward a
perfect season Saturday a g a i n s t
Mississippi.
Quarterback Bill Montgomery cranked
up Arkansas' sputtering offense in these-
cpnd half and the fourth -ranked
Razorbacks whipped Rice 30-ti.
LA VER, EMERSON
BOW IN SPA IN
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -Andres
Cimeno ol Spain and Fred Stolle of Aus-
tralia teamed to win a three-day pro£es.
slonal teNlis tournament Sunday, a.z.
Glmeno beat Rod Laver ofCorona del
Mar, 10-8, 2-', 3-6, 6-4, 6-1, while Stolle
was beaten by Roy Emerson of Newport
Beach, &:2, 6-3 in-the final two slngles
matChes.
Gimeno beat Emerson and Laver
defeated Stolle in the openin& singlea
matches Friday and Gimeoo and Stolle
stopped LaVJ r aod E~rson in the
doubles Saluiday.
Penn State, No. 5, and UCLA. No. 7,
were idle, but si1th-ranked Southern
California downed Washington State U.7
as Clarence "Who's O.J. ?" Davis reeled
off 198 yards all)d passed the 1,000 mark.
Elghth·rated Notre Dame blasted Pitt
49-7 and nin lh·ranked Missouri rallied
from a 10-point deficit and remained tied
for the Big Eight lead by swamping·
Oklahoma 44·10. Terry McMillan passed
for 317 yards and three scores.
Among the second ten, llth·ranked
Auburn blitzed Mississippi state 52·13 and
Louisiana State, No. 1%, held off Alabama
20-15. Allen Shorey scored twice as
Alabama suffered a third regular.season
setback for the first time since 19511.
Florida, No. 13, and Georgia, No. 16.
struggled to a 13·13 tie; Jim Plunkett
passed for 32.3 yard s as 14th·ranked Stan-
ford downed Washingt.On 21-7 and Bob
Cutburth fired three touchdown !?asses to
Hennarin Eber as Oklahoma State stun-
ned Kansas State 28--19 and knocked the
Wild cats from a share of the Big Eight
lead. _
fl.1ississippi, No. 17. took It easy on
Chattanooga 21--0; Ernie Jennings grab-
bed five touc:hdown passes as the Air
Force trounced Utah State 3&-13 and
Nebraska, tied for 20th with Oklahoma.
got by Iowa State 17.J and remained
deadkx:ked with Mis.!IOllri in the Big
Eight.
LOS ANGELE.S (AP) -Two heads
may be better than ooe but the saying
doesn't go for players-when the one
player is superstar Wilt Chamberlain.
The Los Ahgeles Lake.rs and lZ,583 of
'their fans at the Forum found that out
Sunday night as the New York Knicks
rolled to their ninth straight victory and
14th in 15 National Basketball Association
games, 112·10'l.
The 7·foot·I center had been averaging
32 points a game before a knee Injury
Friday night side lined him (or at least
three months.
tlis two replacements, Mel Counts and
rookie Rick Roberson, combined for only
17 points and were unable to keep up with
the Kni cks' rebounding strength.
Los Angeles is Idle today. Tuesday
night lhey· face the visiting Detroit
Piston! for the first lime this season. The
defe:Jt dropped the Lakers. 5·5, inlO
fourth place in the West. Detroit is 5-fi.
Jerry West had 28 for Lo8 Angelea and
Elgin Baylor added 24 but the Lakers,
who trailed by just 49--47 at halftime. were
unable to keep pace with the runaway
New Yorkers in the fin al two periods.
Crampton
Finally Ends
Frustration
HONOLULU (AP) -lt was a 10ng,
tough strugg le for Bruce Crampton, five
years of frustration Lhat came to an cn·J
with his victory in the $15,000 Hawaiia:1
Open Golf Tournament.
.. It's been a long ti me since Fve been
~hire, in the winner's circle." the 34·year·
old Australian said after a four-stlok c
victory over Jack ~Nicklaus for the top
prize Sunday.
"I can't tell you how happy I am.
"It's' been such a long time. I had a
good year. in· 1965, won t h r e e
tournaments. But I have not won since
the passing of my father, very suddenly,
late. that year. ,
"It'! been a long, hard thing to do lo
get things glued back together."
But Crampton. a tour regular siocc
1957, had it all glued together Sunday. He
had come from eight strokes off the pa_ce
to establish a one·stroke lead over
Nicklaus at the end or three rounds
Saturday.
Th~r. he birdied his first two and won It
going away. It really wasn't close. Bruce
had a final 67 , five under par on the 7.020
yard, par 72 Walalae Country Club
course, and finished with a 274 total. ,
Nicklaus closed with a 70 -nevv
really gelling untracked -and finished
set0nd at 278. He was followed by rookie
John Schroeder and Chi Ch.i Rodriguez,
tied at 280, with Jack McGowan and Tom
\Ve iskop£ at ~I.
Crampton, who pushed his earnings for
the year to $118,527, hadn't won an of·
fictal tour event since the 500 Festival in
Indianapolis and has finished second six
times in the last two years.
"l 'm ·so proud and happy I finally won
ln Hawaii ," he said. "I have a lot of fond
memories of Hawaii. My wife and I spent
our honeymoon here. And I was very
close to Makalena " ITed Makalena, a
Hawaiian pro who died in a surfing ac·
cident a couple of years ago.)
Crampton, who now ll ves in Dallas,
birdied the par five opening hole when he
reached the green in two and then pit·
ched to within five feet and canned the
putt on the next hole.
He took his only bogey when he missed
the green on the fifth hole, but got it back
with another bird on the ninth, another
par five that he two-putted.
He chipped to within three feet on the
13th, put it ou t of reach with a 14·fOOt
putt on the next hole and iced It all wlJ.eg
he put a fou r iron shot two leet from the
pin ll.fl the 16th. · ·
F iiia! tCO<H a/Id "-IY t111 H1w1ll1n Ope<i:
ln.1Ct Cr,,mplon, SU.ODO
JKk Hk:lileus, Sl ... JO!)
John Schrolldtt, U ,l!O
Ctil Clll llodrig11111, U,JSQ
Jack McGow..,, i4,112 Tom W1Wtop1, sun
G111>rite Arcl>tr, $3,W
G11 llrewtr, Sl,W &Illy r.-,per, u ,w
Oon 1111!, 13,5.-Jlm Colbert, 12,166
!lobby Mltchtll, U ,166 Grier Jones, $2,166
T•k•1kl II'.-, $2,16' L•rrv Zft..Jl1r, n.tw
Ai, H. Siket, SJ,166
Douo <;allders, s2,l6'
Le• Trivino, st,16' Bob M11rplly, S1,7SO
Ok:li Cr1wtt1rd, Sl,750
Ouolty WYIOl'll, Sl,150
Mhler Bert.er, S1.7SO
'"loWll JOhn!l'I", Sl.416
°"~ S!ocloon. llAU Rod Fun~etll, Sl.IU
V•l'n ~ov;Ji, SIA"Jt. Srtvt Aielcl. Mill LH Elder, Slll
Srevt Spt•y, Siii Tom Shaw, Slll
Herb 1-000Ptr. Siii Al Gllben;it<, Slll
Arnold Palmtt, Slll
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Alao, tbe. Buckeyes would like to think
fhat the Big Ten's best won't go to the
Rose ~I. Since th~'re meu,1ble under .
leape·rillet to return lhls yur, they'd
like' nOlblng betie< than to knock off
w1-er wtU mob.the trip and rtglll ,_
it's Oh» State with ·a $-0 conference
record to 4-1 for Purdue and Mk:hig1n.
With ace quarterback Res Kern resting
a bruited shouJder, second stringer Ron
Maciejowski: took over Saturi:lay and
passtd for 131 1ards and two toiJchdowns
while nmning for 191. Fullback Jim Otis
scored thrte times.
Wounded Wilt Vows He'll Be Bac·k
Purdue set a ·Bia Ten passing record of
40S yards . in trimming Mlcbigan Slale.
Mike Phipps,> tht Boilermakers' star, ac-
coanted for _2512 and took over aisUI pl1Ce
In NCAA career lolal offens< with ~.170
yards.
Michigan, ranked lath, breezed past
winless llllnob 57.0 with Billy Taylor
sca.mperiiig tOr an M-yard touchdown and
71 other yards,
Second-ranked Texas oYucame 1 Yirus
Kings, Montreal
~llide Tonight
An~ 1(1:1': ~tin. the ~-i.:
lhe•poomt start In lhelr brief National
HOl'k•Y League hiatory. And tonight they race the -teain whlch liepn thia·year't
rouch ride. .
.,.. The Montreal Ctnadiens, the defendinl
ltanle)' CUp champions the put lwo
years, invade the Forum. . . '
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los reattached .
Angeles Lakers faee ·the possibility of Asked if he thought Chamberlain would
going the re.t of this National Basketball be back this season,, Or. Kerlan .
Auociatton teSIOll without supentar Wilt answered, "I would say It ls more
Chamberlain although he vow1 11e•u be )lOSSiblUly l!Uln probability," bul added
back. that Chamberlain's detennlnaUon could
ur am 50 paslUve that I'll be back that make it more probB.blllly than possibility.
''Basketball Is tough on this .tendon." 1 proiflfse Laker fan:s-a:nd mr teammates tbe doctor explained. "There h"as tieen
that in 13 weeks, give or take a week, 1'11 aome attrition damage lhr.ough the
be out· on the court again playing and years.,.
helping tbe Lakers win the workl cham-~ ! patellar tendon Is part of the
pionship," said the 7·1 veteran of II mechanism that straightens a knee and
gruelling P!"O cage seasom. helps in jumping.
Chamberlain'• vitw apptartd most OJ>-Chamberl1in has a cast on his right leg
tlmiatlc. On the moll peuimistic side lies from ankle to thigh and is e1pected 'to
a allm chance that at 33 his catter ct'IUld wear it from six to eight weeks while the
be Dabbed kneo helll.
WUt completely ruptured the petellar "As soon as ll Is removed, I'll go to
tendon at the bale or his right knee cap work on getting my leg and body inlo top·
di.iring a Frk!ay night game against the shape," he said . Expecta.Uon!I are that he
Phoenl~ Suna. Surgery lasting an hour wlll le:aYe the hospital and return to hls
and 40 minutes repaired the .damage. homt by mid week.
At 1 ntw"I conference Sunday night, Dr. Or. Kerlan was asked U Chamberlain's
Robert Kerlan, an orthopedic specialist size would make a difference in hi.\
who ti.ls treated__ teoff:.s_()f--injured~puatlon .
11thlel.N, explaiM<I holel were drilled In "Yes," he repl}ed'. "IT l occurred to 1
the bone and the ttndon puUcd up and }ockcy, for Instance, chances of coming
. '
l'iack sooner are better. First, there Is the
total overa ll size and second ly the type of
things he does when he returns.
"We'll have to see how he can .support
his 270 pound's running, jumping aod
stopping."
The injury to Chamberlain was similar
to une suffered by Elgin Baylor or the
Lakers five years ago etcept Wiit's was
below the kneecap and Elgln 's above.
Baylor had said it was eight months
before he could do anything on a basket·
ball court and "it wa!I a couple of years
before I could move freely."
HIW TORI(
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•
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30 DAil Y •llOT •
21-21 TieWithLoaraCalled E X:s~Gr_eat·estiWin
By ROGER CAl\l-WN
• Of ... o.ll'r 1'1191 118"
t)l wa.s the first Ue ln Fountain VaJley
lti&h School's four-year varsity football
-ru.tory-c. • but .. ecstatic 8&rj)B coa<h
Bruce Pickford called it, "the greatesl
vjdory• in our history ."
• 1bo.se were the pN!vailing emotions
Saturday night at Anaheim's La Palma
Stadium aCter underdog Fountain Valley
stormed from heh.ind with a last minute
~oochdown and two-point conversion to tie
Orange County's No. 1 ranked team,
Loara, before a packed house of 9,500.
The deadloc.k ~ps Pickford's oufit In
a tJe for the Irvine League lead with
Saddlehack
Alone in 1st;
Romps, 41-7
By DAVE CEA RLEY
Of tflt o.llJ l'llM Sl•lf
For all practical purposes Saddleback
has the Desert Conference title safely
tucked away as the only unbeaten team
le.ft in the circuit following Mt. San Jaclri-
to!s 7.0 loss to Mira Costa.
The worst the Gauchos might end up Is
as co-champions if they should stumble
at Aft. JAC Nov. 22.
And, for all practical purpow;. Satur-
day night 's game between Saddleback
C411ege and Barstow was over in exactly
ode: minute and 31 seconds.
Barstow took the kickoff, four plays
lajer punted, and Gaucho back Paul Cox
promptly returned the kick to the Viking
30!
Saddleback signal caner Rod Graves
then threw a 30--yard bomb to split end
Rick Day on the first play and the game:·
might just have well ended -even
t hough there were nearly four quarters
left to play.
Day 's touchdown paved the way for
Saddleback's expected thrashing of
J;\arstow, as the Gauchos rolled up a 41-7
count at Mission Viejo High School.
Gauclx> fullback Toby W h i p p 1 e ,
recently recovered from a polled ham-
1>lring, spiced the action for the remain-
der o fthe night as he collected Ito yards
and thret tou chdowns on the ground, and
caught three passes for 69 yards and
another score.
For Barstow il was just one of those
nightmarish nights as it was not only
hombed but also lost the services of its
s~rUng quarterback, Joe Cooper.
, Cooper left the game just before the
h~H. apparently with torn rib cartilage.
•'lbe Vikings tallied their I o n e:
touchdown in the first period when
hallback Gary Evans took a swing pass rrom hls own 44 and raced down the
iklelines for the score.
After that one moment or glory,
Barstow was smothered by the Gaucho
defense. The Vikings failed to even make
a first down in the second hall until only
eigtlt minutes remained in the game.
While Batstow was checked , Whipple,
graves and company were tearing up the
f1~Jd. Further Gaucho scoring went like
(hjs,
~Whipple tallied the second touchdown
llt'lhe first when he dashed 48 yardB. The
fiC'Ol"e was set up when Cooper fumbled
and Saddleback Dave Burk ho Ider
recovered on lhe 48. On the next day
Whipple was gooe.
-Whipple capped a 24-yard drive by
taking a 16·yard toss from Graves in the
:,;econd quarter.
-Whipple again scored from six yards
out in the third. one play afler Steve
Smith intercepted a Cooper pass and
returned it 67 yard s.
-The ever-present Whipple closed his
isolo performance as he crashed over left
guard 13 yards for the score . The
touchdown was set up when Rusty Seed·
borg intercepted another Cooper pass and
returned it 23 yards to the Gaucho 43.
Graves then followed with passes to Gary
Rossman and ~1arc Hardy, bringing the
ball to the 13.
-Gra.yes finlshed the job for the
• ~aucbos as he sneaked over from the
three, capping a 90·yard drive in 12 plays.
Gaucho head coach George Hartman
'fia\d, "I expected our defense to be down
for lhit one aft.er our game last week
with lt11ra Costa. They were Oat in the
~'first half, but really came on strong in
1hi! late stages."
.. • ,,,.,. .,_, rvthint " • ,iFI"' -• ~11lno " • Fl,,I d-n1 1>tn•lllt1 ' ' Tofil 11"1 "°"""' ,, " Vtrdl nnfll1>11 "' "' .,.,,..,, ••u1"" ~' , .
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Loara and the Barons need only lo defeat
Edi.Jon High Friday to clinch a share of
the Irvlne League championship.
Odds predict that Loara will also win
.its finale.ovtt-Magnolia.
It was an incredible series of even ts In
the wanlng moments of the Saturday
clash that gave the Barons their precious
lie against a team few Clgured they had a
prayer of coming close to.
Loara seemed to have it all. The Sax-
ons had won their last 20 games in a row,
were ranked fourth in the ClF poll, were
the 1968 AAA CIF Champions and had
ne\ltl' lost or tied an Irvine League game
in five years of romping and stomping
everything ln sight. Tt'!J he.rel hat Power: 'g® IOOse over the had their finest momenf ln· lour years or
But ii happened, and here's how the middle and took Svoboda1s pass for a J~ football.
Barons did it after Loara had led 21·13 yard gain that gained a first tlov.·n,by less The F9t!fitain Valley delensive ere~. ·
with 2: 10 remaining in the game: than a foot. wl:licl1 boasted four straight shutootl 1n
-O~ve-Elktn's irunt on -Now-the; BatOPB were.....in a go.aJ,to-g.Q_____]eague play beiore ~a.~P.!!l_ed a
his own 18 and raced 30 yards to the sltuaUon on the etght and after a four· tremendous game.
Fountain VaUey 48. yard penalty and two nothing runs at the Five interceptions killed the Saxons'
After one incomplete pass, quarterback middle, il was third down with 33 seconds passing game.
John Svoboda caught Rick Power open left. F'our or those came in the second
in the Loara secondary and the speedy Then Svoboda did it again. He fi red quarter when Loara came at the Barons
halfback sped to lhe Loara 18. over the middle to Hansen in the end with both barrels in an attempt to snap a
Svoboda was thrown for a IO-yard loss, zone to narrow UM;! margin to 21·19. 7.7 tie.
then completed a five.yard aerial to Reed With 26 seconds left. Svoboda dropped Shaw stole two, Rick Martin one and
Hansen. A_nother incomplete a n d back, hesitated, then threw to the corner Bill Kristinat another to slave off lhe
Pickford's crew was laced with a fourth-where Brady Moore gobbled it in for the Saxons. ,
and· IS on lhe 23 with I :25 to go. vital two-point conversion and lhe Barons The final theft ca.me on Loara's last of·
!en1ive M oCUielllSI>• by,ruc1t-Pow<r.
Fountain Valley's flrtt 9COft camt in
the second period when Sv-a (who
turned in bjs belt.....-performance with
IS fm-11-elf.,t and-1~7-yarU&)_pwed.ll _
yards to Hanitn.
Tom Malone kicked the PAT with 11 :21
to go in the half.
Fountain VaJley score4 agjlin in the
third period on Svoboda 's second or three
TD ~sses when be nailed Gary Valbuena
with a 15-yarder with I :52 to go.
A try for two points failed and the
Barons trailed 14-13.
31-23 Loss
RuirtsOCC
Title Hopes
By JOEL SCHWARZ
01 .... OallJ Plltt STiit
They laid Orange Coast College's
championship hopes for 1969 to rest
Saturday night.
Unddeated San Dl~go Mesa, .wh.icb Is
-now-ro1ttn-g-a1onri;owari:l-a Nov-. 22
showdown wit.b Fullerton, breezed by the
Pirates, 31-2.1, at Orange Coast.
MAN OF THE HOUR -Fountaln Valley High's John Swoboda (14 )
carries for a key gain in the Barons' 21-21 tie with Loara Saturday
night at La Palma Stadium. Closing in on him are Paul Chadband (88)
Says Pickford
Games Like That Make
Coaching Worthwhile
By ROGER CARLSON
Of Ille 0 1111 Plltl Sti ll
.. Jt's not often you find a coach or a
team that is particularly satisfied with a
tie football game .
But such is not the case with coach
Bruce Pickford and his Fountain Valley
Barons.
The underdog Baron contingent fought
back with a last minute touchdown and
two-poi nt conversion to lie Loara 1-ligh
UCSB Tops Irvine
In Polo Tourney,
Title Showdo,vn
UC Santa Barbara did it again to the
UC Irvine water polo team, this time
knocking off coach Ed Newland"s
Anteaters. 4-2, In the finals of the West
Coast championships tou rnament at
UCSB Saturday afternoon.
Earlier in the year UCI bo\\'ed to the
~Gauchos in the All-Universit y o t
California tourney finals.
t:CI never Jed, allhough ll was 1-1 at
the quarter .
Pi1ike Martin and Jim Bradburn got the
Ant eaters' only goals.
f.tartin made the first team all·tourna·
ment selections while mates Steve
FanTier, Dale Hahn and Ron Donaldson
were placed on the second un it.
Earlier in the day Newland's group
splattered University of Pacific, 8·1. wilh
J itl"! ~1cDonatd and Stev e Ballback each
se-0ring twice. Hahn, J im Bradburn . Bob
McClellan aod FalJlJer had_ one apiec~.
Friday UC I pounded Claremont. 7-0,
with Bradburn nailing four goals. And it
ripped Cal Poly of Pomona. 11·1, with
fl.iartin and Bradburn poppln1 in three
f!iCh.
The Anteaters close out their season
!his week, ho.sling Fullerton JC wcd-
ncsday (3:30) and San Diego State Satu r·
day.
UCI is 16·7 !or the caf!lpaign .
Saturday night. 21·21. and thus set itself
in a position to clinch no worse than a tie
for the Irvine League championship Fr i-
day when it plays Edison at Huntington
Beach.
It was obvious that Fountain Valley
hadn't gone looking for a tie.
Trailing 14-13 in the third period the
Barons went for broke with a two-point
try but failed.
Then, in the waning seconds or the
crucial , quarterback John Svoboda fi rst
connec ted on a four-yard TD pass and
followed ii \\'ith a strike lo Brady ~1oore
I::ir the vital two points.
"\Ye weren't looking for a tie when we
went there but in this case we're pretty
happy with it. Loara isn't any ordianary
team.'' Pickford says.
"It's finishes like that that kerp a guy
In coaching. When your team does such
an outstanding job it makes it all
worthwhile.
··Tue thing that is really stimulati ng ill
that we came back once, then came back
again and nearly blew it with a missed
tw<>-polnt attem pt. Then we came back
again." he said.
Piekford credited Svoboda"s tremen·
dous passing game to his offensive bloc k-
ers \vho provided the necessary time to
.sci up and throw.
Offensive linemen due a major share or
the credit were Bob Champion, Steve
Raupp, Bill Kristina!. Bob Walker,
George Valbuena, Kip Morris and J im
Hostetler.
Coach Herb Hill of Loara commented
afterwards that he thought Fountain
Valley was the best team his club had
met this yea r and that on Saturday night,
the Barons were probably as good as
anyone his teams had ever played in the
Irvine circuit.
Hill, a gracious customer in an y situa-
tion. said. "FounLain Valley played a fine
game. They were well prepared and thei r
quarterba ck had a great night.
"You can·t stop an opponent too tf·
feclivel y when its quarterback is throw-
ing BBs at you all night," he said.
Pickford credited the remarkable effort
or his defensive secondary to assistant
coach Ken Duddridgc .
"All the hard work has pa id off. He h11d
his secondary in the right place at the
r1~hl lime all night," summed up
Pickford.
f ountain Valley pic ked off fi ve Saxo n
passes to st)•mlc the Loara aerial ga me.
and Ken McGuire (67 ). Svoboda threw three touchdown passes en
route to a 13 for 22 performance to keep the Ba rons in contention for
the Irvine League championship. •
BARON BREAKAWAY -l'ouo.a in Valley's Brody Moore (40) chalks
up a 2l·yard gaine:r in first quarter to get the invaders off ~n~ run~
ning alter Loara had opened up \\'it h a 70-yard 1narc h for the first
touchdO\\'ll . F'ounla'rt 'f nllcy C'ICSC'!-i nut Its r eg ular season Friday
night again st Edh1on al }luntington Beach J·Ii gh and a "''in \viii clinch
no \~·ors 11 h a n a lie for !hr Ir\ inc League cha1npionship.
' .
It was a hard loss for coach Dick
Tuck:?r to swallow because Mesa didn 't
overpo'A'et his team. Rather, Orange
Coast lost on its own nUst,ites in a
nightmarish third quarter.
In one stretch of less than six minutes
the Pirates had two passes intercepted
and a punt blocked to set up three Mesa
toucbdownS which enabled tile Olympians
to change a 16-10 deficit into 28-16 ad-
vantage.
It was a slrange turn of events because
Orange C.Oast had all the breaks going for
it in the first halt -a fumbled punt, a
bad snap on a second punt and n
deflected pass that went for a touchdown.
Even with those kinds of breaks th@
Pirates only had a six-point lead at the
half. That ·was largely due to the fact
that Orange Coast twice failed to get key
first downs deep in Mesa territory on
fourth-and-one plays at the 15 and 21-yard
lines.
"Our inability to make the crucial first
downs in the first half rt ally hurt us,"
said a dejected Tucker in quiet Orange
Coast dressing room alter the game.
"We had a lot of breaks, but couldn't
break it open."
Tucker said much of Mesa's credit for
the victory belongs ,to freshman quarter·
b•ck Anthony Ottombrino.
"He·s really something. He throws a
beautiful soft pass that just noats out
there. They scored one touchdown when
he was falling dawn and their rece iver
also was falling."
Orange Coast broke to an early 9.0 lead
when Ottombrino ran out of the end zone
for a safety after a snap went over h.is
head.
Less than two minules later the Pirate5
recovered a fumbled punt at lhe Mesa 12
and Mike Tamiyasu covered seven yards
on a rollout for the touchdown. Bob
Ryder con verted.
~1esa came back in the second period
on the first of three Ottombrino
touchdown passes, this one for I yards
to Pat Quick. Steve Johnson converted.
\Vith 4:20 left in the half, Tamiyasu
tired to hit Robert CastiUo with a pass,
but the ball bounced.out of his hands. Ed
\Vashko, caught the deflected ball at the
JO and raced in with a 37-yard score.
Ry,der 's kick made it 16-7. Mesa beat lhe
clock on a 23-yard Johnson field goal.
Meso 's third period explosien began
'vith 11 minutes left when Steve Lebher:i;
intercepted at the Bue 22.
Three plays later Ottombrino unloaded
11 13-yard toss to David McDaniel to lie
the score. The conversion was no good .
Again a Tamiyasu pass was In-
tercepted , this time by Oscar Allen, \Yho
picked it off at the Orange Coast 42 and
returned it for lhe go-ahead score .
On the next series Orange Coast wa~
forced to punt and Art Hoskins blocked
George Barnett's boot at the 27.
Otlombrino covered lhe distance: with a
27-yard pass to Everett Langley.
"
Orange Coast stopped another ~fesa
(See OCX, Pq:e 31)
Fountain Valley
Statistics
Flral r1ewni ru•hifl'I
F lrll downs Pll•lr><J
F inl daw'" per11tnu
l alll llrtl oawn1
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•
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Um SPten\IOIO " '" • " Htlmt • • • ... 111-1111 " " I .. . ..,... ' " I u ''"""'' ' z ' ••• Tor111 0 •• ' "' PASllHO "11111111~ Yllltt PA PC: ,.Ml YO ••• SYoboal " " I '" •• I '"~ lt11ldlcr " ' ' H .... I
END_ O~ '!H.E LINE -Orange Coasl College's Tony
Ventimiglia is hauled down after a short gain Satur-
day night against San Diego Mesa. Mesa stunned
the Pirates with their second straight South Coast
Conference l~ss, 31-23, and remains the only unde-
feated team 1n the circuit.
Magnolia Victorious
Mustangs' Tough Year
Getting Tougher, 31-7
By STEVE ANDREWS
Of Ill• IJ.l!IY Pllol 51111
\Vhe n a sideline observer came up Lo
Costa l\lesa football coach f\.1ax Miller
after the r.-tustangs' 31-7 loss to Magnolia
. Saturday night in an Irvine League tussle
at Newport Harbor and said, "11's been a
tough yea r Max," he had to have made
the understatement of the year as far as
Costa Mesa fans arc concerned.
l\iil\er ~s watched 14 members of his
forces sent to the sideline for the season
at one time or another 11·tlh various in-
juries.
Saturday evening v.•as no different as
John r.1anix. Gary Coburn. Chauncey
Bayes and quile possibly Robin Senik
1vere lost fort.he final game remaining on
the schedule •.
\Vhcn asked If anyone else might be
hurl, Miller just sighed, "I don 'l know,
I've just lost count."
However, 1.1illcr will have ,a year to
relax: afler Friday night with his ,
l\1ustangs facing Santa Ana Valley's
Falcons al Santa Ana Bowl.
The loss of Manix and Senik were un-
timely bl ows in the game Saturday.
l\1anix had turned In a fine first half at
tailback. He had been a question mark
during the week alter suffering a pinched
nerve. bul reeled off 53 yards in 12 first
RUSTLERS SW AMP
LACC RUNNERS
Golden West College s w a m p e d
Soothwesl Los Angeles City College in a
Southern California Conference cross
country meet Friday on the Rustler
course. Ja-50.
Even without lhe services of No. t man
.:Terry McKeow.n, th! Rustlers swceJ. the
first five places.
Vic Martinez recorded his all·time best
fn winning the race Jn 22:34. S~ was
Doug Schmenk in 2.1:31. Following them
:icr06S the Une were teammates Steve
Beymt (23:3.1), Craig Smith. (23:51) and
Marcel Poctothena {24 :38).
Golden West's next meet i~ the con·
fcrence meet Friday at Cal State (Long
Beach).
half carries before retiring for the night
with the same injury. ·
Senik called signals the second 11alf.
replacing starter Bill Adelson and got the
Mustang offense moving. He engineered
Costa Mesa's Cirst second half drive from
the Mustang 42 to the Magnolia 16 but
was decked on a pass he completed and
may have suffered a pinched nerve also.
Costa Mesa came out like gangbusters
against the Sentinels, taking the opening
kickoff and marching lo the Magnolia 18·
yard line in 15 plays. Manix and Jerry
Reilly carried the load, alternating on
each running play.
Ho\\o·ever, a m1ssed field goal attempt
rrom the 35 by Benito Ricardo halted the
drive.
Linebacker Dick Ferryman then turned
in two key plays.
The first came on a pass interception.
but the Mustangs ran out of downs, and
then he recovered a loose ball on the Sen-
tinel 17 to set up the game's first score.
W•th 1 :20 remaining in the first quarter
Reilly plunged in rrom the one to give the
1'-1ustangs the lead, 7--0.
GAME STATISTICS
First doWnt Ntfll"'
Flrll dllwn9 PIUI"'
First dowM -Hies
TOl81 fl.SI dcWM
Yards r11Jh!ns
Verd• 1>nsl"9
V1rcls Int
,. • • ' " ·~ " " •• Net Y1ros ••!Md
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Smit~ ' ' • '·' G1rt1 ' ' • ...
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OCC TITLE ...
IConUnued from Page 30)
threat at the one on an inlerception by
r.eo:ge Berg and then traveled 90 yards
for its final score which came on a four-
yard run by Tony Ventimiglia.
Orange Coast was in the game unlil the
final 4:28 when Hoskins blocked another
punt to set up a 22--yard field goal by
Johnson.
Git.Ml' STATISTICS
Finl down1 rui~lng "' ' Finl clowns P111ln1 • First clown• P1111tlle1 • TO!•I llru -· " V•rcl• •11llol ... •• ....... " l>IUint '" V•ra1 ... d ... YlrG• "Intel "' Punts/Avtrlte dllt•nc~ ,,1 •. f
P-lll•1/V1rds P1111fl1toG ,,,
F11mblu/Fumbles 11:>$! "'
'''" ~' Qu•rltrs 51n Dlt'IO '-\two o 10 11
O••"'lle Coe1t t 1 o
"ASSINCi ....
"'" ' " • " "' '" " '" 1/11 '
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1-1J
ouorntirlno •lfCfhiY•KI
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Or1n11 COii!
21 U I In .HIO
llUSHIMCi ·-"' .. " SIWYf' " .. " 8on111ll • " • OtlvmbrJnv , " " --, " ' Mlr!l1 ' " • Tt1m• ' • " Tol~l1 " "' " ·11111 1n1p on Plln!
Or.,,tt CNll
T1mlv1111 " • " MtY•• " " ' H1yn11 " .. ' Vtntlml1ll1 • " ' Totel1 • '" ..
Area Sports
Calendar
...
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Monday, Nowrnbfr 10, l961J DAILY PILOT 31
SA Valley
Corona del
St~ggers
Mar, 14-6
By RON EVANS
Of tllt PlllY "llet Stiff
Saturday afternoon it was supposed tG
rain and the :orona del Mar football
squad was su~ed lo romp over the
winless Santa Ana Valley Falcons, come
rain or shine.
It didn 't rain arxt the Sea Kings un-
believably lost to the inspired Falcons,
14-6.
VaUey had only managed an early
season tie with El Modena and then had
been clobbered by five" successive Irvine
League foes. ln their league contests, the
Falcons had allowed 182 points while
scoring only 3·t
The Sea Kings, entrenched in third spot
in the loop with a 3-2 mark, were coming
off a 35-14 Joas to power£ul Loara. Still
they looked like almost certain winners.
The non-believing Valley team pro-
ceeded tG mire the Sea Kings on the
mush of S<inta Ana Stadium.
Falcon hal!back . Ph.ii Bland took a
, pitchout and romped £our yards for the
·'crushing blow. A pass from Rudy Munoz
to Craig Johnson on the conversion gave
tpe Falcons a 14-6 halftime lead. ·
Corona had opened the scoring early in
lhe second period when Keith Samuels
dove over from the one to cap a 64-yard
drive. .
The Sea Kings elected to try for two on
the conversion, and Samuel! passed to
Jeff Goelitz in the end' zone; however, a
five yard Illegal shift penally brought the
ball back out to the eight.
Samueb then launched another pass ror
Goelib, but it was wide of its mark.
¥alley tied the count at six apiece when
Bland took another pit.chout and raced 14
yards for a TD. Halfback Keith Den.wn
dropped the ensuing conversion pass
from Munoz.
The . flm half proved to be disastrou3
for Corona as it picked up Qnly 77 yards
as against 165 for Valle:Y. But, if the first
half was disasterous, the second half was
a series of minor tragemes •.
The Sea Kings took the opening kicko£f
and marc.hed to ,a first and goal at the
Falcon three. Three plays later they .were
at t.he five and on fourth down Samuels
passed unsua:tssfuJly into 'the end zone.
Four plays later, the Sea Kings had the
ball· back al their 4a. An U·yard keep by
Samuels· and two cilrries"· by fullback
Steve Judith put it at the 28.
Then the Valley defense began to get to
Samuels. The shifty quarterback was
caught for a km of two on thlrd down,
and on fourth down tackle Ron Cheney
dropped him at the 41.
The coup de grace came with 37
seconds left In the game when a Samuels
to Al Saia pass put the ball at the Falcon
19. Samuels then launched a bomb to split
f:nd Dave Krohn who made the reception
just beyond the end zonefs endllne. TWo
incomplete passes later, the game wb
over.
Corona head coach Dave Holla.IJ4
heaped praise on the Valley squad
saying, "They were fired up and played
inspired ball. They just dkl a bellut1a
job." "
GAME ITATISTICS "" ...
Plftl downs r11:1hlf111 • ' ' Flrlt Oown~ 11111ing • t' Finl dellfnt IM!Mltlu • TOlll flrtl clOWfl$ " • Ylnll nrlllifl!I '" '" V••~ PCllSll'lll u ..
V•nll lost " ' Ntl y1..i1 09IMCI ~· •M
""""'A.,...,. cll•l•nc:• ''"·' ''17.t
P-llln/Vlrdl _.llltd ,,. "6 Fumblel/Fu,.,.i. 1ttr .. ,,.
•VSHIHO . -
(wtlMI iMI Mar
T<• YO .. ....
J11cH!tl " u ' '·' ... I " • H
Sl<n1MI$ .. u " ·I.,
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TMITl11 • " ' s.a~
Nltno ' '· • 7.\'1 1$
Tot1l1 •• '" .. ...
l1nll Alli Vl llt'f
G1rcl1 • " • ...
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"ASSING C-.. IM1r ,,d: .. " '"' ,.
51~!1 " • I u ...
ll"fl AMI V•lltY
N,111101 " • • " ,.,
BOMBS AWAY-Sarrta Ana Valley's Bob DeFranco
(34} flies through the air to put the finishing touches.
on Corona del Mar High's Rick Petros (34) after a
OAILV l"ILOT Pllll9 '" f'•I O'DtllMll •
short gain. Other Valley players are Dale Garcia · ·
(26) and Allen Hardin (75). Santa Ana Valley put
the finishing touch on the Sea Kings, 14-6. ~·
Sports In Brief . .,
"
Owens Reinstates 3;
Traditional
Rivals Collide ··· ,•
" In Grid Finales 969 See Stars Game '"
Tl's the final regular weekend or p~eJl
SEATTLE -Washington coach Jim
Owens has reinstated three or the four
black players he suspended from the
Huskie football team Oct. 30.
Harvey Blanks, touted as bigname star
prior to being injured in the Huskies'
spring training, will remain suspended,
Owens said Sunday .
"I hat1e decided to terminate the
suspensions or Greg Alex, Ralph Bayard
and Lamar Mills," Owens said.
"I have delermined lo suspend Harvey
Blanks pennanently. Membership on any
athletic squad depends on IT\any things
which contribute to the ultimhle success
of a program,'' the Husky coach said.
Lawyer Gary Gayton said he will in-
itiate a suit against the university "in
Several"'days''"if BlanU is-not reinstated.
• The Los Angeles Stars strengthened
their grip on the Western Division lead In
the American Basketball Association
Sunday night as they handed the Miami
Floridians a 126-115 defeat behind the hot
shooting of Wayne Hightower before 967
fans at the Sports Arena.
• COLLEGE STATION, T~•· -New
Zealander Bruce McLaren won hi! se-
cond Canadian-American Challenge Cup
road racing championship in three years
Sunday by driving to an easy victory in
the final race of the season at the new
TcxasJntcroaUonal SpcedwaY..
"1cLarcn, 33, picked up about '15,000
•
football coming up and that mean's tr~l-
for his first place fini sh, then later col-tional rivals facing each other. .
lected $50f000 from a championship point ll also means Fountain Valle)':s
rund established by the Johnson Wax Co., surprising Barons will be facing liuo-
sponsor or the $1 million series for sports· tington Beach School District ri Vat
racing cars. F..disoo High in their first-ever meeting
A crowd of 24,240 watched the first and a win for the form er is mandatory i£
race held at the new $6 million speedway the Baroiii3re to adt1ance into the CJf
in South Central Texas. AAAA playoffs as co-champions of the
McLaren, the 1967 title holder, led the Irvine League. '
last 24 of the 70 laps over the 3-mile, 11-They'll meet at Hunlington Beach F·r1.
turn course after teammate and fellow day night. .
New Zealander Dennis Hulme had to quit The game everyone thought was going a'" Can-Am race for the first time ·this to be a title decider al Hunti'ngton Be{cti
season. Hulme's McLaren Chevrolet suf-iS Sa turday night, but the two teams -in
fered ~anical trouble. question failed to c.<ome up with the right
McLaren's average speed for th e 210-set of scores last week and the Sunset
mile distance was 109.845 miles per hour. League title-bowl has become the
But he really wasn't pushed after Hulme nothing-bowl.
and two other top-contenders, New Uunt!~gton Beach and Newport Har~r
Zealander Chris Amon and U.S. driving felt the stfilg of upset last week in S~
champion Mario Andretti had to quit. action and now trail league-leading
Andretti, whG had qualified his Ford· Anaheim by a fuU game .
powered McLaren in second position on Anaheim meets Western Hlgh Fri(lay
the starting grid, led the flrsl. four lap!! night at La Palma Stadium and is "
but left the race after 10 laps when. his heavy favorite to win, thus capturing the
engine failed. ' league crown.
Amon. driving the only F_errari in _the_ . It appears to~ the end of the road for
field. also wa3 forced out of the same lap "Miter Dei Thutsday night wberf 0.
by engine trouble. Amon had been a Monarths: Ught1or a third place Ue with
doubtful starter after his car suffered Servile, playing host to St. Anthony at
mechanical problems in practice Satur-Santa Ana Bowl.
day. other games involving Orange Coalt
Canadian department store heir George area teams on tbe final Frtday of tbt
Eaton, at 21 the youngest driver In the campaign are Estancia and Corona :i:ltt
field, drove an independently sponsored Mar at Newpor\ Harbor, San Clemente It
McLaren.chtvro1el to aecond plae<, hl• Mlsalon Viejo, El Modena al Ll3UM
besf finish Of the seaeon. Beach and Marina at Westminster. "....!_ "'
•
~ a a a
•Tar Poloists
Bow; ·1-6;
Eagles Roll
Estancia ·got ready (or its
\Vednesday battle a g a i n s t
..J.n:iM League lea!kr Corona
del Mar with a 9-3 non-Teag\Te
win over Rancho Alamitos in
water polo action Fri"aay at
the Eagle pool.
On the other hand, Newport
Harbor lost ils first Sunset
League game, a 1-' defeat in
double overtime to Anaheim
at Newport Saturday. The
Tars must now beat llun·
lington Beach, which shares
first place with them, Wednes-
day.
Eslancia jumped off lo a 4-2
first quarter lead and never
!railed. The Eagles upped
their margin to S-3 at halftime
and held Rancho Alamitos
scoreless in the second half.
Dan Hefiera.n and Steve
\Vebster each tallied twice in
the firSt quarter to give the
Eagles the lead.
Hefferan lead the scoring
list with three goals. Webster
and Dan Zanetla scored twice
LU a 2 22 22 : a a a;
M-. N-ID, 1969
!JA~~~
KEEP HANDS UNIFIED AT TDP Of SWING
. Much has been said about fitm/y grasping the
club during the 1011 swing.. especially at the peak
of the backswing. .
I'd like to add here tttat it is also important that
the hands remain unified. . ·
_In illustration #1, we see the pulling apar\ of the
hands thilt so frequentb' occurs in the swings of
average or high handicap J>'ayers. This dis-union of
the •hands is a direct cause of many half.hearted
·shots.
If you keep yoar hands together, with 1your left
thumb fi""" entrenched in yot1rrightpal!I' (~lustra
tion #2), you ·ttllt may find your Jhots, esPecialty
. the. irons, taking off with a great deal more zesl·
and Randy Blatterman hit the ~---~~---------~·~·~•'-""~~·-'~"~'~-=~.,.= nets once.
Steve Lashbrook of Anaheim
put a .shot past the Newport
goalie with IS seconds left in
the sec<ind overtime period to
gi ve Anaheim its win.
The two clubs were lied at 6-
all at the end of rcgulat.ion
play and failed lo score in the
firsl overtime.
Newport ,went ahead in the
fourth quarter 6-5 on a shot by
.Jeff Wilco:r and appeared to
have Uie game well in hand.
But officials called the Tars
for stalling and gave the ball
to the Colonists. From there
Anaheim tied it up with a
penalty throw with, again, IS
seconds on lhe clock to send
the game into eitra sessions.
~
SAFE CC
INSURANCE
for specieil
GOOD STUDENT
DISCOUNTS on
your Family
Auto Insurance
Football Standings
DfSEllT CO,,..l!l.IENCE
W L •PP PA
S..W•-ct • o 1.50 21
Mt. S•n Jacinto • 1 JM N
Mir• Celt1 l l fO l5
1-114 V1 llev l J 111 l\0
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l,,_111 V1llrf 11 Slddleti.ct
SOUTH COAST CONfEl.l:MC•
Stn Ditto MeM
Fulle<"lon 0r ..... Cotst
Cerritos
Mt. SAC
J111 Dlfto Cl!Y
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w ' ' ' ' ' SIYlnl\I
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llu..,1 Ptrll 11 LI Hlbl'"I
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G.t.illOEN GlllOVI LEAGUE
lt1nd• Al1m!to1 G1rden Grov1
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2 0 2 a a a a
Pro Grid
Start dings
"" lASYl!lllM COMl'"lllBM•
CWlllltY OIYltloit
a
\
Newport, Estnnciii, arina, Pro Cage
Standings Mat.er Dei Post Triumphs .. --• L Pct, 09
~~w l T flH, fflOfl NfwVCl'lf
c1to1111fljf s ' 1 .11• 111 '°' Newport Harbor, f.lhnd•. norm. N:.!had four men was aeeond tn 10:50 wUh Terry .. ".!!M• 1•1 .m -• • .m $\\
s1. Lau11 s ~ , ·°' 1111 200 "'--'--_ .................. Del ~ --•·-10 • • H u --o•-11 11 .,,...., N-York l J I .JtS JI' 111 ~l.IWI --~ _.,.. .._-. alUl, ll:V"I, ~.I\: ...,.., : • l'l!lledtllltll•
lj.J31 j
, ' Al ' S LM 1 l'lttsbllr'11 . 1 7 I .lU IC m CfOl:I cowar, w:ma over tbe Olria: BeotJey ... firat In JUck .. Neal, 11! lJ and Nark °""""'
C•l191 Oh111e11 weekend. 1•51 and wu followed bv Reidy, 11:17 followin&. , __ s ....
a 1 .-11'1 0.1111 1 I I .11S 1'11 17' • · I ...J.-ur-... -... 1 "C"O..IL--al! WHlillfleton 1 1 t .661 111 111 -Newport druhbed-Wettenl,-Crata-Clark.1:541-.----'--J ~,...._--~All·lk---"--
flhllldei,t\ii J • 1 _.,. 1u m 15-50, and Marina af&ed Jfun.. · Ot6tr Tan tnlliq In order ped iq ahead of Estancia's • ....,.. DiVt.H
N:w ~~~;~ .. " ~0~,.~11·~'!c!n 211 tington Beach, MJA . 301Ai, tn were Dave Jaffe, 9:56, Rick aeventh man. Jack Moore for :,~~:•MIKI -: ! ;!: 1
w .. ._ DIYlllM Sunlet Leque don while Fleming, 1:51, John HolcOmb, sevenJ)lplaee, 11:37to 11:38. e111c1... ' s .SIS ,,~ ~~~~. ~ ~ : ::~: :: ,~ Estancialhewaa downing~ 10:05, John Fletcher, 10:05 and Other Chargers were. John ~.!!7:" ~ : :: ;....
Dttrort s , • ..w 151 111 JS.41, in ·Iooe Irvine ineel Sid Common, 10:07. Mc:Clure, 11 :46., Mike AJvarez, Se.1t1r. J • .m w.
c111cteo 1 1 • .ni"' 15• Mat.erDeitook:St.Paulbya Dennis Green«. Estancia 11:48, Eric Farris, 11 :~1. Dod s...oi... 1 ' •1•' c .. ,t•I Olvttl• ' n ... •... II 56 d Mik t ... A""1" • o 1 1..,,. :m ,,. perfect ICOl'eo 1$.$0, as the miDed the Eqle course OC\Cman, : , an e .. _..._
Clncllllll" UO, 811""'"' 121
Mllw..... 100. Offtoll tf
S.•l!lit us. "'1"*""11 111
Allll"lll IN, $.,i FrltKIKO ,.,
Clllclgal 10:1. llOltDll 11
~~~r.:nc11e1 l } ,: .f: .i: l~ S~= U::,, ~tw!i f::l %:~ 1:e =:: ~~anM~~"wn took first
sulld••'• 1..wn1 the top seven pla:ea in the win Ediaoo. Green'• tlme of 10:41 place in thie duel • between
Detroit 21, A1i.n11 21 over ..,..1 .... Wes&em. wu abcrt Of Fountain Valley· •1 Marina and HuoUngton Beach
M!nM'IOl1 St, Clewl•nd J ,_.... ViiJdn turf a.1t1..-.cn ,., GrtM , • .., • 'n.e cau.ne wa cul by tome Tim Funk.'1 mark. on the g .
Dell•• n. ,._ Orlffros 11 80 yank becaU1e fl the ra.lns. 1be Eqles Clptured the top Mt'Quown'1limeof10:09 pul lttrlrr«9 Ut. MllWlull" 10S
....... .... 11 .....
~u~/:.:· ,:,~.':!,~ ,. so timea wue just a 'little oU m places. Steve Scbureman him ahead of runner-up Dave Pi.nir llO. OtffWlt 18
Clllueo .. Pltbbu!"911 7 Lockman of Marina who was NIW Yon: 1\2, L .. "'*"' 1•
LM Antlltt 41. $1" Frl<Klsa )II 'med • IQ 2Z T ... _._ ._ S•.UY'1 Sd1Mltl1 ti m ; · • •
l•lllmar• 11 Son Fr1nclKO c n G "d s Tr. i Ii n-g were, Dave s.n Oillo .... "" Fr1ncllai It Siii ~:~':'nc1t',,"1~;.1:bu.... 0 ege rt cores Henderson (fd), 10:35, Stan L~~~ YI. Atl•n•• •I .f.lllM"ll. IJ•.
0.1111 11 w11111neton Davenport (HB), 10:38, Bob
l.o1 A""* '' Phlllde••M• Ph.Iii (M) 10 43 D na ,_....,. • ._ MlnM'S(ll1 vs Grw11 .•• .,., I t Mil· l ps • : ' a $e11!1t II Clllc•• w•uk" use,._~-:;:..,.~,~', Ok.llllllnW $1•'9 & ~-• Sttl• It Babin (HB) and Bob Brickner DeITTlll 11 Lot A11911er
N-O<IQ"• •I N-Y"arll 0.-II. H. c..tlflltl'lle I SOUTMWIST (M), 10:46, Chris York (M), Ntw Yortl •I Siii Frlrl(lllQ
SI. lAuili 11 Oetr"dll AtTnW' u, °'-17 A,._ ».. ttic. ' (ffB) PlllltdtiPltlt 11 ...n.irt. S11nton1 71, w..,...... 1 T-S4 ......, ., 10:48, Jctin Mullins . MllWtuUt tt ......
UC SaMt ..,._. a,, C.I 51111 ,_, MM Jt. WU M 'p;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;•;;;;----i;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
New York
Haulhlll
Ml1ml
e urt111 ... ~
'" Et•""' Dl¥hl911 W L 1' fl<t. Ptl Of'
12 0 .mm1u
j I I .JOO 15' 17•
?61210 lt-111)
2 1 o .m 100 '" I I I .111 UI 20J
WQNno DIYl11911
IC1~"' (fly I I 0 .lff 1'2 II
O.kllolld 1 I I .115 JSS 1'.5
CIMllVllll 4 4 1 .900 Ill m
51{1 Olei!O ~ J 0 .... 1U HG Denver ~J0 .4""115~ S4111dty'J .. _ ...
Ml1ml 17, Bos~ ''
Ntw York 16, 81111110 I
ClncfnNll 31. Hov'~ JI, tit
01kl1nd ... Dl!IWr lO
IC•n111 Cl!Y ti, s.rt DllM J -·-llotlOll 11 Cl1Klnn1!1
HDltllOll •t 0..W.r
K-1 CllY t i Mtw Yort;
Mloml ti eutt.i.
"'" Olt9CI " o.ti.nd
Cl.I.I ' Nor1tl T-$11'9 a, Wkhllt Slttt!I ~'1':'~ :,c~~lll. T~ 35. T-Tldl 2' DELTA SUPER QUALITY
A.lu .... Poclfk st can.di ,. N-Mulm $1 •• ,. Tuo•E1 ... .., 311 T1"res Cost Less L1 V•IM Jl. Cll<-'-Muo:W 1 IOUTM
Monl11\1 II. C.I htY ($LO) I 1..SU 211, All.....,_ 11
LUT Wik• F-1 21. Vlrell!LI 21
D.rtm1111ltl )1, CollHl"lbll 1 Duk• ,... C~ 21
Clonwll I.a. 9'l'W'll 1 Flettd9 U. 0.-.11 U
~ SI, HI""" 711 Miami IOM91 3'. Mlryl .... 11 Hot...-OltN ..,, I'~ 7 M~ 21, Chtt11-I
SyrlQIM n. ... ,~ • H""" ca..ii... ''· VMI 11 ..,, .. 11, ,._ ' ,_ it, Soult\ c1.-1N 1•
c.IMI• ll. 9u<kntll 1 Vl"lnll Tod! JO. l'lorlilt lt1t. 10
MfOWUT WMf Vl.-.lflll.-Jl, WlllllnL& Mlfl' G
Aubu"' st, MIUlnWI Slit. 11 MlclllNn S7, lltlnolt I TUI-14 0-.11 Ttdl 1
-· ., lndl•M 17 Vt......-t>IH Cl, k...tucky 6
Goler9do 17, klNlf I• ,,,_,...la $1, JI, So. Mluiut.I 1 Ml-.1 .... Oki*-)I M1M91911 If. Norlllw9lttrll JI lllOCIUI$ "*•*' 17, 1ow1 11111 J Utel'I M. Wvoml,,. 11 Ofllo St1t. '2. W~ 1 Air F...:. .. Ut1ll $1. ll
Pvr0w .fl, Mkhltlft ltm 11 9YU 21, kl'! Joli $1. S
HcMlon a, Tlllll I• Arli9rw SI .... N• Mllilc9 17
, Compl1!1 li119 of
Fib1r9l1'' t.lt•d Tit•• AYt!lt~l11. ,,lea Stert _, $Z1 .tl ,,_ P.LT.
Fib.r9lt11 Wid1 0..111 -511..-r f'r•"'iulll -
R1dit l -S~orh -S111d l119ty -
l 111 SiI11 Truek Tir••
&G'S DEl:TA-TIRES-
141E.17th St.· Costa Mesa· 645-2010
l1111cAm•ri~1rd fO,,..,.. hll& ... leyl M1•l•r Ch•rte
~I WDT 179'. SANTA ANA -141"6tM
·Sears ; SEARS Has Everything
including SUNDAY SHOPPING
Sunday
Hours
12 rioon
to 5 p.m.
Prices Effective Bqinning Today
Coroiv dtt M1r l l G IS ''
Cos11 Me11 1 s o " 1tl
E1l1rl(l1 1 J 0 14 111
Slnl1 A.,. Vtlln 1 .S I It 111 Bob Paley
Los Al1ml!1>1 ......
k11tll1 e,e,
Et OotldO
Yt!...cl9
S..scll.i>id<
Laa Aml90S
• 1 169 11:1
ll911'l1
!J U1 11!~ , .. l"
1 } '' 11 0612211 •nd Associ•t ..
INSURANCE
SINl'dllJ'I Sewn
Faunltln Vlliey 11, l..o9r1 11
M111'11111l1 l1, C•ll Mesi 7
S.nl1 Ant V1Un 14 Ca<"Ofl.I dtl
Mir 6
l'"riNr'I O-
f'dfson YI F°""t1ln V1ll•Y 11 Hunt•
lne!an !Macll
""' ... , .• s-1..os A11mllo1 21 . S-1 U El Oor1do 76, Slddl1bldl 11 ,,...,. .. ._
474 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
642-6500
!Elltn~ll vs COl'OM dtl Mat t i NtW·
PIN'I HlrbOI' s-....... , •• 0_1
Lotti YI MMnoll1 •I l.1 P1lm1
(DStt Mtw vs Slnl1 Ant VllllV ti
SM!lt Ane IDWI
k1tlllt YI StOclllbldl 11 S111t1 Al\I
·~· V1ltMll YI Sonor1 1t ll Hlbrl Loi Amigos 11 8t11 ""',.._,,.._
El Oorldo YI Loi Altmillll at
WH'""'
South Coast ?Iua
FOOTBALL PLAYER OF THE MONTH
FOR OCTOBER
WINNERS BB.OW VOTED BY POPUlAR ACCLAIM
OF THE STUDENT SOOY AND FACULTY
Doug Hilliard ....... Corona del Mar High School
Dick Ferryman , ..... Costa Mesa High School
Ken Funke .......... Edison High School
Curt Thomas ....... Estancia High School
Tom Malone ........ Fountain Valley High School
Craig Zaltosky . . . .. Huntington Beach High School
Roland Mc Elhan ey .. Laguna Beach High School
Steve Monahan ..... Marina High School
Mark Dunn ......... Mater Dei High School
Bil l Hendershot ...... Newport Harbor Hig h School
Brian Myracle ...... Saddleback High School
Nolan Boyer ........ San Clemente High School
Phil Bl<1hd ......... Sanla Ana Valley High Schoo l
Gary Hicks .. , ...... Tustin High Sc hool
Kurt Deidrick ........ Westminster Hig h School
BAllOT BOXES NEXT TO THE ESCALATO~
• VOTE NOW!
IN THE CAROUSEL COURT -·· 91111STOl AT THE tAN ElllGO flllllWA '"'
COSTA M•tA
• •
Hurry for This Great Ski Event!
SAVE 'II No'v on Polyglass Skis
Regular $8t
• Laminated Mh core with polyester and fiberfi
glass. Buill-in melal Up and heel protectors.
• Top finish is blue with. wh.ite dagger !tyle de-
sign. ~fany sizes lo choose from .
Othmar Schneider Ski Pants
Low Priced!
• 1-fen'.!l or \Vomen·:s Anst.rian mad~ with adjustable
\\•aisl band . Many &ize.!l and colon to choou from.
6988
1999
SAVE $8! Women's Othmar Schneider Parkas
Regular $28 1999 • Belted parka with Dacron• polye.!lle"r fiberfin, nylon 4
.shell.
• Assorterl l.'Olors &nd sizes.
SAVE $91 Othmar Schneider Parkas
Regular $32 2299 • Slim line styling wiLh Dacrone pol1ester fiberfin.
nylon shell .
• As60rted colon and ~izeg,
SA VE $10! 5-Buckle Ski Boots
llegular $40 2999 • Molded torsion proof non-slip sole, waterproof.
• ?-.ten's and women's a.ssorted sizes • , • bl.act )ealher
uppers.
Ask About Sean1 Convenient Credit Plans
,-------------------------------------------------, I -.--TAl-44(11),$11·•UO 11-GIJ.Jt\1 .. _ ...... ti ..:OWEM2'6:t IOUlllCOIUl'IU.fA~
UNOM-UO-OMI -.-.a.1-1«M,Q4...t611 --.C•-•.01 -A-D7-3J71 -54i.;,,1 I I cowacNf~2)91,Nl"2·!!i1•1 -"'°°9NO,_,,,,, ._..,,.-2100 ~ SAHTAft.~tuto'l1 Yaun'°U46t,~ I ~ ""°'" kU'lil'l'.IOll Cf. a.J5ll ....... •.N:I'• lfM211 s M)llA llCNC.t. llt 44711 ~I'\ P•lf'l1 '----~---------------------ears -----------------' .,,......., ..... s., :•»tiaAA•,.,.P.a.,_.,u,._ .. J,..M. -. ••• ".Sati.JloctionG"°'antMdorYowMoM1a..ct"
' '
-----------------------~-~-........ ~-~---·-----·-·------· ·--· ··-··------·-
Mond11, NoVfmbtf lD. l 969 DAil V PILOT #3
Ask
About Scars
Convenient
Credit Plans
·..-.£..:\". t~.-.r.\\
:r2c
'.\4C
• • •
J im1n y C•r•11, fiv11.t i1n"'
Worl1J·1 Pocket Billiard
Champiun, will 1ppe1r 1•er•
•on1lly from I:! noon to
:?::\O Pi\t and 6:30 PIH 10
8:30 l'~l in 1he (olluwing
i.tore1 011 the follo\o·in1 d1yt:
:;ears El fllonte-
November 10 and 11
~t•r~ t:o,int-
~o,·embtr I:! ind 13
Prices Effective
Beginning Today!
Stm., N~v. 9,
thru Wed., Nov. II
When You Pay Too Little For A Brake
Job ••. You Get TOO LI'ITLE!
Sears will not give you a ''Too Li1rle" Brake Job at
any price! Your driving SAFElY is too.important.
Sears will price your Brake job as reasonably as
possible ... t"onsisrent with SAFET'f. Sears Brake
.Jobs provide what you should have to make your
brakes work best and last longer. Uncler no condi·
tion will Sears clo less than a ··i:irst Quality"'
Brake Job. If }'OU "'ant '"exrras'" they.re available ai
extra cost. You have Sears assurance of"Satisfacrion
Guaranu~ed or Your Money Bark."" Don't wait! Let
Sears inspect )'Our brakes for safety.,, at no charge,
Jn1inlla1ion AeailabU /,londny 1hr1i Sa1urdny
GUARANTEE
F1« rrpl.acnnr111 .,.;,11;Q 90
.!JJI ol P•"rl."r if btUeTf
p1i.nu dnccri,r. Ar1er 90
<l•ri "~ rcp1.c<" rill-buiery,
i( &fccti"f'. •Pd chM~ f011
onl1 1ur thr ~tioJ of o•n·
rl'hir, ~ued on rhe rt'.l{Ul1r '
price, le.11 u-.Jc-ln •I 1he
1i111r .,r ~turn, pro-no:ed
ow:r n~mbcrr of mo•Hln ul
1uvn1 .... ,
R e1?.ular 2~99
SJ.99 . each
•Original Equipment Replacement
'
~~' • •
ears.
ALL 4 WHEELS__ ONLY
88*
\II America11 & \·olks,vagen Car~
"""Inspect Mu ter Cylinder
"'1' Inspect and Adjust
l'arking Brakes
JI!# Bonded Linings
ln~lall ed on 4 Wh eels
Y' Hlced All Lines and
Add l''luid
Y' Rebuild All Wheel
( :ylincle~
"""l n~p!'cl Crtase Seal~
,,,,,. :\re Gri nd Brake Shors
11" Repack Front
Wl1eel Bearings
I<" Resurface All'
Br1ke Drub
,,,,,, ln1pecl Brake Rotes
Y' Inspect All Bnkt
Hardwire
Y' Free Adjuatment
for Life or Linin1s
V Road Te11t for
Brake ReliabiHly
•Chrysler products having 6.,iheel cylinders and cars with
disc brakes slightly higher.
Any necessuy additional parts and labor available at Stars
low, low price.
12-Month Guarantee
Fits Mosl 6-Voll Cars 699
N.,U
1Vit1'
Trade·h•
18-Month Guarantee
Fits Many 12-Volt Can 9 99
NL3'
Wi1h
Tr.tde·I"
Sea rs LoiV
l .. olv Price!
.
•Built lo out-perform
ori&inal equipment 1boc.k1
•Smoother, impnwed control
• Handling i1 eatier •.,d
riding is more comfortable
•Fit most can
1988
• ~e ar. unil"ersal under-duh model
•Enjoy music witl1 no annoying interrup·
lions
•For autos, boats, ca111pen and traile ~
Modol6200
* -- - - - --.. ------.. ---...... - - ----- --- - - - - ----l-------------~ IUINA PAIK TA 8·4400, 521·4530 ll MONT! GI 3·3911 IONG llEACH HE 5.0121 PICO WE 8·4262 I CANOG• .... 340·0661 GllNDAlf CH 5.1004, Cl 4·A6 11 OLYMPIC . SOTO AN 8·5211 POMON• ED 2·1145, NA 9·ll61 , YU 6·6751
SANTA ANA Kl 7-~371 TOllANCE 542-1511 I
SANTA ff SP~NGS 944 -8011 UPIAHO 995-1927
I COMPTON NE 6·2l81 , NE 2·l761 HOUYWOOO HO 9·5941 OR ..... GE 637·2100
COVIN• 966-0611 INGllWOOD O• 8·2521 ,.,.OlNA 681 -3211, il1·4211
••NTA MONIC• EX 4·6711 V.lllY PO 3·9461. 914.2220 I
SOUTH COAST PIAZA S40·3333 VERMONT Pl 9.1911-, _______________________ _ ------~-------------' ShopNlghtt Monday through Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noan to 5 P:M. SJAU, 10llUCX AND Q>, "Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back"
'
•
-. '
• • • • • • • • ' • • • • l
I • • • • • • • • • • • •
l • l ..
' • i
I
!111•1!'1'!.•I ••llj§,!'.!'!l!'. l!J !!W•.!'!P'l'.zt!!'i!i!.'!', ~i P!'!\-!'!.!!A!!,lff !I, \P.', '11'\."!Q~ .. ,I."!!'!'. '!', "Ii'!'. "!l"!,.,,if"!1,'!'.' ,, 61'\'f !!Al"!'. 'l""_,\'!'0%~.~~"!111', !!I. "ll'PI "19\i!,..,JAl!!!IP .'!'2-E~, "!S ,!l!P'!'. il"!,,4,JAl!!!'P"!'IS•AlllAl!l!0$!!1Pll'llAllSll(llSCISS•t !IS!Sl5'2 P~4•1110111.,P., • ..._. ...... .,..,.........,...., '-·-•.,.t~•' ' '" ' "' J 1 • ..... • .. ...,..,.. ' • ' - ' • • ·... • ' • • ' •
•
·il§ DAILY ,.LOT
lVMILEWEEDS ly Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS
PEANUTS ly Charles M. Schulz ·
. • DESERTED SPORTS FAN -Red Buttons, desert·
ed by his wile because of his consuming interest ·
in sports, finds companionship with Nobu McCarthy Te.wMG
t whom he had known in Japan. ••Love and the PA.UL MATERE
• Geisha" is one story on 111.ove, American Style" TMAT SI-IE Pl.Alrl5 ro REPLACE ; seen tonight at 10 on Channel 7. ~ Pft!VER AS
9' ...................................... ~l l ATTOfNEYAX
TELEVISION VIEWS
Show Delight
To Children
:f By CYNTHIA LOWRY
;. NEW YORK {AP) -Ii "Sesame Street,'' which :~ makes its debut today as a new, daily program for
( preschool children, fulfills the promise of its pre-
:; view, it is bound 10 have many post-school fans. It
~ is a delight.
"< :,( The experimental series, made \Vith government
and foundation grants, is being shown on a lineup
. of educational stations. It uses cartoon, puppets,
· pedormers, film clips, music, talk and, above all.
~ keen, kind nwnor. Little ones -age 3 to 5 -ought
; to love it. ·, ~: A HALF-HOUR preview on NBC Saturday in-
~ eluded an excellent demonstration of the show's
:· basic premise. "The idea," explained a voice behind
:~ some animation, "is to make use of the things kids
:~ like to watch on television and use them to teach."
Since kids are fascinated by commercials,
. "Wanda the Witch," was presented "through the ·
· courtesy of the letter \V." With bright animation
· and simple but amusing dialogue, the letter W was
Dashed repeatedly on the screen along \\'ith numer-
ous words beginning with W. Then came a short Jes-
~. son on X, equally memorable, equally painless.
·:~ NUMBERS were taught by a similar method.
•::beginning with a "commercial" in praise of 7. ·
· Some characters were introduced, a huge crea-
ture called Big Bird and another called Kermit the
Frog. Many hand puppets are also used.
lt looks like an exciting package -at last a
children's show that children will like and learn
from.
1:AN EVENING with Julie Andre\\'S and Harry
BelaConte" on NBC Sunday night was a real special
-two talented performers rarely seen on television
si nging their best songs in effective style against
colorful and imaginative backgrounds.
Solo and in tandem. they tackled the old and the
new. the familiar and the novelties, touching a little
cajypso !Harry) and "My Fair Ladf'' Julie. The
comedy was gentle -perhaps the wittiest bit wa,s
· a map showing Julie's idea of the United States
when growing up in England -just New York
\Vashington. cowboys and Hollywood. '
"NIGHT GALLERY,'' a two-hour movie fea ture
on NBC Saturday night, consisted of three off-beat
i Rod Serling playlets, all featuring fantasy and irony
and hooked loosely together.
Dennis tJae 1He11aee
&ROOV, A.5BEV
PRffiNDS lll.llT
SHE MAPE THE
PECl510N UPON
,,_UL '5 5UOOESTION!
MOON MULLINS
STEVE ROPER
MUTT AND JEFF
RAIN, RAIN,
RAIN!I'VE
NEVER SEEN
~
IT RAIN
SO MUCH!
MISS PEACH
Mll<UR WOULO UKI! ,.0 (:\'.)A Sl'ee~L THllNK
TlllC< FOii US, ONI! WMIQI HI! Ll!ARNl!D ~U,
•R.OM ""4 OLD INOIAN FAKlll, Ml55
Pf'A,H.
. .
11·:0 ..... _ _,,, -
ESPECIAlt y ~"' rr MEAWS
'NE CAN BOTli PRa=JT FROM Ii!
1 MEAN~WOW\IJUCA>IBIJYTHAT
.. ,.l\TAMOUNT,"' SON!~·AHO KA.YE
1 Ol«.Y GOT A SWfET Of
F<lRYOll '
.-r-1 >
LEIS RENT A
CA.TILE 80AT
ABOUT300
CUBITS LONG!
By MeD
I SH"'-L l!NOU.VOR TO Fd.at.T MY
SOOY A80Y8 THE 6ROUNO Wtolti.E
Cf.Rll.Y!N6 &TIMES MY Wf!IGHT
IN FUllNITIJRE ANO HOWIN&
THIS TRICK IS
3,000 Y£AR5 Ol.O
ANO, ACCOR:OIN()
TO .ZGl!ND Hf\5 MY l!Rf'ATH FOi( II MINUTf!S.
-, '' I I ( :· .. , .,_ .. ,. .. -
AA ILf!O !!'VERY
TIME.
MONDAY
I -··
1:00 u lit: ...... (C) (60) Jtny Dunphy. am·-'""'"' (<)·(30) 9-• .. -!Cl(to)C.~
R1.1kr.i, Marilyn Mlchltb, Rttb l'flU·
hln, Nie un111 1uat.. ·
0 "SEX & THE SINGLE * GIRL"-Part I
NATALIE WOOD &
-"'TONY CURTIS-COLOR!
O Six O'Cloc\ hie: (C) *SrJ;
i nd Ute Sln< QiJI"' Ptrt I (com·
edy) '64 -Torry Curtis. N1ttlie
Wood', Htnry Fond•. To boost clrcv-
l1tlon, the editor tf 1 1e1ndal mil·
azln• attlckl !ht rtputatlot ff a
re$eltch psycholo1ist.
D Diet Vu Dr't (30) m,..,.. ,,.Cit (30)
Iii "" '"' (<} (60)
tHJ m ""' ... ~ .. <CJ !90> Em I l•ICWI Pre•l1r1 Clwlrtfl (CJ (60) lnteMnls ot ll.lrs 1t .tile
premier• sllowlnr or ''Goodbrt. Mr.
CMps," MGM'1 ntw niusiQI nr·
~!Ion of Jamu Hilton'•-d11Sic. (R)
a C1J cas -"' <"I Uil flHIPI dt h .rdotr (30) mitm (C) (60) Jack Hicliey.
1:30 0 MIC Jlenl1tia (C) (60)
0 TM C1111t Cn11 (C) (30) PGl!y
Ber1en, Ptul LJnde and Rol'll Jaffee
'""" m Tt Tell thl Trwtll (C) (30)
fB Dftlce If tllt l'fUidlnt (lO)
rH (fJ HunU11·ltblkllJ' (C) (30)
QI (I} Thi M1Mttrs (30)
€fi) Mttidero 34 (C) (60)
m """ (C) 130)
7·"01J CIS &tt!in1 ..... (C) (30)
0 wtlat'1 llJ' Line1 (t} (30) Guest
panelists Gail Shtldon, Gtrtt RaJ-
burn and Soupy Sales join re1ul1r
panellst Arl1111 Francis. m I Lovt LllCJ (JO)
I!) hit ltlt Clotl (C) (30)
fE Coinlflldi!J/StoQ l.,ort (30)
ID 00 M1Ddlr Slllw (!O) ''lonely
Ari 1111 Bra'A" llirk Dou1l1s..
EI)Allln! (30}
Qj (f) Tn1U1 tr CmlqtMaC:tS (C)
'
l:MUlllCIJ _, "" !<l 130> Luey conlplilMty follows Kim on
• dltl ID t ddw·il movlt. • a -" -. !<l ,,.,
II OM1 ftlll a-(C} (90) David
Htn1111inrs. Gtylt Hannlcllt, Phyllis
Diner, Rolf Halrit, C.rniU Ri1hter
and L.,,,m B11T ,.t.
m no "' ,.., !<l 1601
m--<60>
9:00851(])1111••117 l.f.D. (t)
(]0 lioliitd l'Obl I bank to pmt
fioobm' b I llUllft IS ckpi.rlJ ahwltt.
~JO
l!llnall!JISC-._..
(t) llfM l'llii ...... (advtlltur.:
cof!lldy) '61-Jamet Gantet, Evt
Renz~ Glotp KtnnedJ. A c:ommet·
cill Pl!Oto(raJ!!!t'..•lld • lllOdel find
ttiemSilwis tniPiiidln a primM.--
Soulh Amtricln country.
D Ith C.. Ille lttfl (C) (60)
1'f11 secret world tf Grvudlo Marx
Is rrtMltd.
~)~i~.: Tr!;':O:mi~
S.nllfrl Is mcr.itld. RoN't Viluro
and OGnna Bac:t1 t\lllSt
!ll NEI """' (<} (60) "Wbo S!lukl for Men?" A ctilkll •P·
pr1iSll of the United N1lion5. cm Lii E*du J ~ (30)
ID TONIGHT'S BEST BET! * THE DORIS DAY SHOWI
ID3CIJ """ "' !Cl <30! Doris fil'lds hlrself dod1in1 punch·
in1 bap and atln1 kelp salad
when she's liwn th• 1ui1nmtnt of obt1lninr the publilhln1 rifhts
to ht•ltll 1ddk:t't book.
D ..... (C) (30) Suter Ward.
CD 111 s.w. si. s.w (t) 130)
fE INltldt ltoundop (60)
fEI IMtl Mutiul (30)
10:00 II 9 (I) Ca.I lurntll Sllew (C)
(60) Bini Cro&bJ, Ella Fitz1erald
and Dan Row1n l Dick M111u1
ruut. Tk specill prorra111 sallt!n
Paramount J>lchiru tonithL
om-<CJ <60>
0 illJ CIJQJ Lttt, A111 rl e111
Sfyll (t) (60) Ozzie Ind Htrriet
"N1l11111. Tl111 Loubl, Lu Crane, Aid•
Rey, tarolyn Jones and Red But·
tons 1uest.
0 hlltf (C) (60)
m "'"' ..... (60)
fD Sptclll ftlblr. ('C) (30) .. TIM
Moon Doctors."
Ill CllCll ....... (30)
(30) 10:30 fD Flrln1 Une (C) (60)
m ta.r's World (Cl 130) El) trist1111 llllllll (JO)
CiD Thal Girl (C) (30)
r:3o 0 a(jJc11111110t 1 IC> (60)11:00llOOCENew11c1
Newly's hUlbllly 1lr1lri1nd Mtr?J 8 Alfnd Nltdlcod
Flo rene (l1111 Brldbury) Is In lfl·
other tmb1rr1uin1 predicament.
OE!l!Mr WllW 11111! Wtlcelll ti
II (C) (30) John Monroe 11eretty
ibandons the family cat in 1 DIW
hollSinc dmlopment 1tter bliq
nip!>fd on the ned: and fillflf.
0 -· .. ..... (C) (30) Werner Klemperll', LlrlJ' Hom, Rob·
ert J:ltry IUtJl
Q Mwlt '81111 (C) Ernest lof.
1ni111. Dani Wynter, John Byner 11'1d
J1n1 wY•tt 111ut.
III III Ill • .., <CJ
O @(I) al1'111 Miiie Sa11 (C) 11:30 8 9 ([)Mt" l11ffi11 (C) Phil
• tlSl H1rris, Don Ho, Chim, Shelley 811· O Mnil: (C) "Vita las V.ps" min ind Redd Fon 111 Sdled~led
(!l'luslcaO '64-0vls PrlSll)', Ann· tuuts.
Mlrlflll C.S.r1 D1r10Y1. Sporis-ca1
enthusl1!1 11111 his Irland the Ital· 0 @ (!) m .i.hllJ C.11111 (C)
ian champion. p to La 0V1ps !Of Sdledulf.d cunts Include Jill Sl
the Grand Pril.. John. 8111 D1na, GJP$J Rose lee, m Tl'llttl tr c.n.r-('C) (30) ~::i~=: Emil Ford tnd Davi4
m 1111M "' "' """" cc> <60> e MttM: .... Ow1tt " t11e wffi. fB Ttdlnical Clrw (30) 1r11 FNnf'' (drama) '30--Uw Ayru,
f£I £.-. WWI• (30) A.i111 Loul1 Wolhtlm.
W•tts dlSCl.llMS ttlt ,.r•doles ind u lHl CD m...,. l lahop (C)
contr1dlttlon1 lnhem!I In tllf Wat· khedulld 1111111 11, Leon1rd Birr
lfll dwilll:ation. tnd Rick NtllOn. m ai• .r .... (30)
l:GOl!l&ll,.P.io (C) (60) G ClfOI Cll1nnln1 U¥Drb ts halt of
WOlld'I r1chtlt COllPI• •nd IS IOI'·
mll' chlld atsr now It the Ult.
B MM: (C) .. ,,,..... (western) ·~urt ltl!Clsbr, .INn Petm.
m Mft: ...... liJtlr (drama) •T9-G1or11 Ralt Vir1lnl1 M11~
8 Jacl llMlr (30) Dtn11i9 Dir lZ:• m Mw1r. "'t 1'11 1 Mill Wtr
111..ts. liWe" (comldy) '49-ttry fi;r1rrt. m QuM fir I Dir (C) {30) Ann Sherlcl1n,
fB Sltncln1111t (30)
m """ ,_ <CJ <60)
Cl ttll , •• (C) (90)
,,15 0 I!}) m Gil no ... -(<}
(6) Glorl•. ""'°""' blldl flt• with G!nnr. maintains thlt lit bs
1 fi1hl not tt Id ltwoM4 in I'll
153111 "' tlt\o(lifle. Ptter lttbly •nd
Jlll Ju• 111 featured.
TUESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
!:00 Q "l.;, lor • "lPI" (drama)
'42-knn l londell, Jolin W.tJftt.
1:30 D "Kltll. Wldt •Ml Ma--."
(drtrl'll·m11slcal) '37-111n1 Dun111.
Ra/ldolpll Scott.
(D "Rt lf'Ofl M1Jor" 'dtllftl) 'U
1:00 R Mowil: "Sit tt Crut" (dttma)
•17-spencer Traey, Kath1rin1 Hfp.
''"" 1!10-!<l
m-"""Tla<CJ
u o 0 ......... ·--(C)
-P1! O'Brien, Aobe:rt Rytn, R~lll .......
10:00 D "'llnt1t111t11'1 Acrtt.-rr• (dt•·
1111) '41-'1lfOIY ,_., Dorothy
McGuirt, John G1rtilld.
11:00 D '111 s.... T1 Die" CmntQ
'51-Rlchlrd l1•h1rt. AnM h•
Cf'Clll. ~lliln Ctbot.
%:3110 "A DMMt Utt" (drama) '47
~111ld Colll\ln, Shiller Win!m.
4:30 fJ (C) "h•RIJ ti tlle Clnt. ff
Tlmt" Od·ll) '61 -Scott Bt1dy,
Cilti Ptt!Mll,
. ,
..................................... "" .......... ""'"" ..... ""'""' ...... ""'""--"'""""""" ......... -.......................... ~-~~-............ -,.. _____ .. ,..,.,.....,,_..,.,,,._,_,~--· • ,
.
..
"'--"'
Console In SAC underground headquarter• where aw11om1 power la
controlled by 1 precise communlc1Uon1 system •
Mi11ile crewman studies dat1at 1t1tlon In launch 1110.
Cre wmen working on 1 Tlt1n ml11ll1 In underground 1110.
,
OMAHA, Neb. (AP )-Fifty feel under ground or 50,000
feet above, 1amcbody js always minding the store at Strategic
Air Command Hdqtrs. at Offutt AFB just south of here .
Jn SACs famed comn1and post. three floors below ground,
a virtual city exists under a concrete roof thick enough to pro-
tect it against all b~t a direct hit by-a nuclear bomb. \Vithin this
underground city is the nerve center controlling 80 to 90 per
cent of the free world's st riking pO\\'cr. l n tin1e o( war it could
be scaled off against airborne contamination and occupants
could safely live and work for weeks.
In the event this comn1 and post \Yith its world renowned red
alert telephone should fail or contact with it should be lost, con-
trol of the SAC ~ombcr and missile force immediately shifts to
"looking Glass. That is the code name for a fleet of modified
KC-135 tankers, at least one of which has been constantly air-
borne since Feb. 3, 1961.
Each modified tanker carries a general officer and !Ila[ ready
to wume command of the SAC arsenal il the-need arises. Other
command posts are located at several SAC ba:res ia. the U.S.
All are Jinked to some 50 bases throughout the \\'arid \Vhich
can rtspond instaritly to presiden tial order. Instant conlact is
possible even with indi vidual planes in flight.
Subject to this intricate comm add system are n1orc tha n 600
B-52 bombers, some 600 KC-1 35 tankers and 80 B-S8 Hustler
super10nic bombers, plus an arse11al of interconti ncota l and
airborne missiles.
By fiscal 1970 SAC wi ll begin receiving new F B-1 11 bomb-
ers designed to replaccJhe aging B-52. The FB-1 11 can fly
1wice the.&pecd of soun and carry both nuclear and con\1cn-
tiooal weapons.
SACs missile force consists of some 54 Titan JC and l,000
Minuteman missiles, rapid firing silo-launched projectiles of the
6,~mile range •
.Much of SAC's intricate con1munications 5ystem is devoted
to making certain this awegome striking power is not turned
JOOIC by accident. 1
"Positive Control," as it is called~ 6egins 1A'ith the President
and is authenticated at 11veral 1cvels of command down to the
individual aircraft flyi Q& toward a target th ousands o( mile s
£com anyjlAC comMand post. So precise is this system that if a
~ingle link in the "go code" fails, the bombe r \viii turn away
from its tarict.
"Peace," says a ~ignboatd at SAC bisc, '1is ou r prorcssion."
"
• , , loedlng and arming of 1521 In Vltln1m , .•
• , • ind rtl1111 of1 IO,OQO.pound load on 1n1my,t1rg11 •
.l
:-u A f)Af~Y.PJLOT Mondly, ..... ~ ... 10, 19'•
Speaker Badgered ~
Demos Split 011,_Hoa1.eChiefsN~onStand.
WASHINGTON (Al') -
Sptab< J .... W. MCCormack
has alienlted some Democrats
on both sides of the peace
issue with ~hiS a ttempls to
push through the House a
resolution backing President
1 Nizon's Vletnam policy.
Resentment o v er the
speaker's action comes not On·
ly from 01'mocrats oppooed to
the Nixon policy, but from
'.:iome --It but feel the """"*""' will bt used by Nixon for poUUcal advantage.
The rt90lalion, CGOpo!ISOi'<d
by 51!8 Democrats and so.
Repubticam, ii' genera I ....,p that it pn>bably would
hJ,ve llJtlloniud only the se-
verest Nlxcn critics ezcept for
the Presideri.'1 VJetnam
•peodt laat .. eet-Many Democrats felt Nixon
made a partiaan att.ack an lhe
Democratic admin1stration of
Lyndon B. Johnlon a!!d they
don't like having to vote now
lo endorse the Republican
Prisldenl's pooition.
The oppositlon is not suf-
ficient. to endanger pasu.ge of
the reM>luUon but it is inteMt
enough to cause McConnack
to have seeond thought.a about
rushing It to the House Door. .......,..._ .-.· •
Allhough ii was ..-The ~ !)omocnia &"!
through the Foreiln' Allain CO m p I fl DI ~·s
Committee last week without perfcrmance. on tht ~
a hearing, it .bas not been with that. af S-4 R:9 te
scheduled lo rBc:tioii Oils witJ<-DeinoCt'lllc Leader. 1111 k.e
despite the ·wishes ol some of MIJ!'8eld In a shnllar ,__sltlla·
its sponaors. Tbe.bad<ers want tlon 1aat wetk. Man,!l•MI f~
it approved. before .war protest bad a provlsl~ added to the
acUvities start later 'tbil week resolution urging Nixon \, !O
in \\'ashing:on. seek a mutual cea!t-flf!~, 1n ~t CQUld still be called up ~~ ~nt ~
this week but the lndicatloos inJUee lat a 11111 review "ol ill now are that it will not be. H.s upectl."
McCormack's .insj~ on 'By contra9t, Mcearmac~ a
passage of the -iutlon aU<al .,pporter o1· the Vlct-
widened tbe breach between na mpo11c1es o( IJOUj Nb<on and
him and the I i b t r a I Johnlon, ordered Ult Houae
Democrats, further cloudlll( Foreign Allain Committee io
lhe issue of the future approve the relOlutiOn without
leadership of the H o u s ~ any hearinp and wUhoul any
Democrats. dwl(fs. Dem.crab llj>jlOled
The ,..year-old 1 pt a kt r to the Nixon poUcy see the
m:ently announced be would speaker's ~ u an attempt
run for another term as to .isolate them by forcing an
speaker in 1971 to seek vfn. overwhelming vote 'for the
dication of charges bis m'Oct resolution.
has been used by friends In a vote of the fuJI House
trying to influtnce government on a Vietnam ~Uon. the
officiab. liberal Oemocrall will bt
'J'he a n n o u n c e m e n l drOWPed out, but in the
dismayed liberals who bad e1· Democratic C8UCUI that wtU
peeled McCormack to mp pick the nelll 1ptalcer they will
down and were looking around have a Jarpr voice. and they
for someone to back as his intend to use it.
r JFK's TinSnriver
Eyeing Senate Race
-R.uss1ans -
Disputing
Miniskirts WASHINGTON (AP) -Am-
bassador Sargent Shriver, Jong
aeeking an opportunity to run
for elective offire, is making a
seriow bid for the Democratic
senatorial nomination in Uli·
nois. according to sources
clOSe lo the diplomat.
. And~they say the U.S. am·
bassador to France is receiv.
ing help from organization
.Democrats who oppose the
candidacy of Adlai E. Steven·
aon DI.
'11le sourc:es say Shriver.
who visited Cbicage: recently
as part ol. a four-llate speak·
ing trip, has been approached
by Democratic oftlCials not
only in Illinois, but in . Mary·
land where he i.s a ~sible
candidate for governor.
He reportedly is awaiting
more concrete evidence of in·
terest.
One thing that could keep
him out of the Illinois contest
i.s Stevenson's threat to force
a primary fight.
While iu Chicago., Shriver
had lunch with two top lieu·
tenants of Mayor Richard J.
Da1ey, Rep. Daniel Rosten·
kowski, (0.Ill.), and Circuit
Court Clerk Matt Danaher.
"I had an interesting meet·
Ing with an interested party ."
said Rostenkowski, V.'ho is
chairman of the Illinois slate
makers who will chooee the
organiuUoo candidate for the
Senate later this month.
"He ls a very out.standing:
citizen and coukJ possibly be
considered as a candidate for
the presidency in two years,"
the Chicago congressman told
a reporter.
Rostenkowski said he con·
siders Shriver, brother-in.Jaw
of the late President John F.
Kennedy and former head of
the Chicago school board, as
an Illinois resident.
But Rep. Abner Mikva, ([)..
TI!.). said Shriver "has not
been in lllinoi.s for tight years.
"I think Adlai Stevenson ill
far and away the strongest
man we could put up," Mikva
added.
The likely Republican candi·
date is ·Sen. Ralph T. Siililh,
former speaker of the State
House, who was appointed to
the Senate after the-death of
Sen . Everett M. Ditben, .
Stevenson. son of the late.
two.time Democratic prui.
dential nominee, anoouriced
his candidacy for the Senate
late last month. He led the
Democratic ticket in Ulinols
five years ago when he was
elected to the legislature and
in 196fi when }}e won his pres·
ent past of state treasurer.
FBEE
HOLIDAY SHOW
for Kiddies
r
TIJESDAY, NOV. 11
• FASIDON ISLAND•
Per/orman«11: 1la.m.,1 p.m.,
2 p.m.,3 p.m.
Bring the little oneo lo Fa•hion Island,
Tueoday only, for a delightful holiday
•how ou the mall. Free balloons and
loadt of laughter with the Mitchell
Mmionetlel. Four perf ormanceo.
58 Fine Stores and Services
FASHION J ISLAND
•n•o•TO••'fri
'""" caur IHGl•r llnWm Lill I lllANI lllM: ARTlf\11
• •
MOSCOW (AP) -Rum•'•
Miniskirt war raaes on, and
enemies of the upper.thigh e1~
~re· have propoaed eveiy.
thina: from fines to purge..like
methods. 11\e minis had their
defenders, too.
Writing to 1 Soviet newapa.
per, ooe man likened mini·
skirts -miniybka in Rus.sian
-to a class enemy that must
bt wiped out,-the waylflch
landowners were liquidated by
th< Communist regime.
Exprtuing himaelf in vene,
the antimbli mitn said:
"So that the faMion does
not shame us
"We must liquidate this im-
ported tty le like· a class."
Literaturmya Guota -Lit--
""ll' Gudle -said other
letlers It nceived In tM cm-
t..-1)' ".serlouoll' propooed
levellri( a flile for _.,_.
in a nilntaldrl, like tl>e lJne
for boollganlsm. ·~
'l'h1I would mean a fine of
up to $33.U for wearing minis.
Rejeotln( such proposals,
wrlt.er A. Raskin said Bus-
alans were letUng themaehes·
1et too excited •. He defendf[d
men who ldmlre miniakir?s
and the few darlilg R""1an
women who wear them. -
,.. to fines, he remlDded
mirdlklrt -ts o( public
oppostU... earlier ..nm police
at ~ Soviet raor1.s U•
rested and fined vacaUonm
for "o-1erlyuposed fuhiolna."
Raskin a a i d ht hirnaelf
thought minis were ''immodest
and unestheUc," but ·he saw
a wone threat in the ti:tmn·
isl measures proposed by its
opponents.
"More danlerous than naked
knees," he said, "are the peo-
ple who demand admlnistrat·
ive meuures , fines. defama·
tion, and almost pillory, for
those who wear a 'mini'."
Raskin dlsck>led that an ear·
lier attempt by him lo coot
off the dispute, in an article
Jast summer appealing:' for
calmness toward mlnls, JUC·
ce!ded only in stirring a new
hornet's nest of angry lttte.rs.
After reading the earlier at·
ticle a man from Ufa, in the
Urals, asked: "What inkpot
did Raskin dip his pen in,
that it splashed poilOO and
bile?"
A war veteran from Kiev
was tndignant about seeing
g:lrla in minlsldrta sltUng in
the park "Improperly cl.,.ly
to IJQy sludenta preparing lot
-exams."
Muscovite. V. Y. Gorovoy
said miniskirts were part of
"bourgeois fashion -in ha.ir·
dos. clothes, shots, hats," and
that girls who wore them
lacked "spiritua1 develop-
ment.''
After giving opponents a
hearing, Ralkln let miniskirt
. admir"frs speak.
An m,ineer from the Bailie
port of Riga said opponents
of the style were the same
kind or prudts "who pul paper
skirts and not mint ones on
old statUts\"
"I admit It: 1 likt JTtW.
sklrts,.. u.kl a teacher named
V-fromlOldllemllmla.
"But I 1pt1k not ol -
lklnl .. -that the q-arises, ii there any
akirt at· a.II?"
j
Final Stocks
In Al Hom•
Editions
-wm ·
TO
QUll
UP ... -• ' YOUR
"
Ollll
oun
FOR
fASTI
FAST!,
AmONI
CAll
DAILY
PILOT
cws.
IRED
DEPT.
D
I
A
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D ..
I
R
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-
6·
4
2
•
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6
7
8.
-
-·-·DAILY PILOT .. w ·ANT ADS .
' . '
1 ~ ~ • .
HOUSES, l'Oll<SALC HOUHl'l'Olt SALE t!OUSES FOil ~· HOUSl!S.~ll SALii I HOUSIS FOil SALE
~·" ·· 1100 _0-rol _. 1000 Gantral IOIO ~·I ~ _ 1000 Gantral ___ lllllt
_OIANH
COllN'IY'S •
LAltGEST
· M6 IMO
0,..1 .....
tWliJO
EastSide
3 Bedraom
$23,500
Move In ' Wday. I t'•
vacant. hu beautiful bl.ck
yard with-fish pond, brick --~\ r-~-aney
accns. larp covered
patio, m:l three larzt
bedrootm ht excelle'1t
eaatshk area.
$SAVE$
Mesa Verde
Thll la a 4 bedroom borne
located bi Me. v~ un-
believaiiQo -Jlliced • t
$M,950, '' .,2 I bi.tha,. a 11
.built-in· ldtcM;rl with ·rorc.
ed &if. beatlns, ~nuio
entey. The owner ·ls anx·
kJu4. HUft)'! •
Misa Yl'de
Lease Option
BeautlfUJ 3 bedroom, 2
bath· horile with 1pUkllna
heated and tiltettd pool,
built-ins kitchen, coxy
brick tiftplact. Won ' I
1ut can today. $300 per
month includi11i p o o I ........
3 Bed11111ms
and Pool
$24,950
This home ls In excellent
condition inaide and out
with deluu ·olive srten
c a r p e t i n·r · throurhoot.
beautltuny panelled """" room with ~k fireplace.
Amunl present low ~
terest VA loan with
payments of under $160.00
tndudin&" tues a n d
""""""'·
The
Eagles Nest
Ocean ~ze1, Catalina
view, 4. ~s, peace
tnd quiet. J>rlce ttflUC·
tlon. Intertsted! \V h y
not!
Magnificent View
IA
Newport Beach
On the point ot Ne~"port
Blutra.. this home.
overlooks Balboa Bay,
ha1 beautifUJ uh pane.II·
""' and haM,Wood ...... Doon, hlrh beam ceilinp
and. brick fireplace, heavy
shake roof and much,
much more.
Notice!
It you have-a 3 or 4
bedroom hon\e for sale
or rent, call us ·today. We
represent the employees
of a Jarp firm moving '°
the Harbor Area and they
mUJt have houaina! All
caah U de.aired. Call Far-,... ,..._.
OIAN•l
COUNTY'S
LAI MST
Zut HAI-&YD.
5411641
0,..1-1.,.
ttl l :JI
·-
t'llEAYY
SHAKE ROOF·
O!'EN
THIS WEeJ¢ND •.
IRVINE TERRACE 2 Br. &
d e n, bubblinc fountain.
$42.500
IJlt BONNIE DOONE • CORONA DEL MAR dupl~.
So, of hwy. Dbl. lot. SST,~
441 FERNLEAF • SUNDAY ONLY
BLOCK TO OCEAN, immac.
2 Br. Low d11. PY.1 . $39,500
4701 RIVER . ' CAMEO SHORES 4 Br., pool,
~·a delllbt. $78,5((1 .
454.S TREMONT • WESTQ.IIT, 3 BR .. & din.
Move-lri cond. $37,500
Ult SYLVIA • HAL PINCHIN 111£.W Will come '"" whon you ,.. r. ASSOCIATES
EYenings Ol.11 548-3265 this 4 bed., tam. rm. en-675-4392 Anytime
FOREST E banced with rustic hickory
• paneling.Modornwmotyl< $1,lOOFHAOOWN
0 L S 0 N kitchen, floor eating dean, to J'll!'I¥ S20.~ loan with pay.
A patio that will force )'OU mmts USS TIIAt'I RENT!
to sit under the stars. A liv· !'Bedroom. 2 Bath. This cozy
lnc. Realtors --1-J<' ,...room with year_around _ _cottage_ 'Witb_at~ ;!l_r-
HAVE $1 ,000?
HOME + R-2
Cbristma.s \V&rmth. T o p age in exceilent location.
Costa Mesa area for the Oleery buill·in KITCHEN!
family that lows t.ocelber. Glea.mil\I HARD \V 0 0 0
Onq $33,500. fl.OOHS! Carpeted living
546-2J13 'l'OOITl with warm BRICK
Tenific investment. Lovd,y .FIREPLACE.
home can1et itsell, while We.SELL A HOME
"""'tt thlnlring ol numerous EVERY 31 MINUTES
mon unlta. HU&e 24.'i foot w 1 k' & L
lot. .Only 118.500 tun price.1 -....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ....... --.1 a er . ee IFt.ntastic tttina! Seller pa kl 1-
ott ewr)'body and ~ "''ill '° . .n out tor you. Better
lU1T. ! Dial 645-0303.
64~.()_31)3
at Harbor Center
229 1.Jarbor mvd .• c.~f.
DOYER SHORES
IAYFRONT .
Bn.utiful Norman Grant built
home en 60 ft, lot with pier
" slip. Spiral staircase les.ds
from spacious entry to tre-
LIDO ISLE
Lovely custom home
oo v~ Genoa with
"'bedrooms, 3~~ bath!,
Separate Family room,
Formal dining room,
Well located close to
private community beach
Owners moving
Priced to sell at $89.500
mendous master .Ute. 4 REAL TORS Bedrooms. 4%1 baths, lge.
2190 Harbor Blvd. at Ad:i.ms
545-0&I~ Open til 9 P:\f
THE-LAST W1:>RD-
Enjoy effortless living in this
absolutely spot.less 4 lxhm
& atudy + custom heated
pool_ ln prestige Baycre15t for
the-discrin1inate buyer.
P..1any cuStom features too
nume!'OUs to mentloJt. See
this exceptional borne today.
ITI.9.lO.
I' \I I · \\ Ill I t
~·II<\ Ill I\
I\ t \ l 1 ) I (•
""''''°
View View View
Open Sat. r. SIHI. 1-5
231 SANTA ANA AVE.
NEWPORT HEtGIITS • 'Ter-
rific unobstructed view of
Harbor, fee land, 3 bdrms. + bdnn. o1l patio, lge_ liv.
rm. dfu. area, relrlg. di"S.p.
et, cpt. l:. washer incl. ONLY 1<1.r.oo.
1)e Bluffs
CONDOMINIUM
BEST BUY • Cor. location.
xint creen belt atta ac~
f mm pool, lovely 3 bdrm.
2%. baths, lge. liv. nn. din.
ate&, cpl le drape1, blt·lzf1
• ASKING $36,500,
Westcliff YIOa '
CHOICE AREA • CONDO.
MINIUM • 2 bdnns. 2 bathil.
lge. Jtv. rm. din. area: bit·
In's, w/w & drapes · $43,500 .
Westcliff
PRICE REDUCED • lmmac.
adult occupied home, neal'
schools ancl shopping, S bd·
rm. 2 baths, blt·ins, cpt &
drapes. NO\V ONLY $44,T:JO.
"C" THOMAS
--Realtor
224 W. Cout. Hwy ~5.l:n
Newport Beach, Eve 545-5&1.::
COLLEGE PARK
WITH POOi: -;
Grand piano siie Jiving room,
huge tamUy room & 3 bd·
rms, 2 baths, ready !or your
family. New shag carpeting
& decorator interior. Law
maintenance yard with a
Blue--Haven Pool •• a cover.
ed patio to relax under. Call
now to see.
$29,950
(5%'/0 loan @ $161/mo avail)
EXCLUSIVE WITH
Newport .,
Victoria -11 (anytime) Hvl"g room, family room. 673-4400 Ulll Baker, C.M.
OX! Sq. ft. Tile roof. car. I.==:=~==:=: 1
1 ==?=~~~== """~!!!!!!!!!!""1!!!!!!!!,... peted l:: draped Imi than 12 ------Price st.lhed CORSICAN
months aio.·Oflettd by orig· EASTBLUFF Near new beautiful Fountain
inal owner. $179,500. MUST SELL Valley home. Owner sacri· ·1ohn macnab Lovely view home, owner flcing for perBOnal reasons.
forced to Aell at o n "C e. 4 l bdnns 2 baths, new u~
(7.14} '42.~35 Bdrms., form . din. nn. graded ~11 & draperies
HOMES
901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 brkfst. rm. Large patio w/ throughout. Corner lot • boat
•l!!!!!!!N!!!ewport~!!!!B'!' .. !!'!!h!!!!~J sparklina pool, Just reduc. or trailer storage. Listing
WITH INCOME
New deluxe 4·plexes. All bit.
ins1 shag crpt, dt11s & land.
sea.ping_ 1;~% (annual rate)
loans avail.
. ed to $47 .500. is $31,500, but due to cir·
$l29 /JAo, Pay1 All M"-"'"'"Y oumsto""''• "'w ''°'•open
llJc:I g . axe.s,. nsurance, '·"udln T J .......... for oiler.
interest per annum. Truly (llllrcinemattletht)
Prine!~·& WW FHA 5~i % ~ 546·5880
e 3 BR·2 BA-frplc., plu! e 2 BR·2 BA·patios e 1 BR·I BA-deluxe llinglt
SUNFLOWER AVE. ~telbedroomhomo Coldwell, Bonker & C.. LLEGEREALTY
with 11A baths., covered P~-550 Newport Center Dr. l51X1Adlrnsll,..,.,,CM.
tio._Bi.zllt.tn ldtcb~. Beauti-Newport Beach, Calif. ~~PLUS ell<y 133-4700 644-2430
enhance tor )'OUl' boat °'l -::::=:=:m:=:=:=:=:=z: traner. 'IOP value at $23,500l i-·
ond "''"''"'""'"'"'"""the ASSUME $27,300 s~ % annual percentage 5~% LOAN
loan! Vacant 4 bdrm. This flat top
WE SELL A HOME modem is a top value. IMlx
EVERY 31 MINUTES L."O' lot. sprinld"'. bright Walker & Lee ~;"';:"~~-;·:.,:..,~;
nice area · Orange. Only 7Q.l3 \Veltdiff Dr.
.... mt
Corona del Mar·
Custom built 3 bdrm • 2
$32,.,,,
I' \I I • \\ ! 11 ,
~I \H'\ \II\\
11 I \ I I 1 ( '
baths • 12xl5' formal dining 1093 Bak CM
room • 2 fireplaces + fam· er, · ·
ily room overlooking beauti-
f\11 patio for entertaining.
All thb. &: more in 2400 sq ft.
FIXERI UPPER
2 Bdnns 1 bath, garage. On
R-2 lot on Eastside. Vacant.
Lochenmyer
Realtor-
1860 Newport Blvd., CM
Call &16-3928 Eves. ~165&
Cammercial Sleeper
Outstanding location at
OM ol Costa ~lea's
busle.!t int~s.
Has resilknlia1 income
units at present. 122'1
frontage, excellent eom·
mercial potential & it
11 zoned C·2.
WEST CLIFF
POOL HOME
On a quiet 1Kte 11.reet with
courtyard enlJ'aJ'tee. Spotless
throUghout. Piano lllz.e llv.
Ing room, parqU<!t floored
lamily·room, S49,500. Owner
want! otters.
'46-7171
0 THE REA!, °' ESTATERS
100' x 300' R-4
Building site for a to 10 units
in C.OUOt;y Back Bay area. 2
small rental units at the
ipl't'St"fll. $35.<m.
~~~~d~~!~"NB ~
642-5200 ~
•
COATS -r. BETTER HURRYI
WAL LACI Call now on thla $24,500 borne
IEAL TOltS in North O:ista t.l~a .
5464141-FHA-YA
(o,... '""lftfl) ~Titr will P9Y loan ftn.
I ""-~!!!!!!~"'!"""!" 1.546-9521 or 540-UJI
DON'T. CAU ME 1•1 J ~ 141tHOl) A DUPLEX ---
I'm an extn:. nict 2 bedrooml'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!"""!!
HO"E with • 2 ""'"""" 5 ._ .. _. Paol MONEY MARKE:I' (lUf back. 9WUf"ll1
Both wdll .,.. """"' O«U-~ .. L 950
pied and ftawleta. Sltoi.ted .,..,.,
on a quliet tree lined Corona Thats not &It • A lovely ~im
del Mar street. Onct )'OQ'w pool toot 3 baths. Rich wood ~ the rtst -Come a«: J)Mcllna-. b~kfaat bar, fire·
the best place. M0-17'20.
''7M550 • TARBELL 2955 Harbor
Vacant 3 BR, hardwood fin.
_frP:le, Pltk!· C~h to !oan.
-M>2200 Aat fttoA'f'fef'. _
Delithttul 3 bdrm home
with lovely pool area.
Central Mesa Verde loca·
tion. quiet cul.de-sac k.
low Interest loan avail·
able. A&king $34,500.
''1'. \' '.,, h• j , -"11 'f, I • \' .1 ,
546-5990
Btwn S. Main & Brislo1
Located ~' mile E. of South Coast Plaza Shopping Center
Coll 540-1973
UNBELIEVABLE I
S125 per month pays all for
4 bedrooms, :? bath." y,'ith
wall to wall FIREPLACE,
soft shag cari>t"t and drapes!
Park·like grounds with spac-
ious back yard & COVERED
PATIO! C.onwnient to shops
and schools. Asaime 5~<;;.
GI loan or NO 00\VN VETS.
FHA TERMS ONLY SZJ,500. -we SEl.L A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee 5 BEDROOM-S -
2 matter suites with private
baths ead\ plus upstairs master has ..:-1ace. r..a-e 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
LU-.:1" ... 545-0405 ()peTi til 9 P?.f
full 3rd bath. Built-in range, l""iOii""'-'""'""'""""'• ovm, big ·11v1ng room with Pool-GI Resale
fireplace, family room. Pric-Clo1e To Beach
ed right ii YoU need plenty of room at $33,T;)() your Attractive corner 4 bdrm '"·!th
terms. Anthony pool, 18x38', fully
Panoramic View!
OCEAN &: CATALINA
$37,950
Delightful 4 Bedroam a n d
equipped incl. pool • 8\\·ecp.
Exoel 5% % loan at $191 lncl.
ta." & ins; Owner mogt anx.
lous for oUer. already trana·
ferred out or state.
541·5110 ,...., an.. tt.bt)
OLLEGE REALTY 1500 AdllllS ltKlrtlor,CM
formal dlnizw room. tute. !!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!""'"""""'
tu1ly d'6;~i'i1 Wolk lo TRIPLEX
ochool• and shoppini:. ONLY $62,500
O THE REAL
','"\..ESTATE.RS
DOYER SHORES
Brand n e \V Ivan Wells' 4
bdnn 3 bath + powde1·
room. Formal dining roon1•
tam. nn/w e.·t bar I: trplc.
Lu.xurlously carpeted. Su.
petb view. Pool in land!ca~
ed court yard. Roy J, \Vard
1430 Galaxy Dr. 646·lii;;O.
MILLION $ STREET
P.fodel home in better • than
• new oondltbl. 4 BR., din.
ing ir-familY. Lai:ge rear
yard. \Valk lo school. Re-
ductd to $04,500. G o o d
''""'" Hel Plnchln r. Assoc.
3900 E. <but Hwy. 67'".H.192
CLOSE JO SCHOOLS
3-2 Bdnn~ unit,.s; summer/
winter t't'ntals xlnt! Steps
to beach & bay. on penin·
sula. Don't "DALLY0
' on
this one, it's a "oo'LLY'0!
RmllMi
llALTY
:m> w. Bal"°' NB ""'°"' 2449 E. Cout, CdM 67r>«Ni0
. ASSUME
Slh ~O LOAN
Ba,ycresfs finest 4 BR, for-•
mal dining room + pool,
DAVIDSON Rulty
3-l&-5460 Eves. 5G-494t
MESA VEROE
$23,9SO
Perftct home in size It pr4ce. •
3 bediooms, 1 batlll. Modern
kitcht'n. Double garage,
.Near everything. s.10-1720.
3 BR + dining room, 111 TARBELL 2955 Harbor
bath!, lots ol concillte, room 3 HR, 2 BA, fanuly rco1n.
tor haft! or trailer. prof decor. 1li yr nld--xll1t
DAVIDSON Rulty . · cooo. 132.f>OO. 7!3S2 Flee!
51~"60 D.'.li\. S19-IU.-t8 LAne, 110. (h..·nt'r 6'16-4328""i·
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OAJ1. Y l'llOI"
HOUSES POii IALI HOUSIS l'OR SAtE HOUSl l FOR-SALi
Ho·:: """"....... H-'!"'"!''!"'t! , ~· ~urisl""" 1 -AlllL U""'"""""' Apll. UnfurnltllM 1700
5~ % FAST MOVE . IN 2 . MONTHS old MoottitJ
.. .YJO ' ·=-·~~-'<-~ 3 llodl'oomi. ' ...... Sharp. ,... J>J:AIE. ~I Br, *NA&UU PALMS* ' MARnNl9UI • ~~-~·~ a .... home, Qw..,, ...... 211 ... -· ctlnliw. ""' l a 2 BR. Pool VEN.DOME &-Now· bomu, reedy· lo ·move h:. 2 to$ 'bed-1trm1:b..i co-back. . .....,..,.......-,a11 . .i.c111E.Cic1S:, -• GARDIN ...-so:.
lllNTALI . lllNTALI . UNTAL• • I . ACN I AU: -al :' 1DDO llaclt'llly ·DIG Clita ~ 41001 ........ , JDDO clOia -· 5100
eo,....... 3 BR 2 batiiJlom• Nflllll, 2 to S balhl.->n mile from beach. First Leguno leech 1705 LMle ot$U9"" .,..lb. kit, J..os lot ...,..._ i--. , .. +...., palil, IM!uCin.ATl:'APrSi Eicellon:, peri;.!Jke ~ ~~~::.::ci .. '.'".t:i1~: ~Lap to eo days after move ,i!J. • Walk·er & Lee """ AnnMnor7 L• . .Adwta .....,,~ .ADULT a.r.um.y 1rc.-p ~ .. ooly. N ....
ins, brlcl< ;;;-place, family ' VAY,PHA Tlf'ms. From $23,990 ·-1EAUTI~--" oo,-...., . -~ONSAVAILAllLE 11\0iiPlilr~ ,
room ......... .-loL . T' h' e' Beach . . BEACH E • "° ~ c:o..e •1 -..... CITJ'& l BR .... pri patio, CIOeo.to.~ Pork . uri· :.:1a1 Ana.A~S U3 OutdOOI' BBQ &: room for 1n loveb' Ll.IU!"-ccnio. com-• .&a-'6'i Open 'tU 9 PM ·-r pt, den. 8bare pool. Aslullll, * Sl*cfo\11 I ~ .. 2 Ba 646.5642 &42-U65
boaL& t.ra.Uer. Aasutne 5%% ( 8rookhvtt~1 I~ Seuth of Ade ) .mun lty; trontinc on ~ajk oSE-OUR110RSES".. Cua.tom no )!!L1'7°$165: 64&-3$i * 2 8edroomt or
loan . $~ • .re. $174 P..J.T.I. j on . ~ m_ e· ~ , ms lcent hfftrd pool, .lDO 1teps 3 BR <wJI! add 4th) fUn rm. 1 B~ Wlfmn •.••••••••••• Sl&S A 2 BR fum A unturn Con. * SWlm Pool, PuVcretrt Mesi Verde 962 • • !tl!:'2 • h'Onl r.r!v. bch: tennis cbl. , . . J BR··-"'-• ._ · · * Frpl. lndiv/lndry '""11 Prlcedforirrunedlateu.leal · --1~~ ...,._ i • eo"'"t" •' Back R ... view new paint w uurTI ............. 6 '" venlent to '"""'"" cer.tr 1u• •-•-1 .,... ·~"'--------! 5110
. -e1:c. m~. atnictive rurn. _.., • 2 )lit wd' duplex (Cxofta' _... ·-r-. • -. -.e"9 m Ave. • ~ $..?'f,500. ·Call 545-8424 Soutb _ inelU!le w"/w carpt 'i·-cllps. in•A out. Vacant. '$)10 lM. H. ~, • ...;,,, · tt.i. ~ P'ullttton St'. Set: ~fir. 00$f.t. MESA • it2-.. 2 BDRMS. cpts., d~pet, elee.
'"eo..tiiiiiiiiRealiiiiiiiiE•iitaiitii•iiiiiiii'"'JNowport le.ch 1200 Hunt'-'-... =ch=1~400~ ka:u mUter bed; iocatio~ \Y•lu .~'!t~·-l·BR'--;."::v'•••••···t•·t~ , -:5" • .._.., bltns .• Priv. earas:e. Adults
,. .. ... -. decoi. 2 mu. 2 BAI, .... l2ili 'iEAai.Y Lew. 3 811. iilD'iii.E'~·~·r: _,.,. -4200 • HARBOR ms o:11y. No ..... A.ailable DIVORCE SALE• I;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. TOTAL PAYMENT I•., do.""'' laW>. with w/d, lalnl!JI m; •l fo', Jlo'hil lq 35.1; E °'Mt Hwy CdM U/l. 646-4'60.
432 MAGNOLIA DIS-nl .... Cash $134 per MDf'!TH :t'~'~'!.:~:.e'Sho1: ~zibrla. Mr. '. ~'rfS.7225 . . . ~~.::>~~ENING BAC>IELOR """'"'.f r om N-port hado 5200
Attomey says, Ell 3 bdrm Real Sharp ,! Bedroom, 2 by owner, call for app't. -' · . lRVINE Terr.·2 Br. 2-bl.. 1MMe:DIAT! $U4. AJIO avall l • 2 A 31 ··--'-------I
Eutside,· C.M. Vacant. ~~-~re;;.es~lhtt(;1::_; Bath home, Freshly paint· 49Ml.52, a .m. orwkends. $165. 41J3R. 2;Ba, .dbl pr: tce.di1Ham.nn.$tl>mo., OCCUPANCY ·~Heated pools. chlldsPACIOUS upper 3 Bft. 2 $23,500 ed. GI L:ie.n of StS,800 at FOR SALE b 0 Qtl1drm a: pets O.K. 81.Qe leue. A,t. ~2503 , Luxury •prden apartmenll care center. adJ, to lhoppitw:, 'BA. frptc, -cpt, dri)s. Nr ~ NOW _ n 4 _ ~7946 5,. % . af1!1ual Int. '.f OU can't Sacrifice, ie!ving w n ~ ! ; Beacon 645-0llt 2 BR,.J iA. unhaft or Pe.rut. ottut.. complete .prtvaey, No pets. • · ocean Rm. S22S. mo. ~~~~""""""'""~f beat1t.ServlcePorch.Dou-Europe immediatel y·. $235. 3 B:R, tm rm, bltns, $250.SoofH.wy.' beautiful~ac,tPlns1"u~ c!:~~':..l'IOS::70 .499-2'128
WELI.,.KEPT duplell:. Xlnt ble &&rage. Forced alr heal Custom built wood A alass crpts.. di'ps-· V,acant .. Nice , 642"36G or 675:«144 paralltled recttatlonal facq. • 3 BR., 2 ba., frpl.,' bit-in&,
location, 1 blk trom bch. Cbmpletely fenced, 1prlnk· house. Ocean&. canyon view, area. Blue Beacon 545-0lll Idea In a country club al· RENT •-patio, Xlnt. kx:a.tian. 1 block
"'
P E l=l l=IO N
.. '.J'l ~ .. •••• ., •• Both 3 Br, 2 Ba,'frP! 1" bl.t· lers, Carpets and Drapes waU to wall carpeting, $160. 2 BR,· pr; tencd yd. S.lboe • ™Ph~. Now ~ In 3 Rooms' Fur niture (ran) beach. (114). f73..T861, * 642· 1 n1 Anytime * i~. Won't last long. (714) ttuJiughout, 1'.'8-mily Room. built-Ins &: fireplace,. 1 R/0, w/w. t'hlldren O.K. Newport Beac'h. . $19.95 &. UP 675-4159 m.7861, 675-415' Let us show it to you. Bedroom. 2 Baths. Urrique Bk\' 534-69IK> 3 ~-Yearly $300 mo. Furnished or unturnlshed I=====,,-=-.-. bCEAN VIEW DUPJ.,.EX WE SELi; A HOME con.stniction. OPEN HOUSE · . · · FR A NK MA ll S H AL Modelt open 10 am to l ,pm lfonth-1'0-Month Rent.aLs TR.A.NSF.ERR.EDI ~t 2
Investment Income 1 BR. + 2 Br. unit. Walle to ··EVEIRY 31 M&INULTIS Sat & sj,,, U-5~ weekdays ~!.,~ ':!:;.f11C:.ire':~ REALTY • .,.._. ReoOAKW00;10. WIDE SELECTION ~l t\ bl~,.,,,,.
shopo. $39.500. Agent a ker ee af!er 6, .934 ·><:cemar, La&-. pets 0.K. Bia-.,..._ Lido Isl<: US1 ll~o:,:.~~!;~, I ·BR apt, pertly lUm. Nr
1 uNrrs, 1.,... lot l.12x300'; 642-JSSO o• 833-1077 Beachco. =-VIEW•. · · GAR~EN . m w. '"'· CM ..,.3481 ""' 114>. room to build 5 more. $90,000 DECORATOR'S DREAM 3 1682 Edinger A<).1.11.&4' ·Costa Miu ilOO CHARM APARTMENTS · fl-2 . ~'1176 or 4~94n
Owner wilJ carry 1st TD. BR, 3 BA condo w/frplc, SJ2.:4.a:i Ope~ 'lil 9•PM rerrlfic .. -loan.· Wumptionl , ING 3 Br , 2 Ba year-...... BR 4-plex:. Opts, 3 BR 2 Ba 1133 E Bal~-W 111-M C1tdl1 RltfL Interest tale-·doesn't in--· ly rental. ~Just temodel~ &. ':J.700 16th Strfft drp11, RIO, Patio. Child · • • ..,....
JBio New~rt s1vd .• C.M. ~~I. i2T.500. Broker $2, 999 DN. crease: nifPo1nts. 3 Bdrm.!., .3 BR, 2 BA, la: ~ rm, PoOl d~ted, trp1· & patio. n4: 64Ul70 O.K. Blue Beacon. 645--0111 Blvd: on ~boa Penln. PL
548-7129 6#-0684' eves. =====-=.,...., 4 Bedroom -family living, family rm., 2 baths~ ~-years k ma I n.te n "n c e • New Avail Dec. 1 $335 mo.; Eves $ . t 1o;;1; ' 2 -PX> mo yrly lse. 5t8-80tl
"BLUFFS" 2 Bdrm, 50' deck covered screened in patio olt.1. Reduced to $41;500 crpts/drw. bltns, frplc. 673--~: days 544-fil21.• 30 WEEK & UP ~ pa~ ~~~.k ~bl, ~ ·
BAYFRONT APT. w/ prime . Bay . VI e w. on lrg lot. Aasume GI loan. PLACE REALTY .f.'M.-9704 Avail 12110. : $275 mo. , I ·Br, 21 Br, Bach. f.faid ser-Be~n ~111 ue East lluff 5242
$39,500. Call 6 4 4-2 2 s 9 on1y 642-2718 Huntfna!on leech 3400 vice, w & poo1
Vi•ta Del L1do, !>;er ~ sH p e..,,/w...,. $14' total per mo. HANDYMAN'S RENTAL SERVICE I , · THE BAY CLIFF $175. 1 BR, 2 Ba, dlx 4-piex. e NEW DELUXE e
available. Sell er le'a~/op. ======== Val· EUi Sped.al! 4 Income units 120 GOLDEN WEST RENTAJ..S TWO STORY Ab J I Gar, frplc, diabwuhcr. Bier. ~ 81'. 2~> ba apt. tor 1eue ti Pri -soo Ne port Ho:'•hl• 1210 )Ids. to beach. Patios, deck•. _ _,,_. c · ..,..,..,,.,,... s o ute Y 455 N. N~ Blvd. 5341980 Incl.& ....... mutr. suite, din on. ce ""'"· · w • ilt ~ w/cicean ·view. Nds. 'pa.int, 1~ Giu~n rove ~ aoraeou• 1' immaculate. 646-3265 .-
Geor g e Williamson 't ll't etc. Should gross $9,0CO yr. LGE clean _3__Br, fam rm Large 3 bdrm, 2 bath, !ami· $150. 2 BR. Cloeed gar. Cen-rm. A dbl. pragt!, auto.
REALTOR CHARM & VAL'UE e -Pr. $G9,900. Con.sider trad1"s. \Y/lrpl, xlnt E..Side loc. No 1y A: dining. You won'~ WATERFRONT, Newp t. tra1 Vlafunt, RIO" w/w door opener avail. Pool le
613-4.150 Eves. 873-1564 Retire in thjg 3 bedroom, $235. 549-J532 bell~ it Ln.se $320/month klabd. Beaut, Jse. duplex, Broker 534-69111 ' • nc. area. Nr. Catholic
NEWPORT BEACH large Livinl:: rm.&. Family 17007 Magnolia. t'V ?tfISSION REALTY '49+07Jl i;>ets. . . ~ludlna:· aardener. Avail· v.:et bar .. lndry, garg, boat Qwrc.h.OANLdulyts..,.n:.,pe.11.
Charming 3 BR. w I large Room. Tropical badC)'a.rd. 545.0459 •!.EASE/OPTION• Mua Verde . 31 lft 'able t>ec lit Adults only dock. Winlet or longer. Costa Mesi! 5100 -
$28,lm. }Qnttennskarthis5yr.old3 i CALL~ ~•th c.oasl Adults, no .pet&. 673-7861 or 8EIS 'A.m.i&OI Yf'.ay, N.B.
fncd. yr, cov. paUo. Hdwd. Graham Rlty. 646-2414 -~===~~--Br 2 ba horn I ~r l!ll5J $7-8384 2700 tt 3 BR 6 tarn firs., trpl., bltn. kitch. Nr. Ne"~ Newport Post Office LETS TRADE vie'.w Call . I tee w ocean POPULAR T PLAN 3 Br ., Rea! ESta.te MERRIMAC WOODS NEW 141,..__. 1 schools. church &. shops. .... Your old house. for this two · or rms. · ' <t 4 BR 2 ba N l SINGLE Adultt Lu" u r Y Just completed, 1 or 2 BR, 2 nn. 3 BA. ~"'''' 1 a apt Owner w/fin,...,.., ..... ,000 NEW 2 BR, 2 BA,. din-h PLACE REALTY $9'104 Ba. tam rm, xlnt.crpta, two ., . ew y redec., garden apta with country BA with air ~. ...,__ '1'52 Amlp WQ'. 61S-503l. .......... ~· . story, ~Prestige home. 500• patiol Ice yard wall l andscp e d . Sttk ap. club 1~ and -·~ -·"' 'i'=;:i======I W.lk.r Riiy. 67'5200 ing/play area. $ 3 0, 5 0 0 . a--. lo·..000. 1.-4'Bedroom• ' ' 1 -~-tt nt ~ a .. ..._..e~ com-pletely oouod-led seui· ~= v:·a L'•·, NB ~'0 Sun. Chvner 431 RI v er aide . """"" L•gun• Nlgue.1 17a/ to schools. library, ihop'~1 ~~_:."'ve occupa ' ......,. plete pri.,. ...... sot.mt BAY cle··•-o"•"~·-WOOd• ""· Corona. del Mar 5250
........, ....., ..... t"" 3 Baths. AU ' electric kitch-~"----''-----Quiet . ne\a:bborhood'~ AvaiJ .....,..,....., ~ ,.., API'S·-i ?--'---~ • • ..., 'I' li~iiii~iii;;iii;i;;;iiijii;i~I 642-3'.199 en. Separate Family Room. RENT SELL " BR 21 • "'~" .. <1.... I '""'"""u • .u-vu111 al 16th, lngs, d!.Jhwaahe~. l u 1 h -• ....., • ,:i . Dec. $250. ~ · 4 BR. TO""'""'°••a.. Near Nowpo'rt Be ~ Beautiful carpets and Drap-BA $275 mo. water le lawn ...... ~ a .. ,,. landtcaplng with 1treams le 3 BR 2 bath home, corner
lot JJl)l(180 • add 5 more
units. Drive by 154ii Sllnta
Ana Ave. then call
llania Eealty
6-12..6500
5 BR. 3 BATHS
Dover Shores 1227
BY owner 5 "er, 4 Ba, Pool ,
open patios, 2 trpt, lge view
lot. crpts, drps. 0 v er
$100,000 615-7200.
es. Use ""'ur v .A. loan or ru ""1008 LOVELY countrY dub vlll:a, beach 1 pools, clubhouse. cn4j ·64Xl>SO · watei1alls, tlevaftn, BB~. ~~ 1 ~ care rn . .>'t'r' • 2 BR, 1•• BA~-·~· LLE~A~SE~~'36-~1~!9T"!_.,....~...,IPiJPiJaf~bOA:"j;'o;:u;; -" low tJown F.H.A. Use out -:======= ' "" .....,....:.... ....._., ::-: ' DUPLEX Balboa. Nov. thrU clubhouae, 11!1.Unas, ~le
Guarantee Trade Plan. Condominium 1950 pool, pr. 1216. 5419-37&0. FASHION ~bores, I~ 4 May, l bdr •. $160, 2 bdr $220. swlnl pools, prlv. Pt. w/ -...,.
WE $'ELL A HOME QR, :t·(bi,. w/all desired Nr. Ocean & H arb o r . 1torqe. ~verythln& new. ON TEN ACRES
EVERY 31 MINUTES UNIVERSITY PARK Newport Buch. 320C) featutes. 968-4o62 • RecreaUon deck vw. {213) Starting at $140, Adults: 1 • 2 BR. Furn le Unturn
W I k & L, 2 br., 2 ba. Excell cond. Cash ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 681-6138 please. Just East of i.600 .,._ la / -' tkls /
University Park 12l7 Priced under market at .:;,;.;;,;,;c..;.,.;.,...;..:..c.c--a er ee to owntt. 833-2319 I/ I fount•ln V•llty 3410 OCEANFRONT 3 •·. 2 Harbor Blvd, next ., Naben ""'' "" , .. v. pa ' • ..,.., Cadlll • t '425 Menimac: Pools. TeMls. Oontnt'l Bldat, RENTALS TOWNHOUSE Baths. $300 Pllll uUl., ac a 91» Sea Lane, OdM &f4.26U 7682 F.dinger
8424455 Open 'til 9 P1.f HOUHI Fumlshecf New carpetin&, ~ paiJlt. 2 4 BR S P AN 1 SH TOWN. yearly Way. S45--6300 (MacArthur nr. Cbalt Hwyl $4.1,500. EastbluH • choice Jo.
cation!
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS fi'F.>.1662
3036 E. Coast Hwy., CdM * EASTSIDE C.M. *
See this 3 bdnn, 2 beth, HW
Roon:, frplc. Double car pr,
on alley. Tl'y $23,(DJ.
Gnh•m Rlty. 646-2414
Near Newport Post Office
DUPLEX
2 BR. each • garages. Xlnt
area C.M. Good cond. Out
of state OYll"ler must &ell im-
medla1ely.
Pyramid Exchangor.i 646-2629
Cost• Mesa 1100
1010 OAK ST.
OPEN SAT., SUN.
Tremendous opportunity for
growing family! Spotles!I 3
BR. 2 ba. + family rm.!
Spacious pat Io & yard!
$23,500! 5~ % Loan may be
assumed.
BALBOA BAY PROP.
61J.7420 ANYTir..JE
OFF to PHOENIX
~1ust: sell modem ranch style
4 bdrm on h""ee lined comer
lot. Large 18 x 20' family
room, dining room &-lovely
ki ttj)en. Park • like yard.
Owner leaving state -pric-
ed ' for last sale at $40,500.
CALL 54~1151 Heritage Real
Estate.
3 Bdhn 2 Bath crptd, drp,
Ii-pie, bit-ins, dlshwasber,
Oversized gar. w/elcc open-
er, Like new, W/s.ide CM
548-0137 alt 3
3 BR, 1 ~ ba, new cpt. 6110
loan pmnt $148 PTTI. Quick
poss. Rltr. 642-9730 eve
548-0TJQ
DESPERATELY
loolclng
for-a home? We have a de&
peratc owner wanting to sell
desperately, S ma 11 down
payment, qnick escrow, and
your moved in, in·the great.
est community in. Orange
Co. Thill spacious 3 br home
is 1t1.'0rtil looking at. $3(1,500.
•red hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
can Anytime 833--0820
Corona del-Mar 1250
--~------1 Bdrmt., 2 baths. spllt-iewl. HOUSE, POOL & REC. $2fi9. 673-4724
Go __ n_t_r_•_I ____ 2_000_ Pool. Adults oiiey. ;225 ~~'IERM Dl.SCOUm'. nJRN $151), 1 Blt, crpts,' 2 .BR apt, cplt/drps, blt.'a COROLID0
1
__ , API'Stud~-2 Br.
Month. '" drps & bltin. 1% BA. Poot rar!(e &-o\ien, ft!:ril:, ftte· Lower o::v...s, • ""'· penl· ~ FHA Joan, Pymnts Boy & •-·h ~.75 1525 Plaoe!"tia er, dillposal, air cond., paU~ hoUse, Frplcs., pool, .dbl. under $175 month. 4 BR 2 REN TAL flNDlllS ~ Garden Grove -BR 1 Ni ALL utWtles pa1d. $200/mq, ca.rp:>rts, patiols, 1180 • $220.
bath' Prestiee Home No 11XP115M ... IUIAll8 RHtty, Inc. NEW tri I I 5 BR, t l U ta~·; ;:an· Adults only • no pets. 673-3378 -··•;~~. • 901 DoYtt Dr NB SUite 126 • eve cus P11 y. Wells-Mc:Cardle, Rltr1. 2 BEDRM. apt., <P"· •-.. __..1 .. ,. llSlanAl-MllSS 645-20:XI .,Eves 548-'966 c:rpt it drpa, bltin• Sundeck: 67J..8:B8 ~~
APT.-IOOMAn SIN(( • w/dilhwasher, hlck wall. CLOSE To bch, 2 Br, trplc, 1810 Newport Blvd., C.?.l a 11 elect ldtc h + rehia. ""!•~DO~VER!!!!!"!SH~o~•~••"•~ I $325.. 897-2344 548-7'1'29 Eve. 548-1939 Wshr, Dryr, Li gar. Yrly ... 05 w. 1tt1i, c........., ..,..11 ~ beam ceyrlil, }>I!~· .. !"dio ear leue. '1&5. 67S--O!H5.
847-8531 ... "" .. BEAUTIFUL. taro< """"" dr. $2211 Y· ~oo THE VICTORIAN · ·
POTENTIAl. UNLlMITED ..raneaa ·home.' SWtmmin& S•nta Af:ta 3610 ,RENTAL . SERVI~E Just Completed B~H:,w v1f:w'U:w!i:!:
Elegant 4 br. 21;s ba. condo. PROPERTl·ES WEST 'pool, etc. Avail. Dec. ~ 4 Br, 2· Ba, tam rm. range, GOLDEN \.VEsr RENTALS Brand new 2 BR, 1% BA. Aciutu: i 7s.6sn '
2 swim. pools, tennis crt, Rent•l locaters for 1 or 2 )'tat lease. $650 oven dlshwhr, crpts. roofed rum Garden Grove 530-6800 S 15 O. Ad u 1t1 on 1 y . ,-:,,..,.·..,..~~~~--I
wlk to shops &: IK!hools, 5 ·Reil~ntl•l" -· Apts. . .Per month. 64>0283 pat~. fncd. $233. ~---• Crp~tnll. Sound 2 BR duplex; Garden Rtting,
min. to bch. Lo assumable 2627 Newport Blvd. WATER.FRONT Lux. Apt. on · Corona ci.1 Mar 4150 proofed, pri 1ar w/storage. frpl~c, gar, water J: Pl pd.
FHA loan makes it perfect Newport'Be•ch ·the Penln. NN' ·2 bdr., 2 Lapna Nlpel. ;1707 · Fenced yd w/patio. ~ater S165 mo, 644-2562. •
for family lookine to future. 675-1642 ba., pool. Lee. ad\Jlts. Boat -rozy around floor 1 Br with p;j. Gardener maintained. LARGE-Brand new 3 BR, 2
The Real Est•t• Mart
Dwner Transferred
Investors Dream! 968-6164 I '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ j -alips avail. Caribe Balboa, 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drpe, fireplace, cklse· to ahop'g, 667 Victoria St. 636-4.12& , BA. View. South of
DUPLEX So. or Hwy. 2 p. _ ... T s-•1 1; 310 Fernan do Rd., cn4) view! Priv. beach 'lc. pool Adults only, no p e t s . Hlghway~a-6004 house•. $55.IXKI, $8.000 down. ncsu 0 .. Rent••• to Share 2005 6'J3..3003. prlv. ues. 49S-012't. Studenlt ok $110 mo. Famy· 'Vi'illa Apts SMALL 1 BR. View s. of Income $450 mo. &U-3645 or 3 bdrms 2 baths Royal Hon?I!, Hal pt hi •-·•: -•392 6= "'"4 · WANTED Middle A-Work· BLUFFS: Lovtly 3 BR & , 1711 nc n n.o::a.1 or 11'i1""1 Hwy. New carpels .l """·~=-_,·,,,...=.....,,_,=-,; 1 1SOO sq.rt, cpts/drps, blt-ins, .. ~ Mission Viejo "· 1....,. lady lo share apl den. Opts, drpa,' pools. Wik . Nea'r ~.. ~-.,_ • drapes. $160. 6'JS-6354. OPEN Su n 11-6. Cug New 3 boat door .in 1arage. 60x:l20' "" hool cl b k IL:... ....,_ .., .... ,.e '"'° ~l"'' •
BR home nr Bch. Asking lot. Below market at $3i,500. ;~aame. Call ~1808 alt. 4 ~}~tore~o~ ~ ~; BEAUTIFUL vlew;.2 BR. 1~ la -__. UCI. Ach:!ta only. 20122 SOBaU'I1!allsid~-~( h~;._3 B!.:_12
$79,500. 228 Go l denrod. P•ul Jones Re•lty · 644-044s. BA. F'tplc, bltn ~a a.EAN Bachelor AplL Santa Ana Ave. M0-2796 • e-., u-.... ...,
67Y.i068 847-1266 Eve. 536-63511 WILL ahare 2 Br duplex, WANTEDI "PARK LIDO'' ~m,.:-m493't.'--Au util ind $8.5 Up crpll, drpl, gar. 67J..3324.
CAMEO Sl-IORES: 5 Bedrm, LO/LO DOWN lrpl, on water in N.B. with 3 BEDROOM 2 fltt I 1-315 E Balboa Blvd NEW APTS. girl In 20'11, dependable & 2 or 3 BR Cienm waiting • ~ace, u.g · · Den.Pool, by O\vner $79,500. congenial, 675-3756 morn & L8e or buy J.Jaison eo" lncd-ln yrd,· Afr/Cotxl, $JXI BALBOA 673-9945' $15J & $175
6~ after 5 pm. 646-0132 · · mo. S37-5676. 1 & 1 bdr., 2 lwt?n. pools. All 2 "' 3 BDRMs. l BA, pvt.
Large Reposse.11Jon eveg, _llft Lido lsN 4351 utiL pd. Adib!. only, no pet!. patio, heated pool, waaber
B•lbol Peninsul• 1300 4-BR, new paint A new cpts. WILL share my 2 Br apt. BAYCREST. Cape Cod Co.;tclomJnlvm •Tor-l\irn. 11~sired.1U-3MS ' hook up. '962-8994
--------·I V~ delllrable area. JX>Gl w/&irl ,25 to 35 w/good Colonlal. 4 br. 2 ba. Child, . ' :JU !Avocado St. CM
Developer's Duplex HAFFDAL Rlty 842-4400 morals Refs. 64.5-2969 aft 4 peta, OK. $3511. Cal I ATTR. ·4 Br, appliances, pool BEACH Ap~ .. l BR el· LA . PALMA. S A' PT.S. L•11Una -IHch
Three bedroom upper two B O E ' -· 646-JSU. 1c:~nl1 court $195 mo. H.B. ficlencles. All new f\.1111.
bedroom lower, in ve..., good e y WN R e 2100 962-0040 Garage 3XI Nord. Mrs N!!W 2 Br._.. 1% baµ>s : ·cpts., UPR DUPLEX, 2 I• ..,_,,
•1 Very nice 2 Bdrm 1~ ba Costa MeA RENTAL SERVICE · -~•--•· . (7ll) 675•7225· .1-.... d'· .. a&he .,, __ ,__ ..... ,,. rental area. Now fuUy leu-. . -~ -GOLDEN \VESI' RENTALS ltli:NTAL!io ~ • "".....-~. ..,,w r. i;.ill;Nll' I& gpacloua liv. rm ,
ed. GOOd erowth potential. ho~. Xlnt neighborhood. 2 BR, gar patio, Quiet tro~ 11930 Carden "G~ 530-6600 · · m..o228 ed &araa:.e. SJ.5!>-$155; ~e .at fireplace, . fr' pon::h, I g
$49,500. Ass! ume..,exisf~l!8006% plVA teal setting !or adulll only, 3 BR 2 BA ¥•·Furnished 760 W. Wil&on S4UT.11 aundeck, clolied gara1e, BURR WHITE oan: · 0 • ' us 1 Blk to 5hops $173 544-0452 BLUFFS, new • Gener•I '4000 latbea l1land 4155 ATTRAC11VE studio 3 'BR view -of ~ts-ptly ocean,
$3,550. 847'1329 RENTAL SERVICE '!,ndo· Pool. $350, yrly. · , apt:B. CentraUy Io cat ed. newly painted, new w/w
REALTOR -PRES·Tl.GE FMA 5o/4'1e GOLDEN WEST RENTALS 6•~'1Zl) or 675-6044. The GORGEX>U~ New Bal&oa Ia!and. new 2 Bdrm, Children welCOl'l'le. $15 O. Cl'lts, drapes. nr. sbops & hi·
•2901 Newport.mvd., N.B. Covely 4 BR, ma11y ~tras. ll!UO GaMen GfO\ie 530-6600 N rt H l••h 3210 VAL O'ISERE-.garage67;..l39
185
15• 6JS..7l.15, u 00 -Mrs. Cole. Mgr--:-s1r w. 3¢hoo1, l l,i blk tb tiCh. NO 6'l"'J-4630' 642-Zli\ Eves. near Marina Hi School &: ewpo • r• · ans .,. Center, Apt. J. dogs. To reliilble people,
Lido Isle 1351 ~~s.OwEarl~7~1slon. Newport Be•ch 2200 LRG. 3 bdr .. 2 hi., fireplace, Sa~:l :~; %n:~~s Huntington Be•ch 4400 QUIET, Ip . dehm;-~ Br.1¥.i ·= $3JO. After 6 PM
--------' . ner FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bit., 2 ~~aid~~· Callclole to achoo.I Therapy&: 45' poOt, BBQs ·-· . ·-baths apt,: ~.E., Kitch., 2 -c=c-',..-;;;'"'"'""-1 BUILT BY A STAR ~ .• -2000 Pa"°"' Rd. &42.86!0 2 BORS., 2 ba. Adults. No Car •ar. lltlO Adults, no 100 CLIFF DRIVE
Gtamol'OWI cust bit corner Fountain V1lley 1410 ba., patki, adults. Bayside ** t2lli 421-1534 ** · · · pets. Furn. or unt, 2320 peti. 240 E. 16th · Pl--$180 1 BR, l~io BA. O'pts,
home. J>r:iv. Pa~. HUge-~l~~~l July hl $200. $200. 2 BR deluxe lower. Util Florida. Call 5.16-2730. Ms.&132. drps. b1Un1. View ot ocean.
mstr. s u 1 te. 2 Bd., conv. 6%. %, $145 mo. Spacious 5 Unlvenlty P•rk 3237 pd. Many extras:. Singles BEACH apt.~ 2 BR. ·2 BA. NEWLY Decorated 2 Br Walking distance to town.
playroom, 41,l, bettui. $195,CW Br, 3 Ba, Jge lot. Top Ibo 2300 O.K. Bkr. 534..&9ID cr.pts, drps pooL Adulbl. 219 w/pr $115. otspola! water Also !urn Bachelor, very
R. C. GREER Realty n t: i g h b 0 r b 0 0 d v 1 c. Ii a 2' & 3 Bft. homes for leue. $13.'i. 1 BR duple:r.. Single 15th St: No: 7. pd. 543 aern&rd sl. (CJ. latee. $170, '9f.2449 'or
Huntington lleoch 5400
570!
335.i Via Lido 673-9300 Brookhunt I Ellis. Drps, SPACIOUS 2 story 3 BR. 2 Prices from $285 to $325. adult only. Avail now. BJue 2 BR' poof . tll pd ~ 636-4120 _494-5303==·-,,,..-,_~,...,...,...I
.. iiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii · 2 f 1 ~ · Red Hill Realty 833-0820 Beacon 645-0lll • • u · -mo. ·,-1110 xtr.a crpt1ng, r P c. BA. ·BaJr view. ·Olrnplete!Y Adults onlr. No petll. 17616 NEW 2 BR apt, &aide. 1 BDRM. Nr. town &: bch.
LOWEST PRICE covered patio, 11prinklen turn . No s.tudents. 54&-9574. 1 S Y O U~ AD IN $110. BACH apt. All utll pd. cammm. M7'Z12S. erpts, dt'J)I, bltns, dishwhr, $151rmo. lnq. 1020 So. Cst Mesa Verde
4 BR. 2 BA. lrn nn, exec Home on ·ljdo.-2"'Br. 1 ba. front & bac:k, fruit trees, 4 BUSJEST. muVtplace in CLASSlflED. ~~ will Avail now · encl gar, prv pa ti 0 . Rwy. or GC-614!
home. Bltns, good cond. Pvt Street-to-st~~t. r_:s :fd. ~·~·~:nna. town. The · DAil.Y PILOT ~ookinc fDr it .Dial M2-"Broke'?' 534-6980 Or•nte County 4600 642-6257. RIAL ESfATI
\vaned !mt paUo, lge htd ~. _a ng 1 · money, time f, e!fort. Look ""''0 • 2 BR. Lee rnx1· Genti"•I ' swim pool wlslide & 'div LIDO REALTY INC. Your UNTI'ED FUND Clauilled secUon. s a v e SHOW you CIJ"-Gtve a Jalr Costa Mesa . 4100 SINGLE &dulll, l uxu r y 0 1~_: fPts. ---·------1 3377 Via Lido 673-1300 Needs Your Dollan share gardeh a;its, w/tull recrea· drps, R 1 ' 'a ult&. ·
brd. Prof landscpnr. lo ":!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!~~ _ now!!! $JO.~O IWL Up tlon f&cWtie• A complete no pets 2885 Mendosa Rent1l1 Wented 5990 ma int. Xlnt Tll!igbborhd. ~ n a. 545-M21
$43,!l;iO. 540-757' Huntlnntnn Beech 1400 . Gontr•I 2000 Gontrol 2000Gonorol 20cio • Studlo;a l It< Aptz. -A m' 'Sous.th B""'rookh~~ DELUXE I • -' Bdnn RENTALS WANTED ~;,:.,-,---.--:TT:' ~ - -• Kitchen .. TV tocl. pts. · ... -..., g ' . . ' * HOMES SV2•/e Lun Assumable .• __ .. _, tn•l ~ ~ua11 ,_, A dr .,75 ATRIUM MODEL •Phone S.rvice ~Pool ~,..,. m "~ "~" .,..... " ~ ' * DUPLEXE' s 3 Br 2 Ba, ram &. din rm. &f&..2544 543-8333. Ne~ly paint~. vacant HUNTINGTON CREST S@'O~~ f&-C!lJ-$• • Maid .ervlee avail. · * GUES'l'-HOUSES
Ownr/,.·t. 2956 Pemba Dr. Here's a -~-'3 Bed· --I.'---: ~ -IJ 23·-,.~1 week ~~on~,,.,.,~ .. G1ri:len ,Grove ==:: 4610 2-BR ulnl~ ~~"~Ota,K. * APARTMENTS
5"46-7051 roonr Home~ ?i-10\le fn quJCk. newport oivu, ai11·:t1"" SINGLE. Adul~ Lu x U'f y -• """un .... .'~ "':'..._. -.FREE--SERVfeE
BUSIEST markclplace In
town . The DAILY PILOT
Cla.Ssifled section. S a v e
money, time I: eUort. t.ook
now!!!
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
AB&tJme r .H.A. 6'ii% An-Solve a. Simple Scrambled Word Pu.ult for aChuc.klt $155 -A1TRACTJVE, 1 bdt., aarden apts with country Pool. &ii-3645. GOLOl:N WEsr RENTALS
nual loan with payments of pool, utU. paJd, &arden Uv· club · atmoephere and com-LG 3 BR. l" 1:la. Cpts, drpl. ll930 Garden Grove BlYd.
$Ul Includes all. Yob should O Reorra~ letters of ..,. Ing, adults, no pei.. AlsO .p1~e prtvacy. SOUTH BAY Cf,rport Ir: pool. ~ds o~ . ~-•600,__
see this huge master bed-fO\W KJombled word• b.. Bachel~ apt.\ elderl.f ~IC-CLtiB APl'S 13100 Chapman 2714 Cblttie t'~. 2. 6*'l!lli5 e LANDLORD$ e
room with loads of clo5ets, low to fOl'm four lil'!PJ. words. , In& ""°" prieter. .m Ave., Garden Grove (Il4J LOVELY Ip l ·BR. crptt, FR.E£' RENTAL sntVICE
Romen sunken tub, kita or I ~ 0 ·LA 5 o I Wallace Ave .. CM. 636-3030 drpa. bl Ona, ear. Adults, no Bi'OMr 534-8882
mirrors. Beautiful. Owner I I' 1 1 I . . BACHELOR apt sultaNe for pets. $135 mo. 646--1762. • nte Rental. Smlica •
&ays submit yoUr terms. l or 2 pmon.. Older ~ LafUM Buch 4705 2 BR, ~ Crpta, drps, s-~-/ u-I ~ WI! SELL A HOME .,., $110 mo 2135 Eldea ~• ·~~ v • .,...
EVERY 31 MINUTES I Aw' c M
0
Mar t.. PANORAMIC "1ew ovmook· bltns. Pvt patto, ""'1 .... Properties West m.1912
Walker & Lee
,EXLE " ' ' "ap .in& Aliso Beach. 2 bdr A 3 Adulta. Alt 6'30· 549-0<l3 TEAOIER O..U.1 ama11
' I I r I TRA~ Olda~.}1W__._l0f -bdr..-fmn. All l'lec. apta. BAOIELOR apt, Jdeal tor Apt. in "Beacon 0..,. area.
_ _ . ~~'"tjm. -:::'J.:-a · Mature adulta No pell or student I art11t. $110. Call 832-00.6 or 5U-m7 S42~76S20:n~r9PM 13&-74.~ • rearot cbUd.S1951t$230.Callaft.6 646-2325,646-3706 RINTALSl!RVICI
If IN I K Marie Twoln ·a bout on ef. ===~-----1 PM. a.J755 2 i!iR unf. Newly dtc. New FREE TO LANDtbRDS 3 BR-Vacant leged friend, "I oilmlro him BACHELOR.apt, !rpl~ cpta. llENTALS crp11 '1 d,.... Adulta. no * Blue Beaoon 66<1Ul * . I I I ,. . ~ mopa'.lo;._1 ~'· no "'"' A .... u-L.-~~ ..... 642-2S50, S46-671. 6 '-=====-====! One ea&1 mile to the ocean, . " • " greatly. When his time~Comei' .,_ ~ 0 ,.,...,~ ..--.-"""'"-. 1 ·
Padfic Sands home avail-.---=------, 1 lholl buy o piece of the rope •RENTAL SEllVJCE ~ 1' 5000 1 BR UDPtt ._ Stave, re-Reorm for lent 5995
able on )'OU.r ttmls or just ~KICTET I fora-.'"' ii.:ta. GOLDEN WESJ' R,ENI'At.s • . trtr., pnp. Ht Avocado, DELuXEtnC.M . .Prtvhomt, '21.rm. A eo..:•~ ... doudolo ~ ,,_ G....,n c-·. ·~ -lJIDO BAYFRO, NT APrS CM. * M6-J!lll2. _,_,,_,or ,.~t -~
Ru L. Hodge<. Rltra. I ·1 I' I'. I v 1>yJ11~ ~ ... '11:11 ';7 ~ silfc~~~A~ ?.~ .. 2s. .. un1. an, •11 2 BR.~ ... "°-· -· ;;;~~k. :,,;._~ ....
847.2523 Y°" ...aop """ _.., No. II.low. l'Ur.n 1 BR -.pt: 2UO Nnrimt, momt, trplc, Jldt ftdeconl· t:ndoled .. • $150 h\O. SLEEPlNG room for man B~~.~~ ~: ·~:i~:R~~f~R's l' r r ,. r r I' I~ .I . 81~.Med.nSonbyHotpotnt. :!~~~o~= 2'~ ...... erptaldrpl. PrthOmeAent.-BYmoOO:
lngw. Landscaped, fenced. - -· --· · • 1 BR. SU~ 2 BR $140, Bach tlve bullitinll· Leue at $350. No pet•. 174 Monte Vtsta ly. $40. 11543 Ora•, C.M.
lblt 11ate. NMr Ocean. I) UNSCIAMatE LETTEtS I I I I I · j j I I ~.po. ti21 W. Wllapn. * * Ave. Collta' Mtlll 1.1ALE, prlvatai entrt.nce. $80. Pn~ below FHA, JO mos. FQR ONSWf! . . . •• . • • . • -. 64,..1265 "' Of 5*-95 c.n Mt. Crtely • --9 AM.S PM •mt, Aft L
old. !lo"U U ndfall DriV<., SCRAM LETS NSWERS tAS~FIC TIO., 000 GIVE 'low -ri la1tt ~296<1 UNITED l'UNl> -ll<vo 4M-OID. "FllANI<" n.a • !' A . . IN G ? A "' t UNITED ruND • , ~ M~ ~-y.., Contribuh!d! • rr·s "Fair Share" 'rime
•
I
(
'
!'[ 12•1 l!IJll!l!l lllSll!!'IJ!!!tY"ll!!l!!Wllll&lll!ll& 1111!¥.!12 '1!1§111!11,A!!!. "' !llJ, LIJllAllJ"PllllJ~ .. ,4~-"'*"'"WJ!LllWl!f'l!=!INl!l!ISJ!IG"IN2'1.!!llllJIM .. !l!li'!!IJ'-! •• ~.co.,,.; Rl!'lill?i"Wl!OE!041!1!".,!!.il!P"' llJl$!!lllllllij1¢Jl!JINl!!.U!JI, -~•'1&9!.l!tt•>Rl!l!IMIJl)li114111•1¥1211!l'! 'l!Jill!IQllS"'"" .. , 111112 dllllll(lllQllS~L .,..-.......... ~~· ...... ..,-~ ..... -~ ....... ,....., ...... ,..--..,...,......,.,...... ..... f"'<'"<r"lr-~---~ --• --.....-...
•
Nlfl\L U TATW Jr ' ·--------· --JOU & IMl'LOYMI NT JOIS & ~PLOYMINT J••• Men, Wom. noo -lobe ~ Wom. 7100
Rqcrns for !loftt . ~5 Lott •100 ~°:y 1.'r CHECK HERE
WllH THE -
JOB KINGS!
BUILD Q 'UN1'IS LRG. Roam. bea•ttt.ulty Cl.ti er ODtarto· ean. Jot.
turn. Nwl.Y rl!dec. priv. entr. ~..an· an ~wwwntl.
A ha. IX' 1 qUllt &du.It. CID Ont.trio j n t tr n :t Io n a~
5ta..83. A1r.ROrt 5 uilnutes away.
WE1...L tum1a¥4 ioeim, dtl£ t;ew MOCOI' Speed-.y. 1d
kttchen prlY., • e pa.rat• rnhaatn. $3$.000 C*lh or
refrlg. Canp. Me D • 111bmiL (hmer P. 0. 8ox I,
-When You
Want if done
right •••
fat! • p....i Newport
8Mch Apncy. Typo
65-70. Shotthond 1011,
"'1•nllo & follow
t hru. Uncltr 35.
Phono: 641:3'10. 425
N. Newport lllvd. ......... Cucunqa. CoW. Pb <nil Call one of
the experts
listed belowll
ns-·wx 1: up -wt-ldtcben. ·-~~==;;;;:=:=I----=: $30.. wk studio apt. 2376 = AID~ Nlll1in&. Exp e ?'.
Pr<l'd. App!y ll> _, via
Pll: 'IH--MALE Newtiort blvd. 541--91$. Ac,.... ~I ;
Motelt, Trlr. cm. .5997 ' 1NiiliST ONL y .
TRAVEL tralltl' ·~ pn Sptc:alat. • thk 180' acrts
' Coast Hwy. Rent $!iO mo. in the hills Eut of lrYiJle
Vthodttio Want? WhotWyo Golt
IPICIAl CWSIPICATION FOii
NATURAL llORN IWAPPlllS
Spoclal Noto
5 LI-- 5 tlmoo -5 bucb
SINVICI DIRICTOllY SERVICI DIRECTOllY SIRV!CI DIUCTOllY M£CllAll1Cll
~It, Oilt 6520 C•rpot C!Mnl"I 6625 Mul!ftry, Irick 6ISO
SEALING " PATOllNG CARPET " Furn. _, -Rl_C_H_Al_D_ .. _U_E_N, ASSEMBLER TRAINEE
Commercial
s.i--$450 + commiHlon + car & n:·
penses. (Wholesale
furniture) 2 )'I'll of coUeae.
Resident of O.C. 5 yrs.
Good Alea bac;_kground.
Call 646-&1181:. I , t;ake> -$1000 J)tr &Cft. Can
WEEKLY n.tn Sea Lani besplltup0r.old1nlp'8ct.
14ote1, 2:l01 N"'POrl BM! -1.6!(, lat T.D. with ;Cost& Mesa .. ni:, prlndJ)ll antU 1977, Tbt
•ULP .... AD MUt1 INCL uoe .
........ ... ..... .. .,,..., a-WNt '°" ""' "' ........ a-:.voua ,.... ,,.., .. ......., ..... ,,... " ......_.,...
1-MOTHINO fOa IAll -TUOll ONLYI PHONI 642·5671
Residentl&l • India • Comc1 tor 1 dt,y service & qualJty A
Comp! reu eerv. Curttntly work, Call Slerllnl: for Custom It Spenlah ,,,...ed by Cit> at CM. tar """'"""' 64>-8520 1''1o-ry A Spoc:loltyl DANA
DY'S TR.All.ER COUR1'
Spaces avail now. Call -"'°"' WmnaUon. pi .... call R. w. l!mt1£
Eckhoff & ..._., Inc.
l8l8 W. a..,pman Aw.
To Pl-Y-Tndor't Paradlto M Cradit Sal" M""°'ar ""'' ... -!Ion. CARPET" uphoiatuy •team Block, Brick, Concrot• Laboratar'-Inc. NATO CORP. cleaned alBo carpet b Free E1t. US.U43 twa
rrade 65 Kaller Jetp cam~ GeD1 Contractors 638-MU ata111&n. Results guar. For 1-=========I
~991 5'1·262!~-
Corona del Mar 2 units.
11-2 lot SO. o1 Hwy. Ell-
c:haJWt approx. W,00 aqui
ty for Hawaiian property. . °"'' 615-Qlt)1
er 3 eyt ditlel w/~wbl drive tree esL call ~ P•i:rhontint llX' eqty in home. 1acome aa......_lttln11 6550 ~==~~~~=-I •~•TEJ>-•• n••uGE until or 1 c..t saw new, -·•• • RENTAL READIER Pa nll"I 6150 roumYAIRPORT,
cur. val $2000.-&t&-4643 DEPENDABLE Teenace ====-;;=====1--::;:;-;;::-;:-:;:;:::;o::=:::-
to $4511
ITralneel 2 yn c:ollese.
dratt exempt, willlni: to
travel.
Aute P•rts Counter -------GRAD. Nurie will take care ANTELOPE VAU.EY ll units cioee to Harbor 6 HaveSI3.000equHyln.aharp PG1~1 Njo~lnany""'~-:1m~ Driperlff 6630 NIED PAINllNO? Has an immediate opening of female patient 1" ~Own Owner will WI 2~ acrt11, Newport, Of. VallJe $95,000, 3 Br Glendora home .,~ 1 _ _;,_______ Call WI! Reu.ble Service w/ for a Mec:hanicaJ A5'Vl'l·
$1le1m1n to $500
Min, l yr exper. in counter
sales, jobber exper. horpe, 24 hr f!W'S1n8 care, next kl Pinon Hills Estatea. Want home, Owner will car-($~500) good area. For Avail. from :I PM. Babystng QuaUty at ttl: be1t, at tbt bJer. No experience ii re-
top re:r1. 499-4017 anytime. $4.900. E-Z terma. sc&..3196 ry fin. chp. Leon 'Vtbert bee.ch atta home or unit.. reter. St art lmmed, Call ATTENTION New Hof!te most reuonable prices. qv.lred but the advancement
5999 10 ACRES Rltr, ~ aeytime. Owner/qent 646-2290 ~. =k=rl(~ = !'tee estimates. MS-6002 opportunity is IOO(I.
Misc. Rentils RANCH Ctn -neu labs. Tr Oi.ai1er Twin D, auto lJ Units BLU'h&nk· $54.:iOO CHlLD care in my home by * PAINTING, int A ext.
Selesm1n from $600
(with protable rotary a.if.
compresaor knowleda:el GARAGE for rent· S20 P41r . S% per mo. (TI4l 894-47'3. pilot, raawe UXI mJ; ~nt equU;y. Want hom~ or dir the week. Other children, Back from Vietnam. Back Applicant must be mature.
Id plex on the water. Mr. Con. fenced yard, play room. ElectrlCll 6640 In bulineu qaln. Free well aroorned and intertsttd Commerci1I Interior
Designer from $3 hr.
Muat have draftinr exper,
know color coordinating.
mo. 2135 Elden, CM. See tlllW)', S«IM. W1D CODI er ....... "'~"" ,u., "'""" •-t ~-nt 1'1gr, Apt. 6. ~nt. & 0.:-rt . 6210 truJt detd «' amaller boat. .rad. Riviera Realty _._or .,_...,,,o. estimates. Will 11ubcontract. ...,, permanm emp..,,, ... e •
Owner tn4) '72&-3400 f99..2800 Eves, «H-13.30 BABYSl'ITING • My CdM SIAMESE cat, female, flea 66-1089 DUSI'RIAL units for p"·•~~-·~·--.·w-"-· 1 ~~ Small Jo•· --•-·====~~~--In.;, i. an excdJent op-AWln .........,_.. '-'IU'&Q.-cwi + + Stereo-Marantz a:imponent home, u companion or ~. ....., •IJ(U<,. INT/EXTERIOR. CI ea n, . .... •.
at.otage. $60. \Vest 16th St. Fairway lot 7D x 12> priced Lovely home 5 acres . outfit in con.ole. First Oan mine. Ages 2 • S. daily or tenance & repairs. ~ neat w or le • Guaranteed. tunll)r 1~ an enerptic per.
N"''Port &a.ch. 64&-lT24 ·$40'.KI under market. Lon& family style re:1t.aurant 111 condltlon. ""--t nsoo. Aho, wkly. 675-7993 RENTAL READIER ·Reas rates. Free est. Call :t0n to join.~ dynamic orran-Technicar GARAGES -'~" Near "'·a·• GA A..,,. .,A Paurna Valley. Your hom.e ......., .-iz.atlon Vwt .............,, ""' "'"· _,.....,, or comm1 blda'· ? 1 a automatic'dlabwaaber. Want BABYSITI'ING, nr Newport 54().3924 Jaek 894-.3895 collect if nee. • M•lntnance Mechanic
l ~: k:. ~ mo. R. E. Wanted 6240 down paynlenl 64f.1T21 travel trailer. 4.!K-4746. Hel&btll Heller Parle. Lg: .6.z.z.r s!!!:..~c ... .!..aJJ,_~linrw'!!:: 2401 Campus Dr. All .!!und$4.Dplan0 hr,. m·'n· $11COJ La 4 B near ·eoronadetMar ·i'!antpooJ, yard. Bal•nad lunch . Floora -....... "'°'" ........ ~ uir. ... u ..
Income ·Property 6000 NOTICE oce'an "~ n.£.· 5~% 3Ll~er.ln2 Ba.or ~c1.,,ind1_:_~~·. =Care " 1ro .. i ..... My CARPEr-VINYL--TILE--~ ~! .:if~arge Irvine, Calif. =~~:.to do we~
• · P'.H.A. to anyone, $227 :PT.=--r-11 "-.... ,. .,.__ , !Jc. tr uo ~ LOW DOWN PAD1ENT ""I formal d1nin for Want: Income In Riv. or Home. Exper. Fairview&: ":A":AC::.;. con _.,_..,._, PAINTER. Interior &: Ex·~-··' op--•ty em"''--r •-ilmotor/Piaontr NEWPORT DUPLEX. Bia U you have a S or'4 bedroom ·-· •• r rm. "A" ...... A ............ ,o ~...... .-v••-.. .,...,,,.. -home !or l8le or tor rent. mobUe home or ? 96U925 S.S. Cnty, 675-7®. Baker area, C.M. '"""'1.w. terior. 20 yrs. quality 1't! A1TENTION BOYS' to $4 00 hr 642-2'752 · 8 •-•··• B •~~NG ho J>re...estim&tes. CALL ' • • call us .today. We repre1t11t HAVE: Duplex in Corona untt:s 11ea11 D .... ..,,,.....,,... ~i.,.., i• · my me, Gardenini 66IG GENE 494-'ll.01 Guarantt'ed $1.64 hr. Door to M.in. 4 yrs joh-Ahop •x· STA Mesa bo!Jle & 9-unlts the empleyees Ct a Ia.rs:e -del Mar. WANT: 8-? unitl: W&nt home, Colta Mesa to lunch fumll!lbed &: yard. Door Mies after ICbool 3 perience. Able to plan .and
plus room to bid. $125.000. flnn moving to tbe Harbor in Onz1ae County. Lquna area. Mon thru Fri. 646-0776 AL'S ~ a: Lawn •INTERIOR EXTERIOR.• hn., Mon • Fri, 4 hrs Sat. schedule. Able to read f ·21)% dn. Owner 548-8007 Am and tbeY must have N.&DC)' J. Moore, Bkr. Pyr&mid Exch&n&on Wn.L babysit any age, my Maintenance. Commerclal, Painting -Pape:rhancln& Call MS-51;,t btwn 3 pm· B.P.'1,
60SO housing! All cub lf desired. I 642·7000 I 646-2629 home, 1 am.5:30, 1'1on·Fri. lndl16tria.l &:: reildential. Lie. Ins. Guaranteed 4:30 pm ONLY. lro & Shor S
Busineu Property I .!:Call~. ~F~"'~10~·~-~~~--I '.rorovWNHooiCoiCUSEiSE'aasBir:r,:l2iii11iiba.;: HA VE conren:nce tablu, 646-J87S. or 64z.3237 * 64&-3629 * Harris Paintlna: 60--4SM A · • W wn• pe et·•p
CALL HARDESTY &auL appt'd, PrlY. patio, ·and/or 2 draltlng tableo. COMPLffi PAINTING ttractiv• oman Mlft to $4.50 lw ll'fl•
BlaCk Knfnht Rest. For ~ __ , ...... ·v·' ...,., 500 WANT-«>~. clotbes Bric~ Mason-, etc. EXI'ERIOR-INTERJOR needed tor makeup inltruc-First and &econd shift. ~ • * ,...... .....,.. * ,._...; nr ....,,, -. -· ....... _ _,,.,._ !'.:!:.... ·' 6560 Yard Ma.int. Cleanup e ... ,,_ e tor. Will train for business yrs e.xper on all B &: S 330 E 11th St., CM. u•-~ iiqty for T.D., car, camper .... ,..r, M1UC pro,,............ ..,,_ ...,0 ,......,,.,,., °"•l ~-1 m .. M.,.~ a£na & Bldc--:1 BUSINESS *ift. or-?-!'-Owner 6*f4)4---646-4831' -ni:u. i>UO'.l.'UO/~ CUSI'OM PAINTING 0 Your own. tr-
u•NC •L BUILD, Remodel. repajr. JIM 'S Gardening & lawn REASONABLE RATES Call c::ollocet (Zill 782·33lO lrowne Ir Sharr. By Owner n<' ..,..,,.,
FU.ll 5'1b comm, to all bkt&.
Busi ness Rental 6060
* COSTS MESA * ! 1725 sq u. ne'!". $210/mo.
, 3100 Ml ft/4 0Uc'1 ;310
; ls. is. 25,ooo r.q 11,
' sprinklers.
! \lo .. it, Otanti< County,
lmmed occupancy.
C. Robert Nattress Realtor
I. C.OSta ~1e1111 642-1485
1SC SQUARE FT. •1 · Retail or oUlce: 1pace. 600-
1200-2400 sq ft 211 to ~13
1 tznd St., Newport Beach.
II Key for entr,y, N.B, Trawl
. Lodgo. Owner (213) 233-ll<ll.
eves C21l> 246-0700.
WANTED: Bldg. in C.M. .a~
'prox 2«X> sq ft. ltiltable for
cycle 1bop. ·Write Dally
Pilot Box M-690
SJ'ORE for lease UOO gq, tt.
In stxip ctr on 17th si. Costa I fl1esa Call da)' ~9615 mte
i 002-3883
'
. Sl'ORE for lease, 1500 sq. It.
Oceanfront a.t Newport Pier.
6'!'-7$6
ROOM SUltable for gift lhop,
men's shop or ladies shop.
C.all Jim .Berkshire. 673-9405
Office lentil 6070
I LAGUNA BEACH
Air Condli!oned
~ ON FOREST AVENUE
i Desk space avail.able In
newest ottlce building at
., prime location ln downtown
Laguna Beach. Air condi·
· tloned, carPc~. beautiful r entrances: Frontaa:e on
, Forest Ave., rear leads to
; Munclpa! parking lot&, $50
~ per month tot space. Desk
and chain available for $5.
1
1
Buslneu hours anBWerlng
service available !or $10.
• All utllltiea p&kl except j: teltphone.
DAILY PrLOT j: 222 FOREST AVENUE
I• LAGUNA BEACll
F .. ~-.. 1 ........ ...,.....,..._ ..... 1 F 1000 Square Feet
1 Office Space Avail
I; JC1; 17th s-~ H.•. le 536 111111
! OEL"UXE 250 aq. ft. oUice
· sulW In Coi:ona del Mar
c.. prestige Joe. N•w carpets &
• drape& -priv. p&rking
· Realonomlcs Coft>. 675-6TOO
· COSTA Mesa ottice1. A/C,
crpt&. drps. Parking. Very
• . nlce office&. B55 · Baker, -
Fl""' I" 34' Monterey Double Ender HAVE Soowbl.rd sailboat Brick, block. concrete, maintenance. Res. &: Com-..,,,.,.,41 or write: O ~-1 4 0 h
p:wm boat, lls radio, xlnt With trailer. WANT travel carpenter)', no Job too small. ~ VIVIANE WOODARD pera•-• o • r.
But. ()ppcwtunltlH 6JOO cbaracter boat. Excbanp trailer, horse, taclt, jeep. Lie. Contr. 96U945 !m~o~n::_::1a1~·:..:*~54t)..483'1~~:..· --1 '*;;fp;;iAJNTJNi'ii1NNiG}i;1nrt<tmoiiiOirri!Exte!iieir. COSMETICS IH*
FAMOUS BRAND f.or newer CMillac or R.E CALL Japane:se Gardener lor. Local references. Im-Dept ~ 14611 Titus St. 2 yn exper on all B&S
N •uE (1) 521-8766 or M4-4015. &16-4837 BusiMM Service 6562 Complete Yard Senrice med. sen'1ce. &f&.3657 Panorama Oty, Calif. 91412 machines.
l'VTI Frtt Estimate 64&-0830
CANDY ROlll'ES 1l * * * * * SMILEY'S PAINTING, lntor A •xt. 20 BABYSITIER my hom•. u Punch Pren Op..-Naw available tn·eo.ta MOA ' CLEAN·UP SPECIAL!~! yrs b: CM and NB. Ffff est. mo old &irl, Mon thru Fri. to $3.00 hr.
anc1 mal1)' 0""" "'""' m thlo 1us 1Ness ..... ANNOUNCEMENTS Business Services "0~'!;,~· ~ · 548-4375 64+.1m. 64.l--0438 .,,... • "•••h• '""''"'"·
are.a. All Iocatlons are com· FINANCl•L tncl NOTICES TREE SERVICE ... n'l ·-.....i FOR Betw:r Paintlnr, inter-BAR MAID Cnlrbta) Injection Mokl LMd Man merclal at lactory. Ver Y "' T C p A bookktt · .1.u... ior &: exterior, acoustic WJ.. WANTED. ~ .. DO •. high eam1rWJ N aeI1inr in-axes, · · · ping, cleanup. S P R I N K LE R I 64640Tl a: 5'1-3502 to ~· "'". · 0 lnvllthMnt Oppor. 6310 LN_l ______ '411_1 mutual fund&, inluranee, REPAIRS 646-5848 n&I. The Flame Room . Able to iruperviae 5-6
vol.ved. To quawy you. must Real Estate etc. FREE . RENTAL READIER 1880 Monrovia, CM. women. Do set-ups and
be ~ble: and have one PLEASE to the person who -es. 64&960i. 642-22'Jl * Expert J apaneH ""'"""A Call In person 1t 2 pm bl h 1 hour a dov -·time ("'"'I PARTNER l'lttded far um. FINE-WORK ,,A .. 0384 ~ I . trou e II 00.
)...... ,_,, picked up the bla: beautiful ~' _. IBEAUTY Oper, full time. A bl $3.25 • or e\U · que ttaJ eatate venture. ~ German Qlephtrd, FV att.a.. Carpentering 6590 Pl•sterlna. Repair 6880 Take over ....... cllentele. uem en to "'· $U» TOTAL CASH Million dou&r profit return. 8'7....f864 REWARD' ~====--'"'--Gener1I Services 6682 ., au 2 yrs npetience ln elec-
RZQUJRED tn'lbelie'vable opportuojcy for . . -CARPENTRY I---------I Mlbe e:cp'd. App, in penon. ~mechanical assembly.
I-•--~-1 ... ...._ quick -1. Sl!liOOO to LOSl' female Bluepoint G I t 53 d •PATCH PLASTERING Pb. forappt. 545-0209
.,........ &UVU our ~ $50 000 .!:--":-''-' '66.lSn Siame1e cat vie. 40th St., MINOR REPAIRS. No Job RAIN utters n I a e . S Micro-Almer
-r o ate plan." Malce • .... --. N.B. 615-5920 TO<' Small Cabinet In pr. Rainy Se..,n Almoet Hett! All ~ ~t!mate BOOKKEEPER from $3•110 hr.
YoUr -futul'I!! ~ with UB, . ~=~~--=-~,-...,. ,.., • 0 t b 1 r eablne•· Free est. Re as on a b I e ( S) Mo L 6320 c =REY klttan w/--' band· • · ... Knowl!dge and ex-rience a Dunn A: Bradstreet n'ted MY to Oln •cu 5'5-Bl.15. u no answer leave ~23JS .. -
national compa11)'. For mort >cnlt collar in Hunttncton lnll'. at 6f6-231l. IL o. ======== ~mbln9 6890 FUU CHARGE ~m. convert records onto
lnf..m.llon. '""" '"""· .... 2nd TD . Loan Shop's c.n1er wl. 842-8201 ....,.,,.. H•ullng 6730 PLUMBING REPAIR TO $800
dress .and p!lone # to: FEMALE min. Scflnlluzer, CARPENTRY c 4 b·t nets No job too small Electronic Technlcitn
"ROl!I'E DEPARTMENT Prompt,' conftdential aervtce Fri. eve. Olfl Dr./Tus~n Remod. No job too small, MOVING-TRANSFER e 642-3J2S e Irvine Complex Area from $3.50 up/hr.
#23, P.O: kt 51, '42·2171 · 545-0611 Ave. NB 548-fi68l or SfS.-035.l quality work. Call 6f&..2S76. Local medium dillance, Eco-EXCELLENT GROW'Ill 3 yrs exper. tn repaira & ~,:.-==:...Ca=ll='·..:91.:c'/69-"--1 Serving Harbor area 20 yn:, nomlc.al • Salvagable items S.Wlnt 6960 POTENTIAL t r o u b I e . shoo ting of
AUiliate S.ttler Morft• Co. '9raon1l1 6405 QUALITY Repa.ln -Altera· sometimes pay for the job. Riviera Employment ampllflers, controls &
CANDY SUPPLY 336 E. 17th Sb-ett tlonll -New const. by hwr John. 536-6126. e Dressmakhw. Alterationa: Agency, Inc. audio equipment
ROUfE PALMISTRY & or Contract. 646--3«2 YARD I G a.t • c 1 ea nu p Speclal on coat hems 4967 MacArthur Blvd, Ste 201
<N'o eelliJW: Involved) Real Estate Lo<1n1 6340 CARD READINGS Carpentry AND· • • • $lo 11 0 ad. Sa.lvageables * 646-6446 * N.B. 54<>-6370 Fork Lift Mech•nic
Excellent income for few Brln1 Your Problems to By the job or hour. free! Remove trees, ivy, Alterations--646-5145 BOYS 10-14 from ,$3 +!hr. Me_ I Wiii Help You Call Dick. 642-1797 grade 962-8145 Must have thorough ~=~,.~;1~a'ndYI INVESTMENT srwp bu Soi~ Thom. 1', µ'AIRS. ALTERATIONS ,... ..,. .... UP , Hauti·ng Neat, accurate, :IO )Tl. exp. Curler ~-()pm knowledac of fork lUt and
..... ..., ............. g nc ......... 'il"i $:$'1 tor trust deed•. We .... CABINET Any me job '-'l..o.C.Jt.l" ~ 1w-hydraulic systems. Own
collecting money from coin make lat a: 2nd ol buy ex· I live advice on an matters 25 · 548-6113 Trees k shrubbery trinimed TILE, Cer•mlc 6974 t..aiuna Beach, So. Lquna hand tools.
operated dispe:naeta in Qr. Jsttnr TDs. Bkr. 50-&181 ot. Ute. such u love, court-yrs. ex-per. or ren1oved. 54.S.1359 DAILY PILOT
a11ge C.O. and aurrcuncHna d~ or eves. ehlp, ma.niqe, divorce. bua. REPAiR. Partitions Small *Verne, The Tile lo.fan* 6G-m1 Solderers from $3/hr.
area. We establllh route. lneu tranaactionl ol all Remodel, etc. Nlte or day, HouNcleanlng 6735 CU1t. work. Install & repalrl. BUSBOY Girl DI er Must be exper. 'Vilt be
(Handles name brand capdy Mortgages, T.D.'1 6'45 kinds. Reunite the separ. Reas! Call KEN 540-4679 No job too small. Plaster or • nn !Oldering line v.irc11 for
and macksl. $15'15.00 calh ated, e&Ule speedy and hap. -BAY & Beach Janitorial Serv. patch. Leaking ah owe r W':1treu, & extra B~nquet small parts. ~1n·~~1nru ...... 1ST and 2NDS PY mania.I"•. overcome ri. Cement, Concret. 6600 Carpets, windowa, Ooors. re'pair. 841'-1957f846...®06 waitreu. Ben Brown• La· v"""' .., .... ,.., ....,. val&, lovers q\Lll'ftlJ, e.vU etc. Res " Comm c' I ~ Beach Country Club. Inspectors from
send name, addren and • habits. stumbling blocb of CEMPIT WORK, no job too 646-1401 Tree Service 6'80 .;i'99-;;,;;2271;;;,,...==,,.,-=:::-I $2.25 hr phone number to Mm.TI· So, Calif. T.D s. Inc, all kinds. There ii no heart small, reasonable. Free House-Apt Cleaning CASHIER Restaurant exper. 3 yn exper in mechanical
STATE DISf., INC., 1681 W. ZENITH 2-am ·• ToU Free IO bad or home IO dreary estlm. H. Stufilck 548--8615 Reasonable Prices TREES pruned, topped , prtferred. Nl&hts. 6'fl..S405. Inspections. Read BP'1 .&:
Broadway, Anaheim. Call· 2rid Trust Dredi for sale. th.al I cannot brlnr sunshine • CONCRETE FUXiRS, e 5ro-S'2Q1 e removed. 26 yrs exper. Alk for Mrs. l'rankt. micrometers.
tomia 928Q2 (TI4) TlB-5060. Low lnL on ht. Into It. In fact, no matter pa.UOS, etc. Reasonable, can • WINDOWS DIRTY? A er I a It 0 were q u l P·· CEME'l'ERY Machine Operator
FRIG.IDAIRE * ~"'.':' * whot """ "" your hopo, Don. 642-8'14 Free ••L 15 ''""exp. 494-4505. 638-723< COUNSELING from $2.10 + hr.
fear or ambition, CO N C 1t E T E \Vork-Block Johnny DuM 64~2364 ~ mature men needed. Will take tr a 1 nee .
J&T ACTION Money Win~ 6350 SEE THE Fences-Planters. Remodel· CARPETS. Windows, Drs. Upho?ttery 6990 Prefer 30 to 60 yeara pf ap. Meehanlcally inc 1 i ne d
FrliltWre 13 mln. wast\. _ ,__ PALMISTRY READER Ina: & Additions. 642 9852 ,,.._ 1 XI 1 Expttitnced in &elllnr tn W/&0me expoc on drill Futett In t.be industry, 30, 8.4 to lu70 on your ~•t· I wUJ NU you just what you , etc. Rts or .....,me' . n CZVKOSKI'S Curt. Uphol. the home. Interestlnr work
18 min Wu•--~" do ~•-menL We can place your ·--..... know 6620 work Reu! Re[s. 543-filll. Euro-an Cnftmnanshlp _ _.. . . A press, lathe, etc. un ..... """ ..... ,. 'u • Contractor• .-a.iiu top comrr11ss1on. ·w1~irk o1' 45, 30 min waihel. funch1 dlnct to the bo~r Avall. for parties 100% F1n! 8'3-14.M beautiful ~temorlal Parle Unskilled
FRIGIDAIRE OtrrS'rAND. on title tm. real estate loans With Thia Card and $3.00 FRED H. GERWICK Janitorlal 6790 1831 Newport BJ., C.M. ovttlooldng the p ac If i c F9 T
ING I.DCATIONS: La Mira. @ no extra cogt to "Uie knd· Recelve $5.00 Read.in& Building Contractor SPARKLE JanltoMal & Win· Ocean. Pl1ase call for an ct:h relnees from
da maJor ahopplng centtr. er. Stop in or call, 1323 N. Open Dally 10 AM to 10 PM Fam. nna. bdrms. patios dow cleaning Serv. Win· W~J~]!'.9 6995 interview, De.rrell \\lard. $D2,.oo s'2·
Garden Grove &: Buena Broa.dway, SA (park\nc on Fully Llcensed Licensed-Free estimates "d cl • 644-0212 r ver .00 hr. p k our property) 543-8381 d&)' dow11, resi ., com • cons.. WELDING shop & portable."::=-.-------ar · Off. CZlll 697·92'72 673-6041 & ~2170 Cleanup. F'lff est. 968-2691 Ornamental Iron. 1 aertcal Coln·O-Matic 01'. ... L 210 w. Whlttirr B!Yd., 6625 6'6-1815 RUTH RYAN AGENCY Equipment, Inc. ANNOUNCEMENTS IA Habra C1rpet Cluntn1 L1ndt.t:aplng 6110 SPECIALIZING
23341ii W, Valencia •nd NOTICES LOSE CARPET Special!! Th I 1 LIC'D .. •--.a--Window Cl••nlnp_6997 IN Fullerton TI4: m,7133 "11.'ffk Only!! \Ve vacuum, .. apanese ~ape -OFflCE PERSONNEL
PARTNER Pound (f,... Ads) 6400 shampoo & Hft pile. Incl . contractor, Lawns. qirkln. WINDOW CLE/.NING 1193 Ntwport Blvd., 0-l
SU .. ~-ooil -1-~on• 6'.I'" Cit ft. patios. etc. 83().-3J31 We Promlte to plt1.1t! •Alt. Aou ---'"·' manufactu ... -Aiu~ cat, female, flea '" .... .. ... ..... '"'""""' v•~-·~ ... WEIGHT t:A"' Mao. • LANDSCAPING, sprinklers, 546-2210 179ll •···h !lyd., llB co. expanding nationally. collar • Sundq ll-2-69. Vic. .,.......,_, QC-
Need ma.nqement orient.cl Wallaee & 19th C. M. * Diamonds art meuured sprinkler repa.jr, tl'ft trim-PL.ANNING to move! You'll 847.e617
man. Plutlc tabrlcating: pro-&f&.4662 :,y quality, 80 are we! mlna & rtmoval. 642-0570. find an amaz!Jtg number of ll)G W. 11th St., S.A.
ductl.' Multi plant operation. LADIES watcti fouO<l In alley t O DIAr-.tONO CARPET UNITED Fi.JND -Have homes In today's Oasaified 541-6431
$17,500 requlred.St.lary$300 between Catalina A =-~w::=-=~t CLEANERS645-1317anytlme YouContrlbu~:' Ads.Check them now.
per •~k plus lhatt of prof· ·Holmwood Dr., N . B . to talte part tn grcup wt.1.iht ---------------. -·------
its. Should return in ~ 543--0m Jou program of speclau.ed
ot $25,000 pe:r year, Reftor. BLACK and white male re:duclJll. AD Inquiries con-S ·enc.s ~~· ?:c:r appt kitt.n, w/flea collar. Vic of tldendaJ, Ask tor Mr. Ken-ANNOUNCEMENT
(TI4l 539-ilOUU, ext-· Country Club A Pana;y. ned,y 531·5412. and NOTICES ""
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT
JobW•nlad, Jobe-Men. 'wom. 7100
CLERK TYPIST
FEMALE
MT/ST Operator
$2.25 "'· Will train good, accurate typist.
General Office duties,
FI C Bookkeoper
from $515
Able to go thru trial
balance. Sharp, yo u n g
front office.
Generel Office $2.25 hr.
Completely familiar wi th
general otlice procedures.
PART TIME DELIVERY 51S-2Sll *
" SQ ft downtown c.M. SATURDAY OR SUNDAY INJllRED . ....,, & pd . Don't! P•non•I•
I:> =~~n~~. parldnc. ~~ c!:!:rsa :""~ =ec~. f~ Arthur . -,UD--H-0-1.1-cs-----..,-
64115 Men & Women 7030
~ uve:i; o;;;r;: Accounting • $400 Accts.
Pmnanent. Experi•nced. Payabl•. l..qc&) Co. Lite typ.
~ wpm typinJ", lite
shorthand, ltn9ral oU·
tee dutMs. Some offlc-t
tllptlienl!'e.
APPLY JN PEIUIJN.
Exec. Sec. to $600 mo.
Shi.fl) to~notch gal. able to
set up oUlce. Work under
pressure. ana. $37?iO lnvtntorY 1nvet1t. BLACK SlamaM cal 'lll'Uf'iri& Call Qt U :you •till believe In Phone SU.1211' ar wrtta_ to ,c ._om_mo_rc_l1_: ___ 60_1_5 mtnt. plus ltl hn Pl~ wtelt &liver coll&r, on Balboa Isle. cave style datlfll. P.O. Box ms om.a Mesa.
should return $S)I) per mo 67)..lQrt ORA.NOE CO. 547-6£68 £HARBOR CK.UtSE * ~!: ~~·~:~i;t'~ plUI,. N Ume allo avail. 24 Hr r.cordln1 De.lly 1 P~T. Fun Zane Bo&t n"V<'~ •blo.J'orapp4{'1\4l53$$l0 .\I GROWN~ldtt•nvk. LICI NSIO Co .. Balboo * ~ da.ys. Evn. 642-1479. 940 W. ..,.. K·M.art Sbop I Cen!er Call C "'' ••• . . Sptritu.£ "-•d'-. adv!" JOBS & EMPLOYMENT l'lth.. .M. 642-3929 "'•
I ASSOCIATE Diealred !Or unl· b _,,,,"'°',,_.,....,_,.,,._,.,,. on all matten. ll2 N. El ~ lrMfustrlal Rental 6MO qui real elt&tt tnvntme~ ~·~.' ::.e:L ~ ~: Camino Real, Stn Clemenla Job Wanted, 7020 2500 Sq, fL $2Sl per mo. Incl. ~=~ ~~new.:. Calta NHL ~ fa'"~. =6 _W-'--o"'m"•-"n------'-:
4 otnca. lmmtdiate oc-A1:UYt Gr lnactiw -...U FOUND )'GUiii Calico cat e MlNICARE N1JRSING e
mpane:y. 16th St., N.B. Investment ~I Will -1th dear puUc collar 11J5 Attractive l•pert Nhounea 4 Aldts avaUab~~!:"' ~ -o ... -..:1 Dr 6'2.-1147 me care on hourly ...... t, -· train richt party! vw-un • -Ca na • YOUNG WOMAN l hour minim um. Aho lhlfts
6 OO CAF'E-tully equlp'd le .bout.e. i KtT'f'ENS. 1 black A 1 areY ~ wUl teach )'OU aD & !Ive.In. 546-4570
f . Lots 1 Sarita Ana tndu.tr"1 area. wllh wt'IJte spots on chesta. latest rtlPI. ()JI Ardtll e Allied Nurset A Aldt1 e
IN CllM. u.;"1 R·! lot with !ncomo. I'll.Ill» tull Littlt llllboe la!. m.-41>15 211: $11-4>11 MO PM Of o.c. N-. "'s!stry
o9trslr.td double 1 c.. 5f0..SSll, CALICO JCnTEN", HARBOit sroourr Zitet!I ride rrom 2729 w. Llrcan Lane. St.\.
1treued for a+it. By Owner FOREIGN Wreoi:tr motW)' VIEW l1ILLS 6"--2:586 .St. AueuttiM Dr. H.B. te NURSES & Aides available
J"-000· 6~ m11kcr. Partner wtth equal DAILY pJLOT DlM!l·A· Mattr ~Hilb SChl., S.A. torl'lornec:an .M&-4510
RA wr, Costa. litca. '° ba.p1ta1~,-wanled. APP ro x UNU You mn Ute \Mm (7lf) 5li-7S8.1 f!\18. • Allied N"urwtt Ir Aldtll •
,,. .WU., OlloW, Ph1l SUlllvan :Sl0.000. 7lr. MS-7'70 aft f Jot. juat ~ & dq. IMaJ 'UNrtm FUND -Have Of 0 .0. Nunes Rqtatry
~ Jt'o "FAIR SKARE" 'l1me PILOT ~od ad. You Cailrlbuwd? 2'29 W. Linpn lAM, S.A
Fu F.ut Agency i"i . Call Loraine, Met-
(Z13) 337.aJ.96 chant• PeraonneJ, 2043 West-=========I d!tt Dr., N.!. 6';.2770
Asoemblen Jobe Men, Wom. 7100
abilities
anlimiteb
age ncy
Qualicy Posldons !or
Quallf1ed Applicants
488 E. 17th St., SUlte 224
0>1ta Mtaa 142-1410
BUSlES'I' rnutetpl&ce In
!nwn. Th< DAILY PILOT
Cl•pffted lltCtfon. Sa• e
mon..y, tlm• I: eUort. Loi*
now!!!
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMILER
Minimum 2 )'l'I exp In a.s-
lll!mbly of printed circuit
board.t • t'bA.ss\1 wlrlna.
ELiCTRO·
MECHANIC
ASSEMBLER
Minimum 2 yrs txp in w'lrt
harnnaer 4 cbuil auem·
'Illy.
COl<TACT KAREN/
VANGUARO OATA
SYSTE MS
I I SM).1&f0
GIVE N .. • Ulttild 1'ltnd
•
OR CALL
3W Harbor Blvd.
Cotti Meta. Calif.
(ilf) ~
MlS$l1.E 1l'YSTEMS
OMRON
ATUNTIC RESEARCH
GIVE Now -and later
UNml) P'UND
Keypunch Oper1tors
to $2.75 hr.
Inventory Ship/Ree
Clerk from $400.
Exper, in SiR documen.
talion. Governmflnl traUlc
helpfUt. Kardex, lil o o d
math.
APEX
Einployment
Ac:ienc:y
l>/1 Wk S.. of 1 f!h >
1873 HARIOR
ILVD.
. 548-3426
.
J
J
,
1
'
MondOJ N-10, 1969 DAil Y 'II.OT • ,
JOIS a EMPLOYMENT JOBS a EMPLOYMENT JQIS a IMPLOYMINT JOIS a EMPLOYMENT JOIS a EMPLO'l'MINT . -. JOIS a IMPLO'l'MENT JOIS a l.Ml'LOYMIRT .JOIS & IMPL0™-'41 JOil a IMILOYMiu• '
Oerical
SECRETARY
e1;ERK-ffl'ISTS
Experltnced SLAVICK
JEWnER-S
We have career openlngJ for
11;omeo in OW' Fashion al.and
1tore for
Varian Data Machines,
located in the Irvtne ln-
du.stm.1 Com]lli!x, hu Im-
mediate openlrgs for tho
following
D"PlayTralnees-MAi;;;--SILVER LADY-IMMEDIA TE au, •mp1o,., 1>eoe!i1 ,.,,.
HELP WANTED gnun includ": Pro6t ....,,.
tng, pald vacation, stock op.
*SECRETARY
Reporting to our dlrec1or Of
prognumning. Excellent typ..
ing ll'-1 shorthand Sk:Wa are
required. A minimunl of
three years recent, respon-
alble, related experience is
necessary. En¢neerin&: ex-
perience prelen-ed.
DMSJON tlon, health be:nl!ftb:. For ~
EXPANSION terview call Mr. Bruce Mun.
IN aon, <TI4) 644-1380.
ORANGE COUNTY HOUSEKEEPER live in.
Provides immediate employ. Private apt, 2 ~.
ment for residents of the 675--0310 ~7197.
area. Experience ian't ~~s-HOUSEKEEPER & hild sary as company tra.inmg c
is fumished. care, 5% day wk., $50 wk.
START + rm I: board. Pd, vac.
* CLERK TYPIST
Excellent typinr skills re·
quired. Individual will work
in an engineering oriented
dept. Stable work rerord
necessary, and de&ire to
pilch in .and work.
AT ~9212
~ PER MONTH HOUSEWIVES
Excellent starting salary
and fringe benefit pro-
granl including_ twelve
days paid vacation dlll'-
ing first year ol employ.
ment plus an annual
l{oliday vacation fiorn
Christmas to the MDl1day
following New Years,
PLEASE APPLY
varian data___
machines
A VARIAN SUBSIDIARY
2722 Jl.fichelson Drive
(San Diego Fwy. to Jamboree
oH ramp 1 blk S. to
?.licllelson Dr.)
Irvine, Calif. 9'1661
An Equal Opportunity
Employer M&F
COASTAL AGENCY
Profess Iona I
EmPloymtnt
Asstst•nc•
A member ol
Snelling & Snelling Inc.
2700 Harbor Bl, CM S.1(M;Q)S
Harbor ,Blvd. at Adams
COOK "'!' HOUSEKEEPER
Live In or out, Ba.lboti.
George AJlen Byland Agency
106 B E. 16th St.
Santa Ana. 5'17..Q395
COSMETICS
WIGS
Southern Califomia·s moat
exciting new concept in
beauty studios, located in
Neo.vport Fashion Island,
needs 2 cosmetic experts to
teach professional makeup
techniques & 2 wig experts
to style, sell & demonstrate
a full range of quality hair
goods. Excellent s a 1 a r y
structure, stimulating '~1ork
environment & en unlimited
future foe mature, qual illed
personnel who can teach
and demonstratf.' our con·
cepts and sell with taste &
C'reativity. lntl!'l"Views Tues,
Nov. 11 at the HOLIDAY
INN, Santa Ana Frwy at
Chapman ollramp, Orange.
Ask for Miss Parker.
Wonderful
WORLD
If qualilied and accepted, go
on payroll this week.
lllGH SCHOOL GRADUATE
AGES 20 TO 40
1 YEAR RESIDENT
IN AREA
CALL Mon. or Tues,
774-7253
DRILL PRESS
OPERATOR SR •.
Experienced
APPLY
CadiUac Controls
Division of Ex-Cello Corp.
1866 Whittler Ave.
Coat• Mtst
646-2491
Equal opportunity employer
*DRIVERS*
No Experience
Necessary!
Must have clean California
driving record. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St.
Costa ?o.lesa
Factory
GENERAL
MACHINIST
Require at least 3 mo's. exp.
operating mills, small lathes
& drill presses. Thia is pro-
duction madtlnc work with
a variety of operationa &.
o.flers xlnt oppty. 'for ad-
vancement.
MILLMAN
(WOODSHOP)
\Vork requires a man with 1
year setup & operating ex-
perience on saws, routers &
wood shapers. Production
"-'Ork, build ing projector ca.s·
"·
TECHNICOLOR, INC.
Newport Frwy. (Baker St,
turnoUJ, 1300 Frawley Dr.
Costa Mesa.
Factocy
ASSEMBLERS
Prefer ladies with previous
factory cxper, \Vork includ·
es movie projector a.ssem·
bly. Xlnt m:Jrking cone.l's.,
pay jl benefils.
'IT..CHNICOLOR, JNC.
Newport Fnvy, (Baker St.
turnoff) l~ F'rawley Dr,
Costa ltfesa
F /C BKKPR TO $650
Slablr. C.O. Interesting pos.,
pleasant woricing cond. Top
benefits. Call Dlane, 546-5410
JASON BEST
Employment Agency
HAVE FUN
AND EARN
$$$
IN YOUR
LEISURE TIME
YOU WILL
BE HELPING
IN THE
FIGHT AGAINST
WATER POLLUTION
4 lo 6 Houn of
Conscientious effort per
week will net you
$100 per month
12 Hrs./wk equals
$200 per month
<Minimum Guaranteed>
Part time Clerical positions open
Details in Personal
Interview Only
If you are outgoing and
want. to enjoy yours.e.lf,
call Mr. Darin for appL
at 642-6861 (10 am -6 pm)
THE LINDSAY CO.
474 E. 17th St., C.f\1.
Hotel
FOOD CHECKER/
CASHIER
Only experienced need
apply. Relier shift,
Apply in person only
Contact Bobbie Purdy
Tho Newporter Inn
Hotel
1107 Jambotte Rd.
Newport Beach, Calif.
IMMEDIATE
PART TIME
HELP WANTED
l.Argt!, rtational company, ex.
panding in Ora!lie County,
has creeled many openings,
for male & female, to \l.'Ork
part time evenings. No ex·
perience necessary u we
train,
High school diploma and one
year residence required.
Call Mon. & Tues.
774-7251
Janitor
J. W. ROBINSON
J-IAS OPENING FOR
*JANITORS*
APPLY JN PERSON
FASHION ISLAND
NE\VPORT BEAOl
LEGAL Secretary Trainee,
r.tature. ?i-tust be acturale
typist. Call -644-4452
T,.* J
I~
U% lf.E:INDE.lf.S • ,~,,,,_,Ar-\
IJUJ c-,,.. °'· ' "''"'°" lt«lf "'°"" 1-o ..... ,, c-;; ,.,.. Ph OM jf6..ZJ l
(213) 474-6874 212() So. Main, Santa Ana MAIO Experiencc for ri1otel 1~~~;,.;;,~;,;.;~ .. 1! iF-,oiirieljig;iin:ic~a~r~Me~cfih~a~n~ics Apts. Gd. salary. Sunny
COUPLE wanted u assis-Good co. benefits, Incl paid Acre. :r.1otel, 2376 Newport,
tant managers for r.1otel vacation. group ins. uni. C.M. 5'1Pr9755. ~~97s.J2376 Newport, C.M. fonns furnished free. Good r.1AN, as ASSEMBLY
comm. schedule. Ask far 1'.0REi\fAN Exp'd. or wUI
DENTAL chairside assistant Joe Moore Ph. 541).1764. train. S80 wk. to start. JI.lust
experienced only. GARDENER wants help, be ablo to do lllling &
54s.-&144 Some experience nceessary. physical work. Apply 9-11
Dept. Stnre Ph: 496-3383 eves. AM. Golden'11 Magic Wand
HOUSEWIVES General: Experienced 946 W.17th St., C.M.
COLLEGE STUDENTS furniture man & driver, full
CAREER GIRLS time. Militacy obligations
$ Eam Xtra Mont'y for filled. 642--2050
CHRISTMAS GAL FRIDAY $600
Enjoy an exciting seH.son In
a beautiful :;to1-e. Jmn1ed i-
ate liberal discount. Full
and part tlme schedules,
days and eves.
APPLY PERSONNEL
10 TO 4 P.l.1.
J. W. ROBINSON
Fa.shK>n Island
Ne\\o'J)Ort Beach
THE SUN NEVER SETS on
Oassified's action power.
For an ad to sell around the
clock. dial 642-5678.
Excellent opportunity, New.
port Beach. Enjoyable
Charlge or PftCe ;iob. Top ~n
dits. Call Kay ~5410
JASON BEST
Empklyment Agency
1120 So. Main, Sama Ana
Gtneral Office
Cood typing, telephone re.
ctptionlst. To $-JOO.
lndeponcfent
Personnel Agency
1717 Orange Aw .. SUlte C
C'.M. &fl.«W, 500019
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Mtn, Wom. 7100 * EXEC. SECRET ARY *
Must be able to take shorthand at 100.llO \Vpm. Experience at the executive level in
a sales or marketing activity preferred.
Will aJso handle phones & travef arrange ..
rnents. Excellent opportunity. Salary com-
mensurate with background. "
Please apply In person or call Mr. Kuechler
.for appointment. 11$-4804.
GENERAL AUTOMATION
1402 E. CHESTNUT ST .. SANTA ANA
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
WDI be moving to Irvine mplex 1970
MANAGER
in
NEWPORT BEACH
* NEW OFFICE
NEW SERVICE
*
~fuat be ahlrp, ll.IJlre!•
rive. well grnomed and
Wes oriented with an
eye to the future.
Lots ol responsibility, r.:ir-
citement and opportunity
to prove yourself as a
ca.tttt gal.
C1ll Colltct
(213) 31(1.3260
for •ppointment
MARINE MECHANIC
w/weldlrta ~r. Top pay.
LK. custom yacht•. \Villard
Boat Works, ll&j Baker,
Colla M~.
GIVE toda7 -Tht "Unlttd
\Vaf' -
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; IM'"
*OVERSEAS *
Agency for
Care•• Girls
ESCROW SECRETARY
for v ;p. al prestip O>.
9'ortha~ not n«HU.r)'.
Min, exp, 3 yr. escrow. Top
grooming.
SECRETARY
for director of finance, top
akilll, good secretarial back·
ground. pe1'80nali1'3.
SECRETARY
A rather dlUerent and in-
teresting Co. Must ~ t!ex-
ible and etticient. Good
skills.
SECRETARY
IBM Executive 1ypewriter
experience. Good tYPist.
ligbt shorthand. Top archi·
te-ctural firm.
RECEPTIONIST.
General oHice background.
Good telephone technique,
typing.
BOOKKEEPER
Through trial ~ance. Light
typing. Accnts payable/f't'.
ceivable. No payroll. Gorge-
ous ot.tices on the bay,
Part Tim•
SECRETARY
Typing a n d shorthand.
G o o d secretarial back.
i'?'OUnd. BeautifuJ Co and
great people! ·
410 W. Coad Hwy.
Newport h•ch
646-3939
-newport.
personnel
agency
833 DOVER DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACll
642-3810
PLEASE CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT
FOR YOUR
C'ONVENIENCE
Mon Job< !hon pcoplo
C&O SmKi,.. n"114-2610
Mir. Tral-to "'5
Carter apportun.11)' w/very
nne Co. ~Id advancement
Top btndlta. Oi..!! Annan
~JO
JASON IEST
Employment Agency
2120 So. Ma.In, San1a Ana
MR DONUT needl a woman
21 yn or over, eves. App. lD
J)U1'0n 13$ E. 17th, C.M.
* NURSES AIDES it
EXPERI~CED •549-3061•
P•rt Tlmt Medlc•I
for an RN. 20 hn/wttk.
Salary $300. Tues, Wed and
Sat. until noon. ~ ttb
Sat. on.
Newport
Personnel Agtney'
333 Dove_:-Dr., NB
642-387D 548-274.1
Office Temporary
WORK WHEN &
WHERE YOU WANT
On temporary assignments
e SECRETARIES
e TYPISTS
e BKKPRS._
e PBX OPERS.
e GEN'L OFFICE
Holiday &
Vacation Pl•n
APPLY NO\Y
VOLT
INSTANT PERSONNEL
NEWPORT BEACH
3848 Campus Dr. Suite 106
546-4741
Equal opportunity employer
Restallrtnt
NOW
INTERVIEWING FOR:
e COOKS e WAITRESSES e BUS BOYS e DISHWASHERS e ~AR HOSTESSES
• PIUONNIL
A-CT
44 .... .,.. ......
c,...w-
'4MU1 , ........ ,.,. ... -AM IM.7.f7J1
MALE
YOU-,
CAN JOIN A VITAL EXPANDIN6
INDUSTIY, WllH THE FOUMOST
MANUFACTUlll OF AUTOMAnc '
VALVES 'AND CONTROLS.
THESE 'EllMANINT POSITIONS ARE
AVAILAILI IMMIDIATEL y'
e $WING SHIPT e
• TUUIT LATHE OPIRATOR5
A real career opportunity Mech•nlc•I TKhnlclen • -DllLL PIUs OPERAJORS awaits you in the restaurant Trainee to $6Jt
tnduatry, now the third la.rs· Crowtna 80lidly financed
est ~!llllr)' in the world. c omm'erclall,y-oriented
U you. are brlaht I: alert, manufacturer needa you, lf
neat appearing & at Jeast 18 )'OU are stable, have a
years of aae or older, we mechanical ba~. a:
We . have provl•d. over 20 , yean of
steady emploY11'9llt for ow employffs.
need you. are capable (If 1fOWina Into
EXP NOT NEC. • job --....,. .. ,.. ***·**
\Ve o11 .. eompi•t. training lnd .. trlel S.101 "°° c• 'A ·-VAL· COM PAN" Y. at our expense. promotion Plua commiak>~ car •· ~
from within & company expensea. The whole of So.
benefit's • auch as: Calif'. cu be your ter-17th l PLACENTIA
Li!e ln.s-Meala-Hospitallzation-rilory, It you have IOmtt
Paid Vacatiom-Unlforma chemical edueatloft, or
I COSTA MESA, CALIF.
7 I 4-54a.2iO I
S-6 dB¥S wtoek-Daya or Eves backgroond, and IOl'M in-
lntervlews between S.S pm. duatrlal aalea exiierlence.· ' . .......... .,,..,.., ..... .,. November 4th-9th. Shipp!,/ RectfYl"I
See Mr. Sklrry • SOI
or Miss Smith II you know electronles, I!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'['!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
A & W• Restaurant
16141 Baach Blvd., HB.
142-2155
EqiiaJ Opportunity Empln
Restaurant
Nl9ht
eomponeall,.'"" have Joboi MOr;. Wom. 7100 J1b1 Mor. Wom. 7100 reneral knowledre o t
marine eleetronic aystema, l·Salea--------·ITRAINEE: Attractive ltd.
,.... "" join • ,..,_ GDlllT't' SURPLUS 13-25, .......... in ......... technical grwp. Mn I ~ k> train clop fol' ICbl. 1n
Wire Man to $71NI Ors. ('.ooJ!cy. "°"' !nlned
Experienced in El.EC .Now Interviewing for pvt. pty'L-A-for TV.
TRICAL auembly. _213'.;.;...762-<336..;.;...;;;.c-,.----I
Bu1lne11 Machine Sale• SALESMEN Tral-
St rt $450 -°""""' -An:hitectunl • DISHWASHER '"' ai1o~co:> n ,.... Full Time ,....., 1.oco11on -C&O AM -
have "the amarta," are MeTchanta Penonnd, 2M3
good at math, he-re Is your Weltclitt Dr., N.B. 64$.71'10
entry into an expandlna ~enced ~ p~ferml but TYPISl' ~st, m1n 80
• Id not necesaaey. Many co~ won.tit Call Mr Y .... ue I pany benefits • .ApPiy In per. 60-'1352 °
Food S.rvict Man ... r '°" on!,y between 2 and 6 '
151 E. Pacific Cat Hwy Tral,_ to NGO P.M. ~ISi'
Newport Stach You m&J' quailfY for one ol Please apply 25 )Inn or older prelerftd,
the country'& Jeadlna: 1150Newport8lvd.,Ot w/stronc backpoound ta
Restaurant • "'work/1tudy" tr I. In In a: SALES Earn money with Imt electric, will train °"
*
BUSBOYS propms, with aulanment no ~tment Sarah Ft.,.e::1:1'·1P,!~1!!',!ntfr:l
to one o! a nom" ber o! ev. Coven._, needs Ml I: u.. .....,.. ............ * DISHWASHERS -"' -Full t.ime, over u. Neat in elusive world-famous din-part-time belp. No del; we '
.,.,, -. train. For inl..!h. """'100 WAITRESS appearance, No exp. oec, ~
APPLY IN PERSON Sh t M t I "--• I SaJea " • a ~•n c DRAPERY e BOB'S BIG BOY e to $71NI
Apply in person
REUBEN E. LEE
EXPERIENCED
Extcutive Secretary
to $625 EPF' ·
r.rust have escrow back·
ground to wot'k for V.P.
Top-rate Co. with top bene-
fits.
154 E. 17th St., C.?o.t. Must have experieoce tn SALESWOMEN
p L A S T I C 5 R"E"sr=Au°'RAN""""T'°,~---I l&-10 gauge aheet metal.
Jniection Moldln.. Exp'd. part time \VAITRES.S Experienced P"hrred ·
ADoly 1n PerHn
SUltF & SIRLOIN .
S930 ,ac. Cat. Hl'fY• t·
Secret•ry to $525 EPF *
\Vork for a yoUng exerutive
with a giamoroUs local Co.
Fine opportunity to meet
people. Under 30, please.
·• ·~ 5 -9 Service Technical Excellent bvwftta. Full time. Openings for experienced or •u pm. T I
t.ra.inees (female). 1-rrave. Exp'd. Part lime lunch r• nH $491 Apply in per90n,
yard shill, 1 -swing ahift CASH~R, + 2 eves, S-9 pm Use )'OW' military elec-Pertannel .oftice
Apply 8 am to 4 pm, ~ton. A~ply in person, COLONIAL =c:o le~uca=c~ J. W. ROllNSON
t.hru Fri. only. KITCHEN, 19th & Harbor, technical industrtal lnstrlr Fashion Island, N.B.
Orange Coast Plastics C.M. menta, a a:roY:inQ: and hl&h-Equal opportunity employer
8.10 W. 18th St., C.M. RESTAURANT: Part tlme 1.. id ti Id SALESLADY Exp'd tull experienced Mexican Food Y pa e • • • tlme, to work In Llnprle WaitreS11. Ml-8274 Credit Reporter atore. Gd. aalary, medical, POLICE OFFICER
Rest&ursnt Tr•lnee Fubkms 1or LaFernme. 23
Ancient Mariner Start $525 Fuhlon 1'1and, N .13.
F/C BookkMpor
$650 ERF' $711 to $In Per Month !'.fust have ability to handle
multiple sets of~ .. plus CITY OF now taking appllcationa tor
some EDP. ~ prefer-FUJI , pert "'me, ,.. l red un!e ~" NEWPORT BEACH ~ " -. • ss you are .,......, ~ e\"'ts shtfta.
mg to college. e KITCHEN HELP
Top opportunlcy .... you tt ~110
)'OU have ..ne ~+al~~-...,...,..----
wllllna:ness to spend h t S..vinga & Loan
"" '" oma: 1eamm. "" BRANCH oo•ine... MANAGER F /C Bookkff Several newly created
$550 ERF!""' positions available with • DISHWASHER Chemical Proce11lne Exp'd. Savlnp I: Loan
Excellent opportunity for a progressive police d~-e BUSBOYS Tr•Jnee $476 Enjoy • rewardinl Cll'ffr
\\'Oman "'ilh construction partment expanding in Apply In person Jr you haw aome college and Join a ~ aueceufuJ
Newport Baach
WAITRESSES ~
CAR HOSl"ESSES
Full or part time-. Attraetlvt
with happy fa~. nt!:
ZOO, E. Cout Hwy, at
McArthur N.B. . * * WAITRESSll ,
No nperfence neci!PUY, ,..
will tn.tn. Full time, neat
eptloearanee nee. •
• =Ys'l:1~~,;1 •
lM E. 17th St., C.M. ,'.
WOMAN, Non-smoker. "9
10 am k> 5 pm. Apply Couft-
try Club Donuts P&Jiaadn I:
Santa Ana Ave., S.A. Hts.,
"on-site'• expemnce. Call size and scope of actlv-~e~V~~a~;>'· chemistry &nd math, you Savlnp: A Loan Aaociatlon
for fllrther ~i!J (San ity. Requirements In· iiiiiiiiiim .... ~ .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil may qualtfy for thl& entry in the Newport Beach areL fOUIMll Lu Cook
D. '----L · elude 5'9", 150 powxl• 1e 1 ·00 wtlh 1 nu. poo!tlon entaill chal· •• .,, • • 1
1ego 11rat11.."11 I sales ve po11 n an ""
Legal Sec to $550 minimum: 21to31 years UNUSUAL mcternare't~nallm~-co. m-lencini dutks and la adapt· F N ol age; 20/30 uncorrect. 161 iuwuu.:u .. .,1 ed. for an individual 'Ni.th
r.fin. 2 yrs ~ne~ ~lil law ed vision; high school di-i.mqinative and creative
f ploma. 0 . Good MKhanlc $4 hr abWtif'I. Excellent fringe
ar
Kitchen Tral-
:ma ~~~.attorney in a ppOrlURllY 1.lechanic w1th own tool• Mneftt1. submit your re• J S Those-qualified should able lo arc weld iron and wne to Box M-914 Dally
F ~ ec. to $450 EPF• report for the next writ-The Independent Order of 1teel. Pilot.
p.,,..,.,m, tuII time job.
Over 18, Neat appe~.
Ola.net for advancement.
a .. .., accurate typing, SH 90 t 1 1 6 'IA N Foresters have OP'Ded a +, diets.phone exper, and en • es :...., p.m., ov. Wtldtr1 to $4.SO hr. SECRETARY/RECEPI'ION-APPLY JN PERSON the de&tre to leani. 19, 1969, at City Hall new oHlce In South Orange Need experienced com· Isr Intereftina :lob fn Doc-
A Council Chambers, 3300 County. Require Intelligent blnation welders. tor'• ofllce lor secretarial ccountlng Clerk to Newpo ... a: .. d., Newport man or woman ovl'l' 25. Col. u50 IL EPF • •• skills In dlctaphone & IBM
-r.1. Beach, Calif. No appli· lege not neceSsar:v. Shoold FEMALE TYPEWRITER. Muat have
lleb'• 111 loy
1!t4 E. 11th Street
Cocbi. Mesa Experl!'flCed In Accnts pay. cation nece!sary prior to have experience in meeting plea.sing appeal'll'ft and
able, posting. cash distri· test. For !m1her inlor-public. Dignified Ille time FEE REIMBURSED pmionallty, wtth ability to bu~n, and 80me EDP. maUon, ronlact the Per-position. Earning commenc-handle conf\dentlal mater-Scftoelt..lnatrucflon 7600 D1:f1~05nFe Secretary aonncl 0 ff t c e, Cil4) ea Immediately. Should be F /C lkkpr to $650 ia1s. Hn. 8:45 to 5:30. i ---------
o -ff Neg.• 67J..0033. in excess of $250 weekly. Thru b1a.1 balance, and PH: 83&-QTS M E N
Must enjoy working with Ilg. ~p-,08-,-.m-m_e_r~&-S~ya-ta_m_I. 1 financial 1tatements. Small SECRETARY We can train you now
ures plus general 1ecretar· Telephone: 492-8700 betwtoen Co. needs someone for pay up t.o
lat duties for & fine gentle-ADVANCE TO 9 AM . I PM Mon. thru Fri. pleasant and wlllln& to do TO $600 $4.21 per hr. u
man. MANAGEMENT 9 AM -12 Noon Satunrda)'1 a bit of evA-.. 1.1--:--HEAVY EQUIPMENT
F/C BookkHpor $12,•000·$14,000 !or appointmcol ~,·-•· -Irvine COlll.J•x OPERATORS $500 APF• Accnts Peyable to $450 ,.-R.P.G. programmin&:, E rlerad 1 -ar in Excitirc job with dynamic Top wqn and best em-
Will pay more for eXper1· 300-20 disc. '"""'"""""""""""""""' xpe ,~ young company. ~ayment opportunities an --~ wi h ~ SALES 1 aecntJ Jl&)'able, 1en'I h -~-· u 1-~-e .... -=i I a .....-A firm. Riviera Employment ; Attract. gir s for Riviera Employment n t e cou .. YuC on nuu.•
But will traln a F /C bkkpr Age 1 fashion sales in Orange Co. poaUJ1&', pay bills. Agency Inc try. Plenty of work for
with dive:nified experience. 4667 MacArth'ir'BJ':;j, Ste 201 Full or p/t. 842-4449 Salts 'S.cret•ry $600 up 4667 MacArthur0Blvd. Ste 201 Skilled heavy equipment
R ptl · $350 E ' OJ»talor. We train you on ece orust RF• N.B. 540-6370 SALESLADY Must have top 11tt. akllla N.B. ~70 DOZERS -GRADERS -
Greet clients ln per,,on and Real Est le Sal to handle famous cosmetict. and 3 yrs exper. Nat'l &ales S.Crttary _ $500 LOADERS -SCRAPERS
on phone in tnterestlna law We have 0: onlyes Real * 5.16-f900 * Co. for high-ticket con-Alrrt'ssive pl with sood -CARRY·AU.S -TRAC· o,tfi~. ~fust have ~~te Estate oUlce in the Univ. Sales sumer Item. and handlin&' skills -Swinltna: olfltt -TORS and ATfACH-
yp1ng some abilt"" with --'•• --~. •-·-h ...._,. • _1 MENTS. No need to tnttt· . • ., Park area, on the booming Are you earn1·na 11111 1-.::\.111"1.l UC'Cl\; area • \,,,IW ........... ne. nJ.pt your preAent job or figures, P 1 u 1 a channing Irvine Ranch. We now need 11r. Sec:retery $525 Merchants Pcr90Mf:l, 200 ac:hoollng. Start at home In
personaJHy, • 1 more successful real Weatcliff Or., N.B. 645-2110 1Mre Ume. The~t two Account Cl k 2 0 Beautiful job for pleasant -
. tng er estate a a I e • P er a o n w/ $ 5 per Week? person. Front-oUlce type. Stcr•t•ry ~B-,kd•w' oodre•l,clennt I. nBtnr ~t Tralnet $350 APF• interest In }!arbor View, 1ou Udltt For .a rlli with good figure Corona del Mar, Turtle LotJ of public n!lattons. Good skU1&. Local CODlpaJI)'. terms. Nationwide' place.
aptitude, uae 10.key adder, Rock .l Univ. Park aru. You can if >1>U are dif;nllied Nk:e bou. Bft.utilul ot6ce. $560·to start. ment aalatance. Thll ln.lii-
A ,_. ~-Ex __ , & bondable, ~n ages Accountant Tralllff lncM,.nclent tnc can be your ftnt atep
mp.., uoor o.uue. lerlbJW 3().55, and married. Th11 is ~ up Personnet Agency lO em~yment fn the Hn.· • EPF, emplaytr adv. & promotiOnal porgram a sales opportunity for which ...,_ 1 Onu,,e C vy ulpment Industry
P•'I• fee· oUered• R. ~:Ht.e,.11 ~."°',, .. at you have sea.retied, no can-4 yr. accounting de(ttf!W, Ull in C.M ~w~ Write or illustrated foJd2
• APF, appllcant o:u """' v 1 d 1 yr min. \l.t>rk ex-per. •---.,~·=-===' "· f Univ. Park Center, Irvine vass ng, a vanc:emen • gen. .-SECRETARY MAIL COUPON pays " Call Anytlme 833-0820 erou1 rellrement plan. Not train. NO OBUCAnON
' ERF, company •job but• ca,...,. Earning• FEE PAID EXPIRllNCED NORTHWEST SCHOOLS,
=='='=lm=bu='="='='"===-!..:ONE==gll=l=-=m=""'==w=ond<=="=I 'tart immediately. Ptrmancnt ~ HOur, 5 d&l' Heavy-F.Qul~nt Tnilnln•, -Call 5.14-1101 for appoint. Dr•ftiwom•n $3.SO hr week P,.ttion aV&ilabll De-pt. JIN-& :aox· M7U, c/O
Jobs-Mlin, Wam. 7100Joba-Men, Wom. 7100 men!, between 10 am. A 3 yn mtn. upttlence Newport Beach. hn. 9 am-Dally Pilot
• mechanlcal draftq:.
e PERSONNEL 9
GENERAL AUTOMATION
has an opening in tts Personnel Depart·
ment, reporting directly to the Employment
Su~rvlsor.
ln1tial duties will Involve screening appli·
cants, typing correspondence, handJ fng tete--
phone inquiries and making travel arrange--
ments. Secretarial skills, including short·
hand would be helpful.
This Is an excellent opportunity with a
growing company.
Apply In p<rlOn or cell
D. L. Kuechler, 835-4804
GENERAL AUTOMATION
1402 E. CHES~NUT, SANTA ANA
An Equal Op~rtunlty Employer
pm. 12, '-I-3 Pll1· T09 aalaJ7. Name -··-.. ··--...... " .... _
Sal .. Tr•I-APPLICANT Wrlte Box Pa5, lldy_Pilot. ':~'.'8:i".' ~+''·~: PAYS FEE ~C~l~Ytni.~ :": ... =:::=::=:~;;~=
,....,. Part•tlme RO..Mnt1 """• Ute bool!Mepfrc •-lndeponcfent Clarl< $2 hr · State --··-··-""• -
Ptrsonnel Agency Ren!\ve lllht merchandlee. Ni.gut! Pwmnnel Asenc:7 Neemt Phone -···-···__:
1~:~e~ C ~2~ta~~-Houn LaaU~i=-~1•1477 Hra. ;::.;;; nn,;: -
SA~ REPRESENTATIVE &.ck Office Medlcel SERVICE SfATIOI'( atten-wmt A FtJTUREI
$600 SALARY + full com· $481 dant tulJ· tlm., DPn'· nnt Are/education no ~
miu.lon while In tra.lnlng U ~perienced all phue1 of see Jtm at =eo "Newport Let us help )'Oll ~.
YoU qualify. ()rp.nlu.Uon back o~ IDvd. CM 1NNKE€PCRS tNSTTn.J'm
El.EcrRIClAN: L!ceMed, Clerical $450 Sl!AMl'OO GOU. must k INTERl'IATIOMAL
lhould be ovtr 25. Xlnt Opnate lG-keJ bp ~ lktnled. Call Tony at The MoteVHotcl/ Apt Mamt Sdll
manapment opportunltlet. &'OOd In math. wUI be Hair ,,,..._ &6-G31'1 . A OMSIOH OP H1gh income potential. C.a.11 ....... ., AN'nlOHT SCHOOt.s
Ptnonnel Manqtrbetween wor1dt11 wttl\ tnvolc11 . SECRETARY, •xrttl'. 1D'1 S. IROOIOtORsT
JCl-4. G'75-4573 Mo.lure. wrance agency, full li m1.1. ANAHEtlll, CALU'ORHIA
PLANNING to mow? You'll Fiie Clerk TrelnM N10 Sftl,ary open. Call 80-4H9 a.a.ea tonn _._,. wttt
find an amai:Sng number of Able to traln lb both t.lpha UNITED F1JND...Commwiil) PHONE fOR APPi'.
homes In today'• Oaaalf1ed and numeric J Ul.nc, 11aht Oltat The1 f;f:l tM ,fb Ask for Betty TJl4I06 Ad~<heck lhml now. t)plnJ:. f! done best ... UNITED l'\1H[) -ii&~ -------'
'
I
5 44A4PWG44041 . 4 4 ii!. 140)111 sos, ::seesz &JS& z e s a;, i 255 St ·------------·---. -·
4 O,llLV "LOT Moftdiy, N"""btf 10, 1969 ~ .. K.....,.N015E p "'tll<:HANOI I POk -"-' CHAl'IDIJLFOJt MIRC:tlANDISI FOJt MEltCHANOIS I FOJt TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
,5"1.E AND TJtADI ·'~LI AND Tll,ADE ' , SALE AND TllADI ~tF'"AND-'l'llAD~ SALi~'~ T.~ AF REE TO YOU Marl .. !qulp...--90)S T;;;;ks 500 Uud C 9900
llill Fumlture IOOOPurnfture IOOO Ml1cell•""u1 l600 RE uT. cOntc11tod kitterui, £PTO --------
nursed 3 mo.. Adore pup. INTERC R 250 hil GMC TRUCKS
:: SPANISH MEDnERRANaAN-
Sllaw R~m • Floor-S•mpln ~ F•ctory C~M01i1t1
.i 3 ROOMS OF FURNnuRE -$~89.
e S pc. 1uthentic SjMnllh· lclrm. ut, • 96
In. quilled sof1 with S6 in. m1tchl,.,9 Jo~•
se1t, or chair • 5 pc. Spankh Dinette, o.R
tabla top e 3 hNYY Modlt.or,rf'"''" "'at.thing
tables, top dur1ble enougn .tot '181MftC:O ~ D1ncing. Will sell p lece1 indlvldu1lly.
I Shop First! Th en Se• Our Unb~li;~1ble BuYs!
10011other items with terrific 11vlngsl
Bank Terms Store Charge Master Charge
' -BankAmer!card All Accepted
IE A MAN
GET A MAN'S JOI
OPERATING
lfEA VY F..QUIPMEroT a.droom
Train NO\V to operate J..arxc 9 drawtt dresser, nlir.
eArlh-moving BUU.OOZ-2 bed id a kin ERS, BACK HOES, GRAD·· ror, s e slnn 5' . II:
ERS, DRAG l.JNES, CLA?al size headboard, frame, quilt-
S).fELLS and SCRAPERS. cd mattre&S, lheels, blank-
Tb• Con1fructlon lndu1try ets, etc. ·
ls loomln1I You can earn O\oi(e of Spanish
r.p money in this fast or Modem Style
PUBLIC NOTICE
DECORATOR GETS CANCEUAT!ON
OF 11 WXURY APARTMENTS
Sp1nlsh & Medi1trnn11111..Eumitur1
, AU BRAND NEW
9-pc. Mediterr1ne1n Bedroom Suit• in Pecan
!Rog. ,149.001 ....... _ ............. NOW $1H.OD
Gorge~us Sp1ni,h Custom Built Safi w ith
matching Lov9 Seit-Choice of be1utiful
f•b•lcs. IReg. $419.951 ~.-...... NOW $225.00
Sp1ni1h Oini n9 Set' ........... -....................... $75.00
Solld 01k End T•bles end Coffe, T1bles .. $1f.50
T 11! Decorator Table Lamps
!Rog. $49.951 .................... -...... NOW $11.00
Spenish Hanging Swag 6.amps
!Reg. $49.951 ................ , ........... NOW $22.50
A decorator dream house on display -3
rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was
reg. '1295.
SACRIFICE •••••• $398
CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN
ht PAYMENT NOT DUE 'TIL 1970 mm FURNITURE
1844 Newport Blvd.Horbo~atervd.l
Costa Mesa Only
Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed., Sit. & Sun. 'Til 6
Office Equipment 8011 Pl1nos & Org1n1
TYPEWRITER, add. mach ..
<:,3.li,;~tor, Very reasonable.
Xlnl cond. 892-2423
FACTORY
CLEARANCE!
1130
moving, aotion -packro All For $249 field! Keep present Job G1r1ge Salt 8022
apd train at home in your [.;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;
Factory orders clearance ol
all overage, demonstrators,
fl oor models, studio & re-
lurned Pjano5 &: Organs,
Real savings up l~ 30~~.
Everything guaranteld like
new. Sale limited to spccific
stock • so huny! No n1oney
dO\\'n OAC, 5 yean to pay.
This great sale only at;
\YARD'S BALDWIN S'l'UDIO
1819 Newport, C.M. 642-M84
spare time followed by No do~'n P1nt11. only S9 n10,
Retiident Training in the
actual operation of heavy
~arth-movlng l'C)uipment
under pl'ojcct conditions at bor school owned facilities
rft.r MIAMI, FLORIDA.
Nationwide employment '5Sis.tance. For Jo'REE in·
fqrmation fill ou t coupon
•nd mail today! '
For prompt reply 1~Tite to:
~NIVER SAL HEAVY
CONSTRUCTION
SCHOOLS, INC.
Dept. 1203
P.O. Box 47G E! Toro, ~If. 92630
Name ....... -........................... ..
~e ....................................... .
Address ................................ ..
qty ................ Stale .......... ..
ilr ................ Jlhone .......... ..
WELK'S WAREHOUSE
600 \V. 4th St., Sanla Ana
Open Daily 9-9
Sar_ 9-6 Sun. 11·6
ritusr sacrifice complete
houseful or lilediterrancan
turn: so!a, love scat, 2 com·
mode lanip tables, coUtt
labte, lamps, color TV, din
set, re!rig, stereo, king size
bd.J.m set, Queen bdrm set,
n !'iize bedrm set. s\\'ag
lamp, picture!!, washer &
dryer. li1isc. 8!H-5875
USE D Blue v e lvet
Ro11>Rock SM. 1 turquoise
& l green occasional Chair,
f'ach $9.95. 6 dray,•er 1o1'ainut
dre~r $31 3 pc. !'ii.'! walnut
occasional Ibis $14. The
fictory, 1885 II a rb or.
Demolition
SALE!!
A LIDO ISLE
LUXURY HOME
is being demolished
EVERYTHING GOES!
P ANELI NG-CARPETS
SLIDING GLASS DOORS
APPLf,\NCES.\VlNDO\VS
OIL PAINTINGS
LANDSCAPING
220 Vii l ido Nord
SALE-All Doy
TUES., Nov. 11th
Open Every Nite
& Sunday Afternoon
J>IANOS & UR.GANS
NE\Y & USED
• Yamaha Pianos & Organs
• Thomas Organs
• Kim bail Pianos
• Kohler & Campbell
COAST MUSIC
NEWPORT &: HAR.8oR
Costa 1.Iesa * 642-285 l
0J)<'n l(}.6 F1i 10-9 Sun 12.S
SAVE $300
T\\10 hvin beds, 1..'0nlplc\c, '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiii 1-5'0-G!<.:.,.:o.cc,'~~~~ i· .".""':: Ilk<' 1K'1v Sl~ C'ach. Chest ot
OON'T Give up! You may dra1\·rrs $27.;JO, Slat bench
find it al America's largest, $7, Crib, no mattress $J.
most unusual unfinished Eod table w!l.h i.lra\\'Cr
furniture store. Cor. Redhill $17.50. ~00i4
<11'' Callie Nelson Console
In bcauti!ut walnut includ-
ing bench, $695. Limited
number available!
,•
MEN I
GOULD MUSIC
2()i5 N. Main, SA &, Santa A'na Flvy, Tustin. 1 I-;========
mi So. ol Newport F\vy, Appliinces ll00 PRIVATE PARTY \YANTS
Open 362 days per yr. TO BUY PIANO FOR
S.14-5470 . Rl"ltigeratol's from $38. CASH. 542-6045
1'\VO twin beets, l.'Omptele, GE, Porlablc Color TV, BALO\VIN Spinet Piano 4
like ne1v $35 C:ach. Chest ol like nu ··· ............. $1<18 yrs old $750. Pvt pty,
drai,·ers l27.50. Slat bench Frigidaire clec ·drYer $5::1.95 612-1'".Jl·t or 542-05n
$7. Cl'ib, no mattre~ $5. RCA Console. l'olor TV. $178 ==========
End table with drawer \Vhirlpool au1o washer $50. Televl1ion 1205
$17.50. 549-0074 CE 2 dou'f':~Ap;5· ' .. $98 ---------
FREN01 Provincial :;o!a Lease Color TV or Black
CO!'IIPUTER PROCRAill-$120, Chair $00. Danish lSlS NewJlOl'l Blvd., C.rtl. & \\'bile, Option to buy.
]\UNG IS THE KEY TO modern .sectional $20 each. 548•7788 F'1:ee .service. No deposit
YOUR PROF:JTABLE l\laple dou.ble bed. lamp & KENi\IORE auto washer, A·Aclive TV Rental Co.
FUTURE! table, very good. S 6 O. late model, xlnt cond. 8 (1) 522-U53
642-6236 cycles $6.'i. 5-16-8672, 847-8115 •-;;;;;-;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;-;;;;;~-;;;;;;;-;;;;;;..,;;;;;
Classes start soon. ~ ~.,,.. --USED Spani~h group 1..'0m· MAYTAG aulo \Yasher, xln1 lo( w
Pilot program of[t'rlng thr plele-so!a & 2 n\atchlng cond. 1 yrs. old. S-l:i. Good condition $15 • $40
finest cquipml"nl and fa cil· chrs, 3 carved tbl.11 & 2 cUx 5-J6-S!i72, &t7-8llJ Call 5t'Hi41J
CLOSE OUTI ple1 & chUdrc11. WlU live In engine & lran;>ntlsSlon. Orange Courny Sale;
1=9 box G-e" gar. ?t1ect to ,,,_,,. .-.·. 0>111p1clcly rebuill, nu MJ1 DUNTON
lORD
""' ... urc Carda.. '"'" "' I Service l-1eadquar1c~ Bluf'f area 6#-0000 or lOUl'S, many ex-lras , NEW. USED
CUUlma.!i, Birthdays, Gel G75-44!1T 11/ll rea.'tllnably priced. {2131 UNIVEDSfTY \V e I I, All Occaalan. etc. 830-59S6 " ~llJI' 1 at regular price get COMBINATION Sink and OLDSMOBILE
&r»lher •t le! • stationary tub. Slni::le sta· lfEATJ-l!~IT ROI". ~\Olil(~ :.'850 l:larbor Blvd.
MINNIE'S G r.Ht i tlonary tub. 2032'.? ltiverside horn/ha.Iler. Air t,:llde 4 Costa MC5a I
C d & Gift' Sh ng Dr. S.A. Hei&htt 11/11 compa.sa:. .All, new & titl).9640 I • 1r I op ttaBOnably pnccd. (2131
8511 Hen Ave,, \Ye•tmlnster t.flDDLE • AGED p<.'digreed 836-S!U 1950 OlEV. Pickup. Runs 2240 S. Main
546-7076
tl blk E. ot Beach mvd.) Slame&e-<:At.-~n developed .,:;;;=======I very well, 4 new 111-e, newt
847-3131 allerv, must find good &o.t Slip Mooring 9036 glass, '1-speed trans. Uglyl
POOL TABLES home. ~I ltno but practical. S?Zi. Ctl.U
Secaro Pool FOUND: FenWe Slameit WANTED: Sllp or mooring tl38-9349 days bcCoN' 2 p,111. I
DRUNSW1CK-Al>1F cat approx 3 or <i mo. vtc. space for 25' Colun1bia r,OR SALE ~ 1967 YOltD '64 CHEV. Imp. $995
Cuatom Slate Table Cannery &: Adams A·ve. Challl'.ngcr sklop. Please ECONOUN~. hl'(IV)' Jty, St•lio11 W.9011. \1 -1, •Ylo·
From $289 962-7060 l.1/11 call (7141 522-&46 or l:.'ves: super van. $1975. 630 \\'. m•l•t tr•,.1miu ion, 1,eto1v
100% },lnancJng DARLING calico and m; ... -.1 (n4) 826-3501 17th, C.!\f. •ir. pow•r lleering, r•d io, ~= °"''-'--""'-'--~~c~---ll heeler. Lie. OIR 114 * s~:LS * ~:~t·'"'o'ie':seuse~ke~,dA8 t!!'. ~~S;!~. a1~~l~~e :;r<11)~~ 'lil Chevy P .U . "& ton, ,69 FAIRi ANE $249 5 ~ V-8, 4 .spt't'(J . $7j(). 323 S. »lain SI. Orange 2921 Carob St. NB ll/11 to so·. Call Chuck Avery, Call 962-4694 \1-1, 1ut.~m1tic h•n1mi11ioft,
*AUCTION*
it you will sell or buy
give \Vindy a 1ry
Auclions Friday 7:30 p.m.
Windy's Auction Barn
Behind Tony's Bldg, ~fat'L
2075~~ Newport, CM 64&-8686
KlRBY VACUUM Cleaner
1vlth attac h ment s &
pollaher. Take over sn1ai1
payments or pay oU balance
of $36.40. Credit Dept,
.• ~ Vr l'VCS c all f•elory •ir, powe r 1tee rin9, LA~GE male Gcrn1an '1S.1-J9l6. 'S7 t-'ORO 1 ~ Ton rick Up he•l••, ~door 1ed•n. L;c,
Pointer, 4 yrs. Hunts, 11•/c.a1npcr, SS:-iO. YCU 11)1
1valchdog. Nectls large area.' BOAT SLIP for rent. * 847-59.ll • ,,8-CHF.'V Y $1 695 ~2 lUlO 28' Huntlllt'lon Harbour
FOUND Grey & whit~ kitten ./ S46-26.i2 ./ 9s2 Nov•, • Or., 6 tyl., •u+o· co~·~m~pe:;.;;.r~•c...-----0' 11 m•l1e ft~n1 ... +1~ion, •• d:o,
-vie. of Kent St. &. Ocean-BOAT Slip for rent. Balboo
front. 67~381 eves. 11110 Coves.
,66 O IE'V he•ier, ••c. lie. VMB J6 9 _ Sp!. VAil r /h, ·-'66 FORD $995 --* 536-3743 * auto, tape, i.:arpc\11, ~·ic.
l>1ALE collie 4 yrs old. Likes Xlnt $1600. 673-0.1.'>9 ('vl's.
childrcn, Yt'Cll t r a Inc d . M bll Ho es 9200 613--0721 11/10 ° e m Dune Buggies
CUTE! Kittens, 1 blk/1vhl. BAY HARBOR
ic;hort hair. 1 y,·ht, long hair. tAoblle Home Siles r.tANX/CORVAll t !\l;Jle Offer! J)('sno•r;1[!·:
9525'
Coynt.v 5ed•n. V.8, •ulo·
rn•l•c +•0~1mi1 1i on, f~c!cfV
aif, powt<r 1to1rinq, ••d•o,
h•1ie1, • high mil1a91 c•r
.t •• 1.11!. Lie. vzs 571
'67 OLDS $2195 499-3860 U/10 U.sa Loma Roll • A\\'llY • ,~ ;;;-;===--,..,--.--~~I • 616-1896 • Delmont 88 1·dr. H,T, V.8, BEAUTIFUL hand painled DOG; Cocker & Shepherd, 6 Sheraton M~: liomette · ==O::C.:o0o=::===ll ~uto, r1d ;o, h"•'•" powe •
535-7289.
oil portrait ol you or your mos. female. Shots & Klt -PrcstJ.ge -Saluira Importe d Aa tos 9600 , ll1er, pwr breke1, f•t lo•y
children irom a phol-aph. license. 536-2670 11/10 AU.. SIZES •i• eond, .... ~ii• we ll lireJ , ••• ------.---'--NOW ON DISPLAY I , I A wonderful idea for that 5 SIX WC<'ks old kittens need l-12.'l Baker St., Costa litcsa AUSTIN HEALEY vinyl lop, tint•o 9 •11·
special Christmas g If t. 1,:'.ood honlt>S. 2 Black
111
3 ~~ block East of Harbor Blvrl. ·'66 FORD $f29S
6'16-362!1. tortoise. 545-1'425 10 Costa 1tesa (TI4) 54~9-170 AUSTIN AMERICA G~I. SOO Xt 2 Or. H.T. V.8, •ulom dl<e, •adio , Jo'IRE\VOOD for sale-cut to
yo u r specitications; well
seasoned. Deliv &: stclc'd
free. $27.50 ~; C, $47.50 C.
Call collect (114) 681J..OM6. -
HAND fed n1u l tigraph
duplicator. model 80 & aup-
pl!es $85. 5x8 hand led IC'tter
press & suppliC's !6 trays of
fonts) $50. 642-5027.
PETS d L VesTOCK aUY J• Nl!W ~les. Srrvicr, P:11"1s I 1 · •n I SELL Im USED 'fat1r. power 1 ao""9· ln1n1C'dlate Dclivcl'Y pw•. br1ka1, fat!orv air
8820 Cooper ,\U ri1odcls ,o,.d .. ...hit• w•ll ,;,,s,
v;nvl top, tin ted gl•n.
5°1_AM_E-SE--k-itt-.,-IB--ll-0.-3I TRAILER SALES RPM 153
• . "Buy fram • man '65 FO RD $795 ~~~~;~t and l Bluepoint. who Jives in one!" G•le~i• .SOD Convertible.
\VE SERVICE V.B , eulo. 1adio, he1l 1r,
2 il1ALB while albino EL · 00 \V C fl N B h II · \VllAT \VE s L! .. a . oasl ivy., . . ""'' 11101. w it • w• t1rt1.
C1t1
Siamese kittens. 14 1o11eeks. :::?I So. Harbor, San!a An.'1 &t!·9 11)j ti :().Il&I CYR 271.
(.'HARTER membership in I ~'='=o='="=h=·="= ... ='"='===oll Bick So. of Bol.sa 531-1066 AU1horized f.olG OC'alcr '66 cH"Ev~.--~$~8~9~5
Ne1vport Beach Tennis Club SPACES! ==='=======II Cori• H•rJ Top. ' •Pe•d,
for We at original cost $480 Dogs 8825 lllove in lochiy DATSUN ,,d;o, hc 1i11. Lie. TIS 6]11
«sh. 642-3007 COLLIE PUPPY Now 5• POl'k --------11 '66 FORD $1495
CROs.5 top Ref r i 2,, AK C I al C Choice of model.11 or cu.c;ton1 ORANGE COUNTY'S Cou ntry Sq ui•• W•gon v.e , . . . em e ollie. TJ1 NO 1 ' ' automatic defrost. Exe, $65. liullr in smog fl'["{' Coi.1a , • .,1om1tjc, raaio, ne•te•, Th~ House in Back 445 E. colored, shoU and 11.·ormetl, l!l('Sa-Newport !·!arbor. DATSUN DEALER power iltering, power 8 1veeks old. S40. P h on e b k h't II +· 17th, 642-5741. •.v.-·_·)·l'"l, Adult lilobilc Honie P;i rk DOT DATSUN 1• 11' w '1 '"' •re1•· '"' "" 1:,.11d 9l1u, lu99•9• ra c . * * * * -=~====~~~-G1'Cen.Jc.tl l\tobilr Honie f'.all's FAlilILY t.lcmbcn;hip In Sii.RY TERRIEP..-1\IALI:: l TJ(} \Vhitticr, C:\'i li"l2·U50 18&35 Beach BIYd. UT8 795.
Irvine Coasl Country Club Pups. 2 mos -shoLc; • , •. S 8x42 I 11untlngton Beach ;66 PONTIAC $1495
adorable & healthy. SAN· ~ pal'tan ' a um aWll· Sl2-7781 or 54().N.1 2 G.T.0 .2 Ooo• He rdlop v.a,
for sale. Pvt. pty. 673-9131 TA 'S SPECIAL PRICE SlOO 11.1g, located adult. park C:>.·1. '69 PICK up aylom•+ic, radio, h••'•'· For Sale, }~irewood. 644-4806 · Xlnt cond., priced I01v. .,i11yl top, tinted 9l1u VtT
Orange & Eucalyptus &16-S4j() call after 'I or aU 02-4.
BJ8..0070 \VI::Ii11ARANER 13 up pi cs day weekends. J'l.'car new, 1500 miles ! •I spd, -~~-~~~=
SKIERS-Rent my mobil<' Ap~;;s'. &bot.s. Grand clwn-'61 GREAT .Lakes t.1·lr. 0-:.60. tllr, will Sflcriliee! Srnall '67 MU~~!~~ $l695
2 B f I r n down, \\'ill finance prlvitt<! home In lilammoth. Day or *C7l 4) ggz..2423 * r., urn1 ure, ou a~\·n1~g, v.1, redio, he•ler, pow••
we<'k. C. Ne ill, SJl-337'1 . =~-='~c..;.;....,;....,;....,--1 snnroom & storage. J-am1ly party. ZQS9l9LB. Call Ken 1t1erin9 while .... ,11 tiret ,
TOY Poodles. i;ill'cr beige, Pk. $1 ,000, 8 3 9 -2 <I 1 8 494-9773 or !'>15-00.11. tinl1d 91•11. UCO 279
Quality king lx!d.quilted h1u\vn. A.KC. \VIII hold . <'Vf'/1vknd . --... -,6-8-F-ORD $2295
coml?lete-unused SlOJ, worth &16-336-1----------ENGLISH FORD $250. Aft 5 & wknds 84U5.16 '1 'li7 Fi\SHlON fl·tunor l1xW 2 Gal. 500 -4 Or. H.T.
COLDJ::N fku·icvc.r-l1nlc, 2 llR. 2 BA, furnished. Awn-[;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.[l "·I . 1ulom•lic, ••dio, he•I· 6 Cylinder Chevy
Running. Uses oil.
968-79.\,j
Misc. W1nted
1notor.
8610
SWE BUYS
$ FURNITURE $
APPLIANCES
Color TV1-Pi1not-Sf•r101
1 "9c9 o' H•ine hh CA$H IN JO MINUTES
• 541-4531 •
WE PAY CASH
yrs, J\KC, obdnt !rd, great ing & extras. Nust sell. eall e1, po .. tr tlo•1in9 f•clory
1v/ chldrn. $2j0, 642-9618 (Zl3\ 981-7260. ORANGE COUNTY'S ,,, ~ond ., li,.t1d 91.,1.
P0!\1ERANIAN p u PP i e s ,;;;~;;;~~====I VOLUME ENGLISH WTE 5 8~'=~~~=~
AKC reg, 2 mos.+ shots, Motorcycles 9300 FORD DEALER '63 COR\IAIR $595
879-8l78 SALES· SERVICE Monie. •utom1lic tran1mi1-----------1'68 1-londa 125cc, lo ml}::. '62 ?.IODELS 11gn, r•dio, ht•fo•. l ie.
POODLE PUps, tiny toy & Sports Scramblrr $300. \4 Immediate delivery GH R 135
toy, all colors. AKC, top midget race car $150. LARGE SELECTION '66 MERCURY $1495
quality. Stud ser. BSl-9719 54>7817 Th--' -ore Crclone G.T. 2 Dr. H.T.
TRANSPORTATION '661 ~ HONDA 305 Scran1blrr. ROBINS FORD \l.B, 1utom•lit, r•dio, he•!·
'"i"I -"d J11'I -b"1'lt "'"'· er, powe• 1toering, pow," Bo1h & Y1cht1 90\::l ~1;AS,'"MO-offi:t ... "' ·LA 2060 llartxir Blvd. br1~e1 , foclo•v eir eondi. _________ .;.. ' ' · · · Costa J\lcsa 642-0010 lio~ing, tinted glau. TSA
SCRAM LETS 66 HONDA IGO Scmmbloc. l2l
-Tull(.'() pipes, DCIY lll'CS $300. --·-'66~c=o~M=F.T~-~1~1~1=95
ANSWERS 1=":'°"=:182'===== I FERRARI ,,,., ... , , .... ,,,i;,.
----------11 wa9 on, rod;o, h••'•'· \1 .8, Auto Services FERRARI ouloP1oti, lr•n1m i•1ion, l)O•
oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOiliiiiii I Ealoon -Expt'I -Knife -1 .~&~P~a~r~t~siijjiiijjjijiijj9jj4~0~0 Ne1vport Imporl5 Ltd. Or· wer 1tee•;n9. L;,, RPP 9511 * CASH * Ticke t -KEEPSAK~ !I ange County's only author· '69 CORTINA $1695
in 30 minu!C's for good furn. fllark Twain alxlut an al-lzccl: dealer. 11100 delui•. •utom1tie
iturc & appliaD('('S. Fast, legcd lriend : "I admil'l.' him BE ACll SALES-SERVICE-PARTS h•nimi!iign, ,.d,0, he•ler,
COlU'tcou.s service. 1 piece or grca!ly. \Vhrn his time con1. AUtO Supply 3100 W. Coast liwy. ..hiiew~ll. 5300 ac tuel
h Call J · es I shall buy a pi-of lb" Newport Beach mol e1. Lie. YWT 18 1 ouscful. a111s day or , .. ~. " 6'2 910· '10 17"' rope for a KEEPSAJ<E." " -. ' " ~· · u-. II '=~==--~=~ nlte, 892-3396 or 842-J921. Wholesale Anthonzcd Fen·nri Den.I.er '65 FORD $995
'69 Rinell 22 ft. Deep V OiltC G.1. soo 4·Dr. v.e, •ufo,
15j hp V-' -Fully round -Pnces to All JAGUAR radio, h••ler. power ., .... Ii.kc new -4 1\1\coel tgally _ whole .,..,11 ti r~1. SY B 101. Co1np!C'tc Tlfachinr !'h<l[l ----- _
ltlcs available~ Real-Um<' -~--------1~-~-~~-~~-~~-~~-~~-con1puter programming:. lamps, all cut to $168. The K£Nl\'IORE 11·ashcr & dryer -~
Factory, 1885 Harbor· C'Opl)C'rlonc, \·ery goo.I cond. HI-Fi & Stereo 1210 e WANTED e
Academy Of 54G-Q42. $100. DG.S-1966 aftC'r 3
C
Good used furnitul'f!, appJi.
omputer Technology USED 5 pc. modern walnut ADi\tlRt\L llcrrlgcr;itor ELECTRA. voice F!\t .stereo ant'es. antiques. color TV'~. bunks -head -radio -all SPJ::ED EQUIPtiTENT 'j7 .TAGUAR XK-1,10. i::x-'68 MUSTANG $1995
cquip111entl Tilt lrailer $8000 r:..EBUILT ENGINES ccll cnt condition. p h 0 n c V ·B, 1ulomatic, ••dio, Call 51i-9<l7l dinette $19. 011\'e quilled f'-i'CezCr. Alrno~I nc1v. G'. $100 tuner, !tint. S80 or offei·. refrlg':t, i;tove's, 11·ashers &
fl A!lt to 8 Plil sola & cllair $48. Used * Call-673-160i* &12~ or 842-1316 dryers, etc. 1 piece Ol' hous~ val ue -fllUSI scll-n1akc oliC'I' &16-2986 he•ler, power ile1ring.
I ~~~~""''!'!!!~'!'!!!~!! . 1\erco coru;ole $68. The Fae· ----------ful. Z-1 hr service. 842.:i9:?1
S. AUCERMAN SCHOOL tory, 1885 Harbor. ~2. KJ::Nl\IORE auto \va.i;h<'r. late niotlcl, :-<nit rond. s Cameras & Equip. 8300
-~·lll take car in trade caU 11~:} Virtoria, CM 518·6.·i.JO ==========ll w~ife well "'"'· V5K llSO
Slsmanagc.r Longpre Pon· 18381 Beach Blvd, HB Sli-0991 MERCEDES -BENZ '66 FORD $1495
liac 892-6651 or 636-2500 * OPEN 7 DAYS * F.;,1,"' 500 1 dr. Herdtop Co. Fairgrounds, 1:r. 1.s USED 7 pc antique 1vhitc cyr:lcs. S'i?i. 516.s6n , ll li-SUa LONG Tra\'<'I Top For lit
\Vhcre the Progra1n 1llnette \1•/floral chail's $j8. ="="'======="'°-\\'ILL BUY \ 1nn1 p1uj. silent Scout. !\lust be reasonabl<'. 20' lnbrd. Dory iv/!railer, V.8, eulo, ••dio, h1afef.
pw r. 1100•. l etl o1v ~"
'ond, whil• w•ll lir11, lint·
ed 91111. STY 80 5
Fits the Child Usctl turquoi11e hide-a-bed Antiques 81 10 or sound. J\lust be in good Cull -496-J(HG ii·cll C'QUipJl<'d . r.1ust go, AUTO body & l"cn der
\''"·-• II .,_ ec!t " 'pc ........ 1 .... ,. gi-·ii· nd . ......,,, nt<Cds \\'l'k. Any Rea.so. '~.ble repni-at n'as. pric"• .. ............ · . .::>aUce1man, ....,. " · .. u "'" '3 ' " co · rcas. 1ir1 ..... -.... NEED bricks one to 1000, '" ,_,, Largest Selection
New & U!oe d
MerccdC'S Ben1
Ed. D. ,;lccps 2, $87. Til<' Factory. Pat Michael Antiques \VILL SELL J-"cdera l reasonably priced. 64.·l-4687 oHl"r ac1.."'{'pted . Call 546-J14S V\V's a speciality. J IS-1503
Sl0-l060 Enroll noiv 1885 'Harbor, 540-QW2 GRAND OPENING! Enlargrr for 35 mm , BEAUTIFUL 33' Riverboat. ask for Larry. '66 MERCURY $21 95
Eves. 548-1758 MAPLE dincHc, huich, twin Finl' sclCC'tio11 or Eu1upean 21 ~"x21~", l'lc., In folda\\·ay Machinery, etc. 8700 Sl2.750. 1 yr old Courte!ly lo FORD IiO engine 1'C buii'!iiid
AUCTIONEERING hc<ls, 9 drv:er dresser, & An1tl'ic11n Vl ctot'inn furn. case iv/ masklng easel. ~rokers. B. \V. Tarnutzcr 3 .speed lrJ.ns., 2 rlnume Jim Slemons Imps
W .1rner & M._in St.
Coug•r. V.9, eYlo, red:o,
he•ler, po .. er tle11, power
b•1k11 , f~elo•v ~;r cond,
while w~ll lire1, vinyl top, REGULAR 2 \Vt':EK TERr.t Gti.tndig Co1nb.1 Jllaycr . iltlJ'f', Ser at '1G8 E. 17th SL \ViU trade on projl"ctor. ciJJ FORKLIFT; :!,OOO Jlne u, !HS-5419 r\111.~ and UrPs 7.10/15, fils r.e in business for younelf! chest. ' In C.;\·I. 61:>-2776, 10 to fi. on \l'knds. l''ri eve. thru l'f'C.1lntl .. $8j'j. 4.000 llystC'r, CRE\V \Vanted fo1· 3 inonUls J.'on:I. Call 847-1427 bcforr. 3. Si;inLi Ana 546.4114 =====--=-----lll lint~d ql111. UJA l 7J.
Le11.m lo be nn aucfioncer. Call • 548·S6ll CORNER C\Jpboarcls, 1 pinr, ~~2152 Laguna Beach ' toad. $1Z'i0. 714: 642-8393 cruise 10 \\'~51 lndiel!. Share SALE -\Ville Ov1Js $14.0Ci ca. 1967 2005.E illctt.'t.'t!c:. Benz
\\'EST-BEST School of Aue-\VH.ITE Provin. Bedroom 1 lg, 1vnlnut. IWinlshcd. -=~~======= Jay11: 71·1: 8!l7-1 1~ eves. t'xpenscs 44 Cat ;H6-4l48 Nat1onnl Speed CcnrC"1·, 2110 coupe VJC08.1 a ir, poi\'Cr,
'65-Pi. VMOUTH $895
8.lv.d1re. 4 door, V.I, •U•
lom •!ic lt •n1., po .. er 1!1•"
in9, r•dio, h1ole r. l it. RRY tloncering, P. O. Bo:< 3021, Set. 3 mo, old. \Vh ltc reclin.1=c='="='="=· =4-=""=""::....____ Miscell aneoua 1600 4!i' CHRIS TRI~\BIN S. lla1·llor, C~l. &i6-6700. rt c . cu s 1 0 n1 p Ai 11 t
Anahehn, Calif. 63S-.'XXXI vlbraling chr. 67~~ aft. SE'ITEE bC'au!ilully design-I ~~-~~----~~~! FREE TO YOU TS, l''/B, dual~. $23,000 Daily !l-9, Sa.I !).G, \\'/l<'athcr interior o n !)' "' GIRLS 18-45 Train lo be a _6 _________ cd -curvC'd sollcl 11·alnut i ~ ---------Br 494-39!6 Porsche . l\'icrc,. V.\V. D-$67f10 fl11l prlcc. Ji n1
Dental Assistant. Lo c a I TRANSFBRRED. Se 11 i n I:: =l=ra=n="=·=S="'=·='=''= .. ='=236='=· ==" a BAR slools, black lealh<'r LO V ABLE b 1 k /\\'ht * ALCLAS 25' Buggies. Nev.· & US<'d parts, Slemons illerccdcs Benz. Ul '6l PONTll<C $1695
Instruction. Sponsored by complete houseful ot quallly -$30 <'ach. Redwood picnic longhalred kitten 12 11•ks, Fiying B1idge ExpI'CSS \Vholcsale to all 642-0350, \V. \Varner, Snnla. Ana.
Adult Training School. t.lediterraJl<'an furniture. SewingM1chlne1 8120 labll", four benches 1vlth shots,v.•ill givepdrerlfrom S\1,000 * E\'cs.675-3TI7!\tAGS, i\·ltr Rairlcr, l:i'' for !>16-4ll4" A .. tom•lie lrenimii,:on,
Grand f'rir
\Vril<' PO Box 8 7 8, 892-:i.)96 -----unl brella $35. 1-l'xS' walnut ''et for spaying 1vilhin 6 f•c+o•y i i•, powe r ileer:n9, -P~al~m~d~al-'~·~Ca=\i~f.~'3550~-=~-fN-R-. -N-E\=V-w-.~,1-.,-,-.-,-0-,.,,-cr 1969 SINGER 11•/bcaut 1\'al ii i1h lol'rnica 1011 orlicr desk mo.s, 8li-4!67 or :J.l2-709611_ Sillboits 90Jo Ford, 2 for $20. &15-22~6 1adio, healer. l it. JNN 2~4
MERCHANDISE FOR $2.10. Cor. bro group Sl30. ~111:~e h~lc:1s:,r~:~:ea~:;kc; ~~·k l·i'2t . 3ils~~I~~~~ 10 1 ·,-,-. -1'-1-alld-,~,-.-oo-p-F-.-G-.-,n-b. ="="='=''=6~p=.m=. =====' 1 _____ M.:_G ____ .11 '67 POG~;"1:~,h1 $1995
SALE AND TRAD! 616-6649 ,.eer l!llar. t'111l prii:e $38.:!•I household itcn1s. All Top PR.ElfY lovabll" tri-colot'Cd, i1u.~. rulpe!, head, galley, T railer, Tr1vel 9425 1i'IG 1 doo• h •• dtop, ~wtomelie
PORTABLE DISll\VASHF.R. 01' $.i2G ino. 526-«i16 Quality. Can be seen nl 2027 blk rnsk, cocker mlx, n1ed. bilge pump. f'uJI <.'OYen; and 196.1 TRAVELEEZE !.I(}' Twin ~1c11, &>tvi~. Paris ''•n1mi11ion, '•t+o ry i ir,
Fumlture IOOO FRIGIDAIRE. RUNS t'INt: Pnlon1a Dr. beh\•ecn 20th&: ic;Jzc, needs good home, cushions Slecp11 4 S399.i In1mediate Deli very, ••dio, he•la• TUt 047
Siesta
SALE!
$9), 6Ta--1006 Musical Inst. 112.5 rc.ncd yru'tl, IO\'CS children, 7t~ 833 uu E . 221 . bed htnden1, !iell-t.'011\Ained. All !\fodcls ---Irvine. 548-2936 i,'OOd \\'8.tchdog, house pct. • • Xl, \t'k Excellent ST!OO, ~7ml '67 RAMBLER $89 5
ORE."<EL ma.hg. dining !hi. 3
leaves, pads, 6 d\all's,
buJfel & mirror. &124834.
LUD\VIC \lru 1n!I, Z c I J:: in
cymbals. 7'.1nt. Cone!. l)tid FOR &lie • Diplomat Tr11n1·
$1500, sell I.or $600 lilts. 1 S50 ' •-K•-1 l!IAPLE t11i n bedA, compJelc ..... ,"non. :-~"n ""lO. pc · .,..a '"ti cu5 om •. ., .. ,..,...,., bc\lybrd, $2j. Ask for Joe •
New ~ pc, corner fllT'ftn;. + bedspreads $40. e«ch. 4~ 96" "'"''1
Chol-of cll"ll. -...... now .... .. __ .. C'f E ACCORDION 12) Xlnt. 120 ::::,~~~=""""""'""'-~ ,.... ·~1> -""· D1U1:1UW8.Y. I • \'CS. r>~ •A 12 n . N bl C $159.SO. New bctl5 : King ..,..ss '""'1uar, <X"ss o c. * CA.RPET• Have 2 rolls
199 50 Q 189 50 FUJI 9' EGG Shell Siik Brocade 54().2472 ni·ocado nvJon ('•......,t, dhl• · ' ueens · • Li rn I 1100 ., -·~ m 9' ~., SI'•• I""' v. 1. 80 a, i'u\e-ba<'ked. \VIII imcrific• ,w., ' '"' ns -t.i>\I, w._\I Call 892-S183 0 guam. Kmg u aptt&.ds $13.95 ---==..=:..::;o..__ Pie nos & rgens 8130 $2.90 per ytl. 5'1G-7215.
n. &Z. ,9.0C.. lleadtmll: • CUS1'0M Made &ilid llA:..n.10ND"· Ste1nwa,y. Ya-Carpet leyt:r hlU !ft Lo
Kings, 11,5, Que<"ns $12.SO. llardwd bar, ~tural \1<1lnut I SI 99 cl. Sh
'
'·'I 110.50, "'wins si,••. finish. SZ75. Call _ 673-9228. n1aha • ne1v ii U&cd pianos II)' ons , Y , ags .... ' ~ of all makei. Dcsl bl.I)'$ In ll'O m $.150 up + my lnbor,
Tn1rtdl:_r11 (duo ristr) w/ BRAND New Couch, sz.ro. So, CAllf, rWit here. OOc per yard. 988-6.,<llO
11JJ'ler l!<'••"C matt, reg, SID&, Ncvrr used. OeliW!rcd 11141 ~n1' hlUSIC CO., ORIGINAL oils for Rifts -
now $79.50, K.1. 1prd,1 SlJ.9', (;J. BeallflfUI. 6.75-(627. -,-i907 N. r.111.ln, i;llt frames • old ~hips •
$.pc, ~n IP· Sl49, K.s, vd. 2 DAVENPORTS. beds. k;; Sanla Anll m1s1ion • caslif's, etr., r~rom Vet 1prtt--ai' $49,5(). Camp)! beda rq. $U9.50, now $£1,50. o ~adbnlt. nlisc. furn. Jo~REE ORGAN CLASSES • $2l to $<100. 5'19-5098
'1',ull u:, a:Jeep • so.fa res. r•llo I.urn. 67S-7200. ~londoy nltcs 7:30 • S:'.«l 11m 001.J..k:CTOR'S lte111s, lovt!ly
• $233.50, now SJ6'..50. Ouisl· UVfN'C room, dinet te sci, GOULD MUSIC CO. old rtslorod ct'd11r chc!it on
mu la,v•ways "°"'·SIESTA &-droom SC"!, !\\in beds, 20'5 N. !\!s in, S .. \, 547.(6111 ghl:>phe.rd cutcts $ lO ,
'sLE&P SHOP, 1927 Harbor Limps. etc. C.ll ~778. GEORGt Steck Studlo 8'17-6319
BJvd., Of 6t5-2760 dally l O. ~IAPLE twin h¢1i, compl1>lt Con!lO]P Llkr 11(!1\', $450. 12:i SQ. YDS. ll1ht bt'lge
!') S.t-SUn llMI. + t:irdniread1 S4l), f'flch. 408 Ca ll 89'1·9183 C:lrpcl k padding. Excellent
>.tOvtNG -111' black vtnyl & Fl Broadway. O t. Eve1.Wh --11-,-,=1,=pllanc:..:::\J:.I "oc;:1n'-1-,..-.-li-nc condition. &1~720
marble air. by o.nla $GS. QuaUty ku11 bed-quilted. \Vblte elf'j hnnar Dime-a· SAV!: S400 NcWpOrt Beach
548-0012. Co1Jplete-un1!5t'd noc;, ._'Orth line DAlL~ PILOT \\rAN'l' 'T'tnnl1 Cub lncmbttKNr.
CIVE Naw ~ UnJted ~ S2'). All S ~ ¥.•knds MU.536 J\OS! S6.'1 in<'I trans fee. S\3-678&.
8:1>2929 11 -10 dll)'!!". Rtbtl S+,.i io n W•90 ~. 1!'1
CAL """ Jo• I b T k 9500 lhe t1011 tou,.try mcd•I,
BA'' ~. n~ ......... Coll'-P"P•· ..., • sac y OW11(.'r, rue 1 . L ""' uuiu .. , IC "' I f Uy 'd I II wd" •YlotTO ~lic +r•~1mi 1. Go od watch dog .s. ceftn, u ~p ' u sail. * 1ion, r1 dio, ~e•le•. l ic. RRY
645--04I:i 11/11 aux eng incl. $10,000. ~. VA NS * 70~
&'U-ll:W ext lil """""'""'"''---=" AKC Beegle, fen1 . trl-cokir@d 3l00 \Y, Coa!:t Hwy· N.B. '67 C HRYSLER $1995
need s f enced ya rd . TRADE Lido 14 ll0.1680 I\'/ ·st Eronolinr, $0\'f! LiSIOS 642·9405 ~IQ.l i64 )11~ ... porl. 4 door h~•dlop.
5!0-8G.18 11/11 lrh· & gl~brds for 11ml 1/0, '63 V\V Rus rMLl~ •• $1119!1 ~~·~"="='°='~'"":::::.~M=G::...:°":::.:al='='-ll "'·8, •~lom~ti, tr~nimiuion,
or SEIL S900, 816-0261. '66 V\V Bu.11 SUL.310 •. $1499 '&I !\lG llOO sedan, i.:d. 1..'0nd, pow•• 1!1erin9. ••dio, ~••'·
AKC Basset hound, f~m. 1 CAL ~ _ LOA DED '67 Dodge Spo1'1sn1an V.nn "A111!e 1~·lblack i· a ci n i; ••, low low mil1•ge. Lie.
yr. ]Ol'C'9 children. Need.11 $2!)j0, \l'/Nl"\\'f>Ol'I Slip DEB160 .............. S1!199 slriJlC!l. Pvt pty. Quick sale. VTS 27S
fenced yard. 540-8638 ll/ll Call MG-1701 or 5.U-2061 '6fl Ch<'v Sportsman Van &t.?-91Sti '45 FO""R0D--°"5"1""0=95
rREt; To qualified hon1c. 2 LIDO 14 SI Good d 2 lO!J.113 ................ $23!r.I JOOS rt!G tihd1;cl. Top .Shape! F•irl •ne s oo .. :t d00, h•rd·
kl I tens. 1\dults v n I Y. sell! ~{no. Sl.lils. 0 C:~ ~r '69 Oif'v Van V-8 auro. 711810 \\llI"C' ,\'he{'.ls. Mlchrlln lircs. lop. V-1, ~~!om1tl t tr,n1.,
54g..J846 11111 '''""''~· ""~. 6~ -.• Ku5tom Motors pow•• ''•••'"'ii· ••d•o, ~ •• ,. '"' ..,.,.,. ..,..,,., ,,...,,;:S!lflo :;,:'="=l=•·='=o.1-=°'650::~;===11 ''' lie. NHU 26t CUTE Dalay
646-0&42: 195.1
Costa !\lcSA
flu PP I e !I. e SABOTS $229 e 8.fl Baker St., Co.sr:r "'"!l," -
F"ederal, NC\\', foam1'1otntion. &.is.o222 i\ulh I. H. Dealt<r :11().5.qlj 11-10 MGA
CUTE Kittens, \1'f!t1.ned and
hou.5flbrokC'n 54S-461S 11111
DARLING
64:?-3929
Ol'a""" kitten.
11110
'67 SCOUT 4.ll'.4, 4 spd, l"'l'fec:t
Ponr Crul1tr1 9020 rood .. $a\·e! Dir, R.1:; &ker,
'-'-'-'--'--'-"-"-'-----':;; Co~111 ~11.,...,1, !oD:XlJ ~
RETIRED Couple S e e k :-------.'----
Rospo nsiblr half ln1rm1 66 CUCV. S I_'lclrup. S~.
partner, in 30· Orrill Connie, 596~78. Dir, 8~a &ker St ..
'63. Fully t'qUipt, NOIY al1_Coo_l_•_•_k_oa _____ _
lla)'l!ide lilarlM. 838-003.J. '69 Dat~11n. SlllOO T & II, lop
'61 -30' CHRIS tw1n c•ia E11'· cond. 70CC mil•.l!·
press cniirer. XJnt cond. • 842-6475 '*
•"Sell/trd for • • 11 boa. t , Plt'dsc Enough .. Cl\'1t
---':18 l\IGA Nt~· pa!nl & 1,,"1.11··
ln ln5 G fl EAT t'Ond .
C'l'eryU1in~ 11·orks. ll'11Yi.ngl
slute. n1ust scl l. fi'i"'>-'*'21
l!l60
OPEL
OPEl, S TAT I ON
\VAGON
Runs Good • iu:o
DUNTON
FORD
2240 S. Main
546-7076
TAPPAN ga.c; ra. 548-S770
322 Ogle St .. C~I l l/11
S!\IALL •louM! dOf, female, 5
Y" old, 968-101~. 11/ll
Xiutns 20 •"ttks old to i'OOd
hOme. 83&4"93 fll-i'tro. Your .. ~-.•Ir Sh111't'" ('.all • G.16-:J...1"'3. ~-=-=-=~-"--------~~
•
• l
ower
If all Edison power plants were
shut down, there would be no
noticeable difference in the pho·
tochemical smog level.
Then who-or what-is caus·
ing smog? To fully understand
the problem-and every con·
cemed citizen should-let's take
a lool< at the facts:
The four components of
photochemical smog are: hydro·
carbons, nitrogen oxides, oxygen
and sunlight.
Photochemical smog is the
stuff that irritates our eyes, stings
our noses and hangs in a haze
over Southern California. It oc·
curs during much of the warm
part of the year and results from a
photochemical reaction between
reactive hydrocarbons and nitro·
gen oxides in the presence of
sunlight and oxygen.
Oxygen, of course, we need for
survival. Sunlight we want. It's
the other two components that
spell trouble. And it takes a mix-
ture of both hydrocarbons and
!!ill:£>gen oxides to form P.hoto·
chemical smog. So where do these
amog-makers come from?
Edison power plants in L.A.
County account for only 1/10 of
1 % of all the hydrocarbons in the
air. That's practically nil. In con·
trast, motor vehicles account for a
whopping 67.9%. Nitrogen
oxides? Edison accounts for·
about 1/U-8.3%. Motor vehi·
des again account for the lion's
share-66.7%. (Source: L.A.
County APCD data.)
Remember, P.hotochemical
smog requires a mixture of both
pollutants. Do awar. with either
one, and r.ou do a war. with smog.
And Edison plants produce prac-
ticallr no hrdrocarbons.
We get both hydrocarbons and
nitrogen oxides-tons of them-
through the exhaust pipes of our
cars. And both spew out at
ground level where they do
the most damage.
On the other hand, nitrogen
oxides emitted from power plants
are virtually free of hydrocar-
bons, so there is essentially no
photochemical smog produced.
Besides, these nitrogen oxides are
released upward at about 6b miles
per hour through tall stacks-not
at ground !&el.
Consequently, Edison's total
contribution to photochemical
smog is small indeed. Emissions
are well within the limits set by the
L.A. County APCD. And those
restrictions are among the strict·
est in the nation. Nevertheless,
we're finding ways to reduce our
share of air pollutants even fur-
ther. Contrary to some public
statements, the relatively small
emissions of nitrogen oxides from
power planr. have been and are
still being reduced.
Edison was one of the first util-
ities in the nation to develop an
air pollution research program.
Pioneering work led to the devel-
opment of the "two·stage" com·
bustion process. It substantially
reduced emissions of nitrogen
oxides.
During the last six months,
research breakthroughs have
reduced emissions even further.
These improvements are being
applied to Edison generating
units as rapidly as possible. As a
result, e n1i ssions of nitrogen
oxides from all Edison power
plants in the L.A. Basin will be
further reduced by approximate·
ly one-third. In L.A. County, for
example, from 8.3% to 5.5%
or lower.
And still further research is
underway to control emissions
even more.
But what about the major
smog-producer-the motor vehi·
de? Until now, the pro~ to
control automobile emissions has
concentrated on reducing hrdro·
carbon emissions, as well as car·
bon monoxide. But in so do-
mg, the pro~1 has caused emis·
sions of nitrogen oxides from
motor vehicles to increase.In fact,
in 1969 this increase alone is
greater than the total emissions of
nitrogen oxides from all power
plants in L.A. Coun!)'.l
Authorities are hopeful that
nitrogen oxide emissions fron1
•
.,.---------.--·
autos will start to be brought
under control by the early '70's.
We hope so, too.
W;th. regard to total air pol·
lution, motor vehicles account
for 87.7% of the total .tonnage of
all air pollutants in L.A. County.
And Edison accounts for less
than 1%.
So shutting down power plants
would hardly be a solution. In
terms of either photochemical
smog or total air pollution, you
wouldn't notice the difference.
And no one wants to try to live
without electricity.
Considering the fact that your
needs for electricity will double
within the next eight years, it's
imperative that ·additional power
plants be built in the area. For·
lunately, these new power plants
won't make a noticeable differ-
ence in the smog level either.
Nevertheless, in some areas
Edison is facing serious opposi-
tion to the construction of new
power plants.If Edison is not per-
mitted to build these power plants
dose to where the power is needed,
there are three altematives:
I. Import electricity from out
of state over high-voltage trans-
mission lines. These lines would
have to cut through heavily-pop·
ulated areas in Southem Califor·
nia. Moreover, there is a definite
limit to the amount of power.
' .
• I
-
' .
which can be imported withoiit
affecting the reliability of your
electric service.
2. Generate electricity at DU•
dear power plants. Our plans
include the construction of addi·
tional nuclear plants. But they
take a long time to build-at
least seven to eight years, indud·
ing the time it takes to obtain
approvals from state and federal
regulatory agencies, and the
public. You can't wait that long.
Additional electric power is
needed in the immediate future.
3. Ration electric power. In
some sections of the nation, this
happens periodically. In New
York,forinstance,customerswere
asked not to use their air eondi·
tioning unir. during a heat wave.
But a "brownout'' doesn't solve
theproblem.Nordoesablackout.
The sensible solution is to
build the necessary power plants,
and make certain th.It they com·
ply.with· applicable local, state
and federal dean llir regulations.
Edison is dedicated to do this.
After all, nobody wants smog
-including the 1-1,000 of us who
work at Edison. Our families live
here too.
E
•
I
•